Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 October 1950 — Page 8

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“4 idktribute today to Henry L.|

Iie had béen confined to a wheel hospital here. He was 69. chair most of the time since] Mr, Traub attended the Northbreaking a leg in July.

held in the Stimson home Monday Masonic Lodge. and burial will be in the Memorial | Rites will be at 1 p. m. Tuesday Cemetery here, {at the Flanner & Buchanan

Vice President Alben W. Barkley, Hill cemetery, |

Sécretary of State Dean Acheson ee pate RA and Defense Secretary George C FIRST GIRL IN 85 YEARS

Marshall mourned Mr, Stimson's TOLEDO, O,, Oct, 21 (UP)

death as “the loss of one of our truly great citizens.” ’

mended to President Truman that the atomic bomb be dropped on. ———

Javan to end the war “with the Ye 1A WoL IB) +e least possible cost in the lives of ou ou ay $1 our men,” retired as Secretary of Te C bY i War in September, 1944, on his 0 ur our 78th birthday.

under Presidents Franklin D.! If so don't wastes a minute but send to Roosevelt and William Howard Jour drug store right now for ROMIND. This!

> FL or & 3 7 : - “ ¥ “ d Ah ovine Gi Hie se bn wa a oN io pS I I 4 it ;

* PAGE 8 . yg

To Address By Many She Helped, Dies

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‘Former Worker af General Hospital

State Teach [Dies After Career of Aiding Others Mrs. May C. Lybrand was always good for a “touch” . . . of d Ww C d | 50 cents, a couple of dollars or everi the price of a ton of cdal. rew . Cordier And even after she retired from her job at General Hospital Ancre ; in 1946, she never went downtown but that she would be hailed by someone whom she once hired as a mald or janitor at the hospital. It was “hello, Mrs. Lybrand.” or “how are you, Mrs. Lybrand.”

To Speak at. Meeting Thursday

And thus it went until about a

| } Andrew W. Cordier, executive vaar ago when illness forced the five years. Prior to that, and assistant to the secretary-general Fo aa former a Hos- dependent upon the administra-| of .the United Nations, will ad- pital housekeeper to cease her tion she had served in a similar

dress members of the Indiana regular trips downtown. Yester- capacity at the hospital.

State Teachers Association at a gay after having been bedfast six meeting at 7:30 p. m. Thursday at weeks, she died. 0 Cadle Tabernacle.

‘My mother had many friends n Indiana Ave, Mrs. Tyler J, served 17 months overseas as a rs Stroup, 5758 College Ave. said. captain commanding the 135th At the time she retired Mrs. y eg Imalaria opntrol unit.

The session is a part of two/pyhrand was a housekeeper at “They never forgot her.”

days of meetings, lectures and|the nurses’ home at the Hos- Her mother, Mrs. Stroup said, duty in Italy and on Okinawa. discussions ‘planned here in con-'pital, a job she had held about "ot only helped some of her y “a workers with loans and gifts of lclothing, but often visited them He was a member of the Robert Pennington Post, American Prentice Presbyterian Church, Scientech Club, American Society of Civil EngiWaterworks Association, the Indiana Society of Professional Engineers, and ithe Central States Sewage Works| i He was graduated from Illinois University. Survivors ‘are his wife, Betty; a son, Harvey Richard Kulin; his

nection with the 97th annual con- » oo» vention of the state group of educators. Meetings are being held simultaneously in Gary, South Bend, Ft, Wayne and Evansville. Mr. Cordier. who will discuss “The .United Nations and World! Peace,” has been advisor to all the presidents of the United Nations general assembly since the organization was founded. He was appointed to his present position in 1946 and has the responsibility of coordinating all United Nations activities and programs.

At Indiana College

{the news, ; From 1927 to i944 Mr. Cordier 2 J 3 { If the grandchildren was chairman of the department 1a question, we'd refer Ahem to

of history and political science at| Manchester College, North Manchester, Ind. o { At their sessions here and in other cities the state teachers face the problem. of drafting legislative resolutions designed f{o/ y y p ber help meet the difficulties in op- Mrs. May C. Lybrand | erating state schools in the face —— rnin SA

of rising costs and increasing en- . re rs. Brattain A survey by the association "

resulted in an estimate that en-

rollment in Indiana public schools I§% will Increase 30 per cent in the ites Omorrow near future. The increase in en- ’ rollment alone, it is estimated! . » . | would necessitate approximately Native of Indiana i 500 additional classrooms and ‘ . . . 500 additional teachers each year] Dies in California for the next several years. | Services will be at 2:30 p. m.! Robert H. Wyatt of Indian- tomorrow at Flanner & Buchan-! apolis, executive secretary of the an Mortuary for Mrs, Bertha! association, said that the state Brattain, former resident here, | now appropriates $53 million a|/who died Oct. 13 in Hollywood, year for local school corpora- Calif. Burial will be in Crown tions. The amount, he pointed Hill cemetery following a brief out, is $12 million short of the graveside servige. sum recommended by the assoca-! A native of’ Flat Rock, Ind. | tion and the Indiana School/Mrs. Brattain, who was 72, had Study Commission to the 1049 been a resident of Indianapolis! general assembly, 3 more than 40 years when she | Norman Cousins, editor of the moved in the 1920s. She was the Saturday Review of Literature, Wife of Earl J. Brattain, Erie will address the association at Railroad division freight and pas- | a meeting starting at 7:20 p. m.|/Senger agent here, who died in} Friday. 1923.

Ble Mrs. Brattain had lived in Cali-| fornia. 17 years, moving there

i . Es » oe Stims n u S {from Oklahoma. \ | She maintained her membership |

in the Broad Ripple Methodist

Ai | Chureh here. Survivors include Nill Be Private {a daughter, Mrs, Helen Brattain . |Ferguson; Hollywood; two sisters, |

{ Mrs. Viola Blodgett, and Miss |

{Jennie Garard, both of Bakers-! Only Man fo Sit {vine Calif, two brothers, Ray! In Four Cabinets |and Wallace Garard, both of Los

~ Angeles, and~three grandchildren | COLD PRING HA OR, vv. Xu By 21 (UP)—The Bon and five great-grandchildren.

‘imson, the only man in the nis- Benjamin F. Traub | |

ry of the United States to serve

1 the cabinets of four Presidents. Rites Tuesday

The elder statesman died at the! Benjamin F. Traub, a retired

;e of 83 after suffering a heart } ttack during an automobile ride,(salesman, died Saturday at a

wood Christian Church and -was Private funeral services will bea member of the Calvin Prather

President Truman, Mr. Hoover, mortuary. Burial will be in Crown|

Mary Evangeline Pentz, now two days old, doesn’t realize yet she Is a real oddity in the Pentz fam-| ily. She is the first girl born in the family in 85 years. 1

Mr Stimson, who reccom-

He had served as War Secretary ARTHRITIS PAINS

reat medicine was recently developed in

Taft -and as Secretary of State! the world-famed Knox Control Laboratory: under President Herbert Hoover, 2 California to bring joyous comfort and res

lief for the pains of Arthritis, Rheumatism, Neuritls, Sciatica, Neuralgia, Bursitis and |

HOUSEWIVES ENRAGED | Lumbago. ROMIND usually works with great |

- pl ’ a speed because it dissol i ST. CATHARINES, Ontario, 80 that the ingredients Dy he Intet tote

Oct. 21 (UP)—Police were puzzled, the blood and cartied quickly $o.avery muscle} today by the activities of a back- RO IN ano erp Nate Shea SES vard thief whose deeds have en-

raged housewives. His specialty psins make you sorry. Start taki is

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Mrs.

Church, | Besides the two daughters she Wage boost of about 12 cents an ng {is survived by six grandchildren hour was signed here tonight by piece. the United Rubber Workers Un-| Services will be at 10:30 a. m./ion and the Goodrich Tire and {Tuesday at Flanner & Buchanan Rubber Co, More than 16,000 em- Tuesday in Mey * ployees In seven states are cav-! neral home.

|Crown Hill cemetety.

Mortuary. Burial will be in Hill cemetery.

‘in times of trouble. ‘Walking Library’ { “If there was a death in the {family of a worker, she would visit the home or attend funeral services,” she said. Active despite her advanced years, Mrs. Lybrand was known as “the walking library” to her two daughters, Mrs. Stroup and (Mrs. Albert C. Moffitt Sr. also {of Indianapolis. . Mrs. Lybrand, an avid reader, Parents, {kept her family up to

{have the answer.” | Lybrand was Lafayette, Ind, and had been a {resident of Indianapolis since she was 4 years old. She was a mem St. Paul's. Episcopal

and six great-grandchildren. *.

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" Partner ‘in - [Engineering Firm Harvey J. Kulin, secretarytreasurer of Couch & Kulin, Inc., consulting engineers. died yesterday at Methodist Hospital. He

Fd

Mr. Kulin, a native of Chicago, | n a resident here 10 e lived at 3501 N. Glad-

A veteran of World War II, he

Legion Member

and Mrs.

Services will be at 4 p. m.| J {her,” Mrs. Stroup said. “She'd Tuesday at the Flanner & Bu- United States when he was 16 Burial will had been ill about two years. He! had been employed by the C & G| Typical of Mr. Harrison's probPotts & Co. machine shop about/lem was his order yesterday lim25 years before retiring because iting rubber consumption by man-| ufacturers of civilian goods. Current needs of the Defense Meyer, of the home, 1214 Liv- Department for natural rubber

nd 1" ITH AIEEE IRN | Mrs. Kathioen Bouthe of vembo aoa proc tons in No-| SEY SRR IVR 17] IEE AR

GOODRICH HIKES WAGES CINCINNATI, O., Oct. 21 (UP) | A contract calling for a general 5

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Nr. and Mrs. - 3 A complete list of military re-

Blocher., , . married 64 years. and Mrs. Andrew J.

Blocher, Columbus, celebrated their 64th wedding anniversary

between now and the end of the fiscal year on June 30 has been submitted to Mr. Harrison and the National Security Resources Board by the Munitions Board. He saw These needs absorb all the They were married at Scotland, Il, in 1886 and later moved to Scott County, Ind. to make their residence. In 1908 they moved to columbus. : The couple has been active in the First Baptist Church for 44 years. Mr. Blocher is a retired railroader.

money which Congress has author-| J ized the Defense Department to; : spend, | NOTHING TO BUY But they require such a small’ 0 4 ; part of the nation's industrial out-! NO RED TAPE

put tiat Mr. Harrison is having

ina that there 1s actonl need for IRI 4 J BR LUV ARTHUR 2.

the controls he is ordering.

George L. Meyer

Services Tuesday

{| George I. Meyer, a native of |Alsace-Lorraine, France, Kulin, Brookfiéld, T1l,, and a sis- resident of Indianapolis 40 years, ter, Mrs. Wilma Riedy, Naper-/died yesterday in the Lynhurstiful. Some producers and users of {basic materials believe the gov-|

Mr. Me who cam ernment is going farther than ere 2 eH the, ecessary in clamping restrictions on production of consumer goods.

Mr. Harrison has adopted a; {standard argument in return: we| {must prepare now for an emer-| ‘gency that may develop later and! {otherwise cause serious economic! and a disruption. !

It has been only partly success- |

{Nursing Home. He was 74.

Grange, Ind.

Survivors include a son, Louis!

4

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18,0 _ Approxim registered ir ci . Offi compil com] 7 of 18 12415 votes Ih 24 since 1856, Republican in{1924, Ho

4000 have re i They Here is v the Republi dependent” | RE Bargersvil Republican. crate) keep rupt the c héen Republ Mrs. Hu Bargersville vote Repub Republican. about politic Neal Reco "111 vote for good work.” Carlton RB lege student pie will vote fore. Truma crats turn of them. T ized medici policy, and 18m.”

“Ivan Bye in an India: toward the think one | too long.” ‘¥. L. Hins tire dealer: I generally situation is have a mar enough to te to go.” AWilliam FP

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