Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 December 1951 — Page 14
be
* There will be plenty of gifts, “:tens were filled with people who
a them.
‘ing Room Only” signs.
_oxtra passenger. On some trains noon—only a few hours after the
2 : : ".aution signals up. .They wanted today praised - Allied troops in
lower Flurry
4
ea
handed Allied delegates a letter Gen. Dean had written to her.
Reds to Let At the same tim® a Coramunist & % Po @ & $ h id he jnter-| 2 | rere sea Yule Letters | “Friday told Allied newsmen dean | a Go to POWs
asked him to relay the greetings! Ry United Press
to Mrs. Dean. It was learned that Gen. Dean | y was near death during the first] PANMUNJOM, Korea, Dec. 24 " month of his imprisonment and|—Armistice negotiators agreed it was. believed that the Com-|today to exchange mail between munists had kept news of his war prisoners and their families capture Aug. 25, 1950, secret be- but the Reds rejected “Gen. cause of his critical condition. Matthew B. Ridgway's plea to As late as last July, Communistilet Hed Cross . representatives Correspondent Wilfred Burchett|yigit their prison camps. said, it was still not certain that. The United Nations and ComGen. Dean would pull through. |munist negotiators failed to make 20 Days Without Food any progress whatsoever on an Mr. Burchett, correspondent for exchange of prisoners themselves the Paris Communist newspaper ,. on policing a truce—the two Ce Soir, repeated and elaborated, jor problems holding up agreethe story he related to Allied| oni on a Korean cease-fire.
correspondents Sunday of Gen. 4, ho. was abandoned of
’ l Deas Persons) Netowem 26 ays getting an armistice before the
(30-day. trial cease-fire line agreesbehind enemy lines, including 20 nent expires Thursday. There
Says Jah “absolutely nothing” |. = "indication yet whether
“I had the pistol and 12 bul. [the deadline will be extended. lots left” Gen. Dean was quoted | Noh Korean Mal, Gen, Lee | as saying. “I used to polish the Sang LO propose e exchange bullets. T said IT would: kill 11 of mail and started the ball roll-| North Koreans and save the-12th ing by handing over-a letter from for myself. I was absoluetely de- Maj. Gen. William F. Dean, Com-|
‘countries, on leave from Okla- Rmned nol to become a pris. | unis jpsisoned ne a] homa A&M College, Stillwater, OP°r. of war, ‘i Okla, of rich od Hk However his. J Wete oF, his Dn ‘Rh “Libby ident for more than 23 years, thwarted when a Korean who tl cepted both the#letMrs. Bennett. ran “pretended to befriend the General [Promptly accep 0 eles Benjamin H. Hardy, Arlington,
ter from Gen. Dean andsthe probetrayed him by leading him into 1 Va., chief public affairs officer of an ambush which he could not|posal for a general exchange of
ithe crash of an Egyptian airithe Point 4 program, \fight in his weakened condition. letters from prisoners on both
| i “ ” . sides and their-families. liner Saturday night. James T. Mitchell, director of| ‘Rifles were practically Youels NR Mette Ne ldgway's
There were seven or eight the audio-visual section of the|ing my head,” Gen. Dean said. |Supreme Headquarters in Tokyo Americans among the estimated Point 4 program, Stillwater, Okla. | Surrounded Five Times ° lannounced later that a plan for 21 persons, including 16 passeng-| Cyril Crilley, special assistant’ He told how he was surrounded tne mail exchange had been’ raers, aboard the plane which to Mr. Bennett, Chevy Chase, Md. five times and once broke out of|jied to Washington for approval. crashed into a mountain side near, . Jesse Lee Smith, agent for the The announcement said the
a house with enemy soldiers formTehran in a storm. There were Sentinel Cotton Gin Co., Rayville,
~ io S MY PHONE is always busy. Christmas is that so many people Ay . 0 want to do something -about it./ANG my mail is full. And, quite : strangely, it is always from somethey give, or how much they pay I ci for it. : cam, . ou ica Embassy canceled all Christ2.8. 4 That makes me feel warm in- .,.¢ cojeprations today in mournTODAY'S BUYING was on first side when we come to the season ing for Americans including the Q WV n n ” Something strange had come over| p.,gy PEOPLE “help me. NG . ; 4 quote them always. I don’t know, Those who were pushing, an much in my own right. But I sel-| the clerks put their last ounce ) A | And, as I put these words on § 11 around. ’ into it. More kindness all a paper, I think of all the hands n % 8 L ing a ring less than 10 yards ,.oper address for mail intended IT MUST HAVE been that! And I haven't met, knowingly, NO survivors. ee 4 laway. " |for the. 3180 Americans known to Star, rising in the East, and the one dishonest man. Americans known dead were: | Louis Jardal, of the "Uni- When the Reds overran his out- pe 1 North Korean prison camps warmth which glowed from it, re | Dr. Henry G. Bennett, 65, chief versity of Wisconsin, and Bagh- fit, he crawled under a truck 0) “undoubtedly will be made avail- . ee Christmas Spirit
| { |
\ Fourth Down, "J, Goal to Go ra
By Harold: Hartley TODAY IT WAS. the fourth down, goal to go. ° | It was that last yard which was the hardest. But © they took it with smiles. * 2 The dim outlines of The Christmas Star }egmning to glow in the Eastern| ~~ Hone Tank Reluctantly , she answered with a word she had
used a hundred times before, It was “No.”
To You... I WANT TO TELL you now, this Christmas Eve.
were already
the drug store, the bakery, the departmenit store, the five-and-
“wouldn't let the day go by with- 3 : {out doing what their hearts told IN PRISON CAMP—Photo distributed by Wilfred Burchett, It's how. nice you've been all Communist newsman, showing him interviewing Gen. William F. year, Dean (right) at a North ‘Korean prison camp. The reporter said the
I've bumbled and retraced my| picture was taken last Friday.
But never once have I heard a Death of Americans In Iran Crash Mourned
cross word. No one lost his By United Breses
» ” » FIGURES WERE BOTH up “and down. The big stores were slightly over, about two to three per cent, They had a bad beginning last week, but Saturday picked them up, The marvelous thing about
plans
&
temper, n ny ins ‘or how much they pay YOU Whatever measure of truth TEHRAN Dec. 24: The Amer-clean-up of Christmas lists. And I haven't found any other kind. 4 program, who were killed in 7 i . And ly today, waiting their turns way they'd rather Have it. I've shaken.
It is the will and the “want 10 ."yh5 wants to help me tell floors and basements. It was the when we sing about “good Will.” | iar of the United States Point grumbling last week, stood quiet- dom use their names. That's the And why did all this happen? | the carols and the hymns, and lof President Truman's Point 4 dad College of Chemistry, Iraq. (try to talk a group of American pio from Washington.”
‘the sudden sense of release from program for aiding undeveloped There were confirmed reports soldiers out of surrendering. He,
g that another American. was ied wounded enlisted man | | outward cares. A | 2 1 {carried a woun . . ’s ; le of a aboard -— Emijean Sneidesgar, on his back until he could walk] It was man’s Last Mile o Comes to Aid of carrying United States passport no longer. Ome of his omcers AASIC ACIN
‘1ard and ruthless year. It should]
French Needy
2 ‘ . No. 47531 and reported to be a! - st. it refused to leave him and apparve Oe the hardest. But Hospital Patient : naturalized citizen of Iranian ently was killed in a rice paddy, A New T e For people already have aband- VINCENNES, Dec. 24 (UP)— Guests at Gl origin. : Baik 4 |Mr. Burchett said. . YP aned cold reckoning, and are When a nurse accidentally : “> wo 0 e mericans had,
~oving toward the quiet Manger, Knocked a radio off a bedside
in the path of the Light from table in a hospital and broke + Yule Party
: o ner . Gen. Dean also contracted dys-| : ° |been identified definitely this entery from drinking brackish| Of Red Peril jmorning, Dr. Bennett and his water from rice paddies. In doing ,
‘he Star. (beyond repair, it was a personal) wife. this, he broke his own orders to| DARJEELING, India, Dec. 24 W tragedy for Tommy Hall, PARIS. Dec. 24 (CDN)-—It's American Ambassador © Loy his men against drinking native (CDN)—On the terraced tea 3RO Tommy, who is in his early : . Henderson said that the Ben- water unless they used chlorine plantations of this mountain re-
{gol bi all erry ChristWHEN ICE COATED the roads, 20's, has been in the hospital 315 50.18 to be a really merry Chris
: 2 mas for 35 per cent of the travelers who years with a bone infection. His had been using autos, turned to
, >" inetts’ 250 poverty-stricken kids gant
iwho live in the ‘village of Mer-
bodies probably would be to the United States for burial. Subject to possible change,
tablets. Checked by Many Doctors
isort a band of little brown Com|munists, new to Asia, is making a radio was his constant companion,
h ignac, a few miles south of Sdies The general told the Australian- Pold bid for a foothold south of their old standby, the trains. But Hal Roche, a newsman forgo, qeaux, where the 126th He Doles of the aii probably, rn correspondent his illness be-/the Himalayas, a link with Red The railroads did their best. Radio Station WAOV, heard of g,mper Wing has its head- SS - . came something of a medical China and control of the famous
3ut they had to hang out “Stand- Tommy's misfortune and men-
marvel to Communist doctors. (lighting Gurkhas. ; | “Doctor after doctor came tol India’s national elections have look at me,” he told Mr. Burchett. 8iven the Communist Party its The: correspondent said he was/|first chance to gain legal standcertain there was no surgery. But ing on the ‘border of India less he didn’t know the full details of|than 60 miles from Tibet, the the treatment that cured the Gen-|latest conquest of Chinese comeral. - . , munism. For all three seats in Mr. Burchett said Gen. Dean|the Bengal Legislature, Darjeel-
tioned it onthe air. Minutes fater,| T0RS1RIE.
: : . Some traihs were so loaded Christmas-minded Vincennes lis- The 3000 men from Chisago Free Reich Votes ‘hey went right through Indian-'teners gave enough money to puy and St. Joseph, Mo., who make up
polis. Tommy a new radio and Mr, the wing's flying and ground per- Puzzle Soviets
:ouldn’t squeeze in one ; “|sonnel have all chipped in to Le uni Roche will present it this after-., ho party for the young-l BERLIN. Dec. 24 (CDN) —
‘sters in Merignac's little theater. The Soviets are facing an awkThey have flown down a plane- (Ward dilemma on the problem of
there were nearly 300 standing, old one was broken. sitting on luggage, but bearing up.
2 4» load of toys from Germany so 2ll-German elections. ; DOWN AT Union Station, one, ° Yay ye The United Nations now has DOW Weighed 180 ‘pounds com- oe wi Lonanly chose ‘two easoned railroader shook his S raise © ont. There will be hot chocolate, ®Stablished a. commission which pared: with 190 in his fighting i ftv & h ead. “It's terrible” he said,| popcorn and candy, some good Will “inquire” whether free elec./93Ys. was looking and feeling fit| nN the Iofty squares where
tions are possible under present and had become an expert on the Britain's retired colonels once circumstances in both the West. Korean variation of chess, which twirled their mustaches and aired Lid : ern and Soviet-occupied portions he played with his guard. their terriers, Communist organBy United Press This is the way the Americans of the country. Allied correspondents had no izers are holding regular election WITH UNITED NATIONS have reacted to the fact that . Soviet and Fast German way of checking Mr. Burchett’s meetings. The abundant party FORCES, Korea (Tuesday), Dec. their own Christmas isn’t going ficials have insisted this is an : Cardinal Spellman tp be a very merry one. unwarranted and illegal intrusion Dean. However, they felt it rang Calcutta. headquarters, : : Except for a lucky dozen or 0 into internal affairs of Germany. true and contained a minimum of jorders from Bombay. 10 big wrecks with those pas- Korea, comparing their sacrifices whose wives have managed to Only the Germans themselves Propaganda. | 3 Parties Wage Fight 'nger trains to make Christmas with the suffering of Christ on get across the Atlantic the men they say, can decide on the crucial The. United Nations command| Slant-eyed little hillmen who eadlines. |behals of mankind. have been disappointed in the question. . had no comment on the story. |pick tea leaves and prune the Aelia { in a ristmas sermon pre- hope that their families.could join = They will have a difficult -. Gen. Dean disappeared July 20,|bushes plod miles to Darjeeling ONE LINE was using Pullman pared for delivery at the front, them by this time. This task. mn i 1950, while Bghting with tio hear the offerings of three
‘“‘self-respectin cattle wouldn't! 1 Oo fe as DE 8 ad to go. It ws By Spellman movies. 4a ¥ performance by ike World War IIL.” $ S. “We're running everything on vheels which we think is safe.” 1e said. wh : The railroads had their extra-|25—Francis
of-
party
Ars as coaches, to nl Be Archbishop of New York They've also been disappointed 18 millions in Eastern Germany Infantry Division near Taejon. {parties: Nehru's Congress Party, People were uying -coachigaiq; by the third successive cancel- their reasons for turning down . ein de erie {the Communists and -the local ickets and it had run out off “I dare hope that all at home, ; : {Gurkha League. They are illiter-
lation of plans for their formal the United Nation inquiry. The reception by French and Ameri- Communists almost certainly will
caches. So the public road Pull-‘inspired by our boys’ heroic giv- Hamilton Needs Haircut
ate, but they can vote. Even their ans at no extra cost, but there ing. of themselves for us, may
pe ster major alent should ree On Phony $10 Bills iis women, vio war god ; Sts, © uch com- j i . ; wer II set to receiv § eld. 8 ; laining. ai strongly unite Si eep I 30 Ee Mi oer Georges Bidaull - ang easily. could sabotage Western-Secret Service agents reminded and stone hammer, can mark a PEOPLE SEEMED to sense peace ane the freedoms that he nls or TE after two ore. European defense at least for Store clerks and last-minute’ pallot. | : S. othe g - : ; : {pal : tal the raiifoads had been “The Cardinal arrived in Korea vious SE rite Then they NeXt year by agreeing to the in- Christmas shoppers today thati “we should have gaised their
counterfeiters forgot to. give the wages earlier,” mourns an elderly | barber shop touch to bogus bills| Briton. “We gave them housing they printed. and medical caré, but now the Alexander Hamilton needs a Communists offer them better
ught with America on the move, quiry. nd the highways iced. Everybody bore up, and at this
iting, everybody got there.
vesterday to spend Christmas received a telephone call to the with United Nations troops. His effect that Mr. Bidault was too sermon was prepared for delivery busy with work on the budget to lat a midnight Christmas Eve make the trip, TAIPEI, Formosa, Dec. 24 haircut badly in the portrait that pay.” mass at the 10th Corps-Head-| pike a good sport Gen. Norstad (UP)—U. 8. Rep. Peter Mack graces the near-perfect phony $10| The best anti-Red bid was FLORISTS were in, a dither, duarters and a Christmas morn- gey gown from Fontainebleau (D. IIL), who flew in from Manila ills turning up in this area. His|made the first week of December "{ was their worst day, and their In8 service at a Marine division neaqquarters and presided at the yesterday at the controls of his hair runs ragged off the side of|,,y the State Labor Board. It Tot. , (command post. Isubstitute review. single engine plane, developed athe portrait. ordered the cash wage of garden Potted plants were thinned to America’s fair dream of lib-| {bad cold today and.a physician| In the neatly-engraved portrait|j nor upped from 16 cents to 18 ) vanishing point. Delivery erty for all mankind can still jadvised him {fo remain: in bed.on the spurious $20 bills, Andrew! ents a day. — ucks were skidding over town come true if men heed the lesson {He is on a round-the-world good Jackson has bald spots above his Have No Unions |
i freezing weather with perish- Of Christmas and our soldiers’ {will flight. The dark little mien lve with
Rep. Mack Kept in Bed
Local Stocks and Bonds
2
Dec,
——— st ————————
N . “or 3 + . IN ' IN Ind Pub Serv 4'4 pfd ..... 87 90 -L. | N Ind Pub Serv 4!2 ‘is {N Ind Pub Serv 456% pfd... P R Mallory
Progress Laundry com ........
- Sides |giving,” he added, “the lesson | grouks Asked! : mp : 3 ie nes. 1 worry was the! Which, if learned, would end the american ‘Loan 5% ...... o | their wives and children in two u e€ rea orry § | d op FAmerican States ig | room company houses with private lorists’ Telegraph Delivery As- bitter quarrels that’ have ever iiierican states pfd ardens. They buy their rice and ation. It was hard at work. spilled man’s common blood in Ayrshire Colleries com ...... 16% 8 . sciation. It was . LS Ayres 412% pfd ex eex 100 os wheat at sub-market rates from ‘elegrams were flitting from city fruitless waste, the lesson that +gelt RR & Stk Yds com ..[. 33 | the S1 plantation agements: y city, And florists had little man must return to God!” Bobbs-Merkill om © oi en] Em AO ee y ) er ———————r cBobbs. Merrill pid 4% n al he) ae 50 Shions, Oi hel : entral Soya Nanak i ocal leaders of Nehru's Congress C p : ea i { SOME HELD ‘BACK a few November Employment circle “Theater "com ® "..0. 4, 1] Party do their bargaining for ‘owers so they could fill their Shrinks in Indiana CaEiacnS ag Fel pe viene 84 30 | them. clegraph orders. But if they) A November survey of personsiCon ceria var 8 coven 90 a The tiny pay raise, which came 'ldn’t have the flowers ordered, employed in non-farm jobs in In-| Oummins Eng com ........... 14, 3 | at the expense of the tea com hey had to call the person 10 giana showed a decrease below|:Deita Elec com ............. 15 16%] panies, has helped Nehru's canvhom they were sent and try 10 previous years for the first time) Sauitable Securities com ree Bo er i Sates to win Some SUDDURY awa nake a substitute. this year, the state employment] fauituble Securities vid ...... + ‘ {from ommunist candidate Ratan One man, 89, and living alone goour y ted tod | Family Finance 5% ofd .95 109 La Brahaman, a seasoned camih ; security division reported today. |pamby, Cece ow TG. i ho already holds a seat) old a florist,” 1 don't want any| The division said 1,277,000 per- Hamilton Mig Co com ow paigner wi oa on y : owers. But the florist had the ong were non-agricultural work-| lgift-Jones cy o pe . oi in the state legislature. rder. He had to do something. erg ag of Nov, 15. That was down Hook Drug Co com Bn oa | By advocating better pay con-| fe sent them anyway, and let the § “por cent from. -October and dnd Ase Toe 32 pra CoE | {ditions %or the police, the Com-| ender worry about their wel- gjioht|y less than a year ago. |1ibd Gas’ & Water, com ..... 2% 2H | munists have split their loyalties ome. > The decrease was attributed in ind Telephone 4 Siar Go. vs | and played them off neatly ANOTHER Ch ntowER part to canning plant layoffs, inapls Pow & Lt com x 3615 against their Indian officers. Al HE { MER said, : *Indpls Pow & Lt pf vy HE 95 Two years ago the Communist ‘Keep the flowers and send me alcoholic beverage employment ingianavolis Rativavs com ... 4 hia) Party here was under tutelage of " : | volis Bi cane 7/4 he monev.” drop in the lull following the J Gianapolis Water 0 pf .... 88 103 Indian Communists from Cal- , i sales tax boost, saw mill work ‘Indianapolis Water 5% pf ...105'a 108V3 | ) And a clerk in one of the big- {Jefferson National Life com.. 10'a 12 cutta. Now a successful transfer - flow ; X : cut by the weather, and retooling Kingan & Co com ........... 3% 4% jest flower shops in town sighed and labor disputes in machinery Kinean & Co pfd. =... 2 of authority to grass roots "nd said: bs es | employment ER rr a RR 1 TR + Gurkha leadership has been made. “There's nothing like a flower id Saw | Marmon-Herrington com .... 3, 8 Situation “Unripe’ hop the day before Christmas| INDIANAPOLIS ‘CLEARING HOUSE | Nutt Homes com daa 40 As a test move to penetrate r Easter either, for that matter.” pebits ©" : great $32,409.00 | atl Homes ptd.. 105 the settlement life of the great
tea plantations, the Communists ran off two strikes recently among the milkmen, who hike to town with milkcans on their backs. But the situation is still held “unripe” for a strike by tea labor, partly because four key Communists are in jail. y The candidates of the Gurkha League tell their voters that the Himalayas ought all to be
Gear Switzer-Cummings pfd So-Ind G&E com .e S80 Ind G&E 48% pfd .. Stokely-Van Camp .com Stokely-Van Camp pfd . | Tanner & Co 5'%% pid.. | Terre Jaute Majleabls .e . Ac vs \ | United Telephone 5% pid 01 | “Union Tite ..........vnnnve *Ex-dividend.
BONDS ‘ |gathered into a new state, “Gurk- | Allen & Steen 8s i 0 en histan,” independent internally | American Securiy Be 8055100 91 lll! but part of India. ; 5 “a .e ves ’ —— i —————
| American Loan Fo v y Lian
SAAN Y CLOUDY AND CLOVOY ARIAS
Brink Alarm False
BOSTON, Mass., Dec. 24 (UP —
| Ch of Com Bld
I~ Columbia Club 3-58 62 2 i 4 | Eauitanle Becuriites 38.80 ... 0. + |Ten policemen sped to the north
s Paint & Color 5s 84... ‘end headquarters of Brink's Inc,
NEW FRIENDS—Little Raphaela Fasano, from Newark, N. J, | had a glorious vacation when she Went tp Hollywood to meet her :...| idol, singer Mario Lanza. The lass, who is suffering from Hodgos | kins disease, was treated to the journey and also met actress ss | Lana Turner on the set where Lana's making “The Merry Widow.”
sounded at the scene of the $1,219.{000 robbery’ nearly -two years ago. This time, however, a short circuit caused the alarm.
story of his interview with Gen. funds and literature come from|
EL a ge : : = Ca nr iw oe ol en ieee THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES - —— remy ‘Reds Relay Yule Greetings From Gen. Dean ‘Reds Relay Yule Greetings From Gen. Dean +4 et ro a ; ms 4 - co ma WH ibm, ; ) Br United Press Cis 2 Ts i BR wt °- | poo hl Se : - - PANMUNJOM, Korea, Dec. 24—Maj. Gen. William F.| : a | - 1 : | hie x : a , Dean, top-ranking American prisoner 6f the Communists, i 0 a 1/4 Sine SS : oa today sent word-of-mouth “Christmas greetings and a i : ¢ | py a * peaceful New Year” plus a letter to his wife at Berkeley, Cal. {sf => 8 : ; Communist - truce negotiators *
- day. at ROYSTER & ASKIN M 2310 WwW
" invited. Friends
ANNOUNCEMENTS 1 Death Notices :
BLANCHARD, Goldena. CROOKE, Orval F. HALL, Mabel O. - o REUTER. Mary F.
(IN
ABEL—Edward W., age B81 years. 's. Catherine nd William E. Abel. Brother of Albpft “and Herman Abel. grandfather
of Harvey Zering, passed away Mon-
, + Washington 8t. Floral Park, Friends may call at mortuary after 4 p.m. Tuesday.
BENJAMIN—Joel, Chargin Falls, O., .
husband of Dorothy Pray Benjamin and brother-in-law of Mr, Enos D. Pray, passed away Sunday. Grave-
side services 11 a. m, Thursday at
Crown Hill Cemetery. Friends may ANNER AN
call at D BUCHANA MORTUARY after 4 p. m, Wednesday. s . BILTZ—Willlam J., 78, of 2063 8. Meridian, father of rnest, of Greensburg; Helen and Margaret.
Mrs. Lawrence Schnieder, Mrs. Crnest Allen, Mrs. Joseph Richardson. Mrs, Bernard Lauck. Mrs, Carson Collier, all of city: brother of Charles, of. Lafayette; Raymond, of T! sa Bauer, of Jackson, fe; vived by grandchildren, grand lid Funeral from LAUCK FUNERAL HOME. Meridian,
Church, 9 Cemetery. Members of Holy Name Jocety will meet for prayer Tuesday, Pp. m.
BLANCHARD —Goldena, 4837 Winthrop Ave., age 71, mother of Chestex L., Herman K,, Lester R., John W. Predrick L. and David G. Blanchard, Mrs. Mary Kinnett, Mrs. Margaret Laurimore. Mrs. Ina Mae Greenwood and Mrs. Dorothy Adamson, sister of Mrs. Grace De Noon, passed away Sunday a. m. Funeral Wednesday, 10:30 a. m., from SHIRLEY BROS. CENTRAL CHAPEL. 946-N. Illinois St. Calling after 2 p.m. Monday. BOLTEFF—Van, age 56, passed away General Hospital. Services Thursday, 10a. m. STEVENS CHAPEL OF THE FLOWERS, 3136 W. 16th. Friends “may call after 10 a. m. Wednesday. CHERRY — Rebeccg,~ 1260 - Standard Ave, beloved other of Maggie Johnson, Bowling Green, Ky. Ellen
allie Wade, Louise Frank Miller, Chestnut, La., John Miller, Talco, Texas, 53 grandchildren, passed away Sat. Services Wed... 2 2 m. at BEAN SOM MORTUARY, 1321 W. Ray St. Burial Floral Park Cemetery, Friends may call at mortuary.
CROOKE—Orval F.. 3937 Boulevard Place, age 66, beloved husband of Louise Stewart Crooke and father of Mrs. Sarah Graham, brother of Ralph Crooke of Indianapolis, passed away Saturday in Connersville, Inds Services Wednesday, hg m., from SHIRLEY BROS. CENTRAL CHAPEL, 946 N. Illinois St. Burial Maplewood Cemetery, Anderson. Ind. Friends may call at the residence, 3937 Boulevard Place, from noon Monday to § a. m. Wednesday, and at the chapel from 11a m tol p m :
GASPER—Gladys M., mother of William J. Gasper, Mrs. Ralph Dant and Mrs. John Mackell; daughter of Mrs. Pauline Blake; sister of Mrs, Ruth Evard and George Blake, died Saturday. Funeral ytanesday, 8:30 am, at the KIRBY MORTUARY, Meridian at 19th St, 9 a. m. SS, Peter and Paul Cathedral. Interment Calvary Cemetery, Friends may call at the mortuary. HALL—Mabel, O,, sister of John E. and Harold S. Hall, passed away Sunday in Seymour. Funeral Wednesday, 3 3 m., SHIRLEY BROTHERS, 946 N. lllinois. Calling after 10 a. m. Tuesday.
KERBOX—Susan, age 82, mother of R. F. Kerbox, Oscar E., TS. Jessie Painter, Mrs. Laura Rifner, sister of Robert and Samuel Owens, passed away Monday morning, servces aa rsday 10:30 a. m. CONKLE FUNERAL HOME, 1934 W. Michigan. Friends invited. Burial Crown Hill Friends may call at the home after p. m, Tuesday. LINEGAR—John T., age 82. passed away at his residence, 5368 E. Washington. Beloved husband of Elizabeth gar. Funeral from MOORE & IRVINGTON MORTUARY, 5342 E. Washington, Wednesday, 8:45 a. m. Our Lady of Lourdes Church, 9 a. m. Burial Crown Hill Cemetery. Funeral and burial private. PLEASE OMIT FLOW, . Friends may send flowers . to Riley Hospital in name of Mr. John Linegar. ®
ipton: Mrs,
_ FLOWER-MAKING materials,
oF 2a
MONDAY, DEC. 24, 1951 _
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INDIANAPOLIS TIMES 214 W. MARYLAND 8 Funeral Directors JORDAN FUNERAL HOME
Prompt Ambulance Service
Hours Dally Helen G. Jordan IM-4304 2428 E. 10th IM-4308
ROBERT W. STIRLING
1422 Praspect MA-8570 9 Special Notices SEWING MACHINES
EARN a new electric sewing machine by séwing (in your spare time at home. Call AT-2585.
i0 Lost’ & Found
WILL finder of Navy blue purse;
Hook's Drug Store, Illinois and Market, Priday evening, call IR5010. Reward.
10a Pets Lost & Found
COCKER, 1-yr.-old black with redish brown paws and face. Vicinity East 10th and Beville, Liberal Reward. CA-8868.
11 Personals
. WANTED-Round-trip ride from 52d
and Keystone to 13th Dr. for 1 IM-3438. GENTLEMAN going to Plorida about Dec. 27. Take 1 or 2 ref. MA-9821,
POWER LAWN MOWERS
WINTER SERVICE—SAVE 33%:% Factory sharpened and recondie tioned. Pick up and deliver. Stare brand Corp. IM-3438.
and Sherman man. Working hours. 8-5.
Dr. Fred M. Hickman, Dentist
is now .ocated on entire. 6th floor Marion Bldg, W Ohio. corner Meridian near Post Office Formerly of 301 Roosevelt Bide Li-7022. POODLE CUT PERMANENT New. different. smart: barg. $298. Includes cut. No appt. needed. ROYAL BEAUTY—OPEN NITES 401 Roosevelt Bldg. PL-6090
MANTOOTH DETECTIVE AGENCY COMPLETE IN E=rSAoN SERVICES OF ALL KIN: DAY OR NIGHT. PL-8831, H1.1543. IF YOU want to drink. .hat's your business. If ‘you want to stop drinking. that's our business. Contact Alcoholics Anonymous. AT-3852. wood fiber, crepe paper. leaves, centers, wire, cut petals. PL-7529. NOW YOU CAN foam clean two §x12 rugs for less than 49c per rug with Cond Foam. Vonnegut's.
OSTERMEYER—Harry C., 1012 E, Kessler Blvd., husband of Edith, father” of Miss Janet, brother of Miss Lottie and Alvin C. Ostermevyer, assed away Monday morning. Servces FLANNER & BUCHANAN MORTUARY, ursday, 1 p. m. Friends may call at the mortuary after Wednesday noon.
REIMER—Martin T., 69 years, 304 N. Dearborn, father of Mrs, La Verne Fonseth, brother of Sophia Maguire, Mrs. Emma Litz and Mrs. Lillian Cox, passed away Monday. Friends may call at the JORDAN FUNERAL HOME, 2428 E. 10th, after 7 p. m. Monday. Funeral Wednesday, Dec, 26, 10:30 a. m. Friends invited. Burial Crown Hill
REUTER—Mary F., 49 N. Sheridan age 48. beloved wife of Emil C. mother of Mrs. Rosemary Westfield, New Jersey. and Charles Robert Reuter: sister of Mr. Albert Slagle, Shelbyville, Ind., passed away Sunday p. m, Services Wednesday. 9:30 a. m., SH Y BROS. IRVING HILL CHAPEL, 5377 E. Washington St.; 10 a. m.. Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church, Callers at Irving Hill after 5 p. m. Monday.
RICHARDSON — Geneva Catherine, age 5 years, foster daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert F. Flynn. sister of Linda, James and Jerry Richardson, assed away Sunday. Funsral ednesday, Dec. 26th, 2 p. m.. at the GEORGE W. USHER MORTUARY, 2313 W. Washington St, Friends invited. . Burial Floral Park Cemetery. Friends may call at mortuary after 4 p. m. Tuesday. s— BYAN-—Miss Getrude, 3360 N. Meridian, cousin of Clarence W. Sweet, passed away Friday. at FLANNER & BUCHANAN MORTUARY. Wednesday, 2 p. m. Friends nvited. 2
SVELICH Pete J. age 72. of 3717
S. Walcott, beloved husband of Ella, passed away Sunday, Services Wednesday, 10:30 a. m
os da & SONS FUNERAL HOME, 1424 Troy Ave, Beech Grove. Burial Round Hill Cemetery.
_TIPMORE—Nora. Mae, agé 47, 35 B.
19 s ERAL
4
Belleview Pl, wife of Charlie N, Tipmore. mother of Delores Wallace. Mrs. Velma Housefield and Chares - Wid Rared 307 Sunde Seg - Wednesday. 10:30 a. m. FUNERAL HOME, 4925 W. 16th Bt.
Friends invited. Burial Floral Park. Friends may call at funeral home,
after 7 p. m. Monday.
WEBER—Erthel, of R.R. 1, Box 276,
Zionsville, Ind., passed away Saturday. evening, age 56, wife of Philip D. Weber, mother of Carolynn Sue Weber, sister of Mrs. Erla Klugh and Kenneth Matson. Services Wednesday, 8:30 a. m, at HARRY W, MOORE PEACF CHAPEL, 32050 FE. Michigan. St.; St. Prancis DeSales Church, 9 a. m. Burial Beech Grove Cemetery, Muncie, Ind.
3 Card ot Thanks
McCAMMACK—WIith rincere appreclation we wish to convey our thanks to our kind friends, neighbors and relatives for their thought ful personal services, warm sympathy & for the lovely floral tributes & spiritual bouquets received at the passing of our beloved mother & grandmother. VICTORIA M. McCAMMACK, We are especially grateful & thank Rev. Claude Eaton’ of Brownsburg Methodist Church & Rev. Elmer Sampley, Fleming Garden Christian Church, for their consoling words: the organist, the Conkle Funeral Home for their wonderful service, & tll who assisted in any way. CHILDREN & GRANDCHILDREN.
4 In Memoriam
%
In loving memory of BOBBY JOE KIRK, our son and brother. Born Dec. 1. 1946, passed away ! Dee. 24, 1049, MOTHER. DADDY and STEVIE.
~Bobby Joe. In loving memory our little ns, 4 : aa war an Buch? ;
tma,
ey time hee And helps us oa goron But time so far has only proved How much we miss you yet. God gave us stfength to face it And courage to r the blow what it meant to lose you No-one will ever know.
a m! ¥ “MAM-MA" & GRANDADDY - KIRK.
8 Funeral Directors
AT. 2388
IT's ALL OVER NOW. waxing linoleum that is. Use Glaxo plastic type coating. Block Notions.
REVOKED DRIVER'S LIC. For SR-22's payment plan. CALL COLBROOK, FR-3338,
12 Business Service
: BASEMENTS 5 BASEMENT digging under houses. wr laying and cement work. [M——re BRICRWORE BRICK—STONE—CEMENT _FIREPLACES—CHIMNEYS
BUILT: AND REPAIRED Rooms added—Buildings built and
remodeled—Basements waterproofed, °
All kinds of masonry and cement work. Immed. service guar. 25 yrs.
At.su1 STONE, BLOCK, BRICK WORK FREE ESTIMATES, MA-1820
PRL LL tl URL A PLUMBING, carpentry, painting, ete. Free estimate. Prompt service.
CA-1584. \ CARPENTERS
PAINTING and General Carpenter Work. Kemfoning and paper hanging. PL-4808. REMODELING and repairing, and ney work. Insured workmen. CY-
CARPENTRY. new : red. Ed Gerringer. BLS 108 Tar =
- CONTRACTING ASSOCIATED MAINTENANCE & BUILDERS Heating & New Construction 2301 GUILFORD TA-2079 ' FERGUSON cui 8, me om, 1
u gravel, Losoes on sent, snd ale W. Ray. CRUSHED ROCK TRACTOR grading, Sulidosine cina> 8 oh Tavel. crushed rock, top DRIVEWAYS IVEW
DR| AYE, a hal pale SXCAVAUNR and R BR sine areas. Hartman
Tros., — ELECTRICAL Signal Electric Co., Inc.
Industrial, commercial, residential wiring and motor 1epair, 24-hr. service. Dave’ PL-9672, nights TA-4820,
APPLIANCE REPA » DELIVER. BL-6000. FIRE)
Lic oT R A Cl REA 3
EXCAVATING
= os JFXCAVATION Excavating, lidosthe. Rurtman Bros. BR-8682.
trenching. Eves, WA-
EXCAVATING
Crane work, bulldofing, erushed stones. BR-1621, 8B. L. Sxcavating Co.
I TATE TREE FETE
1701 EB. TA-2434
* * kk
SELECT YOUR HOME FROM THE ADS IN REAL ESTATE PAGES
eral Ho 1 w W, Fall Blvd. —TA-. BERT S$. GADD 1047 Chuichinign ps MA -6049 GRINSTEINER'S | ~ @ H. HERRMANN
T
961 N. Delaware St. Ligon
AT-6847
B . 3 me spe n
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MONDAY
Ya
£
12. Business |
Fencing—| All types for
materials ‘or
BR~8421
i HARDWOD Laid. Old flo Personal attenti BR-8525. 5
FUR Al repai hipgs or Bund - OIL STOVE R ™ GUT | roof repair. E. ea — HA Att Baan PHIL
CH PR-3871.
WILL HAUL
buy junk. Job Willle Myers. MOVING and h - thing; ® 24-hr.” Gary, AT-7026 o GENERAL HAUI ture. bag { Covered t! 8, . GENERAL H! Clean vards, asl sa PA PAINTING. Kem ing. wall wash fay PAINTING, WALLS WAS] teed. free estimi TA-BMC. PAPER CLEA ey PAPER °‘HANGI latest s2mples ©_R_Shepherd. PAPERHANC Steamin 1 Condiff TA-604: PAPERHANC PATCH Work guarantee: PAPERHANGINC 31 and up.
PAPER HAN Immediate E INT PAINTING 25 Yrs. exp! 7 CHIMNEYS. pi new or old. F man. IR-87171. PLASTERING a1 _ done: cement _ TIDY PATC Walton Bros
PLASTERING, p ing, arch-way
= PL PLUMBING—WI PAIRING. CA-
oe gu RO ROOFING—GL New an WE DO OU FREE ESTIM
RI-2928—W
mm K&W SEP’ Dry wells. sep! sludge pits, fir toilets. sewer lir
and repaired. F est. FR-6936.
Septic Tan
Toliets. cessp pits. cleaned. rej modern equip. C
REN 20 Hotels
KIRK SAFE —
HQ
357 E. WASH 100 Clean, DRO A
Special V We Coter to BE SAFE ANI FAIRGROUNDS DAILY AND AI-1763.
22
OLLEGE AT 3 roundings; _ cf Innerspring. Lag DELAWARE, 23 beds, south, fr hot water, stok vate entrance. N. DELAWARE, eled, carpeted 1, rood bus
|
ROOMS. HI-0%! NEW JERSEY, } well furnished TA-5103. i NEW JERSEY, 3
entrance. En NEW JERSEY
NEW JERSEY. 2 front, constan able. WI-2560. TALBOT 2451 N Auto. heat—w 0 ii LARGE DOUBI Twin beds. Pr terrace. HU-5488 RR
23 East
bedroom: priv ployed. IR-1863. Cte RR
24 South
OLIVE, 1838—W bath: private gentleman,
25 West
bath, priv, er 0089.
28 Rooms W
GOOD HOME fo meals, excell. LONG'S relaxis baths, 3 fo nen and wome
TT Matthews Chronics, dial censed. CA-9139, (Ch CHILD CARE .. Week. Reasona CARE for childr _ cated south. G EAS8T—Good car or week; refe:
29 Housekee
COLLEGE, 1524 - quiet, FLETCHER, 866: oil . heat, adults. No drin NEW JERSEY 85 Furnished, uti
beds. Private child while mot! L-1085.
front rms., Pri ‘ployed adults.
1-ROOM efTicien adult. ~893
31 Wanted
COUPLE who h mi Yon TO Ear boys.” Can you DESPERATE: C dri need im will buy on down, FR-1055.
1 Coup .. evicted; des “rms. Best landlol care, -9140. DESPERATE mq - room with bi baby, CA-8488. CO , Infar + unfurnished, { 1. IM-4924.
32 Moving é RENT | New 1
Move Your: He utnlan UDI
you
