Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 January 1942 — Page 7

W Too OL DESIGN

B52 in Special F Rose Poly

Course at Tech Get Certificates.

Fifty-two students of a special Rose Polytechnic Institute course in

engineering drawing and tool design given at Technical High School have just completed their training schedule. The part time evening classes, tuition free, are being given under auspices of the U. 8S. Office of EBducation. Instructors are employed in essential war industries here while the majority of students are cur-

rently working in similar factories in the Indianapolis area.

New Classes Open Jan. 12

Instructors include John R. Pies of R. C. A, Chester Willoughby and Jack Newsom of Schwitzer-Cum-mins Co, Bert Pearce of Link-Belt| and Maurice Miller of the I. G. S. Spring Clutches, Inc. New classes in drawing to help better qualify skilled men to help win the war will start Jan. 12 at Technical High School. Registrations are now being taken at 214 Big Four Building.

Grant Certificates

Students who will receive certificates for work just completed are:

William B. Barnard, Robert W. Bruce, Charles E. Burrows, Thomas J. Demerly, Frank R. Engle, James R. Farrand, Willard C. Flynn, William H. Heidenreich, Edward LIL. Krause, Carl W. Malon, Harold A. Miller, Paul Parker, Rex R. Shera, Samuel B. Phillips and Murvyn B Varvel. George D. Brown, Paul H. Drazier, Donald 8S. Hanson, Kenneth C. Harlan, Louis Kopernak, Price E. Lars sen, Albert W. Radtke, Noble E. Reas, Herbert C. Sanford, Delbert Todd, Edwin A. Hall, Cora T. Irwin, Bitchard I. LaBau, Earl H. McIntire, Gilbert C. McGinty, Charles M. Townsend, Jack A. Taylor and Gerhard Witte, Elma I. Cullen, Kenneth E. Venis, | Everett J. Wiley, Byron A. Confer, Carl A. Dokenwadel, Harold C. Biner, Ralph Hopping, Donald W. Junker, John W. Lane, Wilbur W Carlson, Howard W. Meyer, Joseph Hodson, Fred Ping, Homer Sweany, George 1. Steffy, George Weed, | Conrad Thumma, Richard J. Zeph and William Ralph Mays.

MRS. WOOD RENAMED

Mrs. Carl E. Wood has been reappointed a member of the Sunny-| side Sanitorium board of managers] for her third four-year term. The | appointment was made by the Marion County Commisisoners. Mrs Wood lives at 2137 N. Talbot Ave. |

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isport circles,

"| recreation center. |served on athletic staffs at Chicago,

Superior Court Judge Herbert Wilson (left)® administered the oath of office yesterday to Municipal Judge John L. McNelis who today begins his second four-year term on the Court 3 bench. Judge McNelis was reappointed last week by Governor Schricker.

16 RETIRED BY POWER FIRM

Several With Company When It Was First Organized.

Sixteen employees of the Indianapolis Power & Light Co. entered retirement today and among them are veterans who saw the company formed. George R. Mullins, 956 Highland | Ave, a first-class lineman and servlice man, began service with the company back in 1900, when wheelbarrows and bicycles were used in service maintenance and line con. struction. Charles M. Elliott, 2621 Southeastern Ave, has a service record of 33 years, in which he never had a timelosing accident. Other retiring employees are: Taylor Bonner, 313 W. Vermont St; George Washington, 2355 Shriver Ave.; Lawrence Sadler, 2445 Shriver Ave.; Tony O. Flint, 2522 Adams St.; Elmer H. Adams, 1501 Sauley St.; John Mullen, 323 N. Tacoma Ave.; Joseph P. Espin, 417 N. LaSalle St.; Virgil Phillips, 5840 W. Minnesota St.; Ezra N. Willey, 1315 Burdsal Parkway. E. J. Berry, 908 Eugene St; William E. Gentry, 1235 Bellefontaine St.; Roy P. Frazer, 1133 Reisner St; Richard B. Kirby, 636 W. Maple Road, and William V. McGill, 305 E. 16th St. Mr. McGill, well known in eity was supervisor for | three years at Ipalco Hall, employee He is a former league baseball player and

Illinois, Northwestern and Butler

Universities.

' Rites Tomorrow

For Mary Lewis

NEW YORK, Jan. 1 (U. P) — Funeral services will be held tomorrow for Mary Lewis, 41, former star soprano of the Metropolitan Opera and one of the most publicized singers in America in the 1920s, who died yesterday at

| the Le Roy Sanitarium after a

four-month illness. Miss Lewis had lived in virtual retirement since the death in 1939 of her husband, Robert L. Hague, former vice president of the Standard Oil Co. Born in Hot Springs, Ark, she began singing in church choirs in Little Rock, Ark, and Dallas, Tex, rose to stardom in the Ziegfeld Follies, ahd made her debut at the Metrolopitan in January, 1926, singing the role of Mimi in “La Boheme.”

Seldon D. Hall's

Rites Tomorrow

FUNERAL SERVICES for Seldon D. Hall, who died yesterday, will be held at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Dorsey Funeral Home. Burial will be in the Pleasant View Cemetery near Lebanon. Mr. Hall, who was 65, lived at 104 S. Rural St. He had been employed for the last 12 years by the Mayflower Transit Co. He was born in Thorntown, and had lived in Indianapolis most of his fe. Survivors are his wife, Mrs, Allie Hall; a son, Arthur Hall; a stepdaughter, Mrs. Ethel Winters, and five grandchildren, all of Indianapolis.

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Pair Wed After 53 Years’ Wait

CROWN POINT, Ind, Jan. 1. (U. P).—The last 1941 marriage license issued in this county went to John Golding, 75, and Mary Smith, 70, who were married on New Years Eve. Fifty-three years ago, Golding, then 22, proposed to 17-year-old Mary. She said she could not get married while she still had to take care of her widowed mother, “T'll wait,” John said. Mary's mother died recently at the age of 101.

RED GROSS FUND AT HALF MARK

Latest Pledges Bring Total To $150,389; Health of Midwest Periled.

Workers for the Red Cross War Relief Fund were told yesterday at their third report meeting that almost one half their goal has been subscribed. Additional pledges amounting to $26,485 were reported at yesterday's meeting in the Athletic Club, bringing the total to date to $150,389.50. The local chapter's goal is $350,000. The campaign so far has been confined to solicitation of large individual gifts and corporation pledges, with the public campaign to be started shortly. The speaker at yesterday's meeting was Daniel I. Glossbrenner, secretary- Re of the Marmon Herrington Co. He said that a ‘Middle West has not yet awakened to the dangers confronting it; that the danger to people here was not perhaps from bombing and enemy action, but danger to the public health through a lack of doctors and trained nurses, who have been called to military bases and hospitals, “The health of the community is at stake,” Mr. Glossbrenner said. “The Red Cross, through its firstald and home nursing programs, is our first line of defense in this emergency. These services must be constantly expanded if our people are to be properly protected against ordinary illnesses and the epidemics that inevitably follow in the wake of war.”

BRITISH AND FRENCH T0 SWAP DIPLOMATS

VICHY, Jan. 1 (CDN).—Liberation of seven French displomats detained by the British in Syria after the conclusion of the Syrian armistice and the consequent release of 14 Cote d'Azur Britishers interned at Vals (eastern France) in reprisal is considered imminent in well-informed Vichy circles. This decision follows lengthy negotiations through the French and British embassies in Madrid and Lisbon which three days ago were concluded “satisfactorily” and in which the Americans played their part: According to reliable information here, the British authorities forwarded their order of liberation on Tuesday and the French diplomats will soon be on their way back to their own country. Among them is Jean Conti, son of the former French ambassador to Brazil who headed High Commissioner Henri Dentz’ diplomatic Cabinet. This Franco-British agreement is worthy of note, coming as it does on the heels of Winston Churchill's renewed anti-Vichy utterances in Ottawa.

Organizations

Astronomers to Elect—The election of officers and a talk by Walt Wilkins will be featured at the Indiana Astronomical Society's meet« ing at 2:15 p. m. Sunday at the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church.

Markland to Talk—Glen Mark- |}

lang, director of publi¢ relations for the Indiana Alcoholic Beverages Commission, will speak on “Indiana’s Liquor Laws” at the lunche eon of the Optimist Club tomorrow at the Columbia Club.

Children to Entertain—Musical entertainment by children of club members will top the program at the meeting of the Exchange Club at Hotel Severin tomorrow noon.

v |MRS. KEALING

IS DEAD AT 100

Pennsylvania Native Spent Most of Her Life in Indianapolis.

Mrs. Christena Kealing, who was 100 years old, died yesterday in her home, 3210 E. Washington St. was a member of

formed Church. She was the widow of James Adam Kealing, a blacksmith, who died here 30 years ago. She was born in Bellefonte, Pa. but had spent most of her life here. She came to Indianapolis by covered wagon 96 years ago. The family settled on a farm east of Irvington, Mrs. Kealing had been bedridden for the past year. She would have been 101 in May. She is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Laura Stark and Miss Elizabeth Kealing; a grandson, Harold Kealing, and three greatgrandchildren. Funeral services will be held at 1:30 p. m. Saturday in her home and at 2 p. m. in the First Evangelical Church. Burial will be in Crown Hill.

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Marks 25 Years In Phone Service

TODAY MARKS the 25th anniversary in the telephone career of Mrs. Nellie Bakemeyer, long distance operator for the Indiana

Bell Telephone Co. She began work as an operator for the former Central Union Telephone Co. in Ben Davis, and was later transferred to the main office in Indianapolis, working as a local operator. She recently was transferred to long distance. Her home is at 257 Eastern Ave.

MRS. JOHN MATTOX DIES AT NOBLESVILLE

Mrs. John Mattox, formerly of Indianapolis, died at the Hamilton County Hospital at Noblesville yesterday. She was 48. Widow of John Mattox, former grocer on Roosevelt Ave. here, Mrs. Mattox is survived by her father, Ernest Clover, 2409 Central Ave.; a brother, Reed, also of Indianapolis, and two brothers, Robert and Oscar Clover of Noblesville. Funeral services will be held at the Evans and Godby Funeral Home at Noblesville tomorrow at 2 p. m. Burial will* be in Hinkle Church Cemetery at Noblesville.

EDWIN PRIEST DIES SUDDENLY

Heart Attack Is Fatal; Carpenter by Trade; Born in State.

Edwin Clyde Priest, 59-year-old carpenter, died yesterday of a heart attack in his home, 2257 Gordon St. Mr. Priest was employed by the A. T. Kelley Contracting Co. He was born in Bainbridge, and had lived in Indianapolis since 1912. Survivors are his wife, Myrtle I.; two daughters, Mrs. Goldie Smith and Mrs. Roxie Schuster; a son, Claude, and a brother, R. C. Priest, all of Indianapolis. Funeral services will be held at 10:30 a. m. Saturday in the Royster & Askin Funeral Home. Burial will be at Brick Chapel in Putnam County.

OBSERVATORY TO CLOSE PASADENA, Cal, Jan. 1 (U. P.). —Mt. Palomar Observatory, future home of the 200-inch telescope, the world’s largest, will be closed Jan. 15 for the duration of the war, it was announced officially today by the California Institute of Technology.

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Parents accompanying children attending the regular Saturday morning “kiddie sessions” at Rollerland skating rink will be admitted free starting Saturday. Regular skating sessions are held from 7 to 11 nightly and 1 to 5 p. m. Saturdays, Sundays and holidays. Earl Gordon at the Hammond organ furnishes musical accompaniment.

|, Novena Toes cave petual Novena held each Friday in 8t. Joan of Arc Catholic Church has

been annnounced by the Rev. Fr, Edwin V. Sahm. The new times will be at 6 p. m. and 7:30 p. m., instead "lot 6:30 p. m. and 7:30 p. m.,

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