Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 July 1936 — Page 5

CHARLES LIP

IS SCHEDULED

Contractor Who Died Here |

Yesterday to Be Buried at Union City.

CHARLES H. LIPP, 4073 Park-av, dike.”

contractor and building superintendent, died yesterday at Methodist

Hospital after a week's illness. He |Mrs

was 56.

Funeral services are to be held at 9 a. m. tomorrow in the Tyner Funeral Home and at 10:30 a. m. in Union City. Burial is to be in Union City. Mr. Lipp, who was born in Martinsville and lived in Union City un~ til he came to Indianapolis, 13 years ago, was a member of the Capitol Avenue M. E. Church, the 1.0. O. F., Golden Eagles and the Modern Woodmen of AmericS. Survivors are the widow, Mrs. Maude Lipp; two daughters, Mrs. E. C. Hougen of LaCrosse, Wis., and Mrs. Marion Mercer of Indianapolis, and a son, Herbert Lipp of Indianapolis. MISS GWENDOLYN DIXON, Brownsburg, who died Saturday ine Bt. Vincent's Hospital after an illness of several weeks, is to be buried in Roachdale following funeral services today at 8 p. m. at the Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary. Miss Dixon was 36. She was secretary to Dr. Francis D. McCabe, state probation director

Miss Dixon was born on a farm near Rockville, July 4, 1900, the

daughter of William and Louise | Sk

Dixon and attended the public schools at Rockville. She later enrolled at De Pauw University where she studied music. She was bookkeeper in the State Highway Department and worked for a time in the State Excise Division, before transferring to the Probation Department. A member of the Democratic Women’s Statehouse Club, = Miss Dixon had been active in affairs of the Democratic Party for several years. -

ORAL M. HUTTOW, Greenwood, state manager -of Stokely - Van Camp, Inc. Methodist Hospital, was to be buried in Sharpsville following funeral services at 10 a. m. today in Tipton. He was 45. Mr. Huttow, who was educated in Sharpsville and Tipton :public schools, was graduated from Indiana University. He was a member of Sigma Chi Fraternity. - He became associated with the Fame Canning Co. in Tipton in 1916. After the plant was taken over by the Stokely Co. in 1929, he was put in charge of all Indiana Stokely plants. He was a member of the Masonic Lodge, the Scottish Rite and the. Old Guard, inner organization of the National Canners Association, in which he was active. Survivors include the widow, Mrs. Vena Huttow; a son, Ted Huttow, both of Greenwood; the father, N. L. Huttow, Sharpsville; a sister, Miss Nora Mae Huttow, Indianapolis, and two brothers, Ray Huttow, Windfall, and Uhl Huttow, Sharpsville. HARRY P. WILLIAMS, meat and grocery store proprietor, died Saturday in his home, 1264 Belmont-av, following an illness of three weeks. He was 60. Funeral services were to be held at 2 p. m. today in the Wald Funeral Home, with burial in Garland Brook Cemetery at Columbus Born in Mt. Washington, O., he came to Indianapolis’ many years ago. He was a member of the First United Lutheran Church here and the Knights of Pythias. He operated a store at 1047 N. West-st. Survivors are the widow, Elizabeth; three daughters, Mrs. Gale Copacia, ‘Mrs. Harriett Rasmussen and Miss Dorothy M. Williams, Indianapolis; four sons, Ernest, Harry, Eugene and Karl, and a brother, Pearl S. Willianis, Indianapolis.

MRS. SARAH ELIZABETH MARKLEY, an Indianapolis resident for 16 years, died yesterday in the home of her son, Charles Markley, 1425 King-av. Mrs, Mar- * kley, who was 73, was born in Shelbyville and came to this city in 1920, Survivors are three sons, Charles Markley and Harry Markley of Indianapolis and Robert Markley of Karuchi, India; a daughter, Mrs. William Reed of Shelbyville, and two brothers, Joseph Thomas, Arlington, and Charles Thomas of Washington. Funeral services are to be held at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow in Trinity -M. E. Church, Shelbyville. Burial is to be in Forest Hill, there.

MRS. MARY GLICKERT, lifelong resident of Indianapolis, who died Friday night in the home of her daughter, Mrs. John L. Hahn, 1906 Union-st, was to be buried today following services at 2 p. m. in the G. H. Hermann Funeral Home, She was 85. Mrs. Glickert, who was born in Indianapolis, was a hair-dresser in a downtown shop before her marPi to John Glickert in 1869. Mr. Glickert died in 1918. Survivors in addition to Mrs. Hahn are another daughter, George A. Taylor of and three . Sons, John, Charles and William, all of Indianapolis; six children. an and one greatgrand-

who died Friday in|H

GROYE—Jo Sif Survivors: Widow: shildren. Braet

BLOOMINGTON—Thomas AM furvivors: Widow; sister,

BRAZIL willi hi vivars: Chidrss, Thomas, Duishe avid, Hisabetn Butcher and Mrs. CLINTO —LeRoy Johnson, 20. Survivors: Parents, Eimer Taha 3 ‘Mrs. Rosa Johnson Hurst.

uel Bonser. 82. Survivors: Yidow: children, Mrs. Dora Purcell and Matt

B OLZAX- Tho Rev. David Charles Camp-

bell, 81. COLUMBUS—Miss: Maude Calkins, 22. Survivors: Parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wilson C Mrs. iter: ymie Hollenbeck Sharp. 3 Sutvivors: SH. ig and Lem Sharp CRAWFO DSYILLE- Orville Newlin “38.

stapry ters, Ma Newlin, Mrs. Bear] Davis Digs Mrs. Iva Tracy: brother,

Warren J. McIntyre, Survivors:

39. Devitt, Mary Genevive McIntyre. m and Thomas; brother,

Merle; sister, Mrs. Pear] Bell.

etits

og | —

Touisa Eber-

rey bi

DANA-—Allen Bonebrake, 80. Survivors: Ata Mrs, Elmer Cunningham; brother.

WOOD—8arah Ann Moore, 82. Sut.

. ev ‘Daughrs. Lettie McCubbins, Mrs, Arlie Likéns and Mrs. Harry Bowyer; brothers; Hatry and John; ster, Mrs. Minnie Fudge.

FORT WAYNE-—-B. E. Kohn, 55. Survivors: Widow; sons, Orlo and Dwight. Miss Mar Shadle, 63. Survivors: is anna Reamer and Mrs, H. Rev. H. ‘Morton

Miss Millie Epstein, 79. Survivors: Sisters, Mrs. Sarah Newberger and the Misses Carrie and Nettie Epstein; brothers, Samuel and Simon. FRANKFORT-—David R. Major, 70. Survivors: Widow; sons, Randolph and John. Ralph Smi th, 58. Burvivors: Widow; children, Mrs. Louise Beam and Miss Dorothy Smith; brother, Adrian: Bis, Mrs. Charles Cavan of Springfield, FRANBLIN Orville Burries, as. vivors: Son. Geoige: brother. Ralp GREENCASTLE—Roscoe Eldin ED. 80. Survivors: Widow; sisters, Miss Maude Sutherlin and Mrs. Blanche Massey. GREENFIELD—Burton Beckner, 62. SurLivors; Sons, Russell and Charles: sisters, Mrs. Lena Adams, Mrs. Flora Moore. Mrs. Rhoda Shields and Mrs. Elvira Biller: brother, Henry Beckner ot Rushville ChilDo

Survivors: dren, Mrs. John Watson, Mrs. nald Clarence Lacy. Mrs. Lester {ss Wilma Bingham nd wil-

Widow, parents,

jh

George Bingham, 72.

liam Bingham

Cecil Passage, 23. Survivors: Opal: daughter, Marilyn June; r. and Mrs. Elmer Passage. a Gwinn. 8 Survivors: Sisters, Mrs. Alta Lewark, Mrs. Luther Passwater and Mrs. Myrtle Caudell. all of Fortville, GREENWOOD—O. M. Jutte: 46. Survivors: Widow: son. Ted: brothers. J and Ural: sister, Miss Nora Mae Hutt

Gertrude Hicks; a brother, Clarence, and son, Harlan Jr.

GEORGE F. MULLENKOPF, R. R. 12, Box 436, died early yesterday after becoming ill while fishing on White River. Heart disease was given as the cause of his death. His companion, Lee Irvin, 2344 N. Gale-st, drove him to Lawrence, Ind. for treatment where a physiSian told him Mr. Mullenkopf was ead.

MRS. HELEN MORAN HANDY, 1305 Lawrence-av; died yesterday in the St. Vincent's Hospital. She was 24. Funeral services are to be held at 9 a. m. Wednesday in St. Catherine’s Church. Burial is to be in Holy Cross. Mrs. Handy was born here and attended the Indianapolis public schools. She wés married to Gurnie H. Handy three years ago. She was a member of St. Catherine's Catholic Church. Survivors are her husband; her parents, Mr, and Mrs. John Moran: a sister, Mrs. Louis Moran of Indianapolis, and three brothers, Edward, Norman and Roland Moran, all of Marion. >

WILLIAM F. KINNEY, retired revenue accountant for the Western Union Telegraph Co. here, who died in St. Vincent's Hospital Friday, was to be buried in Holy Cross Cemetery following services at 8:30 a. m. today in the St. Bridget’s Catholic Church. He was 61.

LESLIE R. BROOKS, 2332 N. Ala-bama-st, a resident of Indianapolis for 28 years, died yesterday morning in the City Hospital. He was to be buried in Rushville following funeral services at 2 p. m. today in the Wyatt Funeral Home there. He was 49. He had been overcome by the heat. Survivors are the widow, Mrs. Jessie E. Brooks; a daughter, Martha Jane Brooks, and a son, John R. Brooks, all of Indianapolis.

MRS. ROSA DITTMER, lifelong resident of Indianapolis, who died Thursday night in her home, 1043 E. Tabor-st, was to be buried in

ices at 3 p. m. today, in the Emmaus Lutheran Church. She was 67. She had been ill for several months. 3 Survivors are two daughters, Miss Olga Dittmer and Mrs. Irma Franke, all of Indianapelis, and two brothers, Harry Franke of Incdian-

Lafayette. Her husband, Frederick | Cadet Dittmer, died in 1908.

Brest. Glen. | si

Concordia Cemetery following serv-'

apolis and Edward F. Bartling of

FIRES DAMAGE. STATE FORESTS

1152 Acres Burned in Five a op

: Weeks; Smokers Are Chief Offenders.

Forest fires consumed 1152 acres of Indiana forest from June 1 to July 17, caused $3861 worth of damage and were controlled at a cost of - 1224431, the Department of Conservation reported today. Carelessness of snfokers was cited by Virgil M. Simmons, commissioner, as the chief fire cause. Woodeareas totaling 894 acres valued °* $2958 were ravaged by fires started by smokers; 149 acres were cone sumed by fires started by the burning of debris, and 78 acres wera burned by incendiary fires. Other fires were caused by campers, lumbermen and hunters, he said. More than 1000 acres of forest land were burned within a threeday period, July 10-13, Mr. Simmons said. These fires are being investigated.

LOCAL WOMEN JOIN ANTI-WAR MOVEMENT

Committee Is Named to Map City Organization Campaign. At a meeting of Indianapolis women yesterday in the Spink Arms Hotel, plans were made to organize a local unit of the Committee for the People’s Mandate to, End War. Miss Elizabeth Stradley, Allentown, Pa., national organizer, said in outlining the purpose of the

committee: “We are striving to make concreté what we feel is a constantly growing ' sentiment throughout the world.” Miss Violet F. Muse, Mrs. Vernon Parker, Miss Ethel Moore and Mrs. L. E. Schultz were named on a tem# porary local organization committee. Arrangements also were made to send an Indianapolis delegation to Topeka, Kas., July 30, te urge Gov. Alfred M. Landon to take a definite peace stand in his presidential campaign.

WRECK PLOTTERS TRIED

Face Court for Alleged Attempt to Make Train Crash. By United Press PENSACOLA. Fla., July 20.—Two Negroes and Earl Travis, alleged paramour of comely Mrs. L. W! Vann whom the Negroes accused of plotting to wreck her 70-year-old husband’s train so she could marry Travis, went on trial today. The two Negroes, Allen Langston, an aged “voodoo doctor,” and 17-year-old Allen Finley, told police Mrs. Vann promised to pay them $50 if they wrecked the train.

FILLING STATION ROBBED

Armed Bandit Gets $7 From Holy Rosary Enterprise.

An armed robber obtaintd $7 from the Community Service Station, 502 Stevens-st, owned by the Holy Rosary Church, early today. Robert Crooke, 17, of 843 Wood-lawn-av, station attendant, said the bandit menaced him with a pistol and fled south on East-st.

Association Officers, Renamed

All officers of the Rush-Fayette County Association were re-elected at the thirty-eighth annual reunion held yesterday in Brookside Park. They are T. W. Langston, president; Mrs. Ador Kreuger, vice president, and C. W. Hackelmann, secretary. More than 250 former residents of the two counties attended.

RR | ‘Air Movies to Be Shown - Aviation movies provided by Lieut. Col. H. Weir Cook, thirty-eighth Division air officer, are to be presented at a father-and-son meeting of oF he newly formed American Air Corps in the Indiana Na-

tional Guard Armory, Friday night.

ho at 3 ¥ Hirinond a Perens hae? and Mrs «

* | Pum; N.: C. ES B.

ber

CEIpe 2 kent |

and

Atkins, Isabell

PCN Mes, James -Rickels.. Sur-

%.8 = y ROACHD, n Henry Grantham,

83. AE Th: Mrs. Agnes

Woods, C. Barnes. M Israel and Edgar Srantham. a. Horase

ROCHE! Gordon. 18. ‘Survivor: Mother, Mrs. ® Ginays Burn, RUS!

Frank ‘MM. Earnest. 7 78. Survivors:

Mrs. Floyd Collins and rs Cha Charles Foi Fulton, Rev. L. C. 80. 61. Caer: ChilMrs. Helen Furby, Stan-

viver:

4 30L SLs,

ow; , daughter, rs. Ma r: sister, Mrs. H. C. Steel. and Willis.

Sins Bish Hoary Tor prota ters. 5 A. hoo. 85, sur. Ha ‘Mrs. Nora

Mrs. . Ermine v. Glover.

ee PARAL 83. Mrs. CoTales B.: sister, "Mary J.

win 25d Cou

Ha ® oh PF. Ro t Daughter. Mrs. Ho Yann.

G—An 86. rg TL

dow; cCormick and John

VEE Survivors; Mae McCo

Myers, bonis, Patte

NEW DEAL ASSAILED BY LIBERTY LEAGUE

Revenue Laws Flayed in Pamphlet ‘of Organization,

By United Press WASHINGTON, July. 20.—Again

assailing Administration revenue

serted the “New Deal pattern cs government” resembles that of Er ropean dictatorships.

A league pamphlet said the 1935 and 1936 revenue laws are of significance because of their bearing upon the theories of government. The Administration tax program, it said, is intended to facilitate the type of economic planning Which requires government control of indust try. \

IMPOSE ‘SPRINKLING BAN

Due to Heavy Demand. Times Special ~~ CONNERSVILLE, Ind, July 20.— Police ‘squads are cru! sing nightly through residential districts here to enforce the city's second ban on lawn sprinkling. The first ban was-ordered at the height of the heat wave and was repeated Saturday when water merely trickled from faucets, due to previous heavy consumption.

© Suites

Willis. 49. Sure |

Connersville Faucets Only Trickle,

year, and ane earned their release,” he declared. -

Bln ‘of the men bad been | charged with' second-degree burglary and grand larceny, one with grand larceny, one with embezzlement and grand larceny, two with

La | vehicle taking, one with second-de-Survivor:

gree burglary and petit larceny, one | with petit larceny and one with second degree burglary, court records showed.

Two were married, Mr. Cooley | +| said, and were able to stay in their |

communities ‘and maintain their

homes. If they had. been incarce-|

rated, the county would have been

obliged to support their families,”

he pointed out. “It makes news,” he said, “when a parolee or probationer commits another crime. Actually 90 per cent of the probationers make useful places for themselves in society. The figure probably isn’t that high for

laws, ‘the Liberty League today as- parolees

Plan Citizenship Scheol

According to. Judge Baker, one of the most important things in a pro-

gram of rehabilitation of human | grate decorations to give the Gover-

character is employment. There are a” few young men on probation in Criminal Court who need employment badly, he said. Some of these men, the records revealed, partially are trained for

‘work, while others need training.

He pointed out that the court, however great the need, would not recommend any one for work which it did not feel he was able and willing to do. :

From now on, each applicant for |

release from probation, is to appear before Judge Baker, and officially be released. Future plans of the court include a citizenship school, which all probationers are to be required to attend.

Rocks and fossils collected by Admiral Byrd's expedition to Little America in the Antarctic are to be added to Harvard University’s geological collections.

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TOPEKA STAGE SET

“FOR LANDON EVENT

City Expects 100,000 at | Acceptance Ceremony. By United Press :

TOPEKA, Kas., uly 20—Gov. Alf M. Landon today watched his.state’s

capithl city prepare for its own his-

tory-making ‘day—his formal acceptance of Republican nomination as presidential candidate Thursday.

The Governor spent a quiet weekend. Tomorrow Mrs, Landon: and Peggy Anne, his oldest daughter, arrive from Estes Park, Colo., where they have-beén vacationing. The city, amid putting up of elab-

nor a campaign sendoff “in style,” was faced with providing for 100,000 visitors for the notification ceremony on the steps of the Kansas Slatehouse. ‘The all-day program includes a parade featuring 300 Indians, 75 bands, 15 prairie schoeners, clephants and a carriage in which Abraham Lincoln once rode. There will be. an Indian dance and a barbecue. '* Gov. Lanidon’s address is to climax the formal program which is to start at 8 p. m. "The speech ' will take ahous 30 minutes, plans showed

| Ickes decided ' today | Bublic utiity opposition and stress

CLASH

PHA Chief to Advance]

Funds for Constructing “Municipal “Plants.

By United Press WASHINGTON, July 20.—Public Works Administrator Harold L. to override

power plant construction his new $300,000,000 building His plan was understood to have the approval of President Roosevelt. It exactly fitted ne New Deal's long-range Federal

of using money pn pu y-owned power de- |

velopments. Mr. Ickes may finance up to 141 municipal electricity projects cost ing around $100,000,000 while battling power companies charge that his action would violate the Con-

-} stitution. : Public power systems were pushed

to the front in the big construction after President Roosevelt ruled PWA could finance projects only where a city had sufficient relief labor to build them. ‘One hundred and forty-one municipalities already have certified lists of jobless available for the

The power program, if all applications are financed by PWA on a 45 per cent grant a, would include 69 new municipal power plants, 58 improvements to existing plants, 11 institutional plants and three distribution systems. The final decision on the government’s right to spend public funds financing municipally-owned systems will come next fall from the United States Supreme Court.

RCA PLANT ACCUSED OF LABOR VIOLATION

U. S. Board Issues Complaint Based on Camden Strike.

By United Press PHILADELPHIA, July 20.—A complainé ‘the RCA Manufacturing Co. with violation of the National Labor Relations Act provisions outlawing “company unions” has been issued by the regional office of the National Labor Relations Board, it was announced today. The complaint was based on charges filed with the NLRB by the United Electrical and Radio Workers of America, on strike at the Camden (N. J.) plant of the company since June 23. The ROCA concern was charged specifically with an alleged ‘“company organisation.” a

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120 Men’s

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