Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 33, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 June 1934 — Page 2
PAGE 2
RETIRED CITY MINISTER DIES AT HOME HERE The Rev. Horatio Ogden, 90, Passes After Brief illness. The Rev. Horatio N. Ogden, 90, of 2108 North Alabama street, retired minister of .the Methodist Episcopal church, died at his home after a brief illness yesterday. Mr. Ogden became pastor of the St. Paul M. E. church here in 1897, after serving from 1891 to 1896 as superintendent of the South Bend district of the North Central M. E. conference. He was retired in 1912. ■ Surviving him are the widow. Mrs. Julia Ogden, and a brother, George Ogden, Ottawa, Kan. Funeral services will be held at 2 tomorrow in the Flanner & Buchanan mortuary. Services will be conducted by Dr. Abram Woodard, Meridian Street M. E. church pastor. Burial will be in Crown Hill. - College Professor Dead Word of the death yesterday of Dr. Ervin F. Meyer, history professor at the University of Colorado, Boulder, Colo., was received here by his father-in-law, p. C. Reilly, 3134 -North Meridian street, of the Republic Creosoting Company, who left for Boulder last night. Dr. Meyer was married to Miss Ineva Reilly at the residence here Dec. 21, 1931, and the couple went to Colorado to live. Dr. Meyer was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Max H. Meyer, St. Louis. A brother, Albert Meyer, Evanston, 111., also survives him. Funeral services will be held at Boulder tomorrow. Aged Woman’s Rites Set Last rites for Mrs. Malinda E. Eytchison, 85. of 2442 North Olney street, who died at her home yesterday, will be held at 10 Thursday morning in the home. Burial will be in Memorial Park cemetery. Mrs. Eytchison had been a resident of Indianapolis thirty years, | coming here from Frankton. She was a member of the Calvary Baptist church. She and her husband. Robert D. Eytchison, celebrated their sixtieth wedding anniversary four ; years ago. Surviving her are the widower and six children, Edward Eytchison, | West Carmel; Mrs. Gertrude Fry, I Augusta, Kan.; Mrs. Myrtle Agnew, 1 Steubenville, 0., and Mrs. Nellie White, Glenn Eytchison and Her- I man Eytchison, all of Indianapolis. 1 Maxson Funeral Today Funeral services for William O. Maxson, 58. of 2409 East Tenth street, who died of heart disease at 'his home, Saturday, were to be held at 2 this afternoon in the Royster & Askin mortuary. Burial was to be in Memorial Park cemetery. Lifelong Resident Passes Miss Lydia Kellermeier, 41, of 937 East Tabor street, a lifelong resident of Indianapolis, died yesterday ip Methodist hospital after a two weeks’ illness. Funeral services will be held at 2 .tomorrow in the residence. Burial will be in Concordia cemetery. Miss Kellermeier was a member of St. Paul’s Evangelical Lutheran church and Was educated in the school of that church. She is survived by two sisters, Miss Bertha Kellermeier and Mrs. Henry Masters, both of Indianapolis," and a brother, Walter Kellermeier, Seymour. City Man’s Mother Dead i Mrs. Margaret Herman. 84, mother of Edward James Herman. Indianapolis advertising representative, died Sunday at her home in Grand Rapids, Mich. MINNESOTA U. MAKES R. 0. T. C. OPTIONAL Conscientious Objectors to Be Excused From Military Class. By United Prog MINNEAPOLIS, June 19.—For the first time in sixty-five years the reserve officers’ training corps bugies at the University of Minnesota will summon only the willing, the board of regents has decided by a 6 to 5 vote. Conscientious objectors, who have suffered suspension, expulsion and other penalities, plus Governor Floyd B. Olson's stand against compulsory military drill, were credited with effecting the board’s decision yesterday to make such drill optional.
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KILLED IN CRASH
&g|BSr •**■*-' ll ; jjfjp Mrs. Scott A. Pennington Funeral services for Mrs. Scott A. Pennington, 51, of 117 West Twenty-first street, who was injured fatally Friday night in an auto accident at the Kentucky avenue elevation, will be at 10 Wednesday at her home. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. Six-weeks-old William Aaron Stevenson, Mrs. Pennington’s great-nephew, still is fighting for life at city hospital with a skull fracture received in the same accident.
HOKE DEPLORES AID FUNDLAXITY Tells Builders State Lost $30,000,000 for Building Purposes. Failure to obtain $30,000,000 to $35,000,000 in Indiana for public works is due to city officials’ refusals to carry out their obligations. This was the charge made last night by Fred Hoke, Indiana director of the National Emergency Council, at a meeting of the Indianapolis Construction League in the Architects and Builders building. In many cases, he asserted, local officials in the state have failed to provide guarantees in the repayment of federal funds. In other cases, the federal government has refused bonds because of the $1.50 tax rate limit. Mr. Hoke said he was working on release of these millions in funds in order to provide employment in the state. E. D. Pierre was elected league president. Other officers are Charles Lutz, J. R. Fenstermaker, Carl Guepel and Otto Mueller, vice-presi-dents; J. Frank Cantwell, secretary, and Thomas Kaylor, treasurer. FORMER CITY WELFARE WORKER SUCCUMBS Miss Edith Bain Dies in Hospital at Louisville. Miss Edith Bain, former associate secretary of the Indianapolis Council of Social Agencies, died yesterday in Norton hospital, Louisville. Ky., according to word received here. Miss Bain founded the Volunteers’ council of the council and founded the central registration bureau. She was a graduate of the New York school of social work and Wellesley college. Miss Bain taught social case work at the Indianapolis extension division of Indiana university. INDIAN FACES TRIAL ON ASSAULT CHARGE Arizona Redskin Indirted on Complaint of White Secretary. By United Press BIRMINGHAM, Ala., June 18. Judge H. P. Heflin today threw open courtroom doors to allow spectators to witness the trial of Chief Running Elk, Arizona Indian, on charges of assaulting a young white woman. The state had moved to exclude the public because of nature of testimony. Defense insisted upon the open hearing. Jet black hair reaching down to his shoulders. Running Elk sat immobile during jury selection. He was indicted upon complaint of his attractive secretary. Child Hurt in Fall Helen Louise Nichols, 5, of 917 Division street, suffered a dislocated shoulder last night when she fell while playing in front of her home.
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THE INDIANAHOLIS TIMES
JUNE 19, 1934
