FRANKLIN COUNTY OHIO - NAZIS AGAIN BEATEN OFF AT STALINGRAD (10-10-1942) *************************************************************************** OHGENWEB NOTICE: All distribution rights to this electronic data are reserved by the submitter. Reproduction or re-presentation of copyrighted material will require the permission of the copyright owner. http://www.usgwarchives.net *************************************************************************** File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by Floa Swisher fladam@netassoc.net March 18, 2000 *************************************************************************** Columbus Evening Dispatch Ohios Greatest Home Daily Columbus, Ohio Saturday October 10, 1942 Headline: NAZIS AGAIN BEATEN OFF AT STALINGRAD ********************************************************* Front Page: 47 - Day Old Battle Still Rages in City; No Retreat Seen New Assault Viewed as Hitler's Supreme Effort; German's Counter-Attack Northwest of Metropolis. By the Associated Press The German armies, diverted from the immediate siege of Stalingrad, were reported counterattacking furiously on their imperiled northwest flank along a 40-mile front between the Don and Volga rivers today, but the Russians said they had beaten off five assaults and entrenched to hold their gains. Officials Soviet quarters declared the Germans had lost 60,000 troops against Russian losses of 21, 384 in a battle on the Leningrad front, south of Lake Ladoga. German claims of having wiped out seven Red army divisions and captured 12,370 troops in fighting around the long-beseiged northern metropolis were branded by the Russians as "a new fake of the Hitlerite counterfeiters . . . . A lie from beginning to end." Instead, the Germans suffered nearly 5 to 1 in manpower losses, as well as 200 tanks, 260 planes, 244 guns and 400 trench mortars, a Soviet communique said. Inside Stalingrad, the battle flamed with apparently unabated intensity. Dispatches to Izvestia said Red army defenders had withstood what was believed to be Adolf Hitler's supreme bid for a decision, crushing 80 tank-led attacks in a four-day-old battle in the northwest suburbs. Izvestia's front-line correspondent said the Nazi command threw at least two new divisions into the offensive, aimed at cutting through the city's heart to the Volga, but that the greater part of the attacks failed utterly while others gained only a few dozen yards. Hitler's field headquarter, which yesterday omitted all mention of the siege, cited only minor details in today's communique. "In the fighting for Stalingrad, artillery of the army sank two gunboats on the Volga and damaged another severely. Shock troops blew up a skyscraper in the town. "Relief attacks of the Soviet against the northern barrier front were unsuccessful." No Withdrawal After more than 36 hours, there was still no indication that Nazi assault troops were being withdrawn, leaving the field to Stuka dive bombers and big siege guns to blast the metropolis into surrender. The German radio intimated Thursday that this would be done. With the bloody siege raging into its 47th day, Berlin reports quoted a German officer as saying: "As Columbus first saw land, so we look toward Stalingrad, of which we are talking as one talks of the moon. "In three days, we advanced 1300 yards. Yesterday and today were were only able to turn in our holes in the earth. First we take five houses, and then must give up two . . .Already it is growing cold." Defense is "Riddle" The officer was further quoted as saying that the continued Soviet defense was "a riddle to military expert." Soviet headquarters said Russian troops had crushed two more attempts by tank-led German riflemen to break through to the Volga - apparently in a northeast factory district, site of the great Stalin tank works - and wiped out a company of Nazi infantry. The Russians also declared that the Red army force encircled for several days had escaped the German ring after a hard batle and had taken up defense posts in a nearby workers' settlement. This may have been the same force which the German high command asserted had been trapped, cut in two and "annihilated." U. S. Bombs Strike Meanwhile, the German radio angrily threatened reprisals against Britain for the big-scale daylight attack on Nazi war foundries at Lille, France, by U. S. army bombers and Allied fighters yesterday, but England had a quiet night. British air experts expressed amazement at the feat of American airmen in helping deliver the greatest Allied daylight attack of the war. The return of all but four of the 100 big U. S. bombers which thundered over German-occupied France with an escort of 500 Allied fighter planes, unloading tons of bombs on factories and railway yards, erased any doubts about the giant craft. All the fighters were reported to have returned safely. By comparison, observers recalled that on the climactic day of the battle of Britain, Sept. 15, 1940, the Germans sent over 500 planes and lost at least 185 of them. Threatens Berlin While the German radio bitterly complained against the latest Allied bombing assault,Edgar Louis GRANVILLE, British member of parliament, urged the United Nations to "give notice that unless our soldiers are freed from the Nazi chain gang the Allied air forces will bomb Berlin with mass raids without respite." "Let the BBC tell this to the German people," Granville said, "so they will know the Nazis are responsible. It's the only way." Granville referred to the German manacling of British prisoners - 107 officers and 1269 men - in reprisal for alleged mistreatment of German prisoners in Britain. **************************************************************** Illinois Hunts Seven Lifers in Jail Break Two Guards and Civilian Wounded in Fracas. DAYLIGHT ESCAPE Touhy and Banghart Among Those Who Leave. JOLIET, Ill., Oct. 10. - (AP) - The full facilities of Illinois' law agencies were in operation today in one of the most widely flung manhunts in the state's history to effect the capture of seven life-term convicts who made a daring escape from Stateville prison yesterday afternoon. Two of the convicts, leaders in the spectacular break over the prison walls, were Roger (Terrible) TOUHY, 44, and Hugh Basil (the Owl) BANGHART, 41, one time the nation's top ranking public enemies, who were serving 99-year terms for kidnapping. Two guards and a civilian employee were wounded in the daylight assault by the convicts, five of whom fled in a guard's automobile parked outside the prison. "Shoot to kill" orders were issued as county and city police joined the full state police force in patroling highways and barricading intersections, particularly leading toward Chicago, 40 miles northeast. Warden, E. H. STUBBLEFIELD said that while officials were certain as to the manner in which five of the prisoners escaped, it was not for some time after the break that guards found that two other convicts were missing. They were Edward DARLAK, 31, serving 199 years for murdering a policeman, and St. Clair McINERNEY, 31, serving a life term as a habitual criminal. Although the warden said it appeared they also had escaped in the confusion he ordered guards to search the prison and its grounds. There are about 3600 inmates in the prison. Guards, working on three shifts, number 240. Warden Absent The warden, absent at the time of the break, said his investigation disclosed that TOUHY and BANGHART, both imprisoned for the $70,000 kidnapping of John (Jake the Barber)FACTOR of Chicago in 1933, and other prisoners were talking to Jack CITO, convict truck driver, outside the bakery. TOUHY hit CITO with a pair of scissors, knocked him down and drove the truck across the prison yard to the mechanical shop. There, he cut the telephone wires and apparently by a signal BANGHART, carrying a gun,came through a window. They forced Guard Samuel JOHNSON to give them two ladders and ordered him and another guard and William DAHLER, shop foreman, to get in the truck with them. Already in the truck were three other convicts - James O'CONNOR, 35, who had escaped twice before from Stateville and William STEWART, 43, and Matthew NELSON, 40, both serving life sentences as habitual criminals. They drove to the west wall, fired at Guard Herman KROSS in the tower and wounded him. Then they beat JOHNSON, forced him to climb with them to the tower where they stole KROSS' prison keys and his automobile key. DAHLER, in the meantime, escaped from the truck. After seizing two rifles, part of the tower armament, KROSS' pistol and extra ammunition, the five escaped down the outside steps and drove away in KROSS' car. ***************************************** Columbus Flyer Killed in Crash Lt. Don J. Butler killed in North Carolina Second Lieut., Don Jesse BUTLER of the Army Air Force was killed at Anderson field, Walterboro, N. C., Friday, during a routine flight, according to word received Saturday by his mother, Mrs. J. C. BUTLER, 64 West Ninth avenue. The 26 year old flyer was commissioned Sept 6 at Columbus, Miss., air base after preliminary training at Maxwell Field, Ala. He served with the Royal Canadian Air Force after leaving the employ of the Federal Glass Co. last May and later transferred to the U. S. Army Air Force. Lieutenant BUTLER formerly attended Ohio State and Franklin universities. Besides his mother, he leaves one brother, Forrest K. BUTLER, of Indianapolis, Ind. His body will be returned to Columbus for funeral and burial under the direction of William Feil. *********************************** Detective R. E. COOKE Enlists in U. S. Navy Detective Robert E. COOK, 458 Nashoba avenue, veteran Columbus police officer and hero of the city's most dramatic police bandit gun battles, will lay aside his detective badge Monday to don a U. S. Navy uniform, Chief of Police Otto KAFFITS announced, Saturday. Detective COOKE, a member of the department since Aug 8, 1923, and a plainsclothes man since May 12, 1935, enlisted in the service and will have the rank of petty officer, second class, Chief KAFFITS said. ********************************** Train Victims are identified Wooster, Ohio, Oct 10, - (AP) - A Nebraska couple killed while walking on the Pennsylvania railroad tracks near here, was identified as Philo McAFEE, 73, and his wife Alie, 56, of Allen, Neb. ********************************* Page Two Calendar of Events Births---Deaths---Marriage Licenses---Divorces---Fires Marriage Licenses William P. JACKSON, 26, janitor 307 Jefferson avenue, Lillian TURNER, 24, 307 Jefferson avenue Paul W. ROSSER, 30, taxi driver, 1494 Glenn avenue; Peggy ALBANESE, 33, 505 West Third avenue Phillip J. KELLEY, 19, foreman, 676 Wilson avenue; Clara Irene LONG, 18, 408 South Eureka avenue Lester G. HOWARD, 30, farmer, Delaware, Ohio; Loma E. DENZER, 26, 789 Dennison avenue Nathan WALKER, jr., 32, farmer, Hilliard, Ohio; Martha J. TROESCH, 30, 685 South High Street Oris ELLIS, 57, mechanic, Dublin, Ohio; Nellie STONEROCK, 54, Dublin, Ohio Wylen F. STEELE, 21, mechanic, 552 1/2 South Central avenue; Marilyn RHYNARD, 17, 2569 Indianola avenue Donal W. LYON, 26, chemist, Newport, Del.; Martha CRANE, 23, 1788 Coventry road. GRANTED Howard E. GABRIEL, 20, coast guardsman, 479 Oakwood avenue; Marilyn M. FISHPAW, 19, Reynoldsburg, Ohio Richard CROAK, 20, plumber, 2945 Maryland avenue; Louise LESLIE, 21, 2125 North Cassady avenue James D. MITCHELL, 24, soldier, Fort Hayes Dorothy HATFIELD, 22, 549 Walhalla road William E. FULTON, 45, railroad engineer, 549 Miller avenue; Bessie G. ROBERTSON, 45, 549 Miller avenue James WILLIAMSON, 45, federal officer, Marion, Ohio; Sarah A. CALHOUN, 42, 1400 South Sixth street Walter LONG, 21, farm worker, Cheshire, Ohio; Anne THOMAS, 37, 149 East Weber road Joseph Edgar POWELL, 50, deputy registrar, 1116 Oakwood avenue; Janice Rue ROBINSON, 37, 1086 Oakwood avenue Walter J. KUHN, 32, supervisor, 1708 Bryden road; Mildred E. DOUGLAS, 30, 1632 Bryden road DEATHS BUTLER - Second Liet. Don Jesse, 26, son of Mrs. J. C. BUTLER, 64 West Ninth avenue, killed at Anderson field, Waterloo, N. C., Friday. CHERRINGTON - Miss Sabina, Grove City, Friday CLEMMENS - John Burton, 64, 208 South Princeton avenue, Friday DICKSON - Mrs. Hannah L., 76, 103 West Oakland avenue, Saturday GAINES - Grace Carter, 226 North Grant avenue, Wednesday HOCHULI - Mrs. Sophia, 70, 964 Cole street, Friday PRESTON - Mrs. Dorothy, Pittsburgh, Pa., daughter of Mrs. Charles WHITE, 901 1/2 Mt. Vernon avenue, Thursday RIES - Mrs. Millie, Ithaca, N.Y., mother of Prof. Victor H. RIES, 1241 Lincoln road, Thursday SHOEMAKER - Carl, 55, 154 West Third avenue, St. Anthony's hospital, Saturday SMITH - Clarence Justin, 66, 711 Kimball place, Saturday WILLIS - Lieutenant Edward, 42, 1424 Fair avenue, Fort Hayes hospital, Saturday WOLFE - Charles Bertram, 46, 4458 Smothers road, Friday. Divorces ASKED Mildred RODGERS from Gordon RODGERS; cruelty Orval THURMAN from Martha THURMAN; neglect Mae BAILEY from Oliver BAILEY; neglect Dorothy MUNK from Lewis MUNK; willful absence Margaret BRANTLEY from Olin BRANTLEY; neglect Azielee HARRISTON from Eddie HARRISTON: neglect Ressie YOWELL from Guy YOWELL: willful absence Mildred SWING from Charles SWINK: neglect {that's the way it's printed} Edythe BETHEL from John BETHEL: neglect Granted Harley HARRIS from Roberta HARRIS: cruelty Betty MINER from Challis MINER: neglect Carl HARRIS from Mabel HARRIS: willful absence Laura MELVIN from Marion MELVIN: neglect Orpha GARDNER from Porter GARDNER: neglect George PENCE from Helen PENCE: neglect Mary BENADUM from Joseph BENADUM: cruelty Callie RINEHART from Edward RINEHART: neglect Births Mr and Mrs Harry BOBO, 376 Mithoff street, daughter, Saturday, St. Ann's hospital. Mr and Mrs Ralph BROWN, 590 Mithoff street, daughter, Friday, White Cross hospital. Mr and Mrs Michael BURKHART, jr., Woodsfield, son, Friday, Grant hospital Mr and Mrs Harold CALLANDER, Washington C. H. son, Saturday, White Cross hospital Mr and Mrs William A CRAWFORD, 136 East Thompkins street, son, Friday, White Cross hos. Mr and Mrs John W. DRAKE, Norfolk, Va., (formerly Martha WILCOX of Worthington), twin sons, Thursday, Norfolk General hospital. Mr and Mrs Donald JONES, Wellston, twin sons, Saturday, University hospital Mr and Mrs Herbert KRUSE, 757 West State street, daughter, Friday, Mt. Carmel hospital. Mr and Mrs Volley LANE, 1121 Oakland avenue, daughter, Friday, Mt. Carmel hospital. Mr and Mrs Ralph LINK, 422 South Richardson avenue, son, Friday, Mt. Carmel hospital. Mr and Mrs C. A. LITTLE, 869 Markison avenue, son, Friday, St. Ann's hospital. Mr and Mrs Thomas W. LLOYD, 1231 South Champion avenue, son, Friday, St. Ann's hospital Mr and Mrs Lee LOWE, 607 North High street, daughter, Saturday, Grant hospital Mr and Mrs Thomas MOWERY, 1056 Milford road, twins, son and daughter, Saturday, Grant hospital. Mr and Mrs Frank NOVELL, 750 Delaware avenue, daughter, Friday, Doctor's hospital. Mr and Mrs Joseph PENN, 71 East Tenth avenue, son, Saturday, Grant hospital. Mr and Mrs William RAU, West Epping, N. H. (formerly Jean M. WALKER of Columbus), son, Saturday, Exeter hospital, Exeter, N. H. Dr and Mrs F. C. SCHAEFFER, Circleville, daughter, Friday, Doctor's hospital. Mr and Mrs Leslie SEARLES, 70 West Eighth avenue, son, Saturday, Grant hospital. Mr and Mrs Charles F. STEWART, 317 North Grant avenue, son, Saturday, White Cross hos. Mr and Mrs Thomas TURNEY, 1177 East Long street, son, Saturday, Grant hospital. ************************************************************************ Deaths in OHIO CALDWELL - Mrs. Samuel COOPER, Oct 8 CAMBRIDGE - Andrew G. WILSON, 71, Kimbolton, at Twin Falls, Ia, Oct 7 CHILLICOTHE - Thomas M. HAYNES, 52, at Columbus, Oct 8; Mrs. George KLINE, 58, South Salem, Oct. 8; Mrs. Anna Mary STAUFFER, 71, Oct. 8 DELAWARE - George L. HULL, 38, at Worthington, Oct. 9 GREENFIELD - Miss Grace KIZZEE, 26 of Ironton, Oct. 8 LIMA - Eli FOX, 76, and Mrs. Nancy Melinda HENNON, 60, both Oct. 8; John R. RICHARDS, 80, Oct. 9 LOGAN - John L. STOODY, 86, Oct. 9 MARYSVILLE - Mrs. Mary M. KRIEGER, 71, Oct. 9; William M. DUNHAM, 69, at Akron, Oct. 8 MT. VERNON - Columbus Delano MONROE, 71, Oct. 9 NELSONVILLE - Mrs. Ellen Whyte SHAY, in Mt. Carmel hospital, Columbus, Oct. 9 NEWARK - Mrs. William McCALL, in Baltimore, Oct. 8 NORTH LEWISBURG - John F. RUSSELL, 91, Oct. 8 RICHMOND - Mrs. Louise JOHNSON, 76, at home of her son, R. L. WELCH, Route 3, Oct. 5 ST. CLAIRSVILLE - Charles Franklin BURGHY, 25, Oct. 7 SOUTH SALEM - Mrs. George KLINE, 58, Oct. 9 SPRINGFIELD - John W. ZOPF, 72, Oct. 9; George H. HILLIARD, 72, Oct. 9; Ray STORER, 51, Oct. 7 URBANA - A. B. CONRAD, 62, North Lewisburg, Oct. 6; Mrs. Howard MARTIN, Woodstock, Oct. 7; John F. RUSSELL, 91, Oct. 8 WEST LIBERTY - Mrs. Emma STONEBURNER, 48, Oct. 6 ZANESVILLE - Ralph L. PAUL, 48, president of the Monitor Mining Co., Oct. 9 Emergency Squad Calls 12:58 p.m. - 1914 Denbridge way. Charles HUBER, age 86, Springfield Ill. 1:12 p.m. - 517 Lathrop street. Jennie LEVISON, age 78, ill. 2:49 p.m. - 613 Northview avenue. Mrs. Jane RUSLAND, age 38, sprained ankle. 4:20 p.m. - 121 East Russell street. Albert CASSIDY, age 11, bitten by dog. 4:48 p.m. - 299 Livingston avenue. Mrs. Catherine PEPPER, age 37, 482 South Eighteenth street, fell from bicycle. 6:02 p.m. - 1200 block of East Broad street. Joseph BAKER, age 48, 865 East Long street,ill. 7:14 p.m. - Briggs and Sycamore streets. Marie CUNNINGHAM, age 50, 686 Briggs street, fractured hip. 9:33 p.m. - 454 Trevitt street. Gertrude TUCKER, age 60, dead on arrival of squad. 10:08 p.m. - Ogden avenue and Broad street. Intoxicated man. 10:35 p.m. - 825 Bassett street. Elizabeth GUNNERT, age 52, ill. 11:25 p.m. - Main and Front streets. Jack TINNEY, age 48, struck on head when hammer came off handle. ************************************************************************* George L. HULL, Teacher at Ohio Wesleyan, Dies George L. HULL, 38, professor of business administration at Ohio Wesleyan university. Delaware, died Friday noon at the Harding Sanitarium, Worthington, following a short illness. He was a former public accountant for Konopak-Herst and Dalton company at Toleda. He was a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi fraternities and the Phi Kappa Delta social fraternity. Besides his wife, Bernice, he leaves two sons, Geoge L. jr., and Lowell Andrew HULL; and his parents, Mr and Mrs E. L. HULL, Toledo. Funeral Services will be held at 1:30 p.m., Monday, from Boyer funeral home, Toledo. ************************************************************************* Two are Hospitalized as Result of Fights Two men required hospital attention early Saturday as the result of fights, police reported. According to officers, Lewis GILMORE, age 33, 480 Graham street, was shot through the hand in a Twentieth street restaurant during an argument over drinks he had ordered. He was taken to St. Francis Hospital. During a fight with another man near the West Broad street bridge early yesterday Willie BIGGS, age 19, 413 East Noble street, was stabbed in the abdomen. He was also attended at St. Francis hospital. ************************************************************************ MURDER SUSPECT HELD Kenton, Ohio - Oct. 10 - (INS). - Warren BARNETT, 40, wanted in Floyd county, Ky., on a murder charge, was held in the Hardin county jail today. Sheriff Randall CLERK, said that the man was allegedly involved in a Prestonburg, Ky., fight in which a Walter WADKINS was fatally injured. ************************************************************************* Deaths and Funerals BAILEY - Emma of Tulsa Okla., Oct. 8, Widow of Henry Clinton BAILEY, Mother of Ralph B. BAILEY, Arnott Ross BAILEY, O. Dwight BAILEY, Leah Hazel REED. Friends received at Denton, Donaldson & Kuhn Funeral Home, Sunday. Services 2 p.m., Monday, Lithopolis Lutheran Church. Interment, Lithopolis. CHERINGTON* - Sabina, 78, of 35 W. Park-St. Grove City, Friday. Survived by 4 nephews and 1 niece. Funeral services Monday afternoon Jackson, O., Methodist Church. Interment Jackson by Kenneth Norris. Friends may call at the residence in Grove City until Monday morning. {*Difference in surname spelling from the death listing} CLEMMENS - John Burton, 64, of 208 S Princeton0Av., Friday. Survived by wife, Lydia; daughter's Mrs. Lewis BILL; 2 sons, John, jr., and Kenneth; 5 grandchildren; 3 sisters, Mrs. Cora CLARK, Mrs. Elizabeth PEOPLES, Mrs. Hattie SHOBE. Friends may call at the residence until time of services, 2 p.m., Monday, at the First Church of the Nazarene. Interment Union by Wylie S. Shroyer, 1278 W. Broad St. COLE - Mrs. Marie, age 54, of 293 N. Sandusky St. Delaware, Friday morning. Survived by husband, Ross; 2 sons, Verlyn of Columbus, Kenneth of Westerville; 1 daughter, Mrs. Ralph O'DELL of Westerville; 1 sister, Mrs. Mabel WALKER of Sunbury. Funeral services Sunday, 3 p.m. Morrison Funeral Home, Delaware, Burial Sunbury Cemetery. COPPINGER - Patrick J., age 66, died at St. Francis Hospital. His residence, 1362 Whittier St. Survived by his wife, Glada; 2 sisters, Miss Anne COPPINGER and Catherine McNEIL of Halifax, Nova Scotia; 1 brother, John COPPINGER, Farmington, Massachusetts. He was a member of the K. of C. and Brotherhood Locomotive Engineers and Firemen, Buckeye Fishing Club, also Eagles Lodge, who will conduct services Sunday evening, 7:30. Remains are at A.J. Held Chapel. Funeral Monday, 9 a.m. Corpus Christi Church. Interment St. Joseph's Cemetery. BOYER - Robert B., age 48 years, Friday, at home in Detroit, formerly of Columbus. Husband of Pauline; father of Harriett; son of Ella C. BOYER. Funeral service 1:30 p.m.Monday, Carroll Weir Funeral Home. Interment Kirkwood Cemetery, London, direction Edward E. FISHER. Friends may call at Funeral Home Monday. DICKSON - Hannah L., 76, of 103 W. Oakland Av., Wife of Samuel A. DICKSON; mother of Mrs. E. C. RINEHART, Struthers, O.; Mrs. Earl WILSON at home; also survived by 2 grandchildren; 1 great-grandchild; 1 sister, Mrs. George McCUNE of Columbus. Member of Indianola Presbyterian Church. Funeral services will be held at the P. E. Rutherford Co. Chapel, 2383 North Hugh St. 2 p.m. Tuesday. Interment Union Cemetery. Friends will be received at the Funeral Home, after noon Sunday. HOCHULI - Sophia, age 70, Friday. Survived by husband, Karl,of 964 Cole St.; two daughters, Ida HOCHULI, Mrs. E. A. INGRAM; 2 sons, Carl and William, all of Columbus; 1 grandson; 1 sister, Mrs. Katherine MAIER. Funeral services will be conducted in the Woodyard Co. Chapel, Monday, 3 p.m. Interment Green Lawn by O. R. Woodyard Co. HURLEY - John, 746 E. Front St., aged 52, Friday, St. Francis Hospital. Leaves wife, Gertrude E.; 1 son, Richard; 1 daughter, Jo Ann. Funeral services will be conducted at the residence, 10 a.m. Monday. Interment Oak Grove Cemetery, Logan, O., by the O. R. Woodyard Co. LOVEBURY - Frederick J., of 1488 Essex Rd. suddenly Thursday, at Manchester, Ohio, age 50 years. Survived by wife, Helen; son, Major William, Hawaii; father, William H. of Columbus; brother, Clarence of Durham, N.C.; grandson, William, jr. Friends may call at the Shaw-Davis Funeral Home. Services 2 p.m. Monday, Interment Mt. Sterling, Ohio. MORRIS - Peter J., 51 1/2 E. Rich St., Oct 9, age 81, Brother of Walter MORRIS. Friends received at Denton Donaldson & Kuhn Funeral Home, where service will be at 10:30 a.m. Monday. Interment Union SHOEMAKER - Carl E., 154 W. Third Av, aged 55, Saturday morning. Leaves wife, Luella; daughter, Mrs. John ABBOTT of Dayton; brother, Foster E., 82 Town St.; sister, Mabel GUTCHESS of Dennison Av. Friends may call at the Floyd Born Funeral Home, where services will be held Monday, 10 a.m., Rev. E. Stacy Matheny officiating. Burial Cardington, Ohio. SMITH - Clarence Justin, residence, 711 Kimball Place, aged 66. Survived by wife, Anna B.; sister, Mrs. Charles P. BINIGER; brother, Claude C. Friends may call at the Evans Funeral Home. Livingston Av and Kimball Place, where services will be held Monday 2 p.m. Interment Forest Lawn. WADDELL - Carlos R., 1742 E. Columbus St., aged 50. Survived by wife, Bertha; 5 sons, Leroy, Marion, Robert, Virgil, Albert; daughter, Betty. Remains at the Feil Funeral Home, 225 King Av. until Monday, 10 a.m. Services at the Groll Funeral Home, Waldo, O., Monday, 1 p.m. Interment Marion, O., by Feil. (Marion papers please copy) ************************************************************************* Card of Thanks BURKE - We wish to express our sincere and heartfelt thanks to relatives, friends and neighbors for the kindness, sympathy and beautiful floral offerings shown at the death of our dear wife and mother, Elizabeth BURKE. Also to North Linden U. B. Church, Mt. Bethany Tabernacle and Cablegraft, Ohio Bell Telephone Co. Husband and Daughter.