Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 June 1941 — Page 4

an ving"

Sisters | fo Be Reunled Here After 21 Years or!

At 5:30 p.. m. today two sisters, 8. Ethel Buck, 218 N. Richland ,.and Mts. Edward Hed, Bever-

In 1919 Mrs. Buck was married i South Dakota. She moved away after her sister also left the OWT neither knew where the other

Ral ‘daughter, Mrs. Lometa |; then 7, went to Groton,

her sister

Buck doesn’t know how long her will visit’ here or what they will do during her stay but

ght get in touch with the friends} will

enable them to make contact n 1939, Mrs. Hed, who lived in tle, Wash.; at the time, visited the Chicago World's Fair, and stopped in South Dakota for a visit. Jt wasn't long before Mrs. Buck, in Indianapolis, received. a, “.from her sister and the two

1916, its growth and its objectives. Mr. Yockey was trustee of Indiana district, Kiwanis In tion-

the Indianapolis club in 1925, chairman of various committees through the years ‘and general program

2h een corresponding since.

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al, from 1922 to 1024, president of'

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Df. ‘Stone, State Comman“der, First to Register’ at moe Meeting.

: Times Speeial MUNCIE, In une '17, —* “The ‘| Grand Army of the Republic gath‘ered here today for their 62d annual encampment. y The first to register for the convention was Dr. John H. Stone of

»| Kokomo, state commander. Amorig

the other first arrivals was O. N. Wilmington of Indianapolis. Other patriotic organizations which are holding their annual meetings in conjunction with the G. A. R. are the Ladies of .the G. A. R., Daughters of Union Vet-

and. the auxiliary of the. Sons of Union Veterans. Walter A. Thomas of Ft. Wayne was elected president of the Federatéd Patriotic Societies allied with

4! the Grand Army of the Republic at

the society's: meeting’ yesterday. . Dr.. Stone. was unanimously re‘elected honorary president of the federated societies. Other officers - elected were Mrs. Geneva Arnold, Ft. Wayne, vice president; Mrs. Pauline, Nicola, Wayne, secretary-treasurer; Mrs Ella Hughes, Terre Haute, chaplain; Mrs. Margaret Snowden, Gary, patriotic instructor; Miss Hazel Indianapolis, organizer; Rich rtie Martin, . Indianapolis, color bearer: Mrs: Ruby Rukes, Terre | Haute, - correspondent, ' and, Mrs. Lillian Harwell, Indianapolis,\ musician. Elected to the council of administration were Mrs, Alice ‘Whited,

| Gary; Mrs. Claudia Erther, Indian-

apolis; . Mrs, Gertrude Fox, Ft. Wayne, and Mrs, Misie Krietenstein, Terre Haute.

PARR FOUND INSANE AT TIME OF SLAYING

ANGOLA, Ind, June 16 (U. P.) — A jury of farmers, businessmen and Housewives deliherated - more than eight hours until shortly after 4 a. m. today to find Earl Parr, 52-year-old Steuben County farmer, insane at the time he killed his mother-in-law, Mrs. Nellie Hovarter.’ The verdict was tantamount to acquittal. Circuit Judge Clyde C. Carlin was called to the court to hear” the jury’s ‘decision, but will not enter it in the official records until later today. Prosecutor Harris Hubbard said Parr will not be released until a hearing has been held on his present sanity. The State had charged Parr with shooting his mother-in-law during a quarrel . 12 over the division of livestock owned together.

PLANT SEIZED FOR ~ NON-TAX PAYMENT

NEW YORK, June 17 (U. P.).— Federal Internal Revenue agents seized the plant and property of the Climax Rubber Co. in Brooklyn today for alleged failure to pay p$16:152 in Social Security and UnSEiployment Compensation taxes June 30, 1939 to March 31, ve 1.

The firm’ had been engaged in defense work and only three weeks ago finished a Government contract for valves used in gas masks. Negotiations were said to be under way for a new order of the same supplies. 2

Ie 520 CANP

erans, Sons of the Union Veterans|:

A long trip from Germany ends’

with everybody happy as Eleanor and Evelyn Perl, twins, arrive in Brooklyn from Lisbon on the 8.8. Nyassa.

- MARKLAND GETS

JOB WITH A: B. C.

41 Legislator to Be Director of Publicity; in $3600 Pay Bracket.

Rep. Glenn A. Markland (R. Zionsville) today assumed his duties as publicity director of the

sion. The position, a new one, was created by the commission yesterday Mr. Markland’s primary duties, commission members said, will be to explain to the public the complicated provisions of the new Stout Liquor Law and to handle public relations. Commission members said that Mr. Markland’s appointment did not conflict with the law which pro‘hibits - legislators from taking jobs set up in laws passed by an assembly of .which they were -a member. They said that the Stout Liquor Law, passed by 1941 Assembly, was an amendatory act and did not change the character of the Alcoholic Beverages Commission. Mr. - Markland’s salary has not been fixed, but he will be in a pay bracket with $3600 annually as a minimum. Mr. Markland is the second member of the ‘41 Legislature to take a salaried State position. State Senator Charles Bedwell (D. Sullivan) was named to the Appellate Court by Governor Schricker to fill a vacancy. Mr. Markland, who served in the House during the last two sessions, said he would not run again for the office as ons as he ees the job with the A. B. C. ,

NAMED AT PURDUE LAFAYETTE, Ind, June 17— Dr. Roy E. Nichols will join the Purdue University Veterinary Department July 1 as Veterinary Physiologist, it was announced today. Dr. Nichols has been instructor in the department of surgery and clinics of the Ohio State University Veterinary Medical College since 1933.

Opp. Maj i En

$5,000 CHASSIS

Lomi ii) Sate Fas

© tnt

air: * Grows

State Alcoholic Beverages Commis-| .

‘| trial for Wikia ar ayin

duced and distributed under: condi-

): Utider the new: measure, Grade A milk, ‘defined as milk with a but-

‘terfat content of at least 8125 per | cent ‘and a gacea count of not more than 30,000, per cubic: centimeter, will be 'the' prevailing type of ‘milk sold. Its price ‘will be the same as unlabelled milk now. “If a Grade A milk producer or distributor fails to meet the sanitary requirements: of the o ce, his milk will be immediately degraded to B milk and placed on the market so labelled for 30 days during which conditions leading to the degrading may be remedied. + Grade B milk is defined as milk with\ 3.25 butterfat contént and a bacteria count of ‘not more than 50,000 per cubic centimeter. Milk other than Grades A and B cannot. be sold-in Indianapolis for direct’ consumption.

' Operative Within 90 Days

The ordinance provides a checkoff on the milk industry of two

‘|cents a hundredweight of milk to

finance inspection costs. This, supplemented by a small tax levy, will yield approximately $40,000 annually to support the inspection staff, according to Dr. Herman G. Morgan, City Health officer. Producers and distributors will share the two-cent levy, each paying one cent a hundredweight. Passage of the milk ordinance was unanimous. It followed a long public hearing last week and several hours discussion last night. Dr. Was | Morgan said he believed the ordinance could be made operative wit, hin 90 days.

Drop Mounted Police

The Council struck from the files the Safety Board’s proposal to establish a mounted police patrol. Action was withheld on the request of firemen for a blanket 15 per cent wage increase to meet rising living costs. Edward Fillion, former Board member, spoke on behalf of the firemen. Representing the Indianapolis Firefighters Association (A. FP. of L.), through which the

retary, and Capt. Orville Marshall; president. Mr. Fillion appeared again today before the Safety Board and asked that amount of money that the proposed raise would cost be included in the Safety Board budget until the matter is settled by the Council. E, Curtis White of the Central Labor Union indorsed. the firemen’s plea. Battalion Chief John Redmon and Cabt. Patrick Kelly, both International Association of Firefighters officials of Chicas, also spoke.

BUTSCH SEEKS WAIT} OF HABEAS |

Another legal move to force Ray Butsch, charged with the g two years ago of Mrs, Carr lah Romig in her North Side apartment, has been made in Federal Court.

Judge Robert C. Baltzell, who said he would hear it next Monday. Shortly after Butsch’s indictment in 1939, he was adjudged insane and committed to the Indiana Prison Hospital. Last November he was {returned here for a Probate Court hearing on a guardianship matter but a jury there declared him sane. The Crimina)l Court adjudication, however, still remained and his at=torneys brought’ a habeas corpus action in’ Criminal Court before Special Judge Joseph Williams, who held he was sane. Later Special Judge Omar O'Harrow of Martinsville appointed psychiatrists to re-examine Butsch. A hearing on ‘this has been set for

~|June 24, the 8 after the Federal

Court The ora Court petition seeks’ to -have- Butsch released from the insanity judgment.

STRANDED KOKOMO BOY SEEKS PARENTS

CHICAGO, June 17 (U. P)~—

. | Police attempted today to locate

August and Mamie Shime, Kokomo, Ind, to return their son, William,

bus depot: : . William told police he had left

| Kokomo : with ‘his’ parents Sunday {on a" vacation trip. . left

in Chicago at a motion pic , he

: brick wit, they vent to Gary for s

his ‘parents Satay eve) bus station. ger e ound a note an .had be Ca hE

Hty 6 sald

'| his" parents would Retin. ak. 5:30 | [BT Vesterdag hut: hey, failed

ee rs mia : alls will have, Grade A milk pro-

Safety |

firemen are petitioning for the raise, || were Claude Ream, association sec- |.

His attorneys filed a petition for| a writ of habeas corpus before|

15, who was stranded at a Chicago|l

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