Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 71, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 August 1934 — Page 10

PAGE 10

ELSIE MERRICK RITES ARE SET FOR TOMORROW Church Worker Dies of Injuries Received in Auto Crash. Fun*™; unices for Mr*. El.*:** Mav Merrick 48. who died Tuesday un Frankfort of injuries received in an automobile accident, will be helcj m the hom'*. 120 Berkley road at *3 tomorrow. Burial will be m Crown Hill. Mrs. Merrick was injured Sunday night near Kirkland. She was an active member of the First Baptist church and a member of the Service class and the Martha Hawkins society. She was a former president of the Woman's Lions Club. Surviving her are the widower. Charles S Merrick; her mother. Mrs Jeanette Paulman and a brother, Frank Paulman, Roselle Park N. J. Mrs. Wilbur Taylor Dies The funeral of Mrs. Wilbur P Taylor. 80. who died yesterday at the home of her sister. Mrs. Lillie Welr-hans. Danville, will be held at 3 tomorrow in the McNcely & Son funeral home. The Rev. Riehard M. Millard pa -ter of Broadway M. E church, of which Mrs. Taylor was a member, will have charge of the services. Buriai will be in Glen Haven Memorial park Mrs. Taylor is survived bv her sister, and a daughter. Mrs Dwight S Rit er. with whom she had made her home since the death of her husband two years ago.

Lee A. Woods Dead Funeral arrangements have not been completed for Lee A. Woods, 6.1 of 1623 College avenue, w ho died yesterday in Methodist hospital, following an illness of six months. Mr. Woods was the representative of a number of paper manufacturers. He was a member of Pentalpha lodge and Raper commandery of the Knights Templar, and had been a member of the Central Avenue M. E. church thirty years. Surviving him are the widow, Mrs. E'.la F- Woods; four sons. Byron and Leland Woods. Indianapolis; Hugh Woods. Los Angeles, and Ralph Woods. Tucson; a sister. Mrs. Belle Barrett. Los Angeles, and a brother. William Woods, Indianapolis. Caroline Fernkas Rites Funeral services for Mrs. Caroline Fernkas. 6a. of 1766 Howard street, who died Tuesday at her home, will be held at 8 30 tomorrow in the home, and at 9 in Assumption church. Burial will be m St. Joseph remeterv. Through an error the time for the funeral services yesterday was announced for today. Mrs. Ellen Leary Dies Mrs. Ellen Leary. 78. of 2821 Ruckie street, died last night at St. Francis hospital, where she had been a patient two days. She had been ill six years. Funeral arrangements have not been completed. Mrs. Leary was a member of SS. Peter and Paul cathedral parish, and of the Altar society of the cathedral. Surviving are three sons. Charles P. Leary. Detroit; John J Leary. Birmingham. Mich., and Frank J. Leary. Indianapolis, and two daughters. Misses Norah and Marguerite Leary. Indianapolis. In the Air Weather conditions at 9 a. m. Southwest wind. 20 miles an hour; barometric pressure. 29 74 at sea level; temperature. 82; general conditions. clear; ceiling, unlimited: visibility. 12 miles.

XhuHi_ vfXV VmfrKi ■wHii(r<i tix.l uhinkry at a fair price, o*f gave 1 hem Crab (hrrhard, a atraight Kentneky ivouriton without artificial coloring. without artificial aging, bottled from the barrel. Real rpialttv at a low price ha* marie it the country'# favorite whiskey. C:nb Otehatd STRAIGHT KENTUCKY WHISKEY uiirt >o mi*>tttitb A pmdmrt of IHstiß+rt Hay Fever Ttt t>n d.wa> Tr PlaWe RtXEX Fraoc.-tp-V Fwl hettsr !B h hour A pfcr*irt*'a p- -r, Mmal us w.vn!*nt cap••ilcs. tati># —a aodseni for *ufTcr*ra firm Hajr F#v*r. Rw rwr. Hot Colds. r*r*rrh Asthma Safa. sot hstat-formin*. shwßEf slop itfMnf cys. ninr'nf r s* ror op: pop rstam*. BVosod ralWf within TANARUS% hours -so•-osfood or money back Hot $ rrrommonds RINFX Sold S' si: HA AO S CUT PRICE DRUG stores aai the price t.v

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Indiana in Brief

By Time* Special ANDERSON. Aug 2. —Joseph Dunham. 62. farmer, who served three years in the Indiana state prison for slaying a youth found with yimf companions m the Dunham orchard, is defendant in a divorce suit filed by Mrs. Olivia Dunham. Recently Dunham was acquitted of a charge of assault with intent to kill his wife. He is in jail pending tnal on a charge of assaulting a son. The Dunhams, parents of eight children, were married thirty-three years ago. In the divorce complaint. Mrs. Dunham alleges her husband struck her nd their children ar.d forced her to do a mans work on the farm, including wood cutting and field labor. Alvin Pine was shot fatally by Dunham, who said apples were being stolen from his orchard.

Church Leader Dies B'J 7 'met Specml FRANKFORT, Aug 2 —Mrs. Eva Lacy Thrasher, 78, wife of M. B Thrasher, Frankfort merchant, and a leader in church and literary circles of the city, is dead. Complications which developed following a fall at her home led u> Mrs. Thrasher's death. She had lived in Frankfort thirty-seven years, and for more than thirty-five years was a teacher in the Sunday school of the First Methodist church. She was a member of the National Society of Poets, W. C. T. U., Arts Club and the Fin de Siecle. man Child Beating Alleged tty Times Special SHELBY VILLE, Aug. 2—Perry Russell, charged with beating his 10-year-old daughter Lillian because she last a dog chain which cost a dime, faces the prospect of remaining in jail until Oct. 22. date of his trial in Shelby circuit court. He is

HUEY'S ARMY QUITS NEW ORLEANS FRONT Threatened War Dissolves Into Word Battle. tty I Hitrd Prise NEW ORLEANS. Aug. 2—Senator Huey P. Long began demobilizing his army today while a police force augmented by 500 citizen recruits stood by ready to do or die in preventing the Kingftsh from seizing by force partial control of the municipal government. What had promised to be a second battle of New Orleans as spectacular, if not as bloody, as Andrew Jackson's massacre of the British, was dissolving rapidly into sulphuric barrage of words. Mayor T. Semmes Walmsley, Huey’s arch political enemy. Issued violent statements describing what his police would do to the Kingflsh if his army ventured

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unable to provide bond and no one so far has offered to aid him. Taking the status of a pauper Russell will be defended by C. R. Henry, county attorney. The child is said to have been tied by her hands to an iron bar of such height that her feet barely touched the ground, and in that position was beaten with a tree branch. o n u Policeman Sued By 7 imm Special MUNCIE. Aug. 2.—Mrs. Leona Swank who charges her husband, Archie E. Swank, Muncie policeman, pushed her through a window when she encountered him and “the other woman’’ on a downtown street, has filed suit for divorce. mam Chosen Councilman tt<i Times Special CRAWFORDS VILLE, Aug. 2. Walter Curtis has been chosen by the city council as a member to fill the unexpired term of Robert A. Bonwell, who died recently. Mr. Curtis, an actuary for the Ben-Hur Life Association, is a Republican.

forth. Over the radio Huey called Walmsley a “turkey-head.” Three hundred of 600 national guardsmen mobilized at Jackson barracks forty-eight hours on orders of Governor O. K. Allen, the Kingfish's subordinate in the powerful Long political machine, were sent home. The others expected demobilization shortly. RECEIVED SALARY OF ABOUT $22,000 A YEAR Received 544.000 More for Expenses of Receptions. tty t nitrd Prise BERLIN. Aug. 2.—As president of the reich, Paul von Hindenburg received a salary of 60.000 marks 'approximately $22,000) a year. The kaiser, as king of Prussia alone, received $5,000,000 a year. Hindenburg cut 20 per cent of his salary in his own emergency decree reducing government salaries. He was alowed an additional 120.000 marks a year to cover expenses incurred in “representing the reich.” This included the cost of receptions and entertainment.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

RILEY HOSF'TAL • TO BUILD POOL FORJRIPPLED $40,000 Structure, Modeled After Warm Springs, Wins U. S. Aid. A $40,000 modem therapeutic pool will be added to the equipment of the James Whitcomb Riley hoslptal for crippled children. Plans have been filed with the federal emergency relief administration whereby the FERA will cooperate with the hospital and with Indiana university In financing the project. Plans being prepared by Robert

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Frost Daggett, architect, provide for a brick building conforming architecturally with other Riley units, to adjourn the south wing of the administration building. The pool will make possible the type of hydrotherapeutic treatments offered for infantile paralysis at the Warm Springs <Ga.t institution sponsored by President Roosevelt. Thirty-five feet long by eighteen wide, the projeted pool will allow for accommodation of at least fifteen patients at one time. Two auxiliary pools will allow for treatment. of very small children. Locker rooms, dressing rooms and showers will be provided and sterilization equipment will be thoroughly modern. Faces Poison Liquor Charge BLOOMINGTON. Ind., Aug. 2. Charged with selling poison liquor which caused the death of Noah Hodges, 57, Charles Canner today was free under bond. Hodges’ death was the first from poison liquor reported here since the repeal.

WOODRUFF CHURCH TO STAGE LAWN FESTIVAL Boy Scouts Aid in Fete Tomorrow at Triangle Park. Third annual lawn fete and feast of lanterns of the Woodruff United j Presbyterian church and Boy Scout j troop 44 will be held tomorrow afternoon and night in Triangle park. Brookside and Arsenal avenues, at Twelfth street. The committee in charge includes J. J. McEowen. the Rev. W. C. Ball and Walter Davidson. The

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program will feature special music, the Boy Scout band and games for children. ‘That’s Enough of This' By Vailed Press BERLIN. Aug. 2—One of the most popular newsreel “shots” of the president among German movie-goers was that showing him standing silent and frowning before the camera for several minuses before booming in his deep, sonorous voice: “That's about enougl jf this!”

.AUG. 2, 1934

STATE LIBRARY MURALS READY FOR INSPECTION Cost of Artist's Work. Is Jll.noo, Chairman Announces. Four murals designed and painted by John Scott Williams. New Yorx artist, for the state library, are ready for inspection by the ninemember state library commission, Herbert R. Kenney, commission chairman, announced today. The murals were designed at a cost of SII,OOO and will hang in three rooms of the library.