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The Emporia Gazette from Emporia, Kansas • Page 1

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Emporia, Kansas
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1
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THE EMPORIA DAILY GAZETTE Emporla, Kansas, Tuesday, January 24, Today's Markets WHEAT SHOWS A CAW Fim, 1-S to 3-4 Corn Cp 1-t i-t. Jan. 34 Sharply hichtf Quotwioofi on the EnfUsln pound sterling and enlarged corn exron business did much to strengthen Chicago whwa today. iMt estimates were that 500.000 bushels United States com had been bought for shipment Argentine corn was reported considerably higher in Europe than corn from this country. Wheat closed firm, 1-8 to 3-4 above finish, corn to 3-5 up.

unchanged, and provisions unchanged to a rise of cents. Wheat: -47 7-8 to May 47 to 48c: Sept, S-4C. Corn: May 27 to 37 l-8c; July 38 l-3c; Sept 36 5-8c. Oats: May 17 l-4c; July rwtrad- Rye: May 34 7-Scj July 34 l-4er Btrley. MJay no trading; July rid trading.

Lard: Jan. $3.95: May $4. Bellies: Jn. $3.80: May Kaniat city. Jan.

34 Wheat 36 can: up to No. 2 dark hard 4Mie: No. 1 Ko. 2 hard No. 3 Ko.

3 red nominal 47Sc: No. 1 nominal 43647V.C. OOM: May 41Sc: July Sept. Corn li cart: up to No. 2 nominal 3sa23Vic; No.

3 22' No. No, 3 nominal 2 rsvxeo nominal 23 9 ic; No. 3 July 3 to ic: 2 wnitc sii.n»! nmnsc: No. 3 ir.hizt nominal Kadr 44c. Ryf 34c.

Barley nominal Xar.sfia Cltj-, Jan 24 hay, re- crlpti too llffilt. PKOBUCE. City, Jan. 24 K. Suttrr.

creamer; 1 22c; butterfat parWcg butter 9c. Poultry, hens 20c. Chicho, 24 Poultry, live, 1 car. J5 tlrns: hens Leghorn colored springs 12c: Rock iprinn turkeys ouclca Be; Iweghorn chick- inn S'ic; broilers i3S15c. BUtVet 9,079.

fipecial5. 93 extras. 83. extra flrsu. 81-89, 16ft standards.

90 centrallzed cariota. Efge 8,317, about extrn firsts ineh traded firsts 13c: current re- lie. WALL STREET. Vort. 24 impwd the early tradlnt today but trading quiet anc pains were Irac- tlo.ial.

American Tolitcco Allied Chemical. Colunbian McKeesport Tin U. Smeltlnii and Union Uacltlc lirrnei neoriy a point. Telephone, tp point the'. held much cf nae.

Corn Productf, and Scuthrrn Pacific higher. Voc'i-'onh was avaln reactlonarv, but Bcrotr ir.a National Dairy stendlcd. Call weney renewed at one per cent. LIVESTOCK. City.

Jan. it 7.000: ilo direct: uneven, wealc to IDc loner than Vlordaj'f. Ufhter n-elihts on ratal: top 13.50 on choice 170 10 200 pounds; rood and choice '140 to 350 iwunci u.eO&3.20; packing 370 to 5(0 pounds 11.11502.40; pltr. good and 70 to ISO pounds t2.SOtft2.15. Cattle 7.000; calves fed Meen lue iteady to most bids lower: other killing elcsief and stocleers and little chanted: Rood light TH tteeri IJ.75: rleeri.

rood and choice 5SO to 1.600 pounds I3.76&8.75; common snd medium JSO pouris up 75; good and choice SSO to pounds cows, good ia.35nl2.75: vealers. medium to choice stoclcrr and Htttr food and choice Sheep 7.000: lan-bs active. 2J to JSc Mrhtr: odd lots iheep steady: top cnln- rtdo fed lambs to shippers lambs, aood choice (X) BO down cood choice 1X1 80 to pounds li. ewes, good and choice 90 to ISO il.SOflS.M. Quotations on and OHicifo.

Jan. 24 28.000. In- n.000 iteady to 5e lower than yesterday: pictlr.fr sows firm: good choice 140 210 pounds IS.3SFi.4S: extreme S3.SO: 220 to 200 pounds 13.OS 300 130 pounds 13 pigs pacuna: Cattle 1.500: demand continues broaden for all cattle: tuers and yearllnts ruling firm; with medium weights and wclghtv bulloclti about big welpht steen. 1 400 not reliably wanted- most and yearllngt tarty top sorr." held hicher: best hellers slaughter cattle and good al-d choice 5SO to 1300 pounds e.ommor nnd ir.Mi'.'jm 150 to 1.300 oounds s' SOil 4.75: hellers, iood and cholte SSO to pounds i4 cows, good J3.50CÍ325: vfirllnsi excluded sood beef 750 3 60: good and choice medium itocker r.r.'"- sietrr. tosd and choice 5C5 to 1.0JO pounds SO.

Sheep very little iff fat to outsldern barfly to is.50: inine heid hiaher: blc litio -i -TO He lorer. sheep iambi. pounds down. jcoi rhoice ti.si'if.eo: pa to SB anil 08 to pounds, good and choice to to poundi, good tnd choice St 1.701. Merr.i oper.lng about steady, "n- wek or.

butcher stock. 7,000. openinE around lOc Sheep 5.000, prospecti higher. EMPORIA MARKETS No. Corn We bu 20c bu 14c bu Turkeys Broilert Heavy htnt Light hens Btlgl CoclU lOc Ib 4 to Se Ib ic Ib DC Ib 4C Ib Jc Ib AND nnd 17c Ib No.

1 lOc doz Bggs, 2 7o doz CRBAM AND (Wholeiale) Cheese factory milk, per Ib. butterfat 22o Ib Butterfat 15c Ib Sweet cream 16c Ib points. American Telephone, American Can ar.d U. S. SUcl closed with minor fractional ctianrea, while, pupont, North American, consolidated were major tetentlr weak, dairy steadied.

STOCKS. By B. C. Cnriitopher Co. 'a private Curb Kxcbmnge Cities Service Common 1 Electric Bond Share rcrd ci England Oil of Per.na Deere ic Co stardard oil of Indiana Mcuiitain Producers Chlrngn £xehangfl Midwest Common, Swift a -Oo 'j Swift International Cord Corporation wire: Close.

1 H'4 6 GOVERNMENT BONOS. -New York, Jan. 24 is the on U. 8. government bonds today: Liberty 3 5, Liberty Is: Liberty 4th Treasury S110.23.

Treasury 4S. $106.28. Tre-xurv 3 3 '43 June 5102.13. TreUMiry 35. '51-55 MONET RATES.

New York. Jan. 24 moutj, stendr: 1 per cent all day: time 60-120 d.iys Va; 5-8 months per prime commercial paper IVi: unchanged. WOMAN ATTEIVITTS SUICIDE. Wife of Colorado Prisoner Nervous Breakdown.

Denver. Jan. 24 Denver Post says today that Mrs. Margaret Smecman, wife of Glehn Srfieeman. Cleveland, Ohio, business man and Colorado convict who has asked for a pardon, attempted to end her life last Thursday by taking an over dose of sleeping powder and turning.on the gas.

The Post suys Mrs. Smeeman, who was staying at the home of friends here while her husband sought his pardon from Gov. Edwin C. Johnson, suffered a nervous breakdown Monday after a hearing in which the governor took Smeeman's application under consideration. It developed today that Smce- man.

who was first reported as hmv- bpen returned to the Canon city prison after his hearing Monday, had remained in His attorney. T. Ei haftf a conference with Prison Warden Roy Best and R. J. Worm of the board of yesterday but was unsuccesslul.

lie said. In obtaining statements from them recommending Snipomnn's pardon. Smeeman escaped from a prison road fjanp in Colorado in 1918 and went. io Cleveland wlrere, with his brollipv. George Bronson.

who also served prison sentence here, built up a prosperous music publishing biiMnoss. Hr in Cleveland two weeks ago came to Denver lo seek a pardon. Smeeman was con- vlcted here on an automobile theft charge and was sentenced to two years and one In 1917. At the governor's call. Warden Best and Wann left Canon City for Denver to attend a conference or.

the Smeeman pardon this afternoon. TEACHERS' WAGES CUT. Chicase-, Jan. 24 thousands of school teachers, whose pay days In recent months have been few and far between had a 15 per cent salary cut to think about tcdnv. The decision to reduce the 14.000 instructors and 4.000 other employes of the school city was reached Monday by the hoard of education in an attempt to save $5.600.000 under th? 1931 payroll appropriations of and thereby balance the 1933 budget.

CHALLENGES BEER BILL. Washington. Jan. 24 stitutionality of the Colller-Blaine beer bill was challenged again today by Mrs. Henry W.

Peabody. general chairman of the Woman's National Ccmmittoe for Law Enforcement in a letter to members of the senate Judiciary committee. Approval of 3.05 per cent aJcoho! by volume ns "non inloxlcatlnK" would leave "dry" unprotected from shipments of such beer. Mrs. Peabody said.

SUSPENDS DEBT PAYMENTS. WALL 5T1U-ET. Jan. 34 The stock i mind afiolr today. prices about In qule: Irad- The ras narrowly Irrefular.

ma'ed or.ly half a i.or. sharet. t.le silver market, coln- in the- m'aaurct tc rr.et«.l. i.elptd thr n.f.s'. a hut ijrer par; its ealn.

The toreiir. eitnanre: distracted atten- The pound icak the pla- rrom the Thieh an es.rly merieir. Tobaccc. l'r point 1 In -ctaticr. of of ref.i;pr a U.

ro-r a lorr.f coppers firm i althr.ufli their run-, "rr Katior.a' a couple of Buenos Aires, Jan. 24 (j? 1 chamber of deputies of Buenos Aires province today approved an indefln- nite suspension of provincial foreign debt payments. The senate already i has the measure, which is sponsored by the provincial government. The debts of the province abroad arc the largest of any Argentine government unit except those of the nation. They approximate 140 million riouai-N.

of which one- 1 half is owed the United states. CUSTOM HATIH1NG B. C. CHRISTOPHER ft CO. jot Citixetii Kat'i Banic Eldf.

iftc Crnporla mull tO AIL ooaitt of i Hatched for Health F.verv Rrefdrr Bloodtntril for B. W. i Method by K. S. A.

EcioV: your ordfr csrit dfllvery The Jones Hatchery VI Eact Sixth Emporia NEWS ABOUT TOWN Collection of Newi rmncraphc and The Buy American movement is Ping-pong sets are sold by Hardware Co. Reaction is setting in with the Kansas senate. 2 tor the price one for a iew days. Arnold's. W.

W. Finney has returned from i trip to Chicago. Make offer on fixtures at Rick's tore, Quit Business Sale. Make your money earn VH to 10 guaranteed. Robinson.

red Buy gym suits and shoes at Haynes Hardware Co and get Br'er Fox Kiddie club Several bits domestic gossip are keeping the tongues wagging these days. Don Haynes: "The hardware COK- veiitlon in Kansas City this year wasn't bigger and better than ever." Haynes Hardware has regulation gym suit and shoes for boys. John Dunsworth, coal merchant, threatens to write a letter to the editor unless something la done to change the weather. A dispatch from Fort Rile? "says the war department is filling the 2nd Cavalry to full strength by enlisting several hundred men. Lou Dunlevy says he has more than 100 spark plugs wiclK new sand blast machine installed a week ago.

Teachers College students were lined up in front of the west doors to the gymnasium before 8 o'clock this morning, waiting ior enrollment t-o begin. Although the bluebirds have just arrived In Emporia. several bird lovers report the cardinals have seen round town all winter. Heard, on Commercial: "I've inflated ir.y currency." "How can you do that?" "I'm paying my creditors 50 cents on the dollar instead of 100 cents on the dollar." your old window shades can be replaced by having Newman's mount washable shade cloth on your old rollers. The girls of the sorority crowd and school crowd jammed the Sania Fe platform last night to see Doug Fairbanks, Jr.

The young movie star was kept busy autographing books and dispensing smiles. Miss Grace Flowers, buyer for the ready-to-wear department of the James A. Poole Dry Goods store, left Monday for the New York nmrketi purchase spring and summer merchandise. She was accompanied by Mils Ada Dewey, buyer for the Newman store in Arkansas City. George T.

Qvenwr SUte Oklahoma City. 34 George T. Guernsey, independence banker, won his fijht for from state prosecution when the United circuit court of today Held a state court cannot assume Jurisdiction over a person under probation of the United States district court. The opinion, written by Judge Robert B. WM concurred in by Judge Orle L.

Phlllipt. Judge John H. filed a dli- sentlng opinion. "The first rule which the two systems of court from actual conflict," said Judfe Lewis' opinion, "is that the court which first takes the subject matter of the litigation into its control must be permitted to exhaust its remedy before another court shall attempt to take it." Guernsey pleaded guilty in federal district court to a charge of violating the national banking laws. He was sentenced to three and one due to his age, years, and the fact that he and his wife had turned over all of their -property to satisfy his bank's creditors, he was placed on probation.

Later; the courlty attorney filed charges of embeatlement against Suit Involves Lease Contract. Terms of a contract which expires March 1, 1834, are involved in a civil filed in district court this week Hy Charles W. Burnap against Mr, and Mrs. George Wells and A. Rockefeller.

Mr. and Mrs. Wells formerly operated the Perfect cafe In Burnap's building; at 720 Commercial. They closed the cafe December 24. Under the terms of a 5- year lease, Mr.

and Mrs. Wells were pay Burnap $125 a month as rent. The contract granted to Burnap a icn on all property used in the building as security for payment of When the cafe closed rent had not beeij paid for November and December 1932. The Burnap petition further alleges that on December 22 Mr. and Mrs.

Wells mortgaged to A. W. Rockefeller, her father, the fixtures and equipment of the restaurant, for $1,000. Burnap asks that this mortgage be cancelled and that the contract and lease te adjudged a first and prior lien on the fixtures nnd equipment. He also asks for recovery of $2.000, which includes rent from November 1, to the expiration of the lease.

March 1, 1934J The case will be heard in the February term district court. TREASURE HOUSE AT FAIR Lay nans to Protect World Fair Attraction. Chicago, Jan. 34 to Chicago's world fair next June will find a treasure house which with its contents will be worth 130,000,000. The house will cost about $15,000,000 and its treasures that much more, officials estimated today.

In secret conferences they are making elaborate plans to protect their lakeside fairyland and its store of art and commercial wonders from shoplifters and other nimble-fingered folk. The nation's oldest detective agency, supplemented by city police and at times by the secret service, will guard the grounds and the millions of visitors expected to attend. Day and night watches will be set on the "Mona Lisa," the world's most valuable painting, if Ambassador Paul Caudel of France is successful in his attempt to bring it to the fair. It was stolen once from the Louvre in Paris where it now hangs. Whistler's portrait of his mother will receive scarcely less attention.

Delicate scientific mechanisms of all sorts will be guarded from thieves. But pickpockets and swindlers who follow the nation's crowds will find their oldest organized enemy ready for them. Uninvited and undesirable visitors the banker.and he was held for will be shown the gate by a nation- trial in the Kansas state courts. i detective agency (Plnkerton's). Guernsey sought releaso through habeas proceedings and Judge Lewis' decision'releases him.

In his dissenting opinion Judge Cotteral said that under the doctrine of law expounded in the majority opinion "a probation for one offense in -federal court Is a complete grant of Immunity in all other prosecutions." Death Penalty Decreed For Hinderinf Farm Work ia Rusia Moscow, Jan. 24 for a merciless fight against "saboteirs" in the north Caucasian agricultural region, scene of the recent mass exile of peasantry, Joseph V. Stalin M. Molotoff today decreed the death penalty to persons actively hindering preparatory work in spring planting. The communist chieftain and President Molotoff, titular head of the soviet union, warned the rural party and government officials that they would be dealt with as abettors If they show such elements any leniency.

Demanding stricter "labor discipline." the decree also prescribed exile or expulsion from collective farms of lazy and apathetic peasants. It empowered the village soviets to compel mobilization of the peasantry. If necessary, to clew- cultivated areas of weeds preceding the sowing. (An unusual increase in the extent of state and collective farms was shown last year and the principal problem before the soviet union this year is to find relief lor a serious food shortage. Stalin recently called for increased activity against the kulaks, or independent farmers).

Wowitan 4-H Clab Meets. The Wowitan 4-H club, an organization of 4-H club leaders, met at Miller Monday evening and voted to sponsor the county 4-H club musical appreciation and health contests this year. The club last year sponsored the music appreciation work. In the county health contest, the club will provide trips for the winners in the senior division, and gold medals to the junior winners. In musical appreciation prizes will be awarded to the high club and trips provided for the boy and girl winners.

Biby An Born With Cloted Eiophipu Hasbroucfc Heights, N. Jan. 24 Helen Marie Taylor, the baby born a closed esophagus, died at 1:25 a. m. today at Hasbrouck Heights hospital.

The baby previously had been given only "one chance in a thousand" to survive. After she was born last Friday, nurses noted that whenever she was given nourishment, she suffered se- vero choking spells and her face turned blue. Dr. William J. Greenfield of Hackensack found that the esophagus or gullet, the tube through whic'- food is carried to the stomach, was closed at the third rib.

Five physicians performed an emergency operation Monday, inserting a tube through the abdomen to permit artificial feeding. Previously the child had been nourished by an injection of sugar and water. Not being able to take food normally, the child had an excess of saliva, and a physician said it had been necessary to use a suction pump to keep the mouth dry. The Infant, who was otherwise normal, was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Herbert Taylor of Ridgefield Park. Brown May Be Charred. Dave Brown, colored, who has been held in the city jail since Sunday night, probably will be prosecuted on a charge of Clay, chief of police said today. Brown was picked up by officers when he was suspected of running away in a car owned by William Crawford, colored. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY EMPORIA COMMUNITY Friday.

January 27; special cattle sale. 600 to 800 head, consisting heiler and steer calves, yearling steers and odd cattle; horses, mules and hogs; sale will begin at 11 o'clock; for particulars, 632. FOB RENT Modem five-room bungalow, oak floors, bullt-lns. electric refrigere.tion, garden plot: phone 416. FOR acres, improved.

clcsc in. on all-weather road: T. B. Godsey. acres pasture, 10 miles east; phone 416.

pi -30 TWO ROOMS furnished or uniur- nl5hcd; inquire 502 Neosho. SALE Some good slv.ep; Fred Hlnshaw. house; Ninth, price $12; Dr. Humphry. FORTY-ACRE farm for anything worth the money; George Gunkle.

FOR table. circulator heater, other household furniture: 883 West Sixth. 73-pl-34 PHONE best yard and garden manure FOVE FUBON8 AM KAfKH. Two DM Benlt of Hammer Attack. Luftln, Jan.

34 persons pete beaten two probably fatally, by neighbor man who called at their farm houee north of Luf- kln and attacked them with a Hammer. Mrs. and her daughter, Sallie, 13, were taken to a where slight hope was held for their recovery. Their husband and father, F. L.

McCall, was struck on the head, and Mrs. N. J. Looney, Mrs. McCali's mother, suffered broken lingers and head injuries.

The man called at the home on the pretense he had toothache. Later he asked ior a loan of $2.50 to move to another isrrn. Mrs. McCall was attacked with the hammer when her purse disclosed 15. The money was taken and McCall then was hit.

The assailant next entered an adjoining room where SalHe McCall and Mrs. Looney were sleeping and continued the attack, then fled. Posses and members of the sheriff's department began- a search for him. Mrs. McCall managed to crawl to a neighbor's home several hundred yards away and give the alarm.

She and her daughter suffered crushed skulls. McCall, a invalid, was not considered in a ous condition. Mrs. Looney WM expected to recover. The firm policed nearly every large fair held in this country since it was formed in 1850.

Last summer its men protected, visitors to the Olympic games In Los Angeles and sold tickets. "The eye." as criminals call the agency, will not, sel! tickets at the fair gates bur. 200 uniformed men will patro! regular beats about the grounds. Others, recruited from many cities, in plain clothes will mingle with the crowds In search of thieves, mi-n, and other crowd-followers. APPROVES FINANCIAL BILL.

House Committee Would Extend Glaai' SttapOl MeMcre. BANDIT SUSPECTS HELD. Two Persons Wanted for Kansas Bobbery Are Arrested. Okmulgee. Jan.

24 John Tudor and Hazel Winu, wanted by Chautauqua county, Kansas, officers in connection with the Peru bank robbery were held here todav for Kansas Prank Green, of Sedan, was informed of their arrest and was expected today. The two were taken Into custody late Monday by Max Skelton, a former constable. BO they entered a lawyer's office. Officers at Bartlssville said Miss Wind was arrested there several months ago as a suspect in a previous robbary of the same bank but later released. Coffeyville.

Jan. 24 The robbery of the Peru State bank, for which John Tudor and HarefcWirid were sought, occurred In November, 1931. Total loot was about SBOO. John Aldrich was convicted ot participation in the holdup and was sentenced to a term in the state penitentiary. Enroute to Lansing.

failed in an attempt to after stabbing Undersheriff W. F. Pile In the neck. The attack took place at Chanute. Washington, Jan.

34 house banking committee today unanimously approved legislation extending for another year provisions of the Glass-Steagall act permitting reserve banks to use government bonds security for their currency. The senate has already approved, and the house is expected to do so soon. The committee action followed testimony Monday in behalf of the bii! by Secretary Mills, who said it had "arrested" deflation and contended a failure to continue It would result in "contraction." Representative man in futile opposition to the bill today urged two to require reserve banks to pay the government an interest charge when cotes are issued on federal securities; another that the Goldsborough price stabilization bill be added as an amendment. SANTA FE OFFICIAL DIES. Arkansas City, Jan.

24 James E. McMahon, 67, division superintendent of the Santa Fe, died here last night alter a. long sickness. He had been an employe of the railroad since 1895. He was dispatcher on the New Mexico division from 1895 to 1900; chief dispatcher and trainmaster of the New Mexico division from 1900 to 1910: superintendent of the Pecos division from 1910 to 1914: superintendent of the Colorado division from 1114 to 1918: superintendent of the Oklahoma division since ID IB.

He was with the Union Pacific from until cm- ployed by the Santa Fe. He is survived by his widow and three daughters. NIGHT CLUB OWNER SLAIN. Boston. Jan.

24 Charles "King" Solomon. Boston night club proprietor who was recently indicted by a federal grand jury in New York in connection with a $14,000.000 rum imugsHng conspiracy, was brought Into the city hospital early lit-rlly wounded. A taxi driver found him lying on the sidewalk outside a night club in which Solomon had a part interest. There were bullet wounds In his abdomen, head and neck. "The dirty rat cot me," was Solomon's only statement to police before he died.

TAX COLLECTIONS DROP. Washington. Jan. 24 The government collected $210.995.057 in taxes last month, a drcp of $84.504.169 from the of December, The internal revenue bureau's report showed that inccme tax col- Itctions were onlv SH1.033.327 in contrast to $256.522,095 for the same months a ytar ago. Changs your volume fid ertlse.

XTi; AX it 2:30. 7:00, WOMAN SNEEZES RAPtDLT. Princeton, Jan. 24 Sneezing at the rate of between 18 and 25 times per minute, according to physicians, Mrs. Lonnle Dlckson, 48, passed the 31-hour mark at noon today and her sneezing had shown no signs abatement.

Her phy- lany. Dr. W. T. Morse and Dr.

W. Cash, said that unless Mrs. I Dlckson is given some relief the ailment will prove fatal in a short time. Sedatives administered thus far have given little relief. BASEBALL FOR TWO BITS.

San Francisco, Jan. 24 bit baseball is coming back to the Pacific coast league. In long discussion here Monday, directors of the class AA circuit climaxed their annual spring meeting by voting to establish minimum prices of 25 cents for the bleachers and cents the grandstands. The new ruling does not arbitrarily fix the ticket prices except as to the minimums. NOMMA SHCARCft CtAMK OABU You cannot kill a dog with a bone.

And you cannot hurt anyone by showing them the bargains listed in the Classified Section. SEIZE THE OPPORTUNITIES OFFERED BEFORE THEY GO BY I A NEW LOAF OF BREAD Made with Sweet Jersey Milk! A of Milk in Every Loaf Meets U. S. Government Standard Your Grocer for Milk Bread We have been experimenting -with pure milk bread for several weeks and have now reached perfection in U. S.

Government standard tor pure, swwt milk bread. AXE BAKERY 405 Commercial Phone 315 DEATHS AND FUNERALS Alien Goodell Dies. Allen Ooodell, 81, a retired farmer, died at 3:30 o'clock this morning at the home of his son, Joseph Oood- ell, who lives north of Saffordville. Allen Goodell was born May II, 1851, at Piaett, 111. He was married March 11, 1873, to Christina Brooks, in Illinois.

Mr. and Mrs. Goodell moved to Missouri shortly after their marriage and later to Saffordville, 40 years ago. Mrs. Goodell died September 13, 1931.

Mr. Goodell is survived by two sons, Joseph Goodell, Saffordville, and George Goodell, Strong City, and by five daughters, Mrs. Nellie Richardson, Emporla; Mrs. Dolly Mrs. Phoebe Crouch, Portland, and Mrs.

Anna Bond and Mrs. Lambert, Saffordville. Two brothers also survive, George Goodell, who lives in Illinois, and William Godell, who lives in Arkansas. Funeral arrangements have not been completed. "Go-go Birds" Go Bloole." The go-go birds refuse to go.

Only darkness emanates from the traffic signals at Sixth and Seventh on Commercial, but traffic Is unaffected and it flows through hesitatingly, but without accidents, so far. The birds have refused to go since Monday morning. Morris Dunsworth, the city's ornithologist prodded their gizzards with a screw driver Monday, but it threw no light on the subject. This afternoon he was busy smoothing their feathers and tickling their ribs, but they wouldn't go. "There's just 100 things could be wrong with'em," Mr.

Dunsworth said. "So far I have investigated uve 'era. By the process ot elimination we hope eventually to find the kind of bird seed thr? iike best." Pleads Guilty to Drunken Driving. Lee Ryan, Madison oil worker who was arrested early Sunday morning by Sheriff Joe T. Dailey, pleaded guilty to a charge of driving a car while under the Influence of in- toxica ting liquor before Judge R.

E. Evans in justice court late Monday afternoon. He was fined $100 and costs. Charges of intoxication and possession of intoxicating liquor were dismissed against him. Ryan was arrested after he had driven his car into the concrete abuttment of a culvert 12 miles southeast of Emporia on the Lockcrman road.

Ryan escaped serious injury, but his Chevrolet coupe was wrecked. Emporia Not in Phcnc Rate Fight. The Emporia city commission will not be represented at the mcetlnsr in Manhattan Wcdnerriny at which some Eort of state wide action may be planned to obtain lower telephone rates. It is expected thru will be proposed. The nicotine is inK rpontored by the Manhattin utilities commissioner 40 or more Kansas towns and cities are expected to be Button's phone 366.

of Victo VapoRub In Convenient Candy Form VICKS COUGH DROP "FAST LIFE" and STAGE SHOW WED. THURS. closer mm! the Frankenstein of the The New Fu Manchu, with new and greater thrills with brilliant Cast Wcodrnan Official Here Wednesday. W. W.

Gordon. Kanras a new naiionnl director of the Wcodman camp No. 515 Wednesday evening in the second floor hall of I the Odd Follows The meeting will bcpin at 8 o'clock. Many mcn.bcrs of lodges are expected to itttcnd and tnc Burlington camp will bo rcprc-ciitPtl STONK. KAHKN MORI.KV, by 25 or 30 men, inciuain.

a drill- BORIS KAELOFF team. CHARLES STAKR'iTT. MYRXA LOV. JKAN Hop 'n Lvrn Scattered of cholera ln i Lycn county wrre rrn'ri-d tc.iay by I Carl L. Howard.

n-rci't. Mr. Howard says is scmr evidence that the disease is being spread through the distribution of hogs i from public yards, ond he urtres fanners purchasing Horn yards to quarantine tht hops 30 days before permitting them to run with other hops. A (psmopoiiian Production Added Paradise Band Presents SMASH YOCR BAGGA'OF." Simple to Lose a Pound of Fat a Day on a Full Stomach INCHES OFF Neck Bust Stomach Do Just These Two Simple Things-Fat Melts Away Here is a quick and easy way to take off a pound a to seven pounds every never a hungry moment. A way any doctor will tell you Is safe and sure.

This Is what you do: Take a teaspoonful ordinary Jad Salts in glass of water half hour before breakfast every morning. This reduces instantly. Also cleanses your system of the matter and excess toxins that most fat people have, and banishes puffiness and bloat. Then do this about eating. FILL YOUR your of lean meats, vegetables like spinach, cauliflower, cibbage, tomatoes, and lots of salads.

Eat a lot. I Eat all you can hold. Don't gj hun- Ifry ft minute. Cut down on butter, sweets and bread. Eat any I fruit for desert.

That's all you do. Tat seems to melt away. The coarse lines of ov- erwelght give way to the refined ones of slenderness. You lose as much as a pound a day. You feel better than for years.

For in this treatment you achieve two important results. Tht Jad Salts clears your system of toxins. diet takes off fat with food that turns into energy Instead ot weight. If you're tired of being embarrassed by fat try this way. You'll be glad that you did.

You ran get Jad Salts, large or small size, at any drug store. Salts Is urged purely as a poison- banishing as a The change in food docs the work..

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About The Emporia Gazette Archive

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