Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 June 1940 — Page 12

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ALBERT BROWN RITE SATURDAY

* Native of Reelsyille, Ind.,

£90, Wilk Be Buried at

The funeral of Albert Brown,

- 4035 Byram Ave., will be held Saturi day at 10:30 a. m. at the Shirley

‘ Brothers ®entral Chapel.

Burial

¢ will be af Crown Hill., He died © Yesterday.

Mr. Brown, who was 90, was a na-

“ tive of Reelsville, Ind.

Survivors include three daughters,

° Mrs. Lillian Johnson, Mrs. Anna : Knoebel and Mrs. Nora Weikel, all ‘of Indianapolis. =

. Mrs. Holten Givan

Services for Mrs. Holten Givan, lifelong Indiana resident - will be

held at 2 p. m.'tomorrow at the Englewood Christian Church. Burial will follow at Washington' Park. Mrs. Givan, who was 62, died Tuesday at her home, 32 S. Grace St. She was a member of the Englewood church. ~ Survivors include her husband; two daughters, Mrs. Geraldine Yensel and Miss Esther Givan; one son, ‘Willard, all of Indianapolis; three

+ brothers, Tom of Indianapolis, and

William of Acton and Frank Berry

. of ‘Lebanon, and two, sisters, Mrs.

; Alice Walls

! Miss Lola Berry of Lebanon.

Harry S. Copp

‘ Copp, who. died Monday

for Harry S. in City

Funeral services

- Hospital, were to be held at 4 p. m. today in the Moore & Kirk North-

east Funeral Home.. Burial will be in Sutherland Park.

Mr. Copp, who was 73, lived at

. 2368 N. Gale St. and had been a

resident of Brightwood for 35 years. He was an engineer for the Chicago

. & Alton Railroad for many years © and was employed by the Marshall

Brothers Coal Co. here for 12 years. Survivors are three daughters,

. Mrs. Myrtle Yant, Austin, Tex., and - Mrs. Bessie Ripley and Mrs. Dorothy

Ogden, both of Indianapolis; four sons, Harry, Terre Haute; George,

© Walter and Robert, all of Indian- : apolis, and a sister, Mrs. Cora Palmer, Indianapolis. .

JUNE

of Indianapolis andj

Mrs. Baldwin, 2415 E. Washington St, school pupils.

¢ “A | complete collection of symphonic recordings of the music ‘appreciation campaign was presented this week to the James E. Roberts School by its newly organized Parent-Teacher Assoeiation. H. C. Resener, president, presents one of the sets to Nedra Lee

Other P.-T. A. officers are Mrs. James Huntsman, vice president; Mrs. R. S, Winchester, secretary, and Mrs. Carl Stone, treasurer. Mrs. Georgia Rost is school principal. ~ :

and Jack Kroeger, 5945 Broadway,

LOCAL DEATHS

-

George Yeager Services for George Yeager will be held at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow at the Moore and Kirk Irvington Mortuary. Burial will follow at Washington Park. Mr, Yeager, who was 56, was a salesman for the Polk Sanitary Milk Co., for the past 15 years. He died Tuesday at St. Vincent's Hospital after a-brief illness. He lived at 53 N. Campbell Ave. He was a lifelong resident of Marion| County and was a member of the West Newton Masonic Lodge. Sugvivors include his wife, Jennie; two“sons, Charles G. Yeager, head ot the art department of Manual High School, and Henry T. Yeager

Harry of West Newton.

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5 E. Washington St.

3 S. Meridian St.

of Middletown, O., and a brother;

| Mrs. Armittie Mobley

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Mrs. Julia Ann Whitmore Mrs. Julia Ann Whitmore, 1249

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F.D.R. BACKERS IN FULL CHARGE OF CONVENTION

New Dealers to Name Key Men as Anti-Third Term Move Collapses.

{ By LYLE C. WILSON United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON; June 6 (U. P.).— Selection of a Democratic’ national convention - arrangements committee, which might have been the occasion for a formidable show of anti-Roosevelt strength, is s¢heduled for this week with the antithird term movement in collapse. Democratic National Committee Chairman James A. Farley will select the arrangements committee. That committee will select a permanent convention chairman and a keynote speaker. Senate Majority Leader Alben W. Barkley is most discussed for the permanent chairmanship. Whoever the keynoter may be, his job will be to make a thumping pro-Roosevelt, New Deal speech. Selection of the arrangements committee normally would have offered anti-third term Democrats their last pre-convention opportunity to check the mdvement to renominate Mr. Roosevelt. But the anti-Roosevelt movement failed within the Democratic Party and the keynote addressgiall indorse the’ New Deal as a prélude to a third term nomination unless the President takes himself out of the race. ‘ New Dealers in Charge

dent for 78 years, died yesterday in Methodist Hospital. She was 80 and was born in Cincinnati. Mrs. Whitmore is survived by her husband, Samuel A. Whitmore; four daughters, Gertrude, Helen and Catherine Whitmore, all of Indian-

apolis, and Florence, Washington, D. C.; two sons, Walter, Indian-

It.is doubtful now. however, that Mr. Rocsevelt could stop the third term movement merely by saying he did not want the jJob.again. Senator Pat Harrison (D. Miss), who was more often anti-New Deal than otherwise during the second Roosevelt Administration, publicly joined the third term parade yester= day.

apolis, and Arthur T. of Zionsville; a brother, Martin Grady, Indian-| apelis; 14 grandchildren and one great-grandchild. - Funeral services will be at 2 p. m.! tomorrow in the Flanner & Buchanan Funeral Home. Burial will be in Crown Hill.

Elmer V. Shireman

| Elmer V. Shireman, 440 W. 44th St., a traveling salesman, died yesterday in Methodist *Hospital. He was 57. Mr. Shireman and his {family moved to Indianapolis from Martinsville, Jan. 1. ‘He previously had lived here many years. He was a member of the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church and the Elks. Survivors are his wife, Hazel: two daughters, Mary Elizabeth and Barbara; a son, John, all of ] dianapolis, and a sister, Mrs. HAN Divelbiff, Youngstown, 'O. .__ / Funeral services will be held at 3 m. tomorrow in the Flanner & Burial

p. Buchanan Funeral Home. will be in Crown Hill.

Mrs. Armittie Mobley died yesterday at the home of -a daughter, Mrs. Elsie Shortridge, 3322 N. Capitol Ave., after a long illness. She was 72. «Mrs. Mobley had been a resident of Indianapolis for many years. She was born at Greensburg, Ind. She is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Shortridge, Mrs. Edna Kinsman, Los Angeles, Cal., and Mrs. Versie Steele, Chicako, Ill.; two sons, Edward, Greensburg, and Troy Mobley, Indianapolis: three brothers, Frank and Charles, Grosushure. and Andrew Weaver, Crawfordsville; two grandsons, James Robert and Elsworth Mobley, Greensburg, and a granddaughter, Margaret Elizabeth Shortridge, Indianapolis. Funeral services will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the Howe Mortulary at Greensburg, with burial | there.

Washington, D. C., the city without a state, has a greater population than Arizona, Delaware,

More or less conservative Democrats who are scrambling now aboard the Roosevelt band wagon, are convinced that the President would be their strongest candidate. Senators George W. Norris (Ind. Neb.). Sherman Minton (D. Ind.) and Claude Pepper (D. Fla.) agreed that Senator Harrison’s support of Mr. Roosevelt for another term removed the “last vestige of opposition.” Senator Minton said Mr. Harrison’s indorsement shows that “all shades of political opinion are rallying behind the President.” South Behind F. D. R.

Five southern state delegations with 102 convention votes already are substantially committed to Mr. sevelt’s renomination. They are: abama, Florida, Georgia, North

Carolina and South Carolina.

Louisiana’s 20 delegates are uninstructed. Texas pledged her 46 delegate votes to Vice President John N. Garner whose vanished hope of leading a conservative crusade against the New Deal was. based largely upon belief that southern party leaders would rebel against the New Deal this year. Arkansas and Virginia have not selected convention delegates. If Mississippi goes along with the third term movement, Mr. Roosevelt will have a minimum of 120 of the 226 votes to be cast in the nominating convention by the socalled solid South.

TRUJILLO REPORTED ILL OF PNEUMONIA

SAN JUAN, P. R,, June 6 (U.P). —Gen. Rafael - Leonidas Trujillo, strong man of the Dominican Repubile, was reported critically ill today from pneumonia. A Dominican Army airplahe flew to San Juan last night and obtained medical supplies — including some still in an experimental stage—from local representatives -of a United States company. Trujillo was understood to be at the Dominican capital, Ciudad

Idaho, Nevada, New. Hampshire, New Mexico, Vermont or Wyoming.

Trujillo. He came into power following the 1930 revolution.

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Coming to U.S.

Count René de Chambrun, who took part in the battle of Flanders and escaped to England, will go to Washington as Assistant Military Attache of the French Embassy. He is a nephew of the late Nicholas Longworth, Speaker of the House, and a descendant of Lafayette, whose hereditary American citizenship he inherited.

STIVER TELLS POLICE OF 5TH COLUMN PERIL

MUNCIE, Ind., June 6 (U. P.).— Donald F, Stiver, Indiana State Police, superintendent, last nigh* told the Indiana Association of Chiefs of Police . convention that city police now are faced with the

task of fighting subversive activities by “fifth columns” in America. He said the nation’s police departments were the “first line of defense against subversive activity.”

and both have spring filled

MRS. CRAIG, 78. " PIONEER, DEAD

Managed Shortridge High School Cafeteria From 1918 to 1936. |

Mrs. Nellie Craig, member of pioneer Indiana Quaker family and manager of the Shortridge High School cafeteria from 1918 to 1936, died today at her home, 67 Whittier Place. She was 78. : t Born at_Alamo, Ind., she was the daughter of Joseph Addison and Millicent Nixon Gilkey. She was married to Lon Craig and came to Indianapolis in 1903. Mr. Craig died in 1915. She was a member of the Irvington Methodist Church, the Society of Indiana Pioneers and Irvington Tuesday Club. Survivors are a brother, J. J. Gilkey of Crawfordsville, Ind.; two sisters, Mrs. C. C. Rainbolt of Corydon, Ind., and Mrs. John Dinius, Bryn Mawr, Wash.; a daughter, Mrs. Mark H. Reasoner of Indianapolis, and two grandchildren, Mrs. William C. Risser of Urbana, Ill, and Robert Craig Reasoner of Indianapolis. : Services will be held at 1:30 p. m. Saturday at Shirley Bros. Mortuary. Burial will be at Crown Hill.

Miss Emilie Wittenberg

0 Miss Emilie Wittenb 2019 | N. Pensylvania St... an ‘Ind¥anapolis resident all her life. died last night. She. was the daughter of Charles and Mathilda Ruschaupt| Wittenberg. A brother, Fred Wittenberg, is the only immediate survivor. Funeral services will be held at 4 p. m. tomorrow in the Flanner & Buchanan

| |

Funeral Home. Burial will be| in Crown Hill.

Sais

‘Graduates from Military Academy—Cadet Private First Class Dick Thornton, son of Mrs, Helene D. Thornton, 604 Ft. Wayne Ave, was- graduated Monday from the Riverside Military Academy at Gainesville, Ga. He received the English diploma. Cadet Thornton was a member of the Dramatic Club, feceived one merit ribbon award and 11 times was listed on the Academy’s academic honor roll, receiving the “R” with bronze torch for this achievement. :

Attends Ohio Conference—C. G. Baker, director of the Hawthorne Social Service Association, is one of 40 social workers who will attend

a two-week social work iffstifute beginning Monday in the School of Applied Social Sciences of Western Reserve University at Cleveland, O.

Donald Schmidt to Get Howe De-

gree—Donald ‘Schmidt, nephew of.

E. H. Schmidt, of 384 S. Senate Ave. will be graduated from Howe Military Academy at Howe, Ind., Sunday afternoon. Wiliiam R. Castle of Washington, former Assistant Secretary of State. will give the commencement address.

Hoen Gets Degree—Richard Hoen, son of Mr. and Mrs, William Mark

Hoen of 2864 N. Illinois St., will re-

ceive a B. A. degree in the 66th annwval commencement at Carleton

College, Northfield, Minn.,, Monday afternoon.

5 CITY BOYS IN . CULVER CLASS *

160 to ‘Pass Through Iron Gate’ Wednesday at Maxinkuckee.

Times Specius ; CULVER, Ind., June| 6.—Five Indianapolis cadets are among the 160 Culver Military Academy seniors who will “pass through the Iron Gate” for commencement ceremonies Wednesday. | They are Tony E. Foster Jr.; 801 Carlyle Place; Robert) A. MacGill, 4122 N. Meridian St; Donald A. Stackhouse Jr., 6117 College Ave.; Robert I. Carson, 1040 N. Delaware St., and Arthur R. Twente, 1818 Orleans St. . A total of 24 special events will figure in graduation activities which begin tomorrow with the honors convocation. Athletic contests will feature Saturday's program. Dr. Charles W. Welch, Louisville, Ky., rastor, will preach the baccalaureate sermon 11 a. m. Sunday. Following services, commencement parades will be held. A varsity shell race, alumni meetings and the traditional class sing will follow in the evening. Military competition will be held Monday morning and regimental boxing championships in the afternoon. Presentation of commissions and ROTC certificates will be made at the Garrison parade at 5:15 p. m.

'An informal dance will be held in

the recreation building at 8 p. m. Dr. Bliss Snyder, Northwestern University .president, will , be the principal speaker at cum laude exercises Tuesday afternoon. The final ball will begin at 9:30 p. m. Seniors and the cadet corps will form on the shores- of Lake Maxinkuckee Wednesday morning for Hho Iron Gate ceremony of graduaon.

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