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The Sedalia Democrat from Sedalia, Missouri • Page 6

Location:
Sedalia, Missouri
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PA sia THE SEDALIA DEMOCRAT Franco On To North In His Conquest JANUARY 1939 ilrs. 1 Next Olijective In Catalonia Area Celebrating In Barcelona Order Leaflets Dropped In City Of Madrid By LARRY ALLEY BARCELONA, Jan. 27- The conquering Spanish insurgents, flushed with their success in capturing Barcelona, pushed up the coast today and seized the village of Badalona in the offensive designed to wipe out government forces from Catalonia. Badalona, approximately six miles by road northeast of the fallen provisional capital, lies on a main highway which follows the coast to the northeast more than 20 miles and then cuts inland due north to Gerona and Figureas and thence to the frontier with France. In Barcelona today I witnessed tumultous scenes.

There were hundreds of demonstrations, led by truckloads of women who were celebrating the end of liunger, and the bombings of war. The spearhead of Generalissimo troops had pressed beyond the city in a mop- up" drive toward the French frontier which lies 70 miles north in a straight line. My tour of port sector showed an extensive area had been ravaged by air bombings. Vessels and warehouses were included in the wreckage. A special unit of 18,000 the corps of public order and swung into action to impose order and discipline on the city and effect restoration for normal municipal functions.

Brilliant parades, with the red and gold insurgent banners flying, swept through main squares and thoroughfares in celebrations of the triumph of insurgent arms. Strong Occupation Force Generalissimo Franco left behind a strong army of occupation while the bulk of his forces thrust out to the north, steadily driving back the government foe. Moroccan and Navarrcse troops marched through thickly-packed boulevards. Generalissimo Franco charged his military governor, General Eladio Alvarez Arenas, with restoration and maintenance of order. The Auxilio Social, organization, distributed food and clothing to the needy from large trucks which were entering Barcelona from widely spread sections of insurgent Spain.

Thousands of persons strolled along the avenues and boulevards of the city, joyous that the immediate war had passed from their midst. In the subways, men and women swept out the debris left by the insurgent bombings and trains resumed their normal services. The insurgents occupied the headquarters of the autonomous government of Catalonia and the magnificent building along the Gracia where government Premier Juan Nogrin maintained headquarters until a few hours before his flight. Leaflets Dropped In Madrid BURGOS, Spain, Jan. Generalissimo Franco today ordered planes to drop 400,000 leaflets over Madrid to infcrm the iphab- itants of his capture of Barcelona.

Towns in insurgent Spain such as Burgos, Corunna, Leon and Salamanca setit many truckloads of food and cash gifts for the relief of Barcelona. Pioneer Seda Han who died at her home, 70.3 West Seventh street night. Obituaries .1. P. Modenbach J.

P. Modenbach, 80 years of age, died at 10:1.5 o'clock Thursday night at his home, 917 West Fourth after an illness of a little more than a week. The son of the late John Christian and Eva Catherine Seigel Modenbach, he was born September 1, 1858 in Florence, Mo. His native home had been in Ruchied, Germany. Mr.

Modenbach had been a resident here since 1905. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Mary Modenbach, and a sister. Miss Kate Modenbach, of the home. Funeral services will be held at 2 Saturday afternoon at the Evangelical ctiurch, Fourth street and Vermont avenue, the Hcv.

O. J. Rumpf to officiate. Six nephews will serve as pall bearers, Louis Murtgen, Glenn Murtgen, Norman Murtgen, Peter Williams, Will Shackelford, Orion Martin. Interment will be in Florence Mo.

The body will be taken from the McLaughlin chapel to the home early Saturday morning. Aged Sedal ia Woman Dies Earle, a grandson, made their' home with her in turn. She loved people in all walks of life interested her, and her home was a for old and young, and all who knew her and visited her home never failed to comment on her famous cooky jar-always filled with delicious cookies. Mrs. Rautenstrauch Fned flowers, but she wanted them while she was after Fm was her own remark.

She felt the same about music, wanted to enjoy it while she was living, and in'telling the kind of a funeral she wanted she expressed the wish that there be no a simple funeral." she said. Mrs. Rautenstrauch was not a club woman. In her early days she took an active part in the church and Sunday work, but after her marriage she to her family," as she expressed it, and in her home she was happiest. Funeral service ill be conducted at 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon by the A W.

Kokendoffer. of ihe First Christian church, at the home. The Rev. Quincy R. Wright, iiastor of the First M.

E. church, will as- sist. Pallbearers will be W. O. Stanley, Charles PlunJec.

Sam Harlan. Dr. D. J. Looiboui I.

Reed and Waher i Jefie.mon City. M.u strauo.h's Internjent will bt in un 1 remetery. i Gloria June Foley June Boley, two months old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hugo Foley, 1021 South Harrison avenue, died at the family home at 3:30 thi.s morning.

Surviving are her parents and one sister, Elizabeth Jean, her grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Vance Boyles and C. W.

Foley. Funeral services will be at Hopewell church at 2 Saturday afternoon, the Rev. R. E. Hurd to officiate.

Interment will be in the cemetery. The body will be taken from chapel to the home this afternoon. Surprise Friends In Marriufie Thursday Miss Marjorie Wheeler, daughter ol Ml', and Mrs. J. Wheeler, of Route 4, a senior at Smith- Cotton high school, and John T.

Bronson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ira T. Bronson, also of Route 4, surprised their relatives and friends by slipping off to Kansas City Thursday and being married. They are expected to return home late today.

Relatives had anticipated their marriage, but not until some time in the summer, after the bride had completed her school work and graduated. The young bridegroom graduated from Smith-Cotton high school about five years ago, and is now farming. Brother's Name To Court Record KANSA.S CITY, Jan. Charles V. Carrolla was named in the circuit court of Allen C.

Southern today as a part owner of one of two gambling establish ment.s Southern ordered raided last week. Carrolla's name went into court records at a hearing on a change of motion filed by Frank Carrolla, a brother. The latter sought transfer to another court of a hearing on an order to show cause why equipment seized in the raid should not be destroyed. Southern ordered Frank Carrolla to the stand and asked him if he was the only owner of the establishment. The witness named Charles Carrolla and John as co-owners with him.

Neither was in court. As Carrolla stepped down the judge asked him if he was armed. Receixmg a negative reply, the couri in.vti'ucted a bailiff to search the man. No gun was found. Southern continued the hear- iug on the motion until February 1.

He also continued the hearing on the order show cause pending of the venue ruling. Otiierwise the city's anti-gamb- l.ng lit qiuet today. Both county and federal grand juries held routine French Planes Built In U. S. Agreement For Construction In Country Granted WA.SHINGTOX.

President Roosevelt said today United States aircraft manufacturers had agreed, with this knowledge, to supply France with an number of airplanes. The was asked at his press conference whether had been taken here to facilitate French of planes. He he would to reply in the negative as the question was put, but added since many of the American plane factories were idle it would be a good thing if they accepted French plane orders and got them substantially under way before the larger American air program got started. Mr. Roosevelt said the matter been considered by the cabinet.

He added six major plane factories in the United States were closed and one large engine company had laid of 1.500 men. In view of that, he said it would be desirable to get new orders and have plants go! trig by the time the American program was about to get under way. The President said he did not believe Great Britain was ing any planes from this country at this time. (Mr. Roosevelt apparently meant the British were not negotiating any new contracts for planes at The British ernment ordered approximately 200 training planes and an equal number of observation planes from American manufacuring last year and deliveries now arc be.

ing made under those contracts). No Financial Aid. No American governmental fi- I nancial assistance was involved i in the French orders, he said. Asked why a French observer was aboard a bomber plane being tested for the army when it crashed in Califoria, the Presi- jdent replied that the War Dcpart- ment had no objection to other I countries ordering planes from I private manufacturers. He added I the plane that crashed had not 1 been accepted by this govern; ment.

I He said it was a manufactur- plane being flown at a mii- I nicipal airport and he did not know whether the government would buy that or some olher type of plane and the decision would not be made for several months. Mr. Roosevelt talked with the i press shortly after Speaker Bankhead received a White House request for an immediate appropriation of $50,000,000 to speed airplane purchases in the $300,000,000 plane procurement program. Simultaneously, Secretary of I the Treasury Morgenthau and i Secretary of War Woodring ap- I peared behind closed doors of the senate military committee to discuss the French purchases. I The committee wished to ques- i tion Morgenthau particularly about the presence of the French I government observer in the light I bomber that crashed.

Shouting Students Are Turned Back ROME, Jan. 27 A crowd cf students shouting with i Francel" tried today to reach the French embassy after cheering Premier Mussolini but was turned I back by police. The students, their ranks swelled by many Fascists, raised a cla- i mor for II Duce under his balcony in the Piazza Venezia until he twice answered by appearing to salute them. Unable to reach the French em- bassy, the throng 'marched to the two Spanish embassies in Rome to cheer (The Spanish insurgents maintain embassies both to the Italian I government and the Holy See.) At Zara, on the Dalmatian coast, students celebrating the insurgent capture of Barcelona paraded past an upturned steel helmet into which they dropped contributions to a fund being raised throughout Italy for the return cf Italian war dead from cemeteries in France. To many Fascists.

France has become No. 1 potential enemy. Foreign circles expressed belief that the fall of Barcelona had brought near the day when Italy would present to France a bill for payment of Fascist colonial claims. Personals Ml'S Gearhart. Miss Dorthy Bricker.

and Miss Eunice inotr-red to Beaumcnt, Texas, to isit friends. Walker Chappell, of Kansas Cay, iS the Mr. and Meinie'lia and oi 218 Wf'-t street. tertainment committee has arranged for another interesting program, to be followed by an orchestra dance for members and their invited guests. Half Billion Of Foreigners Is x4t Stake Investment Of Aiiiericaii.s In Spain Millions By CHARLE.S P.

NUTTER WASHINGTON. Jan. I.T)— Foreign investors and exporters have at least a $500,000.000 stake in Spam, toi'n by civil war for two and a half years. Amei'ican investments in Spain at the beginning of the conflict in July 1936, amounted to about $80,000.000. according to the de- pa I'tment of commerce.

More than half of this sum represented the International and Telegraph Company holdings in the fonica Nacional De which controlled the telephone communications system in Spain. There is no Spanish debt owed in thi.s country, nor Spanish bonds held here. Foreign in Spain in 1935, the last year of peace, were estimated at 3,700,000,000 about $530,000,000. About 6 per cent of this investment was French, holding in mines, shipping, industries, and agricultural interests. British and Belgium capital was largely iiu'csted in mines and railways, including street transportation syfJems in Madrid and Barcelona, both of which have extensive subways.

The civil war virtually destroyed American commerce in Spain. During the decade prior to 1930, the United States sold an of more than $70,000,000 worth of goods to Spain annually. This dropped to $21,000,000 in 1936, $6.000,000 in 1937 and ro.se to $11,549.000 in 1938, largely because of wartime purchase of American trucks. automobiles, petroleum and metal products. The Spanish telephone system, American owned, has been government controlled since outbreak of the war.

It has suffered huge losses. There were 1,582 Ai-nericans in Spain at the beginning of the war, virtually all of them living in Madrid, Barcelona. Bilboa, Malaga, Seville and Valencia. Officials here estimate there now aie only 50 or so Americans left on both sides of the lines. Most of the business men and representatives there are awaiting elsewhere in Europe to return to Spain with the down of peace.

Officials here Spain will have to draw huge sums from Great Britain and France, and possibly the United States, for its rehabilitation. Spurs Action By Assembly To Secure Aid (Continued From Page One) The rredited a Social Session In Meeting By S. B. A. At the weekly meeting of Fidelity Council No.

53, Security Benefit night, three applications were presented and Mr and Mrs. Uel Howerton, added to the committee for the month of i'cb- ruary. Ray Weinrich presided. At the close of the meeting a questionnaire period on titles was held between the men and women, with the irxn: the wui.ne!«. Mrs.

and Mrs. M. -m charge. An a ir i' id 1 etre'hments the ra! ion. Ne.xt Thursday c' enlrg tlic cn- to receive old age assistance funds from the federal government.

Data For Legislators. Although no model bill en'i- bodying desired revisions of the law has been prepared by the social security commission, officials said recently they had prepared data for use of legislators who do draft such a bill. By inference Stark made a plea for administrative funds for the commission by setting out federal objectives to staff reductions in the state agency last year. an appropriation sufficient to make possible sound and efficient administration is made available at the coming session of the legislature," he quoted from a Washington letter, is grave doubt as to the right of the social security board to continue federal participation." The governor read this exerpt from another letter written by a federal social security official: would seem that the Missouri legislature would need to amend the present provisions of the act to provide, in terms more clearly stated than those of the present act, that assistance shall be granted on a needs basis if continued federal participation is to be made possible." am submitting this statement." Stark concluded, the belief that you want to know and are entitled to know something of the grave results that may ensue and the serious consequences that may arise unle.ss prompt consideration is given to needed amendments in our social 'ccurity law in accordance with what I conceive to be public sentiment in this state." Fifty Million For Airships President Calls For It At Once On New Planes I WASHINGTON, Jan. Pres.

ident Roosevelt asked congress today for an immediate appropriation of $50.000,000 to be spent largely for new airplanes in the national defense program. I He submitted the request in a letter to Speaker Bankhead which asked that the money be made for expenditure during the remainder of the current fiscal year and through the year starting July 1. Mr. Roosevelt the money would provide, in part, for the defense program he recommended to congress on January 12. At that time he suggested a 000,000 army airplane procurement program and said approximately $50,000,000 should be made axailable immediately.

request for the air corps was I $46,442.829. The administration said that would obtain 565 new combat airplanes. In addition, Mr. Roosevelt re- $1,490,071 for radio equipment for the signal corps and $2,067,100 for armament for the 565 airplanes. In hi.s defense message, Mr.

Roo.sovelt said that by making $50.000,000 immediately available for army aircraft present lag in aircraft production, due to idle plants," could be corrected. At that time, he declared that aviation i.s increasing today at an unprecedented and alarming rate." Increased range, speed and ca- I pacity of planes made abroad, he added, changed our requirements for defensive aviation." Meanwhile, a Republican attempt to bring Secretary Hull be- foi'e a congressional committee to discuss foreign policy in view of proposed military development of Guam encountered strong opposition. The military committee was asked to recommend a $4,200,000 program of increased allowance for reserve officers. The request came from Col. Stephen A.

Park, head of the Reserve Officers Association, who predicted the reserve corps would be re- quiied to about 80 per cent of the officers in an emergency. He said there is a shortage of at least 20,000 such ofiiccrs. At the end of the World War, Park said, the corps was composed almost exclusively of men who had had war experience but now only about 15 per cent can be placed in that category. He suggested that congress enact bills to permit allowances of $1 for each hour of credit earned in inactive status training and $50 annually for the first three years of commissioned service of each officer. Park said the total cost of the plan, $4.200,000, would about equal to the annual loss resulting from numbers of R.

O. T. C. graduates separating from the reserve The proposal that Secretary Hull testify on foreign policy was opposed by Democrats. Lose Fight To Increase WPA Relief Fund (Continued From Page One) No More Hookey wiii Take Cases for Show Rookie Justices Friends Appraised of Linn Marriafe Misery to Refugees From The Barcelona Area (Continued From Page One) i gees, slowly crawled to the north through insurgent aerial bombardments.

Their pitiful freight was drop- i ped in towns that could not find room for their own war-swollen populations. 1 Barcelona railroad platforms were packed with thousands Tuesday night before I left by automobile. I carried with me a family which had left Madrid in the early months of the war when their home was wiped out by a bomb. They had moved to 'Valencia and Barcelona and now were on the move again. When we reached a town near the border it was swarming with men, women and children searching for rooms.

Constant bombing alarms scattered them to shelters so crowded they could not get in. They were forced to huddle in doorways facing empty holes made in the streets during previous raids. Officers of the military command were swamped with twin burdens of military defense and civilian refugees. A few truckloads of dried fish came over the there was no sign of immediate large-scale relief. Vincent Sheean, American author and journalist, was stranded in northern Catalonia when his passport was stolen while he on the floor of a crowded office.

charged the administration forces have been killing time with the speech making the last two days in an effort to bolster their own strength. has been a very unusual spectacle," said Senator Clark D- Mo). has been an old-fashioned filibuster in behalf of a bill instead of against one." I Senator Barkley (D-Ky), the Democratic floor leader, asserted there had been no plan to delay the measure, and that various senators merely had wished to make speeches. In most vigorous since consideration of the relief bill started members engaged in sharp exchanges. I Senator Adams (D-Colo) spoke in angry tones when he said 'WPA employes were being urged to telegraph senators in support of an $875,000,000 appropriation.

Says Bulletins Posted I On two floors of the WPA head- I quarters here, Adams said, bulle- i tins were posted bearing the i words; 25 cents. Send a telegram to your senator today. Protest WPA appropriation cuts. Protest civil service ban of WPA ployes. Protest your job." Senator McKellar (D-Tenn), an advocate of the larger appropriation hurried to a phone to ques- ticn Col.

F. C. Harrington, WPA i administrator. He reported shortly that Harrington said he had no knowledge of the bulletin and that he was sorry it had been posted. Later WPA local number one, United Federal Workers of Am- I erica (CIO) issued a statement saying that representatives of the union had posted the telegram forms special bulletin boards I which are reserved for union no; tices exclusively." It added the WPA itself did not sponsor the forms, i Barkley read a letter from Har- I rington yesterday denying that a I $56,000,000 mistake had been made in compiling the relief appropriation estimate, as Adams had charged.

The house was in recess for the week end, but its naval and military committees pushed alcng with their separate studies of defense needs. Members of the judiciary committee expected their study of a request to impeach Secretary of Labor Perkins would last several i weeks. Relief WASHINGTON, Jan. The vote by which the senate rejected today an administration effort to add $150,000,000 to the $725,000,000 relief bill: For the increase (46): Ashurst, Barley, Bilbo, Bone, Brown, Caraway, Clark of Idaho, Connally, Donahey. Downey, Ellender, Green, Guffey, Hayden, Hill, Hughes, Johnson of Colorado, Lee, Lewis, Logan, Maloney, McKellar, Mean, Miller, Minton, Murray, Neely, Overton, Pepper, Pittman, Schwartz, I Schwellenbach, Sheppared, Smathers, Stewart, Thomas of Oklahoma, Wagner, Walsh, Wheeler I 1 Against the increase (47) Deniocrats Adams, Bailey, Bankhead, Bulow, Burke, Byrd, Byrnes, Clark of Missouri, George, Gerry, Gillette, Glass, Harrison, Hatch, Herring, Holt, King, Lucas, I McCarran, Radcliffe, Reynolds, I Russell, Smith, Truman, Tydings, Van 26.

Republicans Austin, Barbour, Capper, Danaher, Davis, Gibson, Gurney, Hale, Holman, Johnson of California. Lodge, McNary, Nye, Reed. Taft, Tobey, Townsend, Vandenberg, White, Wiley 20 Pairs: Thomas (D-tJtah) for the increase, and Bridges (R-NH) against the increase. Majority Whip Lewis announced that Chavez (D-NM) would have voted against the increase had he been present. KANSAS CITY, Jan.

The snubbing of the county grand jury and the county prosecutor became a mutual affair today. "Frcm now on," said Prosecutor W. W. Graves, whose ouster has been urged by Gov. Lloyd C.

Stark, I have charges to file against defendants, they will i be filed in the justice of the peace courts and not be taken before the jury. jury at any time asked me to appear before it, and I won't take a case before it until it docs." Jail For Petit Larceny Harry Shick pleaded guilty to petit larceny in circuit court this morning and was sentenced to 30 days in the county jail. Closing: Of Leadinsr Stocks Close Thurs. Fri. a ..12 SIX ..26 For.

Power. Smelt. Tel Tel Tobacco Copper ho, hi ho; back to school you go," Board of Education to Evelyn Atchison, Earl Carroll glamour girl, above. Soon Evelyn will be 18 (old enough to forget and Earl latest revue will regain a beautiful member of the cast. afternoon in the assembly room of the court house.

He asks hearers have pencils to take down references. DISMISS CHARGE OF INTIMIDATING A WITNESS The charge of intimidating a witness, pending against Albert Gehlken. was dismissed in circuit court this morning by Prosecuting Attorney Frank W. Hayes. The charge grew out of an arson against Gehlken which was tried in circuit court some ago, in which the defendant was found not guilty.

A mcrican Americ.in American Anaconda Atchison T. S. Auburn Bethlehem Steel Cbicapo Northwestern Curtis-Wright Curtis-Wright A Du Pont De 5 tman Kodak General Klecttic General Motors Int. Harvester International Shoe Int. Tel Kennecott Copper Idbby, Llgg.

Myers Tob r.oose-Wiles Biscuit Mid. Cont. Kansas Pacific Montgomery Ward Nash-Kelvinator Xation.Tl Cash Reg. North American Packard Phillips Purity Baking Radio Corp. of Sears-Roebuck Skelly Oil Standard Oil of Studebaker Swift and Co 4 .6 .21 3i 142-144 .172 ..4212 .33 7 ...18 ..4 .38 ,67 ,.21 4 102 IS 1 U.

steel 531 Westinghouse E. Z.y'4, 4 5.3 103 Capt. Connor To Dallas Captain Emmett Connor, who has been stationed at Jefferson Barracks, near St. and transferred to Dallas, Texas, spent the week-end with his mother, Pat Connor and other relatives at Green Ridge, en route to his new post of duty in Texas, Amertcan Arkansas Arkansas Assoc. Light and NL Gaa Nat Gas.

and EL, Cities Service Cities Service pf Eagle Pfch Lead El. Bond and Ford M. Can. Ford I.td. Gulf Oil Nat.

Bel. Hess Standard Oil 1 the Curb f'losc riose Fri. 1 21., 45 ...10 ...20 -----37 IS Bothweil Hospital Notes Mrs. Archie Hughes, 1618 South Marvin, was admitted surgery. James Woolery, 1613 East Fifth street, was admitted for medical treatment.

Local Time Table MISSOURI PACinC (Effective November 20. 1938) East Line Parents of Son Mr. and Louis Dieckman, of Cole Camp, are parents of a son, born this morning at the Bothweil hospital. Mrs. Dieckman underwent a Caesarean operation, and this afternoon was getting along nicely.

No. No. No. No. No.

20 Leave 10 12 16 2:15 2:50 10:38 3:15 6:10 a. a. a. p. p.

m. m. nu m. West Line Parents of Daughter Mr. and Mrs.

Carl Comer, of 510 East Third Street are parents of a daughter born Thursday evening, January 26. The name of Mary Louise has been given the new arrival. a. p. D.

Pp. m. m. m. m.

a. m. m. Lamine Friruds and acquaintances of Don Pa'tnn and Mary Jane Campbell, of Linn. are learning of their marriage which took place January 8, at Linn.

The ceremony was performed ti'ie M. E. parsonage by the E. I. A.In!'.

TiiC co. pie was u( by the bi'ide's Cair.pbell and S'm qme rr'pi--ypH by he Phillir3 Pipe Line Company, Condition Little Changed Word from C. P. Brown, former Sedalian. who is critically ill in a hospital in Moines, Iowa, is that his condition remains about the same.

Attending physicians state that if he does not grow any weaker and can pull through a lew days, he will have a chance to I Ml'. sister, Mrs. Joe Waddell, of city, 1 at hi? Continued irom Page One) Rally After A Shaky Market NEW YORK. 27 calmed down today and made room for who rallied recently shaky stock market 1 to around i at the The comeback on Tdatively light however, and late profit taking down top marks in cases. Transfers for the ses- approximated 1 106,000 The upward reversal was atfjibuted partly to tl.e fact that the market week had flop 1,1 and app.ar^^ntly decided To reinstate on the assumption a technifal recovery, if nothing else, in the makitig.

Most traders were skeptical aboip The outcome of European ploh- in the wake of the victory at Barcelona and involving a potcihle between the reinvigor- ared dictator nations and France and England. At the time, drying up of foreign selling here, together with a little buying from tended to make war talk seem less The I.ondon mar- filii'hed iii.gher. i. iliy 1 ii.i*ed rui.l Leiiin v. inegu- (By Mrs.

Etha Retherford) H. L. Retherford returned to hi.s home Monday after a visit with his children, Earl Retherford and Mrs. Tennie Cole and their families, of St. Louis.

Miss Myrtle Oswald, teacher of the Lamine school, visited her aunt. Mrs. Eichelberger and family, near Pleasant Green, Saturday. Miss Mary Bidstrup, who teaches at Hale, visited her mother, Mrs. G.

H. Bidstrup and family Saturday and Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. P.

L. Bidstrup, of Labadie, who are taking a vacation, spent a few days last week with Mrs. Bidstrup. No. 4:35 No.

1.25 No. 5:03 No. 7:43 No. 9:25 Lexington Branch No. except Sunday Iv 5:10 No.

except Sunday, ar 11:40 a Warsaw Branch No. except Sunday, Iv 5:30 a No. except 6:35 a. Sunday, ar 12:30 p. m.

MISSOURI PACIFIC BUS LINES (Effective October 5, 1938) East Bound No. 3:10 p. m. (Stops at Jefferson City) m. m.

No. No. No. No. No.

No. No. West Bound 6:10 11:10 2:30 2:50 8:35 1:00 7:00 p. a. a.

a. a. Pp. m. m.

m. m. m. m. m.

MISSOURI-KANSAS-TEXAS RAILROAD North and East Bound No. Title Depart p. m. South and West Bound 6:35 a. m.

Will Give Bible Talk. Charlie Garrison will give a Bible talk at 2 Saturday FRED HARVEY BUS LINE WARSAW. MO. UNION BUS STATION TELEPHONE 346 SEDALIA-WARSAW-BUFFALO-SPRINGFIELD Read Down ReadUp. P.M.

A.M. Mis. A.M.P.M. 4:45 9:50 0 Lv SEDALIA Mo. 5:30 5:05 10:10 13 Jet.

65 52 10:50 5:10 5:15 10:20 19 Cole Camp Jet. 10:405:00 5:25 10:30 25 Lincoln 10:30 4:50 5:33 10:.38 30 Rock Hill tf 10:22 4:35 5:45 10:50 38 Warsaw (Lake of 5:59 11:0447 Dell Jet. ft 9:56 4:05 6:05 11:1051 Fristoe ft 9:503:55 6:20 11:2559 Cross Timbers 9:35 3:40 6:30 11:3565 Preston 9:20 3:30 6:37 11:42 69 Cedar Nook ft 9:12 3:20 6:45 11:5073 Urbana ft 9:05 3:10 6:55 12:01 79 Louisburg ft 8:55 3:00 7:1512:20 88 Buffalo ft 8:35 2:46 7:32 12:37 99 Red Top ft 8:20 2:32 7:4512:50 107 Fair Grove ft 8:05 2:17 7:55 1:00 112 Hickory Barren 7:53 2:08 8:001:05 115 Crystal Cave 7:48 2:03 8:151:20 127 Ar. SPRINGFIELD ft Lv 7:30 1:45 Bold figures denote P. M.

Light A. M. Leave Redaiia for Boonvllle. Columbia, and St. I.ouls— S'-SO A.

12 20 P. P. 3:30 P. M. 2 for Kansas 12 2 a P.

3:20 P. 5:30 P. M. 3 l.cave for Trenton, Carrollton and Des Moines, la. 12.20 3 2 P.

Leave for Tipton, City A. 3:10 P. 6:10 P. 5 Leave for Warrensburg and Kansas City :30 A. 1:00 1 in Springfield for West Plains, Monatt, JopUn, Tuba, and intermoduate points..

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About The Sedalia Democrat Archive

Pages Available:
317,214
Years Available:
1871-1978