Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 March 1951 — Page 29
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FRIDAY, MAR. 30, 1051 .
State to Step Up
»
Funeral to Be
Tomorrow
War on Truckers For Wife of Judge Niblack
25 More Jroopers
To Boost Enforcement Indiana state police served notice that a step-up in the war on overweight truckers was in the making today with the announcement that 25 more troopers will Join their ranks to bolster the truck-weighing program. The additional manpower, provided by the 1951 General Assembly, will be trained this summer and appointments will become effective Sept. 1. The state police board said its policy was to ‘‘enforce the state vehicle weight law within the limitations of state police department facilities.” Meanwhile, Supt. Arthur M. Thurston reported truckweight violations on Hoosiers highways, dropped from 30 per cent in December of 1949 to 2.3 per cent last month, Of the 20,821 vehicles weighed during February, only six of the 469 arrested involved violations of the state gross limit! of 72,000 pounds. He said most of the vehicles stopped were in violation of the axle limits, due to improper loading. ) Mr. Thurston also said construction of four additional permanent weighing stations “at strategic points along major truck routes” has been approved by the state highway commission. They will be located on U. 8. 20 north of Chestertown, on Ind. 219 between Elkhart and South Bend, on U. 8. 24 east of Ft. Wayne, and on Ind. 62 south of Charlestown.
Mrs. J. S. Hinkle, Gift Shop Owner, Dies
Times State Service
MARTINSVILLE, Mar. 30 -— Services for Mrs. J. S. Hinkle, prominent gift and antique shop owner, who died Wednesday in her home here, will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow in the Cure & Hensley Funeral Home. E.atombment will follow in the Greenlawn: Mausoleum. Mrs. Hinkle was the widow of Dr. J. S. Hinkle who was house physician in local sanitariums here. He died in 1949. A native of Brownstown, Mrs. Hinkle came to Martinsville in 1910. Survivors are a daughter, Mrs. Donal Mosier, Martinsville, three gtepsons and a brother, Claude E. Cox, Evanston, Ill,
Native of Sullivan Dies in Hospital Mrs. Margaret F. Niblack, wife of Judge John 1. Niblack of Marion County Superior Court 1, died early last night in 8t. Vincent's Hospital, where she had been a
patient the past week. She was 43. A native of Sullivan, Mrs. Niblack was the daughter of Walter EK Wood, former judge of the Sullivan Circuit Court and now a practicing attorney there, Active in Scouts
She was active in Girl Scout work here and served as neighborhood chairman of the Meridian Heights District of the organization. Mrs. Niblack also spent many hours working as a captain during the last fund drive of the American Red Cross. A resident of Indianapolis since 1925, she attended Butler University, was a member of Kappa Alpha . Theta Sorority and its Alumni Association, and a former
Services Are Set For J. E. Herndon
Services for James E. Herndon, retired railroad employee who died yesterday in his home, 26 N, Gray St., will be held at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in Shirley Brothers’ Irving Hill Chapel. Burial will be in Washington Park. Mr. Herndon was born in Daviess County 76 years ago and had resided in Indianapolis 41
'years. He formerly was a carpenter for the New York Central System and the Baltimore & Ohio 'Railroad.
He was a member of East Park Methodist Church and Veritas Masonic Lodge. Surviving are his wife, Detha, and a nephew.
Mrs. Ella Smith
Mrs. Ella Emith, lifelong resident of Indianapolis, will be buried in Crown Hill following services at 3 p. m. Monday in Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary. Mrs. Smith died yesterday in her home at 4020 N. Illinois St. She was a member of Tabernacie Presbyterian Church. Survivors include two daughters, Mrs. Edna 8. Wilson and Mrs. Myla S. Hall, both of Indianapolis, and a brother, Fred S. Brennan, Lebanon.
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Butler's Dr. Rat To Retire in Fal Member of Faculty For 31 Years
Dr. Gino A. Ratti, dean| emeritus of Butler University's| College of ‘Liberal Arts: and Sciences and head of the ro-}
mance language department, will retire this fall. Dr. Ratti, a member of the school's faculty for 31 years, was known to thousands of Butler alumni
'who attended
4 - Mrs. Margaret Niblack ‘employee of the State Highway Commission. | Mrs. Niblack was. also a member of Central Avenye-Methodist Church and its Sunday School, Services’ will me at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow in Hiseyv and Titus Mortuary. Burial will be in Crown Hill. Besides her husband, Mrs. Niblack is survived by two daughters, Nancy, 16, and Susan, 14; her parents, Mr, and Mrs. Walter F. Wood, Sullivan; four sisters, Mrs John W, Gill, San Carlos, Cal.; Mrs. Gertrude Van Arsdale, Sullivan; Mrs. Agnes Foltz, Warsaw, and Mrs. Ada Willis, Springfield, Ill.; a brother, Walter F. Wood Jr., Sullivan; an aunt, Mrs. Fern Barnett, South Bend, and two uncles, Arthur Wood. former Sullivan mayor, and the Rev. Clive McGuire, executive secretary of the Indianapolis Baptist Association. OES 452 to Meet Prospect Chapter 452, OES, will meet at 7:45 p. m. Monday at the Masonic Temple, State and Prospects Sts. The meeting will be the first with the new officers and there will be an obligation ceremony at the opening.
Society Sets Meeting The April meeting of the Indiridian Sts. A discussion of the held at 2:30 p. m. Sunday at the Riley Library, St. Clair and Meridian Sts. Adiscussion of the telescope will he held.
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Public Amazed to Find
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On Sale At Pre-War Prices
Rogers Jewelers Reverse Trend,
Offers Watches at
1939 Prices S
INDIANAPOLIS, Mar. 30—In the face of constantly rising prices, Rogers Jewelers, with 2 stores in Indianapolis, is performing the amazing feat of offering internationally known Elgin watches at” pre-war prices. The brand new seventeen jewel series of Elgin watches at Rogers starts at 33.75, including federal tax. Watches of similar quality sold
for the same price or more
Not only is” the public getting
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of watches on sale at Rogers.
free of any extra charge. For ex-
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both on the Irvington and N Fairview camp- Dr. Ratti uses. He joined 1 the staff in 1920 as head. of the romance language department. | In 1935 he was named acting] dean of the College of Liberal] Arts and Sciences and dean in 1937. In 1947 he retired from those duties to devote full time
ito teaching.
He joined ‘the Butler faculty after serving from 1913 to 1920 on the staff of the University of Washington, and from 1911 to 1913 at Northwestern University. On sabbatical leave in 1925, he studied ‘at the Sorbonne in Paris and the University of Florence in Italy. He received his Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts degrees at Middlebury College and took his Doctorate of Philosophy at the Unijversity of Grenoble,| France, in 1911. He is the author of several romance language textbooks,
School to ‘Give Show
Bunker Hill Grade School of Franklin Township will present a variety show at 8 p. m. today in the school auditorium. Given by eighth grade pupils, the cast includes Jackuline Allison, Pauline Green, George Lowes, Eva Copeland. Carl Spoonamore. Ruth Todd, Joan Knapp, Jeanette
Pierce and Billy Collins.
Former Golf Champ Dies
EAST HARTFORD, Conn, Mar. 30 (UP)—Jerome D. (Jerry) | Travers, 64, helder of five na-| tional golf championships, died at his home late last night. |
al. Graceful ex-
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