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Jefferson City Post-Tribune from Jefferson City, Missouri • Page 3

Location:
Jefferson City, Missouri
Issue Date:
Page:
3
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Monday, January 28, 1935 'JEFFERSON CITY P08T-TRTB1JNB Society, Women's Clubs, Dances Page 'f LEOLA MAE MIL Editor Phone 5000 Announcements Tuesday Art Club--clubrooms of Public Library, 7:30 o'clock. Tuesday Club--Clubrooms of Pub- Library, 2:30 o'clock, T. A. T. Club--Clubrooms, 122 East McCarty Street, 7:30 o'clock.

Priscilla Club--Mrs. Ed Party, Country Club Drive, 2:30 o'clock. Euphrosyne Club--Mrs. Robert Kerr, 811 E. McCarty street.

One o'clock luncheon meeting. Contract Bridge Club--Missouri Hotel, 1 o'clock. Mrs. Lawson Price, acting hostess. Royal Neighbors--Woodman Hall, 7:30 o'clock.

Society Tea To Be Given For Miss Harris Mrs. George Robertson will entertain with a tea Wednesday afternoon from 3 until 4:30 o'clock at her home in Wymore apartments in honor of Miss Harris, daughter of Lieut. and Mrs. Prank G. Harris whose marriage to Cavlieve Aubrey Haskai'd Casardi is to take place February 2 in Columbia.

Standing in the receiving line with the hostess and honored guest will be Mrs. Guy B. Park, Mrs. Harris and Mrs. Clay W.

Stark of Louisiana, sister of the bride-to-be Pouring tea during the afternoon will be the hostess' mother, Mrs. C. Hunt of Columbia and Mrs. R. E.

O'Malley. Assisting generally will be Mrs. J. W. Hobbs, Mrs.

Howard Cook, Mrs. A. L. Hawkins, Mrs Clifford Fischer, Mrs Theodore Oberman and Mrs. Hale Montgomery.

Assisting in the dining room will be Mrs. John Guy Gibson, Mrs James T. Blair, Miss Elizabeth Church, Miss Elsa Happy and Mrs. Wilbur Buford. Miss Frances Hunt, sister of Mrs Robertson, will also be here for the tea.

Miss Harris, her mother and sister and Mr. Casardi will be guests in the city Wednesday. Attended 35th Division Conference in St. Joe Colonel and Mrs. A.

Linxwiler spent Friday and Saturday in St. Joseph where they attended the Thirty-fifth Division staff conference which was held at the Hotel The banquet Friday night honored Charles I. Martin, retiring major-general the Thirty-fifth Division. The principal speaker was Frederic von Boetticher military attache to German embassy at Washington, D. The military ball in the crystal room followed the banquet.

General and Mrs. Harold Brown and the Rev. R. M. Talbert also attended the conference.

Kendrick-Ditmars Wedding Sunday R. E. Kendrick of this ctiv and Miss Lucy, Ditmars of St. Joseph were married yesterday morning at 9 o'clock at the home of Mr. and Mrs.

James Goff in St. Joseph. The McGrew, pastor of King Hill Christian Church, 'officiated Only members of the family and intimate friends were present Miss Albert Chadwick and James Goff both of St. Joseph, were the attendants. A breakfast was served after the ceremony.

After a short trip Mr. and Kendrick will be at home in Jefferson City. Cherry Street Club Dinner To Be Monday, Fell. 4 The date for the annual dinner of the Cherry Street Club was erroneously printed on this page yesterday. The-dinner is to be held Monday, February 4, at Petit's at fi clock.

The after-dinner hours will be spent informally at the home of FLAPPER FANNY AYS U.S. PAT. OFF. assurance that your was taken requires uega- proof. Mrs.

Lawson Price will be actinc hostess at the weekly meeting of Contract Bridge Club toniofrow afternoon at 1 o'clock on the mezzanine floor of Missouri Hotel Tiie Adult Education Entertainment Thursday evening of, this week at the Junior College auditorium 1 Variety of ait debate an of sacred songs. at will nicct a tomorrow evening in Woodman Hall TT, 7:30 the sent.ed. 'Royal Neighbor and families are invited to attend Virgil Riek and his orchestra will There will be no meeting this week of St. Ann's Circle owing to the supper at St. Peter's Hall Wednesday evening.

Jefferson City Camp, Modern Woodmen of America, will enter- lain with the tri-county meeting this evening at 8 o'clock in the Woodman Hall. Following class adoption and initiation there will I At be dancing and refreshments. Air- fr members from other camps are in-' vited to be present at this meeting. Mr. and Mrs.

Nolan Wrishtsman left Saturday for Chicago where they will be for a week. GLORIFYING YOURSELF By Alicia Hart IMC The girl who wants to get full value for the money she spends on beauty preparations should learn to use them correctly. Half the success of a home facial depends on the skillful way your hands smooth out with which you pat, creams and lo- lines and wrinkles and the manner tions into your skin. You should remember that a skin tonic does about twice as much good if it is ice cold when you put it on. Keep the bottle in the icebox or, if you prefer, pour a little tonic into a dish and set the dish in a bowl of cracked ice for five minutes.

Nearly all astringents should be kept in a cold place, too. Read directions carefully. if there are not printed ones on the bottle or jar, ask iiie sales person to explain thoroughly just how the new preparation should be used Obviously, if a mask ought to be left on until dry, you won't get n-ruch benefit if you wash it off while it is still moist. All masks should be applied to clean skin. Remember that, too.

Don't expect a cleansing cream to nourish and soften your skin. Nearly all good cleansing creams are so light textured that they melt a few seconds after you put them on. Their purpose is to remove dust and dirt. "Use all of your preparations on your neck. It's said indeed to see a wrinkled, crepey throat below a youthful, well groomed face, and there really is no excuse for it.

Make a rule to apply creams and lotions from the base of your throat on up to the hairline. NEXT: The correct way to give yourself a home facial. AGED MAN BURNED TO DEATH IN FARMHOUSE PITTSBURG, Jan. 28--(AP) --Flames which destroyed the rural home of Joseph Rinearson, about 20 eight miles northeast of Liberal, Mo laie Saturday night claimed the life of the aged man, Barton county an thorities announced after an investigation. Traces of the body were found in the ashes after a neighbor early Sunday discovered the house had burned.

Telephone Now Capital City Telephone Co. During the 1893 World's Fair in Chicago. John Philip gotisa was presented with a huge bass horn standing six feet high and weighing i 80 pounds. CHAPPED SKIN quickly relieve chapping an4 row ness, apply soothing, cooling Menrholafum. LIU AH ClPJETtmi! 'Be Good to Your Emancipator Told Him; Declares Republican Party Wiil Never Die.

Abraham Lincoln patted i the head and talked to him, and since that time there has been no more devout a Republican in Missouri than Dorah E. Maples, Christian county's representatives in the slate legislature. It was in the fall of 1863 when Maples, then a three-year-old youngster, saw the Great Emancipator. Maples' father had been wounded while fighting for the North during the Civil War, and was taken to a hospital at Cairo, 111. From here the veteran law-maker tells the story in his own words: "I was only a small boy, can't remember many things that happened in those days, but I can vividly recall the time my mother took me to the Cairo hospital to see my father who was dangerously wounded, his army shot away.

"While we were standing at my father's side, a tall, ungainly looking man, with stubby whiskers came walking down between the rows of cots. Clothes Didn't Fit I said, 'that man's clothes don't fit she said, trying to quiet me, 'that's the President of the United "When he reached us, he put his hand on my head and said, 'little boy, be good to your Since that time, Maples said, he has read all the biographies on Lincoln, is a firm believer in the principles laid down by the man he once saw, and his always been a strong Republican. Will the Republican party die? "No," he replied emphatically. "The Republican party is a great parly, founded on sound principles, and as long as the country needs two parties--one the check on the other--it will never die." pointed to the house of representatives to illustrate his statement that the party would come back. "Two years ago there were only a dozen of us Republicans here; now they're about fifty." A Droll Speaker Legislating is "right smart of a task," he said, and in his Ozark philosophically way added there "wasn't as much rottenness in the legislature as a person thinks there is." Maples is serving his fourth term in the general assembly.

He first r- Personals and Announcements One-Ton Cake Will Be Placed, on Auction Block in Chicago By the Associated Press CHICAGO--There's enough cake army--and in one piece too. The one-ton delicacy, which required 3,161 eggs, 155 pounds of better, 153 quarts of milk, six pounds of. salt and four pints of vanilla, was mixed by 10 men and baked for 10 hours in a 155-foot oven. Mayor Kelly will auction it off, slice by slice, as a preliminary of Chicago's participation in President Roosevelt's nationwide birthday party. came to the legislature for the 1903 and 1905 session, and then came back for the 1933 and 1935 sessions.

While Maples has sponsored few bills, he seldom misses the oppor- aunity to openly expound his views on all important controversial measures, and when he talks, his colleagues listen carefully for his droll witticisms. White-haired, a bit bent with the passing of the years, yet the 75- year-old veteran remains as alert a member as those half a century younger. "I tried to get some young Republican to run from my county last year. I think the country needs young legislators, but I was voted down," he relates. And despite his ardent Republicanism, Maples 'is popular with Democrats and Republicans alike.

IIBLEUOSCIIE SMS LIVES OF WICHITA, Jan. play" rescue saved the lives of Lloyd Napier, 14, and Lloyd Wilson, 13. The boys went lo the Arkansas River yesterday to skate. Ignoring the protests of a beach caretaker that the ice was dangerously thin, they went ahead. Both plunged into 10 feet of water.

Henry A. Miles, the caretaker, tied a hammer to a rope and tossed it to the boys. Napier seized the rope and turned to Wilson who, numbed, sank. Na'pier, clinging to the rope, dove ana grasped Wilson by the clothing. Miles rescued them both.

SOCIETY SKATES WITH COCKTAILS IN HAND NEW YORK, Jan. 28--(UP)--Diversions of the New York smart set: Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Travis ice-skated around and around the terrace 10 floors above Park Avenue, cocktails in hand.

It was a cocktail party for the benefit of a nursery association for which purpose the Travis converted their terrace into a rink Edward Foster, 16-Year- Old Alexandria, Boy, Starts on 1440-Mile Trip; Also Attends Church. Instead of a saw, they used a blowtorch, and when firemen arrived, a 20-foot sheet of flame was spurting from the severed pipe. SCOTTDALE, Pascrct- ta was fast in setting away from the danger zone, entirely too fast. There was an argument over a card game in Patsy's store and someone pulled a gun. Pascretta ran into the street and fell, breaking his leg.

A stray bullet also gave him a flesh wound. WHEELING, W. members of the city council were in secret session to decide a matter of considerable comment. They heard a noise on the balcony and fearing political opponents might be night sent a policemen to investigate. Clambering- out, the officer found it was only a pigeon.

SALT LAKE CITY When students of the University of Utah Engineering school decided to give Dean R. B. Kelchum a cuspidor to express their high regard for him tliey selected no ordinary receptacle. Dave Benedict at Alexandria had ANDERSON, Jan. 28--(AP) --Only 48 of the 1,440 miles over which Edward Poster is to carrv 'i 20-pound weight in order io escape a reformatory term for robbery, had been covered by the 16-year- old Alexc.ndria, schoolboy today.

Prom the old pioneer inn tlicy salvaged an eight-pound, 14-inch cuspidor which had been used by such notables as President Garfield, and William "Buffalo Bill" cody. The names of 20 students were engraved on it. BANDITS HOLD UP FUEL OFFICE, SECURE $300 KANSAS CITY, Jnn. a8--(UP)-- Three bandits, two of whom covered their faces with their hands held up 14 persons yesterday afternoon in a fuel office in Dodson, near here, and escaped with SMo' They overlooked about $85 worth of gold dust. He was determined to continue the severe regimen, Blistered heels did not prevent him from making the 12-mile journey from his home to the jail here Sunday a he attended'two mass-' es at an Alexandria Catholic church, also ii part of his unusual sentence.

Jail attaches reported he arrived! carrying the usual four bricks i a bag, although Chief of Polic declined lo send the youlh out on i the road because of the blisters. Benedict said Foster had not "checked out" wilh him, and officers here suggested the youth was unwilling to risk violation of the imposed by Judge Charles K. Smith. A decision on how much lon-er the daily 24-mile hikes will continue, awaited return to Anderson of Judge Smith, who gave Foster his choice of punishment after youth pleaded guilty to robbing aii Alexandria grocery of 20 pounds merchandise. Two older boys who pleaded guilty wilh Foster drew re- lorumtory terms.

Benedict indicated at Alexandria he would suggest Judge Smith a din sentence be lightened. Fa I Lro SchcetH, of the Alexandria par-! ish. said Foster "is reacting a fully to this unwholesome publicitv and punishment." The youth makes the round i between the Jail and his home five- days week; on Saturday ho hikes home urn! stnys there, retuniiti" Sunday after attending church. Tin- court's sentence barred any hiich- hiking. come plant diseases caused by parasite growths.

Scientists at a New Jersey experiment station nro using fungus to fight fungus try ins to over- Will cclJ at your home with something of value for you and your family look for them Help Kidneys Don't Take Drastic Drugs Yom 1 KUtney.s contuiii million i tubes or fillers which niiiy I'mlinntnvcl by iicRlcirt or i i i limns. Be Direful. If i a Kidney or Bliulder disorders muku you Iroiu Cicttiim Up NijUUs. Nrrvoiism'ss. LCISK i i Pep.

LOK Pains, a i Pains. I ness, Circles Eyes Acid- Hy, i i Smarting or i i you i ilou't need lo lake clmnccs. All (iniuulMs now tlic must modern iidviinced a for these troubles--a Doctor's prescription called CysU'X Works fust--snle mid sure. In -IH hours il musl i i new i a i and Is i to make you feel in years younger In one week or money hnck on of i Cysto: costs only dose at nncl the guni-niitce protect WYMORE QUALITY, Rugs and Stoves Is Your Guaran- tes of Satisfaction Buy Them Now--From FURNISHERS Cash or Credit! rce Delivery! Winter Without can be ti comfortable one, but not nearly so smart as one wilh Inlcrwovcns. Interwoven Silk and Wools in Scotch Plaids 50c up Interwoven Silks 3 Pairs $1 MUNSING Wear Featured in Jefferson City lor Men, Only at Mcycrliardl's.

SHIRTS SHORTS Knitted by a i old company, per garment-- 50c Unionsuits Men's knitted unlonsuits, both long and short sleeves. $125 up Knitted Wools. Cottons and Lisles A 125 E. Store for Men SALES MANACIR REPORTS: "I chose Camels long ago. When I'm 'done I know that a Camel renews my sense of proportion and in energy." (Signed) Louii Bayard A LO iv "CAMELS ARE RAND-TASTING," says this active New York society matron.

"And it's marvelous how smoking a Camel revives my energy whentired." (Signed) Mrs. AlUtoti Boycr t-f FAMOUS EX. PLORER SAYSi "Camels are and yet they have full, rich flavor that you can enjoy. They quickly refresh my energy." (Signed) Harold McCnckcm In every line of endeavor, you'll find the people who work the hardest- those who arc the most active-are the ones who arc most apt to become fatigued and Irritable. They are continually drawing on their extra cnercv F.

F. Peters is typical of those who are active from morning till night. Let turn teH you how he replenishes his energy supply when tired He says- As a master builder I have learned that a tough construction job iusi naturally calls for Camels. I smoke them all the time, in the field, at the office, a when the day's work is over, because Camels give me new energy when I'm feeling tired and listless, and they never get on my nerves." (Signed) FRAZ1ER FORMAH PETERS SURVEYOR: "Surveying is one job that calls for accuracy. And you can't be with tired, janjrfcd nerves.

SmokingCamels as often as I please won't ever interfere with my nerves." (Sigrwd) PreKott Halsey ensive CopsTislil. TOS J. BeynoMs Tobacco Company WinKon-Stleia, x. C. in "Cornels ore mode from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE iih onrf Domestic any other ij popular brand." SJ (Signed) A.

J. REYNOIDS i TOBACCO COMPANY '5; N. C..

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About Jefferson City Post-Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
121,724
Years Available:
1908-1977