Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 189, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 October 1935 — Page 4
PAGE 4
DORA MONROE SUCCUMBS TO HEART ATTACK Member of Pioneer Indiana Family Passes at Age of 72. Mr- Dora Griffith Monroe, 3741 Central-a\, member of a pioneer Indiana family, died yesterday afternoon of heart disease, as she and her husband, Alexander R. Monroe, were driving north on Meridian-st. Mrs. Monroe, who was 72, was a member of the D. A. R and the Woman’s Department Club. Surviving are Mr. Monroe, retired president of the Newark Fire Insurance Cos and two daughters, Mrs. W. B. Day, New York, and Mrs. Bray Jones, Chicago. Arrange Schoppe Rites Funeral services for Leslie W. Schoppe, attorney who died yesterday of heart disease in the Statehouse, are to be held at 2 tomorrow in the Hisey A; Titus Funeral Home, 951 N. Delaware-st. Burial is to be in Crown Hill. He was 51. Mr. Schoppe, an insurance firm adjuster, had left the office of Harry McClain, State Insurance Commissioner, when he was stricken He was a member of the Masonic Lodge, the Knights of Pythias, the Scottish Rite and the Shrine; the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church, and the American, state and Indianapolis Bar Associations. Surviving are the widow. Mrs. Cecile Schoppe; a daughter. Mrs Evelyn Daniel, Indianapolis; a brother, Herman Schoppe, Pittsburgh, N. H . and his father, George Schoppe, Stewartstown, N. H. Mrs. Helen Bowers Dies Last rites for Mrs. Helen Irene Bowers, 4220 Sunset-av, who died last night after three weeks’ illness, are to- be held Saturday in the Flanner Buchanan Funeral Home, 25 W. Fall Creek-pkwy. Burial is to be in Crown Hill. Mrs. Bowers, who was 40, had lived in Indianapolis all her life. She was a member of Christ Episcopal Church and Osric Mills Watkins Post, American Legion Auxiliary. She was a Manual High School graduate. Surviving are the widower, Byron D. Bowers; two children, Marie, 10. and Susana. 5; her mother, Mrs. Marie Montieth; four sisters, Mrs. Margaret Aikins, Miss Dora Montieth, Miss Elizabeth Monticth and Miss Mary Montieth, and a brother, Oscar Montieth, all of Indianapolis. Mabee Rites Tomorrow Services for Mrs. Rebecca Mabee, who died Tuesday night in the home of her daughter, Mrs. William Maley, 238 N. Walcott-st, are to be held at 2 tomorrow in the Conkle Funeral Home, 1934 W. Michigan-st. Burial is to be in Washington Park Cemetery. Mrs. Maybe- 1 was 79. and had lived in Indianapolis 15 years. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Maley and Richard Richwine, living near Clermont; five sons, Abe, Leslie, A1 and Harry Mabee. all of Indianapolis, and William Habee, Noblesville; 13 grandchildren and 12 great grandchildren.
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ADDRESSES TEACHERS
Dr. Morris Fishbein “Medicine and the Changing Times" will be the address topic of Dr. Morris Fishbein tonight at the first general session of the Indiana State Teachers’ Association in C.edle Tabernacle. Dr. Fishbein, columnist in The Times, also is secretary of the American Medical Association.
STATE FOOD, HEALTH OFFICIALS TO CONFER Group to Meet Monday at Brown County Stale Park. Fall meeting of the Indiana Association of Food, Drug and Health Officials is to be held Monday at the Abe Martin Lodge, Brown County State Park, Martin L. Lang, state food and drug commissioner, announced yesterday. Mr. Lang is association president and Dr. Herman G. Morgan, Indianapolis Health Board secretary, is vice president. RITE MEMBERS TO DINE Dance to Be Given at Cathedral Tomorrow Night. Scottish Rite members and their guests will be entertained with a dinner dance and entertainment in the Scottish Rite Cathedral tomorrow night. Miss Ruth Braun, Chicago, soprano, will present a program of songs, and Dale Young, organist, will play. SECRETARY ON PROGRAM V. M. C. A. Official to Speak at Fellowship Dinner. Harry W. White, Y. M. C. A. general secretary, is to speak tonight at th3 Northwood Christian Church fellowship dinner. I. C. Dean, member of the board of deacons, is to preside. The Women's Council is to serve the din-
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FEDERAL LAND POLICY LAUDED It Guards Public, Official Tells Lions Club. “Poverty and the lack of economic security have more to do with regimentation of the mind than all the red propaganda that can be poured out. William E. Sweet, former Governor of Colorado and now 1 special assistant to Rexford Guy Tugwell, Resettlement Administrator, : told Lions Club members at a luncheon at the Washington yes--5 terday. “Give the people the full product of their toil, give them a sense of ownership in the land they till and the home that shelters them,'' Mr. Sweet said, “and we need have no
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
| fear for the future of our country and its institutions.” Government supervision of land utilization and cultivation is in no I way a usurpation of the rights of the individual, he said. Instead, he termed it a strong protection against misleading claims made by large landowners concerning the value of properties they want to ; sell. I The Wiscosin zoning law was cited by Mr. Sweet as an example . of progressive administration for i the betterment of submarginal land conditions and the resettlement of “farmland refugees.” Mr. Sweet also spoke before members of the Real Estate Board today i at the Washington.
Foot troubles leave Bfc <gdm aging lines on the 3^ face .. . when your ® FOOT over . . . and you •an not conceal the fact. Get relief NOW. If you are troubled with a hurting corn, callous, bunion, weak or fallen arches—any common foot ailment . . . we invite you and members of your family to visit our Dr. Scholl’s FOOT COMFORT Department duringDr. Scholl s FOOT COMFORT Demonstration ALL THIS WEEK Mr. Louis Finkelman, an especially trained attendant, will take Pedograph imprints of your stockinged feet and shew you how you may obtain relief from your foot troubles through the latest methods of Dr. Wra. M. Scholl, world famous Foot Authority. No charge; no obligation for this service. Downstairs At Ayres (Also Ayres’ 4th Floor)
FRAUD ALLEGED IN VETERANS’ TOURNEY Investigation Into Open Golt Meet Indicated. A grand jury inquiry into issuance of approximately $3600 in alleged fraudulent checks for prize moneyin the Veterans of Foreign Wars SSOOO open golf tournament here Oct. 3-5 was indicated today by Prosecutor Herbert M. Spencer. Mr. Spencer said his attention has been called to the alleged shortage. No affidavitts have been filed.
Only SI4OO of SSOOO in checks issued : to tiie professional golfers has been ! honored. The checks were issued by Earl S. Passwaiter. head of the quartermaster division of the state Veterans of Foreign Wars. He said Jack Pettit, tournament manager, had assured him funds were on deposit |to meet the checks. Mr. Pettit I could not be reached for comment.
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WINSHIP AT PARLEY Sanitary Official Attends Public XVorks Congress. Wilbur H. Winship, city sanitarv department official, is in Cincinnati attending the 1935 Public Works Congress, the annual meeting of the American Society of Municipal Engineers and the International Association of Public W’orks Officials.
OCT. 17,1935
Phest Colds .... Best treated without ’’dosing" TRY A WANT AD IN THE TIMES
