Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 May 1942 — Page 8
LEE PLOWMAN DIES ON COAST
Marine Engaged in Aerial Photography; Graduate Of Tech High.
’ Leo Plowman, son of Mrs. Edna Plowman, 2305 Guilford ave., and Ross A. Plowman of Knightstown, died yesterday at the Marine hos‘pital at San Diego after a loriet illness. . The 31-year-old youth Joined the marines last January and had been engaged in aerial photography. Before entering the service he was employed by the H. Lieber & Co. He was a Technical high school graduate, Besides his parents, he is survived by two sisters, Mrs, Naomi Ruth Connell' and Wilma E. Plow-
man, and a brother, Orville R. Plowman, all of Indisnapolis,
William Beier
William Beier, retired Big Four Railroad employee, died yesterday at his home, 1231 S. East st. - Mr. Beier was 74 and had lived in this city for many years. ‘He was a native of Germany. He retired from the railroad in 1933 after 25 years service. Mr. Beier was a member of the Morris Street Methodist church.
Survivors are a sister, Mrs. Lena|.
Shilling; a brother, Chris Beier, and > Stepson, R. A. Wilhoite, all of this y. Services will be held at 10 a. m. tomorrow at the G. H. Hermann funeral home. Burial will be in Crown Hill.
SERVICES ARRANGED FOR WILLIAM COLE
William Cole will pe buried at Salem, Ind, Thursday following 2 Pp. m. services there, and services will also be held at 8 p. m. tomorrow at the Flanner & Buchanan mortuary. Mr. Cole, a retired farmer, died yesterday at Methodist hospital. He had lived with his daughter, Mrs. Beulah Jarvis, 1806 Rural st. for the past 15 years. Survivors, besides Mrs. Jarvis, are six other daughters, Mrs. Lucille Sommers of Indianapolis, Mrs. Lenore Kepner and Mrs. Hettie Rogers of Monon, Mrs. Flossie Weston of Whiteland, Mrs. Elsie Sterling of Brownstown and Mrs. Jessie Ribelin of Greenwood, and one son, Harry of Indianapolis.
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Pvt. Harold A. Rumrill (left)
Brothers Serving U. S:-
and Lieut. Harry 'E. Rumrill are
brothers who have joined the nation’s armed forces. They are the sons of Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Rumrill, 65 S. Audubon road. Pvt. Rumrill is in the air corps at Trinidad, British West Indies. He.is 21
and a graduate of Tech high school. Lieut. Rumrill is assigned to the
103d infantry regiment at Camp ‘Bullis, Tex. He is a graduate of . Tech high school and Indiana university.
0. H. KLINGSTEIN RITES ARRANGED
Retired as Operator of Furniture Co.; Lived in * City 60 Years.
Services for Otto H. Klingstein, retired operator of thé Otto Klingstein & Son Furniture Co., will be held at the Wald funeral home at 2 p. m. Thursday. Burial will be in Washington Park. Mr. Klingsteih died yesterday morning at his home, 2356 College ave. He was 69. A | native of Germany, he had lived here for 60 years. He was a member of the Pentalpha lodge 564, F & A. M, Scottish Rite, Murat temple of the Shrine and the Zion Evangelical and Reformed church. Survivors include two sons, Hugo and Otto; a sister, Mrs. Lillie Koch, and three grandsons, Otto, William and Frederick Klingstein, all of Indianapoli.s
William S. Gibbs
William S. Gibbs, retired U. 8. Rubber Co., employee, died last night at his home, 111 E. St. Clair st., Apt. 9. He was 75 and had lived here for 25 years. Services and burial will Lewisburg, Ky., tomorrow.
be at
and Terry, both of Lewisburg, and a sister, Mrs. R. M. Adkins of Greenville, Ky.
Anna L. Livengood
Service for Mrs. Anna _Luetta
| Livengood, will be conducted at 1
p. m. tomorrow at the G. H. Herrmann funeral home, with the Rev. Robert: Lewis, pastor of Fountain Square Christian church, officiating. Burial will-be at Crawfordsville. She died yesterday at her home, 707 Parkway ave. after a fivemonths illness. Mrs. Livengood, born in Montgomery county, came to Indianapolis 17 years ago. Survivors are a daughter; Mrs. Alberta Thomas of Indianapolis and two sons, Capt. Frank Livengood of Indianapolis and William of Maywood, Ill.; five grandchildren and six great-grandchildren.
MARY B.r FLETCHER, EX-RESIDENT, DEAD
Funeral arrangements were to oe completed today for Mrs. Mary Bence Fletcher, one time resident of Indianapolis and widow of Allen M. Fletcher, a founder of the former Fletcher National bank and former governor of Vermont. Mrs. Fletcher died Saturday at her home in Camden, S. C. Survivors are a son, Allen M., of Ruthland, Vt. and two daughters, Fannie B. and Mrs. Mary Fletcher Charlton of Proctorsville, Vt.
KIWANIS PLANS STYLE SHOW
The Indianapolis Kiwanis club will hold ladies’ day and a style show tomorrow noon at the Columbia club. Mrs. Elizabeth Patrick, stylist, will superintend the models
from L. S. Ayres & Co.
Cc
FHC
om
—On Sale Only While They Last
—So Be Early!
J Limit One Dozen to a Customer
—Another DEE...
Soot
\
. —on Sale Wednesday & Thursday Only!
* Streamlined Matching Crystal
“JIGGERS’’
Each One Identified With A Snappy Toast!
% "Just a Swallow" '% "'Down the Track" % ''Bottoms-Up" % "Happy Days"
Hoosiers to Win Farm by Saving
ROCHESTER, Ind., May 12 (U. P.).—Walter Beaudoin, 19, and Mrs. Robert Kern, 20, brother and sister, will have to save approximately $3 a week for the next 15 years to inherit the farm land estate of their grandfather,
" Jesse T. Muncey, who died last
month at Kankakee, Ill The grandfather’s will provides that each of the two heirs must have earned honestly and saved $2500. by the time they are 35. If ‘they live up to this term, they ‘become joint owners of a farm estate valued at $105,000.
SAN DIEGO BLACKED OUT SAN DIEGO, Cal, May 12 (U. P.).—A five-minute blackout was ordered in San Diego last night because of the presence of an unidentified plane, which later was identified as friendly.
SAFETY AWARDS|
WON BY DRIVERS
18 Working for F for Freight Co. Go Through Year With-
out Accident.
Monthly safety meetings held by the
presentation of safety awards to 18 drivers who have gone through the year without an accident. Averaging between 50,000 and 100,000° miles a year under every conceivable condition, one man has
an eight-year safety record, another for seven years, two for six years, two for five years, four for two years, and eight for one year.
The Best Drivers
The drivers are -Walter Hise, 1437 Orange st.; Forrest Money, 2442 Guilford ave.; Paul Maupin, 5302 E. Terrace ave.; Charles McDowell, 910 E. 20th st.; Fred Marshall, R. R. 7, Box 438; Larry Geis~ singer, 1918 Carrollton ave.; Lloyd Secrest, 2732 N. Denny st.; Earl Gentry, 303 N. Forest ave.; Orville Hoffert, 5303 E. Terrace ave.; James Summers, R. R. 1, Box 314; Jack Stewart, 2503 Shelby st.; John Gardner, 1625 N. Euclid ave.; Elmer Bunce, 1231 Shepard st.; Dale W. Sparks, 121 N. Grant ave.; Fred J. Sickle, 601 St. Paul st.; Harry Moore, 370 Prospect st.; Joseph Underwood, 1528 Shepard st. and Everett Parks, 1904 Carrollton ave.
DAIRY PRODUCTION LOW OVER EUROPE
WASHINGTON, May 12 (U.P.).— Continued deteriqration in the European dairy situation due to food and labor shortage and to German requisitions of cattle was reported today by the agriculture department on the basis of reports to its office of foreign agricultural
relations.
Transamerican Freight| Lines, Inc., have resulted in the
Pupils Sp ponsor
A SKATING PARTY will be sponsored by the junior-freshman classes of the ¢ St, John’s acad“‘emy at River-
side rink at 8 |
p. m. May 20. Members of the ticket committee include
Joan Kenney. Jacqueline Spragg, Betty
A rw Miss McCalley meQuinn, Nancy Mc¢Calley, Anna Catherine
Dean, Maxine’ Teipen and Nita
Kirsch. Miss Quinn is in charge of publicity.
CHINESE GUERRILLAS KILL 300 MORE JAPS
CHUNGEKING., May 12 (U. P.).— Chinese guerrilla forces have killed
310 more Japanese in a series of |}
raids over a wide area, the official
Central News Agency reported today. At least 150 Japanese were killed during a three-day battle ending April 29, Central said. It reported that an entire Japanese garrison of 60 men was wiped out during a raid in southern Anhwei province the night of May 7 and the night of May 9 considerable Japanese equipment was destroyed in a raid on an airfield at Pailochi in Hunan province.
DAILY WAR COST IN APRIL: 131 MILLIONS
- WASHINGTON, May 12 (U. P.).— The government spent $131,600,000 daily for war purposes during April, an increase of $16,700,000 over the daily average for March, the war production board reported today. The April total of war expenditures was $3,421,000,000 compared to $2,987,000,000 in March.
OPEN TILL 10 P. M.
INDIANA'S LARGEST WHOLESALE FURNITURE DEALER
QUITTING BUSINESS ||
Survivors are two brothers, George
SELLING OUT TO THE PUBLIC
1000 BEDROOM SUITES 300 DINING ROOM SUITES 250 LIVING ROOM SUITES
400 DINETTE SUITES 200 BREAKFAST SETS 250 Bridge, Floor & Table LAMPS
1200 OCCASIONAL PIECES INCLUDING PRACTICALLY EVERYCONCEIVABLE PIECE OF FURNITURE FOR YOUR HOME OR APARTMENT AT DRASTIC PRICE CUTS
Skating Party
. Dorothy Kise,
Wade, Kather-
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ANOTHER GREAT
MILLER-WOHL
VALUE-GIVING EVENT!
UL 14.0] 30th Ws RT 0 GARY, IND. STORE TIN: EXPIRED)
YI I-14 T
SE ——
Remaining Stock Was Transferred from Gary to Our Store for Im-
mediate Disposal —Come Share in this Great Festival of Bargains—Including
Spring and Summer Dresses—Spring and Fall
(SF. FE1 8 Blouses—Slack Suits—Slacks—Play Suits — Slips — Gowns — Pajamas
and Suits—Skirts-—
-Every-
thing You Need at Prices You'll Appreciate—Sale Starts Wednesday 9:30 A. M. and Ends Saturday. See Our Windows and Shop Every Department.
ALL SALES FINAL! NO EXCHANGES —NO REFUNDS!
Over 200 Spring and Fall
Coats & Suits
Grab These Quick!
$3—+) w $799
A truly enormous selection of the most desirable styles, materiais, and ‘colors. Thrifty women will buy now for next Fall!
Over 1000
\
Actual $3 to $5.99 Val. 10 GO AT—
$1 and $)
A great assortment of Spring and Summer styles in ‘rayon crepes, cottons, sharkskins and many others,
Basement
Basement
300 Must Go!
PURSES 39°
Actually sold for $1.00 and more. Tremendous color
selection in the large and small shapes.
Basement
. that will see you through
- Hundreds of
SKIRTS
Don’t Pass These Up!
J E
Yes! Skirts at 79¢ to $1.29
Spring and Summer. If you -
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Basement
Full-Fashioned!
"HOSIERY 59°
Marvelous qualities at this price. All wanted shades. Only a limited number—
shop early! Main Floor
Come & Get ’Em!
Rayon SLIPS -
19e is
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would cost you work or playtime. choice of.
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in wanted col-
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SLACK SUITS
ors and dive material. Basement
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Main Floor Specials
Here's Your Chance! New Blouses . . $1.00 New Purses... $1.00 Think of it! Better get here New Slips th 31.19 early for these. How Slacks (I $i 99 Basement § Sport Shirts. ...69¢
: Slightly. soiled but sold originally at $7.99 to $12.99.
New Skirts . . . $1.69
Look at This!
BETTER DRESSES. New 2-piece seersuckers. One and
2 - piece sport $
dresses. Beautiful : sheer prints, and -. many others. ~All. worth more. Basement
wv
And Many, Many More Special Values! Shop Both Ha na t Miss Any of These Bargains!
\\\
LE
"THE PICK OF THE SEASONS. COSTLIEST STYLE SUCCESSES
Rey. $2.49 to $2.99 Values!
1500 Pairs of Shoes
CELT Patent Sandal ;
® Widths AAA-C
600 LATE SPRING
Beige Pump ® Sizes 4:10
Beige Patent
HATS... 59°
off+faces,
au Luin rE 9 for 31 99c
BEAUTIFUL “SUMMER HATS
‘Included are the opr cocoanuts ' and lovely * straws ‘in white and. i : Basement
- Combination
Brown and White Saddle Oxford
New £2
' Others 49¢ to. woo!
= edo, H
