Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 December 1944 — Page 18
SHR A
PAGE 18 .
(A LEVINSON
‘ H E will get a. big lek out of the miniature hat and hat box and a lot of pleasure out of trading his Gife Certificate for a life-size LEVINSON or JOHN B. STETSON hat.
a Miniature Hat and ;
37 N. Penn,
Ne
Gift Certificate
Let Him Choose His Own Hat
Box With Every Certificate
HARRY LEVINSON
his hatter Cor, Ill. and Market Sts.
/4
17 8. Illinois
BISHOP LOWE'S DAUGHTER DEAD
Mrs. Evelyn Hovey Was Wife of Banker; Visited Here in 1941,
Mrs, Evelyn Lowe Hovey, daughs{ter of Bishop Titus Lowe, resident bishop of the Indianapolis Method= | ist area, died yesterday in San Antonio, Tex. Wife of Henry A. Hovey, president of a Ban Antonio bank, she visited her father and relatives here in (1941, She attended gratfé ma mgh | school in Omaha, Neb, where her | father ‘was pastor of the First|
| Methodist church’ there ‘from 1913
Ee — _—,
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INSPECTOR REGAINS
15 LBS. ON
AND NOW FEELS FINE
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Distress From Nervous Indigestion and Sluggish Elimi‘nation Promptly Relieved, and He Feels Better Than in Years, States Mr. Alsobrook. Tells About His Case.
i
‘Theo Alsobrook, well-known resident of 2047 Long 8t, Chattanooga, Tenn., who holds a responsible position as inspector in a defense plant, Describing his casé and adding his name to the thousands praising this noted herbal stomachic and Vitamin B-1 medicine, Mr. Alsobrook gratefully continued: “For about two years it seemed to me that I was never able to cat a square meal. My appetite was gone, and everything I forced down seemed to cause so much gas in my stomach that often I felt bloated up to twice my natural size. Some-|
breath,
MR. THEO ALSOBROOK
RETONGA
to 1921. She was a graduate of
Ohio Wesleyan university, Her mothers, Mrs. Anna Bess Lowe, died in 1011, Bishop Lowe hag left for San Antonio, Survivors besides Mr. Hovey and Bishop Lowe include a daughter, Constance, and a son, Ford, both of San Antonio; a sister, Mrs. A. A. Turner, Metuchen, N, J,, and a halfsister, Mrs. Howard Nealond, Portland, Ore, s
GEORGE G. ROETTER
Dr. Carleton W. Atwater, pastor of the First Baptist church, and the Broad Ripple lodge, F. & A. M. will conduct rites for George G. Roetter at 3:30 p. m. tomorrow in the J. C. Wilson chapel of the Chimes. Burial will be in Crown Hill, Mr. Roetter died Tuesday in his home, 1216 W, 33d st. He. was a member of the Sahara Grotto and was 59. . Burvivors are his 4 , Goldie Ten Eyck; two daughters, Mrs. Barbara Pettigrew and Mrs. Gertrude Drews, both of Indianapolis; a sister, Mrs. Emma Stoneman, Minneapolis, Minn, and a brother, Henry, Traders Point...
MRS. GEORGIA HADLEY
Services will be held Saturday in New Castle for Mrs. Georgia B. Hadley, who died yesterday in St. Petersburg, Fla. Burial will be in New Castle. Wife of the late Herbert H. Hadley who was in the ‘furniture business here before his death 20 years #go, she was a member of the Tabernacle Presbyterian church. Survivors are three sons, Elliott B., Terre Haute; Charles A. J. Mil-
waukee, Wis.; and Harlan J, In-
: \ Mrs. Ella O'Hara, mother of bishop of the New York military vicariate, 3164 N. Illinois st.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Bishop O'Hara's Mother Dies Here
=
THURSDAY, DEC. 14, 1944 |
the Most Rev. John F.- O'Hara, ed today in her home,
ELWOOD—William Harper Rutherford, 78. Survivors: Sons, Lewis, lsaac and Glen; daughters, Mrs. Myrtle Watts and Mrs, Dorothy Bowers; brother, Alonzo; sisters, Mrs, Grace McCoy, Mrs, Hattie Alatta and Naomi Berryman. Joe Charles Darrow, 11. Survivors: Parents, Waldo and Mildred Darrow; sisters, Marilyn and Martha.
HUNTINGTON—Mrs. Opal Jackson, 37. Survivors: Husband, George. parents, Mr, and Mrs. Wilferd Rinehart; daughters, Mrs. Marthena Sandlin and Charlene: brother, Cleon Jackson; sister, Mrs. Ulan Reed. .
JONESBORO--Mrs, Verda V. Ricks, 60. Survivors: Husband, Albert; daughter, Mrs. Ocel la Cragum; irgil and Merrill; brother, Ernest Graves; sisters, Mrs, Walter Smith and Mrs. Earl wisher.
NEW ALBANY-—-Mrs. Minnie Banet, 82. Survivors: Daughter, Mrs. Chester Hosea.
OAKLAND CITY-—Mrs. Siendia Cox, 19.
STATE DEATHS
Mrs. Mabel Wilkey; Joe, Ray and Richard. VALLONIA-Mrs. Mary Louise Schneider, 79. Burvivors: uvaughteérs, Mrs, Josephine Stuckwisa, Mrs. Selma ‘Shoemaker and Esther; sons, Lafe and Oscar; ‘brother, Henry Quade; sister, Mrs. John Stahl,
RITES ARRANGED
sons,
Rites for Albert F. Hill will be held at 2 p. m. Saturday in the Herrmann funeral home, 2151 -N, Meridian st. Burial will be in Crown Hill. An employee of the Peerless
FOR ALBERT HILL
¥. ooo CARE URGED ON: RABBIT HUNTERS
Eleven Cases of Tularemia Reported in Indiana Last Week.
Reporting 11 tularemia cases in Indiana last week, the state health depsrtment today issued a warhing agdinst the rabbit-transmitted disease. Pointing out that tularemia usually
reaches its peak during the midDecember hunting season, Dr. J. W, Jackson advised rabbit gourmets to
organs. i
Beware of sluggish hares, Dr. Jackson cautioned huntsmen. Rabbits easily tracked and killed are usually diseased, he said. Tuldremia also can be detected by the appearance of small white specks on uncooked rabbit meat.
Hunters Warned Any meat that doesn’t “look right” should be discarded, he added. So far this hunting season 15 cases of the disease have been recorded by the health department, one of them in Marion county,
Yesterday, the trial of Max Smulyan, poulttyman of 105 N. Alabama st., was. continued until Jan. 4.
Electric . Co.,, Mr. Hill died yesterday. : A veteran of world war I, he
Starts INSTANTLY to relieve
examine their catches. for. infected...
Smulyan is charged by state con-| FIRM GIVING YULE DINNER servation officers with the ‘illegal possession of rabbits. officé employees of the Kahn TailorConservation inspectors said .they|ing Co. will Be held tonight in the saw 300 hares in Smulyan’s poultry |Marott hotel hunters’ lodge. Card store, Smulyan says they didn’t. |games will follow the dinner. ’
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Survivors: Husband, Samuel; son, Grover|Was 46 and was a member of the MU Royo! Blue illis; daughters, Mrs. Esta Willis and i Willis: Sener. M Bruce T. Robison post, American SN Ught Blve A PRINCETON—Mrs. Ruth Edns Woods, Legion. He also belonged the < White, Wine 9 oe. Survivor; Husband, Clinton, re Center lodge ‘PF. & A. M. an te} ACHES-PAINS or Pink ¥INN m riest, 4 ? i y > Bisters, Mrs. Gopi RA Barn Place Mothiauish Shure pi oY ohn Brahm. urvivors are a daughter, Luana; 138 E. WASH SULLIVAN—Mrs. Stella Rich, 82. Sur-|a son, Paul, and .a brother, John |§RVS ON 33 Ek sa vivors: Daugh'ers, Mrs. Ada Ford, Mrs. Fannie Jewell, Mrs. Nellie Burnett and |R., all of Indianapolis. s ————————— — on ———p ————— . y a a "ny
3 Sa
rms
+/1I am back to my normal weight of
felt like my stomach was on fire, A lot of the time I would just pass up a meal without trying to eat anything. 1 was so uncomfortable and nervous at night I seldom got over three hours’ sleep. I had to teke a strong laxative practically every day that came. I lost about fifteen pounds and felt so weak and rundown that at times it was all I could do to stick on the job. “I never before experienced anything like the relief Retonga gave me. I am hungry all the time, and
140 pounds. The gas and distress from indigestion are entirely relieved, and I sleep like a top every night. The constipdtion is relieved, too. 1 feel better than in years, Retonga was. the best investment I ever made in my life.” Thousands praise FRetonga. Retonga .is a purely herbal gastric tonic combined with liberal quantities of Vitamin§-1 and is intended to relieve distress due to Vitamin B-1 deficiency, constipation, insufficient flow of digestive juices in the
dianapolis.
Sr
EDWARD BELL
Services for Edward Bell, who died yesterday at his home, 1124 E. Tabor st., will be held at 1:30 p. m, Saturday in the J. C. Wilson Chapel of the Chimes, Burial will be in New Crown. Mr, Bell was retired from the El Lilly Co. where he was employed 30.years. He was 65. : Survivors are a sister, Mrs, Cora E. Washburn, and a brother, Leonard.
TWO GIRLS INJURED | BY HIT-RUN AUTO
A hit-run motorist who struck two girls at Delaware and 21st sts. last night was being sought by police today. Miss Evelyn O'Neal, 20, and Miss Maxine Rogers, 21, of 2102 N. New
stomach, and loss of appetite. AcRetonga may times I just simply had to gasp for be obtained at all Hook's DependI had heartburn until I|able Drug Stores. $1.25 size, $1.00.
cept no subtsitute,
said turned off Delaware st, at the nex corher,
Jersey st. were slightly hurt when the car knocked them down. They the driver speeded up and
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