This photograph shows (L to R:) Harold Lott and Randy Trembley from the Plant Operations Department of the Menninger Clinic in Topeka, Kansas. The Plant Operations Division kept the facility with working utilities and attractive grounds.
A letter from L. Baum of Paola to Kansas Governor St. John, offering a discerning and, retrospectively, prescient outlook for the effectiveness of the prohibition amendment.
This is a photograph showing soldier Ahern who served in the 196th Field Artillery Battalion during the Korean War. He was photographed leaving evening dinner, and he has a mess tray in his right hand, grease gun on right shoulder, and a carton of cigarettes and bar of soap in his left hand.
This is a photograph showing a railroad water tower with the 3rd Infantry Division insignia painted on the side. It was the only structure left standing in Tongchok, South Korea after the war.
A letter to Kansas Governor St. John from Robert Lowry, a temperance worker from Illinois. In the letter, Lowry requests a railroad pass to Gaylord, Kansas. This letter is related to Kansas Memory item 310222.
A letter forwarded to Kansas Governor St. John by A. Sellers. The letter was written by temperance worker Robert Lowry. In the letter, Sellers affirms Lowry's credentials and requests railroad passes on his behalf. Sellers was the editor of the Waubaunsee County News. This letter relates to Kansas Memory item 310221.
A letter from C. G. Manley to Kansas Governor St. John inviting him to speak at a "torch light temperance procession" in Augusta, Kansas. The names of George Brown and S. N. Blood were also listed as authors. They were part of the Prohibition Committee.
This is a photograph showing four generations: top row: Hazel Marmolejo (daughter), Severa Marmolejo (mother), (grandmother) Juana Granado, and (great grandmother) Paz Corona.
This photograph of Juan and Atanacio Corona's passport shows stamps from the American Consulate in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico and the U.S. Public Health Service.
This is a photograph of the Manuel Corona Band, front row (right to left): Manuel Corona, DeSales Gomez, Atanacio Corona, Tom Lopez; second row: Chito Manrique, Roderigo Padilla, and several unidentified musicians.
This is a photograph of the Corona family: front row Patricia Marie Corona, Josefina Corona, Atanacio Corona, David Daniel Corona, Paul Corona, Amaliag Corona, Ruben G. Corona, and Anna Marie Corona.
This is a photograph of the Corona family - (left to right) Patricia Corona, Paul Leonard Corona, Josefina Gonzales Corona, Atanacio Corona, Anna Marie Corona, Ruben G. Corona, David Daniel Corona, and Amaliag Corona (Sister Mary Carmel OSS).
This is a photograph of Staff Sgt. Charles Lopez who entered the Army Air Corps in October, 1943. He served as a gunner on a B-24 Liberator bomber based in England. Lopez was killed in action over Germany on October 18, 1944. Lopez graduated from Capitol Catholic High School and was employed in the Kaiser shipyards in Oakland, California before entering the Air Force. He was married to Theresa Segova and they had a daughter Augustina Theresa. While Lopez served in the Army Air Corps, Theresa and Augustina Theresa lived with his father Pedro Lopez.