Indianapolis Times, Volume 48, Number 6, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 March 1936 — Page 20
PAGE 20
DOAN FUNERAL SERVICES HELD IN COAST CITY Westfield Woman Was Active Crusader for World Peace. Funeral services have been held in Pasadena, Cal., for Mrs. Phebe Lindley Doan, Westfield, widow of Abel Doan, banker, farmer and philanthropist. Mrs. Doan, who was 91, died Saturday in the California city. Born near Westfield, Mrs. Doan carried on the civic traditions of her parents. Her father, Aaron Lindley, was a free soiler, and her mother, Elizabeth Ballard Lindley, was active in the fights against aiavery and for woman suffrage. She was a birthright member of the Society of Friends and had been an elder in the church. She was an active crusader for world peace and was a member of the W. C. T. U., the Westfield Woman's Club and the mother’s club of the schools. Surviving her are Mrs. Frank Hatch StreightofT, Indianapolis; Mrs. Anna Doan Stephens, Pasadena, Cal.; Mrs. Allen D. Hole, Richmond, Ind.; Dr. Martha Doan, Mt. Pleasant, la., dean of women at lowa Wesleyan College, and Mrs. William E. Furnas, Leesburg, Va., and Prof. John L. Doan, Penn Hall Junior College, Chambersburg, Va., and 10 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. Wiebke Rites Tomorrow Funeral services for Henry F. Wiebke, 1522 Montcalm-st, whcr died Monday in Methodist Hospital after a brief illness, are to be held in the Bert S. Gadd Funeral Home tomorrow at 2. Burial is to be in Concordia Cemetery. Mr. Wiebke, who was 73, was a lifelong resident of Indianapolis and had been employed by the Big Four Railroad 40 years. He was a Order of Druids and the Union Congregational Church. Survivors are three brothers, Charles and Edward Wiebke of Indianapolis and Fred Wiebke of Pocatello, Idaho, and a stepbrother, Fred Stedfeld, also of Pocatello. Former Resident Dies Last rites for Mrs. Nettie A. Bereman, who died yesterday at St. Vincent’s Hospital, are to be held in the Conkle Funeral Home tomorrow at 2. The Rev. Glen W. Mell, pastor of the Eighth Christian Church, is to officiate. The North Park chapter, Order of the Eastern Star, is to assist. Burial is to be in Crown Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Bereman, who was 62, formerly lived in Indianapolis, but for the past six years has made her home on a farm near Danville. Survivors are the widower, Ernest L. Bereman, and two sons, Lo'n’-'U F ra zee and Rhys Schmidt. Long-Time Resident Dies Funeral services for Alva A. Pollard. Crown Hill Cemetery employe, and a resident here practically his entire life, are to be held at 2 Friday in the Planner & Buchanan Mortuary, 25 W. Fall Creek-pkwy. Mr. Pollard died yesterday at his home, 1121 Congress-av. Services are to be conducted by the Rev. Aubrey H. Moore, pastor of the Seventh Christian Church. Burial is to be in Crown Hill. Mr. Pollard, who was 82, was born near Logansport, and was a charter member of Winamac Tribe No. 279, Order of Red Men. Survivors are the widow, Mrs. Margaret E. Pollard, a son, Arthur M. Pollard, city, and a brother, Grant Pollard. Alexander Rites Set Last rites for Miss Margaret L. Alexander, 32, who died yesterday at her home, 102 E. 21st-st, after an illness of four months, are to be conducted at 2 tomorrow in the Harry W. Moore Funeral Home, 2050 E. Michigan-st. Burial is to be in Memorial Park Cemetery. Miss Alexander was born in An-
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HERE’S A WORM’S-EYE VIEW OF THE NEW CHEVROLET BODY PLANT HERE
M - ■; ; ’ Jag • r;
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derson and was a member of the First United Brethren Church. Survivors are her mother, Mrs. Grace C. Decker, her stepfather, F. E. Decker and a sister, Mrs. Jack Schlott, all of Indianapolis. Body to Be Returned The body of Mrs. Laura E. King, 68, who died Sunday at the home of a sister, Mrs. R. L. Green, Palo Alto, Cal., is to be returned to Indianapolis for funeral services and burial. Survivors besides the sis' er are two daughters, Mrs. Alien Greer, Indianapolis, and Mrs. John F. Hetrich, San Francisco, and a son, George King, Sacramento, Cal. Linhart Rites Set Funeral rites for Mrs. Adella Linhart, a resident of Indianapolis 33 years, are to be held at her home, 955 Parker-av, at 2 tomorrow afternoon. The Rev. Mrs. H. W. Robbins La Salle Street U. B. Church pastor, is to officiate. Burial is to be in Anderson Cemetery. Mrs. Linhart, who was 70, died at her home yesterday. She had been in ill health for 15 yeais. Survivors are the husband, John Linhart; three sons, Delbert Linhart, Clyde Linhart and Clayton Plank, all of Indianapolis; a daughter, Miss Vera Plank of De&alb, 111., and three grandchildren, also of Indianapolis. Former Resident Dies Funeral services for Robert K. Putnam, former Indianapolis resident ,are to be held at 3:30 tomorrow afternoon in Grand Rapids, Mich. Burial is to be there. Mr. Putnam, who was 90, died in Grand Rapids last night after an illness of almost three months. He was the father of Miss E. Mae Putnam, the Indianapolis Star librarian, and had lived in Indianapolis from 1920 to 1922. Survivors besides the daughter are two sons, Charles K. Putnam of Grand Rapids and D. G. Putnam of Chicago. Depend on Zemo for Skin Irritations Are you suffering from an itching, burning, irritated skin? There’s no need to. For 25 years Zemo has brought welcome relief to millions of sufferers. Because of its rare ingredients, Zemo usually cools, soothes and relieves the Itching of eczema, pimples, rashes, ringworm and similar annoying skin irritations. Buy Zemo today—Get quick comfort. Zemo has been tested and approved by Good Housekeeping Bureau, No. 4574. Zemo belongs in every home. All druggists’, 33c, 00c, sl.—Advertisement.
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SWISS BISHOP TO TALK HERE North Central Conference to Be Held at Kokomo April 15 to 20. Times Special KOKOMO, Ind., March 18.—Bishop John L. Nuelsen, Zurich Switzerland, is to be the principal speaker at the annual six-day meeting of the North Central Indiana Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church here April 15 to 20. Bishop Nuelsen, senior bishop of the denomination throughout the world, has been in charge of organized Methodism in countries of central Europe since 1908. More than 700 clerical and lay delegates are expected to attend. The laymen’s association is to convene April 18. Chief item of business is to be the selection of delegates to the general conference at Columbus, 0., in May, at which action is to be taken on the proposal to merge the North and South Methodist Episcopal denominational groups. Other speakers are to be Bishop George A. Miller, Chile; Bishop J. E. Gattinoni, Argentina; Dr. George P. Howard, New Mexico; Dr. Merton S. Rice, Detroit; Dr. G. Bromley Oxnam, president of De Pauw University, and Bishop Edgar Blake, Detroit.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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MOST WEATHER PROVERBS FAKE, SAYSOBSERVER Follow Rhyme Rather Than Reason, Armington Tells Fraternity. Eighty per cent of all weather proverbs are false, according to J. H. Armington, Federal meteorologist in charge of the local weather bureau. Mr. Armington, speaking yesterday at a luncheon of the Indianapolis alumni chapter of Sigma Delta Kappa, legal fraternity, said: “The old-time weather proverbs were handed down from father to son, tribe to tribe and generation to generation. Most of the old prophecies merely were a matter of rhyme, like day and May.” Benjamin Franklin was one of the
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first scientists to notice that weather followed general routes from West to East. Mr. Armington said. He discovered this while receiving reports on an eclipse of the moon, noting that places in the path of the eclipse reported a storm passing at different times in an easterly direction. With the development of telegraph in 1868 it was used to gather reliable information for weather forecasts, he said. In 1870, Congress established the first meteorological service for use of the Navy. Later it was placed under the Department of Agriculture, where it now is, he explained. Information and reports are re-
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service. Located about seven miles east of Rushville, it has been operated 65 years. William Henry Harrison, president of the alumni chapter, presided at the meeting. The next luncheon is to be held April 21, it was announced.
