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The Weekly Kansas City Star from Kansas City, Missouri • 3

Location:
Kansas City, Missouri
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

rs oP l' STAR WEDNESDAY JANUARY 26 1938 31 THE KANSAS CITY Atb 3 i 4 THE FASTEST MILKER EVER BUILT THE FASTEST MIL 4 A CLARK-0 IN PART1 CRASH KILLS 4 PUPILS TRAGEDY MEASURE CHILDREN 11 KANSAT It I 'YOUTHS IN IIIGIIVIrAY ''''4 V1 Data Will Be Given Pattern and Clothes Makers lePublicatl rhia makes ate for thii offeyviiie Cart New 1 Pon Ibton their in es for the although on Or pail yel 1 Ar 'HALL HIGH SCHOOL DIE AFTER CAR HITS TRUCK ADMINISTRATION KINDLY TOWARD HIS EASTERN MISSOURI BERTHS others in Machine Are In jure(' Severely as Three Con pies Are Driving to Dance Hall Position on the Reappointment of blilligan Is Not Established nowever--District Attorney Ras Influential Support inOulil at viVJ-ZI MILK TRAVELS tONLY 4 INCHES INSTEAD OF 4 FEET FROM TEAT TO PAIL! TRAVELS 4 INCHES AD OF 4 ROMTEAT PAIL! LI ON IN! FE! 00 401 i (: 1 41: '4' 1 i 1 1 '7nrop 7777777 4 1 i Alh 1: 4174c mfr -1 1 -4'4 1::::: i i i ''-1' 7 -7' 4 Irilk t---- 4- t' r77-': 'w i 1 lake00 41 Ir I' I iov I 7141tr' 1 -'1 '1k: yi 'i A- 11i i- 11111s Ilj 0 4 a4lbs 4 t) 11 4 4 II 1 1: llow 13 to the more low comes and size TOPTKA BUREAU THL KANSAS CITY OMAR (By a Member ol rho Stars Rio fti measuring of 12000 children of all ages in cities and rural districts of Kansas is being done by the federal bureau of home economics and the WPA A training school was conducted in Kansas City Kansas last fail to train WPA workers so they could make accurate measurements The purpose of the measurements is to get accurate data for making clothing patterns for children The information is to be made available not only to the manufacturers of clothing but also to the makers of patterns and to the women in the home economics department of the WPA and the schools 'The proportions used today for clothing and patterns are in empirical figures which have grown up in these industries based entirely on guess" said Mrs Harrison Parknutn director of the women's division of the WPA "There never has been a scientific study made of the body measurements required for the sizing of clothing 11 I 4: i I rH ri 1 I I I A 1 i I i -I i 1 it I 1 1 1 ti I 4 1 i 1 1 A The Surge milks faster No long tubes act claws means easier to keep clan and cleanse milk It gets more milk less strippisig) It milks all cows light pull for asi easy heavy pull for a hard milker and a pmgressively increasing pull or are milked out And 4ell Learn how you can produce CialneC milk at lower cost in half the time! Write tot Eros Surge Catalog and Easy Terms Mar NEW SHROUDED AIR-FLOW No long tubes no clean and clown stripping) It ht pull for on cosy it or it Write tot Eros Irma Offer AIR-FLOW The Surge milks fast claws means easier to milk It gets more milks all cows heavy pull I pmgressivelyincreasin are milked our And Learn how you can pi lower cost in half the Surge Catalog and Es NEW SHROUE 1 i agssmonodt i Smommil ilmonnommormit 1111 1 ammoomme Victims of a motor car accident that took four lives near Marshall Mo Saturday night Left to right Norbert Langan who was killed Miss Kathryn Blair McDonough who was Injured critically Durrett and Thomas A Stookey who were killed The fourth person killed was Helen Entrikin A sixth person In the car which collided with a truck was Mary Thomas who was injured critically THE SUSPENDED VARIABLE PALE MIR Mail Coupon Now! 1- 1 THE -1 SUSPENDED VARIABLE nu -1 1 MILER 1 Ali'r 31t 00--- i 74 -411'p -li 4 i- -1 I I ft -4 '1? 74:7147 144 irte -7 --mr 1 111 11 IS UdSPENDED 1 i 1 hd mb os 1 i I --'4- 1 i co Mail Coupon Now! I I MILK COOLER Gm OILER QS 1:1 MILK BOYCOTT ON LIQUOR STORES LICENSE BACK TO WA Marshall high school students were killed and two ri were in a critical condition at tclitil1 Marshall Fitzgibbons hospital as a roAt Of their motor car crashing into he rear end of a truck loaded Willi cedar logs late Saturday night five miles south of here on highway No 65 The dead are Durrett 17 years old a junior in the Marshall high 5choo1: Norbert Langan 17 years old senior at Mercy academy Helen Entrikin 15 years old a sophomore end Thomas A Stookey 17 years old a junior in the high school i All except Stookey died at the scene He died early Sunday morning in the Marshall hospital Kathryn Blair McDonough 14 years old and Mary Thomas both freshmen in the high vhool were in a critical condition The three couples attended an Elks dance saturday night in Marshall and Tie returning from a refreshment a few miles south of the city here they had gone during the dance intermission Langan was driving the car when it collided with the truck The machines had to be pried apart before rescuers could reach the dead and injured In the truck were Mr and Mrs Boyd and Dale Gregory all of Kirksville They were not injured ROBERTSON ALSO RESTORES PER MIT TO KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Entirely new Surge feature keeps tho poirop ru buy from going to you mote sca for your money! Get free facts on du new SHROUDED AIRFLOW SURGE MILK COOLER Send coupon! keeps tho pow you mote facts on the stow 7 SURGE MILK Ern ut i br II yy fnr oe wm Sg ou gi eg to we for your money! SHROUDED AIRf COOLER Send couF DIES IN HER 99Th YEAR The Two Fraternal's Ousted by O'Malley Are Reinstated After Study of Reports on Their Condition sELI-BArAs-clat i11H i- 1 ii Springfield Girls sod Boys Make a Pledge Springfield five dissenting votes in a crowd of eighty-five young people college and high school boys and girls of First Baptist church at a special meeting pledged themselves "not to enter a store in which liquor is sold" They joined a movement which began at South Street Christian church Delegates from Grace Methodist church also attended the session and voiced "approval and co-operation" Other churches are being urged to Join in the "liquor boycott" Century 'Would Have Been Observed by Mismirt Woman Feb 21 Bolckow Mo---Mrs Eliza Chamberlain who had looked forward to celebrating her 100th birthday February 21 died last week at her farm home near here THE BEST SKIMPIER OF THEM ALL This wonderful new 1938 Me lotto gives Dot Only the sensational exclusive sellbalancing bowl feature but also 100 non rusting non-corroding Stainless Steel ino part touching milk! Easier to wash! Ruin- Fewer disa- AND with fewer discaskims or cream than any other separator! Lifetims dur ability Fret Trial on your own farm New Lots Terms Mail coupon foe Trade Offer details Fres Catalog Easy Terms No obligations! THEM ALL elOttlitsugsi: wive it els 100 nos mis Steel ino ashl Rust- iscs skims et Dr! Lifedms dur i farm New Lots cis Offer details 0 obligations! THE BEST SK1MN This wonderful new II not only the sertmtioni sellbalancing bowl fedI i rusting noncorroding part touchinkrinii)Ild En Fewer discs withl cream than any other i ability Fret Trial on yr Terms Mail coupon I Fres Catalog Easy Te 1 4 11 1 I 1 4 14- 1 op 1 Li1 4 1 RI' IzIAR mAKE DR i iA ERS I kNi A 6000-MILE SCHOOL TRIP TAX TOKEN OUT Of THROAT NMIOin St Louis Physicians Give Relief to a Boy St hospital physicians Saturday night extracted a Missouri sales tax token from the throat of 18- month-old Robert Christensen RAM FREIGIIT WRECK COSTLY Ottumwa of eleven of the twenty-two cars of an eastbound Milwaukee freight train which left the rails six miles east of here Sunday were destroyed by fire shortly after the accident The damage was estimated at 850000 AT WASHINGTON BURV KANSAS CITY STAB 610 ALB BUILDING (BB Member ol The Stara Stall) Roosevelt administration has indicated its readiness to reappoint all federal appointees credited t6 Senator Bennett Champ Clark in Eastern Missouri Friday the President sent to the senate for confirmation the name of William Fahey of Monroe City United States marshal for the eastern district This week the reappointment of Harry Blanton of Sikeston United States district attorney for St Louis will be made WILLINGNESS IS SIGNIFIED Without any announcement to that effect the administration has its willingness to take all of Clark's appointees In the St Louis area but not in Kansas City where the Pendergast organization Is demanding the ouster of Maurice Milligan prosecutor of the vote fraud cases During the heat of the fight over the Supreme court bill last summer with Senator Harry Truman supporting the court-packing scheme and Clark resisting it reports were circulated here that Truman would be given all the federal patronage in Missouri as a reward for his loyalty to the President When these reports were printed in some Missouri newspapers and circulated elsewhere Clark declined to recognize them WITHOUT cilia's APPROVAL Truman admitted last week James A Farley high priest of patronage and justice department officials have agreed not to send Milligan's name to the senate for another 4-year p0111tMellt This so-called political "deal" it was definitely established does not carry the approval of Mr Roosevelt The Milligan case and the present difficulties of the Kansas City election board with McElroy city manager is well known to many influential members of the administration Not Only Missourians but the close-in "brain trusters" are concerned over the final outcome of the Kansu City situation It was learned Emily Newell Blair formerly of Joplin one-time national committee woman and an intimate of the Roosevelts is boosting Milligan for another 4-year term Breckenridge Long of St Louis candidate for the senate in 1922 and mtre recently ambassador to Italy is another who has the President's ear and is said to be urging the administration to reappoint Milligan Friends of Truman are saying he has made no effort to dip into Clark's patronage in the St Louis district and is agreeable to the retention of both the district attorney and marshal there But Clark's position in connection with Milligan is not known Clark steadfastly refuses to talk about the case BABSON BROS UnDOUIT MUM BABSON 81 Grape Growers Advised to Try New Varieties Tx0 Hungarian Girls Are Enrolled at Park College Paikville Hungarian girls Helen Smitny 22 and Livia Smitny 19 traveling more than 6000 miles from their native home in Budapest have enrolleciat Park college for the I I (Add" at" milk 841117 219th St Dept 4261 Chicago Ill 740 NWashi on St Dept 4261 Nonracial 1518 First Ave South Dept 4261 Seattle Wash 466 Spsact St Dept 4261 Syracuse NY 737 Terminal St Dept 4261 Loa Angeles COIL Pious and me full details of your Easy Terms Offer Free Catalog es dm items Iaj chckigk imk Surge Milker 1:1 Melons Cream Separator Surge Milk Cooler Name No of Coles Milked Post Office IL State P-1'13 Stan office st Minnemtpolitrit t62 Symms ttl(4 I an 2 bank eats 1 'grown in the Ozarks for many years unfortunately not always profitably The reason for this unprofitableness has been the lack of ability to dispose of large crops packed for table Use in a short period of time They must be handled in a period of one or two weeks instead of a period of One or two months Concords and Moores cannot be stored for they will not keep for any length of time There is no other outlet for the grapes except their sale for table and Jell use In seasons when grapes are plentiful in the United States Ozark grape growers show little or no profit When a product grows naturally in the middle of the consuming center of the United States something is wrong when it cannot be grown profitably There is no reason for the people in the Ozarks to plant and grow varieties that are not the finest that applies to table grapes as well as wine grapes We have much finer grapes than Concords for table use and much finer grapes for wine than Concord grapes that will bear more pounds keep better with better quality better size and ripen without skin splitting Of the 342 varieties of grapes grown here at our experiment station Concord ranks low when varieties are recommended for planting A high quality product when properly presented always brings a premium and Ozark grapes can be premium grapes The trade acceptance of the name Concord in our city markets can be overcome or rather it can be enlarged to include other varieties Getting back to the growing of wine grapes in Missouri we have some obstacles to overcome when we try to compete with California In California grapes can be raised without trellising In that state the dreaded disease of black rot is not a problem due to the dry climate Here we must trellis and we must fight black rot especially in wet seasons To compensate us for the expenditures necessary for the above protection we must get high production Fortunately we can do that For instance the variety Muench is more or less resistant to black rot and for a period of eight years here at the station this variety has produced double the yield of Concord Wine King Thomas Cynthiana Norton Ellen Scott and a few others also fit well in the picture for this country One of the advantages of the middle West over California is our proximity to markets We save the freight For three years we have had an expert wine maker experimenting with forty odd varieties of grapes in an attempt to arrive at some definite conclusion regarding varieties for wine in Missouri This work is not yet complete but present indications are the varieties mentioned above certainly will be given a high rating BY PAUL Slump (Director Missouri State Fruit trpertmeat Station) MOUNTAIN GROVE wine industry in tbe United States has been and still is more or less a monopoly of California Its climate enables growers to raise European grapes such as Muscat Zinfindel and others that have been a standard for wine production in Europe for ages Wineries have been started east of the Rockies in many places in the United States using for their supply Concords Moore Early Niagara etc those varieties that have been-generally raised for table and fresh Juice purposes The only supply available has been this sort of table grapes In 'I )k 1 Ix' 4r 1 141 ttit '0 177' 0 ii It's EASY to Use Weekly StarWarat A CITY BUREAU THZ KANSAS CITY STAR (By a Member of The Stara Staff) Jefferson were restored last week by the state insurance department to the Modern Woodmen of America and the Knights of Columbus two large fraternal insurance societies who lost their permits to operate in Missouri in 1936 during the fraternal insurance row with O'Malley former superintendent of insurance Annotnicement of the restorations was made by Governor Stark George A Robertson who succeeded O'Malley as head of the insurance department was present The chief executive said he had approved the recommendation of Robertson that the societies be relicensed "AFTER CAREFUL STODY! Robertson said his recommendation waa made after reports on the condition of the two fratemals were had from Charles Hansen department actuary and Jackson chief examiner and after "careful and exhaustive studies of the affairs of both societies" "Conferences were held with Ernest Palmer insurance commissioner of Illinois home state of the Modern Woodmen and with John Blacken insurance commissioner of Connecticut home state of the Knights of Columbus both of whom recommended the societies be relicensed" Robertson said "In the case of the Knights or Columbus their latest financial statement shows the society to be in satisfactory financial condition with a surplus between 7 million and million dollars "The Modern Woodmen according tts documentary evidence obtained by this department have made a sincere effort to meet and have met all obligations and requirements made as a result of the last convention examination in June 1936 participated in by the insurance departments of nine states" 'UNDER BUDGETARY CONTROL The Missouri department actuary reported the Modern Woodmen are operating "under a budgetary control system with their operating expenses within their revenue available for expenses" effort is being made by the society to write selective new business" he added "With the society having unassigned funds totaling 1 million dollars and admitted assets of 6814 million dollars on June 30 1937 and giving due consideration to the licensing by other states and with a thorough Investigation made by this department I recommend that its license be issued" IIELEN SMITNY LEFT AND HER SIsTER tor SMITHY WHO HAVE APRIVED AT PARK COLLEGE PARK liar Mo nom THEIR NATIVE HUNGARY No Red Tape About It Simply Write Your Want Ad in Blank Below I tit It Want OW selling kap in tot the your suds a work Rinso 1 1 I llo 3 3 1 4 i i 1 L7 I 1 1 1 Ctutir-sof 1 4' I '1 Ill I ir i i i I 2: i i i i i 1 I 2 I 'IdS 111 4 11i-1 i' i i I I I 1 i i i' -1 '1 1' i 1 4 iv 1 l' i 1 4 3 I IMMO 1 3 4 4: 121 I2 al4i t' SERMONS IN BEER PLACE There's nothing complicated about inserting a Want Ad in The Weekly Kansas City Star For your convenience a special low rate order blank is provided below Simply write your Want Ad on this blank and mail it with check cash or money order to The Weekly Kansas City Star Prepaying your advertising in this manner entitles you to the low rates quoted on the blank ling a Want 'or your con- is provided this blank )rder to The your adver- low rates Track second semester according to Young president of the institution The sisters cannot speak English and will be classified as special students for the second semester A native of their home city Dr Bila who is an instructor in languages will tutor the girls In English and they will be enrolled In the freshman Class next fall The trip to America and the selection of Park college as the educational school came through an aunt Miss Mitzi Lamprechtoa Trenton schtilteacher who was acquainted with John Dobronti a former Park student a native of Budapest Th sisters received their previous schooling in a convent near Budapest coming to this country for the purpose of Mastering the English language and to better train themselves for a future return to the home of their parents Mr and Mrs Francis Smithy The sisters already are becoming acquainted with the requirements at Park where every student must do a certain amount of "family work They are washing and drying silverware and dishes at the Thompson Commons the cehtral dining hall on the Park campus VARIETY MUENCEIo A Plna WINE GRAPE WHICH FOR A PERIOD or EIGHT YEARS HAS ANNUALLY DOUBLED THE YIELD OF CONCORD AT THE STATIC EXPERIMENT STATION AT MOUNTAIN GROVE MO IT IS MORE OR LESS RESISTANT TO BLACK ROT AND LEAF HOPPERS 05 IlkS evo IMO An Ozark Minister Carries Religion "to the It'orld" Marquand Rev Noel Bremner Ozark Nazarene minister reports success for revivals he holds nightly in a tavern while beer sales are suspended half an hour "The tavern becomes a church the minute I place on the walls a sign I have hand-printed which reads 'Church of the Nazerene'" Bremner explained The young revivalist said he was ordained last September The odd alliance with Murphy Myers bartender began recently after he had trouble finding a place to preach 'Finally I recalled the Biblical admonition Go ye forth into all the world and preach the gospel' I asked Myers and he said 'All right'" Bremner declared clerical formalism "is headed for the ash heap in another fifty years preachers will have to hunt up their audiences as I do" So Ozarkians come from miles around to sit on the tables on the floor even on the bar and listen while the music box stops and patrons set their beer aside Half an hour of religion then Murphy My-era's place becomes a tavern again Lowest Priced Farm Paper Advertising in America! Weekly Star Want Ads cost you less per thousand circulation than any other farm paper advertising you can buy anywhere They carry your message to 480000 subscribers In Kansas The Weekly staeo circulation exceeds that of any farm publication printed in the state The same is true in Missouri In addition The Weekly Star's total circulation is greater than that of any other farm weekly per ler thousand advertising our message 'eekly Staria publication in Missouri irculation is kip ip ART COLLECTION TO HEIRS FAD TO ST JOSEPH RAILS FULTON WOMAN IS SLAIN Husband a State Hospital Attendant Also Severely Beaten Fulton Walter Thompson 50 was shot to death and her husband an attendant at the Fulton state hospital was severely beaten with a poker one night last week in their home four milesnorthwest of here Coroner Hall said Thompson ill with scarlet fever left the house in his night clothing and walked to the home of a neighbor a quarter of a mile away to call officers Deputies found Mrs Thompson dead on the dining room floor a pistol partly hidden by her body A bullet had entered her head baqk of the right ear There were four bullet holes in the ceiling and one in a wall of the room Hall said the husband showed the effects of a severe beating evidently with an iron stove poker which was found near the house Thompson told Hall he was awakened by someone who clamped a pillow over his face before striking him on the head A daughter Miss Avalon Thompson 21 years old said she was upstairs and could shed no light on the tragedy A coroner's inquest has been recessed until Thompson recovers Turn Land Machinery and Surplus Produce Into Cash! Among The Weekly Star's 480000 subscribers you are sure to find many people who want just what you have to sell Give them a chance to buy from you Take a look about your farm See what you have that you don't need Advertise it in The Weekly Star using the blank below Surplus mribers you it just what to buy from what you it in The CARRIES OUT SUICIDE THREAT many cases these wineries have not been successful due mainly to the fact that these varieties do not always lend themselves to the making of the best wines They do not always readily blend when vintners find it advisable to mix Our climate makes the finishing of these grapes uncertain They finish well one year for wine and then do not finish well the next season The reason for this is the fact that perhaps 80 per cent of Our grapes are Concords The skin of -a Concord is thin and lacks elasticity If we have rainy weather before or during the ripening period the skin splits This makes It necessary to harvest and use them immediately or they spoil The grape used for wine should be able to hang on the vine until all the carbohydrates that it will hold have passed into it in other words until it is dead ripe This uncertainty of how Concord grapes will finish has placed the wineries at a great disadvantage We have American wine grapes that are Just as good or better for wine purposes than those grown in Europe In fact Europeans are now planting ana growing some American wine varieties particularly the variety Wine King The wonderful bouquet of this grape blends well with their varieties There is no better place for grape development than in the Ozarks The Ozarks are what might be called "a natural" for grapes like Kansas is "a natural" for wheat and Iowa "4a natural" for corn Grapes have been sus Pictures Assembled by Missourian Are Given Relatives Webb City collection of forty-eight original oil paintings from the brushes of American masters the property of the late Webb of this city and judged by art dealers to be one of the finest private collections in the middle West is being divided among Mr Webb's heirs The collection bought piecemeal from New York and Chicago dealers during the period at the opening of the century when Mr Webb was considered one of the leading mine operators and most extensive landowners in the city is valued at approximately $75000 According to the terms of Mr Webb's will his widow Mrs Mayme Webb of this city a son Dr Ernest Webb a member of the faculty of Southern Methodist university Dallas Tex and a daughter Mrs Grace Kammer ling Phoenix Ariz each receive one-third of the collection Mr Webb died last year at the age of 85 11111110 OMB El ESNS OMNI lag street Car Goes Into the Barn St Joseph Mo--The last run by St Joseph's trolley rail car was made here Saturday night when the owl car on the Krug Park run went Into the car banrs The next morning the Krug Park line was served by new trolley coaches thus completing a change-over of public transportation equipment from the old-style rail cars to a combination of electric trolley and gasoline-driven coaches The transformation of the street car system has been In progress for t(ta years and the St Joseph Railway Liiiht Heat and Power company estimites that it has been accomplished 'it a cost of $900000 Today the thirty-five miles of street car lines are served by thirty-five trolley coaches and thirty-seven gasoline coaches The equipment is modern as most of the coacheS have purchased and put into service in the last two or three years St Joseph was one of the first cities in America to have electric street railway cars such service dating from 1887 Just a few months after the first trolley car tests were made iq eastern cities This city also was orfb of the pioneers in installation of trolley bus scnice Wife Is Unable to Keep Missonrian From Death Orrick Bogard 43 shot himself over the heart last week with a shotgun in a boxcar used for a warehouse back of the Hall community store which he operates He ched twenty-five minutes later Bogard was cast in a play given at the Hall schoolhouse He arrived too late to participate When he returned with his wife and daughter to his home back of the Hall community store northwest of here he announced his intention to kill himself and left the house When he returned a few minutes later for his gun his wife made an unsuccessful effort to stop him I mAilLurnim2 it 11111160 IMMO 111 I 't Safttili lik SAVED FROM BURNING CAR Fill Out and mail to Kansas Cits Itteekly Kansas I 1 I 1 I I i gilt Citl Ofat: a or More Consecutive Ono Time Insertions (Por Word) IPsr Word) All Editions 0 14a 1 to par time Missouri Edifice 0 St Kansu Edition Ei 7e titian: Edition 7 5 per lima A HOSE RUN HER "INJURE" I Mark (X) Oppostte Iditions In Which Ad Is to Appear I )1' Name Two Women Escape Death In Bethany Mo Accident Bethany Mo--Two women were saved from death by burning near here Friday night when one motor car struck inother from behind in a heavy fog George Williams United States army here on furlough from St Louis broke open jammed doors of the burning motor car to rescue Miss Vauncell Cooper 21 Ridgeway Mo and Mrs George McAdam Maysville Mo former superintendent of schools of De Kalb County Mrs George Mormon Maysville escaped from the burning car by leaping from a window Other spectators attempting rescue had abandoned hope of removing Miss Cooper from the sedan when Williams was successful Miss Cooper was unconscious in the rear seat I I I 0 I I Classification MINERS GET FREE FUEL 0 0 Woman Motorist lIns Nnrrow Escape Near Paris Mo Paris unbelievable to garagemen and persons who saw her battered car Mrs Dixie Seissere of Detroit climbed from her wrecked machine which overturned in loose gravel on highway 24 near here with only a run in her hose After changing hose at the home of a relative Mrs Seissere visited a physician who pronounced her unharmed 1 II or Street Number of weeks A Largo Vein Is Discovered at Oronogo Mo 11 I Postoffice Am't enclosed complete ad below including name and address Or it blind address Is wanted mark her 04 -4 '41 I Oronogo winds may blow without creating a fuel prob: Yin in this small Southwest Missouri had and zinc mining community timers while working in the Oro" Circle mine which furnishes wok for a large percentage of the community's men struck a good-sized coal deposit Guy Waring 'mine operator and former member of the state legislature has given the miners permissirm to remove the coal for their own 1 1-e without charge TIME OUT! 4r 004 elk) id a 1 G2A Qr-iNG MIDI iLezz 1 t) 1 4t a tri 111() '''''Z(111" 49 011 F101 1 1 0 -iil ill a Willietet-41tAtile61)) 014 -11 IL IL IS i 7- stills tog-c' e-rtr ty 5-1 4 'op 51 12- 4 gi-- 01 11:11 I Write 0 CROWD TO GOVERNOR'S RAU Military Reception Is Revived at Jefferson City Jefferson revival of the governor's military ball and reception annual event until 500 persons here Friday night Invited guests were officers of the Missouri national guard naval militia reserve officers the governors military staff and a few personal friends FARMERS VOTE "NO" IN POLL Marshfield final tabulation of votes for and against government crop control program in a poll conducted by the Marshfield Mail showed Webster County farmers emphatically opposed to the scheme The vote was one "for" and fifty-three "against" 4 CHILD BURNED TO DEATH Waverly Jones 5 daughter of Mr and Mrs Floyd Jones was fatally burned at the home of her parents near here last Thursday Her clothing became ignited when the ran too near a fire built under a kettle where water was being heated Her parents and four brothers and sisters survive A FORESTRY SHORT couftsr Columbia short course in forestry to bring together ideas on important current problems confronting foresters and others who are administering forest land in Missouri and adjacent states will be held at the college of agriculture here February 3 and 4 I omAN HAS 136 SURVIVORS Edith Baas Stafford Mo Pioneer Was 91 Years Old stafford Edith Bass 91- member of a yioneer Greene C111nty family died itt her home near here where she had lived for seventyv years She leaves 136 descendants including five sons two daughtPrs thirty-nine grandchildren seventy-one great-grandchildren and nineVen great-great-grandchildren 6s: 11111111 IMMO UMW 111111 ISM How much tor just one shot buddy!" a ONIMINMI 7.

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About The Weekly Kansas City Star Archive

Pages Available:
42,359
Years Available:
1915-1951