Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 September 1940 — Page 16
PAGE 16
JULIUS L. SIDA IS DEAD AT 66
Rites to Be Tomorrow for | Musician, Resident Here 38 Years.
-
Services will be held at 8:30 a. m tomorrow for Julius L. Sida at his home, 3048 W. 10th St., and at 9 o'clock at the Holy Trinity Catholic Church. Burial will be in St. Joseph's Cemetery. Mr. Sida, who died Sunday, was 66. A native of Bohemia, he lived in Indianapolis for 38 years. He came to the United States in 1890 and lived in Toledo, O., and St. Louis, Mo., before coming here. He was a musician and a veteran of the Spanish-American War. He was a member of the Holy Trinity hurch, the Indiana Astronomical Society and the Modern Woodmen of America. He is survived by four daughters, Mrs. Margaret Neal and Misses Mary and Victoria Sida of Indianapolis and Mrs. Emma Mihalso of | Whiting, Ind.; four sons, Frank S.| of Chicago, and Julius, Leo and | Edward of Indianapolis; two broth- | ers, Rudolph of St. Louis, and | George of Louisville, Ky.: three sis- | ters, Mrs. Victoria Beneschek, Mrs. | Georgina Miller and Mrs. John | Patay, St. Louis, and five | grandchildren.
Mrs. Myrtle Metz
AT yee iv s
in Fall
"ANT
11 all of
Myrtle Metz will be buried Creek Cemetery this afterfollowing funeral services at p 1 the Flanner & Buchanan | rtua A sident. of Marion County all | her life, Mrs. Metz died Sunday in her home, 1902 N. Illinois St. She was 57 s born near Lawrence, the | of Mr. and Mrs. George Pres She was the widow of Lester Metz She is survived Frank Mrs Dowd
| | | | i
by her uncle, Pressley, and three aunts, rank Bowman, Mrs. John | i Mrs. Frank Mooney.
Mrs. Helene F. Wilcox to=!
were to be at 4 p.m : HER Anderson for Mrs. Helene] Fisher Wilcox, who died here Sun- | day. Burial will be in East Maple-| wood Cemetery there. She was 40 A resident of Indianapolis only 2a year, she died Sunday at Methodist | Hospital after a brief illness. She at-| tended Indiana University where] she was a member of Kappa Alpha | Sorority. She also was a| r of the Presbyterian Church. | is survived by her husband, | a daughter, Miss Nancy | her parents, Mr. and
Service
|
No Speed, but It's a Start
The smiling colonel “soloes”
Roscoe Turner was “hack in uniform” today, not in an airplane, but in the halls of the Antlers Hotel where he is *‘soloing’ his new crutches. The colonel, who is “awfully glad” to be out of the hospital after seven weeks, sald he is going
Col
to practice on his “sticks” (as he
1 es M. Fisher of Anderson CALIFORNIA BOYS’
William Hines
wr
ry
$1 11 |
|
|
again . .., 1 calls his crutches) until “1 can really get up some speed.” { The speed flier, who was in- | jured seriously in an auto acci- | dent, will have to use crutches for another eight weeks and then | | graduate to a cane. | * Col. Turner was told last week by his doctors that he may never fly again { |
hanging of Benny Moreno, 13, and | Edward Leiva, 16, and the report by | Judge Ben B. Lindsey, that corporal |
FEDERAL ROAD FUND REDUCED
Indiana Gets Half Million Less but Fort Project May Make It Up.
Indiana will receive approximately a half million dollars less Federal aid for highway construction during
1942 and 1943 than it has in oe
past two vears. This was learned by Highway Commission today when it was announced in Washington that the Indiana share of the appropriation for Federal roads for the next two years would be $3,355,000 yearly. The present appropriation is approximately $4,000,000. Highway Commission officials said that the reduction in Federal aid
resulted from an economy move in Congress this session, cutting the
Federal aid appropriation for all 48
states about $35,000,000. Small Reduction in Total
The appropriation for Indiana specifically provides $2,425,000 for Federal aid and $424,000 for feeder roads, both of which amounts the Highway Commission must match, and $506,000 for grade crossings, a grant. However, the appropriation reduction will have only a comparative slight effect, Highway Commission officials said, since approximately $13,000,000 is spent annually by the Department for road construction alone, Army Posts to Benefit
Off -setting the reduced Federal aid appropriations, however, was the announcement in Washington bv Federal Works Administrator John M. Carmody that $200,000,000 would be spent for construction of 3000 miles of roads and highways in and leading to the 120 Army posts and cantonments where the panded army will he trained. Ft. Harrison officials said there was a project under consideration by the Chicago office of the Federal Works Agency for the improvement of roads leading into the fort, and that although they had no definite information this probably included this project. Highway Commission officials said that they had received no information concerning road work at Ft. Harrison, but that it would probably be handled by Army engineers anyway.
PERMANENT SPECIAL!
. Regularly $3.75 Nationally Advertised Oil, Machine or Machineless
the State
ex-
announcement |
—. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES | _- Hoosier Goings On
CUT UP
|
Mr. Terwilliger Was After Kidnaping;
So Was Old Timer at Goldsmith Picnic!
IT SHOULDN'T happen to a
By JOE COLLIER
dog what happens to Hoosiers,
At Elwood, for instance, R. M. Terwilliger was held up and Kkid-
naped from his filling station the other night at closing time.
Two
bandits, armed menacingly, bullied him as they drove him into the
country.
|
|
They spoke of killing him. They mentioned killing any cop that |
started after them. They did everything but injure Mr. Tedwilliger. When they freed him he was as good as new. But—on his way to a farm house he fell over a hay doodle,
knocking out a tooth and cutting
his lip. " 5 on AT GOLDSMITH the Old Settlers were having a picnic and an enterprising concessionaire was luring some of the ola fellows to
try their strength with a sledge
hammer. If they were heavy enough with the hammer a bell would ring. No one was able to ring the bell. Finally some one got the idea the bell couldn't be rung by anyone, old settler or young. They baited the concessionaire and finally he grabbed the sledge and rang the bell. Then one of the old settlers asked if he could swing the sledge
with only one hand and ring the |
bell. gathered close.
He said he could. Every one He picked up the
sledge with one hand and started it on an arc. But one of the old settlers had edged too close. The sledge gave him an upper cut. Several hours tioned that a bell was pretty persistently. n n
JESSE PUTTERBAUGH was
ringing
4
later he men- |
| wandering around Little Long Lake |
| with nothing in particular on his mind when he saw a squirrel on a fence. Mr. a pass at the animal but it did not flinch. Inasmuch as this is the hunting season, Mr. Putterbaugh thought the squirrel was unusually bold, so he stepped nearer. The squirrel stayed put. Mr. Putterbaugh then decided that he would have a laugh on | fellows he knew who had been unsuccessfully hunting if he, with-
Putterbaugh made |
out a gun, could bring home live |
game, He went after earnest. The squirrel
the animal in waited until
rr
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TUESDAY, SEPT. 10, 1940
RUMANIA OUSTS BAPTISTS BUCHAREST, Rumania, Sept. 10 | (U. P.).—All religious sects in Ru- | mania except those recognized by the state were ordered suppressed | today. Those suppressed included | the American Baptist organization.
AL] BASEMENT
5 E. Wash. St. and 3 S. Meridian St.
Mr. Putterbaugh was near enough, then he hurried down the fence post, hurried up Mr. Putterbaugh'’s pants leg, bit Mr. Putterbaugh on the leg, hurried down again and disappeared.
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| SCHOOL IS PROBED Ices m to- | punishment and the mental torture at the Royster & Askin] LOS ANGELES, Sept. 10 (U. P).| CC sok ul y te sukkits § Home for William Hines,|—A grand jury today heard of the bi fens had been used at the institu- $ ~ 13 y | . I. ae 1 1 . : L1011, vho lived in the rear of 1123 Shelby aneged suicide of two boys who an| investigati as} t., and who died yesterday. Burial] Mvestigauon Sas N | ] be in New Crown Cemetery. He Culbert Olson's] No Apnointment Necessary
WAN
morrow
Funeral
COMPLETE
* 50 WITH SHAM
——==SET and MANICURE
Judge Lindsey's —
made at Governor
investigator said suffered brutal 1equest after Leiva was found hang-
treatment and inhuman tortures at
{ Service From 8:30 A, M. to 5 P. M. aS 62. Work GUARANTEED by EXPERIS is survit
CENTRAL BEAUTY
200 ODD FE
ed his Mrs
therine Hines.
bv wife
C a
George Warner Funeral he held ; n George Warner, 611 E. Morris St, who died Sunday in the Hospital r. who wa 33, was a the Second Reformed where the services are to be nducted. Burial will be in Washston Park Cemetery
lifel resident of Indianapolis
at
Services will
30 Pp. mM tomorrow for
Methodist
ner is survived by his wife Molly Warmer; a daughter ra; his father, Wiliam F r: a brother, William N. Warthree Mrs. Edna Nina Grund and Mrs an, all of Indianapolis
George F. Knapp George F. Knapp, 1314 Hovt Ave died night at his home after] an illness of only several hours. He! was 49. | A native of Covington, Kv., Mr.| Knapp had lived in Indianapolis 15] years. He is survived by his wife, Etta} s son, Clarence Knapp, and two brothers, Charles of Indianapolis and Nicholas of Lawrence, Ind. Services will be at 10 a. m. tomorrow at the J. C. Wilson Funeral Home. Burial will be in New Crown
Cemeters
SISters
1act 18 St
CLAIM VICHY BLOC | DEFEATED FRANCE
LONDON, Sept U. P.).—The| Newsp Financial News yester-| dav urged the Governmeiit to apply} existing defense laws to publicize the transactions of the “men of Vichy,” which it charged were responsible for the defeat of France The article named Pierre Laval, Pierre Etienne Flann and Georges Bonnet and said: “There is hardly one among the ‘men of Vichy’ who did not speculate against France, thereby aggrafinancial crises which responsible for France's | military preparations. PEDESTRIAN IS KILLED LAFAYETTE, Ind, Sept. 10 (U p.) —William Kennedy, 79, of Lafavette, died yesterday of injuries received when he walked into the side of a passing automobile,
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asked
the Whittier State School.
Buron investigate
Attorney to
District
the jury
Fitts the
ing by a bed sheet in a punishment cell of “lost privilege cottage,” in| which Moreno hanged himself with| a belt a year ago. |
18 N. Illinois St.
Claypool Hotel Bldg.
29 on the Circle
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XTRA DISTANCE IN HIS DRIVES—EXTRAS IN HIS CIGARETTE
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® WATCH OUT, PAR — here comes Little! No, Lawson Little is never content unless he can better par...in his golf...in his cigarette. "I want a//the mildness I can get in my cigarette,” he says: “Camels burn slower and give me extra mildness. And Camels also give me something else I never found before—flavor that doesn’t tire my taste.” Yes, Camels give all the qualities you wantin a cigarette plus an extra measure of each: The extra flavor of costlier tobaccos preserved by slower burning: The natural mildness and coolness of costlier tobaccos plus freedom from the irritating qualities of too-fast burning. And on top of extra pleasure= Camels give extra value (see right).
| TURNED TO CAMELS
FOR
EXTRA MILDNESS AND FOUND SEVERAL OTHER SWELL EXTRAS, TOO, INCLUDING EXTRA SMOKING.
SLOWER BURNING
SURE IS THE TICKET
STE
FOR ADY SMOKING
® YOU WATCH THAT BALL go screaming off the tee and you shake your head. How does he do it? Form, timing, power, wrist action, control... he has them all = but Lawson Little has that extra measure of each which makes the difference between a good golfer and a champion golfer. Just as the extras in his favorite cigarette... Camel . . . make the difference between smoking and smoking pleasure at its best.
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on the average, a smoking plus equal to
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ET THE “EXTRAS__WITH SLOWER-BURNING CAMELS
THE CIGARETTE OF COSTLIER TOBACCOS
Copyright, 1040, RB. J. Reynolds Tobaceo Company, Winston-Salem, N. Oy
