OBITUARIES THE CHATTANOOGA TIMES: CHATTANOOGA. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1941. TRI-STATE NEWS 15 A Christmas Gift for the Family! Genuine SAMSON CARD TABLES NEW TOPS CHOOSE FROM NEW COLOR MANY NEW COMBINATIONS, PATTERNS No. 686 AT THIS Choice AMAZING LOW PRICE 198 Look at this amazing EACH value! Compare the beautiful patterns, the extra strength of Samson Card Tables, with ordinary tables. They can be used for games, No.
662 serving buffet luncheons, sewing, studying! No. 665 The whole family will enjoy a Samson Card Table. No. 620 No. 686-Combination Walnut, Lace Wood, Ivory Leather ORDER inlay effect No.
662-Walnut Border, Brown Spanish Grain embossed No. 645 BY center No. 620-Regulation Chess and Checkerboard. NUMBER No. 665-Walnut Border, Ivory embossed center.
No. 645-Embossed Ivory leather effect. No. 693-Burl Walnut woodgrain effect, Just Look at These WALTER MARR, 76, ANVENTOR, IS DEAD creator of the Associate Valve-in-Head of Engine Was Ford, Buick Henry L. Marr, 76, inventive pioneered with Henry Walter genius who David Buick in the and development when of the this industry automobile was in the days its infancy, died yesterday at Erlanger hospital foldin wing an illness of one week.
wing in Lexington, in Born Marr has made his home st Signal mountain since 1914, Mr. retired from the motor because of ill health. he an industry one of the first men M. Marr was nation to drive an and his chief contrithe entire to the development of the automobile, bation industry was his invenmotor car the valve-in-head engine, has for many years been a tion of which festure of the Buick automobile. He is survived by his wife, whom the former Miss Abbie Farrar, Gertrudes FLOWER SHOP 16 EAST SIXTH Phone 6-1153 See Our Colorful CHRISTMAS MEMORIAL WREATHS Made to Last PHONE 6-7168 GEORGIA at TENTH Deep tops with reinforced bracing.
Extra roomy playing surface. Smooth edges. Other Standard Size SAMSON Round INVENTOR DIES I WALTER L. MARR he married at Saginaw, one son, Walter Marr, an engineer with the General Motors corporation at Flint, two daughters, Mrs. Edward Hays and Mrs.
Paul Mathes, of Signal mountain; five grandchildren, Walter Marr III and Richard Marr, of Flint; Joan Hays, Anne, Elizabeth and Sarah Jane Mathes, of Signal mountain; one sister, Mrs. Jesse Ingamells, of Saginaw, and brother, George E. Marr, of Saginaw. Funeral services will be held at the Signal Mountain Presbyterian church tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock, with the Rev. James L.
Fowle, assisted by the Rev. Battle McLester, officiating. Burial will be in Chattanooga Memorial Park. Active pallbearers who are requested to at the Marr residence at 1:45 p.m. are P.
H. Stegall, J. P. Elsten Hedges, See Page Sixteen, Column One BOUQUET FROM 2409 MCCALLIE PHONE 2-4771 INC. FLORIST 7.6-2648 Quality Features! Stain-proof, washable tops.
Steel corner protectors. Sturdy, double steel braced legs. Gliders on legs. SAMSON Card Card Tables. John Wesley Lazenby, of Chattanooga, died last night at the home of mother, Mrs.
Fred Frawley, 8005 Seville street, Fort Lauderdale, Fla. He had been 111 several months. Mr. Lazenby, a native of Alabama, was educated in the Huntsville High school and attended Staunton Military academy, Staunton, Va, He served an enlistment in the United States navy and was stationed at Great Lakes, Ill. He is survived by his wife; two children, and Patricia Lazenby; mother, Mrs.
Fred Frawter, Mrs. Richard A. Chatley; brother, Owen Lazenby; tanooga. The body will be brought to Chattanooga for funeral services and interment, plans to be announced. John W.
Lazenby William Mack NEW YORK, Dec. 11 William Mack, 76, secretary of the American Law Book company and editor of its publications, Corpus Juris Secundum, Corpus Juris and the Cyclopedia of Law and Procedure, died yesterday. He was a native of Sumter county, South Carolina. Dr. Frank Conrad MIAMI BEACH, Dec.
11 (AP). Dr. Frank Conrad, 66, widely known as an inventor and electrical engineer, died today after a month's illness. His body was sent to his former home in Pittsburgh for burial Monday. John W.
Moore WASHINGTON, Dec. 11 John W. Moore, 64, former member of the house of representatives from the old Third Kentucky district, died today at his home here, after a prolonged illness. A native of Morgantown, Moore had been assistant controller for the federal housing administration for the past few years. Judge Harold Louderback SACRAMENTO, Dec.
11 Federal District Judge Harold Louderback, 60, died today. He was appointed to the bench in 1928. Charles F. Goodwin EAST LIVERPOOL, Dec. 11 Charles F.
Goodwin, 67, secretary-treasurer of the United Potters' association since 1912, died of a heart attack in a Cleveland hotel today, while attending the association's sixty-third annual convention. Deaths -MRS. SARAH age 75, died at the residence of No. 693 Tables $2.98. $5.98 Park.
Arrangements are in charge of the R. J. Coulter Funeral Home. EASTBURN-MRS. MOLLIE, 77, died night at residence, Route No.
4, St. Elmo, Tenn. Surviving are a son, C. A. Isbiil, Route No.
4, St. Elmo; four grandsons, Jack L. Isbill, Jacksonville, Dick Isbill, Pine Bluff, Charles and Arnold Isbill, Chattanooga. Funeral services will be held at 2 o'clock this afternoon at Lone Oak Baptist church, Rev. Oscar Pickett officiating.
Interment Fairmount cemetery. Pallbearers: Earley and Roy Hoodenpyle, Raymond and Paul McEntire, Leon and Alton Hudson. The body will remain at the funeral home of J. Avery Bryan Company until the hour of the funeral. Arrangements by J.
Avery Bryan Company. HEARTSILL- S. died Tuesday morning at Bradenton, Fla. She was a resident of Cleveland and is survived by her husband, S. A.
Heartsill, of Bradenton. Funeral services will be held at 10 a.m. Friday at the McLain Funeral chapel in Cleveland, the Rev. Marvin S. Kincheloe offiiard, Clarence McIntyre, ciating.
Pallbearers, B. D. Knox Harle, William Donaldson, Grover Brown and Harrison Fair. Burial, Fort Hill cemetery. LAZENBY- -JOHN WESLEY, died last night in Fort Fla.
He is survived by his wife, two children, Teddy and Patricia Lazenby; his mother, Mrs. Fred Frawley; brother, Owen Lazenby, and sister, Mrs. Richard A. Brock, Chattanooga. His body will be brought to Chattanooga for services and interment, plans to be announced by Jack O'Donohue.
M'DANIEL-Funeral services for Mrs. Stella Myrick McDaniel, 53, wife of Charles E. McDaniel, who died Wednesday at residence, WHISPER in Burning Bush, near Ringgold, will be held at 10 o'clock Sunday morning, central standard time, Burning Bush Baptist church, Rev. Pedigo and Rev. W.
E. Broome officiating. Interment in Peavine cemetery. Pallbearers: E. Myrick, Curtis McDaniel, Buford McDaniel, R.
L. Moreland, T. S. Senter, J. B.
Weidner and Stuart McDaniel. By request, the body will be viewed at the home only. Arrangements by J. Avery Bryan Company. SNYDER-MRS.
NORA, 22, of Chickamauga, died Thursday morning in a local hospital. Surviving are her husband, W. T. Snyder; a daughter, Betty Lee Snyder; parents, Mr. and Mrs.
J. M. Durham, Chickamauga, a sister, Mrs. Lora Bell Durham, Chickamauga, six brothers, T. M.
and C. V. Durham, Chickamauga; A. Menlo, W. LaFayette, H.
F. and J. Durham, Sale Creek, Tenn. Funeral services will be held at 11 o'clock this morning, E. at the home her parents, lost Mrs.
J. M. Durham, near Chickamauga, Rev. M. O.
Gardner officiating. Interment Shelton cemetery, near Sale Creek. Arrangements J. Avery Bryan Company. COLORED WATSON-MRS.
GUSSIE KINNEBREW, 1139 West Terrace, passed away at her residence yesterday afternoon after a brief illness. Survivors, one daughter, Miss Elizabeth Kinnebrew; two sons, James C. Kinnebrew, of Chattanooga, and John M. Kinnebrew, of Chicago, two sisters, Mrs. Nora Kelley and Miss Bertha Kinnebrew; grandson, James, granddaughter and greatgranddaughter, of and other relatives and The body is at the residence.
Funeral arrangements will be announced later by Buchanan. "I LOVE Evening Paris BOURJOIS SENATORS IGNORE TVA DOUGLAS DAM Approve Expansion, Adding Four Other Dams Urged by Senator McKellar WASHINGTON, Dec. 11 The senate appropriations committee late today approved an expanded Tennessee Valley Authority defense power development, but followed the action of the house in disregarding a presidential plea for construction of 000,000 Douglas dam near Dandridge, Tenn. Senator McKellar Tenn.) said four new hydroelectric dams in the TVA and the adjacent Cumberland basin area and a steam plant at Sheffield, proposed by him, were voted unanimously, "but no amendment was even offered to build the Douglas dam." four dams, McKellar told newsmen, will produce "four times" as much power as the celeDouglas dam." McKellar has contended Douglas dam would destroy some of the most valuable farm land in Tennessee and force several canneries to which the farmers sell their garden crops out of business. William L.
Batt, director of the OPM's materials division, pleaded with the subcommittee, of which McKellar is chairman, for an hour and forty minutes yesterday to approve Douglas dam. Batt urged that Douglas, which would produce 100,000 kilowatts of power, was the only project available which could produce sufficient power to meet 1943 aluminum production needs. The projects offered by McKellar, he said, would together produce considerably more power than Douglas alone, but that no YOU" her daughter, Mrs. C. F.
Reckard, 282 Stephenson avenue, Lookout Mountain, Thursday afternoon. She is survived two daughters, Mrs. Reckard and Mrs. August Meyer, of Noel, also several grandchildren great-grandchildren. The body will be sent to Weeping Water, at 1:25 p.m.
today for funeral services and interment. Arrangements are in charge of the R. J. Coulter Funeral Home. BETTIS -MRS.
SUSIE VIOLA, 49, died at home, Oakwood drive and Highway 58, early Thursday morning. She is survived by her husband, Jess L. Bettis; one son, Thomas Henry Bettis; four daughters, Mrs. S. W.
Ashley, Betty Sue, Louise and Jean Bettis, all of Chattanooga; father, Robert Christian; two brothers, James Christian, Chattanooga, and N. B. Christian, of Fort Worth, three sisters, Mrs. Stella Mullins and Mrs. John Wilson, of Chattanooga, and Mrs.
Myrtle Faulkner, of Cincinnati, O. Funeral services, conducted by the Rev. W. P. Everson and Rev.
Cate, will be held at the Oakwood Baptist church at 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon. Interment will be in Greenwood cemetery. Pallbearers are E. L. Baker, Robert Wilson, Eugene Wilson, Bill Wilson, Jim Poe and George Hastings.
The body will remain at the funeral home until the funeral hour. Arrangements are by the National Funeral Home. DILLARD PATRICIA ANN, 2-month-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Dillard, of 116 West Twentieth street, died at the family residence Thursday morning.
her parents, she is survived by her maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Luther Hicks, and paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Dillard.
Funeral services will be held at the residence at 2:30 o'clock this afternoon, with interment following in Chattanooga Memorial A Evening in Paris Perfume and a atomizer, Boudoir set in gaily beribboned box. Eau de Cologne, Talcum, Single Vanity Gaily tasselled purse, flacon of famous Evening in Talcum Paris Powder Perfume, in Eau bottle logne, slide-top SOUR JOIS in kling Smart Paris Eau purse de Perfume flacon Cologne of with Evening "The Evening mance" in Fragrance Paris of Perfume Re- in unique star box de Fragrant Cologne bottle. Evening and in Talcum Paris Eau in slide-top Also Triple Double Single Loose Vanities Powder Vanities $2.00 Vanity. $1.25, Evening in Paris Face Powder, famous because it "stays on." In gift package with Eau de Cologne PLUS TAX For Japan in Germans Pilot Planes, LONDON, Dec. 11 (P).
-A. large percentage of the Japanese planes attacking the Malayan peninsula are piloted by Germans, the News Chronicle's Singapore correspondents reported tonight. "Enemy plane losses from which the pilots were captured or killed establish that a large percentage of the pilots are Germans," the correspondent said. The main British land forces have not yet engaged the Japanese who have gained a foothold north of Singapore, he added. engineering authority would forecast their supplying a sufficient bloc of power 1943 to prevent injury to defense industries in the valley.
The TVA appropriation was part of the third supplemental national defense appropriations bill, which probably will be acted upon by the senate tomorrow. The house version included $25,000,000 appropriation to enable the Tennessee Valley Authority to inaugurate a $94,000,000 developtana Carolina, a new ment, embracing, $50,000,000 Fongenerator at the Watts Bar steam plant, ten additional generators at existing TVA hydroelectric dams and additional transmission lines. The appropriation was raised another $25,000,000 by the senate committee, McKellar said, to finance immediately work by the TVA on one dam on the Watauga river near Elizabethton, and one on the Holston near Bristol, and the steam plant at Sheffield. The other two dams approved were on the near Dale Hollow, the Caney obedaver Fork, near Center Hill, both to be built by army engineers, "but operated by TVA," McKellar said. 4 hon vilian curies lation othed, get we sparinien arder, shal little duty duty, way 38, ler 1 fuga pre peril go: it finds peace of its apple at people they week case Last cused from which WaS ne of his oubts they ation.
and but in the and white and ct. for is OLE 1e te act the road the rrain, teless can- ust be gift package cum in slide-top bottle. In attractive Evening in Paris Toilet Water and Eau de Cologne: Gay holiday package Paris Convenient Perfume, purse Face flacon Powder, of Evening sparkling in kling Eau de Cologne, generous Talcum selled Famous purse Evening flacon, in Paris Perfume in spar- tas- A bottle. novelty Evening in Separate holiday Paris Perfume package atomizer. in royal-blue Delightful Paris Talcum, Beautiful Perfume, Single gift Loose package Face with Powder Powder, Evening Vanity Lipstick, in TAX THIRD FLOOR LOVEMANS Chattanooga's Quality Department Store A.