Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 January 1948 — Page 5
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Harold J. Koch Harold J. Koch, 5431 N. Penn-
Vincent's Hospital. He was 53. A lifelong resident of Indian: apolis, Mr, Koch was part owner and manager of the John Koch Furniture Co. He was a member of the New
Rite; Shrine; charter member of the Indianapolis Athletic Club, and was a director of the FounHe was a veteran of World War I
{| ington Post, American Legion. Services will be held Thursday at 3 p. m. in the Flanner & Bu§i chanan mortuary. Burial will be
| beth: two sisters, the Misses MarSaree and Mary Koch, and two
E. F. McGrath fo Be Buried Thursday
Funeral services for Edward F.
McGrath, -806--Buchanan-8t.; will}
be held at 8:30 a. m. Thursday in Blackwell funeral home, followed by a requiem high mass in St. ‘| Patrick’s Catholic Church. Burial will be in Holy Cross Cemetery. He was 50. A lifelong resident of Indian- | apolis, Mr. McGrath died Sun,day in St. Vincent's Hospital. He ‘was a member of St. Patrick's | Church, its Holy Name Society, “Knights of Columbus and Na‘tional Association of Letter Carriers, - He had retired as a mail car{rier two years ago. Mr, McGrath is survived by four sisters, Mrs. Eleanor Connor, Mrs. Genevieve Koehler and Miss Bernice McGrath, all of Indianapolis, and Sister Marcella Marie, 8t. Mary-of-the-Woods, Terre Haute, and a brother, John McGrath, Indianapolis.
Mrs. W. J. Breidenbach
Services for Mrs. Alta Breidenbach, R. R. 20, Box 409, who died yesterday in 8t. Francis Hospital, will be held Thursday at 1:30 p. m. in Evansville. Burial will be in Evansville. She was 50. Born in Evansville, she had Jets 94 Intranapolis esident, 23
Evansville; three brothers, Charles and Earl Otto, Evansville, and | George Otto, Indianapolis, and |twe Erandciiaren,
Mrs. Edward Yom
QUITS SOCIAL WHIRL — ‘Evangeline de Castro, 17, Miss Philippines of 1947, has announced that she would enter a convent, Reason: She was oi "bored" with social life’
Charles Barker Rites Tomorrow
Lokal Resident For Fifty Years
Services for Charles Barker, 3222 W, 10th St, who died Sunday in Sunnyside Sanitarium, will be held tomorrow at 10a. m. in the Dorsey funeral home. Burfal will be in Washington Park. A native of Fillmore, Mr. Barker, who was 73, had been a resident of Indianapolis 50 years. He had been a maintenance man at the Allison Furniture Store the last five years, Survivors are his four daughters, Mrs. Josephine Lange, Mire
olis, and Mrs, Shirley Hadley, Martinsville; his son, Cecil -|ker, Indianapolis; a sister, Mrs. Daisy Jarvis, Martinsville, and three brothers, Walter and James Barker, Indianapolis, and John Barker, Martinsville, - ;
Mrs. Agues Yott; 1106 Newman St., died yesterday in St. Francis Hospital. She was 74. An Indianapolis resident for 72 ‘years, Mrs. Yott was a native of Columbus, O, She was a memoer of the Roly Cross Catholic Church.
Funeral services will be held at 8:30 a. m. Thursday in Grinsteiner's funeral home, followed by requiem high mass at'9 a. m. in Holy Cross Catholic Church. Burial will be in St. Joseph Ceme-
tery. Mrs. Yott is survived by her husband, Edward J. Yott; a daughter, Miss Mary Madeline Yott; a son, Thomas E. Yott; a grandson and a niece -and neph~+ ew, all of Indianapolis.
James McGowan Services for James M. McGow- | om an, 901 Locke St, Apt. 567, who died Saturday in his’ home, will} be held tomorrow at-1 p. m. in| the Emmanuel Baptist Church: Burial will be in Crown Hill. Mr. McGowan, who was 37, was born in Bedford County, Tenn. and had livéd in Indianapolis 22 |years. He had been a walter at the Columbia Club six years, Survivors are his wife, Mrs.
mother, Mrs. Henrietta McGowan; two sisters, Mrs. Annje Robinson and Mrs. Sadie Randolph, |
George, Gowan, all of Indianapolis. Luke Foley
Services for Luke Foley, 930 Fayette St, will be held at 10
‘la. m. tomorrow in Jacobs Broth-} ° Burial will |}
ers West Side Chapel. be in New Crown Cemetery. Mr. Foley, who was 41, died Thursday in General Hospital. He was a native of Anderson and was an employee of the Meridian Street Garage, Mr. Foley ‘has _no Immediate
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Mrs. E. A. Seinkmun
. Brinkman, who diéd yesterday in her home, 2316 Stuart St., will be
som Cemetery; ‘She was 81,
Moore chapel.
mortuaries northeast Burial will be in ApderBorn iN Marion County 60 years. She: “was a member of the German Lutheran Church in Peppertowh. Survivors are her two sons; Al-| "pert H. and Harry L. Brinkman, |
Indianapolis; two brothers, Fred!
Hannebaum, ‘Culver, Kas. and
{Charles Hannebaum, Peppertown; 1 two sisters, Mrs
Mrs. Mary Sherwood, ! Clarksburg, and Mrs. Anna|
Lewis, Metamora; four grandchil- | great-grandchil- | |
dren and, nine dren.
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Mar's C Civilization F Higher | Than Earth's, Savant Thinks
; Study of Canals Leads fo Conclusion oe “That Martians - Have Advanced Culture
PAUL F. ELLIS, United Press Science Write expert who
in his theory
No Blighted Areas . In contrast to Earth, he said, Mars apparently has no areas where certain peoples suffer from
pelieves that Mars may have one government-—and that this government may have been in existence for 1000 years. Dr. Randolph said he believed the “strips of vegetation” on Mars followed the laying down of railroads, along which the Marti-. ans settled. The Symmetrical design, indicates, he said; that the
flight would lake about six
lieves that men some he believes that life culture than that on Earth
on new studies of the so-called = have been observed on the surface of Mars.
these first invaders would have to build another rocket ship on Mars to make the return flight. He estimates that a one-way
months. Such a rocket ship, he said, first would have to circle the Earth as a satellite, then move. through space until it reached the orbit of Mars. There again, he said, the rocket, would have to circle Mars as a satellite,
Believe Martians Visitors “On the first trip,” he said, “the main rocket ship might have to land an exploratory party of men to make a check on ground conditions.” Dr. Randolph believes that a colony of Martians may have landed on Earth some 1000 years ago. He said he based this theory on the legends of strange men,
railroads may have been built by private enterprise, but that they]
were under direction of a single |
planetary government. Editor of Journal Dr. Randolph is editor of the] Journal of the American Rocket! Society and has written numerous articles on the possibility of flying a space ship to Mars. He also is prefessor of mechanical engineering at Pratt Institute, Brooklyn. Previously, he has speculated that a colony of Earthmen could be landed on the planet, but ‘that
such as the Brownies and Leprechauns, of Irish folklore. “If such a colony of Martians {landed here,” he said, “they died off in time. They were unable to build a ship for the return to Mars.” This failure, he said, could be because of the difference in the! gravitation pull of Mars and] Earth. The Mars men, he be- | lieves, would not have had the
strength to work against the| +
Earth's gravitation. The pull on Mars, he said, is only 38- 100ths| of that of Earth,
»
A KEYES BEECH imes Foreign Correspe TOKYO. Jan.
overhauling. — - Holiday-loving Japanese have come forward with ideas for tossing out some of the 12 national holidays and adding some new ones more in keeping with the times. One proposal is that Japan have a Mother's Day just like in “America. The Japanese aren't] sure when Mother's Day should be, but they think it’s a good idea to have one. Bygones Be Bygones A suggestion that Aug. 15 be set aside as Surrender Day, or something like that, was quickly dropped on. the ground that by-
Ta iapan’ Bilis holiday “calendar is getting an|
-pothing in Japan except to a com-
signing of the peace treaty be made a national holiday. No one to predict the day. Although Christmas means
paratively few. Japanese: Christians, it is looked upon favorably as a national holiday. The reasoning is that any holiday good enough for the winners is good enough for ' Japan, - Observe New Year's of what.
tinue Japan's biggest celebration. This year, as is customary, all Japanese took off the first six days of the new year. Nearly all Japanese holidays are given an -emperor-worship twist, whichis why occupation
to
Calendar in-Japan- = To Receive Overhauling
Regardless. changes. are made, New Year's will con-
Since its founding in 1881, Flanner § Buchanan has invited the people of this community to offer suggestions for the betterment of its service. Your advice and our desire to give the best _ always— has made this Mortuary one of the leaders in the country. sung JAB we. BlAdOR 0 LOBE vr pei
that same policy.
FLANNER
CRT
BUCHANAN
Georgia Pauline McGowan; his}.
Services for Mrs, Elizabeth A.
held Thursday at 10 a. m. in the!
" Brinkman had been a resident of
RE,
authorities look with favor on a change. However,
i; 4 eZ: Lae
FALL CREEK AT ME i NEY.
gones should be bygones. Besides, it would conflict with the Newsbhoy's Holiday, ‘which also falls on Aug. 15. 1 Still another proposal-—and one that reflects a good deal of hopefulness—is that the day of the |"
Japanese favor : peror Hirohito's birthday, April 29, as a national hol :
Copyr hl? by The Indiana 1 Tas 0 icago Dally “News, ine }
almost Em-
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