Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 August 1948 — Page 3
lgrim Statue West Baden 1a. Father merly of In< ilgrim virgin®
Russia, core ir souls fred virtuously as y walking in w and by obe ndments.”
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reveal its thoroughly her :
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body | “of the Textile Leather Co., sponsors of the picni¢, said all others aboard the ferry when it overturned about 300 yards out in the river apparently had been accounted for. Tow Cable Twisted
Deputies said a cable used to pull the ferry back and forth between the island and the shore twisted, causing the boat to overturn and trap the riders in about!’ six feet of water.» The dead were identified as Mrs.” Peter Van Klingenen, 45,; Cornelius Van Klingenen, 9, her| nephew, and James Putinta, 5,
all from Toledo. Mr. Van Kling-
enen was treated for shock. The boat, deputies siid, was designed to carry between 20 and 30 passengers but that it “might have been overloaded.”
Carl Reeves Dies;
Funeral Services
Planned Tomorrow
Services for Carl C. Reéves, who died Saturday in Veterans’
will be in Floral Park.
Mr. Reeves, who was 58, was aim. Should I leave this city so he will remarry her for World War I veteran. He had|their child's sake, or should I fight for the only man I love?
lived here 41 years.
MONDAY, AUG. 16, 1948 ___
3 Picnick
“
of ‘her trip, the corporal called her
move." He told her he was being sent to Texas, which "isn't over-
said seas.” Shel join him there once he has been transferred. bad Noe
Ask Mrs. Manners— Divorcee Wants Man Ex-Wife Wants Back
Ce ed 2030 Mim THEEX-WIFE of the man I love told me she still loved
School Road, Ben Davis. Burial him and wanted to remarry him—and I also want to marry
He was employed in Kahn Tailoring Co. 34 He also’loves me.
years.
a daughter, Miss Betty Jane Reeves, Indianapolis;
Martinsville; Mrs. Myrtle Sack-
Indianapolis, and a brother, Charles Reeves, Indianapolis.
Otto J. Fischer
Otto J. Fischer, 210 Parkview Ave., who died yesterday in Veterans, Hostpital, will be buried in Washington Park Wednesday following rites at 1:30 p. m. Moore lMortuaries’ Irvin Chapel. He was 72. Mr. Fischer was a lifelong resident of the city .and a member of the Fraternal Order of Eagles and Harold McGrew Camp, Spar-ish-American War Veterans, | Survivors are his wife, Mary; two sons, Fred, Columbus, O., and Jack, Indianapolis; his daughter, Mrs. Justine Harshman; two sisters, Mrs. Linda Weber and Mrs. Rose Roessler; 2 brother, Herman, all of Indianapolis; five grandchildren and one great-grandchild. .
Foster B. Jones
Services for Foster B. Jones, who died Friday in his home, 1155 8. Randolph St., ‘were to be held at 2 p. m. today in Stirling Mortuary, Burial is in Washington Park. Mr. Jones, who was 49, had lived in Indianapolis most of his life and was employed as a conductor 23 years on New York Central Railroad. He was a member of the road Conductors. Surviving are his wife, Eva K.; two sons, Irwin and Richard Jones; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Jones, and a brother, Noel A. Jones. All are from Indianapolis. *
Mrs. Emma Hulse Dies In Home of Daughter
Mrs. Emma Hulse,
daughter, Mrs. Callie Lines, 5170, Primrose St. She was 72. { A lifelong resident of Bedford and member of the first Christian! Church there, Mrs. Hulse had’ been with her daughter here since; last October. Funeral services and burial will be at 2 p. m. Wednesday in Bedford.
Official Weather
UNITED STATES WEATHER BUREAU 1948
~Aug. 16, } Sunrise ..... 5:57] Sunset ..... 140 a rhcipitation 24 hrs. ending 7:30 a. m. 00 ‘of precipitation since Jan. 1.....27.20
T Excess since Jan. 1 .... .°. 48) The following table shows the tempera-! Sure in other cities: : at Station High Low PP ORF 8 87
Ww o 3
PEI oars Indianapolis (City) ... Kansas City as ahm ngeles
asszeEs=sagerssas
Tin 2283
LOS ANGELES * | 10 hrs., 50 min. ® Get there sooner...
® Stay longer... ® Get home faster!
Order of Rail-|
£o22822I812223%28: 232
He told me his daughter, 8, was coming to visit him and Surviving are his wife, Rhea; that his ex-wife would come along as they live a couple hundred miles from Indianapolis. He told me I was to come to his house or t hr e e/telephone him any time so I phoned and talked to his ex-wife. I've sisters, “Mrs. Winifred Clauser,| stopped contacting him until my heart tells me what to do. Perhaps if I go away where he won't see me he will go back to man and Mrs. John Anderson, his daughter. ' I realize she needs her father but I also’'need him. What is the Hecent ‘and right thing to do? I dom’t want to make UNDECIDED DIVORCEE. I don’t see how a man who loves a woman enough to marry her could embarrass her by entertaining his ex-wife as a house guest. I don’t see how you could love a man who shows such bad taste and is so thoughtless. Maybe you like to think he couldn’t make other arrangements for her but he could have. Golly, he’ll probably remarry her if he isn’t spineless enough
another mistake in life.
to keep her from his home.
You'd have plenty of trouble with that designing ex-wife if Make him stand on his own feet and make his own decisions. Stay away from him until he learns
you married this easy man.
how.
She Thinks a Baby Is Coming I THINK I'm going to have a baby by a boy I've loved a long I called him one night and asked
time but don’t think loves me. him if he'd like to go after a coke.
him and he acted like he was crazy about me. pened he asked me for a date the next night but didn't keep it, and I haven’t had any more dates with him. I called him and told him I'd like to see him about something important. ‘When I saw him he said he was scared to death because he thought I was going to tell him I was 8 foing to have a baby. Should I try to make him marry me? with him be, knowing ‘that he doesn’t love me? the father, but does that make a difference? I'm not a-bad girl but haven't always been too good. I hope
you can help.
Marriage is an awfully big job, Gerry, when s man wants it and loves you. I'd hate to see you try to force him to marry you. We can’t get too well acquainted in a letter though, can we? You'd better visit the Family Service Association advisers who have quietly helped many girls. Remember all you've learned about men when you start dating again. Let them ask YOU for dates and don’t believe all they tell you or all you'd like to believe when
you do.
How to Study of Evenings
Another way to complete high lency e: tion.
four years.
Let Mrs. Manners and readers of the column share your probfems and answer your questions. Write in care of The Times, 214
W. Maryland St.
: Acme Telephote. "DON'T YOU DARE"—When she heard that her husband, Cpl. Tony Furio, stationed at San Francisco, was to be shipped overseas, Mrs. Marjorie Furio, 22, started hitch-hiking the 3500 miles from Maine to California with her son, Tony Jr., 22 months old. The baby's illness, however, forced her to stop over at Old Orchard Beach, Me., with a friend. Alarmed by press reports
DO Indianapolis high schools hold ‘night. classes during the winter for completion of high school education? : ANONYMOUS, FRANKLIN. Manual Training and Crispus Attucks High Schools will conduct evening classes two and four nights a week this winter and offer practically all courses ghat are provided in high schools plus basic courses in reading, arithmetic and English.
These examinations are held twice a year; the next one to be Jan. 15. For information on those examinations and on night classes contact the city school office at 150 N. Meridian St. You need an outline for study for these examinaBedford, tions. Tutoring is provided. You could finish school in two years died today at the home of her, by that method while night classes would require a minimum of
to tell her, “Don't you dare
*
Then I had a few dates with The night it hap-
at would living He knows he's I'm 19 and he is 20.
GERRY.
school is to take an equiva-
Mrs. Jennie Smith Dies in Home Services Wednesday For Church Worker’
Rites for Mrs. Jennie E. Smith, who died yesterday in her home, 4410 Carrollton Ave. after a long illness, will be held at 1 p. m. Wednesday in Flanner & Buchanan mortuary. The Rev. George 8. Henninger, retired pastor, will officiate. Burial will be in Washington Park. She was 74, : Mrs. Smith, who lived here 28 years was born in Moores Hil, She was active in church organizations and was a charter member of the 51st Street Methodist Church. . Survivors are five daughters, Mrs. Elizabeth Gulley, Mrs. Edna Murphy, Mrs. Mildred Powell, all Mrs. Gladys
City, N. M.; 2 grandchi and several nieces and nephews.
Monon to Stage
Show at Fair
The Monon Route will celebrate its own special day tomorrow at the Chicago Railroad Fair with a “Hoosier Time” musical jamboree. To be staged at 5:15 p. m. in the cenfral plaza, opposite the “Wheels A-Rollin’” grandstand in the Windy City, the show will feature Marie Lawler, the “Belle of the Monon”; the Mid-States Four; Tom Brennan, popular
Singing Porters. - Nearly 2000 Monon employees and tHeir families are expected to be guests of the railroad. Members of the Monon board of directors will attend a luncheon meeting at the fairgrounds, Music for the program was written by John A. McGee. Paced by the rollicking “Up and Down the Monon,” the scores will salute Chicago, the Railroad Fair and the Hoosier state.
Girl, 8,. Scalded Here
In Home Accident Mary Lou Wetzel, 8, daughter of Mrs. Mary E. Wetzel, 1432 8. New Jersey St.’ was treated In Methodist Hospital for burns. Her right leg was scalded when her mother dropped a teaketttle of boiling water.
Irish baritone, and the Monon
PARTLY CLOUDY AND CLOUDY AREAS
Se
AMERICAN AIRLINES
7.0 REG. PAT'S PEND. COPR 1948 EOW. L.A. WAGNER. ALL MGHTS RESERVED. TONIGHT AND TOMORROW-—Clear to partly cloudy skies and rather cool temperatures are forecast for the Far West and the northern half of the U. S. By the 60's from Boston fo Atlanta, in the Ohio Valley. Indiana and Illinois. Hot sultry weather will continue in the South. The dotted affected areas show where showers will develop in the coming 24 hours, according to government forecasters, -
Today's Weather Fotocast
rt
Eo anid” omzzie WAR Yronus ZG *arn
dawn, the mercury will drop inte
TELE Bo ae Ey
Powell, 33, of
Dodgson,
ris St.
Kenneth Short Jr, 33, of 1113 Udell St;
STRAUSS SAYS:
CHARGE ACCOUNTS are cordially invited— 80-day charge accounts in accord with general practice— and JUNIOR ACCOUNTS (payments are weekly )-—no carrying: charges— Details at Credit Offices
, ~SEVENTH FLOOR.
>
« A CONVENIENCE— - Grandstand. tickets for the STATE FAIR— are available on the First Floor.
shetvurne, 3,
The Jeious sone, a." rrollton due Josette” omen. 20, ot {133 Cur:
: ol
et By Pe s.. [DIVORCE SUITS FILED
30 B. 37th Bt; Betty| BIRTHS
Boys 1, of 418 Alton Ave. 19, of 404 N. Orant a Elsie Thomas.
- |At Genera}—Thomas, Lillian Smith: Wil. pele’ Cantin, 10. of S84 pt am. Margaret "mils; Bugene, June , 21, of § W. Jorwood St. . Roremaer Burs don fh ot Wayne,
Daur i i North; Nendor:
N
This is merely to remind one and all—that KINGSRIDGE SUITS for Fall—are present in considerable numbers (and they are leaving in considerable numbers). !
Particularly you'll enjoy the WORSTEDS for which Kingsridge is famed—The Tailorwork is thorough the fit and character of the suits——insure 8 comfortable presence.
And the VALUE is so obvious—that when you try them on—they ~~ say with a certain enthusiasm "It's mine,"
$60
| Robert De ve : Harold O. Bn 8
35 W. Mor-|At Coleman Ernest, June Tuttle: ams;
Ee
FR
te J RAL Eg 8 Gr 2
on ~
————— DEATHS . Ruth H. Hubba 43 at board: at Methodist, eeres Lillian L. Christy, 88, at 103 85. Kitley,
ins;
C8 . Charles W. Wurst, 71, at 3517 Ransdell, Louise
Sens
TRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF TOMORROW
30, ab Methodist, phous
