Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 October 1941 — Page 4

: 8, DIES

.er Born in Missouri Studied in East.

rvices for Cort L. Pigg will bel § tomorrow at 2 p. m. at the|’

Hamilton Funeral Home with burial i: Washington Park, Mr, Pigg, who pas 65, died Monday at City Hos-

Born in Mexico, Mo., he came to polis in 1922. A musician music teacher, at one time he with the Indianapolis SymOrchestra. Pigg stuied at the New EngConserva f Music, Boston,

ts. He d piano teaching. He led several > orchestras in Terre Haute ‘and Bedford but in recent years confined his work to piano tuning 1 music instruction. He was er of the First Baptist Church

Services will be held at 2 p. m. this afternoon in the Tolin Funeral ome for Arthur W. Suhre, elevator ; , 1644 Hoyt Ave., who Sunday at Methodist Hospital. Bu will be in Crown Hill cemetery. He was 55 and a lifelong resigens of this civy, Mr, Suhre had been injured in a fall down an elevator shaft five years 880 and had been retired since that de. He was a member of Local , 34, Elevator Constructors’

lon. Survivors are the wife, Mrs. Carfle H. Moore Suhre; a daughter, ‘Mrs, Ruth Fisher, Detroit, Mich.; a brother, Frank H., Indianapolis, and “several nieces and nephews.

MISS MARY CARSON SERVICES TOMORROW

Funeral services for Miss Mary E. ~ Qarson will be held tomorrow at 2 p. m. at Kregelo & Bailey morary with burial in Crown Hill .Bhe was 82 and died Monday night ak the Reed Nursing Home. ‘Miss Carson had been ill since ast May when she fell. For 40 years she was a member of the Broadway Methodist Church. She N born near Southport and lived many years in University Heights “before moving to Indianapolis. ‘Edgar M. Carson, Indianapolis, a Blather, is the only immediate sur-

~~ "ATTACK CHARGE DENIED | WASHINGTON, Oct. 29 (U.P.)— Orman William Ewing, 53, former Go Democatle National Committeepan of Utah, was held without bond in district jail today for grand ‘Jury action on a charge that he _ ¥avished a 19-year-old Government ‘worker, The gray-haired lawyer and house owner, father of five ‘chil pleaded ‘innocent to the

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Six-year-old Joyce Van Sickle could be spending her time these days being proud of her older sister, Shirley, but instead she’s mostly worried about Amos and

the turkeys. Shirley, a senior® at Warren Central High School, recently won a state 4-H contest that will send her, all expenses paid, to a wéeklong 4-H convention in Chicago beginning Nov. 28. . That's remarkable in itself, and it sort of establishes the Van! Sickle family as a 13-H family. Eleanor Van Sickle, the oldest girl in the family, won an all-expense trip to Chicago a few years ago,

thing the next year. (Three times 4-H would make 12-H, wouldn’t it?) Eleanor and Jean are at Purdue on scholarships, granted them by the university because of = their outstanding 4-H work when they were in high school, and that’s the mark Shirley is shooting for. That puts a lot of pressure on Joyce, who began school this year and who will be expected by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W, Virgil VansSickle, to make a clean VenSickle sweep of this 4-H thir Mrs. Van Sickle has great p_ ise for the girls’ 4-H work in the county. She also attended Purdue. Don Van Sickle, the 14-year-old boy of the family, is engaged on the boys’ side of the 4-H club program, But Joyce, who admits that so far her academic experiences have been confined to “pasting junk and playing with clay,” is far more impressed with things about the. Tau, which is at R. R. 12, Box 528. . And particularly is she impressed with the way Amos, the dog, keeps chasing the turkeys. She’s sure that if he doesn’t stop that, none of them will: be big enough to eat for Thanksgiving,

State Deaths

EDINBURG—Mrs. Ralph Kennedy, 52. Mrs. Dora Lous Martin,

Me! Frederick K.;

Heathcotte, Misses

Martin; brothers, George, Frank; sisters Mrs. Anna Wannemueller, Mrs. Margaret Ritt, Mrs. Rose Bell, Mrs. Tillie Reisinger, Mrs. Theresa Blume. John F. Murdock, 74. Survivors: Wife, Anna; daughter, Miss Aileen Murdock. Miss Anna L. Herth, 59. Survivors: Sisters, Mrs. Prank Weil Jr, Mrs. G. W. Litty; brother, George, Mrs. Blanche Walling, 80. Survivors: Husband, Homer; daughter, Beverly Ann; Son July; parents, Mr. and Mrs, Luther

oyd. Mrs, M: Helen Gaines, 55. Survivors: nd, y: son, Billy Lee; daughter, Frank Hurtel; “brothers, Ar oy

57. Survivors: Wife, Mrs, Fred McClellan; son win; sister, Mrs. Barbara . Senn; brothers, Rudolph, Philip,

John, JASPER—August B. Betz. Survivors: Sons, John, Albert; daughters, Mrs. George Schmelz, Mrs. Albert rauer, Mrs. -

phonse Koch; sister, Mrs. Margaret Salb. MIER—James Oliver . Hale, vivors: Wife, Cynthia; daufhters, Mrs. Geraldine Richards, Miss Be Ha Carl; brother, Dave; half-brothers, Jesse Hale; half-sisters Mathias, Dorothy ‘Garrett. ALBANY—Mrs. Mary McEifresh, . Survivors: Son, Charles; brothers, Clarence, Edgar, Owen McElfresh. PETERSBURG—Mrs, Rosie Griffin, 79. Survivors: Daughters, Mrs. Charles Woodford, Mrs. Earl McKinney. PRINCETON—James Yeager, 72.

Carl,

: daughters, Mrs. Rickel- . Paul May, s. Edwin Elmer; Mrs. Mary S8haw, Mrs. Henry Vaal, Miss Prances Troesch, Mary brothers, John, Jacob. 31. Sur.

SHELBYVILLE—Robert H. vivors: Wife, Mary; father, W. G.; brothers, Raymond, Kenneth. SHERIDAN—Amos Murray, 81. TELL —August L, Survisors T Wit Mary! Martha Harpe; sister, Mfrs. ry brothers, Albert, Alphonse, ‘Victor. VINCENNES-—Mrs, Anna Brokhage, 75. WARREN—Mrs. Amanda Salter, 94. VOLS, SOUS, + dalnes, Charles Ragtsell: augh 3 e rbower, 8. a Andrews; brother, James A. Leverton. WHITESTOWN—Perry Adolpheus Smith, 84, Wife, Martha Day: brothers, % , Mrs. Daisy B. McMannis, WINSLOW--William Pope, 87,

and Jean Van Sickle won the same

Mrs. Loretta]

MEINARD—Martin Troesch, 170. Wife, Christina, sous, Norbert, | y

2-Way Help for WOMEN!

What should a woman do who is

Van Sickle Family Is A Sweep of 4-H Honors

\

2 8 =

Making

and ‘that’s more pressing than ways and means she may use. eventually to win 4-H prizes later in her school life, and maybe also a scholarship to Purdue.

WILLKIE ACTIVE

Isolationists in Congress|

Plan Capital Meeting to Pass Resolutions.

Times Special WASHINGTON, Oct. 20. — Irate men today are trying to arrange a meeting, tentatively scheduled for Friday, at which resolutions will be

adopted condemning the new inter- [12

ventionist leadership of Wendell L. Willkie.

They would repudiate his proposal for outright repeal of the Neutrality Act, and read its proponent out of the party. Informal discussions regarding the nature of the resolution already have been held among such articulate G. O. P. isolationists as Reps. Paul W. Shafer (Mich.), Usher L. Burdick (N. D.), Harold Knutson (Minn.) and Karl E. Mundt (8. D.). Rep. William P. Lambertson (R. Kas.) also'is expected to take part. He termed Mr. Willkie the “Dr.

ministration aided the selection of |

Mr. Willkie as counsel for the movie industry at the Senate propaganda hearings, it was said.

IRA FERRY RITES SET

Funeral services for Ira Emmett Ferry, who died at his home, 307 N. Elder Ave, Monday night, will be held at 1 p. m. tomorrow at the Harry W. Moore Peace Chapel, with burial in New Crown Cemetery. He was 49. He is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Mildred Irene Flack, Miss Dorothy Louise Ferry and Miss Joyee Ilene Ferry, all of Indianap0. »

isolationist Congress- sharp crack

Have your eyes examined! Should vou need glasses you may pay for them in weekly, semi-monthly or monthly amounts!

DR. A. G. MIESSEN i Oe ra

1]

Costly fo Axis

time met with a vicious blast of

1ave it was in Odessa during the two-month siege. The Rumanians tell us that

they even found large food reserves in the city. gL i

log barricades 12 feet thick on one street as an indication of how the Russians defended the city against 230 Rumanian batteries and huge armed forces.

En route southward through ~ the we were impressed by the niimbet of Ger-

|

ECT

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‘He was 62 and a native of Danville.

apparent starvation

~ BURIAL TOMORI Edward Lockridge, a resident of Indianapolis 40 years, died yesterday at his home, 309 Douglas St.

Survivors are the wife, Mrs. Cordie Lockridge; two sons, Harry, Indi-

a sister, Mrs, Hearne, Indianapolis. Services will be at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow at the Funeral Home. Burial will be at Clayton.

DOCTORS AT BLOOMINGTON The Indiana Association of the His tory of Medicine will hold a meeting tonight with the Monroe County Medical Society in Bloomington. Dinner will be: at Boxman's to be followed by a business session. Dr. Edgar F. Kiser, Indianapolis, wili give an illustrated talk on early American medicine.

Creom cause it troubl

eh on en ve How To Relieve

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