Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 February 1950 — Page 18

How Taking Chance Cashed"

. pretty well set.

if you set fire to the factory.

By HAROLD 11. HARTLEY, Times Business Editor IF YOU ARE over the 40-yard line, play golf with the ~ boss on Sundays, and get a winter vacatiof, you may be Trading Slow and mediumYou feel secure. The company would not fire you even welsh "oS? taday seid at prices

n nsaple, \ apolif Stockyards. You are not exactly. indispe ble, but you are 9 per Solid Stockyards. X

"cent right, if you believe the saan tocar a “company will see you through most of them “thrift” “+ to the gold watch banquet. |. But not all men think that way.

Some won't accept a pre-packaged

security. Christmas,

TAKE ADRI AN JOYCE, chairman of the Glidden Co. He's in Rent Thaw town today. He had one of those, cushy jobs with the Sherwin-Wil-| T° Mans Co. at 45, and played golt| with his boss.

One day coming back from a But the

best

on his own, “The boss jumped a little, “Come|™aYbe the next. “Into “the” house,™ he said. “Let's \ talk it over.” They did_smoking ment will

ing his scotch.

Adrian Joyce. He had made up that add up?

made Jap-a-Lac (remember?) was Won't take so long.

pounding on the roeks. SherwinMr. Joyce did. and dries it for sfcrage. He mortgaged his house, rounded up friénds, and went on the financial hook for $138,000, That was in 1917, Last night, at 77, he told the story in his suite at the Athletic Club, He was here to inspéct his _latést venture, the largest soy‘bean mill in the world.

‘No Rust’

The idea

lion on the books and sells about late a rust-like ec + $2056 million in products a year. chemical,

mysteriously There's one man who did it. you RD-119,

has been ‘Know-how, more than money. 3

“heart of a" man like Adrian D. gather much rust. ‘Joyce, |

“Where They Get i _ipalign in 200 newspapers. ABOUT HALF of the states How Small? nick théir loyal citizens for most : _ of their income through the sales, fever”? use and gross income .ax, Here's the box score: i Twenty-three states and companion “use” take a heavy dip In gasoline taxes; eight do their ni via ago income taxes, and New arasy! uses the franchise system, wh ~ Washington D. C., .a little ry

millions on one.

tax. That givis you a Tine 0 ai of the ways the statés havé figured out to take it away from you. No Smell

Bumpy Skylines _ CITY PLANNERS are getting “rid of bumpy neighborhoéds where one house is big and the ne eustey next is small, and the next tall p,..u.. which - and narrow, and the next short ‘pungent and squat, Home owners who didn't want 4

eliminates nose-wrinkler

also prevents

the rest in the block apparently, © overdid their struggle to be dif-| ferent. In doing fit, they produced

So that should not hodge-podge cities with” bumpy we hope. h residential skyline.

; cities of the future will, . have patterns, smooth to the eye, u. s. Statement

requires special

8 a year in the county, [rose slightly. homes. The |

{little ones go up 500 at a crack. 80 a shortage of 2000, which $17.25 to $17.75. | Mr. Abrams disputes, should melt reached away before we see another Weights from 240 to 270 pounds’

COUNCIL'S dallying with the 3% pou rent thaw won't get very far. The final hearing on the decon-, {trol ordinance is set for Feb. 15. guess among round of golf, hé told his boss he housing men is that rentals willi;, 550-pound sows sold at $12.50

still be wearing the control har- - thought he would like to take off). "o'™ "of next year, and reached $14.75 and $15.

Here's the capsule: The govern - keep controls on in

the bBo ¢ § cities as long as possible. -Reasop: e ss’ fat cigars and, drink- Wage earners are the renters, and most cattle prices held generally

But staying put was not for they're the big vote, too, Doesn't fully steady in later trade.

his mind not to miss the big ad- Bite Size venture, a COWS ARE going to have THE GLIDDEN CO. which ®asier chewing, and maybe

Pre-cured, that's what it is. And farmers report their cows,

Sow Values Up Slightly With

| Lightweight

lower in slow trade in the IndianHeavyweights Bow prices

# Good and choice 170 to 340 und barrows and gilts sold at Several loads the top price, [brought $16.50 to $17.25. Buyers | patd $16 to $18.75 for 270 to pounders. A few weighing up

$16. Lightweights trom 100 to 160 pounds moved at $13.50 to $15.50. Bult good and choice 330-pound!

to $14.50. Choice lightweights|

Cattle Steady

ing prices, against steady bids,

Several small lots of good lightweight steers and mixed weight yearlings sold at $27 to $28. Odd

it head choice steers reached $30.

Most load-lots of.medium to just-

A new device called Tigfarmaire 800d lightweight and’ medium: - ‘Williams had refused. buy it, sa OW Cuts hay into 5-inch lengths Weight steers sold at $24 to

1425.50. Scattered small lots of common

and'and low-medium lightweight na-

orrosion, ‘A new! prought $17.50 to $18.50. labeled Soug

developed over-forties. It takes courage and keep gasoline pipelines clean.

But if your car is kept as busy, ~ And it takes the adventureous as mine, it. may not have time to

Sinclair is targeting its ad cam- $21,

HAVE YOU got “little car

A few of the auto makers are breaking out with it. Théy sense have sales 4 big untapped market which has taxes; 14 [besa Boing to the used car lots. ash showed a bantam not lon , and Kaiser-Fraser is shoot: moved at $20 to 330.

WHEN YOU ‘get in & line of [traffic behind the big bus in the Hogs, 6700; cattle, 1625; calves,

future, “its fumes may not sting

is toying with Mrs. Mary Yant Rites

to $15.25 to $17.

horses, If you can find one, like tive yearlings brought $18 to

$23.50. Medium fleshed 850-950-{pound good steers sold at $24 to

SINCLAIR REFINING CO. has 324.75 on a feeder account. A tapped a lively market. It is 8in- {load of good 875-pound heifers clair's new “no rust” gasoline. is that cars which [good moved at $22 to $25. His comany is worth $5¢ mil- stand any length of time accumu: |

{reached $26. Bulk medium and

Good beef cows, scarce, Com=and medium moved at Canners and cutters sold at $13.50 to $15.

Native good heavy beef and

Most sales were $19 or (higher. Odd outstanding sales. brought prices up to $21.50. Heavy beef bulls moved at $18.50. Bull prices ranged from to 50 cents higher. -Vealers Steady Veaters sold steady with yester-| day. Good and choice sold at $31

|, But if it does develop that thers .~ ory a An i iaay. alk fashioned depends on PPOPRILY pricen fein ing ar i in ne | wer weighing 105 pounds and less sold llook for the Big Three to jump in {with both feet and grab it fast.

at $25 large deck of 105-pound westerns!

of 95-pounders at $26. Late estimates of receipts were:

450, and sheep, 700, -

wistiMeld in Muncie

{comes in through your car heater. crankcase “their houses to look like all of aijution. The trick is that butane Mrs. Mary ‘Yant, widow of Jacob storage tanks, Yant, were held at Sispensing systems and carbure-/in 8t. Lawrence Catholic Church.

stop them,

Times Sate Service MUNCIE, Feb, 7--8ervices for

§ a. m. today

8he was 99. Mrs, Yant died Saturday in the home of her son-in-law, T. F. Snyder; 503-8: St. here.

‘|She was a native of Ohio, and

one of Muncie’'s oldest citizens.

but with little touches of individ wYASHINGTON, uality. oi vi Zoning will do thé trick, ow dn restrictive clauses tacked onto the

-

TORY that telephone “workers may lose the 50 per cent

INDIANAPOLIS ¢ reduction in their telephone bills, pe granted to employees, if k they 80

. on strike, probably can be out. The Bell System has the best

tossed Official W Weather

UNITED STATES WwW n A ATER WEL INES BUREAU

Survivers include a son, Maurice

Liter 3 pis A. Yant, Cedar Rapids, Towa, and

‘$18.

to $26. This included a

{

Dwight P. ores (left), Adrian D. Joyce and James C. Rankin pounds sold at $15.50 $0 of the Glidden Co.

Father, Son Open World's Largest Soybean Mill Here

By HAROLD HARTLEY, Times Business Editor “x Out -on-W.-18th- 8t; today -a father and a son walked through ‘Retarded earlier by higher’ ask: a , dream in stone and concrete, tilted their heads back and turned their ‘eyes to the tops of 190-foot pillars, filled with soybeans. The father was Adrian D. Joyce, founder of the Glidden Co. which he had -bought for $138,000 back in war-tortured 1917, company now on the hooks for $54 million, with $205 million in

sales In 1948,

Beside him is the athletic figure research, the infinite patience of Dwight, who calls the keenly trained scientists, with a The Nese son is president of the vast and Christianity was born. growing Glidden empire with 35

of his son,

senior J touch of

oyce “father” almost reverence,

plants turning out paint and food.

“Tom- | BG} The big plant on W. 18th, take seven days a week, the year Mr. Savage said any local rer. Gabriel Mies 34. 352. "Batgias ~ oe ler 4, at 31 WN. Bevin TE i nt 0 ot 0, SL oe enn a ei 4 ME 0 Mo SE RE cv jearly fall for rehabilitation. - ames 2 : | coma, the elder Joyce many years age. Hd when you .approach those islature. This Sham. 20. 41's Indiana Inds Jennie Katte Wade. 80, at 1929 N. Eerstons, He liked it close to the soybean ...o white pillars out W. 18th was the case in { ; 48 L 3'N. Artington:| Louise “Belle Ratliff, 81, at #33 Broad. country in the heart of the rich g¢ vou will be looking at a the Veteran's bo- A Ful an ee] puilippioe “itheimer. #2, at 1230 Bosari, Midwest. dream in concrete, that men may nus here, he ne a0 21S 8. Delaware or By re RB. Rover 53. at General, care Horse Trade eit and feed their families, paint pointed out. euig 340 Holl: ‘Frances Bul “cinoma.” The new plant is a child of pa- their homes with lasting coat- Mr. Savage ! {Leonard Heb Jr. 23. 1325 Marlowe: tience, something he had planned ings, and live longer. too. said -Vew Jersey | | "ty sudson; 317430” asinchustets Walter c. Forgey carefully and waited for. He got Medicines are made from the and California ~ IDIVORCE SUITS FILED Rites Tomorrow the site and some buildings in a soybean to keep men well, voted two to one Bertha vs. Mont Crowder: Jeanne c horse trade when one of the Glid- — against ‘state ames re or Vison; Norma M. xe. Services for Waller C. Forgéy, den plants blew up. Lemuel C.. Carey public housing ompson: Celia oT os Frank Picerno: 1113 W, New York St, who died And some in the company, {bond issues. F. Oberley; Clara A. VS: yesterday in his homé, will be at

stunned by the loss, salsage Bulls sold at $1830 to wanted to collect their insurance

and get out of the soybean busi‘But not Adrian Joyce.

ness,

THE | TNDTANAPOLIS TIMES 7A Dream in Stone, Loncrete

said they Services Tomorrow |

wr om

Local Public

“Savage Urges $350,000 Housing Log

Stirs Up Protest Here

X_ storm of protest ast ight present “a. true pcre of odie greeted the Indianapolis Housing Housing apis’ housing situation of to.

Housing Vote

IREB Chief Blasts “Inaccuracies’ of

PHA Statistics

By LARRY STILLERMAN ruce Savage today urged ferendum on the need for extensive public housing for 1Indianapolis. The president of the Indianap-!

the “inaccuracies” of the local Public Housing Authority statistics urging 2000 low-cost dwellings here, Ordinances requesting federal ald for construction of rental {units here were tabled last night {by the City Council. Mr. Savage said public housing has been overwhelmingly defeated in almost every instance when a referendum was taken. - “I would strongly recommend a Ballot on public housing here in the coming primary if it were possible.” he said . Admits Housing Need

“He ‘admifted there is a need for limited low-cost units in Indianapolis. i “But we shouldn't ask the boys in Washifigton for the dole,” he stated, “This is a problem for the state ahd local governments.” “If there is a great need here, then let an accurate, impartial survey show this,” Mr. Savage declared. ' “Figures cited by the IPHA were based on government, 1940 statistics. dicative of today's needs.”

is the humble soybean which the Chigrew 3000 years before 250 Tons a Day The Glidden plant here will process 250 tons of beans a day,

“These two examples alone’ Mr. Savage Ser-'show the so-called ‘mandate’ for

Times State Service

NOBLESVILLE, Feb. 7

He vices for Lemuei C. Carey, native the $15 billion socialistic housing L

kept his eye on the rising Glidden of Hamilton County. and. former program is a figment of some-

istar which already had begun to steady pyramid company upon company. {He swapped a Chicago plant for lttve site here, and began to re-

‘bull. -

The Glidden Co., originally orte $34. Common and medium ganized for the making of_paints, {found the flaxseed ofl éxtraction Lambs sold 25 to mostly 50 | process had something amazingly in common with soy (traction. It was a way to keep Ledge 421, F&AM. [the flaxseed mills busy, ee —Protein Food — Widow; But what to do with the bean, that sold at $28, and a short-load Meal and oil. The oil, of course, field; and two brothers, Donald went into paints, but there were other uses, - X. Home. ings, dressings, etc. And the bean Arthur L. Zoeller |

meal was a natural for. protein

|

food.

Long Is shadows

million.

program,

& grandson. The daughter, Marie ad lin dg Snyder of-Muncie, died in od Hil HERE Mrs. Mamie Jackson

Rites for Mrs. Mamie Jackson, oLEARING § * Wl a1

» Allfree St, will be held at

m. tomorrow in Patton fu]

HL home, Crystal Chapel. |

Cemetery.

employee relations of any company in the country, The com- Precipitation pany doesn’t penalize or “strike Tole! iectpicat back. " Coss stich Jb You gan. count. on Indiana Bell "to be as sweet as ever, even dur- tite | in SE DE A_Atrike. Best is. that if there is a strike, their tele phone bills will still be halved.

2000 Houses MARSHALL ABRAMS who ‘runs the Construction League, building materials; hit the ceiling when an Indianapolis Housing Authority reported the town ~ghort 2000 low-cost hones. ¢ Actually, even if true, that is ta N

Sunrise _ 6:47 | Sunset

Savane

..Bot a bad figure, Private builders put up about w

PARTLY CLOUDY AND CLOUDY AREAS.

r v Wh LL LOFT, wn WSOHOW. 1. 4. WASHER. ML ms,

GHIA Atlantic

ete and she. Pacific a a hone of pry Sky

hag

Rare

. than

years and for 15 years was em-

CR loge ASE EEE ge, Harts and over,

ono 3 poultry, 4 ess rist—No. 1. Sc: No. 2 8de.

ns, 14¢; and No.

Local Truck Grain Prices p

Today’ s Weather Ee Folocatr

FOTOLAST'

LEGEND : : AFFECTED searates [0 AEN hoster (ASR F] snow

5 we I +»

TONIGHT AND TOMORROW-—Bslow seasonable mE _y forecast for tonight through |&

fi Ss 0. yellow SoyBeans, 32.08.

ployed as a cook. She died Satur. {able shows the tempers day in General Hospital.

+hoeal- er tomer]

research.

{trone.

Mrs. Jackson, who was 60, was ones are born almost daily. an Indianapolis resident for 30, But the basis of most. of the.

|

Local

Bobs Merrill

Erle" Com Loan

Julian who discovered, a costly way to make Cortisone for|Were to be at 1 p. m. today in the the relief of rheumatoid arthritis, Christ Holiness Church. Burial land synthesized the sex hor. Will be Burial will be. in Crown Hill mones, testoasterone and proges- Was 16. That's just a few. New! She was a ‘student in Crispus;

‘STOCKS

American States Som 7

*Bobba- Merril ota hs | ve

margarine, shorten

land, of the depression (1931).

The company then did about al half million dollars worth of busi- ber of the Mystic Circle, 685, F. ness a year. Last year it did $65/& A. M., Scottish Rite,

Scientific Frontiers The company is pushing back|in Indianapolis 44 years. scientific frontiers with Hoosier. | born and Percy Julian, grandson of a slave, Zoeller; a daughter, Mrs. Dorothy! of OF, heading its vast soybean research Shake; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. unfolded daily in test Louis Zoeller, and twe all of tubes and over Bunsen burners Oliver and Homer Zoeller, all o in 26 laboratories, interchanging Indianapolis. srs Trving RAI Chapel, Information from coast to coast. 7 Thé Glidden Co. is making deep inroads in..pharmaceutical!

ePaiiw graduated Dr. |

It was Glidden's Dr.

Issues “Feb. To

com

Sos ops ul A Sollerits som .

§ via

ets ien - 5 grandparents. = (Poultry Co. here. Hé was 71. 3: Ss ". | Surviving are a son, Wiliam O. 100 James Wills : Herron, Anderson, and a sister,

MIA A —

dpls Railways Juvestars 1 aSRhohe Fr

3 re Ashain 5s_58

ie Rub

hk : ail hone 4% i Traction Termingl 5s 8 LEGAL NOTICES

Notice 1%

“ direclors 3} Inc. 585

ration (cetisd busin He 9. and is Abou: to

Re CH a

| rcedrut have néar or Aa und or

- above normal temperatures for his month. Cloudy at RB Most of |

> be

BLES

rv 3%s 73°. Co 300s 18°

hereby given in Tre

Jefferson = & et be dialed

Incisnap rend.

HE

Fi

he “rown 8 vung for

n oil ex-

tess Saturday in

+ lall

2 Bihday in his home after a brief He was 40. ¢ kinsville, Ky. and lived in In- Central Railroad brakeman the

Wills; two sons, George T, and |W. Price, U. 8. Army; two daugh-| a i tin ‘Wills, and two sistefs, Mrs. Ann Price, both of Mattoon, and!

: Hopkinsville.

county road superintendent for 12/gpne's imagination,” ‘he. said. years, will be held at 10 a. m.| The IREB president said Grand tomorrow in Friends Church. Rapids. Mich., and Detroit turned! Mr. Carey, who was 50, died thymbs down on a -propesal to }

Sunday in his home here: “lestablish a local housing auMr. Carey opened an auto (thority.

agency here with Joseph McCray

six months ago. He held memberships in the Mrs. Charles Hancock

Friends Church and Carmel Rites Set Thursday Mrs. Irene L. Hancock, 5312 E. Mr. Carey 18 survived by hin! Clair St, who died Sunday! Mrs. Gladys Carey: his {while visiting friends in Gary, will | mother, Mrs. Hattie Carey, West t= he buried in Crown Hill Cemetery!

and Wyatt Carey, both of Carmel.

[day in G. H., Herrmann Funeral|

Services for Arthur Louis Zoel-! iler, 4546 Zoeller Ave. (Lawrence), 4

apolis;- Mrs. -Haneock, who was | 5, was a member of Garfield

One of the master strokes of Who died yesterday in 8t. Vin- porg Evangelical and Reformed Adrian Joyce was the purchase icent's Hospital, will be at 1 p. m.! of the Durkee Co. in Elmhurst, {Thursday in Moore & Kirk Notrth- ‘and Sahara Grotto Auxiliary, in. the gathering/east Chapel. Burial will be

Church; Irvingtpn Chapter, OES,

She is survived by her husband, Charles L. Hancock, owner! of Irvington Hardware, and two brothers, Harold E. Becker, In(dianapolis, and Wilbur H. Becker, {Los Angeles.

Gloria Kingsbury Services. .for. 10-year-old Gloria | Kingsbury, granddaughter, John K. Kingsbury, Irvington physician, will be at 1 30! p. m. Thursday in Shirley Entomb|ment will be in Washington Park

{Washington Park. He was 49. A brickmason, he was a mem-!

Murat [Shrine and the bricklayers union.! {He was born in Cadiz, but lived

Survivors include his, wife, Mrs, | Neéllié "M. Zoeller; a son, John IL. Ann

olis Real Estate Board blasted!

They -are not in-

(after services at 1:30 p. m. Thurs-|

_A lifelong resident of Indian-| ¥

Authority's request for oy Cor day" ! Council's permission to apply i Defend ig $350,000 Federal loan. + ends Report

sing the move was “Mar- | anon D, y Pho iy managing di- Housing Authority, defénded the

rector of the Construction League report by defining a “sub-stans

lof Indianapolis, who termed the dard” house as one needing Majer

“Authority's Syrvey Tecommend* repairs, not having an inside ing construction of 2000 low-cost|,., 4 ier and lacking a bath, © housing units as “shockingly in-| ° lacourate.” | “In this category,” Mr. Wade

that the league felt there were mately 44, 290 dwelling ‘units Poms “some gross a rarities in the ing under this classification” figures of a~survey report which Mr. Wade told the council the {indfeated that “every third house purpose of requesting the loan in Indianapolis is sub-standard.” from the Peaeral, Soyernment, The survey, Mr. Abrams re-| was to “finance a survey minded the neh, was based on the Authority can go ahead with 1940 census figures, and does not its housing plans.”

IN INDIANAPOLIS

Coleman—John, Eileen Foret’ gens, Robe nnie

EVENTS TODAY A ndine Planman t, Inez

a) alee” dedieation—-1180 W. 1 -Benward; Rober 3 Yar, Bud uiliersity ounders % iB af > the | At , Jibotet—f chi an: He a jon: r - i ar er pris ie Rs Ama rsday Menten, oe | {fli Jourdan; Fr Ripple igh choo, At Home—L. D. Maggie Ogwin, Eocapers b~Noen, Claypool gle. 4 o-operative Bievies "Cru io POR shington. Plospach: Henry, pe pm

Club—Noen. Lincein. Girls FRt_St. Prypeis— Herbert Rach

Floyd hryn Salter; Earl, a ine {EVENTS TOMORROW [gerd Ke for Advancement of Manage-| 1M General—Carl, an, Stevensony { ment—8 p. m., Lincoln At Charlen ne pe taniey;

{1ndianapdlis English - Speaking! “Union noon, etic Club At Jyanits anion eneva Bradshaw;

vid Celgman— Rodney, Methodist —JoSeph. Homer, Alice Powell: Jackson Elbert. Donald. * Mabel "Burkes.

DEATHS

Mary Ganley McLaughlin, 82. at 3245 N, lllingls, sclerosis John Kit reald Vance, 7%, at 5132 E. North, {coronary occlu { Plorence Peck Bailie. 66, at General,

lane. Univetuity Symphony Qriheatrg--Sharty dee High Schoo, Week rep rank

Nations lin i High oh — Liens Club-noeon. Claypool uniee Chamber of Commerés - noon. Washington Indiana polis Pardue Association = Noon. Athletic Club

MARRIAGE LICENSES

i arteriosclerotic hea George Usher. 26. 2313 W. Washington; Dorothy BR "5 at 924 Westiield, coronar mest Rien it. 3333 ON Dilinois: Ger- Charles T. Coleman. 80. at 1234 Calhoun, eumo! » . “ e Scokgan. 40. 3332 N w. Wa imag: Lacy Dade. 85. at 3112 Boulevard, (vegan Chatmon. %. is Sprin Fenians Tea Davis. $0, at "230 RK. - v v 7 0 uls » William etierson, a. 515 Spring: Mary a aban] hemtrrhage.

ring Bertie Hartman, B80, at

3 p. m, tomorrow in Moore & Kirk Northeast Chapel. Burial will be {in Crown Hill. He wads 74. Marcel am Mr. Forgéy was employed in BIRTHS | Keyless Lock Co. A, native of Tv { Jeffersonville, he lived in IndianAt St. Vincent’ s—Robert, Jean Gebhatt, {apolis 60 years. He was a membér ee Roy _. |of the Moose Lodge and the Méth-

8 Perry, Lels Winburn. At { Bhai Virginia. Hart. -_|odist Church.

BEY N. 5 ns helma L. vs 0 orchert; Mildred M. vs. Billy R. Worland: Bessie oe Otis James; Loral R. vs. Edward ; Susa BE. 2 Edward J. J Ru by MO w Louis H. Davis

a Gregor Mansfield: Edna,

orace E. Emnia

i

con Flannef b

How : Buchanan offord £0

the means of évery-

offer services within

: : one? | |

{

She died yesterday in Methodist Hospital. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John E. Kingsbury, 425 N. LaSalle St, she attended ‘Publie- School 78 and was a memShe ber of the Camp Fire Girls and the East Park M. E. Church Suniday School. Physicians

Services for Miss Mary Leuise! |Willis, 839 W. 20th 8t., who died General Hospital,

in New Crown.

{Attucks High School and was a sald death was

¢ Member of the Christ Holiness [caused bya malady similar te

[theu matic fever;

She is survived by her parents, Georg AMr. and Mrs... Marion. Willis; je . Herron a

‘seven sisters, Mrs. Letha Bruce, ! 1 the Misses. Nellis,..QOdessa,-

Betty, Jean. Rose and Gloria riteein Tauck Funeral home.

Willis, and three brothers. Rob- | Mr. Herron, who died yesterday, ert, Raymond and Samuel Wills, \way 5 native of Greenfield and

of Indianapolis,

Church.”

James Wills, 144 Tacoma Ter-| race, will be buried in New Crown n= 1 ® Cemetery after services at 1p. m.

Edgell, Connersville.

Paul -Parker Price

day; in F ; Services for Paul Pakér Price Church," a SH fa wie: [of Mattoon, TI. ber. {day in 1877 Shelby St., will be * Mr. wills, who ‘Was 49, died held later this week in Mattoon,

illness. He was a native of Hop- | Mr. Price had been a New York

dianapelis 11 years. {last 23 vears. He was 3 member { Trainmen. Survivors Include two sons,

Robert J. Price, U. 8. Navy; Paul

Ella Mae Terry, Miss Patricia |Arnetta and Miss Gloria Jéan

‘Sefvices = Tor George Herron, ¢ 344 Hane 8t., will be held toWIR Greerfierd Tollowing|

and. four was an employee of the Kain| :

“who™ Aiea yelter} =="

He is survived by his wife (of the Brotherhood of Railroad 3 Willle Mae; three daughters, Mrs.

“Harty Wade, “énatrman- ot the

Mr, Abrams - told the council, estimated, “there are approxis -.

urial Wast

may call

53’ urial East EF d. Priends ILL after 5

corgeand A rs. snd’ Choa ssed AWA)

ednesday, ! Wed RGE_ W.

iends invit Tiends may uesdsay.

ies, mother ary Jefines I'S. Austin of cit uri, Mrs, (

Tends invit Oy

fo La AS

ister

Because we serve hundreds of families every year, the t cost to each one can be lowered. - This means a saving to everyone wanting “the finest” ot prices anyone can.gfford, ooo

i

IN TT BUCHANAN 4 day,

James A. Wills; a brother, Aus- ters, Misses Nancy Lou and Ruth

Jeannie Watkins, all of Indianap- a brother, Edward Price, Matolis. and Mrs. Benny Holland, toon, and a sister, Mrs, Sarah | Ellen Addy, Peoria, n.

(43

You Save Because We Save MEN'S SUITS & OVERGCOATS

| 322.85 , 520.95 | ROBERT HALL Clothes:

Cor. Sonate Ave a & Marrians --

ALSCO Call SE

ARGEST SELECTION oes of Linoleum in Indiang Jugs from $239 Fog ue bs red

Castle Film

: Sell or Rent Abbott & Costello. Mighty ‘Mouse, ete.

- Indianapolis Camera Co. 903 B. Washington

EEE a Se kr —

Guaranteed WATCH REPAIRING “uo en | RITE’ S$ JEWELRY SHOP

“s 8. ILLINOIS ST,

Tr

a

{

5

ildred Alber oss m. a PEL, 205 Mbingtan of Bineste

ussquie, hx

at ORTUARY, 3 Newto

CHAPEL Burial Hope,

NEILL Gert ohn Naa merson Ave

ard C.. nna Clare, ella Maret

las residenc lvd., Nerth 08 p. ms,