Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 January 1945 — Page 9

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Francis McGlaughlin Rifes Will Be Held on Thursday

Rive tor Francis McGlaughlin, Mr. McGlaughlin, who was: 58,

He was a lifelong residents of Indianapolis and was a member ff St. John's Catholic church. Survivors include his wite, Mrs. Cora McGlaughlin; two sisters, Mrs. Mary Gladden and Mrs. Gertrude McMahan, and two brothers, William and James McGlaughlin, all of Indianapolis. Ie

MRS. INDIA J. SCALF Rites for Mrs. India Jenkins Scalf, who died Sunday at her home, 505 Chase st, were to be held at 2 p. m. today at Beanblossom mortuary. Burial was te be in Washington Park. 4 Mrs, Scalf, who was 4§, was a Tifélong resident or: Indianapolis and fhe wife of ofville Scalf, employee of the propeller division of Curtiss-Wright Corp. She is survived by her husband; two daughters, Mrs, Betty Lou Stephens, Noblesville and Ethel Scalf, Indianapolis; two sons, Arthur and Charles Scalf; the parents, Mr. .and~ Mrs. Granville Jenkins; three sisters, Mrs, Ethel Pence, Mrs. Sue Rowe and Mrs. Florence Rightor; two brothers, Thomas Jenkins and Major Raymond P. Jenkins and one grandson, all of Indianapolis,

————

MRS. DELLA ROWLEY Services for Mrs. Della Curtis Rowley, who died Sunday at her ii riome, 1217 St. Peter st, will be held at 2 p. m.” tomorrow at’ the Bert 8. Gadd funeral home. | The Rev. M. O. Robbins, pastor lof Victory Memorial Methodist (church, will officiate and rites will be conducted By Chapter 452, Order !of Eastern star. Burial will be in | Washington Park. Mrs. Rowley was a mémber of | Victory church and of the Eastern B | Star chapter. She is survived by {her son, Pfc. Carl B. Curtis, overseas; four sisters, Mrs. Minnie Bowen, Kokomo; Mrs. Martha Tucker, Anderson; Mrs. Dora Lawrence, New Castle and Mrs. Nera Grandison, Indianapolis; two brothers, Charles N. Smith, Kokomo, and J. Ray Smith, Elkhart, and one grandchild,

MRS. LULU ALLISON

Rites. are scheduled at 9 a. m. Thursday at Moore & Kirk funeral home for Mrs. Lulu Allison, 56th st. and Shadeland ave, who died

a loved one, our HNN | funeral home offers you complete and friendly service.

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1934 W. Michigan St. BE-1934

yesterday at the home of her { daughter, Mrs. Mary Gille, 3335 | Madison . ave. Burial will be in ! Floral Park.

at work at the Packard Manufacturing Corp. will be held at 10 a. m Thursday at Blackwell funeral home,

department 25 years before his retirement two years ago. been employed at the Packard plant eight months.

539 N. Gray st; who died yesterday

Burial will be in Holy Cross. gerved with the Indianapolis fire He had

NAGOYA RAIDED BY SUPERFORTS

Japs Claim Little Damage To Aircraft Center on

Mainland.

PEARL HARBOR, Jan. 23 (U. P). ~The Tokyo radio said about 70 Sfiperfortresses from the Marianas raided the Japanese hometand airCATY Center or Nagoya Tor two hours today. A war department communique gave no details of the attack, * The Superfortresses were operating under a new commander, Maj. Gen. Curtis LeMay. The Japanese claimed “fierce interception” so interfered with the bombers that they were able to do only “slight” damage. They said nothing of any American planes shot down or damaged. Destruction of 140 Japanese aire craft and damaging of 100 more by planes of the 3d fleet Sunday (Tokyo time) on Formosa and the adjacent Sakishima and Pescadore islands meanwhile were disclosed in a Pacific fleet communique.

Report 1000 Planes

Tokyo said the carrier-based assault on the Formosa area had gone into a second day Monddy. A total of 1000 planes were reported attacking Japanese installations in the two-day period. Eighty-five of the raiders were

said. | The Japanese radio also said] American Lightning fighter planes had joined land-based bombers for the first time in attacking Formosa. Apparently from Philippines bases, | 80 Lightnings and 20 Liberators | raided southern Formosa for three | hours Sunday, Tokyo said. The report of the large-scale landbased assault was not confirmed immediately. Gen. Douglas MacArthur's communique, however, reported that patrol planes from the Philippines bombed the harbor at Takao, For=mosa, by night and- shot down an enemy float plane in the Okinawa islands by day. Carrier Planes Strike Adm. Chester W, Nimitz disclosed that carrier planes from Aam. William F. Halsey’'s 3d fleet

| Mrs. Allison, who was 62, was al J | lifelong resident of \ Indianapolis. She is survived by her husband, Marshall Allison; four daughters, Mrs. Virginia -Lowe, Mrs. Ruth Merrifield, Mrs. Mary N. Gille and Mrs. Helen Schmidt; four sons, | Robert, James, William and Leo Allison, and 28 grandchildren, all of Indianapolis.

JOHN A. BONNET Services for John A. Bonnet, 2185 N. Harding st., who died yesterday, will be held tomorrow in the Henry Puneral Home, Monon, Ind. Mr. Bonnet, age 72, was a retired gngineer of the Monon railroad.

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also inflicted heavy damage in Ye | Formosa area Sunday. Incomplete reports sald at oust two large ships, docks and the industrial . area were set afire at Takao, Japanese naval base on the southwest coast of Formosa. “Considerable damage” was Inflicted on shipping at Keelung, Toshien and Nan Wan harbors on Formosa, at Mako in the Pescadores and in the Sakishima islands. rty-three enemy planes were shot down in aerial combat, 97 were destroyed on the ground and approximately 100 more were damaged in attacks on Formosa airdromes. American aircraft losses were rel atively light the communique said. It ‘acknowledged, though, a “major” American ship—possibly a battle ship or an aircraft carrier—had been damaged.

Police Probing Snowball Death

NEW YORK, Jan. 23 (U. P.) — Brooklyn police today investigated the spowball death of~7- | year-old Rudyard Poucher, son of W. Rudyard Poucher, sales manager of the Celanese Corp. of America. Returning home from school yesterday, the boy told his mother he had been struck on the back of the head by an icy snowball and had fallen, hitting his forehead on a tree, i He died while a police emergency squad administered oxygen and a physiclan worked over him,

State Deaths

EVANSVILLE~Clyde Gunter. Survivors: Son, Welborn Gunter; brothers, Ulric and Eswald Gunter; sister, Mrs. W, .G. Fox. ap ilia Gro ninger, 3. Burvivors: Parand Mrs. Edward Groeninger;

Bro ers, ‘David and Ronald; sister, Betty; grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Adam Knapp. Mrs. Lula Benninghofen, 65. Survivors: Sons, Charles, Pred and Albert; daughters, Mrs, William Wolf and Mrs, Edwin Ashby, sisters, Mrs, Gus Krach, Mrs. Dick Schee y and Mrs. Lizzie McCullum Mrs. Eda Habbe, = Sister, Miss Josephine Habb Mrs, Mary C. Stofieth, 75. Burvivors: Sons, Sylvester, Arthur and Jerome; daughters, Mrs. Cecelia Spillman and Mes. Inna Pleitien brother,’ Jo n J, rs. Clar Am Blancet, Survivors: Bessie Wotih; hrother,

Survivors:

Fit Bi

ey. oh Kissel, 75, Survivors: Wife, ,Margaret; brothers, Anton, Frank and Mike. JONESBORO--Thomas 8. McKee, 68, Survives: Wife, Pearl; sons, Clarence, Perry, Russell; brothers, Oliver, EdWar wi liam; sisters, Mrs. Lina Jones, rs. Susan Crum mp, and Mrs, Cordelia Berkshire, MARION—8, Dallas McClain, Survive ors: ‘Wife, Nellie, sister, Mrs. Eva Carey. MONTICELLO--Evea Judd, 56. Survivor: Father, George Jui Theodore Jacob W: ht, 87. Survivors: Wife, Mrs. Laura Wr pts daughters, Mrs. Mildred Suton and , Ellen Deardorft; i John Wrigh SEYMOUR—Mrs. Anna Bell Durham, 78. Survivors: Son, Harry Waterbury; daughters, Mrs. Opal. Rush and Mrs. Esther

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SLAIN BY GANGSTERS

MINEAPOLIS, Jan. 23 (U, P.).— Police today held Miss Pearl von| Wald, 34, as a material witness in| the gang slaying of Arthur Kasher{man, 437 publisher of the Public] | Press, who was shot to death last | night as he prepared to enter his| automobile. : wy Kasherman, an ex-convict who! was given a five-year sentence for | extortion in 1937, was ambushed by | gunmen as he checked the tires on | his car. Miss Von Wald was not injured. She told police Kashman apparently | recognized his assailants and called one of them my name, but she was|

unable to recall it. : Miss Van Wald said the car, ap-|

parently containnig two men, drove the other side.

up just as Kasherman was checking | his tires. He turned toward them

and_screamed; 3 *“Don't shoot ———, > for God's sake| don't shoot.”

all.

|__ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES”

MINNEAPOLIS. EDITOR

8

oe

2 Rites Tomorrow :

‘SCHUCHMAN RITES ARE SET To

| Rites for Benjamin Schuchman, | 3448 Capitol ave.,, who died yester- | | day in Methodist hospital, will be:

oped at 10 a, m, tomorrow at Aaron-]

Services for Mrs, Anna F. Gasper, 1753 S. Talbot st., will be held at 8:30 a. m. tomorrow in her home and at 9 o'clock in Sacred Heart Catholic church, A native

of Germany, Mrs. Gasper died

She was 76.

Saturday.

He was running |along the street when another shot | | struck him, killing him instantly.”

{Ruben funeral home. Burial willbe {in Azras Achaim cemetery. !

Mr. Schuchman, who was 42, was {foreman of the Fred Schuchman | | Scrap. Iron Co. He was a native | | of Russia and came to Indianapolis | {from New York four years ago. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. | | Pearl Schuchman; a son, Pvt. Her- | {man “Schuchman, Ft. Harrison; a | daughter, Miss Gertrude Schuchman, Indianapolis; his mother, Mrs. {Sarah Silverman, Newark, N. J, and | two brothers Fred and Alex Schuch-| man, Indianapolis.

| {GEORGE S. BAKER

George S. Baker, 3312 N. Illinois | st., died today in St. Vincent's hos- | pital. His body was taken to Rush- | { ville, |

Grafton A'Doty -*'¥

Grafton A. Doty, shippin®® clerk for Link-Belt Co, died last night | at his home, 1714 Winton ave, Speedway City. He was. 54. Mr. Doty, a native of Johnson |

county, had been employed by Link- |

Belt Co. 18 years and "had resided in Speedway City nine years, He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Elizabeth Doty; - a son, Thomas Grafton Doty, Speedway City; three stepdaughters, Miss Mary, Theresa

“Kasherman’ s Public Press, WHICH ~ Ai employee of the Severin Hotel; Burks aha Miss—Gertrude—M

| was violently critical of ‘Mayor Mar= he was 68. - The killers fired seven shots in|vin L. Kline's administration, apThe first shot wounded Kash-|peared at varying intervals.

Survivors are a son, Wallace, a|

The navy instructor at Purdue univer-|ton, D. C.;

Burke, both of Speedway City, and Mrs. Stanley * Harwood, Washing« two brothers, Martin

erman, but he climbed into his car, | last edition’ was published in De- sity, and three brothers. One broth«|Doty, Morgantown, and Anthony across Miss Von Wald’s lap and out! cember. v

ler, Sidney, 1s mayor of New Castle,

Doty, Glenns- Valley, and two sis

ENELERS 0 PARLEY TOMORF

Hooster jewelers will attend wartime conference of the formed 24-Karat club of Indiana tos morrow and Thursday in the Antlers hotel, Registration will open at moon. with the first session meeting at’ 1:30 p. m. under the direction of B.%

“10. Little, Auburn, temporary chair-

man, He will speak on club objec-

“| tives.

Officers will be “elected tomorrow afternoon. Session speakers include Jack Montgomery, secretary-treasurer M. A. Mead Co.; C. J. Dexter, federal veterans rehabilitation administra{tion; Roy John, Associated Retailers {of Indiana; H. G. McComb, state | director, war production training division; Elliott French, war manpower commission, and Kenneth Kunkle, state OPA office, Humorist Barton Rees Pogue will speak at the firmer tomorrow night.

ters, Mrs, Katherine Sachs and Mrs. Mary Dooley... both._of. Services will be conducted by the Rev. R. C. Windhorst at 10 a. m. Thursday in the Voigt mortuary, koro 8. Meridian st., with burial in

Crown Hill,

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