Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 239, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 February 1935 — Page 5
FEB. 14, 1935
0. W. MICHAELIS DIES SUDDENLY; RITES ARE SET
Prominent Contractor Built Many Imposing Catholic Edifices. Requiem mass for Oscar W Michael 13, head of the Mic-Laa McCahill Cos., general contractors, who died yesterday at his home, 807 N La Salle-st. will be offered at 9 Saturday in St. Philip Nen Roman Catholic Church, of which he was a member. Bur.ai will be in St. Jo**ph Cemetery. He had been ill one day only with pneumonia. Mr. Miehaelis, who was 43. had been in the contracting business with his father. Fionbcrt Michaeli*. until his father's retirement in 1913. Tiie firm was reorganized in 1930. Among the buildings erected by the firm are the St. Philip Neri school. Carmelite Monastery, St. Mary's Academy and St. Elizabeth Home. Mr. Miehaelis was a member of the Knights of Columbus. St. Joseph Society of St. Mary s Church and the Holy Name Society, and was president of the St. Philip Neri Athletic Club. He was noted as a bowler. Surviving are the widow. Mrs. Clara Miehaelis; three sons. Robert, Edward and Lawrence Miehaelis; j four daughters. Betty Joe, Loretta, j Pauline and Ro-e Mary Miehaelis;' two brothers, George Miehaelis, In- j dianapolis, and Louis J. Miehaelis. Toledo, and a sister. Sister Mary Ruth, a nun in a convent at St. Bernard, O. Thomas C. Day Passes Funeral services for Thomas C. Day, president of Thomas C. Day Si co., real estate loan and general Insurance firm, who died at his home. 3760 N- Pennsylvania-st. yesterday, will be held at 3'SO tomorrow in the First Presbyterian Church, of which he was an elder. The Rev. George Arthur Frantz will conduct services. Burial will be in Crown Hill. Mr. Day, who was known for his civic and philanthropic activities, was 91. He formerly was president of the Y. M. C. A. and was a founder of Woodstock Country Club, a member of the Commercial Club and the Columbia Club, and an active member of the Educational Society of Indiana. Surviving are two daughters Mrs. J. Ross Stevenson. Princeton, N. J., and Mrs. J. Y. Simpson. Edinburgh. Scotland; three sons. Dwight H. Day, New York; William E. Day. New Haven. Conn., and Frederick H. Day. Indianapolis. Death came as the result of a fall eight weeks ago. Harry Aschinger Burial The body of Harry W. Aschinger. inventrr and automobile sales executive, who committed suicide Tuesday by sealing himself in a box and inhaling gas in the basement of his home. T 56 Graham-av. will be taken to Evansville, his former home, for luneral services and burial there tomorrow. Mr. Aschinger, who was 45. was an cnEineer in the United States Navy flotilla and was an expert on Diesel motors. He formerly was a salesman for the Burke Cadillac Automobile Cos. and had been sales manager of the E. L. Shaver Cos., Nash distributors, two years. Surviving are the widow. Mrs. Austria Aschinger; a daughter. Betty; his father. Fred Aschinger, and a brother. Jacob Aschinger, both of Williamsport, Pa. Walter Kahn Dead Services for Walter Kahn, who died yesterday of heart disease at his home. 3015 N. Moridian-st, will be held at 10:30 tomorrow in the Hisey & Titus Funeral Home. 951 N. Delaware-st. Burial will be in the Indianapolis Hebrew Congregation Cemetery. Mr. Kahn, who was 63. formerly was in the real estate business Rnd prior to that, in the clothing business with his brother Eli. He had been retired about eight years. Mr. Kahn was a member of the Indianapolis Hebrew Congregation and the Royal Arcanians. Surviving are the widow and the brother, both of Indianapolis.
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Hughes Minority Paper Would Create History Chief Justice, Five Years on Job, Now Believed Engaged in Writing Gold Decision.
YESTERDAY was the fifth anniversary of the commissioning of Hiarles Evans Hughes as Chief Justice of the United States. Feb 13. 1930. the Chief Justice was appointed by former President Herbert Hoover to occupy the Supreme Court vacancy caused by the resignation of Chief Justice and former President William Howard Taft, who died shortly thereafter.
Today the entire civilized world anxiously awaits a decision in the Supreme Court gold cases, involving 69 billions of dollars and vitally afTecting the monetary system of the world's richest nation Seasoned political commentators in Washington believe the Chief Justice is writing his own opinion in the gold clause cases. They think also that Justice Willis Van Devanter, of the conservative group, is writing another. The deduction that the two justices would be found in opposing camps as the respective authors of such dissenting opinions was made by veteran court observers on a recent decision day when it was noted that out of a large number of rulings handed down Justices Hughes and Van Devanter were the only justices who did not read opinions. Coming at a time w'hen it was apparent that the court must have been engrossed in a study of the gold cases the inference was that to these two had fallen the task of writing majority and minority opinions on this, one of the few remaining questions of importance before the court. a a a IF. when the gold case decision is handed down, Chief Justice Hughes delivers the opinion of the court, no history will be made on that account. If. however, the Chief Justice dissents and accompanies his vote with a written opinion. Supreme Court history will be created, for it would be the second time since he took the oath, Feb. 24, 1930, that he has adopted such a course. The Chief Justice has dissented on several occasions--three times in 1933—but on only one occasion has he explained his objections to join with the majority. Tii® case involved the right of Prof. Douglas Clyde Macintosh, Canadian-born Baptist minister and chaplain bf the Yale Graduate School, to become a naturalized citizen of the United States. ana PROF. MACINTOSH, who first came to the United States as a graduate student at the University of Chicago, began teaching in Yale in 1909. He saw service in France as chaplain in the Canadian army. He made public addresses in support of the allies in 1917. He had charge of an American Y. M. C. A. hut in France until the armistice. Then he returned to his teaching at Yale. When he made application for citizenship in a Connecticut court. Prof. Macintosh was asked if he would take up arms in the defense of this country'. “Yes,*’ the professor responded, “but I should want to be free to judge of the necessity.” That answer caused the Supreme Court to deny him naturalization and established the chief justice as a liberal. “I am willing to do what I judge to be in the best interests of my
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country,” Prof. Macintosh told the naturalization examiner, “but only in so far as I can believe that this is not going to be against the best interests of humanity in the long run. * I do not undertake to support •my country, right or wrong’ in any dispute which may arise, and I am not willing to promise beforehand, and without knowing the cause for which my country may go to war, either that I will or that I will not ‘take up arms in defense of this country,’ however ’necessary’ the war may seem to be to the government of the day.” a a a “'T'HERE are few finer or more exalted sentiments than that which finds expression in opposition to war," the court ruled. “Peace is a sweet and holy thing, and war is a hateful and an abominable thing to be avoided by any sacrifice or concession that a free people can make. But thus far mankind has been unable to devise any method of indefinitely prolonging the one or of entirely abolishing the other.” The majority opinion held that Prof. Macintosh was unwilling to leave the question of his future military service “to the wisdom of Congress where it belongs and where every native-born or admitted citizen is obliged to leave it.” Chief Justice Hughes objected to this. The Constitution, he held, does not require citizens or applicants for naturalization to “put allegiance to temporal power above what is sincerely believed to be one's duty to God.” “When we consider the history of the struggle for religious liberty. the large number of citizens of our country from the very beginning who have been unwilling to sacrifice their religious convictions. and in particular, those who have been conscientiously opposed to w T ar and who would not yield what they sincerely believed to be their allegiance to the will of God, I find it impossible to conclude that such persons are to be deemed disqualified . . the Chief Justice wrote. a a a “TTST'HILE it has always been VV recognized that the supreme power of government may be exerted and disobedience to its commands may be punished, we know that with many of our worthy citizens it would be a most '•heart-searching question if they were asked whether they would be willing to obey a law believed to be in conflict with religious duty. “Many of their most honored exemplars in the past have been willing to suffer imprisonment or even death rather than to make such a promise."
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
THREATENED BY SOCIETY KILLER, WITNESS SAYS
State to Bring Its Case to Unexpected Close This Afternoon. By United Press PAWNEE, Okla., Feb. 14—The state moved today to bring its direct testimony against Phil Kennamer. charged with murdering John Gorrell Jr., to an unexpected close by mid-afternoon, using only a dozen of its 60 witnesses. Holly Anderson, cdu-ty attorney, said mast of the prosecution witnesses would be used on rebuttal to combat the plea Kennamer killed Gorrell last Thanksgiving night in self-defense and while insane. Jack Snedden, Tulsa oil fortune heir, who was on the stand when testimony was resumed today, received a passing threat from Kennamer in the Courthouse hall last night. “I’ll fix you, you rat,” relatives quoted Kennamer as saying. The state brought forward its final group of witnesses to show: Refuses to Testify Kennamer’s alleged premeditation of the slaying, that the 21-year-old doctor’s son was shot to death in a fashionable Tulsa residential district, that intervals between the two fatal shots indicated “cold-blooded murder,” and that the 19-year-old son of Federal Judge Franklin E. Kennamer confessed the killing when he surrendered. Mrs. O. L. Harmon, yae state’s “mystery woman” witness who almost caused a mistrial yesterday, was bound over on contempt Charges as court opened. Hearing was set for March 9 and bond fixed at SIOOO. She threw the court into confusion when she told Judge Thursman Hurst she would not testify because her life had been threatened. Battle Insanity Claim State’s attorneys announced they would resist the effort to show Kennamer “temporarily insane.” “If he was insane at the time — and we will have plenty of testimony showing he wasn’t—he’s insane now,” Special Prosecutor J. Berry King, said. Thus, if Kennamer wins acquittal on the ground of mental derangement, the state will insist that he be sent to a state hospital for the insane. Mrs. Harmon’s outburst against testifying staggered the prosecution and placed Kennamer’s seasoned counsel on the offensive.
HEALTH SCHOOL WILL OPEN HERE TOMORROW New York Doctor to Conduct Three-Day Institute. A three-day health institute will be conducted by Dr. lago Galston, New York, beginning at 9 a. m. tomorrow at the Indiana University Extension center. The institute is being sponsored by the Indiana Tuberculosis Association and the Indiana Student Health Association. The school is being conducted especially for school administrators in Indiana, directors of health education in teachers’ training schools, physical education directors in high schools, directors of special education and health workers.
MASONS ARRANGE FETE
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John S. Buck The annual Washington birthday dinner of Calvin Prather Lodge No. 711, Free and Accepted Masons, will be held tomorrow night in the ledge hall, College-av and 42nd-st. John S. Buck, lodge master, wiii be master of ceremonies. Maj. Norman A. Imrie, editorial writer for the Columbus Dispatch, will be the speaker. Work in the Fellow Craft degree will follow the dinner.
2 CARS STOLEN FROM NORTH SIDE GARAGE Thieves Take Automobiles Valued at S7OO Each. Automobile thieves early today stole two cars from a garage in the rear of 4553 Park-av, the home of R. K. Johnson. Each car is valued at S7OO. The license numbers are Indiana 7-525 and 7-526. IF YOU SUFFER from gas after eating—pain, heartburn, nausea, “stuffed” feeling—you're suffering needlessly! Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets will set you right in 2 minutes. Contain Calcium Carbonate and Magnesium which (any authority will tell you) neutralize the acid condition which is the cause of most common stomach disorders. Try Stuart's today—learn why millions of families have relied on them for 40 years. AT ALL DRUG STORES—2Sc AND 60c MONEY-BACK BLAND TONIC Restores Vigorous Health We guarantee to restore your pep, vigor, vitality; or we refund every cent. That's how sure we are that we have the best gland remedy known. Thousands of tests have proved this to our full satisfaction. Now WITHOUT RISK, you can prove it to yours. Giendage is the last word in modern science. In convenient tablet form— Giendage contains extracts from the glands of healthy animals. The effect S astonishing, almost magical! You feel and look years younger! Your interest in life returns. Vigorous health is necessary for success in all activity today! Do not confuse Giendage with other so-called gland remedies. It is entirely unlike others —IS A REAL GLAND PRODUCT and carries an UNLIMITED GUARANTEE OF SATISFACTION OR MONEY BACK. You owe it to yourself and family to try this new day gland remedy. 30-day treatment, $3, at the Hook Drug Co.—Advertisement.
CONTRACT AWARDED FOR MODEL HOUSE Annual Exposition to Be Held April 5-14. The model house of the 1935 Indianapolis Home Complete Exposition will be built by Thomas E. Grinslade, president of the Grinslade Construction Cos. Approval of Mr. Grinslade's selection was made last night at a meeting of the association in the Hoosier Athletic Club. The home show will be held from April 5 to 14 in the Manufacturers Building at the state fairground. It will be sponsored by the Indianapolis Home Show, Ine., and the Home Builders Association will supervise the building of the model house. If the house is rebuilt on a local home site following the show, Hoyt H. Fulk, local contractor who has erected a number of homes in Irvington. will have charge of the work. Paul R. Pike, member of the Pike Realty Cos., was admitted to membership in the association at last night's meeting.
/Ohe ffote of G/iwfoi Values, 3IIP32SWEST WASHINCTOMSt y// dZ utooi H.xou Distinctively Styled until the hair grows Well tailored knick- X ® M A JfiY ers with knit cuffs, n J-W SPECIAL in sizes 8 to 1§ years. , jUy/ FRIDAY Boys 9 Smart Slipover We’ve never sold gen- mmr m qp '■7 11 nine part-wool blankets ww Ma Ink. M Ms It. /A?/ like this before for so low smart, warm, slip- CEfe Jfik „ Wallskr a price and chances are we , ~ -Jr ■ H| never will again, so get yours over sweaters, m-aB ®W €* now! ! sizes. Women's Wash Fabric Two Way Stretch GOWNS sci Foundations Plain tailored of qual- M Ity sizes 1116 * BS rr YOUTHFUL HMH i<9 Women's Broadcloth S lar and stout sizes. Women’s Hand Embroidered 7•' || : |® ■ Rinon Ll^<• I.HUGO WiMS . A I |jS. fit Chemise, Panties, j fiPJT 'Fine' nainsook, fitted; Jfw O* 1 . : BM Vests, Bloomers Jt full length; flesh or 1 1 Excellent quality lin- £ £g ft white. Reg. and extra ■ in regular and BOYS’ NEW SPRING Women’s First QuaUty V/ ■ Golf Hose 4 A Pure Silk llo§Cj| (A New spring patterns. I mamaunm fjjjPPp tfA ffUfa in sizes | •CHIFFON ■■ CV 1d) V S A A Sr or y ’ Service JAwI £m ®j§ weight, reinforced §® 111 n h Medium weight white M P with lisle, wanted M or random. All styles, colors in all sizes. / jg > , Sizes 2 to 12. ,cgl 3'2-Pc. Lavctte boys’ zipper bt'A .3 vests* _ -CORDUROY” Mmim :'sr s /lJ I f • 2 TADS ALL , BLRanSt• 2 BLANKETS "jJ# 1 S*M fi H I4| jkwPnf. 2 BOOTIES ■ 2ND S Wk MtF pair hose . floor Xjffr&tffawTV SILK COMFORTSJd-. JL $1 and $1.98 values. Slightly mussed. •/ fER CRIB SHEETS . .1 •>„ rs* MUSLIM .NTS’ QUILTED PADS J jj c IBY BASSINETTE , s|44 VmHRHHA RUBENS' VESTS Button or foldo.e.. ■ ' '* Full OZEN DIAPERS Zipper WmmW rs- FLANNELETTE -g Cossack I OS, GERTRUDES | * c Style AMU uuWNS .... I Sizes to 16 m—m—mmmmmmammmmMmam—mmemmmmm—mmm-CLEAN-UP WOMEN’S Ml Women’s 52.00 $lO WINTER s^s COATS^I!! While They Out they go and they re real ■ Women's warm winter EViiIMIWG for quick clearance JBbBB f A dfITTC Friday. Don’t miss this <?■' A 9 WHILE THEY LAST! WOMEXS 1 ihS&J sl.oo I $lO Wool Dresses $ " Th ( '!l L ttl, U ||
MANUAL CLUB TO HAVE PART IN CELEBRATION Demree Society Organized at Opening of Schol in 1895. The Violet Demree Study Club, founded with the birth of Manual Training High School in 1895. will observe its Fortieth Anniversary Monday in connection with the Manual Founders’ Day pfogram. The club was formed under the
ST. VALENTINE’S I=^ CELEBRATION' TONIGHT " '''j Why buy candy, hese or flowers when sh* - * would much rather have a pood time? Cover DANCING 9 T. M. TO 1 A. M. To thp Kollicking Rhythm of sa • REY ORCHESTRA *7 4 W ' ; l ' Good music . . excellent floor . . delicious ifa food and good drinks at popular prices. TABLES KKSERVED IF DESIRED |
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name of the Saturday Travel Club by Manual pupils for the study of English literature. Miss Violet Demree, a Manual English teacher, became the sponsor. In 1928 the name of the club was changed to honor Miss Demree. Charter members included Mis* Emily Helming. Miss Eunice Hoefgen. Mrs. Linda Stokesberry. Mrs. Kate Gambold Dyer and Mrs. Myrtle Koontz Hodgin.
