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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 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28, 1943. st.lcj:: dispatch PAGE 3B Missing 210 MEDIEVAL BOOKS SOCIAL ACTIVITIES TODAYandTOMORROW By Walter Lippmann III THE REORIENTATION OF GERMANY GIVEN TO DR MA1ER Process for Using Animal Blood In Human Beings Predicted Soon Negro Scientist in St. Louis Visit Tells How Plasma System Was Developed and Early Prejudices Overcome in War. S- iW ii Gift Including Manuscripts From 12th to 16th Century to Be Put on Display. IN the preceding articles we saw that In order to disarm Germany it is necessary to assume control over Qerman industrial policy.

This is the only effective way of stopping at its beginning any movement for secret rearmament. by Dr. Drew and Dr. John Scud-der of Columbia University, Dr. such a thing as genuinely inde pendent private corporate enterprise in Germany, and nations which really do have private enterprise must be specially protected in their dealings with German industry.

The gift of 210 books and manuscripts dating from the twelfth to the sixteenth century to Dr. Walter A. Maier, professor of Old Testament Interpretation and History at Concordia Seminary, was announced today. The library of medieval manuscripts, incunabula, ancient Bibles and first editions of Reformation writings, was acquired by friends of Dr. Maier from the collection of Dr.

Arno C. Gaebelein of Mount Vernon, N. Y. It will be placed on exhibit at the Art Museum from The development of a process of obtaining blood plasma suitable for human use from cattle and other animals is certain "in the near future," Dr. Charles R.

Drew, Negro, head of the department of surgery at Howard University, Washington, and one of the pioneers in the development of blood platma in this country, told a Post-Dispatch reporter today. Dr. Drew was a speaker at a memorial service for Dr. A. W.

Cheatham, St. Louis Negro gynecologist, held by the Mound City Medical Society last nieht at MRS. EMILIE CABANNE JENKINS of Hollywood, formerly of St. Louis, has announced the marriage of her daughter. Miss Emilie Cabanne, and Nicholas Christie Geankoplis II.

The wedding took place Saturday at the home of the bride's uncle and aunt Mr. and Mrs. William Christy Cabanne of Los Angeles, Cal. The bride is the daughter of Col. John M.

Jenkins and the sister of Lieut. John M. Jenkins HI both of Fort Bragg, N. C. She is a granddaughter of Maj.

Gen. John M. Jenkins of Washington, D. and of Mrs. Charles C.

Crosby of Ashtabula, and a great granddaughter of the late Maj. Gen. James F. Wade. The granddaughter of the late Mr.

and Mrs. Sarpy Carr Cabanne, the bride is related to many of the old French families of St. Louis. She is a sixth direct descendant of Pierre Liguest Laclede, who with Auguste Chouteau founded the City of St. Louis.

She attended the Academy of the Visitation here and the Academy of the Sacred Heart at Menlo Park, Cal. For the past two years she has sung professionally, as Mimi Cabanne, on the radio and at many Army Aid in Political Reform. THIS same control is the best means of acquiring a leverage for the political re-orientation of iwMi''in'i--ll limlllllltlMMWMHHjMlWrm Maw. Germany. We have seen In the previous Drew related.

That wm before th process of freezing and drying plasma had been developed and Dr. Whipple held the precioua plasma in his hands all the way. "That," said Dr. Drew, "gave Dr. Scudder an idea.

couldn't we fly plasma to troops that he asked me. Just about that time, Dr. Alexis Carrell came back from France to tell us that the medical units operating with the Allies were as outmoded as th Maginot line." In June, 1940, the Blood Trans- fusion Association of New York set up a blood bank for the procurement and shipment of plasma to France. Dr. Drew was medical director for the blood bank and did most of the organizing work.

"Ideas for the handling and processing of the blood flowed in so rapidly and from so many LIEUT. ROBERT C. SHU RIG Monday through May 17, and at the Public Library from May 18 Homer G. Phillips Hospital articles that if Germany is denied the right to arm, her industry is capable, even after making reparation, of producing a surplus of "Experiments so far," he said. tnrough June it.

Thereafter it win be available for research and study. 2 SOLDIERS FROM THIS wealth well above the Hitlerian One of the most valuable items standard of life. This surplus shouJd be used to wean the Ger is large folio copy of Dr. Hart-mann Schedel's Nurenberg Chron AREA DIE OF ILLNESSES Jules Ptprlow Photo. MRS.

WILLIAM P. RIDLEY JR. Who is spending two weeks with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin E.

Holderness, 17 Wydown terrace. The Rid-leys live in Columbia, Tenn. Mrs. Ridley is the former Miss Eunice Holderness. "have failed to produce a type of plasma from animal blood which can be administered to humans without fatal shock.

That, however, is a technical problem, and one which I am certain we will li-k Successful Transfusion. Dr. Dan H. Campbell of the icles, the Middle Ages picture book. It contains more than 1800 man masses away from the military caste, the Junkers, the imperial bureaucracy and national ist demagogues and adventurers like Hitler and his kind.

But this same control can be made to provide the means of accomplishing two other indispensable results: one is the destruction of German economic imperialism, and the other is the destruction of Get man political imperialism. German economic Imperialism consists in making barter agreements with weaker countries, and corporate alliances through cartels or contracts with the big business of strong countries. Under the barter agreements, as perfected by Dr. Schacht, a small country is made dependent upon Germany as a market for it exports and as a source of its imports. Political and military control of the small country follows inexorably, because the small country, once it is entangled with the infinitely stronger economic life of Germany, is no longer fiee to act independently.

To attempt independence is to face bankruptcy, unemployment and social upheaval. The German system of corporate alliances with big business in etrong countries is equally undesirable and dangerous. It played an immense role in blinding the democracies to the German danger and in keeping them unprepared for the war. For these corporate and financial connections, as set up by the German industrial imperialists, entangle, often unconsciously, powerful interests in non-German nations. The German corporations are instruments cf the German state; there corporate allies in Britain, France or America are private interests.

This is an unequal and unhealthy connection. Arrangements between private corporations and foreign governments are always dubious, woodcuts and is in the original binding. It was printed by Anton Koberger in 1493. Two Others Are Listed as camps throughout this country. For with this surplus of wealth sources," he said, "that I can't tell who is responsible for what," The bridegroom is the son of Missing in North Africa Action.

Another is a thirteenth century arrive Friday from Sherman, California Institute of Technology reported recently that he successfully had given human beings one France fell and nothing came of Mrs. C. Nicholas Geankoplis, and the late Mr. Geankoplis of Minne palimpsest manuscript in a fifteenth century board binding. It where he is stationed with the Army.

Capt. and Mrs. Pelton and the project. left over when militarism is prohibited, the United Nations' trustees could as a conscious policy raise the standard of life of the German workers above that which represents a collection of sermons apolis, Minn. He attended preparatory school in Minneapolis and The association, Dr.

Drew added. approached the British govern later went to the Roberts School written on vellum in all Italian hand, and examination has disclosed that at least four manu in Istanbul, Turkey. After his grad Two soldiers from the St. Louis area have died of illnesses contracted in the Army and two others have been reported missing in action in North Africa, relatives here have been informed. Pvt.

Frank W. Berry 19 years old, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. ment to find out if they desired blood plasma, but they were not uation from the University of they had under Hitler or under the ill-fated Weimer Republic.

That would be the right thing to do in order that the mass of the Ger their son, accompanied by Mrs. John Adams, who is also a guest of the Culvers, will return to Texas Sunday night. Mrs. Adams' husband is an Army lieutenant stationed at Sherman. To Be Wed Tonight.

arlSS ELEANOR JOHANNING, scripts were scraped from the vel very enthusiastic But in August lum so the leaves could be reused Athens, Greece, he attended the University of Minnesota. For the past three years he has been with A Biblical manuscript on vellum, transfusion of blood from cows or horse. The first transfusion, however, set up a hypersensitivity or allergy in the patient, making a second transfusion dangerous, and probably fatal. The development of blood plasma has so revolutionized the practice of medicine, Dr. Drew said, that it is difficult to realize it has been in use only a few years.

Dr. Drew attributes the origin of the blood bank to some Russian plastic surgeons, who were experi man people may learn to identify of 1940, Dr. John Beattie, director of blood transfusion for the Royal Air Force, sent Dr. Drew a cable containing the Canonical Epistles and the Apocalypse, is believed to the Engineering Department of the their own welfare with our victory and the world's peace. Barry 1915 Union boulevard, died of meningitis at the Army Air Force Base at Miami, last Lockheed Aircraft Corporation.

He I VI daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ed- We need have no regrets about in expects to enter the Army in the ward H. Johanning, will be have been made not later than 1120. It contains interlinear notes and signatures and catch words.

autumn. married tonight in First Congrega Sunday. A graduate of Christian Brothers College and a former stu impoverishing the great German industrialists who backed Hitler or the landed gentry from whom come In the absence of her father the Also among the manuscripts is a tional Church of Webster Groves to H. Frededick Walz Jr. The Rev.

bride was given in marriage by her dent at the Brayton Flying School at Lambert-St. Louis Field, Barry collection of 24 miniature paintings of the Passion of Christ, painted menting with cadavers to deter Ervine P. Inglis, pastor, will per so many of the higher officers of the German army. For the good uncle, who is a well-known motion picture director. Only members entered the Air Forces March 19 in The Netherlands about 1400 and Funeral services will be at 9 mine whether their flesh and muscles could be used in plastic surgery.

One day they drew some ioral the ceremony. Afterward a reception will be held at the Johanning home, 458 Sherwood drive, of mankind they need as a class to be ruined and dispersed, and every encouragement and inducement Saturday at Notre Dame de of Mrs. Jenkins' family were present at the ceremony. They were. Col.

and Mrs. Austin A. Parker, who was Miss Julie Cabanne, Mrs. Webster Groves. Lourdes Catholic Church, 1623 Kienlen avenue, Wellston, and Many white candles have been should be given to promote the rise of new men out of the masses of Germany of new men who do blood from a cadaver and injected it in dogs to see what would happen.

Nothing happened; the dog suffered no ill effects. Other experiments followed, and in 1932 a burial will be at Calvary Cemetery used to decorate the church, par gram asking him to ship 5000 liter immediately and an additional 5000 liters in two weeks. "As far as I knew then," Dr. Drew chuckled "there werent 5000 liters of plasma in the world. But we got together all we had and shipped it over by Clipper.

As a result of his appeal to us, Dr. Beattie lost his commission in th English Army, but once they began to use the plasma, it was restored." On Jan. 1, 1941, Dr. Drew and Dr. Scudder suggested to the Blood Transfusion Association that they set a quota of 100.000 pints of blood by July 1.

Dr. Drew still enjoys remembering the remarks mad about that "fantastic idea." Last week alone, he said, 82,000 pints of blood were collected in th United States. William F. Saportas, the former Miss Frances Cabanne, and Mrs. and, when the foreign government is an aggressive military power.

Corp. Huey Mercille, 37, who has ticularly the chancel and the cen not carry in them by family tradi Charles Gratiot Cabanne. been in the Army 18 years, died ter aisle through which the bridal they are never in the public in tion the infection of Pan-German Russian surgeon named Yudin, of malaria in New Guinea, his half party will walk. bound in vellum. In the collection of incunabula, or early examples of printing, is a rare Letter of Indulgence printed on vellum with wooden seal attached which was presented by Pope Innocent VIII to Raymundus Peraudi for fighting against the Turks.

Peraudi was sent in 1486 as Nuntius to Germany. The Reformation library, believed to be the largest private collection of original sixteenth century Reformation items in the United States, contains a book terest For when one partner is Mrs. Byron K. Elliott of Boston, imperialism. after three years of waiting for the brother, W.

E. Kincaid, 5658 Clem the agent of a warlike govern Preceding the bride will be four bridesmaids and a matron of right moment, found an engineer and her children, Barbara ens avenue, has Been iniormea Corp. Mercille was the son of Mrs and Byron K. are guests of who had attempted suicide by cut honor, all gowned alike in blue tis The Real Enemy. FOR the enemy is not merely Hitler and the Nazi party.

Nor ting his wrists had been brought Lilly Mercille of Eureka, ment and the other is a private business, the private business is certain to be ensnared and implicated in measures of which it cannot adequately realize the conse Mrs. Elliott's mother, Mrs. Alice Orthwein Heissler of the Park to his hospital. He administered sue taffeta. Mrs.

John Minor of Kansas City will be matron of honor. Bridesmaids will be Mrs. brother of Louis Mercille and half blood from a cadaver and the pa is it the German nation, all of it and for all time. brother of Charles Huntington, both Plaza. Mrs.

Elliott, the former Miss Helen Heissler of St. Louis, tient recovered George Reeves Throop Miss of Eureka. The enemy is the historic Ger Marjorie Johanning, cousin of the First Lieut. Robert C. Shurig, 25, printed in 1525 with a woodcut After seven more successful transfusions, Dr.

Yudin announced quences. Monopolistic to the Core. and her children will depart for their home early next week. She man governing class, that mixture bride; Miss Mary Louise Wipper- border by Hans Cranach which pilot of a Flying E'ortress, who par of a military caste with the feudal has been entertained at several his findings. Immediately the Rus man and Miss Alice Walz, sister of has a representation of a printing controlling German indus- ticipated in a raid over Rouen last August, has been listed as missing sians began experimenting with informal gatherings since her ar the bridegroom.

Their gowns, fash landed class and the great industrialists which has waged wars of press at work. ioned with full skirts and long 1J trial policy, the barter agreements and the corporate alliances can be abolished, or in any storing blood taken from cadavers riasma for Envoy to Vatican. in action, the War Department informed his parents, Mr. and Mrs, fitted bodices, have taffeta ruching aggression of ever greater scope and intensity for three-quarters of Dagwood Changes His Name. LOS ANGELES, April 28 (AP).

Arthur Lake, who portrays Dag-wood Bumstead in the movies, had his stage named legalized yesterday. He told Superior Judge Jo at the hipline and at the base of Edwin C. Shurig, 11 Hanley When Dr. Allen O. Whipple of Columbia University flew to Italy event regulated and supervised German industry in its interna three-quarter length sleeves.

Mrs a century. This class raised Hitler to power. It is they who organ County Agent Transferred. ALTON, April 28. Roswell Wayne, who has been serving as county agent in Cooper County for some time, has been appointed farm adviser for Oregon County.

Downs, Richmond Heights. Lieut. Shurig entered the Air Forces in 1939 to attend Myron Taylor, en Minor's flowers will be yellow iris tional dealings is monopolistic to the core, and therefore incapable seph W. Vickers that his real voy to the Vatican, he carried two and blue delphinium. The brides ized the force which he has wielded.

It is they who will seek to about two years ago. He has been quarts of blood plasma prepared name was Silverlake. maids will carry yellow daisies, of dealing honestly in a world on overseas duty since last sum survive, by abandoning Hitler and The bride's gown is of ivory rival here last week. Mr. and Mrs.

Edgar E. Rand, Overhills drive, Clayton, are in Santa Fe, N. visiting Mr. Rand's brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.

Frank C. Rand Jr. Thy expect to be away three weeks. Engaged to Be Wed. ANNOUNCEMENT has been made in San Antonio of the engagement of Miss Ofelia On-derdonk and Sergt.

James Robert Laidlaw of the Army Air Forces. mer. his Nazis, in order to win another satin, classically designed with cov Pvt. John Rothernick, 26, who chance to reconstitute the aggressive power of Germany. where free enterprise prevails; it is also the avowed instrument of German imperialism, and therefore it is incapable of dealing honestly with nations which may, as seems r.ot unlikely in some cases, was wounded in the American invasion of North Africa, now is ered buttons down the back, a heart-shaped neckline and a full skirt which lengthens in the back to form a long train.

On her hair the bride will wear a tulle It is with them that we have to deal conclusively if this is to be the last German war of conquest. Store Hours: 9 A. M. to 5 P. M.

ported missing in action, his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Rother decide after the war to have a nick, who reside on a farm north They way to deal with them, when repulated foreign trade.

poke bonnet bound in satin and trimmed with a small satin bow in of St. Charles, were notified. Roth their prestige is shattered by mili FAMOUS BARE? CO. For any kind of dealing with the tary defeat and authority is ours ernick's wife, Mrs. Dorothy Rother rest of the world, German indus nick of New Albany, said the by virtue of their unconditional surrender, is to liquidate their con We Give and Redeem Eagle Stamps Operated by May Dept.

Stores Co. try, which is highly centralized in War Department's message to her the state, will have to be con stated he had been missing since trol of German industry and to use the wealth of Germany to give trolled. For if it is not controlled The prospective bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. LaTrobe Henry Onderdonk of San Antonio and granddaughter of Mrs.

Rafael P. Serrano, 6130 Pershing avenue. Her grandfather, the late Mr. Serrano, wns Mexican Consul at St. Louis and later the representative of April 2.

He enlisted in August, the Gorman masses a new orienta 1940, and was sent to England by trustees from the United Nations, it will be controlled by the Pan-German imperialists. For tion toward welfare at home and year ago. front. Her veil, attached to the bonnet, is finRer-tip lenpth. She will carry stephanotls and white orchids.

Mr. Walz will be attended by Frederick L. Hoffmeister, seaman, first class, in the Const Guard, as best man. Louis R. Holeka'mp, Dal-lns Wagner, Lieut, (j.

C. Henri Comfort, Corp. Lynn Pavitt and Robert Bedell will be ushers. The Johanning home has been decorated with greenery, white peace with their neighbors. (Copyright.

1943.J m.mv decades there has not been St. Louis Soldier I Killed When Spain and Colombia until his retirement in 1920. Thrown From Motorcycle. Corp. Edward Bohl, St.

Louis S'rrt Laidlaw, who Is now sta MAN SAID TO HAVE ORIGINATED ICE BERBER H. CHARD soldier attached to the Motor Transport Corps, was killed yes tioned near Snn Antonio, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Elliot Carter Rutherford Laidlaw of Plainficld, N. CREAM CONE DIES spring flowers ana rea roses ior the reception.

Mrs. Johanning will MOVES PRODUCE TO and New York. He is a grandson of the late Mr. and Mrs. Henry terday near Cheyenne, when he was thrown from his motorcycle under the wheels of a truck, his sister, Mrs.

Tena Tecke-meier, 6513 Parkwood place, was wear a gray lace gown and a cor- Bell Laidlaw of New York and the Funeral services for Ernest A. snpe of orchids. Mrs. H. Frederick late Mr.

and Mrs. John Milton Col-ton of Philadelphia. informed by the War Depart Hamwi, who, according to family tradition, originated the ice cream cone at the Louisiana Purchase ment. The wedding is planned for early it Bohl, 32 years old, wns accom June, shortly after Miss Unrter-donk completes her junior year at Exposition here in 1904, will be to panying an Army tructt convoy. The accident occurred when he morrow at 10 a.

m. at the Fred Wlliams undertaking establishment, 4535 Washington boulevard with interment in Valhalla Ceme tery. He died of heart disease yes After Municipal Opera Season Here Production Manager Will Join M-G-M. Richard II. Kergrt productions mjinafcer 0f Municipal Opera since lSt.lS, nas signed a contracts with the Metro-Goldwyn Aiayer studio as a motion picture producer and will report in Hollywood Oct.

11. Berger told the Post-Dispatch by telephone in New York today that he would be with Municipal Opera for the full 1943 season and hoped to make it the outstanding one in the opera's history. Deeply interested in the operas future, he said he would make every effort in Hollywood to work in its pulled out from between two trucks into the path of a truck bound in the opposite direction, Wyoming state patrolmen reported. Born In Hermann, Bohl moved to St. Louis 15 years ago.

He was a driver for the Greyhound Lines until he enlisted in the Army last September. He terday at his home, 4026 North Walz, the bridegroom mother, will be in French blue chiffon. She, too, will wear orchids. Mrs. Emi M.

Conner, ROHO South drive, Hampton Park, left a few dnys (iro for a two-week visit with her sister, Mrs. Charles Dietz at Hyattsville, where Lieut. Dietz is an officer in the Naval Reserve. Mrs. Edward Sinclair Garvey, 7415 Parkdale avenue, is spending a week in Knoxville, with her son, Edward C.

Garvey, an Army aviation cadet, who is in training at the University of Tennessee. Mrs. Garvey went South by plane Saturday to arrive in time to spend Easter Sunday with her son. Mr. and Mrs.

Alfred F. Steiner, Twentieth street. Mr. Hamwi, 59 years old, born in Damascus, came to St. Louis in Incarnate Word College in Sun Antonio.

Sergt. Laidlaw was graduated from St. James Episcopal Diocesan School. Hagerstown, and attended Princeton. Mrs.

Thomas B. Armistead, 2 Apple Tree lane, is expected home this week from New York, where she has been for the last several months. Mrs. Armistead went East to be near her son, Sergt. Thomas B.

Armistead III, who is stationed with the Army Air Forces at Mitchel Field. Mrs. Frank E. Pelton Jr. and 1903.

He conceived the idea of the ice cream cone while working at fin ice cream concession at the was stationed at Fort Warren, Wyo. fair, when he noticed visitors buy ing both hot waffles and ice cream FUNERAL SERVICES FRIDAY at adjacent concessions, his stepson, Arthur C. McGuffin, president of the Missouri Cone related FOR DR. AUGUST A. GOSSOW to a Post-Dispatch reporter.

her young son, who are visiting 6222 Faquier drive, have returned He became superintendent of the her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. Culver 625 South Skinker boulevard, will be joined for the week end by Capt. Pelton, who will from a visit of two weeks in Hot Springs, where they were guests at the Arlington Hotel.

Cornucopia Waffle Co. in 1906 and in 1910 founded the Missouri Cone Co. He established the Western Cone Co. about three years ago martin of St. Louis and James, Funeral services for Dr.

August A. Gossow, St. Charles city physician for the last two years, will be held at 9 a. m. Friday at St.

Peter's Catholic Church, St. Charles. Burial will be in St. Peter's Cemetery. Dr.

Gossow, 75 years old, died yesterday at Veterans' Hospital where he had been a patient since Jan. 17. Dr. Gossow, who had practiced medicine in St. Charles since he was graduated in 1895 from the old Beaumont Medical Last week he received a patent on a new type of ice cream cup.

His wife plans to manufacture this in Joseph and Patrick Gilmartin, who are in the Army. As production manager for Municipal Opera, Berger has devoted his year-round efforts to its activities. In St. Louis during the summer, he has been in charge of the opera's New York offices during the fall, winter and spring, lining up talent, negotiating for mufical properties and arranging for production staff, costumes and the many other things necessary for a successful summer in the park. Before 193S had been assistant productions manager for three years.

He will arrive in St. Louis next Wednesday to take charge of rehearsals for the coming 'ver anniversary season which opens with "BalalaiKa" on Thursday evening, June 3. continuation of the business. Au. METHODIST PASTOR PENSIONS College here, served as St.

TOTAL $3,842,639 IN YEAR jprlfourRuqt Charles County Coroner. He servea JAMES J. GILMARTIN FUNERAL Funeral services for James J. Gilmartin, state grain insector at the St. Louis Merchants' Exchange, who died Monday of a cerebral hemorrhage at the home of a daughter, Mrs.

Margaret Weick, 4914 Argyle place, will be at 9 a. m. tomorrow at the St. Louis Cathedral, with burial in Calvary Cemetery. Mr.

Gilmartin, 71 years old, who was appointed to his position by successive Governors over a period of about 45 years, retired two years, ago. He is survived also by five sons, Thomas and John Gil ORIENTAL. HOOK, DOMESTIC RUGS CLEANED REPAIRED Pension payments totaling 639 were made to 12,868 retired "HONEY" Our Pert New Short Coif MOTH HOLES. BURNS, TEARS REWOVEN OFFICE. 239 N.

EUCUD F0. 4551 Methodist ministers or families of deceased retired ministers through MARGARET A. WALSH FUNERAL out the country last year by the in the Wrorld War as Major in the Army Medical Corps, and upon his discharge in 1919 was promoted to Lieutenant Colonel in the Army Medical Reserve Corps, a rank he held until his death. He was born at O'Fallon. Mo.

Surviving is his wife, Mrs. Charlotte Geret Gosow, who resides at 215 Clay street. Missouri and Illinois corporations of the denomination's Board of Funeral services for Mrs. Mar f. a 0 i 1551 Pensions and by the pension agen garet A.

Walsh, widow of Frank cies of the church's 113 annual X. Walsh, who was a department manager and foreign buyer for the For Comfort and Control conferences, it was reported yesterday at the annual meeting of f-ice-Stix Dry Goods will be to Crisp little ringlets bubble all over your head in this delightfully feminine hair-do from the celebrated American Hair Design Institute. It's all in the way your hair is cut. Just run a comb through your hair and your "Honey" curls will spring right into place. Did you ever see a more practical hair-do; or a prettier one? Sale- 1..

pin. morrow at 9 a. m. at St. Mark's Catholic Church, Academy avenue and Page boulevard, with burial in rrwpeny riTTea VI -Attractively Priced iju A Shirtwaist Dresses Calvary Cemetery.

Mrs. Walsh, Ojten JliuridtitjS i.t;l 9 P. M. Dressmaking Course Tuesdays Thursdays WINSTONS, Inc. The House of Fabn'c5 4954 Maryland who resided at 5128 Raymond ave colors suitable into Summer In fabrics and for now and nue, died of infirmities of age yes terday at De Paul Hospital.

the Board of Pensions held at Hotel Jefferson. The Rev. Dr. A. Thomas Mc-Ilwain, executive secretary of the Missouri Corporation, and his associates, who have headquarters at 506 Olive street, were hosts at the meeting, which was attended by elected representatives from each of the Methodism's six Jurisdictions, embracing 21 states.

The Board of Pensions, together with the conference pension associations, has supervision over about $30,000,000 in invested funds. She is survived by five daugh IlrsiNMicrcs 7 iV7f Bridal Girdles and Bras "Honey Coif" including hair cut, shampoo JJ and fingerwave (by our master stylists), Reg. V. S. I'M.

on. i'amoai-BaJT Cltr of Hmutv Srrvrr Ninth Floor GA. Matlon 213 for appointment. ters. Mother Lucille Walsh, assist 505 N.

7th All slies Values to $29.95 From $1495 ant dean of Maryville College; Mother Mary Walsh of Villa CE. 5639 fcmMce IkA Duchesne; Mrs. Leo V. Rooney hts mm Grace Ashley New York City, and Mrs. Charles B.

Blood and Miss Florence Walsh Maryland at Klngshiqhwoy BUTTLE CHEEK 7 I .4904 McPherson. ACROSS FROM PARK PLAZA of the Raymond avenue address..

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