Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 January 1940 — Page 5
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By OLIVE BARTON
WIL CHILDREN LEARN CORRECT — more quickly by:
| A. Hearing others speak well? | JB. Studying grammar? °
| C. Being corrected when they make a mistake?
D. Good rearing?
While all four of the above answers are netded in influencing
far the most potent factor.
J children to use grammatically correct sentences, the first, “A,” is by
A child who never went to school, never parsed a verb or diaed a sentence, can learn to speak not only correctly, but in a cultured, modulated voice if his parents, relatives and friends,set the
example. {
i
He learns fo speak by ‘ear, you might say. He won’t know why
“seen” ‘is always preceded by another verb, while “saw” can go it alone, but he will say it properly, if others around him habitually
0 SO.
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ALL THE CORRECTING in the world won't help, if his ear is attuned to the daily discords of bad grammar, for after a while reminders simply cease to register—if they ever registered at all.
| Good literature is a supplement to training. Iv carries the er along with repetitions of proper placing and excellent usage. .
But what reader, except an especially alert one looking for such things, will notice that infinitives are not split or that the author ver says “Everyone has their failings” instead of “Everyone has his
ailings”?
By this time, no doubt you are wondering about “B, by
2s I say’
at the study of grammar is not enough to help. I say that because
undreds and even thousands of students in high school and r young folk out in the business world on their own, who
college possess
ing grades in grammar and “composition,” still murder (English.
oof enough, I think. f ® = =
| NO, PEOPLE WON'T remember Rule 6 on Page 21, or lesson 15 Who does? But they manage to
an active and passive participles.
”
2 :
pply a little of everything gained here and there, until they have a
retty solid composite of speech.
Above everything else I choose the influence of good example. at sets the web on which to weave other things. Parents who
ak well, help their children to do so.
books there are,
They are the finest text
BEAUTY
| IT'S A SIMPLE MATTER to lose two or Hires pounds, but a tedious job indeed to try to take off 10. Knowing this, the woman who is determined to remain slender decides at 30 just how much she wants to weigh the rest of her life. When her weight goes more
By ALICIA HART ™N
om
than two pounds above that figure, She immediately takes steps to
the excess Dindage
By sensible ven three, wit
g she finds it possible lose two pounds, or hi weeks. She simply eliminates sweets, inuding dessert, from her daily diet, has only soup, green salad, ne thin slice of toast and a beverage for lunch and eats only one ortion of everything on the dinner menu. If hungry between meals, she nibbles fruit instead of pastry or some other calory-rich food.
If, during convalescence after:an illness, or after having a baby,
she finds that she has gained a great deal of weight, she consults
er family doctor about the possibility of reducing without endanger-
cises or a combination of both. } Ed # 2
»
»
»
ing her health. With his help, she plans a diet or a system of exer-
| FEW AND FAR between are cases where the doctor wants any patient to remain 20 or 30 pounds overweight. Among mature perns, it’s rare indeed when obesity is considered to be an asset to lealth. It never is an asset to good looks. | No doctor or, for that matter, no reputable beauty expert, helieves in starvation diets or in fad diets. Don’t be persuaded to-live for days on nothing except buttermilk and bananas or one kind of IN meat and one fruit or three different beverages. ii A one-day liquid diet won’t hurt anyone. But it's a mistake even to try a fad diet or to stay on liquids for more than two days with-
out first consulting a doctor.
JANE JORDAN
|. DEAR JANE JORDAN—I am a young girl of 14 with a problem ° which I would like you to solve for me. I could have many friends if it were not for my parents, especially my father. I have a brother
8 year younger than I who is always bringing His friends around and I would like to have the same privilege, My parents say that I am too old to go out and have fun with
other girls and that my place is in the home. I am not allowed outside the house after 5 o'clock. It bores me a lot to sit in the house all day doing nothing when I could have friends. ! I am not popular with boys but I am a great pal with my school
should I have a little company? Please advise me.
, chums. Should I take my parent's advice by staying in all day, or i WAITING.
Answer—Friends are an important part of every girl's life, every bit as important to her welfare as her schooling. Each of us must learn how to get along with other people, and the friends we make
outside the family prepare us for successful contacts in later life.
You should be free to bring your friends to . your home after "sekool, and to visit with them in turn. I see no reason why you should not observe your parent’s request to stay in after 5 o’clock, especially in the winter when it is so cold and dar are bound to feel anxious about you. By observing all their reasonable requests and showing consideration for their feelings, you make 4. It easier to win concessions.
1 suppose you feel that your brother has the best of it in life because he is ‘a boy, and in your heart of hearts you imagine that your parents prefer him to you for the same reason. "It is true that boys have certain advantages in life which are denied to girls, but the reverse is also true. Doubtless your brother feels that your parents are more protective toward you than toward him, and that girls are better off because less achievement is expected of them outside
the family circle.
that your parents
You must guard against envy of your brother’s lot in life and
make friends with his friends.
As you grow older you'll feel more
interest in boys which in turn will make them more interested in
- you.
School should give you many chances to develop your friendships. It is pleasant to be permitted té bring other girls home. Surely you
can find some way to get around your parent's objections.
If you
please them in some respects, they'll consider you in others. If not,
you still can make the most of your opportunities. at school.
And by
e way, good grades have a powerful influence on parents. Do you
make them?
Put your problems in a letter to Jane Jordan who will answer
JANE JORDAN.
your questions in this column daily.
Clin?
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14, 16, 18, 20, 32, 34,
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CENTS (13¢) in soins for this pattern. WRITE ,Y SIZE, NAME ADDRESS NUMBER Sed ord
Bis i
oN Yew ~of 4 \, v XK . = 2 al 7 ¢ seh * b . e* 4 . @ 278. 1°, < A. v | > 99 ¢ rye v \e U ce Cee * . 2 ee? fF of an * J v lve s . . vy A:lY €l, fa “a . Le . v rg of ‘wv . - e ’ J |e ¢ v, "e's id | &€ "ie . ® ru i . . ° US * . ? Pa ot . &
.| plained, |a special crew to cancel the stamps.
‘miss the excitement.
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[FANS PLANNING | TRIPS TO POET'S
HOME ON FEB. 23
Club Head Expects 500 in Greenfield to Join Ranks Of Stamp Enthusiasts.
' When the’ James Whitcomb Riley stamp series is placed on sale at Greenfield Feb. 23, at least 500 residents of that city will start collecting stamps, according to- Harry H.
"|Coburn, president of the Indiana
Stamp Club. ‘Not only that, according to Mr. Coburn, but hundreds of collectors will converge there that day to get in on the excitement which attends the first-day sale. “On the first-day sale,” he ex“the Government sends in
‘Theyre cancelled lightly and that makes them look better when exhibited at a borse (philaletical language for sale). :
Want Covers, Too
“Collectors want to get what we call first-day covers, too, from. the postoffice where the sale started. ‘Covers’ are special envelopes which have, on the left side, colored drawings of some incident in connection with the person or event the stamp commemorates.” And Dr. Harry C. Ioor, a stamp collector right here in: Indianapolis, probably prints, sells and services more first-day covers than anyone else in the country. He gets orders from all over the counfry and, if asked, will go to the postoffice and have the stamps cancelled on the special envelope for the collector and send them to him. First-day cover collectors, according to Mr. Coburn. address the envelopes to themselves, hand them through one window to be cancelled! and call for them at another. “That’s a service which enables the postoffice to sell more stamps and the letters don’t even have to go through the mail,” he said. “Surely, I'm going over. I wouldn’t One time I went to Chicago on a first-day sale and there was a line of collectors a mile long to get cancellations.” Greenfield's stamp-collecting population will be increased, he explained, just because residents will want to be among the first to buy stamps honoring their most illustrious son, to get Greenfield cancellations for friends elsewhere “and then the hobby will grip them,” The sale of the seven new series, which will mean as many field days for collectors, set Mr. Coburn to some lengthy tales on stamps.
Founded Stamp’ Club
He started collecting things, rakbits, marbles, pigeons, white mice, white rats, pictures of baseball players and prize fighters from cigaret| p packages in boyhood and has been collecting stamps for at least 35 years. He founded the Indiana Stamp Club in 1928, was its first president and is credited with keeping the organization alive when members
-|got tired of going to meetings the
first and third Friday night of every month. Mr. Coburn estimates, while his club has only 85 members, there are about 1500 collectors in Indianapolis, not including children who belong to school clubs. LeGrand Payne is the club’s de collector. It’s been his hobby ti more than a half century. i Walter Feltz is vice president; Joe Zix, treasurer, and Mrs. Albert J. Eiteljorg is secretary. “I won't tell who has the most valued collection,” Mr. Coburn smiled. “It’s a funny thing, people who won't steal anything else will steal stamps and there .have been too many robberies here lately.
Rarity Fixes Value
“A hona fide collector will never sell. He will trade or buy, but never sell because he thinks it commercializes a hobby.” Rarity fixes the value of stamps. “There are some odd ones,” Mr. Coburn - said. “Theyre the kind Henry Van Geyt over at the Social Security office goes in for. Oddities are more‘numerous in foreign issues. I can show you one with the date
"11492 and a picture of Christopher
Columbus looking through a pair of binoculars and binoculars weren't invented, until years later.
It Wasn’t Logical
“I can show you one with a picture of a boat, its sail blowing one way and its flag the other. When the United States issued the Pilgrim series in 1920, the ‘U. S.” was left off the 1, 2 and 5-cent issues. Five cents was the rate to Germany at the time and it wasn’t until the German Government demanded five cents for each letter received because there was no way of telling what country the stamp was from, that the postoffice people found out their mistake, and called those stamps in. “But that story was kept on the quiet, 1 became the. first collector in Indianapolis find it out, when a photographic salesman who Jnew I was a philatelist told me." One of those five-centers is worth $1.50 now. “Listen to this one. When the first air mail series was printed, the 24-center was in two colors, red
:| land blue, and in the. printing of
some of them the eagle in the blue center came out upside down and they were recalled. “If you can find one it's worth an even $3000.”
HELD IN STABBING OF TAXICAB DRIVER
Police held James Franklin Wolfe, 27, of 1003 Elm St, under $1000 bond on charges of assault and batery with intent to kiil today
after a taxicab driver was stabbed in his right hand and back yester-
{day.
George Muir, 37, of 1365 Roach St., the driver, told police he picked up two men at Meridian and Ohio Sts., and was given an address in the 1300 block Elm St. As the cab proceeded around the monument Circle, he said the men in the rear seat began fighting. When Mr. Muir tried to stop them, they turned on him and inflicted the knife wounds,
| police said.
Wolfe was arrested at his Elm St. home and was identified by Mr.
Muir at the City Hospital. Police
El
Scott L. Denny
" Funeral services for Scott IL. Denny, a resident of Indianapolis for several years, were held yesterday in the Flanner & Buchanan Funeral Home and burial was in Crown Hill Cemetery today. Mr. Denny, who was 63, died in City Hospital Friday after a brief illness. He served in ‘the Marion County Assessor’s office several years ago and at the time of his death’ was associated with the United. Credit Bureau. He was a member of Calvin Prather Lodge, F. & A. M. He is survived by a son, A. W. | Denny, Toronto, Can., and a daughter, Mrs. Dorothy Baily, Houston, Tex.
Mrs. Maude H. Mendenhall
Funeral services for Mrs. Maude H. Mendenhall, an Indianapolis resident for 20 years, were to be at 2 p. m. today in the West Newton Methodist Church. Burial was to be in the West Newton Cemetery. Mrs. Mendenhall, who was 53, died Thursday in her home, 1210 Shannon Ave. after an illness of 18 months. She was born in West Newton and was a member of the West Newton Methodist Church, the Irvington Rebekah Lodge, and the Book Lovers Club of West Newton. She is survived by her husband, Carl D. Mendenhall; a son, Hylton Mendenhall, Indianapolis; and three sisters, Mrs. Blanche Briner, West Newton; Mrs. Rebecca Sanders, and Mrs. James Burk, both of Hadley. The Rev. C. A. McPheeters, North Methodist Church pastor, was to officiate at the servites.
‘Mrs. Mary A. Hendryx
Mrs. Mary A. Hendryx, 3370 N. Euclid Ave., died yesterday while visiting at the home of her daughter, Mrs. James Turner, in Hammond. She was 48. Survivors, besides Mrs. Turner, are her husband, Shirley W.; four sons, Max, a student at Indiana University; Shirley W. Jr. and Clark of Indianapolis, and Paul Wallace, Anderson; another daughter, Mrs. Charles Colby, Indianapolis; two sisters, Mrs. Ruth Butner, Martinsville, and Miss Caroline Munger, Miami, and a brother, Earl Munger, Muncie. Funeral services will be held at 10 a. m. tomorrow at St., Mary’s hurch, Anderson. Burial will be in » Marys Cemetery. =
David Longenecker
David Longenecker, formerly. of 3102 N. Sherman Drive, died yesterday after a, week's illness. He was 88. Mr. Longenecker was born in Pennsylvania, but had lived here most of his life. He is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Alpha Wright and Mrs. Junia Richey, both of Indianapolis; five grandchildren and two great-grand-children. Funeral services will be held at 2 p. m. tommorrow at the Moore & Kirk Northeast Funeral Home. Burial will be in Crown Hill.
Mrs. Beuella Brown
Mrs. Beuella Brown, 3609 Brookside Parkway, died yesterday. She is survived by a foster daughter, Mrs. Nellie Plymace, Indianapolis; a brother, Guy Atkins, Dallas, Tex., and a sister, Mrs. Harriett Inlow, Roseburg, Ore. Funeral services will be held at 10 a. m. Wednesday at the Harry W. Moore Peace Chapel. Burial will be in New Ross. :
Indiana Stamp Club members .
DEATHS IN INDIANAPOLI
o%
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Steve Stanich
Steve Stanich, a tavern operator at 702 Haugh St., died’ today. He was 52. Born in Jugoslavia, Mr. Stanich had been in business here about 25 years. He is survived by his wife, Anna; four children, Mike, Sam, Carl and Mary; his stepfather, Duesen Negovan, and a sister, Mrs. Anns Uric.
Burial is to be in Floral Park |
after funeral services at 2 p. m. Thursday at the Rumanian Orthodox Church.
Mrs. Emma Copeland
Mrs. Emma Stumph Copeland, 815 N. Dearborn St., who died Saturday
in Methodist Hospital, will be buried
in Crown Hill following services at
2 p. m. tomorrow at the Grinsteiner| |
Funeral Home. Mrs. Copeland was a lifelong resident of Indianapolis. She was # graduate of Shortridge High School. She was a saleslady for the William Laurie Co. and for the last two years was a clerk at the Wm. H. Block Co. Her husband, Herbert Copeland, died in 1927. She is survived by her mother, Mrs. Conrad Stumph, Englewood, Cal.; a sister, Mrs. Mary Large, also of Englewood; three brothers, Edward Stumph, Kansas City; Conrad Stumph, Santa Monica, Cal, and Herman Ww. Stumph, Indianapolis. .
Miss Lottie A. Heid
Funeral services for Miss Lottie A. Heid, who died Saturday in her home, 2175 S. Meridian St., will he held at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the
home. Burial! will be in Crown Hilt
She was 59. Miss Heid was a lifelong resident of this city. She was a member of
the Friedens Evangelical and Re-
formed Church and the Order of Eastern Star. Survivors age her mother, Mrs. Louisa Heid; three sisters, Mrs. William Maschmeyer, Mrs. W. W. Lorenz and Miss Lillie Heid, and five brothers, Louis P., Fred J., George, John and Harry, all of Indianapolis.
Mrs. Lizzie Michel
‘Mrs. Lizzie Michel, who died Saturday in the Methodist Hospital, will be buried in Crown Hill following services at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the G. H. Herrmann Funeral Home. She was 71. Mrs. Michel, who lived at 624 E. Raymond St., was a lifelong resident here. She was a member of the Holiday Club. Survivors are a daughter, Irene, Indianapoli; & son John, Chicago, and a sister, Mrs. Emma McQuate Merrill, Indianapolis.
Earl T. Duckett
Funeral services for Earl T. Duckett, R. R. 19. Box 708, Diamond Chain & Manufacturing Co. em-
ployee, were to be at 2 p. m. today
in the home of Harold B. Goodman, a stepson, at 6051 E. Washington St, and burial will be in Mount Pleasant Cemetery. Mr. Duckett was 41, and died Friday night in Methodist Hospital, where he had been a patient for eight days. He was {ll for three weeks. Mr. Duckett was born in Warreri, Ky., and came to Indianapolis - 30 years ago. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Mary L. Duckett; a sister, Mrs. Eunice Heintz, St. Louis, Mo., and two stepsons, Harold E.
Goodman and Alfred W. Goodmar,.
ATHENS, O., Jan. 8 (U.P.).—Ten-year-old Mary Alice Lindenberger Schaal and her 20-year-old husband ‘vowed today that the annulment of their six-day marriage could not quench their love. The court, in separating the couple Saturday night and ordering the marriage annulled, decreed that the child must serve an indefinite term in the Girls” Industrial School at Delaware; that her husband, Charles William Schaal, should serve a one-
bride’s mother, Mrs. Lydia Hudnall, should serve a year in the Marysville Women’s Reformatory- for contributing ‘to the delinquency of a minor. , Mary Alice and her husband said they would wait for each other. Mary Alice, who said she already can cook many things and: keep house, looked forward to learning how to become a better wife at the Industrial School.
dence is the Athens County Deten-
being “as sweet a girl as I've ever had.” Mary Alice will stay with her until transferred to the Industrial School. Mary Alice appears more mature than her 10 years. She is five feet, three inches tall, weighs 85 pounds, has dark hair and long, black eye-
Her age was given as 16 in obtaining a marriage license at Pomeroy Jan. 2. The mother signed the application and the couple was mariad in Athens. | e child's acquaintance = with Schaal began a year ago in the Holiness ihe ws at Luhrig. : er Ly
i
year jail term, and that the young.
Mrs. E. G. Campbell, whose resi-. tion Home, described Mary Alice as.
i
Bride, 10, Mate, 20, Vow Law Can't End Their Love
“I've been sanctified twice,” she|.
said. “T can bake bread and make salads and: cook beans—but I can’t bake pies or cakes yet. And anyone who comes into my house is going to find it clean. Im not afraid of scrubbing.” Mary Alice went to school five years at Luhrig, a little mining community near here. Last Christmas, Schaal gaye her a Bible, comb and brush, flash« lights, and pen and pencil set. Mary Alice said her step-father destroyed the comb and brush and flashlight but that she hid the other presents
and intended to take/them with her
to Delaware. | Mrs. Hudnall said: “Mary Alice is a good girl, and smart. I know they will be nice to her there (at the school), and sb: will take advantage of the chance they give her to learn things. William is a fine boy and he will w. it for her.”
1500 WILL SING IN.
ok sisi
CHORUS AT PURDUE |
Limes Special LAFAYETTE, Ind. Jan. 8.~More than 1500 women, members of ‘80 county home economics choruses in Indiana, Wednesday night will join here in the Jefferson High School gymnasium for an annual music festival. ! The combined chorus is believed to be the largest of its kind in the
{country. The festival will be held]
in connection with the annual agri-
cultural conference at Purdue Uni-
Mrs. Josephine Parker
Mrs. Josephine Parker, who died Saturday at the home of her daughiter, Mrs. W. V. Wheatley, 1315 Oakland Ave., was buried in Elwood foilowing funeral services this morning
Chapel. Mrs. Parker was 87. She was ho in Rising Sun, but had lived in Tipton until a few years ago. Survivors, besides the daughter, are two grandsons and a greatgranddaughter.
John J. Anselm
Funeral services for John J. Anselm, 1410 Terrace Ave., who died Saturday, will be at 8:30 a. m. Wednesday at his home and a4 9 a. m. at St. Patrick’s Church.
Mr. Anselm, who was 67, dropped dead of a heart attack in Prospect 8t., 1100 block. He was born hers and was a lifelong resident. Anselm attended St. Mary's Pas thial school. He worked on Ger+ man language newspapers here for 31 years and then was a salesman for the Lucien King Coffee Cg “tor 20 years. Mr. Anselm was a member of st, Patrick’s Church, the Holy Name Society and the Knights of St. (George. He is survived by his wife, Dena, and a daughter, Helen.
Miss Kate Wilson 0
Funeral services for Miss Kate Wilson, Acton, who died Tuesday at her winter home in Daytona Beach, Fla., px be held at 2 p. mi Wednesday at the Acton Presby-' terian Church. Burial will be in Acton. Miss Wilson was born in Mario ounty, the | daughter of Willia and Mary Wilson, pioneer residents. She was a member of the Acton Presbyterian Church, the Order of Eastern-Star and Pythian Sisters.
Survivors are two brothers, J. C. Wilson, Indianapolis pew and the Rev. C. D. Wilson, Law renceburg, and a sister, Mrs. Margaret Stirling, Morristown.
Mrs. Lulu Dolores Combs
Funeral services for Mrs. Lul Dolores Combs, a resident of Indi anapolis for 10 years, were at 10 g. m. today in the Harry W. Moore Funeral Home. Burial was in Washington Park Cemetery. Mrs. Combs was 32 and died Saturday at her home, 2113 Nowland Ave. She was a native of Paoli and a member of the MHillside Christian Church. Mrs. Combs is survived by her husband, Edgar D. Combs; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Toliver, Indianapolis; two sisters, Mrs. Charles Abbett, Indianapolis, ang Miss Dorothy Toliver, &ansas City, Mo., and a brother, Wayne Toliver, Indianapolis. |
Shirley Rae Loy
Shirley Rae Loy, 5-year -old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Loy, died yesterday at her home, 2351 N. Gale St. Private funeral services will be at 10 a. m. tomorrow in the home. She is survived by her parents; a sister, Mrs. May Hughes, and five brothers, Robert, William, Jack, Edward and Kenneth Loy.
at the Harry W. Moore Peace],
. they'll trade or buy, but never, never sell items| in collection.
ILLNESS FATAL
Pioneer Homeopathic Physician Dies at 84; Rites Set Wednesday.
Dr. Willis B. Stewart, a pioneer homeopathic physician in Indianapolis, died yesterday -at his home, 2621 College Ave.: He was 84 and had been ill for seven months. Services will be at 2 p.m. Wednesday in the .JFlanner & Buchanan|?2 Funeral Home. Burial will be in Crown Hill. Born in Wabash Conti, Dr. Stewart had been pg , resident of Indianapolis since 1893. He attended the Indiana University Medical School and ‘transferred to the
Hahnemann Homeopathic College in Chicago from which he was graduated in 1887.
Practiced in Peru
With his brothers, Dr. Frank C. Stewart, who died in 1921, and Dr.
W. R. Stewart, who died in 1931, he | practiced in Peru until coming to
Indianapolis. They opened offices here on the Monument Circle and were said to be the first to practice homeopathy in the city. Another brother, Dr. John W. G. Stewart, practiced in Wabash and died in 1938. Dr. Stewart was a member of the || Third Christian Church, served as a deacon and was a member of the board for several years. He also was a member of the Century Club, the American Institute of Homeopathy and was author of several articles published in the Homeopathic Journal, 4
3 Pastors to Ofticiate A daughter, Dr. Allegra Stewart,
| is a member of the English depart-
ment of Butler University. She
The Rev. William F. Rothenburger, Third Christian Church pastor; the Rev. Edgar Daugherty, Muncie, and the Rev. F. E. Smith, Disciples of Christ pension fund Secreiary; will officiate.
| tral Chapel.
~ |graduated from the
.|1906 and was a | medical staff of Me {for several years. { Dr. Johnson had suffered a mild
T0 DR. STEWART
7. B. JOHNSON, PHYSICIAN, DIES
Services to Be Wednesday Afternoon ae Brothers Chapel.
mea
Funeral services for Dr. T. B. Johnson, Indianapolis physician for many years who died of heart disease Saturday at hig home, 6001 W, Washington St., will be at 1:30 p. m. Wednesday in Shirley Brothers Cene
Dr. Johnson was born in Waveland and had practiced medicine. here since the World War. He was - University of Maryland School of Medicine in ember of the t Hospital
heart attack while in Florida two weeks ago. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Lydia Adella Johnson, to whom he was ed in 1904; a daughter, Mrs. A. W. Reeder, and two brothers, T. N. Johnson, Wave« lang, and J. A. Johnson, Crawfordse Dr. Johnson was a captain in the medical corps stationed at Ft. Worth, Texas, during the World
‘War and was a reserves colonel in
the U. 8. Army reserves at the time
of his death.
He was a member o the Scottish Rite, the Shrine, the American Medical ~ Association,’ the Marion
County Medical Society and the Ine
diana State Medical | Association,
FORMER FIRE CHIEF SUES FOR SALARY
Times Special { BLOOMINGTON, Ind, Jan. 8— The city of Bloomington today faced a $2100 claim for salary, brought by former Fire Chief Berton M. Hazel Heartened by the: sliccess of fore mer Police Chief Claude Myers in collecting on a similar claim, Fire Chief Hazel asks the salary for last: year.
erly dismissed at the first of 193¢ when a new city Sdnifisivatiog took | office
and his wife, Mrs. Lutie Dennett |} Stewart, to whom he was married in 1887, and another daughter, Miss | Lucille Stewart, survive him,
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