Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 May 1941 — Page 7
'RIDAY, MAY 30, 4 LW. D. HOAGLAND DEAD AT HOME
Retired Railways Employee ~ Was 79; Services Set For Tomorrow.
‘William D. Hoagland, retired In- |} : dianapolis Railways employee, died
yesterday at his home, 1022 E. Ohio
St. He was 79. Born in Terre Haute, Mr. Hoagland had lived here most of his life. He worked for the Railways Co. 48 years, and was a member of the 20-year club of the company. He retired in 1932.
Survivors are a daughter, Mrs./|§
Hazel Earnest; two sons, William H. Hoagland of Indianapolis and Andrew Hoagland of Parke County; 10 grandchildren and four greatgrandchildren. Burial will be in Floral ‘Park tomorrow after 2 p. m. services in his home.
MRS. ELLEN LANHAM, ENGLISH NATIVE, DIES
Mrs. Ellen M. Lanham, a native of England who has lived in Indianapolis since 1892, died today at
her home, 315 N. Walcott St. She |
“was 86. Mrs. Lanham was born March 8, 1855, in West Campbell, Somerset“shire, England. She came to America in 1881, residing in Nebraska. Her husband, a retired railroad employee, died in 1932. Mrs. Lanham was a member of the Westminister Presbyterian Church and the Y. W. C. A. She is survived by Miss Florence E. Lanham, Mrs. William J. Yule, Mrs. Fred R. Bokeloh, Mrs. Richard E. Sprague and Harold G. Lanham, all of Indianapolis; 11 grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. Services will be at the home.
‘FEDERAL SPENDING ESTIMATES RAISED
WASHINGTON, May 30 (U. P.). —Administration estimates of 1942 fiscal year expenditures—beginning July 1—probably will be revised upward from the original figure of $19,000,000,000, it was believed today. Predictions of a higher spending figure—$22,000,000 or more—were hased on a request by Acting Treasiry Secretary Daniel W. Bell for a sevised estimate of 1942 expenditures from the Bureau of the Budget. At the same time Mr. Bell gave the bureau new revenue estimates by the. Treasury, based on March income tax collections, cutting the predicted deficit by about $747,000,000.
ALFRED MELOY, POLITICIAN, DIES
Served as U. S. Marshal Until 1935; Once Chairman in Wayne Twp.
Alfred O. Meloy, for many years active in Republican politics in Marion County, died last night at his home, 604 N. Tibbs. Ave. He was 71. Mr. Meloy served eight years as United States Marshal for the southern Indiana District, retiring in 1935. He was head of the street commissioner’s department for many years, and had been Republican chairman . of Wayne Township. He is survived {by three sons, Clif-
ton A, Glenn E."and Eugene J. Meloy, all of Indianapolis.
Gebhart Rites in Crawfordsville
- MRS. ROSE Hamilton Gebhart, a native Hoosier who lived in Indianapolis for seven years, died yesterday in the home of her
daughter, Mrs. A. C. Stevenson, at
110 W. 15th St. She was 80. Mrs. Gebhart lived in Crawfordsville until coming to Indianapolis. She was a member of the Church of Christ, Scientist, in Crawfordsville.
* She is survived by two sons, Eugene Ballard and W. T. Hamilton; two step-sons, Al and Wallace Hamilton; three step-daughters, Mabel Hamilton, , Mrs. Jennie Lamson and Mrs. Jessie Babb, and three grandchildren. Services will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow in Crawfordsville. Burial will be in Oak Hill Cemetery there.
ODEE JUNE GIFT CELEBRATION!
—Select her heart’s desire with confidence at Dee’s!
Solitaire
1 75 $
other design tinat = be very popular with t h e modern prides. Value!
in a
Beautiful solitaire set 3
gold mounting superb beauty.
7 e
With 8 1°
Set
$4975
scintillating diamonds_ set in a gold mounting. .__ ring that will thrill her.
Q75
leamin ellow g g Vy 3
—Make Your Own Terms. ~—No Interest— No Carrying
3
= (of Indiana,” and the “Spirit of Our = | Country.” The pageant will be en- = | titled the “Spirit of 1941.” :
Recreation groups such as this . . . one aim of the United Service Organizations for National Defense. a a {
SERVICE MEN, IN CITY TO BENEFIT
Pageant and Parade Tuesday Will Launch Campaign Among Civilians.
A colorful pageant and parade Tuesday will launch the Indianapolis campaign to organize civilian social hospitality for the armed forces stationed here. : Sponsored by the United Service Organizations for National Defense, the pageant will be given in the World War Memorial grounds, having as its background the impressive north approach. The pageant is being written by Samuel J. Freeman, vice president of L. Strauss & Co., and a committee composed of C. M. Davis, of L. S. Ayres & Co., Paul Watsch, of H. P. Wasson & Co., and George Madden, of Wm. H. Block Co.
3000 Soldiers to Join Taking part in the pageant and the parade will be 3000 soldiers from Ft. Harrison, a nationally known soloist who will sing “America”, and girls representing the “Spirit of Indianapolis,” the “Spirit
After the pageant Governor
= |Schricker will introduce Charles P, = | Taft who will deliver the address E [that will launch the campaign. The E | parade will précede the pageant anc
begin at 3:30 p. m, All arrangements
= |for the public patriotic ceremony = |are being made under direction of = | Homer E. Capehart and Ralph B.
Gregg, chairmen of the parade and
= pageant committees. |
At the same time, the army of
= workers for the campaign will be
mobilized for the first time for dinner at the Indianapolis Athletic Club preceding the pageant. Taft to Address; Workers
Mr. Taft also will address the workers. The northwest section of the City is under command of Col. J. J. Kiser with the following majors as assistants, Mrs. H. P. Willworth, Mrs. Sulton Cohen, ‘ Mrs. James Veach, Robert St. Pierre, Sidney Mahalowitz, Mrs. Jasper Scott, Mrs. William Ankenbrock, and G. V. Carrier.
Col. Fermor S. Cannon is in
: charge of’ the northeast section of
the City, with the following majors on his staff: Mrs. Joseph P. Smith, Mrs. Josie Hall, Senator Jacob Weiss, William Schiltges, Humbert
= | P. Pagani, Mrs. Fermor Cannon and
5-Diamonds $=y =.00
This modernistic arrangement make this the * diamond value of the year!
rn
Choose From Ameriea’s FINEST NATIONALLY ADVERTISED WATCHES
Dee Has Them All!
BULOVA BUL “BEATRICE” i T-Jewels
“SENATOR” i T-Jewels
Edward Zink. Col. William H. Bradley is commanding the southwest section with Majors F. E. DeFrantz, A. E. Peterson, Max Klezmer, Mrs. Thomas Murphy, Vernon Hennessey, Mrs.
== Howard Baumgartel, William Schnei- = (der and Thomas Neal on his staff.
Col. F. E. Thornburgh commands
= |the southeast section with Majors = | John L. H. Fuller, Mrs. Edgar C. Jo- =| seph,, Theodore Dann, Kathryn Mc-
Pherson, Hanna Dugan and Mrs. O. S. Flick on his staff.
WOMAN DIES, RAISING COUNTY TOLL TO 59
Marion County’s 1941 traffic death toll was raised to 59 today with the
= |death of Mrs. Maude Echfeldt, 3110
S. St. Paul St, who was injured
E | yesterday when two cars collided
at Troy and Keystone Aves. She was 60. She died of internal injuries at St. Francis Hospital. The cars in the collision were driven by Mrs.
= | Ruth Copeland, R. R. 10, Indianapo-
<x 1,
“TEXAN” 15-Jewels
New Creation “WHITMAN” I5-dewels 1 T-Jewels
37° $2975 $2975 327° 45°
15¢ a Week! 75¢c a Week! 75¢ a Week! 75¢ a Week!
$1 a Week!
Other Famous Guaranteed Watches, $3.95 to $250.00 .
18 N. Illinois St.
La
lis, and Mrs. Mary Baker, 1414
E | Thompson" Road.
= \KREISLER ON SLOW
ROAD TO RECOVERY
NEW YORK, May 30 (U. P.)—
= | Fritz Kreisler, the violinist, is grad- = | ually recovering from the skull frac- =| ture he suffered when an automo- = | bile struck himr April 26 and music = | still is “the mistress of his entire = | life,” his wife said today.
Mrs. Kreisler said he would be in
=| the hospital “some time yet,” but =| that he was on the slow road to = | recovery and was able to sit up five = | minutes a day. :
He often listens to symphony orchestra programs on the radio, and “the great thing in his mind, the one thing he keeps harping on, is his love of music,” Mrs. Kreisler said. “It is the only thing that means anything to him. All else at present has faded out.”
ENLARGEMENT
EEE 25
Rell Printed and ELMER DAVIS STUDIO
at several places in West Indian-
late today that the condition of for-
RETIRED GROCER DIES HERE AT 80
Robert Douglass Services to Be Tomorrow; Burial In Crown Hill.
Robert Douglass, 80-year-old retired grocer, will be buried in Crown Hill tomorrow after 2 p. m. services in the Farley Funeral Home. Mr. Douglass died yesterday in the home of his niece, Mrs. Lon Lemay, 2011 Carrollton Ave. Mr. Douglass had owned and operated groceries and butcher shops
apolis. He retired 20 years ago.
He is also survived by a brother, Andrew Douglass of Indianapolis.
EX-KAISER VERY ILL BERLIN DECLARES
BERLIN, May 30 (U. P.).—Informed German sources reported
F. Ryan, topped the local contestants, and Boyce H. Eidson, who will receive the international award for the sec- | ond successive j year. The contest ran through April.
awards will be made at a banquet in the Claypool Hotel. Mr. Ryan is secretary of Lodge 261 and Mr. Eidson is field supervisor of the central Indiana district. International President Alexander PF. Whitney, Cleveland, will be the honor guest and speaker, and a number of other international officers will attend. About 2500 persons’ are expected.
2 Local Men Rank af Top in
Trainmen's Annual Contest
Two Indianapolis men will be honored tomorrow night for records they established membership and insurance contest of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen.
They are Frank who
Presentation of Mr. Ryan
in the annual
Two pebsons will receive special recognition. They are William G.
Edens, Chicago, a retired banker and member of the order for 55 years; and J. M. Berry, 1606 Hoyt Ave, who is 92 years Jld and has been a member of the § order for 47 years. J. H. Monical, Indianapolis, and Chester Hunt, Peru, will share Mr. Eidson’s hon-. or. They assisted him in the field. | The winning team of individual reserve representa: NE ATS tives is compos : of MG. Ward, ¥r.Edsn H. R. Woods, Art Hayworth, and Mr. Hunt, Peru; F. C. Cull and O. C. Odier, Huntington; S. D. Dawson, Harry White, Fred Pennington and Russell Barney, Logansport; R. B. Hamilton and William McCreary, Tipton; Ed Shroyer, Champaign, Ill; C. M. Manuel, Anderson; C. F. Davison, Frankfort; Edward P. Culver and W. C. Griffith, Lafayette;
mer Kaiser Wilhelm II has showed no change today, and that he is extremely ill. They added, however, that the
BISMARCK SURVIVORS LAND
LONDON, May 30 (U. P.).—One
of the warships which participated
George Harper and G. A. Calkins, Richmond; R. W. McNamara, Bloomington; C. R. Maher, Roy A. McCowen, A. D. Hillyer and P. N. Garrett, Danville, Ill.; Owen Stone,
Charges FDR Goes Beyond Hitler in Cape Verde ° Suggestion.
PHILADELPHIA, May 30 (U. PJ). —Charles A. Lindbergh, addressing an America First Committee meeting, said last night that the United States should “turn to new policies® and a new leadership.” =." © Assailing President Roosevelt's, -
| fireside speech, he charged that the. =
President went beyond “even Hitler™ in suggesting that the safety of the Western Hemisphere depended on, control of the Cape Verde Islands, off the west coast of Africa. : “Suppose the Germans said that. the safety of Europe lay in cone. trolling the Fernando de Noronha Islands off the coast of South America?” he asked. “Obviously, this country would go to war. If we take the attitude that we must’ control the islands of the Eastern Hemisphere, Europe has just as much right to demand control of
ex-Kaiser, at his residence at Doorn, Holland, is not in a dying condition and members of the Hohenzollern family have not been summoned to the bedside. The Kaiser is 82 years old.
Nazi dreadnaught.
in the battle against the Bismarck arrived today at a British port and landed a number of German prisoners, survivors rescued from the
E. T. Bartron, Alvie Killion, J. H. Monical, F. M. Hardesty, A. D. Milne, Wayne Williams, Gary J. Gray, R. A. Bourne and Mr. Ryan, Indianapolis. :
the islands of the Western Hemisphere. If we say that our frontier
lies on the Rhine, they can say that theirs lies on the Missippi.”
SUITS for wel] dressed men and young men :
Since you're not going to spend another summer sweltering in a regular weight suit, you naturaily want to pick a GOOD summer suit . . . one that's really cool, one that holds its shape and crease, that resists wrinkles. You want the suit with thousands of tiny windows to let your body b-r-e-a-t-h-e. You want a suit that’s tailored to BEVERLY'S exacting specifications, of choice laboratory tested fabrics.
® Single and double breasted models ® New 1941 colors and patterns ® Sizes for men of all builds
RN AR ean
JUST ARRIVED! SPORT GOATS
Youll like their style, the comfortable way they fit. You'll like their longer length, their fuller shoulders and suppressed waists. Plain shades, checks and novelty patterns. Sizes for regular, tall and short men.
a Se RN
“BEVERLY”
Tropical Worsted
IT’S SMART KEEP COOL!
4
USE OUR EXTENDED PAYMENT PLAN Ye Vy Wh IN 30 IN 60 N 9 DAYS | DAYS DAYS
A convenient plan to eomplete the balance. Small Carrying charge.
WORSTED GABARDINE SLACKS Also pure tropical worsteds. Remarkable valhb ®
ues, you'll agree, when you see their quality, their tailoring, their smart style and comfortable fit. High, rise, pleated, zippered, self-belted. Brown, natural, teal, blue and other lively new shades.
SANFORIZED SUMMER SLACKS
Expertly tailored by a maker who specializas in fine woolen slacks. Patterns and colors Just released. Bedford cords, plain gabardines, neat stripes and novelties. Sizes 28 to 54 waist; lengths to 36—Sanforized shrunk for perfect, permanent fit.
Je
COOL SANFORIZED SLACKS Smart looking, lightweight slacks that look 19 : 2 °
much more expensive than 2.12. Cool cotton suitings in cords, stripes and neat woven novBLOCK’S—Downstairs Store
elty patterns . . . all Sanforized shrunk for perfect, permanent fit. vo
1 J
Again . . . It's Indiana’s Most Complete Downstairs
COATS 03%
Students’ Shop for . . . e Camel Tan Herringbones e All Wool Shetlands © Every coal tailored and styled as youth demands.
Students’ SPORT © Glen Plaids BLOCK'S—Dounstairs Store
Developed, 6 or & Exposures. 242 Mass. A Middle of 1st Block
Students’ SPORT SLACKS $3. Hos
e Mayfair Saddle Stitched Slacks © “Celbreeze” Celanese Slacks © “Gringola” Synthetic In the colors youth
Yarn Slacks . demands. ye © BOYS’ GABARDINE SLACKS _ gabardines, belted, pleated, with Talon zipper fly. Plenty of dark © STUDENTS’ WHITE SUITS Drape model suits of an exceptional 10°
Sanforized-shrunk mercerized cotton 29 id brown. quality rayon fabric. Zipper fly - slacks.
