Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 June 1943 — Page 4
peal Lithographing Firm - lll Two Weeks.
Funeral services will be conducted | |
prtuary for Earl L. Eckard, 7162 N. E nnsylvania st., who died yesterday |
St. Vincent's hospital after -a fwo-week illness. Burial will be in Drown Hill. A native of Columbus, O., Mr.
kard spent his youth in Wheeling, |
‘Va. He came to Indianapolis 30 years ago. He was the IndianBpolis manager of the Michigan thographing Co. of Grand Rapids, ch. He was a member of the Optimist ub of Indianapolis, the Indianap®lis Athletic club, Mystic Tie lodge No. 398, F. and A. M. and the Scottish Rite. He was a 32d degree Mason. : “Survivors are the widow, Mrs. Frances Meyers Eckard; a daughter, Linda Jane Eckard; his mother, Mrs. Lena Eckard of Wheeling, W. Va., and a sister, Miss Estella Eckird of Wheeling, W. Va.
mei
rs. - Hester Dolen
Services for Mrs. Hester A. Dolen. resident of Indianapolis for 54 ars, will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow in the Conkle funeral home. al’ will be in Crown Hill. . Mrs. Dolen, a native of Lebanon, died Sunday night in her home, 40 N. Belmont ave. She was 69. urvivors are a son, Andréw F. Polen, Indianapolis; two sisters, Mrs. Grace Fear, Indianapolis, and Mrs. Ida Sheets, Arkadelphia, Ark.: three brothers, John Montgomery, San Antonio, Tex.; Jesse Montgomery, Indianapolis, and Ora Montgomery, San Jose, Cal.: two grandchildren and .one great‘grandchild.
® Grant L. Huffman Grant L. Huffman, 4745 English ‘ave, died yesterday in his home after an illness of a’ year and a half, He was 62. .A resident of Indianapolis 12 ears, he was a native of Clark ‘county. He was a member of the Odd Fellows lodge and the Presbyferian church. Funeral services will be at 10 a. m. fThursday in the Harry W. Moore chapel. Survivors are the widow, Mrs. Grace Huffman; a son, the Rev. Russell A. Huffman of Minneapolis, fiMinn, and two grandchildren,
re Yule Season
For Red Cross!
‘By Science Service
* WASHINGTON, June 22,—Spe- | elal Christmas packages for Amer- { can prisoners of war and civilian Internees are now being prepared at Red Cross food packaging cen- | ters, it is announced in Prisoners | of War Bulletin. . The first issue of the bulletin, | published by the American Na- | tional Red Cross for next of kin of American prisoners of war and folvilian internees and sent free : of charge, is now in the mails. |. The early preparation of the |"Christmas packages is necessary | because it takes four to six months for them to reach the recipients. : Contents will be announced later. : + The standard 11-pound food | package which goes every week from the Red Cross to each of our Prisoners of war is planned to furnish the maximum of nourishing | food to supplement the rations |'supplied them by the detaining power. It contains biscuits, cheese, chocoléite bars of the army D ration type, cigaretes, coffee concentrate, corned beef, dried fruit, liver paste, whole powdered milk, oleomargarine, orange concen- | trate, i luncheon meat, salmon
pressure, soothes, {
4 this quick relief. Lifte hions the o” sensitive LE rifle, CG A
Representative of
Services were to be held at 1:30 p. m. today at the G. H. Herrmann funeral home for John B. Ray, former state deputy fire marshal, who died at his home Saturday. Burial was to be in Crown Hill with- the Rev. Ford Porter, pastor of the Berean Missionary Baptist church, officiating.
CITY RESIDENT ~ 11 YEARS DEAD
Mrs. Mary Ristow Otto Survived by Husband, - Son, Daughter.
Mrs. Mary Ristow Otto, a resident of Indianapolis for 71 years, died yesterday in her home, 326 Buckingham dr. after an illness of eight months. Survivors are the husband Charles W, H. Otto; a son, Carl R.
and four sisters, Mrs. Ida Vahle, Mrs. Anna Libking, Mrs. Emma Olson and Mrs. Francis Siek, and one grandson, Jimmy 'C. Otto.
fond a daughter, Alice L. Otto,
Ezra Knoop
- Services for Ezra Knoop, 5035 Park ave., will be at 4 p. m. tomorrow in the Flanner & Buchanan mortuary. Burial will be in Five Points cemetery in New Bethel. Mr. Knoop, who was 45, died here
of two and one-half years. He was assistant secretary of the Union Trust Co. Born in New Bethel, July 26, 1897, he had lived in Marion county all his life. He attended New Bethel high school and Franklin college and was graduated from the Benjamin Harrison law school.. Survivors are the widow, Mrs. Minnie S. Knoop; a daughter, Miss Elinor Ann Knoop; three sisters, Mrs.- Herman Cochran, Mrs. Harry Timmerman and Mrs. Theodore Waterman, all of Indianapolis, and a brother, Albert Knoop 6f Greenfield.
sin
William Bertrue Masters
Funeral services will be conducted at 1 p. m. tomorrow in the Flanner & Buchanan mortuary for William Bertrue Masters, who died Sunday in his home, 1125% E. Washington st. The Rev. L. G. Trent, pastor of the Woodruff Place Baptist church, will officiate. Burial will be in Crown Hill. Mr. Masters, who was 61, was employed as a carpenter by the Indianapolis Brass and Aluminum Co. Born in Tippecanoe county, Sept. 16, 1881, he had lived in Indianapolis since he was 20. Survivors are the widow, Mrs. Bertha Sampson Masters; a daughter, Mrs. Dorothy Jenkins, Frankfort; a son, John C. Masters, Indianapolis, and four grandchildren.
URGES FULL FOOD POWERS FOR DAVIS
WASHINGTON, June 22 (U. P.). —Rep. August H. Andresen (R. Minn.) in a speech prepared for
that full authority over production, handling and distribution of food, be given to War Food Administrator Chester C. Davis. : “The wintry blast of next January,” he warned, American people subsisting on rollbacks and subsidies instead of food, unless congress acts at once to correct the damage now being done to food production and distribution by utopian schemers in the OPA and other new deal agencies. “When famine strikes home next winter in New York City and other large consuming areas, rollbacks and subsidies won't count. Within six months most legitimate ‘food dealers ewill be out of business because of inability to secure supplies from food processors, and the black market will flourish. = There is. a question in my mind if they will be able to get ehough supplies to take
|.care of the requirements of our|
ar forces, to say nothing of lend-lease commitments.”
300 U. S. PRISONERS OF JAPS ARE DEAD
WASHINGTON, June 22 (U. P). ~Disease and malnutrition have killed .300 Americans in Jap prisons
Corregidor the -.war Separtinent,
-|reports received through the In-
ternational Red Cross, chief causes of death, in addition to beri-beri, a
IN BRIDES’ CASE
.| throw of the government by force
’ which is still in the lower courts.
yesterday morning after an illness|
“that
delivery in the’ house today urged |!
“will find the dausht
camps since the fall of Bataan and |
Schneiderman Decision May Affect Trials of Denaturalization.
WASHINGTON, June 22 (U. P.). —The supreme court's refusal to denaturalize William: Schneiderman because of his admitted membership in the Communist party was reviewed today as having no effect on the deportation order against Harry Bridges. The important effect of the Schneiderman decision was believed to be its bearing on current
hundreds of naturalized Germans and Italians whose membership in the German-American bund and othef Fascist organizations is being offered by the government as evidence that American citizenship was accepted under fraud. The court majority side-stepped a definite decision on whether the Communist party advocates over-
and violence. It. found that the party’s aims and objectives were subject to two interpretations— one, the government’s which ascribes to it reprehensible and illegal purposes; the other, that its purposes were legal.
Side-Steps Issue
A court in denaturalization proceedings should not arbitrarily accept the reprehensible interpretation, it said. The minority, in an opinion by Chief Justice Harlan F. Stone, held there was conclusive evidence to justify the reprehensible interpretation. This side-stepping of the issue now throws the full weight of actual determination of Communist party aims upon the Bridges case
Atty. Gen. Francis Biddle ordered Bridges’ deportation to his native Australia on grounds that he was a member of the Communist party, which Bridges always has denied. Biddle found that the “Communist party of the U. S. A, from the time of inception to the present time,” believes in, advises, advocates and teaches the overthrow by force and violence of the government of the United States.” The Schneiderman and Bridges cases are similar in that membership in the Communist party is a ground for action. But the former was under the naturalization laws, and the latter under the deportation laws.
FBI Investigates
Subsequent to the trial of the Schneiderman tase in federal court, the federal bureau of investigation performed for the attorney general an = exhaustive investigation of the Communist party. In the light of this study and the data entered into the Bridges hearing, Biddle ordered the deportation. Officials privately expressed belief ‘if the government had possessed this data at the time Schneiderman’s case was in the lower courts, there: could be no claim of insufficient evidence con-
denaturalization proceedings against |
‘Lt. Elnora Garlow oe EJ » : »
New WAAC Supply Officer At Stout Field Saw Japs Hit Pearl Harbor.
The newest addition to the WAAC contingent at Stout field is Lt. Elnora Garlow, who has two reasons for serving her country. First, Lt. Garlow, who is the new supply officer for the WAAC at the air base, was at Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7 and wants to see that avenged. Her second reason is her husband —a marine litenantant, who is in the thick of fighting in the .southwest Pacific. Lt. Garlow is 21 years old and is also in charge of all WAAC exercise and recreation at Stout field. Last month she was graduated from the WAAC officer candidate school at Ft. Des Moines, and, before that, received her basic training at Daytona Beach, Fla.
Native of California
A native of Manhattan Beach, Cal, she was schooled there and later attended Pasadena junior college. In civilian life she was a photographer at the Douglas Aircraft plant in El Segundo, Cal. At the time of the Jap attack
Harbor submarine base. Lt. Garlow.was asleep when the first wave of enemy aircraft came over, but she saw more of the attack than she likes to remember. She is extremely proud of her husband, who has taken part in every major Pacific battle since Midway, including a year in the steaming jungles of Guadalcanal.
140 WALK OUT AT BRAZIL COMPANY
BRAZIL, Ind., June 22 (U. P). —More than 140 employees of the American Vitrified Productions Co., were out on strike today because of a wage dispute. Sewer pipe workers struck yesterday after they said the war labor board did not consider demands for wage increases “soon enough.” Charles Wilson, general manager, said employees of all sewer pipe plants in Indiana and Ohio were
cerning Communist party aims.
on strike because of wage disputes.
STATE DEATHS
ANDERSON—Mrs. Martha ‘A. Buser, 36. Survivors: Husband, Robert; sister, Mrs. Charles Moore; father, Earl brother, Keith Hoffman.
ELWOOD—Mrs. Elizabeth Everling, 25. Survivors: Husband, John; sisters, Harriet Hinds and Mrs. Francis Brattain; brother, Brunt Hinds. EVANSVILLE—Mrs. Ida Armstrong, 72. Survivors: Daughter, Mrs. Frances Bock; son, Luther ‘8. Fresno; sister, Miss Mayme Stokley. Barbara Louise Gibbs, 13 months. Survivors: Parents, Mr. and Mrs. ‘Earl Gibbs; brother, Edward Earl Gibbs; sister, Ruby Lee Gibbs. Mrs. Margaret C. Otto, 72. Survivors: Brother, George Hummel; sister, Mrs. fred Sauer. LAFAYETTE—Mrs. Cora C. Evans, Survivors: Daughter, Mrs. Mary Casey; son, Arthur E. Davis; sister, Mrs. William Tudor. MEDORA—Jacob Ramp, 88. Survivors: Daughters, Mrs. Lew Peck and Mrs, Bruce Goss; sons, Henry and Frank Ramp; brothers, Fred and William Ramp; sisters, Mrs. Cara Holthoefer and Mrs. Augusta Weitzel. MISHAWAKA — Fred ©. Tutrow, 62. Survivors: Daughters, Mrs. Ray Needler ‘and Mrs. John Ruggles; sons, Arthur, Fred, Woodrow, David, Arthur, John, Virgil and Marshall Tutrow.
NEW ALBANY-—Mrs. Sallie M. Grantz, 74. Survivors: Husband, Christian; brothers, John, James and William Raidy. Sylvester J. Stierstaedter, 41. Survivors: Father, Sylvester; son, James Stierstaedter; brothers, John and Elmer Stierstaedter; sister, Mrs. Agnes McCloskey. ulonn Mould, 74. Survivor: Son, George
Mrs. Mary Muckelbauer, 84. Survivors: Son. John Edward Muckelbauer; daughters, Mrs. Matt Dorsey and Mrs. Sam
Hoffman;
81.
NEWBURGH—El' Damm, 67. Survivors: Wife, Lena; son, William Damm; daughters, Misses Mildred, Lula and Lena Damm and Mrs. Anna Wilmarth and Mrs. Frank Lindeman; brother, George .Damm; sisters, Mrs. Sadie Scherer, Mrs. Tillie Klenck, Mrs. Harry Schauss and Mrs. Martin Ungethim.
PETERSBURG—Mrs. Alfenus Z. Sorguis, ‘43. Survivors: Husband, Gerald; sons, William and Gerald Sorguis; father, Alfred Schorlucke; brother, Harold Schorlucke. RICHMOND—Mrs. May Cline, 81. vivors: Son, Bruce Cline; sister, Miss Gertrude Stant; brother, Wilbur Stant. ROCKPORT—Mrs. Tina A. Therber, 69. Survivors: Husban Ww.; daughters, Mrs, Mabel Miller, ‘Mrs. Grace Johnson, Mrs. Leona Hunt and Mrs. Jesse Lantaff;
sur-
E. son, Ralph Therber.
SEYMOUR—Phillip Bauman, 56. Survivors: Wife, Katie; daughter, Mrs. Rose Ferstein; sons, William and David Bauman; brother, Harry Bauman. -
SOUTH BEND-—Floyd Temple, 50. Survivors: Wife, Marvel; son, Bobby Temple; daughters, Ruth and Barbara ‘Temple; parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Temple; sislore: Mrs. Harry Hudson and Mrs. Fred n.
Did Humpty Dumpty Fall Because of Stomach Ulcer Pains?
All the King’s men Suid 1 mot put Humpty Dumpty together again, but those who are distressed with stomach ® ulcer pains, indigestion, gas pains, heartburn, burning sensation, bloat and other conditions caased by excess acid should try Udga, Get a 25¢ box of Udga Tablets L your druggist. First dose must convince or return box tc us and get DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK.
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FOR, POLICES
We Must Follow Leader, He Tells Fund-Raising “N. Y. Diners.
NEW YORK, June 22 (U.P.).—
Rep. Sam Rayburn (D. Tex.) pledg-|* ing his “unfailing and unwaver-
ing” support to President Roosevelt, said last night that he would have no part in any anti-administration moves within the Democratic party. “We must follow the leader,” he
said at a $50-a-plate fund raising| ‘dinner of the Democratic national
and state committees. j * Most of his speech was an attack on complaints about conditions on the home front. Hits at Whisperers “Complainers there are—shame on them—and on the whisperers who have private information, on the radio commentators who tell you the news behind the news when
. 360 West Washington St.
great and’ serious dis-
Ambrose O'Connell, executive vicechairman of the Democratic national committee, said the Republicans were waging a war of words.
Raps G. O. P. ‘Strategy’
“There is a new note in the Republican strategy which is of a sinister character,” he said. : “This is the definite’ campaign to smear, discredit and render powerless the work of the various war agencies. There is plenty of evidence that this is a planned cam- , shrewdly conceived to muddle people's minds on the work of the agencies and He proper conduct of the war. : “The doubts, tears and confusion that such a campaign raises can only retard victory and jeopardize peace.”
STAMP HONORS POLAND CHICAGO, June. 22 (U. P.).~— Postmaster General Frank C. Walker formally placed on sale today a postage stamp commemorating Poland’s resistance to the axis.
at ' hE ; BERKELEY, cal, June 22 (U.P). The Tirsal Club of Hels HMB)! —A packing house supplying about |wil give a card party 40 per cent of the meat for ‘this night on the third floor of the Fe area’s 500,000 persons decided today |tain Square building, to limit its: Slaughter to two lambs |Mills is chairman, assisted per day. Naomi Huddleston.
VICTORY WORKERS and GARDENERS Beware of DUSTS and PULLERS:
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