Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 March 1940 — Page 9
LAUNDRY DAMAGED IN $200 NIGHT FIRE
Firemen today sought to determine the cause of fire which late last night caused $200 ddmage at the Best-Grand Laundry, 26-30 N. Senate Ave. . They said the blaze started in the rear of ‘the second floor. | It ed supports from a han ng motor which | crashed to the Z ater see through to the first a = Hose lines were strefihon acn a parking lot next to the laun ry, preventing a/ number of motoris from dri out their cars. = the fire was, extinguished and | i e hose removed.
U. S. ASKED To BUY 2 HISTORIC HOUSES
WASHINGTON, March 28 (U.P). ‘|. =If the Uni d States Government can raise $ 000,000, stenographers may soon grace the salons in which
1 Is
nite House—were offered vernment at that price ey now are occupied by the C = Club.
Smith, Republican ection Commissioner, will
oie ballots at [the Republican Club meet- - ing at 8 p.| 'm. tomorrow in Clark’s Hall, 25t jand Station Sts. Mr.
selub las iso but: was prevented a “by. illness. |The meeting is open to all candidates, Herchell Harms, club - presid » sald,
Rigel More Pairs | of Our Famous 39¢ ~ FULL-FASHIONED ~ PURE SILK HOSE
"PURE SILK’ | Full Fashioned |
All the New Colors| All Sizes, 8 V2 to 10Y| Amaz ngly. Priced) ] Exclusively Ours! Excellent | | Seco s and Thirds Luxurious $i of $1.95 Qualities Every Pair Hand Inspected
10,000 Other Pairs On Sale, | 29¢ to 69¢ Pair Full.Fa hioned Pure Silk Our Hosiery Values Are the “Talk of the Ta Town” * Friday and Saturday GREAT SALE ; —LADIES’— |
| coats & SUITS br | | $6.95—$9.75 _SI488 $16.88 | LADIES’ DRESSES
Sl. a - $2.48
“BUY ON 2 10-PAY PLAN
GREAT SALE . Men’s Famous ARTHUR ALLEN SUITS
S
? | Save a Faw Dollars | Open Sat. Nite Till 9
EFROYMSON'S
:|Home.
| Miss Maria
DEATHS
John E.. Keough
Services for John Emil Keough, old-time Indianapolis baker, will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday at the Moore & Kirk Mortuary. Burial will be at Memorial Park. Mr. Keough died yesterday at his home; 1519 Ewing St, after a six veeks’ illness. He was 57. Born in ‘Indianapolis, Mr. Keough worked for the old Grocers Baking ts |Co., predecessor of the Taystee Bread Co., as cake shop foreman. Later he operated a bake shop for some time at; 4610 E. Michigan St. He beca a bakers’ supply salesman about 12 years ago. He was a member of the United Brethren Church, the Modern Woodmen, the Loyal Order of Moose, and had been a trustee many years of the Mutual Bakers’ Association. Survivors are his wife, Myrtle; a daughter, Mrs. Betty Mills; two sons, John B. and Charles F. Keough and a sister, Mrs. Frank Fletcher, all of Indianapolis.
Mrs. Mary E. Riley
Funeral services for Mrs. Mary E. Riley, former Marion County restdent, were to be held at 2 'p. m. today in the J. C. Wilson Funeral Burial will be in Crown Hill. Mrs. Riley died Monday in the home of her daughter, Mrs. Margaret Martin, Huntsville, Tex.
widow of the Rev. E. 8S. Riley, Baptist minister who held pastorates in Southport and Valparaiso and in Kansas. She was born in Marion County and her grandfather, Benjamin McFarland, was one of the first physicians in the county. She had been a member of
‘the Baptist Church since childhood.
* Survivors also included three sis-
ters, Miss Appolene McFarland,
.tMiss Margaret McFarland and Mrs.
Ira Fisher, all of Indianapolis, and nine grandchildren.
Miss Pear! Ferguson
Funeral services for Miss Pearl ‘Ferguson, 5727 Broadway Terrace, who died Tuesday in Robert Long Hospital, were to be at 2 p. m. today in the Flanner & Buchanan Funeral
1 Home and burial was to be in Crown ‘1 Hill Cemetery.
Miss Ferguson had lived in Indianapolis for 23 years. For 20 years
dore’ Stein Jr. insurance agency. She was born in Bloomfield in 1895, attended public schools there and high school in St. Joseph, Mich. She was graduated from indiaha University. Miss Ferguson had travelled ex-
‘#| tensively in this country and Eu-
rope. She was a member of the Presbyterian Church in Bloomfield and was a former president of the Mocella Club. Her mother, Mrs. ‘Mary Ferguson, is the only immediate relative surviving.
Mrs. Lucinda Huntington
Mrs. Lucinda Huntington, whose
Imother was among the first school
teachers in | Indianapolis, died yes-
terday at r home near Cumberland. She was 83. Mrs. Huntington was born near Cumberland. She was married to George R. Huntington 62 years ago. He died in 1927. Survivors| are three “daughters, Huntington, CumberMaude Huntington, and Mrs. Stella and
land; Mrs Glendale, (Cal, Whitmarsh, Sacramento, (Cal, Jy: two grandsons. Funeral services will be ‘held in Cumberland and burial will be in the family plot on the Huntington farm. e of services has not been set.
M. H. Memorial services for M. H. Gray, former treasurer of the -Board of Disciples of Christ, were held in the Graham Chapel of the Missions Building in Irvington yesterday, under jleadership of Dr. Alexander Paul of the United Christian Missionary So-
‘fl ciety.
Mr, Gray, who lived in Indianapolis from 1928 until his retirement March 1, 1937, died in his Los Angeles home Monday, of heart disease induced by pneumonia. He became a member of the Board of Church Extension after a business career in Kansas City where the church headquarters was located until it was moved to Indiahapolis. He served as treasufer : for 21 years. He is the. father -of Miss Cammie Gray, a missio nary who now is a teacher in the Pre Yo] of Chengtu, China. She has been in China for 24 years. : Immediately upon | Mr. Gray went to make his home. He is survived also
Monica, Cal.
Mack Merrill
ack Merrill, for 0! years a resident of Indianapoli§ and a retired employse of the Carter Lumber Co., died today at his home, 247 N. Hamilton Ave. He was 64 and had been ill for some time. r. Merrill was County. His wife, s. Mary Merrill, died two years ago. He is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Helen Robbett; two stepsqns, Robert Abrams and' A. B. Abrams: a niece, Miss Margaret Merrill, and three brothers, Richard errill, Tipton; Leo Merrill of Ohio and Guy Merrill, Indianapolis. Services will. ke atl 1:30 p. m. Saturday at the Dorsey Funeral Home and burial will be| in Weshingion Park Cemetery.
Doctor's Formula Helps Liver Bile ~_ Flow Freely
\
Right Way To Relieve Constipation and Feel “Tip-Top” In Morning
If liver bile doesn’t flow freely every day into your intestines~constipation’ with its headaches and that *“half-alive” feeling often result. So step up that liver bile and see how much better you should feel! Just try Dr| Edwards’ Olive ['ablets, used s0 successfully for years by Ur. F. M. Edwards for his patients with constipation and sluggish bile. Olive Tablets, being purely vegetable, are wonderful! They not only stimulate bile flow to help digest fatty foods but
$18.926 5. MERIDIAN ST.
ALSO help wg Get a box All drugstores.
Tobag 1 80¢, 604,
Mrs. Riley was 97. She was the|
she was a bookkeeper for the Theo-|}
by a son, M.' H. Gray Jr, Santa |].
Mrs. Eliza A. Bacon
Mrs. Eliza A. Bacon, for 26 years
a resident of Indianapolis, died yesterday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. R. D. Trout, 332 DeQuincey St. She had been ill since Friday. Mrs. Bacon was born in Fulton County and was a member of the Methodist Church there. ' She is survived by her husband, William N. Bacon, to whom she had been married for 61 years; her daughter; and three sons, Charles E. Bdcon, | Ben Bacon, Indianapolis, and Ralph Bacon, Connersville, Funeral services will be at 2 p.-m. tomorrow in the Dorsey Funeral Home and burial will be in Memorial Park Cemetery.
John S. De Bra
John S. De Bra, Dayton, O., hab-| erdasher for 50 years, died yesterday at- the home of his daughter, Mts. J. Ralph Fenstermaker, 146 E. 44th St. He was 84. He had lived at his daughter’s home four years. He had been a member of the Masonic Blue Lodge and of the Scottish Rite at Dayton. Survivors are Mrs. Fenstermaker; a sister, Mrs. C. E. Graham of Lin.coln, Neb.; a brother, Will \De Bra of Dayton, and five grandchildren. Services will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the Whitmer Mortuary in Dayton. Burial will. be at
Pleasant Hill Cemetery there.
"IN INDIANAPOLIS
Mrs. Minnie Meyer
Mrs. Minnie Meyer, an Indianapolis native, died yesterday at Methodist Hospital after an illness of more than six years. She was 55. She was the wife of William C. Meyer, Indianapolis gardener, and lived at 1424 S. Tibbs Ave. A member of the Friedens Evangelical and Reformed Church, she had been active in the Ladies’ Aid'and Dorcas societies of the church.
Survivors are Mr. Meyer; two
daughters, Mrs. Albert Ruble and]
Mrs. Herman Strube; two sons,
William B. and Richard H. Meyer, |’ and six grandchildren, all of Indi-|
anapolis. Services will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the Immanuel Evangelical and Reformed Church. Burial will be at Washington Park Cemetery. us
Miss Julia C. Steeg
Miss Julia C. Steeg, native of
Greencastle and former resident of |-
Franklin, died yesterday at her home, 3435 Carrollton Ave. She had been ill for several months. Miss Steeg is survived by two sisters, Miss Adelaide. Steeg and
Mrs: Bertha Bell, Indianapolis, and |.
a brother, David B. Steeg, Kansas City, Mo.
Funeral services will be at 1 p. m. F
tomorrow in the Flanner & Buchanan Funeral Home and burial will be in Greencastle. -
Tribunal,
‘LOVES’ HITLER, SO BRITON WON'T FIGHT LONDON, March 28 (U. P.).— Kenneth W. Tyler, appearing before the Conscientious Objectors’ said that he not fight in the British armed forces because he loves Adolf Hitler.
Mr, Tyler said he felt that the greatest service he.could render the
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* |community was love. He ; whether he could “love Hitler. in view of the persecutions and sufferings of hundreds of thousands. of i pm people.”
“Yes, I do, ” he replied. actions are anti-social does
“That his could I have” Mr. Tyler was registered
ity as a conscientious 0 bjector.
‘tas Is extra rich in vitaming ~AyB,D,and G. Milnutis a com. pound of evaporated skimmed milk and refined cocoanut oil; :
YOUR MONEY BACK! 1f not satis | fied, return empty container, j _ with reasons; to Carolene Prods | gets Co, Litchfield, ll,
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COSTS LESS
THAN A CANNED MILK
not | | make me forget that he is a child| of God. 1 aisume he has a soul, as |
FORMER PUBLISHER DIES LEBANON, Ind., March 28 (U.P.). former Lebanon newspaper pith ~~ Funeral ‘arrangements were being lisher, who died yesterday.
A little Roman Cleanser. is washing water makes cl . snow-white; saves the hard rubbing and boiling.
‘To remove stubborn stains from table linens, towels, etc., follow directions ‘on the Roman Cleanser label.
Roman Cleanser is used in a million’ homes, Just try it.
QUART AT ALL BOTTLE 15¢ GROCERS
E of
Mb clothes Sy
SMOKED HAMS
SUGAR CURED
Ib. 1 5c
Whole or Shank Half
~ ‘BEEF ROAST
"BEST CHUCK CUTS
+17
NONE HIGHER
Lower Cuts
SIRLOIN STEAK
" BRANDED BEEF
n 23
CHOICE CUTS, Ib, 25¢
Pork Loin ROAST
120
RIB HALF
SLICED BACON
TURKEYS H A M S Sunnyfield Cooked
Ready-to-Serve
BACON SMOKED PICNIC
~ Sunnyfield, Fancy
STANDING RIB ROAS
Fancy N. Y. Dressed |
PORTERHOUSE STEAK: "FRYING CHICKENS ROASTING CHICKENS +. proces
Sugar Cured Whele or Half
.. Sugar’ Cured—Tendered
3-Ib. pkg. 2: 19¢ nto re m 216 i. 256 » 196 1». 336 ». 318 ». 256 w Ile 1b: 12¢
Whole or Shank Halt Tender— * Juicy =| Fancy, Fresh Full Dressed
~ Cello Wrapped
DUCKLINGS LEG O’LAMB PORK CHOPS PORK SAUSAGE "=" VEAL RIB CHOPS VEAL ROAST THURINGER or COOKED SALAMI DRESSED HADDOG OCEAN FILLETS
Genuine Long Island
». 166 Ib. 25¢ | |. ITe 2s 19¢ 1» £36 19¢ '25¢ I
Fancy
Lean-Meaty Center Cuts
and Seasoning Bulk
Milk Fed Veal
1b. Armour’s Star
Ready for the | Pan
Shoulder Cut 1b. 1b.
Boneless
FRESH WILDMERE
BUTTER
CREAMERY ROLL
| wm. 30 i, P&G SOAP 10:32.
Or KIRK'S FLAKE APAX LAUNDRY BLEACH
3 ia 5 C
Full Strength CAMAY
| Tous) SOAP 3 cakes 16- : IVORY SOAP
3:.25¢
| I" Med. Cake, 5¢
-
E-Z-BAKE
FLOUR
24:94
CLIMALENE
Makes Dishes Sparkle
1 9:
pkg. Bowlene 2%: 350 |
. Makes closet bowls clean’
MEL-0-BIT Brick er 2 1b. American {ant
41.
FINE GRANULATED
SUGAR "5
CHEESE Genuine Wisconsin—Whole Milk SWISS CHEESE &uisSHARP CHEESE GOLD-N-RICH CHEESE CORNED BEEF 3 BLUE ROSE RICE FRESH EGGS i &.on
4 Ibs, 19¢ In Cartons Crestview Indiana Grade
» 196
». £9C » 390 2 for 31¢
Wisconsin
Fancy
INBC BRAN FLAKES Siok Noodle Soup “2.2
2 doz. 31¢ “Ar LARGE
CHIPSO = 27+ 39:
FELS NAPHTHA SOAP 6 :.: 25¢ AJAX LAUNDRY SOA 3 10¢ AJAX FLOATING SOAP 3 « 10c WOODBURY SOAP Deal LAVA SOAP CLEANSER Al Purpose OLD DUTCH CLEANSER
VEGETABLE SHORTENING
Del Monte
PEACHES Large No. 21% can {ONA APRICOTS No. 2% can GRAPEFRUIT JUICE .%%. ORANGE JUICE "7: PINEAPPLE “iviite™
FRUIT COCKTAIL GRAPEFRUIT
Pisket
Cr ules
Giant Bars
2. llc 6 for i9¢ 3 for 20¢
2 for 3 { c 2 for 27¢ 4 ... 25¢ 4 .: 29¢
2 for 2i¢ «an 10€
Sultana
n 29¢
SUNNYFIELD FLOUR {ONA FLOUR au purpose CAKE FLOUR NAVY BEANS PURE LARD rene dexo SHORTENING | 3: ». 39¢ SURE GOOD OLEO 3. 25¢
10 ed 34c . 24-1b, bag 1 { c Sunnyfeld—2%-Ib. pkg. i5¢ h is 39¢ ei 25¢
Choice * Hand Picked ..
E037.
4 Dars 21 C.
0XYDOL =
53c SILVER DUST BON AMI CAKE 2: 19¢ WATERLESS CLEANER 5. 25¢ KUTOL WALLPAPER CLEANER == 5c BRILLO SOAP PADS 2: tr i15¢ LAUNDRY STARCH rie. 196 KLEK Homey Red Super sii 2 for 29¢
Dish Towel given with Irg. pkg. |
Argo—New Low Price
LITTLE NUGGET Loy :
Giant 58-02. jar
~1b. can
2 for i9¢ a. 23C Sone 10€ 4“ oz. | 22 for 23¢ we 196
BROOMS : Quality 23¢
APPLE BUTTER : KARO SYRUP i: PENNANT SYRUP 7.0: IONA SALAD DRESSING
FRENCH DRESSING ANN PAGE KETCHUP PURE GRAPE JAM
No. 2 can 3 for 29¢ LARGE
DREFT % 2 39:
Kellogg’s SHREDDED WHEAT ** 8c
CORN FLAKES “invsie 3 rw: 25¢ GRAPENUT FLAKES ™:ie™ 2: 25¢ . 2 for i9¢ 3 for 23¢ 3.2 208¢ oe 106
Giant Pkg. Sle
ULTANA PEAS v =. rads G6 NOODLES mune
THE PERFECT CLEANER
SPIC & SPAN *« 23,
'CAMPBELL’S BEANS : » « 4... 25¢c |
A ¥ PAGE SEARS. ron Vort r 5¢ Ww X BEANS Sultana—No. 2 can | 2 for 2l¢ IONA TOMATOES 0. : cn 4. 266 IONA PEAS ‘No. 2 can | 3 for 25¢ DEL “MONTE PEAS No. 2 can 2 ro: 210 ASPARAGUS °* Wo‘saic™™
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you. You
en 18C 11
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ih Sons
FLORIDA—-LARGE BIZE'
Golden Yellow ie, |
». 5 doz. 25¢
APPLES ORANGES GRAPEFRUIT Tw 206 | POTATOES U. & No. 1 GRADE | = 15:0 21c NEW CABBAGE | sos Sw 106 CELERY FLORIDA-WELL BLEACHED 2s 9¢ BROCCOLI © |LARGE BUNCHES IDAHO BAKING POTATOES BUTTON RADISHES | SHALLOTS YAMS—LOUISIANA -
SEEDLESS
LARGE BUNCHES
¥ for 10¢c ms. 9g -
dos BUNCHES
|| orama
whl 25
STRAWBERRIES
2:7.
Boxes’ Packed With Flavor
EIGHT 0'CLO
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vc 39
SOFT TWIST
BRE
A:P
A Luxury ‘Bread—Doubie Wrapped For Freshn
1% LB. LOAVES
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i ELATI MN 9, kgs.
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65 S. STATE ST.
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H MARKET CHANGES
[ss E. WASH. H. ST. 13
