Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 January 1940 — Page 15
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R BAR INSTITUTE'S WINTER PARLEY
Harvard . Professor to Talk - On Wills; 1941 U. S. Meeting Sought.
More than 200 Indiana attorneys are expected to attend the legal institute at the Claypool Hotel tomorrow, preceding the State Bar Association’s midwinter meeting Saturday. The institute, opening at 10 a. m. in the Chateau Room, will be addressed by Prof. Walter Barton Leach, of the Harvard University Law School, on the subject, “The Drafting of Wills and Trusts.” . The meeting will be open to the general public upon payment of a registration fee. At the same time, a committee began drafting ‘an invitation to the American Bar Association to hold its 1941 convention here. The invitation will be acted on at the state meeting Saturday. The committee was named by Samuel Dowden, following his installation last night as president of the Indianapolis Bar Association. Committee members are Joe Rand Beckett, chairman; Alan W. Boyd, Fred C. Matson, Sidney S. Miller and THomas D. Stevenson.
Bar Head on Program The Saturday morning session of
the association will be devoted to
committee reports and an address by Curtis G. Shake, chief justice of the Indiana Supreme Court, on “The Future of the Practice of Law.” The principal speaker Saturday afternoon will be Prof. Charles A. Beardsley, San Francisco, president of the American Bar Association. Prof. Leach will speak at the midwinter banquet Saturday night on “A Law Professor on the Loose.” | He will be the guest of honor at a luncheon to be given by Harvard Law School graduates at noon Saturday in the Indianapolis Athletic Club. The Association’s midwinter banquet will be held at 6:30 p. m. tomorrpw in the Claypool by the Indiana Judges Association.
- Officers Are Installed
Other “officers installed at last night’s meeting of the Indianapolis Bar Association were Harvey J. Elam, first vice president; Mr. Boyd, second vice president; James C. Jay, secretary; William J. Wemmer, treasurer; Joseph J. Daniels and Charles D. Babcock, executive committee members; Irving M. Fauvre, Thomas M. Scanlon and C. Larry Willson, membership committee. Harry T. Ice, Maurice T. Harrell, Grier M. Shotwell, Paul R. Summers and Douglas D. Brown were named on the committee on admissions. Mr. Dowden named a committee to consider employment of an attorney to direct a legal aid bureau. Members are Jeremiah L. Cadick, chairman; Clarence F. Merrell, retiring president; Eugene S. Miller, Mr. Stevenson and Carl Wilde.
WOMAN'S BODY KILLS MAN IN CHICAGO FALL
CHICAGO, Jan. 11 (U. P.) —Mrs. R. H. Robbins, 27, blond wife of a Waukegan, Ill., physician, sipped tea in a “loop” department store balcony tea room. Suddenly she stood up, stepped on a bench and plunged six floors to her death. Her body struck and injured fatally Harry Kohlman, 50, a floor manager. Her father, Howard S. Cook, Evanston, Ill, said that she had suffered. a nervous breakdown re-
"cently after the birth of a child. He
said she had visited a doctor yesterday an hour before she leaped. The doctor had advised her to return to the hospital for further treatment. : Mr. Kohlman, who died in a hospital, suffered skull, jaw, shoulder, arm and leg fractures when her body struck him and then crashed into a ribbon counter.
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INDIA
—To Bring Cheer to Twisted Bod ies
Leaders at the Indiana infantile paralysis campaign meeting yesterday included: (top picture, left to right), Governor M. Clifford Townsend, Adj. Gen. Elmer F. Straub and A. B. Good. Jane Withers, movie star, noy in person at the Circle Theater, is shown below as she visited Riley Hospital to cheer up the little patients there, Governor Townsend predicted this year’s drive would exceed any in the seven years the campaign has been waged. Other speakers at the meeting, which was held in the Indianapolis Athletic Club and was attended by 60 county chairmen, included Mrs. Meredith Nicholson Jr., state vice-chairman; Wallace O. Lee, permanent Marion County chairman, and Mrs. Winifred Kahmann, head of the Riley Hospital occupational therapy department,
Mrs. Barbara Abdon
Mrs. Barbara Abden, member of the Grace Baptist Church, died yesterday at a nursing home. Living at 1805 N. Illinois St., she had been an Indianapolis resident for 29 years. ¢ : Survivors are two sons, Alfred J. and George T.; a brother, John Kreiplein, and two sisters, Miss Anna Kreiplein, Indianapolis, and Mrs. Margaret Mendel, Aurora. Services will be conducted at 2 p. m. Saturday at the Meyer & Abdon Funeral Home. Burial will be at Memorial Park.
Stephen W. Lowery
Services for Stephen W. Lowery, 1016 N. Tuxedo St., are to be held Saturday at 2 p. m. at the Dorsey Funeral home. Burial will be at Washington Park. Mr. Lowery, who was 57, had been an employee of the Indianapolis Union Railway for 31 years. He had served as assistant station master for the past 20 years. He came to Indianapolis from Smiths Grove, Ky., 37 years ago. . He was a member of the Marion Todge 35, F. & A. M.; Sahara Grotto and Odd Fellows Lodge 465. Survivors include his wife, Pearl; a son, John, Indianapolis; his father, Alph, of Smiths Grove; four sisters, Mrs. Mae Moore, Mrs. Helen Stone and Mrs. Bessie Moulder, all of Smiths Grove, and Mrs. Ruth Wright, Louisville, Ky.
Simon Goldman
Simon Goldman, for 30 years, in the scrap iron business in Indianapolis, died today at his home, 225 E. Raymond St. He was 53 and was born in Poland. Mr. Goldman was a charter member of the Knesis Israél Synagogue and was five times president of the organization. He is survived by his wife, Sarah; four sons, Abe and Nate Goldman, Chicago; Louis Goldman, Indianapolis, and Irving Goldman, Miami, Fla.; and five daughters, Mrs. Julia Ash, Mrs. Lee Bloom, Chicago, and Mrs. Max Finkelstein, Mrs. Laura Karabell and Miss Frieda Goldman, Indianapolis; 19 grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. Services will be at 2 p. m. tomorrow in the Aaron & Ruben Funeral Home and burial will be at the
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Mrs. C. W. Reichard
Services will be held tomorrow for Mrs. C. W. Reichard, Indianapolis who died Tuesday at her home, 1006% E. Washington St. She was 56. She was a member of the Roberts Park Methodist Church and the Women of the Moose. Survivors includé® her husband and three sisters, Mrs. Estella Bridell, Dayton, O., and Mrs. Ella Vice and Mrs. Maude Rahe, both of Indianapolis. Funeral services will be conducted at 10:30 a. m. at the Harry W. Moore Chapel with burial at Washington Park. !
Christian F. Reimer
Funeral services for Christian F. Reimer, who died Tuesday at his home, 138 W. Arizona St., will be conducted at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the Wald Funeral Home. Burial will be at the Concordia Lutheran Cemetery. Mr. Reimer, who was 81, was born on a farm in Mecklenburg, Germany, and during his youth served as a cavalryman in the German Army. He came to the U. S. in 1887 and settled here on the South Side, where he resided for the remaining 53 years of his life. . He operated a tavern at 1305 S. Meridian St. for many years and then was employed by the old Hide-Leather & Belting Co. He retired in 1930 and had devoted his time since then to his favorite pastime, reading. high He was a member of the St. Paul Evangelical Lutheran Church and was instrumental in organizing several German societies here. Mr. Reimer’s death was the first in his immediate family for more than half a century. He is survived by his wife, Lena; nine children, Mrs. Elsie Beplay, Mrs. Anna Murphy, Mrs. Meta Faust and Helen, Louis, Henry, Charles, Walter and Christian Reimer -Jr., all of Indianapolis; five great-grandchildren, three brothers and three sisters,
John M. Sprinkle -
Services for John M. Sprinkle, who died Tuesday, will be held at 10 p. m. Saturday at the Conkle Funeral Home. Burial will be at Washington Park. He was 79. A native of London, Ky. Mr. Sprinkle came to Indianapolis 24 years ago. He was a member of the Christian Church at Greene castle. Residing at 2455 Shelby St. he was an employee of the Chapman Price Steel Co., for 15 years. Survivors are two sons, Edwin and Roy, both of Indianapolis; two daughters, Mrs. Bertha Bickley; Indianapolis, and Mrs. Clarence O. Riggs, Kentland, Ind.
Charles W. Holland
Services will be held tomorrow at Angola for Charles W. Holland, former resident of Indianapolis, who died Tuesday. He was 57. “A plumbing, heating and ventilating contractor, Mr. Holland, was born in Indianapolis and moved to Angola 15 years ago. He was a member of the Blue Lodge, F and A. M,, and the Scottish Rite. ’ Survivors include his wife, Cora, and a sister, Mrs. John Mauck, Indianapolis. :
Mrs. Ella J. Gielow
Mrs. Ella J. Gielow, resident of Indianapolis for 38 years, died yesterday at the St. Francis Hospital at Beech Grove after an illness of four months. Mrs. Grielow, who was 75, was a member of the First Evangelical Church and its Calendar Circle. Surviving is a daughter, Mrs. Elmer E. Simon. Services will be conducted at 3:15 p. m. Saturday at the Dorsey Funeral Home. Burial will be at Washington Park. |
DEATHS IN INDIANAPOLIS
June Louis Blanchard
Services will be held tomorrow for June Louis Blanchard, Indianapolis real estate man, who died Tuesday at his home, 2022 N. Pennsylvania St. for, Mr. Blanchard, who was 63, was a member of the SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral and was a former member of the Machinist Contract Union 161. He entered the real estate business in 1908 and retired because of ill health in 1936. The 8:30 a. m. services will be held at the residence and at 9 a. m. at the BS. Peter and Paul Cathedral. Burial will be at Holy
.| Cross.
Besides his wife, Margaret, survivors include his mother, Mrs. Emma G. Lawrence; two daughters, Mrs. Corrine Harper and Mrs. Rita Pfafflin; three sons, Earl, Ralph and Fletcher, all of Indianapolis, and a sister, Mrs. Frank Walton, Campbellsburg.
CHARLES M. HOLLAND DIES UPSTATE AT 56
ANGOLA, Ind, Jan. 11.—Funeral services will be held here tomorrow for Charles M. Holland, proprietor of the Holland Plumbing Co. and former Indianapolis resident. Burial will be at Circle Hill Cemtery here. Mr. Holland, who was 56, died Tuesday night at his home after a long illness. He had been in the plumbing business here for the past 15 years. Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Cora Holland, and a sister, Mrs. Cora Hauck, of Indianapolis.
STEAL $54 AT CHURCH Yeggs broke into the Church of Christ, Scientist, 210 E. 34th St., last night, battered the combinations from two safes and took $54 in cash.
WAR'S ‘STORM LOOKED FOR IN SPRING MONTHS
Europe and Asia Expected To Complete ‘Choosing Up Sides’ Soon.
By WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Times Foreign Editor
WASHINGTON, Jan. 11. — The next few weeks will likely witness the most hectic diplomatic maneuvers since the outbreak of the war. These maneuvers may decide the outcome of the struggle yet to come. The countries of Europe and Asia are still choosing sides. The lines are not yet completely drawn. The courses of J Italy, the Balkans, Hungary, Scandinavia, Japan and China are still uncertain. Russia remains almost as much of. an enigma as ever. And Herr Hitler, usually loquacity itself, of late has maintained a strange silence.
Even the United States must be counted among the problematical.
“| Upon her relations with Japan to
no small extent depend that country’s relations with Soviet Russia. For while Japan is second to none in her hostility to the Reds, like Germany she will form a working agreement with them if she must. Recently Prime Minister Chamberlain warned that the “unbelievable” calm of the first months of the war can only be interpreted as “the quiet before the storm.” The “storm” is expected to break with the spring. The big German offensive against Verdun, in 1916, began on Feb. 21. Von Hindenburg’s big push in 1918 started on March 21. Today the experts are saying the Nazis may be expected to launch their big effort between those two dates, the time depending somewhat on the weather. The spring and summer, it is feared, may see all Europe, and even Asia, involved. Not just France, Britain, Germany, Russia and Finland, but Scandinavia, Holland, Belgium (or Switzerland, if Germany attempts to turn the French line that way), Italy, Hungary, the Balkans, the Near, Middle and Far East. : Between now and the anticipated “31l-out” war, therefore, tremendous goings and comings in the diplomatic field are inevitable.
PLAN BLOOD TESTS T0 SOLVE DISPUTE
Blood tests to establish the paternity of a 20-months-old child, in an Indianapolis divorce suit in
Superior Court, will be made next week at Ohio State University. Judge Henry O. Goett said a 20-year-old wife, her husband and another man had agreed to allow the tests and had stipulated they will not contest the results in the court action. : The tests were made necessary, Judge Goett said, when both husband and wife claimed custody of the child and the wife stated in court that her husband was not the baby’s father. : The tests will be made by Dr. Harriet S. Hyman, research geneticist, and such tests have been held valid in court. The conclusion is reached by a comparison of blood groupings, and will be arrive at by determining which of the two men could not be the father.
DR. ARBUCKLE IN HOSPITAL
Dr. William E. Arbuckle, 1759 W. Morris St., former Marion County coroner, was taken to Methodist Hospital today. It was reported that he was believed to have.a mild case of pneumonia but that his condition was not serious. He is a member of the Center Township Advisory. Board and 14th Ward Democratic chairman.
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