Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 6, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 May 1931 — Page 7

MAY 18, 1931.

City Girl Is Married in Chapel Rite Miss Elizabeth Lindsay, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Lindsay. 3717 Boulevard place, became the bride of Ferdinand Harry Krentler, in a ceremony Sunday afternoon performed by the Rev. J. Ambrose Dunkel, in the McKee chapel at the Tabernacle Presbyterian church. The altar was in a setting of greenery, with a large center basket of snapdragons, roses and lilies. Family pews were marked by tulle bows. Mrs. C. H Eberhard, organist, played, and Mrs. Nola Reeder sang. Mrs. Raymond Brandes was matron of honor. She wore a gown of shell pink lace over taffeta with a fitted jacket of taffeta, a large pink hairbraid hat and moire slippers. She wore long white kW gloves, the bride’s gift, and carried ' Columbia roses. Reception Follows Ceremony Mrs. Alro Kilpatrick, bridesmaid, wore mint green lace over taffeta with fitted taffeta jacket, green hairbraid hat and moire slippers. She wore white kid gloves and carried Butterfly roses, tied with a green tulle bow. Sherwood Blue was best man, and G. Schuyler Blue, Arlo Kilpatrick, Wiliiam C. Stroup and Dr. Herbert Sedam, ushers. The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore a gown of white lace over white satin, fashioned with a long skirt, with a slight train, and short lace jacket. Her tulle veil fell from a cap, and was caught with orange blossoms. She wore long white kid gloves and carried calla and Easter lilies. An informal reception at the church followed the ceremony. Mrs. Lindsay received in a gown of brown lace, trimmed with mint green, with brown accessories and a shoulder corsage of gardenias and sweet peas. Left for Tour of East Mr. and Mrs. Krentler left immediately for an eastern trip, the bride traveling in a blue tailored suit with black accessories. While in the east, Mr and Mrs. Krentler will spend several days with Mr. and Mrs. William Hockett (Jean Guio), Bloomfield, N. J. Mrs. Krentler was Mrs. Hockett’s maid of honor in her wedding here last October. After June 15, Mr. and Mrs. Krentler will be at home at 245 West Maple road. The bride attended Butler university and is a member of Delta Delta Delta. Krentler is a graduate of Indiana university and is a member of Theta Chi. Sorority Will Meet Alpha chapter, Phi Theta Delta sorority, will meet Wednesday night at the Severin.

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U. S, SPONSORS SPOTLESS CITY AT DAM SITE Model Town on Desert Is Plan of Crampton, in Charge of Leases. By United Press WASHINGTON, May 18—Boulder City, Nev., model town which the federal government is building in the wilderness at Hoover dam, may with ease adopt as its slogan “the spotless city of the west,” if plans*of former Representative Louis C. Cramton Rep, Mich.), are realized. Cramton, known chiefly as a prohibitionist, and defeated in the last primaries, was designated by Interior Secretary Lyman T. Wilbur to take charge of leasing building sites on the government-owned land. His prospectus, just issued, calls for a city which would be the complete antithesis of Reno, in the same state. Applicants for leases will be judged on the basis of “character, personal fitness, personality, age, physical conditions, financial and service fitness, v and training and experience.” Only United States citizens are eligible. Leases are revocable cn etidence of gambling or other tabcoed enterprises. Permittees may, it is said, arrange thsir own quarters, business and residential, but all plans must be submitted for approval, and all buildings must be of a specified Spanish design. Teaching Wives Banned By United Press BLOOMINGTON, Ind., May 18— Married women will not be employed in city schools of Bloomington and teachers who marry within their first five years of employment will be discharged, the school board has ruled. The Bloomington board followed the example of those in Indianapolis and many other cities in voting not to effect increases in pay of teachers this year. gree. It places a patch pocket at the front just to be novel. It accents a waistline through a partial belt that ties youthfully at the back. The sides of the apron are laid in plaits that ripple softly. Style No. 306 is designed for sizes small, medium and large. The medium size requires V-k yards of 35inch material with 914 yards of binding. A neat nils green cotton broadcloth patterned in deeper green and yellow made the original. Yellow binding furnished effective trim. Our large Fashion Magazine shows the latest Paris styles for spring and summer for adults and children. Also instructive lessons in sewing. Price of book 10 cents. Price of pattern 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred) Wrap coin carefully.

THE INDIANAPOLIS'TIMES

Arrange Funeral Rites for Warren Sampsell

Heart Attack Fatal to WellKnown County G. 0. P. Worker. Funeral services for Warren A. Sampsell, 51, well-known Marion county Republican worker, who was stricken with a heart attack Friday and died Saturday night at his home,' 800 East Main street, Broad Ripple, will be held at 10 a. m. Tuesday at the Hisey & Titus undertaking establishment, 951 North Delaware street. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. For years Mr. Sampsell was active in G. O. P. politics, serving as chairman of Washington township, and as reading clerk of the state senate. He filed as an independent candidate for congress in the spring of 1930, but withdrew before the November election. At the time of his death he was state distributor for the Ace Fastener company of Chicago. Born in Salem, 0., he came here while a boy. His father, Dr. Homer A. Sampsell, was a well known dent- j ist here for years! Mr. Sampsell was a member of the Scottish Rite and the Shrine. Survivors are the widow, Mrs. Edith F. Sampsell; a brother, Samuel D. Sampsell of Indianapolis, i and a sister, Mrs. T. E. Drake, of Lima, O. SSOQ Alimony Awarded By Times Special GREENCASTLE, Ind., May 18— Mrs. Ethel Hauck, formerly Miss j Ethel Benedict of Indianapolis, was ! granted a divorce from Albert A. ; Hauck of Airy Knob farm on grounds of cruelty, in Putnam circuit; court here. Alimony of SSOO was! granted. She asked $25,000. Lind Returned to Owners By Times Special WABASH, Ind., May 18.—Origi- | nal owners of seven parcels of the right of way of the Indiana railroad’s Marion-Wabash division, recently abandoned here, have received transfers of the land back to their possession.

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WINE TO BE GLORIFIED Twenty Nations Will Attend AntiDry Parley in Paris. By United Press PARIS, May 18.-Approximately twenty nations will be represented in Paris on June 9 for the twelfth congress of the International League of Opponents of Prohibition. Wine will be glorified. The congress purposely leaves out the United States, inasmuch as invitation of a prohibition country was thought to be inopportune. . Veteran Cowboys Organize By United Press LOS ANGELES, May 18—Three hundred veteran cowboys who rode the plains west of the Mississippi before the railroad came, Sunday formed the national cowboy's association, with Harry Gat as foreman. Many of the cowboys were more than 75 years old.

'BATTLE LOOMS ON TOW-IN BIDS j Fight on Contract May Flare at Meeting. Opposition to the tow-in contract awarded by the safety board Friday in connection with the new traffic ; law, is expected when an ordinance i ratifying the contract is introduced : at city council meeting tonight. The contract was awarded to Indianapolis Motor Inns, Inc., asso- ' dated with Test Realty Company interests. Six other bids submitted were held invalid by the board for failure to follow the form adopted ! by the board for bidding. Objections that the successful bidder was not low, in certain respects, may block any attempt to pass the ordinance under suspension of rules, it was reported. The successful bidder agreed to j tow or crane-in stolen or abandoned ; cars for a flat rate of $1.50 to tow in cars improperly parked under *he ! new ordinance, for $3.00, and to crane them in for $3.50, of which the city receives $2 as a fine, charg- ; ing 50 cents storage daily after i midnight of the first day and storj age at $7 a montlf. Charles R. Myers, safety board j president, said bid of Indianapolis Auto Sendee. Inc., which in some respects was the lowest, was disqualified for failure to bid a flat rate, Aged Widow Dies By Times Special CLOVERDALE. Ind., May IS— Funeral services for Mrs. Belle Sin- j clair, 83, widow of I. S. Sinclair, were held in the Church of Christ here. She leaves a daughter, Mrs. A. T. Sinclair, Cloverdale. The deceased had been an invalid two years. 775 to Get Diplomas By United Press MUNCIE, Ind., May 18. —Central high school of Muncie will graduate 273 students Wednesday, June 3, Principal L. S. Martin announces. The commencement address will be given by Albert B. Palmer, president of Chicago Theological Semi- j ' nary. • .

I Mercy 9 Killer

“If I shot him, it must have been in one of the periods when my soul leaves my body" . . . That’s what Louise Schwartz, 67-year-old Amityville, L. 1., spinster, is alleged to have told authorities w’ho held her in connection with the death of her invalid brother, Edward, 55. She first told police that her brother committed suicide to end twenty years of constant suffering, but the physician who conducted the autopsy gave the opinion that it would have been impossible for the brother to have shot himself.

PAGE 7

WHEAT RELIEF PLEA MADE AT WORLD PARLEY Delegates Urged to Aid Farmers by Canadian Chief of Session. By United Press LONDON. May 18—A plea for relief for the wheat fanner as a means of solving a crisis “affect ing all mankind” was voiced by the world wheat conference today. “Our efforts should be directed toward getting the farmer a fair wage without increasing the cost of living of his fellow-worker,” Ferguson said. Ferguson, who was unanimously elected chairman of the conference on the motion of S. R. McKelvie, American delegate, emphasized the necessity of co-operating among the imporling and exporting wheat countries. Ferguson in his address of welcome to the thirty-six delegates from fourteen wheat exporting countries, including the United States, said two vital problems faced the conference. 1. Disposing of the present accumulative stocks. 2. Improved • methods of handling stocks in future. The United States intends to “dump” no wheat abroad, Sam R. McKelvie, American delegate, informed the press at a conference after the preliminary meeting. McKelvie, who is a member cf the federal farm board, denied widely printed reports about the export of American wheat in vast quantities and said: “The United States will maintain a policy of not dumping wheat, regardless of the action of other countries. However, we will not carry an umbrella for other exporting countries.” McKelvie. commenting on reporta that the conference would form an international marketing organization, said the United States did not favor such a project and would not participate.