Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 March 1945 — Page 14
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RITES ARRANGED
Mother-in-Law of Principal A Lifelong Resident “0f Indianapolis.
Rites will be held at 2 p. m morrow at Flanner & {mortuary for Mrs. Lavinia L. Maple lifelong. resident of Indianapolis! 80th st. and College ave be in Crown Hill Mrs. Maple, who was 64 mother-in-law of Clarence E. Jack-| principal of school 69
| |
[was employed by Fairbanks-Morse all of Indianapolis.
to-
Son,
vived by a daughter. Mrs. “Jack- | son; and a grafdson, Stephen Ed- dianapolis, ward Jackson, Indianapolis. |
8
MARTHA WARD | { Rites will be held at 2 p {morrow at Mrs. Martha Ward, a
m
resident
Indianapolis 20 years. who died yes-|P Park
terday at her home, 1015 Carrollton] ave. Burial will be in Carmel, | Mrs. Ward, who was 76, was the | widow of William J. Ward. She was la member of the Degree of Poca{hontas. | She Mrs
ived by a daughter Gail Bond;-a- granddaughter
1S sur
and a grandson, T Bond, serving in India,
Sgt. Robert
EVA G. GREGORY |
Services will he conducted at 2 p. m. tomorrow at Westbrook Church of the Nazarene for Mrs Eva Gwenddlan Gregory, who died Mrs. Gregory, who was 46, the wife of Garner ‘Gregory. Other | survivors | include two sisters, Mrs.! Jennie Preston, Indianapolis, and Mrs. Elsie DeWeese, and a brother, Charles W. Bennett, both of An-
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LAVINIA MAPLE |
{ Greenfield, who died Wednesday at to- | LOng hospital, will be held at 2
Jordan funeral home for!P-: 0 of |home in Greenfield. Burial will be
was a carpenter and a member of Red Men's lodge at Greenfield.
daughters, and Mrs. Donald Clark, Indianapolis
Mildred Bond, both of Indianapolis. pj ANCHE McCARTER Morion, Ind \ i . terday in o!Flanner &
The Rev. R. B. McCarthy will officiate
vesterday at her home in Monrovia.|”
Services for Harry A. Mathias ox sa: 2831 Brookside pkwy., Will Be at 3:30 P. M. Tomorrow of Gosport and had been in
Rites are scheduled at 3:30 p. m.| tomorrow at Flanner & Buchanan mortuary. for Harry A. Mathias, a resident of Indianapolis for 37 years. | He died~yesteifday at his home, 5348 | College ave. Burial will be in Crown Hill, ‘ 4 Mr. Mathias, who was 75, formerly | Co For
10 years he operated a
Buchanan service station at the corner of 25th [OTIS
st. and ‘Keystone ave,
{ He was a member of Broadway of the Spicer & Hancock Cement | Burial will Methodist church, of which his wife | Block 11s secretary; Logan Masonic lodge | Co., Gosport, who died Tuesday,
was the and Modern Woodmen of America.
‘Surviving are his wife and two
were held yesterday at Gosport.
Ser
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ;
[thé home of a daughter, Mrs. Rob- |
[South dr. He was a lifelong resi-
{business there more than 20 years. the wife of William Harris, who was} He is survived by his wife, Hat-|
employed several years by Flanner|tie; three other daughters, Mildred | & Buchanan mortuary. She was a and Kathy Spicer, both of Indian- | member of the Christian-church atiapolis, and Irmajean Spicer, GosEdinburgh : |port; a son, Harold, DePauw uniSurviving are her husband; a son, | versity; a brother, Arthur, Spencer; Walter, and two-sisters,, Mrs. Mary his mothér, Mrs. Cynthia Spicer, Schoen and Miss Harriett Weant, Gosport, and fou grandchildren.
R. SPICER | zy IEA 1%] ‘Rites for Otis R. Spicer; president Watch Repairing
10-DAY SERVICE!
CAA AN Fis
and Vault Manufacturing|
Mr. Spicer, who was 60, died at
She is!grandchildren, Mrs. Harry Juday Jr. |=
ind Marjorie Mathias, all of In-
ALPHONSE C. RUFFNER . Rites for Alphonse C.. RufIner,
m. tomorrow at Layman funeral
Greenfield most of He
A resident of 1s life. Mr. Ruflner was 173
Surviving are his wife, Mary; two Mrs. Ray McBee, Acton,
ind four grandchildren.
Services for Mrs, Blanche McCarter. 1119 W. 34th st, who died yesMethodist hospital, will 2 tomorrow in
be held: at 2 p. m, mortuary.”
Buchanan
tional will be held afternoon -in. the Baptist},
Mentone with bunali
services
there A resident —of — Indianapolis 20 years, Mrs. McCarter was a member of Thirty-First Street Baptist wurch and North Park chapter of E. S. She was 61. Surviving are her husband, Fred, and two Mrs. J. G Thorstenson, Paxton, Ill., and Mrs. Eric Sonnich, Trenton, -Mo.
ct 0
daughters,
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Services will be held at 2 p. m.
tomorrow at South Side Church of the Nazarene for Mrs. Trula Reba Frost, 2115. Barth ave, who died yesterday at. St. Francis hospital. Mrs. Frost, who was 34, had lived in Indianapolis 27 years and was a member of the South Side church. | She. is survived by her husband; | Jesse: a son, Jesse Ronald; her! parents, Mr. and Mrs. John*T. Shel- | by; two sisters, Mrs. Dorothy Miller | and Mrs. Blanche Hutson, and a brother, Ravmond Shelby, all of Indianapealis.
SUSAN BELL HARRIS Services for Mrs, Susan Bell Harris, who died vesterday at her home, 731 E. 11th st, will be held at 10:30 a. m. tomorrgw-.at Flanner & Buchanan mortuary, Burial will be in" Crown Hill, ’ A resident of Indianapolis 50 vears,- Mrs. Harri was 77. She was
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MAIL — thousands of tons of it — crosses the country every day. To the railroads has gone the assignment of carrying the vast majority of it. And the very fact that most of us take consistent “on-time” railway mail delivery for granted, is a tribute to the efficiency withwhich this tremendousjob is being done. The greatest single step toward today’s smooth handling of mail was the introduction of the first railroad car ‘equipped for sorting mail in transit. It was stubby and funny looking, that little car ‘which went into service for the Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad (now a part of the Burlington) back in 1862. But it embodied the basic idea under which today’s spacious Railway Post Office cars operate—the sorting of mail enroute.
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Since its early days, the Burlington kas been a major mail-carrying railroad. Back in'1884, on one day’s notice, it was assigned the job of operating a mail train to carry the transcontinental mail between Chicago and the Missouri River—has handled it ever since, without interruptin. ‘Today, its fleet of ‘mail trains is busier than ever before. (One of them headed Westward from Chicago last fall, carrying 97 cars of mail and Christmas packages for men and women overseas.) Its passenger trains, too, including the famous Zephyrs, are equipped with the most modern R. P. O. cars in which an amazing amount of mail is sorted as it is speeded toward a myriad of destinations. During these times when mail means. so much to so many, the Burlington is especially conscious of its responsibility—to keep it moving swiftly and surely.
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