JOPLIN GLOBE, TUESDAY, NUV EMBER 12, 1929. Y. W. C. A.
INSTITUTE WILL BE HELD TODAY More Than Fifty Women From Over District Expected to Attend Affair. A first Tri-State Young Womson's Christian Association institute, conducted for members and intertested persons of Joplin, Cartha're and State associations, will open at 10 o'clock this morning at the Y. W. C. A.
residence, street and Byers avenue. More than fifty women from district communities are expected to come here for an day study of women's problems, especially labor conditions. Miss Dorothy Hubbard of the national industrial department and Miss Inez Ensign of Oklahoma City, secretary of the national rural communities department, will participate. Program Arranged. The institute will consist of a study session this morning at the residence, a luncheon at 12:30 o'clock in the association clubrooms, an afternoon session in the clubrooms and a tea there, at which Misses Ensign and Hubbard will be guests of honor.
Themes such as nembership, responsibility, board and committee work and associational ideas of activities will form the basis for the discussions. The program follows: Morning. "Why We Are Harriet Walker, chairman of the educational committee of the local association. "Modern Trends in Dorothy Hubbard, New York city, representative of the industrial of the national Y. W.
C. A. Worship service led by Mrs. M. M.
Wolff. Afternoon. Demonstration of a club supper in charge of Miss Helen Bocker, Miami, general secretary of the Tri-State district association. 2:00 Interest groups: "Board Educational Trends," with Mrs. E.
J. McIntyre of Carthage, presiding. Discussion led by Miss Inez Ensign of Oklahoma City, rural communities secretary of the national association. "Knowing Our. Community and Fitting the Association to with Mrs.
B. W. Nyberg of Picher presiding. Discussion led by Miss Hubbard. Couple Killed at Crossing.
Hannibal, Nov. Haught, 38 years old, and his wife, of Hannibal, were killed and Haught's brother, Earl Haught, U. S. army, stationed at Omaha, was seriously injured Sunday at Bellwood, in a grade crossing accident. Relatives here notified today.
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All druggists. MUSTEROLE! Not in the Army Now and no cadet shall have say the rules of the U. S. Military since the photo above shows Mr. is no longer a cadet.
His runaway Gillespie, daughter of an instructor, tion" from his class. Their courtship rigid regulations of West Point, and that they were able to slip away happy now," said Mrs. Capron when at the fireside of the groom's home M. N. A.
HEAD WILL BE INVITED TO SPEAK HERE Frank Kell, elected president of the Missouri North Arkansas Railroad Company Saturday at a stockholders' meeting, will be invited to Joplin to address the membership of the Chamber of Commerce, it was decided yesterday at a meeting of the board of directors. T. J. Franks, chamber vice president and transportation chairman, will extend the invitation. A luncheon or dinner will be arranged for late this month, at which it is hoped will speak.
The membership meeting, will be one of several to during the winter. Approval of the M. N. plan of improving company properties also was given. Letters of appreciation for Joplin citizens' part as hosts to the recent Southwest Missouri Teachers' Association convention were read, one from Seoretary Albert N.
Weiser Morrisville, and the other from Prof. C. E. Evans of Monett, executive committeeman. George W.
Olliver, chairman of the commercial division, announced approval of monthly salesdays here, as being carried on by the Joplin Improvement Club. Plans for Christmas decorations for the downtown section also are being considered. It was voted to send James A. Gibson, secretary, to Kansas City Wednesday to formally invite the Missouri Association of Master Cleaners and Dyers, now in session there, to hold 1930 meeting here. William C.
Markwardt, who will be in Kansas City that day, second the invitation. MAN, 77, TAKES OWN LIFE WITH A SHOTGUN Special to The Globe. Siloam Springs, Nov. William Ewing Carl, 77 years old, committed suicide last night by placing the muzzle a loaded shotgun in his mouth and pulling the trigger. He is believed to have killed himself while Mrs.
Pearl Thomason, a sister, and her hus-. band, with whom he was staying, were at church. His body was found at 7 o'clock this morning by Thomason. Despondency is believed have caused the old man to take his life. He spent most of yesterday at the Flagg cemetery a few miles northwest of here where his wife had been buried more than twenty years ago.
While there he told friends that when he died he wanted to be buried beside his wife. Carl, who lived on a farm on Flint creek for a number of years, had spent most of his life in this vicinity. Last year he resided with a daughter, Mrs. Myrtle Miller, of Olathe, Kan. He also is survived by one other daughter, Miss Savola Carl, superintendent of a hospital in Dallas, two sons, Adolph Carl of Dallas and Sam Carl of Fort Worth, and several cousins in Siloam Springs.
Funeral arrangements are incomplete. PET MILK COMPANY OFFICIALS ARE FETED Special to The Globe. Neosho, Nov. of the Pet Milk Company, including several from St. Louis and those in charge of the company's condensery at Neosho, were honor guests at a banquet held here tonight by members of the Ad During the day the 'St.
Louis officials were taken on a quail hunt. TARIFF ADVOCATE RAPPED IN REPORT Lobby Probers Denounced ex-Commissioner for Activities While Bill Was Considered. Washington, Nov. its second report to the senate, the senate lobby committee today condemned William Burgess, member of the tariff commission, for his activities during consideration of the pending tariff legislation. After the report was read, Chairman Caraway of the committee told the senate that Burgess, now employed by the United States Pottery Association, was "a paid lobbyist" who "had no regard whatever for his own reputation, no hesitancy in committing perjury," and "was perfectly willing slander members of the senate." Testimony, Reviewed.
The report, which consisted principally of a review of Burgess' testimony before the lobby committee, asserted his actions in attempting to have Frederick L. Koch of the tariff commission disciplined amounted "approximately to contempt of the senate, if they do not constitute such." Caraway announced later that no further action against Burgess was contemplated by the committee and no recommendations were made in the report. All the charges contained in the report were denied by Burgess in New Jersey. He said they were AN HAS "absolutely false statements, made in order to blacken my character and in an effort to stop the efforts of American manufacturers in getting their rights." Burgess is coming to, the capital to attempt to have the report refuted on the senate floor. In the first report to the senate by the lobby committee, which dealt with the employment by Senator Bingham, republican, Connecticut, of Charles L.
Eyanson, of the Connecticut Manufacturers' Association, no recommendations were made, but the senate later voted condemnation of the Connecticut senator for placing Eyanson on the senate payroll while he was drawing $10,000 a year from his association. Removal Recommended. Caraway asserted that Burgess went before the tariff commission and demanded that Koch be removed from his position as chief of the ceramics division of the commission, on the ground that he had shown partiality in favor of importers of pottery while attendIng hearings on the tariff bill before house senate committees. The report said Koch was charged by Burgess with being on terms of "friendly intimacy with the manager of a Japanese importing firm." "Burgess, under oath, swore that at least three members of the senate finance committee had joined with him in condemning Koch," the chairman continued. "He went so far as to quote two of them in the disapproval.
Each one of them has taken occasion to refute that statement by their commendation of Mr. Koch on the floor of the senate." Women Have ANCIENT BEEN MANLOVE MAY ATTEND HEARING ON AIR ROUTE It is probable that Congressman Joe J. Manlove, who acted as spokesman for the Joplin-St. Louis delegation which appeared before an Inter-departmental meeting in Washington in August in connecwith a proposal to establish a transcontinental air mail route through the southwest, may again appear before the federal body on November 25 at Washington at a second hearing. The Joplin Chamber of Commerce voted to send Manlove to the hearing if he is able to arrange his plans.
The route, if approved, would go from New York through Indianapolis, St. Louis, Joplin, Tulsa and to the Pacific coast a route approximately paralleling highway No. 66. Miner Killed in Cave-in. Columbia, Nov.
N. Purdy, 53 years old, 'was killed today by a cave-in while working in a strip mine three miles east of Hinton, north of here. He was covered shoulder deep under five feet of earth. The body was discovered by Keno McGee, a fellow coal miner. Feed and Flour Stolen.
Poplar Bluff, Nov. Three truck loads of feed and flour, valued at $500, were stolen from the Mills Products Company warehouse here last night. Officers said it appeared a truck was backed up at the building and loaded three times with merchandise which weighed at least 8,000 pounds. Something WAR VETERANS FETED AT MONETT BANQUET Monett, Nov. of the American Legion and other war veterans were given a banquet Friday night at the Park Casino by the women's auxiliary of the Hobbs-Anderson post here.
Nick Humy, adjutant, acted as toastmaster. Mrs. Joseph Black, secretary of the auxiliary who served as a Red Cross nurse during the war, gave talk on the subject, "In Flanders Field." Commander Wayne Eubanks responded. Other talks were given by the Rev. J.
H. Stidham of the Christian church and the Rev. Harvey Jones of the First Methodist Episcopal church. Emery C. Medlin gave an address on "Forgotten Promises," telling his audience many war veterans are now walking the streets unable to get jobs.
Music was furnished by a trio composed of Phil Bonuo, Luther Lautaret and Tillman Lautaret. A piano solo was given by Miss Henrietta. FUGITIVES, SOUGHT IN BANK ROBBERIES, CAUGHT Henryville, Nov. After a chase in which several shots were fired, Gene Alger of Indianapolis, sought in connection with a series of bank robberies, and his wife, a daughter of a Jeffersonville, policeman, were captured near here today. With the Algers were Gail Alger, Gene's brother, and Gail's wife.
The Algers have been fugitives to PREJUDICE REMOVED AMERICAN INTELLIGENCE has ridiculed into oblivion that ancient prejudice which excluded women from a voice in council. in millions of homes, the delicious flavor of LUCKY STRIKE fills the room as the family group respects the opinion of its women folk. Tru nun CIGARETTES HOME PAGE 3 INTELLIGENCE WINSOR MCCAT LUCKY STRIKE "toasting did is that ancient prejudice against cigarettes- -Progress has been made. We removed the prejudice against cigarettes when we removed harmful corrosive ACRIDS (pungent irriY modern RS ago, science, when there cigarettes originated were that made ancient without the prejudiceagainst aid of tants) from the tobaccos. LUCKY all cigarettes.
That criticism is no longer justified. LUCKY STRIKE, STRIKE the finest cigarette you ever smoked, made of the choicest tobacco, "'IT'S TOASTED" properly aged and skillfully blended- Toasted." "TOASTING," the most modern step in cigarette manufacture, ent in cigarettes manufactured in the old-fashioned way. removes. from LUCKY STRIKE harmful irritants which are presEveryone knows that heat purifies, and so LUCKY STRIKE'S extra secret process- removes harmful corrosive ACRIDS (pungent irritants) from LUCKIES which in the old-fashioned manufacture of cigarettes cause throat irritation and "It's phrase that describes the coughing. Thus "TOASTING" has destroyed that ancient preju- extra "toasting" process applied in the manuand facture of Lucky Strike.
Cigarettes. The finest dice against cigarette smoking by men by women. tobaccos--the Cream of the Crop--are scienIt's to toasted" tures mum, exact, tifically expert removes subjected regulation to impurities. of penetrating More such than high heat Fahrenheit. a at tempera- slogan, mini- The "It's Toasted" is recognized by millions as the No Throat Irritation -No Cough.
most modern step in cigarette manufacture. TUNE IN--The Lucky Strike Dance Orchestra, every Saturday night, over a coast-to-coast network of the N. B.C; 1929, The American Tobacco Mire. for several months, following the holdup of the bank at Paris Crossing, in which $700 was taken. They were traced to Louisville, Indianapolis, Detroit and Canada, where the trail was lost.
Recently, police heard rumors that they had returned to Jeffersonville. A CLEAR COMPLEXION Ruddy checks--sparkling eyesmost women can have. Dr. F. M.
Edwards for 20 years treated scores of women for liver and bowel ailments. During these years he gave his patients a substitute for calomel made of a few well-known vegetable ingredients, naming them Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets. Know them by their olive color. These tablets are wonder-workers on the liver and bowels, causing a action, carrying off the waste and poisonous matter in one's system.
If you have a pale face, sallow look, dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, headaches, a listless, no-good fecting, all out of sorts, Inactive bowels, take one of Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets nightly for a time and note the pleasing results. Thousands of women and men take Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets--now and then to keep fit. 15c, 30c and 60c." 6 6 prescription for Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue, Bilious Fever and Malaria.
It 1s the most speedy remedy known. a horse, dog, wife or mustache," Academy at West Point. And so, ep and Mrs. Paul Capron, Capron. marriage with pretty Marguerite constituted an "automatic resignahas been carried on despite the it was only during a football game to be married.
"But we're awfully the photographer found them here in West Newbury, Mass. RUTHERFORD FUNERAL WILL BE HELD TODAY Carthage, Nov. services for Mrs. Margaret E. Rutherford, 82 years old, Carthage resident twenty-two years, who died at 3:55 o'clock this morning at her home, 529 Oak street, will be held at 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon at the Ulmer-Drake funeral home.
The Rev. Walter F. Bradley, pastor of the First Presbyterian church, will officiate, assisted by the Rev. Frank H. Ebright, pastor of the First Methodist church.
The Sweet sisters' quartet will sing. Pallhearers will be W. R. Robertson, W. H.
Butts, G. W. Asendorf, Dr. M. J.
McClurg, Howard Campbell and H. W. Hill. The body may be viewed at the funeral home until the hour of the service. The casket will not be opened after the service.
Burial will be in Lake cemetery at Lamar, her former home. Mrs. Rutherford was born March 17, 1847, in Ireland. She came to America with her parents in 1862, the family settling at Sparta, Ill. Her mother, Mrs.
Martha McMurtry, died twenty-eight years ago in Carthage, and her husband, Tom Rutherford, died forty years ago at Lamar. Mrs. Rutherford had been In ill health four years and had been bedfast ten weeks. Death was due to a complication of ailments. She came here in 1907 from Lamar, where she had resided many years.
She was a member of the First Presbyterian church. Surviving are a daughter, Miss Agatha Rutherford, at home; two sons, Tomas E. Rutherford of Carthage and Will B. Rutherford, grocery store operator on West Central 'avenue; Mrs. Sarah Rutherford of Lamar, and three brothers, Charles R.
McMurtry, proprietor of the McMurtry department store; James M. McMurtry, retired Carthage stockman, and Hugh McMurtry of Seattle, Wash. Five grandchildren and three greatgrandchildren also survive. NO CELEBRATION IS HELD AT WEBB CITY Webb City, Nov. day was observed quietly here, 'as no public demonstration was planned.
The schools closed at noon, while the majority of merchants closed their establishments in the afternoon. The banks remained closed all day and the postoffice closed at 1 o'clock. Rabbit Men to Meet. Webb City, Nov. Mineral Belt Rabbit and Cavy Breeders' Association will meet tomorrow night at the city hall.
Two out of town speakers have been selected to lecture at the meeting. They are D. T. Dodson of Springfield and Ed Dilmur of Girard. Dodson will speak on "Proper Breeds to Raise, in Regards to Meat and Fur," and Dilmur will lecture on "Care and Diseases of Rabbits." Both men have been active in the rabbit-growing industry eight or ten years.
McCumber Funeral Held. Galena, Nov. services for McCumber, 48 years old, lifelong resident of Galena, who died Saturday afternoon at Freeman hospital in Joplin, were held at 3 o'clock this afternoon at the Clark. funeral chapel, with the Rev: John Booe officiating. Burial was in the Gandy cemetery..