Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 40, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 June 1934 — Page 2
PAGE 2
J.E. MITCHELL RITES ARE SET FOR TOMORROW Legion Auditor Is Fatally Hurt When Struck by Truck. Last ntf”- for James Earl Mitchc’J, 3s. of 1114 North Bi er avenue, who wax killed yesterday when he was struck by a truck near Rushville, will be held at 10 a m. tomorrow at Shirley Brothers chapel. 946 Nor’h Illinois street. Burial will be in Memorial Park cemetery. Survivors are the widow, Mrs. Lottie Mitchell, a son. Bobb' Mitchell. 4; a brother, Clinton Mitchell, Indianapolis. and a half brother. Wilfred Mitchell of Harmony. N C Mr. Mitchell was auditor at the national headquarters of the American L/'cion. He was chancing a tire on his car when the accident occurred. Westerhouse Rites Set • j Funeral services for Mrs. Theresa j Westerhouse, 72. who died yesterday at her home, 609 West Thirty-sec-ond street, will be held at 9 a. m tomorrow in the Holy Angels Catholic church. Friends are asked to call at anv j time today or tonight at the J. J. Blackwell A- Sons funeral home, 926 North Capitol avenue. -Survivors are the widower. August E Westerhouse; a daughter, Mrs. Lottie Munro; two sons. George and Theodore Westerhouse; a sister. I Mrs. .lame-- Buckley, and a brother. Albert Fisher. Catharine Dillane Dies Burial rites for Miss Catharine T. Dillane. 21 of 394 North Bosart avenue. who ciicd yesterday in St. Vin- , cent s hospital, will be held Friday morning at Holy Cross cemetery. Services will be at 8:30 a. m. at the home and at 9 a. in at Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic church. Miss Dillane was an inspector tor L. S. Ayres Ac Cos. She is survived by the parents. Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Dillane; two sisters and a brother. Her father is a member of the In- , dianapoiis police department. Charles Collins Rites Set Funeral services for Charles Leo Collins. 45. who died at his home. 1123 North Hawthorne lane, yesterday will be held at the home at 2 tomorrow. Burial will be in Memorial park cemetery. Mr. Collins, a life-long resident of the city, had been ill several weeks. He operated a plumbing shop at # 129 North Sherman drive. Survivors are the widow. Mrs. Edna Toon Collins; a daughter. Miss Ruth R Collins; a sister, Mrs. George Herrick. Indianapolis, and a brother. Fred C. Collins. Ft. Wayne. Wright Burial Tomorrow George L. Wright, 63. retired member of the Indianapolis police depart moot, who died Sunday while driving , his car near Butler and j Burge-s avenues, will be buried to- ; morrow afternoon in Washington j Park cemetery. Funeral ceremonies will be held | at the home. 327 West Thirty-first street, at 4 tomorrow afternoon. The widow, Mrs. Ida E. Wright. survives. Mrs. Zona Agnew Rites Funeral rites for Mrs. Zona Tindall Agnew 69. who died Monday a? her home on BlufT road, were to be held this afternoon at the home of her daughter. Mrs. Elsie Kleifgen. 5929 Julian avenue. Burial will be in Louis Creek cemetery. Mrs. Agnew had been a resident of the county forty years. Five daughters and a son survive. EDITORS CHOSEN FOR BUTLER NEWSPAPER Four Indianapolis Students on College Weekly. • Editors and staff members for summer issues of The Butler University Collegian, student newspaper. Have been announced by Norman R Buchan, faculty adviser. ; George F Osthemier, Acton, has been appointed editor. He will be assisted by William Rohr and Miss Evelyn Wright. both of Indianapolis. Other staff members will be Misses Mary Paxton Young and Frances Haight. Indianapolis: Ruth Whalen. Lafayette; Elizabeth Randen. Greencastle, and Annis L. Moyars. Oxford. The paper is to be published each week during the summer term. Mr. 4uchan said. The first issue will be Friday. Printing wifi be done again t* the university press, publication tying managed by students.
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DIES IN CRASH
William G. Sherman
One of four persons returning from a gay drinking party in a suburban roadhouse early today. William George Sherman, 23. of 2133 South New Jersey street, was killed instantly when the auto in whieh he was riding figured in a head-ont collision with a trolley car on West Washington street near Blackford street. RABID DOG WHICH BIT TWO, CAPTURED Escaped Canine Returns to Owner’s Home. A rabid dog, w hich bit a boy' and a woman as it escaped from the Davis veterinary hospital, 402 North East street, yesterday, has been captured and returned to the hospital. The boy. Jack Mitchell. 12. of 427 Massachusetts avenue, was playing near his home when bitten. He was treated at city hospital. The woman attacked was Mrs. Ethel McHenry, 42. of 440 East Vermont street. * While police were searching for the dog it returned to the home of its owner at 2016 East Washington street. INFLATION DEFENDED IN NEW DULLES BOOK Library Business Branch Has New Financial Tomes. Inflation through the issuance of greenbacks actually may be less destructive than various forms of boirowing that the public now practices. it is maintained in 'The Dollar. the Franc and Inflation.” by Dulles, received today at the business branch library. Other books received at the library are "Modern Advertising Makes Money,” by Goode: "If Want to Get Ahead,” by Sherman; "Gold and Your Money,' by Atkins, and “You Must Relax: Practical Methods of Reducing the Strain of Living.” by Jacobson. KOKOMO PASTOR WILL OPEN LAKE SESSIONS Winona Activities to Include Midwest Chautauqua. Dr. Hurd Allvn Drake, pastor of the First Presbyterian church, Kokomo. officially will open the 1934 season of the Winona Lake institute at Winona Lake, fnd., Sunday. July 1. The Rev. Dr. Drake wilf preach at 10:45 and 6:30. Activities during the summer will include schools, conferences and the midwest Chautauqua which lasts ux weeks, July 1 to August 11; the world s greatest Bible conferences.” Aug. 12 to 26; the School of Sacred Music. Aug. 13 to 25. and other progra ms. REPORTER ENLIGHTENED ON HABITS OF CANINE Tells Police*of ‘Mad Dog'; Learns It Was •Sweating.’ "Oh. captain." panted a reporter o Captain Jesse McMurtr.v today, there s a ma ddog at Washington tnd Alabama streets.” ‘ How do you know he's mad?” "There's water dripping from his mouth.” Captain McMurtry laughed. Don't you know that dogs sweat through their mouths in hot weather?” The reporter meekly crawled back into the press room Chrysler Foresees Prosperity fi t I nit-A Pi r DETROIT June 27.—The next ten years Vill bring greater prosperitv than America has ever known. Walter P Chrysler predicted last night at the second annual commencement exercises of the Chrysler Intsitute of Engineering.
$69,000 ANNEX APPROVED FOR RIPPLE SCHOOL Work Will Be Completed for Second Semester, Board Says. Specifications for a $69,000 addition to Broad Ripple high school were approved last night by the j school board. Jhe plans provide for a structure making available fourteen additional classrooms. The present gymnasium will be remodeled into a J combination gymnasium and audii torium, and anew heating plant also is to be installed. A. B. Good, business director, was instructed by the board io advertise for bids as soon as possible, but it is not expected that the building will dp completed before the opening of j the second semester. It will adjoin | the present building and will harmonize with the exterior plan of ! the present building, Vonnegut, Bohn Ac Mueller are the architects. Promotion of Jesse McClure, formerly superintendent of janitors, to j assistant buildings and grounds super intendent. also was approved by the board. Mr. McClure will receive $2,500 a year, an increase of $540 over his former salary. The increase will be absorbed by economies in the department, it was stated. Pending final approval of the ! 1934-1935 budget, the board adopted a resolution providing for approi priations to cover expenses of all departments through July, August and | September. Although the school budget goes into effect July 1, it ;can not be approved finally until September, when property evalua- ! lions and tax board rulings have I been passed upon. A resolution giving the school for
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
RAILROAD VICTIM
-mm*" * m ■
James Michel Standing on the Belt railroad tracks at South East street, waiting for a train to pass, C. James Michel. 16, of 302 Lincoln street, was ground to death by another train last night.
crippled children the name of the James E. Roberts school was adopted. Mr. Roberts, former Indianapolis philanthropist, and his wife, Mrs. Henrietta West Roberts, largely were responsible for the origin of the crippled children school by their donation to the Indianapolis Foundation. CCC RECRUITS SOUGHT 50.000 to Be Enrolled From 22 States in Drought Area. K]t I- 'nitt and /’i ras WASHINGTON. June 27.—The Civilian Conservation Corps will enlist 50.000 men from twenty-two states in drought-stricken areas in a further effort to relieve suffering, director Robert Fechner announced today.
12 GET POLICE, FIRE JOBS IN CITYSHAKEUP Promotions, Demotions and Transfers Announced by Departments. Seven new policemen and five firemen were appointed by the safety board yesterday. The new policemen named were Thomas Allison, 1249 North Tremone avenue; John Foram, 909 South Missouri street; George W. Hughes. 1407 North Pennsylvania street; G. Dean Schwartz, 619 East Thirty-first street: Herman C. Feltman Jr.. 1624 South Talbot avenue; Robert E. Butler. 1862 South Keystone avenue, and Guy Luster, 1022 North West street. Ape. 2. Fire department appointees were William C. Sherer, 1343 ' Edgemont avenue; Patrick E. Fitzpatrick, 249 Harris avenue; John H. Vogel, 1547 North Oxford avenue; William F. McGlynn. 236 Eastern avenue, and Herman C. Adams, 1846 East Tenth street. The board also promoted and demoted several men in the police and fire departments. Sergeant William Rodocker was promoted to a lieutenantcy; patrolman Joseph Klaiber to a detective sergeantcy; patrolman Harry W. Canterbury to a sergeantcy. Patrolman Jnnhua Spearis was retired on pension as w r ere fire Lieutenants Davis B. Dillon and Joseph Heuer. Fire department promotions included private Frank Callahan and chauffeur Cecil Gresh to lieutenantcies; private Russell Younger to chauffeur; private Stewart Spangler to chauffeur, and chauffeur Curtis Nicholson to private. Chief Voshell also recommended
DILLINGER MUST BE CAPTURED BY JULY 1 OR LEACH LOSES BET
John Dilhnger, the Hoosier bad bov, will have to be ir. "durance vile” by July 1, or Captain Matt Leach of the state police, will have to pay off. The captain is not a gambling man. but he is not too prudish to make a friendly wager. Some time ago. the captain hazarded the conjecture that Dillinger would be captured by July 1. Statehouse newspaper men scoffed. "All right. I'll bet you,” snorted the captain. 'Twas done. Four more days and the captain stands to lost 40 cents, or the equivalent in drinks. He said today he still is confident. the rduction of chauffeur Oliver J. Robbins and preferred charges of intoxication and conduct unbecoming an officer against him. The board set trial for July 17.
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PREMIER WILL TAKE STAND IN SEDUCTION CASE Pretty Stenographer Clings to Story of Official’s Love Making. R;j I'nited Frfaa EDMONTON. Alberta. June 27. — Prime Minister John E. Browniee was to become a witness in his own defense today in an effort to refute the charge of Vivian MacMillan. 22-year-old government stenographer, that he seduced her in his own home. The veteran legislator's attorney
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.JUNE 27, IS3I
made strenuous but unsuccessful efforts to break down the girl's store in cross-examination yestrrdav. She clung to the details of ! her story, and even assisted her interrocatnr by providing date* I while he was fumbling through his notes. Miss MacMillan told detail by ri*I tail of the 50-year-old Brownlee s I love-making over a period of three j years. So great was local interest I in the case that the courthouse was surrounded by a large crowd when court convened Miss MacMillan occasionally lowered her head in embarrassment, but for the most part answered questions about her alleged intimacy with Alberta Province's governmental head with the utmost calm. House Burglars Steal 5.75 Thieves yesterday ransacked '. home of Mrs. Frank Kurtz, 2419 Broadway, and stole $35 hidden ir. i bed. Entrance was obtained 'ey ‘prying a screen from the window.
