Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 September 1938 — Page 10
i.
by
THURSDAY, SEPT. 1,
LOCAL DEATHS
SISTER ARISTIDE of the Little Sisters of the Poor, who died yes- . terday, will be buried at Holy Cross + Cemetery tomorrow following servIces at 9 a. m. at the convent, 520 + E. Vermont St. She was 94. are She was born Mary Ann Burgess +. in Salford, England. She helped es2 tablish the order’s home here.
1 MRS. MABEL BOWERS, who « died Tuesday, will be buried tomor- .. row at Memorial Park following a services at 2:30 p. m. at the resii» dence, 3344 N. Sherman Drive. She ie Was 31. =. Survivors, besides the husband, #« are her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Evan Y>J. Weyls of Pine Village; a sister, “ Mrs. Ann McBroom, Indianapolis; w three brothers, John, Chicago; Clar- .. ence, Pine Village; Russell, Bridge- &: port. : i. MISS KATHRYN MARIE PERK- _ = INS, who died yesterday at Cole- * man Hospital after a week’s illness, = will be buried Saturday afternoon at «+ Washington Park following services T'at 4 p. m. at the McNeely mortuary. ~- She was 25. + Miss Perkins, who lived at 26 N. . Hawthorne Lane, was a Tech High «. School graduate. She was a mem- * ber of the Irvington Presbyterian «= Church. » She is survived by her parents Mr. « and Mrs. Walter H.. Perkins; a “a brother, Walter H. Perkins Jr., and + & sister, Miss Helen Perkins.
‘>. MISS FRANCES TEKULVE, em- = ployee of the Kahn Tailoring Co. for = 27 years, died last night at St. Vin«4+ cent’s Hospital after a year’s illness. *.! She was 58. Born in Greensburg, she was a .«~ member of the Rebekah Lodge. " Survivors are a sister, Mrs. E. M. Elder of Indianapolis; three brothers, George, North Platte, Neb.; Edward, Columbus; John, Greens-
»%
1938
1 Teck houses Ba
Entrance and tower of the proposed Milo ‘H. Stuart Memorial Bldg. on the Arsenal Technical campus has been designed to hare
monize with the present structures. Pierre and Wright, with Leslie F.
This winning design, prepared by. Ayres as associate architect, was
one of nine submitted. by architectural firms in a competition an-
nounced Aug. 17.
Construction, at a cost not to exceed $550,000, is to start not later than Oct. 15, under requirements of the PWA, which will provide 45
per cent of the cost. classrooms.
The building will contain approximately 60
. burg. Services and burial will be .. announced later.
+7 LEWIS REIMER of 546 S. Illinois St. died last night at City Hosiptal = after a week’s illness. He was 61. * Survivors include a brother, Fred, Indianapolis.
RETURN BODIES OF SLAIN PAI
: Two Killed by Deputies Are “ ldentified; Petty Crimes Are Investigated.
Deputy sheriffs prepared today to ~«.return the bodies of two gunmen they killed here Tuesday to relatives in the Southwest. The body = »of Tighlman VanAcker is to be sent . to Decatur, Tex. and that of John Bowman to Blackwell, Okla. The men, escaped convicts, were _ slain ‘after. deputies said the pair .- opened fire at Emerson and English .» -Aves. Both were said by the Fed- '.- eral Bureau of Identification to . have escaped from prison at Hunts- « ville, Tex.
© Jack Williams, 17, of 750 Lock- -- wood St., was fined $25 and costs . and sentenced to 60 days in jail . today when he was convicted of = having stolen the auto of William « Green, his neighbor.
vivors: Powell; sons, Charles, Wallace, Ben and
Survivor: Wife
vivor: Daughter,
Mary; daughters, Mrs. Mary Jo Durr. Lucy Nichols and Ms. Louisa Ashton.
Survivors: John, Stever; nica, Meadows, Mrs. Leona Norman, Mrs. Claude Pritchett, Mrs. Stel Littell, Miss Chole
son, 178. Thompson; sisters, Misses and Resse and Alvin,
Sons, Frank. Mrs. Clara Hi
ors:
2. Carl and Arthur; Glidden and Miss Frieda Wagner.
Husband, Perry: daughter, Mrs. Townsley; sister, Mrs. Gertrude Northall.
ors: daughter, Mrs. William Sheehan; brother, Johnson Baker.
vivors:
STATE DEATHS
AKRON—Mrs. Laura A, Powell, 88. SurDaughters, Miss Inez and Daisy
aniel.
ALEXANDRIA — John H. Johnston, 62. Agnes. ANDERSON—Mrs. Julia Goff 65. SurMrs. Myrtle Thompson. Survivors: Wife,
George H. Ayers, 69. Mrs.
BLOOMINGTON—John W. Hillenberg, 88. Sons, James, Thomas, Grover, daughters, Mrs. Katie DoMrs. Sarah Wesner, Mrs. James Hawkins, Mrs. Vanna illenberg. Carson Survivors:
Mrs. Martha
v.93. Daughter, Mrs. Darrell Percifield; brother, A.O. M
arsh. CARTERSBURG — Mrs. Amanda HarriSurvivors: Daughter, Mrs. Hazel Annie, Abbie mma Woodward; brothers, Irwin, CONVERSE—J. A.
Roby, 77. Survivor:
Daughter, Miss Addie Roby.
DALE—Albert F. Brown, 86. Survivors: Aluery and Orian; daughter, e. :
EATON—William H. Bosman, 86. SurvivWie, Mary; daughters, Mrs. J. O. brite and Miss Clara Bosman. EVANSVILLE — Mrs. Katherine Wagner, Survivors: Husband, Charles; sons, daughters, Mrs. B. C.
Mrs. Naomi Pritchett, 59. Survivors: Dorothy
Mrs. Hallie M. Tolliver, 26. Survivors:
Husband, Merle; mother, Mrs. Florence <
0%. Robert Kempf, 13. Survivors: Parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Kempf; sister, Matilda; brothers, Leo Jr., Ames, Thomas, Leonard and John.
GARY-—Mrs. Anna Keiser, 66. Survivors:
Husband, Ira; brothers, Harvey and Aaron Mullendore; stepson, Raymond.
Mrs. Rosella Miller, 75. Survivors: Sons,
Harry, Lester and Ra
yon v Mrs. Elizabeth J. Stevenson, 81. Surviv-
Sons, Homer, Lloyd and Samuel;
GARY—Leland R. Rochstraw. 25. SurWife, Mrs. Mildred Rockstraw;
| Deneau; brothers, Elzear, B. L.
sons, Richard, Robert; parents, Mr. and Mrs.’ Arthur Rockstraw: sister, Betty Ruth Rockstraw. KEMPTON—Lee, Thomas, 48. Survivors: Wife, Pearl: sons, Lynval and Frederick; brothers, Edward and Arthur; sisters, Mrs. Hazel Dick and Mrs. Mary Guant. LAFAYETTE—Mrs. Marie Cathcart, T4. Survivors: Sister, Mrs. E. T. Russell; brother, Lawrence O'Neal. LAPEL—-Mrs. Oliver Widener, : 77. Sur- :. Husband, Oliver; daughters. Mrs. Pearl Gibens, Mrs. , . Ruby McLary and Mrs. Fay Webb; son, Bernie; brother. Edward Graham; sister, Mrs. Anna ve. LAUREL~—Mrs. Harriett Thorinsberry, 79. Survivors:: Daughters, Mrs. Maggie Cummins, Mrs. Martha King and Mrs. Maude Roberts; sons, Joe and Henry. LOGANSPORT—George L. Kimbell, Survivors: Wife; mother. OAKLAND CITY—Mrs. Sarah A. Reed 67. Survivors: Husband, George; daughters. Mrs. Tessie Sprinkle, rs. Ethel White, Mrs. Mary James and Mrs. Eva McMillen; son, Howard Scales; sister, Mrs. Nora Goodale. SEYMOUR—Mrs. Jane Lane, 85. Survivors: Daughters, Mrs. Rex Whitson, Mrs. Minnie B. Merz and Mrs. Claude McCulley. SHELBYVILLE—John O. Thurston, 74. Survivors: Wife, Lottie; daughters. Mrs. Carl Backemeyer, Mrs. Erwin Klefker and Mrs. Harry Parr; brother, Wellington; halfsister, Mrs. Walter Roush, Mrs. Edward Emerick and Mrs, Albert Tucker; halfbrother, Roscoe.
SOUTH BEND—MTrs. Annie Lyell Erskine, 62. Survivors: Son, Albert Erskine; mother, Mrs. Jennie Garland; sister, Mrs. Josephine Lambert; brothers, Thomas S., James Garland. Harry L. Whitney, 50. Survivors: Mrs. Floy Whitney; mother, rs. Elizabeth Whitney; son, Glenn; brother, Charles; sisiors, Mrs. Delbert Miller. Mrs. Clarence es.
STOCKWELL — Mrs. Belle Ibora Van Court, 64. Survivors: Mrs. Ralph Ferguson, Mrs. Francis Alenduff; sons, Joe, Harre, Moddy Van Court.
.WOLCOTT—Mrs. Delia Emond, 61. Survivors: Husband, August; son, Harry; sisters, Mrs. Mary Bonville and Mrs. George and Max Boudreau.
Two men were under arrest today . on vagrancy charges after an alter- * cation in which one of them was « shot last night at the Douglas Park «.skating rink. : ** The wounded man, Walter Wil- “ lams, 19, of 2338 Sheldon St., is in « City Hospital. A 39-year-old special . policeman at the rink was held on a vagrancy charge in connection with the shooting. Police said they found Williams « lying near the entrance to the rink - with a bullet wound in the left leg == and right foot, and cuts on his head ~~ alleged to have been caused by + black jack. blows.
.. Private. James Roy Eagle, 21, Ft. % enjamin Harrison, told police that § . [a man he tried to befriend slugged * 5 J him, and robbed him of his uni4 ©« form early today. City Hospital <-* physicians said his jaw bone was = * broken. x x
- BARBADOS TO GET LARGER MUSEUM
OWATONNA, Minn, Sept. 1 (U. “* P.)—What is expected to become «+ one of the world’s leading marine « displays will be built by Robert « Butsch, of Owatonna, Minn. > Butsch, who was graduated from * the University of Iowa with a + Bachelor of Science degree with a | “major in museum work, was selected from a large field for the post . of museum technician for the Ma- .= rine Museum and Historical Society
have,” Mayor Oakes said.
Mayor Gives Pigs Fat Role In New Setup
CHARLESTON, W. Va. Sept. 1 (U. P.).—A ‘“self-liquidating” gar-
bage disposal plant, which might be called a glorified pig sty, planned today by L. H. Oakes, longmustached mayor of South Charleston.
was
Mayor Oakes announced that the
city had acquired 52 lots at the edge of town—about 12 acres in all. plan is simply to put a lot of hogs on the tract and let them eat up the city’s garbage.
His
There is a good stand of timber
on the tract that could be used in building a fence, he pointed out.
“The way it looks now, the city
won't have to put a dime on the
project,” the mayor said. There was no estimate of how many pigs it would take to run the “plant.” “We’ll see how much garbage we “Then we’ll be able to see how many pigs we can fatten.”
HUNT WOMAN WHO DISAPPEARED DEC. 17
MARION, Sept. 1 (U. P.).—Rela-
LEWIS CITES UNION AS U. A. W. MODEL
WASHINGTON, Sept. 1 (U. PJ). —Seeking to restore order in the turbulent United Automobile Workers Union, C. I. O. Chairman John L. Lewis named the Federation of Flat Glass Workers today as a good example of a union which has set its house in order. He made public a letter accepting the resignation of Acting President Paul W. Fuller, appointed ‘by him to head the Glass Workers Union last year when its ranks were split by a factional quarrel. Its inferential reference to the U. A. W. row was unmistakable,
Enter September 6 Beginning of Fall Term
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44.
BRAN URGED IN CRICKET FIGHT
0il Sprays, Unless Powerful, Not Effective, Purdue Expert Claims.
Times Special LAFAYETTE, Sept. 1.—Crickets which have increased rapidly throughout Indiana this summer, are controlled most effectively by the use of poison bran bait, J. J. Davis, Purdue University entomologist, said today. Increasing with favorable weather conditions, the ‘insects have mi-
grated from city dumps and fields
to homes and stores in all parts of the State, Mr. Davis said. Besides annoying residents, erickets have damaged vegetables, he said. Oil sprays, unless they contain a killing concentration of pyrethum extract, are of little value, Mr. David said. Poison bran bait may be purchased, or may be prepared easily by mixing a teaspoonful of paris green or white arsenic with two quarts of bran, this to be wet with a mixture of one-half teacup of
strong molasses, such as blackstrap, |
and three teacups of water. This damp mash is scattered wherever the crickets appear, usually in the basement. ;
FISH REPORTS EXPANDED
WASHINGTON, Sept. 1 (U. P.).— The Bureau of Fisheries announced today the establishment of a fishery market news office in Chicago to disseminate daily information on current market developments for the fish industry. Chicago is the third field office opened. Others are in New York and Boston.
Fur EB ¥
USA NS
a so i LR Ne GERMANY 20 MILLION TONS
-
CHIEF MERCHANT FLEETS EE lex tac dais ais dais a: dk elk ek ek: WEL wa ic ak a
BIG FIRMS’ ASSETS WITHSTAND SLUMP
NEW YORK, Sept. 1 (U. P.).—
The business recession of 1937 had |
little effect on the assets of the na-
tion’s corporate giants, despite the}:
sharp drop which occurred in earnings, a United Press survey revealed today. At the ciose of 1937 there were 25 private commercial organizations
in the United States claiming assets.
of a billion dollars or more each, or only one less than at the end of 1936. The companies remaining in
A SCIENCE SERVICE FEATURE.” Symbols © Pictorial Statistics, tnc., N.Y. C. 9-1
chest, died there early today.
boosted their combined assets by more than $600,000,000, the survey showed.
SHOOTING VICTIM "DIES IN HOSPITAL
George Leon Barnes, 33, of 124 N. Bast St., who entered City Hospital Tuesday with a bullet wound in the
He had been held in the deten-
tion. ward at the Hospital while
police, detectives investigated the | origin of his wound. Barnes had ! told them that he was shot while on a hunting trip rcently in Shelby County.
the billion dollar class, however,
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Complete Line of “Next-to-New” Clothes, Furniture, etc.
Operated by Junior League . ,
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. Benefit to Riley Hospital
THOLE FORECLOSURES
AT 32,639 FOR YEAR
Investment in Private Real Estate Hits $500,000,000.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 1 (U. P.). —Home Owners Loan Corporation foreclosures on 32,639 homes in the first seven months this year boosted the Government's investment in private real estate to approximately $500,000,000, it was disclosed today. ‘Created in the closing days of the Hoover Administration to aid home owners facing foreclosure by banks and other private mortgage-holders, the HOLC now owns, through foreclosure proceedings, more residential dwellings than any single commercial institution. Officials revealed that on July 31 the Corporation was the proprietor of 84,656 private homes. Their capital value—the HOLC’s investment—was $449,141,189. The Corporation has sold 19,957 other homes on which the HOLC has foreclosed. The sales brought
are turning to the classified pages for Ford Dealer “Clear the Decks” Used Car Value
2
The HOLC was established
sale of
sold $3,093,000,000 of these bonds.
PITTSBURGH, Sept. 1 (U. P.).— The body of Rafael Paschael, 62, Western : Penitentiary convict, lay unclaimed in Allegheny County
stomach ulcers, Paschael, who formerly lived in Clearwater, Fla. was born aboard a French ship.
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CONVICT'S BODY UNCLAIMED
Morgue today after he succumbed to
17 ZA ITCH TALL
2 SACL mira os iS
tives today renewed their efforts to learn the fate of Miss Retta Doll, 56, who has not been heard from since last Dec. 17 when she wrote from Portland, Ore. that she was leaving for Vancouver, Wash., to be married. Oregon authorities reported that
. of Barbados © The museum is located in Bridge‘1 town, Barbados, British island pos1 session in the Windward Islands,
« Lesser Antilles, 200 miles off the
. coast of Venezuela. ° the Portland address she gave rela-
TOWN NAMED AFTER |u CHARTER OAK TREE | vear was that of James Roache, the
man she was to have married and whom she met through a matrimonial agency.® The apartment at the address was vacant and Oregon police reported that Mr. Roche died last January. Washington police could find no trace of Miss Doll near Vancouver.
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. + PITTSBURGH, Sept. 1 (U. P.).— «An oak tree that now exists only in the pages of the nation’s Colonial % history has given its name to the + Pittsburgh district's newest com- « “munity. = Charter Oak, a settlement in Scott '~ + Township, has been named after the 3 gged landmark that once helped settle an argument between the domain of Pennsylvania and Virginia.
- POLICEMAN COVERS 100,000-MILE BEAT
SAN JOSE, Cal, Sept. 1 (U. P.). Careful calculations by Police t. Floyd Bugington have demon“strated that during 26 years as a policeman he has patrolled the city’s + streets for more than 100,000 miles, = or more than four times around the «= earth. HHI
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