Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 November 1944 — Page 10

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PAGE 10 _

. to relieve stuffines invite

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if nose fills.up

Tonight

It's wonderful how a little Va-tro-nol up éach nostril relieves stuffy transient congestion, Also relieves distress of head colds! Follow directions in folder.

VICKS VA-TRO-NOL

Bond Sales.

hells «White, wine, blue, South- $2 29 <

llond print—Pom Pon Trim.

Chien ‘ 4 A Floatties

~Red and Royal Blue . . . Veoh collared “rhea vein

It's hard to believe

they're non-rationed . , .

Tinies distinctively styled sandals of

stretchable imitation suede. Wear tested soles

| Featuring, Miss Dorothy Sarnoff, { soprano, and Leonard Warren, baria

Popular Program Scheduled Sunday to Spur County

A color guard of the 798th military police battalion at Ft. Harri-| cher unit.

son will present the colors at the| free concert in Cadle Taberna

cle| only will be presented by the sym- _. phony orchestra in this first of a se-

| sunday when Fabien Sevitzky directs 'his Indianapolis symphony orches{tra in his first all-popular musical treat.

| tone, Metropolitan opera gtars, the

program wilt spur the Marion county, |

campaign to meet a goal of $67,250,000 in the sixth war loan drive. Arrangements have been made for 37 enlisted men and six officers of the Indiana state guard to serve as | ushers during the two-hour program | beginning at 3 p. m. Capt. William H. Mathis will have charge of the

|

Works of American composers

ries of municipal concerts of the winter season.

Legion Meeting Today

Meanwhile, Neal Grider, county director of the American Legion war bond canvass of more than 6000 employee groups, urged all commanders and leglonnaires of the 38 legion posts in Marion county to attend the one-hour meeting at 8 p. m. today in the war memorial auditorium. Lts. William Hughett and George E. Lyons, bomber pilots recovering at Camp Atterbury from wounds received in action, will speak at the meeting. Final instructions for ‘the business canvass will be given, Rallies have been staged in 57 plants in connection with the drive of the payroll savings division to {have every industrial and business concern employing more than 25 workers accept a war loan quota before Monday, Fifty-six additional booked rallies and pictures have been plants with another | scheduled. |

plants have war combat | shown in 38) 26 showings

18. East st.

MRS. SUMNER'S RITES ARRANGED

Services Set Tomorrow for Resident Who Lived

’ Here 30 Years.

The Rev. Norman H. Schultz, pastor of the Garfield Park Evangelical.and Reformed church, will conduct rites for Mrs. Mary Sumner at 3 p. m, tomorrow in the G. H. Herrmann funeral home, 1505

A resident of Indianapolis 30

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

A

In Charge of DeMolay

Members in charge of the DeMolay Mothers’ club silver offering tea scheduled from 2:30 to 4 p. m. today in the governor's mansion are, left to right, Mrs. Will Bernhardt, president; Mrs. Ross A, Smith, Mrs. Earl Yarling, chairman, and Mrs. William Wise, Mrs. Wise and

Mrs. Smith will pour.

Mrs. Frank Cooper is co-chairman for the tea.

Musical selections will be presented by Mrs, Bessie Hermann, Mrs. Bertha Didway and Miss Patricia Joy. a

and was 45, She died Wednesday |

VinMrs.

Mrs. Mrs

Maude Dorris, Faye Martin,

sisters, cennes,

man, Bloomfield, and Charles Work-

daughter,

ROSEMARY BROOKS

Services for

Brooks, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. L. (Ray) Brooks, 1242 Wright st.,

operation, will be held at 8:30 a. m.|

rick's church, Holy Cross cemetery. Miss Brooks was a graduate of St. !

‘STRUCK BY TROLLEY, MAN CRITICALLY HURT

William Mix, 35, hurt last night when a trackless trolley struck him in the 700 block! of Massachusetts ave, He was taken to City hospital. Mix received head injuries, police sald, when he started to run across

All four members of the state | budget committee were reappointed | yesterday by Governor Schricker, | They will serve until the next gen-| eral eleétion in 1046. | Members of the commitiée are State Senators Walter Vermillion | (D. Anderson) and Floyd Garrott | (R. Battle Groundy apd Reps. James | M. Knapp (R. Hagerstown) and Robert Heller (D. Decatur.) |

ATTEND SERVICES Southeastern Rebekah. lodge No. | 749 will attend church services Sunday morning at Meridian Street | Methodist church. Members will | meet at 10:30 a. m. at the church.

State Deaths

i ALEXANDRIA Walter L. Cary, 46. Sur- | vivors: Wife, Corinne; mother, Mrs. Alta! Maggart; sister, Mrs. William N. Beatson. BENTON--Mrs. Al Roach, 5%. Burvivors: Husband, Albert: daughters, Mrs Ralph Vall and Mrs. Richar Rookstool; | brothers, Alvin and €nlvin Rogers; sis- | ters, Mrs, Jesse’ Weddell," Ethel and Wilma | Rogers | | BRAZIL- Miy Brilla M. McCloud, 68. | Survivors: Husband, Conrad: son, Chester; sisters, Mrs. Helen Mason and Mrs, Lizale White; brothers, John and Wash Mason, | FRANKTON George King, 82. Sur vivor: Sister, Mrs, Elizabeth Davis, | GOSHEN-Mrs. Minerva Melloy, 70. Sur. vivors Husband, James; sons, Milo and Ernest LA PORTE Mrs Burvivors Daughters,

Marie C. Wesch, 84. Mrs. William

For what America has done igfithis war, everyone should be deeply thankful. The days are bright with the wartime deeds of all America; its fighting forces and its working forces, men and women. Still brighter days are ahead, but we must not rest.

Let's pause only for @ moment, this Thanksgiving. There is much fo be done. Everyone must dig deeper and deeper for War Bonds. Our fighting men are

carrying on, so our war workers must As yesterday— and today—s0 tomor-

keep production humming. And the railroads must continue their vital trans-

a -e A

— Thon Look 5 1s Biiphitr Dig

portation job as the war moves into its final chapter in the Pacific.

ROCK ISLAND LINES, a western railroad, is of ever increasing importance as America turns its eyes and its supreme effort toward the setting sun. Our 24,000 employees know this. They will see America through to the dropping of the last bomb, to that day of complete and total thanksgiving.

rew ROCK ISLAND'S sole purpose is to provide the finest in

bien encoder BL ie TLL

was critically 7"

the street. The trolley, going north- { east, was being driven by George W.|{ { Kimbrow, 25, of 408 N. Alabama st. §

SCHRICKER RENAMES | BUDGET COMMITTEE |

brome

Reade

If © Lets Finish the Job... BUY BONDS 1 { i ia oh i a . Ca . . .. : | ROCK ISLAND LINES | ose Vv eu MWS PRAY hi. ©. CHOOSE YOUR OF AMERICA'S RAILROADS—AL( UNITED FOR viCTORY.[ ~~ ~~

years, she was born in Bloomfield |, Stokely Bros. & Co. She was 18.|

in her home, 1515 N. Meridian Lave sisters, Mrs. Harold Sprong, Mrs.

|

sisters, Misses Ruth, Marie and

Survivors besides her parents irs. sisters, Paris Island, 8. C.; four

in India.

man, Arlington, Va., and one grand-| pETER J. SOMMERS

Rites for Peter J. Sommers, who died Wednesday in the Veterans’ hospital, will be held at 8:30 a. m. Miss ~~ Rosemary i morrow in Speaks & Finn fu{neral home and at 9 a. m, in St. who died yesterday in St. Francis Philip Neri Catholic. church, Burial hospital following an appendicitls will be in St, Joseph's cemetery. A veteran of world war I, Mr. Monday in the Robert W. Stirling| Sommers had been employed by funeral home at 9 a. m. in St. Par- Marmon-Herrington Co., Inc. and Burial .will be in the Allison division of General Motors Corp. He was 53. Surviving are his ‘wife, Ann; a John's academy and was employed daughter, Mary Louise, .Indian-

Survivors are her husband, Fred; | Theodore Munn, Misses Doris and a son, Frank Eugene Roberts; five Betty Jean Brooks, all of Indianap-|Ky., and Mrs. Oscar Maher, Harks- | lis, and Mrs, Leo Horning of Belle-|burg, Tenn. and two brothers, Earl, fontaine, O.,, and three brothers, Greenville, Ky. Hazel Frankel, Mrs, Vivian Rogers Harold and Paul Brooks, both of Sommers, in England. and Mrs. Ruth Heinrichs, Indian- (Indianapolis, and Pfc. Raymond | apolis; two brothers, Dexter Work- | Joseph Brooks, serving

Helen Sommers, all of Henderson,

and Lt, Charles

CHRIS JECKEL

Chris Jeckel, 332 N. East st., died yesterday in City hospital less than two ‘weeks after the death of his wife, Mabel. He was 48. A resident of Indianapolis since 1918, he had been a salesman at the South Side market since coming

here. He was born in Louisville, Ky. Survivors are three brothers, Edward and Clifford, both of Indianapolis, and Charles of Yakima, on two sisters, Mrs. Lillian Gar-

rison and Mrs. Edna Gardner, and a half-brother, Elmer Ward, all of | Indianapolis.

apolis; a son, Marine Pvt. James

LEYTE. PUSH SLOWED BY TROPICAL RAINS

Other Troops Consolidate Mapia Gains.

-ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Philippines, Nov. 17 (U. P.).—Tropical downpours slowed the American offensive on Leyte today. Other invasion troops 900 miles to the southeast completed the oc< Supagion of one of the principal Mapia- - islands off New Guinea, Enemy remnants were being mopped up on another. (A Pearl Harbor communique announced that a recapitulation showed 16 Japanese ships, including a light cruiser and four destroyers, had been sunk by Amegican carrier planes in the Manila bay area Sunday. An earlier announcement had listed only two destroyers as definitely sunk.) Gen. Douglas. MacArthur reported in a supplement to his Philippines communique that American troops crushed the last resistance on Pegun island in the Mapia group yesterday. . The victory was won 24 hours after landing in the tiny archipelago 145 miles northwest of Biak. Remnants of the Japanese garrison on nearby Bras island were “being eliminated,” MacArthur said.

V-BOMBING IS RESUMED LONDON, Nov. 17 (U. P.).—The German V-bombing of Southern England was resumed yesterday and continued on until dawn today, causing some damage and an undisclosed number of casualties,

FRIDAY,

NOV. 17, 1944 * Mrs. Lindner, 77, Is Dead of Burns

MRS. BLANCHE LINDNER, 1911 E. Maryland st:, died in City hospital today of burns received last night when her dress was ignited by a defective gas hot= plate in her home. She was 77. Mrs. Lindner, who was pre= paring her evening meal, received second and third degree burns on her face and body. Born near Connersville, she-had lived in Indianapolis 41 years. Survivors are two sons, Clarence and Emmett of Indianapolis; a daughter, Mrs. Louise Johnson, New York City; a brother, Burley Grewell, Ciflcagd; a sister, Mrs. Agnes Parker, Alexandria, and twe grandchildren,

CAPEHART TO VISIT CAPITAL MONDAY

Senator-elect Homer E, Capehart, running true to form, isn't letting any grass grow under his feet. He's going to Washington two months before the swearing-in ceremony for a “get acquainted” visit. Mr, Capehart's assistants at his Claypool hotel headquarters today said he would be in the capital from Monday through Wednesday of next week to “look around, get the feel of the place and arrange for office space.” They said he also will confer with the. Indiana dele= gation in both the senate and house, | The senator-elect is scheduled to {entrain for Washington on- the “Spirit of St. Louis” at 5 p. m. Sun(day. He will stay at the Mayflower {hotel while in Washington.

|

ALES fon 1190 189

WHEN YOU BUY-A FUR COAT IN OUR 'FASHION-RIGHT FUR DEPT. YOU BUY SATISFACTION!

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Tax | . Included

IMAGINE! ... ALL AT ONE LOW PRICE THESE FURS AT THE START OF THIS EVENT (All Subject to Prior Sale!)

. Originally Price (2) Black Kidskins ____________ $149 $99 (1) Brown’ Kidskin ____________ $119 ~~ $99 (2) Dyed Black Let-Out Skunk 5%, $189 $99 (2) Let-Out’ Mink-Dyed Wallaby__ $189 $99 (3) Beaver-Dyed Coneys ______. - $120 $99 (8) Seal-Dyed Coneys ___..__... $120 $99 (1) Sable-Dyed Coneys _____.__ - $120 $9) (1) 4 Raccoon-Dyed Opossum__ $14| $99 (1) yo Black-Dyed Opossum._.___. $14] $99 (1) Black Russian Pony ________ $141 $99 (1) Brown Fox Paws _._________ $141 $99 (2) Norwegian Blue Fox =, _____ $163 899 (5) Mink-Dyed Viscashas _____._. $129 $99 (12) Seal-Dyed Coneys __._._._._.__. $141 $99 (10) Beaver-Dyed Coneys _._...__._. $141 $99 Tuxedos! Box Styles! Wide Sleeves!

Turnback Cuffs! Deep Armholes!

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