Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 June 1940 — Page 11
lard 1.
Scheduled for July 21
Method of Selecting Teams to Be Decided.
‘With general plans already laid Or ‘Amateur Day, the meéthod of selecting the four teams to play on this annual program Sunday, July 21, will be decided at a meeting of the Indianapolis Amateur Baseball ation Monday night at. City
The date was 'set at a meeting Jast night, and officials agreed to move the usual Saturday affair to unday in the hope of attracting larger crowd. The double-header will be played at Perry Stadium. Dr. Paul Kernel has been named general chairman of the event as well as ticket chairman. Wally ~Middlesworth, Paul Hinkle and Tom Quinn will be in Eharge of the | program.
SOFTBALL . Clinging to second place, a half _ game behind Anderson’s Vance Optometrists, the Pepsi-Cola Boosters will endeavor to close the percent-age-point gap between them tomorYow night at Softball Stadium at the expense of the Wabash Elks. ~ Wabash, an entry new to the _ Bush-Feezle State League this season, has on its roster Vern Marsh, for two years the pitching star of the championship Marion Patrick
~ The Elks lost to Anderson, 8 to 7, fn their first scrap at Wabash Wednesday. Prior to the league game, the Kingan A. A. club, leader in the Bush-Feezle Civic League, will tangle with the Goldsmith Negro Secos, this game beginning at 7:15 p. m.,
~ The Charley Simon Delicatessen ~ team of Louisville, winner of 13 - games in 20 starts last year and unbeaten this season, will meet the West Indianapolis Merchants in the or feature game at 8 p. m. tomorrow “at Belmont Stadium. ~ Bill Asher, who has hurled two ‘no-hitters for the Blue Grass boys this season, is expected to be on the ‘mound. In a 7 p. m. contest the Paul Kerr Packard girls of Gary will meet the Hoosier A. C. girls, and at 9 p. m. the Frankfort Hot Dogs will take on the local Hosiery Union outfit.
‘Gleason Pies will play Noblesville Merchants at 3 p. m. tomorrow at ~ Forest Park in Noblesville. Gleason ~~ players are to report at Finch Park at 1 p. m.
~ Delaware Flower Shop has a dia- ; mond and wants a game for tomor- * row afternoon. Call Chet Fryberger, BR. 1812, Goldsmith’s Secos will tangle with Sam’s Men’s Shop in a doubleheader tomorrow at Willard 2, first ‘game beginning at 9:45 a. m.
~~ Tomorrow's: schedule in the Broadway 101 Class League at Brookside: 2—~Company E vs. Company A. 2 $~Company D vs. Company A, * 4~Company F vs. Company C. ~~ The pairings. tomorrow in the * Bunday Morning League at Gar- © field 2: ' © - _9:30—Lincoln Loan vs. Curry-Clippers. 10:30—Varsity Bar vs. Communal Club. _ Here’s how theyll stack up tomorrow evening in the Em-Roe State League at Memorial Park in Lebanon:
C. A. Girls vs. Logansport Girls. banon Lennox Tires vs. Logansport
; bolds. $—Mitchell A, C. vs. Riverside Buddies.
“Tomorrow’s pairings in the K. of . €.-C. Y. O. Senior League: “Cathedral 2 vs, St. Philip Blues at Riv-
. Shamroeks vs. Haly Rosary at Spades L - ahomis vs. St. Francis at 49th and
EJ Eathedral 1 vs. St. Philip Silvers at Spades 2. ’ Holy Cross vs. St. Cathgrine at Wil3 paiacred Heart vs. Holy Trinity at Gara St. Roch vs. Assumption at Rhodius 1.
Results in the Em-Roe Industrial ~ Keague: ftockyards, oli Butcher Workmen, 0.
tional Venee po ooyeridse Paper, 8:
~~ The Kokomo C. Y. O. champions will meet the Indianapolis cham3 pions af 2:30 p. m. tomorrow at Bel- © mont,
8th-Inning Rally
: Wins for Craws
Gaining ground in the American ~ Negro League pennant race, the ~- Indianapolis Crawfords climbed on a the Ileague-leading Kansas City “Monarchs at Perry Stadium last ~ night and turned back the West- ~ .erners, 5 to 4, as the result of an _ eighth-inning rally. Spencer, Crawford catcher, con- ~ nected for a long double to drive in “Smith with the tying marker from first base, and then he raced home himself to win the ball game on a single to centerfield by J. Johnson. This spurt came after Kansas City had gone ahead by a run in its ‘half of the eighth on Ducuir’s triple followed by Cyrus’ single. ~ Spencer led the Crawfords’ at- = tack with three hits in four trips * to the plate. A crowd of 2000 saw
the game.
Indianapolis Blue
Cisco In Kentucky’s Amateur Finals
GTON, Ky. June 29.— “Walter Cisco, who divides his time ween Jeffersonville, Ind., and sville, was to meet Johnny sole of the Lexington Country lub today in a 36-hole match for e Kentucky amateur golf title. Cisco eliminated Pete Doll of ville, 5 and 4, in a semi-final patch, “while Eversole moved ahead ‘defeating Jack Mohney of Lex3 and 2.
orseshoe Champs | Action Tomorrow Orvil Harris, last year's Midwest-
horseshoe pitching champion,}
“his brother Orlo, 1937 and 1938 titleholder, will go into action the State Street Club when it
Phil Rizzuto »
Denning Slips to Fourth
Times Special CHICAGO, June 29.—Phil Rizzuto of Kansas City put‘'an end to Minneapolis’ individual batting supremacy in the ‘American Association. this week by grading the top spot on a .380 mark, average including games of Thursday showed today. Otto Denning, who had been leading the pack for three weeks, slipped to fourth, with .357. Huck Geary of the Millers is second with .361, while a teammate, Phil Weintraub is in third with his mark of .358. Other leaders:
Hits—Rizzuto, 100. Runs—Roberto Estalella. Minneapolis, 62. Doubles—Estalel 19. Triples—Gerald indy, Kansas City, 9. Home Runs—Harvey Walker,
17. uns Batted In—Ab Wright, 1S Stolen Bases—Rizzuto, 20.
John Lindell of Kansas City and Bob Kline of Milwaukee are leadIng the pitching department. The former has 10 victories and two losses, and the latter six triumphs ahd no defeats.
Lash Bids for
Rice’s Crown
FRESNO, Cal., June 29 (U. P.).— There were seven new records and Western athletes today counted 18 victories in 21 junior events of the National Amateur Athletic Union’s 52nd annual track and field meet— the world’s toughest competition in
lis Minneapoli Minneap-
‘| a yéar when war has called time on
the Olympic Games. Senior events were scneduled tonight in Fresno State College Stadium and the youngsters who scored so heavily last night threatened to give the veterans a tough time. The odds were about even that the New York Athletic Club, the San Francisco Olympic. Club or the Southern California Athletic = Association would win the title. The San Francisco Club won the junior championship with 2225 points. The S.C.A.A. was second with 150.
Schoolboy Is Sensation
Eddie Morris, a 17-year-old high school senior from Huntington Beach, Cal, was the sensation of the junior eet. He tied the junior 100-meter mark “of 104; galloped to a new mark of 21 seconds in a 200-meter heat and topped off the evening with a 20.6-second victory in the final of that event. A fivemile wind that was blowing behind his back may deprive him of the record. He will compete again tonight in a sprinting field of such stars as Norwood Ewell of Penn State, Mosel Ellerbe of Tuskegee Institute, Hal Davis of Salinas Junior College, Billy Brown of Louisiana State and Eulace Peacock, formerly of Temple. Other new records include: Cliff Bourlamd, S. C. A, A, 400 meters, 474; Bob Madrid, : Olympic Club, 5000 meters, 15:21.7; Richard Browning, Olympic Club, 200-meter low hurdles, 23.4; Stan Andersen, Olympic Club, 16-pound shotput, 53. feet 6 inches; Carl McBain, Olympic Club, 400-meter hurdles, 52.3, and James Kehoe, Washington A. A., 800 meters, 1:52.2, Don Lash, the Indiana _State policeman, won the only senior event on last night's program—the
10,000-meter run—in 32:28 with al.
130-yard victory over Lou Gregery of the Millrose A. A. of New York. Lash did not strain for the time, slow in comparison with his 31:06.9 in 1936. Both juniors and seniors ran the long grind together, with Frank Lawrence of the Olympic Club winning the junior title. Lash tonight will attempt to lift the 5000-meter crown ° presently worn by Greg Rice of Noire Dame.
Harris of I. U. Entered
Best races of the night were predicted in the 110-meter and 200meter hurdles with Fred Wolcctt of Rice, Ed Dugger of Penn State and Allan Tolmich of Wayne University contesting against the new junior champions, Don Hommell of Southern California in the shorter event and Dick Browning of Visalia ‘Junior College in the . 200-meter event, . Al Blozis, giant sophomore shotputter from Georgetown University, is expected to continue his sweep of weight events, but he will be given tough competition by Stan Andersen of Stanford, who set a new
mark in the junior shotput last
night, Phil Fox of the Olympic Club and Archie Harris of Indiana.
AUTO and DIAMOND
LOANS
and Refinancing 20 MONTHS TO PAY
Wolf Sussman, Inc.
239 W. WASH ST. FITABLISHED 39 YEARS
IN NORSE SHIP |
Eight Cross Ocean in Little) ®
Trawler Rather Than ‘Surrender to Nazis.
NEW YORK, June 29 (U. P).— A grimy, weather-beaten little Norwegian fishing trawler, and eight men who preferred to cross the ocean in it to a “strange” America without charts or adequate supplies, rather than return to their Ger-man-occupied homeland, rested today at the waterfront here. > The boat is the 68-foot, twomasted Bergholm. It looked like a ghost from the seas when it slipped into port yesterday. It evidently had made its last voyage, and it had been a long and hard one. It was caked with dirt. Paint was peeling from its sides. But a tattered Norwegian flag flew proudly from the stern. Capt. Bernt Hague, seafarer from the Viking land, said he and his crew of seven had crossed the Atlantic “roaming west,” with only the thought in mind of reaching some point in America.
Was Mine-Sweeper
“Here was the yarn he spun: He was in command of a Norwegian mine-sweeping fleet operating on the west coats of Norway between Haugesan and Bergen, when Germany invaded Norway. The Bergholm had been converted from a fisher into a mine sweeper. On May 1, he said, he received word -that the fighting in southern Norway was over. The Norwegian Government ordered him to surrender. When he refused, the Government ordered him to “get out of the country.” “We had captured some German prisoners who had been released from Norwegian prison camps, he went oge “We loaded them on Bergholifi and took them to Shetland Island. We crossed under cover of darkness, but the night was only two hours long and the air was filled with German planes. They were bombing everything in sight, even little fishing boats. How we escaped that bombing, I don’t know.” Sent Back to Norway
After reaching the Shetlands, Hague was taken to London aboard a British plane. There he received orders to take his ship to Lerwick, Norway, to aid in the evacuation of
\British troops. He left the Bergholm
at Lerwick and returned to London. “But. I wanted to go back and fight for my country,” he said. “At last we got our fighting orders. From London we went to Glasgow, and on May 21 boarded the Monarch of Bermudas which had 2000 British troops . aboard, bound for Narvik. We left Glasgow May 22 and went to Clyde. On May 26 orders were received to disembark the troops. I was. disgusted. “We weflt to Johnstown, in Scotland, and spent a few days there with the army. “On May 31 we again boarded the Bergholm and set out from Bouckie for the Faroe Islands, where we filled her up with provisions, fuel and water. “We were out only two days when we heard over the radio that all resistance to the Germans had ended. There we were, in the middle of the ocean and not knowing where to.go.” “It was then we decided to go to America.”
40-year-old
e th
Envious Burgess B. 6th
This Aberdeen-Angus prize bull, purchased by William L. Fortune, Cold Springs and Michigan Roads, is reputed to be the best son of
his father, Envious Blackcap B. 6th, who was international grand
Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind. June 29. —The Willkie family of Elwood liked Indiana University so well that, in due course of time, all six of the Willkie children were sent to the Bloomington campus to get
heir education. : ur of the Willkies were in the university at the same time,
the campus, and among them was Wendell who was starting after a law degree at the age of 17. That was in 1909. An individualist, “Wen” Willkie remained more or less an unknown
three years because he refrained from joining or becoming active in campus organizations, social or otherwise.
Became Campus Leader
As a senior his resistance weakened to the extent that he joined the Beta Theta Pi social fraternity, Other alliances followed, and he became somewhat of a campus leader. He became president of the Boosters’ Club, director of the Indiana Union, a member of Delta Sigma Rho, the Debating Club, the Jackson Club—a Democratic organization, and won the Law Prize as the outstanding senior orator in the School of Law. Graduating from I. U. with an A. B. degree in»1913, “Wen” began teaching in Coffeyville, Kas. Among his various duties there was the job of coaching the high school basketball team, a job which Coach Willkie, though he never had played the game himself, performed with such studious care ‘that Coffeyville turned up with a championship team. When brother Fred went to Porto Rico in 1915 as chemist for a sugar company, Wendell interned himself
Willkies Liked I. U. So Well, All 6 Went to School There
‘at Oberlin University a month while
renting a house all their own near |
on - the campus during his first
you will learn in your careers, is
«+ « a ton of champion.
champion of 1939 and sold for $10,000. Young Envious, also a champion, has won top honors in Utah, Montana, Michigan, Massachusetts and other livestock shows. He was purchased from Elliott Brown, Hill, Iowa.
he studied chemistry relating to sugar and then sailed off to Porto Rico to join his brother.
The attraction of law was too strong, however, and in 1916 he returned to the Bldémington campus to complete work for the LL.B. degree. ‘ After a year of concentration work, which he “lightened” with activity in the field of his favoirte hobby, debating, he received the degree, then won entrance to the bar, only to find America’s entrance into the war confronting him in 1917. » Law waited while Wen Willkie joined the Officers’ Training School, became a first lieutenant of the 325th Field Artillery, and reached France just a. short time before the Armistice was signed.
In 1938, as president of the Commonwealth and Southern Corp. Wendell Willkie returned to Indiana University to deliver the principal Foundation Day address. He told the students: “One of the things
that the world has a habit of emerging from soul-shattering conflicts with its soul still unshattered.”
“Liberalism,” he said then, “is not the property of any one political party nor the product of any one political platform. It is not a fixed program of action nor a vote on this - or that particular measure. Liberalism is an attitude of mind. The liberal, for example, might be opposed to regulation of business in one ‘instance and in favor of it in another. “The criterion of the liberal philosophy is this: In the faith of the liberal the emphasis is upon individual freedom, while in the idealologies of either the ht or the Left it is upon social control.”
DEFENSE BRINGS |
HIDDEN TAXES"
|Average Family Will Pay
About $10 a Year More Under New Law.
A
By FRED W. NEAL United Press Staff Correspondent
. WASHINGTON, June 29.—The average American family will have to pay about $10 a year more in
‘|hidden takes as a result of the new
billion dollar defense tax bill, a United Press survey indicated today. The average family was selected from statistics compiled by the living costs division of the Labor Department. It is composed of four persons—parents and two children— and has an annual income of $1524.
For a family of the same size with | N
a yearly income of $2500, the living cost increase would be about $20. But neither the $1524 nor the $2500 family would have to pay an income tax despite the increases in the new measure. The increases would come in the excise levies.
Luxuries Cost More
. Some of the increases for the $1524 family based on average consumption of goods on which the taxes have been augmented: Cigarets, $7.45 more; $1.86 more for movies, sports arid other admissions; 15 cents more. for gasoline; 4 cents more for toilet preparations, and about 39 per cent more per gallon for alcoholic beverages |} (for which it now spends $5.44). Expenditures of any one family would vary, of course, and so would the taxes on the individual! items, but the average would be the same. A man buying a bottle of beer, now selling at 15 cents, might pos-
tsibly have to pay 16 cents as a re-
sult of the new tax. The cigaret tax is increased from $3 to $3.25 per thousand, or a halfcent a package. If two packages
were selling for 25 cents now, they |M
might cost 26 cents after July 1. _ Affects Auto Prices
If gasoline were selling five gallons for $1, the tax bill’s boost of
from 1 cent to 112 cents per gallon |w.
would bring it to about $1.03. If the purchase price of an automobile were $850, the tax increase of from 3 per cent to 32 per cent would bring it to about $854. A 30-cent movie, under the new tax of 10 per cent for each 10 cents over 20, would cost 33 cents. A compact costing $1 now under the increase of from 10 to 11 per cent
would cost $1.10. A $50-radio under |R
the 1 per cent increase of the new bill would cost 25 cents more. The income tax features of the new bill lower the exemptions for single persons from $1000 to $300 and for married persons from $2500 to $2000 and exacts a 10 per cent tax earmarked for defense. The $400 exemption for each dependent and the 10 per cent earned income eredit of the present law are maintained.
F. D. 1. C. TO PAY AT LUCERNE WASHINGTON, June 29 (U. PJ). —The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. announced today that it expects to begin payments soon to depositors of the closed Lucerne State Bank, Lucerne, Ind. The bank closed on June 22, holding deposits of approximately $250,000.
‘Alma;
Income Single, $1500 .. Married, $1500. . Single, $2500. . Married, $2500 No Children Married, $2500, (2 Children). Single, $3000... Married, $3000 (No Children) Married, $3,000 (2 Children). Married, $5000, (No Children) Married, $5000, (2 Children)
$14
$22 $58 $10 $76 $28
$68 $38
'Scole of Proposed fale
Here is a comparison of present and projected income tax payments, exclusive of exemptions for charity, o
Present Law New Tax
other taxes, etc.: | New Defense Tax ts (10% of Total) ° New Total
$1.00 $7.60 $2.80
$110.00 $74.80
$10.00 $6.80
State Deaths
ANDERSON—Miss Maxine Newgent, 29. SUrvivOls: Parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Earl ewgen ARLIN {GTON—Mrs. 77. ‘Survivors: Husba Oakley and Orville; Doe and Mrs. Frank W vivors: Wife, a Edith Rayvl: brother. BLOOMING TON—Fralikliz P. Dunca 57. Survivors: on, Arnold; daughters, er Winifred Alice gry Frances DunWalter
Rebecca Sampson, nd, Dr. Dorsey; sons, sisters, _ Mrs. Maude
non 1. 62. mother,
SurMrs.
ers, George, Tom, Edward and
Raymond Tieman, 29. Survivors: Wife, father, Herman: stepmother, Mrs, Mary’ Tieman; brothers, Paul, Louis and Leonard. John W. Imhoff. 7 Survivors: ie Lauranna; sons, John ol h ters, Mrs. Win I on, Mrs. ay and Mrs. Frank | h BLOUNTSVILLE—John Raymond Crabtree, 31. Survivor: Mother, Mrs. John Bird. CLEAR CREEK—William W. Hall, %4. Survivors: Wife, May; daughter, Mrs. Lucille Weeks. EVEEBFIELD-M1s, 31. Survivors: Tether. Luther Pegram; Pegram. ELWOOD—William D. Foust, 51. vivors: Wife, Catherine; daughter, aret; brothers, Albert and mer, rother, George Richwine. FAIRFAX—Mrs. Sarah E. Adams, 81. Surivors: Sons, John and William; daughters, Mrs. Deal Kinser and Mrs. Goldie Deckard: brother. Milton Southern; sister, Mrs. John Treadway.
» » »
HANDY RIDGE—Betty Joan Lucas, 19 months. Survivors: Parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harley Lucas; sister, Ciara. 2» EFT EE SONVILLE MIs. Esther Karr, 3. : Husband, Russell; daughCarol Karr; parents, ‘Mr. and Sicker; SST Miss Sarah
Dorothy May DasHusband, Clarence; brother, Warren
Marhalf-
6. SUTVIvOrS: Sin and Harve tle Trotter iss Polly Waggoner.
oy A R. Dis kef\sheets, Survivors: Daughters, Mrs. Art ‘Oradat and Thelma Sa maker; eons, J.
& Willia, Kolman Kaplan, 63. . Sister,
Mrs. Edith Coff
offman. NEW CASTLE—Alfred Elmore Beam. 73. Survivors: Daughter, Mrs. Elsie Lin ehack: sons, George, Chester, Oran and Har Sisters Mrs. “Catherine Bailey; brothe: 5 :
PRN CON Joseph Bin er, 79. Survivors: = Brothers, John Conrad; sister, Mrs. Mary Beloa
RUSHVILLE. Marion Ruseed hi ple, 7. Survovors: Parents. illiam Whipple; brother. a Robart; sisters, Lillian Mae and Viola. Ellen
SHELBYVILLE — Mrs. ENIONYILLE Mrs 42, Surviors: Donald; daugh
Rredian hers i Breedlove: sister, Mis. Esther Gillespie.
REV. R. M. DODRILL TOWNSEND SPEAKER
Times Special ST. LOUIS, June 29.—The Rev, R. M. Dodrill, pastor of the Broadway Baptist Church, Indianapolis, will give the sermon for the National Townsend Club Convention tomorrow at 2 p. m. in the Municipal Auditorium, It is expected that about 30.000 persons will attend.. The Rev. Mr. Dodrill will go from here to Washington, D. C., to fill a speaking engagement in a church there.
M survivors: 3
Cassie
Glen yampler, ons, Dale and
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OUTLAW REDS AND NAZIS, GREEN ASKS
WASHINGTON, June 29 (U. P.). —President William Green of the American Federation of Labor proposed today that Congress outlaw the Communist Party and the Ger-man-American Bund to halt their “traitorous activities” in the interest of’ national safety and national defense. Speaking before the graduating class of the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s National Police Academy, Mr. Green said that he believes the nation is “inviting danger” by permitting such organizations to “continue to operate openly or secretly . . . against the interests of the United States.” He said that it was self-evident that “the various brands of totalitarianism which have engulfed con-: tinental Europe—whether their label be Nazi, Communist or Fascist—are hostile to America and to everything which Americans hold dear.” These totalitarian nations, he added, have established “thriving branches” .in this country and “are encouraging their followers to weaken the morale of the United States in every way they can.”
WINS MARBLE TITLE
NEW YORK, June 29 (U, P).— James Music, 13-year-old son of an Eastpoint, Ky., coal miner, demonstrated how he won the national marbles championship in an exhibition at the World's Fair today. * Music won the title yesterday at Wildwood, N. J., when he defeated five opponents in the final of the 18th annual tournament.
GETS PUBLICATION POST
Miss Willa B. Walker is the newly appointed field representative in Indianapolis for the Amecrican Baptist Publication Society, Philadelphia. Miss Walker, former Indianapolis Christian Center director, will distribute Baptist missionary and educational literature here. *
Deaths—Funerals 1
Indianapolis Times, Satur., June 20, 1940
TT—Rev. Ulysses G., passed away AR morning. Y Services at 8t. Paul's Method CD Ie nday, 1: Burial aT: ) Hill. Piriends may call at the Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary until noon Monday and at the church from 12:30 until 1:30.
BARRISH—Isaac Jr., passed away Friday gvaning at the Methodist Hospital. Hus=band of Belle, father of Joseph, Sarah, ‘Louis, re. Rose bak, Mrs. na Helms, spoher of Joseph servises i e conducted . m.. Su - Bu ben _ Funera. Home, Interment, Knessis-Israel.
ENGLE—Sarah A., wife of Charles F. Engle, mother of ‘Fred W. Engle and sister of Joseph H. Huston, passed away Saturday morning. Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary an Private services and burial at W. ter, Ind., Monday.
HYLAND—Martin J., husband of Ma aret B. Hyland, cousin of Robert Hyland, passed away at the residence, Eg Par. k Ave., Thursday evening. Friends ma; call at the McNeely mortuary, 1828 Meridian - St., any time Saturday and Sunday. Funeral services Monday, 8:30 a. m. at the mortuary; 9 a Peter and Paul Cathedral. * Burial Holy Cross Cemetery. [Terre Haute papers please copy.] .
LONG-_ Josephine ‘Margaret, of 85438 Hibf Claude W. Long, mother Edythe Long Ellis of Ind ana is, Polje of Terre Ill, departed a. Funeral aslviges a
? 5342 and
ches-
hen Martha Long Harry Obetz, Paris, life Thursday, age 61. Sunday, June 30, 9:3 vv May Moore & Kirk Irvington ion wlary E. Washington St. [Terre Hau Paris ae papers please copy.]
MILLER—Alice Ann, 76 years, mother of Mrs. Marie Wittmah, Arthur and Ra, “ mond Miller, grandmo other of Freder Raymond, Dulcie, Alice en Arthur Wire: man and Mary Ann Miller, Bi assed ayay Friday. Funeral Monday I uly 1, a. m. as residence, Jat "Michi gan ve
St.: 9 Friends 2 annd. "Bur Ma 0 Cemetery. Friends may call +d after 2 p. m. Saturday.
PURKERSON—Edna, of 724 W. New York 8t., beloved daughter John and Purkerson, sister Mazy, Wilma, Willard, Clifford, Harald and’ Richard Pur. kerson, passed away June - age 15 ears. Services Monday, 2 Pol anblossom Mortuary, 1327 W. Ray St. Burial Floral Park Cemetery. :
REDMOND—Sgt. James J., Company 11th Infantry, husband of Ha: hod: mond, passed away at Wain er Reed Hosital Wednesday. ral ce at he McCord Juneral Home in Oaklandon Sunday, m. Burial Fort Harrison on, * Friends Miu call at the funeral home any tim
St. St. Sosepi's WL friends may call at the mortuary any
4
in Memoriams 3
LOVING remembrance of ry Hynes, who passed away three years. 4g0 today. We mourn for her in “silence; y No eyes can see us weep, But many a pr Lor ‘Is shed hd hers are. asleep. Sadly v_ HUSBAND, CHILDREN,
5 WALTER T. BLASENGYM FUNERAL HOME 2226 Shelb: ret 3129 N. ; If no one nels ers call CONKLE FUNERAL HOME 1034 W. Michigan St. Flanner & Buchanan MORTUARY 25° W. Fall Creek Blvd, : TAM BERT S. GADD 2140 Prospect St.
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