Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 June 1945 — Page 10
THE ‘INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
- TUESDAY, JUNE 26, 1045
PAGE 10 __ : Dog Travels 2300 Miles “Across Nation to Find Home
By ELDON ROARK The saddened family, relirning
Memphis Press-Scimitar Staff Writer [to Knoxville, made their home at a MEMPHIS, June 26.—In nearby new address. One day last March, Parkin, Ark, lives Bosco—a dog njys Flanigan passed her former) with®a Jove of home that drove him ‘apartment. over mountains, across deserts.|c.t Bosco. : through swamps from California t0| prs, Flanigan threw Her arms Tennessee. It 100k him Seven ,.oynd him. Bosco; a mere shell of months to travel 2300 miles. 'his former self, was as happy as| Bosco, a Cross . between a toy ‘could be. collie and a spitz, belongs to Mrs. | © From neighbors, Mrs. Flanigan 1 who shipped him [learned the. dog had been at her S.C. Fianigan, ° pp old home about two months. She] from Knoxville, where she lived a estimated it had taken him seven the time, to Glendale, Cal, when months to find his way back. she went West with her three chil-| One neighbor, recognizing Bosco, dren for & visit last June. Bosco had been feeding him. He said} chewed through his crate in an|Bosco was skinny, sore and dirty express car and escaped after his when he arrived. He still looked | __ train reached Los Angeles. The ex- mighty thin to his owner. press company advertised for him| Not knowing Mrs. Flanigan's new and offered rewards. No Bosco. address, the neighbor had not com- | municated with her, PAUL E. That night Bosco went to his new
DOR S i Y nn in Parkin. He lay down
against a wall and fell asleep with of funerals |all four legs in the air. That had Oistinction Without een a peculiarity of his. €xtravagance —
gv Bs Mod W. C. STEINMEYER ier DIES IN AUTO CRASH
3925 E. New Jor MED H ® ATE D | Walter C. Steinmeyer, 1850 Hollo- |
IRvington 1173 7 | way ave. instructor inspector with POWDER!
the fire prevention section, headSs Ss d, Ft. FINER — LIGHTER — UNLIKE | fae” SS orman ANY OTHER YOU EVER TRIED! |2n automobile Accident yesterday. | H
In front of he building
|
was killed instantly in e was 47.
Fry (his fragrant, mildly medicated The accident occurred near Lonwder after sho . i? offending; on sunburn, hated | don, O., while Mr. Steltmeyer was "skin, after shaving, or minor rash-— | returning to. Ft. ‘Hayes after spendsoothes, promptly helps relieveirritation. | ing the week-end with his family Fine for Baby, tool Buy finer, better, |in Indianapolis. Mr. Steinmeyer was a regular Cuti ou ra A i Purpose Takum! | Mr on the Indianapolis fire | department from 1921 until his re-| |tirement for disability on June 26, 1944. “He was a member of Hillside Christian church and the Indiana State Association of Fire Fighters. Services will be held at 2 p. m. { Thursday in* the Wald funeral
{the Metropolitan company 15 years. |
| Dies i in California Dean of Girls at Manual, i Specialist in French,
Mrs. Ruth Hendrickson Shull, | dean of girls at Manual high school
land an Indianapolis teacher for {more than 25 years, died Sunday in |Los Angeles, Cal. She was 56. Mrs. Shull, who joined the Manual faculty in 1919, had been in ill {health and was on leave of absence for the last year. Until a week ago § she had been in Arizona and was lin Los Angeles visiting her cousin at-the time of her death. : | Since 1931 she had been dean of girls at Manual and [also was direc{tor of girls’ activities. She was |sponsor of the Masoma club, girls’ honorary organization, and a director of the Girls’ League of Manual. Stewart, and three Studied in France Mary Carlton, Mrs. Born in Indianapolis, she the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. cinnati, O, Henny C. Hendrickson. She was| duated from school 45 and]
Mrs. Estella Reilly, former Indianapolis resident, died Saturday in San Francisco, Cal, where she had lived for nine years. She was the widow of John J. Reilly, co-founder of the Fieber & Reilly real estate firm.
SET RITES FOR
Mrs. Ruth Shull
Sally Mitchell
| MRS. MABLE B, B. TAYLOR Rites for Mrs. Mable B. Taylor
| year, she received her | {bachelor of arts degree from But- | Smith will -officiate. |ler university. ? in Crown Hill, Mrs, Shull took extra studies 3 Mrs. Taylor, who was 72, died yesChicago university, Columbia, uni- | terday in her home. She had lived versity, and studied in Grenoble, | in Indianapolis 40- years and was a France, in 1921. She received her | ember of the Central Avenue master of arts degree from Butler. Methodist church Before joining the Manual fac- Survivors are her brother, Gus A. Metropolitan Life Insurance” Co. |ulty, the dean of girls taught at | Brooks. Mayslick, Ky., and her siswill be at 2p. m. Thursday in Moore | Mellott, her first assignment, and |; , Mrs. Carrie Warner, Lexington, ws Trvingt chapel With at Winamac and Kokomo. we . Moriuaries Tvinglon pe In 1922 she toured Europe andj Dr. John 8. Albert officiating. {spent the summer of 1933 in Paris. | Burial will be in Crown Hill In 1934 and 1936 she went on Mr.. Smith, who was 53, died yes-|cruises in the Mediterranean and : : ' ; to Alaska. | . Vincent's hospital. He Ee . Be Clair > A specialist In French and Eng-| ‘A resident of Marion county 33 lish, she edited “LaBelle Niver-
for the American Book Co. , jated with [aise years, he had been assocla in 1933 ‘and collaborated on Chey-
{deleur’s French-Idiom List pub|lished by McMillan Co. in 1987. i She was a member of the First | Congressional church, the Butler | University Alumni association,| {Kappa Kappa Gamma Alumnae club, "Alliance Francaise and Administrative Women in Education. | Survivors are her husband, | Homer, and =her brother, Harry
pid funeral home. Dr, F, Marion Burial will be
wiigion psa Insurance Man Lived Here 33 Years.
Services for George R. Smith, Irvington representative of the
He was a member of the Gethsemane Lutheran. church; Mystic Tie lodge 398, F. & A. M.; the Irv-| lington American Legion post and | the Scottish Rite. Surviving him are his wife, | Esther; his son, Fred G., Indianapolis; a sister, Mrs. Elizabeth S. Newton, Chicago; three brothers, Harold H., Kenneth E. and William H., all|
{home with burial in Anderson cem- | etery. The ‘Rev. Herbert Wilson, pastor of the Hillside Christian { church, will officiate. Surviving him are his wife, Hazel; | two daughters, Mrs: Jeannette Walpole and Miss Joan A. Indianapolis; a son, Coxswain Cyrus E.|
| Steinmeyer,: with the navy at Oki- |
|nawa; his parents, Mr. and Mrs, | | Fred Steinmeyer, Indianapolis; two] | sisters, Mrs. Edna McFadden. In- | | dianapolis, and Mrs. Helen White, |
hy Other MONARCH FOODS Elwood, and a granddaughter, Miss |
eee All Just As Good! Patrician K. Walpole.
of Indianapolis, and a half-brother, Hendrickson.
| Harry Shade; Indianapolis. NOBLE M. HINDS
uins SYBIL CLEAVER | Services for Noble M. Hinds, who Services will be held at 8:30 a. m. died Saturday in his home, 1813 W. | Thursday in Moore mortuaries | Morris st, were conducted yester-
| Norirees: pel sid ah 9 5. 7 In {day in the Farley funeral home. {| Northeast cha Burial was in Garla P - Ra its Catnatie meh Garland Brook cem
| for Mrs. Sybil Gilmore Cleaver, who etery in Columbus. or Mrs. Sybi Mr. Hi died Sunday in her home. She nds, who was 79, was born |
in Hinsboro, Ill, but had lived in was 49.
Indianapolis 50 years. He had . Baris will be in Holy Cross ceme- ,.., 2 employee of the Pennsyler
: vania railroad 40 years. Mrs. Cleaver was the wife of| J
strain Will Save a World of Established 33 Years
BRING IN THE ENTIRE FAMILY KNOW the Condition of Your FamWe Close Wednesday Afternoon STREET FLOOR, COR. MARKET & ILLINOIS STS. TRACTION TERMINAL BLDG.
. : Survivors are his wife, Estelle {Joseph Cleaver, 2260 N. Adams st. Mae: Wo Sons, Maswell Lic ae {She was a aie of Indianapolis] geies, Cal. and Lawr , ey land had lived all her life in Mar-|. ."" aauzh ning akland, lion county. She was a member of |, ughter, Mrs. Margaret | . {Thibo, Indianapolis; two si St. Francis DeSales church. Polis; sters, Mrs. Anna Berkley, Palmyra, and
i idés I husband | 5 BT Mrs, Kathleen | MS: Mabel Boville, Detroit, Mich. ’ and two brothers, Daniel Hinds,
King, New Albany, and Miss Louise | ! | Cleaver, Indianapolis; three sons, | Sic 2 as ca Preston Hinds, | Joseph Cleaver Jr. Pfc. Jack Lawn | ty, Colo. {and Owen Lawn, ‘all of Indianap- | | olis; her father, John E. Gilmore, J MRS, BESSIE POULOS | Indianapolis, and three sisters, Mrs. | Services for Mrs. | Harry Meyer, Mrs. Grace Knipp and {1351 N. Tuxedo st. | Miss Coral Gilmore, Indianapolis.
Bessie Poulos, will be held at {2 p. m. tomorrow in Shirley Broth-
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| s ers’ Irving Hill chapel. Burial will ‘RUFUS L PRUITT |be in Memorial Park. Services for Rufus I. Pruitt, 3305 Mrs. Poulos, who was 42, #ed W. Washington st. will be held at Sunday in her hope. Shes was 2 p. m. tomorrow in ‘the Conkle [born in Michigan City and had funeral home. Burial will be in|been a resident of Indianapolis Floral Park. | nearly 30 years. She was the wife Mr. Pruitt, who was 69, died yes- |°f Anest Poulos, proprietor of Shoe terday in City hospital. He was a [Repure and Cleaners, 45 W. Ohio st. {lifelong resident of Marion county Also surviving her are a son, | and a member of the Methodist Elias; two daughters, Mrs. William | church. Radez and Miss Constance, and | Survivors include his wife, Emma; |'WO grandchildren, all of Indiana stepdaughter, Mrs. Helen Hud- Polis. son; two grandchildren, Wilma | | Higdon and Ruth Brandenburg; a JOSEPH S. LOGSDON sister, Mrs. Jessie Duncan, New| Augusta, and two brothers, and William, Clermont,
Services were to be conducted toBud day in Dayton, O. for Joseph S. | Logsdon, former Indianapolis resi- { dent, who died Friday in his home {at Dayton. Graveside service were (to be held in Crown .Hill.
MRS. ELEANOR C. PATTERSON
Services for Mrs. Eleanor C, Patterson, widow of Oscar C. Patter-| Mr. Logsdon was born in Springson, former resident of Indianapo- field, Ky. He lived in Indianapolis lis, will be held at 2 p. m. tomor- nearly 15 vears. before moving to row at Olney, Ill, where she had Dayton in 1943. He was employed |lived for several months. Burial bY Payne & Co. at Dayton, and was [will be in Olney. a member of the Modern Woodmen | Mrs. Patterson died yesterday In |0f America. |her home. She was a native ‘of | - Surviving him are his wife, Nellie; Olney, but had lived most of her |# daughter, Mrs. HL M. Rembold, life in Indianapolis. There are no | Norfolk, Va.; two sisters, Mrs. F. H immediate survivors. | Stolte and’ Mrs. R. W. Joachim, | both of Indianapolis; .a brother, | Frank, Ventura, Cal, and one h- | grandchild.
.
Just Arrived!
RICHARD L. OGLE
Memorial services for Pfc. Ric ard L. Ogle, who died March 17 of | wounds received in Germany, will|MRS. AGNES 8, GEISENDORFF be held at 2:30 p. m. Sunday in the| Services for Mrs, Agnes S. GeisenFortville Methodist church. dorff, 642 Birch ave. will be held at Pfc. Ogle, a member of the 161st 2:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Bean- { field artillery battalion, was the son blossom Funeral Home, Burial will
with these slacks!
waistline.
sisters, Mrs. |
was and Mrs, Nina Bachert, all. of Cin- | "
oa high School a Ruane |s:3 N. Delaware: st.,, will be held oe am to R- one at 2 p. m, tomorrow in the Hisey &
Navy and brown.
T37 RELEASED AT
CAMP ATTERBURY
Thirty-seven more Indianapolis veterans were released from the army through the separation center at Camp Atterbury last weekend. Four men in the over-age bracket were discharged, four officers were placed on inactive duty and 29
veterans were released -under the
point system. Over-age soldiers were:
Sgt. Robert W. McConnell, 5447 Julian ave; 8. Sgt. Joe W. Breckey, 6008 Primrose ave, Pfc. Joe M., Ereno, 4132 Bowman ave, “and 1st Sgt. Timothy P. O’'Shanahan, 2147 Central’ ave. Officers who were released were: 1st Lt, Kenneth T. Hull, 804 N. Bolton ave; 1st Lt, Leonard Solomon, 5360 N. Pennsylvania st.; 1st Lt, Albert W, Warner, 1503 N. Pennsylvania st, and 1st Lt. Robert 8. White Jr Discharged under the point system were: 8gt. Charles O. Lisby, .» Pfc, Franklin “R. Johnston, 2854 Westbrook' ave.; Pfc. Clifton Carwell, 801 Locke st," M. Sgt. Raymond Taber, R. R. 20, Box 532; Pvi. Raymond R. Merrifleld, R. R. 4, Box 798; T. 5th Gr. James E. Wilson 1432 W. Everett st.; T. 4th Gr. Paul E. Dean, 1834 Livingston st.; th Gr. Joseph B. Cecil, 537 N. Rural and Pvt. Robert E. McWhorter, 526 N: Traub ave M. Sgt. George L., D. Van Meter, 928 N. Tuxedo st,; Pfc. Avery O, Beller, Ha Lord st.;. T. 5th Gr. Rolland C, Be ham, 845 Greer st,; T. 5th Gr. Delbert, Y Large; T. 5th Gr. Alphonse P, Stanich, 765 N. Holmes ave.; T. 5th Gr. Robert E Gannon, 2238 Pierson st.; Sgt. Dale C Heman, 4010 College ave.,, and T. 5th Gr. Harold Kyllo, 1317 Hoefgen st. Plc. James R. Goodlet, 4930 WwW, st.; Pfc. Jake H. Kindrick, 922 N. King st.; T. 5th Gr. Paul C. Gladish, R. R. 15, Box 744; T. 5th Gr. Loring E. Rein- | hardt, 4234 Evanston ave.: 8S. Sgt. Thomas Stieglitz, 3480 Hillside ave.; Sgt. George| G. Faulkner, 3309 BE. 36th st; 8. Sgt Robert E. Ott,
724 E. New York
Morris
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“lonly two of Mauldin’s cartoons and
312 E. Raymond st, and |
Mauldin Charges Gen. Patton Tried to Govern Gl Thoughts
DENVER, Colo., June 26 (U, P.).—|Patton summoned: him, Mauldin Lt. Gen. George 8. Patton; com-|said, his desk was covered with ex~ mander of the 3d army, today was|amples of Mauldin-pictured repre«
to “dictate” the thoughts and emo- “He said my cartoons were undertion of his men. mining the morale of the army, The accusations came from Bill|were destroying confidence in the Mauldin, cartoonist, considered a|command, were making soldiers un=spokesman for the American soldier. |soldierly,” Mauldin said. Mauldin was in Denver yesterday en| “He said that I was blowing off route with his wife to Los Angeles,|steam for the soldiers, that I was where he will see his 22-month-old |giving them an outlet for thei: son for the first time. emotions. He said he. did not believ Point-discharged from the army |that soldiers should have any stear two days ago, Mauldin, the creator|let off for them or have any outls of the famous “Up Front With|for their emotions.”
Mauldin” and its successor “Sweatin’ It Out,” revealed some details about| “SOCIALISM DESTROY an interview he had with Gen. Patan inte WwW ne had with en a LIBERTY’—CHURCHIL,
{ton last march in Luxembourg. Explaining that his recent dis-|. LONDON, June 26 (U. P.).—Prim¢ {charge had nothing to do with his| Minister Churchill said in a came expression of opinion, Mauldin said | paign speech for the Conservative {that Gen. Patton called him into|party today that the Labor party
headquarters and “tried to tell me|stood for a “universal total system
what I should think and what I|which would wreck personal liberty. .
i |should draw, what® GI's should| Standing hatless in the rain a think, what the American people | Crewe, first stop on the second day |should think.” of his 1000-mile campaign tour of The young artist refuted a state- [England and Scotland, he told a iment attributed to the general sev- | crowd which gathered around his leral weeks ago that he had seen |OPen automobile: “I disagree so strongly with social= When Gen. |i8m, not so much on grounds of - | property, but on grounds of liberty,
{liked neither of them.
| Pte William M. Wells, York st hav v |" set. Robert Anderson, 327 Prospect| ave a.universal total system withe {st.; 1st Sgt. Wendell R. Minks, 1232 park | Out every kind of infringement of ave, T. 5th Gr, Clifton Atwood, 923 8.| personal liberty of having everye
West st.; 8. 8gt. Eugene M., Dalzell, 1617] W, New York si, thing ruled and ordered by officials.”
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He target of a charge that he tried |sentations of -soldier life in Europe.
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of Mr. and Mrs Fortville and brother of Mrs. Carl| Mrs. Geisendorfl, who was 54, Park ave. He had died in her home yesterday. She (was the widow of Norman Geisendorfl, Survivors include three daughState Deaths [ters, Mrs. Esther Baker, Mrs. Helen - iii | Kitchen and Mrs Josephine Bell, all BAINBRIDGE--Rov H. Zenor. 39. 8ur- Of Indianapolis; three brothers, Clay Wife, Joseph ine, sons, Carl A. Stewart, Walter Stewart and George
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