Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 February 1951 — Page 4

SUNDAY, FEB. 18, 1951

# 8 p. m. Friday. State Sen. Cecil Federation to Meet cConahay, Indianapolis, will

Indianapo derati Mi Coe dle aapolis Hea Ine. A speak. Paul C. Wetter, president,

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

‘Girls’ Get Makeup— W. T. Hause, 28th's Mission Compared

PAGE 4

Father of 5 Drowns in Foot of Water

Wife Finds Body In Field Near West Side Home

A 41-year-old father of five small children drowned yesterday afternoon in one foot of water

near his home at 2001 W. Morris st. . He was identified as Cecil Lloyd, a machinist employed by the Hoffman Specialty Corp, 1001 York St. Mr, Lloyd's body was found

a

lying face down -

in the backwater from Eagle Creek in a fleld which he 8 Fo planned to have cleared for garMr. Lloyd dening. His wife, Annie Lee, 30, and Mr, and Mrs. Fred Olsen, who reside with the Lloyds, discovered the body at 2:30 p. m. Mrs. Lloyd said she returned from town and found that her husband was missing. Mrs. Olsen said she had seen him earlier in the day as he started for the field. ! Besides his ‘wife, Mr. Lloyd is survived by five children, Lucian James, 11; Wendell Lee, 7; Ernest

Earl, 4; Mary Sue, 2, and Opal| legs to prevent displayed hose from snagging on rough surfaces.

Lee, 8 months.

Those neatly trimmed mannequins you'll see in J. C. Penney displays will stem from the work of Carl Edwards, Penney employee. | Working for the Thursday opening deadline, Mr. Edwards sands |

Ex-Bicycle Champ, Dies

Westport Man

Won Many Awards |

As Pro Rider

{ William Thomas Hause, na[tional bicycle champion of a_hdlf-| century ago, died yesterday in St.| Vincent's Hospital. His home was in Westport, | For several years, Mr. Hause

was a member of the topnotch Unit began service for the

amateur bicycle team of Kimbel| and Hause, He turned profes-| sional in 1804 after winning the| Indiana racing championship, | and rode against the top men in the nation on the once<famous! Morgan & Wright tire manufac-| | turers’ team. He retired in 1896 with a caseful of trophies. | Born in Missouri, Mr. Hause ‘lived in Westport since the age of 2. When he was a boy he bought his first bicycle for $65, paying| {for it from §1 a day he earned |clerking in a Westport general store. Rode 120 Miles Daily { As soon as he could outride all} the boys in the neighborhood, he began his career as a racer. Hel rode for the Indianapolis firm

|and later for Carl G. {founder of the {Motor Speedway. He kept in training by riding {his bicycle from Westport to Indianapolis and back, a distance jof about 120 miles.

Indianapolis

He was 80. enlisted men throughout the di-

‘With That of Decade Ago

eet in the Washington Hotel at/Will preside.

Division Marks 10th Anniversary . Of Call for World War Il Emergency

By LT. RICHARD ¥. SEIVERLING . Special to The Times CAMP ATTERBURY, Feb. 17—Ten years ago today, the 28th

emergency. But today, many officers and

vision ‘took time to recall the day on Feb, 17, 1941, when the

emergency which became the greatest war in history and lasted nearly five years.. No accurate count is available of the number of men who were with the “Keystone’ division then and are still serving with it, but it is estimated at several hundred. ‘Symbol of Our Mission’ In the temporary absence of the division commander, Maj. Gen. Daniel B. Strickler, who is on an inspection tour of several service schools, the acting commander, Brig. Gen. Thomas L.

mission in the present gency.” {

“Ten years ago,” Gen. Hoban |Ing about the middle of May, | said, “our mission was very sim- Plans call for maneuvers in North | of Hay & Willits for two years, jiar to what it is today. Although|Carolina from June 20 to July|

Fisher, tne uncertainties were just the|10.

same as they are now, we trained |

then and trained hard. The rec-/in February,

[Hoban called attention to the an-|the only officer to be serving a niversary “as a symbol of our|fourth tour of federal duty with emer- the division,

Infantry Division was federalized for active duty in World War 1X. Now at this Hoosier camp, serving its fourth tour of federal service in half a century, the former Pennsylvania National Guard {division is busily engaged In intensive training. The division was {ordered into active military service Sept. 5, 1950, for the present

One of the 28th Division units (formerly the first Philadelphia City Troop), the 28th Reconnaissance Company, has the distinction of being the oldest component of the Army of the United States with a continuous record of service. ‘Iron Division’

In World War I, the division fought so hard-—there were 14,000 casualties in 4% months -— that Gen, John J, Pershing dubbed the 28th the “Iron Division.” { Now back in federal service again, the 28th is in the middle! of its 28-week training cycle. Gen. Strickler, commander, entered the Pennsylvania National Guard as a private in 1916 and is

Following completion of train-

After that? Veterans of a day 1941, sald only,|

ord established by the 28th in!“Wait and see.” |

World War II is proof that we executed our mission well.” ‘Bloody Bucket’ |

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ERAS EERE WRN WEES CRB ER Ret AN RRR Re

Wife's Arm Broken

Upon his retirement, Mr. Hause

FREE PARKING

Lot No. 2 Across

Funeral arrangements were be- | " ing completed last night. Dr | 4 Barnes ——————————— * = . Man Arranges Funeral, Then Shoots Himself

i . . . i History backs up Gen. Hoban's| |Again, Police Object {entered the loan business in In-igtatement. In 1941, the 28th Di-| Mrs. George Rider may not|9}anapolis and Omaha, For the vision, proud of its combat rec-| mind her arm being broken re-| 28t 37 years he had been en-or4 in World War I, had not yet | peatedly, but police are getting S3&ed In the insurance business earned its now-famous nickhame

Milltown, Feb. 17 (UP)-—Sidney Carroll, a 56-year-old widower, telephoned a funeral director and made arrangements for his funeral a few minutes before killing himself. Coroner Clydg Roberts said Mr. Carroll, a liguor store owner, shot himself in the head with a revolver because of “ill health.” Carroll's body was discovered by his brother, James, after the suicide. The brother went to Carroll’'s home after receiving a farewell note telling him what to do with the property.

Oil Well Is Capped In Monroe County

Times Siste Service BEDFORD, Feb. 17—An oil Well was capped near here today on the farm of the late Ben Deckard, in Monroe County, just over the Lawrence County line. John Easter, drill supervisor for the Jordan Bond® & Drilling Co., Oaktown, said the well should .pkoduce around 350 barrels a day. "Mr, Easter said the well was sunk 1743 feet before it started producing. He said the crude oil produced promised to be a fair e.

Park and Recreation Executives to Meet

- Times State Service BLOOMINGTON, Feb. 17 -— About 200 park and recreation executives are expected to attend thé Great Lakes Park Training Institute which opens Monday at Pokagon State Park near Angola. The institute, which lasts through Friday, is conducted by Indiana University in co-oper-ation with national and state park associations. Chairman is

Garrett G. Eppley, head of the viving

IU Department of Recreation.

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. | Lodge.

Is Dead at 78

Operated Jewelry.

Store at Greenfield | Dr. I. H. Barnes, Greenfield op-| tometrist and jewelry store pro-|

prietor, died yesterday in his home there, He was 78. Services will be held at 2 p, m. Tuesday in Pasco Funeral Home. Burial will be in Park Cemetery, Greenfield. A native of Ladoga and graduate of Spencer Optometry College, Chicago, Dr. Barnes settled in Greenfield in 1909, and immediately opened Barnes Jewelry Store. He was a member of the Methodist Church and Masonic

Survivors include his wife, Amelia; a daughter, Miss Eda M.| Barnes, Goshen; a son, Feary Barnes, Grand Prairie, Tex.; a! brother, William C., Indianapolis,

{tired of it.

and five sisters, Mrs. F. 0. Wiley and Mrs. Mabel Harrison, Indi-| anapolis, Mrs. John Mitchell and| Mrs. Otto Henry, Danville, Ind.,| and Miss Lillian Barnes, Washington, B. C.

‘Mrs. William Edwards

Mrs, Cora Anna Edwards, an Indianapolis resident for 37 years, will be buried in Round

at 2 p. m. tomorrow in Little & Sons funeral home, Beech Grov Mrs. Edwards, who was born in Kentucky, died Saturday in her home at 3443 8S. Oxford St." She was 54. Surviving are her husband, Willam; two daughters, Mrs. Margaret Kieninger and Miss Mary Ruth Edwards; six sons, Clarence, George, Thomas, James and Harold, all of Indianapolis, and Sgt. Charles Edwards, fighting with the Army in Korea. Also sur-

} is

Hill Cemetery following services|

are four sisters, six| ‘brothers and 11 grandchildren.

£73 a 2 7

Several months ago, she and|

her 51-year-old husband had a tation as a hunter and dog fan-/the German army which, during

|tussle In their room at the Spen-| cler. | cer Hotel. Mrs. Rider's left arm | Parts of the country as a judge threw nine divisions at the 28th

was broken, She did not press! charges,

again, And once more, Rider broke his wife's left arm. Again she did not prosecute. But police, ruckus by neighbors, Rider on disorderly conduct

charge and ordered him into court ber of the Masons and a member of the Scottish Rite and the West- trace their history to Benjamin {port Christian Church,

tomorrow. Announces 4-Point Plan WASHINGTON, Feb. 17 (UP) —Defense Production Adminis-

trator Willlam H. Harrison has SOUND ADVICE

announced a four-point program to help small share of defense contracts. Mr. Harrison na Pritchard, Denver, a assistant to head the program.

Marking 50th Year

Mr. and Mrs. David Seymour

Mr, and Mrs. David Seymour

ding anniversary today with open house from 2 to 5 p. m. in [1] their home, 101 8. Gladstone Ave. Mr, Seymour, a retired railroader, served 30 years with New an Mr. and Mrs. Seymour are members of St Mark's

York Central. Lutheran Church.

They have three children, Mrs. Charles J. Swain, Pittsboro; | John David Seymour and Mrs. Henry Tegeler, of Indianapolis, |

A magnificent bridal set of unusual brilliance. 4 extralarge, fiery diamonds glorify the beauty of the center diamond. Matched wedding ring has 5 large, matched diamonds in individual prong settings. See it—you'll be thrilled at the size of the diomonds . . . amozed ot fhe valve.

' FIRST DOOR SOUTH OF LYRIC THEATER

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Our own "department a

competent maintenance.

| in Westport.

plon Irish setters once sold for have “wiped out” the Pennsyl- | Last night, the Riders argued $1500.

won the Gold Amateur champion- worn by the 28th soldiers was]

summoned to the ship at Riverside Golf Course in back in the line and fighting even arrested | 1904.

Grace. Services will be held at 2| p. m. tomorrow in Westport,

business get its A Milwaukee department ” store must suspect that all is not bliss. d John C.'among

his special The store tags its six-cup perco-| - % 1ators; “Do Not Drop or Throw.” the Civil War, the Spanish-Amer-|

Hinshaw "211"

If You Can't Get Tickets for the Tourney

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|as the “Bloody Bucket” outfit, |

Mr. Hause had a national repu-| That name was attached by Missouri St.

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He was called to many ithe Battle of the Bulge in 1944, n dog shows. One of his cham-/and claimed more than once to

vania division. But every time! Golf Champion, Too the Germans found that the flamAn early golf enthusiast, he ing red “Keystone” shoulder patch

harder. Mr. Hause was a 50-year mem- Back to 1747

Some units of the 28th can

{Franklin's “Battalions of AssociHe is survived by his wife, ators,” organized in 1747. Although the division itself was {not formed until the U.S. Army |reorganized in 1917, its units ‘have fought in every conflict] since the Revolution. Battle streamers of the 28th show par-| (ticipation in the Revolution, the| Customers. war of 1512, the Mexican War, |

MILWAUKEE, Feb. 17 (UP)—

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