Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 September 1941 — Page 10

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Formerly Was Captain in Fire Department Here And Court Bailiff.

william R. White, 76-year-old former bailiff in Marion County Juvenile Curt and a former cap‘tain of the Fire Department, died yesterday in San Diego, Cal., where he had lived the last three years. He was bailiff in Juvenile Court . under Judge F. Geckler and had nt most of his life in Indianapolis. He was a native of Scott County. : : Mr. White was a Le o Irvington Lodge, F. & , Gapl= tal City Lodge. Knights of Pythias and the Hillside Christian Church. Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Addie M. White; three sons, John W. and E. Curtis White, both of Indianapolis, and Richard H. White, who is stationed with the Navy at Norfolk, ~ Va.: a daughter, Mrs. Gilbert Collman of Crothersville; three brothers, Harry, Joseph and - Thomas J. White, all of Indianapolis; four sisters, Mrs. Jennie Smith, Mrs, Bert Irwin and Mrs. John Kuhler, all of Indianapolis, and Mrs. Sadie Kolb of San Diego. 15 grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Monday morning at Shirley Brothers’ Mortuary. Burial will ‘be in

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"This is one. of the two new 12-cylinder, 240-horsepower combination aerial ladder and water tower trucks that the Fire Department will be using soon if the Safety Board approves their purchase by the ‘City. The trucks will be stationed at Engine Houses 13 and 17. They will respond to all first alarm fires - in the downtown district and on second alarms in factory or high value districts. It takes but one fireman to operate the 100-foot hydraulic aerial ladder which also ean “be converted into a water tower, Cost of the

SERVIGES TOMORROW

Funeral services for Mrs. Susan Terrell, who had lived for 31. years in Beech Grove, will be held at 8:30 a. m. tomorrow at the home of her son, H. A, (Red) Terrell, at 76 N. Seventh Ave., Beech Grove. The body will ‘then be ‘taken to Bloomfield, where it will lie in the Baptist Church until 2 p. m., when there will be further services, with burial in Grand View Cemetery in Bloomfield. Mrs. Térrell was 83. She died Sunday at the home of a daughter, Mrs. K. C. Wolfe, 705° N. Emerson Ave.- She was born in Burns City and had lived in Bloomfield before coming to live with her son in Beech Grove. Mr. Terrell is captain of tae Beech Grove fire department. She is survived also by five other daughters, Mrs.| J. T. Clapp, New York; Mrs. Lewis B. Edwards, Bloomfield; Mrs. H.- B. Shull, Mrs. Charles M. Morgan and-Mrs. F. H. Pearson, all of Phoenix, Ariz; a brother, John, M. Bridges, Bloomfield; two sisters, Mrs. Martha

man, both of Bloomfield; 12 granddren.

Mrs. Mathews’ Rites Thursday

MRS. SYLVIA J. MATHEWS, a past president of the George H. Thomas, W. R. C., and a member of Olive Branch Rebekah Lodge, died Sunday after a short: illness. She was 80, ! For years Mrs. Mathews had acted as “Mrs. Santa Claus” for the old Pettis Dry Goods Co. in their Christmas sales. She is believed to have been the first, if not the only woman department store Santa. Mrs. Mathews, who had been ‘a resident of Indianapolis~48 years, lived at 2425 N. Delaware St. She was born in Rush County. She is survived by a son, Floyd Crickmore, Indianapolis; a daugh‘ter, Mrs, Ruby Green, .Los Angeles, Cal.; three grandsons, Vernon Green, Los Angeles; and M. P; and Jack Crickmore, both of Indianapolis, and a great-grand-daughter. Funeral servicés will be held at 2:30 p. m. Thursday in the Little & Sons Funeral Home.

SERVICE MOTHERS MEET WEDNESDAY

The Service Mothers of America will meet at 2 p. m. tomorrow in the War Memorial with Mrs. Ernest Millholland presiding. - Dr. Errol T. Elliott, pastor of the First Friends Church, will give the invocation. Robert Loring - will discuss “Americanism” at the meeting at which all mothers with sons in the service or subject to call are

urged to attend.

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Mrs. Scheefers

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24 years, Mrs. Barbara Scheefers:

died yesterday in her home, 421 E. 19th St, after a short illness. She was 81. "

Mrs. Scheefers was born in Seymour, -the daughter of Peter and Mary Scheurich. She came here from Vincennes in 1917 and was a member of the S88. Peter & Paul Cathedral. The widow of Henry Scheefers, who died here in 1935, she is.survived by a son, Harry Scheefers of Indianapolis; five daughters, Mrs. C. B.. McReynolds of San Jose, Cal.; Miss Clara Scheefers and Mrs. T. E. Lytton, both of St. Louis, Mo.; Miss Mary Scheefers and Miss Frances Scheefers, both of Indianapolis; and a sister, Mrs. Irene Fink of Chico, Cal.

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[MARY HENDERSON'S Dead Here at 81

RITES TOMORROW

. Mrs. Mary Henderson, who died

Sunday in the .City Hospital, will be buried in Memorial Park Ceme-

tery following services at 10 a. m. tomorrow in the J. C. Wilson

Funeral Home, Mrs. Henderson, who was 65, had been ill five weeks. Her home was She was born in Todd County, . Kentucky, and had lived for a time in Illinois before coming to. Indianapolis 20

years ago to make her home. Survivors are her husband, Paul; a daughter, Mrs, Troy Grantham, Portland, Tenn., and three grandchildren, James Prater and Miss Mary Prater, both of Indianapolis, Portland,

icab companies today petitioned the Safety Board for an increase in cab |?

‘said that taxicab companies should}:

Specify 15 Cents for First|

Mile, 10 Cents for Each - Four-fiths Thereafter. Two of the three major local tax-

and 10 cents for each additional four-fifths of a mile. The present schedule is 15 cents for the first mile and one-half, with 10 cents for each additional mile. 1 Donald 8S. Morris, Board member,

quit competing in fare prices with the street car company. He declared that present and proposed schedules were direct competition with the Indianapolis. Railways’ 7-cent fare whent taxicabs carried more than two persons. Mr. Morris said that cab companies should arge a 25-cent minimum rate forall hauls. T. R. Kackley, /of the Red Cab Co., explained t the new rate schedule was a “compromise” inthe local taxicab industry, and that it would “increase income chiefly on long hauls.” A public hearing on the new schedules will be held before the Safety Board at a future date, after which the City Council will consider the matter. :

WAGES INCREASED BY SINCLAIR OIL CO.

NEW YORK, Sept. 2 (U.P.).—An hourly wage increase of 10 cents for employees of “seven plants of the Sinclair Refining Co. was announced last night by H. F. Sinclair, resident of the Consolidated Oil Corp. The increase’ affects employees at

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Rites Thursday

"MISS MARY ELIZABETH BRAUN, who was 65 years old | a week ago today, died yesterday at the home of her sister, ‘Mrs. _ Bertha Merrick, with whom she lived at 1619 S. Sherman Drive. Miss Braun was a midget. She was 38 inches tall and weighed 40 pounds. ‘Survivors, be = sides her sister, are three brothers, , Julius and Charles Braun, . 2 Indianapo-~- | lis, and Will Braun, Miami, Fla: | Funeral services will ‘be held | at 8:15 a. m. Thursday in her | home and at 9 a. m. in Holy | Name Catholic Church. Burial | will be in St. Joseph Cemetery. |

MRS. ALPHA GRRELL DEAD IN CLOVERDALE

Mrs. Alpha Alice Orrell, wife of John -N. Orrell,” died yesterday at her home in Cloverdale. ‘She was 68. Besides her husband, she is survived by two daughters, ‘Miss Ethel Orrell, Cloverdale, and Mrs. Beryl Pfaff, Indianapolis, and three grand~ children, Peggy Ann, John Howard and Donald Hugh Pfaff. Funeral services will be held at 10 a. m., Central Standard Time, in ‘the First Christian Church in Cloverdale. Burial will be in Cloverdale Cemetery.

QUITS ANTI-WAR GROUP

NEW YORK, Sept. 2 (U, P)— Lillian Gish, stage and screen actress, announced today that she had resigned from the America First Committee, which opposes ‘United States intervention in the war, She gave no. reason. ‘Miss Gish made speeches for the committee at Chicago, Hollywood

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