GEORGE LEWIS MACKINTOSH, D. D., A. M., LL. D., former president of Wabash College, is an alumnus of that old and honored institution of higher learning in Indiana.

Doctor Mackintosh was born in Guysboro County, Nova Scotia, January 1, 1860, and received his early educational advantages in his native country, attending the New Glasgow Academy. His parents were John and Elizabeth (Bruce) Mackintosh. In the fall of 1878 he came to Crawfordsville and enrolled as a student in the preparatory department of Wabash College, graduating there from in 1884, with the degree of Bachelor of Arts. For one year he served as principal of the high school at Lawrenceburg, Indiana, and then began the study of theology in Lane Theological Seminary, at Cincinnati, Ohio. He was ordained in 1887, and for the following eighteen years he gave his time and talents to the service of the ministry. His first charge was at Winamac in Pulaski County, where he remained four years, during which time, and largely through his personal work and efforts, the handsome new church edifice was erected. He then accepted the pastorate of the Fourth Presbyterian Church in Indianapolis, continuing his labors there until 1906.

In 1907 he accepted the call to the presidency of Wabash College, where, in addition to his executive duties, he held the chair of professor of philosophy. He resigned as president in 1926, but continues to make his home at Crawfordsville. Wooster College conferred upon him the degree of Doctor of Divinity, and he received from Hanover College the degree of LL. D.

Doctor Mackintosh married, in 1902, Miss Bertha Stone, of Montreat, North Carolina. She died in 1906, leaving a son, Roderick Bruce, who died at the age of sixteen years. In 1912 Doctor Mackintosh was united in marriage with Miss Jean Mitchell, of Lafayette, Indiana. They have three sons and three daughters: Marjorie Miner, Duncan, John Lewis, William Marshall, Jean Argyll and Margot Ellen. Mrs. Mackintosh is a daughter of John B. and Josephine (Miner) Mitchell. She is a graduate of the University of Michigan. Her mother graduated from the medical department of the same university in 1901, and successfully practiced her profession at Lafayette for many years.

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INDIANA ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY YEARS OF AMERICAN DEVELOPMENT Vol. 5
By Charles Roll, A.M.
The Lewis Publishing Company, 1931


CHARLES A. McCORKLE is one of the prosperous farm owners of Jackson Township, Tippecanoe County. Mr. McCorkle has a place of about 368 acres, all good land, well improved and constituting a property which is often pointed out as a model of good agricultural management.

Mr. McCorkle was born in Montgomery County, Indiana, July 2, 1865, son of Andrew Calvan and Polly Ann (Meharry) McCorkle. His paternal grandparents were Andrew and Mary (Gooding) McCorkle. Andrew McCorkle was born in Tazewell County, Virginia, and on coming west traveled overland through Wheeling, West Virginia, to Ross County, Ohio, and after a brief term spent there came on to Indiana in 1828. Andrew McCorkle's father was also named Andrew, and was a soldier in the War of the Revolution. Andrew Calvan McCorkle was born in Putnam County, Indiana, in 1838. He spent his active life as a farmer and stock man. His early education was acquired in country schools and he lived at home until his marriage, at which time he moved to Tippecanoe County and settled on what has long been known as the McCorkle homestead in Jackson Township. He was always interested in church, in community affairs, and at one time was chosen to represent the county in the Indiana State Legislature. During the Civil war he served as a Union soldier in the Army of the Cumberland. He and his wife are buried in the Meharry Cemetery. There were two children, John W. and Charles A. John W. married Carrie Devore and has three children, named Alice, Mildred and Howard.

Charles A. McCorkle grew up at the McCorkle homestead and had better than ordinary educational opportunities. He attended the Shawnee Mound Academy, spent one year in DePauw University and two years in Purdue University. While getting his higher education he worked on the home farm, and he has put in more than forty years as a practical farmer and stock man. Successful in his work, he has exercised a good influence in his community. He and his family are active members of the Methodist Episcopal Church. He is a Scottish Rite Mason and Shriner, member of the Eastern Star, and also belongs to the Knights of Pythias. Mr. McCorkle has traveled extensively.

He married in 1891 Miss Frances M. Bittle, daughter of Silas and Fannie (Devore) Bittle. Their family consists of four children. The son John R. married Miss Wilson and has three children, named Patricia, Charles and Don. The other children are Charles L. Bernice A. and Andrew Francis.

INDIANA ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY YEARS OF AMERICAN DEVELOPMENT Vol. 5
By Charles Roll, A.M.
The Lewis Publishing Company, 1931


FRANK E. HOOVER is owner of the Hoover Brothers Furniture Company at Columbus, the largest establishment of its kind in Bartholomew County, operating a complete home furnishing establishment.

Mr. Hoover has been in the furniture business since early boyhood. He was born at Lima, Ohio, May 15, 1878, son of John and Bernadine Hoover. His father was a railroad man. Frank E. Hoover attended school only until he was thirteen years of age. He is one of five sons, all of whom have been in the furniture business and the older brothers still carryon as retail dealers at Lima, Ohio. Frank E. Hoover went to work in the store of his brothers, learned the business by association with every department and every form of work. In 1914 he bought two furniture stores at Columbus, one conducted under the name of A. Kimball and the other the Hilger & Barrett store. These places of business were consolidated, and since then it has been conducted by the Hoover Brothers Company, at 601-605 Washington Street. The store has 14,000 square feet of floor space, carries a stock of goods valued at about $35,000, including all grades of upholstered furniture, rugs, stoves and other equipment.

Mr. Hoover married Miss Myrtle May Townsend, of Blackford County, Indiana. They have one daughter, Bettie Jane, attending school at Columbus. Mr. Hoover is one of the enterprising business men of Columbus, is a past director of the Chamber of Commerce, a past president of the Retail Merchants Association. He has filled the office of treasurer in the Knights of Columbus, is a member of the B. P. O. Elks and Knights of the Maccabees, and during the World war was a captain in the teams for the sale of Liberty Bonds and also aided in the Red Cross and War Stamp drives.

INDIANA ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY YEARS OF AMERICAN DEVELOPMENT Vol. 5
By Charles Roll, A.M.
The Lewis Publishing Company, 1931


JAMES F. WALLACE, retired farmer and stock raiser, has lived all his life on one farm and in one locality in Jackson Township of Tippecanoe County. His farm there, located two miles east of Shawnee Mound, was his birthplace. He was born there November 23, 1860. Mr. Wallace has fully earned the respect and esteem of his community through his successful management, his public spirit and his willingness to do for others.

Mr Wallace is a son of Hugh and Jane (Brooks) Wallace and is related to the family of General Lew Wallace, the great Indiana soldier and author. Mr. Wallace's parents were born in Ireland and were married in that country, where two of their children were born. Altogether they had ten children: Mary, deceased, wife of John Greenburg; Elizabeth, deceased, wife of William Francis; Aaron and John W., both deceased; Belle, wife of Charles Williamson; James F.; Ella, deceased wife of William White; and the other three children died in infancy. After coming to this country Hugh Wallace lived for two years in New Jersey. In 1849 he came to Tippecanoe County, Indiana. Here he found work among members of the Meharry family until he had earned enough to make a start in buying land and establishing a home of his own. He took much interest in church and Sunday school and other community affairs and was always a devout Methodist. He was buried in Wheeler Cemetery in Jackson Township.

James F. Wallace while a boy attended the Locust Grove School, the Shawnee School and the Sugar Grove School, and completed his education in the National Normal University at Lebanon, Ohio. From early youth he worked on the home farm, and for over forty years he devoted his time and energies to the management of this property, which comprises 420 acres of land. Mr. Wallace married in 1886 Martha Peed. They have one child, Lura, wife of Claude Hedworth. Mr. and Mrs. Hedworth have two children, Lawrence and James A. Lura Wallace is a graduate of DePauw Univeristy at Greencastle.

Mr. James F. Wallace has traveled extensively, and at one time owned considerable land in Texas. He is a Mason, member of the Mystic Shrine, the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, the Methodist Episcopal Church, and is interested in all civic matters and is quite prominent in Tippecanoe County politics.

INDIANA ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY YEARS OF AMERICAN DEVELOPMENT Vol. 5
By Charles Roll, A.M.
The Lewis Publishing Company, 1931


DR. MARTIN WASHINGTON YENCER, a highly esteemed physician and surgeon of the City of Richmond and ex-representative from Wayne County, in the Indiana Legislature, first beheld the light of day near Lancaster, Fairfield County, Ohio, December 27, 1871. He is of Swiss and German descent. His paternal grandfather, Joseph Yencer, was born in Basel, Switzerland, and when nineteen years old, in company with two of his comrades, about the year 1830, sailed for the United States. He located in Fairfield County, Ohio, one of his comrades in Columbus, Ohio, and the other continued his journey to the westward and was never heard from again. Joseph Yencer, Sr., was a cooper and farmer by trade, having been a pioneer settler of Fairfield County, Ohio, united in marriage with Miss Catherine Gazell, of an old pioneer family of Fairfield County, in the early part of the century. With this union there was born three sons and three daughters to crown the little log cabin at Dumontville, Ohio. All three sons represented their state as loyal soldiers of the Union in the great Civil war of 1861-65. Joseph Yencer, Jr., the father of Doctor Yencer, was born in Fairfield County, Ohio, November 16, 1843, and at the age of seventeen enlisted as a private in the Seventeenth Ohio Infantry, Army of the Cumberland, with which he served for three years in the Civil war. This regiment was organized at Camp Dennison, in September, 1861, to serve three years, first participating in the Wild Cat fight in Kentucky, and next in the siege of Corinth, during which it was engaged in several severe skirmishes. The regiment went into the battle line on the Stone's River field and with its brigade charged the Confederate General Hanson's brigade, driving it in confusion, killing its general and some 150 of the rank and file. It moved with its brigade in the Tullahoma campaign, and at Hoover's Gap charged the Seventeenth Tennessee Confederate regiment, strongly posted in a belt of woods, driving it back and occupying the position. At the battle of Chickamauga the regiment was on the extreme right of the center, and when General Wood's division was double-quicked out of the line, the gap left exposed the right flank of the regiment, the Confederates opened fire both on the right flank and in front, causing it to lose heavily and scattering the men in confusion. During this day of battle of Chickamauga, Mr. Yencer, Jr., considered this being the most bloody conflict of more than seventeen battles he bad participated in during the Civil war. His brave and fearless Captain Rickets in the height of the battle encouraging his men to stand their ground, was instantly killed by his side and one out of every three was killed or wounded in this day's battle. At Missionary Ridge, though in the rear line at the start, the regiment was in the front when the top of the hill was gained. It took only a subordinate part in the heavy skirmishing at Rocky Face Ridge, but bore its full share in the battle of Resaca. At the battle of Resaca he was left on the field of battle for dead. A span ball struck his metal buckle on his belt and knocked him unconscious and in a few hours he again was among the living and found this span ball in his haversack at supper time. At Kenesaw Mountain the regiment suffered less than it had in previous actions of less importance, but the heat was so intense that many men were carried off, prostrated by sunstroke. In this engagement Mr. Yencer was wounded June 18, 1864, and this practically ended his military career, as he received an honorable discharge from the service soon thereafter. But he had participated in more than seventeen engagements. Upon his discharge from the service he returned to Fairfield County and devoted his attention to farming, in which he was engaged for a number of years,. but during the past seventeen years he has conducted a farm implement establishment at Basil, Ohio. He was a member of the Grand Army of the Republic and of the Masonic order at Baltimore, Ohio. Mr. Yencer died April 3, 1931, and was given Masonic and military honors at the last rites.

Joseph Yencer, Jr., had two brothers who enlisted and served under the Union flag, Samuel and, John. John being a volunteer in President Lincoln's call for 75,000 volunteers in April, 1861, and served his country flag for four years that this Government of the United States of ours would live. All three brothers of this Swiss family were willing, yea, ready to sacrifice their lives that this Union should be united in one government - one nation and under one flag, the Stars and Stripes -the star-spangled banner.

The mother of Doctor Yencer, Minerva Jane (Kemmerer) Yencer, was born in Fairfield County, Ohio, June 27, 1847. She was the daughter of Josiah and Maria (Zeigler) Kemmerer. Josiah.was born in Pennsylvania, an old pioneer of the .Keystone State, Maria Zeigler was born in Fairfield County, Ohio, her father and mother were the early settlers of Ohio in the seventeenth century. She died December 24, 1925, and of her union with Joseph Yencer there were born six children - four sons and two daughters. Milton E. resides on the old farm in Fairfield County, Ohio; Martin W. is he whose name initiates this sketch; Ada C. is the wife of Leo Burton, of Iowa; Sadie is the wife of W. A. Barr, of Cleveland, Ohio; Perry D. resides at home, and one brother, Samuel S., is deceased. The subject of this review received his elementary educational training in the schools of old District No.1, Greenfield Township, Fairfield County, Ohio, and passed the first seventeen years of his life on the home farm. One of his teachers, Charles Williams, when Mr. Yencer was a student of the district school, was the grandson of a teacher who instructed such eminent men in their day as James G. Blaine, John Sherman and Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman at the old Fairfield County Academy. The old Fairfield County Academy then located near Lancaster, Ohio, in Greenfield Township, Fairfield County, is now extinct. The academy was abandoned some seventy years ago. Mr. Yencer also attended the high school at Baltimore, Ohio, the Ohio Normal College, Pleasantville, Ohio, and the Crawford Institute at Lancaster, and taught for two years in the common schools of Fairfield County. During the time that he was teaching he studied medicine with Dr. O. P. Driver, at Basil, Ohio, and in 1893 began the study of medicine and surgery at the Starling Medical College in Columbus, Ohio, now affiliated with the Ohio State University. Later he was a student in the medical department of the National Normal University, Lebanon, Ohio, in 189 entered the senior class of the Central College of Physicians and Surgeons at Indianapolis, now affiliated with the Indiana University School of Medicine, and on March 24, 1897, he was graduated with the degree of Doctor of Medicine. He then immediately began the practice of his profession at Boston, Wayne County, Indiana, opening his office in September, 1897, successor of Doctor Evans, and remained in that place eleven years, leaving it to come to Richmond, in April, 1908. Here he has since been located at 22 North Fourteenth Street, Richmond, Indiana, and has built up a large and lucrative practice. He has always devoted his attention to general practice. Politically Doctor Yencer is associated with the Republican party, and in 1902 was nominated and elected as the state representative of Wayne County in the Sixty-third General Assembly of Indiana. In 1904 he was reelected as a member of the Sixty-fourth General Assembly, and upon this occasion received a majority of 3,852 votes, the largest ever given in Wayne County over a Democratic opponent. During his four years of service in the Legislature it was his pleasure to assist in the election of three men to the United States Senate - Charles W. Fairbanks, James A. Hemenway, and Albert J. Beveridge. As a member of the Indiana State Legislature, 1903 session, he was the first member to introduce a measure for the creation of a state highway commission for building the public highways and better roads for Indiana. One of the most important paramount measures was the House Concurrent Resolution for the up building of the United States Navy, asking Congress to back the program of President Roosevelt for a better and bigger navy for future defense of the United States which was much needed during the World war in 1917. The House Concurrent Resolution was for maintenance of the mighty policy promulgated by President Monroe. In 1903 President Roosevelt was asking Congress for a mighty navy for future defense of the American Republic. In 1908 Doctor Yencer was a candidate in the primaries for the Republican nomination for Congress in the Sixth District, then succeed Hon. James E. Watson who was congressman then of the Sixth District, then the Republican candidate for governor of Indiana against the Democratic nominee, Thomas R. Marshall. Marshall was elected governor of Indiana in 1908 over now United States Senator James E. Watson. At the age of twenty-one, in 1893, Mr. Yencer was honored by his community as a delegate in support of William McKinley for renomination for governor of Ohio, from his native County of Fairfield County, Ohio, and several times a Republican delegate to the Indiana State Republican Conventions. Fraternally, Doctor Yencer is admirably affiliated, being a Mason, which order he joined at the age of twenty-one years in Lodge 475, A. F. and A. M., Baltimore, Ohio. He has taken the Royal Arch degrees, Wayne Council No. 10, and is a member of Downey Lodge, No. 233, of Boston, Wayne County, his Royal Arch, King Solomon Chapter No.4, membership being in Richmond, now a member of Webb Lodge No. 24, A. F. and A. M. He is also a member of the Sons of Veterans, the Wayne County Medical Society, the Indiana State Medical Society, and a Fellow of the American Medical Association. He was a volunteer during the World war for service in the United States Army Medical Service Corps, authorized by the Council of National Defense, approved by the President of the United States - enrolled as a member on October 8, 1918, by Newton D. Baker, secretary of war. As the armistice was signed on November 11, 1918, Doctor Yencer received his commission, but was not called to overseas service. Doctor Yencer is married to Jeannette May Hill, who was born at Muncton, New Brunswick, August 29, 1880, daughter of John T. and Eliza B. (Barclay) Hill, the former of whom was born at Wytheville, Virginia, August 13, 1848, and the latter at Bathurst, New Brunswick, March 25, 1853. The ancestors of Mr. Hill were early settlers in Virginia, and he has the honor of being a relative of Thomas Jefferson, the author of the Declaration of Independence and the third President of the United States. John Joseph, only child of Doctor and Mrs. Yencer, was born February 29, 1920, and thus has a distinct birthday observance only once in four years, he being now a student in the Richmond public schools.

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INDIANA ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY YEARS OF AMERICAN DEVELOPMENT Vol. 5
By Charles Roll, A.M.
The Lewis Publishing Company, 1931


HOMER KENDAL YORK has had an interesting career because of the fact that he started work at the age of fourteen, earned rapid promotions in responsibility and accumulated a great fund of expert knowledge regarding the automotive industry and all the factors pertaining to its development. Then came a period of wartime service, and after the war the Indiana Truck Corporation of Marion found him a highly valuable man and has given him repeated recognition of the importance of his work until he is now vice president of the corporation and head of its good roads department.

The Indiana Truck Corporation is the outgrowth of a company started in 1898 by Charles G. Barley and George C. Harwood. In 1909 the organization first started the production of motor trucks, and the business has steadily grown on a policy of putting out only a high grade product until the company now has a national and international reputation and is manufacturing several thousand trucks annually, using a plant covering fourteen acres and comprising approximately thirty buildings. Today this is the third largest among the exclusive truck manufacturers in the country. The corporation devoted its facilities to Government orders during the World war.

Mr. York was born at Carrollton, Carroll County, Kentucky, February 19, 1895. His father, Joseph E. York, was born in Tyrone, Kentucky, January 20, 1857, son of William Joseph York, a native of Charlottesville, Virginia. The grandfather was a Confederate soldier and while on duty was drowned, being twenty-six years of age at the time. His body was recovered and is buried at Tyrone, Kentucky. He married Mary Baker, daughter of a prominent Kentucky family, several of whom were distillers. Joseph E. York was a tobacco planter in Kentucky. He married Cynthia Bayne, who was born at Trimble, Kentucky, October 9, 1863, her people also having been tobacco growers.

When Homer Kendal York was a child his parents moved to Indianapolis, where he received his public school education. In 1909, when fourteen, he was given a job as time cost clerk, at $3.50 a week, with the National Motor Car Company. He was with this organization until the war, and when he resigned had reached the position of production manager, at a salary of forty-five dollars a week.

In 1918 he entered the Field Officers Training School at Louisville, Kentucky. However, in July of the same year he was assigned to service at the Indiana Truck Corporation's plant at Marion in supervising the production of the trucks purchased for Government use. The capable way in which he handled his work for the Government attracted the attention of the officials of the corporation, who secured him as service manager, and in the winter of 1919 he was made production manager. In 1920 he was given another promotion, as assistant secretary, in 1921 was made secretary, and in 1925 elected to the office of vice president.

During the war the Government owned 22,000 Indiana trucks, and when there was no longer a use for them for war purpose the Government turned them over to the good roads departments of the various states for the purpose of building or maintaining roads.

The Indiana Truck Corporation was established with a capitalization of only $25,000. It is now a nine million dollar corporation. Mr. York as head of the good roads department has been responsible for a great deal of business for the corporation, and in 1930 he secured the largest single order given to the corporation since the close of the war, an order for a hundred Ford trucks from the New York State Highway Commission. Mr. York is also a stockholder in the Standard Oil Company of Indiana, Standard Oil Company of California, Standard Oil Company of New Jersey, the Texas Oil Company, the First National Bank of Marion, Moldin Printing Company of Marion, Cuban American Manganese Company, Tennessee Copper Company and the Continental Motor Company.

In politics he is a supporter of the Republican party, and has served as a member of the Indiana State pardon board, and as a member of the board of trustees of the Indiana Reformatory. He is a member of the Masonic fraternity. His real estate holdings comprise a tract of rolling land on the banks of the Mississinewa River, only a few minutes' drive from the center of the city. The landscaping of this tract has been a hobby with Mr. York and he had laid out the grounds, planted them with rare flowers, ferns and trees, and it is his intention eventually to turn over the place to the City of Marion as a pleasure park. He is a member of the Marion Country Club and the Indiana Athletic Club and Columbia Club of Indianapolis.

Mr. York married, June 19,1919, Miss Mary Weinbrecht, of Indianapolis. Her father is connected with the National Malleable Iron Company of Indianapolis. The Weinbrecht family came originally from Cologne, Germany. Mrs. York is a member of the Department Club and the Adelphian Society of Marion. They have two daughters. Rose Mary was born at Marion March 5, 1922, and is a bright and attractive girl now in the third grade of the Marion city schools. Phyllis York was born August 30, 1926. Mr. and Mrs. York adopted her from the Masonic Home at Nashville, Tennessee.

INDIANA ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY YEARS OF AMERICAN DEVELOPMENT Vol. 5
By Charles Roll, A.M.
The Lewis Publishing Company, 1931


JOHN WATSON. Among men whose lives have represented useful work and influence in Delaware County for many years that of John Watson is worthy of mention for his long service as an educator and in recent years as a public official.

Mr. Watson, present county surveyor of Delaware County, was born in that county February 3, 1869, son of Abraham and Catherine (Rutledge) Watson. His father was born in Muskingum County, Ohio, and was brought to Delaware County by his mother when three years of age. The grandfather, James Watson, had come to Eastern Indiana in 1840, bought a tract of land here, and shortly afterward died. It was for the purpose of taking possession of this land that the family came to the county in 1843. Abraham Watson grew up there, and soon as old enough took upon himself the responsibilities of farming. That was his vocation throughout the rest of his life. He died in 1916 and he and his wife are buried in the Tomlinson Cemetery. Catherine Rutledge was born and reared in Delaware County. She was a devoted member of the United Brethren Church. She died in 1910, and of their seven children the fifth in age died in infancy, the others being: William R., of Muncie; Sarah, deceased; John; James, deceased; Stella, wife of John Gibson, of Muncie; and Alice, deceased.

Mr. John Watson grew up on his father's farm, and all his life has been interested in farming and country life and has a great many friends among the farmers of the county. After the public schools he attended the Central Indiana Normal College at Danville, graduating with the class of 1896. In 1906 he took a diploma from the Indiana State Normal at Terre Haute, and also had a year of post- graduate study in the Ball Teachers College at Muncie. His work as an educator filled in the greater part of his time for a quarter of a century. All that time he taught in Delaware County. At sixteen he taught a term of school in a country district. Later he was in grade school work, was principal of grades, for a few years taught in the high school, and for nine years was supervising principal of the schools of Muncie.

Mr. Watson for many years has been interested as a student of civil engineering, and has had a wide experience in the application of his studies. In 1922 he was appointed city engineer of Muncie by Mayor Doctor Quick, serving in that capacity four years. In January, 1926, he removed to Florida and for four months was assistant engineer at Clearwater in that state. On returning to Muncie he resumed the private practice of civil engineering. Mr. Watson in November, 1928, was elected county surveyor and in January, 1929, took charge of that office in the courthouse. He is also acting as county agent. He is a Republican in politics and a member of the Methodist Episcopal Church.

Mr. Watson married in Delaware County, September 24, 1891, Miss Rhoda Jones. She attended grade and high schools in this county and taught for several years. She has some interesting accomplishments as an artist and has done a great deal of painting in oils. She is active in the Methodist Episcopal Church and a member of the Riverside Country Club. Her parents were Henry A. and Mary (Reasoner) Jones, her father: a farmer and stock raiser for many years in Delaware County. Both her parents are buried in the Elizabethtown Cemetery. Mr. and Mrs. Watson have an adopted daughter, Mary Eileen Falby, who was educated in the schools of Muncie, graduating from high school there. She is the wife of Mr. Lester Van Horn, connected with the Banner Furniture Company of Muncie. Mr. and Mrs. Van Horn have two children, Vera Maxine, born December 25, 1924, and Oma Jean, born April. 28, 1926.

INDIANA ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY YEARS OF AMERICAN DEVELOPMENT Vol. 5
By Charles Roll, A.M.
The Lewis Publishing Company, 1931


Deb Murray