Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 November 1944 — Page 5

ROLIN SETROLIUM JELLY JO

MONDAY, NOV. , 1944

MRS. BUENNAGEL DIES AT AGE 56

UNRULY Bair ing ¢ a og fe HAIR Bottle dtc. Said ever : JL tele Dade Services Set Tomorrow For Resident Here 29 Years.

Services for Mrs. Hulda W, Buen-

A |nagel will be at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow 1/in the Harry W. Moore peace

chapel. Burial will be in Concordia cemetery. The Rev. H. M. Zorn, pastor of St. Paul's Evangelical Luetheran church, of which she was a member, 1|will officiate. Mrs. Buennagel, who was 56, died

{| yesterday at her home, 614 N. Glad-

stone ave. A native of Logansport, she had lived in Indianapolis for 29 years

land was a former employee of the

William H. Block Co. ‘Surviving are her Rusband, George J. Buennagel; two §isters, Mrs. Paul G. Elkert and Mrs. Julius C. Luplow, both of Indianapolis, and two

| 74.

brothers, Henry G. Heiden of Milwaukee, Wis,, and John F. Heiden of Logansport.

NATP. CLAYBAUGH

Rites will be held in Orlando, Fla., today for Nat P. Claybaugh, :| former Frankfort real estate man, who died there Saturday night. Cremation will follow. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Goldine Claybaugh.” Two sisters, Misses Virgifia and Anna Claybaugh, taught at Shortridge high school before their deaths. He was

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

/ 214 W. Maryland Street

Saturdays off.

SLEEP ---BUT-=-

ROUSED FROM A NAP BY THE PERSISTENT RINGING OF THE TELL - PHONE, A WEARY HOUSEWIFE IN BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA DECIDED TO LET IT RING AND GO BACK TO

‘|all of her life,

Rites Are Set

Mrs. Adelia M. Brier

MRS. ADELIA BRIER DIES AT HOME HERE

Dr. Logan Hall, Meridian Street Methodist church pastor, will conduct services for Mrs, Adelia “M. Brier, principal of school No. 38, who died yesterday in her home, 3400 E. Fall Creek blvd. at 3 p. m. Wednesday ' in the ' Flanner & Buchanan mortuary, Burial will be at Washington Park. Wife of Frederick A. Brier, she never had missed a day of school as pupil, teacher or principal, and apperently had been in excellent health. Born in. Montreal, Canada, Mrs. Brier lived in Indianapolis nearly She was graduated |C from Shortridge high school and received her A. B. and M. A. degrees from Butler university. At the time of her death she was studying for da Ph. D. degree. Active in Schools Before becoming principal of school No. 38, she taught at school No. 51 a year and at school No. 66, 32 years, She also was principal of school No. 36. Mrs. Brier was a member of the Indianapolis Business and Profes-

sional Women’s club and the American Association of University Women and was a life member of the National Education association. She was associated with the Camp

‘| Fire Girls and Girl Scouts and was

past president of the Indianapolis Grade School Teachers association.

Tribute Is Paid

Survivors besides her husband are her mother, Mrs. Lewis B. Skinner, and a sister, Mrs. Edith Ann Strate, both of Indianapolis. She was the sister of the late Frank, William and Lewis Skinner Jr. Tribute to Mrs. Brier was paid yesterday by Virgil Stinebaugh, school superintendent. He, said: “Mrs. Brier was one of the most capable persons on our educational staff. She was an outstanding teacher and an excellent principal. She had a splendid professional background, a sympathetic understanding of children and a gracious personality. Her untimely death is a great loss to the schools and to the community. She will be greatly missed.”

IRA C. RISLEY

Services for Ira C. Risley, 2013 E. Washington st. were to be conducted at 10 a. m. today in the Farley funeral home.. Burial was to be

lin Washington Park cemetery.

Mr. Risley, who was 61, died Fri-

{day in Methodist hospital.

A resident of Indianapolis for 11

| years, he was employed in the main-

|

|

{Forest Risley,

LUCK RINGS THE BELL!

| tenance department of P. R. Mallory Co

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Bertha Risley; three sons, Ival and Denzil Risley, both of Indianapolis, and stationed In San Francisco with the coast guard; a brother, Arthur Risley of Wisconsin,

and a grandson.

RINGING STARTED AGAIN. BY THiS | TIME SHE WAS SO WIDE AWAKE THAT SHE KNEW FURTHER SLEEP WOULD

BE IMPOSSIBLE AND DECIDED TO ANSWER THE BONE. DED]

AUEED SAPPHIRE

ok SAPPHIRE, BIRTHSTONE OF THOSE BORN SHTLADLR 15 CONSI ™ LUCKY IF WORN BY LOVERS. Fo

BETWEEN AND OCTOBIR 20% ESPECIALLY

0. E. CRAWFORD DIES AT HOME

Services for Local Worker Will Be Conducted = Tomorrow.

Masonic services for Orville E. Crawford, who died Saturday in his home, 6311 Pleasant Run pkwy., will be held at 1.30 p. m. tomorrow in Shirley Bros. Irving Hill chapel. Burial will be at Pleasant View, six miles west of Lebanon, Junior partner of the G. C. Goss & Co. junior brokerage commission firm, he was 59 and was a member of Irvington Lodge No, 666, F, and A. M., Scottish Rite, Murat Shrine and the Presbyterian church. Survivors include his wife, Estella three sons, Maj. Richard I. Crawford, in the combat engineers in France; 1st Lt. John A. Crawford, Camp Shanks, N. Y., and Lt, William W, Crawford, Great Bend, Kas.; a daughter, Mrs. Dorothy Wethington, West Alexandria, O., and- a “sister, Mrs, Otis McCoy, Lebanon.

MRS. ALICE FRANKLIN

Rites for Mrs. Alice Franklin will be conducted by the Rev. J. J. Wil-

liams, pastor of the West Side Church of God, at 1:30 p. m. Wednesday in the J. C. Wilson chapel of the chimes.-Burial will be in New Crogyn cemetery. Mrs. Franklin, who was 66, died Saturday at her home, 1008 S. Meridian st. Serviving are a daughter, Mrs. Mildred Ridge of Indianapolis; four sons, Herschell, Alva and Carl Woods, all of Indianapolis, and Pfc. Floyd Woods, stationed at San Angelo, Tex.; five sisters, Mrs. Nellie Hollis, Mrs. Catherine Worth and Mrs. Eliza Goodson, all of Indianapolis, Mrs. Ella Austin of Cape Girardeau, Mo., and Mrs. Maude Linxwiller of Princeton, and two brothers, Thamas Brothers of Cape Girardeau and David Brothers of

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES.

Harry Shipman

, Services Today

SERVICES for Harry Shipman, 76, an active Mason for 45 years and ;a Mississippi river .boat pilot in the '90’s, will be held at 2 p. m. today at the Flanner and Bu-

f thanan Mortuary with the Rev.

Dr: Roy Ewing Vale, Tabernacle Presbyter- 3% jan ‘church pas- | tor, officiating. Masonic services will be held at the mortuary and at Crown Hill by the Calvin W. Prather lodge. ‘Mr. Shipman died at the home of his daughter, Mrs. 8ylvan L. Mouser, 4526 , Washington blvd., Friday. Survivors, in addition to Mrs, Mouser, include another daughter, Mrs. Wallace P. Daggy of Phoenix, Ariz, + a son, Clarence, and a grandson, both of Indianapolis.

MRS. JEAN DAILY

Mr. - Shipman

Jean Daily at 4 p. m. today in th Flanner Burial will be at Crown Hill. Mrs. Daily, who lived at 492 Guilford ave, Methodist hospital. She was 42 an a mentber tian church,

field and Frank of Tipton.

o

Richard P.

The Pirst Church of Christ,

Meridian

Princeton,

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The Rev. Roy Ewing Vale, Tabernacle Presbyterian church pastor, was to conduct services for Mrs.

& Buchanan Mortuary.

died Saturday in of the Danville ChrisSurviving are her mother, Mrs.

Carrie Cummings of Indianapolis; and two brothers, Ralph of Plain-

Cordially Invited

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EMMA BISCHOFF

RITES ARRANGED

Burial to Be Wednesday In Washington Park

Cemetery.

Rites, for Mrs, Emma A. Bischoff, who died last night. in her home,

k [1815 E. Minnesota st, will be held

at 2 p. m,- Wednesday in the Robert WwW, 8tirling funeral home, 1429 Prospect st. Burial will be in Washington ‘Park cemetery. Mrs. Bischoff, who was born Now. 3, 1876, in Ann Arbor, Mich.,, was the wife of Jacob R, Bisch®f and was a member of the Sixth Church of Christ, Scientist,

are two daughters and a son, Mrs. Marie Hudson, Mrs. Irma Foster and George A. Bischoff, all of In~ dianapolis; a brother, George Ardner, Ann Arbor; two half-brothers, Jacob Ardner, Toledo, O., and Michael = Schiable, Detroit, Mich., e|seven grandchildren and three gréat-grandchildren,

1|TRA FIELDS

Services for Ira Fields, Central States Bridge and Structural Co. employee, will be at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow at Waynetown followed by

burial there. Mr, Fields, who was 76, died Saturday at the home of a niece,

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA Announces

A Free Lecture on Christian Science

Verrall, C.S.

of NEW YORK CITY Member of The Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church,

Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts

in FIRST CHURCH EDIFICE

at 20th Street 28, 1944, at 8:00 P. M. _ Doors + Open at T PM.

Survivors besides her husband |

Mrs. Mary Rodman, 330 Terrace ave,

lived in Indianapolis for 15 years, Surviving besides Mrs. Rodman|Chicago, Aurora & Elgin,

Indianapolis, crease.

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He was a member of the Wayne- | CHICAGO, Nov, 27 (U. P)~The town Christian church, « He had 17-day-old walk-out on the Chicago, North Shore & Milwaukee and the

are a. sister, Mrs. Nanna Reid; a|which. affected 75,000 commas, nephew, James Reid of Indianapolis,|ended today with resumption and two other nieces, Mrs, Alice|service by 600 striking workers Kehl and Miss Mildred Reid, all of|{sought a nine-cent hourly wage in

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