Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 October 1938 — Page 15
26, 1938
DEATHS
WILLIAM B. VALODIN, 226 W. 31st St., will be buried at Crown Hill Cemetery tomorrow following funeral services at 2 p. m. at the Montgomery Funeral Home. He was
Mr. Valodin, a draftsman for the Allison Engineering Co., died Monday at his home following a year’s illness. A native of Nashville, Ind., he had spent most of his life here. He was graduated from Tech High School and was a member of the Capitol Avenue Methodist Church. He is survived by his parents and a sister, Virginia.
OTTO H. SIMON, retired Indianapolis detective and brother of Fred A. Simon, chief of detectives, will be buried Friday at Memorial Park following funeral services at 2 p. m. at his home, 2118 S. Emerson Ave. He was 66. Mr. Simon, who died yesterday at his home, served 27 years in the Police Department, mostly in detective service. He investigated many prominent cases, including the McNamara dynamiting case in 1911.
He was a member of the St. Mark's Lutheran Church and Marion Lodge, F.& A.M, @ He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Mary Simon; a daughter, Mrs. Milton Benner, and his brother, Chief Simon.
CHARLES KREITLEIN, R. R. 4, Box 44, will be buried this afternoon at Crown Hill following funeral services at 2 o'clock at the North Side Nazarene Church. He was 48. Mr. Kreitlein died Sunday at St. Vincent’s Hospital. He had been employed three years by the A. F. Deaney Co. and prior to that time was associated with the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Myrtle Kreitlein; two daughters, Miss Betty Lou Kreitlein and Miss Ina Mae Kreitlein; two sons, Charles Jr. and Gene Kreitlein, all of Indianapolis, and four sisters, Miss Luella Kreitlein and Mrs. Pearl Ricketts of Indianapolis, and Mrs. Viola Hitzman of Cumberland and Mrs. Nina Jones of California.
ELLIS L. PORTER, 2012 N. Delaware St. a resident of Indianapolis for 22 years, will be buried tomorrow at Liberty following funeral services at the Montgomery Funeral Home here at 10 a. m. Mr. Porter, who was 74, died yesterday in his home. He was a member of the Third Christian Church. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Emma S. Porter; two sons, Dudley and Verne B. Porter, and one daughter, Mrs. Alta Wright.
HALLOWEEN DANCE PLANNEB-FOR FRIDAY
Local B-1048 of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers and Local 1 of the Retail Clerks International Protective Association will sponsor a Halloween dance Friday at the Athenaeum. Among those invited are Governor Townsend, Thomas Hutson, Commissioner of Labor, and John M. Smith, general manager of the Indianapolis Division of the R. C. A. Manufacturing Co., Inc. Dancing will begin at 8:30 p. m. and the grand march will be held at 10:15 p. m. Prizes will be awarded for best dressed and funniest dressed dancers.
LEMKE'’S LAND SEIZED
MEXICO CITY, Oct. 26 (U.P.).— A decree by President Cardenas was published today officially confirming the seizure of 1723 hectares of land from William Lemke, former North Dakota Congressman and coauthor of the Frazier-Lemke bill.
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VACCINATION HIT BY CHIROPRACTIC GROUP
Compulsory vaccination was condemned as “definitely harmful due to its effect upon vital organs” in a resolution passed by the auxiliary to the Indiana Chiropractic Association in the final session of the association’s annual convention at the Hotel Lincoln last night. Dr. Oliver Cromwell of Terre Haute was re-elected association president, and Dr. H. L. Ramsay, Sullivan, vice president. Dr. C. E. Sowards, Bluffton, was re-elected secretary-treasurer. Dr. W. V. Dean, Indianapolis, and Dr. C. P. Kaiser, Connersville, were named to the board of directors. Dr. H. K. McIlroy, Indianapolis, was elected delegate - to the national convention. Mrs. W. V. Dean was elected auxiliary president. Gary was selected for the 1939 convention.
STEER SHOW ENTRY LIST IS INCREASED
Advance entries in the third annual Hoosier Fat Steer Show to be held tomorrow at the Indianapolis Stockyards are larger this year than last, Harry Ainsworth, show director and Purdue University associate 4-H Club leader, said today. More than 350 steers have been entered in the show, which is primarily for older 4-H Club members and farm youth under 28 years cf age. Steers will arrive at the Stockyards tomorrow morning, Judges are Frank King of the Purdue animal husbandry department and David Allerdice of Kingan & Co. Mark Bottema will sell the cattle at auction tomorrow afternoon.
0.5.15 URGED T0 AID JEWS IN PALESTINE
Protection Justified Under Act of Congress, Rabbi Tells Hadassah.
The United States is justified in protecting the right of Jews to settle in Palestine on the basis of the Lodge-Fish Resolution, Congress in 1922, Rabbi Morton M. Berman of Temple Isaiah Israel, Chicago, Ill, told members of the Indianapolis Chapter of Hadassah at a noon meeting in Beth El Temple.’ The resolution, he said, ifdorsed the establishment of Palestine as a homeland for Jews. He also cited an Anglo-American agreement whereby Great Britain agreed to make no changes in the Palestine mandate affecting Jews
without consulting the United States. The Palestine situation is merely a phase of the present struggle between Fascist and democratic forces, he said. The solution lies with democracy, and the United States must take the leadership as the only genuine democracy capable of preserving international morality, he added. Rabbi Berman, who has just returned from a three months’ tour of Europe where he studied conditions of Jews in Poland, Czechoslovakia, Rumania, Lithuania, Germany and Palestine, is author of several books and a contributor to periodicals. Mrs. Clarence Budd, new president, was in charge. Mrs. Louis Levy read the opening prayer, and Rabbi Elias Charry offered the closing prayer.
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