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St. Louis Post-Dispatch from St. Louis, Missouri • Page 15

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St. Louis, Missouri
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ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH THURSDAY, FEBKUABY 22, 1940 PAGE 3B ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH Bridal Breakfast 1SHAW PLAY REVIVED SOCIAL ACTIVITIES Preacher Says $1000 Offer For Bible Error Stands PIANIST HOROWITZ SYMPHONY SOLOIST AT LITTLE THEATER their puest their son-in-law, Charles LOCIS is well represented at E2 Mirador Hotel in Palm swings, desert resort, Hill Patton of Pittsburgh, Pa. Mr. and Mrs.

Rugg left St. Louis lor Florida, where they have a new many winter vacationists are winter home, soon after Thanksgiv and Cleopatra" Staged in Impressive Style and Capably Acted. I tssfi ing day. His First Appearance Here in Six Years Program of Concerts. -ending j- V-s Jaies Lee Johnson of Hunt-v Vh Villa" has arrived there with th-ee children, Marie Christy, Lee Jr.

and Eleanor Church Dr. Rimmer, Winner of Suit for the Money, Relates He Didn't Propose Award, but Society He Heads Did. The Grinnell College Alumni Club of St. Louis will meet for 30 o'clock Saturday jetnson. Other St.

Dcmis aest, luncheon at' 12; delude Mrs. uliam Ojthcm in Vandervoorf: a h- niece. Miss Betsy Cullen tea room. Evelyn Gardner, dean of women at Grin By COLVIN McPHEBSON GEORGE BERNARD SHAW is revealed as more of historian than humorist in the Little iX A. ti.hsf'ev; Mrs.

Louis P. Aloe, Mr. Mrs. Tyra Hill Goddard, Mr. Mrs.

Kenneth Lemoine Green, V-Vf Theater's revival-of his "Caesar and Cleopatra," which opened last night for a 10-performance run, but Vladimir Horowitz, Russian pianist will appear as featured soloist at the concerts of the St Louis Symphony Orchestra, Vladimir Golschmann conducting, tomorrow afternoon and Saturday night at the Municipal Auditorium. It will be the pianist's first appearance in a St. Louis concert in six years. Horowitz returned to the concert stage last October after retiring for several years because of ill health. His current tour includes appear Tr E.

Wight. ,1 -nether croup were Mrs. Jo- the production is efficiently han nell; Shelton Beatty, dean of men; Waldemar Hagen, director of admissions and testing, and Calvin Doming, admissions counselor, all of whom have been attending the American Guidance and Personnel Association meeting, will be guests of honor. Parties for Bride-Elect. died and is one of the best of the 4 4h W.

Lewis and Mrs. Horace W. fif return to St. Louis uu Mrs. Lewis' sister-in-law, group's costume plays.

Caesar is seen, as a 54-year-old Nathaniel Allison, and Mr. and Hiram Norcross of Tyronza, conqueror who has come to the point in life where he is able to get ances with the symphony orches a perspective even on his enemies MISS MARY JANE NORTHUP, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. ATA and his own deeds. He is not haughty but reasonable and his manner toward the 16-year-old as Glenn Reid Northup, 7571 The Rev.

Harry Rimmer, who won a lawsuit in New York last week on the technical ground that it had not been proved he offered $1000 to anyone who could point to a scientific error in the Bible, told a Post-Dispatch reporter today the offer was still good. Dr. Rimmer, who is preaching in St. Louis this week at the Memorial Presbyterian Church, 201 South Skinker boulevard, explained, however, that the offer was made not by him but by the Research Science Bureau, Inc. He is president of the Research Science Bureau.

The much publicized law suit, Dr. Rimmer said came about because an enterprising member of a Baptist congregation before which he was preaching in New York fiJmrSmis Princeton avenue. University City, j. 4 Cleopatra is indulgent enough to be 8 tras of St. Louis, Chicago, New York and Cleveland.

As guest artist with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra last week, Horowitz played Rachmaninoff's Third Piano Concerto before Composer Rachmaninoff himself. Horowitz will repeat the concerto in St Louis. The program: who will become the bride of John Vance Trauscht, son of Mr. and Entertained Guests. Mr.

AND MRS. RICHARD R. TY? ON, Maryhill, Ladue road, Clayton, have had as their res for the past few days, Mr. J-ors brother, George Frederick "-son and the latter fiancee, Miss y'onna Frances Swanson, both of Tsland. 111.

almost fatherly. In this role Robert Pastene, one of the group's younger players, is unusually suc Mrs. Bernard J. Trauscht of Chicago, Saturday evening, was the guest of honor at a bridge party cessful. He not only has the stature and Concerto Orosso Giusepp Valentin! and miscellaneous shower given by visage to represent the great Ro By a Post-Dispatch Staff Photographer.

MR. and MRS. RICHARD REED ADAMS By a Post-Dispatch Stafl Photographer. THE REV. HARRY RIMMER Mrs.

Harry Carroll, 6363 Alamo avenue, last night. Miss Northup will (Arranged by Yves Tlnsyre) Symphony No. 3, In Major, Opus ao Brahms Concerto lor Piano and Orchestra, No. 3 in Minor Rachmaninoff man but his voice is strong and mature. Although at times his have been issued for AT their wedding breakfast at noon yesterday in a private dining room of the Missouri Athletic Club.

They were married at Grace Episcopal Church. The bride was Miss Betty Bernet, daugh be honored at a luncheon at the 'their wedding, wnicn win performance has overtones of Ray evangelist His favorite pastime is Castilla tomorrow for which Mrs. Bradley Prater and Miss Eliza mond Massey's Abraham Lincoln, ter of Albert Edward Bernet, 1045 Goodfeilow avenue. She and Mr, Adams will make their borne in Chicago. last fall took it on himself to insert a newspaper advertisement beth Ingham will be hostesses.

the laurel leaves and toga belie it and tho actor gets full credit for what isi undoubtedly good work. DR. HOCKING FINDS Tommye Birch looks like Cleopatra, the Cecil B. DeMille Claud- TEACHING ORUM that Dr. Rimmer personally had mads the $1000 offer.

"The next day," he continued, "I received a letter from a retired real estate man, who is publisher of a magazine that advocates the ette Colbert one, at least, and as NO BASIS IN SCIENCE ace at 11:30 Saturday morning. S'arch 9. in Trinity Episcopal Church. Rock Island. A breakfast, r.ven bv the bride-elect's parents, Mr.

and Mrs. Reuben Eugene Swanson, at the Blackhawk Hotel, pavenpert, la. The bridal couple ill sail on the Matsonia, March 21, for a wedding trip to Hawaii. The Richard Tysons and their daughter. Miss Alicia Tyson, will attend the wedding.

Mr. Tyson will fct his brother's best man. His pother, Mrs. Frederick E. Tyson, tf Danville, 111, who is spending tte winter in Florida, will also arrive a few days before the cere- FOR DEMOCRACY OF DEAF OPENS HERE theory that nothing exists.

He debunking skeptics of scientific accuracy of the Bible. question the Bible either because of ignorance of scientific facts or because of ignorance of Scriptural text," he said. He cited the case of a woman who said that Adam couldn't have eaten an apple in the Garden of Eden because the garden was in Mesopotamia, and apples can't be grown there. Dr. Rimmer agreed that apples can't be grown in Mesopotamia because of the climate but pointed out that the Biblical text referred to "fruit, not apples." The account of Jonah's three-day cruise in a whale, regarded by scoffers as the "greate-t of all fish stories," should not be questioned, made several charges of error in MRS.

BRIDGET JOHNSTON FUNERAL ON SATURDAY Mother of the Rev. James P. Johnston Died Yesterday at 73; Born in Ireland. Funeral services for Mrs. Bridget Johnston, -mother of the Rev.

James P. Johnston, pastor of St. Patrick's Church, will be Saturday morning at 10 o'clock at tho church, Sixth and Biddle streets, with burial in Calvary Cemetery. Mrs. Johnston, who was 73 years old, died yesterday at De Paul Hospital of bronchial asthma.

She was a native of Ireland and came to this country 55 years ago. Her husband, Dominic Johnston, was killed in a building construction the Bible. Before I could answer Says Dependence on It Would his letter, the suit was filed." The Biblical account of the cre the gidiy ruler of Egypt, offers a convincing portrait Other notable players in the huge cast are Robert Kaines as Caesar's guard, Ru-fio; John Alden as Caesar's slave, Britanrus, the butt of much of Shaw's wit, since he is a caricature of the modern Briton; Leo Leder-er, Eula Morgan, Alan Green, Edward Oresman and Eben Bradbury. Gordon Carter, who both directed the play and designed its settings, accomplishes more of nis Deliver U. S.

Into Theory of Dictator-State. New Methods and Machines ation of man and the age of the earth were principal points at issue in the' suit. Dr. Rimmer pointed Demonstrated to 400 Instructors and Technicians. out, that under the terms of the offer, tfhe bureau did not attempt Vibeorge F.

Tyson attended West- "to harmonize scientific theories with interpretations of Biblical text." astounding legerdemain in han -jni Military Academy ai Aitpn lor fKveral years. i i BOSTON, Feb. 22 (AP). Prof. William E.

Hocking, a Harvard philosopher, said today science tended to discredit the doctrines on which democracy is based. "I conclude that science can lend dling: nine scenes on the tiny stage The National Forum on Deafness and Speech Pathology opened its twenty-third annual meeting today at the Central Institute for In addition to his evening lec he said. His reply to unbelievers is that a strict translation of the Hebrew text does not indicate Jonah was swallowed by a whale accident in 1902. She resided with her son at the rectory, 1207 North Sixth street. A brother and sister in Ireland also survive.

and making them all look different. The ap proach is that of the Maurice Evans plays, by combination the Deaf with a program of dem but by a "large fish." In one instance in recent years, he said, a and re-combination of relatively no support whatever to the basic simple slements. tures at Memorial Church, Dr. Rimer has addressed student assemblies at several high schools, but plans for a talk at Cleveland High School were blocked when school authorities refused to grant permission because of the religious subject. However, a mass meeting doctrines of human nature on which man was found alive in the stom Mr.

and Mrs. J. Reynolds Medart ef Overhills drive left a few days by motor for Tulsa, where they will spend a short time before going to Florida. After a visit it various resorts they will motor tp the east coast of Florida to Charleston, W. returning to St.

Louis in about a month. ach of a whale shark 48 hours Cold grays of palace wall or pediment are relieved by bright red, gold and blue decoration in the most democracy is founded," he asserted in an address before the seventeenth annual meeting of the American Orthopsychiatric Associ after he had been swallowed. The man was revived and later worked in a London sideshow, Dr. Rimmer refined style. The costumes by Margaret Breen contribute much of Cleveland High and Scruggs billed the "Twentieth to the production and keep Romans ation, Inc.

grade school students will be held tomorrow afternoon at 2:45 o'clock Century Jcnah." Pierre Chouteau Scott, 4947 "Perhaps democracy is only a distinguishable from Egyptians in at Trinity Evangelical Church, A miracle, he declared, "is an ifiriinrham court, has issued cards passing bit of moonshine, built not at all on science (for Locke and announcing the marriage of her Among the pre-wedding parties for Miss Northup and Mr. Trauscht was a dinner Wednesday, Feb. 14, given by Mrs. Alexander Meyer of Stillwater, who is to be the bride's only attendant, and Miss Madeline Dawkins at the home of the latter, 7705 Country Club court. Mrs.

Sneed Northup of Erie, paternal grandmother of the bride-elect, arrived in St. Louis yesterday. Mr. Trauscht's mother will arrive from Chicago tomorrow. Other out of town guests will include Henry Anthor of Kansas City and William Lukas of Chicago.

The ceremony will take place at 6 o'clock in the evening at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Northup in the presence of the two families. Additional guests have been invited for a reception at 8:30 o'clock. Mr.

and Mrs. Thomas A. O'Gor-man 4954 Lindell boulevard, are occupying their winter home in Palm Beach, Fla. They will be home April li Mr. and Mrs.

J. B. Gander, 7807 Davis drive, will leave Sunday morning for Miami Beach, Fla. They expect to be away about three weeks. Mr.

and Mrs. Raymond P. Pre-witt, 4945 Buckingham court, have departed for Pasadena, where they will make their home. On their arrival they will spend several weeks in Pasadena visiting Mrs. Prewitt's mother, Mrs.

T. J. Akins, and her sister, Miss Zoe A kins, playwright. Miss Ophelia S. T.

Carr, principal of Stuart Hall, Staunton, who has many relatives and friends here, is a guest at Hotel Jefferson while attending the meeting of the National Association of Principals of Private Schools this week. Miss Charlotte Hunter, assistant dean of Agnes Scott College, Decatur, will be the guest of honor at an informal tea this afternoon at 3:30 o'clock, to be given by the St. Louis Alumnae of the college in the Cafe Rouge. The party will be in celebration of George Washington Scott, founder of the college. Miss Hunter will discuss plans to celebrate the fif FOUR MODES OF TRAYEL USED Bob Sled, Train, Plane and Auto Employed in Trip From Colorado.

Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Marshall of Parshall, employed four modes of transportation in reaching Jerseyville, 111., to attend the funeral of Mrs.

Marshall's sister, Mrs. R. E. L. Smith, who died suddenly at her home near Fayette, 111., Sunday.

They left their home five miles from Parshall in a bob sled and took the train at Parshall to Denver. At Denver they took a trans, port plane to Larrbert Field, Sc. Louis, where they were met and brought to Jerseyville by Grand boulevard and Itaska street, at which Dr. Rimmer will speak. He spoke Tuesday at Webster iaughter, Mrs.

J. Norman Walker Paine, Jefferson and Rousseau were all cases. An electric organ supplies musical background and sound effects, but sometimes gives the impression Caesar navigated the Nile in a motorboat ef Jv'ew York, the former Miss Chouteau Scott, and Loring Picker- orderly proceeding on a plane beyond our law of comprehension. An airplane or a radio is a miracle to those who have never seen or heard them and do not understand them. There is nothing incredible about God's knowing more than not scientists) but on the dogmatic sentimentalities of the discredited theory of thS rights of man!" Groves High School and yesterday at Jennings High School.

fcg of San Francisco, Cal. The wedding took place in Mexico City, Dr. Rimmer, ordained a Presby- Like all Shaw plays, this one is too long and there are moments when the sight of spear-carriers or onstrations and discussions on new methods of teaching speech to the deaf and hard-of-hearing and correcting enunciation in speech-defective children and adults. The principal demonstrations this morning were by Miss Audrey Hicks, Miss Jane T. Templeton and Mrs.

Jane Y. Olmstead, who showed new developments employed at the Central Institute for teaching deaf nursery and pre-school children. The meeting will continue through Saturday, with about 400 principals, instructors and technicians attending. Afternoon sessions included talks and demonstrations on aiding speech defectives. The topics were: "Congenital and Adult Aphasia," "Cleft Palate Cases," "Speech Spasticities," and "Stuttering Cases." Discussions were lead by' Martin F.

Palmer of the speech department of Municipal University of Wichita and Donald C. Bryant of Washington University. The new thyratron pitch indicator, which enables the deaf to see changes in pitch of speech or music, will be demonstrated tomorrow by Miss Ramona Merritt of "The equality which men need for democratic purposes is not etrian minister, says he is also an laesday afternoon, Feb. 13. archeologist.

author and former we do." equality of fact, but equality of pos Mr. and Mrs. Pickering have cries of the maidens of the court taken a house in Mexico City which FUNERAL SERVICES TOMORROW they will occupy until the end of draw unintentional laughs but on the whole the Little Theater cast gets away with its pomp and circumstance very well. STATUE OF ADAM, SHOCK TO LONDON, DUE IN U. S.

SOON FOR MISS LETITIA OSTERMAN April. Early in April they will feme to St Louis to spend a few days with Mrs. Scott on their way to New York, where they will visit before going to San Francisco to live. WILLIAM FISCHER FUNERAL Funeral services for William J. RUDY WIEDOEFT'S MOTHER DIES 3 DAYS AFTER HE DOES Fischer, retired Belleville merchant Jacob Epstein's Three-Ton, Succumbs Without Learning About and for 35 years a member of tho board of the First National Banlty there, will be tomorrow morning' at 10 o'clock at the Gundlach un-.

1 Mortar Board Head Honored. mKS. GEORGE REEVES Gorilla-Like Figure to Make Coast-to-Coast Tour. Teacher for 26 Years at Lafayette School Succumbs to Complication of Diseases. Funeral services for Miss Ietitia M.

Osterman, a teacher for 26 years at Lafayette Public Grade School, 815 Ann avenue, will be tomorrow at 9 a. m. at the Church of the' Immaculate Conception, 1701 Longfellow boulevard, with burial in Calvary Cemetery. Miss Osterman, 52 years old, died Tuesday at St. Anthony's Hospital Death of Saxaphonist, One of Her Musician Sons.

LOS ANGELES, Feb. 22 (AP). WTHROOP gave a luncheon to- sibility and the psychological laboratory has no way of measuring possibility. "Moral possibilities depend on stimuli; what heroism are men capable of, what responsibility, what sacrifice? These are the only questions that matter when you are judging democracy, and they are not questions on which science has anything final to say. "It is therefore incumbent on somebody to say out loud that if we depend on science here, we depend on something which will deliver us bound hand and foot into the theory of the dictator-state." CHARITY FINAL BENEFICIARY OF $70,000 LAWNIN ESTATE St.

Vincent de Paul Society Named; Life Income to Nephew and Servant. The St. Vincent de Paul Society of St. Louis is the ultimate bene dertaking establishment, 105 North High street, Belleville. Burial will be in Shiloh Cemetery.

the Central institute. 'day at her home, 6510 Ellenwood avenue, in honor of Mrs. Frank D. NEW YORK, Feb. 22 (AP).

Ja Mrs. Anna E. Wiedoeft, 75 years old, died yesterday, without knowing her son, Rudy Wiedoeft, saxaphonist, had died Sunday. Mr. Fischer, 85 years old, died cob Epstein's three-ton statue of The new audiometer, an instrument which produces tones to test hearing, will be demonstrated Saturday morning by Dr.

Cordia C. Bunch, associate director of the institute, who developed the Adam" is on its way to the United yesterday at St. Elizabeth's Hospital, Belleville, of infirmities. A son and a daughter survive. She was stricken with a heart of a complication of diseases.

States from London for a coast-to-coast exhibition tour. ailment Saturday, the same day her son became ill in New York, and wail not told of his death. Coleman of Lincoln, national president of Mortar Board, senior honorary society for girls in college and universities. The 24 fuests included members of the active chapter of Mortar Board at Washington University, their advisors, and officers of the local Uortar Board alumnae. Mrs.

Coleman presided and was Surviving are a brother, John J. Osterman of Orlando, and two sisters with whom she lived at 3455 Lafayette avenue, Miss Ella M. r-DAY and EVENING That may spell trouble In New She was the mother of three York and Washington, in Buffalo, CLASSES I Secretarial. Stenographic and Accnuntfnf other musicians, G. J.

(Gay) Wie Osterman, a teacher at Sigel School, Rochester, Detriot, Chicago, Los bourses. leiepnena oosy Tor catalog. ROCKEFELLER CONTRIBUTES $100,000 FOR FINNISH RELIEF a doeft, Adolph Wiedoeft and the late Herbert Wiedoeft, orchestra leader. and Miss. Lilly M.

Osterman, librarian at Ben Blewett High School. RUBICAM SCHOOL iprincipal speaker last night at a tieth anniversary of the college Angeles, San Francisco, Miami and finally at the New York World's Fair, for this Adam stirs up minor riots among critics, sculptors and laymen wherever it goes. Largest Individual Gift to Date; or given at Hotel Statler for of universities where chap- next year. A.O.EAiiTHAL DIES IN HOSPITAL Note Praises "Gallant Stand" of Small Nation. are here for the conference of Lecture at Woman's Club.

Pressman With Post-Dispatch for NEW YORK, Feb. 22 (AP). ficiary of the 570,000 estate of Albert W. Lawnin under his will, filed yesterday in Probate Court. Mr.

Lawnin, who died at his winter home in Crescent City, Feb. 9, was formerly associated Be One of the Fortunate Ones to Take Advantage of This Sensational Offer eans this week John D. Rockefeller Jr. is the donor rffHE St. Louis Woman's Club or $100,000 to the Finnish relief I had an illustrated lecture on 20 Years Succumbs at 53.

Arthur O. Earthal, a pressman for the Post-Dispatch for 20 years, died of a heart ailment today in fund, the largest individual con Mexico 4his morning at 11 o'clock and a luncheon at 12:30 tribution to Finnish relief. with the N. O. Nelson manufacturers of plumbing and heating Veterans' Hospital at Jefferson Accompanying the check was this o'clock for members and their guests.

Doran Meredith showed colored pictures, and Mrs. Mere note signed by the financier: "The gallant stand which Finland Mr. Edwin H. Wagner, 3 Hill-i-e drive, and her son. Warren 'afner, are in Denver, the pMXs of Mr.

and Mrs. Wagner's on-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Albert E. Seep. They joined aother daughter.

Miss Mary Jo-phine Wagner, who preceded them west to visit the Seeps. Mr. Barracks. Mr. Earthal, 53 years old, wa with the old St Louis Republic for 15 years before coming to the Post-Dispatch.

He was also supplies. In accordance with a wish expressed in the will, his ashes were scattered on St. John's River in Florida, The will puts the major portion dith demonstrated Mexican dances It is seven feet tall, and Epstein, the 60-year-old sculptor, calls it his "greatest work." Epstein's statues arouse anger as well as praise. The statue, on an unidentified British ship due in New York this week, has a special guard and is insured for $85,000. It has thick legs and a tilted head, and is so uncompromisingly anatomically realistic in its nudeness that it shocked many Britishers.

The London Telegraph called It "a Simian rendering of the human form, the boldest experiment in neo-barbarism that its creator has yet attempted." Epstein called it "an epitome of man's appetite and aspirations." Art or monstrosity, an aged Lon Mrs. Lon O. Hocker enter has made for life and liberty has thrilled the world and set up for humanity new high standards of courage and sacrifice. As a tribute agent for a farm insurance com lOOih A nniversary Console tained 20 guests for luncheon. It pany.

He lived at 806 St Clair was the fourth of a series of six street, Collinsville. Mrs- Seep (Margaret Ellen! ties which ghe haa planned to this brave people, my family and I desire to contribute $100,000 to of the estate in trust with the Mississippi Valley Trust Co. and a nephew, Nelson Lawnin, directing that $30 a month of the income go to a Negro servant. Alma Hunter ismr) recently became the pa Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Alma Earthal, and four children.

Others who entertained were Mrs. renta of a son, their third child. Ralph D. Griffi. president of the the Finnish Relief Fund for the desperately needed service it is render $259 club; Mrs.

David B. White, Mrs. Mrg. Robert D. Lewis.

52 Wrest- ing the civilian population of Fin John Latzer, Mrs. Robert Latzer, fcoreland place, is visiting her -iaw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. land." The gift was announced by Her 1 Mrs. Edward E.

Haverstick, Mrs John D. Rippey, Mrs. George Tay (Including Bench) don woman looked at the gorilla bert Hoover, the fund's national chairman, who said that collections lor, Mrs. George M. Burbach, Mrs.

HEADS MEDICAL AID GROUP Dr. Borden Veeder of St Louis Elecited Committee Chairman. Dr. Borden S. Veeder, St Louis pediatrician, has been elected chairman of the Committee of Physicians for the Improvement of Medical Care.

Formed in 1937, the national epfl neldon Bailey at their in Dallas, Tex. Mrs. Bailey the former Miss Roberta Lewis. Donald Wright, Mrs. Oscar E.

Nied-jringhaus, Miss Ettie Jordan, Mrs had passed the $2,000,000 mark and Yours immediately for a small down payment and only that $1,200,000 had been sent to Fin like figure and dropped her market basket Giovanni Troccoli, Artist, Dies. SANTA BARBARA, Feb. 22 (AP). Giovanni Battista Troccoli, land for civilian relief work. ri- i i Edward Hermann, Mrs.

Emil Mai-Dr. and Mrs Fredenck E. Wood- Mr8. F. Mahlert Mrs, tecteH 1 iBen S.

Pearson, Miss Grace Adams, 7 committee has worked for a pro Cooper of Palatka, and the balance to the nephew, for the duration of their lives. The bequest to the St. Vincent de Paul Society, the will explains, was made at the request of Lawnin's deceased wife, Mrs. Virginia Sanford Lawnin. HAWORTH DENIES PENSION SEEKERS ARE MADE TO WAIT No Discrimination Against Those Not On Belief, Head of State Board Says.

JEFFERSON CITY, Feb. 22 (AP). An assertion by House Leader Roy Hamlin Hannibal, that old-age pension seekers were being forced to delay their ap-j plications until June met a prompt from Dunedin, Fla. seph F. Hickey, Mrs.

George M. WILL OF WALTER M. CRUNDEN Estate Left in Trust for His Wife and Daughter. Walter M. Crunden, president of gram of extending care to those unable to secure medical service.

artist, died yesterday. He was 57 years old. Seidlitz, Mrs. Walter Haeussler, PER MONTH fcsa Louise Goddard, daughter and Mre Wor-ron Mrs. James T.

Pettus, Mrs. Fred erick W. Langenberg, Mrs. J. W.

Crunden-Martin Manufacturing tvV. Brentmoor Park, is leaving ten ft tWrow in ir.ir, White, Mrs. William H. Keech, Mrs. who died Monday, left his estate in trust for his wife and a daughter Walter L.

Rathmann, Mrs. Frank Montgomery See, Mrs. William St. Sauveur in the Laurentian f18111 in Quebec for the ski- USED OFFICE FURNITURE Charles, Mrs. Fred C.

Bonsack, Mrs. by a previous marriage. Miss Ed-wina M. Crunden of New York, under his will filed for probate yes Equitable Allowance on Your Piano By special co-operation with the manufacturer, we make possible your opportunity to own a very beautiful modern Console Piano bearing the honored name of Ilallet Davis with its many superb features on terms so generous that any family can easily afford to buy one. Come in today.

See, hear and play this fine piano. Arden J. Mummert, Mrs. C. D.

P. t- Hamilton, Mrs. Gerard L. Irvine, terday at Clayton. "ng in the East.

denial by Social Security headquar Mrs. John M. Wood, Mrs. Rutledge ters today. SamDle and Refinished" Flat Desks, Hamlin wrote Attorney-General Miss Crundeh is to receive one-fourth of the income and Mrs.

Crunden three-fourths. No estimate of the value of the estate was available, Crunden, 53 years old, re Typewriter Desks, Tables, Arm Swivel Chain, Side Chairs, Typist Chairs. Roy McKittrick that the Hannibal social security office was "refus WAIL COUPON AEOLI4N COMPANY OP MISSOURI ing to giva applications for old-age assistance to persons 65 or over New and Used Letter and Legal Files. Storage Cabinets. Mimeographs $5-00 to $100.00 Addrtssographc, Cabinets, Frames, Check Protectors.

IW UUv Mreat, Saint Loeia I Please eitf complete information con cerning llailct Davit Console Pianos. Equipped with "Prsc-tisno" an ingenious device that enables you -to reduce tone volume about 50 at will, making practice hours far pleaianter. MRS. MASON SCUDDER of Up-tr Ladue road, left Tuesday ior Montclair, N. to spend eekg with her brother-in- nd sister, Mr.

and Mrs. Wil-Scon Snead and their twin is. Mrs. Snead was the former Kath' ine Parker of St. Louis.

tS llerbert Lawrence Parker, Washington terrace, mother of r- Scudder and Mrs. Snead, is a Mr of the St, Louis colony win-kGg in 2 Mrg par. accompanied Miss Jessie fcger and her brother, Harry M. unless they are on relief until June McKittrick said such a practice would be illegal and urged those affected to "appeal to the courts," but Social Security Administrator Name Address H. Deas and Mrs.

Frank N. Goer-ner. Mr. and Mrs. John S.

Swift, who divide much of their time between their Brentmoor Park home here and the Sherry Netherland Hotel in New York, left New York Sunday to return to their winter home In Miami Beach. Eighty members of the junior class at Yale University were chosen to fraternities at the annual elections yesterday. The two St. Louisans in the group are Charles F. Freeman whose parents live at Brentmoor Park, elected to Chi Psi, and Rene Auguste Chouteau, son" of Mr.

and Mrs. Henri Chouteau, 26 Vandeventer place, who has accepted an Invitation to Beta Theta Pi. George I. Haworth Baid "no such sided at 35 Briarcliff, Ladue. DR.

THOMAS J. TONER DIES Wentzvtlle Physician and St Charles County Health Officer. Dr. Thomas J. To'ner, a Wentzville physician, died of heart disease today at St.

Joseph's Hospital in St. Charles. He was 64 years old. Dr. Toner waa deputy health commissicner of St, Charles County.

A graduate of the Northwestern University Medical School, he had served in the Army Medical Corps, and practiced in Gary, Kenosha, and at Wentiville for the last four years. Hia wife, Lamps, Card Files, Book Cases, Transfer Cases, Telephone Tables, Typewriters, Adding Machines, Line-a-Times, Dicto-phones. Ditto Duplicators, -Kardex, Ledger Trays, Stands, Floor Mats, Blotter Pad Holders. ALL MECHANICAL EQUIPMENT GUARANTEED order ever haa been issued." OUR NEW LOCATION "We are accepting applications as AFTER MARCH 1st 1125 OLIVE Aeolian pF COMPANY MISSOURI EVENINGS J004 OLIVE STREET oa lin they come in," Haworth said. "Nobody is being put off.

Why, in January we accepted 18,807 application and disposed of 5567 of that I t( be away until in the spring, 209 N. FOURTH CHistiut S29I CLARK-PEEPER CO. number in addition to taking over a V'r-j, rtugg, iu 4.V. will remain iVERYTHING IN OFFICE EQUIPMENT WPA certification, handling a relief emergency and adding to our Free Parking, III S. 9th Free Bus Service to Our Store "Open Until 6 P.

M. Saturday' aid-to-dependent-children program." Mrs. Alma Toner, survives. EW month. They have had as ft".

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