Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 July 1941 — Page 10
PAGE 10
Myron Williams Dead Here af 83
AN INDIANAPOLIS resident more than 45 years, Myron R. Williams died yesterday at his home, 5630 E. Michigan St. He was 83 and was a retired insurance man. He was a member of the Irvington Presbyterian Church. Survivors are his wife; three daughters, Mrs. J. K. Kingsbury and Miss Katherine Williams, both of Indianapolis, and Mrs.
Judd Spray of Detroit; five sons, |
Myron C. Williams of Boston; Roger N. Williams of Buffalo; Stuart C. Williams of Los Angeles, Phillip P. Williams of Pittsburgh and Walter D. Williams of Chi-
cago; 14 grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.
Phone MA 4455 for 3
0 FAST WASHING]
Otarion of Indianapolis 820 N. Meridian St.
Suite 511 Chamber of Commerce Bldg.
LI neoln 9130
AUGUST TAMM, EDITOR, IS DEAD
Was Publisher of GermanLanguage Newspapers; Here 71 Years.
August Tamm, 84-year-old retired editor and publisher of German{language newspapers in Indianaplois, died yesterday in his home, 464 IN. Arsenal Ave.
Ident here 71 years, was active in | Democratic politics and was a member of the State House of Representatives several years ago. He lalso served as chief deputy City Clerk during the administration of | Tom Taggart Sr.
| Began as Printer A native of Essen, Germany, he
Mr. Tamm, who had been a resi-|
Cowgirl
began his newspaper career as af
printer on the old Daily Telegraph, | a German-language newspaper. He pought the Daily Tribune at the| turn of the century and in 1902 it| was consolidated with Telegraph.
the Daily]
In 1907, the paper became the]
Telegraph-Tribune and Mr. Tamm
{published it as a German-language |= newspaper until®it suspended op-
eration in 1918. He came to Indianapolis when
he was 13 and was educated in the parochial and business schools here. |
{He married Miss Minnie Schmidt in 1879. She died in 1931.
Sons Aided Him
Mr. Tamm was a member of the! Altenheim, Athenaeum and the In-| dianapolis Chamber of Commerce. | His son, Otto E. Tamm, and an-| other son, August C. Tamm, who| died in 1918, were formerly asso-| ciated with Mr. Tamm in the printing and publishing business. Survivors are the son, Otto E. of Indianapolis; five sisters, Mrs. Mary Knarzer, Mrs. Louise Speckman and Mrs. Bertha
all of Indianapolis;
Clad in high-heeled boots, a cowgirl suit, and a straw hat, 9-year-old Barbara Hayden of Wichita, Kas. ran away from home and hopped a freight train that she hoped would carry her to Hollywood and fame in the movies. But the railroad police saw her before she got far. She said she learned to hop freight trains by watching movie cowboys
do it.
Scherer, | ws wie EARLE, SIMMONS ‘Hughes, living in California, and | '
(Mrs. Dora Eckert of Kent, Wis. and . \a daughter-in-law with whom | FUNERAL TOMORROW
} ‘made his home, Mrs. Ciaga Tamm.
Services will be held at 2:30 p. m. |
the Grinsteiner
{tomorrow in Burial will be in
{Funeral Home. | Crown Hill.
GO TO ATLANTA MEETING | } Four delegates from Indianapolis,
Services for Earl E. Simmons, who died Sunday at his home, 845 N.
| Kevstone Ave, will be held at 8:30
a. m. tomorrow in the home and
at 9 a. m. in St. Philip Neri Catholic Church. Burial will be in Holy
Chapter 32, Military Order of the Cross Cemetery.
Purple Heart, will leave this week-| end to attend the national convention of the order in Atlanta, Ga. Sunday through Tuesday. They are; Clifford Riggs, Elmer V. McCormick, Claude R. Moore and Henry Klemn.
{John William Wurz is commander
of the local chapter.
—It’s new! . .. It’s different!
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solid form. 4 3B = Made just like lipstick. aman |
A regular $1.00 value. Special Wednesday and Thursday.
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{
Simmons . : | daughter, Mary Orender of Louis-|Ville. Burial was to be in the Odd |
‘Boyer, Fence Co. here, died yesterday at 7
‘his home in Sheridan. He was 78 and was a member of a heer | DIES AT HOME HERE
[family there.
| County many vears. | Francis, of Sheridan; two daughters, |Mrs. Ray Reese and Mrs. Ina Mec- | Kinney, both of Sheridan, and three | sisters, Mrs. dan, Mrs. William Hawkins of De{catur and Mrs. | Thorntown, survive him. |died July 10.
SS. TY Sheridan.
Mr. Simmons, who was 61 was born in Winchester. He had been a resident here 35 years. He was employed by the Central Supply Co. 33 vears and in the last few years was connected with the Plumbers’ Supply Corp. He was a member of St. Philip Neri Church. Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Anna Simmons; two sons, Edward E. Simmons of Indianapolis and Eugene of Winchester; a stepfour brothers, Wil-
ville; Troy.
liam, Walter and Vern Simmons, all | A . SE of Winchester; three sisters. Mrs, | Zionsville but spent most of his life Pearl Keever and Mrs. Edward Best, | In Alexandria both of Winchester, and Mrs. Roy! y : Shierling of Union City, and two |Hughes, who was injured in the grandchildren, Elizabeth Ellen and accident and still is in the hospital; |
Rita Lee Simmons
LEANDER BOYER. 78. DIES AT SHERIDA
Leander Boyer, father of N. E. president of the Hoosier
Mr. Boyer was a farmer in Clinton Another son,
David Irick of Sheri-
Lee McKinzie of His wife
Services will be held at 2 p. m. (C. tomorrow at the home in Burial will be in the Stowers Cemetery there.
t served as the American associate
[survived by a son, Felix Schmall of
BURIAL TODAY FOR W. RILEY HANGOCK:
ALICE EMERSON RITES ARRANGED
Poetess’ Funeral to Be Held Tomorrow; Burial in Floral Park.
Mrs. Alice Fernald Enierson, poetess and editor of poetry publications, will be buried in Floral Park {following services at 10:30 a. m. to- | morrow in the Flanner & Buchanan | Mortuary. The Rev. Harry E. Camp|bell, assistant pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, will officiate. Mrs. Emerson, who had been a resident here 30 years, died Sunday in her home, 909 E. 11th St. She was the author of “Marsh Fire,” a book of poetry, and had
editor of “The Spring Anthology,” an annual collection of poetry published in England. A native of Boston, Mrs. Emerson was a graduate of the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music and the John Herron Art Institute. She Was the widow of William Morris Emerson. who died here two years ago. Mrs. Emerson was a member of the First Presbytreian Church and the Indiana Poetry Society. She is
Chicago.
Services were ‘o be held at 1 p. m., today in the Herrmann Funeral Home, 2151 N. Meridian St, for W. Riley Hancock, 49-year-old lifelong resident of Indianapolis. who died Sunday in the Veterans’ Hospital at Dayton, O. Burial was to be in Crown Hill. Mr. Hancock, who lived at 3711 E. 89th St. had been ill two years. He attended the University of Michigan and had been with the Travelers Insurance Co. 12 years. He was a ‘member of Murat Temple and Delta | Upsilon Fraternity
| Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Mary | | Herrmann Hancock; a son, Riley: a
daughter, Miss Kathryn Ann Han‘cock; his mother, Mrs. Katurah er, James E. Hancock of Detroit, |Hancock of Philadelphia, a broth-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
C. E. GWYNN, RAILWAY TELEGRAPHER, DIES
Charles Elvin Gwynn, telegraph operator with the Belt Railroad 20 years, died yesterday at City Hospital after an illness of two weeks. He was 66 and lived at 5753 Bonna Ave. Mr. Gwynn was a lifelong resident here and was stationed in the railroad tower at E. Washington St. and the Brookville Rd. the last 14 years. Survivors are his wife, Edna; a son, Charles Jr, and a daughter, Mrs. Edna Sharum. Services will be held at 1:30 p. m. Wednesday in Shirley Bros. Central Ohne. Burial will be in Crown iil.
Hold Rites for Crash Victims
FUNERAL SERVICES will be held tomorrow at the Harry W. Moore Peace Chapel for Carl Lawrenz and Mrs. Carrie Weiland, victims of an auto crash Sunday near Alhambra, Ill The service for Mr. Lawrenz, who was 24 and lived at 802 N. Highland Ave. will be at 2 p. m. with burial in Concordia Cemetery. Mrs. Weiland’s service will follow at 4 p. m. and burial will be in Crown Hill. She was 60 and lived at 543 N. Highland Ave.
The accident occurred when
Mr. Lawrenz and Mrs. Weiland, who is his aunt, started on a vacation trip to Springfield, Mo. Mr. Lawrenz' wife, Leona, 22, and his sister, Martha, 15, who accompanied them, were seriously injured and were taken to a hos-
pital at Highland, Il. WHY SUFFER
With YOUR EYES Come in This Week
See DR. KLAIBER, Optometrist
For Relief and For Better Glasses, in the
FAIR OPTICAL DEPT.
311 W. Wash.—Hours 9:30 to 5:00 . Terms If Desired
Eyes Examined the “SAFE WAY”
DISNEY STRIKE ENDED
HOLLYWOOD, July 29 (U.: P).— Having ended a two-month strike, 400 cartoonists today return to their jobs in the Walt Disney Studio under a tentative agreement reached last night at a conference with Fed-
LONDON, July 29 (U. P.).—Gen. Wiladislaw Sikorski, Premier of the Polish Government in Exile, said today that Poland had reached an agreement with Russia on ‘“honorable conditions”. for ending their technical state of war.
TUESDAY, JULY 29, 1941
POLAND, RUSSIA ‘AT PEACE’
DIES OF INJURIES
SOUTH BEND, Ind. July 29 (U, P.).—Alfred Lindbergh, 54, Minneapolis, died last night of a skull fracture received when he wag struck by an automobile on Road 31 south of here Sunday night.
IN
(RD IRE]
eral Conciliator James F. Dewey.
Exquisite Pink Lilies Glass Dish of Floating Gardenias or Begonias: $2.00—$5:00 Vase of
New Crop Roses $1.50—$5.00
Double Petunia Plants $1.00—%$2.00
Beautiful Hospital Vase of Summer Flowers
$1.00—$10.00
/ Bertermann Ss
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and a sister, Mrs. Marie Barringer, Philadelphia.
INJURY FATAL TO JAMES F. HUGHES
{ Funeral services were to be held fat 2 p. m. (C. S. T)) today at Alexandria for James F. Hughes, who |died Sunday in a Lebanon hospital of injuries received July 12 in an [auto accident 5 miles west of Dan-
| Fellows Cemetery there. Mr. Hughes was 63 and lived near
Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Mary |
two daughters, Mrs. Ethel Freeman {of Alexandria and Mrs. Charles T. [Moreland of Indianapolis, and a] Ison, David T. Hughes of Indianapolis. | Mrs. Hughes will be brought here
to Methodist Hospital tomorrow.
!
ANNA FE. THOMPSON
Mrs. Anna F. Thompson, an In'dianapolis resident 30 years, died {vesterday at her home, 634 Udell [St., after an illness of several months. She was 80 and was born in Circleville, O. She was a member of the Seventh Christian Church. A daughter, Mrs. Sam A. Johnson of Indianapolis, survives her. Services will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow in the Wald Funeral (Home. Burial will be in Washington Park.
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