Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 155, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 November 1934 — Page 3

NOV. 8. 1934.

FUNERAL TO BE HELD TOMORROW FOR E. L. CLINE

Prominent Phone Company Executive to Be Buried in Crown Hill. Funeral services for E L Cline V La Pone former manager of the Indianapolis Telephone Cos . absorbed by the Indiana Bell Telephone Company in 1920. will be hel dat the Flanner Ac Buchanan funeral home at 10 tomorrow with burial in Crown Hill Mr Cline died yesterday in St. Vincent s hospital. Mr Cline had operated telephone companies in various parts of the United States. Surviving him are the widow Mrs. Julia Shearer Green Cline and four children. Helen Cline McFadden, Newark. O.; John E.. and Clarence R. Cline. Seymour, and Clarence W Cline, Indianapolis. . Martha Rudy Dies Miss Martha Ann Rudy. 21. daughter of Mr and Mr.'. O. H. Rudy. 136 East Forty-fourth street, died yesterday while visiting her grandmother. Mrs Anna Bellinger. Lafayette. She apparently had been in good health up until the time of her death Funeral services will be conducted by George Southworth, Advent Episcopal church pastor, tomorrow morning at the home of Mrs. Bellinger. Burial will be in Hagerstown. Miss Rudy was graduated from Tudor Hall and attended Wilson college. Chambersberg, Va.. and Purdue university. Surviving are her parents and grandmother. Chauncey Blackburn Rites Funeral services for Chauncey M. Blackburn. 35. Marott. general manager of the International Metal Polish Company, who died yesterday in Methodist hospital, after an eight months' illness, were held last night in the Flanner Ac Buchanan funeral home. The body was taken to Bloomingdale. O- for burial. Mr. Blackburn came to Indianapolis in 1922 to join the staff of the International Metal Polish Company office, later becoming general manager. He was a member of the Tabernacle Presbyterian church, and was to have been married this fall to Miss Mary- Louise Blauvelt, 915 North Hamilton avenue. Surviving are the parents, one sister. Miss Mary Florence Blackburn. Bloomingdale. and a brother. Curtis Blackburn. Indianapolis. Wallace Cather Dead Funal services for Wallace E. Cather. 62. Ralph E. Jones Company president. battery manufacturers, who died yesterday in his home. 3001 Nowland avenue, will be held there at 2 tomorrow. with the Rev. William H Kendall. Memorial Presbyterian church pastor, officiating. Burial will be in Crown Hill. Surviving are three daughters. Mr Ralph E. Jones. Mrs. J. Edward Jones and Miss Mildred Cather, all of Indianapolis. Edwin White Is Dead The funeral of Edwin F. White. 64. of 2035 North Meridian street, an Indianapolis News mailing room employe for gfty years, will be held at 3 Saturday in the Flanner Ac Buhcanan funeral home, with burial in Crown Hill. Mr. White died yesterday in St. Vincent's hospital. Mr. White. a lifelong resident of Indianaoplis. was a member of Mystic Tie Lodge. 470. Free and Accepted Masons, the Scottish Rite and the Shnne. Surviving are the widow, five children. Russell L. W r hite. Edwin G. White and Mrs. Thomas E. Jordan, all of Indianaoplis; Mrs. Fred Bakemeyer. Dayton, and Mrs. William Clifford. Lapel; a brother. Dr. A. E. White, also of Indianapolis, and two sisters. Mrs. Frances Bernard. Novato. Cal., and Mrs. Henry Smith, Boulder, Colo. Paul Shuey Funeral Funeral services for Paul Shuey. 17. of 925 Carrollton avenue, who died at city hospital Tuesday from injuries sustained when he was struck by an automobile near Glenns Valley, will be held at 12:30 tomorrow at the residence. Burial will be in Edinburg. Surviving are the parents. Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Sheuv. Otto Noffke Dies Otto Noffke. 59. of 1230 North Temple avenue .an Indiana National bank clerk, died today at the Methodist hospital after an illness of several weeks. Surviving are his widow. Mrs. Clara A. Rasbach Noffke. and six children. Fred Noffke. 25 South Brookville road. Oswald Noffke. 2311 Shelby avenue, and Otto Jr.. Walter. Russell and Clara Noffke. all of whom live at the Temple avenue residence. Funeral arrangements have not been completed. Anna Stedtfeld Burial Funeral services for Mrs. Anna H Stedtfeld. 76. a lifelong resident of Indianapolis, who died yesterday at her home, 52 West Twentyfourth street, will be held at 1:30 Saturday at the Flanner Ac Buchanan funeral home. Burial will be Crown Hill. Mrs Stedtfeld was the widow of Henry Stedtfeld. She was a member of the Third Church of Christ.

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Senate Vote by Counties

Votes by Counties for United States Senator 1932 Gain or Loss COUNTIES— Minton Rob son Van Nuys Watson Dem. Rep. Adams 4 846 3.152 5514 2576 —1.068 276 Allen 28 014 23.677 39.114 26.279 —ll,lOO —2.602 Bartholomew . 6.904 6.353 7,536 5.908 —1.432 445 Benton 2560 3575 3,446 2597 —486 —B7B Blackford 3549 3.066 4.082 2,850 —533 216 Boone 6.087 5.703 7,011 5.259 —924 450 Brown 1.538 1 526 1,663 763 —125 563 Carroll 4.355 4555 4 894 3,766 —539 789 Cass 9 097 3.873 11522 7,610 —1.225 1.268 Clark 9.023 6,362 9.410 5.806 387 —I,OOO Clay 7512 6,777 8,512 _ 6,112 —556 665 Clinton ....... 7,756 7,427 8,113 5533 —686 2,194 Crawford 2,749 2.639 3,241 2,122 —492 —517 Daviess 5,858 6,958 6,786 5,767 —928 Dearborn 5,010 4,486 6,378 4,646 —1.368 —l6O Decatur 4,477 5.318 5.447 4,565 —970 753 Dekalb 6 506 5,837 7 506 5,486 —BOO —351 Delaware 13.091 12.621 14,475 15578 —1.384 —2,937 Dubois 6562 3,345 7,390 2.345 —1,128 1,000 Elkhart 11,428 13,708 15510 13,156 —3,782 552 Fayette 4.908 4.835 5,268 4,722 Fountain 4,876 4,953 5,573 4,065 Franklin 3,726 3,138 4.646 2,617 —920 521 Fulton 3.981 4,749 4,777 3,707 Gibson 3102 7,515 9,003 6,137 Grant 11,404 10.766 13,618 11,081 Greene 8,777 8,016 8,790 6,260 Hamilton .... 5.058 7,000 6,093 6,915 Hancock 5.524 4555 5,849 3,964 Harrison 5,046 4 549 5,089 3,507 Hendricks .... 4,711 5,871 5,401 5,229 —690 642 Henry 8,365 9,231 8,321 856a Howard 10,488 8,811 10,753 8,997 Huntington .. 7.295 7,195 8,809 6,601 Jackson 6,676 5,012 7,871 3,850 Jasper 2,840 3,076 3,561 2,946 —721 760 Jay 5,978 5,688 6,753 4,944 Jefferson 4,744 5,592 5,250 4,608 Jennings 3,114 3,799 3,513 2,813 Johnson .....* 5.946 4,657 6,938 4,417 Knox 11,925 9 505 13,963 6,651 Kosciusko .... 5,882 7,698 7,493 6,918 —1,611 783 Lagrange 2,548 2,975 3.258 2,324 Lake 45,570 38.086 46,520 41,720 LaPorte 13.830 11,095 15,111 10,421 Lawrence .... 6.991 9,301 8,128 8,265 Madison 21,360 17,851 22.128 18,499 Marion 92.351 76,760 95,067 Marshall 6.012 5.988 7,210 4,861 Martin 2.649 2,917 3,050 2,081 —4Ol 836 Miami 6.377 5.733 9,000 5,812 2,623 —29 Monroe 7,303 7,964 8,614 7,540 Montgomery .. 7.441 7,805 8,251 6,323 Morgan 5.424 5,627 5,779 4,749 Newton 2.322 2.926 2,653 2,391 —331 535 Noble 5.233 5,810 6,527 5,205 —1,294 605 Ohio 1,179 1.050 ' 1,261 993 —B2 57 Orange 4,160 5,154 4.801 4,495 —641 659 Owen 3.251 3,215 3.640 2,366 Parke 4.366 4.674 4,689 3,831 Perry 4,451 3.760 5,024 3,199 Pike 4.304 4,337 4,531 3,127 Porter 5.120 5,817 5,565 5,397 Posey 4.956 3.332 5,552 2,843 Pulaski 2,735 2,856 3.234 2,174 Putnam 5.727 5.043 6.203 4,309 Randolph .... 5.239 6,851 6,269 6,364 Ripley 5,272 5,042 5,946 4,180 Rush 4,659 5.552 5.087 5,031 St. Joseph .... 29.411 28,280 38,332 27,894 Scott 2,091 1,927 2,230 1,686 Shelby 10,167 6,113 8,620 5,275 Spencer • 4,531 4.264 5,399 4,064 —B6B 200 Starke 2.833 2,681 3,348 2,362 Steuben 3.050 4.068 3,697 3,532 —647 536 Sullivan 7.826 4,426 7,805 3,613 Switzerland .. 742 641 2,952 1,935 Tippecanoe ... 10.647 12,810 13,881 11,595 Upton 4.578 3,958 4,914 3,575 Union 1.388 1.782 1.612 1,616 —224 66 Vanderburgh . 29.660 21,333 32,912 16,670 Vermillion .... 5.909 4,752 6,289 4,046 Vigo 21.328 17,732 25,847 18.044 Wabash 5.477 6.763 6,635 6,502 Warren 2.502 1,996 2.218 2,168 Warrick 459 355 5,267 3,456 Washington .. 4.180 3.637 4,773 3,195 —593 442 Wayne 10.543 11,244 13,666 12,202 Wells 5,346 3,539 6,195 3.050 White 4.253 4.459 4,957 3,417 WTiitley 4,331 4.036 5.067 3,343 Total 512,660 472 993 870,053 661,750

Scientists; the Altenheim, the Womens’ G. A. R. Auxiliary, and the German Protestant Orphan's home. Mrs. Hamersley Dies Mrs. Ann Elizabeth Hammersley, 90. a former Indianapolis resident,

Betty Cay 5 and 7 East W ashington Street Stages An Socciluiq Salle f Blouses Sweaters s i.oo Twin Setn. *I.M JLjf' JsSkMa Crew, turtle and tunnel tgssj” necks. Some with cute N *: A*- "X, peplum. Twin sets in fancy and brushed First Quality Meet Chiffon 'TV RS ABOUT” a ■ • .4 Xew Skirt 39e $1.98 Pure thread silk with re- Wear it one day buttoned inf ore ed lisle heel and toe. down the back. . . . Turn 2>h , w p it around the next! AllPgjr O3C wool flannel.

died yesterday at the home of a daughter, Mrs. R. C. Wadsworth. Bayside, Long Island. N. Y., where she had lived sinec leaving Indianapolis. Funeral services will be held tomorrow at Washington, Ind.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

MINTON EDGE 59,167. FINAL FIGURES SHOW

Indiana Democracy Chiefs Cheered by Election Results. (Continued From Page One) his lead with strength from outlying wards. Six Democratic city council members, including one woman, were elected. A clean sweep was made by the Democrats in the county in which the off-year election ballot probably will be the unusually large figure of 167.000. County candidates were elected by pluralities ranging from 13,000 to 15,000. All three members of the board of county commissioners are Democrats and the county council of seven also is solidly Democratic. Bench Is Democratic The entire bench also is Democratic. The only posts the Republicans succeeded in winning were minor offices in the township elections. In other counties in the state, the Republicans fared better in the election of both city and county officials. Particularly were inroads made among the mayors who were given an extra year of office by the skip-election law which carried municipal elections over from 1933 to this year. One peculiarity of the municipal elections was seen at South Bend, where the city Democratic ticket went down in crushing defeat, even though the district gave substantial pluralities to Mr. Minton in the senate race, and to Samuel B. Pettingill in the Third district representative battle. Washington’s Mayor Bows Another outstanding mayoral defeat was at Washington where the veteran Mayor John W. McCarty, the city's chief executive twenty years was beaten. Disagreement over work on a municipal sewer project was assigned by observers as the reason for the defeat. Having had the audacity to predict the results of the state, city and county election and even to conjecture as to the probable pluralities, this observer views the election results with equanimity. The forecast results show the Minton plurality only about 25,000 off, not a great deal in considering a state-wide vote. The prediction was 35,000 against the 100,000 prediction by party leaders. The county ticket forecast was about 5,000 too high and the Kern forecast about 3.000 too low. Defeat of three representatives was forecast. One lost and two other doubtful races were not decided until almost the last minute. college" trustee dies Warren Cartier Was Notre Dame Board Member 20 Years. By United Press CHICAGO, Nov. B.—Warren Cartier, 68, a member of the board of lay trustees of Notre Dame university for twenty years, died suddenly last night of a heart attack at the Presbyterian hospital, wheer he had been confined since Oct. 27 with a kidney ailment.

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Pioneer Railroader Passes Century Mark; He Scorns Glasses and Cane

AN impressively bearer old gentleman. Charles Jenkens Waterhouse Parker. 1902 Bellefontaine street, is celebrating his 100th birthday today surrounded by a host of pleasant memories and loving relatives. Mr. Parker, who is in excellent health, who does not use a cane, who reads even the finest print without glasses, and who is handicapped only by deafness, was born Nov. 7. 1834. near Greene. Androscoggin county. Maine. The son of Jacob Royal and Lois Robinson Parker, he is the last of a family of twelve children of whom eleven lived to become adults. He and a brother, Jacob Anselm Parker, came to Indiana when young men and settled near Terre Haute, where their father's brother and sister had settled some years earlier. Mr. Parker obtained employment on the old Indiana Central railroad and. for several years after his twenty-first birthday, he drove the curious wood-burning “iron horses" of the time for that and other lines. He remembers when the first switch was placed at the Union depot in this city. a a a SHORTLY before the Civil war, Mr. Parker returned to Maine to work for the Maine Central Railroad and to marry his childhood sweetheart, Miss Mary Weekes There he lived with his bride in his ancestral home, the famous old Washingtonial Tavern, stop on the old Lewiston-Auburn stage coach lines. The inn burned down only a few years ago. There, his first son, Charles J. W. Parker 11, 5341 North New Jersey street, was born. In 1867, Mr. Parker moved his family to Hutsonville, 111., where Mary Weekes Parker died giving birth to her second son, Maine Parker. A few years later Mr. Parker married Elizabeth Holderman and they moved to Indianapolis and purchased the home in which they still live. At that time, it was known as 152 Rhohampton street, and the family horse and cow were pastured in a dense wood directly north of the house. In Indianapolis, Mr. Parker entered the lumber business in which he continued until his retirement at the age of 84. a a a THE Republicans lost a vote Tuesday when his family vetoed a trip to the polls. Although he cast his first vote as a Democrat, Mr. Parker attended the organization of the Republican party in Maine and has voted its ticket ever since. “Meet your neighbor half way; give and take and trust in your Heavenly Father,” says Mr. Parker, describing his life principle. Four generations were represented at Mr. Parker’s birthday celebration. Charles Parker II and his son, Charles 111, who lives with his grandfather, represented the second and third generations. The fourth was represented by Floyd Fisher Jr., 10, of 5720 North Three Brothers Die Together By United Press STOCKHOLM, Nov. B.—Three brothers named Akeson, ages 59, 64 and 65, and all unemployed, today hanged themselves simultaneously in one room of their apartment.

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Charles Jenkens Waterhouse Parker

HANNAH NOONE LEADS BY 8,190 203 of 231 Precincts Give Incumbent Trustee Big Margin. Official tabulation of the vote in 203 of the 231 precincts in Center township today revealed that Miss Hannah Noone, Democratic trustee seeking re-election, was leading her Republican opponent, Cal. E. House, by more than 8,100 votes. Miss Noone had a total of 45,444 votes in comparison with the 37,293 of Mr. House. James Cunningham, Democratic township assessor candidate, showed a total of 42,135 votes to give hirq a lead of more than 5,000 over his opponent, Republican William M. Gruner, who had amassed 36,677 votes. Democratic justice of the peace candidate John W. Manning was leading his Republican opponent, Isidor Wulfson, 43,136 votes to 34,353. while John W. Cochran, Democratic constable candidate, showed Delaware street, son of Elizabeth Parker and Floyd Fisher, and grandson of Maine Fisher. There also is a Charles in the fourth generation, the 6-year-old son of Mary Parker and Dr. Hayes Freeland, Denver, Col., and grandchild of Maine Parker.

See u)Uat a GutMei* i * a Colonial MERIDIAN AT MARYLAND

41,517 votes to the 35.767 of his Republican opponent, Arthur M. Bowman. Democratic advisory board candidates appeared to have the edge over the Republicans. Charles Holtman. Democrat, showed 41,790 against the 34.455 of Republican B. T. Clay; L. G. Koerner, Democrat, had 41.268 to the 33,948 of his Republican opponent, Ludwig C. Koenig, and Charles F. Roesener, Democrat, had 41.051 as against the 33,592 of Republican Frank K. Sawyer.

WASTE DISPOSAL IS SUBJECT OF LECTURE City Sanitation Plant Manager to Address Metal Group. A short talk on waste disposal will be given by C. K. Calvert, Indianapolis sanitation plant superin--1 tendent, at a dinner of the Indianapolis chapter, American Society for Metals, at the Antlers at 3:30 Monday. Following the dinner the society’s technical meeting will be addressed by Howard Stagg, Syracuse, N. Y„ steel company executive. Mr. Stagg who will talk on “Steel Failures,” , will invite questions and discussions |on problems of steel manufacture : and treatment. Tom Gibbons Sheriff Winner l!y l nited Press ST. PAUL. Nov. B.—Tommy Gib- ! bons. who fought Jack Dempsey in I the historic battle of Shelby, Mont., in 1923, today was assured of election as sheriff of Ramsey county (St. Paul).

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ZEPPELIN TRIPS TO GERMANY TO STARTJN JULY Regular Passenger Service to Be Given Trial by Eckener. B'l l nitrd Pres < AKRON. O . Nov. 8 —Lakehurst-to-Germanv . Zeppelin passenger service will be inaugurated next July for a four-month trial period. Dr. Hugo Eckener. veteran Graf Zeppelin skipper, announced here. The huge new LZI29, nearing completion at Friedrichshafen, will be used on the North American flichts. Dr. Eckener said, with the naval air station at Lakehurst as its terminal in the United States. Two flights a month will be attempted at first, and later probably three. Transoceanic passenger fares will be around S4OO per person, according to preliminary estimates. Dr. Eckener would not discuss location of other possible commercial Zeppelin terminals in this country, saying that was up to American interests to work out. Neither would he discuss possibility of construcj tion of new’ dirigibles in this country for commercial use. Dr. Eckener came here to confer ; with officials of the GoodyearZeppelin Cos., makers of the giant U. S. S. Macon and the illfat?d U. S. S. Akron. He returned to New York today. METHODISTS ATTACK STATE LIQUOR SETUP Greater Protection Asked in Report of Church Council. The old saloon has been snp- | planted by something equally bad, if not worse, members of the Indiana Council of Methodist churches were told yesterday at their meeting at the Lincoln. This statement was made in a report, read by Dr- Earl E Harper, Evansville college president, which has been compiled to represent opinions of church officials and laymen throughout the state. Besides asking for greater protection against the liquor traffic, the report recommended *hat the inheritance of fabulous wealth should be restricted and that close co-oper-ation should be substituted for competition between capital and labor. Pupils to Dance for Veterans Pupils of John Sweet's dancing i school will present an entertainJ ment for the patients at the vet- ' erans hospital tomorrow. Bert O'Leary will act as master of ceremonies in the program, which is sponsored by the Indiana Veterans of Foreign Wars auxiliaries. Moor, 147, Dies Suddenly By United Press CASABLANCA, Morocco, Nov. 3. Sidi Ben Mati, a Moor, one of the many claimants to the honor of being the world’s oldest man, died suddenly today. He claimed to be 147.