Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 August 1946 — Page 17
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Stratton Porter's
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United Press Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON, Aug. 26.—Former Supreme Court Justice James c.| McReynolds, 84-year-old bachelor and the most unyielding conservative among the “nine old men,” died last night at Walter Reed hospital. He had been in ill health for the past year and entered the hospital |
early this month for observation and treatment.
Ore Tire TrustE Buster Had Been Ill for a Year: Rites to Be in Kentucky
By RUTH GMEINER
AT RURAL HOME
Leather Plant Worker to,
Be Buried Here,
Services an employee of the | Leather Products Co., will be held
Death was attributed to a breakdown of the gastro-intestinal system, in J. ©. Wilson Ohapel of the "
complicated ‘by bronchial monia and “a failing heart.” The “tate justice's brother, Robert P. McReynolds, of Los Angeles, flew here from Chicago
pneu- |
this morning to take charge of 8
Dr. | |
funeral arrangements. He was en | §
route to his home when notified of the death. Service to Be in Kentucky Mr. McReynolds’ body, accompanied by Supreme Court Marshal Thomas E. Waggaman, will be! taken by train Tuesday night to] Cincinnati, thence to Russelville,| Ky. where it is scheduled to ar-|
rive Wednesday afternoon. |
It will then be taken by auto- | mobile to Elkton, Ky. site of ‘the| old McReynolds family home, here | it will lie in state overnight. Funeral services will be held| Thursday in Elkton. Burial will] be there.
Mr. McReynolds died a little more! than decade after he thundered from the supreme court bench: “The constitution is dead!” That blast, concluding his famous dissent in the gold clause cases, summed up the associate justice's view of the interpretation of the constitution drawn by his judicial colleagues during the last few of his 26 years on the court. Retired in 1941 | He retired Feb. 1, 1941, after President Roosevelt inaugurated for a third term. The aging justice, then 78, was compelled for reasons of health to] give up in his desire to remain on| the bench long enough fo prevent! Mr. Roosevelt from naming his} successor. As it turned out, he outlived Mr. Roosevelt, The crusty jurist was the most unyielding of the “Conservative”
was
posing - Mr. Roosevelt's legislative
program. He voted against every 801
New Deal case that came before the court. He cast the court's lone dissent against the TVA. Born at Elkton, Feb. 3, 1862, he was the son of a prosperous secessionist doctor. Was U. 8. Trust-Buster | He developed a successful
ment,
One of ‘nine old men’. ,.
Justice McReynolds.
He was said to have voted to hold |
Services will be held tomorrow at 2 p. m. in Fountain Square church bloc of the court of the "30's Op-| for Mrs. Mamie Crain who died Fri- |
day in her home, Lincoln st. She was 50. A native of Petersburg, Crain was an Indianapolis resi- | dent 26 years and a member of the law Fountain Square practice at Nashville, Tenn, and in Church of God. 1903 came to the justice depart- Burial will be in where “he prove? one of Crown Hill ceme-
Theodore Roosevelt's most vigorous tery.
trust-busters. weed
His government career was inter-| rupted for several years while hel
practiced law in New York, but in| [OUr sisters, 1913 he returned to Washington as Mrs. Laura Rodarmel, Mrs, George Woodrow Wilson's attorney general. Blackwell and Mrs. Otho-Riffle, and |
Crain;
shortly | unconstitutional more timés than any other justice in the history of the court.
Rites Are Set for Mrs. Mamie Crain,
Mrs.
a stepson, Mrs.
A year later, Mr. Wilson elevated two brothers,
him to the supreme court,
Royal
acts of
Mrs. Vard Crain Survivors are her husband, Vard George Crain, Charles Perry,
Ex-
CONgress
Hooper and Everett Hooper, all of Indianapolis
Tock: s
fa TN
Corduroy overalls in brick or blues 2 to 6, 4.00 The shirt, 2.00
sizes
Chimes at 10 a. m. Thursday. Burial |
will be in Crown Hill.
Mr. Ayres, who was 58, died yes-| Marion |
| terday. A resident of | county since 1909, he lived at R. R. 2, Box 104. He had worked for | the leather company for 10 years.
| Greenwood; a son, Charles R. Ayres, land three daughters, Mrs. Virginia
Cline, Mrs. Evelyn White and Mrs.| =
Phyllis Maled, al] of Marion county; !
a sister, Mrs. Charles Purvis, Beaver |
Dam, Va, and a brother, John | Ayres, St. ‘Louis, Mo. {MRS. MARY V. WILLIAMS Services for Mrs. Mary V. Wil-
|liams, who, died yesterday in her 'home, 116 W. Walnut st., | held in Kirby mortuary at 2 p, m. tomorrow, Burial will be in Washington Park. | A resident hete for 35 years, Mrs. Williams was a native of Eubanks, |Ky.,, and a member of Englewood | chapter, O. E, 8. | Survivors are two sons, Virgil O | Williams, Hewitt, N, J., and Walter | |B. Williams, Indianapolis; a daugh- | ter, Mrs. Jean Devine, New York; two sisters, Mrs. Iotie Barks, and (Mrs. Mettie -Lyster, Indianapolis, {and three grandchildren.
MRS. MARY J. BRETZ
| Burial will be in St. Joseph's ceme- | Hopes. J. Butler, 82.
tery.
[She lived at 2066 N. Delaware st. Survivors are a daughter, Mary K. Bruce; two sons, Eugene E. Bretz and Charles A. Bretz, all of Indianapolis, . and a sister, Mrs. Margaret Hayes, Los Angeles, Cal.
| MRS. STANLEY FISCH
Private services
| carl Haymer of Indianapolis, Aug. |13 in Los Angeles. She was 72.
Los Angeles. Survivors besides her daughter, are her husband, Samuel Fisch of Los Angeles; Fisch of Ft. Wayne,
for Bernard L. Ayres, American |
will be!
Requiem high mass will be sure) State Deaths
in SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral | at 9 a. m. tomorrow for Mrs. Mary | |J. Bretz, resident here for 70 years. Keesling Mrs.
{ Roy P. A graduate of Shortridge high| wife, Edna L. daughters, Sarah Ann Kethool and member of the Cath-| Mrs, Grace Siekerman, Mrs. Myrtle Boost-
ers olic church, Mrs. Bretz died yesterday morning at the age of 70. Suryivors:
Mrs. | Survivors:
were held for | Mrs, Stanley Fisch, mother of Mrs.
Mrs. Fisch. died Aug. 11 and burial | brothers, was in Home of Peace cemetery In' Mrs, Lena
two brothers, M. W. and M. M.
Fisch of Los Angeles; two other
daughters, Mrs. Carl Philadelphia, Pa., and Mrs. Bernard P. Lewi of Los eight grandchildren.
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Shapiro of | vivors:
Angeles and
‘THE INDIANAPOLIS
i |
|
Above is reproduced the stamp that you'll use when the new reduced rate of 5 cents an ounce for airmail goes into effect Oct. 1. Survivors are his wife, Margaret, The red and white stamp, showing a modern four-engined transport
plane, will be placed on exclusive first-day sale in Washington, D. C,,
Sept. 25, ~other post offices
the following day.
Services will be held tomorrow at 10:30 a. m. for Charles Craigle, 38 N. Sheridan ave. who died Fri day in his home. He was 62. A former clerk in the commissioner's office several years, Mr, Craigle also had been yard master and yard conductor for 30 years for the Pennsylvania railroad. He was {a member of the Brotherhood of ‘| Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen, Mr. Craigle was a lifelong resident of Indianapolis. Burial wlil be in Calvary cemetery, Survivors are two son, Charles J.
ANDERSON-—Amos Pittsford, 74. Survivors: Wife, Fern; daughters, Mrs. Court
Ward Stohler; sons, Lawence, Lora, Glenn; sister, Mrs. Amy COLUMBUS-—Mrs. Mary A. Cotton, 80.
Kettenbrink, 50. Burvivors:
tenbrink, Mrs. Frank B. Huffman; sisters,
CULVER - Wilber Graves Brown, 81 Wife, Hattie; sister, Mrs. Birdie Young, ELKHART — Samuel! Ervin Kamp, 81 Wife, Mary Ann: daughters, Mrs, Ethel Green, Mrs. Joseph Bruggner, sons, Samuel E, Ervin E.; brothers, ReuJeu, James; sisters, Mrs. Nettie Delsaver, Mrs. Carrie Huffman, Mrs. Luella Fall George C. Dotson, 46. Survivors: Wife, Helen; Mrs. Alec | Dotson | EVANSVILLE—Mrs. Catherine 68. Survivors: Husband, Pred Gilmore, daughters, Miss Mrs. J. L. Hon, Mrs, J. E. Mrs. Paul C. Doig. Edward Pfeffer, 71. Burvivors: Mary; sons, Edward Jr, George, Henry, Frank; daughters, Mrs. Anna Palmer, {| Mrs. Loretta Jobe, Mrs. Irene Logsdon; Henry, John; sisters, Miss Barbara Faust, Mrs. Anna
son, William; mother,
2 on kX,
Emma ian: Stanley, sister,
Wife,
Catherine Pleffer, Mrs Bassemeier, { Schataman. FT. WAYNE—Harry E. Mann, 63. Survivors: Wife, Selma; sons. “Robert L., Phillip N.; sisters, Mrs. John Ripley, Mrs. James M. Barker,
HAMMOND -Mrs. Fern VanGorp, 32. Burvivors: Husband, Leland; sons, David, Charles Leroy
MONON — William Heims, 79. SurSon, Albert; daughters, Mrs. Mar-
Services for Charles Craigle, Veteran Railroader, Are Set
Craigle of Indianapolis, and Albert F. Craigle of Hollywood, Cal, and two sisters, Mrs. R. H. Chaney and | Mrs: Burt Burket, both of Indianapolis.
NIRVAL DOSTAL SERVICES SET
10-Year Navy Veteran Dies In Ohio Hospital.
Services will be held tomorrow at 3 p. m. in Woodruff United Presbyterian church for Norval Frederick Dostal, who died Thursday in a veterans’ hospital in Dayton, O. He was 31. A veteran of 10 years in the navy, Mr. Dostal was the husband of Mrs. Velma PF. Dostal, 3312 E. Ninth st. He was discharged last March. Mr. Dostal is a natiye of Dodge, Neb, and had served in Africa, South America, Alaska, and the Pacific. Burial will be in Crown Hill Survivors besides his wife are his mother, Mrs. Frances Dostal of Dodge, Neb, and a brother, Cpl Francis Dostal, now in Germany.
SHIP TIMBER BY WATER WASHINGTON -- Transportation of Alaskan forest harvests is nearly all “sea-going”; 75 per cent of the timber grows within three miles of tidewater.
Services for Charles G. Lohrmann, who formerly operated a grocery store at St. Clair st. and Senate ave, will be held In Krieger funeral home at 10 4. m. tomorrow. Burial will be in Crown Hill Mr. Lohrmann, a life resident of Indianapolis, died Saturday in City hospital. He was 80 and lived at 2215 W. 16th st. He was a member of Ancient Landmarks lodge 319, F. & A. M, Murat 8hrine and Scottish Rite. Survivors are a brother, Dr. Henry Lohrmann, retired Indianapolis physician, five nieces and a nephew.
CLYDE E. LAYTON
Services for Clyde E. Layton, who died yesterday in Methodist hospital while on a visit here from Ft. Lauderdale, Fla, will be held in Moore Mortuaries Colonial chapel Wednesday at 10:30 a. m. Burial will be in Crown Hill. He was 64. ! After retiring in 1043 from operating the Layton Ice Co. Inc., with plants in Bloomington and Lébanon, Mr, Layton moved to Florida. A native of Covington, he was a member of Tabernacle Presbyterian
MRS. JAMES C. RILEY Services will be held tomorrow at 2 p. m. for Mrs. Dona Riley in ‘her home at 850 College ave. She was 74. Burial will be in Washington Park cemetery. Mrs. Riley died Thursday in the home of her sister, Mrs. Rhoda J Boyd, in Converse, She was a resident of Indianapolis 28 years Survivors besides her sister are her husband, James C. Riley: a daughter, Mrs. Loa B. West, and a son, Lewis F. Riley, both of Indi"napeolis. |
JOHN V. STURGEON John V. Sturgeon died yesterday
iin the home of his son, Alvin L.|
Sturgeon, 1163 N. Gladstone ave. He was 85. An Indianapolis
resident for
1:30 p. m. in Moore Mortuaries | Peace Chapel. Washington Park cemetery. Survivors besides his son are two! other sons, Charles Byron and
Frank Sturgeon, both of Indian-
Reynolds of Louisville, Ky.
MRS. IDA. L. LONG
Services will be held tomorrow in Santa Barbara, Cal, for Mrs. Ida L. Long, widow of the late Dr. ''S. Edward Long of Indianapolis. She was T2. Mrs. Long went to California in 1037. Burial will be in Forest Lawn cemetery in Glendale.
| garet Burch, Mrs, Dorothy 8wark, broth- \ ers, Sam, John NEW ALBANY Mrs, Frances Elizabeth Uncerwood, 34 Survivors: Husband. Jo-| eph ; son, Stewart. daughter, Busan Carol Underwood, Mrs. Mary Everbach,
mother,
* » = REMINGTON -—-Evereit A Bhearer, £3. Survivors: Sisters, Ida and Molly Shearer, Mrs. Janey O' Riley; brother, Ellsworth RENSSELAER—Calvi n O. Heath, 72, Survivors . arry, daughters, % Pauline Boasian, Mrs. Mildred Dornell: brother, Edgar; sisters, Mrs. Della Fritz, Mrs. John e. ROCHESTER Vivian B. Fuller vivors: Wife, Cora: daughter, George Gilson; son, George, sister, Bella B. Bmith.,
SHELBYVILLE—Mrs., Joanna Mae Sny-
76. SurMrs Mrs.
der, 170 Survivors: Daughters, Mrs. George Smith, Mrs. Walter Hiser, SOUTH BEND-—Samuel Lee, 15. Survivors Parents, Mr. and Mrs. Terry Lee; brothers, Plc. Essic H, Percy, Tyree, SWEETSER—Mrs. Roxie Baun, 28. Pica vivor: Daughter, Mrs. H. V, Blos TERRE HAUTE--Walter Cs 63 Survivors: Daughters, Mrs. Eva Stewart, Mrs. Harry Allen; son, Leon, sisters, Mrs. Ida Williamson, Miss Margaret Clough, Mrs. Martha Blankenship, Mrs Mina Little rs. Ethel] Wiser, Mrs. Edjth Fuller; brgthers, Emmett, Hurley, Pete. - Clyde Cooper, 51, Hosea e Bone, 34 Margaret®Haverty Kleckner, 80 Iva M. Wood, 83. Survivors: Brothers, Charles and the Rev. Ora Davis, sister Mrs. Emma Kelly. VALPARAISO—Don Carnahan, 67. Sur vivors: Wife, Cora; brothers, Paul, Ros-
coe, sister, Mrs. Maude Ramey VINCENNES—John Ulsomer, 53 WANATAH—Mrs. Clara BE. Wright, #7, Survivors: Husband, Frank; sons, Harlan, Sheldon, Mrs
aaughters, Mariemma
Maldy, Mrs, ora Mae Goodwin, Mrs. Lucille Keel, Miss Joanne Wright; broth. ers, Walter, Ira, Howard and Bdward Wallace WHITING—David B. Purinton, 63. Survivors Wife, Blanche. brothers, T and Rev. W. 8; sister, Mrs. N. B. Winkless Paul Germick, 52. Survivors Wife,
Anna; daughters, Lorraine and Barbara Germick, Michael Hanchar 8r.
brothers, John, Michael
sisters, Mrs. Steve Kocsis, Mrs, Mrs. John Toth;
WHITING-—Joan Yager, 6 years. Sur3 ors: Parents, Mr, and Mrs. John John Jr., James and
agen hic ing 3 Yager.
HOOSIER SEES FOOD CRISIS EASED ABROAD
HANOVER, Ind. Aug. 26 (U. P), —Europe's food problem will be al leviated this year with the aid of the United States, Britain, Swiss and Swedish governments, Mrs. Albert G. Parker Jr, wife of the president of Hanover college, predicted today. Mrs. Parker recently returned from an extensive 10-week tour of eight European countries to study reconstruction problems of the Protestant churches in Europe. She said the study was made in connection with a $27,000,000 fund United States Presbyterian churches are raising to ald world-wide church reconstruction. Still on the -etritical list in west ern European countries visited were fuel and clothing problems, which were likely to remain for some time, Mrs. Parker sald.
INDIANAPOLIS to WASHINGTON, D, ©, Only $10.45 Plus Tax
AMERICAN BUSLINES DEPOT 239 N. Capitol Ave, Phone LI neoln 3750
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Survivors are three daughters, Mrs. E. PF. Boggs and Mrs. R. E | Smery of Indianapolis, and Mrs Ear] Barnes of Medinah, Wash., and a son, Raul C. Long of Burbank, Cal.
nearly 30 years, Mr. Sturgeon was! a native of Jackson county and a! night watchman for L. 8. Ayres &| Co. for 20 years, retiring in 1938. | Services will be held tomorrow at |
Burial will be in|
apolis, and a daughter, Mrs, Ley |
f
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