Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 January 1942 — Page 7

\ PAGE 7 Hoosier Salon. A gallery talk and

refreshments have been arranged for the group.

Altar Society Sponsors Party— The Altar Society of St. Philip Neri Church will sponsor a card party at 2 p. m. tomorrow in the parish audi torium, 535 N. Eastern Ave. Mrs. Florence Zinkan is chairman.

\ TUESDAY, JAN. 13, 1942

CAROLINE EDSON DIES IN OREGON

Sculptress and Artist Was Daughter of Deceased Local Pastor

‘HE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

HONOR VICTIM Mrs. Crooks Dies OF CORREGIDOR

‘Friends Arrange Memorial For Pvt. Curl, Killed In Philippines.

Kiwanis Honors Ade LOCAL ORGANIZATIONS

iary, O. BE. 8, will hold a luncheon at noon Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Edith Blume, 2332 Coyner Ave. Mrs. Louise Sharp is president of the organization.

O.E.8. Group to Meet — The

Cumberland Chapter, O. E. 8, will hold a stated meeting at 8 p. m. Wednesday at the Cumberland Ma-

Men's Club Installs—Newly installed officers of Our Lady of Lourdes Men's Club were announced today. They are Fred Schoettle, president; Ray Thompson, first vice president; Stephen Madden, second vice president; Joseph A. Wicker, secretary, and Herb Larrick, treas-

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Rectal Soreness

Miss Caroline Edson, Indianap-olis-born sculptress and artist, died recently at Portland, Ore, where she lived with her brother, Dr. Elmer} Rockwood Edson, superintendent of} the Veterans’ Hospital there. Miss Edson was the member of a well-known family here. Her father, the late Rev. Hanford A. Edson, had been pastor of the Second and! Memorial Presbyterian Churches in| Indianapolis, and her mother, Mrs.| Helen Mar Rockwood Edson, was| the daugt of the founder of the! Rockwood Manuf ring Co. A member of the

NFer ater

art

actur

New York Art; membership in the Miami Beach Ki

George Ade, famous Hoosier writer, receives a scroll of honorary

wanis club. Mr. Ade is the first

League, Miss Edson was 60. She had! man ever to have received an honorary membership from a Florida

France and Mun-| Kiwanis club. Sonny Shepherd,

Paris, i 1d making the presentation.

ar

studied in

ich, Germany for

Miami Beach Kiwanis president, is

yi Fears] was an art instructor at State College. She attended Wheaton Seminary and Vassar College and also held a} bachelor of science degree from oe Iumbia University. Funeral services Portland. Cremation

George W. Padgett

Fun

IS DEAD AT 69

| Lite-Long Resident Here; Pioneer Member of West Side Church.

Funeral services will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow in the Price FuMr. Padgett was 73 and had ye. | Dorel Home for Mrs. Fannie Behe tired 13 years ago. A native of Dan- Schlee VanHorn, 69-year-old lifeville, he was a member of the 101 long resident of Indianapolis. who Men's Class of the Broadway Bap- died Sunday in her home, 238 N. tist Church here. : Addison St. Burial will be in Floral Park. | Mrs. VanHorn was a member of Olive Branch Rebekah Lodge, Olive Branch Social Circle, Olive Branch | {Past Noble Grands Association and] Queen Esther Chapter, O. E. S. She was a member of the West Michigan Street Methodist Church, {having been affiliated with the!S church when it was the old King|w Avenue Methodist Church. Mrs. VanHorn was born the daughter of Charles J. and Fannie E. Schlee. She was married to Ed-

MORE PEP? ward E. VanHorn Nov. 28, 1899,

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eral services were to be held in the Moore & Kirk Funeral} George W. Padgett, a| here who died] home in Fortville| Burial was!

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'Philmer Eves

Philmer Eves, a founder of the | Association and the! Club. died yes-

He was 84. | Once an executive of the old Indianapolis Gas Co., Mr. Eves was |

tive of the Paterson, N economics courses sponsored by al

public service company. Survivors are his wife; a daugh-|

L

and lecturer, dress Kirshbaum Community | tomorrow

Indianapolis There will be no admission charge.

Great which is an expose of anti-semi-tism. His address will be followed by an open forum presided over by

business Washington St. als

{ neral m. Thursday in the G. H. Herr-| mann Funeral Home, with burial in|

[FANNIE VANHORN| Author to Talk

At Kirshbaum

MAURICE SAMUEL, will deliver anti-semitism

author an adat the Center

on

night at 8:30. The lecture is sponsored by the Zionist District. Mr. Samuel will speak on “The Hatred.” his recent book

David Sablosky, president of he nn Zionist Zionist Districk

ALBERT VIELHABER

FUNERAL THURSDAY

Albert Vielhaber, 511 E. McCarty t., died yesterday in his home. He

as 58. Mr. Vielhaber with

was in the shoe his father on E. several years and so served as precinct committeean on the South Side. Surviving is a sister, Mrs. Edgar Taylor of Wynnewood, Pa. Fuservices will be held at 2

rown Hill

usanna F. Mertz

Mrs. Susanna F. Mertz, a resident

of Indianapolis for many vears, died i t his home in Topsham, Me. Yesterday in her home, 1322 Laurel Lodge there and Center Lodge here, 1SrGSY at Ps | St., after a brief illness. She was 64}

Survivors are her husband, Emil a daughter, Mrs. Margaret!

two sisters, Mrs. Rosalind

Patrick’s Church.|

ewis Lang Lewis Lang, who died Sunday

Friends of Pvt. Wiiliam R. (Jake) Curl, the first Indianapolis soldier reported killed in the defense of Corregidor, Philippine fortress, will

at the Garaen Baptist Church. The service will be conducted by the Garden Baraca Philathea Class, a group of young men and women at the church. Private Curl was 24 and was the father of a 15-months-old son, John. His wife, Helen, and his parents, Mr. and Mrs, Thomas S. Curl, 2506 Second Ave, West, Mars Hill, received word of his death in action from the War Department.

Nicknamed “Sunshine”

Private Curl was a close friend of the Rev. Clive E. McGuire, pastor of the Garden church and executive secretary of the Indianapolis Baptist Association. One of the last communications he received from the soldier was the day before Pearl Harbor was bombed. Private Curl sent him a crucifix which he had acquired in the Philippines. Friends said that his buddies in the Philippines nicknamed him “Sunshine” because of his cheerful disposition. Enlisted Year Ago

Private Curl enlisted in the Army a vear ago and had been serving with the coast artillery. He attended Washington High School. Besides his parents, wife and son, Private Curl is survived by three sisters, Mrs. Hubert Bell, Mrs. Jesse Harris and Miss Lois Evelyn Curl, and four brothers, Robert, James, Donald and Thomas R. Curl, all of Indianapolis.

Bert W. Pfaff

Funeral services will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow at Noblesville for Bert William Pfaff, former district circulation manager of the Indianapolis Star, who died Sunday at his home in North Webster. Burial will be in the Noblesville Cemetery. Members of Center Lodge 23, F. & A. M, of Indianapolis, will conduct the services and members of The Star's circulation department will be pallbearers. Mr. Pfaff was district manager for The Star from 1918 until his retirement " in June, 1940 because of ill health. He operated a cigar store at Anderson from 1913 to 1918 and was a member of the Elks

i

Survivors are his wife, Katherine: two sons, Frederick of Richmond and Otis of Cincinnati; a sister,

widely known as a pioneer in the] Sharp: two sons, Hubert and Emil Mrs. Hermie McGuire of Anderson, field of social hygiene. As an execu- | F. Mertz: a brother, George Strebel, and three grandchildren. J. Gas Co. land ne organized one of the first home| Schilling and Miss Margaret Strebel. Services will be held at 9 a. m. | Thursday in St. | Burial will be in St. Joseph's Ceme- Rome, N. Y.,

Mrs. Florence Sees

Mrs. Florence Sees, a native of died yesterday at St. Vincent's Hospital after a week's illness. She was 53. Mrs. Sees was the mother of Mrs. Glenn Dimmick, 7016 Broadway, and made her home with her daughter

since coming to Indianapolis from

conduct a memorial service Jan, 25|

Mrs. Sybil May Crooks

Native of England Came to U. S. When Child; Rites

To Be Tomorrow.

Mrs. Sybil May Creoks, wife of William D. Crooks of the advertising department of Eli Lilly & Co., died yesterday at Long Hospital. A native of Devonshire, England, Mrs Crooks was 44. While a girl, she went to Scotland to live, later coming to this country where she was married to Mr. Crooks in Rennsalear in 1920.

Services Tomorrow

Mrs. Crooks was a member of the Meridian Heights Presbyterian Church and had lived at 5744 Broadway Terrace. Besides her husband, she is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Edward Alling of Kenmore, N. Y., and Miss Mary Catherine Crooks, a student at William Woods Col-

Joseph Crispin, living in Scotland. The Rev. Sidney Blair Harry, pastor of the Meridian Heights Church, will conduct services at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Flanner &| Buchanan Mortuary.

WELFARE SOCIETY MEETS TOMORROW

The 20th annual meeting of the Indianapolis Family Welfare Society will be held at the Indianapolis Athletic Club tomorrow noon. Singing of the Star Spangled Banner, led by Harold Winslow of Technical High School, and an invocation, by Bishop R. A. Kirche hoffer, will open the meeting. Dr. M. L. Haines, member of the Charity Organization Society and Indianapolis Benevolsnt Society boards, who died recently, predecessors of the present Society, will be memorialized. The resolution to pay tribute to Dr. Haines will be presented by a

lege, Fulton, Mo., and a brother,|

urer. Plans for the traditional annual Lourdes dinner at the church are being formulated. Prominent speakers and musical entertainment are tentatively scheduled for the event, to be held in February, according to Mr. Schoettle.

0. E. 8. Group to Dine—Past presidents of Queen Esther Auxil-

4

cancelled,

sonic Temple.

Cancel Century Club Meeting— The Century Club meeting originally scheduled for tomorrow has been according to Earl Teckemeyer, president. Next Tuesday the club will be guests at the William H. Block Co. to view the art exhibition of the

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committee consisting of John PF. White, Rabbi M. M. Feuerlicht,| the Rt. Rev. Msgr. M. W. Lyons, | Warrack Wallace and Dr. F. S. C.| Wicks. Earl Buchanan, nominating committee chairman, will report on board member elections, New officers will be named. Robert F. Nelson, general secretary, will give the annual report of work during 1941. President of the Board of Diree-

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{night in his home, 1324 Sharon Ave. | will be buried in Crown Hill fol-]

{lowing funeral services at 2 p. m. ‘tomorrow in the Conkle Funeral

tors Herbert S. King will preside | at the gathering.

| Connecticut last September. Her husband, Joseph, died two years ago. Besides her daughter, Mrs. Sees

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Mr. Lang was 86 and had been a sident of Indianapolis 67 years.

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Survivors are his wife, Julia;

al son, Samuel C, a grandson and a|Funeral services and burial will be |great-grandson, all of Indianapolis. held Thursday in Rome.

is survived by two brothers, James and William Bird, and her mother, Mrs. Katherine Bird, all of Rome, and two grandchildren, Carolyn and Virginia Dimmick. Friends may call at the Kirhy Mortuary after 7:30 p. m. today.

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79 48. Survivors:

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i: Wim Moore and Mrs.

er; sisters, Mrs. illie Enyeart. Marv Sixbey, 88. Survivors: Daugh- — NYS Easton Prough and Mrs. ilo Elliott; son. Frank; brother, John Cobert. pechazles Johnson, 77. Survivors: Sons nard, Elmer, Delbert, Clifford and Heron: daughters, Mrs. Edna Reen, Mrs. M. Harter and’ Miss Mildred Johnson;

Boise) Frank. Mrs. abel M. Miller, 62, Husband, Harry LeRoy Miller; Mrs. Ira W. Shanholt Jr, and Mrs, Alice | DeRose’ sons, Duane and William; stepson, LeRoy Miller; brother, William Eggleston: | sister, Mrs. Ethel Richmond.

| _EVANSVILLE—Albert Hats, 89, Sur | vivors: Daughters, Mrs, 8. Batcke, Mrs, { Mark Lockwood and Miss Marion Maes: | sister. Mrs. George Mexal | Mrs. Anna B. Suddoth, 69, Survivors: | Daughter, Mrs, “Granville Myyat t; son, | East, brother. James H. Broo E. Helderman. 56. Te Ivors: Wife, daughters, Mrs, us Angle and Miss Martha Helder- | Ran, sister, Mrs. Dora Maynard: brothers, { Lester, Robert and George. | hii Woehler Jr. 84 Survivors: Sons {John and SF oneis: daughter, Mrs. Fred | Deuker, George Alonzo Spencer, 77. Survivors: | Wife, rs. Ellen Spencer; daughter, Mrs. Lovina Seaver: sons, Edward, Frederick and David: sisters, Mrs. Anna Smith and Mrs. Jennie Lull; brother, William. Mrs. Mary Oehlman, 61. SUI VIvOIS: | Husband. William Oehlman; IER. Clark. Mrs. Pred Frazier and Mrs. Leo Negele. daughter, oe Louis Futterer; { brother. Edward F. Schn { Charles William St ofieth. 3. Survivors: | Sister, Mrs. William Fuller. 71 Survivors: daughters, Mrs

Calvin Groves, . Delia Groves: n. Mrs. Gilvert Postlethwaite ‘and Mrs. Harold Graening; sons, L. D., |O. N.. Major W. and Dr. Shelby Groves: Mrs Lizzie Cates. Anna Becker, 81. Survivors: | Daughters, Mrs. John Ferstel Mrs. Bens {Eble and Mrs. hol _ Hormouth: John and Nick Barfinger. Eth ce, B52 urvivors: ; daughter, Miss d rry and becca Barr; Mil

Brothers, Herbert and Cas

Survivors: Sauehjer®

| sister, Mrs.

| brothers, | Mrs. Ida

| Chester Brace: | sisters. Mrs. . Condit rs. \ded Van Britson and Mrs. Bessie Stanton. FERDINAND Ferdinand OQlinger, 80. i Survivors: Wife: daughters, Mrs. . Leo Leonard, Mrs. Charles Dischler and Mrs. enry Gossen: sons, Emil, Antone Joseph, Edward and the Rev. Alois Ol . i GARY -Charle Cunningham, Sar {vivors: Wife, Mrs, Partha Cunningham | brothers, Harry and Elmer: sisters, Misses {Nellia and Elva Cunningham HOLLAND William A. _Sickbert, 71. Survivors: Daughters. Mrs, Dan Schroeder Miss Lena Sickbert, Miss Margaret Siekbart and Mrs. Chris Moller; sons, Frank, Ben and Oliver: brothers, Herman, John, Fred and Dan; sisters, Mrs, William Siebe and Mrs Wiliam Greve. i JA PER onal Eugene Keller, 2, Survivors: Paren Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Kellier; brothers. "Robert Joseph and Charles; | sisters. Jenny Liee and Rita Mae. LAGRANGE—V. D, Weaver, 72.

ls ROME OILY Mis. SON J. Owen, 75. | Survive Boy sister, rs. Bert Lovsll: Revaane aghters. Mrs. C. &. Routsong, Mrs. Jesse Isley and Miss eis Owen.

WARSAW William E. Hatfield, 21.

30 ED] IN 7942 WITH

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While you're start ing fresh in a new year — make this ratomtion, Resolved: to have my eyes examined today and the proper glasses fitted, that | may never be forced to lose one minute of achievement in 1942 be. cause of the fatigue, the] nervousness, the headaches of poor vision.

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