Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 May 1937 — Page 15
_ THURSDAY, MAY 13,
J, C. OVERMAN FUNERAL IS SET FOR TOMORROW
Burial to Be in Crown Hill; He Was Butcher in City ‘Market 40 Years.
John Calvin Overman, 965 Lindwood Ave. a butcher in City Market for 40 years, who died Tuesday in City Hobpital, is to be buried in Crown Hill tomorrow. Funeral services are to be held at 3 p. m. in the Shirley Brothers Funeral Home. Mr. Overman, who was 81, was born in Maple Valley, and. came to Indianapolis 47 years ago. Survivors are two sons, Arley G. Overman and Pharos J. Overman; two daughters, Mrs. Laura E. Marsh and Mrs. Marie H. Griswold, all of Indianapolis; seven grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
MRS. STACEY JANE LITTLE, 4827 College Ave., a resident of Indianapolis 20 years, died yesterday in Methodist Hospital after an illness of four days. She was 76. Born in Owensburg, Mrs. Little was a member of the Third Christian Church, the Women's Relief Corps and the Rebekahs. Burial is to be in Green Hill Cemetery, Bedford, following funeral services in Finn Brothers Funeral Home at 9 a. m., tomorrow, and at 2:30-p. m. in Bedford. . Survivors are three daughters, Miss Opal Little and Miss Ruby Little, both of Indianapolis, and Mrs. Edna Hatfield, Seyniour, and a grandson, L. J. Hatfield, Seymour.
MRS. SARAH F. JUDD died last night in her home, 767 DeQuincy St. She was 88. Funeral services are to Be held at 8 p. m. today in the Shirley Brothers Central Chapel. The body is to be taken to Iowa tomorrow and funeral services and burial are to be Saturday afternoon in Sioux City. Mrs. Judd was born in Bangor, Me., and spent her girlhood in Lansing, Mich. Mrs. Judd came to Indianapolis in 1908. Later she returned to Iowa. where she lived for 10 years before returning to.Indianapolis. She was a member of the Emerson Avenue Baptist Church. Survivors are two sons, G. J. Judd, Indianapolis, and W. D. Judd, Sioux City, and a brother, Charles Batson, LeMars, Iowa.
MRS. ELLEN O'NEILL, a resident of Indianapolis two months, died yesterday in her home, 1220 Park Ave. She was 59. Funeral services and burial are to be Saturday morning in Terre Haute. Mrs. O'Neill was born in Illinois. She was a member bf SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral. Sur.vivors -are a daughter, Miss Mary O’Neill, Indianapolis; four sisters, Miss Mary Fortune, Miss Agatha Fortune and Mrs. Alice Gaddis, all of Terre Haute, and Mrs. C. L. Paine, Los Angeles; and two brothers, M. J. Fortune and Thomas D. Fortune, both of Terre Haute.
MRS. AMELIA TOPP, 1411 N. Grand Ave. was to be buried in Crown Hill following funeral services in the Moore & Kirk Funeral Home at 10 7. m. today. She was 53. Mrs. Topp, who was a native of Sweden and resident of Indianapolis 20 years, died Monday in her home. Survivors, besides the husband, A. A. Topp, ar ea son, Alphonso Topp Jr.; two_ sisters, Mrs. Selma ' Carlquist, Dallas, Tex., and Miss Ida Carlson, Sweden.
H. P. Wasson & Co. EES
1937
A new flivver plane, which costs only $900 and operates on ordi- - nary gasoline with a motorcycle engine, fooled skeptics in its first public demonstration at Hanworth airdrome, near: London, with a successful flight at 85 miles per hour. Above it zooms over the, field toward a landing. At right, designer
the flicht with Pilot Berrington.
Indianapolis Woman to Judge Horse Club
Times Special
MUNCIE, May 13.—Competition .in 15 classes is on the program for | the Muncie Light Horse Club's annual spring show at the Fair Grounds
here Sunday.
Miss Audrey Pugh, Indianapolis exhibitor and horsewoman, is to judge the events starting at 2 p. m. Besides the regular classifications, games and novelty races are to be held. The committee in charge includes Mrs. Merrill Smith, secretary; Mrs. Har- | land, Decatur, Winchester and Noold Lahr, assistant secretary; Ros- | blesville. Trophies and ribbons are and | to be awarded in all classes. The Don Allison, chairman of the entry championship award, to be made to
Chester Wingate, chairman;
coe Lord, assistant manager,
committee.
Entries have been received from '\ a5 donated by Ed Nearon, Muncie.
Up Goes Flivver Airplane
C. H. Latimer-Needham talks over
2
Show at Muncie
Anderson, Marion, Richmond, Port-
[ the horse winning the most points,
STATE DEATHS
ANGOLA—Thomas Chalmers 75. Survivor: Son. Timothy H. Dirrim, 79.
McConnell, Survivor: Son. AUBURN—George Beard. Survivors: Two daughters, a brother, two sisters and two half-sisters.
BROWNSTOWN—Mrs. Blanche Ellen !Tabor, 53. Survivors: Father, Elba McCrary; husband, Bd; daughters, Mrs. Lucille Hauer, Mrs. Sudie Jackson, Mrs. Ruby Buenning, Mrs. Betty Rueter: son, Elba; brother, William McCrary; half-brothers, George and Raymond. COLUMBIA CITY—Henry J. Blair, 81. Survivors: Two sons and two daughters. COLUMBUS — George Carmichael, 80. Survivors: Daughters, rs. Harve Lowe and- Mrs. Goldie Gullett; sons, John, Orville and Carmel. 1 Mrs. Mary Jane Klipsch, 93. EDINBURG—Lucy Shipp Kerr, 71. Survivors: Husband, Ellet; sons, Floyd and Roy; daughter, Mrs. Otto Wheeler. EDINBURG—Ira L. Crippen. 83. FT. WAYNE—Miss Rose Ellen Scarlet, 76. William Ozment, 33. Mrs. Minnie Klusmann, 81.
, Survivors: , Donald, Hilles and . daughter, Ina Mae; brothers. Fred, Maurice and Martin: sister, Mrs. Lena Peppler. HUNTINGTON—James Himes. ors: Wife and three children.
Surviv-
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IMPORTANCE OF OUR ‘INVISIBLE IMPORTS’ CITED
——
Travel Reflects Income, U.S.
Official Tells Bankers’ Trade Group.
By United Press FRENCH LICK, May 13. —Em-
tion’s “invisible foreign trade,” Ernest C. Draper, Assistant Secretary of Commerce, today told the Bankers’ Association for Foreign Trade that sharp increases “in certain of our invisible imports reflected domestic improvement in business.” The prepared address was read to the convention by Dr. A. E. Taylor, assistant to Mr. Draper in the Department of Commerce. . Mr. Draper said unless proper consideration was given to “invisible” transaction—sale or purchase of services such as freight, insurance, passenger service for travelers, and actual merchandise consumed by foreigners traveling here or Americans abroad—a “distorted view” of
sult. “A sharp increase resulted last year in certain of our invisible imports,” he said. “ “The shift must be
.ascribed to an important degree to
‘the marked improvement in busi-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
phasizing importance of the na--
foreign trade as a whole would re- |
PAGE 15 |
ness which has taken place in this country during the last two years. “Our most important invisible export is the total expenditure of our tourists abroad.
‘Travel Reflects Income’ “Travel at home and abroad is sensitive to changes in our national income and the increase in our travel outlays abroad from $409,000,000 in 1935 to $495,000,000 in 1936 reflects a corresponding improvement in the income of the American people.”
Mr. Drapr said the fact that aggregate visible and invisible imports have at first shown a higher rate of increase than have corresponding exports is wholly consistent with our position as a net creditor nation and should be viewed as a hopeful sign that international trade as a whole is on an upward trend.
WARREN TO DEDICATE SCHOOL UNIT TONIGHT
Charles M. Walker, Warren Township Trustee, is to be toastmaster at a dinner tonight in the Warren Central High School Gymnasium at the dedication of the school annex. Guests ‘are to include Governor Townsend, Floyd I. McMurray, State Superintendent of Public Instruction; Malcolm Dunn, Marion County Schools Superintendent, and John Linder, County Attorney. 3 A concert by the school band and a pageant are on the program. Arrangements are under the direction of Mrs. Myrtle Rodden, W. R. Moore, Miss Lenore Moore. Mrs. Vevene
Carter, Miss Cleta Marsh and Miss Lucille Cline, faculty member.
law suits think the longer they de-
Funeral services for Henry L. Lindemann (above) who died Tuesday at his home, 414 N. State St., are to be held at 8:30 a. m. tomorrow at the residence and at Holy Cross Catholic Church at 9 a. m.
TENT CITY ERECTED By United Press
DELPHI, Ind, May 13.—A tent city was erected on the Adam | Blocker farm today to accommodate ]
approximately 15,000 persons ex- |g
pected for the national meeting of' the Old German Baptist Church opening Saturday. The meeting | will continue through May 18 and is expected to attract delegates from every state. :
5 0 Per Cent of Law Suits In County Settled Out of Court
More than half of all law suits out of court and most of them just ness is called in a trial.
filed in Marion County are settled a few minutes before the first wit
County judges and court attaches claim that many times four or
five jury trials are cancelled in one
week at the last minute.
Superior Judge Joseph Williams® said “desire of litigants hold on to their money as long as®*they can” is the psychology back of the last minute decisions to settle. “In civil cases, the court and jury are used as sort of a whip over their opponents to force a settlement,” Judge Williams said. Court attaches said defendants in
lay a trial the better chances they have of settling for a smaller amount. Many venue. changes from the county are .merely moves to
OHIO DOCTOR HONORED By United Press HARTFORD, Conn., May 13.—Dr. Weston A. Price, Cleveland, was the: recipient today of the Newell Sill Jenkins Medal, award of the Connecticut State Dental Association to the person making outstanding contributions to science, humanity or dentistry. ‘
Memory Is the Tieasury and Guardian of All Things
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JEFFERSONVILLE—Bernard O'Neill. 63, | Survivors: Brothers, Joseph, George and Thomas. x MADISON—Herman Thomas. NOBLESVILLE—J. F. Wild.
PENDLETON —Mrs. Alma Woods, 83. Survivors: Daughters. Mrs. Edna Mannon, Mrs. Alma Lawson and. Mrs. J, J. Pennington. PORTLAND—Abert W. Hardy, 62. Thomas R. Madden, 79. Survivors: Wife; three sons and two daughters. RUSHVILLE—William J, Cain, 90. vivor: Son, Lindsay. SEYMOUR—Dr. O. F. Welch, 66. Survivors: Wife, Lizzie; son, Scovilie: daughteh Miss Bertie Welch; brothers, Will and ert.
SHELBYVILLE—John M. Burton, 81. Survivors: Wife, Hulda: half-brother, Samuel; sons, Walter, Arthur, Carl, Garrett and John; daughters, Mrs. Effie Flory, Mrs. Bessie Kirksey, Mrs. Mary O'Fallon and Mrs. Ruth Moenlman. SHERIDAN—Mrs., Walter Applegate. WABASH—Miss Violet Peterson, 24. Survivors: Parents and a brother. WARSAW-—Mrs. William Wilt, 51. Survivors: Husband; two daughters; son: father; three brothers and three sisters. Miss Geneva L. Pisher. 25. Survivors: Parents, Mr. and Mrs, Sherman Pisher; brother and two sisters. H i 55. Survivors: Wife;
Sur.
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