Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 November 1948 — Page 5
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#1 suffered over 30 years x R00 Aichi ab ov bres
TI
[OY i—3 : Little Rascals
STORE
REOR A 73% :
Constipated hr 30 YearsBut-No More constipation “If our diet
pleaty wal f not satisfied after 10 da; Mich.,
nd get DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK.
“ARMLESS AND LEGLESS PEOPLE DON'T WANT OUR PITY ~BUT THEY NEED _OUR HELPY
Handicapped persons eed encouragement and help to find constructive employment, maximum self- suficiency and personal happiness. Two of the 47 Red Feather Services are specifically and exclusively engaged in giving the handicapped this kind of help. Nearly everyone helps lpy giving to the Community Fund. Will you?
THE COMMUNITY Pp LT
Indianapolis end Marion County
‘Harry Turner
In addition to his parents, he is survived by .three brothers, Charles Jr, William and Adolphus Monroe, all of Madison, and five sisters, Mrs. Margaret Wilburn, Madison; Mrs. Geneva Zamites, Pennsylvania, and Mrs. Bernice Herman, Mrs. Waneta Wilson and Mrs. Lottie Williams, all of Indianapolis.
Services for Harry Turher, American Foundry Co. employee, will be at 1 p. m. Wednesday in Jacobs Brothers West Side Chapel. Burial will be in Floral Park.
. Mr. Turner, a resident of Indianapolis 21 years, died Friday. He was 43, a native of Campbellsville, Ky., and resided at 966 Udell St. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Verna Turner; three sons, Harry Jr., James and Jerry Turner; two daughters, Miss Catherine Turnner and Miss Doris Jane Turner, all of Indianapolis; -his mother, Mrs. Catherine Hazelwood, Campbellsville; three brothers, Charles and Walter Turner, Indianapolis, and Hobert Turner, Campbellsville; two sisters, Mrs. Mary Calhoun, Indianapolis, and Mrs. Clara Barnett, Columbus, O.; four aunts and five uncles.
Dies of Asphyxiation SOUTH BEND, Nov. 1 (UP)—| Michael R. Holland, 27, Lakeville, died of asphyxiation in his house trailer near here yestreday, ap-
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| Alexander Burial will be in Crown Hill Cem-
Teacher, Dies Miss Corene
waht, all of Indianapolis. Services will be held at 2:30 p. m. Wednesday in the Bethel AME Church with Dr. John A. , pastor, officiating.
etery.
Rites for Former Court Bailiff Set
Services for Joseph W. Walpole, Democratic Party worker for 38 fears and former bailiff of Superior Court 1, will be held at 8:30 a. m. tomorrow in Usher Mortuary. Requiem high mass will be subg at 9 a. m. in St. Anthony's Catholic Church. Burial will be in Holy Cross Cemetery. Mr. Walpole was 59. A nephew, the Rev. Robert Walpole, pastor of St. Mary's Church, Richmond, will sing the mass Mr. Walpole, a native of Indianapolis, began his political career as a page in Criminal Court, During World War I, he as foreman at the Link Belt ; leaving that position to beors a route builder for the National Bread Co. where he remained 14 years. - Superior Court Bailiff Appointed bailiff of Superior
Court 1 in 1934, Mr. Walpole served in that capacity nine years. He was employed two
years asa patrolman by the Curtiss-Wright Corp. until he was forced to retire because of ill health. Mr. Walpole was graduated from Manual Training High School and was an honorary {member of the Indiana Bar Association. He was a member of St. Anthony's Catholic Church. He is survived by his wife, Mrs.
daughters, Mrs. Rita Buchanan Clark and Mrs. Martha Brezette,
odore and Martin H. Walpole, Ine dianapolis; a granddaughter, Miss
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=! Thief Snatches Teeth ST. LOUIS, Mo., Nov. 1 (UP)— Mrs. Mildred Proffitt, 61, hoped a burglar would return her lower Mrs. Profiitt’s plate dropped out of her mouth when she came upon the intruder at work. The thief picked it up and fled. She said the denture
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Caroline Buchanan, Indianapolis; seven other nephews, among whom is Father Donald, St. Miners Abbey, and seven nieces,
Mrs. Hannah Welch
Services for Mrs, Hannah Welch, 2253 Villa Ave., who died Friday in her home, were held at
Chapel of the Chimes. Burial followed in Star City Cemetery. She was 75. A resident of Indianapolis 46 years, Mrs. Welch was a native of Star City.
Memorial Methodist Church. Among survivors are a son, Carl Welch, Houston, Tex.; five daughters, Mrs. Irene Kennedy, Mrs. Genevieve Becker, Mrs. Mildred Burns, Mrs. Lyda Dill and Mrs. Louise Shepherd, Indianapolis; seven grandchildren, and four great-grandchildren.
Mrs. Claud Wilson
Mrs. Christiana Wilson, lifelong Indianapolis ‘resident who died Saturday in Methodist Hospitsy will be buried tomorrow in Memorial Park. She was 70. Services for Mrs. Wilson will be held at 2:30 p. m. in Dorsey Funeral Home. She lived at 44 S.
She is survived by her husband, Claud; three sons, Virgil and Wilson, both of Indianapolis, and Harold Wilson, St. Paul, ; three sisters, Mrs. Will
liam, Carl and Alvin Nolting, all of Indianapolis; three grandchilBren and two great-grandchil-n. .
denture today.
was worth $50—to her.
Corene K. Allon, IRi
Catherine Nevitt Walpole; twok
Indianapolis; two brothers, The-|
She was past noble grand of Rebekah Lodge No. 749 “land a member of the Victory
merly of 3679 N. Delaware St.
Coral Gables, Fla. Seryices and burial will be held there. A native of , Mrs. Probst, who ,was 43, lived: here until 1927 when
Agnesdied Saturday in ner home atin tier University.
she married and
O’Mahoney, president, will pre-
Mrs. J. 1. Probst Dies | in Florida
Mrs. Frances Quirk Probst, for Probst was a member of St. Joan |.
of Arc Catholic Church and at-! {tended —St.-
She is survived by her husband, J. I. Probst; two sons, Jack and Bob Probst, both of Coral Gables; her mother, Mrs. Jane Quirk, and,
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Revenue Bureau Employee Dies
Miss Sayde Slutzky, 547 8. Central Court, 30-year employee of the Bureau of Internal Revenue, died yesterday in eMthodist Hospital ter an illness of two years. Miss Slutzky, who was 65, had lived here 60 years. Born in Peru, Ind., Miss Slutzky was a member of the Jewish Home for the Aged, Indianapolis Hebrew Congregational Sisterhood and the White Cross Guild. She was employed 30 years as a stenographer for the Bureau of Internal Revenue. She is survived by two brothers, Jacob L. and Frank H. Slutzky, both of Indianapolis, and a sister, Mrs. Ben Fishman, Grand Rapids, Mich. Funeral services will be at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow in Moore Mor-
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
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Sa by Nat'l. Tenants Ass'n, John T. Lyons, Acting Nat'l. Dir., St. Paul, Minn.
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Our President knows war because he served in
That's why he and he alone of the present candidates for the highest office in the land speaks the language of you war veterans.. of courage and strength and unity in the present mighty battle to preserve both our own American freedom and the peace of the world. That's why he forswears platitudes and doubletalk. That's why he speaks simple, honest facts . the kind of facts a G.I. can understand. . That's why he has battled and battled success: fully to see that the veterans of World War 1}
No veterans of any war in our history have received such intelligent and thoughtful and under:
1u fact. whon thictoen millimasyvios ine and
War II, they found waiting for them the G.I. Bill of Rights: loans to help build a home . . . buy
+ + +» the Veterans’ Administration reorganized and placed in the hands of the G.L’s General— Omar Bradley . . . terminal leave pay paid promptly. They didn't get any vague promises
The VET in the WHITE HO
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Wendy Wells models he spired by Ri H a Ha role in Columbia's aris nicolor film, "The Loves of Carmen,” at Loew's Theater this week!
+ « vor any certiioates with a’ promise to make it
good in some distant future. They got cash.
.the language apples
get the breaks they
on street corners.
oursquare behind the veteran.
You don’t see any bonus marchers during the Truman Administration. You don't see World War II Veterans selling
The World War II Vet, returning to his farm lid not come back to 16¢ wheat. Nor has he been forced to stand helplessly by while his farm is sold for taxes because millions of depression ridden unemployed can’t afford to buy the food he farmer grows... the terrible condition vhich faced the farmer veterans of World War L. Yes, the Vet in the White House has stood
It is Harry Truman who above all others has -onsistently advocated decent housing for vet-
:rans. It was Harry Truman who insisted that
the close of World
. start a business
*
the special session of the 80th Congress pass the Taft-Ellender-Wagner Housing Bill . © . failed to pass because its sponsor in the Senate of the United States Congress “walked away from the bill.” All this you should remember in November . on Election Day. Then . . . go to the polls, vets, and vote your conscience,
which
os wok An id il . ’ nt vib ¥ ¥* S pinn bien i Ca wm as Hw er SE, nd pn
5
1918.
tain World Peace.
capable of
NOBODY WANTS WAR HARRY S. TRUMAN Knows: iY
HE SERVED IN PEACE. : TI TEACH, frie Nien Goan from private to Corporal to First Licutenast. as HE SERVED IN WORLD WAR L From Lieutenant te Captain of Field Artillery, 1917.
He led his battery under fire in the Vosges Mountains, the Argonne Forest, the Battle of Verdun and at Mets. HE SERVED IN WORLD WAR II. Veteran Harry Truman was a United States Senator when the Japanese struck st Pearl Harbor. He volunteered for combat duty, but General Mar. shall urged him te stay in the Senate. He provoted, snd bectme shairtan oi, the femoss Truman Committes which made a phenomenal reeerd of efficiency and fairness. . HE LEADS IN PEACE. aie He was the first President to propose and establish 4 world-wide intelligence service, s separate Air Foros, unification of the armed services. He was the first Président to obtain the consent of J the Senate for « Union of Nations ordenised te mais.
He is the first President ever to build a in war, Because HE KNOWS WAR.
world force A Erorgt hum en
KEEP THE VET IN THE WHITE HOUSE.
aT 4, (Paid Political Advertisement—YVeterans Division, i
Ne
hag
