Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 November 1939 — Page 11
"TUESDAY, NOV. 14, 1939 _—
SINFRANCISCO PREPARES FOR BRIGHT FUTURE
_ Pensions Beaten, Rossi Is Re-elected and City Waits For Business Boom.
Times Special ° SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 14. — With the $30-Every-Thursday pension plan out of the way and Mayor Angelo J. Rossi re-elected, San Francisco is swinging its attention away from politics and looking over its program of progress. _ First point to be disposed of was the financing of the Exposition for a second year, and this has been virtually completed. In August, two months before it closed, the financial benefits of the Fair to the city, as well as to Oakland, Berkeley and scores of other cities and towns around San Francisco Bay, began to be felt in a big way. Business at High Level
Business increased to the best level in nine years. It is still hovering at that level, and San Francisco expects that another year of Treasure Island will attract sufficient out-of-state visitors—bringing with them some 50 million dollars— to keep the €eoTIOmic mercury at a high mark. Another hopeful sign is the fact that maritime labor’s working contracts, frequently the cause of shipping tieups, are being discussed amicably by both sides. Shipbuilding, long a dead industry on the Pacific Coast, also presents a bright outlook, with contracts already awarded local yards for near 10 million dollars’ worth of new vessels. : Residential building is booming, and work will start early in the year on ‘a 15- million - llar housing project. Traffic over the Golden Gate and San : Oakland Bay Bridges is the greatest since the iwo huge structures were opened. There's a Worry Side
Thirty-five miles south - of San Francisco, near Sunnyvale, Uncle Sam is expanding Moffett Field into a 10-million-dollar aeronautical research laboratory. On the worry side of the ledger, the list is toped by this one: What will the war do to shipping? San Francisco now claims the largest trans-Pacific trade in many years as a result of recent shifts in world trade routes. But if Washington were to crack down on Tokio by holding up new trade agreements, this port would lose considerable business. Full effects of the new Neutrality Act have not yet been estimated. In the air the city is moving rapidly. The municipal airport now ranks fifth in the United States in the number of scheduled departures and arrivals. Air-line passenger traffic in September was up 54 per cent from the preceding September. An expansion program at: the airport, representing an investment of nearly six million dollars, will be completed by next summer. Traffic Arteries Widerned Treasure Island, site of ‘the Exposition and home of the Pan American Airways’ Clippers, is destined eventually to become a great, centrally located air-line terminal. In “the city proper, an extensive program of widening main traffic arteries across-town, and leading to the Peninsula suburban areas to Je south, is being carried out. downtown traffic and i problem is still unsolved, but new regulations and the widening of several streets has eased the congestion. Among suggested solutions is an underground parking station at Union Square, in the heart of the shopping and hotel district.
41 HOOSIERS ENLIST FOR ARMY SERVICE
Forty-one additional Hoosiers, 17 of them from Indianapolis, have enlisted in the U. S. Army at the recruiting station here. Those from here are: 4 Air Corps—Elmer L. Crowley, Bernard C. Seitzinger and. Arthur K. Schlutz. Coast Artillery—Charles E. Weaver, James A. Hallen, George R. Wilkerson, James L. Kent and Norman B. Lines. Infantry—Frank C. Schad, Leonard I. Johnson, Chdrles E. Hinman, Marvin G. Kennedy, Robert R. Meeks and James: C. Moore. Quartermaster Corps—James K. Kellum, Wilubur W. Kellinghaus. Field Artillery—Marvin E. Young.” Recruits from other Indiana cities: Air Corps—James E. Skaggs, Plainfield, and Jacob G. Robinson, Greenwood. Field Artillery—Bert Kriner, Kuightstown, and Lawrence B. Dorsett, Coatesville. Coast Artillery—Roy R. Withers Jr., Muncie;
Ralph D. Williams, Thorntown; Eu-|g=
B. Gray, South Bend; Allen P. Rogers, Clinton; Herbert L. Hall, Greencastle. Medical Department — George: A. Smith, Bicknell; Owen D. Wilson, Anderson; Louis R. Orten, -Terre Haute; LeRoy Snow Jr, Tipton; Harold L. Blaize, Glezen; William
R. Sylvester, Flora; Francis M. Elder|,
and William R. Ferguson, Greensurg. Infantry—Ralph G. Jones, Kokomo; George M. Jackson, Lexington; William W. Long, Elwood; Walter D. Cregar, Connersville; Ralph R. McGee Jr., Columbus; Marlin Abbitt, Bloomington; Jasper A. Blanton and Milton A. Bainter, Fortville.
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DEATHS
Arthur W. Kirschner
Arthur W. Kirschner, a retired employee of the Wege Marble & Tile Co. of Indiana, is to be buried tomorrow following services at the G. H. Herrmann Funeral Home at 8:30 a. m. and at 9 a. m. at the Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Mr. Kirschner was 64. A resident of Indianapolis several years, Mr. Kirschner died Sunday at his home, 703 E. Minnesota St. after a long illness. - He was a member of Sacred Heart Church, the Knights, of St. George and St. Thomas Society, of St. Catherine’s Church. He- also was a charter member of the Minnesota Benevolent Society. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Tillie Kirschner; two sons, Arthur and Raymond Kirschner; a-daught-er, Mrs. Lucille Bryant; three sisters, Mrs. Anna Yetter, Mrs. Fred Scherrer and Mrs. John C. Geiger, and five grandchildren all of Indianapolis.
Mrs. Mary E. Evans
Funeral services for Mrs. Mary E. Evans, 2524 N. New Jersey St., are to be held at 2:30 p. m. today .at the Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary. Burial is to be in Cave Hill Cemetery, Louisville, Ky. Mrs_ Evans, who was 65, died yesterday at her home. A native of Washington County, Kentucky, Mrs. Evans came to Indianapolis in 1922. She was married to the Rev. P. Taylor Evans, former pastor of the First Reformed Church here, Sept. 30, 1902, ~ She is survived by her husband, a son, Dr. Thomas W. Evans of .New Albany; six sisters, Mrs. Louis Schneider, Mrs. Albert Ummenthum, Mrs. William Augustus, Mrs_ C. A. Phixton, Mrs. Thornley Sharrard and Miss Lina Noe, all of Louisville, Ky., and a brother, John Noe, also of Louisville.
Vinson 0. Carter
Funeral services for Vinson O. Carter, 35 E. 36th St., who died Sunday at Methodist Hospital, will be held at 4 p. m. today at :the Flanner & Buchanan Funeral Home. Cremation will follow. Mr. Carter was 53. He was associated with the Hatfield Electric Co. and previously had been with the Sanborn Electric’ Co, for 17 years. He was born on a farm one mile east of Mooresville where three generations of the family were born. He was a member of the Broad Ripple Masonic lodge. Survivors are his wife, Kathleen, and his father, Edgar Carter, who lives on the farm.
MORRISSEY RITES T0 BE TOMORROW
Funeral services for John Morrissey, father of Police Chief Michael F. Morrissey, will be held at 9 a. m. tomorrow at his home, 1416 E. Market St., and at 9:30- a. m. at Holy Cross Catholic Church. Burial | will be in Holy Cross Cemetery.Mr. - Morrissey, who was 83; died | Sunday after a long illness. He is survived by two sons, Chief Morrissey and John Morrissey Jr.; a daughter,” ‘Mrs. -Anna Dean, and four grandchildren, Gertrude Dean, Anna Catherine Dean, Ralph Déan and Mrs. Rosa Marie Breen, all of Indianapolis, and a brother, Edward Morrissey, Yutan, Neb.
TAFT RAPS SHIP TRANSFER PITTSBURGH, Nov. 14 (U.P.). — Senator Robert A. Taft of Ohio. de€|clared. last night that the people “cannot trust the pdwer of war and peace to the Democratic Party for four years” and criticized the proposed transfer of American ships to
spirit of the new neutrality act.
IN INDIA
Mrs. Mary Wobdruff
'|to Indianapolis’ as a boy an _| here for many years. 2 ‘He was “married to, Miss ‘Magy Camper Shuler ‘of ‘Indiana 1s, whose :fa=| of, ‘ ofl widely Hon in- harness :: | racing. circles.
‘Funeral services for Mrs. "Mary Woodruff, 638 Madison Ave.’ who died yesterday, will ‘be’ held ‘at 2 p. m. tomorrow at ‘the G. H. Herrmann Funeral Home. - Burial will be at Washington Park. Mrs. Woodruff was born at Campton, Ky.,.and had lived in ‘Indianapolis 30 years. She attended the Baptist church,’ She was active in the Eastern Star until recent’years when health prevented. She also was a member of the Rebekah Lodge. . Mrs. Woodruff is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Esther Hohlt and Mrs. Christine Armour, both of Indianapolis, and Mrs. Mary Kearns, Wheeling, W. Va.;. a son, Henry Claude = Spencer, Indianapolis; a brother, Isaac Napier of Oklahoma; 14 grandchildren and one: great: grandchild. .
Gustavus J. Haivey Gustavus J. Harvey, employee: of the Indianapolis -postoffice for 38 years, who had planned to retire after the Christmas’ rush, died last night at ‘his home, 2750 N. Adams St. He was 63. Mr. Harvey had Just returned home from completing his route with a ‘parcel’ post truck when he col: lapsed. * He was to have béen retiréd within six months. ‘The police emergency squad, undef the direction: of Sergt. Kent Yoh, attempted to re vive him. Mr. Harvey ‘had beers iH for some time.’
He is survived by his’ wite;sMrs.| =
Ethel Harvey; four -sons, Jasper, James, Owen and Warren Harvey; two daughters, Mrs. Juanita Waltnian and ‘Mrs. Eleanor Davis, all of Indianapolis,! and three: brothers, Will, Fred and Henry Harvey, all Hudson’ Falls, N. Y. Funeral services are to’ be ‘held at 10 a. m. Thursday at the Calvary Baptist. Church under the direction of Burial isto be in Memorial ‘Park. Friends may call at the home tonight: © :
LOCAL: WOMAN, SHOT. “THROUGH HEAD; DIES
Ms, Peggy Fisher T Pisher Tucker, 27, of 106 W. North St., Apt. 106, died at City Hospital today from a bullet wound through Her head. = : ‘She was found dying on the“ floot of her apartment’ about 4:30 a)'mi. Police were told that Mrs. Tucker
had quarreled with her fianée.'De= |"
tectives .said . they. found a revolver near her body.
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e Indianapolis Motor atic - ak Club . banquet Nov. 28 at the Hotel Washington. New officers will ‘be installed, Other speakers will be J. H. Mc-
James L. Beatty, Motor Vehicles Bureau director, Installation services will be conducted by Richard Fogarty-of the U. S. Rubber Co. “Pfficers to :bé installed are Fay Langdon, president; Earl PF. Throm, vice. president; John Gedig, sec-
d 6d retary, and F. M. Jackson, | treasurer.
iorgerJack Jackson Dry Dry Goods Store, 2141 Pros pect St., told “police today: the front
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John. VanBuskirk
Private funeral services are to be held at 11 a. m. tomorrow for John VanBuskirk, 3001 N. Pennsylvania St, a long-time resident of ‘the city and formerly: ‘associated’, , with the Anchor Buggy Co... Mr. VanBuskirk, who was. 81; died}. Sunday at his home. He was born | in Gosport in 1858; but: spent. mast of his life in Indianapolis, and. Beh Davis. .. He retired. from the Anchor Buggy. Co. in 1917," i His. wife, Mrs. Celia Barry Van Buskirk, SUrVIVeR,
Mrs. Jennie H. Droke
Mrs! ‘Jennie H.Droke, who lived one ‘and: one-half miles south of Beech: ‘Grove; was found. dead in her bed yesterday: by: Mrs. Hattie Evers
Mrs. Droke was 8, Mrs. Everling| said she had gone to the Droke
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