Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 April 1951 — Page 7
30, 1951.
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MONDAY, APR. 30, 1951
C. R. Brammer Rites Tomorrow Burial Planned
In Knightstown
+ Services for"Clifford Ray Brammer, who died Saturday in his home near. Knightstown, will be at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Knightstown Methodist Church, followed by burial there in the Glen Cove Cemetery. He was 38. Mr, Brammer was an employee of P. R. Mallory & Co., Inc., the past 10 years. Born in Kansas, he had lived in Kuightstown 15 years. Survivors .include his wife, Agnes; two daughters, Carolyn and Judy; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Brammer, all of Knightstown; five brothers, Russell, Muncie; Oclel, Goff, Kan.; Marvin, Hiawa Kan.; Norman, Topeka, Kan., and Floyd, Indianapolis; and five sisters, Mrs, Olive Dotson, Kansas City; Mrs. Edna Leavelle, Knightstown; Mrs. Dorothy Smoot, Shirley; Mrs. Lola Christian and Mrs. Helen Geren, both of Topeka, Kan. Friends may call at the home in Knightstown.
Charles J. Glaser
Services for Charles J. Glaser will be at 1 p. m. tomorrow in Shirley Brothers’ Central Chapel. Burial will be in Washington Park Cemetery. Mr. Glaser died Saturday in his home, 820 East Georgia St. after a long illness. He was 46. An Indianapolis resident for 22 years, he had been employed as janitor in Public School 4 for the past three years. Before that he worked in the maintenance department of the P. R. Mallory Co., Inc. Surviving are his wife, Lear; a son, Charles W.; two stepdaughters, Miss Frances Rogers and Miss Myrtle Clihe; a stepson, Donald Clihe; and four brothers, Edward, Harry, Frank and William, all of Indianapolis.
John Wesley Chryst Services for John Wesley Chryst, who died today in his home, 408 E. 31st St, will be at 1 p. m. Wednesday in Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary. Burial will be in Crown Hill. He was 79. A native of Lancaster County, Pa., Mr. Chryst lived in Indianapolis since 1892, He was a stereotyper for the Indianapolis Star and News, and a member of Stereotyper Union Local 38.
Sole immediate survivor is his! wife, Harriett Ellen.
Mrs. Virginia Strother Services for Mrs, Virginia Strother, 2209 N. Capitol Ave, who died here Saturday, will be at 1 p. m. tomorrow in Patton Funeral Home Crystal Chapel. Burial will be in New Crown.
Rites Wednesday For Mrs. Bechtold
Services for Mrs. Mildred M. Bechtold, former teacher, who died yesterday in Methodist Hospital after.a long illness, will be at 10 a. m, Wednesday in Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary. Burial will be in Beech Grove Cemetery, Huntington. She was 44, and lived at 716 E. T1st St. The wife of Merlin E. Bechtold, sales engineer for the AllisChalmers Manufacturing Co., she had lived in Indianapolis 15 years. She was a member and taught Sunday School at the Meridian Heights Presbyterian Church, and was active in the Broad Ripple High School's Parent Teacher Association,
told was a graduate of Manchester College. She taught in Huntington County schools from 1026 to 1932, when she resigned after her m Survivors besides her husband include two daughters, John E, and Janet Y. Indianapolis; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Bone, Huntington; and two sisters, Mrs. James Roth, Huntington, and Mrs. Dale Ulrich, Highland.
County Demands Gas Tax Money
Marion County Commissioners today demanded that the County Council take immediate steps to appropriate all available state gasoline tax money, about $300,000, for emergency repair of county rdads. © Fred Nordsiek, president of the Commissioners, said if the Council fails to take steps on -its own initiative, “Commissioners will exercise its legal rights and call a special session on the matter.” Action followed a report by the Indianapolis Medical Division of the Civil Defense Organization that many county roads were ‘“almost impassable” and that failure to keep them in condition would hamper the defense program. r——
Indianapolis Woman Elected AYPA Treasurer
The Indiana group of the American Youth for Political Action today announced newly-elected officers, including one from Indianapolis. Mrs. Myrna Flory Gemmer, wife of the Rev. Robert Gemmer, Indianapolis, was elected treasurer of the Indiana AYPA. The election took place during a week-end work camp attended by the young people at Flanner House. Other officers elected are: Robert Stoner, Anderson, treasurer; Craig Wilder, Dyer, vice chairman; Miss Fannie Chappel, Kokomo, secretary; and Miss Margaret Chappel, Kokomo, publicity director.
Mrs. Strother, who was 69, had lived here 30 years. She was a native of Edinburg.
Survivors include a son, Fran- Four On Airliner
cis, Chicago; a sister Julia Dor-' sey, and a brother, Arthur Dorgey, both of Indianapolis,
Study of Constitution BLOOMINGTON, Apr. 30 (UP) —Indiana University officials an-, nounced today the 100th anniver-| sary of the state constitution will be observed here June 25 to July 6 during the annual workshop in state and local government. They] said the group would study the present constitution and examine the needs for a new one.
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Home Folks Hail Jean—and Doug
Wife Holds Spotlight
In Tennessee Town
By H. D. QUIGG United Press Staff Correspondent MURFREESBORO, Tenn., Apr. 30—The MacArthurs came to Murfreesboro today. For the first time in a long while, the General played second fiddle. It was Mrs. Jean Faircloth MacArthur's day in the middle Tennessee country town where she grew up. She brought her husband and her 13-year-old son? Arthur, back to meet the home folks 14 years to the day after she and Gen. Douglas MacArthur. were married in New York, Apr. 30, 1937. The MacArthur's flew from New York in the General's Constellation, Bataan. They landed at nearby Smyrna Air Base for welcoming ceremonies that touched off a five-hour round of festivities. ! Stage Parade Murfreesboro prepared plenty of attention for Gen, MacArthur —a parade, a speech at the Middle Tennessee College football stadium, a wreath-laying ceremony at a World War II monument, a greeting by a Filipino delegation, and a country-club luncheon for the whole family. But primarily it was Jean MacArthur's homecoming. Here, where she went to college and joined the local chapters of the United Daughters of the Confederacy and the Daughters of the American Revolution, the home folks turned out in full force to welcome her return and help celebrate her 14th wedding anniversary.
. Triplets Born . To Muncie Couple, 6 * y ’ Doing Fine MUNCIE; Apr. 30 (UP)—Triplets today increased the family of Harry O. Reading, an unemployed laborer who lives in an upstairs apartment, to seven children. Two boys and a girl weighing a total of 11 pounds were born to Mr. and Mrs. Reading in Ball hospital Saturday. They were delivered by Dr. Eldo Clauser, who said one arrived every 15 minutes. Hospital authorities said the babies were “doing fine” in incu-
bators and the mother also was in “good condition.”
Mrs. Ada Rogers’ Rites Wednesday
Services for Mrs. Ada Rogers, , Who died
ner & Buchanan Mortuary, with the Rev. E. Burdette Backus of-
Shaken Up by Storm
Four persons were injured!
lslightly as a Chicago and South-|
ern airliner ran into a sudden| storm over Scotland, in Greene County, yesterday. The plane, Flight 10, from | Shreveport to Detroit, jolted the passengers when it lurched as it hit the localized rough weather.
Treated and released at Meth- ters, Mrs. Lewis Ott Ward, Muncle, and Mrs. Myron J. McGee-Mem-|han, Indianapolis, and six grand-
the stewardess, and|children.
odist Hospital were: Miss Bobby Repult, 21, phis, Tenn, Miss Gertrude Willoughby, 59, and! Miss Virginia Willoughby, both of Detroit.
| Martin, 48, Detroit, received first laid when the plane landed at
34, Mrs. B. L. McCoy Dies; A third passenger, Mrs. Camilla Teacher for 32 Years
ficiating. Burial will be in Crown Hill.
Stork (and Girl) Ride Elevator With Parents
Marion Craney, 24-year-old ex-| ecutive secretary to Mayor Bayt,| can't decide whether his new daughter's arrival was well or ill-timed. The T7-pound, 12-ounce “tant greeted Indianapolis at 6:46 a, m. today on her parents’ second wedding anniversary. But she chose the elevator at St. Vincent's Hospital for her bow to the world. Mr. Craney was awakened at 5:45 a. m. by his wife, Vera, 24, and was told that their second ichild was due very shortly. He called their acct; then ordered a taxicab. : The cab conveyed Mr. and Mrs. Craney to the hospital by 6:40. But there just wasn't time enough to get to the delivery room. The elevator was at the third fleor when the girl was born. The young couple live at 959 Tuxedo St. Their son, Stephen Joseph, will be 1 on May 16.
Seek to Identify Charred Body
Grandstand Burns In Warrick County
Times State Service BOONVILLE, Apr, 30—Police today were attempting to identify the badly charred body of a man who died in flames which de-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
New Warning to Stick to Marked Trails | - [Follows Death ‘Plunge in State Park
stroyed the grandstand of the Warrick County Fairgromnde) early yesterday. A check of local residents re-| vealed only one person missing. | But police were uncertain that he was the victim, since he had been in the habit of “disappearing” periodically in the past. Prevent Stable Fire
Firemen battled the blaze for) more than two hours yesterday morning ‘and succeeded in preventing its spread to the five stables that house harness racing horses at the track. State Trooper Glen Hirscher said the blaze apparently began in the seats, instead of the structure. Since the grandstand is a favorite hangout, police believe the dead man may have been an
Mrs. Rogers, who was 75, was the widow of Harry Rogers, for-| {mer executive secretary of the In-| dianapolis Coal Merchants’ Asso-| ciation. | A native of Logansport, she had lived in Indianapolis 50 years. Survivors include two daugh-
Times State Service COLUMBUS, Apr. 30—Mrs, Jo-
| Weir Cook Afrport ‘here.
!were the same as in 1949—heart |
‘(creased from 39,884 in 1949 to
tensive disease, 3208.
Purdue Aid Heads Indiana CROP Setup
| carloads of grain and other farm | commodities to be sent to needy
State Death Rate Up
Indiana's total deaths as the schools 29 years, Mrs. McCoy's result of disease and accidents in- [retirement was announced at the creased by 527 cases in 1950, the {school's eighth grade commenceIndiana State Board of Health | ment last week.
{said today. Its division of public health
statistics pointed out that the [first four major causes of death
| disease, cancer, cerebral hemor-| rhage and hypertensive diseases. Indiana's total deaths in-
{cerebral hemorrhage, 4980; hyper-
T. R. (Tommy) Johnson, direc{tor of information at Purdue | University, is the new 1951 Indi-| ana state chairman of. the Chris-| tian Rural Overseas Program, {succeeding Lt. Gov. John A. | Watkins. The state CROP quota is 114
in war-torn lands.
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'Delana R. Childress Rites at Spencer Today
for Delana R. Childress, former Owen County surveyor who died in his home here Saturday, were to be at 2 p. m. today in West & Son Funeral Home here.
vivors include his wife and two daughters, Mrs. Hazel Edwards|
anna Paetzel McCoy, teacher for 32 years, died here Saturday, just three days after she announced
A teacher in the Clay Township
She is survived by her hus-
Times Stale Service SPENCER, Apr. 30 — Services
Mr. Childress, whb was 77, was county surveyor, for 12 years. Sur-
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The fatal plunge of a daredevil staged on the marked foot trails,” |youth at Clifty Falls State Park he explained. today brought renewed warning| ‘There are absolutely no from Kenneth R. Cougill, head of marked trails on that side of the the Indiana State Park System: canyon. ‘No Marked Trails’ “We can understand the ad“This tragic accident could not/venturous spirit of young people, have occurred if these boys had but this accident clearly shows obeyed park regulations and|the importance of following the
in all state Alcohaul—
CHICAGO, Apr. 30 (UP) — Three men drove up fo a truck lines loading platform in a ‘truck tractor, hitched it to a -trailer loaded with 500 cases of whisky valued at. $25,000 and Srove away, police reported toay.
safety regulations parks."
Plunges 150 Feet Donald Reinhardt, 18-year-old |Ft. Thomas, Ky. youth, plunged 150 feet into a rocky gorge at Clifty Falls yesterday.
The youth and two companions, Tony Rizzo, 17, and Jack Grever, 18, 8, were exploring the rocky clitt
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at the top of the falls while their, girl friends waited below. Tony leaped over a four-foot ledge on the moss-covered rocks. | Donald jumped aiso. His foot slipped. Before either of his pals could grab him, he went over the cliff. The three girls—Miss Mary Ann Budde, Miss Patricia Franksman and Miss Martha Peeper — watched in horror.
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