Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 May 1941 — Page 9
TUESDAY, MAY 183, 1941
STATE DEATHS
ANDERSON—Mrs. Etta h Tam. vivors: Wife, Emma: urvivors: Sons, Albert, oe nd Max White. Trent daughter. Mrs. Margaret Tyrol: siser. Miss Ora Conrad ANNAPOLIS—Albert Osborn, 71. ¥Yivors: Sons, Willie and Sam; step-son, Jasper Catterson CARTHAGE—Charles Vivors: Wife, Laura LEBANON—MTrs Alber! Beason. | Survivors: Sons, COLUMBUS—Corwin Parker, 50 | E.; daughters, CONVERSE—Mrs. Abbie Wolf, 86. Sur- Arthur Clements vivors Sons, Con and Charles Wolf: LINTON—Clifford Squires, 49. daughter, Miss Hallie Wolf: sister, Mrs MARENGO-—Mrs. Anna Ollie M Weatherby Survivors: Two sons, two daughters. CRAWFORDSVILLE- Mrs. Nancy Walk- MARION—Mrs. Emma Carter, 68. 68. Survivors: Husband, Z. J.; SON, yjyors: Sisters, Mrs. Ray Al be t Walker; daughter, Mrs. Pearl Threl- Mrs. John Ferguson; sons, ke Richard Carter.
MIDDLETOWN —MTrs. son, 99. Survivors:
daughter,
Wife, Sur-' Charles Fager: brothers, sister, Mrs
Grace; sons, Reed; daughter, Mrs. sister, Mrs. Della Gillespie; Tom and Hubert Reed: Bernice Morris.
Armilda Boyland, O., E.
Beason, 76. Surbrothers, John and
Ella Florence Edgell, 72 a ors Husband spe Sahghiels rs. Grover Harting, rs arry Proctor, | Mrs. Fay Anderson Mrs. Dewey Moore and | dau te as, ese Mrs. Lemuel Swift: sons, William, Homer, aha Keller; son, Amos; Russell and Loral: brothers, Frank and H0Ppes Charles Perry; sisters. Mrs, Charles; MOUNT PLEASANT MTS. Echelbar ger and Mrs. Jessie Hinds 95. Survivors: Husband, Jule A. 59. Survivors: Velma and
Martha A. Husband, Poore and brother,
E l WOOD-—Mrs Bu
Carmen Etienne NEW CASTLE—Carl E, Clark, vivors: Parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clark; brothers, and Robert: sisters, Mrs.
ENGLISH Mrs Lottis Gaither, 75. FAIRMOUNT—Albert Rapp, 83 FRANKFORT — John Thomas McKay, 94 vivor: Daughter, Mrs. Mattie Brittain. 0 ED r and Miss Roberta ark arvivors: Daug —Mrs, Edith S. Moore, 23. Mrs. Sarah Fraizer. vors Daught er, Miss s Ann M Marie Koons Moore; parents, Mr. and Mrs. H ; | ver, TS. atie ne brother, Henry T. Shirsl; sters, 1 an Held and Mrs. Delores Hensley. HAGERSTOWN-—Gordon Parsons. 34 HATFIELD—Mrs Malvina Jones, 86 VEEDERSBURG—Oscar Burvivors: Sons, Gurley, F. B. Jones, Thom Survivors: Haves, Ed Moore and Jess Hayes; davgh- G. Longsberry, Mrs. James ter, Mrs. Minnie Grant; brothers, R Misses Julia and Mildred Hinote: end Alva Fortune; sister, Mrs Sadie George. Edward, Oscar Jr. Nancy Everett Sur- Thomas Hinote.
Rr 3] SIMA 5 EAST WASHINGTON
12 Bohday Sate
500 BRAND NEW CRISP COOL
DRESSES
Sizes 14-20 and 38-44
Mrs.
LAFONTAINE—John Reed, 76. Survivors Maurice, Sharon and | Geneva | half- | half- |
84. : E. and William Mrs. Ora Newman and Mrs
Weathers, 84 v
Sur- | Porterfield and Floyd and
StinHenry;
i in her home, 49 W. 33d St., will be|
Samuel
Alma Etienne, Sons,
Wife, Ber-| joseph. Earl and Russell Etienne; daugh- | ..: : a ; tere BES, Robert Little and Miss Catherine will be in Crown Hill.
19. Sur- : y Herman ressionally,
Harold, Donald, William Eldon Arford |
77. Survivor: Daugh-
NEW SALISBURY—Mrs. L. C. Adams, 80. 78. Surviv- | ors: Brothers, Charles, Henry and Gustave.
L. Hinote, 76. Wife, Sarah; daughters, Mrs. E. Jennings, sons, John, Carl and : step-son, Harold Hughes; brother,
HALEY FUNERAL SET TOMORROW
Pioneer Woman Physician | Was 85; Practiced Until A’ Few Days Ago.
Funeral services for Dr. Cloud Haley,
Hl Three Weeks
| Laura pioneer Indianapolis] woman physician who died Sunday |
‘held at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in the]
Hisey & Titus Mortuary. Burial
was 85 and the wife of Joseph W. Haley. ill only a few days and had con-
tinued to practice until her illness. |
The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Jennings, Mrs. Haley was born in Morrow, {for a while in Illinois. When she |eame to Indianapolis to study medicine, the public was prejudiced against women physicians. Graduating from the Physio Medical College here, she became a Marion County doctor and con-| tinued her general practice until 25 | years ago. Mrs. Haley since has specialized in women's diseases and | maintained offices for the past 17 years in the State Life Building. She formerly had an office at 712 N. Illinois St. | Mrs. and Mr. Haley Park Methodist Church, the Royal Neighbors of America and several {medical organizations. | Survivors besides are a sister, Mrs. Hester Jenkins of Indianapolis; a niece, Bailey of Carmel, and a nephew, Herbert Jenkins of Indianapolis.
FRANK HAISLUP DIES:
her husband
A retired building contractor. Frank Haislup, died yesterday in his
75 and had been a resident here 39 | years. Mr. Haislup, a native of Bartholomew County, ago. Survivors are a sister, Mrs. Nettie Frazee, five nephews and one niece, {all of Indianapolis. Funeral services will be held ™ 3 p. m. fomorrow in the Harry Moore Peace Chapel and burial wii | be in Crown Hill.
WARREN W. ST. JOHN BURIAL 1S TOMORROW
Warren W. St. John, who died| | ing Ave., will be buried in Crown! | Hill following services at 2 p. m. | tomorrow in the Heath Memorial | Methodist Church.
Mr. St. John was 73. He was a} | member of the Independent Order | of Odd Fellows. Hayden. His wife, John,
Mrs. Retta St.
survives,
O.. and lived |
Haley's first husband, Al-| bert D. Cloud, died in 1928 and she| were married in| 1936. She was a member of Roberts!
Mus. |
‘RETIRED AS BUILDER
home, 315 N. Hamilton Ave. He was |
retired several years |
| Sunday in his home, 1518 N. Keal-|
| Frank Daniel; An Indianapolis resident 50 vears,!ald Daniel and Robert
He was born at| 2 p. m.
Dr. Cloud, as she was known pro-
She had been
Russell H. Gilmore . . from “printer's devil” to head of local I. T. U.
MARTHA E. RIHL | DIES HERE AT 82
Former Local Te Teacher and Principal Il 2 Years; Rites Tomorrow.
Miss Martha E. Rihl, Indianapolis school teacher,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
R. H. GILMORE, PRINTER, DEAD
Member of The Times Staff, Long Active in Union And Lodge Circles.
A printer more than half a cen-|
(tury, Russell H. Gilmore, a member | lof the composing room staff of The
Indianapolis Times and a lifelong |
|
resident of Indianapolis, died today | in Methodist Hospital. Mr. Gilmore, who had been ill
|three weeks, was one of the most |active members of the International | Typographical Union here and was {a leader in Masonic affairs.
\ |
to the Indianapolis {later worked for
|
a retired y qe 312, F. & A. M.; died Chapter 5, Royal Arch Masons: In-
|yesterday after a two years’ illness. dianapolis Council
He learned his trade at the Bur-
. rose |ford Printing Co. and while he wat a |
‘printer's devil,” one of his supervisors told him he'd “never make a! Pe | President of Local
But Mr. Gilmore went ahead to {become president of Local No. 1, In-| [ternational Typographical Union, ‘land was the local’s delegate to the union convention at Providence, R. , in 1914, and at Colorado Springs 1926 and 1936. In 1926 he won a pi on the laws committee of the International Union. Mr. Gilmore went from Burford’'s Sentinel and 17 years at the {Indianapolis Star. He joined the staff of The Times in 1916. He was a member of Capital City Indianapolis
2, and was a
She was 82 and had lived at 353 charter member of Pilgrim Shrine
Lincoln St. 64 years. A teacher and principal in the | city’s public schools more than a | half century, Miss Rihl was a native |
of Indianapolis and had retired 15 0f Naomi Chapter 131,
years ago. She had taught at Schools 28 and 25 and had been principal of | Schools 13 and 31. She was a
Survivors are a sister, Mrs. Kortepeter; a brother, H. S. Rihl; a niece, Mrs. Martha Schad, and
a nephew, Theodore P. Kortepeter, | { Church.
all of Indianapolis.
(2:30 p. m. tomorrow in the G. H. {Herrmann Funeral Home, with | burial in Jun Cown all
MARY E. GOODWIN DIES IN E. SIDE HOME
resident of Indianapolis 46 velit, Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Goodwin died Sunday in her home, 5901 E. Washington St., Apt. 7. She was 73. Mrs. Goodwin was born in Fillmore. She was a member of the
[Grace Methodist Church, the Mec-
| Guffey Club and the War Mothers. Survivors are her husband, Harry Goodwin; two sons, Ray Goodwin lof Indianapolis and Ralph Goodwin of Cleveland; a daughter, Mrs. two grandsons, DonGoodwin, and two granddaughters, Mary |Evelyn and Dorothy Daniel. Funeral services will be held at tomorrow in the Moore & Kirk Irvington Mortuary. Burial Iwill be in Washington Park.
ROOM
Since you last bought a car!
TAKE THE WHEEL yourself, sit the family in back, and discover what solid comfort there is in this year’s big Ford car! Don’t pick out any new car till you do,
See the New Ford Colors and New Exterior Styling just released for Spring!
if comfort’s what you actual passenger space
‘re after. Here's the greatest
in the whole Ford price field
this year. Greatest total seating width. Greatest length inside the body. And here's a ride that’s a marvel! A new Ford ride. A soft Ford ride. A quiet, level, easy ride, even over rough roads, front seat or rear, that you should look into. Drive your present car to your Ford dealer. Take this new Ford car out on the road. And see how far the motor car world has changed since your present car was new!
Faro GOOD DRIVERS LEAGUE. Boys and
s, here 85 Voie University Scholar: details, write Ford
rtunity to win one of
is your oO ips for skillful SLNiuE. Good
ivers Leagu
Dearborn, Mich., or see your Ford Dea oy
V-8 POWER—90 smooth horse. power. There never was a low price engine like this before. NEW BEAUTY — When you look at the smooth flowing lines you see one of the few cars up-to-date styling. A NEW RESTFUL RIDE— On the new Ford “Slow Motion Springs.” A soft, ‘quiet ride wholl wholly new this year.
FORD HAS THE QUALITY FEATURES
EXTRA VALUE —New ease of control with positive mechanical, fine-car type shifc—extra-big hydraulic brakes—and the famous Ford semi-centrifagal clutch. There are more than 30 Ford “Exclusives”’—some of them found only on highest priced cars—and all ‘of them found only on the Ford in its price class:
|
member of the First Baptist Church. | Effie |
Funeral services will be held at|
|daughter,
12, White Shrine of Jerusalem. Held Lodge Offices
Mr. Gilmore was a past patron Order of | Eastern Star, and was a member of [the Past Matrons and Past Patrons | Association of Marion County. He was past associate grand guardian of Job's Daughters of Indiana. He also was a member of the Knights of Pythias and the Fraternal Order of Eagles. He attended the Fletcher Place Methodist
Mr. Gilmore is survived by his wife, Mrs. Millie Gilmore; a son, Richard Gilmore of Indianapolis; a Mrs. Ruth Woesner of (Tampa, Fla, and two grandchil|dren. Funeral services will be at 3:30
ip. m. Thursday at the Moore & Kirk
Funeral Home. Burial will be at
Crown Hill.
Mrs. Ronecker, 90, Is Dead Here
BURIAL WILL be in Crown Hill for Mrs. Elizabeth Ronecker, 90-year-old native of Germany, who died Sunday in the Methodist Hospital, following services at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Edwin Ray Methodist Church. Mrs. Ronecker was injured in a fall at her home, 1712 Woodlawn Ave. last week. She came to this country with her parents, pioneers of the dis- | trict near Jefferson Barracks, Mo., | when she was 5. Following her marriage 73 years ago, Mrs. Ronecker came to Indianapolis. A member of the Edwin Ray Church 50 years, she was active in the Epworth League and the Ladies’ Bible Class of the church. | Survivors are her daughter, Emma C. Ronecker of Indianapolis, four nephews and their |
S. T. CROFT SR,
| | families. | |
BLACKSMITH, DIES
A blacksmith for the Big Four Railroad, Samuel T. Crofts Sr. died vesterday in the Methodist Hospital after a three-months’ illness. He was 63 and lived at 901 N. Ritter Ave. Mr. Crofts, who was a native of Louisville, Ky., was married there in 1899 to Miss Bertha C. Stokes. He had worked in the Beech Grove shops of the railroad here since coming to Indianapolis in 1915. He was a member of St. Matthew's Episcopal Church.
four daughters, Mrs Mrs. Rosemay Coffman, tha C. jorie Crofts, all of Indianapolis, and five sons, William T., Joseph E., and Samuel T. Crofts Jr. all of Indianapolis, George W. Crofts | of Anderson and Marion C. Crofts | of South Bend. The Rev. J. W. Yoder, pastor of St. Matthew's Church, will officiate at funeral services at 10 a. m. tomorrow in the Moore & Kirk Irvington Mortuary. Burial will be in Memorial Park.
THEODORE FINKLER
Tl several months, 833 Ft. Wayne Ave. He was 61 and | was a native of Germany. A resident of Indianapolis 30 years, Mr. Finkler formerly lived in Louisville, Ky. and had come to this
was a member of Southeastern Lodge 852, I. O. O. F.
Finkler;
Dietrich, all of Indianapolis; two sisters, Mrs. Laura Lich of Indianfapolis and Mrs. Frieda Gordon of
dore Lich of Indianapolis and Mounsey Lich of Detroit, Mich.
2:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Hockensmith Funeral Home. be in Washington Park.
WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE —
Without Calomel And You'll Bedinthe Morning Rar topo”
The liver should pour 2 pints of bile juice | into your bowels every day. If this bile is not flowing freely, your food may not digest, It may just decay in the bowels. Then | was bloats up your stomach. You get cone iy feel sour, sunk and the world
| Tt Ike “those old Carter's Litt) | Liver Pills to get —— pints of bile flows EA to make you feel “up and up.”
REE
ARVIN iN]
= WASHINGTON
AND DELAWARE STS. —=
GIANT BAR P & G LAUNDRY SOAP Special Wednesday only. While 1500 oe 10¢
6 CORD COTTON SEWING THREAD
Black and white. All sizes. Wednes3 for Re
day only + 46-IN. OILCLOTH REMNANTS—EA. One vard to one and one-half yard lengths—As- “1 Be sorted colors and patterns i
14-QT. ENAMELED DISH PANS
Round size. While 300 last. Heavy coated Cc gray enamel . .. . 25
“NICKLE CREPE” TOILET TISSUE
Mill irregular rolls. Regular c 3c quality. Wednesday only 4 rotis | 1
9-IN. CROCKERY MIXING BOWLS
Porcelain glazed with colorful strip trim, Note the large size
Final Clearance! Women’s & Misses’
COATS
and TOPPERS $3.95 & $6.95 Values Save Half and More
3.
Of course theyre mostly one of a kind and in broken sizes and assorted colors. Plaids Fleeces—Tweeds — Boucles— Shetlands. Fitted and Swag-
gers, 12 to 46.
DRESSES
Formerly Priced from $2.00 up to $3.98
Redingote style navy marquisette with printed French crepe slips, chalk crepes in spring colors. Spun Rayons in plain and prints, many washable.—Sizes 12 to 52.
Girls’ Sheer
ORGANDY DRESSES
With Slips
For May festivi-
White, blue
Day ties. pink, and yellow. Sizes 7 to 14.
Girls’ Fleece
TOPPERS
Reg. 1.00 Values, 5 0
in sizes 7 to 14. Priced to clear.
Enjoy the Returning Sun in Cool, Comfortable
PLAY
1
Many Samples $1.98 and $2.98 Qalities
Piece Slack Suits -Piece Farmerette Suits 4-Piece Play Suits 2-Piece Work Suits Pastels, high shades and dark colors and combinations. Smart styles, designed for comfort. Denims, linenes, hopsacking, prints. Sizes 12 to 20.
29 -
Besides his wife, he is survived by | | Ellen Bader, | Mrs. Ber- | Scott and Miss Helen Mar- |
Crisp. New Spring
CURTAINS
39°
® Tailored Mesh Pairs ® Bathroom Curtains ® Ruffled Priscillas ® 5-Pec. Cottage Sets
HERE 30 YEARS, DIES
GRASS SEED—5-lbs.
Tested seed, clean and Ae
free from chaff. READY MIXED PAINT General purpose paint in 15¢
Theodore | Finkler died yesterday im his home, |
country when he was a child. He
Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Nina | a Stepson, Ray Dietrich: | two stepdaughters, Helen and Peggy |
New York, and two nephews, Theo- |
Funeral services will be held at
Burial will
assta. colors, 1-10 gal. ens U. S. Government Rejects 3-lb. Blankets
o.
Fine quality blankets made to Government specifications. Limited quantiy. Also jacquard Indian blankets.
Size 72x84 Rust Color
99.IN. UNBL. SHEETING 20¢ value, 1 to 3-yard 15¢
pieces. Heavy quality— CURTAIN GOODS
yard. 36 to 43 inch widths in 7.1 <
assorted marquisettes, meshes and voiles, yard. Regular 19¢ to 29¢ Quality Spring Dress Goods
2 to 10-Yard Lengths
12%
“Fruit of the Dhoom’ 80-square rints . Printed boplins o jicla gn rinted Dimities . Printed Sheer Goods Large color and pattern choice
Knit Fabric and Floral Cretonne
SLIP COVERS
for Chairs for Davenports
1.98 $2.98
Club and wing chairs in choice of blue, green, plum and brown. Davenports in several styles in sizes 76 to 84-inch back. Matching colors.
SHOP AND COMPARE THIS LEADER VALUE
Sale! Luxury Tufted
CHENILLE SPREADS | 1 Ed
Heavy spreads with an abundance of soft cotton chenille tufts in soft rich colorings. Full and twin sizes in wood rose, peace, blue, green and
More Chenille Than Usually Found at Higher Prices
