Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 June 1940 — Page 12

MARY FARRY IS DEAD AT 93

Member of Pioneer Family , Was Widow of Civil } War Veteran.

Mrs. Mary: Isabel Farry, widow of a Civil War Veteran and granddaughter of a member of the first Indiana General Assembly, died yesterday at her home at 1923 N. Illinois St. She was 93. i’ “Mrs. Farr 7 taught in the public schiools before her marriage “.to- William#%R. Farry in 1879. Mr. » died ur years ago. mber, of a pioneer family, her dfather ‘was Abel Lomax, In-

pi State Legislator from 1823 to

1830. She was’ a member of the Cenial Avenue Methodist Church ere Survivors are her brother, Dr. J. M. Study of Cambridge City, Ind. and a, sister, Mrs. Josephine Study Nichols of Washington, D. C. Services will be at 10 a. m. Friday at the home. Burial will be at Crown Hill.

Mrs. Lottie Young

Services for Mrs. Lottie Young, former Indianapglis resident, will be at 10 a. m. tomorrow at the Harry - W. Moore Peace Chapel. Burial will be at Crown Hill. . : Born at Frankfort, Ind. Mrs. Young had lived in Indianapolis until her marriage in 1929. She was a graduate of Manual High School and was a member of the Methodist Church here. She died Sunday at St. Elizabeth's Hospital at Danville, Ill, where she had been living.” She was 41. She is survived by her husband, Irvin C. Young, and her mother, Mrs. Grace King of Indianapolis.

NEVER IN CENSUS AT 73

ANTIOCH, Cal, June 18 (U. P.). —At the age of 73, Joel H. Ford has vet to be included in a United States census. He says census takers have contrived to miss him and his family each decade since 1870.

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Lithuania. for working as a baker.

This Hoosier Came Back

Times-Acme Photo.

‘Back from the Ahroming experiences in Europe, Alexander Gregoloff (center), 19-year-old Hammond, Ind., youth, is shown in happy reunion with his brother, William Gregoloft, and his sister, Mrs. Stella Nelson, who holds her baby son, Robert. Alexander said he narrowly escaped a Russian firing squad and fled a Russian concentration camp. He then wandered without funds over Europe for nine months. He never received money sent him. The Red Cross got him through Germany with the aid of two American vice consuls ‘in The United States Lines gave him passage home in return

70 ESSAY WINNERS ON TOUR OF STATE

MADISON, Ind, Seventy high school boys Fy on winners in the “Greater Indiana” essay contest conducted by the Division of State Publicity were here today on the first leg of their six-

day tour of the state. | The party inspected Clifty Falls

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State Park, had dinner at the Clifty Inn and visited the Lanier Home, a stately ante-bellum mansion onthe Ohio River. Yesterday's schedule included

stops at Martinsville, Bloomington, Indiana University, Bedford, Oolitic,

Spring Mill State Park and French.

Lick. The students met in Indianapolis yesterday for the start of the tour, awarded them for essays on the advantages of their own counties. They will return -to Indianapolis Saturday after touring northern Indiana.

f

‘home, 2629 N. Illinois St. , ' The Rev. Virgil D. Ragan, pastor |i

[Charles E. Miller, Kansas City, Mo. '}

|Mrs. Amanda C. Zobbe

LEWIS 6. MILLER IS DEAD AT 76

Retired - Real Es Estate Man Came Here When ¥ 4 Rites Tomorrow.

Funeral services will be held at 10 a. m.’ tomorrow at the Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary for Lewis Grant Miller, 76, retired real estate dealer who died yesterday at his

of the Fairview Presbyterian Church, will officiate. Burial will be in Crown Hill. Mr. Miller was born in Rushville and came here when he was 7. He i married Alice E, Dunn in 1886. Besides his wife he is survived by a daughter, Miss Alberta A. Miller; a sister, Mrs. James H. Baer, In dianapolis and two brothers, George W. Miller, St. Louis, Mo, and |:

Funeral services for Mrs. Amanda C. Zobbe are to be conducted at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow in her home, 1133 Prospect St., by the Rev. F. R Daries . of the Zion Evangelical and Reformed Church. Burial will |: le in Crown Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Zobbe died Sunday. at her home after an illness of thre weeks. She was 88 and had been a |: resident of Marion County all ‘her life. She was born in a log cabin be- | longing to her father, Thomas|; Huggins, on S. Sherman Drive. Mr: | Huggins had come to Indianapolis in 1821 and had helped clear the } first acre of ground in Indianapolis i on the present site of t “Williams | Hotel at the southeast corner of, Senate Ave. and W. Washington Sts. : Educated at St. John’s Boarding School, she was married to Charle F. Zobbe in 1882 and lived in the } Huggins home at Churchman Ave. 1 and the Huggins Pike (now Bethel |} Ave.). At that time her father | operated a toll gate there. § Mr. and Mrs. Zobbe then moved

[to the Zobbe farm, now the Sarah :

Shank golf course and they lived |§ there for three years. She had

{lived in her present home about 50

years. Survivors are four Miss Ruby Zobbe. Mrs. Edwa Keller, Mrs. Garnet Rambaud and Mrs. | Opal Smelcer and one brother, Harwood Huggins.

Mrs. Lucie A. Carey

Funeral services for Mrs. Lucie A.'%

; {a

(Carey, who died Sunday .at her #

home, 750 Graham Ave., will be held at 8 p. m. today at Shirley Brothers i Central Chapel. Grayville, Ill.

‘Miss Dorothy Worrell

i Technical High School and a mem-

Mrs. Carey, who was 81, was born in Lancaster, O. She moved to Indianapolis in 1906. She was a member of the Irvington Presbyterian Church. She is survived by three daugh-

| ters, Miss Margaret Carey and Miss | Dorothy Carey of Indianapolis and

Mrs. G. G. Shepwood, Oakland, Cal., and a son, Abner B. Carey, Grayville, Ill

Miss Dorothy Worrell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Luther Worrell, 605 N. DeQuincy St., died yesterday at Methodist Hospital gfier more than a year’s illness. She was 27. Miss Worrell was a graduate of

ber of the Broadway Methodist Church, where she had been an active member of the choir. She is survived by her parents; two sisters, Miss Ann Worrell of Indianapolis, and Mrs. Clara Hooper of Greensburg, Pa., and a brother, George Worrell of Indianapolis. Services will be at 8 p. m. tomorrow at the Harry W. Moore Peace Chapel. Burial will be at Jeffersonville, Ind.

DOORS INCONVENIENT RENO, Nev., June 18 (U. P.).—Attention of the city officials has been called to the fact that the Washoe County Court House, nation-wide mecca of divorce seekers, violates the city’s building ordinance. The doors open inward instead of oui war.

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