Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 October 1950 — Page 10
PAGE 10
PN A A AU EI A JO WA
Who Pays ea
Row Over Extradition Cos} Brings Grin to Unhappy
x
‘Marion County Unable to Make Mon Pay for:
Trip From California Charles Cox, “unhappy. pappy.”
28, of Gardena, Cal, 1 is now not nearly so
in’ Non-Supj Case
y described as an
unhappy. Mr. Cox made a trip to Indianapolis from California at the expense of Marion County. And the county doesn’t have a chance in the world of making him pay for it. - ==, Mr. Cox was extradited” along with another man from the
West Coast a month ago to] stand trial here for nonsupport.|
Gets 1 to 7 Years The second man, Earnest Bar-| ker, came- to trial Sept. 19 in! Criminal Court 1 and was found guilty. He was sentenced to one
to seven years in the Indiana Re-|
formatory but it was suspended! on condition that he pay $20 a! month support to his four chil-!
Tomer: Member ' Of Sousa Band
Services for Fred Sommer,
Harry Moo Chapel. Burial will be in Crown
The three men, Tom Flannary and Floyd Leslié of the prose-
| otor's staff and Sgt. Joseph
|Klein, were gone about a week and returned with the two prisoners. Mr. Cox protested His in{nocence all the way and plead
Hill Mr. Sommer, who was 76, died Saturday in his home, 1230 Lexington Ave. Active in the Democratic Party he served as deputy coroner in 1931.
{that he has receipts to prove he had made payments, “We think the trip was a success,” Mr. Dailey said. “We don't
. dren.
Rabb, When arraigned
~ Robert Raab:
Tells Same Story In his trial Friday,
Deputy Prosecutor Mrs. phine Stewart, story she had told Mrs.
previous y.
the court.
violated here,” the judge said.
the prosecutor's office filed a motion to dismiss the charges. Mr. and Mrs.
courtroom hand in hand.
ly Prosecutor Geor e
train to bring the two men back.
was made for. only $407 ne ® Everything for your dog, cat, fish or bird at the “Department Store for Pets.”
PET HOUSE
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Mr. Cox came to trial in Crim-| (one.
fnal Court 2 before Judge Saul I. | [these dependent children do not the|
judge, after hearing some evl- | Welfare Department.” dence, said to Deputy Prosecutor |
Mr. Cox told the same story and Mrs. Cox who had filed the charges with Josetold the same Stewart
“I have been receiving payments right along but “e borrows money all of the time and I don’t think that's right,” Mrs. Cox told
} Cox and their four children walked from the
Now, the question arises about! the expenses of. the trip. Original-| Dailey IMrs. planned to send three men by|
. They did, however, go by car. The| trip by train was estimated to
cost $1200. The sytaioblle trip William B. Qualter ja
{necessarily want to prosecute anyWe only want to see that
get on the rolls of the County
“Marion County bears the ox. Wydah J. Farah
pense of the trip. That isn't right Rites Tomorrow to the taxpayers of Marion Coun- :
ty, Bob. It costs a little fortune to go to California for this man.”
Services for Wydah J. Farah, 15 years a resident of Indianapolis, will be held 2 p. m. tomorrow in the 8t. George Greek Orthodox Church. Burial will be in Crown Hill Mr. Farah died Saturday in his home, 517 W. 20th St. He was 57. He was a member of the St. "|George Church and was affiliated with the Knights of St. George. Surviving are his wife, Zakia Anna; two sisters, Mrs. Hanna Saikley, Indianapolis, and Mrs. Saeda Saba, Cordoba, Argentina.
“I failed to find any statute Albert W. Dornbush
Services for Albert W. Dorn-!
oven hearing je Seqlimony of of hush, Advance Paint Co. foreman) e witnesses, Prosecuto. aabi 1x vears will be moved for a quick recess. When| 3 years, wid held at 8p, 10.
day in. Hermann Funeral Hom Dornbush’s birthplace.
yesterday in his home, son St. He was a member of Olive]
|Branch Christian Church, Sur-|MidWwest sales agent for the Pratt
|viving are his wife, Olive a brother, Thomas; two sisters, Thomas Neal [Freda Roth; his mother, Mrs. [Carrie Dornbush, and a nephew, {all of Evansville.
| Services for William B. Qualter x [lifelong resident of Indianapolis land former employee of Crown Hill Cemetery, will be at 10 a. m.| tomorrow at Holy Cross Catholic| Church. Burial will be in Holy Cross Cemetery in St. Croix. Mr. Qualter, who was 55, died Saturday in Flower Mission Hospital, He lived at 814 N. New| Jersey St. | Surviving are his three sons, \James, John and William Jr.; a! |daughter; Miss Mary; his mother, Mrs. Sarah, all of Indianapolis; {and two. sisters, Mrs. Biddy Lazin, | West Fork, and Mrs. Margaret
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{sister, Mrs. Maurice Lunte, all of
| plwin R. Schreiner, resident of court convened that afternoon Burial ‘will be in Evansviiie, My | Indianapolis for 40 years, died
Mr. Dornbush, who was 53, died 31 and lived at 4226 Carrollton 1536 Daw-|{*Ve
and Mrs.
William Soltau
lanapolis Real Estate Board and
Mr. Sommer was also a former Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra musician. He was a member of the Emmaus Lutheran Church, Surviving are three sons, Fred W., operator of the Hoyt Machine Co., with whom Mr, Sommer worked; Walter H.,, and B8gt Carl Sommer of the Indianapolis Police Department, and five grandchildren. :
Henry Drummond Dies in Hospital
Henry J. Drummond, 550 W. 46th St., lifelong resident of Indianapolis, died yesterday in Methodist Hospital. An insurance man most of his life, Mr. Drummond, who was 41, was a member of the Marion Masonic Lodge, Scottish Rite and Murat Shrine. He was a graduate of Shortridge High School. Survivors are his father, James G.; a brother, Hugh J, and a
| Indianapolis. Edwin R. Schreiner
here yesterday. Mr. Schreiner wa: |
For the past 20 years he was
./Food Corp. of Philadelphia, Pa. land until his retirement recently, he represented the Shores Phar{maceutical Co. of Cedar Rapids, |Towa. He was a member of the |8t. Joan of Arc Catholic Church. Surviving are his wife, Helen; {a brother, Walter B., Vineland, . J.} a daughter, Mrs. Leonard A. Murchison, Indianapolis, and a grandson. Private services and burial will be held at Newtown, Ind. Wednesday.
Services Today
Services for William A. Y oii 11306 Woodlawn Ave, were held today in Shirley Brothers’ Central Chapel. Burial was in Memorial
ma k'e another
and didn't even
date. Once I tried letting another fellow win in cards. He Later he told a friend he didn’t
wasn't smart enough to
again,
solitaire. jold said. A CARD WHO OUGHT TO BE DEALT WITH.
. THERE SHOULD be talk about being a good winner along with the talk on being a - good loser. A tactful winner doesn’t rib the person he de-
ground. Even then, he doesn't overdo razzing. You probably acted smug when you won. You probably | overdid the dumb act with the boy you let defeat you. Stupidity may not become you but don’t fool yourself by thinking superiority becomes you, either. You actually don’t think you'll end up an old maid, but you might. Men like to think they excel in the fields and recreations originally dominated by them. They should excel, long experience. If they don’t, they should concede to the women, but they soldom do. We tell them they're wonderful when we_ fall in love with them.” Naturally, they beHeve us. They want to believe us, and they want us to keep admiring them.
Dies in Michigan
Times State Service
Park. Mr: Soltau, who was 75, died Friday in his country home near {Nashville. A lifelong resident of Indianapolis and head of | Realty Co., he was engaged in the real estate business 25 years. i He was a member of the Indi
of the First Evangelical United Brethren Church. Survivors are two daughters, Miss Pearl and Miss Opal; a son,
BLOOMINGTON, Oct. 9—Dr. Horace Addison Hoffman, first alumnus of Indiana University to! {hold a faculty post at the univer-,
|sity, died Friday. He was 95. He| wa
was Dean Emeritus of Greek at; {IU and the oldest member of Sig-| ma Chi Fraternity.
Graduating with honors from the
studied Greek and Latin at Harvard and in Athens, Greece. He was a professor of Greek and
Charles W., and two brothers, John and Ben, all of Indianapolis.
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tof his daughter, Mrs. David R.
Latin for almost 40 years. Upon his retirement in 1920, the university awarded him an honorary LLB degree. Dr. Hoffman died at the home
Murray, in Traverse City, Mich, where he had resided since retirement. He is survived by two other daughters, Mrs. Daniel B. Mebane, New York City, and Mrs. William ‘K. Nance of Vincennes. Dr. Hoffman was born on a farm near Dear Auburn, Ind.
Man , Stabbed to Death
After Drinking - Bout
An all-night drinking-bout cli-| {maxed by an "argument about
{how long it would take to get some man today. Glenn H. Cutherell, 39, of 738
law “wife, Nellie Beatrice Bailey, gcissors, police said.
Municipal * Court Clarke tomorrow.
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rr — een
. {described the world situation a8
won. Mayor Feeney heard high-rank-
want to date me because I/America’s potential might with play Russia's war power.
cards. So I'm afraid to try that
Either way it just doesn’t seem| Association of Mayors.
to work out right. I'm afraid unless I find an answer to my prob- Showed Indianapolis to be “well
{lems I'll end up at home playing advanced" in civil defense plans. Or worse yet i ean He
feats unless he's sure of his |
Dr. H. A. Hoffman :
university in 1881, Dr, Hoffman
gin brought death to a
N. West St, was stabbed with! a pair of ‘scissors by his common-
26, ‘after he is said to have threatened her with a pair of
She was arrested on a charge of murder and will appear before Judge Alex
| Cutherell was arrested on al | charge of murder in April of 1942, {but no indictment was returned. |He was arrested in March of {this year for assault and battery with intent to murder, The case
Sete seressesesesconse
Mayor Feeney warned against a “let down” In civil defense preparations. The mayor, who returned to his desk today after attending a defense conference in Washington, |
serious despite developments in| the Korean area. While in the national capital
t ing ‘military authorities compare
The conference was called by
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Mayor Feeney said comparison
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George E. Kidd |
BLOO ech State o's -
|B. Kidd, FIELD, ou. 2 County! {auditor and retired funeral di-| {rector, died here Saturday. He| |was 81. Surviving are his wife, Eva: a daughter, Mrs, Fannie Cahill, Washington, and a son, Max Kidd, |
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college electi The men the public is are set up so “If a vote - simple instru of,” explaine: everything fo Each ma weighs 1120 | a machine good beefstes An assem voting machi rolled into t ° long line of being pushed hyaah-—mule First the « dashes aroun the, working storing them Inspectors disconnect pi out where thi Mr. Lann¢ Republican. totals from | other just in have ever see what a dizzy Mr. Gayhi letters which “When I sta off. I work t numbers beg glasses.” Ray Kem] strips, a ven unused panel: Charles Bi celluloid: cove Lingenfelter | says he is a “The Able Di “Henry's k best man for Turner Fic with a cloth the “mule tre “Clerk San and the keys ‘ing set of ke duplicates. Tt
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~NEW YOR YOF wrong about run, the chea of major leag ing boys have I wrote th ‘the series, in runs had bee nings, and in cal distance, Konstanty for measly hits ir
What He A
WHAT WI weeping over rocket—with ball, the spitb - "pitcher's trick Jnuch talent | and are blami There see: about the stul skill is serving Rob Roberts burp and drib thirsty for h testily into th fore, pitched game from a and certainly need post no ¢ ity of permit games. It turns ou purest caoutel place at all if hitting the of activity by the contests in th citing as a gu! on the outcom: One of the have distingui is a kind of %c sport In whicl
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~ HEIDELB! was a VIP. streetcars anc My day be Army put me train this side Our fighting train the Dres of a befter n:
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IN THE C private train whizzed arour in it while o: scuttled for tl to report, run: So I got a 7 knobs that cc on the run v cream on the were lined - wi ished, inlaid b Outside the of locomotives var and an o - carrying Gern “no doubt that Here, in t Student Prince
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