Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 June 1936 — Page 6
DES IN CAPITAL: NATIVE HOOSIER
Noted Political Expert Had Been lll a Year; Burial on Thursday.
~ Puneral services for Dr. Arnold Bennett Hall, political scientist and | director of government research in Washington and a former resident of Indiana, who died yesterday at his home in Washington, are to be held in Franklin, the city of his birth, Thursday afternoon, accord-
ing to word received here. Burial fyears as head of the farm loan de-
also is to be in Franklin.
Dr: Hall, 54, had been ill more than a year. He was a member of the Baptist Church, the Masons, American Political Science Association, American Social Society, American Institute of Criminology, American Judicature Society, Phi Delta Theta, Delta Sigma Rho, Phi Beta Kappa, Pi Gamma Mu and the Order of Coif. He was graduated from Franklin College in 1904 and was graduated cum laude from the University of Chicago in 1907. He was the author of several books on political science. He is survived by the widow, Mrs. Grace Stafford Carney Hall; a daughter, Miss Grace Elizabeth Hall, Evanston, Ill.; four sisters, Mrs. Letitia Hall Carter, Indianapolis; Mrs. Florence Hall Harvey, and Mrs. Margaret Hall Albjerg, West Lafayette, and Mrs. Mary Hall Selby, San Diego, and two brothers, Warren S. Hall, Lake Forest, Ill, and Nelson C. Hall, Milwaukee.
Mrs. Rhoda P. Campbell
Services for Mrs. Rhoda P.-Camp-bell, who died yesterday, are to be held at 10 tomorrow in the home of her daughter, Mrs. Neva Merritt in Brownsburg. Mrs. Campbell, who was 86, is survived by five daughters, Mrs. Merritt, Mrs. Iva James, Sherwood, Mich.; Mrs. Emma Dewey, Martinsville, and Mrs. Della Dunbar and Mrs. Minnie Jones of Indianapolis, and two sons Elmer and David Campbell, Indianapolis.
Giles Ferris Olwin
Last rites for Giles Ferris Olwin, investment attorney and former sec-retary-manager of the Indianapolis Better Business Bureau, who died yesterday in his home, 5102 N. Penn-sylvania-st, are to be held at 7:30 tonight in the Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary. Services also will be held at 2 tomorrow afternoon in the Methodist Church in Winchester, his former home. Burial is to be in Winchester. He was 60.
ikaw, 75, who died yesterday in his
‘Effie L. Brokaw, and a daughter,
Mr. Olwin was associated with the ||
dent of the board of governors of the National Better Business Commission. He practiced law in Winchester, serving as a junior member of a firm, one of whose members was Judge Enos L. Watson, father of James E. Watson, former United States Senator. He is survived by the widow, Mrs. Mary M. Olwin; a daughter, Mrs. Ethel Hunt Davis, and a granddaughter, Mrs. Robert Hoyne, both of Indianapolis, and a sister, Mrs. Davis E. Cruea, Dekalb, III,
Isaac E. Brokaw
Funeral services for Isaac E. Bro-
home, 2134 Carrolliton-av, after an illness of three weeks, are ‘to be held at 1:30 tomorrow afternoon in the Hisey & Titus Mortuary. Burial is to be in Greenfield.
Mr. Brokaw was born in MecCordsville. He was employed 25
partment of the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Co. following which e had a real estate office in the Hume-Mansur Building 10 years. Later he was a land appraiser for the Federal Land Bank of Louisville. He was a member of the board of deacons of the Third Christian Church 18 years and was a past master of the Pentalpha Lodge of the Masonic order. Members of the lodge are to have charge of the funeral services. He is survived by the widow, Mrs.
Miss Madge Brokaw, Indianapolis.
Mrs. Josephine Rosengarten Funeral services for Mrs. Josephine E. Rosengarten, who died | yesterday, are to be held at 8:30 tomorrow in the home, 749 Prospectst, and at 9 in St. Mary's Church. * Mrss Rosengarten, who was 69 had been-ill three months. She was born in Cedar Grove and came here about 50 years ago. Survivors are a daughter, Mrs. Harry J. Arszman, and three sons, William J., Ervin B. and Harry A. Rosengarten, all of Indianapolis.
"FARM INTEREST
| serve our soil,
'is one of importance to farmers. It
INCONVENTIONS
Support of Spokesmen Is Asked by Indiana Bureau Official.
Sassil Schenck, .vice president of the Indiana Farm Bureau, Inc., today asked ° farmers to support agricultural spokesmen in the political conventions, both state and national. “June is the month in which policies will be formulated which, to a great extent, will determine our future,” he said. “The force with which farm representatives can proceed is in direct proportion to the support they receive.” Policies must be formed, he said, on transportation problems, soil preservation and tax revision.
Points to Soil Decline
“The productivity of our soil has been deteriorating for the last two decades,” Mr. Schenck pointed out. “There is no good reason why public funds should not be spent to pre-
“Property continues to be burdened with more than its share of the tax load. With fixed levies on all other sources of government revenue, there is no reason why there should not be a fixed levy on property. “The problem of transportation
costs $7.50 to transport 100 bushels
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Mprs. Sashweight, nee Sadie Maguire, has often campaigned for the State Legislature, and will be remembered as one of the leaders of the pre-war fight for more leap years. Her frequent speeches before the “Tall Stories Club” are always eagerly
awaited.
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the thing to do about it!
“To keep my Red Crown always fresh —always full of that lively ‘Live Power’—I drain it out every thousand miles and fill "er up again! “Silly!” says my husband, Ted Sashweight. But that just shows you how ‘silly" some men are! He drains out his oil every thousand miles from his car
and I drain out my gasoline. . . be more logical, I ask you?”
. Could anything
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