Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 May 1946 — Page 4
viii of {of the New York“social register,
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TES SET FOR | AW ERCHNER -
Former - NYC Claim Agent Dies at Age of 56,
Services will be held at 10 a. m. tomorrow in Hisey & Titus mortuary for Arthur W. Kerchner, retired district claim agent for the New York Central railroad.- Burial will be in Greenbush cemetery at Lafayette. Mr, Kerchner died yesterday in his home, 3610 Fall Creek blvd. He was 56. - A native of Lafayette, Mr. Kerchner came here from Chicago. He was employed by the railroad 37
Requiem high mass for V. L. Dugan, active in Defnocratic ‘politics for many years, will be sung at 11 a. m, tomorrow in St. Patrick's Catholic: church, Burial will be in Holy Cross. | Mr, Dugan, who was 68, died yesterday in his home, 734 Sanders st. He ‘was born in Hendricks county, but had lived here most of his life. Formerly employed by the Beech Grove shops of the New York Central railroad, he later was bailiff in superior court 1, and superintendent of the city asphalt plant. For 30 years he was a precinct committeeman of the ninth and 30th wards. Mr, Dugan was & member of St. Patrick's church and the
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
'V.L Dugan Rites ee Requiem at St. Patrick's
Holy Name society,
years until his retirement last| Survivors are his wife, Emma; a October. He was a member of Tabernacle Presbyterian church, the Masonic lodge and the Exchange club. Survivors are his wife, Lola; two sons, Charles and Arthur Kerchner, both of Chicago and three grandchildren,
and two sisters, Mrs. Catherine Conner and Mrs, Hlizabeth O'Gara, all of Indianapolis.’ CHARLES A, BOND Services for Charles A. Bond, for-| merly a salesman for the Randall| Feed store, will be held at 1 p. m. tomorrow in Flanner & Buchanan | mortuary. Burial] will be in Wash-| ington Park. { Mr, Bond died yesterday in his | home, 1026 College ave, after an illness of a year. He was 71. Survivors are his wife, Ruth; a Mr. Craig lived here 24 years, son, Lawrence Bond; a half-sister, | moving to Pasadena in 1915. | Mrs, Flora Andrews of Wichita, | Survivors are his wife, Barbara, | Kas, and a grandchild. a son, Charles H. Craig, and a| { daughter, Miss Kelton E. Craig, MRS. STATIRA ARMSTRONG all of Pasadena. | Services will be held at 3 p. m.!
CHARLES I. CRAIG Charles I. Craig, former Indianapolis insurance man, died recently at Pasadena, Oal,, according to word received by friends here. He was 50.
|
New Iron Lung Stops Patient's Breathing for8to | | Hours
By Science Service ~ swift ascent and descent from high
PHILADELPHIA, May 17.— A | altitude. A sponge rubber cover new kind of iron lung, which actu- | over the ears or a radio micro-
ally stops the breathing for hours phone lessens this feeling and in [at a time, has restored health to! 'all cases the patients become ob-' [six out of 12 patients with advanced | (livious to it, Vasoconstricting | tuberculosis of both lungs, Dr, Al- nasal spray helps relieve the sinus {van’ L., -Barach of Columbia uni- | congestion. | versity College of Physicians and; The effect of stopping weeathing | | Surgechs reported to the American jon the central nervus system is) | college of physicians here, of considerable interest, Dr, Ba- | The patients stop breathing for rach pointed out. The patients the eight to eleven hours they lie for hours without moving their spend daily in the new apparatus. hands or changing position. The [No movement of the ribs or dia-|desire to smoke disappears even in phragm can be detected by X- ray | those used to smoking two packs] pictures. The patients lie relaxed of cigarettes daily. | without moving and for the most |
part are not even bored though | some use the radio for amusement. SALES UP 22% IN
Air is wafted in and out of their sick lungs by the apparatus which, through a special device involving a collar around the neck equalizes the pressure on both sides of the chest ,wall as well as the upper and lower surface of the dia-
| phragm. vear as compared with 1845, a deLungs Rest Completely partment ‘of commerce survey of : This pressure-equalizing feature|larger retail establishments indiis the chief difference between the!cated yesterday. new apparatus and the iron lung | A check of 872 retail stores reused for polio victims. Because the | vealed sales gains of 17 per cent pressure is equalized, the lungs are| | during March over the figure recompletely at Yest and cavities in |ported for February, f them heal. March sales for 19 department | Patients who were not helped by storés were two per cent higher other methods of treatment re-|than in March, 1945, figures comcovered after one to three courses piled by the bureau of census of of the non-breathing treatment. the commerce department indi-
HOOSIER STORES
WASHINGTON, May 16 (U. P.) — {The dollar volume of sales in In- | | diana increased by 22 per cent dur- | ing the first three months of the
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| Two of the recovered patignts have cated. {been well and at work for four| Indiana cities recording sales years. A single course of treat-|RAains included Gary, 23 per cent; ment takes three to four months| Evansville 22, Terre Haute and during which the patient spends Lafayette, 15, Fort Wayne seven, eight to eleven hours every day in and Indianapolis, four. the apparatus. ——————————————— Learn Not to Breathe LATE START, GOOD FINISH The patients have to learn how| XANKAKEE, I. (U. P).—Frank not to breathe. They may’ learn | Curran was 23 years old when he’ this in a few hours but some take! started high school in 1932. Two two or three days. ' At first their and a half years later he was gradsinuses ‘and ears bother them. The | uated and went to Chicago to study effect of the oscillating pressure | law, Today he is assistant state's on the ear drum is like that of! 'attorney of Kankakee county.
daughter, Miss Rosemary E. Dugan, |}.
iA Heer ras Pert rth ee Cement ie
tomorrow in Moore Mortuaries Pegoe chapel for Mrs. Statiré Armstrong, 517 N. Linwood ave. Burial will be in Crown Hill." Mrs. Armstrong, a resident here for 30 years, died Wednesday at Terre Haute. She was a member of Linwood Christian church and Queen Esther. chapter, O, E. 8. . Survivors, are a sister, Mrs. Martha Howk of Terre Haute, and a niece, Mrs, Isabel Stanger of Indianapolis.
MRS. MARY KASSENBROCK
‘Requiem high mass will be sung in St.
Ann's Catholic church at 9.4
here«for 30 years. ‘Burial ‘will fol. low in Holy Cross cemetery, Born in Louisville, Ky., Mrs. Kassenbrock was 75 when she died ednesday in her. home, 1444 8S. Norfolk st. She was a member of St. Ann's church and was the wife of the late Henry Kassenbrock. Survivors include four daughters, Mrs. Gertrude Crail, Mrs. Mayme Brauer, Mrs. Lorraine Schwert and Mrs. Dorothea Nagel, all .of Indianapolis; three sons, Paul and Norman = Kassenbrock, Indianapolis,
and John Kassenbrock, Evansville;
22 grandchildren and eight gygatgrandchildren,
MRS. CLARA EDMONDSON
employee of L. 8. Ayres & Co. for 24 years, died yesterday in the home of a son, Raymond Edmondson, 1603 Hoyt ave. She was 64. She had lived in *Indianapolis most of her life and was an assistant buyer for Ayres. She was a member of the Broadway Baptist church and Harold Megrew auxillary, United Spanish war veterans, Survivors besides her son are her husband, Earl ‘Edmondson; . two other sons, George Edmondson and Charles Edmondson: a daughter, LMrd, Mary Coryell, and four grandchildren, all of Indianapolis. Services will be held at 1:30 p. m.
‘
__ FRIDAY, MAY 17, 1946 |
RITES MONDAY FOR ° ~~ MRS. JESSIE DAVIS
Services are scheduled at 1:30 Pp. m. Monday in Moore Mortuaries Ben Davis chapel for Mrs, Jessie
Davis, 5631 W. Morris st. Burial
will be in Crown Hill, Mrs. Davis died yesterday in City hospital. She was 72. A native of Selma, Ala. she had lived here six years and was a member of Lynhurst Baptist church and Bridgeport chapter 513, O. E. 8. Survivors are four daughters, Mrs. W. R. Robison, Mrs. Mary Stout and Miss Laura M. Davis, all of Indianapolis, and Mrs. H. W. Reasner of Anderson; a brother, Charley Schray of Louisville, Ky., 11 grand-
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