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The Emporia Gazette from Emporia, Kansas • Page 2

Location:
Emporia, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE, EMPORIA GAZETTE THE GAZETTE -Rtltot Pi.r*r at titaotf OH? si to Oirottgli tht af fciibnvriplleii cflldon MS by citrrur to Emportv, is wau wen By B) Mtti, By MtU, Bj WprKi? WrpSiiy tlx 'zniWitTw. To to OUStnat of foOl rAnlfNS, tiaw tc fMlly el OlMIIt trtfl film VtJOH rrswrvft rtsiu lo or TDitUi ihti It cu to contract GeMtte not lot dlwontlanei! ol ITCH Prcii MI aft Jcvr publics I Son ol tvt II otherwise AU TWENTY YEARS AGO PILES OF THE EWPOTUA Hv.T^T!ltns ic inlf-nrtrnt, Mrr. Krii Si Bift the bssls thf Octohrr 10IT. T-TrmiTitary in nnniiul training And will clvfn in pf ihf- Ijvfin f.chftoJs tills ihi cnimty CBitnivl. united lctlni will he Ufed instruction, Mlis AUtira Lowr.ls, who ploved Jn A.

ofiire the find Mtw Mnbfllt rccraUjf Vhr Mutual Bullulnff Mid associntJon. bavr rrrilvcd ftppolnt- rnfius to ortlrr wr.r deium- mfnt lu I). C. Hoth women Km por In nuslnnsr. CPlJtBu.

a raxton returnrct Inst niglU fc n'fpt'8 trip to York CKy and Chl- CfcfO. Dr. O. J. Ccrhrll, Dr.

and Frftnt wrnl io Kan City today 10 Mtrnd the mcctlnp thn Wc-dical Arstrrln'lnn ttit Southwest. Dr, j. E. w-pnl to Lftwroncs today to attend the ball came. Miis LoU pierson.

who leaches "In Par- Miss Marte who music Rt Kiowft, iper.t the weclc-end In Emporta with their partmls, Dr. and Mrs, PUrspn. A ptigpani fntltlfd "Clvlltzfttlon" will br sivrr. rridJiy niRhl nt the Creek by the combined forcea of the Rock Shawr Creek nnd Line ftcbools. The, committee ior the comfort of on- llst ed mm will mrct tomorrnw evening ic the room of the Y.

M. A. to pJans for ihn ioldlers' Chrisl- RHYMES OF THE TIMES Bj Frcscnllmcnls, I often think nbout the woo for which I waited nil In vnln; the signs and tokens let me know that many evils were In train. Thcro presentiments at grief that tntvde ma walk the floor by night; and such rorebodmss Uin thief that stole all and delight. To Mends who asked me, "Wh5' gronns, why do you haunt the wailing I'd say, "I feel it in my bones that ruin stares mo in the face.

Whnt form calamity may take. I do not know. I cannot guess, but mental comfort Is a fake, there's nothing solid but distress. Prosperity just now is mine, I have a shirt and handsome tie, I have a roast when I would dine and eight varieties of pie. 3 have a large, imposing hnt to wear on Sundays to the kirk, but jinxes soon come to bat, and hoodoos will get in their work.

I can't explain just how I know that nil gcotl luck will soon be o'er, but all the standard brands of woo are due to camp around my door." I've felt like this a hundred times, I've felt ray blood turn cold with fear, I seemed to hear the sexton's chimes announce the end of all things dear. And now I can't recall when any dream of woe oame true; I've lived until I'm old and gray, and still my luck's as good as new. 1937. Georce Uatthen GARDEN CLUBS ELECT Hut-chinson, Oct. 14 UP) The Associated Garden Clubs of Kansas, in convention here, re-elected Mrs.

Prank Manhattan, president and awarded the 1938 meeting to Salina. A Monthly Payments Low SI.00 Per S100 No "Bed MUTUAL Building Sc. Loan Homer J. Ball Pott No. 5 AMERICAN LEGION 2d nnd 4th Legion dub 604 Funeral Serricc G.

KoberU, Glenn A. Bine, Otean A. Mercban' PfaotM 76 POT nr Oommcrtx! tl- going out for money to jilMees, to 'members who cut thilr quotas In the. original campaign, and, to mwo money from fcvsry possible in order to the budget for the car- rent j-csr's Morp power to Ihtsi) men. It should not be necessary ior them to grt out second time In fan efiort to the Ohambw's activities.

But It is neowsftry, and, this time fy shoulrt get the money. The Chsmbcr of Commerce tlu- only organization the business -ion havo equipped to sponsor and promote activities for the good oi the town. But it can not be active unrt iielp tha town ilnanred. Without finances it becomes worthless enterprise. Just now l.hr is JcopaTdlKine the Ohrlslmns decoration program otisly.

11. nlready IIBS climlnnKx! other worthy projects included In the buriset, The budget makers at the bcslnntng retained only those prosee (A which seemed minimum requlremnnts for o. town of this size, The budget was within reason. Yet the campaign fell shoi its goal. It Is not too Inte to rectlty this rfslinquency and mnko a new slnrt.

Make it a live Chnmber of Commerce. get your money back from ft live T. THE SUPRKME TEST. Kansas' new law banning hitchhiking, part of the state's IRW enforcement program, soon will got a rea! test. Declaring that 53 nor cent of the transient hlloh-hikeri are wnntcd by officers or have crinv- na! records, law makers and en- orccment officinls described the highways with their ride-bummers as one of the breeding ground.

1 of crime. No person shall attempt to or beg a ride from anyone unless two ore acquainted, the law states. The worked wou during past summer, it is claimed, and for fewer rlde-tluimbers the roads. In past years hundreds of college few wanted to get a free ride home for the week-end, Thanksgiving or Christmas vocation, have hit the highways and mooched transportation from anyone who would pick them up. Many college men -have bragged that they attended all of the out-of-town football games without spending ft cent for passage.

Now schools have started again and tho football season Is here. Will students give up hitch-hiking? Will the officers make exceptions in their case It looks as If the anti-hitchhiking law is going to get a. real C. O. THE FACTS OF DEATH.

Ghosts from Flanders fields rise rynd speak through the lips of med- icft! corps of 'the laite World war in'" new book, "What Every Voung Man Should Know. About War" by Harold "Roland Shapiro. The catechism of military life Includes questions which may be nsked by eager to enter military service or by the radical advocate of peace. The answers are packed with quotations from ex-service doctors to show the realities of war from the cantonment to the front line thereafter. After fixing the cost of Use World war at five times the total value of Frunce and Belgium combined, the what military ambitious uMd to deceive exMnlnlng at of enlistment, The tnental of ioWler In actual combat are wounded ire made by hysterical deafness.

The eoidfer detailed to bury dead may develop anaemia, or the loss of and qualify him for a peacetime job In the "War la quiet," according to the question-answer "when can you how many shells go aver a sector In a dty." Life in the inseparable from such parasitic vermin nnd fleas. The creature known as a -coolie" Is merely a louse with military an ever-present enemy which may reduce the sol- disr's efficiency by 50 per cent. War by asphyxiation stands little chnnce of being effectively out- Non-combatants as well as may as well that mustard gM amelle and that dugouU and resixinilble for most gu according to the war Jurici to and feet in tlon to ttaue destroyed are moit painful war The war doctors also offer Unvarnished advice to the dying, in you are stabbed With a bayonet and tha enemy is unable to extract it, ack him to rive rifle a half- twist to the left. The on the battle line have as methods of malingering, or faJurig an aliment to from going Into action. These nrc vital the book, "What Every Young Man Should.Know About The closing chapter, "When ,1 Die," reveals the facts of a military death in- a ghastly block, decomposed moss," that accounts for a Gold Star mother.

paths of glory lead to what? Ask the doctors who served in any C7O Leaders, Like A PL, Bicker Among Themselves Settled Juriidictional Dispute Between DtAiniky, Hilltnan; Row in Auto Workers Stiil Stewing; Martin Mide "Reds" An Communist Opposition Clique Influential; Lewis Won't Intervene, Din Ponee AIM Anthon of "WMhiagtoe Committee for Industrial Organization, meeting In Atlantic City this week, has one or two dents its armor which Indicate that nil Is not harmonious beneath the surface, In piling up Its vast membership of 4,000,000 members and outmanr euyering the A. F. ol L. In most of the mass-production industries, the OIO htis fallen Into one of the chief mistakes which ripped open its rival bickering. Prima Donnas of the OIO, like the craft union heads of the A.

P. of now are pulling each other's hair backslage In the dressing-rooms. Chief prima donna row has been between David Dubinsky, president of the International Lndle's Garment Workers, and Sidnes- Hlllman, president of the Almalgamated Clothing Another has been between Homer Martin, president of the United Automobile Workers, and some' of his cohorts. KNIT-GOODS DISPUTE The Dubinsky-Hillman dispute has been over who shall organize and control the workers of the knit- goods Industry. This may sound relatively unimportant, but for a time threatened to cause a serious break betwen these two pillars of the OIO.

During the depression, Dublnsky's Ladies' Garment Workers slumped badly. Membership dropped "to a new low. On the other hah'd' Sidney Hlllmnn's Amalgamated Cloth- Ing Workers weathered the storm, was even able to lend money to one or two factory owners. With the NRA, however, the garment workers got a new lease on life, reached a present membership of about 225,000. Hlllman's Amalgamated Clothing Workers meanwhile numbers about 200,000.

Dubinsky, intensely ambitious, was elected to the executive council of the A. P. of L. at San Francisco some years ago. When he returned, the Pennsylvania station In New York couldn't hold his followers.

LEWIS AS "SOLOMON" Rivalry between and Hillman, already-at a high peak, reached'- the breaking 'point when it came to. organizing the workers in the knit-goods Hillman claimed the Industry as a division of men's wear. Dubinsky claimed It as women's wear. Finally' they took their to John Lewis. He'decided tliat since Hillman was organizing the entire textile industry of 1,000,000 workers, it was only' fair, that the 75,000 in the knitigbods industry should go to Dubinsky.

Hillman, after' some delay arid demurring, finally agreed, and this little halr-pulilng contest Is" now settled. The with the United Automobile still is stewing. It will headaches oeforc it is'finished. AUTO FACTIONS Chief fly in the automobile ointment Homer 'Martin himself, an ex-Baptist preacher, with the ideals of but'aH its emotionalism as Martin is a great haranguer, can 'whip a crowd into a frenzy. He of the union y'because of that, partly because he was a compromise between two rival factions.

Those'" factions one "of them Influence Jay Lovestone, former head'of the Communist party who was- expelled by. Moscow some, among other things, he advocated a policy of infiltration or "boring from withiri" other vradicaj: and liberal groups in 'the Although.Moscow-hasiinow come around almost identically that policy, is the bitter foe of communism- an'd; has organ- the Communist; party opposition. His I present complaint against communism it is not radical enough 1 Homer under the domination of Lovestone, simultaneously other UAW leaders with being and dangerous radicals. OLD-TIMERS Truth Is that these are £omo of the old-timers among the automobile workers, the Ruether brothers, Robert Travis and George Edwards, men who did the early staged; the llret successful at Flint, Martin, a newcomer in the Industry, served an automobile worker only two or three months. Now he transferring these original organizers to out-ol-the-way posts, It was friends of.these men.

Irate at their treatment who marched on Mrirtln's hotel In Detroit the other day. Real within the UAW is Wyndhnm Mortimer, a former Mine Worker. He acts as chief negotiator when It comes to contracts, is now negotiating with General; Motorsj; expects to conclude successfully within the next few weeks. Mnrtin, has difficulty following a consecutive train of is a poor negotiator. John L.

Lewis, sometimes accused of aspiring to be American czar of labor, has been urged by OlOors to Iwuseclean Workers. He replies: "These growing-pains. These officers were elected by the men themselves, and you'ye got to let the people in the individual un- ons work for themselves. United Auto Workers has jumped from almost nothing to nearly COO.OOO dues-paying members 'n one year. MERRY-GO-ROUND Rep.

Luther Johnson of" Texas Is telling friends, that one thing that Emporla, OctoUar 14, 198T, him- his recent 'tour 4 countries was the of hitchhikers. Owen will go en the air October 18. The occasion will not only his first radio address Joining'the Supreme court, but speech'he will have made during a court talk briefly at dinner hU nl nB a OOO'drive by the university of Pennsylvania, his alma SEC Commissioner a participant a pool an office pool on the outcome of-the World scries, Mathews won the pot total of $5. CTnu a PIRATES SIGN TRAYNOR A 1-year RI ZZO of Columbus Goes to Bucs. Pittsburgh, Oct.

14 J. "Pie" Traynor, an old Buccaneer himself, will guide Uie Pirate brig again next year. Pres. WUJlam E. Benswariger of the steel'city's base- ban club, announced today that Traynor had signed a contract to manage the National league entry in 1938.

The Pirates, in the midst' of a reconstruction program, last night bought from the Cardinals Outfielder Johnny Rizzo, sparkplug in pennant victory of the Columbus team of the American association. Four other top-flight minor league players have been acquired recently, Rizzo, hailed as a "second Joe Medwick," batted .358 for Columbus. "Hello, Parkway Pet Shqp? How tbmt money-back fbh died." Overseas travelers to Europe numbered 230,000 from January -1 to August 15 of this year as 'compared with 214,000 for corresponding period, of 1936. Three per cent of the adult population of the have graduated from college and another 4 per cent have attended some college. For Belter ClothcsZ THE COAT WITH 9 LIVES KUPPENHEIMER i Valgora Topcoats Fall weather has at least 9.

moods' ranging- from chilly, rainy days to mild, sunny 9 requirements to satisfy. You need Valgora, the topcoat with 9 features. It is: 1. weather proof, 2. wefc-resistant, "3.

wrinkle-proof, 4. soft, supple, 5. lustrous, 6. light in weight, 7. handsome, 81 distinctive and.

9. moderately priced. It unites alpaca, wool. An investment in 40 good appear- anee BRUCKNER'S SHOP FOR MEN CRISCO 3 Ib. can with purchase of 10o box of Pepper Pancake Flour Mornins Light 3 lb bai 14c A Home-Owned Store City-Wide Delivery 325 Com'l Phone 261 Silver Drip SORGHUM Miracle Whip Salad Drewinf or Sandwich Spread it.

Jar Sugar Milk Honey Ib 17c Spice Cookies I5c Sunshine Krispy 2 18C Ib. Free Six-O 1 Coffee DemorT- 1 stration -We Invite You i Our Friendly Star. Our Cookies and Crackers Come from Loose-Wiles Biscuit Largest in the World make your selection from lite Largest Fruit and Vegetable Department. Lettuce, large crisp heads 2 for 13c Grapes, fancy Tokays 2 Ibs. lie Onions, No.

1 yellow 3 Ibs. lOc Celery, fancy Pascal 10c Grapes, No. 1, Concord 25c Potatoes, sweet 10 Ibs. 25c Apples, cooking 8 and 10 Ibs. 23c Cabbage, large solid heads Ib.

2c Apples, York-Imperial basket 63c Tomatoes, slicers 2 13c Grapefruit, nice 5 for 25c Carrots or 2 bunches 9c Lemons, juicy 1 doz. 25c Oranges dozen 17c Bananas, golden ripe 6 ID 25c Mangoes 2 ID 13c Potatoes peck 21c See us before buying your Kraut, Cabbage THERE IS A DIFFERENCE 2 Post Toasties 1 Grape Nuts Flakes 22c Peaches, No. 10 4Sc Apricots, No. 10 45c Plums, No. 10 3Sc, Pumpkin, No.

10 29c Hominy Ne. -10, 29c Tomato Juice, No. 10 39c Special Attention to your Telephone Orden. Delivfriet at 7:30, 9:00, 10:30 a. m.j 2 and 4 p.

nt. Green Beans, fresh 2 Ibs. 13c Radishes 5. bunches lOc Apples, Ozark Kawfelt bask. $1.09 Corn Meal, fresh 5lb.

bag 17c Crackers, Fonda 2 Ib. box 15c Oats, rolled 1 5 Ib. bag 17c Flour, Old Oak 24 Ib. bag 79c Tomato Juice, Publix, No. 2 2 for I5c Catsup, Jo-Andy, 14 oz.

J- 2 for 19c Pork Beuii; V. tall, Grape Juice, pure gal. jug 99c Sptnacb, No. 2 stand 2 for 15c Pumpkin, Jacks'n, No 2V 2 Kidney Beans, Otee, No. Sardines, Sunset, tall for 25c Apricots, wbole, No.

2 17c Corn, standard, No. 2 3 for 25c YUM-M-M! DOUGHNUTS CIDER Fresh from Bakery Dz. Gal. Briny Your Container. Cereal Deals 2 Kellogg's Cornflakes 1 Kellogg Pep 1 Kellogg Krumbles 1 Shopping Bag I Bine Bowl ALL FOR 33c Emporiums Most Popular Meat Market There's a Very Good Reatan! SIX-0 COFFEE I Ib.

3 Ib. 54c emu brick ice SPARE RIBS lOc PICKLES 3 lOc FRESH SIDE PORK 25c CALF HEARTS lb I5c BEEF BOIL lb I2c BEEF RO ST ArBion Ib 15-16- BEEF STEAK An i lb: l6c PORK CHOPS lb 30c PORK STEAK SAUSAGE 2Oc PORK.

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About The Emporia Gazette Archive

Pages Available:
209,387
Years Available:
1890-1977