Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 June 1940 — Page 13

DAY, JUNE 20,

BOYS OVERHAUL | TOWNS’ CIRCUS

Animals, Wagons Groomed ip Annual Affair . At Fieldhouse.

Thatorth East Community Cenre ore Ho anty Cet ‘winter quarters these days.” : ‘The center is getting ready for v the nd Annual Boys’ Town Cirfcus to be held at the Butler Field : House June 28. The animals and wagons used in = the first circus last year at the Fair $ Grounds are being overhauled under |. Tom on of Ben Scalf, executive of Boys Town. The 12 “miniature circus wagons will glisen ~in new paint during the downtown trees | parade circus day morning. The boys are doing most of the “painting, while the girls sew up . holes in animals and replace buttons "and fasteners. A new act is being prepared which was designed by Mrs. Edna Christian, chairman of the circus committee. It is a troop of birds of paradise. Paul H. Rinne, president of the Indiana Music Co., will direct the 100-piece accordion band, another feature at the famous show.

~ Band Director

§

Paul H. Rinne . . . will direct circus band. :

FUNDS GRANTED FOR JAIL IMPROVEMENT

NOBLESVILLE; Ind, June 20 (U. P).—Plans for a $12,000 grant to improve the Hamilton County Jail were approved tentatively by the County Commissioners yester= day and the county auditor was instructed to call a meeting of the county council to appropriate the money. One tier of new cells to accommodate 14 or 16 prisoners would .be constructed. It wouid be built so that a second tier could be attached to it later.

‘WEST TO LOSE LANDMARK FT. BENSON, Mont., June 19 (U. -P.) —This city is about to lose one of its oldest historic landmarks. It is the sign of “Jos. Sullivan, Saddler.” Mr. Sullivan made saddles there for 59 years. Recently he died _and the sign will be taken down.

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0, B, MOWRER, | ADAMS AID, DIES |

Firm's Sales Head|}

. | sales manager of the J. D. Adams

man Ave.

Charles Francis

Local | Was on Business Trip To San Francisco.

Funeral arrangements are being made at Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary for Harold R. Mowrer, 5686 College Ave., district sales manager of J. D. Adams Co. Mr. Mowrer died Tuesday at San Francisco while on a business trip through the West. A native of Owensville, he came to Indianapolis in 1920. He became district

Co. in March, 1937. Mr. Mowrer was a graduate of the Benjamin Harrison Law School and a member of the Owensville Masonic Lodge. Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Alice Cobb Mowrer, and two daughters, Misses Melissa Jane and Nancy Jean Mowrer.

Mrs. Luella A. Koster

Services for Mrs. Luella A. Koster, who died Tuesday, are to be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow at her home, 3251 N. Illinois St. Burial is to be in Crown Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Koster, who was 68, had been ill for several years. A native of Boone County, she had lived here 60 years. She was a member of the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. Survivors are the husband, Carl C. Koster; three daughters, Miss Katherine Koster and Mrs. Helen Simmons of Indianapolis and Mrs. Gertrude Cones, Whiteland; a son, Fred Koster, Indianapolis, and two sisters, Mrs. James A. Dill, Rushville, and Mrs: Isabelle Evans, Indianapolis. }

Mrs. Minnie McKinney Mrs. Minnie McKinney, an Indianapolis resident 30 years, died yesterday at her home, 1129 ChurchShe was 38. Funeral services are to be at 10 a. m. Saturday at the Calvary United Brethren Church. Burial will be in the New Crown Cemetery. ‘ Mrs. McKinney, who was born in Kentucky, was the wife of Virgil McKinney. Surviving, besides the husband, is one son, James Shotts.

Miss Sarah Maloney

Miss Sarah Maloney, an Indianapolis resident for many years, died yesterday at the home of a nephew,

William Page, 648 N. Rural St. She was T7. Miss Maloney was born at Madison, Ind. She was a member of the St. Philip Neri Catholic Church here. Survviors are eight nieces, the Misses Nell Maloney, Buffalo, N. Y.; Sadie Maloney, Indianapolis, and Agnes and Mildred Hennessy, Vicksburg, Miss.; Mrs. Mary Costello, Indianapolis, and Mrs. Mary Ford, Mrs. A. A. Gamble and Mrs. Roy Shelby, Vicksburg, and seven other nephews, John Page, St. Louis, Mo.; Daniel, George, William, James and John Maloney, Indianapolis, and Dennis Hennessy, Vicksburg. Services will be at 9 a. m. Saturday at the St. Philip Neri Church and burial will be at Holy Cress Cemetery.

Funeral - services for Charles Francis, a retired grocer, will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the J. C. Wilson Mortuary. Burial’ will be at Memorial Park Cemetery. Mr. Francis, who was 60, died

‘INDIA

If there's one thing that’s

Prevention Department.

“The Soda Pop Was Good

Times Photo.

s good at a picnie it’s soda “pop.” That's ‘what these young folks liked yesterday at the American Legion Police Post picnic at Columbia Park. Left to right they are Patricia Troutman; Martha Hague, daughter of William Hague of the Accident Prevention Department, and Paul Comiskey, son of Sergt. Joseph Comiskey of the Identification Bureau. That other fellow who seems to like picnics, too, is Patricia’s dad, Capt. Leo Troutman, head of the Accident

Grease Offers Slick Way

For Exterminating Ants

In order to exterminate ants you must know the difference between a sweet-eater and a grease-eater. There is no mystery involved. Simply put eut some grease and watch the ants. If they stay away, they're sweet-eaters. ‘If they don’t stay away, they're grease-eaters. There seem to be a few more ants today than in any previous year, according to Frank Wallace, Indiana State entomologist. He says the rain may be responsible.

What the rain actually does, Mr. Wallace says, is to make the ants dig more debris from their recesses, resulting in larger ant hills. This makes - the number of ants seem greater than it is. Although there are hundreds of varieties of ants, they may be divided generally into two groups—inside the house ants and outside the house ants. The inside ants either like sweets or greases. The sweet-eaters can be

| controlled by using a simple poison

for which Mr. Wallace has the formula, and putting it on the sweet which the ant eats. For the grease-eaters, enough tartar emetic to cover half a dime should be spread thinly on any grease. (Bacon rind makes an excellent base.)

Things were pretty bad for years around homes and bakery windows, with ants everywhere and nothing to stop them successfully. "The Government put a man to work on the case. He finally discovered a for-

eats it but works in a kind of Fifth Column way. The ant who eats the poison carries it in food back to the queen ant. Because the queen lays so many eggs, she eats a lot more and the total amount she eats is enough to kill her. The colony thus faces extinction. The ants try to feed the young larvae, a few of whom also will be queens. They also die. Once years

lat the same address for many years.

Born at Akron, Ind., he had been an Indianapolis resident about 40 years. He retired several years ago. ] He was a member of the Englewooed Christian Church, Survivors are his wife, Blanche; two daughters, Mrs. Charles Spoon and Mrs. James Morris, and two sons, Robert

Tuesday at his home, 3511 Prospect St. He had operated a grocery store

and Carl Francis, all of Indianapolis..

Friends Marvel at Her Improvement, States Mrs. Jackson. Can Even Do Her Drill Work Now. Pains Gone; Digestion Fine.

Hundreds of Pont and well known men and women “are daily coming forward with voluntary and grateful indorsements of Retonga for ending long-standing inorganic complaints and bringing a happy return of strength. Among these is Mrs. D. W. Jackson, 83 N. Brookville, Indianapolis, who is an officer in the Ladies’ Auxiliary, Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen, and a member of Tuxedo Baptist Church. “For three years I suffered from acid indigestion .and sour returns to my throat that seemed like liquid fire,” declares Mrs. Jackson. “I dosed constantly with strong purgatives which did not seem to relieve me of sluggish elimination or bilious dizzy spells, and I suffered agonies from pain in my hips, legs and back. At one time the pain

MRS. D. W;

in my hip was soj.severe that 1 was|98¢

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told the hip might be out of joint. I was so weak that I had to sit down to do my kitchen work. Church was only seven blocks away but I could not walk to it. At night my legs cramped so dreadfully that I could hardly stand it, and even long rests in bed failed to ease my distressing condition. “Retonga seemed to help me from the first. Now I am entirely relieved of the acid indigestion, the pains in my legs, hip and back have disappeared and I no longer have cramps. I have regained twelve pounds and my appetite is splendid. I now even do drill work and my lodge sisters marvel at the freedom and ease with which I get around.

tonga. The medicine is grand.” If you are suffering from complaints similar to Mrs. Jackson try Retonga. Let the Retonga representative at Hook's Dependable Drug Store, 8. E. corner Illinois and Washington Sts, tell you more about this famous medicine. Ré€tonga can be obtained at all Hook’s ‘Dependable Drug Stores. $1.25 size,

mula which doesn’t kill the ant who |H

I tell everybody I°owe it all to Re-

ago, before the formula was so well known, people had a lot of trouble with it. Finally Mr. Wallace discovered the druggist didn’t believe the formula had enough poison in it. They were increasing the dose so much that the ants never got back to the nest to feed it to the queen ant. To exterminate the garden variety of ants, Mr. Wallace recommends carbon disulphide. You poke holes

about 10 inches apart into the]

ground around the group of ant hills. Then the carbon disulphide is poured into the holes and the holes are covered up. "Pretty soon most of the ants are gone.

INTER: AMERICAS

"HOUSE TO OPEN

Hemisphere | Interest at N. Y.

World’s Fair to Center In Building.

Yinics Special WORLD'S FAIR, N. Y,, June 20.—

Unifying the importance of trade,

travel and culture in the Americas,

Inter-Americas House at the World's Fair of 1940 in New York. will open its doors Saturday. Throughout the summer the many interests of the republics of the Western Hemisphere will be centered in the handsome building, with its gardens and fountains, occupied last year by Argentina. Dr. Leo S. Rowe, director general of the Pan-American Union which is celebrating its 50th anniversary this year, will be the principal speaker at the opening exercises. Inter-America House is a nonprofit venture sponsored by a score of organizations interested in furthering the unity and co-operation which have kept the republics at

:| peace. One of its primary purposes

is to foster a better understanding of the cultural and artistic attainments of the peoples of North, South and Central America. Exhibits also will emphasize the mutual advantages of an interchange of trade. The major exhibit at Inter-Amer-ica House is presented by the PanAmerican Union, official agency of the 21 American nations. This includes a large illuminated map that was a major attraction for 1,000,000 visitors at the Union’s display last year. : Motion pictures and musicals presenting the works of North and South American composers will be presented daily at the pavilion. News bulletins featuring inter-Amer-ican events and personalities also will be part of the daily program. As 8 special aid to business men interested in trade in this hemisphere, the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce of the Department. of Commerce will be repre= sented to provide latest information on trade conditions.

MRS. A. A. TUCKER, PHARMACIST, DEAD

Mrs. Albert Anderson Tucker, 564 N. Hamilton Ave. died yesterday after a brief illness. She was 38. Mrs. Tucker, who had lived here for about 15 years, was a registered

pharmacist. She and her husband, Albert, operated the Service Pharmacy, Hamilton Ave. and E. Michigan St., for several years. Services will be held tomorrow at 3:30 p. m. at the Harry W. Moore Peace Chapel. Burial will follow at Crown Hill, Survivors include, besides the husband, one daughter, Mrs. Maria E. Anderson of Indianapolis; a stepdaughter, Mrs. Paul Delbauve of Indianapolis and a stepson, Edmuid F. Tucker of. Elkhart, Ind. Two brothers, .E. W. and Martin Anderson and two sisters, Adeline S. and Essie M. Anderson, also survive.

ARMY PILOT DIES IN CRASH DAYTON, O., June 20 (U, P.)— Lieut. Robert H. Quigley, 35, U. S. Army pilot, was killed today when his single-seat pursuit plane crashed to earth at Wright Field.

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