Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 97, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 September 1933 — Page 5
MRS. HAYNES, WIDOW OF AUTO INVENTOR, DIES Paralysis Is Fatal: Wife of State Publisher Succumbs. flu r nitffi Press KOKOMO. Ind., Sop’ 1 Mrs. Bertha B Havnr-s. 75. widow of the man generally credited with inventing the automobile, died Friday night of paralysis. Her husband. Elwood Haynes, built a horseless carnage in 1393 which now is in the Smithsonian institution museum. In addition to being regarded as the inventor of the automobile, he developed chromium steel and encaged in chemical and other metallurgical reserch. Mrs Haynes was born in Paulina. N J.. in 1858. Sne is survived by son. March Haynes; a daughter. Mrs. Glen R. Willis; a brother, Harry Lanterman. and five grandchildren, all of Kokomo. fl.r VnUft l Press WASHINGTON. Ind.. Sept 1 Mrs. Henry Barkes. whose husband is one of the publishers of the Washington Democrat, died late Friday after a lingering illness. Other survivors incude two sons. John and Richard, and one daughter. Mrs. E G Brouillette, Washington; one stepsister, Mrs. Ida Patch. Washington; Curtis Johnson, a stepbrother. Indianapolis, and her mother. Mary Ellen Johnson, Indianapolis. Shane Funeral Today Funeral services for Isadore Shane, 34. of 2058 >2 Ruckle stret, insurance salesman, will be held at 2 today from the home of his father. David Shane. 3626 Salem avenue Burial will be in Ohev Vedeck cemetery. Mr. Shane died suddenly Thursday in the offices of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, 157 North Illinois street, of heart disease. He was planning a trip to A Century of Progress and was discussing his plans with fellow workers of the company when he was stricken. Survivors, besides the father, include the widow. Mrs. Sophia Shane, and four brothers. Max. Leo. Albert and Sydney Shane, all of Indianapolis. Dies After Operation Following an operation. David Moffatt Kautz. 21, of 4059 North Pennsylvania street, son of Mr. and Mrs. F. R Kautz. of that address, died Thusrday in the Methodist hospital. Survivors, besides the parents, are a brother. John R. Kautz, and a sister. Miss Katherine Kautz. Funeral services will be held a 4 Saturday in his home Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. I,ast Rites Saturday Last rites for Mrs. Rosie Pearl Smith. 38. of 861 Bradshaw street, will be held at 2 Saturday in St. Mark's English Lutheran church. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. Mrs. Smith died Wednesday at her home. Survivors are two daughters. Leona Mae Smith and Inez Louise Smith; her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Hayworth, and four sisters. Mrs. Lucille Hawkins, Mrs. Ruby Taylor. Mrs Ruth Oliver and Miss Lena Hayworth, all of Indi. anapolis. Funeral Is Set Orane Postlewait, 58. a native of France, and resident of Indianapolis twenty-two years, died Thursday at his home. 1022 Sterling street, of a cerebral hemorrhage. Funeral services will be held at 3:30 Saturday at the residence. Burial will be in Memorial Park cemetery. Survivors are the widow, Mrs. Orane Postlewait. and a son. Orane Postlewait Jr. Fall Is Fatal A fracture of the skull, suffered Wednesday, when he fell from a stairway landing between the second and third floors of the Craig hotel. 328 East Washington street, where he lived, caused the death of Herman Johnson, 35. at city hospital Thursday. The body has been removed to the F. John Herriman funeral home, 701 North New Jersey street, but funeral arrangements have not been made. Mr. Johnson was a waiter at Blacker’s cluli parlor on Massachusetts avenue. He is survived by his father and a brother. OFFICERS SENT TO KNOX Four Indianapolis Residents Will Spend Two Weeks at Fort. Active duty at Fort Knox. Ky.. for a period of two weeks, beginning Sunday, has been ordered for four Indianapolis reserve officers. The officers are Major John O Thistle. 3338 Central avenue; First Lieutenant William E Stubbs. Barton hotel; Second Lieutenant Frederick T. Hill. 3742 Kenwood avenue, and Second Lieutenant Charles O. Ober. 2043 Bellefontaine street. Colonel Thomas L. Sherburne, chief of staff of the Indiana military area, who commanded the first reserve officers camp a? Fort Knox, has returned to Indianapolis.
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Loral Delegates to Attend Parley in Kansas City. Local organization of the National Federation of Postal Employes will be represented at the national convention, to open Monday in Kansas City, Mo., by Mrs. Agnes K. Eddleman and George G. Fortner, the latter local president. MARRIAGES ON INCREASE HERE August License Total Far Exceeds Those of Last Two Years. Reaching within seven of the traditional high month of the year, marriage licenses issued in Marion county during August totaled 349, according to County Clerk Glenn R. Ralston. In June, this year. 356 couples affirmed their belief that “two can live as cheaply as one.’’ The August figures are considerably greater than the total of the same months in the last two years. August. 1931. recorded 298, and August. 1932. 283. The nine months total of 1.995 is well ahead of the same period last year, and there appears litue doubt that 1933 will exceed the 1932 total of 2.932. The increase is ascribed by Rais- ' ton to the belief of jobs, higher j wages and return of prosperity, ex-! pressed by the couples who appear shyly at the marriage license counter. AUTO PARTS THEFT CHARGED TO TRIO A Suspects Held Under High Bond for Investigation. While investigating a report of a car being stripped, police Thursday night arrested three men, finding a quantity of automobile parts, they said. The men were arrested on charges of vagrancy and are held under high bond for investigation, while the automobile and parts were impounded. Curtis Toliver. 21, of 638 Locke rtreet; Frank John. 28. of 931 Lynn street, and John Thomas Toliver, 24, of 305 Cora street, are under arrest. Two men. one of whom had thirteen assorted automobile keys in his possession, were arrested on vagrancy charges downtown and are being held for investigation. Lawrence Dacey, 19. of 222 East Wabash street, who police say was paroled from Ohio penitentiary for automobile theft recently, and Richard Mescall, 21. of 928 Daly street, are held. Mescall had the keys, police said. A truck belonging to Joseph Risley, stolen last Wednesday, was recovered at Fourteenth street and Gladstone avenue, but two kegs and two cases of beer, taken with the truck, had been stolen.
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WIFE FIRM IN BELIEF MATE IS GUILTLESS Husband ‘Chicken-Heart-ed.’ Questioner Is Told: Could Not Be Criminal. (Continued From Page One) he nearly fainted at the sight of blood. The Peck children. Gloria. 9. and Mabel, 7, still were in bed when the reporter called this morning, but soon arose. They were sent back to bed as the reporter started the ordeal of telling Mrs. Peck of the trouble the husband and father faces. Children Grief Stricken But the children overheard and, ' as their mother sobbed, they were heard crying in a bedroom. Asked what had been said when detectives called at the home Thursi day, Mrs. Peck stated they told her ! Peck was wanted as a witness in an ! “accident case.’’ Mrs. Peck, a frail brunette, who suffered a nervous breakdown two | years ago and still is under care of a doctor, declared she would go to her husband as soon as she has more definite information regarding the case. The children will go with , her. The separation, she explained, was due mostly to financial troubles, and she declared her love for Peck is strong as ever. Shortly the children were playing on the floor with comic page cut- | outs, but their grief had not passed. Worries Over Daddy “They won't hurt my daddy?’’ Mabel inquired as she looked up : from her play. Her question followed a cry from her mother: “I hope thay won’t let the mob get him, for I know he is innocent i and could not have committed this horrible crime.” Mrs. Peck said she first met Peck in Danville, 111., where he managed a theater, and she was in a song ancL : dance vaudeville act with a sister, i Evelyn Doyle. They were married in Danville, i moving later to Crawfordsville, | where they lived a year. They came | here from Crawfordsville and had I lived in the city three years. Jobless for Months ! For a time they operated a deli- | catessen at 547 East Forty-second i street, selling their interest to an j aunt of Mrs. Peck. Peck has been jobless for several months, his wife said, and had j traveled about in his automobile, ostensibly in search of employment. Arrest of Peck and his alleged accomplices, Henry Shelby, Tilton, 111., | and John Allen. Danville, 111., fol- ! lowed tracing of the license plate on his car, and an address in DanI ville given detectives by Mrs. Peck. TWO KILLED IN CRASH Four Others Injured in Collision at Calumet City. | By United Press j GARY, Ind., Sept. I. —Drivers of j two automobiles which collided in Calumet City, 111., Friday night were killed and four passengers were irr- | jured seriously. The dead: Ernest Persons, 50, | Maywood, 111., and Turner Eadus. 65, \ Valparaiso. Injured were Mrs. Dorothy Eadus, j 53; Joseph Herring, 45, and his wife, j 42, of Kouts, and an unidentified girl, about 3 years old. All were j taken to St. Margret's hospital at j Hammond. The accident occurrerd at an in- . tersection. The Indiana people were j believed en route to the woi-ld's fair, i
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