Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 October 1948 — Page 5
4, 1048 nH
+
EEN
° autifully ht irregationally
ee
knit bal-
choice ¢ of Ei ales
onot or thout colit blouse. e or blue.
ATS
NE TE
AYRES’ LL]
ET LL LLL LLL
Nn
rib,
MONDAY, OCT. 4 Film Colony
HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 4 (UP)-— Jerry Giesler, one of the film colony's most prominent lawyers, was in “fair condition” today at Good Samaritan Hospital after ‘week-end automobile accident. Mr, Giesler received a ¢racked shock and bruises Saturday night when his car smashed into a tree as he drove home from
prin
1048 Jerry: Giesler ie
ARCA ORR oo Advertisement -»
ad Cemetery there, either tomorrow or when. one of his sons,
— award from the State Board of
Now Many . Wear
FALSE TEETH
With Little Worry
Eat, talk, laugh or sneeze without fear
of insecure false teeth dropping, slipping EETH holds plates Ww a sville 7 |first worked for the Noblesville
pasty - taste or~; feeling. nauses. It's alkaline (non-acid). “plate odor” (denture breath). FASTEETH _at any ( drug store.
Local Deaths—
A. L Wan Dies At Noblesville
Rites, Tomorrow for Gas Firm Pe
* [charge of construction and Ei tenance for all properties of the Indiana Gas and Water Co., will “108 Held “at 2pm: tomorrow. in, First Friends Church, Noblesville. Burial ‘will ‘be in Crownland
Lt. Charles Wann, arrives by plane from Japan. Mr. Wann, who was -53,. died re|Saturday in his home there, He had recently received the Hurty
Health for his contributions to| Indiana water conservation. He was to have been honored at a company banquet Thursday in| Lebanon, Z Member of Lodge
Employed by the Indiana Gas & Water Co. 30 years, Mr.
branch as a pump man. ~~
“He was a member-6f the Dr. Blatchley Nature Study Club and
Enjoy Eating! Insist on Soft Plastic Com-Fit PADS for Your
FALSE TEETH ;
Stay Soft in plates Chew anything. Change every 3060 days for best
results. - A at HOOK'S and Other
2 oo Sy
Clip This Advi. for a Reminder!
Eagle Lodge No. 450, Noblesville, He belonged to First Friends Church.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Phoebe Wann; three sons, Lt. Wann, Emmett and Archie Wann Jr., Noblesville; four daughters, Mrs. Elizabeth Parton; Mrs. Phoebe Rigsby, Mrs. Lucille Wilson and Miss Jean Wann, Noblesville; two stepsons, Eugene Wade| and. Oris” Coleman, Indianapolis; a brother and two sisters.
NIE wa
-[-swoe_repatn
SPECIAL Ladies’
Half Soles 95¢ Men's Sie $1.26
18 S. llinois St.
Iinois and Washington St.
Leather
RELIEVES SIMPLE
HEADACHE
For Itching Skin!
To rom soothe 90 ald
Pimples and similar sur-
Ringworm, face skin and itchy scalp irritations ply Zemo. This Doctor’s highly Peed invisible Zemo liquid is backed by amazing record of success. Greaseless! Stainless! For stubborn Seng Ze. use Extra Zemo.
son zene, JEMO
REACH-IN REFRIGERATORS
_Reach-in Refrigerators, Display Cases, Water oolers,
=e Mrr-Sentney,-who was 58. lived
Proves Wonderful
See
‘|/Springs, Md., and for his sister-(in-law, Miss June Cotton, who digd June 16 at Silver Springs,
Crown Hill Chapel. Both will be buried in Crown Hill Cemetery. At the time of Miss Cotton's death, Mr, Murphy, who was 74, was seriously ill." Miss Cotton's body was returned here and held at Crown Hill.-to await the double service. AR “Indianapolis “resident 47| years, Mr. Murphy formerly was a railroadman. Before going to
Miss Cotton formerly served 22 years as a home visitor for the social service department of the Indianapolis School Board. Mr. Murphy is survived by a daughter, Miss Mildred Murphy, Silver Springs.
John R. Sentney
Services for John .R. Sentney, 3514 Birchwood Ave., who died Thursday, were to be held at 2 p. m. today in First Methodist! Church, Bloomington.
in Indianapolis 30 years. He operated a wholesale paper business. A graduate of Bloomington High School, he attended Indiana University. A native of Owensburg, he lived in Bloomington before moving here. He had been {ll seven years. He was a member of Pentalpha Masonic Lodge and Kiwanis Club. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Caroline H. Sentney; a. daughter, Mrs. Patricia Ann Newhouse; two
and nephews, -all-of Indianapolis.
Mrs. E. O. Hartley
Services for Mrs. Clara Wagner Hartley, 1162 Reid Place, who| died Saturday in Methodist Hos-| pital” will be held at 10:30 a..m,| tomorrow in Flanner & Buchanan] Mortuary. Burial will follow in| Washington Park Cemetery. |
Born in Columbus; Mrs, Hart-| ley had lived in Indianapolis 25
years. She was 53. She is survived by her husband. Erplest O. Hartley, and two
|daughters, Miss Nina Hartley and| Mrs: Ted - Huter; all of" Indian-
V Frank. Murphy... wenger, a0. he had stopped, breath- Mrs, Abigail Garber 1. Services _for Frank _ “Murphy. ing. As Ruth drew his .Fiead” “Services for Mrs. Abigall Girwho wdied . TRURSIAY. oat. Bilger) Abave thy suisce she removed. |ber, "Who. diéd Saturday st - the
1 be held at 2 p. m, today in|—
grand children and several nieces|
Lt. F. E. Rogers Killed -
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Mrs. Noffsinger Dies i in Hospital
who died
Services for Mrs. Norma Noft-
singer, 20-year ol mother. of two
on Ave,
; Yesterday in General be held at 2:30 p.m,
children, of
“In_Aleutian Islands
* Services’for Lt. Forest E. Rogers, Army Air Force pilot who wag. killed Sept. 5, 1045, with nine
fin the Aleutian” 5, WHE held at 10 a. m. Wednésday in the Robert W.. Stirling Funeral be morial
aban SE CEL BT
» Lt: Rogers was a gradiate of Southport High l and a member ‘of n Avenue Methodist Church and Veterans of Fore! ars. s survived by his parents, and ‘Mrs, Carl Rogers, 1407 4 Woodlawn Ave.; two brothers, Lloyd E. and Carl Rogers Jr, and his grandparents, Henry and Minnie Lempke, all of Indiamapolis.
Frank J. Hill
Services for Frank J: Hill, 514 LaSalle St, who died Saturday in his home, will be held at 1:30 p. m. Wednesday: in the Moore Mortuaries Peace Chapel. Burial will follow in Park Cemetery, Greenfield. A ‘native of Charlottesville, Ind. Mr. Hill, who was 56, had been an Indianapolis résident nine years. During the last eight “lyears'he had worked as aguard in 4 the Indianapolis BOA pa He pe oe * was a member oO s » SAVES ‘CHILD'S LIFE — Tar | 40 No. 267, F&AM and the spattered Ruth Vivian Oriani, Connetsville Bagle Lodge. 17, stands beside the tar.pit in |* Amorig™the survivors are his Gardena, Cal., from which she |wife, Mrs. Blanche C. Hill; a sisrescued 2-year-old Larry Stans- ter, Mrs. Charles Lemine, and a bury. Larry was eye-deep in the | niece and nephew, all of Indian-
oozy pool when Ruth reached | | apolis.
the tar from his mouth and nos- [home of a son, Rbiicoe: oar Logs H thing by the {Manchester, were to e s e was lydathing ‘by ©. |afternoon at St. Peter's Lutheran Church, north of Bippus.
: : |" ‘Mrs. Garber was born in WhitArrange Rites ley County and lived all her life
lin the nearby Bippus community. For Mrs. Hancock She is survived by two sons, a Services for Mrs. Rosa E: Han- {daughter and a half-sister, and cock, 5312 'E. St. Clair St. wil 12 Grandchildren. 38 EN Brana died yesterday in her home, willl grandchild.
be held at 10;30 a. m. Wednesday |
trils. time life squads arrived.
tomorrow in. Flanner & Buchanan|’ Mortuary.
. Cremation will follow.
Noffsinger had lived in Indianapolis -13 years. She was gradu-
; Fgh Sebont and attended Waebster College, Oxford, 0. ,
a “Bart. son, Stephen Alan; a daughter, Jan ‘Ellén and her mother, Mrs. Belle Hyman, all of Indianapolis, ‘and -a sister, Mrs. Rebert Walker, Chicago, and a brother, Capt. Arthur 8. Hyman, Ft. Benning, Ga. .
Mrs WW. A. Thompson
prc for Mrs. Efiza Thompson, 17061 8. Meridian St. died yesterday in her home, will be held at 10 a. m. Wednesday in the St... Benedict Catholic Church, Wax, Ky. Burial will follow in the church cemetery. A native of Grayson County, Kentucky, Mrs. Thompson, who, was 69, had lived in Indianapolis! eight years. She was a member, of Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
William A. Thompson; five daughters, Mrs. Rita Clouse, Mrs. Opal Thomas, Mrs. Lillian Hardesty, Mrs. Maggie Sanders, all of Indianapolis, ' and Mrs, aude Alvey, Greenwood; a son, Thomas Thompson, California, and a eister, Mrs. Molly Thompson, Bloomington, Ill.
Edward H. Harms
Harms, 1005 Bradbury 8t., who died yesterday in his home follow-ing-a-short illness. will be held, a 11:30 p. m. Wedneatar in fhe G. ‘Herrmann funeral home. Buia will be in Crown Hill.
who was 75, lived in Indianapolis 70 years. A retired miller, he was employed by the National Starch Products Co. He was a member of Marion Lodge No. 35, F, & A. M., which will be in charge of the services.
ters, Miss Ruth E. and Helen M. Harms, and a son, Raymond H. Harms, all of Indianapolis.
in the G. H. Herrmann Funeral MTS: Earl Owens.
Home. ~ Biirial will follow in| Services for Mrs. Mary C. Pit- ) »..,man Owens, 3440
o was 83, had _ been held at 10:30 a. m. Wednesd
an Indianapolis residgnt 50 years. Chape She was a member of the Gar- Im the Oglonial 3 apd. Siar. be field Park Evangelical and Re-|®0% S€TV Harel. 'held at 1 p. m: in Oak Hill Ceme-+ formed Churc tery, Crawfordsville. She is survived by two sons, | A native of Montgomery
Charles -L., Indianapolis, and Al-| County, Mrs. Owens, who was 69, bert E. Hancock, Cincinnati, O.; been an Indianapolis resi-
two sisters, Mrs, Della Grove; In-| dianapolis, and Mrs. Lettie Long, dent 42 years. Los Angeles; 14 grandchildren, 28 = She was a member of the Cengreat - grandchildren and one tral Ave. Baptist Church. great-great-grandchild. ‘She is survived by the husband, Earl S. Owens, Indianapolis, and Mrs. Mary Crain {two brothers, John - puss, Services for Mrs. Mary Crain, Crawfordsville, and the Rev 1711 BE “Michigan St. ~whe died Russell Pitman, Fredonia, Kas.
Saturday in her home, will A Brush With Death h
held® at “10 a. m. tomorrow in Moore Mortuaries Peace Chapel. ATLANTIC HIGH NDS, J., Oct. 4 (UP)—Thomas Bur-
Burial will’ be in Washington) 4 Park. Mrs. Crain, who was 59, lived| ton, 52, said today he was glad in Indianapolis 33 years. She/he owned only a midget model owned and operated LaVon Hem- station wagon. When a train hit stitching Shop in her home. She his car, it picked it up on the was a member of Woodruff Place cow-catcher . and carried it- 50 Baptist Church. | feet. Mr. Burton 8 out, .She is survived by .a son, Wil- unhurt except for minor cuts and
Carrollton Ave.
Hla of: + 12: Julces
Advertisement
Yr. bln u, of
ELE “ok
Stomac
“For 5 veirs I suffered from gas swelling and bloat,” says a well-known citizen: “My meals just laid in my stomach and turned to gas. Had dizzy attacks from this condition. I tried many,
medicines, but they never had
any effect on. me, but finally I found INNER-AID. It. cleared out all my gas. Now I can eat without misery afterward. This is the only medicine that ever heiped
R.[me.”
INNER-AID is the new formutrom Nature's plants. It has relieved many people who had’ never been really helped before’ by any medicine. Taken shortly before meals it! mixes with your food; thus elimipating the poisons that foster stomach trouble. . It will cleanse the bowels, clear.gas from stom-
bile from the system. So don’t] go on suffering! Get INNER-|
liam M.. Crain, Indianapolis. | bruises.
- —
AID. Sold by all drug stores.
Accept this offer
from Arthur Murray
~—Sold Exclusiv
AoC
ers. 2133 N. Meridian
Food Freezers, Beverage and | Milk- Coolers; Walk-in. Cool- }i ers, Tyler Display cases. .
ely—
Indiana's Largest Commercial
TA-311
{ apolis.
Henry S. Johnson
| Services are being arranged for | Henry 8. Johnson, |Cal., brother of Lewis L. “Cap.” Johnson, city traffic engineer. Mr. Johnson, who died Friday in | Venjce, was a native of Indian-
{ apolis. COMMERCIAL SALES A resident of Venice for 30. REFRIGERATION, INC. years, he operated a hotel there.
| Other survivors include three sist ters, Mrs. C. T. Conwell and Mrs. Alta Gall, Indianapolis, and Mrs. E. E. Perry, East Cleveland, O.
60, Venice,
Celebrating the 35th Anniversary
Soothing, wodicated vapors hn phlegm,
BRINGS RELIEF WITH EveRy SREATH!
‘relieve coughing spasms in a’ horryt
Mother, know what wonderful relief you get 8} When you
rub on Vicks VapoRu
Now, if a cold brings miser--able stuffiness or congestion in
®
easier... br welcome relief!
causes coughing or phl .hs Da sl vay By use While Child Sleeps . . . Vicks VapoRub for grand re- aaa giving your child the. lief; too. mforting benentsof VapoRub cao lts Napshuh Steam! Steam, do as be ed of . a bowl of ing wa sos ee ‘apoRub on rizer—put a spoonful throat, and back, Its fa- . icks yapokib. Then ...let mous polultice-vapor action child breathe in the com- . for houts fd VapoRub Ae toa bring relief With every breath thesé even while ; soothing, m ted vapors go child sleeps. eV VaroRus
>
3
5
For Continued Relief *
Enroll now for tall and winter popularity
"ES, Arthur Murray is so certain that ho con make you"a ‘popular dance ‘partner that he is making this challenge offer, for the first time in the history WN aligh +x. YOU Sis: eraon gv oovtlannty “froeh ~ pc
This offer hos behind it oll the confidence that comes from teaching wearly four million people in the past 35 years. What's more, his unique methods are so easy that anyone—even i they've Syvar dunced before
WR & howe
his new dance book. Send 25¢ to Arthur Murray, Studio
3 ARTHUR MURRAY
Open Daily 104M. te 0p;
a”
: nY, N. Ponnyivan st,
¢ . »,
—con learn almost overnight.
Sui townons alter of ine ist dase Hwoncires © being made for a limited time only.’ So don't wait. “ Come in today or phone FR anklin-2565.
To prove how easy it is to become o really good dancer Arthur. Murray offers you
vonio St., for the “Murray- Go-Round ” “ poges of donce news, instructions, ote.
of his studios
“In just 5 minutes his “experts can show you how Arthur-Murray's basic discovery—the “First Step to Popularity” —is the simple
lead ond follow the Seti steps of
C, 22% N. Pennsyl-
who
|
She is survived by her husband, |
“Among the survivors are her|
“NONSTger: alg
Funeral services for Edward H. |
He is survived by twe daugh-|}
|
ach, enliven liver and remove old |}
| it
M. FRanklin 2668 |
{ ih 4
Rites in Marin: For Hoosier Flier
A native of Milton, Wis, Mili; mrostel, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Gus Trostel, 4725 Rookwood Ave. who was kill
wi
{Teachers College. in 1942. After}. receiving cadet training in Texas, he ‘was commissioned a sec-| = ond lieutenant. f
1 BIR [IDEN Born in Reading, O., Mr. Harms, | }
L.. ts
will be held ‘In Marion, followed et "i a by burial there. ba,
School. He entered the Air Force
da,
Masonic Lodge there. Besides the, . |parenits, he is survived by two . - brothers, David Paul Trostel, In-| dianapolis, and ‘Air* Corps Lt. Ralph Edwin: Trostel, and. three sisters, Mrs. Mary Jane Down-| ing, Marion, and Misses Joan ie Virginia’ Trostel, both of Indianapolis,
We
Lt. J. P. Trostel Killed, In_.B-29 Crash
Services for 1st Lt. John Phil-
oT RRA y a gi CLEAMERS 8
or ry 2, 5 >
Bt THOtel, Whe 24, was| ob Eo ar 0 wx : pas "Finer Drapery Cleaning
* Bame THOROUGHNESS of cléaning. as Our Pine Garment Earvice,
hile a freshman in Ball State] ~ “As Convenlont:s Your Telephone? ‘RI, 8321 } Served in Bermuda 4“) a or
He served actively’ in Bermuthe Azores and Newfound-
land as a weather observer, before he was transferred to Alaska a month ago. Lt. Trostel was a member of Marion Methodist Church and the
os 8 Tn
presage ————————— ———
Lo * :
J 50 | i , srk Mo E— : ” "
Buys a Fine
All Wool Tweed Suit
at Richman Brothers
Here is 2 new record in walue- giviiig he for the books for even as great a value-giver as Richman Brothers.
«
These suits are made of fine, 100%, virgin wool fabrics, inf a variety of patterns, and new shades of blué, gray, tan.
The models have the flattering new lines, or “bold look” if you please... broad shoulders, full chest and blades, easy waist. flat hips. The workmanship is from the skilled hands and willing hearts of the Richman Family, and we guarantee perfect fit at no added cost.
The result is distinguished appearance, delightful comfort, and the ultimate in smartness —all this ata paltry. $27. 50.
Where else, in all the world, does so little still buy so much ? FINE ALL WOOL WORSTED SUITS: ; + ..-3450- 3930. |
ALL WOOL GABARDINE& COVERT TOPCOATS . 3958} re
'RICHMAN BROTHERS
. 22 East Washington St.
Store How! Monday Thru Saturday, 9:30 A. M: tod ba ‘Mn. : RICHMAN'S BRINGS YOU LAST-MINUTE NEWS—WIRE, 10:00
