Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 May 1943 — Page 12
PAGE os _.
NAVY INVESTIGATES | | SAN FRANCISCO FIRE
MeDuffee Rites To Be in Toledo
SAN FRANCISCO, May 14 (U. | Services will be held at 10:30 a. m.
P.) —A naval board of inquiry today | Invesigated a four-alarm fire which Swept two navy piers, injuring 85 persons and threatening naval! stores and ships.
All available equipment, includ-| ing 12 fire boats, poured water on | the blaze, and it was believed most | of the naval cargo was saved. The! navy was unable as yet to estimate the damage. Office workers joined the fire! fighters Women helped carry stores | of supplies from endangered areas. Two ships moored between the two burning piers were towed to safety. The fire, which threw off great clouds of black creosote smoke and relatively little flame, burned) for four hours before it was ex-| tinguished.
GLASSES
— Have your eyes examined! Registered optometrist §| with offices at i
MILLER JEWELRY
29 on Circle
i
!
| five | with the Toledo concern.
Monday in the Rosary Cathedral,
Toledo, O., for Joseph H. McDuffee | Sr., widely-known figure in the mot
tor industry, who died yesterday a | his home in Toledo. Burial will be | there. The 64-year-old industrialist was president of the Prest-O-Lite Stor‘age Battery Co. of this city and vice president in charge of the | battery division of the Electric| auto-Lite Co. of Toledo. Mr. McDuffee left Indianapolis] rs ago to assume his duties
SOLDIER GETS HIS MEDAL TOO SOON
NEW YORK, May 14 (U. P).— |A war department notice that his
Ison, Jerome, had been awarded the
oak leaf cluster for gallantry in the | European area, came as a surprise] to Irving Marcus. “The boy has never been out of
| the United States,” Marcus said. | “But my kid is a born fighter and he'll win those medals just as Sun
as he gets overseas.” A check by the war eg ramen: | revealed there was an error.
1 =
* * Open Saturday °’
ILLNESS FATAL 70 MRS. COOPER
‘Resident Here 34 Years Is Dead at 93; Rites to Be Sunday.
Mrs. Katherine I. Cooper, who ‘was an active member of the Tab|ernacle Presbyterian church for 34 years and a life member of the. Women's department club, died yes- | [pentay in her home, 2143 Broadway. | . Cooper, who was the widow | of A ion K. Cooper, was 93. She, 'had been ill for some time, Born in Putnam county and married in Putnamville in 1870, Mrs. | | Cooper came to Indianapolis from | Greencastle in 1891. | Funeral services will be conducted (at 2:30 p. m. Sunday in the Kreglo & Bailey mortuary. The Rev. Ralph O'Dell, assistant pastor of Tab- | ernacle Presbyterian church, will of{ficiate. Burial will be in Greencastle. Surviving are two sons, W. K.| Cooper, Indianapolis, and L. J. Cooper Vincennes; six grandchildren | and nine great-grandchildren.
Katherine Groennert
Funeral services for Mrs. Kath{erine Groennert, who died Wednesday in Methodist hospital, will be (at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in the George
| hospital guild committee Thurs-
Women of Moose Honor Girl Here
A SCHOLARSHIP in nurse's training has been awarded to Miss Goldie Nahmias, 1025 8S. Illinois st. by the Hospi) guild committee of the Women of the Mbose, headed by Mrs. Phyllis Doyle. Miss Nahmias will be graduated in June from Manual Training high school and will enter ¥ nurse's training ; ko in August at St. Vincent's hos- Miss Nahmias pital. She was awarded the scholarship for her outstanding record in scholarship, leadership and cooperativeness, and also for being emotionally stable and dependable. She is the second student to receive the local scholarship. Miss Betty Postma, winner of last year’s, will receive Miss Nahmias at the chapter program of the
day night, May 20, in the Moose home.
MRS. NORA WILSON DIES IN TEXAS AT 71
Mrs. Nora A. Wilson, widow of!
PLANS COMPLETED FOR SALVAGE DRIVE
The most extensive scrap colleetion drive yet held in Indiana will
| be launched Monday by volunteer | | in every part of the state.
Services to to Be Tomorrow Both urban and rural homes will be Death Caused by Injuries canvassed in the one-week drive. For Longtime Atkins A check of all counties by the Suffered in Fall Three general field staff today showed | Employee. that all was in readiness for the| Weeks Ago. | campaign. Gov. Henry F. Schricker Carl Mindack, member of the! ‘has proclaimed the week as “Hoos-| Funeral services for Mrs. M. E.| Atkins Pioneer Club of the E. ©. {ier 8. O. ho ep Week” and has | Burkhart will be held 2 p. m. Sun- | announce the slogan, “Salvage Our! da in the Flanner & Buchanan Atkins & Co, died yesterday. |Serap to Save Our Sons.” y os Dr. C. A. McPheeters of Mr. Mindack, a resident of In- state goal for the drive is 83000 the North Methodist church will dianapolis since he came from Ger- fons. Most of that amount will be officiate. Burial will be in Mt. many in 1908, lived at 1401 Union Collected from farms. | Pleasant cemetery. st. and had been ill only a few days. | A IE Injuries sustained in a fall three
He was 58 and had been with Atkins | ABANDON BURMA POST | weeks ago resulted in Mrs. Burk-
for 25 years. | NEW DELHI, May 14 (U. P.).— hart's death yesterday in St. VinThe services will be at 10:30 a. m.| British troops have withdrawn from cent's hospital. She made her home tomorrow at the George H. Herr-| |their strongpoint at Maungdaw, 12| with her daughter, Mrs. W. W, Peet, mann funeral home and burial will miles west of the recently-relin-|7466 College ave. and had been an be in Concordia cemetery. His wife, Mrs. Bertha Mindack, | Arakan sector in Burma, a com- hood. two daughters, Mrs. Ruth Kosh- munique announced today. mider and Mrs. Josephine Cubert, — and a brother, Frank, survive.
Joseph T. Baker
Funeral services will be held at 3 p. m. tomorrow in the Harry W. Moore peace chapel for Joseph T. Baker, 1405 E. New York st, who died Wednesday in his home after an illness of three months. The Rev. L. C. Trent, pastor of the Woodruff Place Baptist church, will officiate. Burial will be in {Crown Hill. Mr. Baker, who was 85, was born
BURKHART RITES SET FOR SUNDAY
'quished town of Buthidaung, in the | Indianapolis resident since child-|
‘club, the Indianapolis Currant | Events club, the W. ©. T. U, the White Cross guild, and the North | ethodiat church. She’ was the | widow of the late Ellsworth Burklust Pviving besides the daughter, or ri sisters, Mrs. O. J. Biegler, ‘Camden, and Mrs. Martha, Davis, and two grandchildren, Elizabeth and William Peet.
Daniel V. Dugan
Funeral services for Daniel V. Dugan were to be held at 8:30 a. m, today in the Blackwell funeral home and at 9 a. m. in St, Philip Neri church, Burial was to be in Holy Cross cemetery, Mr. Dugan died Tuesday after a long illness. He was born in In- | dianapolis 45 years ago and attended St. John's parochial school. Surviving are the wife, Mrs, Frances O'Connor Dugan, a daughter, Miss Dorothy Dugan; his mother, Mrs. Margaret Dugan; three brothers, Walter, Harry and James and a sister, Miss Mary
| Dugan,
! She was a meinber of the Minerva Dugan, all of Indianapolis,
John C. Wilson, died yesterday in near Knightstown and had lived
| H. Herrmann funeral home. Burial the home of her daughter, Mrs. Karl!in Indianapolis for 50 years. He
Monday ‘Til 9 P. M.
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Men's Fine Gabardines, all colors
E | resident of Indianapolis and a mem- |
: Surviving her are the husband,
s ‘nie Hall, 2 Kubitz, = Rolland F. Hewes = Funeral services for Rolland F.
| Manufacturing Co., will be at 1:30 : |p. m. tomorrow in the Harry W.
| will be in Crown Hill. Mrs, Groennert was a life-long | ber of St. Peter's Evangelical and | Lutheran church. She resided at | 1514 E. Washington. She was 51.
| Harry F. Groennert; three sisters, | Mrs. George Watkins, Dallas, Tex.; Mrs. Bertha Braun and Mrs. Min-| and a brother, Frank
{
|Hewes, a guard at the Packard |
| Moore peace chapel, 2050 E. Michi-|
|gan st, with the Rev. William 0.! | Breedlove, pastor of the Calvaty/
=| Baptist church, presiding. 3) Mr. Hewes, who was 50, died!
| yesterday in his home, 3432 E. 25th
= Ist, after an illness of three months. |
| He was a lifelong resident of!
= Indianapolis.
E2| Surviving
= | Mrs. E | Betty =| Miss Josephine Hewes; his mother, E |Mrs. Luella Hewes, and a brother,
=|
F State Deaths
a to 3
E! sens, and a sister,
£7.00 Trousers
Men's 1009, Wool Felt Hats
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E | Husband, Frank; a daughter, Mrs. Pearl
his wife, Lorna P. Hewes; two pr Tg Rollayn Brewer and Miss| Hewes; a granddaughter,
are
F. Ross Hewes, all of Indianapolis. |
| ANDERSON—James A. Grind, 69. Sur- | vivors: Daughters, Mrs. Albert W. Hutton and Mrs. Edward Roran, and sons, Gordon aud Lt. Col. Richard H. Grind. Mrs. Myrtle Crouse, Ti. Survivors:
Hensley; sons, Thomas, Clifford and Clarence Crouse, and a brother, Alonzo Mc-
{Joseph and Elina Reid.
Donald. MARION—MTrs. Survivors: Daughter, and a son, Roy Stirns. NEW ALBANY—Mrs. Pansy E. Maxwell, 58. Survivors: Daughters, Mrs. Viola Worrall and Mrs. Bonnie Edwards; sisters, Mrs. Altha McKinney and Mrs. Frances Daubs, and a brother, James D. Keithley. SEYMOUR -— Mrs. Mary Katherine Thompson, 76. Survivors: ‘W. 8.; children at, home, Oden, Foy and Mode Thompson; daughter, Mrs. Loius A, Wilson; brother, John Waggoner, and sisters, Eva Bebout, Alma Cornett and Anna; Waggoner. | ST. MEINRAD—Ben Kessens, 59. Sur-| vivors: Brothers, Henry and Frank KesMrs. Henry Otto. TROY Mrs. Michael Jacobs, 65. vivors: Husband, and a sister, John Purnhage.
Sarah Ann Stirns, 90. Mrs. Harry Six, |
Mrs. |
the lovely quality,
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Blackwell, Corsicana, Tex. She was 71. Mrs. Wilson had been ill for several weeks. | A former employee of the Kahn} Tailoring Co., Mrs. Wilson retired ladt November. She had been with! the company 26 years. Born on a farm near Scottsburgh,| Mrs. Wilson was the daughter of] She had! lived in Indianapolis 45 years and was a member of the Rebekah) lodge. | Besides her daughter, survivors are another daughter, Mrs. Florence Marberry, Indianapolis; two grand-| sons, Sgt. Ross Marberry, army air forces, Victoria field, Tex. and Sea-| man 2-c¢c Allen Marberry, Great, Lakes, Ill; five brothers, Charles and Taylor Reid, Los Angeles, Cal.; | D. L. Reid, Indianapolis; B. C. Reid, | Detroit, Mich., and Harry A. Reid, { Danville, and two sisters, Mrs. Min- | nie Elizabeth Miller, Wabash, and
[Fo Mary Reid, Danville. er - | {
ACCIDENT FATAL FOR EARL R. GAMBREL, 53
Injuries suffered in an auto-truck accident Sunday at Fountaintown
{caused the death yesterday of Earl
R. Gambrel, 53, of 1510 Castle ave. He suffered internal injuries and contracted pneumonia in a Shelbyville hospital. Mr. Gambrel was a millman employed by Charles McCahill, local contractor. Surviving are: the wife, Osa; daughter, Miss Rosemond Gambrel, Indianapolis; sons, Pvt. Elmo Gambrel, former Times employee, Camp Croft; Verland Earl, Kankakee, Ill, and Ivan, Indianapolis.
“ON WITH THE SHOW” PHILADELPHIA, May 14 (U. P). —Snake charmer Mrs. Margaret Settlemire, 21, Baltimore, continued ther performance last night at a |north Philadelphia carnival despite | { bites on the hands and arms by a rattlesnake. When the show was]
Sur-| over she asked police to take her to] © community
{a hospital,
was a retired carpenter and con-
| plan to formulate a post-war activi-
C10 ASKS SENATORS
§i plan by the Indiana CIO through |
tractor. Survivors are two sons, Lewis S. Baker, Indianapolis, and Ovid M. Baker, Grand Junction, Colo.; a sister, Mrs. Jane Wyatt, Indian- |
Distinctive sign. 8 brant diamonds in all
8-DIAMOND DUET Mate oS * d
| 937
|apolis; a brother, Robert A. Baker, |
Indianapolis; 19 grandchildren and several great-grandchildren.
’ mn
William 0. Jarvis
Funeral services for the Rev.|
William O. Jarvis, retired minister, |
'will be conducted at 11 a. m. tomorrow in the Woodruff Place Bap-/
| tist church by the Rev. L. C. Trent,
pastor. Burial will be in Knights-
town,
ARCHITECTS 0 AID POST-WAR PROGRAM
In support of Mayor Tyndall's 6-DIAMOND DUET The right rings for the left hand! Perfectly matched yellow gold mountings, cach set with sparkling diamonds. A timely value.
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ties program, Indianapolis architects have started a series of dis-| ‘cussion meetings on city planning] and are studying a four-point post- | war program with the Indianapolis chapter, Indiana Society of Architects, in charge. | Arthur Bohn is chairman of the project, with Edward D. Pierre, vice chairman; Leslie Ayres, Clarence T. Myers, John R. Kelley and George Caleb Wright, committeemen. While emphasizing that winning the war is “our primary job,” the | architects also contended it is their responsibility and that of the build- | ing industry, in post-war planning, |
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No Citizen
Mother of Two Soldiers Fails to Get Papers. MINNEAPOLIS, May 14 (U. P.)
Out of the High Rent District
Al Bas
SE ar eet
® Convenient Drive-In
—A 43-year-old mother of two sons in the fighting forces yesterday was denied United States citigenship because she refused to promise to bear arms in defense of the nation. Federal Judge Matthew Joyce denied the citizenship to Nor-wegian-born Mrs. Hahnheld Otilie Johnsrud, whose character he praised as “excellent.” Mrs. Johnsrud’s 21-year-old son Norman, quit school three years | ago to join the marines. He was decorated twice for valor on Guadalcanal and recently was | wounded in action. Her other son, Roy, 19, was inducted into the army a few weeks ago. When the court asked her if she would defend the constitution, even to bearing arms, she hesitatingly replied: “I can’t do that.” “Then I am sorry for you, the judge. “I must deny application for citizenship.”
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TO BUCK RUML PLAN
Senators Willis and VanNuys| have been asked to oppose the Ruml |
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its secretary - treasurer, Walter | Frisbie, on the grounds that the plan is “unsound, unfair and un-
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Sparkling rug patEasy to keep clean. Long wearing.
Support of the Robertson-Forand | tax measure that passed the house of representatives is urged in the same letter, since “it is far superior | to the Ruml plan.” |
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KILLED BY TRAIN MARION, May 14 (U. P).—| Claude McCorkle, 60, a section work- | er at Shirley, Ind, was killed yesterday when he walked into the| path of a Pennsylvania railroad, train.
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