Lima News, Mar 3, 1920 August G. LUTZ, 66, barber, 326 N. Pierce-st., died at his home, Tuesday night, after an illness of five days from pneumonia. He was born in Wittenberg, Germany, August 1853. The widow, a son Henry of Lima, three daughters, Mrs. Millie LUTZ, and Mrs. C.M. BRENNER, both of Whitney, Ind., and Miss Lulu LUTZ, at home survive. For two terms he served as county treasurer. He emigrated to the United States in 1868 and settled in Bryan, where he was later married to Flora L. ARNOLD. After a short residence in Toledo, he located in Lima in 1873. Funeral services will be held Thursday at two o'clock at the residence. Interment will be at Woodlawn. Friends are asked to send no flowers. Mrs. Elizabeth BUCHANAN, 77, died at St Rita's hospital early Wednesday morning after an illness of five months from a complication of diseases. Mrs. J.L. HIXON, daughter, Wellington, and four grandchildren survive. Funeral services will be held at her former residence, three miles north of Kalida, at a time not yet set. Interment will be in the Cuba cemetery, Putnam county. Gerald SHANAHAN, 3 1/2 years, son of mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. SHANAHAN, 323 W. Grand-av, died Wednesday morning, after an illness of six weeks from whooping cough and complications. Funeral services will be held Saturday at nine o'clock at st Gerard's Catholic church. Burial in Gethsemani. The roof at the residence of Mrs. Louise EYSENBACH, 714 W. Spring-st., was entirely destroyed by fire Wednesday noon, causing large damage. Sparks from a chimmey, Chief MACK claims, ignited the roof. The flames spread to every part of the roof and penetrated the ceiling on the second floor of the house. Furniture and other articles of the home were damaged by water. A barn in the rear of the residence was set fire by flames from the burning roof, with slight damage resulting. Charles gordon PARKER, 206 W. McKibben-st, locomotive engineer, has taken out second papers in naturalization in court. He came to the United States from Canada. Charles W. DAVISSON, Auglaize-co, farmer, died at his home, nine miles southeast of South Warsaw, early Wednesday morning. He has been ill four months from complication of diseases. The widow, two daughters, Gladys and Chloe and a son Roy, with his parents, who live near Waynesfield and Mrs. John BLANK, sister, near Westminster, survive. Funeral services will be held Friday at two o;clock at Olive Chapel. Interment will be in Fairmount cemetery. Henry STEPLETON, 920 St John's ave., was taken to the City hospital, Tuesday afternoon in an unconscious condition from a fall, was able to be removed to his home, Tuesday night. The Long and Bowersock ambulance made the transfer. STEPLETON, while at work on a building at Main and Vine-sts., fell from a scaffold to the ground.