Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 February 1940 — Page 7
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LABOR UNITY IN STOPOVER HERE
“Talk Unionism,” He Advises Friends; Plans Rest After Coast Operation.
Tom Mooney sped westward today, toward home and the surgeon's knife, ; He stopped over briefly in Indianapolis yesterday to greet his |old
» friend, John J. McNamara, before
o
going .on by easy stages to San Francisco where he must undergo an abdominal operation. The white-haired labor leader, whose imprisonment for the 1916 Preparedness Day bombing ended last year with a full pardon, looked frail, but his eyes were bright and steady. ‘Now I Must Rest’
After the operation, he will rest awhile. Then he will throw his full energies into the labor movement. “It will be hard to rest,” he said. “If I'd taken a rest when I should have, I'd be in better health. But now I must rest. I must pay back my friends who have stood by me all these years. I must get well again, quickly.” ge Mr. Mooney spoke before a small
- group of friends late in the after-
1»
noon. He told them labor must unite its divided ranks to forestall United States participation in the European conflict. He spoke clearly, but now and then as he recalled the great labor conflicts in the past— the hanging of the Molly Maguires in Pennsylvania, the Pullman strike, his lips quivered and his voice failed.
‘You Must Talk Unionism’
“You must all of you work hard for the labor movement,” he said. “It is® labor, no one else, that can preserve freedom in America. “You must talk unionism to all you meet, tell them that labor can prevent fascism in this country, can improve distribution in a system that produces more than enough for everybody.” He warned that participation in war would bring an abrupt end to liberty in this country. Certain interested groups, he said,
“want war, to divert the people from
»
"the
domestie troubles. They will do all they can to have war, he said. “When war comes, your liberties will be taken away and you will never get them back. You will be imprisoned—like the peoples of Germany and Italy are imprisoned.
‘Soon I'll Be Back’
“True, you will not be locked up in a cell every night as I was. But you might as well be for all the freedom you will have.” “This is all I have to say, now, to my friends,” he said. “I must leave now for a while, but some day soon I'll be back.” Escorted by Mr. McNamara, Mr. Mooney left the meeting and went to his hotel, where he conferred with executive committee members of the Indiana Industrial Union Council.
MRS. FRANCIS PAYNE, CLUBWOMAN, DIES
B Mrs. Louise Hughel Payne, wife of Francis W. Payne, Indianapolis attorney, died last night at her home, 5345 University Ave. She was 46. . Mrs. Payne was born in Anderson, the daughter of Clarence and Lulu Hughel and came here with ithe family in 1905. She attended School 32, was graduated from Shortridge High School and Butler University. She was a librarian in the Indianapolis Public Library for three years until her marriage on May 29, 1919. 3 Mrs. Payne was a member of Downey Avenue Christian Church, Kappa Kappa Gamma, the Tuesday Club, Katharine Merrill Graydon Club, the Irvington Dis-
* cussion Club, the American Legion
‘Donald; her mother;
Auxiliary of Post 38, the Indianapolis Council of P.-T. A. and was historian of . the Howe High School P.-T. A. She is survived by her husband: three sons, Robert, Edward and a brother, Myron M. Hughel, Chicago, and a sister, Mrs. Genevieve Hughel Lewis, Winnetka, Ill. Funeral services will ‘be held at 2 p. m. Wednesday at the Downey Avenue Church. Burial will be in Crown: Hill. Friends may call at the Ragsdale & Price Funeral Home. |
Mrs. Goldie L. Dow
Mrs. Goldie L. Dow, a resident of Indianapolis for 27 years, died yesterday at the City Hospital after a short illness. She was 49. Mrs. Dow lived at 2055 N. Tacoma Ave. Survivors are two sisters, Mrs. Alma Kelleher, of Anguilla, Miss., and Mrs, Pearl Irwin of Frankfort, Ind., a brother, Herbert D. Walter of Chicago; and a son, Donald Walter Dow, of Indianapolis. Funeral services will be held
: Wednesday at 1 p. m. at the Little
8
& Sons Funeral Home. Burial will be in Oak Hill Cemetery, near Kirklin, Ind.
INDUSTRIALIST DIES
LOUISVILLE, Ky., Feb. § (U. P.). —Patrick Henry Callahan, nationally known industrialist and humanitarian, died at his home last night. He was 74. He spent the last 30 years of his life in social and economic betterment crusades.
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MOONEY URGES
osevelt lll Married
Theodore Roesevelt ITI, son of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt Jr, and his bride, the former Miss Anne Babcock, are leaving the church at Louisville, Ky. after their wedding. :
It's better for police to warn minor traffic offenders than to arrest them and clutter up the courts, - Municipal Court Judge John McNelis said today. His statement followed the morning session of his court in which 22 motorists appeared, none of them charged with such major offenses as speeding or drunken driving. In England, Judge McNelis told newspapermen, motorists committing minor refractions are given printed notices calling attention to their offense, reminding that often such offenses result -in injury or
‘Mere Warning’ Advised in Minor Traffic Offenses
death to other persons, and asking the motorist’s future co-operation. The judge cited the case of a defendant brought before him today for having only one headlight burning. “This man lost $2 in pay for his morning's work when he came to court,” Judge McNelis- said. “The arresting officer wasn't in court, and if I hadn't dismissed the case, the defendant. would have had to make another trip to court and lose another $2 in pay. A warning would have served just as well in
this case.” ~
€9. son;
Surtwo
BLUFFTON—Harry Y. White, vivors: Five daughters; one brothers; one sister. : BUCKSKIN—Louis Kruse, 83, DECATUR—-Andrew Wolpert, 66. vivors: Wife; three sons; three daughters; four sisters. John Scaer, T4. daughters; one son. Mrs. Mollie Haggard. Survivor: Husband, John. EVANSVILLE—George W. Dodd, 58. Survivors: Wife, Viola; daughter, Mrs. Willard Pate; sons, George Jr. and Joseph; sister, Mrs. Edward Wessling; brother, William
odd. Frank F. Guenther, 84. i , 60. Survivors: Sons, Ar- . sister, Mrs. Eila ‘Clemmons; brothers, Owen and Harvey. - Mrs. Sarah C. Thompson, 78. Survivor: Husband, Edgar. i FAIRMOUNT—Walter Downing, §8. -Survivors: Wife: daughter, Mrs. Vada Wilson. FT. WAYNE—Mrs. Christine Kiel, 85. Survivor. Daughter, Mrs. William. Doehr-
Survivors: Wife; three
man. v hi Mrs. Gloria Kelley.. Survivor: Hushand, 0. J. Kelley. S Harry S. Johnson, 49. - Survivors: Wife, India; daughter, Miss Helen Ruth -Johnson; mother. Mrs. John Johnson; brothers, Wiliam and Frank; sister, Mrs. Bertha Lemon. RL 4 Mrs. Rosanne Mix, 83. Survivors: Son, William; daughters, Mrs. Cathorine Fromm, Mrs Pearl Muter and Mrs. Rulie Boehm; brother, Elwood “Blazer; sister, Mrs. Alice Nichols. ’
si
STATE DEATHS
GARY—Miss Alice Jane Wray, 18. Survivors: Parents, Mr. and Mrs. Perry Wray; brothers, Perry and Donald. Mrs. Rosa Sumegi, 72. : Michael Terus, 6 GAS CITY—Mrs. John Sheehan, 65. Survivors: Husband; sons, James, John and Francis; - daughter, Margaret; brothers, James Patrick, Peter and Bernard Ross; sisters, Mrs. W. H, Cashman and Miss Margaret-Ross. HUNTINGBURG—William R. Souders, 54. Survivors: Parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Souders; brothers, John and Louis; sisters, Mrs. Frank Bath and Mrs. Henry Neuman. LAFAYETTE—Sharon Louise,, 13 raonihs. Survivors: Parents,” Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Timmons. MARION—Mrs. Mary Jane Davis, 177. Survivors: Son. Marshall; daughters, Misses Ollie and. Nannie Davis. MOUNT -VERNON—Fitshugh Lee Funsten Jr. 11. .. -- : PRINCETON—Mrs. Eliza Greer, 73, Survivor: Son, Dr. Oliver Greer. Claude McDonald, 60. Survivors: Wife, Serepta; sons, Morton and James; brother, T. Morton; daughters, Mrs, John Ferguson and -Mrs. Howard Stormont. hist SOUTH HOLLAND — Adrian Voss,- 35. Survivors: Wife, Ada; parents, Mr. and Mrs. Herman- Voss; sister; four brothers. STENDAL——Raymond Faries, 28. Survivors: Wife, Irene; mother, Mrs, Sarah Faries; brother, Elza; sisters, Mrs. Oscar Gwaltney and Mrs, James McDowell.
WABASH—Worth Chronister, 67. vivors: Son; sister; brother.
Sur-
ETTA HARRELL DIES;
TAUGHT AT BEDFORD
Times Special ° BEDFORD, Ind, Feb. 5—Miss Etta Ethel Harrell, widely known school teacher, is dead here; her death being the third in the family in four months. Her brother, Benjamin, died last Thursday and her mother died last September. Miss Harrell, 53, taught here for 19 years and formerly at Vincennes.
Survivors include a brother, W. P Harrell, Indianapolis. :
Mrs. Emma Somers Timcs Special KOKOMO, Ind. Feb. 5. — Mrs. Emma Somers, member of a prominent Howard County family and a graduate of the Kokomo High School class of 1876, died here yesterday. She was 83. Her late husband, O. A. Somers, was a former national commander of the G. A. R. She was active in the Women’s Relief Corps.
Robert Peer
Times Special CLINTON, Ind. Feb. 5.—Funeral services were to be held here today for Robert (Uncle Bob) Peer. He was 94 and a member of one of the pioneer families of Dana, Ind. His death was the result of a broken hip.
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PRESBYTERY OF CITY WILL HEAR DR. HALL
Churches in the Indianapolis Presbytery are to unite to hear Dr. Cameroun P. Hall of Philadelphia, executive secretary for Social Education and Action of the Presbyterian Church in the U. S. A. Dr. Hall will speak at a dinner meeting in the Irvington Presbyterian Church Thursday at 6:30 p. m. He will also give the hroadcast for “Religion Sees the News,” over WIRE, Saturday, Feb. 10, and make a speaking tour of Indiana afterward. The Presbytery includes about one-eighth of the state.
WOMEN TAKE OVER JOBS PARIS, Feb. 5 (U. P.). — More
than 500,000 French women have ‘taken up posts in defense industries,
In many plane factories 30 per cent of the employees are women. During the last war, 400,000 women were engaged in war work.
Modern highways take more punishment in one day than the old roads did in an entire year.
color,
INVITE MINTON
)]
TOWHITE HOUSE
Hoosier Is One of 40 Asked To Meet With Officials of Youth Congress.
- WASHINGTON, Feb. 5 (U. P.).—
| Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt has im-
vited 40 Senators and Representatives to an informal meeting at the White House tonight with officials of the American Youth Congress, the Congress announced today. - The meeting will discuss plans for the Congress’; citizenship institute which will oh held here next week and to which ‘Republican Na-
tional Committee Chairman John D. M. Hamilton yesterday refused
cause, he said, it had failed to purge itself of allegedly communistic groups. Mr. Hamilton’s action was revealed in a letter to the Congress’ executive secretary Joseph Cadden, and was coupled with a denunciation of Soviet Russian policy as “immoral, imperialistic and autocratic.” The American Youth Congress has been defended against charges of communism, made before the Dies Committee, by Mrs. Roosevelt who has described its leaders as “my young friends.” The President, Mrs, Roosevelt, Attorney General Robert H. Jackson and several other New Deal figures have agreed to address the meeting next week. But Federal ‘Scurity Administrator Paul- V, McNutt, Democratic presidential aspirant, declined on the plea that he was “too busy.” Tonight's White House meeting will survey plans for the four-day meeting at which 3000 delegates will discuss problems of jobs for youth, peace and civil liberties. No Republican Congressmen -were invited. Those invited include Senator Sherman Minton (D. Ind.).
BARBERS TO MEET ON PRICE-WAR RULES
Members of the International Barbers’ Union are scheduled to meet at the Hotel Lincoln at 8 p. m. tomorrow to draft a new petition for price and hour regulations. : The meeting was called by George R. Smith, Union secretary, after Independent Barbers’ Association members went back to their own prices and closing hours in defiance of State Barber Board regulations. . Prices and hour regulations promulgated by the State Board last Nov. 15 were declared by Circuit Judge Earl R. Cox to have been issued in an illegal manner during an injunction hearing Friday. Judge Cox lifted a restraining order, permitting the Independent
own prices. i Shae . Mr. Smith said a new petition will be drafted to “correct errors” made by the State Board in promulgating the ‘previous regulations, which fixed
cuts at 50 cents and set the closing hours at 6 p. m. for all shops in the Indianapolis area. Judge Cox criticized the Board’s regulations on the ground that it did not follow the letter of the law in promulgating the order.
MANUAL HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATE DIES AT 46
Funeral services for Mrs. Margaret S. Parrish, who died Saturday at St. Vincent’s Hospital, will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the Moore &
Burial will be in Crown Hill,
4822 Manlove Ave. She was born here and was a graduate of Manual High School. She was a member of the Trinity Methodist Church. Survivors are her husband, Emer-
Robert E.
BLAST DAMAGES PLANT LONDON, Feb. 5 (U. P.).—An explosion occurred Saturday in a hut of a Kent County power works, it was disclosed belatedly. today. There were no. casualties, it-was said, but
Do you remember... those delightful trips to Brown County last fall when the countryside was a mass of and fleecy clouds hung overhead? You can’t help but remember then, that smooth stretch of road between Morgantown and
the hut was badly damaged.
Wayne M. Burns
to ‘send a Republican speaker be-|
Barbers’ Association to fix their
the minimum price for adult hair-’
Kirk North Side Funeral Home,|
Mrs. Parrish, who was 46, lived at|
son; a daughter, Jeanne, and a son, |
Mrs. Flora A. Hankins
Funeral services for Mrs. Flora A. Hankins, a resident of Indianapolis for more than 50 years, will be at 1:30 p: m. tomorrow in Shirley Brothers Central Chapel. = Burial will be in Crown Hill, ‘Mrs. ‘Hankins was 80 and died Friday at her home, 1128 Central Ave. after a five-day illness. She was born in Plainfield and was a member of the Friends Church. She is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Lottie E. Murphy and Mrs. Fern Brooks Phebus, both of Indianapolis; two grandchildren and three great-grandchildren; two sis-
? |ters, Mrs. Lou McCartney and Mrs.
Minta Gillespie, both of Bartlesville, Okla. and three -brothers, Clark Woody and Walter Woody, also of Bartlesville, and Jep Woody, Pittsboro. Le .
Funeral services for Wayne M. Burns, ‘former. president of the Reserve Loan Life Insurance, Co., were to be at 2 p. m. today in the Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary. Mr. Burns, who was 56, and lived on Spring Mill Road, died Saturday in Methodist Hospital after a long illness. He had lived in Indianapolis for 12 years and was insurance com= pany president for two years when he retired because of illness. He was a member of the Columbia Club, Highland Golf- and Country Club and of the Masonic Order. Mr. Burns was born in Pennsylvania and was educated there. Before coming to Indianapolis to make his home he was sales manager for the U. S. Guage Co., New York. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Edna Zurlich Burns; three sons, William Burns, Wayne Burns Jr., and Ralph Burns, all of Indianapolis, and a brother, Ralph Burns, Carlisle, Pa.
Franklin P. Woolery
Franklin Pierce Woolery, an Indianapolis resident for 32 years, died yesterday at his home, 3761 N. Meridian St. He was 72. Mr. Woolery was born in Harrodsburg, Ind.” He was a traveling salesman for the Kohn Adler Co. of Philadelphia for many years and the last five years was associated with the Sun Realty Co. He was a member ‘of the Central Avenue Methodist Church. : Survivors are. his wife, Mabel; a daughter, Mrs. Frances Bronson Hollingsworth, High Bridge, N. J.; a brother, Dr. Homer Woolery, Hollywood, Fla., and a grandchild. Friends may view the body at the McNeely Funeral Home after 6 p. m: today until 11 a. m. tomorrow. : Funeral services will be held at 2 p. ‘m; tomorrow in the home of Judge Don Rogers in Bloomington. Burial will be in Bloomington.
Charles D. Ford |
Charles D. Ford, 409 S. Rural St. died yesterday at City Hospital. He was 65. : Mr. Ford was born near Effiingham, Ill, and came to Indianapolis 21 years ago. He was employed the last seven years at the P. R. Mallory Co. and was a member of the Winter Avenue .Nazarene Church. He is survived by his wife, Charlotte; a son, Paul, Indianapolis;
and -Mrs. Myrna Heady, both: of Indianapolis, and Mrs. Katherine Bailey, Clay City, Ind.; four sisters, Mrs. Seth Herbert of Indianapolis, and Mrs. Orie Brandenberg, Mrs. Effie Beasley and Mrs. Nora Bensley, all of Casey, Ill “A Funeral services will be held at 7:30 p. m. today at the Harry W. Moore Peace Chapel. Burial will be in Casey tomorrow afternoon.
_|merly attended Cathedral
three . daughters, Mrs. Ina Ramey, {
Robert Donald Holman
Funeral services for Robert Donald Holman, who died Saturday at St. Vincent's Hospital after an illness of nine months, will be at 8:30 a. m. tomorrow in the residence, 2609 N.
Capitol Ave, and at 9 a. m. in SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral. Burial will be in St. Joseph’s Cemetery. Mr. Holman was 22 and the son of Mrs. Mary T. Holman. He forHigh School. He is survived by his mother; six brothers, Elmer Holman, Omaha, Neb., Paul Holman, Marion, John Holman, Seattle, Wash., Ralph Holman, Richard Holman and Raymond Holman, all of Indianapolis; and three sisters, Mrs. Paul Caudell, Mrs. Walter McCullough, and Miss Lillian K. Holman, also of Indianapolis. :
{August Henry Reller
Funeral services for August Henry Reller, a teacher for 22 years in the Cumberland church school, were to be at 1:45 p. m. in his home at Cumberland and at 2 p. m. in St. John Evangelical and Reformed Church, Cumberland. Mr. Reller was 90 years old and died Friday at his home. He was the
son of Frederick and Eleanor Reller and once operated a grocery store in Indianapolis. He also had taught in Ohio.
He is survived by four daughters, Mrs. Matilda Rice, Catalina Island, Cal.; Mrs. Amelia Colburn, Indianapolis; Miss Pauline Reller and Miss Julia Reller, Englewood, Cal.; two sons, Joseph Reller and William Reller, ‘Long Beach, Cal.; a daugh-ter-in-law, Mrs. Herbert Reller, Indianapolis, and two sisters, Miss Helene Reller, Cumberland, and Miss Lydia Reller, Evansville.
Mrs. Maude Harris
Mrs. Maude Harris, former Indianapolis resident and mother of Lawrence Harris, race driver and mechanic who was killed in a crash at the Speedway Sept. 21, died Saturday at Muskegon, Mich., friends here learned today. Mrs. Harris was 70. She was born here and lived here many years. She was the widow of Joseph Harris. Survivors are a son, William, Detroit; two daughters, Miss Maude Harris and Mrs. Margery Cassidy, both of Muskegon, and three grandchildren. -
Walter R. Bellville
Funeral services for Walter R. Bellville, manager of the parts department of the Frank Hatfield Co., automobile agency,” will be at. 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Harry w.| Moore Peace Chapel. Burial will be in Washington Park Cemetery. Mr. Bellville was 53 and died Friday night at his home, 1922 N. La Salle St. He was born in Cincinnati and had been a resident of Indianapolis for 25 years. He was a member of the Brookside Lodge, F. and A. M. :
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DEATHS IN INDIANAPOLIS
Mrs. Clara E. McCarty
Mrs. Clara E. McCarty, an Indianapolis resident for 40 years, died yesterday in the home of her daughter, Mrs. J. H. Thomas, 86th St. and the Chapel Road. She was 79. Mrs. McCarty was born near Madison. Her husband, William, died in 1930. She was a member of the Methodist Church. Survivors are four daughters, Mrs. Thomas and Mrs. Dale Entwistle, also of Indianapolis, Mrs. Flora Kinder, Washington, and Mrs. Harriet Pfister, living in Florida; a son, W. R., Everett, Wash.; a sister, Mrs. Alice Storms, Madison; and a brother, R. E. Hagan, Madison. Funeral services will be held at 1:30 p. m. WedneSday at the Harry W. Moore Peace Chapel. Burial will be in Memorial Park. :
Mrs. Mary Ellen Short
Funeral’ services for Mrs. Mary Ellen Short, a resident of Indianapolis for 38 years, were at 10 a. m.
today in the home, 340 Graham Ave. |’
Burial was in Coatesville. s. Short was 82 and died Priday at her home. She was the widow of William E. Short, was born in Forsythe, N. C. She is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Olen G. Clapp, Indianapolis, and Mrs. L. T. Downey, Huntington, W. Va. and two sisters, Mrs. Hattie Graham, Indianapolis, and Mrs. L. E. Leatherbury, Elwood.
Mrs. Alice Wheatcraft
Funeral services for Mrs. Alice Wheatcraft, who died Saturday at her home, 2951 N. Capitol Ave, will be held at 3 p. m. tomorrow at the ©Flanner & Buchanan Funeral Home. Burial will be in Crown Hill. . Mrs. Wheatcraft and her husband, Charles, were associated in
the florist business here for almost 50 years until his death in 1935. She was born here, the daughter of Henry Baker, an early settler,
George F. Trees
- George Francis Trees, custodian of the apartment building at 3540 N. Pennsylvania St., dropped dead yesterday while at work in an aparte ment. Dr. Norman R. Booher, depe
uty coroner, saia death was due "9 heart disease. : Funeral services and burial will be held at Greenfield.
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