Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 March 1950 — Page 7
3 :
and a pitcher, the Cincinnati
anz will follow 1 to the mound
y Pacific Coast y while Mueller
'd at Toulsville
.ssociation.
"Mar. 11 (UP) |
laced the New ay as the big n pitcher omeback trail ystrous sopho- , the major
he difference” ed Sox and when he won pokie. He reit last spring, shed .the year 1. - .
Boudreau has h his desire to this spring. slants will use wman and Rill mound. l., Mar. 11 — Dodger Pitcher ninated to open ates’ exhibition the St. Louis
srted that the ich bothered ason has not pring: Rookies Bill MacDonled to follow d. present almost squad. There en on Manager — ter and he innned -to-use-as-possible during 1es.
al, Mar. 11— oclaimed “they s the Cubs and d their spring 70's city series
last-place club fanager Farnk s said. “We've e habit of wins don’t - care spring. We do to get used to even if only in
Onslow of the red by naming er, Bill Wight,
to be pushed said. “Frisch ddin’ somebody
vorite
illtoppers from begins defense in the opening ament at Mad-
st Arizona and versity against to round out gram involving 1 entries. ley and fourthof Brooklyn do tion until MonKentucky’ and
lo cpeeond and cos
y, start play Are Tall Ky, winner in 24 during the seaby 81% points -6); San. Fran.C. N.Y. (17-5) LaSalle (20-3
hoice over Ari.
L. I. U, 20-4) Syracuse (17-8). from Bowling three six-foot-iter Bob Lavoy addy Cate and
pected to have .
for Niagara. . which came. to~ \ament an un? yice and bowled Utah, Bradley icago to win the | be sentimental it their surprise
17 Years
., Mar. 11 (UP) of - Wisconsin's never losing a match in its tumbling last fisted Michigan nded the Bade
a TY Headquarfers SOUVENIRS JOVELTIES AN’S INOIS ST. AND SUNDAYS
RR, 0 BATTERIES
‘operated by James ‘Brackett, 31,
78) Ee t
SATUCOAY,MAR. 11,1050 __« pn
- § Stake Traffic cients a Boy, 2 Men
In Ra oy ie Three persons werk killed in| 4 state traffic accidents early today and last night, and four Indianapolis residents were in hos-| HIT pitals as the Fesult. c of traffic mis- | SL haps. EDead wie Joe Montalve Gonzales, 25, Markle; Milo Hochstetter, 4%, Napannee, and Harry Le-|| roy Mott, 5, Muncie. / | Mr. Gonzales was killed today | when his car. left State Rd. 3! near kle and overturned. The Mott child was struck by!. a car driven by Frank B. Harrold, Albany. The boy was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Mott. | Mr. Hochstetter, farmer, was! killed -instantly- last night ‘when!® the truck he was driving was struck by a B. & O. Railroad freight locomotive a half mile, west of Nappanee. J. A. Walker.” of Garrett, the | engineer, told police he saw the
Youngsters See “Johnny Holiday’ at Times Theater Party
from the Lutheran Chil: |
The Times was host to this group of youngsters and their chaperons truck approaching but thought, dren's Home at a “Johnny Holiday" movie party at Keith's Theater. The Ronnie Alcorn production |
the driver was going to stop. 7 Struck by 2 Autos Cornelius Edwards, 62, of 1923) Park Ave. was in General Hos-| pital in a critical condition as the |
or of being struck by two cars on Ohio St. just west of Hlinois| 0 i d S ll St., last night,
Police said the pedestrian was| first struck by an automobile]
| was filmed at the | Indiana Boys School at Plainfield.
Week's Effort Fails Judge Tells "Jesse James' He'd Better Appeal to Lord
80-Year-Old Jurist Refuses to Rule On Assertion of Man, 102, That He's Bandit
UNION, Mo., Mar. 11 (UP)—A hard-bitten old man went back his big cave in the Missouri Ozarks with a judge's advice that if
Court Recesses After Calling 200 Veniremen ,,
of 3025 N. Tacoma Ave. and;
"THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES —
|On Sewer Lines
. |of $3,390,000. Others were Monti{cello, for- interceptor lines and a
agreement with Indianapolis which would permit
knocked in front of a car driven] by Albert J. Hussung, 24, of 62 S. Mount St. | There were no arrests. Mr Ed-| wards suffered a fractured leg: and head injuries. Pedestrian Hit by Car Another pedestrian, Clarence, Hensley, 58, of 612 E. Ninth St, received a fractured leg early,
-today-—-when-- struck--by a car
driven by Robert R. Harriett, 47, of 2814 E. 17th St. The accident occurred as Mr. Hensley was walking across Mas-
sachusetts Ave. in the 700 block. Since the trial began last Monday a battered coffee can for use as ongtime residents of the state. 1:30 P. m. tomorrow in the Rector, — [Iiey aS0e ¥
——A—former— Indianapolis police- Without 12 jurors accepfablé to a cuspidor.
man, Michael Long, 65, of 610 N_ Bradley St. was critigally injured] last night when struck by a hit-,
run driver at Sherman Dr. and E. |
Michigan St. Witnesses told police ‘the retired officer was walking across the intersection with the green light when struck by the speeding car. Housewife Injured Mrs. Pearl Smith, 62, of 903 N. | Wallace Ave. was injured last. night when she stumbled and! fell in front of her husband's automobile. Police said the husband, Fred, “had “Tet "his wife out of the car) in front of their home and was] starting to put the machine in a,
garage when the accident oc-| curred. i Methodist Hospital physicians,
said Mrs. Smith was suffering, from. an injured shoulder and possible fracture fractured ribs.
Hoosier Admits
| week-end today. | ficials began to round.,up more!
+i Price and William Johnson,
By. DONNA MIKFELS Times Staff Writer COLUMBUS, Mar. ¥1—The sec-| ond murder trial of Robert Aus! tin. Watts -was -in recess for the!
‘he really is the old-time bandit, Jesse James, he should ask the! Lord's forgiveness for his many sins. J. Frank Dalton, 102 years old and sporting flowing white hair and a drooping handle-bar mustache, asked the Circuit Court. yes-, {terday to formally declare they YY Meanwhile, of-| 'he is the legendary badman. I suggest he retreat to his hideout Mr. Dalton, who recently suf-and ask forgiveness of the Lord. prospective jurors. fered a broken hip, caressed al “If he is not, he had tried to Yesterday, for the third day in|white-handled 44-caliber horse |perpetrate a fraud- upon this! a row, court had to be recessed pistol under the olive drab Army court. We love Missouri and Mis-| early because the supply of ve-iblanket that lay across his knees souri people-but- the criminal con-' 'niremen on hand was exhausted as he testified that his true nameiduct of the James gang has left, without a jury being seated. lis Jesse Woodson James. |a black spot on the state and will More than 200 veniremen have With the foresight befitting an never be erased.” been summoned in for jury duty/old frontiersman, he also carried] Aj} of the witnesses were a
{both the State and defense being _The hearing was rich in M seated. pm THourt ‘history and the Sperations)
“lof the James gang but experts] tended to doubt some of the “dis-!| Probe F- 51 Crash {the same 12 men and impanel-| [closures.” > iment seemed near. But one time| Says Court Can't Rule Fat t 9 Pi :
a juror who already had said he] But legally, it leff the latest] Guard Planes
Change Minds Twice both sides have passed!
'had no conscientious objections |claimant to the ame ‘of Jesse! to the death penalty had al'james in the lurch.
{“change of heart” and asked to! Circuit Judge Ili E. Breuer |
be SAvused. u = th d fo {said the court could not rule on| L h no me e defense, Mr. Dalton’s claim. : : 'which tentatively had passed Petition dismissed,” said Judge Fall, Burn in Ohio i Horace Schaefer, - excused him. Breuer, who bears a striking re-| STEUBENVILLE, 0, Mar. 1}
Mr. Schaefer served as foreman semblance to Abraham Lincoln.|(UP)—Authorities searched the, of the jury three years ago inl“There is nothing for me to rule’ wreckage of two National Guard! | the “teenagers” trial of William | upon. | p-51- “fighters today to tind -out:
inl “If this gentleman had never which they were convicted of the changed R by law, he still| Why they crashed during a train-!
| laying of State Trooper Herbert | bears the name with which he was ing flight, killing both pilots. mit
|christened. . If ‘he is Jesse James, The two planes plunged to The Majority of persons. ex. ; [earth three miles apart from a cused have been eliminated be- Sa : cause they said they had opinions Mrs. die Warneke
| night- flying Services Monday ‘ {F-b1's last night and burned! Times State Service {while the otner planes continued | GREENSBURG, Mar. 11—Serv-/ the flight. Witnesses sald one of | lices for Mrs. Sadle Warneke, the - planes dropped several] {mother of the late Omer E. War-{ “trouble flares.” neke, Greensburg High School| “Authorities said they thought|
as to Watts’ guilt in the 1947 slaying of Indianapolis housewife, Mary Lois Burney. Many said they formed their opinions as the result of reading about his trial in adjoining Shelby County where he was found guilty and sentenced to die.
age from 80-to F u-neral Home,
en Paned
Projects Approved by Pollution Board
Indiana Stream Pollution Board approval of sewer lines in Meridfan Hills and Indianapolis has cleared the way for public hear ings on the projects. > Hearings for property owners; who will be assessed if the proj-
fore the plans can be confirmed.)
{Hearing dates have not been set,
The two systems were.includi in four approvals returned by board involving an estimated cost
treatment plant; and Columbus, for interceptors, treatment plant and the East Columbus sewer,
Seek Agreements
You'll See Them in
_ {ects are started. must be held be-|
Town Board members of ° Me-
ridian Hills will complete nego-| ~ttiations withthe. Indianapolis; Sanitary District before their) “hearing date is scheduled. The
board is attempting to reach an
Meridian Hills to connect its new lines to
’ |the Indianapolis system.
If the agreement cannot be jreached, Meridian Hiiis will be faced with the necessity of build{ing a-treatment plant. Approval of the Indianapolis, {project covered the proposed 34th St. sewer sought for years by {residents in the Forest Manor {area. It would extend Tom) ons {Creek .to Temple Ave.
tor lines will supplement drainage from the new line intc line into Fa Fall Creek.
Rites Tomorrow For Mrs. Miller
Burial in Greencastle For Elderly Resident |
-Services for Mrs. Elizabeth Lavena Brattin Miller, 3740 Guilford Ave. who died last night in {the Robinson's Nursing Home, {2254 Central Ave., will be held at,
—Greencastl Burial will “he Th- Forest Hills Cemetery there.
Mrs. Miller, who was 89, lived
{in the home of her daughter, Mrs.
Joe Kettery, at the Guilford Avenue address. A native of Cincinnati, she was reared and educated in Sheencastie. She attended the ry department of the PresPrimary Female College, and Asbury Academy and AY University.
After “her family moved to! Kansas City, she met and mar-! {ried Millard Sylvester Miller. They made their home in Okla-| homa City several years. then re {turned to Greencastle.
(ler died in April, 1933. | She was a member of Kappa
Mr, Mil-
Roy Rogers and Trigger wil be in The Times seven days a |
Ll Phan
the Funny Paper
| Mr. East
Times Sponsors Free Lecture Friday Night The secrecy that surrounds the
. |sammer life of seabirds on their
isolated nesting grounds will be lunveiled by Ben East, field editor
ot -Outdoor Life Magazine, next
Friday night when The Times brings the wildlife authority to
.{the N. Pennsylvania St. Armory. ; vie and lecture bye.
The ! be free to the public.” There will be no admission charge, no-collections and nothing will’ be sold. ~. Dense Popula "Mr. East's movie, “Waters That Run- to the Sea,” has 3000 feet of natural color. He will take his audience to a low reef of gravel known as Shoe Island, near the
where some 10,000. Caspian terns nest and raise their yo each
‘|vear in a seabird city so crowded
that the females can reach out
brood their eggs.
The Caspian tern, sometimes called the swallow of the sea, is
week starting Sunday in their new thrill packed adventure strip on lone of the most beautiful and the comic pages. It'll be as exciting as the movies. Be sure to get graceful of seabirds, Mr. East
the very first Roy Rogers comic strip .
. + in the BIGGER SUNDAY
TIMES. Telephone RI. 5551 now and ask to have The Times—daily and: Sunday—delivered to your home.
Former Ball Players to Be Bearers at Massing Rites
A requiem high mass for Mr. Massing, 1808 Singleton St.,-who died yesterday in St. Vincent's Hospital, will be sung at 9 a. m. Monday in the St. Catherine Catholic Church after services at 8:30 a. m. in Lauck Funeral Home. Burial will be in St. Joseph| | Cemetery. A-yeteran— professional ball player, Mr. Massing was known as: a power hitter in three professional leagues, before and| shortly after World War I. He {managed the Indianapolis Tigers,
e/a | South Side team, and later the of MATES, another Ssuthiing,
Side Bee which won the city championship in 1932 and 1933 under his coaching. Former members of that team will be pallbearers. A ndtive of Ripley County, he lcame to Indianapolis when he
Morrell Payne Services Today
“Claims Adjuster
Dies Here at 55 Morrell L. Payne, 6522 E. Pleas-
Kappa Gamma sorority and the ant Run Pkwy., will be buried in
{Methodist Church.
la brother, Louis; {two grandchildren,
A. K. Brattin, St.
Joe Kettery, Jr. salesman in The Times dis-
Play advertising department, and juster in Empire Life & Accident Nathan E Bray
Mrs. Robert. E. Schaefer, and a jgreat-granddaughter, Jonnea Eliz-|
In addition to formation of five] {the daughter, she is survived by
a niece, Mrs. Joseph Statz;| il
services at 3 p. m. today in Shirley | Brothers Irving Hill Chapel. Mr. Payne, who was 55, died Thursday in Methodist Hospital. He was an insurance claims ad-
Insurance Co. A life long resident of Marion
was a boy and was discovered 'N. ¥., and 1 grandchildren,
“la field at his farm a mile south
Washington Park Cemetery after
He later played for Houston in the Texas League and the old Indianapolis Federals. He also was manager of Danville in the Three-1 League. Observe Golden Wedding Mr. Massing and his wife, Emma, recently celebrated their {30th wedding anniversary. : Other survivors include six daughters, Sister Grage_ Louise, C.8.J.; Mrs. Marie Lee, Mrs. Lillian Barker, Mrs. Thelma Braun, {Mrs. Margaret Farrell and Miss Alice Massing, all of .Indianapolis, and a son, H. J. ~LBud)-Mass-; Indianapolis.
Also surviving ‘are four sisters, Mother Mary Louise, C.S.J., St. Louis; Mrs. Mary Dransfleld, Indianapolis; Mrs, Catherine Schill, Lakewood, O., and Mrs. Clara Budenz, Chicago, Ill; a brother, William Massing, Buffalo,
Services Arranged For Plainfield Farmer
State Service PLAINFIELD, Mar. 11-—S8erv-{ices were being arranged today| for William Etter, found dead in
“depict 2000
says. Possessed of long wings and a forked, swallow-like tail, it is white beneath and pearl-gray above, with a black crown and
red bill. At the height of the nesting season in the Shoe Island colony
these beautiful birds cover the ground like a living blanket, [tensions along 33d Sts. a Former members of a champion |playing sandiot baseball by a East relates. They make no preIndianapolis amateur baseball Southern Association scout. Heltenge at nest building, laying ‘team will be pallbearers Monday then traveled into the South. (heir eggs in a shallow depresi |playing as a catcher for Natchez, sion in the avel, and these (for John N. Massing, their |Miss.; Augusta, Ga., and Mobile Lfrave, in lerudes homes are packed so close former manager. Ala., in the league.
together that a visitor could walk the entire length of the reef and crush tern eggs under foot at
door Life field editor declares. Closeup Shots His film includes closeup shots of individual terns on their nests, chicks emerging’ from the egg,
and mass flights of thousands of the seafow! in slow motion. In. addition to its seabird and other wildlife sequences, the flim and on Ranying. lecture will =
the Great Lakes, The picture includes mountains, sand dunes and other scenic features, wildflowers and trout fishing, and traces the waters of the Great Lakes from their origin down to Niagara Falls, 3
BLAST KILLS TWO.CHILDREN
TULANCINGO, Mexico, Mar, 11 (UP)-Two children were killed and 14 other persons burned seri-
.jously yesterday by the explosion
of 144 cases of
amite being - used to blast Syn
a road through the
i Hidalgo Mountains.
of here yesterday after he had| {Gone to plant clover. He was 70.! Death was attributed to natural causes. Survivors include his wife, Margaret; two brothers, Charles, and Edward, Indianapolis, and.
ris, and Mrs, Van Streder, | andria, Va.
Alex-
Services for Nathan E. Bray, |e of Morgan County and resident
two sisters, Mrs. Nick Myer, Mor-|
|
tion ne
northern end of Lake Michigan,
black wingtips, and a vivid corals _
every step if he chose, the Out-:
old birds defending their young _ from the attacks of neighbors
“miles of coastline on
A Supreme Court principal, will be held at 10 a. m./one of the planes may have ot Poth Schaefer, all of Indianiab- county JONg Fesident of anon or Indianapolis
Monday in the Greensburg Bap-| | trouble and crashed and the pilot ; | : decinion snatened hin from he tist church. Burial will be inlot the second plane had piled up! [the company 20 years. He was wiizaie-a-be hed at 290 ou C ing ony ran ang Save Sm al south Park Cemetery. _ | while circling low to look for nis Otto Lee Reisinger {eb of the New Palestine Ma-| ; pew rial Su the gronds he aq, Warneke died yesterday buddy. onic Lodge, Scottish Rite and] Chapel of the Chimes. Burial
tituti { Mrs. Services for Ott ' [been deprived of. constitu onal Memorial Hospital here, 10| First reports said the planes; qq Alton Ave, 0 Lee Reisinger, pe Irvington Presbyterian wil be In Mooresville cemetery.
Hghts. | ¢ f World War| ays after the death of her son, might have cbllided while flying} {Church. A véteran o vestigation by. Federal Probation Object to Death- Penalty The widow of Charles J. War-|in close formation. 4a Y will be at 10:30 a. m. Monday {I, Mr. Payne served overseas iu; THutaday in St Frazicis Hospiauthorities today after pleading] Other veniremen have been ex-|neke, she formerly lived in Milan,| One plane piloted by Lt. Wil- 1011 be in Crown Hill, He was 72.| {the infantry. Es after 38 air 0 od days. guilty yesterday in Federal Court cused because they objected to|She was a member of the Greens-| liam ~ Drazic of ‘Steubenville Reisinger was a lio Survivors include his wife, Ma- Ions Tires 1 aan DE and to a charge of concealing athe death penalty which the prose-| burg Church and-a former Indi- crashed in a field about fourf, i ..."4 yative of New Marion, Fie: 8 daughter, Mrs. A. Marshall| 0 A a ik § an felony. 'eution is asking. ana officer of .the Eastern Star.| {miles west of here. The plane of |, Springer Jr.; a brother, William B y farme
Leroy E. Entsminger, Evans- | ville, was under pre-sentence in-|
four] -
Bray, who was 79, died
file with Secretary of. State
Entsminger was charged with failing to report-theft-of a-$515:16 check from the mails when it oc-
So far the tentatively seated ." Neil Diehl, of Columbus,
fury is att-mate. Several Negroes Joseph—W.—Weishaar crashed into a hitt-seven— mites. southwest of the city.
have been questioned for jury| gervices for Joseph W. Wei © “le curred. Instead, he waited several duty but all were excused. One cpio. 3 26 K. lowa St.. who died Sheriff Clarente Eber said Li. wl ” : aren made a des-| weeks, until he had an argument was excused because he said he yesterday in his home. will pe| Drazic app y
with the woman who took the/had formed an opinion which, peg ats check. attorneys said: “Charges would “Keep him “from giving the 'H. against the woman will be pre- defendant a fair trial. sented to the Federal Grand Jury|said they did not believe in 1 capital Monday. Entsminger, who is 47,1 punishment;
faces a possible three- -year prison sentence. Two other men were also under | investigation today followin guilty pleas to mail thefts. Ora Baker, 68, 932 N. Rural St., admitted taking parcels from the
mail while serving ‘as a postal
employee. Stephen J. Clark, 21,1" of 718 N. Alabama St. pleaded] guilty to stealing three unemploy- | ment checks, -
Armed Bandits 4
Stage 2 Holdups
Armed bandits. one of them a woman, netted $78 in two holdups last night.
Police
cas Grocery, 2318 W. Walnut St. of $28 last night. A knife wielding woman, ac-| companied by a man, took $50,
from Donald Ellis, 24, of 436 N. presented to the athletes at alall of Indianapolis;
Dearborn - St., late last night at| Vermont and West Sts Mr, Ellis told police he was approdched by the couple as Xe, walked past the corner and that, the man grabbed him while the’ woman drew a long knife and took his wallet from his pocket.
4 Indianapolis Men File for Legislature
Four more Indianapolis men had declarations of candidacy for seats in the General Assembly on
Democrat, for State Senate; ‘and Charles H. Democrat;
David 8. Krieger, Republican, and’
William Davis Mackey, Republican, all for state representative.
* Ben Davis Athletes Of Cage Sweaters une 8r.; two sisters, Mrs. |
| parate effort to use his"parachute anid got half way out of the plane |; before it crashed. His body was) thrown clear. . Park. 1:t. Diehl's body was wedged in
Mr, Weishaar, who was 76, was| ¢ lan a retired stone cutter. A lifelong! 'P® kage 2 bie yarn
| resident of Indianapolis, he was ia member of St. Mark’s Lutheran Church. Survivors = include a daughter
130 poms Monday in Gf ‘Funeral . Home, Washington
Herrmann
The rest “will be in
| Burial
Thief Deprives Caught Hitching Ride |
his Mrs
wife, Ray-| | in the Indiana Girls’ School ost
grammed with the school ietters,
said ‘a’ masked man! previous night, armed with a revolver robbed|V. Metcalf, night watchman, in a Thomas Mocas, owner of the Mo-! cloakroom and carried the prize| was a veteran of World War II. sweaters away. | _|._Athletic Director Gordon E. Mrs. Phyllis Davis and Mrs. Mer-|
Martin Towsey and ‘Miss Minnie Clermont today.IF YOU own a royal purple| Weishaar, and a brother, George| The girls, both from Indtanapo-| | Ben Davis High School sweater |J. Weishaar, all of Indianapolis, lis, escaped from the institution] | perhaps you'd better not wear. it| and a grandson. . | yesterday by jumping from a win-| for a day or two. !dow. They were recaptured as Police today were looking. fof Charles Ww. Gardner seven brand new sweaters, mono-| (lis on the highway. : I Services for Charles W. Gar d-1 gchool officials said one of the]
; ner, 1534 Hamilton Ave. will be y the instiwhich were to have been awarded | 4 at 1 p. m. Monday in King girls had Sseapes nto past 20 months. -
{to letter-men of the basketball / team last nigh. |& King ( Chapel. Burial will be in;
—+Floral-Park: ti ——— ) { S .. = | Mr. Gardner, who was 22. died i THUGS entered the building the, Thursday. in his home. Born and, Official Weather locked Lawrence| reared in Indianapolis, he was a| UNITED STATES WEATHER BUREAU {member of the Christ Temple and gynrise. 8:04 a. m.
| Precipitation 24 hours ending 7.3 7:30 a.m. 21 | | Total precipitation since Jan. | ..18:01} [Excess since January. 1 11
Survivors include two sisters,
Harker said seven more sweaters|cedes Cotton: a brother, Ronald!
| The following Sabie shows the tempers- | had been ordered and would be! Moore; an uncle, Melvin Gardner, | es:
ture in other eitd Stati
{later r ceremony.
mothers a and a grandfather.
[Boston - i Burbank R. C. Cc 8 eh i jie ineinnats ....... oulette, | Harvester [Bemver ©. 011101! . Wayne 32 Ft. Worth 6 Official, Dies After Stroke i: oo B | Kansas City “rr { i Robert C. Coulette, 40, assis- Min heapolis-St Paul ... 7+ New Orleans . 6 i tant works manager for the In- New Yor 3! ® dianapolis plant of the Interna- Qnanoms City ....... $s 5
tional Harvester Co, died of a |Pitisouren vl cerebral = hemorrhage -Thursday| Te § night following the plant's an-|§ is : nual organization dinner. (hasten, Df # Born in Ft. Wayne, he was edu} cated in California, attending Loyola University there. He joined International Hag ‘vester in Ft. Wayne more than
£8588
as second assistant superintendent in 1941 and was elevated to assistant works manager in December of 1946.
brothers. Richard and Henry. © A requiem mass will be sung at 10 a. m. Monday, in Our B=
inf Burai wil be in Marion,
| daughter,
{he lived in Indianapolis 65 years. He was a member of the Engle-! ‘wood Christian Church and Local |47, Painters nUion.
Survivors -include his wife, Ethel M.; three daughters, Mrs, Faye: ‘Stewart,’ MERE Dorothy
Walsh and Mrs. Betty Brunton! and a son, Merritt Reisinger, alll of Indianapolis; a sister, Mrs. Myrtle Reller, Long Beach, Cal. and seven grandchildren.
Girls School Runaways ‘Mrs. Mary Clegg
Rites’ for Mrs. Mary mother of Robert L. Clegg, Indi-
m, tomorrow in Neoga, Ill. Mrs.! Clegg,” who ‘was 85, died there yesterday in her home. A native of Ilinois, Mis. Clegg is survived by her son, Robert; a Mrs.
J. Clegg Jr.. Bloomington
Mrs. William Phillips
Services for Mrs. Eva Phillips, |
11524 Woodlawn Ave. will he held. Tat 1:30 p. m: Monday in J. C. Wil{son Chapel of ‘the Chimes. Burial, {will be in Crown Hill. Mrs. Phillips, who was 78, died
Sunset. 5 5:47 ». =, | | Thursday in the home of a niece,
Mrs. Ernst Angrick, {Ave. Born in Indiana,
2817 Allen, she lived
Surviving are her husband, {William F. Phillips, and several
75 nie [nieces and | nephews.
C.,. Indianapolis, and a sister, “Mrg
Mrs. C. M.. Conger, Fairland.
William A. Calvert
Rites for William Anthony Calvert, Indianapolis. resident years, will be held -at 11:30 a. m.| Monday in the J. C. Wilson] Chapel of the Chimes... Burial {will be in Scottsville, Ky. Mr. Calvert, who was 75, died | yesterday in his home, 415 8. | Randolph 8t. He was a native
was employed by the Rockwood
Two runaway girls were back |anapolis, will be held at 2:30 p. [Manufacturing Co.
Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Trma B. Wood, Indianapolis, land Mrs. Allen Jones, B8cottsville, .Ky.; three sons, Loren Calvert, Indianapolis; Garland Cal-
Robert ' Ewing, vert, Nineveh, and John Calyert, |and a brother, William E. Barnes, |- |they flagged a ride to Indianapo-|Neoga, and ‘a grandson, Robert Pico, Cal.; ) {seven great- -grandchildren.
36 grandchildren and
Edward H. Swanson
Services for Edward H. Swanson, 2164 N, Capitol Ave., will be held at 2 p. m. Monday in Patton {Funeral Home. Burial will be in |Flofal Park. Mr. 8wanson, who was 60, died Tuesday. He was a native of | Alabama and had been -a resi-
15 in Indianapolis the last 60 years. dent of Indianapolis 40 years. For
|3 years he was employed by the Wm. H. Block Co. There are no! immediate survivors.
Me. 8458
SPACIOUS SURROUNDINGS 1S AVAILABLE WHEN You CALL
6 3 HERRMANN
FUNERAL HOME 1505 SOUTH EAST ST.
“A FUNERAL ey
IN FINER, MORE
165
| Surviving are a daughter, Mrs,
+Helen—Nichots, Indianapotis; two {grandchildren and two great-! grandchildren.
Mrs. Melissa Blacklidge “Rites for Mrs. Melissa Black-| 'lidge, native of Elizabethtown. | |Ky., and resident of Indianap- | |olis 23 years, will be held at-11
La m. Monday in Flanner & Bu-| |
{chanan mortuary. Burial will be] in West Maplewood Cemetery, in|
Clegg, of Allen County Kentucky, and Anderson.
Mrs. Blacklidge, who was 68, died yesterday in Methodist Hos-| |pital. A member of North Meth.Jodine Church, she lived in 3250 N.| New Jersey St. | Surviving are a daughter, Miss | Mildred Blacklidge. Indianapolis,
Hesperia, Cal.
f
THE MoD
6p.mto9p m Monday thru Friday
OPEN HOUSE!
“The Indianapolis Home Builders Assn. end Marion County Residential Builders, Inc.
“Present -
7936 WINDCOMBE BOULEVARD (One Block East ut College Avenue) Indianapolis, Indiana r
:.., Open for Public Inspection . . ., Daily and Sunday thru March 26
HOME BUILDERS SERVING AS, 3 HosTS ; SUNDAY, MARCH n. :
>
-@ MODEST COSTS
* No charge for inspection and commitment. : * No Commission or Brokerage charges
EL HOME
2p m. to 9 p. m. Saturday and Sunday
and peck at each other as they
meee
