Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 July 1937 — Page 9

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THURSDAY, JULY 22,

MRS. 0. K. MURR, WIFE OF PASTOR, DIES HERE AT 58

Funeral Services to Be Held At Roosevelt Temple Church Saturday.

Mrs. Onie Kate Murr, 2025 N. Temple Ave, wife of the Rev. Lyman C. Murr, Roosevelt-Temple M. E. Church pastor, died today in Methodist Hospital after a five weeks’ illness. She was 58. Mrs. Murr was born in Greenfield in 1879.

Survivors in addition to her husband, are four daughters, Mrs, Violet Sandefur, Tillaiook, Ore.; Mrs, Hazel Foley, Sullivan; Mrs. Mary Catherine Garrison, Greenfield, and Miss Rosalind Murr, Indianapolis; & sister, Mrs. Martha Clark, Tillafook, and three brothers, Frank, New Albany; James, Bedford, and John Davis, Cloverport, Ky. Burial is to be in Memorial Park following funeral services at 2 p. m. Saturday in the church. The body is to lie in state from 1 to 2 p. m. in the church.

MRS. CATHERINE MARIE PEACOCK, 236 N. Summit Ave, who died yesterday in City Hospital, is to be buried tomorrow in Holy Cross following funeral services at 8:30 a. m. in the George W. Usher Funeral Home and at 9 a. m. in Holy Cross Catholic Church. She was 20. Born in Jeffersonville, Mrs. Peacock had lived here 19 years. She was graduated from Technical High School in June, 1936, and was married to Russell Peacock June 18. 1936. She was a member of the Holy Cross Catholic Church. Survivors are the husband; & daughter, Janet Peacock; her mother, Mrs. Hazel Davis, and three sisters, Mrs. Ruth Doyle, Miss Mildred Davis and Miss Mary Davis, all of Indianapolis.

LOUIS C. WILSON, who died Tuesday from injuries received

when his car crashed into the bridge

over White Rover at College Ave, is to be buried tomorrow in Crown Hill following funeral services at 10:30

&. m. in the Flanner & Buchanan |

mortuary. He was 33. Mr. Wilson was vice president of A. J. Wichmann & Co., investment firm, and lived at 5556 Washington Blvd. Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Margaret Loer Wilson; two children, Miss Sarah Jean Wilson, 5, and Diana Loer Wilson, 1; and the parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Wilson, 3952 Washington Blvd.

MRS. JENNIE B. ASHCRAFT, who died suddenly at her home, 129 E. Ohio St. is to be buried tomorrow in Portland following funeral services there at 11 a. m. She was 72. Mrs. Ashcraft came to Indianapolis 10 years ago. She was born in Ohio and later moved to Red Key. Survivors are two daughters, Mrs. LaVern Fishback and Miss Bertha

1937

Three Indiana nurses are among nine airline | kee, Ill; stewardesses who are to receive ‘diplomas of merit” for “outstanding service to humanity” in nursing the sick during the Louisville flood in January. The awards are to be made by the Rho Pi Phi, national druggist fraternity, in Boston July 30. | Kalamazoo, Mich.:

Top row (left to right), Marie Wanda, Kanka-

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Thelma Fuller, Horton, Pompton Lake, N. J.; Joan Waltermire, Indianapolis; Mae Leslie, Antler, S. D.; Catherine Goth, Bethlehem, Pa.

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Charitan, Iowa; Pat

(left to right), Mabel Williams, Phyllis Alldredge, Evansville,

and Agnes Spence, Ft. Wayne.

Deaths Among Indiana Residents

BUFFALO--John Furman Moore, 76. Sur- | vivors: Sister, Elizabeth Kitchen; brother, | Joseph T. CARLISLE—Mrs. Nancy Ann Hines. 97 Survivors: Children, Tom Jones, Nancy Long. Stella Ehlers and Orval and Guy | Jones. | CONNERSVILLE-— Benson | Survivor: Brother, Max. DELPHI—-Orval Zersas, 51. Survivors: Wife; daughter, Mrs. Virginia Hunter: son, | Edward. stepson, Robert Malone: father, | John Zersas; brother, Ernest Zersas. FT. WAYNE—Velda Eunice Wells, 15. Survivors: Parents, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Wells; grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Clar-

FILLING STATION AID

Kingery, 59.

Obliging Attendant’s Pants Yield $8, Police Told.

George Youngling, a filling station attendant, told police two men came to his station and asked him to look up a telephone number, bent over him as he did so, thanked him and walked out with $8 they took from

Ashcraft, and a grandson, Guy Fish- [his pockets.

back, all of Indianapolis.

JACOB D. DETAMORE, who died vesterday at the home of a brother in Drexel Gardens, is to be buried tomorrow in Floral Park following funeral services at 2 p. m. at the Farley Funeral Home. Mr. Detamore, who was 31, was born in Illinois and had lived in Indianapolis several years. Survivors ‘are his wife, Mrs. Evelyn Detamore; brother, Marion E. Detamore, both of Indianapolis; and sister, Mrs. Minnie Clements, Warsaw.

THOMAS E. MURPHY, 1122 N. Bellevieu Place, died yesterday in City Hospital, He was 25 and a lifelong resident of Indianapolis. He

was a member of the Holy Trinity Church. { Funeral arrangements were to be! completed today. Survivors are the parents, Mr. | and Mrs. Thomas H. Murphy; three | brothers, Donald, Lewis and Harold; and three sisters, Mrs. Catherine Owens, Mrs. Leona Sommers, and Mrs. Louise Arzman, all of Indianapolis.

‘COMPLETE’ BURGLAR "TAKES MOUTH WASH

The “complete” burglar takes cigarets, gin, whisky—and mouthwash for the morning after. Clyde Menaugh told police that | such thieves entered his pharmacy | at 2960 College Ave., last night and | stole 3000 cigars, valued at $150; | 5000 <cigarets, valued at $30; 20| quarts of liquor, valued at $92, and | 48 pints of mouth wash valued at $15. The thieves also took $297 in| change from the cash register and an undetermined number of nickels from a marble machine,

BOUND TO GRAND JURY | —————————— i Earl Phillips, 17, Negro, today had | been bound over to the grand jury on & murder charge after a preliminary hearing in Court. He js accused of slaying Samuel Lee Anderson, 16, Negro, at (1131 E. 15th St, Tuesday afternoon.

HE FOUND ALL-BRAN BROUGHT REGULAR, DAILY ELIMINATION

Get rid of half-sick days—with the headaches, the listlessness, the “always tired feeling.” Frequently. they come from common constipation .. . due to meals low in “bulk.” All you have to do is eat a delicious cereal regularly: “Every morning, for years, I have had a good helping of your ALL-BRAN and it means regular, daily elimination.”— Mr. E. N. Kring, 312 E. Hickory St., Fairbury, Illinois. Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN is so much better than drugging yourself with patent medicines. Within the body, ALL-BRAN ab. sorbs twice its weight in ‘water forms a soft mass, gently cleanses the system. Eat two tablespoonfuls daily either as a cereal with milk or

<f:ecream or in recipes. Three times

daily in severe cases. Sold by all ers. Made and guaranteed by Kellogg in Battle Creek.

Municipal | |

Mr. Youngling, who lives at 5610 E. 10th St., works at a station at 801 Massachusetts Ave. ' Stewart Stewart, 50, of 1632 Naomi St., told police he found his house ransacked last night and a total of $50 in cash stolen. The thieves entered through a screen door and took a $10 bill, 10 $1 bills, 25 silver dollars, and a $5 gold piece, he reported.

PICKPOCKET VICTIM

| Nettie Church, Mrs. Olive Taylor and Oather Brothers: brother, Albert Cox

ence Wells and Mr. and Mrs. George Dancer. Henry Seitz, 57. Survivors: Wife, Della Seitz; son, Wilson Seitz. GARY-—Mrs. Rebecca Hughes, 68, Survivors: Sons, William, harles, John, Joseph Christ: two daughters, Mrs. Christina Glister and Mrs. Viola Kwasnitkow-

SK1. Herman P. Cheatham, 85 Survivors: Wife, Lula; son, Harry, daughter, Stacey; brother, Lucian. HAMMOND Gilbert C. Richter, . Survivors: Wife, Agnes; two sons, Verle and Clayton; father, Conrad; brother, Harold; sister, Mrs. Velda Orr. _HOWE—Miss Mathilda Ruhl, 79. Survivor: Brother, Levi. JAMESTOWN Mrs. Catherine Johnson, 95. Survivors: Daughters, Mrs. Mary MecDaniel and Mrs. C. E. Shirley. KOKOMO-—-Luther B. Rust, 50. Survivors: Wife, Maggie: sons, Virgil and William: daughters. Hazel and Ruth; brothers, William, E. G. and P. J. Rust LINTON—Mrs. Amanda J. Brothers, 973. Survivors: Children, Mrs. Myrtle Franklin, Albert and Clarence Brothers, Mrs.

Deore Nixon, 74. Survivors: Wife, Betty Bell: son, Ira: stepchildren, Mrs, Maggie Stafford and Mrs. Maude Wise; sister, Mrs. Mary Fewell. MANILLA Landy H. Brown, 77. Survivors: Wife, Della: daughter, Mrs. Earl Talbert; sons, Ralph, A. B. and Wendell Brown. PERU—Mrs. Lucinda Elizabeth Rife, 78. Survivors: Sons, Wilford, Obed and Orville Rife. PLYMOUTH Harry E. Alleman, 55. Survivors: Wife, Hazel: son, Donald; daughters, Bernice Umbaugh and Helen Blanchard. _REELSVILLE—James B. Bucklin. _Survivors: Wife, Mrs. Mildred Yenney Bucklin; son, James III; parents, Mr. and Mrs.

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Harry PF. Bucklin: twin brother, Kenneth H.; sisters, Mrs. Rosemary Tiedeman and Mrs. Jean Busby. ROCHESTER--Milo Van Lue, 80. Survivors: Sons, Mark and J. M. Van Lue; brothers, Oliver and Frank Van Lue. Mrs. Rebecca Butler, 87. Survivors: Husband, Harris E. Butler; daughter, Mrs. A. B. Green. 2 SOUTH BEND-—Harvey Henry Dugdale, 46. Survivors: Wife, M#. Leona Mull Dugdale: sister, Mrs. Louise Cupinski. SOUTH LINTON—Mrs. Zella_ Richards, 40. Survivors: Father, Felix Fardherbe: husband, Claude: children. Mrs, Martha M. Barnett, John P., George A. and Claude L. Richards; brothers, Paul, George and Arthur Fardherbe; sister, Mrs. Corinne

LLIVAN—S8. W. Exline, 76. Survivors: Wife, Dora: daughters, Edith, Mabel and Lovde Exline and Mrs. Harry West; son, James R.; brothers, Thomas C. and John L.; sister, Mrs. Isabelle French.

TIPTON—Mrs. William Ryan, 60. Survivors: Husband, and a daughter, Mary Catherine Ryan.

WATERLOO William Ridgeway, 12. Survivors: Parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ridgeway.

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__ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

d for Flood Aid

PAGE 9

STORES CHARGE ‘DEMAND’ RATES FOR POWER HIGH

Firms File Protests in Indianapolis Utility Hearing.

Three downtown department

stores today filed petitions with the |

Indiana Public Service Commission

asking that the Indianapolis Power & Light Co. reduce their “demand” charges. These stores, the William H. Block Co, L. S. Ayres & Co., and H. P. Wasson & Co. alleged that their “demand” charges, paid each month, are about one-fcurth of their total bills. They claimed this was too high, and the petitions pointed out that the store consumption is almost uniform from month to month. Witnesses have testified that “demand” charge is made to pay the

cost of bringing electric current from the plant to consumers and includes such items as meter installation and meter reading. Cost of current production is assessed as a separate charge. Utility Rests The utility has rested in this rate case and the Commission has indicated there is hope for an early termination of the hearings. Final evidence from the Power & Light Co. was introduced late vesterday and the Commission experts today brought their case up-to-date. Harry E. Boggs, 'ormer Commis sion chief accountai.t and now retained by the utility, testified that company gross income increased during the first six months of this year approximately 10 per cent abeve the corresponding 1936 figures.

This increase continued during April, May and June despite the

ALL OF HAAG'S NEIGHBORHOOD DRUG || STORES HAVE SAME | Curt PRICES AS DOWN TOWN STORES

temporary April 1 rate reduction ordered by the Commission, according to the testimony. Mr. Boggs also testified that customers paying less than $1.47 a month are considered to be served at a loss by the company.

OBSERVATORY SET UP A miniature observatory has been

set up at 73d St. near Crooked Creek, between U. S. 31 and Indiana

20 by the Indianapolis Astronomy Association. Free observations will be given every Wednesday night at 30

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