Indianapolis Times, Volume 48, Number 29, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 April 1936 — Page 6
PAGE 6
W. 0. PINNELL. LUMBER FIRM OFFICIAL. DIES Funeral Services to Be Held at Residence Tomorrow. Funeral services are to be held at 2 tomorrow afternoon at the residence for William Ormal Pinnell, 5632 Washington-blvd, who died yesterday morning. He was 46. Born in Lebanon, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Julius Pinnell, he attended Indianapolis public schools, Shortridge High School and the University of Virginia. * He was associated with the Pin-nell-Dulin Lumber Cos., Noblesville, for 22 years and came to Indianapolis in 1930 with J. W. Pinnell & Cos., of which he was vice president. He was a member of the Masonic Order, the Elks Lodge at Noblesville, the Indianapolis Athletic Club and Sigma Nu Fraternity. Surviving Mr. Pinnell are the widow, Mrs. Irene Albright Pinnell; a son, Julius E. Piinell; two brothers, J. Victor Pinnell and Herbert A. Pinnell, and a sister, Mrs. Nathan P. Graham, all of Indianapolis. Services at the homa tomorrow are to be conducted by Frank Ayres, Christian Scientist. Burial is to be in Oak Hill Memorial Cemetery. Chenery Rites Here Memorial services for Mrs. May Sells Chenevy, former resident of Indianapolis who died April 4 at the home of her daughter, Mrs. J. P. Marshall, St. Louis, are to be held at 2:30 tomorrow in the Crown Hill Chapel. The Rev. William A. Shullcnberger, pastor of the Central Christian Church, is to have charge. Survivors other than Mrs. Marshall are two nephews, M. E. Graves and Alan M. Sells, both of Indianapolis; three grandchildren and one great-grandchild. Pedlow Rites Thursday Funeral services for Richard J. Pedlow, 329 S. Emerson-av, a resident of Indianapolis for 66 years, are to be held Thursday at 2:30 in the home. Mr. Pedlow, who was 68, died Sunday night in the Methodist Hospital after an illness of one week. Burial is to be in Washington Park Cemetery. The Rev. Harold O. Boon, rector of St. Matthew’s Episcopal Church, and the Rev. Francis D. McCabe, former rector, are to officiate. A native of Hell’s Hollow, Wis., Mr. Pedlow came to Indianapolis with his parents when he was 2 years old. He worked for the Mooney-Mueller-Ward Cos., and was a member of St. Matthew’s Church. Survivors are the widow, Mrs. Louise Pennicke Pedlow; a daughter, Mrs. Louise Plummer, and two grandchildren, Louise and Georgia Plummer, all of Indianapolis. Byers Service Arranged Funeral services for Mrs. Melissa Byers, Brownsburg resident who died yesterday, are to be held at 2 tomt rrow afternoon in the Hensley & Phillips Funeral Home, 1068 Udellst. Burial will be in Crown Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Byers, who was 88, was born In Zionsville. She had lived in Indianapolis, Carmel and Boone County most of her life. She was a member of the Presbyterian Church of Zionsville. Survivors are a daughter. Mrs. W. E. Parkhurst, Brownsburg. and two sons, W. E. and J. E. Byers, both of Indianapolis. Ackerman Rites Tonight Burial of Miss Charlotte Ackerman, 3410 Hillside-av. X-ray technician, who died yesterday at the Methodist Hospital, is to be held in Huntsville, 0., following funeral rites tonight in the Flanner Buchanan Mortuary. Miss Ackerman who was 48, was a graduate of the Indiana Christian Hospital and was employed by Dr. Raymond C. Beeler for more than 16 years. She had been ill 10 days. Survivors are her mother, Mrs. Sadie B. Ackerman, Indianapolis, and two brothers, Bert Ackerman, Bellfontaine, 0., and Fred Ackerman, Turner, Kas. Dodds Rites Wednesday Last rites for Ernest L. Dodds, 1303 Tecumseh-st, who died yesterday in City Hospital after an illness of sij{ weeks, are to be held in the home of Mrs. John R. Callender, 929 E. Raymond-st, tomorrow morning at 10. Burial is to be in Crown Hill Cemetery. Mr. Dodds, who was 44, was a salesman for the Polk Sanitary Milk Cos. Survivors are the widow’, three sons, William, Edw’ard and Robert Dodds; a daughter, Miss Dorothy Dodds, all of Indianapolis, and two sisters, Mrs. Birdia Gill. Detroit, Mich., and Mrs. Olive Silvers, Redfield, Kas. THIEVES TAKE HAY, CORN Furniture Also Stolen, Police Are Told by Victim. Thieves, w’ho apparently plan to become farmers, stole four tons of hay and 300 bushels of corn valued at $336 and furniture worth S2O from a warehouse at Kentucky-av and the Belt Railroad early today. Charles F. Tucker, owner, reported the burglary to police.
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University Park Fountain Portrays Spirit of Joy
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Depew Memorial, Product of Two Noted Artists, Is Praised by Critics. Nowhere in Indianapolis, art lovers believe, is the joyous spirit characterized to a higher degree than in the “Fountain of Youth,” the Depew Memorial Fountain in University Park. Although sculpture often is criticised as being ponderous and heavy, these dancing boys and girls give the impression of ecstatic, light-hearted movement.
This work is the product of two men, Karl T. Bitter and A. Stirling Calder. Bitter drew the designs, but v/as killed in a traffic accident in 1915 before he could finish the work. Calder modeled the figures and carried out Bitter’s idea. The fountain, which cost $50,000, was given Indianapolis by the late Mrs. Emma Ely Depew in memory of her husband, Richard Johnson Depew, M. D. The statue was unveiled Sept. 13, 1919. Artists Are Noted Bitter came to the United States from Vienna in 1889 when he was 22. Among his other works are the reliefs on the Pennsylvania Station in Philadelphia and on the New York Chamber of Commerce and the Metropolitan Museum of Art buildings in New York.
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Calder was born in 1870 in Philadelphia and studied at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts and in Paris under Chapu and Falguiere. His greatest honor to date is winning the grand prize at the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition in Seattle in 1909. HLs best work is said to be the Ericsson Memorial, a gift of the American people to Iceland. At present he is an instructor in the National Academy of Design and Art Students’ League in New York City. Purple Heart Chapter to Elect An election of officers for the Indianapolis Chapter of the Military Order of the Purple Heart is to be held at 8 tonight. Guy A. Boyle, commander, will preside.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
BIDS ASKED FOR FIVE STATE HIGHWAY JOBS Projects Readvertised After April 7 Letting, Adams Says. Bids are to be received April 28 on five additional highway construction projects readvertised from the letting held by the State Highway Commission April 7, according
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CEREMONY SERIES SET FOR MASTER MASONS Grades From Fourth to Thirty-Sec-ond to Be Conferred on 50. More than 50 Master Masons in the Indianapolis Valley are to receive grades from the fourth to thirty-second in Scottish Rite
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close with a dinner-dance the following night. Dr. Max Bahr to Lecture Dr. Max A. Bahr. Indiana Central Hospital superintendent, Is to present a thesis on “Personlaity vs. Environment” and an illustrated lecture at a meeting of the Indianapolis Medical Society tonight in the Athenaeum.
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