Indianapolis Times, Volume 48, Number 47, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 May 1936 — Page 5

MAY 5, 1936

SARAH POLLARD) IS DEAD AT 98 IN HOME HERE Aged Woman Was Widow of Intimate Friend of Harrison. Funeral services for Mrs. Sarah Amanda Pollard, widow of William Pollard, close friend of former President Benjamin Harrison, are to be held at 2:30 tomorrow afternoon in the Tyner Funeral Home, 328 W. 30th-st. The Rev. Aubrey Moore of the Seventh Christian Church is to conduct the rites. Mrs. Pollard was 98. She died early yesterday morning in her home, 936 Eugene-st. Born March 21, 1838, in Rush County, she had lived in this county since she was 11. She and her husband, who died in 1934, lived on a farm near New Augusta until 1905, when they moved to the Eugene-st address. Mr. Pollard and President Harrison served together in the Civil War and were associated later in politics. Both Mr. and Mrs. Pollard were life-long members of the Christian church and charter members of that church in New Augusta. Mrs. Pollard is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Laura M. Avery, New Augusta; Mrs. Hattie P. Heath, Indianapolis, and Mrs. Grace Kllngcnsmith of near New Augusta; six granddaughters, Mrs. Elza O. Rogers, Lebanon; Mrs. Lottie McManus, Rush County, Indiana; Mrs. Alma Sweeney, Toledo, O.; Mrs. Lula Neidinger and Mrs. Beatrice Mclntyre, Indianapolis, and Leota Gillan, Orrville, O.; 19 great-grandchildren and 11 great great-grandchildren. Mrs. Katherine Davie Last rites for Mrs. Katherine Davie, 2209 Bellefontaine-st, are to be at the Bert S. Gadd Funeral Home tomorrow at 2. Burial is to be in Crown Hill. Mrs. Davie died yesterday in her home. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Helen Richardson, Martinsville and two sons, Sydney Jr. and John Davie, both of Indianapolis. Mrs. Mary Jane Kirby Funeral services for Mrs. Mary Jane Kirby of 2850 Madison-av are to be held tomorrow at 2 in the home. Burial is to be in Floral Park. The Rev. E. P. Lowe, pastor of the Olive Branch Christian Church of which the Mrs. Kirby was a member, is to officiate. Mrs. Kirby, who was 84, died yesterday in her home. Surviving Mrs. Kirby are a son, Charles Kirby, t-nu two granddaughters, Mrs. Viola Richardson and Imogene Kirby. Ray Franklin Funeral services for Ray Franklin of 34 E. Adler-st, are to be held in the home today at 2. Mr. Franklin, who was 25, was a truck driver. He died Sunday in his home. Burial is to be in Crown Hill. Surviving him arc the widow, Mrs. Frances Franklin; the parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Franklin; two brothers, Edward and Orva, and two sisters, Florence Franklin and Mrs. Jewell Yakjl. All live in Indianapolis. Eva L. McNeely Private funeral services for Mrs. Eva L. McNeely, a resident of Indianapolis for 40 years, are to be held in the home, 1042 Blaine-av, tomorrow at 2. Mrs. McNeely died Sunday morning. She was 67. Burial is to be in Floral Park. Wilhelmina $. Kruger Funeral services for Mrs. Wilhelmina S. Kruger, 335 Grahamav, are to be held tomorrow at 2 in the home. Burial is to be in Crown Hill. Mrs. Kruger died Sunday afternoon in the home of a son, William F. Kruger, of the Gra-ham-av address. She was 68. Surviving besides the son are a brother, Frank A. Engleking, and a sister, Mrs. Emma Tanscl, both of Indianapolis. Thomas A. Kinney Thomas A. Kinney, a retired farmer of 2737 Guilford-av, died yesterday in his home. The widow, Mrs. Margaret Kinney, survives. Funeral arrangements are not completed. William P. Moylan Funeral services of William P. Moylan, 56, of 1532 N. Dearborn-st, a former employe of the park board, are to be held at 8:30 tomorrow in the home and at 9 in St. Philip Neri Church. Mr. Moylan died yesterday in his home. Burial is to be in Holy Cross Cemetery. Howard Amos Howard Amos, 719 E. Tcrrace-av. died at the Methodist Hospital this morning. He was a salesman for the American Estates Cos. Surviving besides the widow, Alice, are two daughters. Miss Ruth Esther Amo3 and Mrs. Constance Hensel, and a brother, L. P. Amos, Kokomo. Funeral services are being arranged. Mr. Amos, who was 60. had been with the American Estates Cos. for the last 17 years and prior to that was assistant supervisor of the Prudential Insurance Cos. here. He was born in Kokomo. Murid Lauk Services for Muriel Lauk, 24, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John F. Lauk, 2954 MacPherson-av. are to be held at 3 today in Sheirley Bros. Central Chapel. Burial is to be in Crown Hill. Miss Lauk, a graduate of Broad Ripple High School, had lived in Indianapolis 20 years. She was 24. She was a member of the Girls' Federation of the Third Christian Church. Suviving, in addition to the parents, are a sister, Martha Jane STRENGTHEN THE BLADDER MAKE THIS 25c TEST Prink lor* of boiled or distilled water, If irritstlon causes getting tip nlebta, irregularity, pain, or backache. Vnu know what hardwater does to s teakettle. Drive out excegs* acids and deposits with buoho leaves, juniper oil. etc., made into green tsbletg called Bukcts. the bladder lax. Works on the bladder similar (o castor oil r.n the bowels. In four day*, if not pleased, any druggist will refund your 25c. Hook liiug Stores.-sAiivertiscuicat, -

HORI2ONTAI, Ansircr to l*rcrl<m Pmtxfe' 17 He told msrI. 4 Champion IK !E j I IS!UiK IE I lAikIaIDIAI * 4 velous tales of liar. Baron fA N 0 glplifi IQIN jL AV Aj h,s 8 - 13 Aperture.! 1111 'iM'ill I 1118 l Mill author of a lSHareim I~itA%MIIAIR|TIkPKI IlfC of travels 16 Chest bone ■sipU p' "EPUftL 23 Sliding box. 19 To spill. a IrTnFllg £ 28 Eye tumor, v 21 Ravines. -JA Hji H t 5 T AIMiE N3O Footlike part. 22 To be in debt. IPiMJBI X.N 0 31 Knave of clubs 23 Dating E £ DMeIkT 32 Night hefm-o machine. f|jg R]o QfPffjA R LBBEjR O|S 35 Money vaults. 24 Russian ruler. fftfiPElnll [tigl IFlAflllslElLr? 39 Hereditary. 26 Being. , _ .. 42 Unoccupied. 29 Machine part J. JJ ,k - J5 p he ' 43 Dye apparatus 33 Negative word oun< *-\ STo consume. 44 Suture 34 Corpse. H To nnl\ 6 Roman 45 Last word of 36 To entwine 56 To divert. ; emperor.v a prsyer into fabric. 58 He was a • • Buttercups. 46 Therefore 37 To attempt. by birth. 8 Nether world. 47 Kettles- * J 38 Those who sell 59 He was a— — 9 To hasten. 48 Toilet box.' 40 Evergreen tree by profession 10 Bear con-' 49 To ascend. 41 Inlets. (pi.). stellation. 50 Prophet. 45 Quaking. VERTICAL ** River mud. 55 South America. 48 Gaelic. 'l2 Tree 1 . 57 Doctor of 51 Brink f 2 Hideous giant.l4 Chum. medicine. |i a""" i* Vs"o' 7 9 10 j; |/£ I 3 n ” ~Ti5 " mmm , _ ft * _ __ __ __ -- p||;j Wtm- * vS tW !$£:!: Wm 41 AB“ 46 44 |45 |46 47 W3 50 _ r “~ '35 * 5o 55 TT 56 67 ri 11111 HHtI 11 h

Lauk, and a brother, Vincent Lauk, both of Indianapolis. Miss Lauk died Sunday ir. City Hospital. Mrs. Mary Farage Funeral arrangements for Mrs. Mary Farage, 1153 Tecumseh-st, have not yet been completed, but burial is to be in St. Joseph Cemetery. Born in Syria and a resident of Indianapolis for 23 years, Mrs. Farage died yesterday in her home following a 10 weeks’ illness. She was 43. The dead woman was a member of the Syrian Ladies’ Goodwill Society and of the St. Philip Neri Church. Surviving in addition the widower are a son, Frederick Farage; five daughters, Frances Farage, Amelia Farage and Mrs. Mose Katter, Indianapoils; Mrs. Ed Sowma, Niagara Falls, and Mrs. Charles Dager, Utica, O.; three brothers, George and Louis Bocater. Syria, and Farah Bocater, South America, and four grandchild* n. Ander Nicoli Steen Last rites for Ander Nicoli Steen, 2610 Southeastern-av, who died Sunday in City Hospial, were to be held at 2 this afternoon in the Woodside M. E. Shurch. Burial was to be in Washington Park. He was injured Friday night when struck by a car at Rural and New York-sts. Mr. Steen, who was 64, was born in Haisted, Denmark, and had lived in Indianapolis for the last 40 years. He had been employed by the Pennsylvania Railroad for 26 years.

/L,. T . c 7Z Am not crying. \ (Tommv9 wS7 V IM DISAPPOINT VS - Y ARE wu emb 1) ( BECAUSE ICAN 1CAN T r^A-yf YOU GET SNOWY CLOTHES ‘—l) \ FROM MY Nf£W / \ / Y^WASHER (IS THE washing machine} THAT AFTERNOON (BROKEN ( \ ms - SLOAN, MY MOTHER FEELS') x w < (sad because her clothes don't / [ ( NO. IT WORKS FINE. )\o ( COME OUT AS WHITE AS YOURS / \ ( MRS. SLOAN HAS ONE T'M’ (f / N ( LIKE MINE—YET HER U / WELL,DOROTHY,TELL^^ n WASH IS ALWAYS L'®® \ (MOTHER TO USE RINSOr SO MUCH 4I \ WHITER / iVS SMILE ON f J X 7 / A $ jW/ 9so¥ ‘FjA <p^l NEXT WASHDAY > / ( YOU ANGEL! \ T "ii i I BOUGHT YOU A j /|U TRY RINSO TODAY ) W ~ H> > PRESENT WITH < \ AND SEE IF IT REALLY \ V-’ ( WONEY fr OM MY J f MAKES A DIFFERENCE \jANK, MOMMY j V _ LATER j—, f I CAN'T COMPLAIN THIS WEEK. MY^—' \ CLOTHES ARE 4OR 5 SHADES WHITER. \ j&jlb 1 / { AND MY, WHAT RICH SUDS RINSO J }J \\ ] - T v ~\GIVES IN OUR HARD WATER j // NO WASHER? Then Rinso is your an* / / /! I swer to the question: “How can I ( l\ / / make washday easy and yet get my clothes j \ / J \ \ snowy and bright?” Rinso does the drudge / \ / V\ work of washday. Its rich, lively suds soak I \ \ out every bit of dirt. And the dirt \skept out I\\ \ 1 / \ W~~ —it doesn't “settle back’’ because Rinso sA • ** suds have “lifting power"—they hold dirt ( in suspension. Clothes come 4or 5 shades I I { lf|P whiter. They last 2or 3 times longer, too r —because they're not scrubbed threadbare. Vith Rinso you don't need bat soaps, If chips or powders for active suds in hard- IOJ I M iY I I mU/j est water. Recommended by makers of 33 II wIM. L A. * famous washers. Grand for dishwashing // L and all cleaning. Easy on your hands. Ap- /■. \a/aTFB I proved by Good Housekeeping Institute. 1 a re ooccT or uvaa bkotmxxj company TUMt IN onßiasoradio proma feunriaaKenMAyor!thPhilßea^rcbeaw Rum Mown *ad hu Liftboy. Erenr Tneoday at B;30 P. M. (E.RT.)om Colmhia Network.

TEST ASTROSCOPE IT LOCAL HOSPITAL St. Vincent’s Staff Uses Stomach Diagnosis Tube. Doctors, nurses, and internes at St. Vincent’s Hospital today discussed the use in the hospital of the gastroscope, a tube used for the diagnosis of stomach diseases. The tube was used for the first time yesterday in the hospital and was reported as “working perfectly” in a diagnosis of the ailment of a woman patient. Anew invention of medical science, the tube has prisms contained in it with a light on the end. The rubber tubing is inserted through the mouth into the stomach. It enables the diagnostician to see into the stomach and determine the nature of the patient’s ailment. The device, which does not cause the patient much discomfort, is to be used particularly to diagnose cases of persons believed to have ulcers. It eliminates the use of an X-ray picture.

Rush Jobs Make Us Smile Hendren Printing Company, Inc. 470 CENTURY BLDG. RI-8533.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

WORKER HURT GRAVELY Chicago Man Jumps From Scaffold at Chevrolet Tiant. Peter Mores. 38, Chicago, Is in a serious condition at Methodist Hospital today as the result of injuries

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received yesterday afternoon at the Chevrolet Commercial Body division of General Motors Corp., 1100 W. Henry-st. Believing that an iron rail was about to fall on him. Mores jumped backward from a 15-foot scaffold.

GIRL’S BODY IS FOUND Child, 7, Had Been Missing Since Sunday Morning. By United Press WATERVILLE, Me., May 5 —The body of 7-year-old Mary Proulx,

missing from her home since Sunday morning, was found lying in a grove of alders near Messalonskee River today. The girl, one of four children of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Proulx, formerly of Portland, had been bound, i gagged and assaulted.

PAGE 5

Austrian Woman Leader Dies By United Press VIENNA, May 5. - Marianna Hainisch, 97, pioneer leader of Austrian feminism and mother of ita first president, died today of bronchitis.