Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 November 1944 — Page 9

9, 1944.

FOR |SKED

ges War letain

d »

ce ; 9.-Even af gs of peace conversely, ncements of

ampbell Jr,’

, army, told ican Society rs here to= peace insure rdnance re- ,, as well as | industrial

| Stake

tress on the security im be in direct , and money esearch and

ears ago the rtment ree year for its cluding the nals, depots, well as reit. For this “the record nd developt. a glorious me, the ord t more than y year for its

Needed

needs the tive research en the brain at- large is plained. This in research universities, tutions, con« viewpoint of ze the facilie try for ree uction. id industrial pbell maine tain our sue ) that if war able to preess” lives and operty.

a ners

his firm has vestors. We il yourself of select secu

sear fo be rchases may sh or carried live margin wr Market?

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Wyo

WEDNESDAY, NOV. 29, 194

le Suffering

Many Peo Peo * Headaches

Painof

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fing $48. sour stomach and heartbum, doetors owually| gp s largest Brice Te ie in madi, Ro 1 eller at 106. Aspitin Woilds largess Filo So lasts. Blaha brings contr 4 acting, 80 why pe more? Refuse subYA pie Buy St. dos Joseph ita. Nervous Rest loss SE can’t shoot Piles, but within a after i 3he Brat HARP iication, s fight the sgo-

0 “CERTAIN ah The 1035 pain andirritation. 3. Beipsshr shrink sore;swollen tissues. 3 eom1" periodic disturbances Torsing Ierituted men membranes hesjing alleviates make you feel nervous, tirc', restless, nertousiets due a te “dragged out"—at iro times—t'y fa- sands while hey Sorkad and e Jed Hife mous Lydia E. Pinkham's ogous sein positive guarantee to relieve such symptoms. It | of 2 Somplete tisfact action oy money i ‘Pinkham’ Don" le “misery w China-Roid today. Tour th this ou!

nies of Rout ind wagsl Masts Shing and eases e

in | ident Benjamin Harrison and a resyour | |dent of Indianapolis several years, ck. | will be held in Washington, D. C, it to |tomorrow. Burial will be in Omaha,

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, MARY HARRISON |

DIES IN CAPITAL

Daughter-in-Law of Former President Will Be Buried

In Omaha.

Services for Mrs. Mary Saunders Harrison, daughter-in-law of Pres-

Neb. Mrs. Harrison, wife of the late Russell B. Harrison, Indianapolis attorney, died yesterday in her home in Washington. She was the daughter of Alvin Saunders, territorial governor of Nebraska during the Lincoln administration and later a United States senator from that state. Prominent in Republican state politics, her husband served as Mex ican vice consul and as counsel for the Mexican government in Indiana for several years and was a veteran of the Spanish-American war. He served in both the state senate and house of representatives. He died in 1936. Mrs. Harrison is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Marthena H. Williams of Washington, and a son, William Henry Harrison, former Indianapolis attorney now living in Dayton, Wyo.

MRS. RHODA JOHNSON

Rites for Mrs. Rhoda Fern.Johnson, 1420 Montcalm st., were to be at 2:30 p. m. today in the Corinth Methodist church with burial in the Johnson cemetery near Brownsburg. Mrs. Johnson, who was 54, died Sunday in her home. A native of Hendricks county, she had lived here four years and was an em- | ployee of the Allison division of General Motors anda member of the Corifith Methodist church. Survivors are three sons, Pvt. Maurice Johnson of the army, and Cecil and Grant, both of Indianapolis; two daughters, Mrs. Gwendolyn Mead of Indianapolis and Mrs. Mildred Trover of South Bend; two sisters, Mrs. Bertha Sands of Indianapolis and Mrs. Susie Rogers of Lizton, and six grandchildren,

WILLIAM H. PHELAN

Rites for William H. Phelan, who died Monday in his home, 1220 Park ave., were held at 8 p. m. yesterday in Harry W. Moore Peace Chapel The body was sent to Nashville, Tenn, for burial. Formerly employed by . the Sentinel Printing Co., he was 72 and was a ‘member of the Royal Arcanum lodge, Woodmen of the World, Camp 125, and the Westminster Presbyterian church, Survivors are his wife, Alice; four brothers, Tony C., Boise, Ida.; Edward D., James Y. and Robert E,, all of Nashville.

ernie

MRS. IDA ANNA PEAR

central chapel, 946 N. Burial will be cemetery.

Indianapolis most of her life. odist church, Survivors are her Arthur; four daughters, Mrs. Ken

| Arthur J. Smith, Mrs.

ARE YOU GUILTY

OF AN OFFENSIVE BREATH BECAUSE OF

POOR TEETH? If Your

Teeth Are Hopelessly Decayed

WEAR NEW DENTAL

PLATES

all of Indianapolis; Clarence Trinnepohl

of Indianapolis and Mrs. Carri

Cincinnati, O., and children,

Jerry Smith,

two grand

Services for Mrs. Ida Anna Pear, who died yesterday in her home, 2011 Station st, will be at 10:30 a. m. Friday in Shirley Brothers Illinois st. in Memorial Park

Mrs, Pear, who was 53, was a native of Batesville but had lived in She belonged to the Forest Manor Meth-

husband,

neth Warren of Louisville, Ky.; Mrs. Gertrude Laney and Mrs, Esther Atkinson, a brother, of Indianapolis; three sisters, Mrs. Ella Haupt

Weartz and Mrs. Joseph Albers of

Phyllis Warren and

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES : Local Army Nurse Overseas Writes of Yank's Attitudes

“1f some of those peoples back there want to fight so badly, why don't they come over here?” «An Indianapolis army nurse serve ing right behind the lines in Holland asked the question in a letter to her mother this week. She didn't expect an answer to the question; it isn’t ever her question. Lt. Leota A. Hague, in two letters to Mrs. John R. Schmidt, 3140 W. 16th st., voiced the question which is being asked by. injured and maimed soldiers, hurt by the horrors of war but horrified more by news of ° strikes, dissension and strife in the home front,

Frequent. Question

The query is “voiced frequently by boys in the hospital who seek to forget pain and erase memories of war in news from home, only to read unwelcome news of people bickering among. themselves instead of ‘fighting all-out against the enemy, “The boys over here are fighting with all they've got,” he sald. “It's awful discouraging to us over here, reading about people quitting war jobs for permanent jobs so they can be prepared for the end of the war.”

Tells of Plasma Use

‘Lt. Hague, spurred on by unfavorable news which is disturbing the men’ at the front lines, wrote her letters between work of patching up our fighting men. She pointed out that the men hear not only of strikes and abandonment of jobs, but of a nation slacking in its duties of purchasing bonds and donating plasma. Her letter told briefly of the importance of plasma in the shock ward. “Our patiénts came in, pretty badly shocked: We pump blood and plasma into them and get them built up a little bit for surgery. A lot of these fellows come in so full of holes you'd think it impossible | for them to make it . . . but they put up such a good fight they generally pull through.” In closirig, she voiced another sentiment which is being repeated more and more among boys who can’t believe what they's hearing about the people at home. “If we're going to win . , . the people back

RITES” ARRANGED

*Imother, Mrs. Maude McGinety, In-

dianapolis; two brothers, Mullen, Indianapolis, and Willlam McGine-

SLAVS DOOM 105 Yugoslav partisan courts-martiai

have sentenced 105 persons to death

Lt. Leota Hague

EX-SHOWGIRL WINS ‘PARDON FOR MATE

PITTSBURGH, Nov. 20 (U.P) .— The persistent efforts of his attractive wife, a former Ziegfeld Follies showgirl, yesterday won for William Johann Adams, a commutation of his sentence to four to eight years

a swindling charge. Adams, through his wife, Mrs. Laureen Adams, has sought release from jail since a few months after his sentence, May 26, 1942, on grounds that he had become paralyzed. She was a regular visitor

nearly two years.

in Allegheny county workhouse on |-

to the workhouse, where he has been confined in the hospital for

The former showgirl took her

"FOR" MAUDE DODD

The Rev. Stanley Mahan, Bellaite Methodist church pastor, will conduct rites at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow in the’ church-for Mrs. Maude MbGinéty Dodd, who died Monday in her home, 5028 Primrose ave. Burial will be in Union -Chapel cemetery. Born in Falmouth, ‘Ky. she was a resident of Indianapolis more than 20 years and was 37.- A graduate of the Indianapolis School of Music, she taught plano several years, She was a member of the International Travel Study club, serving as lecturer two years, and the

Mrs. Delia M. Morgan, Indianapolis,

ty, San Diego, Cal,

Beautiful and serve iceable You can find ‘‘the" compact in

as traitors: and war criminals, according to a Russian broadcast re~ corded today by FCC monitors.

and a sister,

Plastic Revion Compacts wo, Gift Sets Ww Includes 5 shades

of nail polish and adberon. Comes in lovely case... .. An

compacts.

this

Office of ‘Civilian Defense Speaker's bureau. She also was organist of the Bellaire church. Survivors are her husband, Dorsey; two sons, John and Sam, three daughters, Nancy, Peggy and Carolyn Sue, all of Indianapolis; her

TO EASE MISERY OF CHILD'S COLD RUB ON{JICKS

w—) § VAPORUB starts INSTANTLY to relieve

MUSCULAR

ACHES-PAINS

assortment, ideal gift. 3150 coo 8100 $2.00 & $5.00 Specials. oer Sus er wt. MITCHELL Sr Lasts crt

Soreness and Stiffness For blessed prompt relief — rub on powerfully, soothing Musterole. It | actual helps break up painful local | much easier

fight to the state board of pardons after failing in efforts to obtain his release in local courts, asserting that further confinement would endanger her husband's life.

HAVING ZIPPER TROUBLE?

‘NATIONALLY KNOWN ZIPPER EXPERT

WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY.

home are going fo have to keep fighting the same as we are over here.”

ELKS TO CONDUCT MEMORIAL SUNDAY

Memorial services both for their civilian dead and those who have been killed in this war, will be held by the Indianapolis Elks lodge at 4 p. m. Sunday in their lodge, 750 N. Meridian st. The observance, which is nationwide, will be held in over 1400 other Elk lodges throughout the country. John DeMasie is exalted ruler of the Indianapolis lodge.

GROTTO CARD PARTY The monthly card party sponsored by the cast of the Sahara Grotto will be held at 8:30. p m. tomorrow in the Grotto home, 4107 P. Washington st. Mrs. Effie Am-

He can repair or replace all types of zippers on such articles as purses, dresses, trousers, snow suits, windbreakers, handhags, traveling bags and briefcases.

3 ongestion, plaster. “No fuss. No muss

with M walerolel” Just rub’it on. In3 Strengths

BH

apply than

|

IF SO, SEE

KURT STERN

HERE BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT

NOVEMBER 29th and 30th

We Also Repair or Replace Worn Linings, Clasps, Snap

Fasteners, Metal or Wood Frames on Ladies’ Handbags

mon is chairman.

ALL WORK GUARANTEED Hours—9:00 A. M. Till 6:00 P. M. Daily Monday, 9:00 A. M. Till 8:00 P. M.

MAIL ORDERS GIVEN PROMPT. ATTENTION

INDIANA WEAVING CO.

320 Illinois Bldg. LI. 9674

CORNER ILLINOIS AND MARKET STREETS INDIANA'S OLDEST WEAVING COMPANY TUNE IN WIBC 9:43 A. M. WEEKDAYS

State Deaths

BLUFFTON—Mrs. J. A. Sturgeon,

79. Survivors: Mrs. Minnie Schumaker. GARY—Mrs, Audrey C., Durham, Suivivers: Husband, Eugene; Mr d Mrs. Harry Quade, tern drs, Robert Johnson and

Quade.

and Mrs. Mary Brooks; sister, Mrs. James Erickson.

vivors: Wife, Elizabeth; daughters, Mar-

Gustav Stassel.

vivors:

.vivors: Parents, Hammett; brothers, Edwin, Lawrence; sisters, Pearl and Bue.

Central location makes Kirby services Convenient for all Indianapolis residents

Survivors: Wife, Jennie; son, J. Audley

Ids McMullen, Mrs,

Laurs Smith.

Survivors: Husband, James; sons, Ray and Hugh; siater, Mrs, George Caps; brother, O. T. Pee

AY orn J. Borcherding, Brother, William; sister,

26, paien.s, son, David;

Miss Norma Quade; brothers, Jack and Charles

HYMERA Edgar Lytle, 66. * survivors: Wife, Josie; daughters, Mrs. Mae Willis brother, Harry;

LA PORTE—John M. Stassei, 60. Surgaret, Anna, Mrs, Harold Laughrey, Mrs. "oe

John Bhamp and Mrs. Ellen Stone; sons, Edward, Alex, John and Fred; brother,

LEISURE--Mrs, Leora H. Carr, 59, SurHusband, Omer; daughter, Mrs.

Surand Mrs. Ravin. a.

MONTICELLO—Charles R. Byers, 72,

daughter, Mrs. Mary Ruff; sisters. Mrs. - Inez Artz and Mrs,

. In the kee permanently

Melvin King; mother, Mrs. Jeorge Haines; sister, Mrs. Ida Renendal; brother, Clarence Haines. MIDWAY-—Qeorge A. Hammett,

THE MARION COUNTY’

SAVINGS AND

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re in YOUR local Association's office.

. In making all payments here for the life of your loan, in your own: home town association.

For MONEY with which to BUY — REPAIR — REDECORATE or IMPROVE A HOME (or to refinance an out-of-town held loan) GO TO A LOCAL ASSOCIATION LISTED BELOW.

BUY AN EXTRA $100 WAR BOND

ITE ITNT

Insurance Sav. & Loan Assn. Peoples Mutual Sav. & Loan Assn. _ : Prospect Sav. & Loan Assn. Railroadmen's Fed. Sav. & Loan Assn. ~ Shelby st. Fed. Sav. & Loan Assn. Standard Sav. & Loan Assn. Turner Bldg. & Sav. Assn. ; Union Federal Sav. & Loan Assn. ST

MM

dh

GRANTS ror sine CLEARANCE

FULL-FASHIONED RAYON HOSE REG. 69c =e

REDUCED TO—

REG. $2.98 MISSES’ JACKETS. ___. Now $1.49 REG, 98¢ DRAWSTRING HANDBAGS. _Now 25¢REG. 50c NOVELTY BELTS _______- Now 25¢ REG. 25¢ DRESS SHIELDS _______.__Now 6¢ REG. 2 for 5¢ THIMBLES __ Now 2 for lc REG: 10c MENDING TAPE ____..----- Now 2¢ REG. 25¢ MENDING TAPE Now 6c REG. 25¢ HAT STANDS ____.--—- Now 6c REG. 10¢ COIN PURSES __.__...____Now 5¢ REG. 35¢ Hose Tops _______————-- Now (Tc REG. $1.00 GARTER BELTS ________ Now 50¢c REG. 25¢ COSTUME JEWELRY ___._. Now 6c

WOMEN’S COTTON

DRESSES

‘ REG. 2.98 ; REDUCED TO— 1 2

REG. 25¢ RATION BOOK HOLDER -fOW LL

REG. $1.00 TOBACCO POUCH ______ “Now 25¢ REG. {0c CARDBOARD LUNCH BOX __Now Bc ‘| REG. 69¢ PILLOW COVERS ________ Now Tc: REG. $1.19 WATERPROOF SHEET__. Now 30¢ REG. 50c CRIB PADS _________.___. Now (3c

REG. 50c WATERPROOF PANTS — 8¢ REG. 94¢c POLO SHIRT ___ Now 4Tc REG, $3.98 GIRLS’ RAINCOATS ____Now $1.99 REG. $1.59 INFANTS’ PILLOWSLIPS Now T9¢ REG. $1.00 SAFETY BELTS REG. 25¢ Infants’ Walking Trainer___Now (3c

WALNUT. STUDENT

DESK REG. 28.50 2-30

REDUCED TO—

WITH DRAWER GUIDES

REQ, 25¢ ONEESECLOTH, 4 Yds.____Now [3c REG. (0c CHEESECLOTH, 12 Yds.._Now Sc

REG. 39¢ MEN'S TIES _____-—--- Now (0c REG. $1.00 STAMPED KIMONO.____. Now 25¢ Now (3c

REG. (6c STAMPED HOT PAD REG. $1.20 Kitchen Towels, Set of 2__Now 6dc REG. $1.20 Guest Towels, Set of 2___Now 32¢ REG. $1.19 CARD TABLE COVERS_._Now 59¢

REG. 50c MEN'S TIES ___..__----- Now (3c REG. 25¢ KNEELING PADS Now 13¢ | REG. 10¢ GLAD RAG POLISH CLOTH. Now Bc REG. 10c ZUD RUST REMOVER... ein Now + ;

WT. GRANT co. 2 wir