Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 October 1943 — Page 7

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; Tabernacle Presbyterian | Worker Dies Sunday After. Long lliness.

| Dr. Roy Ewing Vale, pastor of the Tabernacle Presbyterian church, will conduct services for Mrs. Lulu 3 Harris, for many years an active worker in the church, at 2 Pp. m. Wednesday in Flanner & Bu- ; chanan mortuary. Burial will be {in Crown Hill, ‘1 Mrs, Harris, who lived at 3510 Washington bivd., died yesterday in Methodist hospital after an illness Fm. ws 4of two and one-half years, She

of) cpm BEC py gy William L. LeMaster Was

She was the wife of Edward W. Active In Civic

Death Ends Seven Years mn L YOUR looks better exc Of liiness at Home | OUR fa we

Sunday. ALWAYS

Miss Nora A. Schering, Indian- RHEUMATIC PAINS

apolis public school teacher 34 years, died yesterday in her home,| comfort? 102 N, Arsenal ave, after an illness of seven years. She was 63. A graduate of Manual high school, she attended Butler university and took post-graduate work at Colum-| bia university. She last taught at] : public schent No. 3 Rural and | International Beauty School Washi sts. in A © WAS A asks you to help ws su the member of Trinity Lutheran church. almand fo besuiieians,

hangers on her back. \| Special Prices and Terms rs Vors og A Mates ’ Miss Stare) can MAI, or Wette

PARKER RITES "| Schering, and a nephew. Herbert G. international Beauty School ARE HELD TODAY = = asses Least

(Charles Arthur Davis

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Hook's Dependable Drug Stores

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BR One of 300 WACs arriving in London, Pvt. Erika Kaul, of London, carries a full load eof knapsack, steel helmet and coat

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Notre Dame Meets Michigan, Navy to Face Duke Saturday

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bright all night; the lack of uniforms; the absence of defenses, shelters, barbed wire, barrage

Here there is food aplenty—ice cream, fat juicy sirloins as often as you can eat them, oranges and

. | give your right arm for in England,

all in profusion. Dublin is pretty tame for any spy-conscious American who has read too many detective stories. I was thoroughly disappointed not to be furtively approached by some swarthy stranger offering to loosen my tongue with Irish whiskey. There were no potted palms in my hotel to conceal microphones or spies. 8¢ far as I know, my baggage was not searched, my phone was not tapped. All very disappointing. General opinion is that Dublin no longer is the spy center it was reputed to be earlier in the

War, 2 Enemy Sighted

To the best of my knowledge I ran into only one of the enemy. had thought of all sorts of embarrassing questions to ask a Nazi should the occasion arise. But, as luck would have it, I didn’t recog-.

~ [nize the adversary until too late.

Going down to dinner one evening, I arrived at the elevator to find a man already waiting. I judged him to be in his 50s and was, therefore, surprised when the elevator arrived and he stood aside and bowed me in ahead of him. But at the bottom, he pushed past

| me, rudely and roughly, and rushed

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Activities.

Funeral rites for William L. LeMaster, salesman for the Brown & Bigelow advertising firm and active in ¥. M. OC. A work, will be at 3 p. m. tomorrow in the Shirley Bros. central chapel, with burial in Glen Haven cemetery. Mr. LeMaster, 3254 Park ave. died of a heart attack Saturday at Greenwood, where he had gone on a business trip. He was 48. Mr. LeMaster was a member of the board of management of the Central Y and was in charge of activities for service men. He came to Indianapolis four years ago from 8t. Paul, Minn, where he was a Y secretary. He was a tenor soloist and sang in loeal churches and before various elubs, He was a member of the Broad. way Methodist church, Mystic Tie lodge 398, F. & A, M,, Sccttish Rite, Murat Shrine and was president of the Y's Men's club. Survivors are the widow, Mrs. Alita LeMaster; a daughter, Mrs, Loretta Hanson, Minneapolis, Minn. “two sons, Yeoman Richard LéMaster, serving in the South Pacific, and Theodore R. LeMaster, Indianapolis; his mother, Mrs, Margaret A, LeMaster; a sister, Mrs, Leland Larson, a brother, Luther R. LeMaster, all of St. Paul, and another brother, the Rev. A. A. LeMaster of Long Beach, Cal,

0. F. SCRIMSHER RITES ARE SET

Former Contract Manager Was With Block Co. For 29 Years.

Funeral services for Charles PF, Scrimsher, former contract mane

will be at 2 p. m, tomorrow in Flanner & Buchanan mortuary with burial in Crown Hill ; Mr, Scrimsher, who was 74, died He was employed by H. P. Was- & Co. 25 years during which became credit manager. t to the Block company as t manager in 1914 and later manager. He re-

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Murat lodge, F. & A. Christian church. s are a daughter, Mrs. , ©. VanDuyn; a son, Fred C. Scrimsher; three sisters, Mrs. Merle Sidéner, Mrs. Frank Flold and Miss

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Funeral rites for Mrs. Mabel Nelwife essional

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ager at the William H. Block Co. os

ing with work at the Tavernacle church and was active in women's organizations of the church. She also was a member of the board of directors of the Indianapolis Or phans’ home and a member of Mu Phi Epsilon Patroness club.

Five Children Survive

Survivors besides Mr. Harris are four daughters, Mrs. Howard F. Foltz and Mrs. James E. Loer, both of Indianapolis; Mrs, Robert T. Batchelor of Tenafly, N. J., and Mrs. Nicholas M. Mayer of Palm Beach, Fla.; a son, Sgt. Edward W. Harris Jr, stationed with the army in Las

Vegas, Nev.; three sisters, Mrs, Alma Goltermann, Miss Estelle Mier and Miss Meta Mier, all of St. Louis, Mo.; a brother, C. W, Mier of Dallas, Tex, and 12 grandchildren, Marjory, Virginia, Joan, Betsy and Howard F. Foltz Jr, Elizabeth and James E. Loer Jr, all of Indian. apolis; Richard and Martha Batchelor of Tenafly, N. J.; Edward W. Harris III of Las Vegas, and Nicholas M. and Nancy Mayer, both of Palm Beach. Pallbearers include John H. Jefferson, John E, Messick, J. E. Woodard, Earl H, Schmidt and Harper J, Ransburg, all of Indianapolis, and Parker H. Woods of St. Louis, i

State Deaths

CONNERSVILLE--John Culbertson, 18 Survivors: Brother, Henry Culbertson; sisters, Eleanor and Alice Culbertson,

DANVILLE~8hirley Peatherngill, 57. Bur : Wife, Hazel Featherngill, daugh- , Mrs, Walter Poe and Mrs, George ents, Mr and Mrs, Charies Peaiherngil); ents, Mr. an Ts. aries o i brother, Marion Peathornetil; aster: Mrs. Lee Flinn. EAST CHMICAGO--Prank Jamros Sr. 80, Survivors: Wife: Tillie Jamros; sons Charles, John, Valentine, Joseph, Frank Jr. and Peter Jamroz; daughters, Mrs Victoria Berdis snd Miss Angeline Jamros, . HAMMOND-—Mary - Dougherty, h e. Mrs. A. T

73. Sure . Weger, ; sons,

ter, Mrs. Josephine . McAuwlifl; brother, Timothy Dougherty, *

vi Clonsales, 60... Burvi Cathe Gonsalez; Dari Martin Gonsales; daughters, Mrs. Vicania Miss Connie Gonsiles; sister, ; brother, Bulogio

vors: Wile, 0, Joe and

Survivors: son, Nick Kammer, nn Oster-

Anna Mary Hi 58. i pd, anughiers. Mr ar e : % ' Ma elen 3 and Mrs. A

gren RENDALLVILLE--Gedige Prederick - Gabet, 50. ivors: Sister, Mrs. Otto Kiebel; brother, Joseph Cabet. LA PORTE--Louise J. Survivors: Daughter, Mrs. El gandsons. Russell and Chester xter Davis, Koch, 84.

Mrs, Frederick L. Husband, erick L. Koch; sons, Paul and Willlam Koch; daughter, Mrs. Louise Blank; brother, Herman Marlow, . =» ®

LEBANON Frank Stark, 77. Survivors: jon, Carl Stark; daughter, Mrs. Harrison Shannon; brother, Lee Stark: sisters, Mrs. Otterman, Mrs. Laura Dean, Mrs Wills, Mrs. Myrtle York and Mrs Golda Burgess. LOGANSPORT Florence Little, 78. Sur. ors Brothers, Samuel H. and John A ttle. 1

MACY Elizabeth Fishley, 90.

Schultze, 88. Kili and

Survivors:

Survivors:

. | Sons, Henry and Prank Mishley: daught wg Th Raa

ers, ristine Koterman, Mrs, Runkle and Mrs. Ellen Miller; sister, Mrs. Rebaces Hoffman; brother, Emanuel Zegause.

MONTICELLO — Harvey M. Thompson, 78. Survivors; Wife, Mrs. Thompson; daughter, Mrs. Blanche Semmler; grandchild 3 Wilson and

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years, she spent many hours assist-

Aged Indiana Woman Dies Of Injuries Received In Fall.

Funeral services for Mrs. Catherine A. Parker, Thorntown, who died Friday in the home of her daughter, Mrs, George B. Loveless, 414 N. Bradley ave. were held today in the Moore & Kirk Irvington mortuary, with burial at Dayton, Ind. Mrs. Parker dled of injuries received In a fall a week ago. She was 84. Lived Here 15 Years

A native of St. Catherine, Ontario, Canada, she and her two brothers went to North Dakota ter ritory when she was 20 and filed claims for 160 acres of land. She came to Indiana with her husband 50 years ago and settled on a farm near Lafayette, in. Indianapolis and had lived in Thorntown the last 30 years:

Parkef, Chicago; three grandchildren whom she raised, Sgt. Ralph Dean Willams, stationed in England; Mrs. Howard Hill, Spokane, Wash,, and Francis Williams, Chicago; a brother, Charles C. Campbell, North Rockford, N. D.; a sister, Mrs. Charles Scott, Los Angeles, Cal.; four other grandchildren and one great-grandchild.

Mrs. America Canary

Services for Mrs. America Canary, 123 8. Noble st, were held today In the Harry W. Moore peace chapel, with burial in Mt. Pleasant cemetery, Trafalgar, Ind, Mrs. Canary, who was 01, died Saturday in lier home after an illness of four months. A native of Johnson county, she had lived in Greenwood and Indianapolis 27 years. She was a member of the Christian church at Trafalgar. Burvivors are five grandchildren; four great-grandchildren and one great-great-grandchild,

———

Mrs. Dorothy Prevo

| Services for Mrs. Dorothy Buell Prevo, wife of the Rev. Ernest F. Prevo, pastor of Jamestown Methodist church, will be at 10:30 a. m. Wednesday in the Jamestown church and at 3 p. m. in Montrose Meth-. odist church in Terre Haute. Burial will be in Mt, Pleasant cemetery. Mrs. Prevo, who had lived in

Saturday in Methodist hospital after an illness of almost a year, Survivors besides the husband are a brother, John A. Buell of Terre Haute, and three sisters, Mrs. F. A. Unger of Cleveland, O., Mrs. ‘A, E. Mollett of Chicago and Miss Kathryn Buell of Terre Haute.

DIES AS HOME BURNS FREMONT, Ind., Oct. 4 (U. P.)~ Joseph Shaffer, 67, farmer residing at the Indjana-Michigan state line,

a fire destroyed his farmhouse. Sur

rites will be conducted Tuesday.

She lived 15 years

Survivors are a son, Murray A.

Jamestown the past five years, died |

was fatally burned yesterday when|’

vivors include the widow, who was visiting in Flint, Mich. Funeral

Funeral services for Charles Arthur Davis, 1022 N. West st, will be at 4 p. m, tomorrow in the GC. M. C. Willis & Son funeral home. Burial will be in Crown Hill. Mr, Davis, who was 61, died Saturday in City hospital following a brief iliness. He was custodian at the Union Trust Co. before his illness, : Survivors are an uncle, Alfred McPheeters Sr, of Indianapolis, and two cousins,

Mrs. Frances Settle

Funeral services for Mrs. Frances E, Settle; 1128 Dawson st, will be at 1 p. m. Wednesday in Val lonia Christian church with burjal in Vallonia. Mrs. Seftle, who was 47, died yestérday in her home after a year's {liness.

she had lived here 256 years. She was a member of Emanuel! Baptist church, .

L. Settle; six sisters, Miss Frieda Fleenor and Mrs. William E. Smith, both of Indianapolis; Mrs. Bim Hauer of Vallonia; Mrs. Charles E. Shelton and Mrs. George B. Shelton, both of Brownstown, and Mrs. Lafe Hauer of Mt. Healthy, O.

| Mrs. Lena Caster

Services for Mrs. Lena Caster, former resident of Shelbyville, will be at 11 a. m. Wednesday in the home of a niece, Mrs. Fred Bein. burg, 4070 Boulevard pl, and st 2 Pp. m. in the First Evangelical church at Shelbyville, Burial will be In Shelbyville cemetery, Mrs: Caster, who was 73, died yesterday in St. Vincent's hospital,’ She had been living with Mrs, Beinburg since 1036, She was a member of the First Evangelical church. ’ Survivors are a daughter, Mrs. Ada Vollrath; three nieces, Mrs. Beinburg, Mrs, Marie Flaskamp and Mrs. Lena Berry, and two nephews, Rudolph Reichel and Louis J, Reichel, all of Indianapolis, =

A THOROUGH

Store Hours: Monday

12:15 to 8:45

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A native of Washington county, |

Survivors are her husband, Charles

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