Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 December 1940 — Page 18
8 N——Johit H.
YMCA DIRECTORS | T0-ELECT OFFICERS 2: vr ERR ELI |
Directors of the ¥. M. C. A. will [te Miss Iva Eckel; as: Frank, | meet at 5 p. m. Tuesday to eleet Howard and Edgar; brother, Chates; sis: officers for 1941. - gue I nN
At the 86th anniversary meeting
Liquor, Coffee
FORMER LOCAL | PASTOR IS DEAD). Ard MilleBami
nicipal Court yesterday, charged “with having beaten up the other. It seems that one of them began
Dr. Max Bahr Appointed fo Federal Prison Health Post
Mops
MRS. E.L MICK DIES ATMAROTT
gore §, duisnisr: nd : Famer >
A ‘Clevenger 82. Survivors:
Bs
iss Jessie th Tr, Andrews; ht + half-br other,
&
. Widow of Real Estate Man Had Lived Here Since 1882.
© Mrs. Minnie Bell Mick, widow of Edward L. Mick and mother of ' William E. Mick, Indianapolis building contractor, died yesterday in her home in the Marott Hotel. ~~. Mrs. Mick, before her marriage to Mr. Mick, was Miss Minnie Bell Clark. Mr. Mick was widely known here as a real estate man before
Chosen as ‘Psychiatrist at |
New Terre Haute Penitentiary.
Appointment of Dr. Max A. Bahr, | Central State Hospital superintend- | ent,” as consulting psychiatrist oni the board of examiners for the|} United State Penitentiary at Terre Haute, was announced today. | Dr, Bahr, who has been connected (§ with the Central’ State Hospital ‘more than 40 years, was named by|f§
{had lived in
{The Rev. Thomas homas W. Grafton Was 83; Here From - : © 1912 to 1931.
Thomas W. Grafton, a retired Dis-| ciples of (Christ minister who' lived nearly 20 “years ‘in Indianapolis, will be held st Beverly Hills, CBl,| Monday. v The Rev. “Mr. Gratton ~ died | Wednesday night. He was 8-954).
wo
Funerl? services for the Rev.|
= “self, and as she drank she got } Snevier and. angrier with the
ther. So,
walked down to the other woman's
home
“And, Judge,” one woman exclaimed, “what do you think? She hit me in the eye with a percolator.” - oe ‘Judge John MeNelis looked at the other woman sternly.
in the afternoon by her-
the testimony went, dhe
and they had an argument.
|to the board and eight others ‘were . | re-elected. Those re-elected were
the Wm. H. Block Co., was elected
A. C. Sinclair, Clayton O. Mogg, Edward Zink, Merle Sidener, Jesse A. Shearer, G V. Carrier, Francis W. Hughes and James A. Stuart. The annual report of the associafion was read by President Fermor | M5. Re 8. Cannon. Mr, Sidener, treasurer, |s declared that “it is & little ama; that we have been able oo our program yet wipe out an operat- | ¥ ing deficit and work on a surplus |ps
¥
of the association yesterday, Charles? D W: Jones; general superintendent of | Lawrence.
8
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er Hh lina * Surviv3. Wiltsie . Stuart; son,
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RA Sn pe so Cha ries | Dickey
s. beth Rastron, as 8 Ey hal SEE fon
VIVORS: h 11 sisters, ara Ei
| Haynes;
¥ q| [MUN Wire ly i “Henry Jr. survivors: Fy son, RA
es
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Re is : Bar Earl Dut Ms. per. well, Mrs, J > 4 / SEE fe, or a; Gughict, 3 brother CASTLE-—-Vi nr Narvells he
Ginsance Mavity, 81. Sur‘Walter A. Shatver. 4a
ge ow ie, ie}. tH Sogcev: thy aad
a wver;
§ 75. Gora. Whites Beret Bhed ind i Sigh .
gan; oh A
Be AE N fo in ie i Mew
ther, par 1 Ste a int, 60. ar ors: mn Mrs. Derr; brother, 205, na ;
"| retirement several years Grafton Was pas-| o then ind
Bd i B3 fiery 3% Nt: Mr
Self, Mr a Hilary, Cech” ang Cadmus; krother, aril NCH—Mrs. Goldie Pearl Mason, nr Tau jvors: Husband, Charles Jr.;
“Is that $0?” he inquired. It is not 0," the woman cried
basis.” Dr: Roy E. Vale of the Tabernacle |g Presbyterian Church spoke on “God's Hand in Human Affairs”
Aun a Hawes. and Emmet Be
U. S. Attorney General Robert H. [fl Jackson. 2 The board’s duty will be fo exlamine inmates believed to be insane or otherwise defective and report to the Attorney General. ‘Board mem=bers will have, authority to recom mend transfer of prisoners to the| hospital for defective delinquents a Springfield, Mo. The other two- members of the! board, one appointed by the U. S Surgeon General and the other by! the penitentiary warden, are ‘Dr. James B. Ryon and Dr. Jack’ L. James.
. ‘his death in-1921. She came fo Indianapolis in 1882 with her family from Mattoon, Il. ~ Her father, Joseph H. Clark, was - a first lieutenant in the 123d Illinois volunteers, a part of Wilder's brigade, in the Civil War. She was a member of the Meridian Street Methodist Church when the Clark family came to Indianapolis and she had been active in that work since. ~ Mrs. Mick attend old Butler College when the pus was in
: Born in Towa . He was born Feb. 21, 1837, on & farm near Fairfield, Ia. His parlents were Parker Grafton and Ann}
"Irvington and became a member of Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority. She was a charter member of the Women’s Department Club and
of the Indiana State Conference on
Dr. Bahr is a former president of the Indianapolis Medical Society and
Dr. Max A. Bahr ... . named by U. 8S. Attorvey - General
Elizabetlt Moreman Grafton, early setlers in that aree. He was graduated from: the old
Social Work. He has written several booké on mental and nervous dis eases.
WORK IN GAS MASKS ‘FOR AIR RAID DRILL
MOSCOW, Dee. 13 (U. P.)— Fifteen thousand workers in ‘Moscow’s ball bearing plant worked yesterday for 90 minutes in gas masks as.part of an air raid-chemical prevention drill, it was learned today.
Oscaloosa College, now Drake University, and received -his- M. A. trom the old Butler .College," now Butler University. He was married May 21, 1882, to Miss Ana J. Johnson, daughter of B. W. Johhs proniinent Disciples | of Christ ister and editor. He entered the ministry the following October in Sterling, Ill. From 1884 to 1886 he was editor of the Christian Evangelist. :
Wrote Many Articles
was a foxmer member of the Monday Club. Funeral services will be at 11 a. m. tomorrow in the Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary and burial will be in Crown Hill. Cemetery. The Rev. Logan Hall, pastor of the Meridian Street Methodist Church, - will be in charge. Besides her son, Mrsi Mick is ~ survived by-‘a daughter, Mrs, Ethel Hemenway; & brother, Frederick A. Clark; a sister, Mrs. Ross H. Wallace, all of Indianapolis, and
Thousands of gift items are lined up on our counters and tables, racks and shelves—waiting for you to select them for Mom and Dad, sons and daughters, and all your friends and relatives. Come . See our huge assortments. USE OUR CHRISTMAS LAYAWAY.
Few y Family Fights — It's Christmas
Christmas has seemed to alfont even domestic relations in the
county. Judge - Wilfred Bradshaw of Juvenile Court said ‘today families aren't doing much December fighting. The number, of ‘cases heard in his court are about half of the usual figure. : :
a granddaughter, Miss Ethel Joan Mick, a student at DePauw University.
fell and firemen and mechanics “repaired” damage done by “explosives.”
Work went on while mock bombs
MOSKINS
DRESS UP FAMILY
CHRISTMAS SY
THE FOR a
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’ eo
WEEKLY PAYS § THE BILL
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MACRINAWS
ro
(iD) JH
IRTS Lule
"CREDIT
© STARTING SATURDAY DEC. 14TH. « OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL CHRISTMAS!
| MOSKINS J.
CLOTHING
COMPANY
131 W , WASHINGTON I
last year ‘and looks for a January upturn in business.
(ET SHI-SUITS |
He said the same thing happened
ON EASY CREDIT
| Park,
sa
| constable in the Justice of the Peace
1the Masonic
| Shirley, grandchil
He wrote widely on: religious| topics, one of his best-known books being the life of ‘Alexander Campbell, early leader of the Disciples ‘of Christ. . He is survived by his wife; a son, the Rev. Warren G. Grafton, pastor of Walnut Hills Christian Church, Cincinnati, and Miss Alena Grafton, Beverly , executive} secretary ‘ of the Southern ‘California Christian Women’s Associas tion.
Frank Broz : Frank Broz 1314 Wright St, a
65 |
4 4
Courts for 26 years here, died yesterday in Methodist Hospital. He was 67, was born in Chicago, but had lived in Indianapolis all but less than a year of his life. In 1898 he was married to Miss Ida Glode, ‘who survivesi him. He was employed by the H. Lieber Co. for 14 years and since 1914 has been a constable. At the time of his death he was connected with the courts of Charles A. Woerner ‘and W. K. Ellington. Mr. Broz was a member of the Immanuel Evangelical Reformed Church, the Loyal Order of Moose and the Mutual Behefit Society No: 95. He also is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Theron Jett and Mrs. Paul Linn, Indianapolis, and Mrs. Cecil Linn, Washington, D. C,, and a brother, Edward Broz. Funeral services will be at 2 p. m. tomorrow in the homie and burial will be in Crown Hill Cemetery,
Walter E. Dolk
Walter E. Dolk, who operated a photographer's studio at 2¢° W. Ohio St., and whose pride lay in taking pictures of two or three generations of a family, died last night at his home, 2462 N. Harding St.
Mr. Dolk was 73 and was in his studio up to last Saturday. He was a photographer for 35 years and a member®of the Swedish Lutheran Chureh, La Porte. Surviving him are his wife, Margaret T.; three daughters, Mrs. James McBride, Mrs. Clair Gould and Mrs. Charles R. Swaim; a son, Walter M.; his mother, Mrs. Anna. Dolk, South Bend; three hrothets: : Frank Dolk, Vancouver, ‘B. C Charles and Irvin, South Bend; two
troit and Mrs. Anna Edner, New York, and four grandchildren. Services will be held ats 2 p. m. | Monday at the McNeely. & Sons Funeral Home with burial at Floral L.
Harry 0. Smith
Pennsylvania’ ‘Railroad conductor, | who was killed yesterday when he fell beneath the wheels of a freight car, will be at 2 p. m. tomorrow in the First Reformed Church, with burial at Washington Park. . - Mr.. Smith, who was 56, lived at 609 N. Gray St. He had been a brakeman and conductor for the] railroad 34 years. He was secretary of Lodge 261, Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, and a member of
Surviving, him are a son, Willard L. Smith, Evansville; a brother, Thomas, Winnipeg, Canada; a sister;
Mrs, Gale Smith Roberts, Terre Haute, and two grandchildren.
Daniel T. Sticley A ihgton
two hfothers, Alva F. ‘and William ¥. Indianapolis; and four
As . fi
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TURKEYS 25e. |
| GEESE, DUDKS ___180 Lb.
SHOPPING, FREE DRERSING
sisters, Mrs. Selma Nicholsen, De=| .
Services: for Harry O. Smith}
Mr. Shirley, a retired metal work=| er, was a native of Hendricks °
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