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The Wichita Eagle from Wichita, Kansas • 2

Publication:
The Wichita Eaglei
Location:
Wichita, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

wrrmntmt'? inTRBMmw wowre fw wwpsasaMwa8 v- rrsrrrzr 1 rrryrrr'rrr-r 'zzszzvi I V' -V vw- i -y 'v'-L rv I v-r 'w-: 1 S'1 I Business- Outlook vt- hibiiii ni i 11 Tha Wichita Eagto 'V i i A alar 4 (rtyT rci 1 1 ''V pm 4 1 1 nr US Britain 1: vi Admits Cutting Arm Of Husband in Figlit fr Exports 52 By A- IXVBf GSTOX iBjiBii should iwyW 1 -yoo to chock your ffho pofidm Here you Here you thought ohoot regie cc- uMutcetfsf Ifiadeoht- briag yeer esbtlag elides te otl Ne ehCgetieos It -X i fi GRILL IS The Continental Grill at 3012 East Douglas has reopened after extensive interior remodeling and redecorating A new "mahogany room" pictured above seating 25 persons has been added Many hew' booths have been added to the general dining room PONY IS GRAND (Qiet)CaII manager of the Grapette company is shown" adjusting (GrapetteVv saddle-blanket in front of the Miller theater following the awarding of prizes in the Grapette bottle top contest Saturday morning Eager children crowd about to get a closer' look atlthe sleek little pony Winner William Ernest Weber (in light striped sweater) stands at his head Ifntiil Flnudil laitaft TOLADZXraiA SeptS fa-ptish not-to-be-evaded historical tedisconfront tbs Anglo-American conferees in Washington this week: We of the States sell the world than we buy 2The people of 1 Great Britain buy more from the world than they pH And unfortunately they are Of-long standings 'As far back as the early iSOOs Great Britain Imparted more than she exported Britain wds the banker land shipper for the world She was' also the warlcTx great manufacturing far ahead of Trance Germany and the united States which was trying to nurture Industries with tariffs AS a' result of two wars however British overseas investments are sharply reduced Also her manufacturing leadership 'has been lost Tctr dependence on other coontries for food cotton tobacco said other raw materials is just as grfeat'-if not greater thariever That explains the dollar deficit To solvs It Britain must change her way of economic life She must reverse and export more than 'she imports The 8 Side of the Problem UnltedStates must also reverse history Tram its earliest revolutionary beginning this country Iras been an exporter of goods We imparted British Bench German ahd Dutch capital to build ois railroads and mdustrlea We paid the interest and dividends on those investments with our exports of 'wheat cotton and tobacco Our position as an export nation was the natural consequence and complement of our position as a borrower nation But now this country Is no longer debtor nation Our giant corporations like Ford General Motors American Radiator and Standard Sanitary and so on have plants -abroad Foreign governments owe money here And instead of paying -out Interest and dividends Cbhlch supply the world with the 'collars needed to buy manu-Tactured and agricultural products) we are collecting Interest and dlvl-dends The debtor-exporter relationship which kept world trade in equilibrium between the and 1914 has been violently upset I Tbe Present Need- If there had not been two world Wars American supremacy in world markets might have developed more slowly But it would havs developed Other nations have neither our natural resources nor our knowhow for Competition In world markets And they cant get them overnight Indeed Great Britain's recent efforts to cut dollar purchases runs INSPECTS Will Price (left) of the Price Auto Service 301 South Topeka makes his initial check Saturday in the Ford Motor company national safety contest as Sergt Hannon center director of safety education and Capt Gunsaulles look on (Eagle Staff Photo) AIDED POLIO Ten of the eleven little friends of -Rodney Phipps polio victim who bottle caps in the Grapette company bottle top contest that he might win his hearts desire a are shown on the stage of the Miller theater Although their combined efforts did not win the radio-phonograph offered in the contest Rodney gets his radio just the same The ten shown are (back row left to right) Richard Evans Carol Prothero Betty Jo Hirsch I front row left to right) Robert Evans Buster Hegeman Bill Squibb Pat Alexander Jack Wine-garner Louis Winegarner Jr and Gary (Eagle Staff Photos) Raymond Wooten 46 Negro 823 Wabash bled to death Saturday evening tram a two-inch cut Inside ils right forearm Inflicted police reported by his common-law wife during a drunken argument Held on a technical charge of vagrancy and investigation pending lllng a formal charge of murder was Eva Landrum 49 Negress same address Was Based She told Patrolman Stanley Hamlin first officer on the scene that she had cut Wooten but spared somewhat dazed over the act that ha waa dead only cut slm on the arm" she insisted to Sergt- Rex Belnz who arrived shortly after Hamlin Deputy Coroner Dale Falrlelgh said death was due to loss of blood from a severed artery The cut was not more' than an Inch deep he said -adding that there waa only one other mark on body a superficial cut on the shoulder Heard Scream Eva told Sergeant Belnz that Wooten was still alive when she left the apartment to "call the police" A neighbor however Bernice Martin 29 who lives In the same apartment building called police from a comer grocery after she heard a scream from the Wooten apartment When officers arrived Eva's dress wss saturated with blood and 1 stockinged feet were spattered with blood The dead man was an employe the Gardiner Coal company He was bam in Baxter Springs had been In Wichita 16 years He Is survived by four sons three of Wichita one in the army two daughters of Wichita a brother In Baxter Springs and a sister in Galena Chicago Musicians To Enroll at Four outstanding graduating high school musicians from Chicago HL Saturday informed Walter Duerk-sen music school director that they-would enroll In the University of Wichita school of music next week The students are Miss Jacquelin Tallmadge daughter of one of outstanding Instrumental directors Miss Dorothy Beach con cert mistress of her high school band Jack Falkenstrom violinist and former member of Youth orchestra and Ralph Lutz first bassoonist of the Youth symphony Lutz and Misses Beach and -Tall madge are scholarship winners of the National -Music camp at Inter-lochen Mich Duerksen said Fifty courses will be included In the music school curriculum this fslL -Twenty-seven outstanding music educators will make up the staff Duerksen reported The university is a member of the National Association of Schools of Music Students tram at least 30 states are expected to make up the enrollment tim BOILOIII6 10AII ASSOCIATION lM -92 If Former Spines Employe Dies in Sioux City Word has been received by Wichita) friends of the death of Ted Joyce former Spines Clothing company window trimmer who died In Sioux City la about 4 a Saturday Survivors include a brother John and two sisters Mary and Blanche all of St Paul Kan body will be returned to St Paul his native home town for funeral services and burial Expect Infantrymen To Reach City Sunday Men of the 137th Infantry division of the Kansas national guard who have been attending a summer camp at Ft Leonard Wood Mo will arrive In Wichita Sunday at :7:30 by troop train' guard officials announced Saturday Lieut Robert Morrison Is in charge of the group a RUSS PRATER COMPANY! INSURANCE -REAL ESTATE LOANS 6 SALES 07 mitt PH0HE4S1M A few people so id hit was wealthy but most of them colled him Stingy Joe" -He hod white hair a ready smile on instant response and a wholesome respect -for money While his home was the oldest in the neighborhood It was the neatest cleanest and most attractive He loved animals children and flowers but obhored schemes and would soy "No" to one quicker than winking your eyelid but distress or new rose would bring out his pocketbook in a hurry While Joe Jones talked 1 less than on oyster he was observing He watched Ben Steen put gasoline in his cor never lost drop a diligent worker with a big smile A stranger asked him "How would you like to have station of your own?" He beamed but shook his head "No money" he said Anonymously he was backed and bos made good Joe heard Maitna Floriety practice violin when other girls danced Anonymously she was given a four year course In a famous school of music She happy and famous A widow with four young children lived in small house The mortgage was being foreclosed Anonymously it was paid and she was given dear title A dog made a crippled child happy A television set brought Joy to elderly people in a home for the aged Children were sent to a summer camp No one but banker knew until too late that the man who had received sneers should have received cheers "Stingy Joe" created his memorial with deeds Gordon Mortuary 3279 Douglas Ph 6-4615 THI All-PORCELAIN 'fintonoBbtSafer Frigldaire Uve-Wafer dcffori fceeps dotfvts Immersed io0-hg penetrofbg'ajrrertfs ef-hol wdty watv cU Ihe half-hC Xnd the' same Live-Water action that gets clothes'cleanar rinses them brighter (twice I) far froth clean torConie: htrta Ure- Ute A- nm Jtt counter to Interest We want to continue to sell but we If other nations won't buy The way for for the world not to curb International trade but to Increase It not to reduce purchases In this market but to expand sales That road leads to economic expansion and five trade The other way leads to barter quotas and constriction Pacific Pilot's Rites Tuesday Funeral services for Lieut Robert Fidler aged 25 of 1604 Falrmount who was killed in a plane crash July 22M949 at Okinawa during air force maneuvers will be conducted 10:30 a Tuesday at St James Episcopal church by Father Samuel West Interment with Masonic rites will be conducted at Wichita Park cemetery by members of Albert Pike lodge Cochran mortuary Is in charge Lieut Fidler was killed when a P-80 he was piloting was involved In a crash with another plane His wife Helen and son Joseph Woodward were living cm the army airforce base In Okinawa at the time of Lieut Fldlcr's death He was boxp Feb 25 1924 In Wichita He attended Wichita schools and was graduated from East high school He attended the University of Wichita where he was a member of Alpha Gamma Gamma and the debate team He held membership in the Masonic lodge and the Albert Pike lodge In addition to his wife and son he Is survived by his mother and step-father Mr and Mrs Woodward of 1604 Falrmount and a brother BUI and a sister Susan also of that address The body will arrive In Wichita at 7 a in Sunday Soviet Forms Get Radloe MOSCOW Sept SHfl-Mau installations of radio receivers on collective fanns Is being undertaken! the Soviet Union JACKET JEANS I I 7000 Attend Pop Contest Award Show No less than 1000 little voices cf Wichita children yelled "Hurrah ion at the awarding of prizes in the bottle top contest which took place at the Miller theater Saturday morning First prize "Grapette" a black Shetland pony went to William Ernest Weber who could only stammer "Yeah? and at the questions "Are you and "Have you ever ridden a pony before? Then came the question of how he was going to get the pony home Smcee Harold Heneman had him believing for a moment that he actually would have to ride the pony whether he could or not! More than 1000 Wichita small fry saved "Grapette" and bottle tops to -win irises according to (Chet) Sail manager of the Grapette company More than OOOjOOO bottle tops were brought to The Miller theater to be checked both by number and weight- Grapette Orangette and Lemonette bottle tops reached the theater In 100 pound gunny sacks feed sacks in paper sacks baskets boxes or In any other kind of container which happened to be handy Something like a half-dozen Grapette company men In uniform handled the huge task of moving and stacking boxes bags and baskets of bottle top entries' Rodney Phipps one of the many hundreds of children trying for prizes who was stricken with polio during the contest remained In the running to the last due to the good sportsmanship and humanitarian-ism of eleven of his little friends They their bottle tops and entered them In his name so that he might win his heart's desire a radio Although their pooled ef forts were rewarded only by the winning of a pen and pencil set Rodney will get his radio Just the same the manager of the Grapette company said today Such devotion cannot go un-re warded he said The eleven children were Pat Alexander -Bill Squibb 'Buster Heneman Robert i and Richard Evans Larry DeBroL Jack and Louis Wine-garner Gary Corns Carol Prothero and Betty Jo Hirsch Weber won his pofiy With 25430 bottle caps Second prise a-r-Schwinn bicycle was awarded to Thomas and Richard Wilson brothers who garnered 22036 bottle tops- Third prize- an Admiral radio-automatic phonograph vu awarded to Rodney Tanner for 20928 bottle caps Other prizes were awarded to Leonard Fisher and Mary Peebles Wedding Bells aft Last NEW ASHFORD MASS Sept 2 (UP) A school teacher and a chef were the first local couple to me married at the New Ashford Community church in Its 120-year history -toj National Safety council said that tha Ford free safety check of cars would make American motorists safety conscious 1 In order to participate In the contest motorists must bring (heir car or truck of any make to the dealership for a safety check at no cost or obligation Fkee checks will be made on the brakes steering headlights (ear ana stoplights tires windshield wipers muffler glass horn and rear view mirror An attractive "safe reflector insignia will then be placed on the car or truck Inspected and the driver given an entry blank to participate In the contest The motorist must then complete In no more than 50 additional words the following statement: "All cars and trucks should be safety-checked periodically A jury of prominent persons In safety circles win judge the winners Only one entry per car or truck may be entered HOTEL mSSfmr 1 Ford Dealers -Enter Safety Check Contest Two local Ford dealers Saturday announced their entrance in a $100-000 car check and safety contest being sponsored by the Ford division at the Ford Motor company They are tha Price Auto service 301 South Topeka and Ferguson-Olander 1226 East Douglas Seven hundred prizes will be awarded to winners In the national contest They include 25 new Fords Including five Ford trucks twenty-five $1000 ujB Savings Bonds one hundred $100 Bonds two hundred $50 Bonds and three hundred and fifty $25 Bonds The contest hts the support of the National Safety council the Inter Industry Highway Safety committee and other safety organizations Ned Dearborn president of the SOS By VOS BKSKBVATNMM ELUS SHOW SERVEL Fine points of the latest model eight-foot Servel gas refrigerator were displayed at-the Broadview hotel at a sales meeting of more than 50 Servel dealers and salesmen from the Wichita trade area" The meeting was led by Willis -left president Siebertand Willis Inc Wichita Spiegel center field sales director" for Seryel Inc of Evansville Ind and Sam Booth right sales manager Siebert and Willis (Eagle Staff Photd) HOME MORTGAGE LOANS Build or Refinance EASY TO GET EASY TO PAY ft Jewel99 Studded DENIM JACKET i JEANS Studded with brilliant "jewels" end silver-bright harness spots Cowboy cut and ruggedly tailored of 8-os sanforised washable deninw Double-stitched end copper-rivet feinforced Long cuffs Witch pocket Sises 1 to 12 i 4 1 1 VENETIAN BLINDS Custom Built DO TOUR VENETIAN BUNDS NEED REPAIRING? Left Us Replace the Old Slate with Crack-proof FLEXALUM Theyjyrent Rosft They Are Easy fte Wichita's Oldest Exclusive Blind Mfg Chip WHY WORRY ABOUT i O' MAIL ORDERS INVITED -V c- JV V0 of tamlfss Is offr aztsasfv deawfe has imrttad If yea ere in doubt ebeet yew property wiO he fled to moke FRU inspection If teuiitas era I jffmf yen wi8 he feraished nhqnsstienehle proof nue e'T Boyf Shop-Third Floor aUnXIEKMlMODRSWN Free Inspection and SCHAMMERHORN BUND CO 124 8 FunnnuREGo in r1 a m- nd'Antr at jot i V' 'Hi i -w -i' i ta V' I 1 -j pr 1 a a I tfp -r pAUJ.

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About The Wichita Eagle Archive

Pages Available:
2,719,453
Years Available:
1884-2024