HARRY WILLIAM CAWLEY, Doctor of Dental Surgery at Hammond, has been a leader in his profession in that city for the past twenty years. He is also well known in business circles, being president of the Calumet Coal & Supply Company.

Doctor Cawley was born at Eldorado, Ohio, March 11, 1888. The Cawley family were pioneers in the vicinity of Dayton, Ohio. His father, John W. Cawley, was born and reared near Eldorado, had a public school education, taught school for several years, and in July, 1888, a few months after the birth of his son, Doctor Cawley, moved to Hartford City, Indiana. For many years he was in business there as a commercial tailor. He was a Mason and member of the Universalist Church. His death occurred in 1914 and he is buried in a cemetery at Hartford. During the Civil war he was a fifer in a drum corps with an Ohio regiment. John W. Cawley married Mary Emily Moore, who was born and reared near Eldorado, Ohio. Her father was a minister of the Universalist Church, and she, herself, was an earnest worker in that denomination. She was a member of the Woman’s Relief Corps. She died in 1929, at the age of eighty, and was buried at Troy, Ohio. Of her five children two died in infancy. The others are: Edgar M., manager of the Calumet Coal & Supply Company at Hammond; Miss Edna Maie Cawley, engaged in secretarial work at Hammond; and Dr. Harry W.

Dr. Harry W. Cawley attended public school at Hartford City, was graduated from high school at Indianapolis in 1906, and in 1909 from Indiana University received his degree Doctor of Dental Surgery. It was in 1912 that Doctor Cawley entered upon the practice of his profession at Hammond. His offices are in the First Trust Building. He is a busy professional man and is a member of the Lake County, Indiana State and American Dental Associations. He is a member of the Chamber of Commerce, Garfield Lodge No. 569, A. F. and A. M., Lake Hills Country Club, is an independent Republican and a member of the First Methodist Episcopal Church.

Doctor Cawley married at Hammond, October 20, 1924, Miss May Lowery, daughter of William and Emily {Smith) Lowery. Her father is superintendent of the Standard Steel Car Works at Hammond and prior to that for a number of years was superintendent of the Illinois Car Works. He is a Mason and Odd Fellow, member of the Manufacturers Association. Mrs. Cawley attended grammar and high school at Hammond, being a member of the high school class of 1918. She is a member of the First Methodist Episcopal Church, the Eastern Star and the Woman's Club. They have a daughter, Dolores May, born March 20, 1928.

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


JOHN H. FETTERHOFF is one of the prominent members of the bar of the great oil city of Whiting. He located in Whiting soon after he was admitted to the Indiana bar, and for twenty years has been immersed in an increasing professional business and in many pleasant relations with his community.

Mr. Fetterhoff represents an old Pennsylvania family. As the name indicates, the Fetterhoffs are of German ancestry. He was born on a farm near Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, on Washington's birthday, February 22, 1880, son of Philip W. and Catherine (Schwab) Fetterhoff. His great-grandfather, Col. Philip Fetterhoff, was colonel of a Pennsylvania regiment in the War of 1812. His grandfather was John Fetterhoff, of Pennsylvania. Philip W. Fetterhoff was born and reared near Harrisburg, attended public schools and for over half a century has been active as a farmer and stock raiser. He still lives on his old homestead near Harrisburg, at the age of eighty-seven. He and Catherine Schwab were married in 1873. She was also born and reared near Harrisburg and is eighty-three years of age. Both parents are active Lutherans. She is a second cousin of the great American industrial magnate, Charles Schwab, chairman of the board of the United States Steel Corporation. Her father was Simon Schwab. Philip W. Fetterhoff and wife had ten children, two of whom died in infancy. The living children are: Mrs. Sarah Lucas, of Harrisburg; John H.; Miss Susan, who lives near Harrisburg; Mrs. Catherine Sweigard, of Pennsylvania; Isaiah and Philip W., Jr., both of whom are prominent attorneys at Harrisburg; Mrs. Anna Sweigard, of Harrisburg; and Norman, of Harrisburg.

John H. Fetterhoff grew up on a Pennsylvania farm, attended district schools and the Elizabethville Seminary. He came to Indiana to enter Valparaiso University, where he was graduated in 1908 and admitted to the bar the same year. In 1910 he located at Whiting, where he has steadily practiced law through the years. His offices are in the Central State Bank Building. He is a member of the Lake County, Indiana State and American Bar Associations.

Mr. Fetterhoff has never married. He enjoys many relationships with civic and fraternal organizations, including the Chamber of Commerce, Whiting Lodge No. 613, A. F. and A. M., Whiting Chapter, Royal Arch Masons, the Knights Templar Commandery at East Chicago, Fort Wayne Consistory of the Scottish Rite and Orak Temple of the Mystic Shrine at Hammond. He is a past exalted ruler of his lodge of Elks, member of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, the Woodmar Country Club, the Lincoln Hills Country Club, the Congressional Country Club at Washington, D. C., and the Lions Club. Mr. Fetterhoff for two terms was city attorney of Whiting and was deputy prosecuting attorney for two terms. He is a former president of the County Bar Association. He votes as a Republican. During the World war he was enlisted in the local Home Guard. He enjoys golf, baseball and other outdoor sports.

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


REV. LEMUEL OTHO JACKSON. In the person of Rev. Lemuel Otho Jackson, pastor of the Christian Church at Marengo, is found one of the most wholesome and human of philosophers and most courageous ethical teachers that Crawford County has ever known. The strength of his faith, the encouragement to be found in his business success, the extent of his insight and services and the power of his public utterances and his maintenance of the truth in which he believes, unite in the making of a career of signal usefulness and purpose.

Lemuel Otho Jackson was born September 8, 1890, on a farm in Washington County, Indiana, and is a son of William Edward and Amanda (Farebee) Jackson. His grandfather, William Jackson, was born in North Carolina, whence he migrated in an early day to Kentucky, in which state he spent the remainder of his life as an agriculturist. William Edward Jackson was born in Kentucky; but in young manhood moved to Washington County, Indiana, where he married a native of that state and spent the active years of his life in tilling the soil. He is now retired and a resident of Scottsburg, where he is a substantial and highly-respected citizen. Mrs. Jackson, who was born in Washington County, also survives, and to her and her husband have been born the following children: Ora E., who married Harry McClain, of Scottsburg, and has two children; Glenn and Gladys; Lemuel Otho, of this review; Clarence, of Logansport, who married Carrie Martin and has four children; Hall, Earl, Wayne and Mary Ellen; Clifford, a farmer of Scottsburg, who married Lodana Payne; Christina, who died in infancy; Arthur, of Pontiac, Michigan, who is married and has one child, Arthur, Jr.; and Laurence, of Royal Oak, Michigan; who is married and has two children.

Lemuel Otho Jackson received his early education in the public schools of Scottsburg and after his graduation from high school attended the Theological Seminary and was graduated therefrom with the degree of Ph. D. His first parish was at Spring Valley, where he remained two years, following which he filled pulpits at Blue Grass, Fulton County, three years; Paoli, three years; and French Lick, twelve years, and in 1922 became pastor of the Christian Church at Marengo, where he has since remained. He has made this a successful parish and has done much to elevate the moral tone of the community through his intense zeal and enthusiasm. He is not only a spiritual guide to his people, but a business advisor as well, for he is himself a successful business man. While at Paoli and French Lick, he was manager of the Tomato Products Company, and now holds the same position at Marengo, where the plant gives employment to fifty people. Reverend Jackson maintains an independent stand upon the question of politics, and as a fraternalist is affiliated with the Independent Order of Odd Fellows and the Modern Woodmen of America. He cooperates with other public-spirited citizens in the furthering of civic enterprises for the general benefit of the community.

On December 24, 1912, Reverend Jackson was united in marriage with Miss Alice Reynolds, daughter of Charles and Louisa (Miller) Reynolds, of Scottsburg, Indiana, and to this union there have come seven children: Charles, born November 7, 1914, who is attending high school in the class of 1932; Seldon, born January 27, 1916; Helen, born March 27, 1918; Junior O., born August 23, 1920; May Alice, born in November, 1924; Billy, born March 7, 1927; and James, born November 27, 1930.

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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


JOY F. BUCKNER is one of the popular and progressive physicians and surgeons of Fort Wayne, with offices at the corner of Broad- way and Taylor streets.

He was born in Northeastern Indiana, in Wells County, January 26, 1898, son of Francis Marion Buckner. More of the details of the Buckner family are published on other pages. Dr. Joy F. Buckner graduated from high school at Bluff ton, Indiana, in 1917, and in the fall of the same year entered the University of Indiana. His work there was interrupted during the World war. He entered the Officers Training School at Camp Taylor, Kentucky, serving in the latter months of 1918, until after the armistice. He then resumed his college course and in 1924 was graduated Doctor of Science and took his M. D. degree at the university in 1926. He had six months of experience as an interne, from January 1 to July, 1926, at St. Vincent's Hospital at Indianapolis. Doctor Buckner has practiced his profession at Fort Wayne since September, 1926. He is a member of the Allen County, Indiana State and American Medical Associations, and the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity.

He married, August 7, 1926, Miss Winifred Morse Terry, of Indianapolis. She is a graduate of the Shortridge High School of Indianapolis with the class of 1919, and in 1925 graduated from the University of Iowa. They have one daughter, Kathryn K., born August, 13, 1928.

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


FREDERICK GRANVILLE KENNEDY since 1920 has been one of Whiting's most useful public servants, the postmaster of the city. Mr. Kennedy brought to this office the experience of a successful business man.

He was born at Greenfield, Ohio, March 15, 1879, son of John and Edith (Clark) Kennedy. His father's father and grandfather were early settlers near Canton, Ohio, and are buried in the Kennedy family cemetery near that city. John Kennedy was born and reared in Ohio, was educated in public schools and served as a soldier in the Union army during the Civil war, being a member of the Sixty-fifth Ohio Volunteer Infantry. After the war he devoted his attention to farming and stock raising. He died in 1893 and is buried at Greenville. His home was on a farm near that Ohio city from 1881. His wife, Edith Clark, was born and reared near Logan, Ohio, was well educated and was a school teacher before her marriage. She was a devout Methodist. Her death occurred in 1919 and she is also buried at Greenville. Of their five children Estella died at the age of eighteen; U. L. Kennedy lives at Long Beach, California; Homer O. is a resident of Bellefontaine, Ohio; Frederick G.; and Carrie, who died when four years old.

Frederick G. Kennedy attended public schools at Greenville, and on graduating from high school in 1898 took up a career as a business man at Bellefontaine. He was in the restaurant business there until 1905, and on selling out entered the postal service. In the fall of 1918 he came to Whiting and was in the refining department of the Standard Oil Company until 1920, when he was appointed postmaster. His first commission as postmaster was signed by President Wilson and he has been retained in office through the successive administrations of Presidents Harding, Coolidge and Hoover. In this office he has worked and studied with a view to making the postal facilities completely adequate for the commercial and industrial interests of the city.

Mr. Kennedy is affiliated with Whiting Lodge No. 613, A. F. and A. M., Whiting Chapter, Royal Arch Masons. He is a Republican, member of the First Methodist Episcopal Church, the Chamber of Commerce and Luncheon Club. His recreations are golf, hunting and fishing.

He married at Bellefontaine, Ohio, February 7, 1907, Miss Cora Snider, daughter of Hugh and Mary (Burkhart) Snider. Her father was a captain in the Union army during the Civil war and for many years conducted a prosperous grocery business in Bellefontaine, where he died in 1913 and is buried. Her mother passed away in 1920. Mrs. Kennedy had one brother, who died when two years old. She was educated in the schools of Bellefontaine and was a newspaper woman before her marriage. She was connected with the Bellefontaine Daily Examiner. In Whiting she is active in the Methodist Church, teaches a class in the Sunday School and belongs to the Eastern Star and Woman's Club.

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


GEORGE JOHN WOLF, president of the Hammond School Board, is a business man who has taken a keen interest in local educational affairs and is the type of citizen always willing to sacrifice his time and effort in behalf of some phase of the public welfare.

Mr. Wolf was born in Lake County, Indiana, November 8, 1887, son of John E. and Anna (Lavene) Wolf. His paternal grandfather, August Wolf, came from Germany and was one of the pioneers of Lake County, Indiana. He settled near East Gary, at what was then known as Lake Station, and he and his wife are buried in the cemetery at East Gary. John E. Wolf was also born and reared in Lake County, attended public schools and in early life was a farmer. In 1888 he located at Hammond and was engaged in the building material business til his death in 1893. His wife, Anna Lavene, was born and reared at Muskegon, and attended school there. She died in 1924 and she and her husband are buried in the Oak Hill Cemetery at Hammond. They were active members of the Lutheran Church. Their family consisted of the following children: John C., of Hammond; Joseph A., of Hammond; Ethel, wife of William Huehn, of Hammond; George J.; Charles E., of Hammond; and Walter R., who died in 1893, at the age of two years, also a half brother, Edward W. Hess.

George J. Wolf made the best of his early advantages in the grammar and high schools of Hammond. He was graduated from high school in 1904 and immediately went to work. Up to 1917 he was an employee of the Wells Fargo & Company Express. From 1917 to 1927 he did a prosperous business as a manufacturer of concrete building units. He sold out to take over the Hammond franchise for the Studebaker car, and he has since been the distributor for the Studebaker products in this territory. He has large and handsome sales rooms and offices at 122-124 State Street. In addition to the Studebaker he has the local agency for the Pierce Arrow cars.

Mr. Wolf has had four children who have been educated in the schools of Hammond, and since the first child entered school he has been interested in the welfare and progress of local school facilities, and this interest led to his election as president of the local board of education. He is also a member of the Hammond Chamber of Commerce, the Kiwanis Club, Lake Hills Country Club, and for many years he and his family have been active in the Lutheran Church. He is a Republican. From 1920 to 1924 he was president of the City Council.

Mr. Wolf married, May 18, 1910, at Hammond, Miss Elizabeth Brumm, daughter of August and Wilhelmina Brumm. Her father was a carpenter by trade and died in 1930, being buried at Hammond. Her mother is now eighty-nine years of age. Mrs. Wolf attended grammar and high schools at Hammond, is a graduate of Valparaiso University, and before her marriage taught in the Hammond public schools. She is a member of the Woman's Club. The four children of Mr. and Mrs. Wolf are: George Homer, who graduated from the Hammond High School in 1928 and is a member of the class of 1932 in Indiana University; Wallace David and Warren Allen, both students in the high school; and Jane Elizabeth, in grammar school.

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


HON. WILLIAM J. HENLEY, one of Indiana's best known lawyers and jurists, has been a leader in his profession at Rushville forty- five years. His name over the state is especially well known because of his gifted services while on the bench of the Court of Appeals.

Judge Henley was born at Carthage, Indiana, October 15, 1864, son of Thomas W. and Hannah C. (Williams) Henley, his father a native of North Carolina and his mother of Wilmington, Ohio. Judge Henley is a direct descendant of Robert Henley, who in England was Lord Northington, Lord Chancellor of England. Another ancestor was Patrick Henley, who came to the United States on the same boat with William Penn. The Henley family for many generations have been devout Friends.

Judge Henley's father was a farmer who lived most of his life near Carthage in Rush County. He died in 1903 and his wife in 1912. William J. Henley attended a private school conducted by the Friends at Carthage and studied law in the office of Mellette & Bundy at Newcastle. In 1885 he was admitted to the bar and entered upon his law practice at Rushville. Eleven years later he was elected judge of the Court of Appeals, taking his seat on the bench January 1, 1897. He was made chief justice of the court, at the age of thirty-three, being the youngest man to hold that honor in Indiana. Judge Henley was on the bench until 1904. After being nominated for the third term, he resigned to accept the office of president and general counsel for the Chicago & Western Indiana Railway, which is the holding company of seven trunk lines entering Chicago, with headquarters in Chicago. In 1912 Judge Henley resigned and returned to Indiana to carry on his practice of law. He is president of the Central Fuel Company at Rushville. He is a member of the Rush County, Indiana State and American Bar Association and for years has been one of the leading figures in the Republican party of the state. His high responsibilities and his many interesting activities have kept his name before the public. In 1909 the inimitable Sam Blythe, who at that time was running a series of his articles on prominent political personalities over the country, under the title of Who's Who and Why, in the Saturday Evening Post, devoted a full page to Judge Henley, his friends, his position in Indiana politics and affairs. Judge Henley is the only person honored by receiving this kind of publicity in Indiana. His name has been associated many times with the leading men of the nation. Judge Henley is a member of the Masonic fraternity and the B. P. O. Elks.

He married, May 6, 1885, Miss Sarah A. Monroe, who was born at Rushville, February 10, 1865, daughter of George and Missouri (Hackelman) Monroe. In 1912 Judge Henley married Myrtle E. Robinson, a native of Marion, Indiana, daughter of William A. and Amy (Whitfield) Robinson. Judge Henley has four children, the first three by his first marriage, William J., Jr., of Chicago, June and Gladys, and by his present wife has a daughter, Mary Elizabeth.

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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


HAZEL FRANCES LONG, librarian of the Whiting Public Library, was born in Chicago, and was ten months of age when her parents established their home in Whiting. She is a daughter of Frank M. and Fannie (Pullen) Long. Her grandfather, Martin Long, came from Hull, England, and married Martha Coburn, of Boston, Massachusetts. These grandparents are buried in the Forest Home Cemetery at Chicago. The Pullens also came from England, and were early settlers near Brioghton, Illinois. Her maternal grandfather was an early minister in that section of Illinois. Frank M. Long was born in Chicago, attended school there and is a veteran employee of the Standard Oil Company at Whiting, being chief clerk of the mechanical department. Fannie Pullen was born near Brighton, Illinois, was educated in public schools there and died August 21, 1930, being buried at Gary. She was a member of the Plymouth Congregational Church. There were three children, Frank M., Jr., Martha Elizabeth and Hazel Frances. Frank Martin Long, Jr., was born at Whiting, graduated from the Whiting High School and from the Kent College of Law at Chicago, and is now with the sales and legal department of the Standard Oil Company. He married Lois Morrison, of Whiting, and has a son, Frank Martin Long III, born in 1929. Martha Elizabeth Long was born in Whiting, is a graduate of the high school, then attended the University of Chicago, and since graduating from the Metropolitan Business College has been employed as a secretary in the University of Chicago School of Education.

Hazel Frances Long was graduated from the Whiting High School in 1913 and since then has devoted practically all her time to library work. She was with the Whiting Public Library until 1915. The following year she spent in the Library School of the University of Wisconsin, where she received the Bachelor of Library Science degree in 1916. Since then she has done advanced work in the University of Chicago. During 1916 she was in the public library at Cleveland, Ohio, and from 1916 to 1918 with the Whiting Public Library. During the war, in 1918, she worked for the Sinclair Oil Refining Company. In 1921 she was made acting librarian of the public library at Oak Park, Illinois. In 19221 she returned to the Whiting Public Library, was children's librarian, and since 1924 has been librarian. Miss Long is a member of the Beta Gamma Upsilon sorority, the Whiting Woman's Club, the Lake Hills Country Club and the Plymouth Congregational Church.

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


WILLIAM WOOD PARSONS, former president of the Indiana State Normal School at Terre Haute, was one of the first students to enroll in the institution when it was opened in 1870.

He was born at Terre Haute, May 18, 1850, and died September 28, 1925, after a long and useful life of three-quarters of a century. He was a son of Dr. Thomas and Elizabeth (Ryman) Parsons. His father was a pioneer doctor of Terre Haute, where he practiced medicine until 1862, and then lived retired on a farm in Douglas County, Illinois, until his death in 1869.

William Wood Parsons graduated from high school at Tuscola, Illinois, and with the opening of the Indiana State Normal School on January 6, 1870, joined the first class. He was graduated in 1872, and in 1886 received the Master of Arts degree from Indiana University, and DePauw University and Wabash College conferred upon him the degree Doctor of Letters. He taught school near Tuscola, Illinois, was principal of a school at Gosport, Indiana, and also taught at Indianapolis. In 1876 he returned to the Indiana Normal School, where he was professor of English from 1876 to 1879, head of the English department, in 1882 became vice president, in 1855 president, and was head of the institution thirty-six years, resigning the office in 1921.

It was during the long and successful administration of Doctor Parsons that the school at Terre Haute became one of the outstanding institutions of the kind in the country. In June, 1927, on Alumni Day, the Memorial Chimes were dedicated as a gift of alumni and friends to commemorate those who had devoted their lives to the cause of education. At the same time was established the Parsons-Sandison Living Memorial Fund, the proceeds of which are to enable students through loans to complete their education.

Doctor Parsons in 1894 helped organize the Terre Haute Trust Company and was on the board of directors until 1922. He was for twenty-five years a director and from March, 1922, until his death was chairman of the board of directors of the First National Bank of Terre Haute. He was also interested in other banking institutions, was president of the board of managers of the Rose Orphan Home, member of the board of managers of the Rose Polytechnic Institute. He was a Methodist and a Republican.

His first wife was Harriet Wilkes, of Terre Haute. They had two children, both deceased, Harold died in infancy and Robert died soon after his graduation from Wabash College. Harriet Wilkes Parsons died in 1915. His second marriage, in 1917, was with Miss Martina Erickson, principal of Monticello Seminary at Godfrey, Illinois. She was the first dean of women at the Indiana State Normal College at Terre Haute.

Note that there is a printing error at the end of paragraph 2. It should probably read “...in 1885 president, ...”. I left the original biography as it was written in the book.

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


REV. GEORGE THEGZE was born and reared and received his theological training in Hungary. He came to the United States in 1914, and since then several localities in the Middle West and the East have received the benefit of his devotion and spiritual leadership. Father Thegze is now pastor of St. Mary's Church, Greek Catholic, at Whiting.

He was born in Austria-Hungary, May 5, 1883, son of Rev. Victor and Helen (Egressy) Thegze. His parents were born and reared in Hungary, were educated in parochial schools there, and his father was ordained a minister of the Greek Catholic Church. In 1910 he came to America and was pastor of St. Michael's Greek Catholic Church at Binghamton, New York, until his death on December 29, 1920. He is buried in St. Michael's Church Cemetery. After his death his widow returned to Czecho-Slovakia, where she now resides. There were five children, one dying in infancy. George was the oldest child. The others live in Europe.

George Thegze attended school in Hungary, completing his common school work in 1905, and in 1910 was graduated from the University of Budapest, where he received his theological training. He was ordained a priest in that year and for several years following was pastor of the Church of the Immaculate Conception at Jank, Hungary. He came to the United States in 1914. His first pastorate was at St. Michael's Church at Gary, Indiana. After three years he went east and for about two years was pastor of St. John's Church at Bayonne, New Jersey, and then pastor of the Holy Ghost Church at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, until 1928, when he took up his duties in St. Mary's Church at Whiting, Indiana. Father Thegze is a popular member of the community, a helpful citizen, and has found contact with organizations both in and out of his parish. He is a member of the Whiting Lions Club. He votes independently as an American citizen. His hobby is hunting. Every season he goes to the woods of Northern Wisconsin to hunt big game. He is head of the parochial school of St. Mary's parish, supervising the work of a large enrollment of students.

He married in Hungary, November 10, 1910, Miss Helen Legeza, daughter of Rev. Alexander and Anna (Lamfalussy) Legeza, of Kiralyhaza, Hungary. Her father for many years was a priest of the Greek Catholic Church. Both her parents died during the World war. Mrs. Thegze was born and reared in Hungary and educated in the public schools at Ungvar. They have four children: George, Jr., Helen, Charles and Victor. George, Jr., graduated from the Oliver High School at Pittsburgh, then spent three years in Pittsburgh University, and is now studying medicine abroad at Vienna University. The daughter, Helen, after graduating from the Oliver High School at Pittsburgh spent two years in the Academy of Mt. Mercy in that city and is now engaged in secretarial work in Chicago. Charles is a graduate of the Whiting High School and a student in Notre Dame University, taking the premedical course. Victor is in grammar school at Whiting.

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


Deb Murray