Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 307, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 May 1933 — Page 3

MAY 4, 1033

30-YEAR CITY RESIDENT DIES; RITES ARE SET James Alexander Is Taken at Home: Stackhouse Funeral Fixed. Following an illness of sixteen weeks, James Alexander, 55, a resident of Indianapolis thirty years, died Wednesday in his home, 1440 North Colorado street. Funeral services will be held at 3 Saturday in the Shirley Brothers central chapel, 946 North Illinois si reel. Burial will be in Memorial Park cemetery. Mr. Alexander was a member of the United Brethren church and the Modern Woodmen of America. He was in charge of metal work at the Acme-Evans Company, where he had been employed as a millwright for seventeen years. Survivors are the widow, Mrs. India Alexander; his father, William Alexonder, of Hemlock; a stepson, Martin Ora Parker; two sisters, Mrs. Mamie Pickering and Miss Lula Alexander, and five brothers, William, Judd. Edward, Charles and Dock Alexander, all of Indianapolis. Stackhouse Rites to Be Friday Funeral services for Charles Stackhouse, 63, of 1310 North Warman avenue, who died Wednesday of auto accident injuries, will be

held at 2:30 Friday in the Hisey and Titus funeral home, 951 North Delaware street. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. Mr. Stackhouse was struck by an automobile driven by Hardee Kord, 5075 West Sixteenth street, Tuesday night, when he was walking on West Sixteenth street in Speedway City.

Mr. .Stackhouse

He was thought uninjured at the time and was taken home, where he was treated by a physician. Mr. Stackhouse had been a resident of Marion county eleven years. He had operated a barber shop in Speedway City nine years. young City Woman Dead Funeral services for Mrs. Mabel Baker Bardonner, 20, of 290 Central avenue, who died Tuesday in the city hospital, will be held at 2 Friday in the Finn Brothers funeral home, 1639 North Meridian street. Burial will be in Floral Park cemetery. Survivors are the husband, A. J. Bardonner, five sisters and five brothers. Former Resident Is Taken Last rites for A. J. Spaulding, 65, former resident of Indianapolis, who died Tuesday in this home in Danville, Ind., will be held at 2 Friday in Tipton. Ind. Burial will be in Fairview cemetery there. Mr. Spaulding was an employe of the Indianapolis Bleaching Company seventeen years. He moved to Danville about a year ago. Survivors are the widow, Mrs. Lizzie Spaulding; three daughters by a former marriage, Mrs. Jessie Ramey, Indianapolis; Mrs. Bertha Warner, Tipton, and Mrs. Lillian Mumaugh, Chesterfield; a sister, Mrs. Eliza Tingle, and two brothers, William E. Spaulding and Joseph Spaulding, all of Indianapolis. REVEALS EASY WAY TO CATCH FISHING WORM Rubbing Stick Driven in Ground is Recipe Given in East. Bit United Prrxtt NEW BEDFORD, Mass., May 4. The fishing season is here, but what about the bait? The following recipe of an Orleans resident for getting worms without digging is passed on to posterity by Don Trayser: "Drive a stick of wood an inch in diameter into the ground, leaving one end exposed. "Cut notches in another stick and rub it along that in the ground. "Vibration disrupts and annoys the worms and they wriggle to the surface to find what the earthquake is about." Two Killed in Crackup B;t United J’restt SOUTH BEND, Ind., May 4. Clarence Erdman, 21, and his brother James, 25, Three Rivers, Mich., were killed instantly today when their truck crashed into another stalled on a highway near here.

f THOSE CLOGGED INTIST.'NES ARE CAUSING flj th^H^YOU DR.ANTOINE yOUR HEADACHES AND IRRITABILITY. IVE jm y "Didn’t like me. the noted Pari* 1L iPI* FOUND THAT FLEISCHMANN'S YEAST, EATEN El *S j. ANV • diagno.tician, Wf**" 'Jp REGULARLY, GIVES THE SUREST AND KB __/*\ explain.- VLg? f RELIEFEROM THIS TROUBLE, V A /fyr JUIS a food, it in vi cor* xr n ] W t'j-r ' /" \H--if Vw Iltfll<TtSTl>l.lSTH€

Girl Who Tried Suicide Will Get New Shoes

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Vergie Toney Vergie Toney, 14, of 723 South Drexel avenue, the school girl who swallowed poison because a schoolmate taunted her for wearing shoes found on a • dump, is going to have new shoes. Touched oy ~.3 story of Vergie's attempted suicide in Wednesday's issue of The Times, two women telephoned before 6 a. m. today. Both asked that their names not be revealed. One, a welfare worker, said that she intended to spend some of her own money for shoes for Vergie. The other said she had made arrangements with a downtown store for Vergie and three of the other eight children who live in the ramshackle home of Mr. and Mrs. George Toney to be outfitted with footwear.

TWO J) AYS TWOAYS WASHINGTON Specially Purchased [SUMMER SHOES Scked sales ir* a£HHH k. 1 "" 1 fi'eretl Am Pf||ll lis Ml miii mfm iijifiMHHr r , e ■j • WHITE KIDS • PUMPS •"Hite suvas Here you will find every •straps • white LINENS wanted style and material for • black kids mi min ci steai. # SPORT oxfords

WARS TO END WAR FALLACY, BUTLER TOLD Oberlin College Head Gives Address at Honor Day Exercises. War to end war is fallacy toward attaining world peace, Dr. Ernest Hatch Wilkins, president of Oberlin college. Oberlin. O , declared today in an address at the annual Honor day exercises of Butler university. His topic was “The Scholar and Peace." “We were told that the World war

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was a war to end war. We believed it. It is to be hoped that no future generation will prove so guillible,” Dr. Wilkins said. Enumerating the causes of war, Dr. Wilkins listed first “the extreme inequality of economic distribution. ’ Discussing the consequences of war, the speaker quoted Talcott Powell, editor of The Times, as to cost in veterans' relief aione, which he at one time eifima'ed to oe a billion dollars annually in the United States. “Add to this," the speaker continued, “the immense cost of maintenance of armies and navies; think of what these sums might do if devoted to constructive works of peace; and you have some measure of the gigantic waste of war.” After discussion of the various proposed methods for world peace extant, Dr. Wilkins advanced his theory which he termed “frankly fantastic.” He proposes an intensive study

of the peace problem in universities and colleges, with elementary work in all departments to continue to more advanced levels as with other subjects. He set forth phases of war to be studied by the different departments of educational institutions, and suggested that warfare with bacteria as weapons, which he termed “all too possible," should be a topic for departments of biology. More than 100 students were presented honor awards for scholastic achievement.

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WOMAN BADLY HURT IN SUICIDE EFFORT Inhaled Gas After Arrest of Lover, Say Police. Miss Cynthia Norton. 33. is in a serious condition at city hospital following what police state was an attempt at suicide by inhaling gas

early today in a rooming house at 715 North Alabama street. At the same address Wednesday night police, arrested Edgar E Bowen, on instructions of federal agents who said they wanted him on a warrant charging narcotics act violation. She made no statement as to the cause of the suicide attempt, but there are indications that she was remorseful over the arrest of Bowen. Police found a list of all expenditures for food and other articles

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in the last two weeks, during which the couple had lived at the rooming house as man and wife. Police state Miss Norton has bepn arrested eleven times sir.co June, 1932. usually on vagrancy or disorderly conduct charges. On her last appearance in court a week ago. before Judge Paul Rochford, municipal judge protein., a fine was suspended after the court had been advised she was aiding federal officers by giving evidence in drug cases.