Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 June 1939 — Page 7
THURSDAY, JUNE 1, 1939
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
PAGE 7
A. C'S HEARING DEATHS IN INDIANAPOLISSTATE REJECTS
ON NEW STOCK vrs. emma e games IS SET JUNE 16
Barnes, ido of Dr. Dawson E. Barnes, Indianapolis physician and surgeon, who died Claims Amount to to $22,533; s Property Transferred | In Reorganization.
m. tomorrow at daughter, Mus. Peunsylvania
be held at 10 a. the home of her 85 G. Calwell, 5538 N.
died Tuesday in She was oorn
i Barnes Methodist Hospital.
of Indianapolis for 30 years. She | Fos 78. Burial will be in Crown
Hearings | Hill.
to fix the time within] which creditors and stockholders] Mrs. Barnes was a charter memshall accept revenue notes and new ber of Athen Chapter, Order of stock in Indianapolis Athletic Club, | Eastern Star, Craw fordsville, and Inc., and surrender s:ock in the In-|a member of the Tabern acle Pres-| dianapolis Athletic Club were set byterian Church since 1892, today for June 186. She is survived by two daughters, At the same time, claims amount-| Mrs. Calwell, and Mrs. E. J. Baker, ing to $22,533 presented by attorneys] Indianapolis, four granddaughters, for all parties concerned will be | one grandson and four great- grand- | heard, a notice issued today by sons. Howard S. Young, trustee for |
i ‘Mrs. Medora S. Jeffrey
debtors, said. Property of Indianapolis Athletic Funeral services for Mrs. Medora who died Tuesday at!
Club was turned over at midnight last night to the new organization, |S. Jeffrey, Indianapolis Athletic Club, Inc., re-! Methodist Hospital, were to be held organized under the 1935 not-for- at 4:30 p. m. today at the home of profit act. {her daughter, Mrs. F. M. McClelIncorporation papers for the new land, 3353 Broadway. orgaization were filed with the Sec-|! Mrs. Jeffrey was 91 and had been retary of Siate yesterday officers and directors of the old organizations were transferred yvesterday to the new one. Approval of the reorganization plan was given May 21 by Federal Judge Robert C Baltzell. Joseph W. Stickney is president of the new club, Wiiliam H. Wemmer, secretary, and Bowman Elder, treasurer They also are the incorporators. Verified
St. dianapolis since 1934 and was a member of the First Preshyterian Church. Her husband, Edward S. Jeffrey, died in 1908. She is survived by ters, Mrs. McClelland, Mrs Johnson, Brownwood, Tex.; Ross F. Hayes. Brooklyn, N. Y, Mrs. Frank A. Winter, Chicago Burial will be in the Bellefontaine Cemetery, St. Louis, where services also will be held.
Miss Elizabeth Vawter
Funeral arrangements were to be completed today for Miss Elizabeth Vawter, Shortridge High School teacher of French, who died yesterday after a month's illness.
four daugh-
for allowand disin the
applications ances for compensation bursements have been filed case by the following: Jeremiah L. Cadick, attorney ior ground owners, $2000 for services; W. O. Jenkins, $15000 for services and expenditures in behalf of the first preferred stockholders committee, and $1250 for services in behalf of the depositaries of the first preferred stock: Matson, Ross, McCord Miss Vawter, who wds 45, lived & Clifford. $3250 for services and at 3319 N. Meridian St. She had $33 01 disbursements in behalf been a teacher at Shortridge since of the debtor, the Indianapolis Ath- 1919. She was a Shortridge graduletic Club Realty Co.; Leo M. Rap- ate and received her A. B. degree paport, $3250 for services in behalf from Butler University and her A. of the first preferred stockholders M. from Indiana University committee: John G. Rauch, $2000! Funeral services will be held at for services in behalf of creditors; the Hisey & Titus Funeral Home, Donald M. Ream, $1750 for services at a time to be announced later. in behalf of debtor, the Indianap- Burial will be at Red Sulphur olis Athletic Club; Howard S.|{Springs, W. Va. where she was Young. | $7500 as trustee for aebtors. born. Miss Vawter survived by a brother, James H. Vawter of Washington, D. C.; a sister, Mrs. John L Hicks of Fairfax County, Virginia: a nephew, George Vawter, of Washington, D. C., and a cousin, Will Vawter, Indiana artist
Wayne 0. Jeffries Wayne Oliver Jeffries, of 6645 Madison Ave. is to be buried at
for
FUNERAL SET FOR AIR CRASH VICTIM
Funeral services for Miss Edna Mae Robinson, 15-year-old Indian-| apolis girl who died Memorial Day in an airplane crash at Christian i TOITOW i # Field, Road 52 and 38th St, WL oa Tus be at 2 p. m. tomorrow in the Conkle |goythport Baptist Church. Mr. JefFuneral Home, 13934 W. Michigan ries who was 20, had lived in InSt. Burial will be in Floral Park|gjanapolis all of his life.
Cemetery. Mr. Jefries died at his home yes- | Another victim of the crash, Mrs.) | terday and is survived by two brothRosemary Lukas, 23, of 1227 Parkers, Roland and Allan, and one sisAve, was injured critically and|ter, Miss Rose Jeffries. Methodist Hospital physicians said her condition today had shown no i improvement ‘Raymond Blair The pilot, Ralph Biddle, 28, of 442 | Bosart Ave, was injured but his|Dyer, Ky, tomorrow condition was not regarded as cri- services here at the Conkle Funeral tical. | Home. Daniel Moulton, Civil Aeronautics; Mr. Authority inspector stationed here, tor said he has finished his report on|Ave. Services also will be held at the accident and mailed it to Wash-|Dyer. He is survived by his wife, ington where it will be made public.| Leona, and a daughter, Miss Maxine |
1S
Blair, who was 41. had lived | several years at 25 S. Warman |
in 1834, are w|
in Alamo and had been a vesioent,
and all|ill one week. She was born in New York, but lived most of her life in| Louis, Mo. She had lived in In-|
DD. F Mrs. | and |
Raymond Blair is to be buried at | following |
John Arthur Blackburn
Services will be held at 2 p. m.| tomorrow at the Royster & Askin | Mortuary for John Arthur Black-| burn, who died yesterday at his home on McCray St. near the Georgetown Road. at Crown Hill. Mr. Blackburn was 69. Born in Lancashire, England he came to this country when he was 18 and settled in Carroll County, Kentucky. He came here in 1916 to work at the American | Foundry Co. 0) E Sand then worked for the LE \ . Board. He retired in 1930. | : : He was a member of the West and had
School
Park Christian Church
SHEN a ; been a member of the Knights of |
Pythias. Mr. Blackburn is survived by wife, Mary; six daughters, Mrs. Catherine Hoskins, Mrs. Lillian Ballard, Mrs. Nelly Austermieier, Mrs. Emily Murnaine, Mrs. Drucilia | Cochran and Mrs. Marguerite Berry, |and two sons, Redford Callis Blackburn, Indianapolis, and Garnett
his
| Walizee oS |
| Elmer E. Johnson
Elmer E. Johnson, retired carpenter, died yesterday after a long illness. He lived at 12 N. Parkview ae. Services will be held at 1:30
m. Saturday at the Harry W. By Mortuary and burial will be
to Postmaster fit Tipton.
Born at
Assistant to | Here Had Been lll Since March 17.
| He had been a
Vernon, he was 76. He
worked here until about 10 years ago when he retired. member of the Knights of Pythias. He is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Harlin Hogue, and two grandchildren.
Gus C. Jonas
Gus C. Jonas, 231 Ave., shipping clerk emploved by the Hook Drug Co., died of a heart attack last night. He was 69. Mr. Jonas was born in Germany and was brought to the U. S. while he was a child. When he was 4, his parents brought him here from Pennsylvania. He had been emploved many years by various wholesale drug firms. He 1s survived by three sons, Charles C. and Guy C. Jr., Indianapolis, and William, Buffalo, N. Y.; a daughter, Mrs.
Services for Wallace Buchanan, for five years assistant postmaster (here and for 44 years in the postal will be held tomorrow at 2
| b amseries 2 | service, & Buchanan]
[p. m. at the Flanner Mortuary. Mr. Buchanan, who was 66, died vesterday at his home, 1126 Parker Ave, of a heart ailment. He had been ill there since March 17. The Rev. C. J. G. Russom, First Reformed Church pastor, will have charge of the services. Burial will be at Crown Hill Cemetery. Mr. Buchanan was born at New London, Mo., and was appointed a clerk at the local postoffice May 3, 1895. The first of July, 1902, he was made a foreman and became assistant superintendent of mails Dec. 4 1904. On May 1, 1930, he was named to the superintendent's post. Adolph Seidensticker, postmaster, appointed Mr. Buchanan his assistant Feb. 1, 1934. Today he called him “one of the best informed men on postal affairs and regulations in Indianapolis.” He was prominent in lodge aflairs of the Masons, Scottish Rite and the Mystic Shrine. He had taught {himself French and was a member of L’Alliance Francaise. He also was a member of the Knights Templar, the Indianapolis Traffic Club. the Board of Trade and the First Reformed Church. He survived by Miss Helen Buchanan. His wife, (Mrs. Olive Buchanan, died two
years ago. | spectacular fire which consumed the
RESPIRATOR HELPS Paluxy Co. refinery and threatened | SAVE INFANT'S LIFE tnis East Texas oil field town was
brought under control early today by firemen from nearby cities.
apolis
EFFORTS OF CAPITAL ‘HOUDINIS’ ASSAILED
FRENCH LICK. June June 1 (U. P.).— E. C. Sammons of Portland, Ore., president of the National Stoker Manufacturers Association, in a closed meeting of the board airectors today, attacked the “sterile efforts of the political houdinis in Washington” to promote business recovery. He asserted that there is stitute for private payrolls.” New officers of the association will be elected tonight.
a daughter,
is
O1L FIRE UNDER CONTROL TALCO, Tex. June 1 (U. P.).—-A
The police first-aid squad used a respirator to save 14-month-old | Kenneth McCullough, 39 S. Warman Ave., when he became choked yesterday. The child, ill with whooping cough, was taken to City | Hospital, where he was reported in good condition today. He is the son lof Mr. and Mrs. Oran McCullough.
Hyacinths . . . 3 for 25¢ WARD'S PET SHOP
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MURDER RING PROBE |— MAY BE TURNED WEST!
PHILADELPHIA, June 1 (U. P) —Scores of other mysterious deaths in other states will be investigated as result of revelations in the sinister mass murder for insurance syndicate was disclosed today. Homicide squad detectives and other officials in charge of the investigation of the arsenic murder merchandising ring which killed more than 100 persons, said they had received scores of letters regarding “unsolved crimes” in other states as far west as Chicago
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A
He was there 11 years!
{ Noble Blackburn, Washington, D. C./
{came to Indianapolis in 1915 and]
| East Park M. E. Church and of the|
N. Capitol]
Helen C. Feeney, | and a brother, Alex Jonas, Indian-|
SIX ESTATE TAX
REFUND PLEAS ®
Burial will be|
Five Petitions jons Claim Value | | Incorrectly Fixed After
| ? Owners Died.
|
Six petitions asking total refunds of $20.563 on inheritance taxes paid in the last 15 years were denied today by the State Tax Board. The petitions were the first to be filed by resident heirs of Indiana estates. Five of the six peti#ons asked refunds on the ground that valuations of the estates were not fixed correctly after the owners’ deaths. | English Heirs File | The Board asserted: ‘No objections were made at the time of the | court's approval of the valuations | following the owners’ deaths, and there is no reason for the Board to overrule the courts.” The sixth petition was filed in behalf of heirs of the estate of William E. English, owner of the English Hotel properties, who died in 1926. It asked for on the ground wife died before expectancy. The life expectancy clause of inheritance tax returns proposes to estimate the number of years (heir to an estate will live in order | (to compute the amount of taxes.
Reason Is Held Invalid
“The fact that the widow before the 22 years expectancy riod is no reason for a refund.” board ruled. Other estates and the amount of | refund asked were those of Henry |
refund of $13,136 that Mr. English's | the
a
died pethe
J. Huder, Indianapolis, who died in | E arrie Beck. Mrs
1929, $399; Mrs. Laura Sanders, died | in 1925, $621; George W. died in Howard County in $337: John W. Headley, died Monroe County in 1930, $2159, Leo Kahn, Indianapolis, died in 1929, $3911.
of |
“no sub-
For Evening Appointments Call Lincoln
{| Moore.
{ Vivors
| holdt
| 22-years lite
an|
Landon, | Mrs 4 929, aig: in | Ston e, and | le
STATE DEATHS
BLOOMINGTON —Mrs Davids PERU—Mrs. son Johnson, 64. Survivors: Husband, |vivors; arry, daughters, Mrs. Fletcher King, Mrs. | rence; Martha Starr: son, David: sister, Mrs. Wil- | Mrs. liam Baker: brothers, John, Harry, Thomas, | er Dr W. R. Davidson. (M BOONVILLE—Mrs. Margaret Freundlich
Nancy Ann Wray, SurHusband, William C.: Lon brother, Simon Hufford; si Abraham Fisher, Mrs. Mathias B Mrs. John 3rubaker, Mrs. Tess rs. B. Ww. Root. SOUTH BEND-—Mrs. Edwin Wozniak, 33. id Husband, Edwin; parents, Mr BRISTOL—Mrs. Anna M. Northway, 64.|and Mrs. Stephen Mroczkiewicz, brothers, BUNKER HILL—Mrs. .vdla Ann Smith | Clement, Thaddeus, Stephen Jr 5. Survivors: Sons. Edward F.. Grover, TELL CITY—Miss Ida Dittrich, Noble, daughters. Mrs. Je: Clester, Mrs. |Yivors: Sisters, Mrs. Meta Scherge Sheila Poss, Mrs. Mary Graham, Mrs. |LOuisa Bergert: brother, Edward. Rosalie Isler WALLACE—Albert Bowman, 50. COLUMBUS—John Krause. 70. Surviv-| ors: Wife, Floy: brothers, Edgar, s: Wife, Bertha: brother. Cire d. ters, Mrs, Edgar Hershberger, Mrs. . Melissa Jane Roland, 83. Surviv-| Wilson. Husband, Marshall; daughter, Mrs. WINAMAC — Mrs. Emma Newsom: sons will, Ralph, Gle {Survivors: Husband, brother, W., W. Lambert siste S. | Aiken; Effie W, Newsom Mrs. herman Hopkins. | CRAWFORDSVILLE—Charles C. Tavlor, 2. Survivors: Brother, William: hor. | brother, Roy Taylor: half-sisters, Mrs. Leta | Elmore, Mrs. Emma Baum | DANVILLE—Harvey G. Moore, 85. Sur-| vivors: Sons, the Rev. Earl and Cra|
Margaret
ch Root,
66.
ens,
SurMrs Surv ivC1
‘Clyde Aiken, 64
Edward J « Ri
Harriett the Rev. stepdaughter, Mrs. Roger
H
Catherine Ann Dicken: sheets, 76. Survivors Daughters, hy Thomas G. Held; son, Carl; si ster, Mrs. Sarah Beard. | Mrs. Pearl A. Cotton, 57. Survivors! Hus-| band, William; brothers, Grover Shick: sisters, Mrs. Charles Wright | Mrs. J. R. Porter, Mrs. H. H. Kelsey. 8
” 5 EVANSVILLE—Mrs. Asa R. Hudson, 56.| Survivors: Husband; daughter, Mrs. Harry Pitzer: brother, William C. Bell. | William W. Dick, 74. Survi Wife, Mary: daughters, Mrs Marel a His Mrs. | August Hoffman, Mrs. Joe Ti Virzil Kelly; sons. Sidney, Wi ple: sister, Mrs. Elma Logan. Charles R. Legeman, 75. Wife, Mary: song, Charles Jr., FT. WAYNE — Mrs. Ida O Survivors Husband, Pearce Mrs. Jennie Byran. Ralph Ilif;: sons Miss Anna Geeting. GALVESTON —George M. Bell, 82 Sur- | vivors: Wife, Marv brothers, Allison, Ran- | som GOSHEN-—Judson D Daughter, Mrs taniey Mrs. John Blough ®Mrs Mrs. Hugh A. Sampson; John, Zeb AEBANON- Albert Sisters, Mrs. Cora Wooley Bo Green; brother, John MICHIGAN CITY-—Claud Survivors: Brothers, George, sisters, Mrs. Maud Houston
Park. ” “a u
MOUNT VERNON-—Mrs. E 58. Survivors: Husband Michs ford; brothers. Andrew MUNCIE—Charles C vivors: Wife, Blanche; daughter, Catherine; brother. ters, Mrs. Lora Ream, Mrs. . NEW CASTLE—David Cc. Jurvivors: Wife, Mary: Mr Mvrtle Haven; son. Garland: sister, Mr Fannie Fogle- | song: brother, John Thompson. | NorTH, LIBERTY — Mrs. Ky AUS 3. Survivors: Hushan Se Jr.:. daught Irs, Sam Wesolek: brot bert Fran Nelson Bec 5 Nellie Gill OAKLAND C1TY—Ti e Re 63. Su.vivers: Wife Effie Dale Blaize; son, Charles Gorley, brothers, arrick. sisters, Mrs. Jacob Co Mrs Mrs. Emery Richardson, SERRINSY ILLE — Charles Lennis Ww Vife, Ethe 1; daughter Br ‘Botts: isters, Mrs James M | 1
ELKHART—Mrs
WHITES
John, Carl,|
ors: sgen, ngtey. Mrs. | liam, Tem- |
Survivors: | Ralp Hughes, daughter, 41. Survivors Wife, | brother, Marion.
Svs 'rholt, 76. Wolf: sis Henry Rup-| brothers,
ters
D. Hysong, 77. Sur-|
ors Brs. | Ww. Da
Ty es. Fern |
stella Maas, | 1; son, Clif- | Alldridge. 1 5 Sur=- | son sley; Sisida Heilman. Thompson, 62. |
Stu
Anna Mae
W. Bat-| Seugkter. | stepfathe ] Albert Heber
tram,
Prookis
60. | MTS
Hatton, |
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