Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 October 1938 — Page 21
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LOCAL ‘DEATHS
(Editorial, Page 20) CARL R. VONNEGUT, 1217 Pick-
‘Methodist Hospital, will be ‘buried tomorrow following services at 2
*Mortuary. He was 36. © Mr. Vonnegut was manager of the ‘38th St. store of the Vonnegut >*Hardware Co. and head of the firm’s building hardware department. A <native of Indianapolis, he was edu“cated in the local schools and atfended summer sessions of Culver Academy. He was a grad“uate of the University of Wisconsin, He was a member of Phi Kappa Psi _Fraternity and the Athenaeum and a fcrmer member of the Woodstock Club. - He is survived by his wife, Mrs Marjorie Vonnegut; a daughter, Nancy Vonnegut; a son, George Louis Vonnegut; his parents, Mr. ~and Mrs. George Vonnegut, and two xSmers, Erwin and Ralph Vonnegu . EDGAR HART, prominent Indizanapolis Mason who died Tuesday “in the Murat Temple, will be buried at Crown Hill following funeral -services at the McNeely Funeral “Home, 1828 N. Meridian St. He was -49 years old.
Mr. Hart was in the retail shoe business many years, operating a store on N. Pennsylvania St. and -later in the Circle Tower. In 1932 Je was Republican County Chair--man and sought Republican nomJdnation for county clerk in the 1934 «election. He was named business -manager of the Murat Temple four ‘years ago and has been potentate oI Murat Shrine.
FRANK J. PUGH, 1320 N. Jeffer‘son Ave., a resident of Indianapolis many years, will be buried at Crown Hill tomorrow following funeral services at 2 p. m, at the Royster '& Askin Funeral Home. H was 75. © Mr. Pugh, an employee of the ‘American Railway Express Co. for *38 years, died Wednesday at his home. He retired 10 years ago. He was a member of Oriental Lodge, F. & A. M. Masonic rites will be ‘conducted at the burial. - He is survived by a son, Harold ‘William Pugh of Indianapolis, five grandchildren and two great-grand-children. PETER M. KANE, 256 Parkview Ave., will be buried in Holy Cross Cemetery following services at 9 a. m. tomorrow at Holy Cross Catholic Church. He was 79. . ~ Mr. Kane died Wednesday at the St. Francis Hospital where he had been a patient the last week. * A native of Lafayette, Mr. Kane dad lived in Indianapolis for the past 12 years. He retired from his work with the Big Four Railroad in ,1930. ~ He is survived by a son, Raymond J. Kane, and two daughters, Misses
- GEORGE A. BARCUS, former Tesident of Indianapolis, will be buried at Raleigh, N. C., after funeral services are held here. He was 62. He was a member of the local ‘Knights of Pythias and was an employee of the City Ice & Coal for many years. - Mr. Barcus died Wednesday ag the home of his daughter, Mrs. "Robert Parrot, Raleigh. He is surYived by the daughter and his wife, Mrs. Laura Barcus.
EXTORTION SUSPECT CAPTURED IN TRAP
~ LONG BEACH, Cal. Oct. 28 (U. P.).—An elderly extortion suspect, who sprang a police trap by reach-
ing $5000, was questioned today by Federal officers. - He was Paul Dresback, 63, a former druggist, caught in a fashjonable apartment house where wealthy John Foster, 71-year-old dil man, received a letter threatening his seven grandchildren. Poice Capt. Walter Lenz said Dresback readily confessed. . Mrs. Foster received the letter yesterday telling him to set a package containing 1000 bills of $5 .denomination outside the door of his apartment. + Mr. Foster called police who prepared a dummy package. They attached a concealed cord and hid. There was a pull last night and they cornered Dresback on the stairway.
THEY HOLD. RECCRD
. SHENANDOAH, Pa. Pa., Oct. 28 (U. P. ).—Marry Balliet of Shenandoah and Mrs. Eliza Timmins of Frackville, twin sisters, have observed their 76th birthday. They believe they are among the oldest living twins in the country.
FOOTBALL PAROLE ASKED MOUNT CARMEL, Pa., Oct. 28 ¢U. P.).—A 17-year-old boy was committed to jail for the alleged larceny of $22 worth of dynamite. Coach George Kavel of Mount Carmel High School asked a parole for the youth. He needed the boy, a gtar player, for his football team.
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ELSA MAXWELL DUE TOMORROW
Party Arranger Who Pepped Up-Society to Visit Town Hall.
Town Hall brings Elsa Maxwell, on whom ‘the society of two continents depends for bigger and more origigal parties, to English’s Theater at 11a. m. tomorrow. Miss Maxwell, a recognized authority on the subject, will tell how
society has changed and why. Of Elsa it is said that, single-
handed, she has transformed the social life of the American “400” from
a gloomy, staid institution, patterned after British society of the turn of the century, to a “gay and
giddy merry-go-round.”
Miss Maxwell specializes in ar-
ranging parties for the social reg-
ister. She invites the guests, ar-
ranges the entertainment, and su-
pervises every phase from sending invitations to prescribing the costumes. Her autobiography, “I Have Lived by My Wits,” is scheduled for publication this winter.
ANDREWS ERRS ON ADVICE TO STORES
Pay-Hour Aid Gives Formal Ruling on Retailers.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 28 —Elmer
F. Andrews, wage-hour Administrator, confesses that he has been giving retailers a bit of faulty advice.
On several occasions he has said
informally that if 20 per cent or more of a retail store’s business goes out of the state, the store is in interstate commerce and hence covered by the Wage-Hour Act.
Mr. Andrews doesn’t know where
he got that: idea, but at any rate his general counsel, gruder, -has now formally advised him that, in so far as retail and service cerned:
Calvert Ma-
establishments are con-
“If more than 50 per cent of the
selling or servicing is in intrastate commerce, the exemption applies.”
WPA Not Asked
For Extra Funds
WASHINGTON, Oct. 28.—WPA
officials said today they had received no requests from Texas or elsewhere for extra funds to take care of pecan shellers and other low-wage workers laid off by manufacturers since the Wage-Hour Act went into effect Monday.
"10 STATEWPA
-home ‘assistance in homes of needy
“Joss approve
cludes Funds for Home Assistance.
John K. Jennings, State WPA administrator, today announced final
ects, totaling $1,044,496. Two general State allotments were approved, ‘$454,500 for free
where the homemaker is totally or partially incapacitated, and $2916 for
recording devices on State streams. Other projects approved were: Bedford, $148,780 for operation of a stone yard to produce building stone for use on WPA projects. Decatur, $4970 to improve the municipal waterworks system. New Carlisle, $508 to improve the public library building. Anderson, $12,575 for operating gardens and canning surplus and donated foodstuffs, products to be distributed free of charge to the needy. Crawfordsville, $6885 for preparing and serving school lunches, to be furnished without cost to the needy. Allotments for the construction of low dams in streams were approved for Howard County, $151,314; Perry County, $162,260, and Huntington County, $99,888.
MONKEY BITES ACTRESS NEW YORK, Oct. 28 (U. P.).— Phyllis Haver, former film star, was bitten by a monkey at a birthday party for her wealthy husband,
night.
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