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The Kansas City Times from Kansas City, Missouri • 4

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Kansas City, Missouri
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Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

YORE, 1 Du the 37 U. E. 7 THE KANSAS CITY TIMES, MONDAY, APRIL 19. 1926. RITES FOR JUDGE J.

M. LOWE. Services for Veteran Jurist Will Be at 3 o'Clock This Afternoon. Funeral services for Judge J. M.

Lowe, who died Friday at the St. Regis hotel, will be o'clock this afterin the Calvary Branch Baptist Ninth and Harrison streets. Dr. church, Jenkins will officiate, The active pallbearers: Barnett, Pryor Combs, Thomas Crittenden, Frank Robinson, Ellison A. Neel, Cliff Jones, Joseph Cooper, E.

M. Hopkins, Lexington. H. P. Smith will act in the place of Mr.

Barnett in case Mr. Barnett should fail to return in time from Memphis, Tenn. The honorary pallbearers: R. A. Long, Oscar F.

Mehornay, Frank P. Sebree, J. L. Porter, E. M.

Clendening, R. Stout, A. F. Seested, Theodore Gary, James 8. Barton, Crawford M.

James, Homer McWilliams, O. V. Wilson, Charles H. Davis of Boston, U. S.

Epperson, Dr. J. E. Logan, Milton Thompson and John R. Blackwell of Lees Summit.

and E. W. Stephens of Columbia, Mo. Dr. Jenkins will be assisted at the grave in Forest Hill cemetery by the Rev.

Carroll V. Day, D. J. Evans and the Rev. J.

A. Cooper. Mr. and Mrs. Hughes Bryant, daughter and son-in-law of Judge Lowe, returned yesterday morning from Washington, D.

for the funeral. They were on tour in the East when they received a message of the death in a Washington. Kicked by Male, Negro Kills Helper. OKLAHOMA CITY, April Failure to hold a mule while another negro put a bridle on it cost Bill Carr, 40, of Luther, near here, his life last night. According to the story told officers, Carr slackened his grip on the mule and it kicked John Jackson in the stomach.

Jackson procured a shotgun and emptied the contents of both barrels into Carr's body. Monticello, Nurses Strike. CEDAR RAPIDS, April nurses at the John McDonald hospital, Monticello, walked day because one of their number had been disciplined by the superintendent for remaining away from the institution, after prescribed hours. MANY SEEK PAGEANT ROLES. Miss Helen Gifford to Have Part of First Eve in Women's Play.

Rivalry for the roles in the pageant of the progress of Eve at the woman's exposition, opening Monday night, April, 26, at Convention hall, has not delayed the pageant, but it has held back announcements, according to Mrs. Mary M. Miller, general chairman of the exposition. Miss Anthony, the director, have Mrs. Albert, I.

Beach, the author, and approved Miss Helen Gifford as the incarnation of the first Eve. The scenery will suggest Eden. Two trumpeters and four heralds will announce the tableau. A group of twelve Stone Age girls appear. As the group falls into graceful positions, Eve is revealed among them.

Mrs. John Adams Prescott will be regal Eve, as queen and ruler over men. The character is Queen 1sabella. Girls dressed in medieval costumes will make her court. Mrs.

Gilmer Meriwether, as Betsy Ross, will be escorted by eight girls representing the D. A. and Mrs. Hal Gaylord, as Julia Ward Howe, will have an escort of twelve Union and Confederate Other characters, including the secluded woman of the ages when men sought to keep other men from seeing their wives, and Pocahontas, remain to be chosen. Mrs.

Beach bridges the gap between Julia Ward Howe's time and today with a group representing Progress and her daughters, Drama, Education, Sculp ture, Music, Art. Following this group the pageant presents: Red Cross Nurse. Mrs. Mortimer R. Platt War Mrs.

H. H. McCluer W. C. Miss Mary Wilkerson The pageant committee is: Mrs.

Beach, Mrs. Herbert V. Jones and Miss Lenore Anthony, Car Hits Pole, Three Electrocized. PHILADELPHIA, April Three men were electrocized and three badly burned today when their motor car crashed into a high voltage electric light pole, causing a live wire to come in contact with the car. One of the injured is not expected to recover.

SLIPS 285 492 Daintily smart affairs in crepe, de chine, and tub silk. Visit our lingeries shop on first Floor Adler's 1208-10-12-14 Main St. SUMMER FELTS 4290 Introducing two new Bris successes the Spanish Sailor and the Shown in parchment and the new pastels. Floor Fifth Fifth Adler's Floor 1208-10-12-14 Main St. Stop and Shop MAIN AT THIRTY-SECOND Finest Fund Market in America 3 Soap Crystal White With Any 10 Parchase BARS in Market 29c Dept.

Dept. Butter Brookfield 12 Carton 1 lb. 41c 3 Dept. Peas WISCONSIN No. Can 2 3 Cans 23c Dept.

Grass Seed MIXED 1b. 29c Dept. Potatoes Red 9-14 or Russetts Peck 75c Wall Paper Sale Continues All This Week We are offering for quick sale a big variety of desirable ly reduced prices. patterns at greatCome Early and Secure the Choicest Values A large assortment of Wall Papers with matched borders per 5c only, roll A group of Living Room and Dining Room Papers, over seventy-five patterns, at 60c and 35c One group Imported Papers Bedroom Papers, hosts of patterns and 15c GEO. P.

POTVIN WALL PAPER CO. 12TH AND CHERRY STS. 4 Bars Crystal White Soap CRYSTAL WHITE Limit one packnge to a FAMILY 12C tomer. ASH AND CARRY. Sale on third floor.

39-in. Unbleached Muslin, yd. 10cl 36-in. Hope Bleached Muslin. 14c 29c Linene, 36-inch Scout Percale, yard.

14c 32-inch Dress Gingham, 12c 36-inch Pajama Check, yard. 13c 33-in. Jap Silk Pongee, d. 15c Curtain Rods, each 5c Children's Buster Brown Hose. 10c 1D embossed to cood parch- grade INTO ART AND RESEARCH GUGGENHEIM.

FOUNDATION ANNEW FELLOWS. Five Women Among Those Selected to Carry Studies Abroad Seience, Muste, Painting and Literature. Associated Press.1 NEW April The John Simon Guggenheim 3-million-dollar foundation, established last year by former S. Senator Simon Guggenheim of Colorado, and Mrs. Guggenheim, to help scholars and artists carry on work abroad, as a memorial to their son, announced tonight the appointment of thirty-seven new fellows from eighteen states.

An appropriation of $100,000 has been made to cover their expenses. The new list of fellows includes five women. Three artists were appointed for creative painting, three musicians for creative work in musical composition and many research appointments, were made in a wide variety of sub-, Sects. -two colleges and universities B.re represented. Harvard leads with four fellows, the University of Chicago has three, University of Cincinnati, three; University of Wisconsin, two; Yale university, two.

A fellowship usually carries an endowment of $2,500, but every case is adjusted individual needs. Those awarded the new fellowships follow: Dr. Warren Ault, Boston university, to conduct research into English local government; Dr. Roland Bainton, Yale divinity school, to prepare a book on religious toleration Stephen Vincent Benet, author, to do creative work in poetry and prose; Dr. David Blondhelm, Johns Hopkins university, use of the romance languages by the Jews: Wallace Brode, bureau of Washington, for research in azo dyes.

Royal Chapman, University of Minnesota, to study destructive pests; Dr. Arthur H. Compton, University of Chicago, to study nature of radiation; Dr. Alzada Comstock, Mount Holyoke college, to study League of Nations financial reconstruction work. Dr.

Kenneth Conant, Harvard university, to make drawings, being restorations of three Romanesque French churches; Dr. Ralph Eaton, Harvard, study theory of knowledge its relation logic and metato physics: Dr. Alfred Emerson, University Pittsburgh, to investigate the origin of the caste of termites: Dr. Herbert Fels, University of Cincinnati, to study French, brand German pre-war foreign Investments. Mrs.

Hallie Flanagan, Vassar college, to developments of the theater In Europe; Dr. J. Penrose Harland, University Cincinnati, to investigate ancient civilizations in Greece, Crete and Cyclades; Dr. Edwin Kemble, Harvard, to study new quantum theory; Dr. Paul Knaplund, University of Wisconsin, to prepare monograph on "Gladsone 8.9 a Colonial Statesman." Dr.

Ernest Lane, University of Chicago, to make comparative study of geometry; Dr. Julian Lewis, University of Chicago, to study fundamental nature of Immunity phenomena: Leopold Mannes of New York, for creative work abroad in musical composition: Dr. Harold Marvin, Yale medical school, for research into cardiovascular physiology; Glenn Mitchell, New York, for art studies abroad; Dr. Marjorie Nicholson, Goucher college, for research into English Seventeenth century thought. Miss Elizabeth Olds, Minneapolis, for foreign studles and in portraiture; Dr, Linue Pauling, California Institute of Technology, theoretical and experimental researches Into the atom; Dr.

Thomas Raysor, State College of Washington, to prepare new edition of Coleridge's literary criticism; Dr. Franklin Reagan, University of California and Indiana university for studies of the earliest blood vessels of mammalian embryos. Dr. Gladys A. Reichard, Columbia uniVersity, art style of Melanesia; Dr.

Ryder Edward Rollins, New York university, for studying and editing unpublished ballads of the Pepysian collection: Dr. Ralph A. Sawyer, University of Michigan, to study spectral series relations in extreme ultraviolet metallic spectra. Frank H. Schwarz, New York, art studles creative work in mural decoration in Dr.

Roger Session, Cleveland, O. Institute of Music, for creative work in composition; Dr. Robert Shafer, University, the of. works Cincinnati, of Fulke to prepare Greville: new Dr. Walter Silz, Harvard university, to study literature of Heinrich Von Kielst; Dr.

Ephraim Spelser, University of Pennsylvania, investigations of the Mitanni-flurri group of peoples in Northern Mesopotamia, Dr. Ellis Bagley Stouffer, University of Kansas, for a comparative study of differential geometry; Dr. Glenn Trewartha, University of Wisconsin, for geographic investigations of Japan and China; Dr. John P.ade, University of Georgia, for research into the early history of Georgia and Alabama: Dr. Norbert Wiener, Massachusetts institute of technology, for researches on Bohr's almost periodic functions.

The trustees also announced the following renewals of grants to fellows the foundation appointed last year: Dr. Violet Barbour, Vassar college, continuation of research in the life of Sir George Downing: Dr. Aaron Copland, New York, continuation of creative musical compositions abroad: Isaac Fisher, continuaton of study abrond of danger trends in world race relations: Dr. Kenneth James Saunders, Pacific school of religion, Berkeley, for the continuation of research In oriental religions: Dr. Allen Brown West.

Princeton university, for continuation of reseurches on the Athenian empire. The fellowship awarded last year to Dr. R. Griffith, University of Illinois, for research in child psychology, has been transferred to the 1926-27 group. Dr.

Warren Ault is a brother of Harwell A. Ault of the Claremont hotel, a lawyer of the firm of Moore, Smith, Aughinbaugh and Ault. Dr. Ault's home is in Baldwin, Kas. He attended Baker university there and was awarded a Rhodes scholarship.

He graduated in 1907. Dr. E. B. Stouffer is dean of the graduate school and a professor of mathematics at the University of Kansas.

3-Burner Gas Cookers $12.95 Large oven with white enameled door panels. Giant Star and 2 regular burners. An excellent contar Montgomery Ward Cos RETAIL STORE SeeSunday Paper. THE BARGAIN SPOT OF KANSAS CITY OGAN ONES DRY GOODS COMPANY Between 7th and 8th on Main and Delaware Telephone MAin 7373 O. N.

T. Thread, Lace Edging, yard 10c Crochet Cotton, ball 10c Embroidery, yard. 5c McCall Price Men's 50c Wilson Bros, Hose, pr. 25c Men's $1 Dress Shirts Men's 69c Athletic Union Suits. 45cl Men's Bal.

Shirts or 39c Women's Fiber Hose Pair, 10c, 19c, 29c Assorted colors; seconds and mill run; graded and priced according to condition, pair, 10c, 19c, 29c. Men's $1 Muslin Night Gowns. Men's Men's 35c Boss Paris Canvas Gloves, Garters, pair. Men's J. Capps and other Boys' 79c Play Suits.

Men's Blue Work Shirts. Women's Fine Knit Union Suits. Girls' Silk Dresses $2.95 Royal Balls U. S. Golf What So Dignified As These Underprice Bargains in This Great $100000 Sale of 12 Fine Stocks Up to 29c Piece Goods: 32-in.

Gingham, 39-in. Muslin, yd. Voile, Outing Flannel, Linene, Curtain Chambray, Unbleached Marquisette, Scrim, Crash yd. Suiting, yd. Bleached Muslin, Hundreds of yards on Table'pick them out, short lengths to full bolts--up to 29c values, per yard 9c.

29c VOILE, White and every imaginable springtime new, first class; per yard 36-in. 49c Sateen Black and assorted colors: yard, "Bargain Table" Up to $2 Salvage Silks, 89c Several kinds: plain colors novelties; better hurry--while they last, yard 80c. Up to $3.50 Fine Silks Flat Crepe. 40 in. wide, Printed Crepe de Chine.

Yard Skinner's Bengaline 98 Mallinson's Brocade Charmeuse Satin. Delightful $2.50 New Spring Printed Silk Crepes Crepes and de Taffeta, Chine, yd. Yard 79c $1.19 and other fine fabrics; yard 59cl Up to 89c Summer Prints Stripes, plaids, florals--broadcloths Special Purchase Women's Genuine $7.50 High Grade All Silk Pongee Dresses $4:75 Very latest styles; stroller collars, puffed sleeves, natural pongee color skirt with striped or plaid also natural pongee color waist with fancy skirt and other clever combinations; sizes 16 to 44-fresh, new, high gpade -direct from the manufacturer-each $4.75. Chicago State Street Fire and Water Salvage Children's Women's 79c to $1.39 Step-Ins Teddies Bloomers Water soiled or little damaged; priced according to condition 3 matchless bargain lots, 10c 19c 29c Choose from Muslin, Dimity, and Voile. Women's Up Women's up to $1.59 Salvage Princes to $1.39 Slips, Salvage According Sateen, to Striped condition, Gowns Satinay and Lingette.

39c 59c 39c 59c Crepe and Voile. 79c Women's 59c Brassieres, Women's $1 Warner and Gossard Brassieres, soiled Women's $5 and $6 Gossard $2.45 Women's Up to $1.69 According to Condition, 100,000 Rolls HIGH 8c Wall Paper, 12c Roll 2c All-orer floral and striped patterns: wold In straight combinations. Grand Mid-Month Bargain Sale Men's Fine Suits Going Big! Let Our 1485 $20 $25 and $30 J. Capp One and 2-Pants Suits Suits Also others. Young Dandy spring steles Men's styles; majority good patterns sizes tweeds; sizes 34 to 37.

to 39. Men's Gaberdine Raincoats, YARD color; full bolts; 136-in. Broadcloth 9 White and colors: tub fast: first quality yard 36-in. Rayon Dress Goods Figures, Volle Checks, Charleston Rayons. Rayon- Combinations; great lotseason's most popular fabric: 650 Up to 69c 36-in.

Pure LinFlock Dot and en; assorted Novelty Figured colors; yard, Voiles; yard 29c 49c Special Lot $1.49 Fancy Marquisette Curtains With Contrast Color Ruffles Pair $1.00 Dainty dotted and crossbar marquisette: white with blue, rose or gold fancy ruffles: yards long compiete with tieback: pair $1. 19c Curtain Mar- 45-in. Lovely Shadow quisette; mock Curtain Net, yard borders; yard 10c 69c Marquisette Panel Curtains; silk fringe; 40 each inches wide by yards long; $1.29 Just in From New York! Special Lot Women'3 $15 Poiret Sheen Coats, Each $8:72 Very latest straight line styles with narrow fur collars; some have fancy embroidered puffed sleeves; well made; blue, tan, gray; sizes 16 to 38- better hurry; each $8.72. Department Store Sale Women's and Wearables! Girls' Up to $1.95 Dresses Voile, Organdy, Gingham Perfect condition or very little mussed. 50c-79c $1.00 Sizes 2 to 14.

Girls' 59c and 79c WEARABLES Muslin Mussed or little soiled, Combination Suits choice. Billy Burke Athletic Union Rompers Creepers. 39c Panty Dresses. Infants' Flannelette Sacques. 19c Infants' Flannelette Kimonos.

19c Infants' up to $1.69 Wool Sweaters. 59c Girls' 39c Muslin 19c Girls' up to 39c MUSLIN PANTIES, KNIT PANTIES. ORGANDY BONNETS, PIQUE HATS, WOOL MITTENSmussed or soiled; 10c Salvage Apron Dresses 39c 59c 85c GRADE WALL Wall Paper, 15c Wall Roll 5c Kitchen blocks living room bedroom florals a straight stripe combina. tions. Weekly Payment Plan Help You 71995 2950 $30 and $35 $40 Silk $45 and $50 Two-Pants Mixed Worsted Model Very latest Suits single and Also Flannels BLUE and Suits Soft SERGES.

Fin- Silk Misuits, Worsted 33 double breasted models: labed Worsteds: display models. none all wool: sizes 30 to 42. latest. very better: hand tailored; eatin piped seams. Men's $3.50 and $4 Wool Pants, pair.

$2.95 $15.85 Men's High Grade $2, $2.50 and $3 Men's $1.50 Dress Shirts Athletic Wilson each Ide, Ar- Union $1 row, Suits ROCKFORD GOTHAM MANHATTAN styles: Neckband, latest collar colors, attached and collar to match Fine count nainsook; Cash Capture, each $1.39. latest patterns -Chicago regular sizes. Men's $1.50 Men's $2.00 Genuine Men's $2 and $2.50 Wilson Bros and Allen Arrow and Ide English A. Lisle Ribbed Union Dress Shirts Broadcloth Suits $1.45 Shirts, Men's $5, $6 and $7 Emerson 87c 93c and Rothschild Fine Felt Hats Men's $1 and $1.25 Pure Thread Hose Men's $3 Men's Up to $4 Country Club Interwoven, Phoenix, FELT HATS, SPRING CAPS, Wilson pair 75c $1.45 $1.45 and fancy patterns. Latest solid colors Boys' Up to $3 Wash Suits, Men's 25c SILK PLAITED RAYON HOSE, 3 pairs for 50c, pair 17c Peter Pan, Robin Hood and others.

Oliver Twist, Russian. Middy and Eton styles: lineue, poplin. Men's $1.95 Work Pants, Pair other chambray, fine linen, washable galatea materials; and sizes 2 to each, $1. Boys' Up to $3.50 Wash Suits $1.49 high Twist, PETER grade; Eton PAN. and each ROBIN Middy HOOD styles; and very others: $1.45 Oliver Cottonade and stifel Boys' $1 and $1.25 Boys' SCHOOL cloth; sizes 32 to 42; Honorbright 1-piece KNICKERS; CUT "Bargain Spot" special, PLAY SUITS, FULL; pair pair, $1.49.

79c 79c Shoes for Entire at Right Men's and Boys' and $4.50 Dress Shoes, Pair $1.98 Solid leather: several kinds. several styles. Men's and Young Men's $6.50 Dress Shoes and Oxfords, Pair TO $2.95 Women's and Growing Girls' Up to $4 Low Shoes, pair Straps, Oxfordsseveral kinda. several styles. Women's Soiled Straps and Oxfords, pair 69c Women's Soiled Felt and Leather House Slippers, pair.

10c Misses' and Children's Soiled Ties, pair 3-Eyelet 69c Infants' Soiled First Step Shoes, pair 39c Look! Astonishing Up to 75c Repaint Golf Balls 29c S. Snalding. Roval. Goodyear. Silver King and dandy standard condition brands: brands 20c.

plainly relettered each 35c Reach Amateur REGULATION BASEBALLS 25C Family. Around 1-2 Price Women's $4.50 and $5 Low Shoes, Pair $2.95 Stylish, high Pumps. Straps. Oxfords. Women's $6.85 Newest Spring Straps and Pumps, Pair $3.95 Patent a 14 Champagne kid with ment kid overlayvery latest.

Misses' and Children's $3.50 and $4 Straps and Oxfords, Pair $1.98 Solid leather steles: sizes MISSES', CHILDREN'S and INFANTS' $2.50 and $3 STRAPS and OXFORDS, Pair $1.00 Bargains, 3rd Floor Champion Tungsten Electric Light Globes 18c 10 and 25-watt. MAZDA LIGHT GLOBES, NEW LOW PRICES 15, 25, and 40-watt. 60-watt 32c 75 25-watt, inside fros 100-watt, inside frost. Heddon's, Pflueger's Famous Globe and South Bend 49c Phonograph Wood Minnows RECORDS GLOBE 100 Sprout, Fishing Hooks- 29c Limerick, Pacific Bass and others 200 10-inch: play both sides: very latest popular selections. PAPER at HALF What It Costs Elsewhere! Paper, 25c to 35c Wall Paper Up to 75c.

Wall Paper Roll Roll Roll 8c 122c 25c Lovely high grade Imitation tapes- High Beautiful Corals and grade tapes. tapestries stripes." tries, gilts and all- gilts -splendid over patterns. sortinents..

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About The Kansas City Times Archive

Pages Available:
1,147,760
Years Available:
1871-1990