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St. Louis Post-Dispatch from St. Louis, Missouri • Page 23

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St. Louis, Missouri
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WEDNESDAY, JUNE 21, 1950 ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH 3C 13 COLLEGE Federalist Leader 4 INSTITUTIONS UNITE OMAHA PASTOR GETS St. Louis Letter By Ralph Coghlan MARQUIS CHILDS Aid to Spain but Not to Franco? El ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH WBe GRADUATES WAGED ON NEW CANCER STUDY UTHERAN PO Unofficial Record in Betrothals Set Among Class of 53 at School. ON a kind of now-or-never basis the heat is being stepped up to get a loan for Spain out of the Export-Import Bank.

In fact, the report is being persistently circulated that the loan has already Cornell, Sloan Kettering, Memorial Center and New York Hospital in Combine. Dr. Lawrence Acker Named to Succeed Dr. Walter A. Maier as Speaker.

John T. Flynn's Book home. 1 have received a copy of John T. Flynn's book, The Road Ahead," telling of the dangers of socialism. The Book was published last year.

It is marked by rubber stamp as "compliments of the Guaranty Trust Co. of Missouri. Clayton." A printed slip says: "We have purchased several hundred copies of this book and are sending them to our friends." I had never before even Beard of the Guaranty Trust Co, so must assume that its gift of been approved on the highest level and that it only remains for the bank to carry out this decision. But this may be somewhat pre mature. Within the bank there is opposition to a loan to Franco's Spain.

A rescue operation in be half of Franco would have loud political repercussions both at avasadtM- I vQ I mmm home and abroad and particularly in western Europe. Thirteen of the 53 students who were graduated from Webster College, a Catholic women's college at 470 East Lockwood avenue, Webster Groves, have announced they now are preparing to take a long-term post-graduate course in matrimony. The 13 young women all became engaged in late May or early June. College officials report that this number is a sort of unofficial record for engagements of graduating seniors. "Ordinarily only about four or five announce their engagements," one of them said.

"Why there are so many this year is a mys would form an interim government that might rule for a coiw siderable period. Such a govern-ent would release most of the thousands of political prisoners now held in overcrowded jails. Monarchists have been the most recent prisoners added to the pyramid of coercion. But they have been treated somewhat more tenderly than liberals and republicans. Last January.

Secretary Ache- son took a realistic step in re- The now-or-never urgency ap parently grows out of Franco's difficult political and economic situation. Propaganda out of Tit Nw Tsrtt Herald TribunrPtist-Disjte SPfCUl Dispatch. Copmibt. 1950. NEW YORK, June 21 One of the greatest concentrated efforts to beat cancer and to learn nature's secret of growth got under way yesterday with the signing of an agreement combinning the resources and technical skill of four of New York's major medical institutions.

Special duties will be assumed by each of the participants in a co-ordinated program of teaching and research calculated to increase the number of cancer specialists and expand their knowledge. The participants are Cornell University, Sloan-Kettering Institute for Cancer Research, Memorial Center for Cancer and Allied Diseases, and New York Hos-pitaL Under the agreement, Cornell uuun is noi nmitea euner to friends or to clients. The printed slip alsosavs that the circulation of Mr. Flynn's book is urged by the Committee for Constitutional Government, and Fighters for Marquis Childs recently reported that Dr. Edward A.

Rumely, head of the committee, faces possible contempt action in Congress for refusing to produce records showing who paid the cost to send out vast quantities of propaganda, Including Mr. Flynn's book. LAST FEBRUARY, the Reader's Digest led off its issue with a condensation of the book and further attempted to impress its 9,000,000 subscribers with seven Madrid suggests the outlines of a WILLIAM FRIED LANDER I versing the futile non-recognition policy voted in the United Na- deal being pushed here. MILWAUKEE, June 21 (AP) The Rev. Dr.

Lawrence Acker, pastor of the First Lutheran Church of Omaha, was named yesterday as temporary successor to the late Dr. Walter A. Maier of St. Louis as conductor of the Lutheran Hour, heard weekly over the Mutual Broadcasting System. The program will be heard also over either the American Broadcasting Co.

or the Columbia Broadcasting System, the Lutherans have not yet decided which. Dr. Eugene R. Bertermann of St. Louis is director of the program.

The Rev. George Wittmer of St Louis declined an invitation to take over the broadcasts, now in their seventeenth season. Dr. Maier died Jan. 11.

Plans for a national televised Lutheran Hour were approved, the program to go on the air next October. The Lutheran Church Missouri Synod will consider union with the American Lutheran Church tery." itions. Under this policy, the As a first step Eight of the 13 graduates are STUDENT FEDERALISTS in this deal, Dic United States and most of the U.N. powers withdrew their ambassadors from Madrid. St Louisans.

They are Marie Carroll, 5408A Holly Hills ave tator Franco would drop his minister of com KtC9 What Franco Wants. nue; Mary Cooper. 8141 Kingsbury boulevard, Clayton; Dolores Green, 4433 Penrose street; Jac MEET 1NG HERE merce and in dustry, Juan An v5r lliy But at the same time, apparent-under pressure from such per tonio Suances. a has stood for plan sistent friends of Franco as Senator Pat McCarran of Nevada. will set up a new graduate study division in its medical college, primarily for investigative work queline Hellman.

5028 Lansdowne avenue; Mary E. Hellwig, 4714 Penrose; Mary L. Holland, 6741 Murdoch avenue; Margaret Mey-rose, 6254 Delor street, and June Murphy, 1368 Ferguson avenue, Wellston. Franco ning and "disci Conference Delayed for Day Because of Auto Accident Involving Delegates. in cancer.

Memorial Center ill build and pline" in Industry as opposed to the "liberal" concept of free enterprise. Removing this embarrassment. Franco would also Acheson said that the State Department was "quite prepared to acquiesce" in loans contributing to Spain's industrial recovery. He ruled out any "general balance of payments" loan which the own the required facilities, the Sloan-Kettering Institute will supply operating funds and personnel. EARL OF HAREWOOD at its convention today.

Such a merger would affect nearly The national student conference 500,000 Lutherans. The Missouri of United World Federalists opened at Washington University pledge himself to be a good boy and conform to the ideas of the top-flight New York bankers who are now in Spain. and New York Hospital will permit the use of its clinical and research facilities. Spanish Government might use as it saw fit. SELLS THIRD OF ESTATE TO PAY TAX Synod is the largest Lutheran Church body in the United States The new division will begin This last is, of course, what The hope of Franco's backers.

with approximately 1,700,000 members. The American Lutheran operating this fall with not more than 10 students. toaay, a day late because a minor automobile accident in Kansas held up the eastward progress of motor caravan of delegates from California and other western states. who are numerous and powerful Church has approximately 646,000 in Washington, is to follow the precedent of the recent Export- members. Franco wants.

But the immediate pressure is for a series of industrial loans. The first in the series adding up in the neighborhood of $100,000,000 is $700,000 for a fertilizer plant. $60,000,000 LEFT Import Bank loan to Argentina. In the Argentine, Juan Peron, at The West Coast continfent left San Francisco's Civic Center last HARVEY A. BEFFA ADVANCES CHARITY BY WIDOW OF E.

S. HARKNESS Thursday morning in three auto one time Franco's friend and ally, found himself in financial diffi TO SHRINERS' IMPERIAL POST Spanish experts are waiting on quoted paragraphs of praise. One John T. Flynn of these paragraphs was quoted from the review section of the rew York Times and, as the Courier-Journal of Louisville points out, was deliberately dishonest. The New York Times reviewer did say, as he was quoted by the Reader's Digest, that the Flynn work was perhaps one of the two 'most important books about th contemporary American scene that we will have this year." But the Digest failed to print the reviewer's ensuing remarks: Neither one is an intellectual or a literary achievement of any great consequence.

Their importance lies in the fact they are the latest and most extreme manifestations of an endemic hysteria affecting a considerable segment of our society. IT IS THE HOPE of Fighters for Freedom, whatever that mysterious organization may be, that distribution of Mr. Flynn's book will reach 2,500,000 copies by the end of this year. It compares the book's power to affect the destiny of the nation with Harriet Beecher Stowe's "Uncle Tom's Ctbin." It says further the book "should go to everyone in position to disseminate ideas." I have read Mr. Flynn's book and can understand why it is being seized upon by conservatives to be circulated among the American people.

By and large, spokesmen for American conservatism in the past two decades have been pretty feeble and ineffective. Men like Herbert Hoover have done their best, and so have the publicity writers for such organizations as the National Association of Manufacturers. But their best is not very good. MR. FLYNN, on the contrary, is a brilliant pamphleteer, and a ruthlessly direct one.

He knows how to write. His prose is blunt and simple. He is animated by fiery ideas and prejudices. One of the most ardent of the latter is his hatred of Franklin D. Roosevelt and nearly everything he stood for.

His views on F.D.R. were contained in "Country Squire in the White House" and other writings. As a skilled propagandist, Mr. Flynn knows how to select facts which fit into his main thesis, ignoring others which do not. He knows how to present a measure of truth and distortion, so it is hard to unscramble them.

He knows the value of repetition and innuendo. As a matter of fact, he is a sort of opposite number to the late Charles Michelson, the Democratic publicist who did so much to destroy Herbert Hoover politically. culties and after a promise to behave he was granted a loan of $125,000,000. Special to th Post-Dipateh. LOS ANGELES, June 21 Har vey A.

Beffa, 5 Lucas lane. Nor NEW YORK, June 21 (UP) the doorstep of the bank to prove the "soundness" of these loans. Presumably they would pave the way for the bigger operation. Free Grain for Spain? The probated will of Mrs. Mary mandy.

was elected assistant rab- mobiles decorated with slogans for world federation. The group was joined en route here by other students in their automobiles, with the caravan scheduled for arrival yesterday. Murray Frank, chairman of the Federalists' student division, learned late yesterday in a telegram from the caravan leader, ban of the Imperial Council of the Ancient Arabic Order of No Harkness today released of her late husband's Standard Oil fortune to charitable and public institutions. In addition, Franco and Peron signed a bles of the Mystic Shrine here trade treaty which was supposed yesterday at the Shriners' nation to work wonders for both coun al convention. William Friedlander, University of tries.

But Peron soon found him But Franco's case is not on the same footing. Considered on the basis of expediency, geography makes a lot of difference. After all, Argentina is part of the hemisphere and the reasoning was that, in spite of past mistakes and misunderstandings on both sides, we must live with the Argentines. Lid on a Volcano? It is on the basis of geography, the need of a foothold in Europe in the event of a third world war. self on the short end of the deal.

California senior, that there had been an accident near Oberlin. in LEEDS, England, June 21 (AP The Earl of Harewood, nephew of King George VI, realized 257,010 ($519,628) from a two-day auction of real estate, held to raise money to pay taxes. He sold almost a third of his 22,000 acres near here to pay death duties on the estate of his father, who died in 1947. The auction ended today. The buyers were mostly tenants, living on the Earl's lands.

One of the items offered was the village pub at Rig-ton. The 27-year-old Earl is eleventh in the line of succession to the British throne through his mother, the Princess Royal, daughter of the late King George and sister of the reigning George VI. The mother and son are keeping the ancestral seat, Harewood house. Announcement that 7000 of his 22,000 acres would be put on the block said the Earl was forced to break up his holdings by "the burden of death duties" inheritance taxes. Such assessments against the estate that went to the young Earl when his father died in 1947 amounted to about one-third of the valuation of pounds sterling $2,196,480 at the rate of exchange then Harold Lloyd, motion picture actor, was succeeded in the top post of imperial potentate, to which Beffa is scheduled to rise with Spain failing to live up to the terms of the treaty.

Peron Northwest Kansas. Friedlander re ported no injuries, but gave no further details. in 1953, by Hubert M. Poteat of New Bern, N.C. Beffa is chair finally ruled that not another ton of Argentine wheat was to go to Spain and since then only a few small cash deals have been the will disposed of $5,000,000, mainly to charities.

Mrs.Harkness, widow of financier Edward S. Harkness who died in 1940, died June 6 at the age of 76. Her father-in-law was Stephen V. Harkness, a founder of the Standard Oil Mrs. Harkness was the life beneficiary of her husband's residuary estate of $55,000,000.

The principal beneficiary of the Harkness fortune was the Commonwealth Fund, established by Frank, who was graduated last week from New York University, man of the governing board of Shriners Hospital for Crippled and Miss Phyllis Barnhill, the stu dent division's national field di cnuaren. that pressure has come from mili Beffa, first vice president and A great deal of distress among rector, nastily revised the pro tary sources for the Spanish loan gram for the conference, telescop the Spanish people is said to have resulted. Opponents of the loan general manager of Falstaff Brewing served last year Those opposing it say that to res ing it from a six to a five-day meeting, ending Sunday. Then, cue Franco with a United States as imperial priest and prophet. TO THE GUARANTY TRUST CO.

I should like to say that Mr. Flynn's book made an impression on me. If I had no standards or information to'weigh against Mr. Flynn's words, the book might tne caravan will continue to Wash Government loan would only put the lid temporarily on a volcano. Mrs.

Stephen Harkness in 1918 to support hospitals and other DEATH OF ROBERT H. BECKLEY have made an overwhelming impression. If I were totally ignorant. ington, where a petition urging world federation will be handed institutions dedicated to promot So intense is the feeling in almost all classes against the dicta President Truman. it would have scared me to death.

Its thesis, of course, is that America is going rapidly down the road to socialism; that the genius of free enterprise is being destroyed and that, unless something is are considering a countermove. They would recommend passage by Congress of an appropriation for wheat to be distributed free in Spain by the American Red Cross. This, it is argued, would prevent the dictator from claiming any credit for dollars from America. And it would bring relief to torship with its inevitable cor Robert H. Beckley, secretary and treasurer of the Elwood Lum ing health.

Under the terms of Edward Harkness's will, one-half of the principal of his residuary The program today includes a talk by Frank on "Students and ruption and favoritism that an done about the trend immediately, the nation will be ruined eruption is inevitable. the World Govenrment Move estate was to go to the Common Mr. Flynn says that "we are following, not in the footsteps of ber died yesterday of cancer at Deaconess Hospital. He was 55 years old and lived at 8823 ment," a panel discussion on Russia, but in the footsteps of England." This is a theme that has opponents of the loan argue that Franco can be superseded wealth Fund on the death of his widow, half of the remainder to Presbyterian Hospital of New Russia and World worried many American conservatives. Mr.

Flynn adds jitters to Lawn avenue, Brentwood. BISHOP ALTER OF TOLEDO, 0., a people who have suffered much without disorder by a coalition of Surviving are his wife. Mrs a seminar on Russia and a general session dealing with the group's monarchists and republicans who and who still suffer. York and the rest to 10 other in stitutions. NEW CINCINNATI ARCHBISHOP their fears by painting the gloomiest picture possible of what he conceives to be the ruinous failures of the British Labor Government.

On the strength of some local British borough elections a vear or so ago, which went against the Labor party, he says "they Grace Roth Beckley; three daughters. Miss Robin Beckley. Mrs. organizational structure. A highlight of the conference WASHINGTON, June 21 (AP) WILLIAM H.

BISSICK FUNERAL will be a talk Saturday by Alan The Most Rev. Karl J. Alter. Cranston, head of the parent or Lloyd McGowan and Mrs. Ernest Will, and his mother, Mrs.

Louise Beckley. Funeral service will be at 11 a.m. tomorrow at the Am-bruster undertaking establishment, 6633 Clayton road, Clayton. Burial will be in Oak Grove ganization, appropriately titled "Report From the Front Office." Bishop of Toledo, has been appointed Archbishop of Cincinnati, it was announced last night. After this, the caravan will be The Most Rev.

Amleto Giovanni assembled and drive into St. Louis Funeral services for William H. Bissick, a retired druggist, were held today at the Alexander Sons undertaking establishment, 6175 Delmar boulevard. Burial will be in Le Claire, la. Mr.

Bissick, 76 years old, died of heart disease yesterday at his home. 2944 Dodier street. He had Cicognani, Apostolic Delegate to the United States, also announced and then out to Thomas Jefferson School at Sappington for a picnic. revealed a hitherto unsuspected revolt ot tne voters against ine government and cast an ominous shadow over the hopes of the Socialists for winning the parliamentary elections in 1950." THE GIFTED AUTHOR is usually not so incautious in his statements. The "ominous shadow" did not materialize.

Despite what Mr. Flynn chooses to consider the pitiable plight of the British people of all classes, the voters, of their own free choice, did return the Socialists to power. They did so by a greatly reduced majority, to be sure, but if they felt at all as Mr. Flynn does, there would have been a massive Tory landslide. According to Mr.

Flynn, the rise of socialism in England was a plot of a group organized in 1883 and called the Fabian Society, hparipd bv such neoDle as Sidney and Beatrice Webb, Ramsay Mac- NOTICE TO OUR CUSTOMERS AND FRIENDS Harris Grocery Co. 223 N. KIRKWOOD ROAD will be closed all day Thursday, June 22, due to the death of our founder, FRED D. HARRIS the appointment by Pope Pius of Early next Monday morning, the the Rt. Rev.

Msgr. Patrick J. Mc- students will pull up stakes and FINE ASSORTED CHOCOLATES move on to Washington. Cormick, rector of the Catholic University of America here, as titular bishop and auxiliary to 'operated a drug store at Clayton WILLIAM NICHOLAS FUNERAL Archbishop Patrick A. O'Boyle of and Tamm avenues for 33 years, before retiring eight years ago.

Surviving is his wife, Olive H. Bissick. Washington. Donald and George Bernard Shaw. Similarly, in America, a plot J41S N.

MA. 005 Bishop Alter has been head of fnic sialism on the United States is being hatched by such the Toledo Diocese, which con appneies as the Americans for Democratic Action and the Federal tains approximately 210,000 Cath Council of Churches of Christ. The book is pervaded with an atmos CLEARANCE olics, since 1931. He was one of the original ad phere of dark socialist conspiracy both in England and America, it numnv is to awaken both dumb Britishers and dumb William Nicholas, retired automobile dealer, died of a stroke yesterday at a building which he owns at 3850 Easton avenue. He was 61 years old and lived at 2823 Gravois avenue.

Surviving is his wife, Mrs. Margaret Nicholas. Funeral services will be at 9 a.m. Friday at St. Wenceslaus Catholic Church, 3018 Oregon avenue.

Burial will vocates before Congress of fact Americans bs tr what is haDDening to them. finding boards in labor disputes He is 64 years old. it looks neiv Mr. Flynn ignores or minimizes the great and basic historical forces which have caused the repeated elections of socialist governments in England and which are causing the alteration of capitalism FLORISTS ELECT Y. H.

ROWE in the United States. EXCELSIOR SPRINGS, be in Resurrection Cemetery. INSIDE AND OUT DFSPITE THE DEFECTS in Mr. Flynn's historical reasoning Kio fMinnintr admixture of fact and fiction, American progres Values to $50.00 Sizes 10-42 grace ashley 4904 MePherson Ave. RO.

4513 ALSO AT THE NEW CLIYTOX SHOP 1744 Forsyth, CU. 1875 ID sives are very foolish if they limit their criticism of "The Road Ahead" to mere blanket criticism or vituperation. Here is a book to he answered verse by verse and chapter by chapter, for it is lv i i a II a. June 21 (AP) Vernon H. Rowe, Kirkwood, was elected president of the Missouri Florists' Association at the close of its convention yesterday.

Milo L. Minkin, Kansas City, and Dr. L. T. Melton.

Marshfield, were named vice presidents; Art Lininger and Roger Dourdet, St. addressed to the central political proDiem oi tne mcnucm rcuiury. tvhen BIEDERMANS REUPHOLSTERS your old living-room suite ricS 0. J. SCHULZ DIES; EXECUTIVE LITTLE SYMPHONY 4954 MARYLAND Louis, directors.

OF JOHN DEERE PLOW CO. IN NEW FROM PENN STATION CONCERT FRIDAY NIGHT OPEN TUUIISDA NIGHT until 8:30 p.m. I CASE RECORDS by DR. GEORGE W. CRANE daily and Sunday in the POST-DISPATCH O.

J. Schulz, assistant general sales manager of John Deere Plow Co. in Moline, 111, died of a heart ailment yesterday in Moline. He was vice president and a director of John Deere Plow Co. Ltd.

of Canada. Mr. Schulz, born in St Louis, was treasurer and director of John Deere Plow Co. here, be- fin -it TO YOUR HOTEL Eleanor Leek to Be Soloist for First Program of Season at Washington U. Rf pilar Store Hours 9:00 to 5:30 Thursday Store Honrs 9:30 to 8:30 IN MINUTES! aaC fey Ca6 fat pr Kire mA 1 vi Ifore going to Moline in 1944.

He if Hp Svmnhonv illC Ol. ,4 1 HMHiTTETa 3 STORES Plaza Store Df 2121 it Private bath it 4-atati tmdi. it titcltin U. water it tip-vina Swviaar will open its sixteenth consecu-;" vo tive season Friday night with a 'pany for 33 years beginning as concert in the Washington Uni-J? clerk in the order department versity Quadrangle. Soloist will St.

Louis. He was 54 years old. be Eleanor Leek, clarinetist. I Surviving are his wife and two Starting time for this and con- isisters G.eselman and certs on five succeeding Friday Miss Edna Schulz of St. Lou rrn mm fiA Ct9n pv II uuvirti riviLCS win lc oi nights r-rmrliirt nr for several i-ujiiu i.

SELECT FOODS Chappie, 8282 FORSYTH BLVD. Webster Store -WE. 070 40 W. LOCKWOOD Varkside Store -RO. 6646 302 N.

KINSSHIGHWAY (FOR DELIVERIES 0L 2121 seasons; Ve urr Tto direct the tot establishment, 7233 Delmar live concerts. Max Steindel will Umversity City. En- Grove 7th Avanua and 31st Street (Dirtcfff pJI. mm it.li.iO NEW YORK CITY stt root MifNDir tvfi agiht I aBBU- tombment will be in Oak conduct the final program. can choose from Mausoleum.

you FUNERAL OF CHARLES CULLEN Mohair, Velour, Damask, Tapestry Miss Leek, the orchestra's first chair clarinet for three summers, will play the Von Weber Concerto for Clarinet. Orchestral works will be the Gluck-Mottl Ballet Suite, Sibelius's "Pelleas et Meli-tande," Diamond's "Romeo and Juliet" and the Haydn Imperial" Symphony. IF YOU CAN AFFORD U0 I'ou Can Afford the Best Funeral services for Charles Cullen, retired National Stock Yards commission dealer, will be at 9 a.m. Friday at Sacred Heart Catholic Church, in East St Louis. including labor and materials, prices Burial will be in Calvary Ceme- pnninmnw nF smiik is rravf try Mr dnlprv hi vtAr old.

oiea Of TO STRAUB'S FOR FINE BAKED GOODS! WE JUST CANT STOP RAVING ABOUT OUR TOP QUALITY MERCHANDISE LET STRAUB'S DO YOUR BAKING! THURSDAY'S FEATURES LEMON COCONUT CAKE CUT DELICIOUS ONE LAYER GOLD BUTTER CAKE WITH RICH LEMON FROSTING AND COCONUT ALL OVER. EACH T3 Crumb Loaf Mary Ann Shells Slice ad Toast in. for Strawberry I O. Far rookfvst la. J7C Skortcok 4 la Pk.

I 7C PRAETORIA. South Africa, I a cerebral hemorrhage Monday at Yoy'r mistake if to think a tiie-abie cash outlay stands between ye and tti security of owning your Drive Family 1ot here. Our prices start at just June 21 (UP! Field Marshal Jan nuwi, uuui where he lived. He. retired 18 four years ago.

Surviving are nephews and seven nieces. Tomorrow's Events frave condition tonight as his heart weakened in his long fight against pneumonia. Smuts's personal doctor and a specialist from Johannesburg were in attendance. The condition of the former Prime Minister recently has been improving and worsening in abrupt changes. Chairs $24, Sofas $5z Now you will be able to spruce-up your living room with a rejuvenated suite reconelitioned down to the frames and covered in rich, new, quality materials.

Your old worn-out suite will tale on new life, rebuilt to give you years of comfortable service re-covered to add new sparkle to your living room. ALMOND CRISP COFFEE CAKE 10 ajn. Latin teachers' meeting at DuBourg Hall of GOES GREAT WITH STRAUB'S FINEST COFFEE FOR BREAKFAST. 49' St Louis University, 221 North Grand boulevard. EDWARD R.

OYERHOLT FUNERAL BUY ON OUR VERY EASY CREDIT TERMS BLACK RASPBERRY ICE CREAM a1 far lower ttia many suppose them to be so low that you, too, wilt probably be surprised. To make ownership supremely easy, yea may also choose to pay on ear tefore Need ludget 1n monthly installments as lew as $10.50. Act now to be sure of many low price and no tra cherg for family plot car. llemorla I J-a rh The Cemetery Eterlasting A Prrpet Care Banal Perk EV. 2111 Lucas-Hunt Road 11 a.m.

Mary Read Gardner discusses statue of Caracalla in "Personalities in Art" series at OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9 -SERVE 59' FOR A MOST COLORFUL AND TASTY DESSERT- IN MERINGUE SHELLS. CARRY HOME PRICE City Art Museum. Forest Park. OT. OT.

at PACKED OR DELIVERED 6:30 p.m. Dinner at annual outing of Traffic Club of St Louis, at Crystal Lake Country Funeral services for Edward R. Overholt former St. Louisan, were held last Saturday at Seattle, where he had lived since 1942. He was buried there.

Mr. Overholt. 78 years old, died June 13 at Seattle. He had been a conductor for the Terminal Railroad Co. here for many years.

Surviving are two daughters, a brother and two sisters. 9GDQ Club, Bopp and Oehler roads, St Louis county. COS f33DG3S3SS3 8 p.m. Magicians' Club meets at Downtown Y.M.C, 1528 Locust street.

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Pages Available:
4,206,495
Years Available:
1869-2024