Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 April 1941 — Page 8
PAGE 8
BRENNAN RITES | SET TOMORROW
Mother of Local Realtor Dies at 77: Burial in | Holy Cross. |
Funeral services will be held at} ® a. m tomorrow in St. Patricks! Catholic Church for Mrs. Anna M. Brennan, mother of William A Brennan Sr, Indianapolis realtor | and president of W. A. Brennan. Inc ! There will be a short service in! her son's home, 4530 Park Ave. after which the family will leave at 8:15 a. m. for the 9 o'clock Requiem Mass at St. Patrick's. Burial will be in Holy Cross Cemetery Mrs. Brennan, a lifelong resident Indianapolis, died Sunday in her home, 1510 Draper St. after an illness of several weeks. She was 78 She was
of
a member of St. Patrick’s Church and the Aitar Society there Her husband, Lawrence A. Brennan, died in 1927. Besides her son, she is survived by two grandchildren. William Brennan Jr. and Mrs. J. Albert Smith, both of Indianapolis
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AMERICA'S BIGGEST NICKEL
Church George Storm.
er andchildren
Honor Church Secretary
Miss Hazel Funk's 20 years’ service as secretary at the Methodist Church area office here was recognized by Bishop Titus Lowe (above) and other Methodist officials and pastors at a luncheon in her honor yesterday at the Indianapolis Athletic Club.
SERVICES TODAY FOR | MRS. SARAH MILLER
Funeral services for Mrs. Sarah R. |
Miller. who died yesterday in her] home. 2025 Olive St, were to be | held at 2 p. m. today in the home. Burial will be tomorrow in Elizabethtown, Ky : Mrs. Miller, who was born in Kentucky, had lived here 20 years. She was 58 and was a member of the Baptist Church in Elizabethown.
Survivors are her husband, Harry | William T.|
C. Miller; eight sons, Miller, living in Alabama, and Roy D., Edward F., Harry A, John F, Elmer R., David P. and Hubert M Miller, all of Indianapolis; three daughters, Mrs. Mary Hahan, Mrs. Dorothy Wall and Mrs. Ruth Williams of Indianapolis; four brothers, two Sisters and 22 grandchildren,
MRS. CARRIE STORM, HERE 12 YEARS, DIES
Funeral services for Mrs. Carnie Belle Ellis Storm, who died yesterday in her hone, 1267 W. 30th St, will be at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the Ash Greve, Ill, Christian She was the widow of
Storm was born in Shelby Illinois, and spent most of her life in the vicinity of Ash Grove. She had lived in Indianapolis for the past 12 years. was a member of the Christian Church at Ash Grove Survivors are two daughters. Mrs.
Mrs. County,
Telva Clem and Miss Nellie Storm;
William B. Ellis, and five all of Indianapolis.
™O0 WIN SCHOL ARSHIPS Two Indianapolis students
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arships in recognition of high honor standing. Charles Breunig, 1818 N. Talbot Ave, won the Price Greenleaf scholarship, while Robert | F. Magill, 2945 Broadway, wong the | | Walter Kessler scholarship.
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PORCH TABLE
COUNTY SCHOOL fT WINNERS NAMED |
Awards Are M Made for First, Second and Third Places In Butler Contest. |
Winners have been announced in the annual Marion County Educational Achievement and Written | Composition Contest, which was held April 1 at Butler University. The contest was sponsored by J. Malcolm Dunn, former county schools superintendent, and the Marion County Parent-Teacher As-
Lawrence: 2 Mary 3. Muriel Johnson,
Jerry Hyde, John
Narre Garden City: 2, John Strange: 3. Ewell and 4, Virginia Derby-
Walters,
Davis, and
and
sociation. E. E. Lefforge of Law- | rence Township was contest com- | mittee general chairman. Medal awards were made to win- | ners of first, second and third places and a certificate was given to the class or room in the school repre-! sented by the winning pupil. Achievement contest winners in the various grades, ‘and the school they attend are: 3A—1, Royce Meranda, John Strange: 2 | Jane Ann McCammack, Fleming G; 3.| John Maier, Center 2, and 4, Russell Flatt, | MM L. F. B d Fe washID a and Richard Cochran, Flemm (tied) i B-—1, Kenneth Blanck, Ben Davis: 2 | rs. ra y Betty Bogue, Garden City: 3, Henrietta | | xo Jnl, Wy G, and 4, Carol] T oKe | Dies Here at 59 i Benny Joe McFarland, Acton: 2, Charles’ Robert Blaschke, Maywood 3 FUNERAL SERVICES will be [joan Perrott Garden City. ahd 1. Maurie at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow in the (tied) ie. % Farley Funeral Home for Mrs. eet Len Joh AR | | Lottie F. Brady, who died yes- . Fleming G. and 4 John Canada, terday in her home, 1221 Kapper Bog, Devs Billy Orr, Bridgeport; 2 Marion | St., after a brief illness. Burial Brown, Sleasant, Run. 3. Peggy _Hadlev, ok : v, . t rank! will be In Crown Hill. ‘ ToWDARID, hd Maxine Haines, University Mrs. Brady was 59. the wife | Heights (tied) ne. I tack of W. Frank Brady. superintend- | S81. Georuians, Davis, Noe 3. Jack ent of the Holmes Avenue Gospel | Garden City ied), 3, Glenn VanTreese, x < - Tabernacle. Mrs. Brady was born |ESRIE O40 {Ahn tite Son in Terre Haute Strange ied) tak e 2: 9 3 “ro B a 3 in —1, gene axey, enter . , J0an Survivors besides the husband | Love, Southport; 3, Dorothy Ann Thomas, include two brothers, Theodore | Qenter > and 4 Norma Fae Brenton : ¢ thes enter Middaugh. Miles City, Mont, | TB—-1,_ Connie Brinley, Garden City: 2 and Frank W. Middaugh of Indi- | Harold Nihiser, Ben Davis: 3, Billy Macanapolis | Douglass, Nora, and 4, Mary Ellen Doer- | schel, John Strange ———————————— YA—1, Ruth Cooley, | Louise Gates, Center 2 | West Newton, and 4 | Strange. MAUDE E, SHOULTS | 8B—1. Hilda Dudziak, Garden City: 2. ¥ Billy Harding, Fleming G: Robert Smith. Mars Hill, and 4 DR othy: ‘Graham, John Sthanee { "HERE 4 YEARS, DIES i Paul Alexander, Center 3: 2 Morris Mills, big at Yeh. 3. Warren | mford Cen nd 4, Robert Mrs. Maudie E. Shoults, a vesi- | Wosdruft fi dent cf Indianapolis nine years, Betty McKinley, died yesterday in St. Francis Hos-|Smith, Ben Davis : : 1s pital after a short illness. She was| AL Harold Boswell. Warren Central Sos ! oan agner. Pike Township: 3, J 39 and lived at 3922 E. 10th St. | Mitter, Oaklandon and 4 Billy Rigot, Ren A native of Flemingburg, Ky. Davis. «|, 10B—1, Harriet Schuh, Ben Mrs. Shoults formerly lived in Up 12. Mildred Dishman. Beh Davis land and Marion and was a member le 10A_ LR ichard Hendrickson, Southport; of the Upland United Brethren illy Maines, Pike Township: 3, Johnny | Serak, s, OC wWohver | Church, the Women of the Moose | Decatur Centra SHE, Revert Wolver, 11B—1, Margie Blick, Ben Da d 2, and the Cosmas Sisters. Georgia Petites BLCL: Ben Davis, an At the time of her death Mrs. imac ure Witte, Warren Central; 2, Shoults was employed as a payroll | Thomas Haynes, Southport: 3. Joyce Hope, South , A k: clerk and cost accountant at the Township. Rag O BLAAId Sila, PE Rytex Paper Co. She had worked! 2 Win Warren Smith, Ben Davis, Villiam Owens, Ben Davis there two years. Previous to that] A—1, Robert McGahev Decatur she had been employed for two| entrar : Janet Talkington, Warren years in the accounting department | and ¥ Paul Vou© Warren Central of the General Baking Co. Survivors are her husband, Cecil! Shoults; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. FREDERICK NORDSIEK Charles A. Cox of Marion; three! sisters, Mrs. Lillian Page of Mution,d DIES g IN HOME AT 73 Mrs. Martha Shoults of Anderson| Frederick Nordsiek, former em-| and Mrs. Irene Massey of Marion, |Plovee of the Marion County Highand two brothers. Robert H. Cox of |Way Department, died today at his Marion and Herbert J. Cox of home, S. East St. and Sumner Ave. | Chicago. |He was 73. Funeral services will be held at! Mr. Nordsiek, who was born in| 10:30 a. m. Thursday in the Harry | Germany, had lived in Marion | | W. Moore Peace Chapel. Burial will|County 40 years. He had been ill |be in Washington Park Cemetery. |16 months. \ ci — Surviving him are his wife, Mrs. | ‘MRS IDA PETERS {Charlotte Nordsiek; two sons, Fred! | M | Nordsiek, County Commissioner's (bailiff, and Henry Nordsiek; two | . s Sek ; } RITES IN MARIO daughters, Mrs. Albert H. Schroeder | Funeral services for Mrs. Ida Mae land Mrs. Louis Mount. and 11 | Peters of Indianapolis, who died | grandchildren | yesterday at her daughter's home| Services will be at 2 p. m. Thurs- | IN Marion, will be held in the gay atthe G. H. Herrmann Mortuary, Marion home tomorrow morning. with the Rev. Robert Kuebler offi- | Her body will be brought to ciating. Burial will be at Concordia. | Indianapolis and other services wi ——— (be at 2 p. m. tomorrow in Wash | ington Park Cemetery. | Mrs. Peters was 86. ong? vos | a member of the East Tent Methodist Church in rs Survivors are three daughters, Foo Robert Shugart, of Marion at whose home she died, Mrs. The new $1000 minimum wage | | Alpha Pence of Cincinnati, O., and |law for teachers with college de- | | Mrs. Sofa Hawkins of Indianap- grees applies to all contracts en- | | ols; a sister, Mrs. Emma Walters [tered into for the comnig school |of Springfield, O., and a brother, year, Attorney General George Frank Duncan of Indianapolis. | Beamer ruled today. . His opinion answered a question {raised by Dr. Clément T. Malan, |Superintendent of Public Instruction, as to whether the law, which jdoes not become effective until the 1941 acts are printed and a procla[mation is issued by the Governor, pertains to the teachers’ contracts being written now. The law provides a $125 minimum shlary for all teachers with college | degrees, with a $250 per month raise for each additional year of texperience up to the 10th year. i —————————. . \ BOMB SHELTERS COST WASHINGTON, April 22 (U. P).! —Civilian defense experts gave the [nation a preview today of the kind of bomb-proof shelter it may expect “if protective structures become nec- | essary in the future.”
A War Depgrtment survey esti- | mates that a family-size shelter will | |range in cost from $230 for the sim|ple, conventional type to $700 for deluxe accommodations. | The survey will be made public this week by the Office of Production Management's division of state and local co-operation. It emphasizes that this is not the “signal to start work” on shelters, but that the | recommendations should be followed lin event of war here. REMY TALKS AT LUNCHEON William H. Remy, former Prosecutor, will speak on “Practical Citizenship” at the Indianapolis Junior Chamber of Commerce luncheon tomorrow at the Canary Cottage. The program is under the direction of the citizenship and governmental | research committee, of which Edward L. Humston is chairman.
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