Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 January 1941 — Page 9

| FRIDAY, JAN. 24, 1941

CLAIR B. ROSS DIES IN FLORIDA

Partner in Local Stamping Firm Had Lived Here For 20 Years.

Clair B. Ross, partner in the Ross-Adseal, Inc., makers of nameplates and decorative hardware, died yesterday at Miami, Fla. after several weeks illness. Mr. Ross, who lived at 5525 Julian

Ave, had been a resident of Indianapeolis for 19 years. Hhe operated the business with his son, David. A native of New York City, he was 72. He worked at Evansville

as a typesetter for the old Evans-i-

ville Standard and later for the Evansville Journal and the Evansville Journal-News.: He came to Indianapolis as a compositor after the introduction of the linotype. He was a member of the International Typographical Union. Survivors include, besides David, his wife, Birdie; another son, Dr. Benjamin R. Ross of the faculty of Indiana University; eight grandchildren and one great-grandchild.

CLAIM ITALIAN SHIP SUNK

- LONDON, Jan. 24 (U.P.).—The Admiralty reported today that the submarine Parthian, 1475 tons, has sunk a heavily laden Italian supply ship of about 7000 tons south of Italy. Date of the sinking was not specified.

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. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Troop 83 Gets Legion Trophy ‘for Championship

Leaders of Boy Scout Troop 83-—ihe championship troop—zre the winners of the Shindler Trophy awarded annually to the most outstanding Legion-sponscred troop. Leaders of (he troop, sponsored by Haywood-Barcus Post No. 55, American Legion, and Legion sponsors are, front row (left to right), Lyle Frost, patrol leader; Angelo Auda, troop scribe; William Fentz, patrol leader; Dick Harvey (with Shindler Trophy), patrol

leader; Billie Mitchell, assistant patrol leader, and William Ritchey, patrol leader; back row (left to right), Delbert O. Wilmeth, chairman of the

troop committee; John Lanahan, assistant scoutmaster; Roy Borders, State Legion committeeman representing the seventh district; Fred Ruoff, of the 4th district; Newton H. Kelsay, 10th district, and Arthur F. G. Gemmer, 12th district.

FORMAL | PROBE. INTO TWA CRASH: PLANNED

ST. LOUIS, | Jan. 24 (U. P)—A

Transcontinental & Western Airlines “Skysleeper” from the West which took a |toll of two-lives at the edge of Lgmbert-St. Louis Airport, will be held within the next two weeks, it was announced today. Those killed |were Capt. P. W. T. Scott of New [York City, the pilot, and J. F. Mot}, Kansas City, TWA mechanic riding s&s a passenger.

Pilot Orestes Dio Guardi of New| York remained in hospitals, from | which four passengers had been re-| leased. ko A TWA statement said Mr. Scott may have misjudged his altitude be- | cause of high frees on a low rise in: the town of Bridgeton, where the: ship crashed in & barnyard. i

CITRUS CAPITAL SHIFTS BARTOW, Fla. (U. P.). — Polk County 'eads the nation’s counties in the production of citrus fruits.

It passed Los Angeles County in 1939 ~

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formal inquiry into the crash of a |

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| W. Pearl. St., is survived by his wife,

‘| a sister, Mrs. Ida Wilsori' of Traders

| Frances, Betty and Anita Lynn,

| here by friends.

LOCAL DEATHS

Eugene Olds

Eugene Olds, a resident of this)

Floral Park Cemetery following 10

‘a. m. services tomorrow aft the resi-| Edgewood. Burial was to be at (Crown Hill.

dence, 1504 W. Ohio St.

Mr. Olds, a leather worker, died {Tuesday at her home, 1123 Dudley Ave.

Tuesday at Nashville, Tenn. Survivors are his mother, Mrs Certrude Olds; two sisters, Mrs, Goldie Lodge and Miss Mary Olds, ||

Six passengers, Stewardess Mary and two brothers, Harold Olds and ‘Mrs. Amelia Hutzel; a son, Carl Eschoach of New York and Co-jAlfred Olds, both of Indianapolis. |Kistner; a sister, Mrs. Jennie Cur-

Mrs. Caroline Moser |

Services for Mrs. Caroline Moser, | mother ¢f Dr. Rollin Moser, Indian- | apolis physician, will be held at 11 a. m. tomorrow at Aurora, Ill. Bur-| isl will be at Sheridan, Ill. She

Mrs. Moser, who madé| her home in Aurora, died at Methodist Hospital yesterday. She bkecams ill while visiting her son liere during tae Christmas holidaws. Survivors include Dr. Moser, who lives in Crows Nest; her husband the Rev. Henry Moser of Aurora] another son, Willard Moser. of Port Arthur, Texas, and four daughters] Mrs. Glenn Larrison of Morocco, Mrs, H. L. Winder of Sheridan, Ill Mrs. Samuel Krueger of St. Paul Minn., and Mrs. Henrietta Greenleaf of Old Lyme, Conn.

Fred Goodwin Services for Fred Goodwin, who ded Tuesday at City Hospital, will be held at the. Royster Askin J¥uneral Home tomorrow ai 1) a. m. Burial will be at Pleasant

Hill. He was 65. Mr. Goodwin, who lived at 1019

Vice; a daughter, Mrs. Ellis Curtis]

Point, and six grandchildren,

Alma L. Lynn

Services will be held &5 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in Shirley Brothers’ Cenk tral Chapel for Alma ILduise Lynn, a pupil of School 8, who died Thursday in the City Hospital. Burigl will be in Anderson Cer:etery. Born in Indianapolis Jan. 27, 1928, she was 13 and lived at 910 Lexington Ave. Survivors are her mother, Mrs. Lula Lynn, and four sisters, Mrs. Margaret Piercefield, Mary

Stanley Chastain

Stanley Chastain, Roachdale unfdertaker, died yesterday at his home there, according to word received

Mr. Chastain was 51 &nd operated the Ronchdale Mortuary, which was fcunde¢ by his father in 1890. Hp had been ill for only a few days. Survivors include his wife, Bernice; a son, Edwin, anda daughter, Mrs. Herbert Jeffries. Services will be held at 2 p. m. Sunday, with burial at the Roachdale Cemetery,

STREET CHANGES NAMES TOBRUK, Jan. 24 (U. P.).—Passirg through Bardia én route tp Tobruk, correspondents noted that the name of the main sireet, Via Mussolini, had been chsnged to Via Ned Kelley by an Australian trooper. Ned Kelly was a famous Australian bush bandit. Along came a British officer who changed the

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name of the street to Via Churchill.

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718 JOBS FILLED BY GOODWILL OFFIGE

Indianapolis Goodwill Industries found jobs for 778 persons, including the physical handicapped, in 1940, the agency reported today. Of the 778 total, 75 were em-

ployed for a period of three months| qq

or more. They were designated as persons who cannot be employed in industry because of handicaps. Pau] H. Buchanan yesterday was re-elected president of the organization and F. T. Reed and E. O. Snethen, vice presidents. William B. Schiltges was named treasurer and Leo Kaminsky, secretary. Nineteen directors also were re-elected, with . two more to be named at a later date,

CHARGES PLOT ON LUXEMBURS

Envoy Says Nazis Seek to Force Merger With Forced Signatures.

WASHINGTON, Jan. 2¢ (U. P). —Hughes Le Gallais, Luxemburg’s minister to the United States, said last night that German officials and | Gestapo (secret police) agents are exerting “moral and economic” pressure on his countrymen to sign documents advocating a union of Germany and Luxemburg. The pressure, he said, was aimed primarily at officials and employees of the Luxemburg Government “who risk loss of their positions” they refuse to sign the documents. Declaring that the Germans “want to get these signatures so they can say that the people of Luxemburg , have expressed their readiness to join Germany,”

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