Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 June 1942 — Page 11

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FRIDAY, JUNE 19, 1942

LEATHER FIRM Map Payroll Bond-Buy

FOUNDER DEAD

« Charles Harden Ellis Was 65; Services to Be Held Tomorrow.

Charles Harden Ellis, who founded the Capitol City Supply Co. leather firm, at 118 8. Pennsylvania st, will be buried tomorrow in Crown Hill cemetery following 1| p. m. services in Flanner & Bu-| chanan mortuary. Mr. Ellis, who was 65, died Wednesday at Methodist hospital. | His home was at 3461 Kenwood ave. | He came to Indianapolis 45 years! ago and founded the company inj 1907. A member of the Methodist] church, he also held memberships] in the Oriental . Masonic lodge, | Royal Arch masons, Knights Tem-| plar, Scottish Rite, Shrine and the Columbia club. Surviving are his wife, Margaret S.; a son, Charles H. Jr. of Mason, O.; two brothers, HL H. and Earl H., and a sister, Mrs. Frank Allen, all of Greencastle, and three grandchildren,

Jasper N. Strother

Jasper Newton (Dad) auto repair shop operator for the last 20 years, died yesterday at his home, 1016 Winfield ave, after a long illness. He was 63. A resident of Indianapolis 25] years, Mr. Strother came here from | Spencer, where he was born. He

Local Deaths

Denford Phillips Sr, employee; Henry M. Wing, retired real ef the Indianapolis Railways, Inc. estate dealer and active Republican died yesterday in Methodist hos- worker, died yesterday at his home, pital. He was 52 and lived at 6174/5631 Rawls ave., following a month’s Strother, | Norwaldo ave. illness, He was T9. Mr. Phillips canfe to Indianapolis] Mr. Wing retired from the real in 1912 and entered the employ of [estate business 20 years ago and at Indianapolis Railways at that time. one time was a retail coal dealer in For the last 30 years he had worked | Indianapolis. A native of Boone on the Illinois st. lines. He was a county, he was married to Miss native of Lewisville. Laura Belle King in 1885. Mrs. Funeral services will be at 2:30 Wing died in 1926. . . m._ Sunday in the Flanner &| Mrs. Lena Malson, a sister, is the Was 3 imemiver of ine Memorial | & 1 on mortuary with burial in only immediate survivor. Baptist ehureh and ts Modern Union Chapel cemetery. The Rev.| Funeral services will be at 1:30 Weis, ot (3metica, Maple 2aMP. | john Ray Clark, pastor of the pn m. tomorrow at the Bert S. Gadd “ Surviving are his wife, Minnie Broad Ripple Christian church, willl mortuary. Burial will be in Salem Belle; four So fsymond, Luther, officiate. Church cemetery near Zionsville, Delmar and Clifton; a daughter,| "gy, viving are his wife, Tillie A.;| Mrs. Sarah Minor; a stepson, Wily, oo sons, Denford Jr, Jack and liam K. Guy, and 16 grandchildren, | pix and a daughter, Miss Arlene Dewey Page all of Indianapolis. Phillips, all of Indianapolis, and| pewey Page, Indianapolis Belt Services will be at 1 p. m. Sunday | tw sisters, Mrs. W. C. Carter of|yajiroad brakeman, died yesterday at the home, conducted by the Rev. | Indianapolis, and Mrs. H. L. Wheel- at his home, 2145 Kildare ave. at George Kinsey, pastor of the Me-| gar of Kalamazoo. the age of 44. A member of the morial Baptist church. Burial will en | Order of Railroad Conductors, Mr. be in Ellettsville, Ind. ‘Mrs. Mary M. Jones ‘Page had lived in Indianapolis 10 Mrs. Mary Maudelene Jones, who cars, coming here from Greene

Thurman Puckett came to Indianapolis in 1917 from SOUR, are his wite. Lillia: two Services for Thurman Jackson | Carlon City, Ind. died yesterday | Fr and Dewey Ir: two Puckett, 463 Concord st, will be|following an illness of one year. | daughters Mises Rise Marie and conducted at 2 p. m. tomorrow in She was 57 and lived at 345 8... C0 el Ton of Indianapolis, and the Conkle funeral home with|State ave. | two sisters, Mrs. Bart Bedwell of burial following in Floral park. Surviving are five daughters, MIS. oon Ind, and Mrs. E. A. HosAn employee of L. Strauss & Co.| Violet Burke, Mrs. Muriel Crick, tetter of Indianapolis. for the last two years, Mr. Puckett Mrs. Helen Crick, Mrs. Marguerite Funeral services will be at 3:30 died Wednesday at City hospital Hicks and Miss Joy Jones; four p. m. tomorrow at the home, with after an illness of only four days. sons, Robert, Dale, Frank and Bovd, ria] in New Crown cemetery. Born in this city, he was 22. He and 19 grandchildren, all of In- a 2 was a member of the Fairfax dianapolis. Christian church. Services will be at 2 p. m. to- Henry Behrman Survivors include his parents, Mr.|morrow in Calvary Tabernacle! genrv Behrman, a resident of Inand Mrs. William O. Puckett; two Pentecostal church, conducted bY | dianapolis for 35 years, died yestersisters, Mrs. Betty Bailey and Mrs. the Rev. Raymond G. Hoekstra,|gqay in City hospital following a Christine Parks; two brothers,|pastor. Burial will be in Memo-|manth’s illness. He was 700 and Oscar and Wallace, and his grand- rial Park temetery. lived at 720 N. Grant ave. ‘parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert! : Mr. Behrman was formerly emBrickhouse, all of this city. W. A. Letiff |ployed by a rural carrier for the : | " ih ob Indianapolis Star and was a native D lla Bolander Funeral services will be hele at| Batesville. : e 9 a. m. tomorrow in the Holy Cross | Surviving are two daughters, Mrs Mrs. Della F. Bolander. lifelong Catholic church for William A. Frieda White of Cleveland and Ms. resident of Marion county, died Letiff, retired grocer and native of | horothea Batchelder of Indianapyesterday at her home, 720 E. 25th Syria. ‘olis; a son, John, and two grandst. after a week's illness. She was! Mr. Letiff, who was 68. died yes- daughters, Laverne. and Dorothy 79. Mrs. Bolander was a member of terday at the family residence. 1821 pear) Behrman, all of Indianapolis. the Universalist church of Oak- Southeastern ave, after an illness : ndon as born near Law- of six and a half years. : landon and was ret Mrs. Cora Landis

rence A naturalized citizen, Mr. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. came to this country in 1905. He; DELPHI, Juhe 19 (U. P.).—Mrs. Audrey Hodson of Indianapolis, and | first made his home in Canada, then Cora Landis, widow of former RepMrs. Shirley F. King of Detroit,/in Chicago and came to this city|resentative Charles B. Landis of Mich., and a son, Joseph T. |25 years ago. | Delphi, died yesterday at Denver, Funeral services will be at 2 p. m.| He is survived by his wife, Ge-|Colo. She is survied by two chilSunday at the McCord funeral home |milia; three sons, Abe, Joseph and |dren, Col. John Landis: of Camp in Oaklandon. Burial will be in the Charles; a daughter, Rosemary, and | Lewis, Washington, and Mrs. John I. O. O. F. cemetery, ? a brother, Sam, of Middlesboro, Ky.{Marsh of Santa Fe, N. M.

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Campaigning to boost the payrool bonds savings allotments in Marion county industrial plants to 10 per cent of the total salaries of employees, these men met at a breakfast in the Columbia club to plan the strategy of the drive. Management and employees will be asked to co-operate, Seated, left to right, are: D. B. MacLaren, E. A, Crane, Evans Cochran, E. G. (Mike) Horne, I. Frank Holmes, S. I. Hart, Lloyd S. Wright, Art Crane, J, Earl Owens, J. Lowell Craig and Frank D. Walker, Standing, left to right, are: E. M. Demlow, George A. Saas, who presented the campaign plan; W. C. Royal, George T. O'Connor Jr, Lee B. Smith, E, H, Scott, G. A. VanD yke Jr, George K. Jones and J. B. Solomon.

ing Drive

DISCUSS MINE

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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PAGE 11

LIST CATHOLIC

ASSIGNMENTS

Father Casey Will Become New Superintendent of

Diocesan Schools.

The Most Rev. Joseph E. Ritter, bishop of the Diocese of Indianapolis, today announced the ap-

pointment of the Rev. Fr. John|

Casey, former assistant pastor of St. Philip Neri’s church, as new superintendent of Diocesan schools. Father Casey succeeds the Rev. Fr. Leonard Wernsing, appointed by Bishop Ritter to be pastor of St. Joseph church, Jasper, said to be the largest congregation in the Indianapolis Oatholic Diocese. The new - superitendent of parochial schools will live at the rectory of St. Joan of Arc’s church. The Rev. Fr. Patrick Kilfoil, J. C. L., former assistant at Cathedral

Sergeant Dies At Ft. Harrison

Services for Sergt. Sam W. Ball,

, who for the last 18 years had

been stationed at Ft. Harrison, will be at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Harry W. Moore peace chapel. Burial will be in Memorial Park cemetery. Sergt. Ball died Wednesday at Billings Gen= eral hospital at the age of 46. 5 He had been ill Sergt. Sam Ball for Riis TA dianapolis in 1920 from Clay county, Kentucky, where he was born, and was a member of the Thirty-eighth Street Christian church and the American legion. Surviving are his wife, Jessiyn; three daughters, Misses Glovanna, Jesslyn and Catherine, and a son, Sam, all of Indianapolis, and his mother, Mrs. Ziltha Ball of Ken-

high school, is the new superintendent of Reitz Memorial high school, Evansville, and the Rev. Fr. Richard Kavanaugh, former assistant at St. Therese church, here,

{ |

PACT IN STATE

| {

‘Agents of Operators and Workers Meet With U. S. | Labor Spokesmen.

| TERRE HAUTE, Ind., June 19 (U.| | P.) —Settlement of the 25-day strike in Indiana’s deep shaft coal fields was to be discussed today with Lewis Austin, president of district 11, United Mine Workers, and Harvey Cartwright, copmmissioner of the Indiana Coal Operators Association in Washington to confer with U. S. Department of Labor officials.

Labor commissioner Thomas PR. Hutson also left for Washington to take part in the conference. Both Mr. Austin and Mr. Cari-| 'wright left for the capital last night | jon the suggestion of Governor | Schricker, who urged that the mines be re-opened immediately. The strike was called May 25 when 300 drillers and shotfirers démanded a 40 cent daily wage increase. The walkout threw 2000 other miners] {out of work. |

MARY WILLIAMS OF | BEN DAVIS IS DEAD

Mrs. Mary Catherine Williams, who with her husband, Lee H. Williams, had operated a grocery near Ben Davis for the last 24 years, died yesterday in St. Francis hospital. She was 71 and lived at 000 W. Washington st. Surviving, besides her husband, are two daughters, Mrs. Elizabeth Singleton and Mrs, Mary Wilson; and two sons, Bennett and Glenn, all of Indiahapolis; a sister, Mrs. | Alta Young of Fair Hope, Ala.; a | brother, J. T. Rariden of Toledo, Ill.; seven grandchildren, and four great-grandchildren. Services will be at 2 p. m. tomorrow in the Moore & Kirk West Side chapel. Burial will be in Mount Jackson cemetery.

W. Side Woman, Long Ill, Is Dead

MRS. MINNIE LL. THOMPSON, a resident of Indianapolis 37 vears, died vesterday at her home, | 1044 W. New York st., foliowing a | long illness. She was 65. Mrs. Thompson was a member vof Fairfax Christian church, Alfareta council. Degree of Pocahontas, and Ellen Rebekah lodge. "Born in Bennington, Ind., she was the wife of Everett G. Thompson. Surviving, besides her husband, are two sisters, Mrs. Nettie Morgan of Vevay, Ind, and Mrs. Delia Donahue of Indianapolis, and two brothers, Cecil and Claude Neal of Indianapolis. Funeral services will be at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the Fairfax church with burial in Washing- | ton Park cemetery. |

LEARN HOW TO GET

| ters. Mrs. 1 { Niceum, Mrs, Lillie Pa

becomes. assistant superintendent of Cathedral high school. The Rev. Fr. Patrick Gleason, Terre Haute, comes to the St. Philip Neri church here; the Rev. Fr. Raymond Gates, newly ordained priest, is appointed temporary chaplain of the Little Sisters of the Poor, and the Rev. Fr. William O’Brien, also newly ordained, goes

las assistant to St. Patrick's chureh,

Terre Haute. The Rev. Fr. Leo Schafer of St. Mary's church, Indianapolis, is sent to Jasper and the Rev. Fr. Eugene Weidman of Scottsburg comes to St. Mary’s. The Rev. Fr. John Holloran is the Butler Newman club moderator. Leave has been granted the Rev. Fr. Richard Kavanaugh and the Rev. Fr. Joseph Casey to attend the summer school at the Catholic University of America.

Mrs. Holdaway's Rites Tomorrow

MRS. CATHERINE TORIAN HOLDAWAY, wife of Benjamin F. Holdaway and a resident here 25 years, died yesterday at her home, 3326 Randall st., following an illness of one year. She was 32. A graduate of Technical high school, Mrs. Holdaway attended the Fourth Church of Christ, Scientist.

Surviving, besides her husband, are a son, David; a daughter, Alice Ann; her mother, Mrs. Clara Torian, all of Indianapolis; a sister, Mrs. E. H. Smith of Dayton, O., and a brother, Tim Torian, a construction worker at Pearl Harbor, T. H. Services will be at 3 p. m. tomorrow in the Harry W. Moore Peace chapel. Burial will be in Washington Park cemetery.

S fale Devths

ANDERSON-—Thomas C. McCoy, 33. Survivors: Wife, Mildred; mother, Mrs. Martha McCoy; brothers, George, Charles; sisters, Mrs. Arthur Lohr, Mrs. Joseph Dunbar, X Lee Tobin, 79. Survivors: Brothers, James, Robert, Michael Tobin; sister, Mrs. Mary McCullough. CONVERSE—Mrs. Harriett Carvey, 81. Survivors: Sons, Everett, Lester; daughters, Mrs. Orville Foor, Mrs. Jessie Gombough; Miss Pauline Carvey; sister, Mrs, Anna Carter. EVANSVILLE—Elias A. Dean, 51. Survivors: Wife, Mary: sons, Marsden, Ronald, Raymond; brother, Forest. FLORA—Mrs. Susie Musselman, 89%. Survivors: Daughter, Mrs. Perry Miller; brother, Henry Cripe: sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Graybill,

tucky.

PULLMAN PACT T0 END STRIKE

Railway Carmen Will Meet In Michigan City Tonight To Ratify Plan.

MICHIGAN CITY, Ind, June 19 (U. P.).—Striking members of the Brotherhood of Railway Carmen of America (A. F. of L.) meet tonight to ratify an agreement ending the Pullman-Standard Car Co. strike which halted work on an army contract for 1500 freight cars. The agreement, already approved by the union’s bargaining committee and company officials, was negotiatedd by a federal conciliator

after army officers issued an ultimatum that work must resume Monday at the plant or the contract would be completed elsewhere,

Extends Contract 60 Days

Proposed by Robert N. Pilkington, federal labor conciliator, the pact would extend the contract, which expired April 16, for 60 days while the war labor board considers the claims of the 1000 strikers for ine creased wages and better working conditions.

Charles Burchfield, international representative of the A. F, of L. and union spokesman, said there was no doubt the union members will vote to return to work on the recommendation of their bargaining committee. Felix Knight, general president of the B. R. C. A., sanctioned the agreement by telephone from Kansas City and requested its ratification by the union membership.

‘Busy on War Contracts Mr. Pilkington’s proposal was ac-

‘cepted last night by A. A. Logmann, company superintendent,

and the union committee, “The meeting was called after Maj. H. J. Hocker of the engineer's procurement division of Chicago issued his ultimatum.

Mr. Hocker pointed out that the strike which started June 15, was interrupting the production of 27 cars daily and said such a failure “easily might affect the outcome of some important engagement.” Only 30 more days were needed to complete the army order. The company is operating almost exclusively on war contracts. -

TOWNSENDITES TO DINE

Mrs. Emma High, 79. Survivors: DaughSs David McKinley, Mrs. Cora riot; sons, Raymend, Truman High: brother, Eli Craige; sister, Mrs. Linnie Powell. i JASPER—George Haberly, 71. Survivors: Wife, Helen. KEMPTON—Mrs. Mary Small, 79. Survivors: Sons, John, Clyde; daughters, Mrs. Alta Taylor, Mrs. Hazel Culluom, Mrs. Alma Tolle; sisters, Mrs. Mima Powell, Mrs. Ella Duncan. PRINCETON—Edward Vonderheide, 53. Survivors: Wife, Annas; sons, Raymond, Walter; daughters, Marcella, Antonilla Vonderheide, Mrs, Edna Rath, Mrs. Louise Cox; brothers, Frank, John, Sylvester, Clarence, Xavier, Chris; sisters, Mrs. Anna Ehrman, Mrs. Eleanor Recker, Miss Frances Vonderheide: parents, Mr, and Mrs. Peter Vonderheide. NEW ALBANY — Miss Katherine Rite. Survivor: Sister, Mrs. Mary Manus. John J. Kipp, 75. Survivors: Daughters, Mrs. Chris eber, Mrs. Veronica Lutz; son, Edward Kipp: brother, Martin.

ST. JOSEPH—Herman Gesenhues, 76.

Survivors: Sons, Bernard, Joseph: daugh-

ters, Mrs. Clarence Poff, Miss Elizabeth Gesenhues, Mrs. James Blue. STENDAL—Howard Starkey, 69. Survivors: Wife, Louisa: daughter, Mrs. Leo Howard: son, Frederick: brother, Edward.

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