Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 July 1936 — Page 7

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Church, ‘'women’s Benefit Association, Daugh-

“SERVICES FOR

EDWARD YOUNG|

Insurance Man Had Lived in Indianapolis More Than 25 Years.

EDWARD H. YOUNG, an Indianapolis resident for more than 25 years and widely known in the in-

surance field, died Monday in the |’

Giverr Nursing Home, 1834 E. 10thst. He was 72. Funeral services will be held 4:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Flanner .& Buchanan Mortuary. Cremation is to follow. Members of the Irving-

ati

ton Lodge, F & A. M. will have| 88

charge of the services. Mr. Young was born in Newburg, .N. Y., May 17, 1864. He was special representative for the Colum.bian National Life Insurance Co. and at one time was district agent for the Missouri State Life Insurance Co. and. state representative for the Prudential Life and Accident Insurance Co. He lived in Evansville and St. Louis before coming to Indianapolis. He was formerly a grain broker. He was president of the Indiana Insur- - ance Federation in 1917 and also served as secretary-treasurer. He was a member of Irvington Lodge, FP. & A, M.; Raper Commandery, and the All Souls Unitarian Church. He had lived at 5429 Hibben-av several years. A daughter, Mrs. Douglas Holsclaw, Tucson, Ariz. is the only survivor.

JAMES R, COLE, prominent drug chemist and proprietor of Cole Prescription Laboratories, 551 Indianaav, died last night in his home, 707 E. 22nd-st after an illness of three weeks. Services are to be held at 1:30

p. m. tomorrow in the Shirley Broth- |.

ers Central Chapel. Burial arrangements have not been completed. Mr. Cole was born in. Stockwell and was a member of the Austin Masonic Lodge of Tipton. An Indianapolis resident for more than 50 years, he operated the Laboratories ‘with’ his son, Edwin H. Cole. He began his career with tha Ward’ Brothers- Wholesale house 50 yvears-ago. He formerly operated a drug store in Tipton. + Surviving are the widow, Mrs. “Victoria . 8. :Cole; three daughters, “Mrs. Dorothy Cole Reed, Toledo, O.; Mrs: Kathryn Thompson, ‘Evansville and Mis" Alice Cole, Indianapolis; two sons, Edwin H. Cole, Indianapolis and James M. Cole, Modesto, Cal., Shane, Indianapolis.

MISS IDA M. CURRY, Courthouse matron ang active in Democratic politics, diéd in the City Hospital yesterday following an operation. Funeral services are to be held at 10 a. m. tomorrow in the Finn + Brothers Funeral Home, Burial is to .be in Crown Hill. Miss. Curry had been matron-and assistant bailiff at the Courthouse « for nearly four years. She formerly was employed at the City Hall. She was a member of the First Reformed - the. McGuffey .. Club,

ters of Pocahontas, Women’s auxiliary of the Old Hickory Club, and the Woman's Relief Corps. For «the last 10 years she had lived at the home of S. B. Brater, 966 =~ Gray-st. . She had been a resident of Indianapolis most of her life. The onl; survivor is a brother, Harvey Curry, Escindido, Cal. Ha

HARRY A. CHANDLER, 2411 N. Alabama-st, for more than 20 years a proto-engraver at the Indianapolis Engraving Co., died at his home Monday after a long illness. He was 75. : Funeral services are to he held at "4 p. m. tomorrow at the Flanner and Buchanan mortuary. The Rev. William A. Shullenberger, Central Christian Church pastor, is to officiate. Burial is to be in. Crown Hill. ’ Born in Kentucky, Mr. Chandler "came to Indianapolis many years ago. He became a member of the Central Christian Church in 1904 and was active in its work many years, Survivors are the widow, Mrs. {Kathryn Chandler, and a brother, R. L. Chandler, Newcastle.

MRS. MARTHA ELLEN - SCHENCK, 847 Eugene-st, died ves- ‘ terday at therhome of her daughter, » Mrs. Elmer Smith, in Lebanon, after an illness of several days. She was 83.

+. Funeral arrangements have not + been completed. .Burial is to be Mount Tabor Cemetery in Fayette. Mrs. Schenck was born in Hendricks County, the daughter of John M. and Elizabeth J. Dollahiie, and was the widow of Levi H. Schenc who died in 1927. She was a member of the Mount Tabor Church. ‘.. ,. Surviving besides Mrs. Smith are ‘two other daughters, Miss Elizabeth and Miss Rozella Schenck, Indian.apolis, and two grandchildren, Harvey Smith and Mrs. Dorothy Shockley, Lebanon.

JOHN W. WURZ, 2172 Shelby-st, who died Monday night at the : Kiefer-Stewart Co. is to be buried in Washington Park Cemetery following funeral services at the Wald Funeral Home at 3 p. m. tomorrow afternoon. He was 67. « Mr. Wurz, who-had been ill for .some time, was a resident of In-

and a sister, Mrs. Alice Mec-

Lucille, of St. Mary-of-the-V#ods.

The officials who attended the dedication of the Henry L. Dithmer wading pool at 1902 S. East-st today, are shown standing before’ dozens of children who swarmed into the water after thé gates opened

- officially.

They are (left to right). Mrs. Louis R. Markun,

Park Board member, Val McLeay,

City Plan Commission; Henry L. Dithmer, president ‘of the Polar Ice and Fuel Co. and donor of the pool; Mayor Kern and Henry Dithmer Jr. Water for the pool, which is equipped with sprinklers, is furnished by a deep well. The pool,

which also is equipped with a chlorinator valued at

secretary of the

$700, is the eighteenth built in the city. It was dedicated to children of the South Side.

§ [Long Illness Is Fatal to

State “Teacher's College - Former President.

By United Press: TERRE:

A.B. Seivea any in 1894 and a from Ind degree in 1908. Wabash College gave him an. LL. .D. degree in 1929 He was principal of Noblesville grade schools from 1892 to 1893, instructor -and assistant principal in Evansville from 1894 to 1899, mathematics teacher at Shortridge High School; Indianapolis, in 1900, superintendent of -schools in Union City from 1901 fo 1906, in Hartford City from 1906 to 1908 and in Crawfordsville from 1908 to 1919. :

dianapolis for more than 40 years. He was formerly a master mixer for the Grocers Baking Co. He ‘was™ a member of the Zion Evangelical Church, the Schwaben Verein, Marion Camp 3558, M. W. of A. and the Arbeiter Sterbe und Kranke Kasse .

Survivors are the widow, Mrs. Chrisina Wurz;, two daughters, Miss Minnie Kleine and Mrs. Louise Oberting; four sons, John W. Wurz, Clarence R. Wurz, Ralph Wurz and Kurt Wurz, all of Indianapolis; a brother, Gottfried Wurz, Philadelphia, Pa., and a sister, Miss Minnie Wurz, Philadelphia.

DR. J. P. COWAN, organizer of three United Presbytetrian Churches in Indianapolis, who died in Greenfield Sunday, was buried there following funeral services at his home yesterday. He was 91. f Mr. Cowan, who came from Iowa, had spent 35 years in the ministry here. He organized the First United Presbyterian Church at Massachus-etts-av and East-st in 1889. In; 1891 he organized the Woodruff United Presbyterian Church at 12th-st and Arsenal-av. In 1907 he founded the Witherspoon United Presbyterian Church. He retired from the ministry in 1924 and had since lived in Greenfield. He served ‘as’ moderator of the General Assembly of the church in North America, and was. a member of the board of directors of the.Indiana Anti-Saloon League several years. During the World War he served on the local draft board. JOHN W. DOWNEY, 1202 E. Tabor-st, former supervisor of the city street department, who died Monday night in the St. Francis Hospital, is to be buried in St. Joseph Cemetery following funeral services in the St. Catherine’s Catholic Church at 9 tomorrow morning. He was 64. Born in Martin County, Mr. Downey came to Indianapolis in 1912. ° He was a Spanish-American War veteran, a member of the St. Catherine's Catholic Church of which his brother, the Rev. J. M. Downey, is pastor, and the Holy Name Society. Surviving besides Father Downey are the widow, Mrs. Ida B. Downey; sister, Miss Margaret Downey, Indianapolis, and two daughters, Sister Gaudentia and Sister Margaret

MRS. EDNA BERYL CALLAHAN, former resident of Clayton, died yesterday at her home, 1232 S. Harding-st, after an illness of two months. She was 61. Funeral services are to be held at 3 p. m. tomorrow in the Hazelwood Friends Church, of which she was a member. Burial is to be in the Clayton Cemetery. Mrs. Callahan was born _in Morgan County. She had lived in Clayton for 30 years and in Indianapolis two years. Survivors are the husband, William H. Callahan, and three daughters, Mrs. Maude Thompson, Mrs. Leafy Lewis and Mrs. Bertha Kidwell, and three sons, Henry, Howard and Clifton Callahan, all ‘of Indianapolis. Jo

OSCAR E. RUTH, balloonist, known as “Mile High Ruth,” who died ‘Sunday in St. Francis Hospital after an illness of six weeks, was to be buried today in Floral Park. Funeral servives were to be held at 2 p. ‘in Beanblossom Funeral re Mr. Ruth, who ‘was 55 and was born in Washington, had performed here and in many other states. Survivors are the widow, Mrs. Mary Ruth; a sister, Mrs. Frances Streeter, Washington; and a niece, Mrs. Frances Yerbough, In-| dianapolis.

MRS. BEATRICE TOMSON SMITH, a pioneer resident of Fort Madison, Ia. died yesterday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Verna M. Stuart, 4837 N. Capitol-av, alter an illness of several weeks. The body is to be returned to

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Fort Madison for funeral services and burial Friday. She was born Oct. 30, 1852, in Canfield, O., and was taken by wagon train shertly afterward to Missouri. From there she went to Fort Madison, where she and her late husband, Walter B. Smith, were identified with the development of the city. She was a member of the Presbyterian Church. In addition to the daughter Mrs. Smith is survived by a son, Perry G. Smith, four grandchildren and four great-granchildren.

MRS: AUGUSTA LEUKHARDT, Indianapolis resident for 67 years, who died Monday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. John C. Jordan,

10 a. m. tomorrow in Crown Hill following funeral services at the Richardson Funeral Home. Mrs. Leukhardt, who was 78, had been ill for several days. She was born in Germany and was a member of Zion Evangelical Church. She was a pioneer resident of Oak Hill. = ‘Survivors are the husband, Christ Leukhardt, and the ganghter, Mrs. Jordan.

CHARLES H. PRITCHETT, Indianapolis resident for 50 years,

died last night in his home, 528 E.

New York-st. Although he had been ill for a month the heat was said to have hastened his death. He was 593. Funeral services are to be held at 3 tomorrow afternoon in the Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary. Burial is to be in Crown Hill Cemetery. Mr. Pritchett was born in Cloverdale. Survivors are a brother, Jess C. Pritchett, and a sister, Mrs. Bunie Cline of Indianapolis. FRENCH HOLLINGSHEAD, a retired farmer and real estate owner, died yesterday in the Oxford Hotel following an illness of two days.y ‘Death was believed to have been caused by the excessive heat. He was 83. Services are to be held at 9:30 a. m. tomorrow in the Royster & Askin Funeral Home. Burial is to be in Glen Haven Cemetery. Mr. Hollingshead had been a resident here for 20 years. He was an extensive’ land owner in Indiana and Illinois. Survivors are a daughter, Miss Myrtle. Hollingshead, Indianapolis; two brothers, Montgomery, South Bend, and Granville, of California, and two ‘sisters, Mrs. Josephinee Clark, South Bend, and Mrs. Cora Benton, Billings, Mont. MRS. LAURA J. NOELLE, 2316 E. New York-st, who died yesterday after an illness of six years, is to be buried ‘in Dayton tomorrow. Funeral services are to be held in the G. H. Herrmann Funeral Home tonight at 8, with the Rev. Frederick R. Daries, Zion Evangelical Church pastor, officiating. Survivors are the widower, William F. Noelle, and a sister, Mrs. Charles E. Guckes, Dayton, O. PHILIP LOMBARDO, 432 S. East-st, is to be buried tomorrow in St. Joseph Cemetery after funeral services at the home of a sister, Mrs. Catherine Micelli, at 8:30 a. m. and in Holy Rosary Catholic Church at 9. Mr. Lombardo, who was £1, was Yorn in Sicily and came to Indianapolis when he was 14. He has been a freight handler for the Pennsylvania Railroad for the last 19 years. NELSON C. HOLLY, who died yesterday at the Colonial Hotel after being overcome by the heat, is to be buried tomorrow in Crown Hill. He was 69. Funeral services are to be in the Bert S. Gadd Funeral Home at 10 a. m. Survivors are two daughters, Mrs. D. D. Bowers, Huntington, and Mrs. Fred Hosler, Indianapolis, and two sons, Wilson Holly and Jack Holly of Indianapolis.

2321 Coyner-av, is to be buried at | Nor

.Schinlaub, 27.

STATE DEATHS

AMITY—Ora Mitchell, 59. Brother, Asa Mitchel tyke] Sarah Ford, ‘71. Survivors: Widower; sister, Mrs. Alta Hector; brother, Charles McNorton; son, F. A. McNorton.

BLOOMINGTON—Arthur Webb, 58.

BRAZIL—Mrs. Cynthia H. Miller, 75. Survivors: Sons, illiam H. and Grover C.; daughter, Mrs. Myrtle Cobley Mrs. Eli Lawson, 82. a IvOTS: Sons, Elmer ahd Lloyd Lawson and jGeorge Stites; AUgHiers, Mrs. Cora Rogers and Mrs. a urnett. COLUMBUS—L. H. Rowell, 85. ors Sons, Fred and Frank. Mrs. Ida Swank Carter, 62. Survivors: Brothers, John and Will Swank; sister, Mrs. Charles Elliott of Newcastle. . CONNERSVILLE — Raymond ‘Gettinger. 25. Survivors: Parents, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Gettinger: brothers. Wayne, John. Danny Thom mas Lee; sisters, Martha, Mary and William > Haley, 71. Survivors: Nieces and nep! Fred Phe Talbott, 69. Survivors: Widow, Doris; son, Howard; daughter, Mrs. Wyman Ritter: sisters, Mrs. Ben Wolverton and Mrs. Will Goddard. FAIRMOUNT—Mrs. Survivor: Daughter, Sallie. FRANKFORT—Robert Kimmel, 33. Survivors: Father, H. V.; brothers, Presley and Wayne: sister, Mrs. William Bush. . GLENWOOD—MTs. Mary J. Little, 80. Survivors: Daughter, Mrs. Monroe Brooks; son, Ralph; brother, John Miller. GOLDSMITH—MTrs. Thelma McCullough Survivors: Widower, Oren; daughter, Beverly Ann; son, Oren Jr. GREENFIELD—Caleb W. Moncrief. 78. Survivors: Widow, Leota; sons, John, Orlo and Russell; daughter, Mrs. Lela

Survivor:

Surviv-

Lochman; brother, Charles M. Gibbs.

GREENWOOD—Mrs. Sallie E. Ferguson, 78. Survivors: Daughters, Mrs. Laura Jones and Mrs. Stella Fleaver; sons, Emsley and David. HILLSBORO—George Lucas, 72, 8Survivors: Widow, Emma; sons, Guy, Raymond and Les: two aughters, or. Elsie Walters and Mrs. Grace Lang.

KIRKLIN—Mrs. Sarah Elizabeth Kuntz, 90. Survivors: Sisters, Mrs. Laura Lambertson and Mrs. Dora Scott.

LAFAYETTE—Mrs. Lillie Long, 77. Surviyors: Stepson, E. B. Long. Mrs. Elizabeth’ Lynn Hitenour, 46. Survivors: Sons, y L., Fred C., and Kenneth: sister. Mss. Frances Herman; brother, John agne William Custis ‘Goodman, 79. George M. Kincaid, "23. Survivors: Father, Ingram; stepmother; sisters, Mrs. Edith 'Quintlic and Mrs. Elsie Crider; brother, Raymond.

LEBANON—Oscar Winters, 31. Survivors: Mother, Mrs. Belle Winters; sister, Mrs. Blanch Livingston.

MADISON—Jacob Lucht, 63. Survivors: Widow, Mary; sons, Frederick and John: daughters, Mary and Helen; brother, WilMiss Julia Gavitt, 83.

MARTINSVILLE—Miss Olive L. Branch, 67. Survivors: Brother. P. 2 nephews, Manley and James E. Bran William N. Busbee, 81. Hrvivers: Sons, George hd William; "daughters, Mrs. Mary Goss Sind Mrs. Zola Shumaker; brother.

GIRLS ATTEND CAMP

Marion Methodist Conference Is to End Sunday.

Times Special MARION, July 15—Fifty girls, representing 20 churches of the Indiana Methodist Protestant Conference, are attending a camp-meeting here. Mrs. James Simmons, Anderson, is camp director. Assisting her are Edna and Mildred Eizinger, Tippecanoe, and Mrs. Katherine Burris, Anderson. The encampment is to end Sunday with awarding of achievemnt medals.

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NOBLESVILLE—W. Cravens, 84. Surgvors: Widow, Min: sons, . and E. Cravens; Saugh teis, By and Mrs. C. W. Jesse - Duley. . Mrs, Fh Mrs. Alma “kincaid; brother, Thomas, Mrsy Lydia ‘Esther Fisher, 83. Survivors: Sons, James M. and Jack; daughter, Mrs. Mary Christian. RI CHMOND ~Miss ‘Mary Brother Elijah L. Hart, 60. Survivors: Mr a Martha Wampole and Mrs. Mary Pau Cook. a Survivers: Da hers, Mrs, ‘allline alzell; sons, D: as. Finnie; Pau 4 Joni; mother, Mrs. Eimi Cook; sister, Ms. na Pa 3 . x inden on Hawkins, a. .Survivors: Sisters, Miss Mary Hawkins and Mrs. R. P. Ailes; brother, Charles. SEYMOUR—Mrs. Margiret Laugel’ Massman, 176. Survivors: Massman, Mrs. Elsie Timbers, Mrs. Helen Hombrook' and Edna Massman; brothers, Albert and. : Louis Laugel; sisters, Mrs. Marie Rapp and Mrs. Barbara Tanner,

SHELBYVILLE—Mrs. Lilly Dawson, 46. Survivors: Son, Harry Carter; daughter, Mrs. Harold Hoard: brothers and sisters,

TWO CHILDREN DEAD OF STRANGE MALADY

Fatal Illness Dianosed as. Rare Type of- Dysentery. Times Special Bo EVANSVILLE, .Ind. July 15—A rare type. of dYsentery was the strange illness that took .the lives

of two of the five:childrén of Em-:

mett Stepro, Yankeetown miner, Welborn-Walker Hospital, authorities had been informed today. Two sons and a daughter are recovering, - physicians believe, from the illness that first was diagnosed as a form of. poisoning.

Stroke Blamed in Fatal Crash By United Press 3 ELKHART, Ind., July 15. —Frank Garrison, 55, Elkhart automobile salesman, was killed late yesterday when his automobile crashed into a tree. It was “believed Mr. Garrison suffered a stroke,

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