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The Neosho Times from Neosho, Missouri • Page 3

Publication:
The Neosho Timesi
Location:
Neosho, Missouri
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE NiEQSHO ftMES, pftJRSbAY, OCTpBER 21, 1937 BM.D.S.PAT.Orr. Prepared by the Editors of TIME Weekly Bad Neighbor organ of the Soviet govern-: hia trip ment, ''cannot fall to remark In ihome from the, west, President. President Roosevelt's speech the aext morning, the duke and duch- them yield a pop bottle full of i LlBEKTY AND FREEDOM ess were, met on the platform by to mount and' ride wild In north central Newton coun- Nazi labor front leader Rob-'horses in a- race across the ar-jty two adjoining school districts, ert Ley who presented a bouquet of red roses, promptly drove Ger- (with the stirrups tied down as many's guests to Kajserhof a concession to their sex); 'Cowboy Billy Keen vaulting over an OOO AU A VUG i VJ A4g) UADV1 ena; cowgirls riding bronchos and Freedom, mark the. hotel. His Royal Highness the.

with two horses; trick of Windsor, duly confirmed by George VI in that rank, was slat- Franklin D. Roosevelt stopped off number of views directly coin- ed to be received by Der Puhrer at Chicago to dedicate that city's elding with the ideas for which new centennial bridge, surprised his listeners by talking not about the bridge but about international affairs. Said he: 'The present reign of terror Soviet diplomacy alone hitherto has "fought consistently." AS head of the Popular Front and Chancellor Adolf Hitler at his Bavarian snuggery on Oct. 22, to sail with the duchess from Cherbourg on the Bremen on Cabinet in France, Premier 6 for Manhattan. mille Chautemps told the Ameri-l While the duchess waited at horseshoe Pitcher Ted 'Allen knocking a paper bag from the head of an assistant in the course of making a ringer; lighting a match with another trick roper Gene McLaughlin, 7, of Del Rio, performing with his brother Donald, mounted basketball, a game with all the pun- and international lawlessness be-'can Club of Paris in a fe.rvent the Kaiserhof, Dr.

Ley features of water polo, gan a few years ago. It beganjafter-luncheon speech "We duke out on what be'football and a riot in a picket center of a truly progressive farming, community. Possibly the privileges of Freedom end at the boundaries of Liberty. At any rate, there is such a good fellowship of interests, it seems advisable to combine the news un- the above heading. "'The school bell at Liberty is silent these beautiful autumn days as our school" board from the standpoint of both economy and efficiency arranged for all'grades to attend the Diamond, consolidated school.

A splendid bus ser- BARBABIOK CHAIRMAN O. T. A. Mrs. John Grenlnger, raother-in- of Mrs.

Grady Smith, one of our loyal members. Willis Joslin, a long time res- Dr. H. P. Barbarick, local chlW ident and much respected citi- opractlc physician, was named zen of near Pepsin, died v.ery' chairman Of the program coin- suddenly last Thursday and waslmittee of the Ozark Basic Tetili buried Sunday at Center grave yard.

through unjustified interference in the internal affairs of other, nations or the invasion of alien territory in violation of treaties, and has now reached a stage the very foundations of civilization are seriously threatened. 'Without a declaration of war found with emotion and pride in, 81 intensive fortnight's tour- of Hne. BIRTHDAY DINNER A group of relatives and friends met at the home of Will Schweitzer Sunday with well filled baskets to help him celebrate his 67th birthday. A bountiful covered dish dinner was served at noon. Those enjoying the occasion the President's Chicago speech an German factories, and echo of all the principles to worker recreation projects.

Tak- which we are passionately attach- ln England's onetime king repeatedly and vigorously by the coat lapel, Dr. Ley proved himself a buttonhole orator: "This was a rubbish fac- ed!" Members of the Chinese government, which clearly stood to gain most by the Implications pf President Roosevelt's new foreign tory!" the Nazi roared in Wind- and without warning or justifi- policy, blandly expressed them-i sor 's ear. "It was worse than a cation of any kind, civilians, in- selves as "much gratified" last rubbish heap because, it was cludng women and children, are week but unrestrained were founded by communists. And then ibeing ruthlessly murdered with)Joyous whoops of U. S.

tae Leader Adolf Hitler came On the fourth night of the show Steer Walter Cravens, one of the the circuit, was thrown and trampled on; died next day of a punctured lung. Slip of a Daught Macon, a Daughter of the American Revolution should end a Fourth of July oration vice is furnished and all the tots we re Mr. and Mrs. Welch, arrive safely, comfortably and Ida sparlin, Mrs. Edith Matthews on tlme 'and Billie Holmes of Seneca, Mr.

school Is taught by and Mrs W. E. Schweizer and Miss Hattie Patton, who is teach-' son, Billy Joe, of Independence, ing her second very successful Mr. and Mrs. John Lader- term here.

She is also leader of ach, Mr. and Mrs. Ora Schweizer the 4-H health club sponsored and daughter, Gretchen Belle, by the United Gleaners home ec- Mr. and Mrs. S.

P. Lenhart, Mrs. nique. Association at a meeting. Sunday afternoon ft't ttte Drake hotel in Carthage whin the annual election of was held.

Dr. Ray B. Smith oC Joplin was elected president; Dr. L. A.

Scho'onover of Springfield, and Dr. Clara Harding of Ash Grove, secretary- treasurer. Want ads bring results. bombs from the are "being attacked and sunk by submarines without cause or notice. resident in China.

"If you boycott Japan," S. radio listeners were told by firmer Chinese Am- Nations are fomenting and tak-; bassador to the U. S. Dr. Alfred Ing sides in civil warfare in na- Sao-Ke.

Sze, broadcasting- from tions that have never done them any harm. Nations claiming freedom for themselves deny it to others. Innocent peoples and nations are being cruelly sacrificed to a greed for power and su- Shanghai, "you will find you have contributed to the greatest single step of progress in Although President Roosevelt was offering the United Kingdom premacy which Is. devoid of all the chance of the century to ex- sense of justice and humane the U. from isolation and sideration.

"It seems to be unfortunately true that the epidemic of world along and all that was changed! Look at the happy working men! LOOK AT THEM! While the duke lit a cigaret to gain elbow room, Buttonhole Orator Ley singled out a worker, with a burst of praise for George III, her audience would be. justifiably startled. In Macon, Mrs. Walter D. Lamar last week startled a convention of the Georgia division of the United Daughters of the Confederacy with an in- crying; "You are happy here, are discretion no less dramatic.

Cli" you not, my worker comrade? Qa.jthe wall a few feet away a huge placard: "HUSH! Remember it Is your duty to be silent!" maxing a rhetorical eulogy of famed Rebel Jefferson Davis, Mrs. Lamar said: "Let the world know the wisdom, the kindness, Gertrude Jolly, Carol Richards, Miss Susie Schweitzer and Ben Schweitzer. The afternoon was ocomlcs club of Pepsin. A large church building at Pepsin furnishes a place of worship, and Sunday school is held regu- spent Present, larly. Liberty also has its place of worship in the Liberty Pres-i byterian church where a union RTRTHDAY DINNER A happy gathering of relatives I team It up with Great Britain, galn an answered: "Ja, ja.

Voa voo The worker looked at Dr. Ley, the justice of great and only then at the placard, then at Dr. President of the Confederate this week Downing street had its careful fingers crossed. In Japan, lawlessness is spreading. When Germany and Italyl prompt and Yes, States of Lincoln!" The Daughters of the Con- Sunday school and young people's; and friends was the dinner given meetings are held each Sunday, in honor of the 80th birthday of and preaching services once Marie Schumaker Sunday at month.

Liberty Homemakers Club her old home near Elm Springs also sponsors a 4-H'girls club, which Mrs. Sehumaker has own- Now that we have-lHtrOOTCedled since coming to America 60 ourselves, we are glad to be years ago, but being unable to among the contributors who make' care for her old home and farm, the county news of the she sold it to her oldest Will Times what it is. We cannot make Schumaker two years ago. Mr. news, we can only send it in, and Mrs.

Schumaker are remodel- and the writer will appreciate the Ing the house and will make It Sale! At the Den Barker Farm, 3 miles west of Neosho on Oil Only U. S. cabinet member to federacy gasped. Said Mrs. La- speak out on the.

Windsors was .1. A an epidemic of physical disease' angry reactions to the Chicago Madam Secretary Perkins who 'speech suggested that the Pr est-i mis assistance to the starts to spread, the community approves and joins In a quarantine of the patients In order to protect the health of against the spread of the disease. War is a contagion, it be. declared or undeclared. It can engulf states and peoples remote from the original scene of hostilities.

We are determined to keep out of war, yet we cannot insure ourselves against the disastrous effects of war and the dangers of involvement. We are adopting such measures as will minimize our risk of involvement, but we cannot have com-'as anticipated, the petition was dent had gone a long way toward stinging these mutually friendly Fascist powers into a hard triumvirate. As First important act of the U. S. supreme court's 1937-38 session last week was, duke and duchess In enabling them to see as much they like of U.

S. labor. PWA officials in Washington readied a list of 31 U. S. cities in which the visitors might inspect its work.

The state department fussed Over derails of how to receive the sister-in-law and elder brother of the king of A AM, WVf -M 1 as anticipated, to dispose of the En land and emperor of India who once occupied this royal and petition by Lawyer Albert Levitt, that Associate Justice Hugo Lafayette Black be required to prove -his eligibility to sit on the bench of the highest U. S. court. Also plete protection in a world of disorder in confidence and security have broken down "There must be positive endeavors to preserve America hates war. America hopes for peace.

Therefore, America actively engages in the search for peace." Franklin Roosevelt did not advertise these words, briefly repeated in his "fireside chat" a (few days later, as a renunciation of a foreign policy that dated from 1920. Since the U. S. turned its back on the League of Nations, the U. S.

has been sternly devoted to a policy of Isolation and a theory that U. S. safety denied. Said solemn Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes last week: "The motion papers disclose no interest, upon the part of the petitioner other than that of a imperial status himself, today presents a protocol problem unprecedented. The President and Mrs.

Roosevelt, according to Washington prognostications last week, will receive the duke and duchess, Ynay ask them to stay at the White House. Admiral's Tokyo, into mar: "It was just one of those slips." UL11CI LllaLl I'UUL UJ. a J. I UfcClilft 1111U citizen and a member of the ne Japanese navy office In Tokyo last week, a little woman laid several pieces of money on the counter as a contribution to Japan's war funds. Saidtshe: "These of this court.

That is insufficient. It is an established prlncple that to enttle a private individual to invoke the judicial power to determine the validity of executive or legislative action he must show that he has sustained or is immediately in danger of sustaining a direct injury as tho result of that action and it is not sufficient that he has merely a general interest common to all REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS (Filed within the last weekT Clara Moore to Ethel Hutchens sw qr of sw qr of sec. 27, twp. 26, rge. 32, for $1.

Martha Brown et al to John Oden, half of ne qr of sec. 30, twp. 27, rge. 31, for $1. Germane Menapace to Frank E.

Menapace, ne qr of sw qr of fee. 32, twp. 24, rge. 32, for $1. G.

M. Campbell to Charloe Campbell, sw qr of se qr and so qr of sw qr of sec. 15, twp. 24, rge. 30, for $1.

Imogene Cole Payne to C. R. Smith, lots 1, 2, 3, 4, in blk. 22, Granby, for $1. Margaret N.

Johnson to Wiley E. Rackley, half of nw qr of sec. 8, twp. 26, rge. 30, for $1.

Clive R. Lane et al to Felix F. Andriano, part of lots 1, 2 in blk.il, Abbott's addition to Neosho, for $1800. Hattie Viola Bowles to F. M.

Anderson, sw qr of se qr of sec. cooperation of all in assembling worthwhile news for our column. modern. Those who enjoyed the lovely Wheat sowing Is nearing finis; dinner wer-e Mr. and Mrs.

J. A. for this season, and the buzz of Schumaker, Mr. and Mrs. E.

F. tractors is quietly giving way to Branham, Mr. and Mrs. A. J.

the whirr of the portable feed Hodgden, Junior Branham, Neil, grinder as it visits farm after farm on weekly rounds. Liberty Club postponed the Maxine and Marjorie Schumaker, Mr. and Mrs. G. E.

Kruse and little son, E. of Neosho, Mr. regular meeting Thursday, Oct. i and Mrs. G.

A. Harroun of Barns- 14, on account of the funeral of dall, Rev. and Mrs. Blllle Wednesday, Oct. 27 10 head of Dairy Cattle Many Farm Tools Feed and Furniture Reason for selling, will quit farming.

Sale to Start at 10:30 J. H. JACKSON Owner W. J. WADE, Auctioneer are Admiral Yonai's teeth." 9 rge for is best served by a laissez members of the public." taire attitude, towanl nat'onal quarrels.

Vague as the word quarantine" might It clearly Indicated that the President was prepared to use diplomatic if not economic pressure on international bullies. It left no doubt whatever that he intended to frame, U. S. foreign policy to encourage peace not only by being a good neighbor, but by restraining bad neighbors, Reactions to only foreign state to approve U. S.

President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's Chi- cage speech so highly as to have It reprinted in pamphlet form and distributed on all fighting fronts to encourage the troops last was the Valencia government of Leftist Spain. In Madred Mr. Roosevelt was hailed in whole pages of heartfelt Spanish for having brought Washington out on the side of Valencia. Cried Madrid's "Informaciou- e.s": "There is not a paragraph in President Roosevelt's speech which cannot be fully subscribed to by us without mental reservations or distinctions." "Soviet public opinion," said Moscow's Izvestla (News), offlc- Sufferers of STOMACH ULCERS HYPERACIDITY DEFINITE RELIEF OR MONEY BACK THE WILLARD TRB ATMBNT has brought prompt, definite relief in thousands of cues of Stomach and due to HyptracW- Ity, and other forms -ol atwacliDis- (lue to Excess Actd. ON ll PAYS TRIAL.

For complete information. of 1 tor Itr-frw-aH OWSLBY'S DRUG STORE Annapolis house on the Annapolis, grounds, the white glazed brick quarters of the U. S. naval academy's superintendent have been occupied since 1934 by onetime of the U. S.

fleet, Rear Admiral David Foote Sellers, who next February re.acb.es the navy's statutory retirement age of 64. Superintendent Sellers' successor, appointed last week by Navy Secretary Claude A. Swanson, will be Rear Admiral Wilson Brown, now commander of the U. S. fleet's Washington bigwigs who visit Annapolis under the new superintendent's regime will be welcomed by an old friend.

For Wil- aon Brown distinguished himself from 1926 to 1929 as naval aide to Calvin Coolidge. and command- Ing officer of the presidential yacht Mayflower, again from 1934 to 1936 as naval aide to Franklin Roosevelt. His career began in 1902 when he graduated from Annapolis as the youngest member of his class. He went back to teach at the academy in 1907, commanded the U. S.

S. Parker during the World War, later headed the S. submarine base at New London, Conn. GOP Plans- the Republican party represented in U. S.

government by 17 out of 96 senators, 87 out of. 435 representatives, and eight out of 48 state governors, former President Herbert Hoover recommended in the Atlantic -Monthly magazine a plan for getting his party out of the', Shocked underlings investigated, found she was the wife of a dentist, had obtained the money by selling gold from the teeth of Navy Minister Matsumasa Yonai after work done in her husband's office. St. R. Clay and Geo.

H. Siegel of Nutley, N. last week watched with amazement the rapid growth of their newly-founded Antl Movie Double Feature League, of America, dedicated to mass Boycotting of double bills and now boasting 65 chapters throughout the U. S. Meanwhile Fanchon Marco, potential firm which controls 31 St.

Louis theatres, completed a 10-day poll of 57,599 St. Louis cinema-goers, found that 7 out of 10 citizens In the nation's seventh largest city still like, Other- St. Louis preferences; Clark Gable, Myrna Lo.y, Shirley Temple. Only 1,609 St. Louis fans admitted that they liked gangster films.

Broadway New New York's Madison Square. Garden last week clattered 600 head of fractious livestock and 200 cowboys and cowgirls for the 12th annual world's championship rodeo. Soon most of the top-flight cowboys of the North American circuit were circulating around Broadway mov- io theatres and bars, wearing at the Garden's special behest the widest hats and brightest shirts they could buy. As contestants in what is one of the m.ost unprofitable as well as one of the riskiest of sports, rodeo cowboys average about $3,000 a year in prize, money, spend most of It on traveling expenses, clothes, entry fees, hospital bills. Few, therefore, can afford to pass up the Madison Square Garden rodeo, which offers, the season's biggest total'prize money aug- Mary A.

Rowe to Homer E. Stuckey, part of blk. 37, Neosho City, for $600. Marion Page Durham to John Oden, half of lot 2 of sw qr of sec. 19, twp.

24, rge. 31, for $800. Bank of Granby to State. Bank of Granby, various tracts In Granby for $4,726. Jim W.

Parker to Melvin Babcock, ne qr of se qr of sec. 22, twp. 25, rge. 31, for $1. Jos.

P. Reynolds to Wm. A. Reynolds, part of half of sw qr of. sec.

28, twp. 26, rge. 29, for $3600. i i MARRIAGE LICENSES James C. Skilllng Joplin Emma Frances.

Chase Joplin Jack H. Butler Neosho Lois Helen Cooper. Okla. Delmar L. Harlow Tulsa Dorothy Mae.

Jarrett Tulsa Lester Branham Neosho Marguerite Blinn Neosho W. L. Baxter Springs Mary Henderson. Picher, Okla. Arllss W.

Huffman Neosho Juanlta Parraley Neosho Harley Butterfield. R. 2 Hem? Parmley Neosho R. 4 Raymond Welcher Neosho Aileen Slankard Neosho Wayne. Stephens Neosho Pearl Lett Neoshq Burton Goins Miami, Okla.

Zelma Lambert Miami Roy Conduff Leota Leamon Nqosho I doldrums: a mid-term republican i mented this year by the entry national convention to be held fees In all events. Chief features of the rodeo It'nEdfyToBeMUUktn STOMACH TROUBLE Stomach sufferers should learn tho GAS, ACID, heartburn, during the next year. Republican Chairman John D. H. Hamilton last week announc- were the smell of taubark, a display of gay bandanas, a pounding ed that the, republican national, of hoofs, a whooping of cow- committee would nie.et In Chica-i hands and a continuous schedule month to consider aer- of feats of skill and vigor.

Among lously what good such, a conven-jthem: exhibition of trlck- tlon would do, decide whether to hold one. ropjng by 44-year-old- Chester Byera who learned some of stunts from Will Rogers and i been No. 1 S. trick roper so to the crack long (20 years) that no com- fordi Express out of Paris for, petitors were entered against him a privately chartered last week; cowboys trying to rf.car was hailed in the throw light Mexican steers, to night at Sologne last ride hugs- humped steers, to iope Berlin early wild cowa long, enough to make YES' On Most Anything You Have In FURNITURE BRIC JBRAC AND ANTIQUES HIITO RRQIO A gift every car owner wants. The Firestone Auto Radio has 6 all metal tubes, 0" Super Electro Dynamic Speaker, Sound Diffusion and every modern improvement.

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plete line of table and console models. Easy to buy on our layaway plan. BOYS AND GIRLS FLEETWOOD BICYCLE Completely streamlined deluxe equipment. Strong reinforced choice of colors full balloon, tires. LOW AS PER WEEK in fit.

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About The Neosho Times Archive

Pages Available:
30,845
Years Available:
1870-1953