Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 May 1940 — Page 2

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YOUNG DEMOS T0 NAME NEW LEADER TODAY

Governor Tells Organization To Avoid Politics in Face of War.

Times Special

EVANSVILLE, Ind, May 25.—

AN SR

Two candidates were in the con-|

test for the presidency of the In- | diana Young Democrats at their annual convention here today. They were John Walsh, of Martinsville, and Jerdie Lewis, of Terre Haute, who were in the contest to | Succeed Robert Tilton, of Fowler, in balloting this afternoon. The annual election followed an address by Governor M. Clifford Townsend ldst night when he urged Democrats and Republicans to join | hands for national defense unity. | U. 8. Senator Sherman Minton was to deliver the principal address at the closing session tonight.

Criticizes G. O. P. Platform |

Speaking on the same program with the Governor last night was | State Democratic Chairman Fred F. Bays, who criticized the Republican platform adopted at their | convention in Indianapolis vester- | day. He said the G. O. P. had | nominated a “reactionary ticket.” | The Governor said he believed that the most able and experienced leaders of the Republican Party should be called in to conferences

This committee is in charge of memorial exercis es at Washington Park Cemetery Sunday. They are, front row (left to right), William Johnson, Ora B. Keller, Clarence Scott, Alvan Brenton and John Stump; second row, George McClellan, Harold Cromwell, Bruce Eberley and Harry B. Duncan; third row, Chester | Pruitt, Donald Smith, James Moore and Alvin Light; fourth row, Edward R. Saxton, Anton Anderson, H.

Verle Wilson, C. T. Hawkins and J. Stephen Fullen.

Washington Park Graves To Be Decorated Tomorrow

The sixth annual memorial exer- soloists will include Minnie Griebecises and decoration of graves of ex- | haur and Ruth Burt Book, who also service men and women of all/will lead mass singing.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Patriotic Groups Will Honor War Dead

DEPUTY KILLED, 3 INJURED WHEN AUTO HITS BUS

Car Loaded With Prisoners

In Collision Near Switz City.

SWITZ CITY, Ind, May 25 (U.|

P.) —~Deputy Sheriff John Kormelink of Evansville was killed in-

stantly today and three other per- |

sons were injured seriously in a bus-auto crash at the intersection of Roads 54 and 67 near here. In serious condition were Tony Bergner, another Evansville Deputy Sheriff, Bob Hines of Bloomington, the bus driver, and Ed Easton, a youth from Evansville riding with the deputies. Also in the car were Norman Perry, 18, and Marvin Ward, 17, both of Evansville. The deputies were taking them to the State Penal Farm at Putnamville to start serving a sentence and then were to take Easton to the Boys’ School at Plainfield. Officials reported that the Evansville car was traveling north on] Road 67 at a high rate of speed | and struck the front end of the bus which was going west on Road 54. The impact was so great that the car was hurled into a field 200 feet away. No one was riding in the bus with Hines.

and frequently consulted on national United States wars will be held at

Also participating in the exercises

policy. [2:30 p. m. tomorrow in Washington [will be the Grotto drill team and

Boy Hurt by Auto; ‘43 Drivers Held

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of the war, he may use the $1100

Franklin C. Boggs of Goshen, Ind, mural painting student at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts at Philadelphia, for the second time has been awarded the Cresson Traveling Scholarship. Because

or wait for more favorable conditions abroad.

|

Times-Acme Photo

grant for study in the Americas

WILLKIE SCORES FOREIGN POLICY

Charges New Deal Neglected

« . {Park Cemetery under auspices of |Revelers, the 18th Battalion Marine Politics Should Be Abated Sahara Grotto and patriotic and Corps Reserves, 4th Battalion U. S. [Naval Reserves, Strayer Post auxiliary units, Military Order of the Purple Heart, Order of DeMolay, Grotto American Legion Post and auxiliary, | Harold C. Lanham is general chairman. He is assisted by Wil{liam Johnson, Mr. Keller, Alvan Brenton, John Stumph, George McClellan and Anton Anderson of Strayer Post; Edward R. Saxton, Chapter of DeMolay; Harold Crom-

The Governor asked that the nation concern itself with the important problems facing it. “The ordinary fury of a political campaign should be abated this year, and candidates and parties should speak calmly of the important issues, and should not threaten our national unity, he said. Speaking of the dangers caused by the present war he said: “We must compete, and compete successfully, against ruthlessly powerful, terribly efficient dictatorships. The 140.000.000 people of America must act with the same unity of purpose as the one man tyrannies of Europe

Urges Co-operation

“Our purpose is the safe-keeping of democracy, and democratic stand-

military organizations. Roy Mawson will be master of ceremonies. Otto W. Cox, grand marshal of the Order of Eastern Star in Indiana, will be the principal speaker, The invocation and benediction will be by the Rev. Meed H. Reynolds, Woodside Methodist Church. William A. Hoefgen, president of Washington Park, will give the address of welcome, and Luther Shirley, Sahara Grotto monarch, will respond. Other speakers will include J. Stephen Fullen, Sahara Grotto orator. The memorial program will ibe in charge of Frank T. Straver Post, 1405, V. F. W., of which Ora B. Keller is commander. Music will be by the Grotto band,

ards of living. Their purpose is the destruction of civilization. “ I do not wish to minimize the

directed by Harry B. Duncan, and the drum and bugle corps. Vocal

Donald Smith and | Indianapolis |

well, Bruce Eberley, Harry B. Dun-!

can, Chester Pruitt, James Moore, |

Alvin Light, Mr. Fullen, H. Verle Wilson, Grotto and C. T. Hawkins, Washington Park Cemetery. Free busses will start at 12:30 p.m. from the east end of the Washington St. car line. The services will be held under shelter regardless of weather conditions,

necessity under any condition for an able minority party, which can and should suggest alternatives for the government. But I believe that the most able and experienced leaders of the Republican Party should be called in to conferences and frequently consulted on na-

1000 EXPECTED ATRAIL SESSION

| Youth Held as Father's Slayer

EVANSVILLE, (0.

Ind.,, May

25 |

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| | | | |

A child was the only person injured in traffic in Indianapolis during the 24 hours ending at 7 a. m. today while 43 drivers were arrest ed for violations and 130 others were fined $444. Gene Ruesch, 8, of 1720 Milburn St., was hurt slightly yesterday when his bicycle and an automobile driven by Irwin Stout, R. R. 18, Box 706, collided in Montcalm St. 1700 block. The boy was treated at | City Hospital and then taken home The 130 drivers convicted fore | progam Judge Charles Karabell paid an | average of $341. Five motorists | convicted of driving while drunk paid heavily, an average of $20 each. Twenty-seven convicted of speeding |

FLIER 10 DROP had to pay an average of $6.48. FLORAL TRIBUTE Pike Sourly Editor

‘Dead After Crash

: | PETERSBURG, Ind. May 25 (U. V. F. Ww. Post Will Conduct '») justin Early, 30, editor and

Luther Shirley . . Responds for Sahara Grotto on Memorial

z | publisher of the Pike County DemoCeremonies at Three crat, died last night of injuries re- | Cemeteries. State Road 61, near Winslow. { Mr. Early was pinned beneath his

ceived in an automobile accident on Flowers are to be dropped from |car which burst into flame. Rescuers

To Warn Nation of Impending Peril.

KANSAS CITY, Mo.,, May 25 (U. P.)—Wendell Willkie charged last night that the New Deal had neglected to warn the nation of =a “catastrophe” which had caught it poorly prepared. “Our foreign policy was conducted in an atmosphere of mystery and vague threats and uncertainty,” the president of Commonwealth and | Southern Utilities Corp. and Republican “darkhorse” presidential candidate said in an address. “If (the people) had been told the seriousness of the situation, they would not merely have approved these things (increased armaments); | they would have demanded them.”

2 p. m. at the Blasengym Funeral

LOCAL DEATHS

Mrs. Addie Horton

Services will pe held’ Monday at

Home for Mrs. Addie Horton, former resident of Indianapolis. Burial will follow at Mt. Jackson, Mrs. Horton, who was 85, moved to Detroit four years ago. She died Thursday. ’ Survivors include a daughter, Mrs, Ciara Rholaman of Detroit, and two sons, J. M. and Cecil Horton, both cof this City.

Mrs. Cora J. Ruppert

Mrs. Cora J. Ruppert, 2111 Southeastern Ave. died yesterday. She | was 59. Survivors are her husband Charles; four daughters, Mrs. Burnetta Shock, Mrs. Fern Inman, Mrs. Thelma Beeman and Miss Geraldine

He said that the “New Deal alone Ruppert; and four sons, Arthur and has prevented recovery” and that (Paul of Indianapolis and Harold there “is something more important 8nd Glen Ruppert, both of Chicago. than new social experiments—and| The services will be conducted that is the preservation of the Fed- Monday at 3 p. m. at the residence. eral Union.”

“We are facing a period of Mrs. Amy Clara Neer

SATURDAY, MAY 25, 1940 Hoosier Wins Art Prize

300 BELIEVED DEAD IN PERU'S ‘WORST QUAKE’

Injured, Thousands Homeless; Details Are Lacking.

LIMA, Peru, May 256 (U. P= Authorities estimated today that more than 300 persons were killed and 1500 injured in yesterday's earthquake, the most disastrous in Peru in 50 years. Full reports of casualties still were lacking. The majority of the victims were in Lima and Callao, six miles away. The quake, striking yesterday at 10:30 a. m. (Indianapolis Time), felled more than 1000 homes and buildings. An aerial survey revealed today that the towns of Chancwy and

1500

| Hural near Lima and Chorillos on |the coast were also damaged badly

but the rest of the country appeared to have escaped the full severity of the quake, which lasted more than a minute. About 80 per cent of the homes were destroyed in Chorillos, the newspaper EI Comercio reported. Another slight tremor early this morning sent people running into the streets again but no damage was done. With thousands of homeless wan= dering in parks or quartered in public buildings, the Government announced that reconstruction work would begin immediately and that special credits would be extended to building contractors. Manuel Prado went to Callao, the center of the quakes, to direct soldiers, sailors and police in rescue work, The front of the historic Santo Domingo church caved in and the tower of the Cathedral of Lima and the Church of St. Peter, all in Lima, were cracked. The AngloAmerican clinic in Bella Vista and the maternity hospital there were not damaged although several rearby houses were destroyed.

SHOTGUN ALARM ROUTS BURGLARS

On six previous occasions, all on Friday night, burglars broke into the Oestering & Litzelman Coal Co, 1130 Kentucky Ave. As recently as a week ago last night they broke in and took $125. Last night burglars just started to rattle the door when they heard

President

danger,” he said. “In 10 years of con~ Mrs. Amy Clara Neer, an Indiantinued unemployment, of enormous |, lic’ resident 15 years, died yesWg ep efits, off Siagusht on | terday at the home of a daughter, hoi Ms Mrs. Maude Winkelhaus, 1213

the blast of a shotgun and fled. | Company officials had rigged up a

[burglar alarm—an anchored shot= gun with a wire attached to the

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tional policy. in PY). = Vanterbursh (Cowny lthe mir over soldiers graves ‘| trigger and door so that. the gun

“I believe today that Democrats and Republicans alike should join hands to support our President, Franklin D. Roosevelt. The Presi-| dent has a hard, lonely job, and he] needs more than ever today the hands and shoulders of the American people behind him.” Governor Townsend told the convention that if people want a secure, free and peaceful America they must work together and make intelligent decisions. “With the end of the war, and we hope the destruction will not long endure, our era of reconstruction will just begin. In this nation . it will not be a reconstruction of bodies, and towns, but a reconstruction of society to meet the changed picture of the Old World,” | he declared.

TROTSKY PLACES | BLAME ON STALIN

MEXICO CITY, May 25 (U. P.) — Leon Trotsky, exiled Russian revolutionary, charged last night that his enemy, Josef Stalin, had “personally directed” the attempt to assassinate | him yesterday morning. | The left-wing newspaper “El Pop- | ular” charged today that Trotsky had staged the raid, possibly with the aid of agents of the Dies Committee | of the United States Congress, in-| vestigating un-American activities, | to provide an excuse for United States intervention in Mexico. | The paper said the incident was staged more for the benefit of the United States than for the Mexican public. A band of unidentified gunmen, dressed as Mexico City policemen, poured machine gun fire into the bedroom of Trotsky's suburban Coyoacan villa at 4 a. m. yesterday. Trotsky said he and his wife rolled from their bed and lay on the floor as machine-gun bullets sprayeti the room for 15 minutes. One of Trotsky's guards, Sheldon Harte, 25, of New York, was Kid-

Coroner Jacob Reisinger said today that Howard Wade, 19, had admitted the fatal shooting of his father, Reavis Wade, 46, but that

he said he feared he would be beaten because his father had purchased a revolver. Mr. Reisinger said the youth told police he had not intended to kill his father but only to wound him. The elder Wade was quoted by police as saying that he didn’t know what the trouble was but that his son shot him. Gilbert Winters, 26, a brother-in-law of the youth, also was in custody and police said young Wade told them that Winters took $7 from him to purchase the

Minton to Be Principal Speaker at Banquet | Tomorrow Night.

International officials of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen | and members from a dozen states will attend the state-wide meeting] of the Brotherhood at the Claypool Hotel tomorrow. The meeting will culminate with a! banquet tomorrow night honoring | Alexander F. Whitney, Cleveland, | O., international president. More than 1000 are expected to attend) the affair, at which lodges of] Central Indiana will serve as hosts. | U. 8S. Senator Sherman Minton| (D. Ind.) will be the principal |

revolver used in the shooting. speaker at the banquet. T. D. Eilers, Cleveland, chairman of the

promotion department, “will present FAMILY HAS SECOND awards in the membership contest. | C. E. Umbanhowar, general chair- GOLDEN WEDDING DAY 1 of the Big Four railroad com-

nan mittee, is chairman of the closed efternoon meeting. Indianapolis of-| Tne Cumberland home of Mr. and ficials in charge of arrangements in- Mrs. William Gale will house its

clude Mrs. Georgianna Marshall, second golden wedding anniversary vice chairman; E. T. Carpenter, SeC- | nelebration tomorrow retary; F. M. Hardesty, treasurer of | : . the state meeting committee, and | Lwenty-five years ago Mr. Gale's Miss Clara Edmonds in charge of father and mother ‘celebrated their ladies’ auxiliary activities. 50th wedding anniversary in the home. Tomorrow at noon Mr. and Mrs. Gale will be honored on their

TEAMSTERS LOCAL 50th wedding anniversary by rela-

| tives at a noon dinner, WINS COURT RULING In the afternoon from 2 to 5 o'clock and in the evening from 7 WASHINGTON, May 25 (U. P.).— to 10 o'clock, open house will be The Justice Department today will |held for friends. waive appeal of a Federal District | Mr. Gale is a retired banker. Court decision which ended Govern- !and Mrs. Gale have lived all their ment prosecution of an Interna- |lives in Cumberland. tional Teamsters Union local on | Present for the dinner will be a anti-trust law violation charges. daughter, Mrs. Roy E. Denny of InThe court held that the Govern- dianapolis; ‘wo sons, Hugo M. and ment had failed to show criminal intent in prosecuting the union in connection with a jurisdictional strike. The case was the first brought to trial in the Department's drive against alleged restraints in the building industry.

three brothers, E. C. Cole of St. | Petersburg, Charles Gale of Ft. Wayne and Louis Gale of Woodburn, Ind.; six grandchildren three nieces, and a nephew, Arthur Neiger | of Buffalo.

He |

Otto V. Gale, both of Cumberland; |

naped by the raiders and no word

Floral Park Cemetery tomorrow aft- | ernoon by Capt. Matt. Carpenter of | (the Indiana National Guard Air | Corps, an A. E. F. veteran. | | At the same time, members and | {friends of the Lavelle-Gossett Post | (908, Veterans of Foreign Wars, will | decorate graves at the cemetery. | The Post will sponsor memorial |

services at the cemetery beginning lan automobile in front of her home. evening under auspices of the Texas

fat 2:30 p. m. tomorrow; at Shilo | {Cemetery at 10 a. m., and at Holy {Cross Cemetery at 11:30 a. m. At (all three ceremonies there will be | the salute to the dead by the Post firing squad; taps by Robert Mears jand Zelma Gandolf; Post ritualistic |services, prayer, addresses and | music. [ Services in Shilo Cemetery will take place at the grave of Horace {Gossett, one of the soldiers for {whom the Post is named; the Shilo | | Children’s Choir will sing and the | Rev. A. L. Lewis, Shilo Methodist | Church pastor, will give the ad-| dress and prayer. | The grave of Alvin Lavelle in Holy Cross Cemetery will be the setting of the ceremonies there. The Rev. Fr. August Fussenegger, chaplain of |

the Knights of Columbus Council gency Hospital eight hours after ho- |

437, will speak and offer the invocation. Charles H. Money, head of the] George Washington High School

| history department, will deliver an| chain were found on & dresser in | H U GHES ASKS COURTS

{address and Ancil Morton, Post commander, will give a few remarks fat Floral Park Cemetery.

Irvington Post 38 ‘Arranges Services

Memorial services will be held by | {Irvington Post 38, American Legion, | )at 2 p. m. at Memorial Park. The | Post will be assisted by its auxiliary, | [the junior auxiliary and Scout cubs | from Pack 35. Howard Chown, chairman of the post memorial services committee, | will be in charge. He will be assisted by Mrs. C. R. Earle, auxiliary {services chairman, and Mrs. Isabel {Marsh, junior auxiliary chairman.

|

in | were unable to get near the burn- | dispirited at home.”

ing machine because of exploding shotgun shells, set off by the heat.

Terre Haute Woman Killed by Auto

TERRE HAUTE, Ind., May 25 (U. P.) —Mrs. Mary Everett Young, 60,

was killed instantly when struck by

SLAYER OF RAILROAD EXECUTIVE HUNTED

BUFFALO, N. Y.,, May 256 (U.P).

|—The slaying of Frank D. Cooper,

62, Union Pacific Railroad executive of Chicago, today sent police into the waterfront area searching for a shabbily-dressed man reported to have accompanied Mr. Cooper to his room shortly before he was found beaten and dying in a downtown hotel. Mr. Cooper, general agent for the railroad’s transportation department, died early today in Emer-

tel employees found him lying fully clothed on his bed. He had been beaten on the head and face. Police said the victim's watch and

the room, but that his wallets contained no money and his hat and coat were missing. Police said Mr. Cooper's dying description of his companion fitted that of a known “waterfront bum, whom we'll have in custody shortiy.”

W. H. MONCRIEF, 42, DIES IN NEW YORK

Sergt. William Henry Monrcrief, U. 8. A., Indianapolis residen, stationed at Oswego, N. Y., died yes-

services terday at a hospital in New York | City, after a six months’ illness. He |

was 42, Born at Camden, N. J., he came

Dewey Off for Texas, “Wars’ to Be Subject

| NEW YORK, May 25 (U. P.).— {Thomas E. Dewey, candidate for {the Republican Presidential nomination, leaves tonight for Dallas, |Tex., where he will speak Monday [Republican Central Committee. | He will be accompanied by Mrs, |{Dewey, a native of Sherman, Tex. |The subject of his speech will be “Wars, Domestic and Foreign,” En route back to New York, Mr. Dewey will speak in Birmingham, Ala.

| Wednesday night.

Gannett Says F. D. R.

‘Promotes ‘Hysteria.’

ROCHESTER, N. Y.,, May 25 (U. {P.)—Frank Gannett, Rochester publisher and Republican Presidential nomination candidate, accused President Roosevelt of promoting “national hysteria” for political | ends. Addressing a group of home-town Republicans last night, Mr. Gannett likened the President's actions (to Orson Welles’ radio hoax of a Martian invasion.

TO AID DEMOCRACY

WASHINGTON, May 25 (U. P.) — Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes last night called on attorneys and jurists to uphold democracy by earning the “confidence and respect of every citizen.” Opening the District of Columbia judicial conference, the 78-year-old |former Secretary of State recalled

{that he once told a police court| i

| magistrate that the latter's court was more important than the Su|preme Court itself because so many [thousands of persons must face [1ower tribunals. Although Mr. Hughes made no mention of the current drive against | [subversive elements, his words were | regarded as particularly significant

here in 1904 and attended grade|in view of fears that the anti-

had been received from him.

“Many people buy lottery tickets] but only one wins,” said Trotsky | calmly. “I had a winning lottery ticekt this morning..”

.

New Type Plane Made of Plastics

{ school in Indianapolis. {in the Army five days before the | war broke out in 1917 and served | {27 months overseas with the First]

He enlisted | spy campaign may develop into a

so-called “witch-hunt” and in view of the spread of dictatorships.

STATE C. OF C. WARNS OF ‘FIFTH COLUMN’

The Indiana State Chamber of Commerce today issued a warning against fake representatives of the English and - French Purchasing | Commissions and against possible “fifth eolumn” requests for infor-| mation on Indiana industrial ac- | tivity. The warning was issued by Executive Vice President Clarence A.| Jackson following a special request for co-operation in Indiana made by the Anglo-French board. Mr. Jackson pointed out that both pations’ commissions have constantly reiterated that it is their| established policy to conduct negotiations without intermediaries. | He said that in case of doubt as to| the authenticity of credentials, the Chamber would be glad to assist in| checking with New York and Wash-

ington.

TOMATO INFECTION WARNING IS ISSUED

Indiana tomato growers today were warned by Purdue University | agricultural specialists to watch for | the first sign of collar rot infection! in their plants. Dr. R. W. Samson, Purdue tomato | disease expert, said that collar rot| is recognized by the black spots on!

ease first produces small, dark spots a plane.”

‘centric ring 5, is waterproof and oilproof.

A new type of airplane, made of plastic materials fused by baking in an oven at 300 degrees, was the stems. On leaves, the same dis- tested in VanNuys, Cal, this week. Test Pilot Vance Breeze said it was able to do “anything you'd ask of The plane, suitable for mass production, is manufactured by the Timm Aircraft Corp. This which enlarge and often show con- photo shows a tail section being fitted to a fuselage after both have been molded to precise dimensions. The

| Division. He was wounded and re- | ceived several citations. | He was a member of erans of Foreign Wars, the Red |Men and the Order of the Purple | Heart. He is survived by a sister, | Mrs. Stella Secrist, 2230 Guilford Ave., with whom he made his home when in Indianapolis.

‘AIRCRAFT CARRIER BOMBED, NAZIS SAY

BERLIN, May 25 (U. P.). — The High Command said today that German airplanes had severely damaged an Allied aircraft carrier off the Norwegian coast and landed parachute troops to aid the beleaguered German garrison holding out at the north Norwegian port of Narvik. The High Command communique said the German air fleet landed Alpine chasseurs at Narvik to reinforce the Germans there. The Allied troops around Narvik have been attempting vainly to close in on the Germans for weeks. In the bombing of the aircraft carrier, presumably a British craft, fire broke out on the ship, it was stated.

15 HELD AFTER RAID

was charged with keeping a gam-

lice squad raided a pool room in the 1200 block on Oliver Ave, today. They charged 14 others with gaming and visiting a gaming house. Police saigl a poker game was in

Times-Acme Photo.

the Vet-|

Patrick Loman, 553 Warren Ave, |

ing house and gambling after a po- |

NLRB SETUP ALTERED IN ECONOMY MOVE

WASHINGTON, May 25 (U. P.. —The National Labor Relations | Board today announced a major | change in the handling of labor | representation disputes, after slashing its personnel to absorb a $337,000 salary and expense cut voted | by Congress. | Effective immediately, represent- | ation cases will be heard by regional field officers rather than by the limited supply of staff trial examiners. The latter, to be reduced by 10 on June 7, will continue to hear charges of unfair labor practices. NLRB officials announced that 53 employees had been laid off and five had resigned in the new economy program.

3 POSTMASTERS NAMED WASHINGTON, May 25 (U. P.). —The Senate today had confirmed the nominations of postmasters at

Temple Ave. She was 82, Born in Richland County, Ohio, she had lived most of her life at Urbana, O., and the last 15 years with her daughter. She was a member of the Centenary Christian Church. Survivors are two daughters, Mrs. Wingelhaus and Mrs. Mable A. Clark of Urbang; a son, Harry W. Miller of Dayton, O., and two sisters, Mrs. Artie Pritchett and Mrs. Gertrude E. Dunn, both of Urbana. Services will be held at 1:30 p.m. Monday at the Harry W. Moore Peace Chapel. Burial will be at Crown Hill.

Mrs. Theresa Schneider

Mrs. Theresa Schneider, wife of Ferdinand Schneider, died at her Lome, 53¢ E. Jowa St. today. She was 71. Mrs. Schneider was born in Jasper, Ind. the oldest of seven children. She was educated in the Jasper parochial schools. When she was 2% she married Mr. Schneider and they operated a farm near Jasper five years before starting a hotel in Dubois, Ind., which they operated for many years. Survivors include three daughters, Sister Bertrand: Mrs. John Mueller and Mrs. Marie Neifhoff, all of Indianapolis; two sisters, Mrs. Catheine Reichmuth and Mrs. Josephine Weiker of Louisville; one brother, Clem Cummins Schmidt of Jasper, and five grandchildren. Services will be held at 8:30 a. m. Tuesday at the home and at 9 a. m. at Sacred Heart Church. Burial will be in St. Joseph Cemetery.

was discharged when the door was rattled.

LAUNCH DESTROYER NAMED FOR HOOSIER

BOSTON, May 25 (U. P.) ~The U. 8. Destroyer Gwin was launched at Boston Navy Yard today. It was christened with champagne by Mrs. Jesse T. Lippincott of Wal= nut Hills, Cincinnati, O.,, a cousin of Lieut. Comm. William Gwin, for whom the vessel was named. A na= tive of Indiana, Lieut. Comm. Gwin was killed in action during the Civil War.

FINNS REACH MOSCOW MOSCOW, May 25 (U, P.)—A Finnish trade delegation of five members arrived here today by aire plane from Stockholm.

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