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Anderson Herald from Anderson, Indiana • 2

Publication:
Anderson Heraldi
Location:
Anderson, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

FUNERALS Thursday, Feb. 14, 1952 MRS. JESSIE E. BENNETT Mrs. Jessie Eldorado Bennett, Flowers CALL 8910 BOUQUET SHOP 25th and Raible The Anderson Herald age 87, 3038 East Lynn street, expired yesterday morning at her home following a three-weeks' illness.

Born at Industry, she had resided in Anderson for sixty years. She was a member of St. Ambrose's Roman Catholic parish. Survivors John Boswell, Edgewood; Frank: Boswell, Cincinnati; a daughter, Mrs. Bernice Eshelman, at home; grandchildren and seven greatgrandchildren.

Friends may call at the Brown and Eckenberg funeral home after noon Thursday. Last rites will be held Friday, 2. p. m. at the funeral with the Rev.

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Interment will be in East Maplewood cemetery. MRS. OPAL M. BARRON Mrs. Opal M.

Barron, age 40, 1710 Noble street, wife of Leo Barron, died Tuesday night at the Citizens' Nursing Center after an illness of four months. She was born at Lima, but had lived in Anderson most of her life. She was a member of the Central Methodist church, She is survived by the husband; one son, Cpl. Robert Barron, Camp Stoneman, one daughter, Miss Jerry Barron, at home; her mother, Mrs. Anna Smith; her grandmother, Mrs.

Joseph Ralston two brothers, Paul and Wyatt Smith, all of Anderson. Funeral services will be held at the Harold E. Rozelle funeral home, Friday, p. m. with the Rev.

James Baker, former pastor of the Central Methodist church, in charge. Interment will be in Memorial park. Friends are being received at Rozelle's funeral home. MRS. ANNA BRONNENBERG Funeral rites for Mrs.

Anna Bronnenberg, age 80, R. R. 2, Alexandria, wife of Phillip Sheridan (Sherd) Bronnenberg, will be held at 2 p. m. Friday at Baker Brothers' funeral home here with the Rev.

Monroe G. Schuster, pas: tor of Central Christian church, officiating. Interment will be in Bronnenberg cemetery, CPL. ADDISON McCREARY The remains of Cpl. Addison L.

McCreary, age 17, son of Mr. and Mrs. Perry M. McCreary, will arrive here today and will be taken to Baker Brothers' funeral home. Friends will be received at the funeral home after 7 p.

m. today. Cpl. McCreary was killed rean action Oct. 19, 1951.

Last rites will be Saturday at 1:30 p. m. at Mecca, where the body will be removed Saturday morning. MRS. LILLIAN WISEMAN Funeral services for Mrs.

Lillian Wiseman, age 47, former Anderson resident, will be held today at 1:30 p. m. at Baker Brothers' funeral home with the Rev. Dr. E.

J. Smith of the First Baptist church in charge. Interment will be in Menden cemetery, Friends are being received at the funeral home. Mrs. Wiseman expired in Chicago Sunday, where she had made her residence for the past 20 years.

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Linville Dies At Home Elbert Stephen (Dad). Linville, age 80, R. R. 7, Ovid, died at 8 p.m. last night at his home after a brief illness.

The body was funeral taken to the Harold E. Rozelle home pending completion of final funeral arrangements. He was born near Shelbyville and moved to Anderson in .1909. was an employe of the Delco-Remy division of General Motors here for thirty-two years. He retired five years ago.

Mr. and Mrs. Linville were married at Shelbyville, Nov. 14, 1889 and the couple celebrated their sixty-second wedding anniversary last Nov. 14.

Mr. Linville is survived by the widow, Effie A. Linville: four sons, Russell B. Linville, Fortville: Virgil L. Linville, Verl S.

Linville, Springfield, Charles D. Linville, at home; daughters, Mrs. Rose M. Snyder, Anderson; Mrs. Dorothy A.

Childers, Indianapolis; Miss Bernice Linville, at home and Mrs. Josephine Cooper, Middletown; 11 grandchildren and 12 great grandchildren. Mrs. Petchesky Dies Yesterday ALEXANDRIA, Feb. 13 (Spl) Mrs.

Martha M. Petchesky, age 27, died at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cummins, 621 West Adams street, Alexandria, Wednesday at 3:25 p.m. She had been ill eight months.

Until the fatal illness, Mrs. Petchesky had lived with her husband in New York state. She was born Jan 28, 1925, in Alexandria, the daughter of Charles and Marie Christensen Cummins. In 1946 she married Nathaniel Petchesky at Elkton, She is survived by her husband, her parents and three sisters, Mrs. Ellen Beekman, Anderson; Mrs.

Edna Harman and Mrs. Rosemary Warner, both of Alexandria. The was removed to the Gipe, Wililams and Kyle funeral home, where friends will be received after 7 p.m. Thursday. The body will remain the funeral home until Saturday, when it will be taken to the Church of the Nazarene, where she was a memFuneral services will be conducted at the church Saturday at 10:30 a.m.

with the pastor of the church, the Rev. J. T. Trueax officiating, assisted by the Rev.L. L.

L. Scantland, pastor of the Pilgrim Holiness church. Interment will follow. in the Park View cemetery. Edward Heche, Fortville, Dies FORTVILLE, Feb.

13 (Spl)Edward W. Heche, age 67. owner of the Variety store in Fortville for the past 28 years, died at noon today at the Methodist hospital at Indianapolis following an illness of several months. The body was removed to the George McCarty funeral home here where friends will be received after 1 p.m. Friday.

Funeral services will be conducted at the funeral home at 10 a.m. Saturday with the Rev. W. E. Rothman in charge.

Burial will be at Bluffton and graveside services will be held at 3 p.m. Saturday at the Six Mile cemetery in that city. Mr. and Mrs. Heche came to Fortville 28 years ago from Bluffton.

He formerly was employed as a foreman in a piano factory at Bluffton. Mr. Heche attended schools at Bluffton. Surviving are: the widow, Clara L. Heche: three sons, Paul, Chicago, and Ivan and Adrian, who are co-owners of the store here; one daughter, Mrs.

Joyce Helbert, Fortville, and seven grandchildren. Blanche Beeman Dies At Hospital ELWOOD, Feb. 13 (Spl) Mrs Blanche Pearl Beeman, age 67, 1828 South street, wife of Edward Beeman, died tonight at Mercy hospital at 6:30 p.m. after an illness of several days. The body taken to the Copher and Fesler funeral home pending completion of funeral arrangements.

She is survived by the husband; five sons, Marion, Gaston; Albert, James, Gerald, Elwood; Dewey, Orestes: three daughters, Mrs. Rachel Glotzbach, Mrs. Alice Carpenter and Mrs. Donna Abbott. all of Elwood; twenty- three grandchildren.

Mrs. Beeman was born May 19, 1884. near Anderson, the daughter of George and Alice Ring, She was married to Mr. Beeman Aug. 21, 1901.

Aladdin Sales Official Dies ALEXANDRIA. Feb. 13 (Spl) James O. White, age: 63, vice-president of the sales for Aladdin Industries, which maintains a plant here, died Tuesday morning at his home on Valley Brook road in Nashville, after an illness of a few months. Funeral services will be conducted Thursday morning at the Cavalry Methodist church in Nashville.

He will be buried in the Woodlawn White cemetery in that city. Mr. had been affiliated with Aladdin Industries, for nearly 20 years. He moved to Nashville Chicago in 1949 when the company moved its general office to the Tennessee city. He was born in Evansville, Ind.

Surviving are the widow, one son, one daughter, six grandchildren and three sisters. When the "sky survey" now ander way at the Palomar Observatory in California is completed, an atlas of 1,870 photographic plates will be published. Work On (Continued from Page One) positions cost the Reds an estimated 320 dead on the frozen eastern Korean battlefront, the Eighth Army announced Wednesday. West of the Mundung Valley the Communists attacked in company strength to test Allied positions. AP.

Correspondent Stan Carter reported a night of sporadic battling on Christmas Hill' and another high point, An Eighth Army communique said Allied troops withdrew on orders. from their position at 7:30 a. m. Wednesday but re-occupied it four hours later without enemy contact. On the central and western fronts, light patrol contacts were reported.

In the air, Allied pilots flew 423 sorties against Red rear supply lines despite hazardous weather conditions over much of Korea, Communist Mig pilots refused to battle American Sabre jets. Resionation Of (Continued from Page One) declined further comment until the inquiry is completed. Scotield refused to see an Associated reporter at Austin, Press, is in a hospital. Mrs. Scofield, said was too ill to comment.

added that Dunlap's statement the resignation was requested is Dunlap said the taken from a Revenue Bureau office in New York City in the predawn hours Tuesday contained complete recof a bureau investigation there. In brief, this is the situation on the files and dispute involving them: The Justice Department has convened a special, grand jury in New York consider evidence gathered in an investigation of four former high revenue officials, including former Revenue Commissioner Joseph D. Nunan Jr. The investigating subcommittee headed by Representative King (D- now holding hearings in San Francisco, had planned public hearings on the New York investigation in In San Francisco, Representative Curtis (R- a member of the subcommittee, charged that convening of the grand jury was "a deliberate attempt" by Secretary of the Treasury Snyder to "head off" the King committee. Representative King said the Justice Department move "muddled up" his investigation.

U.S. Attorney Frank J. Parker in New York said removal of the files would handicap the grand jury inquiry. Dunlap told a reporter that four revenue bureau investigators, scheduled to testify before the grand jury Monday, will have little information to present in the absence of their files "except what they can say from memory." Meanwhile, Secretary Snyder disputed any implication that the Treasury, which has supervision over the Revenue, Bureau, had agreed to King committee take action first on the New York investigation. In a statement late today, Snyder said the Treasury is obligated to and "report all to evidence proper of author- irregularities or wrongdoing." denied charges the Treasury is trying to "head off" the committee.

Snyder said department "has never sought to interfere in any way with the activities. of the King subcommittee The has sought to co-operate Treasury, subcommittee in every way possible." Heart Disnlay Continued from Page One) to view the various compartments of the body organ and observe their necessary functions. A similar heart is on display at the local division of General Motors corporation. Other hearts of this type have been presented to Bloomington and Monroe county schools and to PTA councils throughout Indiana. Valentine Day (Continued from Page One "Who can guess how many people send valentines?" He did concede.

however, that there is an increase in the amount of mail posted this time of year. Schulman said the average citizen is spending more money now than ever before on his valentines. Sales of the nickel and dime variety, and are "half-dollar slumping. But valentines the are going like hotcakes. TEMPO (Continued from Page One) he said, have advanced through "desire for unreasonable profits." SEN.

JOSEPH R. McCarthy, Wisconsin Republican, said this week that leaders and advisers of the State Department were trying to decide whether they want President Truman to run for re-election. The President, McCarthy claimed, puppet on the strings being pulied by the Achesons, Lattimores and Jessups." "If they can find another stubborn man whom they can control," McCarthy continued, "and get people to for the v'll throw Truman out." Speaking before 1,200 at a Republican Lincoln Day dinner in Fond du Lac, McCarthy declared that the nation's. leadership was becoming "almost completely morally degenerate." Police Swift (Continued from Page One to see other larger diamonds the jeweler might have. in stock.

The merchant, noting the rough dress of his prospective "customers," decided that they were going a rule often employed by shoplifters; to divide clerks on and then acomplish their, theft. The merchant suggested that the men return when he had ample time to show his full stock. After their departure, the merchant telephoned the detective division, Accompanied by two plainsclothesmen, he pointed out the two men who were loitering neat another jewelry store in the same vicinity. Police took the men into custody, questioned them them at headquarters, warned and ed them. Capt.

Daubenspeck complimented the merchant on his cooperation and warned merchants to be on the alert for any future purported shoplifting operations of this type. McHale May (Continued trom, Page One oust him. anti-McHale forces claimed enough votes to remove him, but a show down did not, actually rules of materialize. the Democratic State Committee provide that the national. committeeman is elected the day after the party's state nominating convention in Indianapolis.

The state committee will meet in Indianapolis Friday to approve a revision of the rules. One of the changes contemplated, it is understood, would permit election of the committeeman simultaneously with the reorganization of the committee. The committee will elect its officers May 15. Murray Enraged (Continued From Page One) hearings in the wage dispute in an effort. to avert a nation-wide strike scheduled to begin in 11 days.

Besides the guaranteed annual the union is asking an wage, cent-an-hour general wage increase, a union shop, and various other benefits. President Truman asked and got 45-day truce in a wage showdown a in the industry. This expires Feb. 23, the tentative date for a strike. Murray today called the top policymakers of his union to a Pittsburgh meeting Feb.

21. The policy committee can extend the truce or flash a green 1'aht for a strike of the nation's 600,000 steel workers. SORROW Understanding IN Can Mean So Much! WALTZ HIDAY FUNERAL HOME W. and: Delaware PHONE 5593 1 CALL 7906 ELECTROLUX XI $1225 2-Year Guarantee complete with 7 attachments and all new parts Model XI FREE To First Ten People WAXER ATTACHMENT Used also for painting, moth proofing, shampooing rugs, and furniture. Rebuilt by VACUUM CLEANER CO.

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About Anderson Herald Archive

Pages Available:
619,366
Years Available:
1893-1987