Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 November 1942 — Page 5

OSTAL CLERK

* DIES AT AGE 47)

! Julius F. Carteaux, Il Two Months; Funeral to % Be Monday.

Julius F. Carteaux, 47-year-old postal employee, who lived at 738 N. Emerson ave., died last night in the U. 8S. Veterans’ hospital. He was ill two months. Mr. Carteaux was employed as a clerk in the finance department of the postal service, He was born in Pierceton, Ind, and had lived here 22 years. A member of the American Legion, Federal post 62, in world war I. He belonged to the Federation of Postoffice Employees. Survviors are the yife, Iva; a son, Norbert Careaux of Indianapo-

This attractive English brick Home located at 40 E. 56th st. was sold recently by Gladys Cook and Hazel Howe to Frank Derry. Ford Mr. and Mrs. Elmer R. Krueger from Lieut.

Woods & Co., realtors, handled the transaction.

FURRIER, HERE

45 YEARS, DIES

Make-Believe Characters to. Parade

This white brick colonial in Brendenwood has been pur

Alex’ Metzger. gilt

Savage of Atkinson & Co. represented both buyer and. seller.

The Jack C. Carr Co. sold this five room brick Toms at 402 S. to William Herman Graham for the Builders Realty Co. ‘Three other similar homes on the street are for sale.

GUT ‘FRILLS’ IN

Hamilton ave.

CIVILIAN GOODS

Printer Dies

SET 4-DAY REUNION 3% FOR. SCOTTISH RITE

The 77th semi-annual convoca= tion and reunion of the Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite, Valley of Indianapolis, will be held four days starting Tuesday. : 8 Melvin Maynard Johnson, Boston most puissant sovereign grand come mander, will be the guest speaker at a banquet which will close the cons vocation Friday. -

In California RAYMOND W. THOMAS, a

former partner of the Thomas & Evans Printing Co., died Tuesday in Los Angeles, Cal, after an illness of a year. He was 50. Mr. Thomas was born in Indianapolis and lived at 2516 Brookside ave. until he was employed by the Los Angeles HeraldExaminer as a linotype operator three years ago. He was a member of the Masonic order and the Sahara Grotto, Survivors are his wife, . Mrs. Zula Thomas; a ‘son, Raymond O., both of Indianapolis, and a sister, Mrs. Emil Seidel of North Hollywood, Cal.

‘lis; two sisters, Mrs. Herman DePew ‘of Avilla and Mrs. Ronald H. Jones of Kendallville, and two. brothers, William L. of Avilla and Eugene V. of Kendallville. ; Funeral services and burial will be in Kendallville Monday morning.

| Byrnes Seeks New Curb on Production Waste to Get

War Workers.

WASHINGTON, Nov. 14 (U. P.). —Another surgical operation on the few remnants of civilian economy still thought to be non-essential was undertaken by home front leaders today to release scarce material and manpower for war work. The “frills and wasteful practices” will be lopped off this time:

Owner of Shop. on Circle; Active in Temple and

Organizations.

David Rosenberg, 58, owner of the Rosenberg furriers, 116 Monument || circle, died this morning at Meth- | i odist hospital after a short illness. An Indianapolis resident for 45 years, Mr. Rosenberg was in business here for 42 years. He was vice president of the Indieng Furriers association.

225 Savings Ll LORN ASSN

NOIANAPOLIS INDIANR

Samuel V. Bevington Samuel V. Bevington, a former Indianapolis resident and assistant superintendent of the Cincinnati division of the Big Four raliroad, died Thursday at his home in Cincinnat}, 0. He had been ill three weeks. He was 69.

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Mr. Bevington entered the employ of the Big Four when he was 19 and served in many cities. He was stationed in Indianapolis in 1903 and lived in Cincinnati since 1920. He was a native of Harrison, O. Survivors are the wife, Molly, a son, Richard, of Cincinnati, and a nephew, William Bevington of Indianapolis. pe services will here at 2:30 ..m. Monday in the Kirby funeral Po Burial will be in Holy Cross cemetery.

William C. Braun Funeral services for William C. Braun, 47 S. Tremont st., a resident of the West side more than 40

years will be held at 2 p. m. Monday at the Royster & Askin mortuary, 2310 W, Washington st. The Rev. Basil Stultz, pastor of the West Park Christian church, will conduc} the funeral services and burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. Mr. Braun died yesterday after a brief illness. He was 73. A retired Baltimore & Ohio rail-

road machinist, he was a member|

of the B. & O. Veterans’ club, Knights of Pythias and Odd Fellows lodges and the West Park Christian church, | Survivors are the wife, Grace; a sister, Mrs, Scott Davidson of Hillsboro, Ill, and two brothers, Emil of Madisonville, Ky., and Adolph of Waco, Tex,

C. L. WOLFANGER, BARBER, IS DEAD

George L. Wolfanger, 1147 Shelby st., operator of a South side barber

shop and resident of Indianapolis more than 50 years, died yesterday in City hospital following a short illness. He was 62.

He was a native of Madison, Ind. Survivors, are his mother, Mrs. Frances ,Wolfanger; two sisters, Mrs. Florence Healey and Mrs. Tillie Nimz, and two brothers, John Wolfanger and Maurice Wolfanger. Services will be Monday at 8:30 a. m. in the Robert W. Stirling funeral home and at 9 o'clock in St. Patrick’s Catholic church. Burial will be in Holy Cross.

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Mr. Rosenberg was a board member of Beth-El Temple, Zionist or-

ganization, deputy of the Progressive Order of the West, and a member of B'nai B'rith, Abraham Jacob’s lodge, Indianapolis Aide association and Beth-El Men's club.

Funeral Tomorrow

Survivors are his wife, Esther; two sons, .Joseph of Indianapolis and Arthur, second class storekeeper in the navy, stationed at Peru, and one grandchild. Funeral services will be conducted at 1:30 -p. m. tomorrow at the Aaron-Ruben funeral home,

and=Cantor Myro Glass will officiate. Burial will be in AzrasAchaim cemetery.

Harry Ammerman

Harry D. Ammerman, who was 51, and a lifelong resident of Indianapolis, died yssterday at his home, 315 N. Jefferson ave. Until taken ill four years ago Mr. Ammerman was a brakeman on the Big Four railroad. Survivors beside the wife, Laura, are a daughter, Mrs, Charles Baughn; his father, Isaac N., a brother, Gilbert, all of Indianapolis. Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. Monday in the Harry W. Moore Peace Chapel. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery.

State Deaths

ANDERSON—James G. Bright, 51. Surfivors: Wife and two children. BLOOMINGTON—Peter K. Hutchinson, $1 i Survivors: Wife, Bessie; and brother, a Miss Eva DeBruler, 72. Survivors: Brothels, Marvin, Jay and Ellis. CARMEL — Mrs. Wayne Hopkins, 20. Survivors: Husband and one child. COLUMBUS—Dwight Crossland, 12. Survivors: Parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dempsey Crossland. EVANSVILLE — Howard E. Hartley, 28. Survivors: Wife, parents and a sister. GREENCASTLE — Mrs. Susie Earhart Bruner, 68. Survivors: Husband, Charles; four daughters and three sons.

HUNTINGBURG—Ben Fischer, 73. Survivors: i ters. LEBANON-—Henry Thomas Baker, 76. Survivors: Sons, Dyal; daughters, Msr. Opal White, Mrs. Minttie Quinley and Mrs. Doreas Brown. NEW ALBANY-—-Mrs. Flora Gray, 80. Survivors: Son, George: daughters, Mrs. Ethel Walkup and Mrs, E. Merrivan Coe. JEYMOTR--J, Uhron. L. Davis, 65. Survivor: Wife. iy Mary Shoemaker Christopher, 87. Survivors: Sons, Fred, William, Herman and Albert; daughters, Mrs. Henry Bretthauer, Mrs. Osterman and Mrs, Edward Ude. Ralph Vv. Williams, 49. UNION CITY -— Mrs. Sara Catherine Cain, 75. Survivors: Three daughters, two sons and a brother. VINCENNES—Emil C. Marter, 70. vivors: Wife and three children.

" ELECTED FRESHMAN HEAD Bernard “Pete” Davis, Anderson freshman, is newly elected president of the freshman class at Butler university. Other officers are Shirley Peabody, vice president; Ruth Marie’ Ralph, secretary, and

Sur-

ml li

Gordon Tanner, treasurer.

~ By William Ferguson

AS

d\ 3

and Azras-Achaim; a &

1943| & N. Meridian st. Rabbi Israel Chodos

Wife, oné son and three daugh-|-

. one pound air pressure. The engine rides on a three ton truck, hidden behind the cowcatcher. Eighteen men worked 11 months to make the train which took 3400 yards of cloth, 1200 gallons of paint and 18 miles of tape.

More than 50 inflated figures, together with bands, over 100

RED RANGER, Lightning, Snoopy Sam and other makebelieve characters will greet children from the windows in the balloon train of the. Christmas “Parade of Giants” Tuesday night.The gigantic train, known as the “War Bond Special,” weighs six tons, is inflated with 50,000 cubic feet of air but carries only

clowns and Santa Claus, will line

up in the parade starting at 7:30

p. m. from the memorial plaza. The procession will ge down Pennsylvania st. to Washington, west on Washington to Illinois st. north on Illinois to Market, east on Markef to the Circle, around the Circle to Meridian st. and north on Meridian to the plaza. The spectacle is brought here _by the the Wm, H. Block Co.

WASHINGTON

A Weekly Sizeup by the Washington Staff of the Scripps-Howard Newspapers

(Continued from Page One)

rules so that 150 names on a discharge petition could bring a bill to the floor for a vote. Now it takes 218 names—a majority of the house. NO COALITION: Republicans shy away from any out-and-out alliance with reactionary Southern Democrats, fear they would have all

to lose, nothing to gain. . n E-4 ” » ” s

LIQUOR RATIONING: It has started (on a state basis) and may spread. Washington state liquor board, to conserve dwindling supply, has ordered one-quart-a-week limit. Customers formerly could buy three quarts a day. 2 8 8 : 2 2 = Tax lawyers think they've found a way to beat the $25,000 salory limit imposed by Stabilization Director Byrnes. It involves participation in earnings in lieu of salary, is said to be particularly attractive to movie people. ” » 8 ’ ” ” » - OFFICE OF WAR INFORMATION claims a victory in publication of the story of Lieut. Gen. Mark W. Clark’s mission to Africa. Before OWI started trying to open news channels, bottled up as “military information.” ® ” ” ” ” ” Tire inspection, with all its accompanying bookeeping, may hit a snag in the ‘shortage of garage attendants. Some localities report insufficient - repairmen to handle normal business, none for tire inspection. Maryland has relaxed its annual checkup on vehicles because of the mechanics shortage. - # 8 = : } 2 8 =»

Family Row Shaping Up

LOOK FOR A SHARP battle, between old-line G. O. P. and former isolationist elements on the one hand and Willkie forces on the cther, over. selection of new Republican national chairman. First group, including Dewey, Bricker, Taft forces and the Mec-Cormick-Chicago Tribune bloc, wants Werner Schroeder, Illinois committeeman. Willkie crowd is out to stop him, apparently favors Committeeman Kenneth Bradley of Connecticut. Committee meets Dec. 7 at St. Louis. Before then feelers will be put out for compromise candidates. ; ” o 8 ‘ 2 2 » Young Democrats in the house want their eongressional campaign committee reorganized; hope to have it staffed with dynamic leaders before the next election. It’s the only chance, they think, for Democrats to keep control. : 2 82 8 ® 8 = Filibuster is onin the senate to kill the anti-poll-tax bill.’ Southerners who oppose it know they'll lose on a roll-call: think they can talk it to death because ne other important legislation: is waiting

he’s generalissimo of the opposition, ® ” 2 =» » 2 CONGRESSIONAL LEADERS aren't sold on Republican plan for a joint committee on the conduct of the war, are worried about President Roosevelt's left-handed indorsement in a letter to Senator Vandenberg last December. House Democrats remember that Woodrow Wilson Seiad a similar plan, think he was right. n 8 #2 =» Pride of Ty marines, as expressed by one of them: “A guy who used to be a music (bugler) got himself a second lieutenant’s commission in the army. 1 say it's a demotion.”

LOCHNER AT INDIANA u - DEER GETS A BREAK

such exciting tales were

action. Senator Tom Connally of Texas won't filibuster, he says, but

DELAY 435-YEAR DRAFT A MONTH

Changes Due in Congress Results in Later Call For Older Men.

Induction of men who have reached the age of 45 since the time of their registration and have not since been inducted into the armed forces has been postponed 30 days, Col. Robinson Hitchcock, state selective service director, announced today. Col. Hitchcock said that instructions to that effect had been sent

‘to boards and induction stations in

Indiana. The order, given on authority of national = selective service headquarters, was based on proposed legislation which may amend the selective training and service act.

the passage of any proposed legislation it 1s desired to postpone temporarily the induction of men who might otherwise come under any early congressional action.” Nothing prohibits a registrant whose induction is postponed from volunteering for service, Col. Hitchcock said.

RED CROSS WITH AEF WASHINGTON, Nov. 14 (U. P). —Fourteen American Red Cross fleldmen have arrived in North Africa with U. S. invasion forces, the Red Cross disclosed today. All are seasoned workers who have been with the troops to which they are assigned for several months.

MACHINIST . 181, W. South. LI-6212,

YOUR ROOF!

Two Requirements for a Good Roof Are—

Officials hesitate on being too specific -because of possible “runs” on existing supplies, but they listed wing-tipped shoes, monogrammed towels, laundry deliveries to homes and the like as frills that will go,

Chinese

Seeks Simplification

The surgery was ordered by James F. Byrnes, econmic stabilization director, in a directive to War Production Chief Donald M. Nelson. He said he wanted “a vigorous program of simplification and standardization of production and distribution not merely to eliminate frills and wasteful practices but, wherever necessary and advantag-

eous, to concentrate on the production of relatively few types of goods

prices.” WPB officials said Nelson approved the program before it was announced by Byrnes. They said it would be integrated closely with the new controlled materials plan for maximum utilization of all scarce supplies. It also will be tied in with a program started several months ago fo concentrate production of essential civilian goods in a minimum number of plants, releasing the remainder for direct war production.

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