Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 178, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 December 1933 — Page 20
PAGE 20
LAST RITES FOR DESCENDANT OF EARLY FAMILY Marion County Native Laid to Rest in Crown Hill Cemetery. Last rites for Omer Rodibaugh. 84, of 822 Eugene street, retired grocer, who died in his home Sunday, were held in the Ragsdale & Price funeral home this morning at 9:30. Burial was in Crown Hill cemetery. A native of Marion county, he was born near New Augusta, the son of one of the pioneer families that came to Indiana from Ohio. Mr. Rodibaugh retired twenty years ago. He was a member of the old Hall Place M E. church, the Odd Fellows and the Knights of Pythias. Miss Ida B. Hoyle, Indianapolis, a niece, survives. Murphy Rites Tomorrow Last rites for James A. Murphy, 73, retired Monon railroad engineer, who died yesterday in the home of his brother, John F. Murphy. 2703 Guilford avenue, will be held in St. Joseph's church tomorrow morning at 9. Burial will be in Holy Cross cemetery. Mr. Murphy had been with the railroad almost fifty years. He was a member of St. Joseph's church. Survivors are the brother and two sisters, Mrs. R. E. Doherty and Mrs. James Healion, both of Michigan City. German Native Dies Mrs. Christina Goettsche, 68 of 3561 West Michigan street, a native of Wurttemberg, Germany, died Sunday in her home after a brief illness. She came to Indianapolis when she was 18 years old and had lived here since. Mrs. Goettsche was the second oldest member of St. Paul's Reformed church. She was the widow of Frederick Goettsche, who died fourteen years ago. Funeral services will be held in the home tomorrow afternoon at 2. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. Survivors are a daughter. Miss Freda Goettsche; two sons, Theodore and Edward Goettsche. all of Indianapolis; a sister, Mrs. F. Lang, Buffalo. N. Y., and a niece, Mrs. John Marren. Indianapolis. Minister’s Widow Is Dead The widow of the Rev. William T. McGowan, Mrs. Sarah* McGowan, 212 Emerson avenue, died Sunday in the Methodist hospital. She was born in Ripley county and had been a resident of Indianapolis thirty years. Mrs. McGowan w r as a member of the Downey Avenue Christian church. Survivors are a daughter, Mrs. Daisy M. Turner. Indianapolis, and two brothers. William Curran and Albert Curran, both living near Versailles. Funeral services will be held in the home tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 with the Rev. Elvin Daniels, Seymour, conducting the rites. Miss Caroline Johnson, Plainfield, will sing. Burial will be in Memorial Park cemetery. McConnell Funeral Set Last rites for Mrs. Grace McConnell, .39. of 1827 Hoyt avenue, who died Sunday night, following an automobile accident, will be held at the home tomorrow afternoon at 2. Mrs. McConnell s son Robert, 15. also was injured when the car in which they were riding was struck by an Indianapolis Railways bus at Michigan and Delaware streets. L. C. McConnell, the husband, who was driving the car, was uninjured. Mrs. McConnell was born in Indianapolis and had lived in several other Indiana towns, returning here about a year ago. Survivors are the husband and son; her mother. Mrs.
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John F. Lombard; four brothers and four sisters, all of Indianapolis. Veteran Nurse Dies Miss Louisa Gehrke, 69, a nurse at the home of Mrs. Ward Hackleman, 1314 West Thirty-sixth street, died at her employer's residence Sunday. She had been in service there thirty-seven years. Miss Gehrke came to Indianapolis from Germany when she was 14 years old. She was a member of the Trinity Evangelical Lutheran church. Survivors are a sister, Mrs. Mary Zoller, Indianapolis, and two halfbrothers, Charles Radke, Indianapolis, and Herman Radke, Chicago. Last rites were held at the J. C. Wilson funeral parlor. 1230 Prospect street, this afternoon at 2:30. Burial was to be in Concordia cemetery.
STANDING POLICEMEN ON CARS IS OLD RULE Recent Order Merely Was Reminder of laxity in Obedience. The ruling, recently enforced by I Chief Michael F. Morrissey, that policemen must rise and give their seats in street cars and buses to paying customers, is not anew one. It anti-dates the invention of the automobile by several years, and was proclaimed anew simply because 1 some of the “boys” seemed to be i forgetting their manners. Police, firemen, and Employes of the Indianapolis Railways must be more alert for the paying passengers' comfort. Postmen, however, appear to have a lien on seats in street cars and buses. The mail | carrier, according to Adolph Seiden- ! sticker, postmaster, has his fare paid j by the government and is entitled ' to a seat.
CIVIC LEAGUE FORMS ON ROCKVILLE ROAD New Organization Aims at Better Conditions. Anew civic organization, to be known as the Rockville Civic League, was formed at a meeting of residents on the Rockville road west of the city limits last night in Garden school No. 8. The Rev. C. E. Oldham was elected president of the new organization, which plans a concerted fight for better roads, streets, health conditions, telephone and electric service. Other officers named were L. A. Boughton, first vice-president; Fred Vawter, second vice-president. George Zigler, secretary, and Harry Dix, treasurer. Second-Hand Store Robbed Burglars, who broke into the second-hand store operated by Elija Wells, Negro, at 1330 North Senate avenue, last night, strewed clothing on the sidewalk for some distance, police were notified. Extent of the loss was not reported. Railroad Y’ardmaster Robbed Two Negro hobos robbed Albert G. Welke, 59. Illinois Central railroad yardmaster. of a $35 watch and 75 cents, last night as he walked through the railroad yards.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
BIRTH CONTROL ADVOCATED AS WOMAN'S RIGHT Dr. Charles P. Emerson Is Heard at State Mental Hygiene Session. Woman should have the right and ability to determine how many children she should have and when she shall have them, Dr. Charles P. Emerson, Indianapolis, National Committe for Mental Hygiene, president, declared in an address yesterday before the eighteenth annual meeting or the Indiana Society for Mental Hygiene at the Clay pool. Dr, Emerson, discussing “The Mental Hygienist’s Attitude Toward Birt,h Control,” spoke of problems in which the state enforces birth control to reduce propagation of the unfit. “Birth control clinics for benefit of the normal minded are springing up over the country like mushrooms,” he said. We believe thoroughly in these clinics. Out of Medical Realm “They are not strictly medical. The participation of doctors in them is quite unnecessary. They have the advantage of encouraging doctors to talk more freely to patients, a thing which in the past they did only when physical condition of the wife made such measure desirable. “Apart from medical problems involved, such clinics should not be under medical auspices and the movement should be a part of social welfare,” he asserted. Other addresses included that of Dr. Louis A. Lurie, medical director of the child guidance home, Cin-i cinnati, who pointed out that society must concern itself more with the crime itself. Assails Prisons Dr. Lurie classified most of our prisons and penitentiaries as “a blot on civilization,” charging that it is as useless to try to drive crime out of the soul of man as it was to try |to drive demons from the body of > a bewitched person by physical pun- | ishment. Professor M. L. Entorf, Hanover college, stressed the necessity of changes in college courses to provide for “personality development.” Other speakers were W. D. Hennessy Jr., Columbus high school; Dr. Olga Hoffman, Madison; Dr. L. P. Harshman, assistant schools superintendent. Ft. Wayne; Dr. Spafford Ackerly, Louisville univer- ! sity; Mrs. Ruth Heavenridge, Indi- { anapolis; Edward E. Dißella, mem- | ber of Governor McNutt’s commisj sion on unemployment relief, and | Paul H. Moore, Central Housing ! Foundation.
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VARECHA FACES 100-YEAR TERM IN PENITENTIARY Young Killer Pleads Guilty to Murder Charge in Chicago. By Vnited Preaa CHICAGO. Dec. s.—James ilggyt Varecha. 18-year-old killer, attacker of girls and robber, today faced a 100-year term in the state penitentiary for the murder of Frank F. Jordan during a holdup. Varecha pleaded guilty to the murder charge yesterday at his second trial for the killing. In December, 1932, he was sentenced to death for the killing, but was granted anew trial by the state supreme court. Varecha also pleaded guilty and was sentenced for one year to life on a robbery charge and for one to fourteen years on a charge of assault with intent to murder. The sentences were to run consecutively. Theoretically, under she Illinois laws, Varecha could be released after thirty-six years of his prison
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DEC. 5, 1933
Butler Professor Speaker Dr. Walter Slifer. professor of history at Butler university, will address a gathering at the home of Thomas May. 316 Layman avenue tonight. His subject will be “Thiyr , Political Forum.”
