Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 April 1945 — Page 4
| TUESD.
rR SIE
J Take Pai
(Continue
: forces were | of the way ac in the Meinin the old bord and 180 miles
Eisenho
Between the ‘Oth armies, tl ~ began choppir ty ern wall of tl i finish off a "haps 150,000 G b Gen, Dwight . the Ruhr trap
>
EN Vr RA IHTSER ANE ALN AY ARN SET HE WO va Se
os THE INDIAN APOTIS TIMES TUESDAY, APRIL E1965
State. Deaths BAY
a Eh AYR B 5 D ol Ww n BIR ! R S STD RE | wr S x 7 >
vivors: Wife, Alta; daughters, Mrs. Glen —
Rule, Mrs. Clayton Fisher, Mrs, Clesson I—— ——, —— C—O J S—— A —— —— »
LIFELON LOCAL RESIDENT DEAD
Rites for Mrs. Rodocker to Be Held Tomorrow.
Services for Mrs. Virginia R. Rodocker, 1110 E. St. Clair st.,, who
died Sunday in St. Vincent's hosof the Himborn plant's 25,000] {our ridiculous lack of military pomp pital, will y held at'3 p. m. to- Brion: sister, Mrs. Rebecca Brundage.
workers—about 8000 were foreign land fanfare. | ROCHESTER-Mrs, Albert Ross. Surslave workers—,, “Whole queues of people waiting in| MOTTOW at Moore Mortuaries “Peace yo" niuchier, Mrs, Clarice ‘Culp; pick their way’ A line to be registered through mili-| chapel. Burial will'be in Memorial | sister, Mrs. Schuyler Fenimore. , | RUSHVILLE—M t through the de- [tary government channels, or to ak Rodock he ‘was 29. was | 58: a Husband, Wiliam: iy bris-filled streets | turn in their weapons in accordance | 3 ocker, who was Mrs. Rov Pollitt, with hate in- their {with our proclamations, will direct |
German Ruhr Civilians Show Hate for Allied Troops
By B. J. McQUAID, Times Foreign Correspondent IN THE RUHR, April 3~The Ruhr's fiesh and blood, as the allled occupational authorities have here discovered, is more indestructible and less easily conquered than its brick and steel. The huge August Thyssen blast furnaces lie buried under tons of rubble, which eclipse even their phenomenal wartime output of everything from pigiron to stainless metal castings. But the native German element]
Turner; sisters, Mrs. Lesley Bowen, -Mrs. Nobie Hunt; brothers, Acel, Clayton. HARTFORD CITY--Everett Rynearson, 68, Survivors: Son, Meredith; sisters, Mrs. Alice Moore, Mrs, Mrs, John Burke, Mrs. HUNTINGTON-—The 88. Survivor: Wife, Sara MARION--Mrs, Hannah Herbst Prickett, 86. Survivors: Daughter, Mrs, Ernest Carey, Miss Avalawe fckeft, Mrs. Walter ains; son, Leonard. - MORGANTOWN—Mrs. Mary ¥Alice Fesler, 82, Survivors: ‘Daughter, Mazel; son,
. Jacob Ahner,
Mrs. Charles Kittinger, Wilhelm, 85. Sur-
5
{and a former student at School 14
a lifelong resident of Indianapolis | Mrs Bertha Achor, hearts for the
Mrs. Mary Livonia khaki-clad in- } vader, “They are sullen and unco-opera-!. tive” says Lt. Gordon W. Seims, Chicago, whose : job requires him Mr, McQuaid to deal intimately with the civilian] * population. “Their attitude toward us is en-
[their ridicule on some hapless G. I.| or M. P. in the vicinity and starting | whispering to one another |
: land pointing.
“When you bark a command or) threaten punishment they fold up like vellow rats, click their heels ana meekly obey. The only language | they understand is the language of | force.” o n 5 SEIMS, who was my guide on a
{and Technical high school. She | ‘as a P.-T, A. member at School
, grinning) 14 .and a member of the Mothers’|
club of the school. She is survived by her husband, John R.; a son, John R. Jr.; a daughter, Barbara; her mother, | Mrs. Florence Groth; her step- | father, Joseph Groth; a sister, Mrs. | Betty Beaver; two half-brothers, John Groth both of Indianapolis, and two broth-
tirely different from anything we | tour of Duisberg's industrial suburbs ers, Robert Koons, Indianapolis, and encountered in the Rhineland. They | land the Thyssen steel plant in Hami- Cpl. Kenneth Koons, in the Philipknow Germany, is licked and are born, and other soldiers of the 79th’s| pines.
prepared to knuckle under, for the | time being, but they don't like it| and, they make little effort to dis- | guid their feelings. ” 8 » x . “ONE OF the most interesting manifestations of their sentiments is the way they laugh at us and] make the equivalent of American wisecracks about what they consider |
WHY BE FAT'\?
Get slimmer without exercise
You may lose pounds and have a more slender, graceful figure. No exercising. No laxatives, Nodrugs. With this AYDS plan you don't cut out any meals, starches, tatoes, meats or butter, you Hane ply cut them down. It's easier when you enjoy delicious (vita. * min fortified) AV DS before meals. Absolutely Barmlens, Try a large size box of AYDS. 30-day. poly only ga. Money back if you a. tiger res
THE WM. BLOCK CO. ALL KEENE RUG STORES
Away Go Corns Instant Relief
x Sy fol F3hive Sores of sore
mr SRE
stantly stop tortion; pinha
or speedily removing corns. Cost but a trifle.
a Sold everywhere.
D! Scholls A ino i Quick Medication for
| ECZ EMA-ITCH!
When you subfer from red = nealy «= burning Eczema torment . . . you want Poslam’s fast-acting help! You need its 6 active US.P, ingre= dients to quiet fiery skin—and thus hasten healing. Soothing, cooling Poslam is known as the Ointment without Disappointment. A 38 year Te guccess — Poslam satisfies you or
TE A
SOAP CREEL ESE
spe ANEMIA
Because Weakened from Lack of Iron due to “Periodic Losses”
You girls who suffer from simple
anemia or who lose so much during |
periodic periods that you are pale,
feel tired, weak, “dragged out”-this |
Jay be due to low blood-iron-So start Lousy = try Lydia E. | Pinkham’s TABLETS — one of the | [realest Bloods iron tonics you can uy to help build up red blood to | give more strength and energy - such cases. Taken as directed —Pinkham's Tablets are one of the very best Jos Ways to get precious iron into
Just 31Y Pink ham's Tablets for at fh en n' Jemat ably bene ow label directio
Lydia E Pinkham's Jabr€e3
famed 313th regiment, one of our |
{top-notch combat outfits, have been {faced with open acts of civilian hos- | tility from the moment they entered {the Hamborn area. Lt. Richard Gonzales Angeles told how our proclamations {were torn down the first night after (they were posted in the city square.
placed and a 76-mm. anti-tank gun | put into position, with its muzzle|
mation board. Crews now man the gun night and day and proclamations are not molested. ” o Fd CAPT. BOB VACHA of Surrey, England, leader. of a small British
to assist in civilian problems, is impressed by the way the “master race” has taken to tears. “When we insist on adequate answers to questions,” said he, “men and women alike burst into tears. “They have the same line over here as in the Rhineland,” he added: “‘We waited for you to come ‘and liberate us from the Nazis, but when you arrived you came as tonquerors, so how. can you expect us to co. operate?’ ” #8 x = PERHAPS it is not so hard to view these tears as something more than “crocodile” when it is realized that these Ruhr people are in an abnormal psychological state border. ing on the psychopathie, their minds warped by the strain of month on month of relentless, ceaseless allied bombings and equally ceaseless Nazi poundings designed to convirice them that the bombings were not for knocking out their factories but for {killing them’ and Saswroying their hemes. . " No oie wno Dats Joo esse iB industry was allowed to leave this region. And in Hamborn today there seems to be thousands of | women and children whose faces and | attitudes show the terrible strain under which they have been existin| A 1045, by The Indianapolis Times | : and The Chicago Daily News, Inc. .
ccc, PET UIs “B.trLLcniva
Rites for Louis B. Eilering, West Lafayette, formerly of Indianapolis, who died yesterday, will be conducted at 2:30 p. m. Thursday in the J. C. Wilson Chapel of the Chimes by the Rev. Clarence Sitler, pastor
7of the Immanuel Evangelical and
Reformed church. Burial will be in Crown. Hill. A retired brick manufacturer, he was 69 and moved to ‘West Lafay-
ber of the Immanuel church. Survivors are his wife, a daughter, Mrs, ningsmeiler, Lafayette; a son, Elmer H. Eilering, Indianapolis; a sister, Mrs. Henry Ernsting, Indiana pols, and two grandchildren.
JOHN H. OLVEY John Homer Olvey, dr., died today in Methodist hospost He was 62. resident of
Indianapolis 40
vears, he was a building contractor.
He was a member of the Broad { Ripple Methodist church, the Broad {Ripple O. E. S. chapter and the | Broad Ripple chapter 643, F. & [A M. Survivors are his wife, Stella; two sons, David Willlam and Kenneth R., both of Indianapolis; a sister, Mrs, Paul Bennett, Lafayette, and | {three grandchildren. | Services will be conducted by the | Broad Ripple Masonic lodge and the! | Rev. W. E. Gillett at 2 p.m Thurs- | day in Flanner & Buchanan mor-| {tuary. Burial will be- in Union| | Chapel cemetery, | eie—————————— WAYNE G. O. P, TO MEET Wayne Township G. O. P, club will meet at 8 p. -m, Friday in the | | ane Post 64 hall, 6566 Ww, Wash- | ington st.
Every field has its
hall-mark of
In funerals .. . it's
Shirley Serv
ily
ie FU NERALS IRVING WILL CHAPEL Wns a Tosh HL Vt 8.
a >
quality
ice.
yothers
WEST CRAPEL 201. Michigan St
The next morning they were re. | School,
unit attached to the 79th division!
815 Riviera |
WALLACE L. CALDW ELL Rites and burial were to be held today at Birmingham, Ala, for
| Wallace L. Caldwell, former local of Los|businessman who was fatally in-
{jured in ah automobile accident | |yvesterday in Birmingham, An alumnus of Manual high Mr. Caldwell left here in [1912 to enter the limestone business in Birmingham. He headed
trained point-blank on the procla-|the Kentucky Rock Asphalt Co.
of Louisville from. 1921 to 1925, and in recent years managed the Alabama Limestone Co. which he organized. He was 56 and was the nephew of David Braden, retired Indian{apolis tailor. Other survivors are his wife; two daughters, Mrs. Gladys Means Tindall, Chicago, and Miss Lenore Lyon Caldwell, Birmingham, and two brothers, Dumont, 6264 Broadway, and Braden, also of Indianapolis and now a Red Cross official at Ft. Belvoir, Va.
WILLIAM SCHULLER William Schuller, retired upholsterer, died today at his home, 1537 Leonard st. He was 82. A resident of Indianapolis 24 years, he was employed at the old Sander & Recker Furniture Co, until his retirement in 1927. He was a member of Sacred Heart Catholic church. ‘He is survived’by his wife, Lenna; a son, William T, Indianapolis; a brother, Arthur, Cleveland, O, and three granddaughters. Rites will be held at 8:30 a. m.
funeral home and at 9 a.
be in 8t. Joseph cemetery.
JAMES D. JONES bie . “Rites will be held at 2 Pp mm. {'Phursday at First Baptist thusch| for James D. Jones, 802 Roache st., {who died Friday at City hospital. Burial will be in Crown Hill Mr. Jones, years, is survived by his wife, Lil-| (lian; his parents, Mr. and Mrs, M.| H. Jones;
of _ Indianapolis;
| on,
and Donald Groth, !
Thursday at the G. H. Herrmann m. at] Bacred Heart church. Burial will]
a resident here 15
two sisters, Mrs. Eliza-| beth Powell and Mrs. Eloise Webb, | ; and seven] “brothers, Max, John, Arthur, Sig-
“SERVICES THURSDAY jmund, all of Indianapolis, and Clin- |
Keith and Carl, with Lhe armed
|v ivors: Brown
RESIDENT HERE 25 YEARS DEAD
Emil Lempe, 25 30, Employed! As Baker.
Rites will be held at. 10 a. m. tomorrow at the Moore mortuaries | peace chapel for Emil Lempe,] Marion . county resident for 25 years who died Thursday at his {home, 1445 Broadway. Burial will be in Washington Park.
{ Mr. Lempe, who was 80, was a!
native of Germany and had been| employed as a baker by the Homemade Pie shop six years. -He was| a member of the Fraternal Order of Eagles, “Aerte-211: 5% He is survived by a son, Warren, | Syracuse, N. Y.; a daughter, Mrs Mamie Brighton, Miami, Fla. and | a grandson, Herbert W. Brighton, | in the Aleutians.
CLARA E. HARMAN Services and burial are scheduled | tomorrow in Lima, O, for Mrs. Clara E. Harman, who died yester-| day at the home of her sister, Mrs. |
Harry M. Moore, 131 Berkley rd. Mrs, Harman, who was 81, was a native of Lima and had made her home with Mrs. Moore for the last 10 years.
“ Fast relief for common headaches!
{
Don't let an ordinary headache spoil your work or your fun. Do as millions do—take genuine Bayer Aspirin. - 1. Bayer Aspirin provides amazingly fast relief. Starts disintegrating in your stomach in two seconds—is ready to go to work . slmast ab qncel fo] 2. Bayer Aspirin provides sire” relief. Hag been used in literally millions of normal cases—for over 40 years—without the slightest trace of unpleasant reaction. Get Bayer Aspirin today—and be prepared to rout your next headache in a remarkable hurryl
BAYER)
ASPIRIN
1 i 5
Stepson, William; brother, George
ray le 313, Seedse BGS — _ 38 8 1 os {Hie Sit
w
| 1 |
|
ette two years ago. He was a mem- |
i
‘Amelia; | Bertha .Johan-
BY THIS
ing habits of the public the increasing reliance u
XN NN
SEN
Most individuals simp gasoline or ‘bother that thing with cash..
N
EE
substantial sums of cash or on their persons,
«wait for change and preserve them. Nor will they risk keeping
ARE YOU BENEFITING
TREND?
One of the most noticeable changes in the bank.
during this war has been pon checking accounts. ly cannot afford the time, it takes to pay for every- ... get ‘receipts
around the home or office
Anterican National Bank believes that one of its
most useful functions is
to enable busy men and
women to deposit funds and make payments by
acting theit banking by
to you on faye.
check at their convenience; anywhere inthe country, An increasing number of depositors are trans.
mail —=which frees them
from the necessity of going to the bank to make deposits. We have special envelopes to simplify banking by mail, which we shall be pleased to send
AMERICAN * NATIONAL BANK
at Indianapolis
PAXNSTLYANIA AND MARKET STREETS r Brunch Office is maintained at College Avenue and 2nd Street . Hach War Bond You Buy Zine Victory Nearer!
pep ————
pti
TERE ETL ELE EI TLE EOE ETE ER ERLE REI ORE ER ERE LET NTE LE TRE TR TE A RR RN HI RR RRR
x... DRESSES-— Downstains at AYRES
Misses’ and Women’s Smart
“NEW for SPRING”
DRESSES
$8.95
Sheer prints that are cool as a lake breeze—to look at and wear. Perfect dresses in one and twopiece styles for now and the hot summer days ahead. Sizes 12 to 20; 181% to 24 and 38 to 44.
A. An all occasion two.plece sheer. Collarless Jacket is softly shirred and has tiny crystal buttons down the front. Sizes 12 to 20. $8.95,
B. A sheer with a two-piece appearance. Pleated ruffles start at shirring on shoulders and continue around the peplum. Pleated front skirt. Sizes 38 to 44. $8.95.
DRESSES—~Downstaifs at AYRES
A Short Story... High Fashion
Over-All T oppers
$77.95
Top yeur favorite suit, dress (even formals) ~with=this collarless topper, * Made of all-wool shetland,it has large patch pockets and four
pearl buttons. 12 to 20,
White, black and colors. Sizes
COAT&~Downstairs at AYRES
Modern Ayre “Flats”
Punch-uate the Positive
in Comfort $ 5 00
"
Spring carries on with perforated “flats” by Modern _
Ayre—light'and airy yet comfortable. Black erushed kid or town brown calfskin with baby doll closed toe and open back. Also red or green lizard. printed " eaifshin. rhs ay
ToL 3
© 8HOES—Downstalrs ati ;
TS
: ————————————— CT ——————————————————————— a Fn ———— SS ————————
a
allied victories dicted that th of the pocke § speed the ene; .Heavily-cens said Field Ma Montgomery's . 2d and Canac , making “spec * their twin-offe + While the B | rolled the Ge! ' ward the Nc Americans we East along the highway and breakthrough ¢ Envel
Late dispatc already had ! rugged Teutokb the toughest
#2 Do YOU ¢ “Ser,
Does your dog and bile himselfraw and sore? Hi | and flea free, bu tense itching irri in the nerve end in torment and unless you try t him Rex Hunters week, and note One owner writes I know he woul Hunters Dog Pow sore from scratch Now he plays ar for Rex Hunters
the Hook's Drug | ers everywhere, ( box for $1.00 only re ——————————
t Rheuma Relieves
Thousands of su pains due to rheur neuralgia and neuri! their discovery of | found a quick-actir relieves those exha pains. NORITO is t ~—really works fast. the joy of relief fron Reace and sleep in ORITO under thi very first three dose pain to your satisfa
refunded. Don't suff and get NORITO-0
fe 1
- Famous Jo
and econ
Peers sasernnes
y 27
SOOTH | YOUR THI below the g
Each P& F Co your throat a 15 treatment. Real they're really n millions for cou tions or hoarser colds or smoki
é
COUGH I
Poecscesnnronnvnvy A —
Which of ye is goming |
Constipation nr Bo
| roi
different =~act | g Purely le nation of 10 veget
| ALL-VE
