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The Chillicothe Constitution-Tribune from Chillicothe, Missouri • Page 5

Location:
Chillicothe, Missouri
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

WEDNESDAY. OCT. 26, 1949 THE CHILLICOTHE CONSTITUTION-TRIBUNE. CHILLICOTHE. MISSOURI G.O.P.

Needs Labor's Confidence Sett. Lodge Declares Peaty Must Get in "Competitive Position." NEW YORK, Oct. Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts, Republican, last night proposed a program to "put us Republicans into a competitive position" and said it must include an effort to win the confidence of labor. Lodge said in a speech at the annual Herald Tribune forum that the Republicans must compete with the Democrats for votes but this "does not mean 'me "But neither does it mean mere negotiation," he said. "Instead of scolding the darkness, let us light a lamp.

"If the Republican party is to re- answers to everyday insurance By FRANK KANAN Question: Recently we suffered a fire loss which was paid by our insurance company. Now a friend tells me that my insurance policy expired with the settlement and I must take out a new policy. Is this true? Answer: Not entirely unless the insurance company paid you the full amount of the policy. When an' insurance company pays you for a fire loss, it deducts the amount paid you from the amount of the policy. Thus, if you had a ten thousand dollar policy and the company paid you five thousand collars, you would still have five thousand dollars in insurance.

However, you should see your insurance agent about having your policy changed to give you adequate protection again. you'll address your own insurance questions to this office, we'll try to give you the correct answers and there will be no charge or obligation of any kind. V. F. (Frank) KANAN Insurance Loans Real Estate Abstracts 703 Webster Phone 269 turn to a position of greatest national usefulness, it must take inspiration from its progressive past and it must certainly make a vigorous, sincere and successful effort to win the confidence of labor." Another speaker was Guy George Gabrielson, chairman of the Republican national committee.

He told the forum the party already has begun a new system of precinct organization in preparation for the 1950 elections. He said the Republicans would have "just as much practical politics as our facilities and resources will permit" and already had tried out the system in Pennsylvania'a twenty-sixth district. "We lost the district last year," he said. "We won it back this year." The Republican party must be known as an instrumentality of all the people, Gov. Val Peterson cf Nebraska said.

"The test which it should apply to all proposals should be 'Is this good for he declared. "If, in the long run, it is not good for all America, it is not good for any segment, including that which sees in the proposal a selfish advantage," Peterson continued. Firsf Missouri Pacific Passenger Train Rolls Ozorker Left St. Louis at 7:44 This Morning. ST.

LOUIS, Oct. The OEarker rolled out of Union Station for Little Rock at 7:44 a. m. (CST) first Missouri Pacific passenger train to leave St. Louis since the start of a strike Sept.

9. Departure of the Ozarker, 24 minutes behind schedule, marked the resumption of normal operations on the railroad's 10-state network. Officials said the train failed to leave on time because a heavy lead of mail slowed down loading. Next Mopac passenger to leave was the Missouri River Eagle which departed for Kansas City and Omaha at 8:55 A.M., five minutes late. 'Except for a few freight crews, all 5,000 operating employes who were on strike are back at work.

Freight shipments are being accumulated as fast as possible. Liquid air, once a curiosity used in scientific "magic" shows, has now become so abundant and cheap as an industrial by-product that it can compete with ice and mechanical refrigeration. PUBLIC SALE I will sell at public auction at the farm 8 miles north of Chillicothe on highway 65, on FRIDAY, OCT. 28; 1 p.m. The Following Property: 17 HEAD OF good milk cows, one 6 year old cow heavy milker, two dry cows, 3 2-year-old cows, two of these cows milking now, one dry cow.

II Chester White sow and 10 pigs. :100 head White Wyandotte pullets, starting to lay. FARM I. Case gang plow, one sulky plow, 6-ft. McCormick mower, 8-ft.

disc, a good one, also "other articles too numerous to mention. Household Goods Terms of sale cash, no property to be moved until settled for. Mr. and Mrs. Fred A.

Hien Auct. Gard Shaw. Clerk to be named day of sale. MAKING LOANS IS AN IMPORTANT PART OF OUR BUSINESS We consider it a privilege to make sound loans to the people of this community. We'll be glad to discuss a personal loan, insurance or car loan, home loan or home improvement loan, or collateral loan.

All loans are made at low bank rates. NATIONAL BANK NINE SHOT BY BERSERK berserk Waterford, farmer, identified as Joseph H. Runyon, 57, shot nine persons in two Waterford bars and then killed himself. At left, Undersheriff Don Menzies and one of the victims, Ben Prunty, 49, examine the single- barreled shotgun used by Telephoto Ludlow News Mrs. Alice Stockwell returned home Wednesday from a ten-day visit with her son, Raymond Stockwell and family of the Low Gap community.

Dick Osborn left for his home at Hollenburg, after spending a week with his sister, Mrs. Maude Welker. Enroute home he will visit relatives a week in Kansas City. The O. E.

S. met Wednesday night at their hall in Dawn with twenty- eight present, including ten from Ludlow. Visitors from Independence, Breckenridge, Utica and Paris, Ill- were present. Following initiatory work, refreshments, of sandwiches, pie and coffee were served. The regular meetings are the first Wednesday of each month.

Funeral services for Mrs. J. T. Snider were held from the Methodist church Thursday afternoon, conducted by Rev. Burton of Breckenridge.

Burial in Monroe cemetery under the direction of the Michael Funeral Home of Braymer. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Johnson and Mr. and Mrs.

John Anderson returned home Thursday from a ten day deer hunt in Colorado. Mr. and Mrs. W. M.

Thompson left Thursday for Wichita, where they will spend several days with their son, John Thompson and family. Mrs. Ida Jamison had for her dinner guests Saturday her son, Orville Jamison and wife and daughter, Bonnie and Charles Hamilton of Kansas City. They left in the afternoon for Chillicothe to visit Mr. and Mrs.

Roger Cunningham and family who accompanied the Jamison home for the week end- L. J. Fields, who was a medical patient at the Chillicothe hospital, was dismissed from the hospital Friday and returned to his home Public Sale PUREBRED DUROCS Wed. Nov. 2, 1949 BY KARL J.

DIETER Farm-Southeast of Maysviile 20 Duroc Boars 30 Open Gilts All Cholera comes from excellent mothers of popular are well-grown medium dark red. Sale Starts 1 p.m. Lunch on Grounds SOUNDS CRAZY v.but you have to buy a life and retirement contract when you don't need it, because when you do need it you can't get it. Discuss it with A. B.

KAMMERER 202 Citz. Bank Bldg. Tel. Of. 613, Res.

1243 No Obligation LIFE and RETIREMENT INSURANCE ANNUITY CONTRACTS Old Breed of Cattle The Holstein-Priesian breed of cattle has been selected for dairy qualities for about 2000 years, according to the Encyclopedia Britannica. here. Mr. and Mrs. H.

Lee Johnson left Sunday afternoon for their home at Licking, after visiting since Friday night with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Johnson and his brother, E.

R. Johnson and family. They were accompanied to Springfield by his mother who will visit relatives there for two weeks. Mrs. Susie Fryer spent Sunday afternoon with Mrs.

Ida Jamison. The least used letter in the English alphabet Is the letter Award Fortune lo Young Widow Girl. 19. Who Became Bride of Man, 71. Wins in Court.

TOWSON, Oct. 26. judge awarded a fortune today to a pretty young girl, in place of the $9,000 a wealthy real estate man promised to call off their marriage. Louise M. Hebditch, 19, gets her widow's third of the estate left by John C.

Hebditch of Havre De Grace, Md. He was fond of passing out business cards that said "rated more than a million." There is a dispute over how much the estate is worth. An inventory field by the executors lists the assets at $50,000. The girl's suit alleges its at least $700,000. "The story book failure of a December and May romance," Judge J.

Howard Murray called it in Baltimore County circuit court. Hebditch and the girl were married in Jannary of 1948, when he was 71, she 18. Hebditch had been married twice before. He had grown children. A few months later John and Louise agreed to separate.

John would pay her $9,000. But the next day John called Louise. Would she come over to the house? She did. Four months later, last January, they set out in his automobile for Florida. They stayed three nights together on the road, registering as man and wife.

Last March John Hebditch died. His children and the trustees of his estate argued that Louise was entitled only to the $9,000 Hebditch had promised her in the separation. Judge Murray ruled that since she was a minor she could not legally enter into such an agreement. Their trip to Florida together also seemed to invalidate the separation the judge So Louise is legally the widow of Hebditch, entitled to a third, of his esate under the Maryland law. An appeal probably will be taken.

NON-UNION GRADER MAN BEATEN NEAR RICHMOND RICHMOND, Oct. A misdemeanor warrant was issued here this morning for Willard Wilkinson, Kansas City, upon complaint of J. L. Hays, grader man for a construction company. Hays charged he was accosted by Wilkinson and three other men while he was at work on Route the Millville road, northeast of Richmond.

He said Wilkinson and a man known as "Lew" jerked him from the grader and administered a severe beating. According to Sheriff E. W. Craven, the construction company was unable to hire a grader man through the union at Richmond, and employed Hays, who is from, Kirksville. Hays is not a union member.

Add Zest To The Hour Serving Coke Serves Hospitality I Get ABSTRACTS AND TITLE INSURANCE FROM GUNBY'S Loans 712 600 Ask for it either way both trade-marks mean the same thing. BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY Vt CHILLICOTHE COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. 1949, The Coca-Cola Company Use Constitution-Tribune Ads MORE POPULAR THAN EVER Preferred by more users than the next two makes combined! Here's real proof of truck value! Now that operators can get the make they really want, Chevrolet Advance-Design trucks are setting new sales records every week. More and more buyers are insisting on the power, the comfort and safety they get in Chevrolet. They like Chevrolet's rugged good looks the way Chevrolet trucks handle their hauling jobs with such low operating and upkeep expense.

In fact, they like these advantages so well that they buy more Chevrolet trucks than the next two makes combined! Come in now, and talk over your trucking needs with us. ADVANCE-DESIGN TRUCKS Featuring VAIVE-IN-HEAD ENGINES -Greater power per gallon, lower cost per lood DIAPHRAGrA SPRING SYNCHRO-MESH TRANSMISSIONS-Ouick, smooth shifting HYPOID REAR AXLES-5 stronger than spiral bevel typo DOUBIE-ARTICUIATED BRAKES- Complete driver control WIDE-BASE WHEElS-lnereased tire mileage ADVANCE-DESIGN STYLING-WHb the Cab that "Breathes" BALUTYPE STEERING-Eosier handling UNIT-DESIGN built Chillicothe, Missouri 701 Calhoun St Phone 1156.

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About The Chillicothe Constitution-Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
362,960
Years Available:
1890-1988