Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

St. Louis Post-Dispatch from St. Louis, Missouri • Page 35

Location:
St. Louis, Missouri
Issue Date:
Page:
35
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1952 ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH 30 COMEDY AT EMPRESS Gets Horse Show Trophy THOMAS L. STOKES As Gov. Stevenson Reshapes His Party MARQUIS CHILDS Iran and Cartels, Problem for Eisenhower ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH ADVERTISING ARTISTS PRESENTED UNEVENLY OPEN Mil SHOW WASHINGTON.

WASHINGTON. HORTLY before the political campaign took ever the national stage a little drama entitled "Can We Save Iran?" had been in the headlines. If anyone wonders what happened to Iran. OV. ADLAI STEVENSON, in taking up his job of reshaping, reorganizing and revivifying his defeated party, will find 'The Happy Time Is Frank, Humorous, Essentially in Good Taste.

Display Suggests Influence of Easel Painters on Today's Illustrators. his chief obstacle in its Southern conservative wing, as did Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry S. Truman even when the party was in power and exultantly so. it is still there.

But the margin by which that unhappy country is Intact and still open to Westerners has greatly narrowed. It Is another of those more or less desperate problem children waiting By HOWARD DERRICKSON The influence of fine art on on the White House doorstep for the new boss. This is because that wing of the party, which has predominant voice in its affairs in Congress where political maneuvers are contemporary illustration and ad' While practically everybody was distracted by the loud political noises, a most important By MYLES STANDISH "The Happy Time," a comedy by Samuel Taylor about a warmhearted French-Canadian family which had a long run on Broadway but floundered in Chicago so that the road company never reached here, received its first St. Louis professional perform vertising design is apparent in I this month's City Art Museum dis-j play by the St. Louis Illustrators and Designers.

On view are about had the bruising clashes with the South's conservative leaders of either of the other two. To bring as many of the South's leaders into line as possible, he would be expected to keep pressure upon them through the rank and file of their constituency, including farmers and labor, who still are enamored of the pro- in which the practical choices are extremely limited. Consider this matter of cartels in another light "Certain scarce yet vital materials must be obtained for the national smritv from outside th meeting was held in the Presi- v. i dent's office. Present were top-level securi I ty advisers, both grams and policies for which the 100 pictures by 2o exhibitors.

Jim Cummins, winner of the jury award of a subscription to a professional magazine published in Switzerland, conveys unusual emotional impact in his prizewinner, a picture of a woman military and ci ance at the Empress Playhouse last night. The Ansell resident company thus performed a worthy dramatized between elections, is seeking once again to realize its long-nurtured ambition to seize control of" the party and dictate and dominate its policy. It was frustrated in that aim during the Roosevelt Truman New Deal Fair jk tiovernor Decame so eloquent a I cnnl-pcman in hie vilian. They had been called to ouiies. xjuc ox uicm is uiiuium.

Suppose it was essential to enter into a cartel arrangement in order to obtain uranium. "Would the Department of Justice then similarly exercise a veto, and in that event what would happen to our whole service to local theater-goers by acquainting them with a hit that consider a proposed plan for He, rather than their conservative leaders, speaks for these people in the south, and they are numerous. otherwise they would have to wait playing phonograph records. Sensations of loneliness and slow passage of time are here im getting oil pro- LA to see in the movie version. Whether they performed as great duction started Stevenson again in Iran.

It service to the play itself is parted through compositional devices, chiefly repetition of shapes receding in the distance, in a was stopped last dubious. February which Mossadegh. atomic program?" This was taken as a rhetorical question. At any rate, no answer was forthcoming and the meeting broke up with no agreement on what to do about Iran. It is a play full of volatile and means, of course.

manner reminiscent or tne museum's "Red Staircase," by Ben quaint characters, calling for a that the Iranian Government has Shahn. As if to make the allu well-rounded ensemble perform' ance for full flavor. This it obvi sion stronger, even the colors are had no revenue coming in to pay civil servants, police and the army. The shaky government of weepy Premier Mossadegh is liv Case Before Grand Jury- alike. As a commercial artist, how- ously did not achieve, not to the detriment of the company.

Type casting, impossible to perfect in ever, Cummins has by no means ing on the fat accumulated from tried to duplicate the subtle ef the past while Mossadegh keeps a stock company, is called for. The company strove valiantly, Midwest G.O.P. Influence. The Southern wing of the party has predominant influence in Congress, as we are all well aware, because the one-party system still prevalent in the South so far as Congress is concerned, combined with the seniority rule in Congress, pushes them to key posts from which they gain invaluable experience. It is so, too, in the Republican party as regards the Middle West, which likewise wields the most powerful influence in that party in Congress.

It still does, as President elect Eisenhower is coming to recognize. 0 Midwest conservative Republicans shaped that party's record Deal years though it gave both of those gentlemen plenty of trouble in Congress. For their purposes, the Southern conservatives have certain advantages on paper, other than their influence in Congress. For example, when you look at a map of the election, you can see easily that the space shaded "Democratic" is confined entirely to Dixie and a couple of border states, and not to all of Dixie. So only the Southerners, figuratively, emerge with ary trophies visible on the cold contours of a map.

Southerners Did Not Work. fects of Shahn but has expressed on insisting that the British can never return to operate the there were a couple of creditable performances, and it succeeded in a message that is necessarily more obvious because aimed at a Anglo-Iranian Oil Co. Here is an Issue that cuts so many ways both at home and abroad. One obvious reason why the Justice Department could not sanction such an agreement for Iran is that at the very moment the Department is pressing antitrust charges against leading American oil companies for entering into cartel agreements in their making most of the comedy en Associated Press Wirephcto. larger audience.

Cummins is joyable. There was, however, an Against Anti-Trust Laws. great admirer of Shahn's work. ne said. unevenness about it prevented it from acquiring any sort of.

polish. All the "tres biens," Similarly. Rov Ramev's airhmsh The plan put forward at the WTiite House meeting was for a MRS. ANDREW J. SHINKLE (left).

9929 Litzsinger road. Ladue, with Seveven, her 5-year-old gelding, receiving from MRS. J. MACY WILLETS the hunter stake trophy won yesterday at the National Horse Show in New York. The horse also won the thoroughbred challenge.

Regal Aire, 7-year-old gelding owned by James Endicott of St. Louis county, won the fine harness stake. illustration for a coDDer tubin? dealing in the Middle East. advertisement, with its geometri half-dozen of the big companies both British and American to and "le bon Dieus, and Gallic shrugs that could be tossed in still don't change essential types These charges being presented cal exactitude of dimension and perspective, suggests the mathe before a federal grand jury in Washington result from a lengthy all during the lean years out of on a week's rehearsal. matically precise landscapes of the experimental artist Charl.

siuay maae in the department. power. That record had so little appeal that the party finally had A simitar study by economists CH LOSLAVI sneeier. feheeler influence, com- MET' OPERA TO SKIP of the Federal Trade Commission mon in advertising art todav. Is to pick a candidate who was not identified either with the party or the record in order to get back brought to mind by several other of cartel agreements in the international oil field was kept for offer to pool their services and work for the Iranian Government.

Soundings had already been taken in Tehran and the reaction had been favorable. It appeared that such a pooling arrangement would ease Mossadegh's mind of the overriding fear of domination by one company or one country. Top Defense Department offi entries. The comedy has its points. A 12-year-old boy has his first grappling with the mysteries of sex against a background of a family which might seem raffish to the prudish.

His father is a tolerant, easy-going violin player in a vaudeville house. His Scottish mother is a sturdy representative into power. many months under a ton-secret ST. LOUIS ON ITS TOUR OE PAUL PATHOLOGIST Konert S. Robison of the Washington University School of But, on the other hand, the Southern conservative wing can claim little, if any, credit for that.

A few of its leaders, in fact, worked openly for Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, and many of the rest, including some prominent members of Congress, sat on their hands or sulked in their tents or contented themselves with only token blessings for the ticket A few Southern leaders took o'f their coats and worked hard for the Democratic cause. Speaker label. End of an Era? rine Arts faculty contributes Similarly, any student of politics, and Gov.

Stevenson is one, knows that the Democratic party never can win on the program of series of dramatic, action-packed uioie story illustrations, distin. Served on Board Investigating of the Puritan proprieties, but finds it a losing battle with the Finally at White House orders guisned by their draftsmanship Southern conservatives. His problem, then, is to lfeep the party Symphony Society, Deems $70,000 Guarantee 'Too Much of a cials, both civilian and military, were optimistic about this proposal. Even the State Depart others around. Uncle Desmonde, ine pictures, Intended to stir Katyn Massacre; Wife 111 in Same Hospital.

it was reviewed by Secretary of State Dean Acheson, Secretary of from being identified with them. youngsters' imagination and a flashy traveling salesman, is a demon with the women. Grand- ueiense Kooert Lovett and Mu arouse their curiosity about liter G.O.P. Southern Coalition. tual Security Administrator ment was moderately hopeful.

Essential to Defense. pere is also a gay dog. Uncle ature, were designed for use in a Webster Publishing Co. school Dr. Edward L.

Miloslavich, di Louis drinks, but continuously. Aunt Felice is a shrew. And into Here he encounters the blunt fact of the Southern conservative textDOoK lor retarded readers Averell Harriman. They, in turn, called for an appraisal from Gen. Walter Bedell Smith, head of the Central Intelligence Agency.

rector of the DePaul Hospital de But present also was a spokes Commercial artists, thrmspi the household comes a pretty The Metropolitan Opera Company will omit St. Louis from its spring tour next year because the St. Louis Symphony Society refused to guarantee a return Hungarian maid, Mignonette, who man for the Department of Justice. The Justice Department, Democratic Republican coalition which has operated effectively against New Deal-Fair Deal social bmith is said to have reported partment of pathology, died of a heart ailment last night. He had been a patient In the hospital for sets Uncle Desmonde to whinny that the FTC study, if published.

ing and even disturbs the boy said the spokesman, could not approve the plan since it would be a clear violation of American several weeks. himself. But there is much native wouia cause harm to American relations in the Middle East approximately $70,000 for of Hiswife, the former Miss Katlv four performances, the post-uis- anti-trust laws, which prohibit rina Blashek, also is in the hos often easel painters on Sundays, do considerable experimental work of their own. as the new show illustrates. Its purpose is to indicate increasing potentialities of St.

Louis as a commercial art center because of the large number of artists of all kinds living here. There are droll and satiric cartoons, wire drawings, ingenious uses of photographs and drawings what would be in effect a cartel Some passages were deleted before the report was at last released. Much of the material had patch was told today. pital. She is recuperating after wisdom, tolerant understanding and love of truth in the family in spite of its eccentricities, and they are able to steer the boy properly on his course to manhood.

The agreement. For the time being at Francis Kocmson, iout aireciui an operation. least, this was accepted as a veto Dr. Miloslavich. 67 years old been publicized before and It caused little stir.

Department officials were re was born in California, but had luctant to accept such a verdict. play is frank and humorous, but essentially in good taste. The anti-trust laws, with their cf the House Sam Rayburn and Senator Lyndon Johrson got most national publicity because of the tnse national issue that their stnte of Texas became due to the bolt to the Republicans of Gov. Allan Shivers and Senator-elect Price Daniel. Others pitched in here and there throughout the South, but not too many or too vigorously.

Stevenson's Advantage. Gov. Stevenson owes very little to the conservative wing of his party in the South. His obligation rather is to the rank and file who stood stanchly by the Democratic ticket. However, he is expected to make his overtures to the conservative leaders where avenues are open because of their influence in Congress where the party must henceforth make its record.

For this task he is better spent a large part of his life for the Metropolitan, saia tne New York company had received excellent support in St. Louis and would like nothing better than to return, but was obligated to accept "the biggest receipts One of them expressed it this abroad. He studied at the Uni prohibition on cartels, are a peculiarly American phenomenon. way: versity of Vienna, and after teach To me, Ken McEwen as the and economic reforms. It is pre- sumed this coalition would continue in the Eisenhower Administration: but, as a matter of fact, such issues likely won't be raised as the President-elect is not expected to propose any new reforms of that nature.

If he did, he would find his own party involved in the fight 'on them, so the blame would cut across party lines. There will, however, be Democrats from outside the South, as well as some few from the South, including Gov. Stevenson's running mate, Senator John Spark-man of Alabama, who can keep such issues alive for the record, and with Gov. Stevenson's encouragement, publicly as well as aim paintings oz such products as airplanes, shoes, trains, cloth "What you say about the wrong The first great trust-buster wu ing pathology for several years at Marquette Universtii' in Mil ness of cartels may be true. But wolfish Uncle Desmonde and we can get.

Theodore Roosevelt, and the ef ing, trucks, soft drinks, automo- this is a very pressing situation waukee, went to Croatia and for Dnes ana tires. The Metropolitan, ne saia, nas arranged to appear for three days in Montreal and a week in Exhibitors, each showins his 15 years was a member of the work as an individual and not as University of Zagreb faculty. He Clyde Waddell as rambunctious grandpere best hit the mark. Leo Lucker as the drinking uncle and Robert E. Perry, the director, in his first acting role with the company as the Papa, were also satis fort to check industrial and financial bigness by law comes out of the era when the corporations were growing into giants.

We may be about to see the end once and for all of that era. Toronto, Canada, during tne pe returned to the United States in a representative of a firm, SIEGFRIED SCHULTZE RECITAL AT CONCORDIA SEMINAR 1947 to assume the post of path riod in late May wnen it migm have scheduled a St. Louis visit. He indicated the Canadian cities ologist at DePaul. Kobert Aldag, Pres Bagent, He was a member of an inter sieve Bioomer, Aline Cunningham, Jim Cunningham.

Neil Dun- mai arrentable guarantees. factory after one got used to them and they got deeper into their roles. Eva Gabor, the nominal national commission which went mgan, Robert Emmenegger, Art 1 ALL I "We can take in SlB.uuu a nigm on a eell-out here in New York," Pnhinsnn pxDlained. "It's foolish star1 of the evening, played the ruzsimmons, vvuiiam Kavanaugh, Otto Keisker, Don Langeneckert, maid, the role she had in the Broadway company. It is really privately.

And, as for foreign policy, the new President must rely on Democrats, which, in a time of crisis, will redound to their advantage. for us to travel if we cant get varrou Martin. Murray McKee Siegfried Schultze, German-born pianist, will appear in a free recital opening the lyceum series of Concordia Seminary Saturday at 8:15 p.m. in the seminary auditorium, 801 DeMun avenue, Clayton. Schultze will play an all-Chopin program.

He has given Chopin a guarantee of $20,000 or at a secondary part, calling for her equipped than was President Truman and than President Roosevelt eventually became in the later years of the New Deal. The new head of the Democratic party has persuasive, personal qualities, is a moderate in least a minumum oi a to be saucy, spirited and pretty, han, Van Newman, Chris Pearson, Roland Rodegast, John Souris, Jim Temple, Russ Viehman, Jim TT 1 which she managed easily. There So, all in all, Gov. Stevenson's task does not appear as dark as performance. Th.

Mptronolitan was guar an waae, weaver ana Alois was, however, a certain hardness about her performance which the map and the election statis Zink. abroad to investigate the massacre of thousands of Poles whose bodies weer found in Katyn forest. After performing a series of post-mortems Dr. Miloslavich, testifying before a House investigating committee, reported that the killings took place while the area was in Russian hands. The pathologist recently won prizes with a display showing how the natural color and texture of pathological specimens can be preserved.

Dr. Miloslavich lived at 5104 Northland avenue. The funeral will be Friday at 10 a.m. at teed $40,000 last May and realized more than $68,000 in four performances at Kiel Auditorium, political philosophy, and has not 'tics seemed to presage. recitals in several European wasn't in keeping with the char acter.

Jaccard's William Zalken. secretary of the I am afraid one of the serious cities and the Near East. He made his American debut in 1934 in Carnegie Hall, New York. Symphony Society, said. He saia he did not blame the opera for EL0.SE polk plays Truman Invited to Hawaii.

WASHINGTON. Nov. 12 (UP) President Truman today was invited' to speak at the groundbreaking for a memorial to an unknown sailor at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, next Dec. 7. The Disabled Tomorrow's Events weaknesses of the production lay in the key part of the boy, Bibi, played by Stanley Martin, a 12- going where it could get the most year-old.

Broadway actor. Chu money, but termed me request ed guarantee "too much of i eamble." "What Fluorida- ROGRAM Starting to LOSE HEARING? FREE -32-Page Book -Tells Why BEETHOVEN Open forum: tion Means to Blessed Sacrament Church, Kings-4 dren on the stage are too often unreal as written. Stanley did St. Louis We have to taKe in Dental Society-St. Louis Medical highway and Northland, with burial in Calvary Cemetery.

American Veterans, which is sponsoring the memorial, said Truman promised to send a representative if he could not attend himself. to $90,000 to come out." he said little to bring Bibi to life. That is not too much to his discredit. Societv, sponsors: St. Louis Med Both Robinson and ZalKen ex- nressed reEret that a financial ical Society, 3839 Lindell boule vard.

8 p.m. Coaching child actors in big roles, unless they are geniuses, probably understanding had eluded them Ui'i 1 Piarfst Gives Second Recital for Benefit of School Building Fund. Posthumous Award for Murray. LOS ANGELES, Nov. 12 (AP) The Human Rights Award of the National Association for the Meeting: League of Women requires a great deal of patient and both emphasized there were direction which there would be no hard feelings.

The opera of Don't hetilal ril far thit lnformili. full, illuatratrd 32-pan booklft prepared by Andrew E. Prepper, one Amerira'i foremost romuluoti to drifentd cimn. Whatever your hearing problem, this amaiim booklot will answer year question mar well provide a happier future as has dona for thoosands. Postpaid book mailed Sent in plain wrapper.

Writ THE ALIERT ALOE CO. Fashion And Valae For I i In fleorco fleorcovcrlna little time for in this instance. The play will run through Sua day evening. oar campltt stltctio. Advancement of Colored People, awarded to Philip Murray, will be presented posthumously next Tuesday.

The CIO president, who died Sunday of a heart attack, was to have been the cipal speaker at the meeting. ficial added he still had hopes something might be done. The Metropolitan's visit last spring was its sixth to St. Louis in seven years, and the first since Rudolf Bing became general manager. Kennard Carpet Co.

312 Ami BIdi. OMvt 8th. MAi 1900 Voters; discussion, "State Grace Methodist Church, 6199 Waterman boulevard; 10:30 a.m. Lecture: Gerald Heard, British author, speaker; "The Specialization of Meaning in the Modern Graham Memorial Chapel, Washington University, 8 p.m. Classes: Lip reading and auditory training; Central Institute NEW PROKOFIEFF SYMPHONY Hearing AM Dfitin An all-Beethoven program was presented by Pianist Eloise Polk last night as her second of three recitals for the benefit of the Community Music School building fund.

The 19-year-old per SOS LOCUST ST. PRAISED BY SHOSTAKOVICH Cfntrol 44SS Mi. li i Louit 1, Ma. 1 I I former distinguished herself in most respects as she offered the MOSCOW, Nov. 12 (AP) Stalin prize winner Dmitri Shostakovich today heaped lavish praise on the latest work of Serge til I 'A Vuvvui for the Deaf, 4550 West Papm street, 7 p.m.

Joint meeting: Instrument Society of America-Institute of Ra Prokofief his seventh symphony which recently had its premiere Major Polonaise, Bagatelles, Opus 33, and the Major (Wald-stein) and Minor (Appassionata) sonatas. She rewarded a friendly audience that occupied about two- dio Engineers, St. Louis section; Floyd M. Glass. Oak Ridge Na CLAYTON STEUBEN GLASS in Moscow's Hall of Columns.

tional Laboratories, speaker; top Writing in Soviet Art, Shostako ic, "Electronics in Nuclear Instru vich said the famed composer of mentation Engineers Club, 4J53 Lindell boulevard, 8 p.m. Meeting: Export Managers Club; Franz Pick, publisher of Pick's World Currency Report, Hrs car was collateral whew Vt paid fta Ml with ihe proceeds of a personal loan from speaker; topic, "The Future of the United Mates Dollar congress "Peter and the Wolf" had again shown he is a master of "unusually fresh harmonic language." Both Shostakovich and Proko-fieff have been in and out of the Soviet dog house. Shostakovich made a comeback last March by winning a 50,000 ruble ($12,500) Stalinist prize but only a second prize. No first prize was awarded, which was regarded as a slap at all top composers. thirds of the seats of Sheldon Memorial main floor with one encore.

The polonaise, though harshly punctuated in several places, was a brilliant demonstration of the pianist's mechanical accomplishments. Miss Polk, to -her credit, didn't inject too much pomposity Into this work. The Bagatelles, for the most part, were delightful, partly because the pianist seemed to enjoy playing them. There were times, however, when she seemed to be rushing some Hotel, 8 p.m. Film: "Islands of Paradise J.

W. Schmuck, Pan American Airways, narrator: St. Louis County Library, 6814 Natural Bridge road, Normandy, 8 p.m. Boatmen's SONS OF REVOLUTION ELECTION FUNERAL FOR JACOB EDELMANN 1 1 of the quicker passages, though this didn't always keep the sound NATIONAL BANK aOAOwr ouvt st.iows 2. mo.

itomttr Fodorsf Dopes hnvsxco Corp. from being agreeable. John Allen Love, 9630 Ladue road, Ladue, was elected president of the St. Louis chapter of It was on the slow movements IDS YEARS OF SERVICE of the sonatas that Miss Polk the Sons of the Revolution at the organization's annual dinner Funeral services for Jacob Edelmann, retired Belleville baker, will be at 9 a.m. Friday at St.

Mary's Catholic Church, Belleville, with burial in Walnut Hill Cemetery. He was 78 years old and died yesterday of complications. He lived at 1300A West Main street, Belleville. "Mr. Edelmann retired in 1940 after 34 years in the bakery business there.

Surviving are his wife, 1 1ft 1 1 GRAND COLONIAL made some of her best impressions. The adagio of the "Wald-stein" and the andante con moto of the "Appassionata" were not overloaded with emotional intensity. The tendency to-hasten cone arpeggios, bass figures and cadences also prevailed in other parts of the sonatas, but fortunately not to the degree that it damagingly overshadowed thematic material. Miss Polk will complete the series with a recital of romantic and modern works on Nov. 25.

C. M. meeting last night at the University Club. Other officers elected are John Brabson Trent, first vice president; Herbert L. Houchin, second vice president; Norris B.

Gregg third vice president: John Richardson Thomas, secretary; Leonard E. Martin, treasurer; Thomas William White IV, chaplain: Calvin F. Gatch, registrar: R. J. Lockwood, historian, and William F.

Kieffer, marshaL I 1W Wallaea Mrs. Mary Edelmann, a brotner and a sister. The elegance that colored th middlt 18th century it reflected in the rhythmic lines of this I pattern of third dimension beauty. The contours of its de- tign make it ideal for engrmving. LOVE IT flue! UNUSUAL GIFTS! CHINA CLASS LAMPS MIKRORS COME TO MY HOMt Opn I to WtokdiYi Fromeet Busthmm Southern Veteran Dies at 107.

FITZGERALD, Nov. 12 (AP) "General" William Jordan GEORGE BRIDGMAN DIES 2260 4 pe. place setting 204 N. CENTRAL BOWL WITH ORNAMENT 12 6000 Sprite, Height 8" $90.00 A brilliant centerpiece when used together eparatelv, a pedestal bowl foi; fruit or flowers and glittering eea-creature for pure decoration. From a complete collection of Steuben crystal noted for its brilliance, beauty and craftsmanship.

CLAYTON PA. S35S Bush. Georgia's last surviving confederate veteran, who had hoped to "live as long as Moses" 120 years died yesterday. He George A. Bridgman, mayor of Trris, 111., died yesterday in St.

Clement's Hospital in Red Bud. sannnnnnBnnBnnnnnnnnnns' Good Vision was 107. His death leaves only eight survivors of the confederate army. on the ar "needed as wall at skilled hand and Pay as little as $125 per month for each place setting ftm cAorf. or sarsi Jaccard's rowxroirc, 9th Loctut CLAYTON, 1 N.

Brentwood PARTY RENTALS- I I Coin Silver Candslibra Silvoneara PiikH Brwls itmr foldlni Chain Table Portabl Bart Silver Tray Cut Rack "1829 111., about 35 miles southeast ot St. Louis, folowing a stroke near there about three weeks ago. He was 63 years old and was serving his third term as mayor. Bridgman suffered an attack while working on a conservation project near Red Bud. Surviving are his wife, Mrs.

Thelma Bridgman; his mother Mrs. H. A. Bridgman. both of Paris, and a son Austin Bridgman.

St. Louis. brain. It tak eomptnt promrmtT to diagnosa th fficincy of your vision. Sa us today for at elimination.

A Itl A OPTOMETRISTS Ott Bach. 0 0, sa iifhui. A.B- rtfitwooJ Foray In Your Favorite Colors! CALL YOUR FLORIST TODAY! Cfoytot.5 Missouri 4 2It M. m' St. CI.

BM7 2400 lit In). HI. 247..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the St. Louis Post-Dispatch
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About St. Louis Post-Dispatch Archive

Pages Available:
4,206,641
Years Available:
1869-2024