Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 March 1938 — Page 13

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FRIDAY, MARCH 25,1938 _

" : ADAM.LARISON,

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* Funeral for Dr. Paul Leland

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“ ‘Dr. Norman R. Booher, deputy

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_ who died yesterday at Methodist

¢ the Methodist Episcopal Church, - : “Masonic. order and International

WORK, IS DEAD

Haworth, Historian, Set Tomorrow.

Mrs. Ada M. Waggoner Lafison, Indianapoli€ resident 38 years, who

died yesterday at her ‘home, 5117]

E. Wash'ngton St., is to be buried at Memorial Park cemetery following funeral services at 10 a. m. tomorrow at the residence. She was 59. : .

‘Mrs, Larison, born at New Pales- | :

tine, was a member of Irvington M. E.|Church, Amicitia Club, Banner Teraple of Pythian Sisters, tor. Order of Eastern Star,

Irvingtor White Shrine 6, Fidelity Review of |

the Women’s Benefit Association, Rebekah Lodge and Women’s Relief Corps, ; Survivors are a daughter, Mrs. Robert I... Mannfield, Indianapolis; brother, Charles, Indianapolis; two sisters, Mrs. William Eck, Indianapolis, 23d Mrs. Frank Andrews, of Shelby County, and two grandchildren. . DR. PAUL LELAND HAWORTH, member of the Butler University history faculty; writer and explorer, who died yesterday at his home, “REastover,” at West Newton, is to be buried =2t West Newton- cemetery following funeral services at 2 p. m. tomorrov at West Newton Friends

ORVILLE E. STRONG, former

artist for the OS jgans Gas & Coke | Utility, who died Wednesday at the

Marion County Tuberculosis Hospital, Sunnyside, after an illness of five months, is to be buried at Floral Park cemetery following funeral services at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow at the Moore & Kirk Irvington lfortuary. He was 29. ; _Mr. Strong was born in Indianapolis end was a member of the Christian Men Builders’ Class of Third Caristian Church. ~ Survivors are the widow, Mrs. Hazel Shotts Strong; parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Strong; two brothers, Vance and Harold, all of dianavolis; sister, Mrs. Kathleen en, end grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. John Brown, all of Thorntown.

’ LUTHER A. TROUTMAN, 2735 N. Meridian St. Apt. 6, Indianapolis Star composing room machinist,

Hospital; is to be buried at Howard, Ss. D., following funeral services there. He was 40. ~~ Mr. Troutman was born at Hubbard, -Iowa, and was a member of

Typographical Union. Before coming to the Star last June from Fargo, N. D., he had been emp. yed as a traveling machinist for the -

Survivors are the widow, Mrs. Lucille Troutman; son, Robert,’ Indianapolis; three sisters, Mrs. Gertrude Schieferstein, Grants Pass, Ore.; Mrs. Linnie Muilenberg and Mrs. Emma- Boylan, both of Iowa, and a brother, Charles, Washington, D.C. Ma » WILLIAM COBLENTZ, 2435 Shelby St. custodian of the Garfield Court Apartment, 2417 Shelby St, fell dead yesterday while ‘at work. He was 63. Funeral ar-. rangements had not been completed,

coroner, said death was due to heart disease. Mr. Coblentz was a former || resident of Miami, Ind. The widow, Mrs. Virgie Coblentz, survives him. j$5. MINNIE BRUMMER, resident of Indianapolis 45 years, who died yesterday at her home; 220 N. Illinois St. Apt. 311, after a lohg jliness, is to be buried at C Hill following funeral services 2 p. m. tomorrow at the G. H. Herrmann funeral home. She was . Brummer was born in BarCounty. Robert Brummer; sister, Mrs. H. Egbert, St. Louis, and two brothers, Adam Horton, Cincinnati, and A. F. Horton, Indianz polis. GEORGE C. DARLING, living : |Zionsville, who died Wednesy at St. Vincent's Hospital, is to be buried at Rochester, Minn., following funeral services there tomorrow. He was 68. : : Mr, Darling, born at Rochester, had lived in' Marion County eight years. Survivors are a daughter, Mrs. Rex Holmes, Indianapolis; two sisters, Mrs. William S. Campbell,

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. » « But when Adolf Hitler came

For years Alois Hitler might have despaired of his | son Adolf’s future. . .. A failure as an art student, an itinerant house-painter, a mere corporal in the German Army, theh a political prisoner in Munich.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS "TIMES Alois Hitler's Son Comes Home

day, it was as the undisputed master of his native Austria and he indulged in the sentimental gesture .pictured above—a silent eight minutes spent before his parents’ flower-stewn graves in Leonding while his conquering bombers roared overhead.

Deaths Among Indiana Residents

ATTICA—Michael Lawrence Harty, 79. Survivors: Brothers, Stephen and Yawrence; sister, Miss Louise Harty. BLUFFTON—Mrs Arista Loal White, 48. Survivors: Husband, Albert; daughter, Mrs. Harold Murray; sister, Mrs. Charles Boltin. ' : BURLINGTON—Mrs. Nora _ Davis, 64. Survivors: Husband Samuel B.: sons, Euorge,

Jone, daughter, Mrs. arah Cleaver.

CLARKS HILL—B. R. Smith, 84, Survivors: Sons, Jesse, Charles, Clarence, Minor, Noah, Guy and _ Clyde; daughters, Miss Blanche Smith, rs. May offitt and Mrs. Hazel Rance, CONNERSVILLE—Garland R. Stewart, . _ Survivors: Wife, Catherine; son, Taylor. CROCKER—John Hoeckelberg, 50. Survivors: Wife, Margaret; son, Robert; daughter, Helen arie; sisters, Mrs. David Magnuson, Mrs. August Tetzloff and Mrs. Lena Schultz: brothers, Charles, Henry, Fred and William. CROTHERSVILLE—Johnson Perry, 83. Survivors: Son, Leland; daughters Miss Lemira Perry. » DELPHI—Mrs. ‘Lorenzo Hildebrand, 174. Survivors: Husband; daughters, Mrs.

Samuel;

Indianapolis, and Mrs. J. B. Hendrickson, Bruce, Wis.; brother, Bert K. Darling, Rochester, and a granddaughter,

Col. G. W. McCoy Dies at Vincennes ‘VINCENNES, March 25 (U. P.). Funeral services will be held here tomorrow for Col. Guy W. McCoy, 78, grandson of former Governor “Blue Jeans” Williams, and former

adjutant-general of Indiana: Col. McCoy died yesterday at his

versity in 1884 and was’ a captain in the first military unit at the school. Later he became a colonel in the first Indiana Militia and saw service in the Spanish-American War as a member of the 159th Regiment. The wife and four sisters survive. ; : !

home here following a long illness. |p { He was.a graduate.of Purdue Uni-

Ella. Burkholder, Mrs. Ed Johnson and Mrs. Ethel Johns; sons, ymond a Clifford; sister, Mrs. Sabrina’ Monroe. ELKHART—MTrs. Minnie Joan Ball, 60. Survivors: Husband, Herman E.; son, Everett 'W.: daughters, Audrey and Any ine; brothers, Henry, Fred and Albert, 3, Charles Croninger, Mrs.

84. Survivors: Wife, Eva;

Milo Sh is Helen Russell; sister, Mrs.

aw. daughter, Mrs. Dora Smith. by ELWOOD—John Albert McMillin, 74. Survivors. Daughters, Mrs. Rowena Logan and Mrs. Glenn Carr; son, John; sister, Mrs. Thomas Richardson; brother, W. M. GOSHEN-—-Mrs. Hattie Wead Hayton, 67. Survivors: Datighters, Mrs. Eugene Myers, Mrs. Roy M. Cripe and Mrs. Lee McCreary; Sisters, Mrs. Ann Biller and Mrs. Mary fits. i - HAMMOND—Mrs. Bertha Thomas, 45. Survivors: Husband, Truman; daughters, Mary and Beverly; son, James; mother, Mrs. M| L. Gerlach; sisters, Mrs. Oscar Cramer, Mrs. Eva Rosenberger, Mrs. Neis, Mrs. Gundrum | and Miss Ida Gerlach; brothers, Arthur and Edward. HARVEY—Mrs. Margaret Gibson, 78. Survivors: Daughters, Mrs. Joseph Hoover, Mrs. Margaret Gardner and Mrs. Mamie Aaron. 2 2»

LAFAYETTE—John Hughes, 41. Survivors: Wife, Mary: daughters, Martha Lee and Jean; son, Jackie; mother, Mrs. Mary J. Hughes; sisters, Mrs. Alfred Kingery, Mrs. James Miller and Mrs Elmer Michael; brothers, Ray and Roy. Mrs. Martin P. Westphal, 60. Survivors: Daughter, Mrs. ds; son, Clarence; sisters, Mrs. Martin Ernst; ‘brothers, Fred and George Klentzer.

LA PO Survivors: man and Mrs. and Henry; hrothers, Edward, Oscar and George Garwood.

oy Luchtman; sons, Frank Bert, John,

LOGANSPORT—James F. Buchanan, 46. |}

Survivors. Wife, brothers,

May; JoorRe and -- William; sisters, Katie a ie.

PF. McLochlin, 73. Survivors: Wife, Mary: sons, Frank, George. Robert, Neal and Walter; daughter, Mrs. Margaret oran; brothers, Edward and William; sisters, . Ella McCann, Mrs. James Doyle, Mrs. P. F. Grady and Mrs. Charles Drosier. § OGILVILLE—Mrs. Laura Ann THomnson, 60. Survivors: Sons, Glenn W., Merle O., John and Carl; daughters, Mrs. Chester D. Plummer and Mary Beatrice; brothers, Charles, Loren, Q. G., and J. Clifford; sister, Mrs. Wildam Winchester. \ ROCKFIELD—Samuel Wilson Sterrett, 89. Survivors: Sons, Vance, Morgan, Judson and Floyd: daughters, Mrs. Pearl Mullen Burrows, Mrs. Ruth Nethercutt, Mrs.

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Maude Moore, Mrs. Icie Moran, Mrs. Jennie Bekaa Mrs. Etta Parish; brother, Prank E.

ROYAL CENTR rs., Emm Long, 84 3 ott

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E—M: 8 Survivors: Daughters, Mrs. Celia and Mrs. Virdie House: son, Edward.

SHELBYVILLE—James B. Kennedy, 76. Survivors: Wife, Hettie; sisters, Mrs. J. W. Thompson and Mrs. Charles W. Filmere; brother, Fred W.; adopted son, James F. Kennedy. ! SHIPSHEWANA—Mrs. Sophia Hershberger, 74. Survivors: Son, John; daughters, Mrs. James Mason, Mrs. James Eash and Katie. : VINCENNES—Col. George W. McCoy, 18. Survivor: Wife, Jeanette. WOODSTOCK—F. M. Crowe, 74. Sure vivors: Wife, Ida; son, George; sister, Mrs. Laura Marsh.

URGES WOMEN TO FIGHT SMOKE

Speaker Tells of System - Used to Combat Nuisance

In Ohio City.

The Indianapolis Smoke Abatement League today studied a plan whereby clubwomen would assist in the reporting of smoke control ordinance violations. Mrs. Carey McCord, Cincinnati Federation of Garden Clubs president, told the Combustion Institute at Hotel Washington last night that more than 2000 women are co-opera-ing in the battle ‘against smoke in the Ohio city. ho She said the women are provided with cards by the Abatement League to . make complaints, which are turned over to the League and then to proper authorities for action. Names of complainants are kept confidential, she said. Roy 'O. Johnson, Abatement League counsel, said the League will sponsor an amendment to the smoke control ordinance providing for use of the Ringelmann chart in measuring smoke density and another liberalizing the measure so that any citizen could prosecute a smoke law violator.

WPA CANDIDATE AT BRAZIL WITHDRAWS

BRAZIL, March 25 (U. P)— Henry E. Brown, one of seven can-didates-for the Demoératic nomination for Trustee of Dick Johnson Township, withdrew from the race today because of - regulations announced recently by John K. Jennings, State WPA director, prohibiting WPA workers from becoming candidates for remunerative offices. Mr. Brown said he had no other means of support for his family and Tather than risk being discharged from WPA rolls hé would withdraw | his candidacy. ? :

SCION TIRED OF PUBLICITY

CAMBRIDGE, Mass, March 25 (U.P). —Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. Harvard senior and son of the Ambassador {fo England, has resigned from the cast of the annual Pi-Eta Club show, “Revolt in Reverse,” bee cause he is “tired of publicity,” it

was disclosed today.

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Coed Disguise

S : Gets Man Into ~ Girls’ Session|

Times Bpecial 3 . BLOOMINGTON, March 25— State Rep. Samuel Hugh Dillin, the only man on the Indiana University campus who: knows what the co-eds ‘think about each other, was pretty modest today about his ‘special distinction. ° 2, His sudden rise to fame came last night when he successfully disguised’ himself as a womai and walked into the annual Yazz bap

journalistic organization. «: It is- true that: Miriam Meloy,

Shelbyville, "a senior co-ed, finally

informed on him after she began to wonfler why the “woman student” seated near her smoked her cigarets in an aggressive, unladylike manner. ] Before the girls threw Dillin out, however, he had heard enough of the razz to make him an asset to any conversation for the rest of this school year. He said he thought “luck” ‘and “proper planning” allowed him to succeed where so msny men students in past years have failed. is a law student and a State representative from Knox and Pike Counties. 3 .

GENERAL ELECTRIC SIGNS LABOR PACT

FT. WAYNE, March 25 (U. P.).— The local United Electrical & Radio Workers’ Union signed a nationwide contract with the General Electric Co. last night. John B. Dennis, local unit president, was the last to receive and sign the pact. ° Embodied in the contract are provisions" against discrimination, negotiations far settlinz disputes over company policies as io wages, hours and working condiiions and recognition as sole bargaining agent in all plants where U. E. R. W. represents a majority of the Workers. Other U. E. R. W. presi S

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