Items of genealogical interest in the Springfield, Greene County, Missouri newspapers, the Springfield leader and the Springfield daily news for 1929, Part 1, Part 8

Author: Hall, William K. (William Kearney), 1918-
Publication date: 1929 v. 1
Publisher:
Number of Pages: 644


USA > Missouri > Greene County > Springfield > Items of genealogical interest in the Springfield, Greene County, Missouri newspapers, the Springfield leader and the Springfield daily news for 1929, Part 1 > Part 8


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


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DEATH


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MELVIN W. OUTii Meirin W. Gustin, 8 x 40 years publisher of newspaper, died here the-home -of -his -sou, following a brief Uliney. Mr. Qualin published Richland. Tuscumbia. Hart Balem during his colorful a newspaperinan of the tto: . He purchased a with من شد 1866 0 2 in period of 10 years. He ft War veteran. Coming from Michigan In 1863. beitled neer Lebanon. mt medlately in the Union days after the battle of WB His record MA a soldier high alanding. He partidos the balllen of Monday' Ridge and the name of VIL was a thember of Company Missouri Infantry. Funeral will be conducted nt + 30 0 urdey morning at the W. Mortuary. The remains win shipped to Richland for. There.


WHLIS L. MORME Funeral services for WIts' ris will be conducted at it Saturday morning at the, Funeral chanel. The place has but as let been deteratt -


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CALLA HUSBAND COLD Mrs. Glenna Durnen, Pped Bomer Duraelf for divorce ta cfrtutt court today . charging that be Med torped cold to ber. the stad cttody.co thetr catid, John Bobert, 1 Jon ckf. and also 015 a month malatisabot for him. They were married Apri M.


4. 1. 1.1800


WEST PIAINH MO. Jan. I 1 ingo. 87. of Ant. No. plone dent of Howell county and b ¡ Judge Earl Lingo, southern." judge of the Howell county died at hie home Wednesday Influenza. Mr Lingo had bem tdent of Howar county 50 y


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DOUGLAS MICCANDLE Douglas D. McCandless, to of Mr and Mrs. O. A. Moc 2012 North Broadway. died at the home following a brid The body was taken overle to Lincoln for burial in cemetery by the Klingow. home here.


AFINY MIE REATO Evelyn Mae Weaver. Infant ter of Mr. and sfrx. Elde Way East Brower NICCI. died this at the home. Puneral under direction of the Klla ueral homie, are incomplete


MRS. GU'S 'MARX -- Funeral servicea for Marx· will be conducted 'o'clock Sunday afternoon at . Address, 425 State Airtel. B . be made in the Jewish cem der direction of the Herman mejer Funeral home.


HAWLEY SERVICES Funeral services for xius 8. Monday afternoon at the Renda Lohmeyer Funeral chapel. . will be in National cemetery. direction of the Spanish-Am War Veterans of Spettwellold


SATURDAY MORNING, JANUARY 12, 1929 -- DAILY NEWS


Page 1: Marriage licenses issued .**


Page 3: A daughter Sara Elizabeth Butler was born January 6 to Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Butler, 2148 N. Main avenue.


Page 4: Miss Emily Jane Fort and Mr. G. Terry Robinson were married .**


Mrs. Sophronia O. Miller was appointed to administer the esate of her husband Charles E. Miller who died December 20, 1928.


Page 8: Albert H. Blair died .* Mrs. Gus Marx died .* ·W. S. Whitehead died .**


Melvin W. Gustin died .*


Evelyn Mae Weaver died .*


Mrs. Beatrice White died .* Ellis S. Hawley died .* Willis E. Morris died .*


Page 14: Mrs. Oscar P. Moody died .*


MARRIAGE LICENSES


Paul Young, 21. Nlangue, Mo., and Mas R Bbell, 17, Springfield. Ora S. Thomy. 32. Los Angeles, Cal, and Sylvia laguewood. 21. NIxA. Mo : and James Camp. 21. and Audra U. Tella. btb of springfield.


Miss Fort Married To Mr. Robinson


Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fort. 1320 South Campbell avenue. almounce the marriage of their daughter. Emily Jane, to Mr. G. Terry Robinson of Vero Beach, Cal.


The ceremony was performed by the Reverend. Stephen B. Campbell at his home/in Kansas City, Mo., December twenty-seventh.


Mr. and Mra. Robinson will make their hothe in California.


SOLONS WILL ATTEND MRS. MOODY'S FUNERAL


State Representative George O. Reed, of Greene county is a member of a delegation of three from the house of representatives to attend the funeral of Mrs. Oscar P. Muvd ;. wife of Representative Moody from Lawrence county, at Mt. Vernon at 2 o'clock thia afternoon.


Other representatives are J. S. Mc- Queen of Barry county and Mr. Griggs of Jasper county. They ar- rived in Springfield yesterday. They will return to Jefferson City Sunday to be present at the inauguration of Governor-elect Henry S. Caulfield at a joint session of the house and sen- ate Monday.


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DEATHS


ALBERT H. BLAIR


Funeral arrangements for Albert H. Blair, for 56 years an employe of the Frisco railroad. are incomplete. The Klingner Funeral home is In charge. Mr. Blair died suddenly at Thayer after becoming ill while working. He waa a freight conductor. He is sur- vived by his wife, who is ill at her home, 2036 North Benton avenue.


MRS. GUS MARX


Funeral services for Mrs. Gus Marx will be conducted at 2:30 o'clock Sunday afternoon at the home. 425 State street. Burial will be iz Hazel- wood cemetery under direction Her- man H. Lohmeyer Funeral home ..


W. S. WHITEBEAD


W. S. Whitehead, former Springfield resident, died Tuesday morning at his home in Tulsa. Funeral services were conducted there Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Fielda, and Anna Fields. of Springfield, attended the services. Mrs. Fields is a alster of Mr. White- head.


MELVIN W. GUSTIN Funeral services for Melrin W. Gus- tin. 85. will be conducted at 9:30 o'clock today at Starne mortuary Burial will be at Richland, Mo.


. EVELYN MAE WEAVER Funeral services for Evelyn Mae Weaver, infant daughter of Mr. and Mra. Elda Weaver. 1008 East Brower street, will be conducted at Klingner Funeral chapel at 10 o'clock today. Burial will be in Eastlawn cemetery.


MRS. BEATRICE WHITE


Mrs. Beatrice White, 29, died last night at the home of her brother. L. L. Glore 1321 Frisco street, fol- lowing a brief illness of Influenza. Mrs. White contracted the illness while nursing her four children. three.i of which are critically ill with the disease at the Glore home. They.were brought to Springfield when the whole family became . bediaft. She is survived by her husband. William White, who lives on a farm co route No. 1. and four children, Beatrice. Mary, William and Norbit. She also Is survived by her parents. Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Glore: four brothers. L. L. and N. S. Glore of Springfield. C. M. Glore of Los Angeles, and B. F. Glore. of Denver. She also 18 survived by a sister, Mrs. D. T. Conway. of Denver. Funeral arrangements are under cl- rection Herman II. Lohmeyer Funeral home.


ELLIS S. HAWLEY


Funeral services for Ellis S. Hawley will be conducted at 2 o'clock Mon- day at Herman H. Lohmeyer Funeral chapel. Burial will be in Nat.onal cemetery under direction Spanish - American War Veterans.


WILLIS E. MORRIS


Funeral services for Willis E. Mor- ris will be conducted at 11 o'clock today at Klingner Funeral chapel. Burial will be in a Springfield ceme- terv.


SATURDAY EVENING, JANUARY 12, 1929 -- LEADER


Page 1: Mrs. Louise G. Wallace died .** Page 3: Mrs. James K. Vinton died .** Miss Josephine Harrison died .** Mr. and Mrs. Frank Carnett died .** Page 6: Births reported .** Ellis S. Hawley died .* Albert H. Blair died .* Mrs. Gus Marx died .** Mrs. Beatrice White died .* Mrs. James Smith died .** William T. Junkins died .*


DEATHS


MRA. JANES "X. VINTON Word was received here today by Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Vinton, 1046 South Fort street, of the death of Mr. James K. Vinton on January 10. A .AJO ;- Arteona.


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JOSEPHIXE HARRISON Funeral services for Miss Josephine Harrison, 81. who died Friday at her boma, 026 Tezus avenue, will be con- ducted Sunday afternoon at 8 o'clock at the realdegos. Interment will be in South Habetwood cemetery, under direction of the Campbell Undertak- ing company. .4


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Mrs. Louise G. Wallace, Drury Benefactor, Dies


Aged Widow, Who Gave Generously to College Here and to Schools in Lebanon and Elsewhere, Expires at the Age of 85


Mrs. Louise Groesbeck Wallace, 86 moting business interests and edu- years old, wealthy philanthropist of cational enterprises and actively en- gaking In church work. Lebanon. Mo., and widow of W. I. Wallace, died this morning at ber Besides the Lebanon High school and Drury college gifts, other dona- home in Lebanon of old age. .- Mre. Wallace was a pioneer citizen i tions were made to foreign and home of the Ozarks region, and was the missions. the Children's Home In donor of both the 'Clara Thompson Council Bluffs. Iuwa; Iberia Academy at lberla. Mo .. the Congregational church st Lebanon ard several other Institutions. halt of music and Wallace 1:all at Drury college, together with over · nina otber educational fusiltutions Mrs. Wallace was described by Leb- anon civic leaders as "Iba city's best friend and promoter." and home and foreign misalons in Missouri and other states. She gave more than $60,000 to the Lebauon Tablet Inscription High school, and bullding expenses The inscription on the bronze tab- let in front of Wallace hall here reads as follows: of the two halls here at Drury totaled more than $200,000.


All business housea of Lebanon will close for the funeral services Monday afternoon At 2 o'clock at the Congre;


rational church. Burial will be made in hits mouth and unrighteousness


in the Lebanou cemetery.


Carried on Husband's Work


W. I. Wallace was. up until. the Ume of his death, especially active lu philanthropic work and lo the Con- gregallonal church. Ha was a trus- tee of Drury college for a number of years. Shortly after his death Mrs. Wallace took up his work, and dut- Ing the Drury collega commencement exercises 'of 1924 announced her con- tribution to the school, that of Wal- tace hall.


Mr. and Mrs. Wallace had no chil- dren but adopted & daughter, Clara. who 'married Major Edgar Thompson, surgeon of. the United States navy. and a brother of Wlimer Thompson. now an instructor in mathematics at Drury. The foster daughter died shortly after her marriage, and It was at this time that Mrs. Wallace made the announcement of a accond contribution to Drury college. this time in the form of a conservatory of music. The Clara Thompson hall, ded- Icated to . the memory of her foster daughter.


Lebanon's Best Friend ·


It was announced today by Doan John N. Bennett of Drury that the school would probably hold memorial services some time next week.


Mr. and Mrs. Wallace came to Leb- non . from the East In. 1866 on their honeymoon. Uked the country, and had lived there since that time, pro-


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"Erected to the memory of Wash- Ington Irving Wallace by his wife. Louise Groesbeck Wallace.


"Bible verse --- The law of truth was


: ta uot found in his lips: he walked in peace end uprighteousness and turned many away from Iniquity.


"Malachi. 6th verse."


HOLD DOUBLE SERVICE FOR VICTIMS OF CRASH


LEBANON, Mo.,. Jan. 10-Double funeral @rvices will be conducted here Monday for Mr. and Mrs. Frank Carnett. Mr. Carnett was killed last Sunday In an automoblie accident wear Biloam Springs, Ark .. and Mrs. Carnett died Jait night from injuries received lu the mishap.


The services will be held at New Hope. 10 miles cast of Lebaron, and burial will be made In the cemetery Where. .


BIRTHS


Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Wicker. 677 West Scott street, armnunce the blith! of a daughter, Patricia Louise, Janu -; arY 11.


M: and Mra. Pani MrCleruon. for- i merly of Springfield, who now restde fur St. Louis, announce the birth of a 800, William Paul, on January 10.


46


DEATHS


MA & HAWLEY


Funeral services 'for Ellis 6. Haw- ley will be conducted Manday after- noon at 2 o'clock at the Herman II. Lobmeyer funeral home. Burle! will be in National cemetery under direc- llan of the Spanish-American Wer Veterans of Springfirid.


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ALBERT II. BLAIR


Funeral arrangements for Albert IL. Blair. - who died suddenly Thursday afternoon, are as yet Incomplete. Ar- rangements are in charge of the Klingner funeral home here.


MES. GUS MANN ..


Funeral services for Mrs. Gun Marz will be conducted at '2:30 o'clock, Sunday afternoon at . the home. 435 State street. Burial will be in Haselwood cemetery under di- section of the Herman H. Lohmeyer funeral home. Pallbearers. named were as follows: Ernest Rathbone, O. H. Reynolds. John Lawler. Jacob Karchmer, Moe Fayman and Roy Rawyer. .


MRS. BEATRICE WHITE


:: Funeral arrangements for Mra. 86- atrice White, who died Just nlght ut the honte of .her brother. U. L. Olort. are Incomplete. The Hernisu H. Lol- meyer funeral home is In charge. She is survived by ber husband, Willinın White, who lives on s farm on route No. 1, and four children. Beatrice. Mary, William and Norbit. She also Le survived by her parents, Mr. and MOLD .. P. Glore: four brothers. L. In . and N. B. Glore-of -Springfield. C. M. Glore of Los Angeles and B. F. Aloro of Denver. She also Is survived by a alster. Mrs. D., T. Conway of Denver.


MRS. JAMES SMITHI


Ward has been received here of the death yesterday of Mrs. James 8mlth of Washington. Ind. Mrs. Smith wAs the mother of Mrs. Harry E Trester of 1700 West Atlantic street. She Is survived by four sons, all of Washing. ton, and one daughter of Balem. Il. Buris! will be made in Washington. .


WILLIAM T. JUNKINS


William T. Junkins. 89. of Walnut Grove, Mo., died Friday afternoon 10 n Springfield hospital. He is surviv. ed by one sor and two sisters. fu- neral services will be conducted Bun. day afternoon at Mount Pleasant ce.netery. under direction of the Brim Undertaking company of Walnut Grove, . .


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SUNDAY MORNING, JANUARY 13, 1929 -- NEWS and LEADER


Page 1: Willie Anise Calvin is 3 1/2 years old. Her father John M. Calvin will be 83 on January 24 .**


Page 2A: There is a long article about Julia Colby.


Page 10A: Mrs. Beatrice White died .** Ellis S. Hawley died .** Mrs. James Smith died .**


Charles W. Anstey died .*


Joseph Dorrell Bradley died .**


Albert H. Blair died .** Mrs. Gus Marx died .* William T. Junkins died .*


Page 1B: There is a long article about Dr. B. F. Finkel and his predictions for the future. Page 3B: The mother of Mr. George Hughes of Newburg died .**


Mrs. James Dunham of Rolla died Saturday. She was the mother of Mrs. Clarence Decker of Newburg.


Mrs. Edith Gord died .**


Mr. and Mrs. John Watkins have been married 59 years .** [There is a photo of


them.]


Sister Mary Bernetta died .** Miss Margery Wright and Herbert Austin were married .**


Miss Emma Gatewood died .**


A. King died .**


Son born January 7 to Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Carney of Monett. A. H. Jordan died .** Mrs. Mary Griffen died .** Glenn Rentfrow died .** Mrs. Woods Hamilton died .**


47


Son born January 8 to Mr. and Mrs. Darlh Boucher of Peirce City. Mrs. Elizabeth Looney died .**


Dean Henry died .**


Page 6B: Miss Abbie Lewis and Mr. John Holler were married .**


Page 7B: Miss Dorothy Palmer and Mr. John Wesley Green were married .** Miss Agnes Millsap and Mr. Harry G. Edwards were married .**


Page 9B: A son Billy Engleman, Jr., was born December 16 to Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Engleman of Pittsburg, Kan. Mrs. Engleman is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Hill, 811 West Pacific street.


Page 12B: Card of thanks .*


Mrs. Mary Griffen of Webb City. Widow of the late Joe Griffen. was . buried at the Hickory Grove ceme- tery Thursday.


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Gle :::. Runtfrom of sprit.steid @as - buried here Monday. He leaves his widow and several small children and his father, George. brother. Ora. and sisters. Jane and Verda. of this place. and his brother. Cliff. of , Springfield.


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Mrs. Bue Axton of Denver. Colo. was called liere by the serious illness and death of her mother, Mrs. Eliza- beth Looney.


Mrs. Elizabeth Looney, 89. died at her home, three miles west of Peirce City. Monday morning. She was the mother of nine children, six of whom survive, three sons and three daugh- ters .. Her husband died 11 years ago. She leaves a sister, Miss Tempa Orll. and a host of relatives and friends to mourn her death.


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Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Looney of Springfield, were called here Monday by the death of Mr. Looney's mother. Mrs. Elizabeth Looney.


Mr. and Mrs. Riley Looncy and the former's slater, of points in Oklahoma. -


. were here to attend the funeral of their mother. Mrs. Elizabeth Looney.


Dean Henry, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Henry, died Friday. Dec. 4. at his home In Miller, after a short Ill- nean of pneumonia. Funeral services were held Sunday afternoon, at the Baptist church. Interment in Pieas- ant Grove cemetery. -


1 A. H. Jordan, age 55, died at his home at Fort Smith, Ark., January 3. Burial was at Bellgman. Mr. Jordon was a brotherinlaw of Mrs. Alta Partridge, who resided here for some . years before reslening her position at the West hospita!


A. King. a former resident of Monett, and uncle to T. L. Wain- wright, died at his home in Noel Tuesday and burial was at Newtonia. Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Carney an- nounce birth of a son, born Monday. . January 7.


Mr. and Mrs. Louis Huffman and son James of Springfield. attended the funeral of Dean Henry, Sunday.


Mro. James Dunham of Rolla died suddenly last Saturday. Mrs. Dun- ham was the mother of Mrs. Clarence Decker of this place.


Virgil Weaver who has been ill some time died and was buried Sunday afternoon at the Thomas cemetery.


Blater Mary Bernetta, sister of W.' P. Conrey. died at Loretta, Ky .. Saturday 5, her niece. Nell Callan and nephew Will Conrey left to at- I tend the funeral.


Mr. and Mra. Bill Inks and sons. were called to Oklahoma by the death of their daughter and elster Mrs. Edith Gord, who has been ill some time. She leaves besides her parents, a brother, a sister, two small children and husband.


Mrs. Woods Hannitton of Walnut Orove dled Wednesday atd was buried At Oakdale cemetery. near here. Thursday. .


Miss Margery Wright, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Solon Wright and Her- bert Austin of Mt. Vernon were mar- ried at home of the bride's parents at 8 o'clock Monday evening. January 7. The ceremony was performed by Rev. F. B. Kineli of the Baptist church.


Miss Emma Gatewood, an aunt to Finia Johnson, died at her home in Peirce City and funeral services were held Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock at Wessel funeral home.


- Mru. Hughes, mother of Mr. George Hughes, died in Corsicana, Texas. and her body was brought to Dixon. Mo, funeral services were conducted Thursday. Those from Newburg at- tending the services were: Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Hughes, Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Wilson, O. D. Ward and wife. Mr. :Bam Montgomery and wife. Mr. llomer `Houston, Miss Helen Houston and Mrs. Van V. Elting.


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DOCTOR FINKEL VISIONS:


Therepathy Around World;


Conquest of Ail Disease


None of Man's Fantastic:Imaginings on-


35 Years And now


'BEDOU A.KARELII


TO SEE and hear over equipment-


To communicate with rational, living beings on other planeta-


To shoot a rocket to the moon-


To prolong human life indefinitely, predetermine sex, and have absolute control over all disease-


These and a thousand other fantastic and inconceivable things are seen by Dr. B. F. Finkel, head of the department of science and mathematics at Drury college, as sane. scien- tifie possibilities for the future. He mentions merely the fantastic ones, Doctor Finkel explains-the inconceivable ones he cannot think of, or he would predict them. too.


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NO ROUND TRIPS TO THE MOON


Not that he expects to live to me them. understand-nor yet that he expecta you or me to do so. In fact, | The concedes that it may take 100 million years to accomplish some of them. But considering advances In wolerroe madein', the last little con- tury, and the fact that the buman mind .. develop's with .« geometrical progression. Doctor Finkel believes thet nothing is impossible If the bu- man race endurea long enough.


That Is virtually nothing; and nothing on this earth. He does be- llere that it will be impossible. ever. for a man to leave this earth and then return to It -- as on a journey to the moon


WHAT It Yor MISSED:


In the first place. he explains- granung the possibility of shooting a man se far as the moon on come sort of rockel -- it would take an ex- traordinarily precise aim to hit . speck as amall as the moon. And If the traveller should mies his des- Unation. he would simply go on hurtling through spare In . on end- less interstellar Journey.


In the second place. If by some miracle of accuracy he did bit the moon. he would merely make a tiny. Inappreciable dent in It and disap- i pear-much as a meteor striking


earth's atmosphere is instantly con- sumed. And in the last place. even If he got there ellve. he couldn't live in the carbon dioxide atmosphere of the moon, and he would have no way to get back to earth.


But on the earth Itself. Doctor Finkel believes that virtually nothing Is too fantasile to be 'possible of realization. "There le no ' limit to the pomibility of development of the human mind." he saye: "end thare la no limit to what man may know."


FLYING DREAM COMES TRUE


Allenuance at ine tuettinik ul ture American Association for the Ad- Venement of Bokence and associated cooletws .mn. New York. City. from March. Doutor Faked'recently bes ++ turned. has if anything even in- greepod bia confidence in the endless und toooudeivable possibilities for tu- "tare' development - Reports of · what sodentiste bave done and are doing Strengthen his bellet-if that be pop- muts/in the potentialities of the bu- man mind :o develop in power and increase in knowledge.


Thirty-five years ago Doctor Fin- kel predicted that during his ow . time "the a :. will be filled with fiy - Ing machines as it is with birds." .. ..


48-A


That prophecy has been virtually ful- filled-there may not be quite yet as many airplanes. as. there are birde he concedes, but they do fly by bun- dreda. A personal wish perhaps fathered that prophecy-even then Doctor Finkel hoped to fly his own machine, and be atill does. He has ridden in a plane and found it « thrilling experience, but will not be satisfied until he can pilot his own plane. "I don't ermo uke to ride la an automobile, unless 1 can drive it myself." he explains.


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FORERAW TELEVISION


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Twenty years ago be predicted television, which is now rudely ic- complished and on the verge o.' per- fection. The day is not far off. Doc- at your telephone and while yo . talk to .no bere me me and this roomy as clearty so you do now."


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Mra. Finkel Whimsically comments that abe boper wird television comes to pass. some dott of sorusd"witt be provided for emergeoder -- in case ope might not wish to be looked at.


There is a lay bellet-rellc. po doubt, of school days When students "Just bate" algebra and' geometry- that mathematics te "dry and dust," and mean, promic stud. Yes Do fu- turist poet has a more virid and chal- lenging imaginetior than Doctor Finkel, seos larger vlaloris or enjoys them more lu mathematics be finds thrills fascination and great atten- ture: and in science an expanding ris- lon beyond etem bla broad compre- hanstoy.


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MATHEMATICS AHOW WAY -1


It 10 mathematics" be 'points out. that makea arianna nicchiamater !! possible to apply it to practical prob-


od out and proved that


matter. and of wireless communka- tion. many years , byfog scientists came Mong nhà, thường, the boậy tí scientitio knowledin anteble and. mathematics! formules trendy worked out discovered the x-ray and inrented the radlo. Thus the mathe- uiatician prophesles and the clentist makes prophecy reallty.


The next fled for scientiflo im- prorebenta, Doctor Finkel sees in biology. Biology today. he says, · La . far behind the physical sciences. Hun -. freds of research scientists l.a: ac- cumulated & vast mass of blological deta-Ono day. Doctor Pinkel maya, | 1 blologtst-mathe.naticlan will appear to give meaning to this data and -make it valuable fo: practical uso.


1 DISEASE TO BE UNKNOWN


And that will be the dawn of a new ere. Life will be indefinitely pro- longed. Discese will be conquered. controlled with The sanie mathemati- ca' precision that electricity is con- trolled today. Box will be mediately


spectacular development in biology. Duce .It. bellus Doctor Plukel recalls the history o' electricity.


Electrical phenomcua we .. ..::. ob- served about 600 B. C .- Jowl years sko. ho says. First records of elec- trical observation, hit : ays. Air those of Greek women spinning their wool on amber reels. As they turned the wheels In their laps, the amber be-


came electrically charged. Then when Inadvertently the spinners drop- ped "their reels onto the bard earth floors, the dust clung to them and off. because of the magnetism of the amber,


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A REVOLUTION ARIESD


For MON ' than two milleniums- -2400 years-various observations of electrical phenomena were made, cur- lous and Interesting to scientists, but of Jo practical valuc. Then !:: 1831 "twu erteuttsts, an Englishman and an American, working Independently on opposite sides of the Atlantic, an- nounced the same discovery -- the re- Latjon of electricity und magnetismn.


That was less than 100 years ago- And-NI-the-vast wee-of-electrical pom. er and development of electrical equipment which in the century has completely revolutionized the world. Hititted from their discovery. tiden some brilliant biologist does comparable thing in his own field- available for application all the quantity of blological data now at hand-an equal revolution inny be Expected. Doctor Flukel believes.


As he sees it the physical sciences today have reached a temporary per- Lod of rest while the biological sci- ences are poleed on the bin.k. of A ut »


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PHYSICIAL SCIENCE RESTS


Progress in the phpstr: .. been to swift during the past 30 :


so far 1. advaller of p'ra! ants 0;


a lack of equilibrium. he says-and physical science will wait awhile un- : Il men catch up with It. So he sees Immediately ahead a period of In- tellectual, artistic. and spiritual de- velopment-a "renaissance" .- which wWI bring the other chinees of life Once Again abreast of Filete




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