Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 September 1941 — Page 5
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RA E. MYLES RITES SATURDAY
Retired Carpenter ~ Had Been County Resident For 73 Years.
Ira Edgar Myles, 73-year-old re- :
tired carpenter, died yesterday after having been ill three years. A resident of Marion County all his life, he lived at 825 Villa Ave. "Mr. Myles was. a member of the Victory Memorial: Methodist Church and Prospect Lodge 714, F. and A. M. Before he retired several years
. ago, he worked for 18 years in the
stock department of the New York Central Railroad shops in Beech Grove. Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Mary Ann Myles; two sisters, Mrs. Ida M. Pee and Mrs. Mary E. Hartman, both of Indianapolis, and two brothers, William E. Myles, Indianapolis, and Arthur H. T. Myles, Cloverdale. Masonic services will be: conducted at 2 p. m. tomorrow in the Bert S. Gadd Funeral Home, with the Rev. R. E. Skidmore officiating. Burial will be in Crown Hill.
LEONA FABEL, HERE 25 YEARS, IS .DEAD
Mrs. Leona Fabel, a resident of Indianapolis 25 years, died yesterday in St. Vincent's Hospital. Her home was at 4000 Bluff- Road. Mrs. Fabel was born in Anderson 40 years ago. She was the wife of Ward L. Fabel, president of the Western Riders’ Association. She was a member of the St. Roch’s Catholic Church. Besides her husband, she is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Norma Daugherty, and Misses Jackie Lou and 'Merna Lee Fabel; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cain; & sister, Mrs. Carl DeFalco, and a niece, Miss Betty Maxine Hosea, all of Indianapolis.
U. S. ASKED TQ AID FRANCE WASHINGTON, Sept. 19 (U. P.). —French Ambassador Gaston HenryHaye has asked the United States to seek during its current conversations with Japan the withdrawal of Japanese forces from French IndoChina, it was learned today.
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~ Thomas A. Gill Funeral services for Thomas A. Gill, who was for 25 years a machinist in the Beech Grove shops of the New York Central Railroad, will be held at 8:30 a. m. tomorrow in his home, 58 S. Fourth Ave., Beech Grove. Additional services will: be held at 9 a. m. in the Holy Name Catholic Church, and burial will be in Holy Cross Cemetery Mr. Gill died yay in his home. He was a member of the Beech Grove Lions Club, the Holy Name Church, and the Holy Name Society of the church.
ELIA A. WCARTY, POSTAL CLERK, DIES
Elija A. McCarty, a post office clerk and World War Veteran, died yesterday while visiting relatives at Martinsville. Mr. MecCarty’s home was at 1005 N. Pennsylvania St.
Gosport until coming to Indianapolis 25 years ago. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Elva McCarty; three sisters, Mrs, Ethel Kilburn, Santa Cruz Cal, Mrs. Edna Casey, Detroit, Mich, and Miss Malissa McCarty, Gosport, and four brothers, Curtis L. McCarty, Monrovia, William C. McCarty, Spencer, Woody P. McCarty, Gosport, and Tinsley T. McCarty, Phoenix, Ariz.
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AIM STRANGE
Parents Sa Say Poison lvy Covers Field Used For Playground. Parents of children attending the | Sherman Drive, tonight were ex-
allege ‘are crowded conditions and
‘hazardous playground facilities. District Civic Association at 8 p.m., R. A. Nicholas, 4036 E. 62d St., said parents would protest what they charge is negligence in not clearing a field adjoining the school on the west which is used. for a play-
sound said the field is “filled with poison ivy” ‘and that children have to climb through a hole in the fence which is partly covered with rusted
provided. Protest to Janitor
Mr. Nicholas said that his 9-
cut near her eye on the fence and that she also contracted poison ivy from the, field. A mother of one of the other children had protested to the janitor, he said, but was told he didn’t take care of anything “off the school gro ounds. ” Mr. Nicholas said she then got a hoe and tried to clear the field, but it was too big a job. The field was rented last spring for the use of the children.
Enrollment Rise Cited
Mrs. G. Schuyler Blue, 4701 E. 78th St. Parent-Teacher Association member, said that it would be brought out that there are 499 children in accommodations originally planned for 250." She said that the Assembly Room has been divided for use as two classrooms, but this is not sufficient to alleviate the crowded condition. She said one classroom is being used for 60 children. She asserted that the enrollment has risen 100 since last school year, and that “if conditions were bad last year, theyre worse this year.” George H. Hopper, Washington | Township Trustee, as well as representatives of the school staff, were expected to be present to hear the protests of parents.
BUTLER OFFERS DEFENSE STUDY
Beginners in Chemistry to Meet Tuesday and Thursday Evenings.
fered in the Butler University eve-
ning division. The class, to be taught by Dr. A. J. Idhe, will meet Tuesdays and Thursdays at 6:30. . The course in traffic management, meeting at 7:30 Mondays, is experiencing a larger -enrollment. Plants working on defense in the city and nearby are Sending workers to the class. Another new course is that on general astronomy. The class, meet-ing-at 7p by Dr. B. Pe. Getc! A class on ir algebra will meet at 7 p. m. on Thursdays.
‘'s #8 8
Stanley Trusty has been named business manager. of The Bulldag, Butler humor publication, by Robert Bensema, editor. Other staff members are: William Pentecost, circulation manager; William Mortimer, promotion manager; Bette Jeanne Ruth, associate editor, and Gottfried Guennel, art editor,
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Map Convention Plans
Plans for the national convention of the Modern Language Association of America will be mapped tomorrow morning at a meeting of the local committee in ‘the office of Dean Gino A. Ratti, head of the, Butler University Romance Language Department. During the convention, set for the Christmas holidays, several affiliated groups also will meet. They include? Teachers of -French, American Teachers of German, Italian, College English and the American Federation of Modern Language Teachers.
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Frank Celarek, Pt. Wayne junior, has been named treasurer of the
according to Floyd Wilson, executive secretary.
GENERAL PLEASED BY GIRL’S 20-CENT GIFT
commander of the Sixth
to acknowledge a gift of two dimes to the Army today.
a personal letter to 10-year-old Alice Carey, Chicago, thanking her for the carefully-wrapped coins which she put into the mail, addressed “For the Army—U. 8. 0.” “I am sending my money for the Army,” said Alice’s letter. “I personally want to thank you for your contribution of 20 cents to the Army and the U. 8. O. It is being forwarded to the United Service Organizations,” replied Gen. “Your patriotic spirit and Intersted In our Army is greatly apprecia
Two STRUCK BY CAR
today a
night $ Ne N at New Jersey and Washing. ton Sts. His SUBAIIOD, Rooker, “a, of 328 E.
OVERCRO JWDED
John Strange School, 62d St. and|
pected to protest on what they]:
At a meeting of the Allisonville| i
barbed-wire since no gate has been
year-old daughter had suffered a|
A night class in begining chem-) istry to help applicants for defense| jobs meet requirements will be of-]
Mi Thursdays; is taught)
American Association off:
Butler chapter of the Y. M. C. A, | -
CHICAGO, Sept. 19 (U.P.).—The| Corps| - Area, of the U. 8. Army found time
Maj. Gen. J. M, Cummins sent
: Michael "Hayes, 33, of 4 N, New| rena i ceived when he and & oom- : by an auto last 3
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Reynolds, in charge of tickets.
Englewood Chapter 483, O. E. S., will sponsor a.card party Sept. 26 in the Wm, H. Block Co. auditorium. Co-chairmen for the event include Mrs. Esta Bolen (left), in charge of candy, and Mrs. Mary
FIND WEST SIDE MAN DEAD IN HIS HOME
Geqrge H. Clements, who lived at 1125% W. New York St., was found dead yesterday in his home. He was 44.
Mr. Clements was born in Indian-
apolis, and for the last 20 years
had been employed by the Indianapolis Bleaching Co. He is survived by his: wife, Mrs Myrtle Clements; two stepsons, Gussie and Luther Curtis, both of Martinsville; a stepdaughter, Lucille Curtis, Martinsville, and a sister, Mrs. R. V.. West, Louisville, Ky. - Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p. m, tomorrow in the Conkle Funeral Home, with burial § in Floral Park.
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Russia Stresses Popular Science
By Science Service WASHINGTON, Sept. 19.—To make the Russian people scienceminded, the Soviet Union publishes
popular scientific books in very large editions—700,000 copies of
. |about 70 such books being scheduled
for this year. A report just received here, says that members of the Soviet Academy of Sciences and other prominent scientists are among the authors. Especially popular, says the report, is a series on “Modern Problems in Science and Technics,’
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OYSTER BAY, N. Y, Sept. 19 (U. P.).—The Navy Department's newtype, 1900-ton, armed cargo ‘ship to “challenge the submarine,” has automobile engines taken right off the assembly lines of a major car manufacturer. This was revealed today by Irving Jakobsen, president of the Jakobsen Shipyards, which are making the ship after it was perfected with “the active and insistent help” of President Roosevelt. (In Washington, naval - officials explained that while the first test model used automobile engines; marine gasoline motors would be used in service models. The officials said marine engines could be produced almost as easily as auto engines.) The ships use 16 six-cylinder gasoline engines, each of 110 horsepower, to drive a six-foot propeller sunk amidships. A study of outboard motor boat propulsion led to this sort of propeller installation, which is unprecedented in marine transport. Mr. Jakobsen said he was not able to divulge details but gave credit for the design and plans to the Weave Associates of Washing ton. He said the ships had been tested in Long Island Sound. The only credit he took for himself was that “we did try to use some equipment readily available, rather than to develop a diesel engine for the boat. Diesel manufacturers have enough to do now.”
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