Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 February 1941 — Page 8

a MONDAY, FEB. 10, 19 Heinz, Director of Fortune “¥| lowes. ra 0 w. vse Based on Horseradish, Dead

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ILODGE IN CHARGE

High Court fo Pay Honor fo Indiana -Born Yan Devanter

eral passengers were killed . and many injured today when a {rain crashed into the rear end of a standing express train in Essex County. =

Funeral Services to Be Held At 2 P. M. Tomorrow for Flerist’s Wife.

Funeral services will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow in the Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary for Mrs. Helen B. Brandlein, who died Saturday in “her home, 618 W. 41st St. Burial will be in Crown Hill, _ Mrs. Brandlein, ‘who was 59, was the wife of Carl A. Brandlein, Indi‘anapolis florist. She was born. at Alfordsville and had been a resident of Indianapolis 35 years. Mrs. Brandlein was an active businesswoman ‘many years. She was secretary to U., S. Senator Albert J. Beveridge at the time the . Progressive Party was being organized asd collaborated with him in the former Senator's book, .“The Life of John Marshall.” Survivors are her husband; a

* daughter, Mrs. Mary Louise White,

of Indianapolis; two sisters, Mrs. Margaret Illingworth of Valley Mills, and Mrs, Burdétte Watson of Carmel, and a grandson, Richard White of Indianapolis.

Melvin P. Server

Funeral services were to be held at 3 p. m. today in the Shirley Brothers Central Chapel for Melvin P. Server, who died Saturday. Burial was to be in Crown Hill. Mr! Server, who was 36, was former solicitor in the display advertising| department of the Star. A native of San Antonio, Tex., he had lived | most of his life in Indianapolis and was a graduate of Shortridge |High School. He was a member of the Irvington Presbyterian

Church and formerly lived at 1020],

Beville Ave. a Se are “his mother, Mrs.

Pearl Server, and a son, Paul Server, both of Indianapolis.

Mrs, Wilma Carroll

Puneral services will be held at 10 a. m. tomorrow in the Tolin Funeral Home for Mrs. Wilma Carroll, | who died Saturday in -her home, 2916 Shelby St. Burial will be in Sunman, Ind. She was 31. She is survived by her husband,

Former Justice, Native of Marion, Is Dead in Capital at 81.

Times Special : WASHINGTON, D. C., Feb. 10.— The Supreme Court pays tribute today to the late Willis ‘Van Devanter, its Indiana-born. associate justice for 30 years, who died of a heart attack Saturday night at the age of 81. : Justice Van Devanter, who had voted against most of the Administration. bills, retired in 1937 on full pension - of $20,000, when President Roosevelt was pushing his fight to add to the Supreme Court. He had spent most of his time since then at his 700-acre farm in Maryland ‘and his home in Washington. He had been acting as Federal District Court Judge in New York City. He died at 10:20 p. m. Saturday at his apartment here. His sister and hostess, Mrs. Sanford L. Raridan, formerly of Marion, was the only person present. Funeral services will: be held at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow at the Episcopal Church of the Epiphany, with Supreme Court justices the honorary pallbearers. Justice Van Devanter was born at Marion, Ind., but was nominated to the Supreme Court in 1910 by President Taft when he was a Wyoming resident. He lived in Marion when there was a nearby Indian reservation and he was personally acquainted with the Indian chiefs for whom the Mississinewa, River and the Meshingomesia Country Club was named. He attended Asbury College, later to become DePauw University, and was graduated from the Cincinnati School of Law. He was deputy prosecuting attorney after that in the days ‘when Grant County had so little population that a prosecutor served from three to four counties. He went to Wyoming when he was still in his 20's and later helped to organize the territory for statehood. He was made a justice of the Wyoming Territorial Court in 1889 by President Benjamin Harrison;

Clyde Carroll, and two sons.

President McKinley appointed him

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MRS. RENA PIERPONT, HERE 42 YEARS, DIES

Mrs. Rena B. Pierpont, a native of Morgan County, who died Saturday in the Methodist Hospital after a week’s illness, will be buried in Memorial Park following services at 2 p. m. tomorrow in the Harry W. Moore Peace Chapel. Mrs. Pilerpont, who was 66 and lived at 2509 Carrollton Ave. had been an Indianapolis resident 42 years. Survivors are her husband, Clarence Pierpont; threes daughters, Mrs. Ada Thomas and Mrs. Clara Davison, both of Indianapolis, and Mrs. Cora Monical of Grand Rapids, Mich; a sister; Mrs. Sadie Burns of Indianapolis, amd two brothers, Tilden Harper of Muncie and Jess Harper of Pendleton.

Edward E. Hamilton

An employee of the New York Central Railroad 27 years, Edward

'E.. Hamilton died yesterday in his

home, 2040 S. Sherman Drive. He was 56 and (was born near Logan, O. Mr. Hamilton came to Indianapolis in 1910 and was a member of Prospect Lodge 714, F. & A. M,, and Irvington Lodge 508, I. O. O. F. He was a former meniber of the United Brethren Church. Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Zanna F. Harilton; ‘two sons, Edward C. and Norval 1D. Hamilton; six sisters, Mrs. ‘Ada Clark, Mrs. Zora Marks, Mrs. Martha FPrysinger, Mrs. Mary Bilodeau, Mrs. Myrtle Oliver and Mrs. Alice Fizer; four brothers, Rama, Starling, Earl and Ott Hamilton, and one grandson. Funeral services will be held at 2:30 p. m tomorrow in the Trinit Reformed! Church and burial w

be in Memorial Park.

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assistant attorney general in 1897; President Theodore Roosevelt made him a Federal judge in 1903, and President Taft promoted him to the

He was known as a conservative, and before 1936 he voted for only 13 that upholding the right of the TVA fo sell electric

him upholding the ¥"ederal safety appliance act for interstate railroads and indorsing the power of Congress to fix liability of comrnon carriers for injuries to employees engaged in in-

The last time he was in Marion was in 1937. just after he had reHe was a guest of honor} there at a dinner at which he was presented the Lions Legion of Honor for “distinguished and illustrious

He will be buried at Rock Creek Cemetery here, beside his wife, who died during a European vacation

OF COMBS RITES

80 - Year - Old Physician Had Practiced Here More Than 50 Years.

Funeral services in charge of members of the Mystic Tie Lodge were to be held at 3:30 p. m. today in the Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary for Dr. George W., Combs who died Saturday in the Methodist Hospital. Burial was to be in Crown Hill. Dr. Combs, who was 80, was a practicing physician in Indianapolis more than 50 years.. He lived at 2734 Sutherland Ave. Born at Oaklandon, he attended the old Central Medical College here. He had studied in Germany and England and was active in medical practice until four years

5 | ag0.

He was a mémber of the Mystic Tie Lodge, F. & A. M., the Mystic Shrine, Scottish Rite and the Indianapolis and American Medical Associations. He was a member of

{| the Central Ave. Methodist Church

and taught Sunday School there,

Peter C. Pedersen

Funeral services for Peter Christian Pedersen, who died Thursday in his home, 811 Lincoln St., were to be held at 1:30 p. m. today in the home and at 2 p. m. in the First Trinity Lutheran Church of which he was a member. Burial was to be in Concordia Cemetery. Mr. Pedersen, who was 70, was born in Rise, Thijlesovn, Denmark, and came to the United States when he was 16.- For several years he worked in the California stone quarries. He later returned to Denmark for 11 years and married Miss Anna Jensen Moller, who survives. He returned to the United States and had lived in Indianapolis since 1906. He formerly was in the cement contracting business here. - ~ Survivors besides his wife are a son, Alfred Emil Pedersen; a daughter, Miss Martha Marie Pedersen; three grandchildren, Joyce, Anita Dee and Judith Ann Pedersen, all of Indianapolis, and six sisters and one brother, all living in Denmark.

Gustav Kossow

A native of Germany, Gustav Kossow was to be buried in Washington Park following services at 2 p. m. today in his home, 2619 Roosevelt Ave.,, where he died Friday. Mr. Kossow had been an Indianapolis resident 45 years and had been employed at the P. R. Mallory Co., Inc., eight years as a toolmaker. 3 : He was a member of the Masonic and Moose Lodges. Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Anna Kossow, and a granddaughter, Miss Mary Ann Smith of Plainfield.

William H. Hendricks

William H. Hendricks, a retired railroad telegrapher who died Thursday in his home, 758 Le%ington Ave., was to be buried in Washington Park Cemetery following services at 1:30 p. m. today in the Shirley Bros. Central Chapel. A native - of ‘Sellersburg, Mr. Hendricks was 73 and ‘had lived in Indianapolis 42 years. Retired three years ago, he had worked for the New York Central Railroad. 40 years and was a member of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen. Survivors are his wife, Mrs, Mae Hendricks; two daughters, Mrs. Helen Sapp and Mrs. Nellie Terry; a. son, Marshall Hendricks, and a granddaughter, Mrs. Bernice. McKeand, all of Indianapolis.

William S. Green .

Funeral services will be held at 1 p. m. tomorrow in the Speaks & Finn Mortuary for William Sims Green, a retired railroad engineer, who died Saturday in his home, 2211 N. Pennsylvania St. after a five weeks’ illness. Burial will be in Morristown. = Mr. Green, who was 77, was a former engineer on the Louisville & Nashville Railroad and had lived in Indianapolis three years. He was a member of the Elks Lodge. He is survived by his sister, Mrs. Eva F. Irwin of Indianapolis.

Mrs. Stella A. Wilson

An Indianapolis resident 17 years, Mrs. Stella A. Wilson died yesterday in the City Hospital. A native of Holton, she was a member of the W. C. T. U. here. She was 42 and lived at 333 Cadle St. Survivors are her husband, Harry Wilson; three sons, Delmar, Robert and William Wilson; -a daughter, Miss Ruth Wilson, all of Indianapolis, and her father, Nathan Buchanan, of Holton. . Services will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow in the Conkle Funeral Home with burial in Floral Park.

Reed Smoot .. . expert on finances, tariff.

SMOOT SENATOR FOR 27 YEARS

Heart and Kidney Disorders Bring Death; Known for High Tariff. Bill.

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. Feb. 10 (U. P.) —The body of former United States Senator Reed Smoot, who died here yesterday, will be sent to his home in Salt Lake City today. Mr. Smoot, who was 79, died of complications from heart and kidney disorders. He came here two weeks ago to recuperate from a fall on a Salt Lake City golf course, and was being treated by his stepson, Dr. W. T. Sheets. Mrs. Smoot was at his bedside when he died. Mr. Smoot was a member of the Senate from 1903 to 1933. He was one of the authors of the Hawley-

symbolic of the high tariff policy. Didn’t Use Tea, Coffee, Liquor

Mr. Smoot never used tea, coffee, tobacco or liquor. He often said the world’s troubles were too much sleep and too little work. He worked

sarsaparilla to stay awake. Mr. "moot was born in Salt Lake City on .Jan, 10, 1862, of Mormon parents. He was educated at Brigham Young Academy, was appointed one of the presidents of the Utah Stake of the church, and in 1900 was made an "apostle, - He amassed considerable wealth as a banker and wool manufacturer. In 1902 he was elected to the Senate, and, as he was re-elected again and again, assumed an increasingly prominent place. He became an expert on finances and tariff and could recite the tariff background on every item of his attire, down to the metal tips on his shoestrings.

Married Twice

His first wife, Alpha: May Endredge, died in 1928, and on July 2, 1930, he married Mrs. Alice Taylor Sheets in a two-hour service in a Mormon church. Besides her, he is survived by: three daughters, Mrs. Chloe Garden, Cincinnati; Mrs. Zella Hardy and Mrs. J. W. Mariotte of Washington, D. C., and three sons, Harold and Ernest of Washington and Narlowe E. Smoot of Provo, Utah. He will be buried at Provo.

URGE GOOD FRIDAY AS LEGAL HOLIDAY

Indiana will join 11 other States in observing Good Friday as a legal holiday if the House-approved bill receives favorable action by the Senate this week.

Howard Hiestand (R. Kentland). at the request of patriotic, fraternal and religious groups, including American Legion posts, units of the Masonic Order, Elks, Moose, Catholic . Order of Forresters and the Knights of Columbus. Rep. Hiestand said the bill is not designed to provide another “day of rest” but is intended as a “gesture of profound respect to all Christian denominations.” The Lafayette Post 11 of the American Legion has distributed a resolution among all the members

sage of the bill.

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PHILADELPHIA, Feb, 10 (U. P.). —Howard Heinz of Pittsburgh, president of the H. J. Heinz Co, died at 11 o'clock last night at Jefferson Hospital. didi Physicians said Mr. Heinz was brought to the hospital Dec. 20. for an abdominal operation, and was in good condition until a relapse yes-

.| terday.

Mr. Heinz, member of the National Industrial Conference Board and director of the Pennsylvania Railroad and the Mellon National Bank, was born in Sharpsburg, a borough up the Allegheny River

|from Pittsburgh, Aug. 27, 1877, the

son of Henry John and Sarah Sloan Heinz, : : Upon his graduation from Yale University in 1900, he entered the world-wide business his father built up from a small neighborhood establishment which bottled horseradish. He became first vice president of the concern in 1905 and on the death of his father in 1919 he was made president. : During the World War, Mr. Heinz served as United States Food Administrator for Pennsylvania and zone éhairman of the United States Food Administration for the area including Pennsylvania, Ohio, Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland and the District of Columbia, and a member of the War Industries Board at Philadelphia. After the armistice he became head of .the American Relief Administration of Southeastern Europe and- Asia Minor and representative of the United States Grain Corp. with headquarters in Constantinople.

He contributed widely to charities and founded several special

funds for the aid of students. In June, 1927, he contributed $100,000 to Yale to establish the “Howard Heinz Students’ Educational Fund.” He was married in 1906 to Elizabeth Granger Rust, and they were the parents of two children, H. J. Heinz II and Rust Heinz. Rust Heinz was killed in an automobile accident July 23, 1939. ;

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