Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 October 1939 — Page 8

PAGE 8 _

‘GUARD TO DRILL “TWICE WEEKLY DURING AUTUMN

Outside Field Training 1s Required Under New Schedule.

The new fall training program for National Guard units in Indiana, which includes a twice-weekly drill, went into effect today. Indianapolis units which have been attending training and drill

programs one-night each week, will}

report at the National Guard Armory an additional day. Monday and Thursday nights have been designated as the training nights for most of the local units.

Field Training Included

At the same time, staff officers of the 38th -National Guard Division, with headquarters here, were working out plans for the second phase of the fall and winter training schedule. This phase includes one week of field -training and maneuvers to be attended by all Indiana units between now and Jan. 1, 1940. According to War Department orders, the field training can be carried out in three week-end periods, but staff and regimental officers of National Guard in Indiana at a meeting yesterday - discussed the feasibility of holding the field pro- _ gram during one full week.

_ Regulars to Leave Fort

In any event, the outside training for Indianapolis units probably will be held: at Ft. Harrison, after regular Army troops leave for a scheduled winter maneuvers in the South. Intensive training in small unit problems in preparation for movement next month to Camp McClellan, Ala., is now being conducted by .the 11th Infantry at Ft. Harrison. The exercises involve night operations and scouting and patrolling.

Sergt. Maj. Leo T. Woltring, for three years a member of the staff of inspectors and instructor of the . 16th Battalion, U. S. Marines, with headquarters here, has been ordered to the first’ Marine brigade, fleet » Marine force, Quantico, Va., it was announced today. Sergt. Maj. Woltring is a veteran of 22 years in the Marine corps.

‘RITES WEDNESDAY FOR MRS. LANTRY

Mrs. Esther Lantry, Indianapolis . resident for 60 years, died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Fred A. Thomas, 3914 N. New Jersey St. Saturday. She was 67. Services are to be held at 8:30 a. m. Wednesday and at the St. Joan of Arc Catholic Church, of which she was a member, at 9 a. m. Burial will follow at Holy Cross Cemetery. She was a native field, O. Survivors, beside Mrs. Thomas are four other daughters, Mrs. Frank Evans, Indianapolis, Mrs. C. E.

of Spring-

Thomas, Kokomo, Mrs. Jack Bris-|

tow, St. Louis, Mo., and Mrs. Leonard Vebhlor, Jasper, Ind. Two sons, Joseph Lantry and George Lantry, both of “Detroit, Mich., also survive.

FUNERAL TOMORROW FOR JACOB HESSONG

Jacob K. Hessong, retired farmer and fruit grower, died Saturday at his home, 5211 N. Michigan Road.

... He was 71 and had been ill for 10

months. Mr. Hessong was a life-long resident of Marion County and was the son of George W. and Susan M. Hessong. He was 4 member of the Pleasant View Lutheran Church. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Mary J. Hessens and two daughters, Miss Florence apolis. and Mrs. Kathryn M. Butt, Madison. Funeral services will be at 10:30 a. m. tomorrow in the Pleasant View Lutheran Church and burial will be! in Crown Hill.

SERVICES CONDUCTED FOR EMMA BEAUPRE

Funeral services for Mrs. Emma’ P. Beaupre were held at 8:30 a. m. + today in the Blackwell Funeral] "Home and at 9 a. m. in the St. | Patrick’s Catholic Church. Burial was in Holy Cross Cemetery. Mrs. Beaupre was 80 and died -. Friday at the home of her son, . Frank F. Beaupre, 1066 Cottage : Ave., after a long illness. She was ; born in South Bend and was a member of St. Patrick’s Catholic Church. Her husband, James Beavprs, died in 1933. Mrs. Beaupre is survived oy her son, & sister, Mrs. Frank Yott, Indianapolis, and two brothers, Fred Odiet, Indianapolis, and Albert Odiet, South Bend.

WINAMAC GROCER DIES

WINAMAC, Ind., Oct. 23.—Louis W. Holderman, Minamac grocer for the past 25 years, died Friday after a two-month illness. He was a native of Wabash, Ind, and had worked at Huntington before coming to Winamac. He is survived by. his wife and three daughters.

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M Hessong, Indian-| |

Mrs. Cornelia Duke

Mrs. Cornelia Duke, 1124 E. 35th St., a native of Indianapolis, died last night at Methodist Hospital. Mrs. Duke had been ill for more than a year. She was 41. She was a member of the Third Church of Christ, Scientist, and had been active there before her illness. She had also been a member of the Delphian Society and the Travel Study Club. Mrs. Duke is survived by her husband, Robert; a brother, James E. Dennis, and her father, James E. Dennis Sr, all of Indianapolis. Funeral services will be held at 10 a. m. Wednesday at the Moore & Kirk Mortuary. Burial will be at Crown Hill.

John Mitchell Owens

Funeral services for John Mitchell Owens, who died last Tuesday while on vacation at St. Augustine, Fla, "will be at 1:30 p. m. today at Greenfield. Burial also will be at Greenfield. Mr. Owens was 46 and a resident of Greenfield. He formerly lived in Indianapolis. He had been on vacation two weeks when death came. He had been employed by the Union Telephone Co. for 15 years. Mr. Owens was a member of Noblesville Lodge, F. & A. M. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Mary Cecil Owens; a sister, Mrs. Paul DeVault, and two brothers, Joseph Owens and Howard Owens.

Mrs. Wanda Wilson

Mrs. Wanda Wilson, 1218 N. Parker Ave., died Thursday night at her {home after an illness of three weeks. She was 59; was born in Indianapolis, and was a member of the Zion Evangelical Church: Funeral services will be at 10:30 a. m. tomorrow in the Harry W. Moore Funeral Home. Burial will be in Memorial Park. She is survived by three sons, Glenn Wilson, Arthur Wilson and Earl Wilson, and a daughter, Mrs. Gwendolyn Dugan, all of Indianapolis.

‘Mrs. Lucille Ritchey

Funeral services for Mrs. Lucille Ritchey, who died at her home, 231 Eastern Ave., Friday, were held this morning at 9 o'clock in St. Philip Neri Catholic Church. Burial was lin Holy Cross Cemetery. A native of Illinois, Mrs. Ritchey had been in ill health for several years. She was 48. | Mrs. Ritchey was a member of St. Philip Neri and was affiliated | with the Altar Society of the church. {She is survived by her husband, | Russell; her mother, Mrs. Gertrude Roth; five sisters, Mrs. Rose | Schlink, Peoria, Ill, Mrs. Frieda Case, Terre ‘Haute, Ind. Mrs. Hilda ‘Stroud, Mrs. Frances Smith and Ida Roth, of Indianapolis; four brothers, (Will and Isadore, Star City, Ind. {Leo of South Bend, Ind., and Alvin ‘of Indianapolis.

‘Gustave F. Schultz

Gustave F. Schultz, who came to Indianapolis from Germany in 1904, died yesterday at the home of his niece, Mrs. Dick Bunte, Bluff Road, three miles south of the City limits. nr Schultz a cabinet maker, was Services will be at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday at the Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary. Cremation will follow. Other survivors are twoi sons, | Paul and Franz, Berlin, Germany; four sisters, Mrs. Karl Froelich, Indianapolis; Mrs. Karl Hoffman, Brown County; Mrs. Anna Ruehl and Miss Julia Schultz, both of Germany.

TURKEY WINS LOAN ISTANBUL, Turkey, P.).—England and France have agreed to loan Turkey $214,000,000, it was reported reliably from Ankara today.

There’s no disagreement now, but at first Tommy Manville, Elinor Troy, bubble dancer, for whom he char York. Elinor maintained from the first that she and Tommy agrees that the former Broadway showgirl will beco me his fifth bride soon.

DEATHS IN INDIANAPOLIS

Oct. 23 (U.|

| myste | |

Claude D. Mullendore

Claude D. Mullendore, 95-year-old Civil and Spanish-American Wars veteran, died last night at Veteran's Hospital. He had been injured Oct. 11 in a fall at his home at Onward, Ind. He is survived by his wife, Nora.

Frank C. Spangler Frank C. Spangler, 1055 W. 33d St., who died yesterday is to be buried at Spencer, Ind: his former home, tomorrow. He was 58. A teller at the American National Bank for the last everal years, he

began work with the firm in 1904. He was a member of the North Park Lodge, F. & A. M, and the Central Avenue Methodist Church. Services also will be conducted here at the Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary at 10 a. m. He is survived by his wife, Jessie; a son, Harold; a daughter, Mrs. Earl A. Taylor, and a granddaughter, Miss Judith Ann Taylor, all of Indianapolis. Also. surviving is a sister, Mrs. E. B. Hord, of Superior, Mont., and four brothers, Gail, Indianapolis; Reginald, Superior; Ronald, Miami, Fla., and Rupert, Portsmouth, O.

Mrs. Jane A. Werner

Funeral services for Mrs. Jane A. Werner, 833 S. Warman Ave., were to be at 2 p. m. today in the West Washington Street Methodist Church. Burial was to be in Floral Park Cemetery. Mrs. Werner, who was 53, died Saturday at St. Francis Hospital after an illness of a week. She was a native of Cave City, Ky., and had lived in Indianapolis 22 years. She was a member of the West Washington Street Church and of the Ladies’ Auxiliary to the Veterans of Foreign Wars: . She is survived by her husband, John Werner; a daughter, Mrs. Ruby Tucker; two sons, Ernest Lee Savage and J. Earl Savage, Indianapolis; four prothers, David A. Boston and Simon Boston, Louisville, Daniel Boston, Cave City, and Charles Boston, Bowling Green, Ky., and a sister, Mrs. Eliza Stephens, Indianapolis.

Mrs. Minnie Lindsay

Funeral services for Mrs. Minnie Lindsay, who died Friday at her home, 5121 Winthrop Ave. after a

long illness, will be at 2 p. m. today |’

in the Hisey & Titus Funeral Home. Burial will be in Memorial Park. Mrs. Lindsay was 78, was born in Tuscola, Ill, and had been a resident of Indianapolis for several years. She was a member of the Meridian Heights Presbyterian Church.

She is survived by her husband, | §

John W. Lindsay; two sons, Clark Lindsay, Chicago, and Robert Lindsay, Indianapolis; Mrs. Lola Andrews and Mrs. Frank M. Jones Jr., Indianapolis, and Mrs. John Pollard, Tampa, Fla.; two brothers, Everett “Clark, Indianapolis, and Dan Clark, Lafayette.

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Herman W. Behnke

Herman W. Behnke, 539 N. Temple Ave., a retired machinist, died Saturday in Methodist Hospital where he had been a patient for 14 weeks.

Mr. Behnke was a native of Germany and had lived in Indianapolis since 1888. He was a member of St. Peter’s Evangelical Lutheran Church, ‘He is survived by his wife, Mrs, | Adeline Behnke; two daughters, Mrs. Mary Ely and Miss Frances Behnke; four sons, Harry, Edward, Frank and William Behnke, and a sister, Mrs. Wilhelmina Gruenka, all of Indianapolis. Funeral services will be in the residence at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow and in St. Peter's Church at 2 p.m. Burial will be in Concordia Cemetery.

Charles E. Robbins

Services for Charles E. Robbins, 768 Massachusetts Ave., retired Indianapolis Railways employee, who died Saturday after a long, illness, will be at 10 a. m. tomorrow at the Conkle Funeral Home. Burial will be at Floral Park. He was 76. He had lived in Indianapolis for the past 45 years. His wife, Emma, 768 Massachusetts Ave., survives,

Mrs. Elizabeth Postel

Funeral services for Mrs. Elizabeth Postel, were held at 10 o'clock today at Royster & Askin Mortuary, 1902 N. Meridian St. Burial was in New Crown Cemetery. Mrs. Postel died Saturday in City Hospital after a brief illness. Born in Elletsville, Ind., she was 79 and had lived in Indianapolis for 60 years. She was a member of the Orthodox Presbyterian Church. Survivors are her daughter, Mrs. Blanche Cutshaw, of Crawfordsville, Ind. and a brother, John Gillespie, of Paris, Ill.

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