Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 February 1940 — Page 8
EE wcaikh Deaths Among Residents of I
Mrs. Mary Ellen Morga
Mrs. Mary Ellen Morga, native of Ohio, -died yesterday at her home, 944 King Ave. She was 57. Services will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the Royster & Askin Puneral Home. Burial will be at Washington Park. Survivors are her husband, Palmer; a daughter, Mrs. Esther Billeter of Indianapolis; = four brothers, Charles and Jesse of Greenville, O.; Clifford of Dayton, O.,, and Roy of Indianapolis, and three sisters, Mrs. Cora Hayes and Mrs. Myrtle Stevens of Greenville and Miss Carrie Lees
Curtis Lee Paul
of New York.
Mrs. Gertie Blue Rhoades
Mrs. Gertie Blue Rhoades, member of an Indianapolis pioneer family, died Tuesday at City Hospital. She was 64. : Mrs. Rhoades, who lived at 3741 Boulevard Place, was born on a farm the location of which is now Butler University. She was the} daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Perry Blue. Her grandmother came to Indianapolis from Maryland by oxcart. Survivors are her mother, Mrs. Allie Edwards; a daughter, Mrs. Osa Badger; two sons, Clarence Rhoades and Perry Rhoades, and five grandchildren, Juanita and Edward Badger and Buddy, Billy and Donald Rhoades. Services will be at 2 p. m. at the Wald Funeral Home with burial at
Military services for Curtis Lee Paul, a World War veteran who died Monday at the Veterans’ Hospital, were conducted today at the Royster & Askin Mortuary. Burial was in Washington Park Cemetery. Members of the Frank Strayer Post 1405 of the Veterans of Foreign Wars had charge of services at the cemetery and members of the Order of the Purple Heart
served as pallbearers.
Crown Hill.
Our
Mr. Paul was a salesman for the
Stewart Radio Co. He was 41 and lived at 2932 Central Ave. He ‘served overseas with the 16th Infantry Headquarters Co., and received the Purple Heart decoration for bravery in action. Survivors include his wife, Beulah; a stepdaughter, Miss Wanda Powell, and three sisters, Mrs. Cora Garver, Terre Haute, Ind.: Mrs. Rilla Osborne, Paris, Ill, and Mrs. Otha McCloud, Kansas, Ill.
Joseph C. Baumann
Services for Joseph C. Baumann, World War veteran, who died Monday at the Veterans’ Hospital, will be held at 9:30 p. m. tomqrrow at
the residence, 1828 Singleton St, and at 10 a. m. at the Sacred Heart Church. Burial will be at St. Joseph's. | Mr. Baumann, who was 52, was born in Indianapolis and during the war served overseas with Battery B, 25th Field Artillery. He operated a Mutual Milk Co. route since the war. He was a member of the Sacred Heart Church, the Garfield Post 88, American Legion and was a life member of the Eagle Lodge. Survivors are his wife, Della; son, Edward; two daughters, Mrs. Mary Bartenbach and Mrs. Louise Millar; his parents, Mr. and Mrs, Albert Baumann Sr.; one sister, Mrs. Mary Heimann and five brothers, Albert, John, Louis, Leo and Frank, all of
Indianapolis.
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David R. Lindner
Services will be held Saturday. for David R. Lindner, president of the Lindner Brothers Ice Cream Co, who died yesterday. He was 50 and lived at 68 S. Audubon Road. A native of Dayton, O., Mr. Lindner founded the local company 13 years ago. He had formerly been
head of the Lindner Brothers Milk |
Co., at Dayton. Eight years ago he helped form the: East End Dairies of which he was a director. He was a member of the Irvington Lodge, F. & A. M., the Optimist Club and the Irvington Methodist Church. Survivors are his wife, Hannah; two sons, David and Wilbur; a daughter, Marian, all of Indianapolis; a brother, Carl H, of Cincinnati, O., and a sister, Mrs. Mabel Stewart, Dayton. The 1.30 p. m. services will be followed by burial at Washington Park.
Miss Katherine G. Johnson
Miss Katherine G. Johnson, retired Indianapolis public schools teacher, died yesterday at Methodist Hospital. Miss Johnson, who lived at 1516 N. Pennsylvania St., was 58. She taught in schools here for the past 35 years and had taught in Tipton County for four years. She was teaching at School 10 when illness forced her to retire. Born in Hantilton County, she was the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. M. S. Johnson. She was a member of the Indianapolis Teachers’ Federation, the Grade Teachers’ Association and the National Education Association and the Gray Friends Church near Carniel. She is survived by a sister, Mrs. Bertha Randall of near Carmel, and a’ niece, Miss Nan Reasoner. Funeral arrangements were to be completed today.
Mrs. Esther Cowen Mrs. Esther Cowen, a member of the Methodist Church and Indianapolis resident for 18 years, died yesterday at her home, 2910 E. 17th St. . Mrs. Cowen, who was 70, was born at Mt. Vernon, Ind. The services and burial will be conducted tomorrow at her native home. Survivors are four daughters, Mrs. Carlena Ramsey and Mrs. Roberta Redmond of Wadesville, Miss Aline Cowen of Evansville, and Miss Mayme Cowen of Indianapolis, and one son, Owen Cowen of Santa Ana, Cal.
Mrs. Prudence Fouts °
Services were to be held today for Mrs. Prudence Fouts, resident of Indianapolis for 17 years, who died yesterday at her home, 3203 E. New York St. Mrs. Fouts, who was 86, came to Indianapolis from Zanesville, O,, and had been a member of the Fair Oaks Baptist Church there for 30 years. She was a member of the Woodruff Place Baptist Church here. One daughter, Mrs. Charles Knotts, survives. The services at 7:30 p. m. will be conducted at the Moore & Kirk Funeral Home. Services will also be held at Zanesville Saturday. Burial will be there.
Mrs. Jeannette Skiff
Mrs. Jeannette Selton Skiff died Jast night at the home of her sister, Mrs. Emery W. Cowley, 1132 N. New Jersey St. Mrs. Skiff had lived in Lebanon and Muncie most of her life. She moved here four years ago to live with her sister. Funeral services will be conducted at 11 a. m. Saturday at Meek’s Mortuary at Muncie, and burial will be in Beech Grove Cemetery there. In addition to her sister, Mrs. Skiff is survived by several nleces and nephews. : ,
Francis A. Linton Jr. Francis A. Linton Jr., 3006 E. 65th St., a photo engraver at the Circle Engraving Co., died yesterday at his residence. He was 46, During the World War, Mr. Linton served in the artillery and signal corps in the Canadian Army. He was a member of the Calvin Prather Masonic Lodge, F. & A. M. and of the First Congregational Church here. Survivors are his wife, Marguerite; a daughter, Miss Luramay; his father, F. A. Linton of Toronto, Canada, and two sisters, Mrs. W. G. Ingram and Mrs. Leonard Albright, both of Toronto. . Services will be held at 2 p. m. Saturday at the Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary with the Rev. Ellis
FOOD PLAN LOAN GIVEN APPROVAL
Attorney General Says Trustees May Set Up Revolving Fund.
Prospects of the Federal food stamp plan being adopted here were brighter today following a ruling by the Indiana Attorney General that trustees may set up a $75,000 revolving fund from their. regular funds. The various township trustees in Marion County already had agreed to adopt the plan providing a legal method of establishing the revolving fund could be found. Before the plan can be put in effect, approval by the County Auditor and Trustee for the fund transfer is required. and Edward P. Brennan, Accounts Board chief examiner, said he would seek a conference with these two officials as soon as pos-
sible. 0. K.’d by Ralston
County Auditor Glenn B. Ralston said today he has no objection to the plan since it has been declared legal. At the same time, Paul H. Jordan, Milwaukee, regional director of the Federal Surplus Commodity Stamp Plan, notified Dudley Smith, Indiana Unemployment Relief Commission director, that he or an assistant would come here next week to discuss plans for setting up the plan. The stamp plan provides for distribution of food on the Government’s surplus commodity list through regular grocery channels instead of from; Government warehouses as at present, and in increased amounts. Under the plan, WPA workers and persons receiving welfare grants would be permitted to buy a limited number of orange colored stamps, redeemable at face value at any grocery for any food.
Receive 50 Cents Extra
At the same time, they would receive, without charge, blue stamps worth half as much and redeemable at any store for any goods on the surplus commodity list. Relief clients would receive 50 cents worth of blue stamps for each $1 of their regular food order. The blue stamps would be redeemed by the Government and the orange stamps bv the sponsoring agency, such as WPA or the Wel-
fare Department.
The revolving fund is necessary to assure redemption of the stamps when they are presented by merchants. » It is probable that the bulk of the revolving fund would be provided by Center Township. The township does not have the funds available at present but officials point out the money could be borrowed from the bond issue recently proposed for the township. In his opinion, Atty. Gen. Omer Stokes Jackson said a plan that would furnish more adequate relief to persons on relief would meet the requirements ‘of the 1939 poor relief law.
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