Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 June 1943 — Page 5
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_ Acton Native Was Veteran
~ Of Grocery Store
Business. ‘ Willlam Oscar Francis, 4038 S.
Rural st, Acton native who had
lived in Indianapolis most of his life, died yesterday at his home after a long illness. Mr. Francis, who ‘was 58, was en-
gaged in the grocery business until
his retirement two years ago. « Funeral services will be held at 2 p. m. Friday in the J. C. Wilson chapel of the chimes. Burial will be in Acton. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Odes‘sa Francis; a son, George W. Francis; two sisters, Mrs. Estella Flanagan, Southport, and Mrs. Mae DeVore, Greenwood, and a brother, J. V. Francis, Bluffton.
Mrs. Louisa Fries
. Mrs. Louisa Fries, 910 E. Morris ‘st, died yesterday in her home after an illness of five months. She ‘was 79.
A native of Brookville, she had|fg
made this city her home for the
SW “past 55 years. Her husband, Paul
“Fries, is a retired cigar maker who formerly operated a shop on Virave. ; : Survivors, other than her husband, include a son, Richard, and five sisters, Mrs. Rose Seehoffer, Mrs, Lizzie Steinmentz, Miss Katie
Heeb and Mrs. Nora Brandlein, all|§
of this city, and Mrs. Ida Geselle, Brookville. Services will be held at 2 p. m. Friday in the Meyer & Abdon
funeral home with burial in Crown|#¥ Hill,
Mrs. Sarah Butler
Rites will be conducted at 2 p. m tomorrow in the Moore & Kirk northside mortuary for Mrs. Sarah 8. Butler, widow of Charles Emmett Butler, who died yesterday in her home, 3355 N. Pennsylvania st. The Rev. Frank S. C. Wicks will officiate. Burial will be in Crown
Mrs. Butler, who had been ill for several months, had lived in Indianapolis since 1907. She was a native of New Point. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. ‘Owen Piokens and Mrs. Stanley L. Combs, Indianapolis; two sisters, Mrs. Walter Rutherford, Greensburg, and Mrs. Florence Kilvert, New Point, and two brothers, Bert Starks, Osgood, and Edward Starks, Greensburg. s ————————————— BURMA RAIL YARD BOMBED
NEW DELHI, June 30 (U. P.).— 'B-25 Billy Mitchell bombers of the U. S. 10th air force left a 2000-foot tower of smoke billowing up from the railway yards at Kyaukse in
" gentral Burma yesterday when they
‘dropped nine tons of explosives on .the Japanese installation, a com-
{¥. munique said today.
MACHINELESS PERMANENT Pape) Shomrce et $460 ; Hair-Cut . . . Ui ROBERTS BEAUTY SHOP 528 NA
legion drive, he sold one to her.
with Campfire Girls Nancy Forbes
TRAPS ALSO SET FOR JAPANESE ‘BEETLE
For the ninth straight year, traps have been set in Indianapolis to locate areas in’ which Japanese beetles might be prevalent, Frank N. Wallace, state entomologist, announced today. Traps also are to be set in areas in Elkhart, Ft. Wayne, Hammond,
Logansport, Muncie and Richmond where the beetles have been found in the past or where there is a pos-
sibility that they may be present.
Areas in which beetles are found are treated with an arsenate of lead solution to kill the larvae. The control program, conducted jointly by the entomology department and the U. S. department of agriculture, was started here in 1934 when the first beetle was found in Indianapolis.
effective with no beetles found in succeeding years in the areas where the treatment was applied, Mr. Wal-
lace said.
The control program has proved|:
Who's selling who? Lowell S. Fisher, commander of the John Holliday post of the American Legion, gets a kiss from his daughter Harriet Margaret as he signs up for a $500 war bond in the Boy Scout, Girl Scout and Campfire Girl campaign. .Last month, during the
sands rung by Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts and Campfire Girls in the closing hours of their drive to sell war bonds, Mrs. Schricker is shown here
(left), 4602 Central ave., and Bar-
bara Jungclaus, 5131 N. Pennsylvania st.
Youths to Close War Bond Drives
Officials had every hope today that Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts and Campfire Girls would put their June campaign for $4,538,600 war bond sales in Marion county over that mark. Only bonds bought and actually paid for by midnight will be credited to the June quota. Cub Scouts, youngest in the organization, even helped in obtaining pledges of purchases to help reach the goal. The final tabulation will be released within a week or 10 days by the federal reserve bank at Chicago. The treasury department is watching results because it is the first Scout-youth group drive in the nation and if successful may be staged on a national scale.
MEXICO HONORS GEN. CHIANG CHUNGKING, June 30 (U. P.).— Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek has been presented with the order of the Aztec eagle, Mexico's highest decoration.
That ia Smet ...YOU can spot it every time
: Reserve releases a trained Marine for combat duty. But before they do that, they must,
We
themselves, undergo .training so rigorous that regular rest periods are allowed them. That's
when the call goes up for
ice-cold Coca-Cola
«+ « for the pause that refreshes. Ice-cold Coca-Cola does more than just
quench thirst. It brings a
pleasant after.
sense of refreshment. You feel it and wel. come it. Made with a finished art, ~ Coca-Cola has a taste all its own. Delicious! Satisfying! There’s an extra something of goodness about it. You know from experience that the only thing like Coca-Cola is Coca-Cola, itself.
‘A couple of Cokes! That's the way to make a friendly
moment refreshment time.
v's natural for popular names to acquire friendly abbreviations. That's why you hear Coca-Cola 2 + called Coke. Both mean the same thing. . .“coming from a single source, and well known to the
community”s
BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY
of : The best is always the
TRADE -MAR K
Delicious and
Refreshing
J
better buy!
id
RESIDENT HERE 50 YEARS DEAD
Rites for Leopold Schubach
Will Be Tomorrow at 10:30 A. M.
Leopold Schubach, a resident of Indianapolis for 50 years, died last night in his home, 1741 Union st, after a lengthy illness. He was 86. Funeral services will be conducted in the Aaron-Ruben funeral home by Rabbi Morris M. Feuerlicht at
10:30 a. m. tomorrow. Burial will be in Indianapolis Hebrew cemetery. Mr. Schubach was a native of New York city coming to Indianapolis in 1893. ° Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Hannah Schubach; a son, Solly Schubach; a daughter, Miss Florence Schubach, and four grandchildren, all of Indianapolis.
David E. Ross
John W. Burt, 1220 N. State ave., president of the Purdue university class of 1893, of which David E. Ross was secretary, will be an honorary pallbearer for the Purdue benefactor tomorrow. Services for Mr. Ross, president of the university board of trustees, who died.Monday, will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow in the Central Presbyterian church at Lafayette. Burial will be on the Purdue research foundation campus. Mr. Burt, a close friend of Mr. Ross, wrote a poem, ‘“Memories,” which was included in the book presented to Mr. Ross in 1938 in appreciation of his service to the university.
Ernest Schwartz
Funeral services will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow in the AaronRuben funeral home with burial in Ohev-Zedek cemetery for Ernest Schwartz who died yesterday in his home, 134 W. 21st st., after a long illness. He was 36. : Mr. Schwartz was born in AustriaHungary, Jan. 31, 1907. He came to Indianapolis in 1921. Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Anna Schwartz; a daughter, Charlotte; his mother and stepfather, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Engel; a sister, Mrs. Alex Rabin, and an uncle, Philip Greenwald, all of Indianapolis.
STOCKYARDS BLAZE INJURES FIREMAN
One fireman was injured in a blaze which late yesterday swept the Exchange building at the Union stockyards, causing unestimated damage. The building is in the center of the yards, but no livestock pens were threatened. Charles Britton, Squad 7 fireman, fell unconscious when he entered the burning building without a gas mask. He was administered oxygen by a City hospital ambulance detail and .revived. The ‘building housed the Exchange hotel, the stockyards bank, merchants’ offices and offices of the Western Union and Postal Telegraph. It is owned by the Belt railroad and the Union Stockyards Co. Cause of the fire was not determined.
State Deaths
ANDERSON—James M. Washburn, 78. Survivors: Daughter, Mrs. Fred E. Dr. Wendall and Victor Washburn
John L. Bluemle, 73. Survivors: Arnold and O. W. Bluemle; sisters, Christina Smith and Mrs. Mary macher.
BICKNELL—Mrs. Ida Mae Hirth, 81. Survivors: Daughters, Mrs. Alma Leatch, Mrs. Dave DeCoursey and Mrs. John Webster; sons, Earl, Norman, Chester and Ralph Hirth; sister, Mrs. Eva Huffman; brother, Ralph Rouse.
COVINGTON—Mrs. Cora Richards, 39. Survivors: Husband, Amzi; daughter, Bonnie Richards; sons, Kennetn and James Richards; sisters, Mrs. Nora Hubler and Mrs. Grover Carpenter; brothers, Stanley, Kelsie, Eugene, Earl, Roy and John ‘Kopp.
EVANSVILLE—Mrs. Anna A, Weber, 63. Survivors: Husband, John; daughters, Mrs. Bernard McAtee and Miss Lorena Weber; sons, John, Arthur, James, Leroy, Asa and Elmer; sister, Mrs. Henry Ketzner; brothers, Conrad, Nick and Peter Zenthoefer, : Mrs. Catherine Ramsey, 44. Survivors: Husband, Maxwell; daughter, Patricia Anne sey. Albert W. Ellis, 71. Survivors: Sisters, Miss Ida Martin and Mrs. Homer Bristow. Kenneth LeRoy Burton, 30. Survivors: Wife, Elinor; son, Gary Burton; daughter, Vicki Burton; parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Burton; brothers, Leon and Lyle Burton; sister, Mrs. F, F. Hawkins, George A. Lord Sr. Survivors: Wife, Rosa; daughter, Mrs. E. W. Long; son, George Lord Jr.
NEW ALBANY—Harry B. Farnsley, 53. Survivors: Wife, Ruth; daughters, Mary Ruth, Martha and Margie arnsley; sons, Floyd, Verald, Carl and Roger Farnsley; sisters, Mrs. Cletus Spurgeon, Mrs. Roxie Huff, Mrs. Gertrude Duffy and Mrs. Cecil Schibben; brothers, Leo, Bruce and John Farnsley.
Sons, Mrs. Schu-
Harley,
SEYMOUR—Mrs. Martha J. Barnes, 95. Survivors: Sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Bark-
man. STENDAL—Henry Bass, 11 months. Survivors: Sisters, Helen and Martha Bass; brothers, Finess Jr. and Owen Bass; parents, Mr. and Mrs. Finess Bass.
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