Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 December 1943 — Page 8

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BASH VET TETw'S Sear Bord SOSTATWORER] Sore Poste

Mrs: hose Fred Brews

ry Ka eh estan, 4. Burvivors. Mrs. Jol

ust L. Gutheil will SEERVIPED vd Susial or aya held tomot= nson; brothers, Forrest and

{ row afternoon: in Winchester, - Mr. Guthetl, a former local resi- | Parents, Mr. an hn Weston; dent and retired accountant, died | Funeral for w. M. Lauck brothers, Sammie Bory Donald, Raymond,

‘Ernest E. Lohrman Killed Richard -and Monte Weston; sist BerWhen Truck’ Strikes | yesterday at the Masonic home in To Be Wednesday in nice And Neta Weston: "grandparents, ur | Franklin where he had lived for 2d Mus Jamis esd. ang Mr. Bridge in Fog | the past year. He was 86. Catholic Church. ARLINGTON—John Luther Metsker, 88 * He lived here 25 years and was Survivors: Wife, Laura Emma Metsker; | 3 a ay daughters, Mrs. Buelah Glendenning, Mrs E.| secretary of the Indiana Building Services for Willlam- M. Lauck Lena Hurt and Mrs, Lucille. Fenton; sons, and Loan association for many [will be conducted at 8:30 a. m. to- Sonus ang Ariett Metsker sisters. Mrs years. He retired 14 years ago. | morrow at his home, {18 W. 20th s%.,| pgpromp-Howard L. Buher, 53, Sur-| A native of Shelbyville, he was (and at 9 a. m. in the Holy Angel|vivors: Wife Fae Buher: | mother, Mary |

Buher; sons, Ivan | a member of the Shelbyville Ma-

services for Ernest » will be held at 10 a. m at the Robert W. Stirling home, 1420 Prospect st

| be in Crown Hiil Catholic church. Burial-will be In |cparies Owen and Loren Andrew Bul

t. Joseph's cemetery daughters, Mrs.

‘man, who lived at 1420] sonic lodge and the Scottish Rite. |€ piel, wis . ad ! * “ , Ru Arthur Growe. was killed vesterday Survivors are a brother, Arthur | The Holy Name society will hold |" ov cov i pawand Sutton Black- | when a truck-he was driving struck | Gutheil, Winchester, and “several |Prayer services at 8 p. m. today &t|man, 78. Survivors: Wife, Lucy Black-| idee an road 39 north of Ross- on the home. : : Wan; daughters, Mrs Albert Nussmelier,| a bridge on road 39 north of Ros nieces and nephews Mrs. Harlan Foulke, Mrs. Robert Raymond | vilie in a heavy fog He was 37 = An employee in the parcel DUS!|and Miss Edythe Blackman Liovd K. Young and Raymond partment of the Illinois st. post-| Janet Ann Gfote, 6. Survivors: parRowle Indianapolis discovered MRS, W. B, STRINGER office for 36 years, Mr. Lauck died [his Mr and Mrs. Alfred E Groe. so | the | v about two hours after the yesterday at his home. He was 54. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Grote and Mrs | accid He was a member of the Holy Ernest Hornby. ol Elal, eanie Louise Stampflt, 73. Burvivors:| Mr. Lohrman had been employed RITES WEDNESDAY Angel church, the Holy Name so- Daughters, Mrs. Mayme Kevekordes, Mrs 10 vears by the Kibler Trucking Co ciety and St. Francis Ald society. A [Amelia Schulz, Miss Anna Stampfli and| " t delivery for the A&P Co. He gervices for Mrs. Wilmot B, [CW years ago he was interested in Misa (hernia SnBhiiii sons. pEzark gis was a ! er of the Central Bap- ‘Stringer, 2252 N. Pennsylvania st |dramatics. He performed: in p'AyS| FRANKFORT Nettie M Suits, 39. Surfet J . ; . lat Garfield and Brookside parks. vivors: Hushand, L. D. Suits; son, Eldrid| nl are his wife, Mrs. Ruby w Yesident ariindiababolis) i years Survivors are a sister Mrs Rose |[Suits. daughter. Janice Elieen. father, | § are his wife, Mrs. Ruby wi be at 2 p. m. tomorrow in the : ok ’ B: » Henry Personnette; sisters, Miss Nina Per. An v - iss Shirley is Cr Pn a M. Hargitt, and a brother, Peter J. |sonnette and Mrs. Jessie Castile; brothers 1 , Miss hile Hisey & Titus mortuary. The Rev oo g 2 Frank, Ciifford. Arthur, Sanford and Loh ree s, James, Rich-'p rin Smith, pastor of the Cen- Lauck, In AIndianapolis Harold Personnette ard Ronald Lohrman:. four tral Avenue Methodist church will PU Yernnpiimporougl B18 S 6) rviTors ap its , a a TS ents. Willis 1 J w brothers, Willi | Fred, -John © ofciate and burial will be in Crown G. L. HOOPER RITES WANMOND J " abaouen anc “J. Lohrman, I ¢f ITn-| Hill cemetery Wife, Bonnie Krause daughters, dia four sisters, Mrs < KRtringer . 0 in D Doro! hy. Beverly and Merrijane Krause “oo i SS Mr Stringer died vesterdav in ARE HELD TO A on Jack and Donald Krause, father, Al : and Mrs. Josephine her Rome after an iliness of sev-| S q L H I k Krau brothers. Ben. Ed ang Rader. -lndianapolis; Mi Carey eral vears. She was 76. S Services for Guy L ooper wi Tom Krause. sisters, Mrs Jack Werko hoe Len WEEE eral years } he was 7 : he was a be held at 2 p. m. today at the |! Mrs John Warner and Mrs etn i! Soutn a. member of the Central Avenue i Ivan Carter. 45 Survivors: - Wife.

Flanner & Buchanan mortuary, 23 [piv Carter: sons

Cladys Watson, Anderson | Methodist church. Ivan ye Robert Carwo : Survivors are a daughter Miss W. Fall Creek pkwy. followed by er Whig er, ze Agnes Brsse nger: 1 1 ) : | ’ : 3 a other Mrs "anny Carter rothers Euliss D. Smith Vay Stringer, Indianapolis. and burial in Crown Hill |Clyde. Dorsey and Carel Carter; sisters, rvices for b « D. Smith. 1613 three brothers, William E. Bawden, Mr. Hooper. manager of the Da- M bre Betty Mitts ha Agries Comes Jr : . alin i + ¥ ps n MT yertrude ONAK N y charger f e Seattle, Wash Richard J Baw- vis & Little Coal Co. died Saturday son Bri . Co. will be at 11 den and Joseph H Bawden at Methodist hospital after an m- MARION «Margaret Ellen Freshour, 68 ] , . ~ oe i. on irvivors Hushand Harry Freshour 1 a n n © oat Mt Tabor Chicago ness of several weeks. He lived at dnughte DMs a Br eons f n Favette. with bufial.in the ee [2030 College ave {neth and Fred Ivans: brother, Robert | ) | . i Pordyce, sister, Mrs. 8 E Deardorff, ~emeter TRUCK DRIVER KILLED He had been in the coal business | Hugh Ly 82 Survivors: Brother, lied I PRINCETON. Dec. 28 (U. P). 10 years here and for 33 years William Lytle sister. Mrs Mary Howell | n oe - : ‘ Albert Leach. 77 Survivors: Wife pa John Campbell, 70, Mt. Carmel, III, sored for ne Polar ee © ee aN Cree Lois RWS, v | ) th 2 truck driver, was killed nstaptly &0 He was born in n Y. Mrs Cora Martin : AS 1.at night when his eoal truck BCPtucky |, NEW ALBANY -Fannle Elizabeth Clark as HEN i 3 € uc . v : Survivors are his wife, Mrs Ma- (%! Burvi Husband jlessepM Crk i overturned six miles son Vernon Clark: daughters, Mrs. Len 0 “bel Hooper; a daughter, Miss Flor- |B. Clark. Mrs Charlotte Smith and Mrs | v NG . Svivia Richardson sisters Mrs. Fred Tf Ne » t S ar ence Hooper, assistant professor at toe Wilson. Mrs Mable

| Wagner. Mrs. Ros in | McCutcheon. and Mrs

oT 'George Washington university .Monroe Pittman

A Alma S A sm DIES WHEN AUTO SKIDS Washington, D. C: two sisters, Miss | {brothers, Homer and Edgar Morris . ) ' he EEE IAL fel y . Missa | SOUTH BEND, Dec. 28 (U. P).— Vina Hooper, and Miss Sue Hooper, | (ROBERTSDALE tie re Toy athe | Pauline Smith, Browrns- Donald Smith, 16, received fatal in- both of Morganfield, Ky, and four Jorn La} 0p _— other. William Larson: | i M Violet Murat, We juries vesterday when his car brothers. Allen, Waller, Butler and aos a te “Ackerman” and Mrs

skidded and overturned on a curve. Ir] Hooper, all of Morganfield. SEYMOUR Mrs vdia Riall, 79. Bur- — - a ee CP ee eee. | VAVOTS Brot hers HE rson and Sikas Stradley: sis Ars. Maude Pruett and

SENATOR'S WIFE DIES WASHINGTON, Dec. 28 (U. P). | —Mrs. Bennett Champ Clark, .50,| | wife of the Democratic senator | from Missouri, died at her home; here last night after an illness of |

{more than a vear. {

Mrs. Rinda ¢

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“Keep on. | Buying « War Bonds”

iE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _

|FORMER POSTAL

To Be Wednesday UrARG i pr ac, Wh ower commons wes uc se 30 YEARS. DIES gi i ri

¥

bh —————

Funeral Services Will Be Held Tomorrow for H. W. Hannebaum.

| baum will be, held at 10 a. m. to-

oe] {tional services and burial will be Russell Day and Mrs held tomorrow afternoon at Pep|pertown in Franklin county.

{James A. Bray of Chicago, Ill, |of Bishop James A. Bray of the| | Colored Methodist Episcopal Church; | (Mrs. W. P. Curtis of St. Louis, Mo, | :

Services for Henry W. Hanne-

{morrow at the Moore & Kirk funeral home, 2530 Station st, and addi-

A retired railway postal clerk, Mr. |Hannebaum died Thursday at the| {Methodist hospital after a five-week illness. He was 72 and lived at 2405 Stuart st. A native of Franklin county, Mr. Hannebaum taught in the public schools there before he moved here more than 45 years ago. He was a | postal clerk for the Big Four railroad 35 years, retiring in 1933. He was a member of the First United Lutheran church and the Railway Mai] association. = Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Lydia | C. Hannebaum; two sons, Louis H | [

Hannebaum, Indianapolis, and Lt. Otto P. Hannebaum of the navy; | two brothers, Fred Hannebaum,|

Culver, Kas, and Charles Hanne- |

"baum, Metamord; three sisters, Mrs. | Mary Sherwood, Laurel; Mrs. Eliza- | i

Indianapolis, and |

Metamora, and

beth Brinkman, Mrs. Anna Lewis, two grandchildren.

Mrs. N. L. Clarke | Services for Mrs. Nellie L Clarke, | wife of the Rev. Alfred T. Clarke, {former pastor of the Witherspoon | | Presbyterian church, will be at 4 {p. m. tomorrow at the Witherspoon | Presbyterian church. Burial will be|

lin Crown Hill.

Mrs. Clarke died Saturday in her) home, 1932 Highland place. A resi-| dent of Indianapolis 23 years, she was an active member of the com-| mittee of management of Phyllis] Wheatley Y.W.C. A. of Indidn- | |apolis ‘during the period of its or-| |ganizatiori ‘and building. : Besides her husband, she is sur- | vived by a son, Alfred T. Clarke Jr.| |of Boston, Mass.; three sisters, Mrs. | wife |

wife of Dr. W. P Curtis: Mrs. Frances R. Porter of Philadelphia, | Pa., and two brothers, Amzi and

ISunmer Childs of Marion, Ala.

the finest

New Year Resolution you can make

for 1944

BRANDISHES KNIFE, ENTERS GIRLS ROOM

Two 19-year-old girls living ‘in the 100 block, W. Walnut st. re-

dishing a knife entered their room about 5 a. m. today and threatened to kill them if they called for help. One of the girl said he attacked her and fled with one of their purses.

W. T, MAYGORS DIES WAS ILL TWO WEEKS

Services for Will 'T. Maygors, 913 N. Tacoma ave. will be at 10:30 a. m. tomorrow in the home, with burial in Washington Park cemetery. Mr. Maygors died yesterday in his home after an illness of two weeks. He was 87. He was superintendent of a French Lick streetcar line 17 years before his retirement in 1919, when he moved here. He was a member of the French Lick Masonic lodge.

LEELA ERCRUCIANAN NORTOMRY

sam Ryan, French Lick, and Miss 29 W. FALL CREEK BLVD TA 33 Winifred Maygors, Indianapolis; sevéh grandchildren - and ‘seven SAT

great-grandchildren. -

EE lELSF I NUS

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* *

ur wounded fighting men have one great chance for life that is yours to give them. In the field hospitals close to the fighting fronts, Medical Corps men call this one great chance Resuscitation.

~ Every badly wounded man at the hospitals is rushed to Resuscitation. On the shell-torn beaches, on the battlefields, Medical Corps men administer} it under fire., - Resuscitation is the transmission of the precious blood plasma. Every drop that trickles down the long tubes from bottles suspended above hospital cots or ‘slung from a comrade’s rifle stock is a priceless homefront gift of life to the battle-torn American soldier.

On the home front we must face 1944 realistically. “ The number of American men in combat will be increased many fold. The fury of the war will surge upward in climactic offensives in many parts of the world. g

Thus far America’ has suffered relatively few cas- ~ .ualties, but already the medical officers have raised the worried cry in the field hospitals, as row on row of badly wounded men are brought in: “Will there be enough blood?” American casualty lists, inevitably, will be multi plied in fateful 1944.

Will there be enough blood for the wounded—rmzn?

That is the question that faces each of us in 1944. It will be a life or death question for thousands of ~imen. The biggest offensives are coming in 1944. Then will come the need for more and more blood plasma. If the blood is not there when they need it, men will die.

If you have not already done se, register with your Red Cross Blood Donor service today. Resolve to become a regular donor in 1944, when your blood will be most needed. It is the finest New Year resolution

you can make.

= aera Veet Seton ii . tered under fire on Ovedalcanel. Someone's generous contribution gave this fighting man « chance for lie

|

Al

New —CF

Here is will de ‘comfort the late

AR Helene Ci Machine or Machinejess

PERMAN

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Retouc —QONLY