Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 203, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 January 1935 — Page 10

PAGE 10

JOHN P. SEARS RITES ARE SET FOR TOMORROW Mortgage Agency Founder Was 71, Burial to Be in Crown Hill. Funeral services for John P. & who died Tuesday meht in his r 3556 Guilford-av, following a 15weeks' illness, will be held at 10 tomorrow jn the planner & Buchanan Funeral Home. 25 W. Fall Cteekpkwv. with burial in Crown Hill Mr. Sears, who was 71, was Indiana financial correspondent for the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Cos, Hartford. Conn. He was one of the founders of the firm of Sears and Harvev, first mortgage loan aeenev. and was president of the Co-operative Building and Loan Assn, for six years preceding his death. He was a member of Central Christian Chutch. which he Pad served both as deacon and elder. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Anrel P Harvey; a eranddalighter. Mrs. W. Whitley Foster, and a great-grar.ddaughter. Miss Julia Ann Foster, all of Indianapolis, and a brother Samuel Sears. Dayton. Homer Hylton Rites Services for Homer Hylton, who died at his home, 6173 Rosslvn-av. Monday after a seven weeks’ illness, will be held at 10 tomorrow in the Shirlev Bros. Central Chapel. 346 N Illinois-st. Burial will be in Floral Park Cemetery. The body will remain at the home until time for the funeral. Mr. Hvlton. who was 66. had lived here 40 years. He had been a member of the Fighth Christian Church 14 years, until last year when he transferred to the Broad Ripple Christian Church. Surviving are three brothers. Matt Hvltor.. Dunlap Ka.s.: Will and Abe Hylton both of Willis, Va.; two listers. Mrs. Amanda Gardner, Indianapolis. and Mrs. Lizzie Weeks, Willis. Va.; the wddow. Mrs. Rosa Hvlton; two sons. Posey and Elmer Hvlton. both of Indianapolis, and five daughters. Miss Virginia and Miss Louise Hylton, and Mrs. Lillian Erusler. all of Indianapolis, and Mrs. F r he] Martin Acton, and Mrs. Lelia Ashley. Bethel. Mary Harkins Funeral Requiem mass will be offered at 9 tomorrow at. St. Philip Neri Roman Catholic Church for Mrs. Mary E. Harkins. 3715 E. New York-st, who died Tuesday at her home after a long iilnes; Burial will be in Fa.rmount. Ind. Mrs. Harkins, who was 71. had been an Indianapolis resident 12 year- She was a member of S f . Philipp and of the Altar Society there. Surviving are a ocr., Frank Harkins. and three daughter?. Miss Grace and Miss Reda Harkins. and Mrs. W. F. Buck, all of Indianapolis. Florence Quigley Dead Funeral arrangements were to be compieied today for Mrs. Florence V. Quigley, 236 N. 17th-av. Beech Grove, who died last night in her home after a few days' illness. Mrs. Quigley, who was 45. was a lifelong Marion County resident. She was a member of the Holy Name Rorr-n Catholic Church. Surviving are the widower. J. Frank Quigk ; her parents. Mr. and Mrs. George Vondersaar. Beech Grove: four sisters. Mrs Paul Phelps. Greenwich. Conn.; Mrs. Lle-

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PARK BOARD APPOINTEE

*" JR

Albert H. Gisler.

—Nichobon Bros. Photo. The appointment of Albert H. Gisler. 5139 E. Michigan-st. as a member of the Park Board ’was announced today by Mayor John W Kern. Mr. Gisler. who is president of Kothe. Wells A: Bauer Cos., wholesale grocers, will fill the vacancy* created by the resignation of Dr. Carleton B McCulloch, who is now a member of the Safety Board. Mr. Gisler. who is 45. is a member of the Rotary Club. Chamber of Commerce. Ancient Landmarks Masonic Lodge and the Immanuel Reformed Church.

wellvn Cook. Anacortes. Wash.: Mrs. John Alvin Glebes. Indianapolis, and Mrs. John W. Kennelly, Indiana polis. and a brother. George J. Vondersaar, Beech Grove. Opal Hartman Passes Funeral arrangements were to be made today for Mrs. Opal Hartman. 3550 W. Michigan-st, who died yesterday afternoon at her home after a nine-days’ illness. Mrs. Hartman, who was 36. had been an Indianapolis resident 30 years. She was a member of the Fairfax Christian Church. Surviving are the widower. Charles Hartman; three children. Marian 10. Shirley 8 and Russell 16 months, and her parents. Mr. and Mrs. William Hankins, all of Indianapolis. Albert Bragdon Service Services for Albert Ellis Bragdon, retired Indianapolis mail carrier, who rfied yesterday in Methodist Hospital of pneumonia, will be held at 2 tomorrow at the residence. 1738 Arrow-av. Burial will be in Spring Valley Cemetery. Mr. Bragdon. who was 73. had carried mail in Indianapolis 36 years before his retirement in 1926. He had been an Indianapolis resident more than 40 years, and was a member of the Oaklandon Universalist Church. Surviving are a daughter. Mrs. Mabel Poehner. Louisville; a brother. Ernest Bragdon. and a sister. Miss Grace Bragdon. both of Lawrence. and a number of grandchildren and f.reat-grandchildren. Bertha Pope Burial Burial services for Mrs. Bertha Pope, wife of Arthur Pope, former Wheeler City Rescue Mission superintendent. who died Monday in her home in Ft. Wayne, were to be held in Ft. Wayne this afternoon. Mrs. Pope was the founder and superintendent of the City Gospel Mission. Cincinnati. Surviving are the widower and a sister. Mrs. Kenneth Hawkins. Ft. Wayne, and a nephew. Robert Nipper. Shortridge H’gh School athletic roach.

23 STUDENTS SELECTED FOR BUTLER PLAY Thespis Dramatic Societv to Stage Production for Three Nights. Names of 23 Butter University students selected to the | cast of "The Hoodoo.” first semester major production of the Thespis Dramatic Society, have been announced by Miss Frances Beik, instructor in speech and adviser for the society. The play will be presented Jan. 10. 11 and 12 in the Thespis workshop in Arthur Jordan Memorial Hall. Both matinee and evening performances will be given. The cast will include Fred Winter as Bright ’n Early; Harold Miller, Billy Jackson; Louis Stauber, Little Hemachus; Bette Milier, Lulu; Barbara Zechiel, Amy; Florence Gipe, Mrs. Perrington Shine; Dorothea Craft, Mrs. Clinger; Elizabeth Boeckman, Angeline; Marilyn Knauss. Gwendolyn: Joseph Nesbit, Prof. Spiggot; Rosemary Gladden, Aunt Paradise, and Phyllis Smith, Doris. Additional members of the cast will be Virginia Ferrell as Dodo; Ray Espinosa, Dan; Cecil Marion, Mr. Meek; Dorothy Thompson, Mrs. Spiggot; Phillipa Schreiber, Mrs. Longnecker, and Elizabeth Duddick, Mary Jane Roberts, Sally Ragan. Phvilis Winkler. Arthur Gipe and Olga Feld as the Six Little Spiggots. Virginia Cunning. Robert Emhardt and Herbert Kenny will comprise the stage committee for the production and Helen Clever will be in charge of costumes. Founders’ Day, Feb. 2 Butler University will honor her founders %ith special ceremonies Feb. 7, Prof. Bruce L. Kershner. university public occasions committee chairman, announced today. Plans for the event, which wi.’l be the 53rd celebration of Founders’ Day, have been started. The 43 incorporators of the university, who in 1850 received a charter to establish Northwestern Christian University, now Bugler, will be honored at the ceremonies which will be held on the Fairview campus and at the Claypool. The tentative program for the event includes special Founders’Day talks in all 9 a. m. classes on Feb. 7. At 11 a. m., a special chapel service will be held to m: morialize deceased members of the university faculty. At 6:30 p. m.. a banquet will be held at the Claypool, closing the day’s events. Formal academic services, traditionally held in the Butler fieldhouse at 11 a. m. on Founders’ Day, will not be held this year, Prof. Kershner has announced. The class programs and memorial chapel will be held instead. Members of the public occasions committee, aiding Prof. Kershner with plans for the event, are Clide Aldrich, Seth E. Elliott. H. M. Gelston. Donald C. Gilley, Sarah Sisson ; and Evan Walker. TRANSIENTS’”CENTER OPENING POSTPONED Treatment Station “Open House” Delayed Until Equipment Arrives. Delay in arrival of new equipment for the new transient treatment center. 211 N.'West-st. has caused postponement of the formal opening of the center, it was announced today by Wayne Coy, Governors’ Unemployment Relief Commission director. An "open house" has been planned to celebrate the opening.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Indiana in Brief

By Times Special KOKOMO. Jan. 3.—Safety deposit boxes which have not been opened in years and all trace of whose lessees have long since disappeared will be examined here soon in connection with the receivership of the Citizens National Bank. Attorneys for the receivers recently obtained from Howard Circuit Court an order to open all such boxes. They are considered as assets of the bank and in all cases the rental is long in arrears. Immediate purpose of the move is to get the boxes in condition to lease or sell. The contents of the boxes, many of which have not been opened for twenty years, will be kept confidential by the receivers who expect to make every effort to find the missing owners and restore to them their property.

Neighbors Get Estate By Tunes Special NOBLESVILLE. Jan. 3—Tbo entire estate of Frank B. Kercheval, life time resident of Sheridan who died last week, will go to Mr. and Mrs. Fred Beauchamp, his neighbors, for their kindness during his life. Mr. Kercheval’s will which was filed for probate here, states: "Even this bequest does not repay them for the many nice things they did for me.” The will names Samuel H. Stokes as executor. The value of the estate has not been made public. nun Dance to Aid Fund By Times Special LEBANON. Jan. 3—This city already is planning to join with 5,500 others in the nation in honoring President Roosevelt on Jan. 30, his birthday, by holding a ball, proceeds of which will be added to funds to be used in continuing the fight against infantile paralysis. Plans for the Lebanon'party are in charge of a committee composed of Walter Reynolds, chairman; Cleon Bratton, secretary, and DeLue Akerman, treasurer. it o a Mayor Gets Sticker By Times Special COLUMBUS. Jan. 3. John L. Hosea was inaugurated as mayor of this city with the beginning of 1935, but that was not the only distinction he achieved, it was revealed in City Court today. When the new mayor left the City Hall after the induction ceremonies, he found a sticker for improper parking of his automobile. The mayor had left his auto in a space which a large sign showed was reserved for police cars. A conscientious policeman appointed by the incoming administration placed the sticker. SPONSORS PARTY Legion Post to Held Benefit Event Tonight Service Post No. 128, American Legion, will sponsor a public benefit euchre and bridge party tonight in Legion Hall, Oaklandon. On the committee in charge are Ernest G. Mock, Walter J. Geo. Bradford B. Evans, Florence Dv.zan, Iris Linder and Lulu Newhouse.

STOMACH TROUBLE? HTHERE’S no betA ter builder and IMF Zfrm tonic than Dr. Pierce's ' Golden Medical Dis- ' lip covery, for it tones l 10 up the stomach and X •****- / the blood. Read what • y. Cora E. Cain of 34 Spruce St., k Akron, Ohio, said: A little less than a year ago my daughter. Marie Avalon.(plot ure shown) was a physical wreck, due to stomach trouble. After giving her Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery I soon noticed a change in her and she kept on improving, she surely is a different sirl--no more crying spells, eats and sleeps well, and her teachers often remark about the difference in her school work." New size, tablets 50 cts., liquid SI.OO. Large size. tabs, or liquid. $1.35. All druggists. Write Dr. Pierce's Clinic, Buffalo, N.Y. —Advertisement.

200 CITY HOSIERY WORKERS TO MEET Federation Auxiliary Will Hold Luncheon. The Ladies’ Auxiliary to Branch 35. American Federation of Hosiery Workers, will meet for the first time at a luncheon Saturday in the Young Women's Christian Association, 329 N. Pennsylvania-st. Two hundred women are expected to attend. The Auxiliary was organized by women members of the Branch and is intended for members of the Union and their friends. All Y. W. C. A. facilities, including swimming, skating and dancing are available to members. It is planned also to rent a recreation center next summer for the use of members. Walter Truman, district manager, said similar organizations will be formed soon at Ft. Wayne. Grand Rapids, and Paducah. Ky. Indianapolis will be host Jan. 13 'to delegates from Belding and Grand Rapids., Des Moines, la.. Milwaukee, Wis., Paducah and Ft. Wayne. They will discuss matters of interest to the midwest section.

JUDGE GECKLER ILL: MACK CASE DELAYED Juvenile Jurist to Select Home for “Captive Girl.” Juvenile Judge John F. Geckler i3 ill at home, so the selection of a permanent home for 16-year-old Helen Mack. who. six weeks ago was released from virtual imprisonment of a year in a gloomy room, will not be made today. Russell Newgent, court referee, said that he understood a selection had been made, and that Judge Geckler would announce the choice when he returned to the bench.

DON’T NEGLECT MINOR THROAT IRRITATION IT may become serious. Rub on soothing, warming Musterole. Relief generally follows quickly. Musterole gets such marvelous results because it’s NOT just a salve. It’s a “counter-irritant”— easing, warming, stimulating and penetrating—quick and helpful in drawing out pain and congestion. Used by millions for 25 years. Recommended by many doctors and nurses. All druggists. In three strengths: Regular Strength, Children’s imild), and Extra Strong. Tested and approved by Good Housekeeping Bureau, No. 4867. Radio: Tune in the “Voice of Experience,” Columbia Network. See newspaper for time.

CITY PURCHASES 15 POLICE CARS 7 Fords, 8 Plymouths Will Replace Old Autos When Radios Are Ready. Fifteen new squad cars for the Indianapolis Police Department will be delivered as soon as the installation of radio sets can be completed. The new automobiles, seven Ford V-8s and eight Plymouths. will replace old cars which have been traded in on the new purchase. The new cars, all 1935 models, were selected by a committee composed of Albert H. Losche. City Purchasing Agent; Chief Mike Morrissey and Ernest Ropkey. president of the retiring City Council, which allotted funds for the purchase early last month. The net cost of each Ford was $449 and that of each Plymouth was $502, plus a substantial trade-in value on all the cars. All the new cars will be two-door models with the doors opening from the front, shatter-proof glass all around, leather upholstery and special radio generator. Capt. Robert L. Batts, head of the Police Radio Department, will leave in a few days for the two automobile plants in order personally to supervise the radio installation.

Lowest Prices Now Prevailing On Furniture, Rugs and Draperies SANDER & RECKER Furniture Cos. Meridian at Maryland

HAAGS er r price IPBIJGSI TO WHAT EXTENT MAY A FATHER PUNISH | A parent may inflict only reasonable or moderate punishment. Si(Tj\ ' __ _ m _\p X t Qnpttion: Ts tpu hirp a workman to 4- **" /Mm 831 t //, /-j 'lnwn trppa nn your land and hp hr Hil N ■IUsJ J] W m mm m fjfj f ff£J mi-takp down trpp?; nil Tour nnzbHj H -If ■ L/ U f/t E Cv hor's land, are you liable for the damages - ■ ft, Z. . ! lIH It If “Watch our advertisement next Thursday i I 'Lie a for c( ,rrprt legal answer to this question." There are more ways thati one of punishing children. Im- tamir a. ir/mt VAITD proper diet and lack of attention to minor ailments always WAlttl lUUIV lead to far more lasting: injury than the switch, no matter f HIT fIRFN’S how harshly used. If your children are not up to par consult u your "family physician and then let us fulfill his recom- HEAK^H^ mendation, if medicines are needed. We are fully equipped. COLD REMEDIES ll^^i NO'K for Coughs .. 29c Rinex Treafment ... 89c flfl Grove's Hose Drops. 39c Brownie Cold Caps 23e mgt& fp Menfho-Mulsion 49c Bromo Quinine 24c *T Vapex Inhalant 59e Garglette for Throat 19c s j mwm “laid W* FOR THE SAFE TREATMENT Os CQ r but -sok tops 2Sc-DrkJn > rniin ii c ' D3C r/ // -E •!* Uli UUfl Si A PH, si.’i .ns rrpsrriulior ,] ROTH KC SMALL Size LA ace size S U9 1 ** SAMM.S ~M imrt.vflr NOW I INDO-VIN Tonic • 98c '7n Electric 5 OVALTINE Food Drink w-oume ,*>7c ■■ ■7 %t JAD SALTS, Condensed •*■ 40c PEBECO Tooth Paste *- 19c PAR LYSOL Disinfectant 7 Ounces 43C for Only ... MILE’S NERVINE *- 83c . HIND’S Honey & Almond Cream .. 39c * FEEN-A-MINT Laxative **- —l9 c measures W HITE’S COD-LIVER OIL Tablets 89c F J™ £- m DULLARD’S ASPERGUM 19c | L ' 2ovnlt *- Bi Bring It to Any of 1 I Cut Price Drug Stores I | This Coupon and 13c Entitles I 1 You to a Regular 25c Size I Box of I 1 . | . ■ I W" I I THE DELICIOUS MOCO. I I LATE BAR LAXATIVE i ii | Try Sweetlax for the i happy relief of constipa- * | tion. Eat them like can- | dv! Harmless to grownI line and children alike I I ups ana uuiuren aune. i indigestion, too. |

RABBI TO GIVE SERMON Service in Be Held at Indianapulis Hebrew Temple Tomorrow Night. "Hebrew, Lsraelite or Jew?” will be the subject of sermon to be de-

wMHfwirm rJ LJk\ ™ll 11 ILx Jl■ 11 laliU FRIDAY BARGAINS! 500 LBS. FUDGE \Wr ’ kin Chocolate and Q V Dress > vanilla flavors. Qy^C Gloves Li— Eg’.uST.. UU Safety Matches CHIFFON HOSE 1 / Boxes QC Ladies' pure , Q. A 46-in. OILCLOTH 9 r c |pc XVomen', and Children'. I “I* J® House SLIPPERS Wr Ray ; n "u ND , E s^a Odds and ends of gfl f A.nrtrt pa- m 4^ higher priced felts. | U q | IIQ Broken sizes. Fr. ■ ftya >p ( ,nd Floor Ladies’ Sweaters T a^® LE ; R^M^ GE Assorted pat - M A V 4Sr Broken lots. T U A A terns. Slipover JTT§ a™ l pn JV | ll styles. Broken 13 p eo ‘ 1 W > sizes. Reg. SI.OO Men’s Dress Socks §ffHr LartifW Kay on plai t e and, 0^ Rayon Striped Solid rnhirs. Black, 11. . Ifr union > n I M ¥ Suits Jj w unions. K-1* J C Men’s Work Shirts knee. Sizes ::ti Blue chambray shirt.s. Broken Ladies! SILK UNDIES whlle they |}v C t Chemise. Dance , rP ,. n rc V SL* a 1 Ladies’ SCARFS Odds ends of

TAN. 3, 1930

livered by Rabbi Maurice M. Feurlicht at the Indianapolis Hebrew Temple. 10th and Delaware-sts, at 8 tomorrow night. A children s choir will feature the service at 10 Saturday morning.