Indianapolis Times, Volume 48, Number 5, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 March 1936 — Page 4

PAGE 4

MARTIN SCOTT FUNERAL IS SET FOR TOMORROW Actuary for Insurance Cos. Had Lived in City for Ten Years. Funeral services for Martin Scott, who died yesterday in his home, 4355 Collegc-av, are to be held tomorrow in the Kincaid Funeral Home. Burial is to be in Crown Hill Cemetery. Mr. Scott, an actuary for the Reserve Loan Life Insurance Cos., was a native of Friendship, N. Y., and came to Indianapolis 10 years ago. He was a member of the Unitarian Church. He was 50. Survivors are the widow and a son, Robert Scott. Schitell Rites Set Last rites for Mrs. Mary Schnell, who died Monday night in her home. 969 N. Pershing-av, are to be held in the Conkle Funeral Home tomorrow at 2. Burial is to be in Crown Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Schnell, who was 70, was born in Switzerland and was a member of the Lutheran Church. Survivors are the widower, Marcus Schnell; five sons, Edward, George and Robert Schnell, all of Indianapolis, Mark Schnell. Cincinnati, and Albert Schnell, Denver, Col., and three daughters, Mrs. Albert Wagner, Mrs. Harriet Kclch and Mrs. Marie Douthclt, all of Indianapolis. Moss Services Arranged Services for Albert R. Moss, who died Saturday in his home, 946 N. West-st, after a brief illness, are to be held tomorrow at 2 in the New Liberty Baptist Church. Burial is to be in Floral Park Cemetery. Mr. Moss, who was 86, was born in Peru, but had made Indianapolis his home for the past 35 years. He was a member of the Bethel Baptist Church. The widow is the only survivor. Ice Victim Dies Funeral services are being arranged today for Mrs. Mary Shaffer. 2514 Burton-av, who died yesterday in City Hospital of complications arising from a fractured arm which she received in a fall on ice Feb. 15. Hagedon Rites Fixed Funeral services for Mrs. Fannie L. Quandt Hagedon, 42, wife of Oscar H. Hagedon, secretary-treas-urer of the Tannin Products, Inc., who died yesterday in Methodist Hospital, are to be held at 2 tomorrow at the G. H. Herrmann Funerai i Home, 2201 N. Pennsylvania-st. The I Rev. L. C. Trent, pastor of the! Woodruff Place Church, is to be in ! charge. Burial is to be in Memorial I Park. Anna Newby Dies Last rites for Mrs. Anna Newby. 87, a resident here for more than 50 years, who died yesterday at the home of a daughter, Mrs. Harlan Ratliff. 23 E. 15th-st, are to be held at 10 tomorrow at the Hisey <fc Titus Funeral Home, 951 N. Deiaware-st. Burial is to be in Crown Hill. In addition to Mrs. Ratliff, another daughter, Mrs. Florian O. Smith, Detroit, Mich., and a son, Charles R. Newby, Venice, Cal., survive. McGee Services Friday Final rites for Craig A. McGee, 75, of 924 W. 32d-st, retired electri-

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ILUNOIS-ST BRIDGE OVER FALL CREEK REPAIRED BY CITY WORKMEN

Klimt

Workmen today are repairing the west guard rail of the Illinois-

8 ENTER CONTEST FOR CONVENTION DELEGATES Shelby County Democratic Slate Said to Back Greenlee. Timm Sped fit SHELBYVILLE. Ind., March 17. Names of eight candidates seeking nominations as Shelby County delegates to the Democratic state convention have been filed here. The slate, first to be announced, is said to be pledged to the gubernatorial candidacy of Pleas Greenlee. Members and the townships they represent are: Fred Courtney, Glen Bass, Gordon Johnson, Robert Moorehead and Arthur Thralls, Shelby; Russell Cortelyou, Jackson; J. Walter Haehl, Union, and George Gregory, Noble. INDUSTRIAL LEADERS TO HEAR DR. SLUTZ Dayton Man to Make Three Talks Here Today. Dr. Fiank Slutz, who is to speak today to members of the Rotary Club at luncheon, is also scheduled to appear at Washington High School this afternoon at 2:30. Tonight at 6:30, Dr. Slutz is to address a meeting of industrial leaders in the Y. M. C. A. Long connected with industry in Dayton, Dr. Slutz has chosen for his topic tonight, “Making Good With Others.” CIVIC , GROUP ELECTS Two Vice Presidents, 11 Directors Named by Sunshine Gardens Club. Mrs. H. C. Beaman and Albert McGinty today are vice presidents of the Sunshine Gardens Civic Association. They were elected last night at a meeting in the home of Stuart Reed, Tibbs-av. Sunshine Gardens. Eleven directors also were chosen, and a committee was appointed to work for the improvement of the roads in the Gardens. dan, who died yesterday following a brief illness, are to be conducted at 9 Friday at Holy Angels Church. Burial is to be in Crown Hill. Mr. McGee was born in Hendricks County Sept. 17, 1860. Survivors are the widow, Mrs. Lillian McGee; three sons, Robert. Hobart and Clay; two daughters, Geraldine and Dorothy McGee; three sisters, Mrs. Betty Munden, Miss Jennie McGee and Mrs. Jewell Williams.

st bridge over Fall Creek. Masonry on the bridge has been crumbling

FARMER FOUND DEAD AT HOME Jesse Kunkle Believed to Be Victim of Heart Disease. Services for Jesse Kunkle, 58-year-old farmer who was found dead yesterday on his farm near Acton, are to be at 2 Thursday at the New Bethel Baptist Church, and burial is to be in Bethel Cemetery. Although Dr. John E. Salb, deputy coroner, has not yet returned a verdict, it was generally assumed today that heart disease was the cause of death. He was found by his widow, Mrs. Anna Kunkle, when she returned from a trip to the grocery. He was lying in the barnyard beside a heavy door. Mr. Kunkle was a veteran of the Spanish-American War and is survived by his widow; a son, Harry Kunkle; two daughters, Mrs. Dorothy Karabell and Mrs. Frances Yokey; a brother, Walter Kunkle, and two sisters, Mrs. Olive Kellemeyer and Mrs. Emma Krise. LAMSON TRIAL TO END Prosecutor to Resume Final Argument Today. By Untied Perns SAN JOSE. Cal., March 17. Prosecutor Allen P. Lindsay today was to resume his final argument to the jury in the trial of David A. Lamson, former Stanford University Press salesman charged with murdering his wife. Opening the argument yesterday, Lindsay urged that the jury convict Lamson and assess the death penalty. MOTHER LOSES BATTLE Hammond Veteran Granted Custody of His Son, 4. By United Press HAMMOD, Ind., March 17. A mother who adheres to Communism, has no faith in the church and dislikes the wealthy, is unfit to rear a child, Judge Mark B. Rockwell ruled in Porter Superior Court in granting Michael Vlanich, a World War veteran, custody of his four-year-old son.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

away. The bridge was not weakened structurally.

FINAL $290,000,000 DISTRIBUTED BY AAA Details of New Farm Program to Be Made Public Thursday. By United Press WASHINGTON, March 17. AAA officials began distribution today of the final $290,000,000 of benefits from the old AAA program and completion of detailed plans for the new $500,000,000 soil conservation program. The $290,000,000 is due farmers who partially or wholly had carried out contracts of the AAA when it was held invalid by the Supreme Court Jan. 6. The money was supplied in the deficiency appropriation bill. Ts ohnical obstacles had held up its distribution. Meanwhile, orders were issued that details of the new soil conservation program and regulations under which farmers will be paid approximately $500,000,000 a year for conserving soil fertility must be completed and made public Thursday. MAINE JCEARS FLOOD Continued Rain, Thaw Frighten River Residents. By United Press BOSTON, March 17.—Continued rain and thaw spread new flood fears throughout Maine today, but rivers in the other five New England states were falling rapidly to normal levels.

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ELASTIC STOCKINGS ANKLE SUPPORTS KNEE CAPS ARCH SUPPORTS HAAG’S 129 W. Wash. St.

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CAREFUL STUDY DF ARMAMENTS URGED TO CLUB Defensive Type Also Would Keep U. S. Power, Rotary Told. Americans should make a thorough study of defensive armaments as opposed to offensive war machines, Dr. Frank D. Slutz. Dayton, 0., told the Rotary Club at the Claypool this afternoon. For 30 years a counselor of young peoples’ activities in high schools and colleges. Dr. Slutz said that the United States could remain a world power if it maintained only defensive armaments. If the United States went to world disarmament conferences armed defensively, but not offensively, it would “create a bond of genuine interest” as a basis for future world peace, he said. Advocates Economic Isolation Dr. Slutz said that battleships with only a cruising distance necessary to protect the American coastline would be a type of defensive armament. The speaker advocated a policy of economic isolation as a way to keep the United States from becoming entangled in foreign wars. “If the United States could be developed to produce only what it needs, it would avoid international trade difficulties that lead to war,” Dr. Slutz stated. Urges Book Be Written He suggested that Rotary Club scholarships be devoted to those youths who planned to enter international service and urged that a book dramatizing the lives of the individuals who represent “the heart of the various nations” be published by the Rotary Club. Foremost Americans, who Dr. Slutz said should be included in the proposed book, are Abraham Lincoln, Thomas A. Edison, Jan© Addams, social worker; Horace Mann, educator, and Edward A. Filene, Boston merchant. The subject of his address was “The Importance of Being Earnest,” and he chose as his theme the fourth object of the Rotary Club, international service.

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-MARCH 17, 1936