Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 November 1948 — Page 9

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Local Deaths—

| son, who died Sunday in his

Washington Rites For Gen. Weir Set Arlington Burial

kersburg, W. Va. Mr. Harris,| Services for Mrs. Sanders will : ¢ A. ‘l'whose home Fg Sm be at 10 a. m. in Gospel of Peace n “| Brig. Gen. John -M. Weir, In-|had lived with 1 higudaughter for| Tabernacle there, where she Wap. sche - —- : dianapolis native who climaxed athe past 13 years. He was 83. = (& member. She lived in - : 0

ington, D. C. He was 56. thrombosis, will be held at 11:30 ington. Burial will follow.

then Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson, Gen, Weir had been one of the Army prosecutors in a German spy trial conducted behind closed doors in Washington. Practiced Law Here \ The son of formér Superior Court Judge Clarence E. Weir, and the late Mrs. Weir, he was graduated from Manual Training High School and attended Indiana University. He later was graduated from Stetson University, DeLand, Fla. From 1914 to 1917 Gen. Weir practiced law here with his father. He then entered the Army and decided to remain in service after the end of World War I, being assigned to the Judge Advocate General Dept. He sérved as an instructor in law at West Point from 1924 to

survived by his wife, Carin, and a son, John H. Weir, Washington, and a sister, Mrs. Cyril Cass, Hartford, Conn.

William T. Johnson Services for William T. John-

home, 949 Pearl St., will be at 1 p.. m. tomorrow in People’s Funeral Home. Burial will be in New Crown. A native of Dark County, Kentucky, Mr. Johnson lived in Indianapolis 29 years. He was employed by the Indianapolis Street Commission for the last four years, He was a member of the Teamsters’ Union and the Church of the Living God. He was 62. He .is ‘survived by his wife, Mrs. Bertha Lee Johnson; two sons, William T. Johfison Jr., Indianapolis, and Tilford Johnson, Louisville, Ky.; a daughter, Miss Mary Frances Johnson, Indianapolis. ‘Also surviving are five broth. ers, George, Fred and the Rev. O. B. Johnson, Indianapolis; Dewey Johnson, Louisville, and Joseph Johnson, Jeffersonville; a sister, Mrs. Ada Woodard, Indi-

anapolis, and three grandchil-

Sunday in Walter Reed Hospital, Wash-

Services for Gen, Weir, whose death was attributed to coronary

Pp. m. tomorrow in Arlington National Cemetery chapel in Wash-

Previous to his appointment to the NWCQ three years ago by

1928. Besides his father, he is

Harris Services Mrs. Leonard Sanders

Mrs, Beulah Sanders, 'who died To Be TOMOITOW |yecteraay in ner home, 326 Gave

Services and burial for Robert St. after a six-weeks iliness, will] op x ; i ho os anne, mr, To 8 Neral | OM r 0 me O y i - Charles. O. Thornberry, 2244 Salem, hee b < lace. Sie ™ Y go] ’ Broadway, will be tomorrow in ait oP % IS

PAGE. 9

A retired grocer who operated |2POLS eight year » bos b several retail stores in Parkers-| Mrs. Sanders Toor wy pe burg. Mr..Harrls is survived by/her husband, Leonard; her five grandchildren, John, Donald, lis: » Mr, ha Page, Lottie Richard, = William and 3polia; Sista ,

Mae McKee, Hem id, Tex., and Thornbury, all of Indianapolis, in J addition to his daughter. Mrs. Eunice 8. Gober, Lufkin,

Tex., and a brother, C. 8. Page, George H. Baker

Pasadena, Tex. _ George Henderson Baker, 56, of 566. Reno St. will be buried in New Crown Cemetery following services at 1 p, m. tomorrow in Craig Brothers Funeral Home. A native of Springfield, Mr. Baker was an Indianapolis resident 30 years and~was a member of the South Calvary Baptist Church. } “There are no immediate survivors.

Mrs. Blanche O'Brien

Requiem high mas® will said t a. m. tomorrow in Christ the King Catholic Church for Mrs. Blanche O'Brien of 2339 oi

New Jersey St., who died Sunday in St. Vincent's Hospital. Burial will be in Holy Cross Cemetery. K ‘resident of Indianapolis 56! years, Mrs. O'Brien was 64. | -Born in Madison, Mrs. O'Brien| was a member of Christ the King Church. She and her husband, the late Thomas O'Brien, oper-! ated many park concessions in! Indiana, the most recent being in!

Broad Ripple Park, Indianapolis, T0 MAKE NEW FRIENDS Her only survivor is a sister, FOR THIS SAFE, WHITE Mrs. Lucille West, Indianapolis. * GRANULATED SOAP

Owen C. Ogden | 23

Services for Owen C. Ogden,

Sed IN A

dp ! ~~ bil SK

(CC FEE is probably the most im t largest selling brand of coffee in the greatyou make for your y’s over-all-area where it is sold. Forrest- Park, Noblesville, and | table . . . because coffee is an everyday stand- Folger's is a special kind of coffees . . :

by—the very soul of breakfast—and inmany Mountain Grown coffee . . . with a homes it graces the table three times sach tinctive flavor all its own, A flavor of day—often sits in readiness on the stove all and tang. A flavor of completely balanced day long! ood nase, No other coffee flavor is quite Fe re NE thre dam) our home romises you u you olger’s you ver 7 > P how wonderfully it glorifies a simple meal

who died Saturday in his home,

most in coffee enjoyment — A promise alread: : 5 557% W. Washington St., will be| 4 » 7 fulfilled in thousands of other homes as ey and easily assures the triumph of all special at 11 a. m. tomorrow in Conkle] ff ; SN denced by the sales record; for Folger'sisthe occasions. /

Funeral Home. Burial will be in| Floral Park. |

Mr. Ogden, who was 62, was a former employee of the Balke &| Krauss Lumber Co. A native of! Paris, Ill, he had lived in In-| dianapolis since childhood. A veteran of World War I, he was a member of Wayne Post, American Legion. Mrs. Dorothy Hall, his daughter, survives. His wife, Mrs. Bertha A. Ogden, died last year, me ———————

Killed by Train

EVANSVILLE, Nov. 23 (UP)— Robert C. Beal, 64-year-old Evansville railroad man, was injured fatally last night when he stumbled over a signal box into the path of a freight train at the

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