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The Call-Leader from Elwood, Indiana • Page 8
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The Call-Leader from Elwood, Indiana • Page 8

Publication:
The Call-Leaderi
Location:
Elwood, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE 8 The Call-Leader Thursday, November 20, 1975 Obituaries ft EDRAA.JACQUER Mrs. Edra A. Jacquier, 70, Anderson, died in Community Hospital in Anderson Wednesday night following a lengthy illness. Bom in Arcadia on March 23, 1905, she was the daughter of Leroy and Caroline Davis Startzman. She married John Jacquier in 1926.

He died in 1946. Mrs. Jacquier was a member of the Arcadia Christian Church and had been employed for many years by the Arcadia Post Office. Survivors include six daughters, Mrs. J.D.

(Carolyn) Etchison of Covington, Mrs. C. B. (Marilyn) Adams of Shelbyville, Patricia Jacquier of Anderson, Mrs. Norman (Janet) Waugh of 4 1 r'J A Barbara Fairchild and the "Teddy will present one performance at the Brass Rail this Friday night.

The Columbia recording artst and her group will begin their show at 9 p.m. construction okayed l.J kV 1 r. Business notes School INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) -Final school building plans for seven school corporations were approved by the Commission on General Education of the State Board of Education Wednesday. The commission also approved a change in the countinj period for average daily attendance for Jennings County Schools because of a teacher strike and agreed to waive tuition for out-of-state students taking part in American Field Service Domestic Programs. The school plans approved include: Greenwood Community Schools for an outdoor physical ALBERT DLDLEY Albert Edward (Stud) Dudley, 77, died yesterday evening at 4 20 p.m.

at the Parkview Convalescent Centre. He had resided at 2428 S. EJwocxl. He was bom on August 28, 1898 in El wood. He was the son of John T.

and Alice Oare Dudley. He was retired from the daily report EL WOOD POLICE Jim Sheedy, 1580 S. and 700 Fairmount, reported the possible theft of a German Shepard dog. The animal is eight years old and has black and silver fur. The dog may be in the Rigdon or Leisure areas.

Larry McPhearson, 1508 N. reported the theft of a three speed Sting Ray, red, white aid blue, 20 inch, J.C. Penney model. Bill Frye, 803 N. 13th St.

reported the theft of a spare from the trunk of his vehicle. door of the trunk was forced open. Arley Scott, 1302 N. reported the breaking and entering of his truck. He reported a total of $165.90 worth of tools as stolen.

On Tuesday a hit and skip was reported to the El wood Police. The accident occurred at S. A near 23rd Street. The accident involved Marion A. Harris, 2306 S.

A and an unknown vehicle. Elwood police now believe the driver of the unknown vehicle to have been David Allen Blockson, 201 N. 12th Elwood. According to the accident report, the Harris vehicle was parked at the curb facing west on S. A Street.

Blockson was reportedly going east on S. A Street. Blockson reportedly hit the Harris vehicle in the front end and then left the scene. David Allen Blockson, 17,201 N. 12th was arrested on a charge of leaving the scene of an accident.

Michael A. Blockson, 16, 201 N. 12th St. was arrested on a charge of having no operator's license and having a false registration. Daniel P.

Dunaway, 2100'4 Main was arrested on a charge of violating the 1935 Beverage Act and disorderly conduct. ELWOOD FIRE DEPARTMENT The EFD trucks were called to a garage fire at 1218 S. I St. at 1:15 p.m. yesterday.

The garage is owned by Darrell Bogard of the above address. The garage is reported to be a total loss. The EFD trucks were at the scene of another garage fire at 10 :20 p.m. yesterday. This fire was located at 2209 S.

Street. The building is owned by Charles Whisler of the above address. At 3:00 am today the Elwood fire trucks went to a house at 2316 Main Street. Mr. and Mrs.

Earl Savage, the owners and residents of the house, escaped through a window. The estimated damage of the house is set at $7,500. "fodj. take food look (he world Iscflinf snowmobile. GRAHAM SNOWMOBILE SALES I SERVICE DM LinN.

2t-7M7 Mm it4 MacMutt LUn4 Trail TraMw Ttfr 4 I Set I to ski-doo world's no. I scUiif snowmobile Pendleton Reformatory. He had been a parole officer. He was a member of the St. Stephen's Episcopal Church, the Government Official Retirement Club of Indianapolis, a 32nd degree Mason and the Shrine Club of Indianapolis.

Survivors include Mrs. Ethel Boyden of Elwood; and three brothers, Wilfred Dudley of Anderson, William Dudley of Gary and Harold Dudley of West Virginia. Friends may call after 2 p.m. today at the Dunnichay Funeral Home Funeral services will be on Saturday at 1:30 p.m. at the St.

Stephen's Episcopal Church with Vicar Tom Honderich officiating. Burial will be in the Elwood City Cemetery. RALPH MARSH Ralph B. Marsh, 62, died Wednesday morning at St. Mary's Hospital in Leonardtown, Maryland.

He moved from Anderson to inton, Maryland in 1973 after retiring from Nicholson File in Anderson. Survivors include the widow, Bonnie, two daughters, Laquita Sue Ely of Quinton; and Mrs. Marsha Bailey of Kalamazoo, four sisters, Mabel HOSPITAL NOTES MERCY HOSPITAL ADMISSIONS Mrs. Michael Bell, Summitville Japk Frye, Elwood DISMISSALS Miss Deborah Friend, Anderson Mrs. William Davis, Alexandria Dennis Hexamer, Alexandria Mrs.

Doris Skillman, Anderson Mrs. Maezell Bibbins, 1615 S. 21st Elwood Mrs. Donald Bohlander, Rt. 1, Elwood Rosco Gardner, 2325 S.

Elwood aha Hull, Summitville Raymond McDaniel, 2507 N. A Elwood Joseph Lane, 1220 S. Elwood Mrs. Russell Shannon, 1815 S. Elwood Mrs.

Joseph White, Rt. 4, Elwood BIRTH To Mr. and Mrs. Michael Bell of Summitville, a girl bom this morning. AMBULANCE Mrs.

Mamie Brookbank was taken from Dickey's Nursing Home to the Tipton Memorial Hospital yesterday in the Copher and Fesler ambulance. TIPTON COUNTY MEMORIAL HOSPITAL ADMISSIONS WEDNESDAY Ada Lance, Tipton Carolyn Eller, Cicero Nettie Richardson, Kokomo Arza Belzer, Arcadia Mayme Brookbank, Sharpsville Robert Gettie, Kokomo Audrey Gunter, Kokomo James McGinnis, Corunna, Ind: Shirley Jones, Atlanta Charles Skinner, Tipton Connie Mumaugh, Kokomo Carol Boyll, Kempton Donald S. Hughes, Elwood BIRTHS Bom to Cynthia and Joseph Henderson of Atlanta a son at DISMISSALS Delee Morris, Tipton Trizie Hood, Windfall Marie Jackson, Kempton Jim McCune, Anderson Lester Cherry, Tipton KathyDobson, Tipton Janice Wilbom, Kokomo Bear of Alexandria, Mrs. Katherine Starkey of St. Petersburg, Mrs.

Gladys Mittendorf of Phoenix, and Nancy of California; a brother Barney Marsh of Cocoa Beach, Fla. and five grandchildren. Funeral services will be held 1 30 p.m. Saturday at the Karl M. Kyle Funeral Home in Alexandria with the Rev.

Ronald Shew officiating. Burial will be in the Parkview Cemetery in Alexandria. Friends may call at the funeral home after 5 p.m. Friday. JACK L.

MILLER Jack Miller, 46, Rt. 3, Tipton, died at 10:15 p.m. Wednesday in his home following an illness of three years. Bom in Kokomo on July 27, 1929, he was the son of Alfred and Lula Williamson Miller. He married Martha Greer on April 29, 1955.

She survives. Before moving to Tipton five years ago, Mr. Miller lived in Kokomo. He was employed for three years at Chrysler Corp. He was a member of UAW Local No.

685 in Kokomo. Surviving with his wife are two sons, Jeffery and Joe Miller, both at home; a daughter. Gary (Deborah) Brown of Kokomo; and one granddaughter. A sister and a brother are deceased. Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p.m.

Saturday in the Warner Funeral Home in Sharpsville. Rev. Karen Warren of Kokomo will officiate, and burial will be in Sharpsville Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home after noon Friday until 9 p.m. and Saturday before services.

Donations to the intensive care cardiac ward in St. Joseph's Hospital, Kokomo, or to other charities will be accepted in Mr. Miller's name. MARY LOUISE WALLACE Mary Louise Wallace, 50, 203 Walnut Alexandria, died this morning at her home. She had been a nurse's aid at the St.

John's Hospital. Survivors include her husband Kenneth and one son, Kenneth Wallace of Alexandria and three daughters, Debra, Donna and Anita all at home. Friends may call after 4 p.m. on Friday at the Noffze Funeral Home in Alexandria. The body will be taken to the Russman Funeral Home in Louisville, Kentucky for services.

FOSTER CLIDENCE Foster Clidence, 87, Rt. 3, Noblesville, died Wednesday at 2 p.m. in the Turtle Creek Convalescence Center in Noblesville following a lengthy, illness. Born Oct. 26, 1888 in Clinton County, he was the son of Wesley and Indiana Alexander Clidence.

He was married to Lessia Clidence who died in 1972. Mr. Clidence was a retired farmer and had worked in the Real Silk Hosier Mills in Indianapolis. Before moving to Noblesville he had lived in Indianapolis and Westfield. Survivors Include three daughters, Anna Anderson of Columbus, (a former Goldsmith resident), Ruth Barker, Indianapolis and Maxine Huffman of Rt.

3, Noblesville; seven grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren. Funeral services will be conducted Saturday at 11 am in the Evans- Godby- Trout Funeral Home in Noblesville. Rev. David Wharmby will officiate and burial will be in Gravel Lawn Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home after 4 p.m.

Friday. FBI probe continues concerning the American Field Service, each student leaving a U.S. school district is replaced by another student coming into that district. -v In other action, the commission: Approved a request from Gary schools to relocate one mobile classroom from Pulaski School to the Deep River Outdoor Education Facility. Approved requests for authorization of a $240,000 advance payment from the Veterans Memorial School Construction Fund to the Tri-Creek School Corp.

of Lowell, and a $250,000 advance payment from the same fund to the Westfield-Washington School Corp. of Westfield. Approved the recommended commissions, based on inspection reports, for 42 public schools and 16 nonpublic schols. Granted a waiver to the Carroll Consolidated Schools of Flora on the rule requiring 10 per glass area for each classroom so it can proceed with final plans for the proposed Carroll Elementary School. Issued a similiar waiver to the East Allen County Schools of New Haven on preliminary plans for remodeling the Monroe ville Elementary School.

Approved, with stipulations, a request from the Tippecanoe School Corp. for a variance from the rule on school site size with regard to emodeling at Battleground Elementary School. The Lafayette-based system is to buy more acreage as it becomes available. Kingsford Heights Elementary. State school superintendent Harold Negley said the normal period for counting average daily attendance was Sept.

8-Oct. 3 and the figures are used in determining amounts of state and federal aid. However, Jennings County teachers were on strike from Sept. 25-Oct. 3, which caused closing of the high school and junior high school and a 70 per cent drop in elementary school attendance.

The commission said it could use Aug. 29-Sept. ,24 for computing average daily attendance. Under the plan approved "You are done. There is only one way out for you." Although not mentioned at the hearing, the letter was said to have been accompanied by a recording or of material allegedly compromising King's character.

Sen. Frank Church, D-Idaho, chairman of the Senate committee, asked Adams how he would have interpreted the letter. "I've read it," Adams said. "I've heard your staff said it suggested suicide. I can't find any basis for that conclusion." The witness, accompanied by seven senior FBI officials, testified that FBI investigations were' carried out on a wide variety of organizations ranging from New Left movements, almost all black groups, students, antiwar activists and even a pioneer Baltimore women's liberation group because it was suspected of being vulnerable to communist infiltration.

Adams, in ascribing motivation for FBI actions, referred to the femper of the times in the 1950s and 60s when "cities were burning and universities bombed." Yours education facility at Greenwood. High Evans vi lie-Vanderburgh Schools for remodeling West Terrace Elementary. Johnson County Special Services School at Whiteland for a new structure. Lafayette Schools for an addition to Glen Acres School. Southwest Dubois County Schools at Huntingburg for remodeling Maple Park Elementary.

Fort Wayne Community Schools for remodeling Adams Elementary. LaPorte Community Schools for an addition to revolutionaries" were James Adams, FBI assistant deputy for intelligence who testified on the King matter, told a Senate investigative panel "there was no statutory basis for justification" of some 25 separate actions carried out against King before he was assassinated in 1968. The campaign included an anonymous letter written by the FBI to King in late 1964, just before he was to receive the Nobel Peace Prize, saying, campaign Wallace ran surprisingly strong in the 1972 Indiana Democratic presidential preference primary before being shot and forced to withdraw from the nomination race. Wallace ran second to Sen. Hubert Humphrey, and ahead "of Sen.

Edmund Muske, D-Maine, polling 42 per cent of the vote and winning 21 delegates to the national convention. Order Arcadia, Beverly Jacquier of Indianapolis and Mrs. (Betty) Lewis of Carmel 10 eat- grandchildren, one great grandchild and two sisters, Mrs. H. E.

Wooten and Mrs. O. P. Branson, both of Peru. Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p.m.

Sunday in the Arcadia Christian Church. Rev. Lee Mangold will officiate and burial will be in Arcadia Cemetery. Friends may call at the Hartley Funeral Home after 7 p.m. Friday.

ROBERT BEEMAN Robert Howard Beeman, 51, died on Friday November 14, at a hospital in Long Beach, California. He was born on May 31, 1924 in Elwood. He was the son of Howard and Anna Mae Stansberry Beeman. He was married to Jean Harris Beeman. She survives.

Other survivors include two sons, Rodney Wayne Beeman at home and Howard Beeman of the U.S. Army; and two daughters, Mrs. Anna Mapheny of Long Beach and Mrs. Alice Bixby of Long Beach; five sisters, Mrs. Wilma Rathburn of Greensburg, Mrs.

Margaret Smith of Smyrna, Tennessee; Mrs. Rose Childers of Metropolis, Illinois; Mrs. Lois Bockery of Morgantown, Kentucky; and Barbara Tompkins of Elwood; and two brothers, Edward and John Beeman of Gas City. Funeral services were held on Wednesday in Long Beach. Gliurcli -notes- MAIN STREET WESLEY AN CHURCH We will be having a three day revival beginning Friday, November 21st.

The Rev. Garry Beecher will be officiating. He and his wife will also be providing special music for the services. Services will begin at 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday and at 10:20 am on Sunday.

This is a special invitation to all to come and join us in worship, praise and revival. PUBLIC NOTICES SALVATION ARMY DOLLS Persons dressing dolls for the Salvation Army Christmas baskets are urged to return them by Monday for judging and display. Fires in 40 U.S. schools each day More than 40 American schools are hit by fires every day, says the National Safety Council. It pointed out, however, that only a small number of them involve an immediate danger to students, teachers or other school occupants.

Grain report Grain market quotations from the Tipton County Farm Bureau Co-op at 8 a.m. today were No. 2 com 2.25 Soybeans 4.27 Oats 150 July wheat 3.00 GET READY FOR Vcst Sido WASHINGTON (UPI) A six-year campaign of illegal harassment and surveillance by the FBI against Martin Luther King was conducted under the mistaken suspicion he was under' "communist influence," according to a ranking FBI official. Elsewhere, FBI Director Clarence Kelley told a Senate subcommittee Wednesday terrorist bombings were increasing in America at an alarming rate 46 in the first half of 1975 compared to 45 for all of 1974. Kelley said "new left Wallace "INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) Wallace's presidential campaign in Indiana kicks off Saturday with a meeting of 150 or more supporters.

Many of them are associated with the American Party, but the meeting is being billed as a "grass roots Democratic" session. Wallace has announced he is seeking the Democratic presidential nomination next year. The American Party is one of the third-parties which in previous years pushed Wallace for the presidency. Saturday's meeting will feature Sid Chambless, a member of the Alabama governor's staff, and Richard Stump, recently named state chairman for the Indiana campaign. Chambless was scheduled to deliver a statement from Wallace.

DON'T BE PUSHY 1 Aggressive people are much more likely to suffer heart attacks than easy-going individuals, according to the Western Collaborative Group Study of Coronary Heart Disease. COLD WEATHER 10 OFF ON ALL WRAP-ON PRODUCTS including Life Time Heat Tapes with Thermostat Control Indicator Lite, Wrap- On Insulation, Plastic for windows. Ilardwaro i VM HOLIDAY CLEANING DIAMOND RUG I UPHOLSTERY CLEANING SERVICE 111 WDM tUIMITEEl 995t.tr, "ff95Er liiiirtini I Mtttm Mil DOW FOR II tPPOIITMEIT 552-6203 Optn I t.M. ft 5 ML NOWl wr Uri lMrtl th Strut FImt! BntTioVrlF We carry selections from oHallmark oAAcPherson's glpjog- Stuclios IMPRINTED or Bath kirt, fciihttw jta prahr. ml PLAIN in ana 'i SPECIAL SERVICES Each Yening Nov.

18-23. 7 p.m. and 10:30 a.m. Sun. conducttd by tht outstanding evangelist Rev.

P. Lidded. Howell. Michigan. The Kirkpatrick Family from Huntington, will accompany with music.

Public cordially invited to attend. Host pastor, David My grant. First Church i Of llazarono 1800 No. I 51. vome 1 Drowse! to 12 Mail 652-2721 i.

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