Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 January 1949 — Page 5
The president of Clarence KE. Crippin & Son, Inc, Indianapolis commercial prin
since 1886. os : | A native of Mt. Clemens, Mich., his Indianapolis printing career began in 1886 when he came heré to work in the Baker & Randolph He was subsequently em-
lis Sentinel, Press and the Indianapolis News. The firm of Crippin & Son, formed with his son, Charles M. Crippin, in 1911, was later merged
PERMANENT
Haircut, Soft Water Shampos and
CENTRAL =:
oles fing FLORAL CO. 3837 E. 10th St... . IR-4433
ee SS
_ In Germany in 1945
Services for T-5 Charles W.
t in Plattling, Germany, on 1945, will be held at 8:30
University extension. ‘ He was employed in Emerson-
' 1Scheuring Tank Co. before enter-
with the Anchor Printing Co. and became the Consolidated Printing Co. This company merged with
1919 and J. Frank Hanly, former Indiana Governor, became president, Mr, Crippin became president when the firm went into receivership in 1928-following the death of Mr. Hanly and the present Clarence E. Crippin & Sons, Inc; came into being. r Services Friday “He was ‘sa member of the Indianapolis Board of School Commissioners from -1917 until 1922, when the Indianapolis school system was undergoing one of its greatest expansions. He served as president of the board in 1920. Mr. Crippin was a pioneer member of the Indianapolis Convention Bureau, a member of the Mystic Tie, F&AM, Scottish Rite, Murat Temple and the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. Funeral services will be held
lat 1:30 p. m. Friday in Flanner &
Buchanan Mortuary. Survivors include his wife, Althea, Ft. Myers; a daughter, Mrs. W. C. Goodall, and a son, Charles M. Crippin, Indianapolis; a brother, the Rev. Crestus L. Crippin, Tulsa, Okla., and three grandchildren, Miss Elizabeth Crippin and Wilmot Goodall, Indianapolis, and
City, Fla. and a great-grand-daughter, Sharon Rhynehart.
Mrs. Nettie Collyear Services for Mrs. Nettie B. Collyear, native of Madison, who died Monday in her home, 1317 Sharon Ave. were to be held at 1:30 p. m. today in the Conkle funeral home. Burial was to be in Floral Park. An Indianapolis resident B55 years, Mrs, Collyear, who died at 73, was a member of St. Mark
. wucia EA ERE, LY
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A MAN NEAR HERE FELT LIKE SWOLLEN BALLOON;
FULL OF STOMACH GAS Recently a man 1
ving near r here stated that he used to feel tkamp & Co; Indianapolis, whole Mrs. Woodward
like a swollen balloon after every meal. He would bloat full of gas
and spit up acidulous liquids for
hours after eating. Was terribly constipated. This man is one of hundreds in this vicinity who now praise INNER-AID. He states he was amazed at the results
ters when he took this medicine. Now|» % he eats what he wants without Irene Bell and Mrs. Maxine Jor
gas or bloating, and bowels are regular for the first time in years. He feels like a new man.
INNER-AID contains 12 Great
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sents * Leaves Cincinnsd, 5 5 5 § ¢ 245 PM Leaves Louisville, 3 3 3 33 430 PM
THE PAN-AMERICAN Sleepers — De fuze Cogches — Diner
Leaves Clacianstl, . 7 0 § 7 9:00 AM Loaves Louisville 2 3 8 8 7 311:23 AM
THE AZALEAN tune Cosches—Diner
fount: 11311 08 ou oe TS aR RTE au | Eas ;- LOUISVILLE & and try NASHVILLE R.R: Tone In “The Ruirood Neer" Every Mondoy svening ABC Network
She is
Methodist Church. ‘ -a daugh-
§ -survived-by ter, Mrs. Clara Strouse, Kingston, TIL; three sons, Otis, Albert and Robert B. Collyear, Indianapolis; two brothers, David J. and Samuel Kinney, Indianapolis, and six grandchildren.
|Henry Butler
Henry (Heinle) Butler, Detroit native and Sores track star at Manual H ¢ yesterday in Hil Deteol Home. Hy was 56. : . A resident of Detroit since moving there from Indianapolis 28 years ago, he was employed there as a mechanic and later operated a service station. A World War I veteran, he was the one-time holder of ‘the Indiana high school record for running the half-mile. 7 Besides his wife, Lottie, he is survived by three cousins in Indianapolis, Miss Marjorie Phelps, Mrs. Anna Walker and Russell Smith.
Frederick Lyon
Private services for Frederick
the Enquirer Publishing Co. inthe
Mrs. P. H. Rhynehart, Panama
ing service Feb. 6, 1943. After en-
Rosemary ers, Joseph and Abraham all of Indianapolis.
James Artman James A. Artman, 1322 Ringgold St. mative of Elizabethtown; Ky., died yesterday in Methodist Hospital after an illness of six months. He was 43. He owned Jimmie's Motor Sales & Service Co., 1439 Shelby St. several years and was a member
Lutheran Church. He had been an Indianapolis resident 18 years. Services at 10:30 a. m. Wednesday in the G. H. Herrmann Funeral Home will be followed by burial in Concordia, Ind. Survivors include his wife, Clara Moehlman Artman; a daughter, Mrs, Paul V. Sumner, Indianapolis; a son, Pvt. Kenneth E. Artmany Indianapolis; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Artman, Crawfordsville; a sister, Mrs. Herman C. Myers, Westfield; two brothers, Walter E. Artman, Lamberton, Minn. and {Paul H. Artman, Catin, Ill, and {a grandson.
Julius 'Ahlefeld
Julius Feltman Ahlefeld, 320 E. 15th St., a carpenter, who {yesterday in St. Vincent's Hospital after being ill one week, will be buried Wednesday in Washington Park, : Services will be held at 2 p. m. in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, of which Mr, Ahlefeld was a member. * Born in Pike County, Mr. Ahlefeld, who was 71, came to Indian-
his wife, Bessie; three sons, Darwin, Benjamin and Robert Ahlefeld; a daughter, Miss Betty Ahlefeld, all of Indianapolis; brothers, William Ahlefeld, Indianapolis, and Fred Ahlefeld, ville, and four sisters, Mrs. Cora Sanders, Bloomington, and Mrs. Ella Riggs, Mrs. Audrey Harris and Mrs. Sarah Wallace, ; seven grandchildren " great-grandchild. Thomas Irvin Thomas Willard Irvin, retired hardware proprietor, who died Saturday in his Oxford, Ind. home, will be buried in Oxford following services at 10 a. m. tomorrow. in his residence. He died at 92. : A resident of the Oxford community most of his life, he operated a hardware store 51 years there before retiring in 1941. He was a member of the Oxford Methodist Church and Masonic e. His survivors include two (daughters, Mrs. Charles Wattles
lof the St. Paul Evangelical and]
apolis in-1916. He is survived bY income shown in Column 2. The
two it you can claim these expenses
: ; neon EAE pe i Sn
ond XPLANAT IC
No.6 —
+ ; Servos tor 75 cone w Em IRS] SOR
By S. BURTON HEATH _ NEA Staff
a.m. in Kirby Mortu- UMN Sched ary and at 9 a. m. in Holy Cross a) Ne hetule ¥ Catholic Church. Burial will be did in Schedule B. In Column in Holy Cross Cemetery.
The figure in’ Column § must include both the depreciation you have claimed in past years and often some you didn't and couldn't. If, for example, you bought a frame house in 1935, as of the beginning of 1948 past shown in Column 5 would be 12 yeats at 3 per cent. ne /
g
i
1] »5 oi i
ili i i
1
al hd kc EE Frama. TN —|:za0a T0440 2720 5000 [owes RE A ns”
Brick dwellings and the like, 215 per cent a year. - Farm buildings, 2 to 215 .per cent a yéar, : pre Home furnishings in ren room, 10 per cent a year. . = = IN COLUMN 7 show the estimated life you used in figuring depreciation. (This is 100% divided by the percentage used from the list above.) In Column 8 show how many more years the property has to go before it will reach
been |the age used for Column 7. | CPL. Paul C. Mason Jr, son of
If Column 8 does not show that the property theoretically is all worn out, in Column 9 show the depreciation claimed this year. This is obtained by multiplying the cost in Column 3, by the percentage shown in the list above. This depreciation figure, from Column 9-—goes also in Column 3 of Schedule B. In Column 4; Schedule B, show everything you spent repairing the property during 1948. Column 5 is for listing all other out-of-pocket costs of keeping up the
but not anything spent to enlarge or improve the property. These lasts costs are capital investments, which can be used, when you sell, to decrease taxable loss.
than Schedule G provides room for, you can show them on an attached sheet of plain paper, The blank at the right has been designed by NEA Service fo help you assemble your costs, and to remind you of things you might miss. Copy whatever you have in this blank into Schedule G or onto plain paper, and show only the total in Column 5 of Schedule B. Now add the figures in Columns 3, 4 and 5 of Schedule B— subtract their total from the rental
difference is your profit—or your loss. If you owned the property solely for the purpose of renting
even though they show a loss— in extreme cases, even though you had no tenant all year. The situation gets more complicated if you keep part of a building for rental, or if you rent part if the time but use the space yourself when it is not rented, or if you combine these two as the Does did when they rented one room in their house while Sara was at college but used it for her
IF THERE are more expenses|
“OTHER EXPENSES"— RENTED PROPERTY Advertising “for rent” §$.... Commission ‘to rental or managing agent : Electricity .... Coal, oil or other fuel.. GAB sues vessssssnsnss WRLer .iissnssrsnsnss 'elephone ovo csennss ired janitor and maid Expendable supplies
Depreciation of furnishi
sens Casas seve see sane
asa
seve LEER
sessissnsnne eases
ngs Interest on mortgage.. Real Estate taxes .... Personal property tax on furnishings ..... Franchise and use taxes, city fees, etc. Taxes and insurance on employees ....... Legal fees on leases, dispossesses, etc. ... Rent paid by you (if you are subrenting to —
others TOTAL of “Other Expenses” for Col. 5, Schedule B ..c.oveve $00
when she came home during vacations. . In such cases it is best to figure the deductible expenses as sug-
[ERR]
sens
“cost of a book,
vide them between the rented portion and that you use yourself, usually on a room basis, Then divide the rented portion’s share of expenses between the time it was rented and the time it was used by the family. It-is-easiest to do-this on plain paper. The Does’ schedule shows how they reported their profit on Sara's room. It appears with.the eighth article. :
. ” » ROYALTIES are handled like rents, in the same schedule. The cost, for Column 3 of Schedule F, is what you spent creating the book, song, play or invention, or what you paid for the oil property, timber. or coal, land, or whatever. Ordinarily the
be written off during the lifetime of the patent or copyright. If you can show that the incomeproducing lifetime will be shorter than that of the patent or -copy-
right, the collector probably will approve a faster tion, In the
charge : precia , {professional advice.
Tomorrow: Capital gains and losses.
Pvt. L. J. Hession
Services Thursday Double services for Pyt. Lawrence J. Hession, who died June 11, 1943, in a hospital in Hawaii,
Services for Solomon (Sol) D. Frelje, retired grocer, who died Saturday in St. Vincent's Hos-
tomorrow in Speaks & Finn Fu-
will be held at 8:30 a. m. Thursday Chapel and at 9 a. m, in St. Jo{seph’s Catholic Church. Burial will be in Holy Cross. Pvt. Hession, who was 20, was
in Moore Mortuaries Peace/St. Joseph's
peral Home and at 9 a. m. in Catholic Church, {Burial will be in St. Joseph's (Cemetery. | Mr, Freije, formerly operated
Solomon Freije Rites Tomorrow
Get Sold by all drug
(Ed) Lyon, Zionsville, who died and Mrs. Hughes Patten, both of Saturday in General Hospital Indianapolis; a son, Robert W. after-a short lliness, will be held Irvin, Oxford; a sister, Miss Alice at 2 p. m. tomorrow in Royster & Irvin, Franklin; a brother, Askin Morfuary. Burial will beiCharles Irvin, in Crown Hill. grandchildren and two Mr, Lyon, who was 70, was em-|grandchildren. ployed 36 years in Baur-Stein-| _.
great-
sale florists. A native of Boone| ,. Josephine Woodward, forCounty, he lived in Indianapolis|,... 1ngjanapolis resident, who 40 years. He moved to Zionsville | 4,4 14st Tuesday in her Castro several years ago, He was a Valley, Cal, home, was to be member. of University - Park buried in Washington Park CemeChristian Church here. tery following services at 2 p. m. Surviving are his wife, Mra. ... . the cemetery chapel. She
Minnie Lyon, and three daughMrs, Elsie Gunnell, A native of Jeffersonville, Mrs, Woodward lived in Indianapolis 60 years and was a member of the Fifth Church of Christ Scientist, a) « Survivors -include two daughiters, Mrs, Emma Jean Miner, jCompton, Cal, and Mrs. Lula [Florence Lammert, Castro Vail+ {ley, five grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren,
‘John W. Schakel
John W. Schakel, 1313 Linden St., who died yesterday in Meth-
dan, all of Indianapolis.
MONEY LOANED Quickly, Confidentially,
Cheerfully on
¢ JEWELRY ¢ DIAMONDS ¢ WATCHES ® CAMERAS ® RADIOS © LUGGAGE
® MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS ¢ SHOTGUNS AND RIFLES
after services at 2:30 p. m. In |Emmaus Evangelical Lutheran
member,
JEWELRY CO.
Pree Parking in the Rear of Our Store 219 W. Washington St Across From the State House
daughter, both of Indianapolis.
NO OTHER RUB GIVES FASTER RELIEF IN
CHEST COLDS!
(i np A a usterole instantly ih 10 xqlidve WL STRONG
inducted into the U. 8. Army in'Mrs. Forrest Todd October, 1942. After receiving his; Solemn requiem high mass for basic training on the West Coast;{Mrs. Mabel Craney Todd, who
Lafayette; five he served with the 24th Infantry died yesterday in Methodist HosPacific| pital, will be sung by her son; the,
Division in the Bouthwest
odist Hospital, will be buried tomorrow in Concordia Cemetery
{Church, of which he was a
A lifelong resident of Indianapolis, Mr. Schakel, who was 68, | retired last May from his position as Mutual China Co. shipping clerk, which he held for 20 years. .He 1s survived by a son, Herbert J. Bchakel, and: one grand-
area. ; A native of Indianapolis, he lived in 922 E. St. Clair Bt. He
Catholic School and was a parishfoner in St. Joseph’s Church. Surviving are his mother, Mrs. Madonna . Hession Richardsons two sisters, Mrs. Vernon Born and Mrs, Don Cavander; three brothers, Michael O., James V. and John Hession, all of Indianapolis. .
Mrs. Zella Hardesty
Mrs. Zella Mae Hardesty, 1346 N. Dearborn S8t., native of Shelby County and Indianapolis resident 45 years, died yesterday in an Indianapolis nursing home after an {liness of six months, She was 83. She was a member of the Irv. ington Methodist Church and its Women's Bible Class. Her husband, the late Edward Hardesty, who died in 1942, was associated with the old New York department store here many years. Services at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in Shirley Brothers Irving Hill Chapel, will be followed by burial in Greenwood Cemetery. Her survivors Include _ three daughters, Mrs, Gilbert L. Helms and Mrs, Everett Collings, Indi-
son, Aurora, IIL; a sister, Mrs. Harry Wilson, Franklin, and
anapolis, and Mrs, Owen Thomp- |
Rev. George P. Todd of Corydon at 10 a. m. Wednesday in St Mary's Catholic Church, RichMrs. Todd, who was 56, was a 1919 graduate of St. Vincent's School of Nursing. A native of Loogootee, she lived in Indianapolis five years, moving to Richmond in 1921. She was in the parish of 8t. Mary's Church, Richmond.
Besides the one son, she Is survived by her husband, Forrest Todd, Richmond; two other sons, Joseph F. and Thomas Todd, both of Richmond; four sisters; Misses Matilda and Rose Craney, Indianapolis; Mrs. E. E. Murphy, Washington, D. C., and Miss Ruth
brothers, Eugene, B. J. and Flavian Craney, all of Indianapolis, and Victor Craney, Loo~ gootee.
Craney, Loogootee,” and ~~ four]
ithe Frelje Grocery Store, 348 N. Freije. A native of Syria, he was
pital, will be held at 8:30 a. m, brought to America when five
years old. He lived in Indian.
{of St. Joseph's Church. Surviving are two brothers, John and Tom Freije, Indianap'olis; a sister; Mrs. Suzie Parker, | Indianapolis, and nephews,
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of this Primer are: |property, not charging for your; Was-a-member Apartment poling and equip- own work or your wife's. In these n coldmns show only the total costs. Details should be given in Schedule G, shown below,
song, ete, would —
case of mineral, oil, gas;
Pine St, with his brother, John
{For SPRING SEMESTER CLASSES Beginning Feb. 7
apolis 50 years and was a member
CP Pau C. Muon dr TL military rites in Washing. ton Park Yonder i
Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. Mason Sr! 1234 Pasadena Ave. will be bur. fed with military honors in Washington Park Cemetery following services at 10 a. m, Thursday in Royster & Askin Mortuary. Wayne Post No. 64, American Legion, will furnish the honor guard, Cpl. Mason, who was a member of the 3d Armored Division, First Army, was killed in action Apr. 14, 1945, in Germany. A member of the 1044 Ben Davis High School graduating class, he Baptist Church and the Order of DeMglay, a In addition to his parents, he is survived by a sister, Miss Shirley ‘Mason, and a grandmother, Mrs, Attie Mason, both of Indian-
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Applied on University
Information: :
122 East Michigan Street
" Orientation Tests—1-4;
Registration—11 A. M.-6:30 P. M., Jan. 81-Feb. 4 9 A. M.-12 Noon; Feb. 5 :
$23
CLEA LL UA LLL SHIRT WORK § : :
- Aoioreai ADVANTAGE has been added to our famous Three-Quarter-Finish family laundry service ‘=the FOLDING of your wearing ap-
less work for you _
fo | Enroll
6-10 P. M., Jan. 24.
Indianapolis Extension Cenfer INDIANA UNIVERSITY
Phone Rl ley 2326
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
Feathered Friend
HORIZONTAL 57 Compass point
BETTER
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START 1949 WITH
VISION
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Answer in Frevious Pussle BRIO IWIN INIEIRIE] | [D}
EINIAINITIS |
Curriculum Includes Credit Giving Course t% Be Degrees, Also Courses Planned for Adults Interested in Obtaining Specialized
BIETAR] [CIRIAIL IE] ; CIARA CTR TATE]
QIRILIE
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