Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 September 1937 — Page 11

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Fk W. BULTHAUP, "RESIDENT HERE 3 YEARS, DEAD

Funeral Rites Sch Scheduled for 2 P. M. Tomorrow at

Wald Mortuary.

Fred W. Bulthaup, native of Germany, who died yesterday in his home at 326 E. Morris St., is to be buried in Memorial Park Cemetery following funeral services at 2 p. m. tomorrow in the Wald Funeral Home. He was 79.

{ Mr. Bulthaup, an Indianapolis

- resident 33 years; was a foreman at

the Diamond Chain & Manufacturing Co. He was a St. John’s Evangelical Church and Herman Center Lodge member, Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Lena ‘Bulthaup; daughter, Mrs. Elizabeth Coghill, Mrs. Anna Brittenbach, Mrs. Mary Hawkins, Mrs. Ella Webb, of Indianapolis, and Mrs. Clara De Wire, Tulsa, Okla., and sons, Edwin 'C., Andy E. and Carl H. Bulthaup, of Indianapolis.

JACOB KERNER, Marion County blacksmith and farmer, who died Wednesday night - in St. Francis Hospital, is to be buried in Greenwood following funeral services at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in the home on the Shelbyville road three miles southeast of Beech Grove. He was 85

Mr. Kerner, born in Franklin County, came to Marion County as a young man and became a blacksmith. He was a German Lutheran Churchixmember Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Mary Kerner: two daughters, Mrs. Dora Whittaker and Mrs. Jennie Dougherty, Indianapolis; two sons, John Kerner, Beech Grove, and the Rev. Frank S. Kerner, Muncie; 13 grandchildren, and 14 great-grandchil-dren. :

MRS. GRACE SMALLWOOD DURMAN, who died |yesterday in her home at 6016 Rosslyn Ave, is to be buried in Crown Hill following funeral services at 10 a. m. tomorrow in Shirley Brother's Central Chapel. She was 65. Mrs, Durman, born in Clark County, had lived in Indianapolis 47 |years. She taught school in Henryville previously. She was a mem‘ber of the Broad Ripple M. E. Church and .the church Missionary | Society, and was School 15 Mothers’ | Club president. | Survivors are her husband, L. L. 'Durman; a son, Dr. Donald C. Durman, Saginaw, Mich, and three grandchildren.

{ MRS. FARNIE LE MAR, Indi- "| anapotis resident 17 years, who died | yesterday in the home of her sis- | ter, Mrs. O. R. Burgess, 2540 Brocadway, is to be buried in Johnson County following funeral services |at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in Mrs. Bur|gess’ home. Mrs. Le Mar, born’ in Shelby County, was the widow of Bert Le Mar. She was a Third Christian Church member. Survivors are her mother, Mrs. Lucetta Blankenbecker, Mrs. Bureess and another sister, Miss Fay Blankenbecker, all of Indianapolis, and two half-brothers, William and Claude Blankenbecker, of Shelbyville.

: MRS. FREDERICK H. MILLER, formerly of 1030 N. Pennsylvania St., who died Monday in Baltimore of injuries received when she was ‘struck by an auto, is to be buried in Crown Hill at 10 a. m. tomorrow following funeral services in- the John F. Reynolds Mortuary here. ‘She was 69. Mrs. Miller, born in Ireland, came to the United States when. young. | After living for a time in Crawfordsville, she came to Indianapolis about 30 years ago, then went to Baltimore following the death of her husband four years ago. . She was a member of SS. Peler and Paul Cathedral and the Proctoe Club.

WILLIAM SENEFELD, 27 Jenny’s Lane, construction superintendent, who was found drowned in the Whitewater River west of Brook‘ville Wednesday, was to be buried today in Washington Park following funeral services at 10:30 a. m. in the

Shirley Brothers’ Central Chapel.

The body was returned here yesterday from the home of a sister, Mrs. John Lohrey, where Mr. Senefeld, convalescing from a recent ill‘ness, had been visiting. It. was believed he slipped and fell into a shallow mud bed from which he was unable to free himself. MRS. PHOEBE PEVLER, an In- | dianapolis resident 20 years, died ! yesterday in the home of her daughter, Mrs. Mae Frost, 1129 E. Market St., following a short illness. She was 76, Funeral services are to be held at 10 a. m. tomorrow in the J. C. Wilson Funeral Home. Burial is to be in Memorial Park. A native of Kentucky, Mrs. Pevler was the wife of Isaac Pevler. She had lived several years in Greenwood before coming here. Survivors besides the hysband, are seven daughters, Mrs. Walter Torr, Brazil, Mrs. Jenkins, Greenwood, Mrs. Oren Demaree, Mrs. Frost, Mrs. Fred Smith, Mrs. Ellis Thomas and Mrs. Clinton Henry, all of Indianapolis; two sons, Edward Pevler and Raymond Pevler, both of Indianapolis, and a brother, Thompson Carter, living - near Franklin.

AL JOSEPH, Connersville,|

brother-in-law of Municipal Judge Charles J. Karabell, died today in Methodist Hospital. He was 30. Mr. Joseph was admitted to the Hospital Aug. 16, underwent an operation and several blood transfusions in an effort to save his life. Six police officers gave their blood in the transfusions.

Born in Connersville, Mr. Joseph |

had lived there all his-life and was in the auto accessory business there.

' He was an Elk.

Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Nellie # Joseph; his mother, Mrs. Bessie Joseph, Connersville; two sons, Louis Allan and Stanford Raymond Joseph; two brothers, Jack, Zanesville, O., and Sam Joseph, Connersville, and two sisters, Mrs. Rose Koff, Cincinnati, and" Mrs. Lillian Comet, Mcorehead, Ky. Funeral services are to be at 11

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A STETSON HATS I

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CARBON—Mrs. Susan Jane Crague, 81. Survivors: Sons, Elmer and Edgar; sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Reynolds.

CRAWFORDSVILLE—Howard N. Cox, 90. Survivors: Jasper;

oll M.s Josephile fone, 186. o Sur vivors: ‘Parents, Mr. Roy sisters, Mary and Ruth: hail Sister. Soe GREENSBORQ—Arthur McDaniel, 39. Survivor: Brother, Lewis. LOGANSPORT—William M. Moss, 78. Survivors: Wife; brother, S. A. Moss. MAUMEE—Janies Harvey Davis, 86. Survivors: Sons, C. “and Theodore; dat hters, Mrs. Stertie. Deckard and Mrs ettie Lutes; half-brother, T. J. ns. MIDDLETOWN—Mrs. Etta Eins Survivors: Daughters, Mrs. Eva Blair and Mrs. Maude Neff; stepdaughter, Mrs. Hazel Davis; stepson, Homer Wood: brothers, Charles, Mont, Davis and Orville, MONTICELLO Miss Josephine Coble, ie Survivors: Parents and Mrs. Coble: sisters, Mrs, Helen Wallin, and Ruth.

"Mary,

ow SE Ise Brother, Mackie; ‘Houchins and Mrs. Lizzie Rutter.

;4 thur. and Victor;

. PRINCETON—MTrs. Clara: M.: Christmas,

IREPORT SHOWS

MUNCIE—Murs, Chiora Hert. Survivors: Mother; ‘sisters, Mary Louise and Vera Leona., Subviv-

ENSVILLE—Fred Smitn, 51. Maude

sisters, Mrs. Mi

Louise Johanna Ganske, Sons, Walter, Oscar, Ardaughters, Kate: and Freda Ganske; brother, William Tetzloff; sister, Mrs. Emiline Weisse:

PERU—MTrs. 89. Survivors:

31. Survivors: Husband, David; children, David Jr. and Zelda Louise; father, Charles RTI.

OUR—Sherman Redinger, 71. SurELL Sisters, Mrs. Henry Loertz and Mrs. Frank McGregor; and Mrs. Charles Culp.

_WABASH—Mrs. lora Woods, 73. Surn, W. H. Woods; sisters, - Mrs. er and Mrs. Sanford Smith; Brothers Alonzo Ulsh.

‘WALDRON—Mrs. Harriett Emilene Banta 68. Survivors: Husband, Eugene;. seven Shiliren: sisters. Mrs, Walter Thorp and

Attacks State Administration for Demanding Party | “Rubber Stamp.’

T'imes Special WINAMAC, Ind. Sept. 10.—Gov ernor Townsend’s demand that In diana’s Congressional delegation “rubber stamp” the President was branded today by Rep. Halleck (R. Ind.) as an admission of the worst iharges against the New Deal. He spoke here last night at a district Republican meeting and observed that “it cannot be possible that Indiana wants in Congress the sort of representation Governor Townsend called for.” Dick Heller, the Governor’s secretary, recently warned that State employees not faithful to the Administration would be fired. “Indiana, with some - exceptions, has had able and intelligent representation in Washington—men with brains enough to do a little thinking: for themselves,” Rep. Halleck said. “If all that the people of Indiana want in Congress are parrots in ‘cages, to speak only the master’s views, they certainly will have just that if the State House Demacratic machine has its way,” Rep. Haileck said. “If the State House Democratic machine is so determined to have personal one-man government, ‘sometimes referred to as dictatorship, in this country,- then why don’t they come out and say so? Why all the camouflage?” he asked. “In my opinion, the overwhelming majority of the people of Indiana, without regard to politics, demand and will have a continuance, of our tripartite system of government. “Several foreign countries which make: no bones about being under a dictatorship, still have the equivalent of a rubber stamp €ongress. Our people have seen enough’of the operation of that sort of government that they will have none of it in this country,” he concluded.

a. m. Sunday in the Aaron Ruben Funeral Home, with burial at Sarah-Tefila.

MRS. ISABELLE TERRELL, 564 N. Jefferson: Ave., an Indianapolis resident 10 years, died yesterday in her "home after an illness of two weeks. She was 65. Burial is to be at Stilesville following funeral services at 1 p. m. tomorrow in the Woodruff Place Baptist Church. Mrs. Terrell was born in Seotland-and was a member of the Woodruff Place Baptist Church. She was a former resident of Clayton. Survivors are a son, "Herbert Young gf Indianapolis; four daughters, Mrs. Charles Chasteen of Indianapolis, Mrs. Stanley Hall, Rosedale, and Mrs. Nancy Clawson and Mrs. Oscar Burns, Clayton; and two sisters, Mrs. Mary Wilkie of Dayton, O., and Mrs. Harry Rider of Glasgow, Scotland.

Halleck Raps Townsend; ~ Landon Scores F. D. R.

Marks 50th Bir Birthday by Warning Phi Delts of Dictatorship.

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo, Sept. 10 (U, P.) —Alfred M. Landon reached his 50th birthday anniversary last night with a denunciation of President Roosevelt's economic and Supreme Court programs which, he said, could lead to dictatorship. He told the national convention

of Phi Delta Phi, legal fraternity: “If Congress delegates the legislative power to the President, or to code authorities, if the Executive, displeased with court decisions, may deprive the courts of their power, there is the end of free government.” He said that if legislative power were delegated without restraint, “then Congress may meet in January, pass one act authorizing the President to enact such laws as he thinks the people need, and then adjourn.” “I need not tell you what that means,” he said. “It is the government of Stalin, Hitler and “Mussolini.” The Former Kansas Governor and Republican Presidential candidate in 1936 observed his birthday anniversary with friends atop Pike’s Peak and then came here to address the convention, He termed the Supreme Court controversy “the most significant debate we have had since the Civil War.” “The Court was criticized bitterly when it sustained the Legal Tender Acts following the Civil War,” he said. “But never was it more openly assailed up to the presaat time ‘than when it protected a minority in one of the worst periods of oppression in American history. That period illustrates the way of a temporary, unchecked, tyrannical majority. A courageous, free and stable Supreme Court saved the South from economic and social chaos. And the same Court has protected and secured the rights.of the Negro, as well as the. white man, today to a. fair trial.”

“PROTEST F PLANNED Organized protest against the Indiana Motor Vehicle Weight Tax Law: is to be outlined at a meeting by Private Truck Owners of Indiana, Inc., at the Anthenaeum, 401 E. Michigan St., Monday night. C. W. Abraham, organization secretary, announced that all ‘secretaries of industrigl associations of the state had been invited to attend. Albert Stump, truck owners’ attorney, is to explain the unconstitu-

tional features of the tax law, Mr. Abraham said.

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VALUES ARE UP INWARREN AREA

Yieraase of of $723,160 Over 1936 Total Is Noted By Assessors.

Value of real and personal taxable property in Warren Township has

James Kingsbury, announced teday. * The reported increase in taxable property. valuations in Warren Township followed by two days the release of a report showing property values in Center Township (inside Indianapolis) up $9,277,000 over last year. Real and personal property in Warren-for taxing purposes is valued at $21,543,200, as compared with $20,820,040 in 1936. All real estate, according to the report, is valued for taxes at $21,471,630, or an increase of nearly $400,000 over last year. The report showed that approximately $121,190 in new construction has been put on the tax books since 1936. In 1936, approximately $27,000 in additional improvements was added for taxing purposes. Personal property valuations likewise increased during the past year. Value of personal property now stands at nearly $2,000,000, an increase of $345,470 over last year.

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U. S ‘High Command’ Just FP ooling Themselves, WiitesAl

Wait, He Wars, Until Netitrality Foor Muff One and Get Us Tangled Upln: a War.

By MAJOR AL WILLIAMS rpms wars in three years in widely separated areas aie completely debunked assertions that the plane is now the principal

| weapon of warfare, in the opinion. of the Army High Command” .

So reads a story from Washington. It appeared just about the time I was beginning to wonder why Army and Navy brass hats in this

‘and’ other ‘countries had not already raised the question as to why

fighting aviation did not decide the Sino-Japanese conflict over the week-end. Such a blast is typical of those launched by one arm of our

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national defense against the utility « of any or all other departments. But none of them are ever signed. “High Command” is not a signa= ture. The British admirals have been using pen-names for years in the British Navy’s crusade to hold command of the few airplanes it saw fit to equip itself with. The admirals won out, as they always do until a war comes along and then they’ll lay low and accept only such Tesponsbility as ‘they must. assume. ” ” s ; EN. Braddock. once marched against the French and their Indian allies at Fort Duquesne many years ago. He insisted upon fighting the war his way and refused to understand that anyone would dare to be so profane as to change the rules. So he marched forward in shoulder to shoulder battle formations

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that had won on the fields of Europe, but the felldws who had changed the rules without notifying him, hid behind rocks and trees and cut his outfit to pieces. There are still a lot of Braddocks around. The last blast from Wash-

mechanics into a white heat. Not because it is a clash of personal be'liefs but because it means that the High Command of all forces in this country is going into the next war as poorly prepared as they were in the last one. E 4 2 2 UR High Command points to the’ failure of the plane in the

Ethiopian campaign. Forgotten is the estimate of the British Army

experts, “that the Italians could not conquer Ethiopia within four years.”

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isin the Job in seven months. And they did it in. jig time with fighting” aircraft that scouted and routed out ambushes, bombed concentrations of enemy: troops. And last but by all means most impor-

‘tant; the Italian infantry marched

fast because they were lightly equipped and depended upon the grocery service of the Italian air force that delivered food each day along the march. Those facts stare at the High Command's claim that the plane failed ir. the Ethiopian campaign. The High Command’s second indictment holds, “The plane is hampered by inclement weather and is available only a portion of the time.” I could pardon a general for forgetting almost anything, but MUD has beer. one of the greatest factors in all the campaigns of history. And mud is only part of the

stage setting of inclement weather.|

This 'is one item that could be cleared up by studying what has gone before, and what mud has done to military campaigns that were otherwise brilliantly planned. : 8 7 8

HE third squeek concerns the claiin that “planes are hampered by antiaircraft fire which compels them to fly so high that bombing is inaccurate.” That’s what our generals plan for the airplanes fo do when they attack some day. And some foreigner may be rude enough in his search for immediate results that he may launch a decoy attack at 15,000 feet and ther fly rough-shod over the army aintiaireraft batteries with a concentreted ground-strafing attack. Our Aimy has yet to buy, build, purchase or shoot at a single radio

controlled - airplane that could be used as @ target. This type of air-

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: itish. A Royal’ ‘antiaircraft pavers on Aug. 13 shot down one of these little planes with the second volley at a distance of a mile. The British Army has just started to use the “Queen Bees.” ? The British Navy has been em= ploying ‘them: for a long time and has had little luck with marksmanship. Think these things over; they

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ed to professional military people. What's done about them will affect everyone of us just as soon :as our neutrality experts drop an easy fly ball and we izugle up with an air jpower.

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