Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 November 1940 — Page 8
TUESDAY, NOV. 2, 1940 :
F. H, BEWSEY IS DEAD AT 78
Retired Lilly Employes Hn : A Week; Services to
; Be Tomorrow.
Ill one week, Favorite Bewsey, retired employee of Lilly ‘& Co., died yesterday in the ome of a "daughter, Mrs. Earl E. 3ingleton, in Beech Grove. - Mr. Bewsey, who was 78, wf a native of Colfax and spent his edrly life there and in Frankfort, In 1884 he was married to Miss Mary E. * Perry, who died in 1934. He was employed for 20 years by the Eli
Lilly & Co., retiring two years ago. |
‘He was a member of the Modern Woodmen-of the World, the Beech Grove ‘Christian Church and the . Masonic Order. Surviving besides Mrs. Singleton are another daughter, Mrs. Frank Horn, of Columbus; a sister, Mrs. Elmeda Payne, of Colfax,jand two
‘grandchildren and two sroht grand- |
«ehildr en,
- Funeral services will be at 10 a. m. | home of Mrs. | Singleton and at 1 p. m. at Colfax.
dfomorrow in the ‘Burial will be in Colfax.
ARTIFIOSAL LAKE FINISHED CAMDEN, N. J., Nov.
(nit WPA projects,
Cooper River tidal dam, has been | "tompleted and formally dedicated.
7 -
Hiram |3 the Eli
22 (U, P).— | One of the country's largest singles the $600,000
‘Dies at Purdue
H. E. Young . . . institutes.
LAFAYETTE,
led farm
Ind., Nov. 26 (U. Thursday for H. E. Young, state leader of farmers’ institutes at Purdue University, who di yesterday after a short illness. Mr. Young was editor of the Farmers’ Guide at Huntington for | six years and editor of the Farmers’ Review and Illinois Farmers Magazine at Chicago for_several years. He took his post at Purdue nine years ago.
P.).—Funeral services will be held |
\
mr oer ln
HEINY FUNERAL SET TOMORROW
'Ex-Hamilton County G. 0. P. Leader Dies at 68; Held State Office.
Funeral services for L. G. Heiny, for many years active in Hamilton County Republican politics, will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow in the
Moore & Kirk ‘Colonial Mortuary. Burial will be in Crown Hill, Mr. Heiny, who lived in Indianapolis for 15 years, died Sunday at his home, 34561. College Ave. Mr. Heiny was 63. He lived in Noblesville most of his life and was chairman of the Hamilton County Republican Committee from 1916 to 1918. He served in the State Auto License Department when Frederick E. Schortemeier was Secrefary of State. Former manager of the American] | Security Co., he was a member of} e Noblesville Masonic Lodge and hird Christian Church. Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Gertrude Heiny, two sons, Arthur, is deputy postmaster in Noblesville, and Roy Heiny, assistant secretary [of the Wainright Trust Co. there; (three brothers, Alfred W., and Walter D. Heiny, both of Noblesville, and Larue Heiny of Marion; a sister, | Mrs. Clara Forrer, of Noblesville, and a stepsister, Mrs. Georgia Pritchrd, {of Indianapolis. ~
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Ak os eA
He'll Discuss War
Col. William J. Donovan . . , recenyly In England,
THE INDIAN APOLIS TIMES °.
who |
COL, DONOVAN HERE ON DEC. 3
“Wild Bill’ of ‘Fighting 69th’ To Talk on ‘Can We Let England Fall?’
Col. William J. Donovan—the’
“Wild Bill” of the famous “Fighting 69th"—will speak in Indianap- | olis Dec. 3. Col. Donovan, who was World| {War commander of the New York] infantry regiment, was himself one of the outstanding World War mili-| tary figures. He will speak on “Can| We Afford to Let England Fall?” at {8 7» m. in ‘Caleb. Mills Hall under (sponsorship of the Indiana Com-| mittee for National Defense. At present, Col. Donovan is a (special assistant to Navy Secretary | Frank Knox and recently returned | {from England, where he was sent lon a special observation mission by the Navy and War Departments. | Long prominent in New York! Republican politics, Col. Donovan was Assistant Attorney General] under President Herbert Hoover. At the outbreak of World War I, Col. Donovan was a major—battalion commander in the “Fighting 69th,” the New York National Guard |regiment organized during the Civil] War. It was incorporated in the Rainbow (42d) Division. The Indiana Committee for National Defense was organized last August, to advocate repeal of the arms embargo. It is composed of prominent Hoosiers and recently imerged with the William Allen White Commitfee to “Defend America by Aiding the Allies”
MRS, GRILLIGH, £2, ILL 2 YEARS, DIES
A native of Germany and a resident’ of Indianapolis 56 years, Mrs. Minnie Grillich died yesterday in the Methodist Hospital after an ill‘ness of two vears. She was 62 and lived:=at 1726 Lockwood Ave. Mrs. Grillich was a member of Emmaus Lutheran Church. | Survivors are her husband, Wil{liam Grillich; a daughter; Mrs. Wil{liam Ahlers; a son, Eugene Barn(hill; three sisters, Mrs. Lena Menzel, | Miss Stena Harting and Mrs. Bertha Webb, all of Indianapolis, and five | grahdchildren. . Services will be held at 2 p.m. to-| {morrow at the home with burial in {Crown Hill Cemetery. Rev. W. C. Meinzen, Emmaus Lutheran pastor,| will officiate. | {
Mrs. Dorothea Schenk
Funeral 2ervices for Mrs Dorothea | Schenk. who died Sunday in" her| home, 620 Worth Ave., will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow in the home Burial will be in Crown Hill. Mrs. Schenk,” who was 77, was a native of Batesville and had lived here 35 vears. She was a member nf the Zion Evangelical Reformed Church. 5 Survivors are two sons. Willie Schenk; a Ivan Crouch, all and a sister, Mrs. of Batesville. #
J. W. Robertson
Following a long illness, James W. Robertson, former Waveland business man, died yesterday in his home, 3744 Kenwood Ave. He was a resident of Indianapolis 13 years. Mr. Robertson; who was born on| a farm near Waveland, attended the! old Waveland Academy and taught school for a number of years before! starting in business. Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Pearl Robertson; one daughter, Mrs. Taylor Groninger, of Indianapolis; a brother, Fred Robertson. of Noblesville, and a sister, Mrs. Ella Butcher, of Greencastle. Funeral services will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow in Waveland with burial there. Friends may call at the Kregelo.& Bailey Mortuary here until tomorrow noon.
Hugo and daughter, Mrs. of Indianapolis, Louise Bonmier,
Paul F. Zierz ’
Funeral services for Paul F. Zierz. | a furrier at L. S. Ayres & Co. for 25 vears, who died Sunday in the Methodist Hospital after a two-year, illness, will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow in the Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary. Burial wil be in Washington Park. Mr. Zierz, who was 60, was a native of Germany and came to the
United States when a chid.
Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Stella Zierz, and one son, Frank Zierz. |
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IR. C. T. PAUL DEAD IN EAST
Founded {Irvington Mission - College; He Was Born - In Ontario.
Dr. Charles T. Paul, founder of the College of Missions in Irvington, and resident here from 1910 until 1928, died last night at Hartford, Conn., according to word received here. A native of Bowmanville, Ontario, Dr. Paul was 81.
head of the Latin American department at the Hartford Seminary Foundation. A widely known linguist, he received degrees fiom almost a score of colleges and universities. During his professorships he taught at Hiram College and the University of Nanking.
At the time of his death he was|(FElGE
As an author his works included fj
“Missionary Mountain Peaks,” “Pres- =~ entation of the Christian Message to Pagan Africa” and * “The Call of China.” He is survived by a son, Justus, and his wife, Jesse. Private services will ‘be held at Hartford tomorrow.
Ralph C. Holland
Ralph Carson Holland, a Big Four | Railroad conductor for many years] and a member of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, died yesterday in St. Vincent's Hospital. He was 54 and lived at 2362 N. New Jersey St.
He was born Aug. 1, 1886, the son
lof James A. and Roselta Holland.| $8
{He married Miss Lulu Kate Cole, Sept. 21, 1908. | Survivors, besides his wife and | parents are & son, James Griffith |. Holland, and four sisters, Mrs. H. O. Harrawood of Mentone, Cal.; Mrs. | Jessica Evans .of Indianapolis; Mrs. {C. A. Andrews of Dormont, Pa., and | [Miss Emma Holland of Sikeston, | Mo. Funeral services will be at 2: 50. p. m. tomorrow in the Little & Sons | Funeral] Home. Burial will be in| Crown Hill. |
Mrs. Sarah May
Funeral services for May, an Indianapolis years, were to be held at 1 p. m.| todav at the Moore & Kirk Irving-| ton Mortuary. Crown Hill. | Mrs. May died Saturday .in Meth- | odist Hospital after a year’s illness.| She was 89 and lived at 316 Lay-| man Ave, | Survivors are a son, O. D. May: two sisters, Mrs. B. F. Lamb and| Miss Elizabeth Sweigart, both of In- | dianapolis; two grandchildren, Lieut. | Thomas B. May of Ft. Knox, Ky.,| anl Mrs. Jessie Daugherty of In-| dianapolis, and a great-grandson, Stevie Ma; of Indianapolis.
Mrs. Sarah |
resident 65
Burial was) to be in |
Fred Dankert
Fred DanKert, a captain in the 46th Infantry during the World War, died Sunday in the Ft. Har- | He was 54 and a| former National Guard instructor for the 152nd Infantry in Portland, Anderson and Shelbyville, Ind. A native of Nebraska, Mr. Dankert | lived in Lawrence. He was a member of the Masonic Order in Atlanta, Ga. Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Fern | Dankert, and a sister, Mrs. Florence Waisner, of Sheridan, Wyo. Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. | tomorrow in the Service Club at the Post. Burial will be in the Post cemetery.
me
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