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Fort Scott Daily Tribune and Fort Scott Daily Monitor from Fort Scott, Kansas • Page 5

Location:
Fort Scott, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

yiJUAUYrjjjrfcMU EVENING. OCT. 8. 1920' if I Ml' Tuivfti 9 "7 and EnJttrraJ Br iAoomwi J. McCreedy-Makinson- GuarzntecJ to rx A Mr and Mrs.

Fred McCreedy or taa, pimples -lirer-ist stxz- K- 507 S. Margrave? St. announce the marriagerof theit daughter Miss' i 1 -i, I une csjs -j Lys fUds pores ErtJ? tissues i.pritiis Jsves the skjo clei'fcHct, hchy Jt eadiag toilet iuu. li they bjr.mail, trd tATIONAI. Tv'ZrPT r-.

Soldlby and other toiier counterir" VOU certainly want to save money, and you would Jike to have better bakings. Then use biggest thing you can do to- improve, the quality of your IBaldngs i andiowexyaaking costs-i (uisde jn; theltrgest, most sitaryBadng Powder Factcaies in theWorld. No Baking Powderja made 'under better conditionsnone can; be quality. 1 It contains only such ingredients as have been officially endorsed by the U. S.

Pure Food Authorities. An absolute guarantee that it is pure. Mabel JTattie JlcCreedy Mr. Thomas Makinson, which pccUfred yit 630 o'clock, at1 the residence' -Of' the-bride. Rev.W.

Yi 'Christian jhe'- impressive certtfjjonyf In thepresence of relative-! Roses and crimson dahlias decorated the 'house, attracticely. binuivcsoxfiBiHE iK-: appearance her traveling or blue with black fur. Her costume was completed with a small feather toque. Brides roses formed the beautiful After the ceremony a four course wedding supper was served. Mrs.

McCreedvN was assisted by her s-' 1 i 11 5wTl-ii5a- riM 5T IA i i. I THE GLOW of the blazing, liearth, soon we shall A Lie spending the long winter evenings. With a good book or good friends and goodi music with a little dancing, perhaps, and lots of good-natured banter on the side. Our thoughts must turn to furnishing the living room so itwill be charming and comfortable. Karpen Guaranteed Upholstered Furniture -5- SiFtM Ti '2ajr- S3- JX 1 i' Aim IB I KM I -1 nc 7 ir- "WRr.v.'.v.'J.' Si vsg'cy BEST BY TEST i 'lPW3)ii Charm and comfort iire'cohibindd td the greatest ex-v tent in this luxurpus furniture that costs no more than ordinary.

Karpen Furniture may be had in lull overstuffed pieces, upholstered in tapestry or igurecl velours or i may be had in the cane panelled suites with loosci spring cushions and frames of solid mahogany or birch mahogany just as you may prefer. yrt. Si ilj' TT' TTfTC daughters Mrs. Elmer Holding and Miss Alice Mr. and Mrs.

Makinson left this morning Wichita, Kans where they will attend the Wheat Show and at the same time visit the bride's sister, 'Mrs. F. F. Lyon and family. After Nov.

1st they will be at home at 1602 S. Crawford but they expect to take a more extensive tour to St. Louis and Southern points after their return. Both Mr. and.MrsJvIakinson are popular young people in the community.

The bride being the daughter of5 the old established, grocer, Mr. Fred McCreedy and wife, was- edueafed in, Fort Scott schools and is a 'favorite with her circle of friends. Mr. Makinson is a valued employee of the Frisco, being "a pipefitter and ox-welder at the shops. He is a most estimable yoUng man.

Friends extend Jiearty congratulations. i rr Mrs. Harry Stockhoff left this morning fo El Dorado, to visit her sister Mrs. Wood, Bass a.nd to attend the wedding of her niece Miss Elizaebth Bass, a Fort Scott girl to Mr. Cyril Faulders on October 15th.

Other relatives will go over later. Mr. and Mrs. J. J.

I.ewis who for six months have been in La Jolla, are expected to arrive at their home in Newton, Kans. to: nijrht and perhaps next week they will visit Mrs. E. L. Glaze and family.

The. Music Study Club will meet Saturday afternoon at 3 o'clock at the home of Mrs! Douglas Penni-man of 843 S. Judson St. The hostesses will be Mrs. Douglas Penni-man.

Misses Alma Ahrens, Anna Anna Mae Jenkins and Mrs. Dan Bates. Mr. and Mrs. R.

R. Rogers have been attending the Oklahoma state fair for the past several and visited' and relatives. They motored back with Mr. and Mrs. D.

C. Goodner, who is in the drug business of that city. 1 1 i If -l i I b't a 3 i I T- i 1 fax 1 JhJ a recrived Pure Tood Exposition, Chicago Paris Dqxj'tion, Francs positive proof ci its superior merit; It is used. by mere housewives, clorn.jc rcicntir.iiard chefs than any -Th wcuid rioi: be the pfclRHAPS it may be a lamp that is needed an odd chair or two, a table for cards or, mav be, a librarf table. l- it were possible to securer a f.irjlier.quaiv.y 1 Calumet Creap Cake Recipe 3 cups pastry-flour, 3 level teaspoons Calumet Baking Powder, cup butter, l4 cup3 granulated sugar.

Yolks of 3 eggs, cup cold water. Whites of 3 eggs, 1 teaspoon orangs extract Thenrnix ia the regular way. -Oftentimes, rugs prove attraction to one or two small a decidedly added a room. If so with It ir r.t a moderate price. Ail yv.f-i have to dcri? to compare costs to 1 now.

much you can Gave oy This 8napsliot of Mrs, Cox vaj napped at Trail's End. tha haanJ Cox home, tour miles outside aluret ccntains full ft 'V- or. Kerne powders com 12 -caivi iasterd of 15 in Ee WED 31 YEARS; NOW PART your room, we can show yoii rugs that kwill delight you as lover of beautiful furnishings. Fern stands quarter-sawed fumed or golden oak will take carc of the plants soon must be brought in from the porch. suit; yo i fret a you want it.

R. Owen- Files Suit For Divorce From, Sarah ElizabettvOweni ft .1 -o. i to'. Married in 1838, the Claim. esaEl Alleging that his has aban-ooned him, after they had lived New way of revenge.

thirty-one years together, H. R. Olv-en, of this ycity, filed suit this morning in district court, -through i And Music Woman Put Wads of Gum Where Spectators at Fair Would Sit Down on Them. who promptly came and told the woman she would have to cease such practices or leave tho grand stand. It is reported that one young woman sat down on some of the gum, with the result that her clothing was smeared with it.

his attorney Judge J. H. Crider, for a divorce from Sarah Elizabeth 1 Owen. Mr. Owen claims that he and his wife were united in mau-iage in the WISHING AND WAITING-how i Ml OO r- Mr.

and Mrs. George Steckel left today for Wichita, to attend the International Wheat show. They will also spend a few days in Newton visiting Mrs, Steckel's daughter Mrs. Fred Lewis and family. Mr.

and Mrs. A. A. Davis, of 501 South Eddy street, have arrived In Los Angeles, where they will visit their daughter, Edna, and in a short time will go on to Oakland. E.

F. Weeman. of Maquoketa, Iowa, where he has lived since 1854, is in Fort Scott visiting his year 1888, and-that they lived to CULP'S BODY COMING stead of asking; people to sit down, or trying to look lover the shoulders of the crowd, she decided, to R-ive up the idea of trying to' see the races, and instead center her ef-: forts on revenge. A nd her plan took a strange form. She had an ample supply of chewing gum her.

She would chew up a wad of this. When the crowd stood up, she would place the wads on the seat in front of her, and when the persons occupying those scats sat down, they would get the gum on them. Tom Hartman, of, this city, was one of those the woman had picked as a But it chanced that he looked around before he sat down. IBM Jong has it been since you first wished ''O'Pi'lTipnJr for and began waiting for fiilh: iih (ii gether as' husband and wife until August, 1919, when the defendant, through no fault of his, abandoned Remains of Fort Scott Boy Killed In France in a Train Accident to Buried in National Cemetery. him.

This abandonment, it is You have, no doubt, heard many of the "mean man" stories, but it is doubtful if you over heard a. real "mean woman" story. Well, this is one of that kind. The woman referred to was one of those- attending the Uniontown fair, yesterday. She was fat, and presumably fond of ease.

At any rate, even at the most exciting moments of the races, she refused to stand up. therefore, her view Was obstructed at times. This angered the woman, and. in claimed, has continued ever since. SI NK THE U-97.

Mr. Culp of 214 East Seventh street this morning received a telegram from the Graves Registration German Submarine Which Sank granddaughter Mrs. Harry Seelye for some time. He has visited here before. And he saw the gum Seven Allied Ships Will Be De- lie left his 'service at New York stating that 142 brings you a model 107, and forty 40 selections of the best in music of your own choosing.

This can be paid, for in easy monthly payments. Investigate now. seat and called Marshal Jess Kent, stroyea in unicago naroor. Mrs. Ed Koontz and cousin "Mrs.

the body of his son, Herbert R. Culp, had arrived in New York and would be shipped to Fort Scott for burial in the National Cemeterv. Chicago, Oct. 5. If the naval terms of the treaty of Versailles are Marys, Hupp returned last night from Rich Hill, where they visited relatives.

1 The remains nrp prnoptpl tn. arrivoN carried out by. the allies the U-97, a German submarine with a record of MOW FEEL1 BETTEIl tc yr Miss Agnes Heck, of the city at least seven allied ships sunk, will within the next week and will be taken to the Cheney Undertaking rooms to await burial. Herbert Culp was a member of itself be sunk in 100 feet of water schools is enjoying a visit from her mother, Mrs. Heck of Hill, about 20 miles Chicago harbor this fall.

"i' a machine gun company of the a- In-', Orders for the destruction of the U-97 were Issued some time ago, but Mo. Mrs. Amanda Tincher Hartman is visiting her niece in Lawrence, -ft later withdrawn pending decision Kans. whether that part of the German peace) treaty which provides for the destructioa of all surrendered war- THE HOME OF BETTER HOME FURNISHINGS Piano Tunings W. C(.

McPherson. 109 N. Crawford. Pnonc 702f craft is to be put into execution. A.

Mi- There is some difference of opinion among the allies, France and Italy Saint Joseph Woman Says Tanlac Has Given Her a New en Life. Gains Ten Pounds by Taking It. LiUlJ and I' would get so dizzy that I had to catch hold of anything to keep from falling. My appetite was poor and I became so weak that I could scarcely do anything. I tried all kinds of medicine but nothing especially being anxious to keep some of the late German ships to bolster up their own navies.

In the meantime the U.97, which PERSONAL MENTION, i 2 R. Armour is herefrom Eldorado Springs visiting his brother, Sheriff Clarence Armour. Herbert Conine is here from Gor don, fcansas, visiting for a few days. 'Sinnd taking- Tanlac I seem td seemed to suit my case. 356th.

Infantry. He was killed in a railroad accident in France on January 28th, 1918. It was reported that Culp had been killed in a railroad wreck but later developments revealed that he was struck by a French troop train. -1 In company with a corporal, Culp was detailed to recruit guns one morning and it was while performing' this duty xthat he was killed. He and his companion were crossing a bridge which had a double railroad track.

They stepped off one track to avoid a train and both' got in front of a French troop train which suddenly came around a curve. Both were killed instantly. Aside from the father the boy Is survived by four brothers and one sister, they being Lou. Ernest and Clara of this city. Will of Springfield, Mo.

and Christopher who is attached to the 37th U. S. Cavalry now in the Hawaiin Islands. Funeral arrangements will be announced as soon as the body arrives. toured the Great Lakes in the interest of the -Victory loan campaign.

He has been employed by the Em "My very first bottle of Tanlac gave me an appetite and settled my stomach and now after taking six bottles I can- eat anything I want and am never troubled in the least with indigestion or gas. Have already gained ten pounds have taken a new lease on life and am feeling In better general health than I have for the past two years," said Mrs. Elizabeth Tinsley of 2410 South St. Joseph, Mo. "Before I started taking Tanlac I pire Oil Company at that place, and following the armistice, is tied, up alongside Jerry's old flagship, the Commodore, here.

Only the hulk of the old-time terror of the. seas remains, practically all her machinery expects to return there shortly. Leonard Bright, another well-known ex-High School student, is employed are still aboard, and probably will go down with the ship if she Is sunk. Although the batteries are worth several thousand dollars, and an offer has been made for them by a private purchaser, the naval department refused to permit the sale. If the orders to destroy the hull are revived the U-97 will be towed out to sea by the gunboat Wilmette, formerly the steamer Eastland, which turned over in the Chicago river, in 1915, drowning more than and fittings having been removed, the was in a.

terribly run-down -condi-jin weight and-have so much more tion" continued Mr. Tineley. strength and energy that I can do there by an oil company. Helen, the seven year v'old 'Everything I ate seemed to lie on daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

William all my housework without any trouble." Tanlac lsr sold in Fort Scott by Frank5 Shoemaker and by the leading druggists ir every town. C. Reynolds of eight miles south my stomach like a lump of lead and would sour and bloat me up with pas until I was in perfect misery. Headaches almost drove me frantic west of thiscity, is confined to her home with the diphtheria. There 800 excursionists.

About twenty Advertisements are rtews Good news timely news helpful; news. News of the great world of business. Heralds of the world's improvements builders of factories linkers of homes. Tews of the latest; styles; News ot: comforts unknowri whenY father- majority, to be sent to the Annapolis' naval academy Her five-inch deck gun rests On the wharf beside the rust-eaten hulk. 1 I Iii spite of Lthe, gutting process which the boat has the hnlk 4s still worth $15,000 to $20,000 a- to Captain Edward A.

Evers, naval commandant in the Chicago district. There is a large amount of copper and brass aboard which could be recovered by breaking up the bpatl miles out in the lake the charts shour more than 100 feet of water. are several cases of diphtheria in the vicinity and acting on the advice of Dr. E. B.

Payne, the Star ana there' Captain Evers plans to Schoor house, where a number of James Johnston passed away this morningat 9:10 gaiter lan, illness of seven months. He leaves a wife and seven children as follows: the children that are afflicted, at tend school, has been closed. I luT storage, batteries, which' former Word was received yesterdavsthat A. R. Wilson, a well-known old res ly ran theU-boat, when submerged ident of Hepler, was very badly in.

jjured yesterday at Hepler, as the re Allie, Mrs. MayvSharplep, Dee 'and t.Char-iey. One grandson Leon Walker, one sisterY.Mrs. Mattie Grover and two brothers-John Johnston and Wm. Johnston 4 nou ls.

Funerat services, wfll ixj -ntuicted tv Rey.sAllenatUhe home 1,901, J. asa boy. Mews that is handy to your eye suit of falling from, the, roof of a church, which he was painting. No open up the U.boat's sea -cocks and then batter her to pieces with shells from the Wilmette's five-inch guns. nj, 1 i i i i Trade for Bomfcinmg you want falue which; yoif 5 may realize that'outgrown article, still useful has either a cash, pr, exchange through; tf fbf saie pr, Tor exchange advertisement.

You are cumbering; 'UP storage room, with It yet needisome thing else for whic It might be Trade it. TOO Cate to classify. FOR RENT NEWLY DECORATED i rooms; very desirable; modern; in suites of 1, 2 and very reasonable. Phone 1891W. 1106 Main.

$49.50 $49.50 details as to the nature of his in- Sleeps Any Old Way "I am 50 years old and. never was sick until 8 years ago, when I got stomach I have spent a for Mewsthat will sv you iries have been learned, but it1 was -Tlne SL. Sunlay af time be, announced tomorrow. reported that he was- dangerously hurt. -vr; tune for medicine -which did not cure, I kept ort suffering and get- you can't afford to hurry by.

Don't miss the advertisements -News of the best places to buy tmg worse. A fellow worker- told me about MjtjT's Wonderful Rcm-edy After'taking three doses I felt like a different man; before taking it I- could not lie on my back nor right side. Now I can sleep any old FOR SALE JC COLE'S HOT BLAST heating stove in excellent condition. Phone 1784. Seigt-' F.

J. Keenan, of the local recruiting station, this morning, received an ordes to discontinue enlistments of -nen for service in Germany, except those having special qualifications. Presumably, this means that only clejks can be accepted for service in Germany. This stops the recruiting of Infantrymen, which has been allowed for months. The enlistment of cooks was discontinued a short time ago.

Men's Worsted Suits tvay." It is a simple, harmless FOR RENT FURNISHED FRONT -i room: modern, including steam heat: couple preferred; with or without board. PhChe 80. MJ-K- f- For Iniasis it pays. to read advertisements: Serges or Dark Dressy Patterns Oct. 16 $49.50) Inralids aration removes the' catarrhal mucus from theJntestinal tract and allays the inflammation which causes practically all stomach, liver and Intestinal ailments, Including ap- MO COOKING There's a way to acquire just the home that's your ideallocate It through the Wast 'k Tha Food-Drak, for All Ages.

Kpendicitis. One dose will convince ST REE AIR fc Lunch 1 You cannot afford to own property unless it yields an income. Keep it on a paying basis through advertia-log for tenants until tenants are secured, or money refunded. For sale by Johh Synnbtt and. Shoemaker's Drug Store aad druggists every where.

--v- If carrter falta yeu. be tween and 7:33. Do not ca9 befora 7:00..

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About Fort Scott Daily Tribune and Fort Scott Daily Monitor Archive

Pages Available:
72,684
Years Available:
1884-1923