Indianapolis Times, Volume 48, Number 31, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 April 1936 — Page 30

PAGE 30

RETIRED NAVY OFFICER, CITY NATIVE, DIES Capt. Waldo Evans to Be Buried in Arlington Cemetery Tomorrow. Capt Waldo Evans, retired United States naval officer, born in Indianapolis, is to be buried tomorrow in Arlington National Cemetery in Washington. Capt. Evans, a former governor of the. American Samoa and Virgin Islands, died yesterday in Des Moines, la., at the home of his niece, Mrs. William T. Sherman. He was 68. 11l since the death of his wife a year ago in an automobile accident, Capt. Evans suffered a paralytic stroke in December. He was in the Navy 46 years and during the World War commanded a cruiser which convoyed troop ships overseas. He was made commander of the U. S. S. Wyoming in 1919. He was transferred to Great Lakes fill.) Naval Training Station as its commander in 1920 after serving as governor of Samoa, and was governor of the Virgin Islands from 1927-31 when he retired. Nelson Rites Tomorrow Funeral services are to be held tomorrow afternoon at 2 in Grace M. E. Church for Mrs. Edith F. Nelson, who died yesterday at her home, 46 N. Bradley-st. Burial is to be in Washington Park Cemetery. Mrs. Nelson, who was 47, was a member of the Methodist Church, the Irvington chapter of the Order of Eastern Star, the ladies’ auxiliary of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, the Indiana Women’s Republican Club and the Ninth Ward Republican Club, and was a past president of the ladies’ auxiliary of the McKinley Club. She was born in Bedford and had been a resident of Indianapolis more than 30 years. Surviving are the widower. Earl; her mother, Mrs. Josephine Clarke; a sister, Miss Ruth Clarke, Heltonville, and two half brothers, Everett and Ase Clarke, both of Bedford. Former Resirient Dead Funeral services are to be held tomorrow in Delaware 0., for Charles H. Bruce, who was in the bakery business in Indianapolis many years before moving to Ohio. Mr. Bruce, who was 50, died at the home of Arthur Decker, a brother-in-law, in (Delaware. Mr. Bruce was born in Indianapolis and spent most of his life here. He was in the bakery business in the 1100 block of Virginia-av. Surviving are the widow, who lives in Delaware; two brothers, Arthur and Clifford Bruce, and a sister, Mrs. Ada Fickle, all of In- j dianapolis. Herrell Rites Private Private funeral services are to be held for Mrs. Maude C. Herrell, who died last night at her home, 4227 Graceland-av, after a two-year illness. She had lived in Indianapolis since 1907 and was a member of the Meridian Heights Presbyterian Church and the Inter-Se Club. Mr. Herrell died in 1933. Surviving Mrs. Herrell, who was 64, are three sons, Harry TANARUS., Leonard J. and Maxwell Herrell, Indianapolis; a brother, Charles Young, Galveston, Ind., and four grandchildren. Friends may call at the Flanner & Bxichanan Mortuary tomorrow night. Retired Fireman Dies Funeral services are being arranged today for John Fitzgibbons, 62, retired battalion fire chief, -whose body was found late yesterday afternoon in his room in the Spencer Hotel. Deputy Coroner John Wyttenbach today had fixed the cause of death as coronary occlusion. The body was found by Andrew Foltz, 4500 E. 16th-st. a carpenter who had been called to force the door of Fitzgibbons’ room after hotel employes were unable to gain entrance. Surviving are two brothers, Sergt.J. P. Gibbons, municipal court bailiff, and W. J. Gibbons, Los Angeles. A sister, Miss Catherine Gibbons, lives in Cleveland.

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From the gray-white granite of Mount Rushmore, gigantic national memorial in South Dakota, the sculptured face of George Washington here looks out, aloof from all the world, across to the forested mountains to the southeast. The face of the first president is 60 feet in height and that of the entire monument 240 feet. At the right is the face of Thomas Jefferson, kindly and quizzical in expression. A few finishing touches this summer and Gutzon Borglum, world-famed sculptor, will complete the heads of these two great statesmen. The face of Arbraham Lincoln, at the extreme right, then will be blocked out and work started on that of Theodore Roosevelt in 1937.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

CLUD EXECUTIVE URGES DRIVERS TO USESIGNALS Criticizes 'Amateur Safety Exponents' for Their Fantastic Ideas. Criticism of “amateur safety exponents” for advancing “inane” safety idea* while neglecting the enforcement of already existing traffic laws was made today by Todd Stoops, Hoosier Motor Club secretary. “They overlook entirely the many safety laws still in force which have been advocated by students of traffic safety since the automobile was invented. A little more attention

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to present safety laws may solve our accident problem,” he said. Mr. Stoops said that the present Indiana law on hand signals, sponsored by the Hoosier Motor Club, makes it imperative that signals be given for every operation of the automobile. The proper use of hand signals will go far in deducing the number of motor vehicle accidents, he said. The operator of the car who gives hand signals is a careful and considerate driver, Me. Stoops stated. ‘‘Many fantastic ideas are now being advanced by amateur safety exponents in the general and widespread movement against automobile accidents, and they overlook entirely the many safety laws still in force which have been advocated by students of traffic safety since the automobile was invented. A little more attention to present safety laws may solve our present traffic accident problem.” D. K. E. Alumni to Meet The Indianapolis Alumni Association of the Delta Kappa Epsilon Fraternity was to meet today at noon in the Bamboo Inn. John D. Hughes is president.

CHINESE UNITY NEARJSCLAIM Y. M. C. A. Group Is Addressed by International Committee Aid. China, which steadily has been undergoing physical, moral and religious changes during the last 40 years, rapidly is approaching a political unity, Francis S. Harmon. Y. M. C. A’s international committee secretary, told members of the local Y. M. C. A. Discussion Club. He spoke at a guest luncheon given

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yesterday by Charles J. Lynn, Eli Lilly & Cos. vice-president, in the Athletic Club. Mr. Harmon declared that the physical character of China’s cities is changing and the crusade by western medical missionaries has succeeded in great measure in preventing epidemics and diseases. Since the Y. M. C. A. missionaries entered China, the same year that China ©pened her doors to the western world, there has been an influx of two other types of missionaries, the emissaries of communistic Russia and of Fascist Italy, he said. D. F. McClelland, former Y. M. C. A. national secretary in India, told of the tremendous tasks facing Christian organizations in India. Declaring that the hope of India lies in its acceptance of Chris-

.APRIL/16,1936

tianity, Mr. McClelland said that through Christian teaching mysticism has been replaced hymutUcal science and that rehabilltatiorSj,? being brought to the economic ana' social structures. flcU SERVICE Crowns—Bridges Extractions ir von. i ., w *r*;? rT , credit so "late Repairs 18 IT°7$ _ One-Day Service good at If You Wish Forshee’s 'f' l ’- Forshee Operates His OWN Laboratory I Honrs: 3A.M.t08 P. M. Sundays: 11 A. M. to 1 P. M.