Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 69, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 July 1933 — Page 7

JULY 31, 1033_

DEATH CLAIMS CITY RESIDENT FOR 50 YEARS Funeral Rites to Be Held on Wednesday for Mrs. Mollie Carey. Following an illness of several years, Mrs. Mollt* I Carry. 714 East Thirty-third strrrt, a resident of Indianapolis for mor* than fifty years, died Sunday in her home. Funeral services will be held on Wednesday. Hour and place of *he services have no' been arranged. Burial will be in Crown Hill < -metery. Friend have been ask'd to call at the Planner A- Buchanan mortuary 25 West Fall Creek boulevard. Survivors are two daughters, Mrs. Helen Ferine and Mrs Otho 1). Bales, and a granddaughter. Dorothy Jane Ferine, all of Indianapolis. Myers Kites Are Held Funeral services for Mrs. Annie Elizabeth Myers. 68 resident of Wabash many years, who died Friday in the home of her sister, Miss Emma Colbert. 609 East twenty-third street, were held at 10 today in Wabash at the home of a brother. E R Colbert. Burial will be in Wabash. Mrs Myers was born in California and spent most of her life in Wabash. where she was prominent in the work of a number of literary clubs and in the work of the First Presbyterian church. Survivors are a son. D D. Myers Toledo. ().; three daughters. Mrs. H. A. Ramstetter. San Antonio. Tex Mrs. C. S. Owens. Bedford, and Mrs A H. Lockrae. Minneapolis, Minn.; four brothers, Louis Dale Colbert Fairbanks. Alaska; C C Colbert. Elkhart: N. R. Colbert, Indianapolis, and E R Colbert; the sister. Miss Colbert, and five grandchildren. Death Claims Chemist Word was received here Sunday by relatives of the death of Louis H. Schulmeyer, former Inc'iannnolis chemist, at. his home in Chicago Saturday Funeral services will be held at 230 Tuesday in his home. Burial will be in Chicago Survivors are the widow. Mrs. Hallie Rock Schulmeyer. and a daughter. Miss Fanena Schulmeyer, Chicago; two sisters. Miss Mamie Schulmeyer and Mrs. Richard A. Kurtz, both of Indianapolis, and a brother, Carl W. Schulmeyer, Frankfort. Traveling Salesman Dies Follow ing an illness of four weeks. Henry W. Jolliffee. 56, of 953 West Thirty-third street, a resident of Indianapolis twenty-four years, and a traveling salesman in Indiana for the D. P. Cook and Sons, wholesale hosiery and notion company fourteen years, died Sunday in the Methodist hospital. Funeral services will be held at 2 Tuesday in the St. Paul M. E. church. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery'. Mr JollifTe was a member of the Knights of Pythias, council No 4. United Commercial Travelers, and St Paul church. Survivors arc the widow. Mrs. Luella Merrill JollifTe; three daughters. Mrs. Norma Calvert. South Bend; Mrs. Mary Ewbank. Greenfield and Miss Martha JollifTe. Indianapolis; a son. Merrill JollifTe. Indianapolis; two sisters. Mrs Edna George. Anderson, and Mrs. Sylvia Smith. Mt. Carmel; a brother, William T. JollifTe. and two grandchildren. Jean Ann Calvert and Robert Edward Ewbank, Jr. Auto Injuries Fatal Funeral services for Sergeant Clarence H. Vint. Company G. Eleventh Infantry. Ft Harrison, who died Friday at Ft. Harrison of injuries incurred Tuesday in an automobile accident near Lawrence, were held at 11 today at the Service Club. Chaplain A C. Oliver Jr. officiated. Burial was in Bloomington. Sergeant Vint had twenty-eight years’ service in the army and had been with the Eleventh infantry at Ft. Harrison since 1921. His service record included eight ’‘excellent" discharges. Survivors are the Mrs. Edna Vint, and two stepdaughters. His home was in Lawrence. Theater Manager Dies Julius Hollander. 34, of 2130 North Talbot street, a native of AustriaHungary. died at Methodist hospital today after an illness of eight days. For seventeen years. Mr. Hollander had managed theaters at Fountain Square, including the Sanders. South Side and Apex. He had lived here twenty-one years. About two and one-half years ago. he was married to Miss Catherine King, public school teacher Besides the widow, he is survived by his mother. Mrs. Cecelia Hollander. Indiana polls: six brothers, Joseph. Emil. David and Leo. all of Indianapolis, and William, living in California, and Miklns. living in Europe, and one sister. Miss Helen Hollander. Indianapolis. Mr. Hollander was a member of Beth-El congregation. Funeral services will be held at 2 Tuesday at the mothers home. 1407 Woodlawn avenue, with Rabbi Morris M. Feuerlicht officiating, assisted byCantor Glass.

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Letter Dropped in Sea in Jar Is Received in City

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Fcrd Huber (inset i dropped a letter sealed in a glass jar into the Atlantic ocean. Four days later, the letter, shown above, was received here by relatives.

Missive Found on Florida Beach Is Delivered on Fourth Day. Four days after a letter was scaled in a fruit jar and tossed into the high seas it was received in Indianapolis. A mail carrier delivered to Mrs. John Lmegard. 5370 East Washington street. Thursday, a letter that had been posted from the S. S. Purla. a fruit boat, en route to Puerto Barrios. Guatemala. According to the letter, the boat, one of the Great White fleet of the United Fruit Company, was miles off the Florida coast in the Atlantic ocean when the letter was thrown overboard, sealed in an ordinary fruit jar. Is Washed on Beach The Jar washed up on Miami’s beach and was taken to the postoffice by the finder. The letter bore the post mark of the S. S. Perla for Sunday, July 23, and the Miami, Fla . stamp date of Tuesday, July 25. The letter was from Ferd Huber, former Indianapolis resident, and a cousin of John Linegar. He formerly lived with the Linegar family. Huber forgot to mail the letter to Mis. Linegar before he sailed. Only Passengers on Boat "This fruit boat left Philadelphia two days ago (July 2D,” Huber said in his letter. ‘We are now- in the Aalantic ocean some place of! the coast of Florida. There is a possibility the tide will wash this fruit jar up on the beach where it may be found." Huber with his wife and two children are the only passengers on the fruit boat. Thpy are on a pleasure trip to Guatamala and San Salvador. where Huber formerly was engaged in the shipping business. He will visit his brother. Hugo

NATUROPATHS ADJOURN Educational Session Held Sunday at Severin: Delegates to Chicago. Indiana Naturopathic Asssociatlon closed its education meeting at the Lincoln Sunday. Several delegates will attend the American Naturopathic Association convention in Chicago. Aug. 31 to Sept. 2. Speakers at the meeting here were Dr Minnme Limbert, Muncie; Dr. Winifred Workman. Indianapolis; Dr. B F. Clark. Indianapolis, and Dr E W. Cordingley. Clinton.

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I STANDARD STORES ARE 100% WITH PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT | HIS PROSPERITY PROGRAM WILL BE PUT I INTO EFFECT IN ALL OUR STORES */ TODAY! £/ I In co ' operation with our customers and posalto give useful and gainful employment I mOSt ° f ° UI com P etitors we are P roud and to more people will prove to be the shorthaPP> t 0 d ° ° UI P3lt Und€l the inspirinß cut ot of the Wilderness. We are conW leadership of the greatest President of our vinced that the average citizen (and after 4Jj " IttTk V times. all, there are more of us average folks than v Often have we wished that some authority an ' °^ er aren t there?), will get a would arise with the power and vision impartially to en- better deal from the New Deal than he has had in a long, ■? force a code of shorter hours on the overworked Food l° n £ time. 4 Industry. But unrestrained competition has made such ~, . , .. „ .. ... * a reform impossible, up till now. Adherence to the spirit, as well as the letter, of our pledge to the President requires that we somewhat re- | And so we welcome this New Deal with real enthusiasm. duce the number of hours when our stores will be I We believe that President Roosevelt, with one swift open. We look for the friendly co-operation of the 4 blow, has cut the Gordian Knot of stagnation and de- public to make these new hours fill every reasonable spair that has bound us. We feel certain that this pro- need. Nothing, except the failure of the American people to co-operate sincerely, can stop the forward march which is now under way. We bespeak for the President ... and in the interest of every single citizen of this country... the loyal and patriotic support to which his forward-looking program entitles him. L STANDARD GROCERY CO. j L. A. JACKSON, Inc. Ja EST. 1897

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

JUVENILE JUDGE SHUNS ROLE OF 'BATH DICTATOR' •It's Man's Own Business,’ Rules Geckler in Family Tangle. It’s a man own business how often and where he takes baths, and this is one case where a wife j can't dictate to him. j This, in effect, was the substance of a ruling today by Juvenile Judge John F. Geckler in the case of Marion Anderson. 1253 West New York street, arrested on child neglect charges on complaint of his wife, | Mrs. Geraldine Anderson, who charged he set a bad example for i their five children by the infrequency of his baths. For Children's Sake According to the wife's testimony. Andenvm occupied the family wash tub not qftener than ever two weeks, and sometimes even less frequently. She asked the court to require her I husband to grace the tub at least ; once every week, for the sake of ! the children's morale. When Anderson testified, he told ■ the court he didn't like to bathe in a wash tub. having no bath tub. I and only did so at times to please ' his wife, with whom he had lived 1 seventeen years without any pre- : vious trouble, he said. Takes Di;is in Creek Then he bared a secret—in between baths in the wash tub, he takes dips in the creek, sometimes as often as two or three times a week, he explained, adding that he

FLYING MOLLISONS PLAN NEW AIR ADVENTURES

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The crack-up at Bridgeport. Conn., that ended their trans-Atlantic flight is only a “temporary setback" to ttie flying Mollisons, Jim and Amy. shown at their New York hotel reading telegrams of consolation and congratulation. As soon as their injuries heal, they say. they plan to take to the air again in attempt to set a distance record.

much preferred the greater exposure of the creek to the cramped wash tub. “Well. I can't find anything in the law that says how often a man should take baths—defendant dismissed," Geckler concluded.

LEAGUE TO MEET AT T Industrial Body Will Discuss Roosevelt Reforms. League of Industrial Democracy will meet at 7:30 tonight in the

social room of the Y. W. C. A„ 329 North Pennsylvania street. "Whither Roosevelt's Reforms?" will be the evening's topic. Miss Sara Weinberg will preside. A dinner will precede the meeting, which is public.

PAGE 7

ILLINOIS MILK GROUP BATTLES RECOVERY CODE •Unconstitutional Abuse of Authority.’ Is Claim of Leaders. Hv I nitrit /Vr.. CHICAGO. July 31 Terming the milk code of the national recovery act an "unconstitutional abuse of , governmental authority, the Independent Milk Distributors Association of Northern Illinois planned to seek an injunction m federal court today against its enforcement Norman Diet/., president of the association, issued the challenge to the NT A. saving he invited prosei cution It was believed to lie tho first direct opposition to the recovery program Washington authorities, fearing an effort to question the constitutionality of the recovery program, have tried to keep their orders court proof. Dietz said he had signatures of ; 750.000 persons protesting against the rode, which sets 10 cents a quart as the minimum milk price. He said hi* association controls 102 distribution centers and serves ' a half million persons. Tho dis- * tributors retail milk at 6'* cents a quart. Dietz said his association j would continue distribution at that ! price. In his petition. Dietz said he will | contend that agricultural secretary Henry Wallace, signer of the nulk ! code, is attemptin gto extract property from citizens without due process of law. Doctors have been counting the pulse by watchrs ever since 1690