Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 October 1939 — Page 16
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URGE CONGRESS T0 *REPUDIATE' DIES ‘PINK’ LIST
Tempers - Flare in House After Publication -of League’s Directory.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 26 (U.'P.)— Rep. John M. Coffee (D. Wash.) said " today he was seeking some method of getting the House: specifically to “repudiate” the Dies Committee for making public : names of + Gavernment employees on a “membership and mailing list” of the Washington branch of the American:League for Peace and Democracy. - He charged the committee’s action was an attempt to “intimidate” Government employees into resigning.
Cites First Lady
The list, which. contained 563 names, included Edwin -S. Smith, National Labor Relations: Board member, and. Louis Bloch, -member of the Maritime Labor: Board, both $10,000-a-year officials, and Assistant Secretary of Interior Oscar L. Chapman, who gets $9000 annually. The committee's session today was canceled because a witness, who was to have continued testimony-about Communist activities, failed to appear. The controversy boiled over from the committee room to the House floor when Rep. Jacob Thorkelson (R. Mont.) made three unsuccessful attempts to obtain unanimous consent ‘to insert the membership list into the Congressional Record.
Statement Challenged .
He was particularly resentful, in accusing the League of being’ a “communist front” organization, of what he asserted was a.siatement by Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt that “we shouldn't hurt members of these subversive . organizations.” -. Mrs. Roosevelt, he said, made the statement in a speech two days ago at "the New York Herald-Tribune Forum, : Rep. Coffee charged -that the Committee obtained the . membership list illegally, -but “this; statement was challenged: by Rep. Joe Starnes (D. Ala), a. Committe member, ETH
Franklin
Times Special ! 2 FRANKLIN, Ind., Oct. 26.—Will A. Burton, bursar and former student of Franklin College, will be honored at a special testimonial dinner at the annual -home-com-ing celebration Saturday. Mr. Burton received the honorary M. S. degree in 1932 and serves as secretary of the College Board of Directors. He is a member of the Rotary Club, the Masons, the Knights of Pythias, the First Baptist Church and Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity.
WAIT ADDRESS BY. TOMLINSON
|Town Hall to Present Writer |:
# “ x PERT er
“On Affairs in New World Saturday.
mentator; and -autherity on : New
{| World :affairs, will" speak. ‘on “New| Roads to Riches in the Other Amer-|* icas” at. the Town Hall program at|.
11 a. m. Saturday at English’s. ‘Mr. Tomlinson. was expected ‘to lecture Dec. 2 but the European. war caused -a rearrangement. of the
:| schedule. ;
~ Mr. Tomlinson returned Oct. 16 from his 16th: annual survey -of
‘|South America. He studied the rela-
tionship between the United States
‘land Brazil following the new trade
agreement; the possibility of colonization of: American farmers ‘ in Brazil, and plans for developing the iron and manganese industries there. . In Argentina he studied the influence of Italian and-German settlers in interior cities. He also surveyed conditions in. Chile since the new - Popular. Front - Government came: into power. . . Mr. Tomlinson has: written . for newspapers and magazines throughout the. country.’ His ‘latest - book, with the. same title as his lecture subject, was published recently. It discusses the economical, socigl and political life of the, western South
American countries.
| Joseph York |
Funeral services for Joseph York, 309 N. Addison St. who died yesterday, will be held at 11 a. m. Saturday in the Conkle Funeral Home. Burial will follow at Crown Hill. He was 82. ; Mr. York, died at Methodist Hospital of pneumonia which: developed after he broke his hip Oct. 18. He was a night watchman at the National Malleable & Steel Casting Co. He had been with that company since he came ‘Indianapolis from his birthplace, Clay County, Kentucky, 37 years 8go. Mr. York was a member of the
ices tomorrow. If Survivors beside his wife, Cynthia, are three daughters, Mrs. Ollie Crist, Mrs. Lulu Chaplin, both of Indianapolis, and Mrs, Jane Barnes, Riverside, Cal.; two -sons,.Sherley, Indianapolis; Homer, Marion, Ill,
land two sisters, Mrs. H.R. Hillard, :| Frankfort, Ky., and Mrs. H. Roberts,
Dayton, O.
Herman C. Reifeis
Services for Herman C. Reifeis,
| who died yesterday at his home, 818
Iowa St., will be at|2 p. m. tomor-
£ row at the G. H. Herrmann Fu-
g neral ‘Home.
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Mr. Reifeis was 80. Burial will be at Washington Park.
Born in Germany, Mr. Reifeis
f| came to the United States 57 years
ago and moved to Indianapolis seven
t | years later. He retired 10 years ago
from brewery work. | He was a mem-
S lber of the Schwaben Verein. and B | Bierbrauers Verein.
Survivors include his wife, Friederika; three sons, Herman, Arthur and William; a daughter,’Mrs. H. E. Smith, all of Indianapolis; another daughter, Mrs. E. |G. Baldwin of Detroit, and a stepson, Theodore Weiss, Jackson, Mich.
Robert H. Carroll
Services for Robert. H. Carroll, 2166 Singleton St., who died at his home Tuesday, willl be held tomorrow at 8:30 ‘a. m. at the residence and at 8 a. m. in St. Catherine's Church. Burial will follow at Holy Cross Cemetery.
i Mr. Carroll, who was 40, had lived
{in Indianapolis 10 years. He was.a native of Sherodsville, O. Survivors are the wife, Mrs. Viola Carroll; three sons, Robert Jr. and John William, both of Indianapolis, and Elmer R., of Cleveland; three daughters, Roseann Marie, Frances
Carroll and Mrs. Harry Carroll of
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LOCAL DEATHS
Wolf Run, O;. two brothers, William, Norfolk, ::Va.; and: John of Wolf Run, O.; and five sisters, Miss Mary Carroll, Hubbard, O.; Miss Anna Carroll ‘Michigan; Miss Tillie Carroll, Toledo, O.; Miss Lucy Carroll, ‘Annapolis, .O., and Miss Rose Carroll of Richmond, O.
Morton C.. Bird ‘Morton C. Bird, Indianapolis building contractor, who died at his home, 720 E. 49th St. ‘yesterday, is to be buried at Crown Hill Cemetery Saturday following services at the Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary at 1:30 p. m. He was 70. _. . A resident of Indianapolis for 50 years, Mr. Bird, had been ill for a year. “He was a native of Covington, Ky. ; He was a member of the Northwood Christian’ Church and the; Broad Ripple Lodge, F. & A. M. Survivors are _the wife, Mrs. Susan Kendall Bird; five brothers, Thomas V.. Indianapolis; Henry . and Ira, both of Miami Beach, Fla.; James, Madison, 'Ind., and ‘William, Bedford; - Ky., and, three “sisters, Mrs. Minnie ill, Indianapolis; Mrs. Mary Bennett and Mrs. Paul Heim, both of Denver, Colo,
Timothy Shanahan
Timothy Shanahan, 1440 Hoyt Ave., a member of the police department for 19 years, died yesterday at the U. S. Veterans’ Hospital after a brief illness. He was 48. Born in Ireland,: Mr. Shanahan came to. Indianapolis in 1911, Dur-{ ing the World War he was & member of the 18th Infantry and served eight months overseas. Services are to be held at'9 a. m. Saturday in St. Patrick’s: Church. Burial ‘will follow at* Holy Cross Cemetery. . He was a member of the St. Patrick’s Catholic Church and the Police Post of the American Legion. Beside his wife, Nora, he ‘is survived -by a son, Leo; two daughters, Miss Irene Shanahan and Mrs. Nora
.|{Hall, and one brother,. John, all oo
Indianapolis. : QF
Theron E. Miller
Theron E. Miller, 2229 ‘Carrollton Ave, died at|his home yesterday after a brief illness. He was 43. Services will be held tomorrow at 2:30 p.- m. in| the Conkle Funeral Home. Burial will be in Crown Hill. Mr. Miller was the owner of a bicycle shop at 708 E. 22d St. He was a member of the Capital City Lodge, F. and A. M., the Knights of Pythias and the Broadway Methodist Church. ’ He is survived by his step-mother, Mrs. May Miller, a brother, J. Rus-| sell Miller, both of Indianapolis, and a sister, Mrs. Frances Thomas, Los Angeles, Cal.
ARREST HAWAIIAN GOVERNOR'S SON
NEW YORK, Oct. 26 (U. P.).— Everton George Poindexter, 38, so-cially-registered son of Judge Joseph B. Poindexter, Governor of the Hawaiian Territory, was arrested early today after an automobile accident
lor. charges of third degree assault
ana leaving the scene of a wreck.
He was arrested at home by two detectives who said: he tried to snatch their badges: from .them. They said Poindexter had refused to-let them into his:apartment until the building superintendent reassured him. that the badges were genuine. They chargad he then produced a deputy sheriff’s badge, which was taken.
(CUNNINGHAM CASE’
NEARS CONCLUSION
OKLAHOMA, CITY, Oct. 26 (U. P.).—A District Court jury may begin deliberating tonight the verdict of whether Roger Cunningham, former Federal Housing Administration inspector, must die in the electric chair or serve a life term for the slaying of his attractive wife. The state has presented its case. The defense late yesterday asked the jury to send the 34-year-old
{ confessed killer to prison ‘where he
can get the mental treatment he needs.” Rebuttals, were scheduled today - with the prospect that the case may go to the jury by tonight or tomorrow. 2
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