Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 August 1942 — Page 10

his father had left,

AYBOY DODGE |_

IS DEAD AT 43

Death Follows Arrest After “Trying to Break Into Neighbor’s House.

DETROIT, Aug. 14 (U. P)— John Duyal Dodge, 43, playboy son

manufacturer, John PF. Dodge, died lastnight from a cere-

into a woman’s bedroom. Dodge; who once had a $1,700,000 . Inheritance, died in a public hospital. His wife, Dora MacDonald} Kline Dodge, and a family physi-| cian, Dr. Edward K. Sarmichael, were with him. ~ Police arrested Dodge Tuesday night on charge of breaking and entering. Prosecutor William E. Dowling said apparently what hap- - pened was this: : Dodge and his wife were at separate parties. Mrs. Dodge went - next door to the home of Howard EB. Lange to borrow ice cubes and ound him drinking with Mignon ~ Fontaine, 32, who roomed at the Lange house. Quarrels With Wife Mrs. Dedge and her husband quarreled and after a scuffle, she returned to her party. Miss Fontaine fled to her bedroom. Police, answering a call from a neighbor, found he had tried to force the window of Miss Fontaine's bedroom. He was removed to a receiving hospital, in a coma. Mr. Dowling said he believed the excitement was responsible for his condition. Lange declined to press a complaint, and the breaking and entering charge was dropped.

Cut Off in Will"

His first marriage, to Marie . O’Connor, in February, 1918, made his father so angry that he threatened to disinherit him. His father died in 1920, and cut him off with $150 a month for life. Dodge threatened to contest the will in court, ‘ finally accepted a $1,700,000 settle- ~ ment. ~~ In March, 1922, he served five days in the house of corrcction for desertion, and since had largely dis- - sipated his fortune in lawsuits and bad investments. Last February, he tried to get more of the fortune and the state supreme court ruled he should have the $150 a month he originally was bequeathed, , His first~ wife divorced him in June, 1933. A few weeks later, he and Dora MacDonald Kline were - married.

where

field, Hawaii.

ers,

Pvt. Lundy

Missing J

LOCAL YOUTH

IS UNREPORTED

Field.

Pvt. William Lundy Was Stationed At Clark

The war department has in-

formed Mr. and Mrs. Frank Stites, 2322 N. Gale st.. that Pvt. William E. Lundy is missing in action somein the Philippines. Lundy made his home with Mr. and Mrs. Stites before entering the service as a member of the 14th bombardment squadron. p He is a member of the St. Frances de Sales church and attended Cathedral high school. ployed at the Basca Manufacturing Co.

Pvt.

He was em-

In 1939 he enlisted in the air

corps and was stationed at Hickam Two months before Pearl Harbor he was transferred to Clark field in the Philippines and since the beginning of the war Mr. and Mrs. Stites have had no word from him.

Pvt. Lundy has two older broth-

Alexander,

who is stationed with the army air corps at Colorado Springs, Colo., and Robert J., ‘an R. O. T. C. instructor at Purdue.

D. S. C. GIVEN TO PARENTS NEW YORK, Aug. 14 (U. P).—

Mr. and Mrs. Russell M. Church, parents of Lieut. Russell M. Church Jr., Indiana university’s first wardead of the present conflict, received the Distinguished Service Cross and soldier's medal here yesterday at a posthumous presentation.

AY

PRICES

SLASHED!

ON OUR $50,000 STOCK OF ZEISS, LEITZ, EASTMAN, AGFA, DEFENDER, EDWAL, IALTY F-R,

ALBERT SPEC

VICTOR, WABASH, CRAIG, SIMMONSOMEGA, SOLAR, E ETC.

PHOTOGRAPHIC

Supplies and Equipment

SPECIAL?

Our Entire Stock of Chemicals Drastieally - Reduced

Must Go! As Much As

‘We're cramped for space!

753%

To make more

room we are SLASHING PRICES ON PHOTO-

GRAPHIC SUPPLIES and EQUIPMENT.

SAVE UP TO 17569 on

YOU chemicals, including

nationally advertised brands of DEVELOPERS, FIXERS, HARDENERS and other needs, ready

for use or ready to mix

“This sale also includes CASES,

ALUMINUM REFLECTORS,

in your own solutions.

ENLARGERS, CAMERA FLASH

BULBS, TRIPODS, MOVIE SCREENS, REWINDS, EXPOSURE METERS, FILTERS, FILTER HOLD-

- ERS, SUN SHADES.

_ Save on PAPERS, including ENLARGING PA-

PERS in all sizes, surfa

ces, weights,

Real values available in DARKROOM EQUIPMENT . . . EASELS, CUTTING BOARDS, DEVELOPING TANKS, CONTACT PRINTERS, PAPER SAFES, PHOTO TIMERS, SAFE LIGHTS,

TRAYS, FUNNELS, SPONGES,

FILM CLIPS, HANGERS

GRADUATES, and ROLLERS, PRINT

TONGS, BLOTTERS and BLOTTER BOOKS, ELECTRIC FILM DRYERS, SCALES, THER-

MOMETERS, ote.

R= UP NOW and SAVE! OPEN SATURDAY TILL 8 P. M.

LINCOLN 5

01 W. WASH. ST, = = 57

JEWELRY .& LOAN COMPANY

TOANS 1% INE. Fer Mo. to 1% INT. Per Mo. on

Per M

0. 3

|SEES SURPLUS {OF U, S. WOMEN

Census Official Says Loss

‘will take place early in September,

Of 500,000 Men Would Create Excess. CHICAGO, Aug. 14

of the census bureau, said today that at the end of the war the United States may have a surplus of marriageable women for the first time in Listory. In a paper presented before the 21st annual institute of the society for social research at the University of Chicago, Hauser said that if the United States should lose 500,000 men a surplus of marriageable women would result. ®The surplus of millions of women in Burope after the last war led to fairly wide-spread discussions of

gamy and giving it legal- status,” he said. Need Demographers

Hauser called attention to the need for demographers—those who make statistical studies of population. “The writers of the treaty of Versailles did not include a demographer,” he said. “It may be that the winning of the peace, which in every respect is as important as the winning of the war, will in large measure depend on the recognition and the resolution of the ‘population problem.’ ” Hauser cited increased divorces and difficulties in controlling migrant workers as other possible post-war problems. He advocated “wise and effective” national policies to prevent the recession of the migrant worker “Irom a role of respectability and importance to the role of ‘okies’ and other destitute depression migrants.” « “It is possible that the control of internal population movements may be a major national problem in the post-war order and may Dprofoundly affect the general welfare of the American people,” he said.

Sees Less Marriages

While passage of the selective service act pushed the marriage rate to a mew high, “full participation in hard war probably will drop marriage rate to a new low,” he said. After the war, the immediate effect will be a sharp increase in the marriage and birth rates, he added, but those increases probably will not be of long duration. He offered statistics showing that the monthly rate of marriages in June, 1940, when the selective service was introduced, reached 14.1 per 100,000 population. This dropped to 12.0 in July and went to a new peak of 14.7 in September, when the act was passed.

PLAN REGISTRY OF WOMEN MONTREAL, Aug. 14 (U. P).— National registration of Canada’s women power for war industries

Elliott M. Little, director of national selective service, revealed today.

BRITISH AREAS BOMBED LONDON, Aug. 14 (U, P.)—A joint communique by the air and home security ministries today said a small number of enemy planes last night bombed points in East Anglia. There were no casualties

Ww. P)—| Philip M. Hauser, assistant director] |

the” advisability of permitting poly-|

It’s

sometimes very compensating, this life of the clown. Ask

Felix Adler, one of 100 cutups with the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey circus, who here gets a caress from Estelle Butler, eques-

trienne. and night performances.

The circus comes to Indianapolis Thursday for afternoon

|garet B. ha :

{resident o

‘| Gary; tap caughters, Mrs. O. B.

F. A, RAMSEY'S RITES ARRANGED

Retired Horse Trainer Was Native of Kentucky;

Here 18 Years.

Franklin Anderson Ramsey, retired horse trainer, who lived at 3001 Washington blvd, will be buried tomorrow in Crown Hill following services at 2 p. m. in the Harry W. Moore Peace chapel. Mr. Ramsey died yesterday at his home. He was 87. A native ‘of Clark county, Kentucky, he came to Indianapolis in 1912 and resided in Indianapolis 18 years. Surviving are the widow, Mrs. Sarah Strous Ramsey; three daughters, Mrs. Harry Brann, Mrs. Howard Barriger and Mrs. Harry Frame of Indianapolis; a son, Edwin L. of Edgewood, and three grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.

DAVID PIERCE, 4, DIES; SERVICES TOMORROW

David Pierce, 4, son of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Pierce of Evansville,

formerly of Indianapolis, died yes-{

terday in Evansville. Funeral services will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the home of Mrs. | Blanche Parr in Lebanon. : ‘The boy’s father is manager of the Evansville branch of Foster and

and damage was slight.

Messick. -

Deaths i in » Indiana

ANDREWS=—MTrs. Sarah Ricks, 82. Survivors: Sons, Luther, Virgil: daughters, Mrs. Henry Bare, Mrs. D. L. Vessells, Mrs. Noah Bodkin, Miss Ethel Ricks; brother, Cyrus Davis; sister, Mrs. S. M. Karn.

ANGOLA—Barbara Richardson, 1. vivors: Parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richardson.

BIRDSEYE—Benny Newton, 54: SurFives: Wife, Clara; brother, Samuel Newon.

CHURUBUSCO—Arthur Fogel, 62. Survivors: Wife, Edna; son, George; daughters, Mrs, ‘Earl Richards, Mrs. Lois Dehnert, Edna Fogel; sister, Mrs.. Cora Wappes. DECATUR—Mrs. Mary Eyanson,. 84. Survivors: Sons, Lewis, Don, Frank, Raymond Eyanson; daughters, Mrs. Mary Fetters, Mrs. Charles Fetters; sisters, Mrs. Veda Weber, Mrs. Rudolph Weiland. EVANSVILLE—William Cartwright, 40. Survivors: | Wife, Betty; sons, Robert, Stanley Cartwright; brothers, Bethel, Earl Cartwright; “sister, Mrs. Staley Henshaw; parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Cartwright. GAS CITY—Harry Beers, 71. Survivors: Sons, Raymond, Henry; daughters, Mrs. Anna Lanning, Mrs. John Webb; brother, Thomas Beers. HUDSON—Roy Hill, 53. Survivors: Wife, Ortha; daughters, Mrs. Lena Christlieb, Mrs. Reza Gingrich, Mrs. Freida Entrikin, Misses Erma, Glenna Hill; son, Victor. . HUNTINGTON—Frank Glass. Survivors: Son, Fritz; brother, James Glass; sister, Miss Dorcas Glass,

sp ALLY ILE Mrs,

r

Sur Joseph

Chester: Boszor,

P D S

FA

“The Dentist You Can Trust— Who Trusts You” 26 Years of Careful Dentistry

ROOM 30(—3rd FLOOR ROOSEVELT BLDG.

Cur ay sdliingtan & Illinois

TR I Hotel) :

MARION—MTrs. Survivor: OWENSVILLE—Miss Mary Newman, 16. Survivors: Parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Newman; grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Anderson. PORTLAND—Mrs. Josephine Hiester, 63. Survivors: Brothers, George, John, Frank Mitchell; sisters, Mrs. Harriett Davis, Mrs. Charles Davis. SOUTH WHITLEY—Clarence Shafer, 44. Survivors: Wife, Eva; son, Pauldon Shafer. STENDAL—William Richardson, 72. Survivors: Daughter, Mrs. Doris Wineinger; brothers, Joseph, J. T. Asher. - WHITING—Mrs. Anna Klapak, 60. Survivors: Husband, Joseph; son, Andrew; daughters, Mrs. Helen Pishkur, Mrs. Ann Franchi, Mrs. Mary Evans; brother, John Jimay

Maggie Thompson, 61. Brother, Jesse Myers.

Those itchy blisters, tiny cracks between toes, may mean dread Athlete's Foot! - «

Get glorious soothi ief from thattorturing with sin bing reli d HV- . cb. 2 od N foe Reaches

ay Te contact. ghee safe. M HV-, ves ELE {rerio 222...35¢and

ct Now on My Popular :

NY

|

ROMPT

arately.

1 out of 2 get it!

CE ETE WARNING!

Aching, Decayed Teeth Are Nature's Warning to You That You Need

Armihice Day Casualty Is Dead

A SOLDIER WHO was shot down on a European battlefield on the morning of the armistice halting World War I died yesterday In the U. 8S. Veterans’ hospital here. He was William E. Bauer of Portland, one of 12 soldiers decorated with the gold eagle by Gen. John J. Pershing.’ Mr. Bauer, who served 13 months overseas and was attached to the 26th balloon company, was 48.

CONTINUE CASES OF

14 HELD IN GAMING

The cases of 14 men charged with visiting ‘a gaming house in the 1500 block, N. Illinois st., were continued to Monday by Gause, special judge in Municipal court 4 yesterday. Claude M. Worley, former chief of police, charged with operating a gaming house, will be tried sep-

Harry

son’s Home in \ + dersburg. en «rices for Mrs. Mar-| = 1516 Edward ave., 4 at 2 p. m. today at cjirie church, Veeders7as to be in the Vee~ ery. who was 82 snd a ndianapolis 22 years, died at th “1ome of a son, John| S. Reed, 2, Ei iin "She was ‘member of the United we rch here. ire the son at whose “l and two other sons, “est A. Reed, Muncie, #2, McKinley E. Reed,

Punefa were to. be 2 the Osbo:: mF burg. Buri 1

dersburg or “Mrs. Rav 1

Hanger, Ingi napolis, and Mrs. R. E. Furr, vis ersburg, and a sister living in Vox SIShure.

RITES 4 DNDAY FOR 5. |) /LVIA RAMEY

PY , Evelyn Ramey of t., died yesterday at

The funeyz | is to ‘be held at the home at 10 £. m. Monday, with burial at the | G eenwood, Ind., cemetery. 4 Sarviving u 2 her husband, Woodrow W.; = sb), Robert Wilson; her father, Robe iI. Gidcumb; a brother, J. B. Gideun! and two sisters, Mrs. Marie Wests} ld and Mrs. Pauline Burton, alll) |Indianapolis.

1 AFT QUTPUT 2=0T 2 BILLION

ON, Aug. 14 (U. P.). industry produced of planes, engines and opellers in the first six months p: 1942, exceeding the entire 1941 oi put, the Aeronautical chamber of ;cramerce reported. today. | Last years $1,250,000,000, Col. John i the Trade | jus

‘oduction cost about ie report said. Jouett, president of aciation, said “this Te Zion of American in¢action should and :mpress the peoples ith the inevitability nations victory.”

doubtless Wil of the worl of final uni ; bane, > \

President savelt’s regular Friday morniz;¥ nress conference, No

He-said he will ask a change of venue from Judge Gause.

reason was Jgven.

SI

a Cn

of Our Remaining Stock of Summer

—THREE BIG PRICE GROUPS . No. |

Formerly

$1.88 to $2.19

Formerly

$2.19 to $2.99

Formerly

$2.99 to $3.99

—Lovely 1 and 2-Pe. Styles

Buy several at these prices to finish out the summer season. All favored summer styles and colors!

oir LATER CE oT CER

has passed its prime.

ENTAL ERVICE|

ILY BUDGET PLAN! 0! ONE account, 0! weekly or 0) Tonthly J Jeyment

the whole situation? |

of Cars which are Really Nee to Replace that Old Car than § 9 1

; ONSIDER the reasons for presen. ; C purchase of new cars. Ties

They were not # meant to handicap 0 \

They were simply meant to see that 5 into the hands of those who needed 3 m= as their needs demanded.

With such a car, you travel safely, © start fresh with brand-new tires on uo life from them. For dependable per. a car is frequently far more of an as<

Why not drop in on your Buick ‘der -

Rationing Rules were not mM 23nt to Prevent Replacement Nee! 2d. It Sometimes Helps More “ry to Keep it Running

1 1H

to owner and thence out of service 6 secome much-needed scrap metal.

|S

a

If your car serves a really necesss © purpose, Buick dealers are prepared to make immediate delivery © - brand-new, gas-thrifty, dependable new models built for the purpose seeing you through the duration.

e best use of gasoline and oil, sels designed to get maximum ; mance of necessary jobs, such * to the country than one which

Ie

~

K yours eligible fe buy -

“ules and regulations governing the.

+s whose cars fill necessary pur-

s now built and ready for sale got

and talk over all details of

Are you included in this list?

ARE YOU directly of y or indirectly at fn the production of war — war? ® Prosecution of the ® ARE YOU « pj ysician, . Nurse, vete, ” Surgeon, farmer? "Orion, clergyman or

® your cg i re fire or Pg pis work or the like? a ® ARE YOU owner of o taxicab op oth or iat means of ‘pubic trans 8 2

EE

lyr

COMMUNITY MOTORS, : 37-57 West 38th. St. Indianapolis, Ind.

Indianapolis, The