MONDAY, JUNE 30, 1924. PLATTSMOTTTH SEMI - WEEKLY JOURNAL PAGE THRE1 4 th OF CELE Plattsmouth, 10:00 10:00-11:00 10:30 11:00 12:00- 1:00 12:30- 2:00 2:00 3:00 3:00- 6:00 3:30 7:00- 8:30 8:30 9:00 9:00 At Coates Hall and K. S. Platform, Modern Dances. At M. W. A. Hall, Old Fashioned Dances. Plattsmouth Golf Course open to visitors for the day! Location of Rest Rooms Elks Club, North Sixth Street CLEANUP OF POLICE IN CITYOF SEATTLE Acting Woman Mayor Dismisses the Chief and Takes Charge Herself After Being Defied. Seattle. Wash., June 26. Mrs. Henry Landes, wife of the dean of science in the University of Wash ington and acting mayor of Seattle in the absence of Dr. Edwin J. Brown, mayor, at the democratic national convention in New York city, today took personal charge of the police department. Mr. Landes designated Capt. Claude B. Bannick, formerly chief of the department, to her aid. She gave Bannick the title of acting chief. Mrs. Landes yesterday removed William B. Severyne from the office of chief of police, after she had given him twenty-four hours to ef fect reforms In the city and in his department and he defied her. She issued a proclamation today which stated that an emergency existed and that In this emergency "I, Mrs. f-I-M-M U I I 1 1 II 1 t PUSTEfiUUMWICK WORK Cm Pool AM- WOII OTTAWA NT BHD Phones Bfl-J 4 4 6-J E. A. md F. S. RICE BR ATIOIM AT PROGRAM Morning Baseball, Cedar Creek vs. Plattsmouth. $75 purse to winner. Admission free to all. Concert, Plattsmouth Eagles Band. On Main street. Tug of War. S10 purse to winners. On Main street. Water Fight. 10 purse to winners. Weeping Water vs. Plattsmouth Fire Departments. On Main street. Afternoon Picnic Dinners in Garfield Park. 2 blocks south of 5th and Main. Plenty of shade. Concert, Plattsmouth Eagles Band. From bandstand in Garfield park. Patriotic Address, Hon. Jas. T. Begley. Garfield park. Program of Races. Cash prizes. On Main street. Free Motion Pictures, Parmele Theatre. A cool, restful place for those who are tired out. Baseball Game, Union vs. Plattsmouth. $75 purse to winner. Admission free to all. Evening Grand Concert, Weeping Water Band. On Main street. Wrestling and Boxing Exhibition. On Main street. No admission charge. Big 500 Fireworks Display. Fired from River front, foot of Main street. Free Dancing for Young and Old. Ground Henry Landes, acting mayor, was put in charge of the department." In a dispatch published here to day, Mayor Brown was reported to have declared: 'Severyne is all right and will be put back Just as soon as I get home." REPORT OF OFFICERS AT VETERANS' MEETING. Salt Lake City, June 26. Re ports by national officers again to day occupied the attention of de'e gates to the annual convention of t'le disabled American veterans of 1 ie world war in seselon here. The ai lliary branch of the D. A. V., the sc r vice star legion, also met and heard reports of officers. Tomorrow t e D. A. V. organization elects new f ficers and selects the city in wh; h the 1925 convention will be h Id for the post of national commani: ;r succeeding James A. McFarland . re Mayor George Leach of Minneapolis, Minn., W. J. O'Connor of San Fr;.:i clsco; Captain Ed Bunge of Cincin nati; John Hahan of Missoula. Mo.it. and Prank Irwin of Washington, D. C. BEDDSB TAKEN FROM WELL. The reimer which became fast In the oil well northwest of town a couple of weeks ago when the driller attempted to use it to loosen the drill at the bottom of the well was taken out Tuesday of this week. The drill became fast in the bottom of the hole about a month ago, and while the men have been working night and day since that time with the hopes of getting it out all at tempts have ben futile. When the reimer was used to loosen the core in the drill the latter piece of ma chinery became fast and they were not able to loosen it until this time. They are now attempting to get the drill loosened which they expect to have out before long when the drill ing will at once be resumed. Ne hawka Enterprise. Neb. Floor of Court House AUTOS LINE HIGHWAYS Despite the recent rains the main highways are all in very good shape and especially the federal highway south from this city to the Kansas state line and the autos are con stantly passing day and night over this fine stretch of roadway in num bers that are surprising. The stretch of road from this city to Murray was kept alive last night with the cars going and coming from the bathing beach and for miles the bright lights f the cars looked like a procession. Several cars were found Bailing along the highway withut either along the highway without either front or rear lights burning and they autoists or those with horses who might be traveling near them as it was impossible to distinguish the car until a person was right up n it. Either the lights should be fixed or the cars given a rest until they are properly equipped. FAMILY DINNER. Mr. and Mrs.! Torrence Fleming entertained a large group of rela tives, about 25 in all, at the pleasant Dome on tne soutn siua last Sunday for the day. A dinner such as Mrs. Fleming can prepare was serv ed and enjoyed. Those present were; Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Heebner, Mr. and Mrs. Mark land, Mrs. M. E. Fleming. Miss Imo Heebner, Grandville Heebner. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wessel of Nehawka. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Westlake and two sons of Eagle, Mr. and Mrs. George Heebner of Avoca, and Miss Olga Elgaard, and M. T. Fleming and family of Plattsmouth. Weep ing Water Republican. Harvey Zepp of Omaha of Omaha, representing the Guarantee Fund Ins. Co., of that city was here yester day visiting with his patrons and the friends here. PLACE BLAME FOR SCANDAL AT DOOR OF REPUBLICANS Subcommittee Votes 8 to 3 in Favor of Not Mentioning Klan by Name League Bobs Up New York, June 2 7. The plat form committee of the democratic national convention adjourned about 3:30 o'clock this morning after ap proving all of the thirty-five planks submitted to it by its drafting com mittee except those relating to the Kin Klux Klan and the league of i nat ions. I The subcommittee of eleven mem bers, which submitted the prelimi ' nary draft, was instructed to meet at noon today to attempt to whip into shape planks on the klan and the ; league, and the entire committee ; was called for 2 p. m., to receive the ' report. Little change was made by the entire committee in approving the other declarations. New York, June 2G. Republican I "inneficiency and corruption'' forms jthe subject matter of the first and principal plank in the democratic platform, presented tonight to the 'resolutions committee by the eleven 'men who have labored for more than (twenty hours on the national party declaration tor l"JJ4. Asserting uiat never had an ad ministration so thoroughly failed as has this republican administration, the platform arraigned the republi can party for "attempting to impede and stop" the senate investigations. It is asserted that these investi gations showed the immoral nature of the naval oil leases; the unfitness of the attorney general to hold of fice and corruption in the veterans' bureau. Reference is made also to charges against republican members of congress growing out of the Chi cago grand jury inquiry into the vet erans' bureau. "If only three cabinet officers are disgraced, the democratic party asks f how many more men are guilty," the platform draft adds. "This nation cannot afford to have in office men of this character." "A vote for Coolidge is a vote for chaos" the plank concludes. "Dis honest extravagance and inefficiency now exist in the government." This and some thirty odd planks in the platform were uncontroverted in the subcommittee, the only issues in dispute for settlement by the committee being the declarations with reference 'to the Ku Klux Klan and the League of Nations. Oppose Naming Klan Five or six alternative proposals with reference to both the klan and the league were submitted, and the committee settled down for what promised to be another all night ses sion. The subcommittee was over whelmingly opposed to naming the klan, and against reaffirmation of the 1920 plank regarding the league. Reports coming from the rocuu where eleven committeemen labored were that there was a division of eight to three against denouncing the Ku Klux Klan by name. Those holding out for mentioning the invis ible empire as such were Senator David I. Walsh, of Massachusetts; former Secretary of War Newton D. Baker and Joseph A. Kellogg of New York. Both Senator Walsh and Mr. Bak er were under instructions from their state delegations to insist that the klan be named. Senator Walsh of fered a plank to accomplish that end, but his was only one of nearly a dozen that had been prepared. All of these were placed before the en tire committee. Renew Threat of Fight Anti-klan leaders in the convention followed closely the battle in the committee and renewed their threats of a fight on the convention floor un less there was a clear-cut declara tion in the committee draft. They said they had been ha.-ing informal polls of the delegations made and expressed confidence that they could muster a majority in the conven tion. In the long hours of discussion in the sub-committee, Newton D. Baker was reported to have conducted a single handed fight for a declaration for the League of Nations practical ly identical with that adopted at San Francisco four years ago. Al ligncd against him were William Jennings Bryan and other "wheel horses" of the party who favored a very much modied expression. To Grant Farm Aid The plank dealing witi. farm aid pledges the party to stimulate by every governmental activity the cre ation of co-operativo marketing as sociations on a national scale; the establishment of an export market ing corporation or commission; the placing of agriculture on an equality with other industries; development of internal waterways as an aid in reducing transportation costs of farm products; revision of the tariff and reconstruction of both rail and water transportation charges. The agricultural plank asserts that the republican policy with respect to Europe has been such as to retard the economic rehabilitation of that continent, with a result that that market has not been reopened to the American farmer. A pledge also is given of the adop tion of an international policy of nuch co-operation by direct official negotiation, instead of indirect, un official negotiation, as will restore a normal flow to Europe of the prod ucts of the American farm and fac- ! tory. J Refraining the prohobition plank, j the subcommittee recommended one , declaring for "enforcement of the prohibition law," but without men tioning specifically either the eight eenth amendment or the Volstead act. "The republican administration has failed in the enforcement of the prohibition law," the plank declared. "The democratic party pledges itself to the enforcement of tnis law." MELLON ADMITS HE HAD NTEREST IN DISTILLERY Treasury Head Questioned About Forged Whisky Withdrawal Fermits. New York, June 26. With An drew Mellon, secretary of the trea sury on the witness stand, summon ed by the defense in the trial of Gas ton B. Means, former department of justice agent, and his secretary, El mer W. Jarnecke. charged with vio lating the prohibition law, counsel for Means today failed in an attempt to show that Means was dismissed because he exposed an illegal with drawal of whiskey from a distillery in Pittsburg partly owned by Mr. Mellon. Secretary Mellon adnitted that he once had owned an interest in the Overholt distiller, but said that his first knowledge of Means' investiga tion of the distillery had come when he read the testimony given before the senate committee. Mr. Mellon added that the distillery company since bad been liquidated, and that he had no connection with it. To questions as to whether forged permits for withdrawal of 42 thou sand gallons of whisky from the dis tillery had ben deposited by a man named Goodman as collateral for a loan from the Mellon National bank of Pittsburg, in which the secretary is interested, Mr. Mellon replied that this was not true. "I inquired of Pittsburg bankers," he said, "and was informed that no whishey certificates were held as col later for loans or otherwise in any banks there, and no certificates had been held for years." "Then these forged permits were in the office of the Overholt Distil lery company?" asked Thomas B. Felder, attorney for Means. "I understood so," answered Mr. Mellon. Hiram C. Todd, special deputy at torney general interposed many ob jections when Felder sought to ques tion Secretary Mellon about his bus iness affairs and Judge Wolverton said to Felder: "I repeat what I told you yester day, that the government is not on trial in this case." Jarnecke was questioned by Todd as to three letters which he admit ted having written to Samuel Scmidt of Chicago, In which Schmidt was urged to purchase liq uor "with a guarantee direct from the head of the department of jus tice that goods will be shipped to the man's warehouse and protected while in the warehouse." The let ters were made public by the sen ate committee during the Washing ton investigation of the attorney gen eral's office. Jarnecke explained that ho thought the transaction legal until Means told him that it was not. TEST OF AUTO BRAKES IS A MAT TER OF SAFETY Movement Grows Over State To Have Fublic Tests Made as Matter of Fublic Safety. Starting in Omaha the movement for the general testing of the brakes of autoes and trucks has spread un til Lincoln Is about to launch the movement and in the smaller cities there is beginning to form senti ment for this safety measure that is a safeguard for the general public and the auto and truck owners as well. It is generally conceeded that the brakes on the car are not watched carefully enough and little heed paid to them until the time when they are badly needed and then when they fail to do their work there is per haps tragedy and sorrow in the wake of the neglect. In Omaha the cars and trucks are brought to the public testing station and those who have brakes properly acting and servicable are given a sticker so showing and which is a guarantee of safety to the owner as far as he is concerned. Cars or Trucks that have defective brakes are ordered to have repairs made and report again to receive the necess ary certificate of their being in prop er working order. The importance of properly work ing brakes can be fully realized by the auto owner and should have their prompt attention for their own good as well as measure of protection to the traveling public on the high ways and the pedestrians who might at some time be in danger because of the fact that the breaks on the car would not work in time to pre vent being run down. When the opportunity affords this city as well as other smaller places in the state should follow the exam ple of the larger cities in this safety measure. GIVES FRIENDLY DEMONSTRATION. At the session of the convention this afternoon at New York the most friendly demonsthation of the sess ion was that which greeted the pre sentation by Senator Claude Swan son of the name of his associate. Senator Carter Glass to the conven tion for the office of president of the United States. In the greeting to the able Virginian, California, New York, Texas, Pennsylvania, Mary land. Montana, Oregon, Washington, Vermont and Georgia joined and while there was no parade or exten- j sive outburst as in the McAdoo and Smith displays there was a genuine friendly feeling shown. Alvo Department W. F. Bornemeier and the family were spending last Friday afternoon in Lincoln, where they went to look after some business matters. Simon Rehmeyer and wife were visitors at the home of his brother, Fred Rehmeyer and family, Dear Weeping Water on last Sunday, mak ing the trip over in his auto. Uncle P. J. Lynch, who is a work er, is still busy with the bee hives for the many swarms which continue to come and which he is hoping will produce him some revenue in the fall. Orris Foreman shelled and binned a crib of corn at his place west of town on last Friday, believing that while the price is very satisfactory there is still opportunity for further advance. J. D. Foreman, who has the large hatchery and rs growing chickens in large numbers is getting along very nicely and has many chicks which are in excellent condition and are doing fine. J. W. Kallmeyer, who has been at St. Louis for some time looking af ter some business matters, returned home last Saturday evening and has been looking after the business since his return. W. A. Cook shelled and delivered his last year's corn crop on Friday of last week, taking the same to the elevator at Elm wood, where he was fortunate in receiving a very satis factory price for it. The subjects fof the free movies for Saturday of this week will be "The Hill Crest Mystery" and will be given outside as the business men have so arranged in their wiring suheme so that the show can be given outside or inside, just as the weath er shall dictate. The new home which Henry J. Miller has just had constructed on his farm is about completed and will be occupied by Mr. Lyle Miller, who will "batch" there, according to the arrangements at this time. Of course we are of the opinion that he would share the nest with the right party. Arthur Dinges who is a rustler and a good workman at that, has been kept pretty busy of late getting the tractors in condition for the coming of the harvest which will soon be here. He has just been put ting in fine shape a tractor for J. M. Manners, and another one for Earl Creamer. Entertain the "Young Men The young ladles class of the Methodist Bible school entertained the young men's class of the same school at a very pleasant party and reception at the home of Mr. anil Mrs. Martin Nickles northeast of Alvo last Wednesday evening and the young men pronounce the ladies most excellent entertainers. The young men now have in mind a re turn entertainment when they will entertain the ladies. Attends the Ford Clinic Arthur Dinges, the owner of the Alvo garage, was a visitor In Lin coln on last Wednesday, where he attended a school conducted under the auspices of the Ford Motor com pany, giving instruction on the Ford cars and tractors, and which better equipps machinists for work on these celebrated machines. The Country Looking Fine Notwithstanding the continued rains which have kept the farmer, the farmer boy and the hired man from the corn fields, things are look ing pretty good on the farms at this time. June is the month which is most optomistic and promises the most. The corn has had a hard time to get going, owing to the very cold weather and It being so wet, but it is coming along nicely now. Along with the corn, the weeds were slow at first, but are now growing over time. The wheat and oats are look ing fine and win soon be crowding the farmers for their gathering. The hay crops also are good, wnn the alfalfa and clover excellent. During this time the strawberries, goose berries and cherries have been a good crop, and with good promises for raspberries and blackberries, which are just now making their appearance. The conditions have found much work for the farmers and the housewife as well to do, so that they have had very little time for other things. TRANSMISSION OF PICTURES. The transmission of pictures over tho telephone and by wireless is one of the distinctive triumphs of the last decade as far as the advancing march of the race is concerned and another step forward in the field of dicovery and -invention that will af fect many radical changes in the transmission of pictures for use of the large press associations. The developement of this line has resulted in the Northwestern Bell Telephone Co., of Omaha, being able to receive I and send pictures over their lines; and with the best of results. Haying and Harvest ARE ABOUT AT OUR DOORS It will pay all those needing a Deering and McCormick mower to see me. I have a number bought at last year's prices and can save you some money on them. Coatman Hardware Co. ALVO ACTING GOVERNOR DECLINES TO ENTER STATE GAS FIGHT Johnson Comes to Lincoln, but Not on Oil Business, He Says. Situation Unchanged Lincoln. June 26. Lieutenant Gov ernor Johnson of Hastings, who is acting governor of the state in the absence of Governor Bryan, arrived in Lincoln this evening and was in the executive office for a short time. The lieutenant governor said his presence had nothing to do with the controversy in the state over the price of gasoline, although he said he had suggested to dealers that they make a voluntary reduction and thus make it unnecessary for the state to go into the oil selling business. M. B. Atkins, an independent dealer, head of the A. B. A., company in Nebraska, today addressed a let ter to Lieutenant Governor Johnson urging him to come here to bold a conference with the oil dealers and 'said he believed such a conference i would lead to what he thinks would be an equitable price for gasoline. Mr. Aitkins suggested that 18 cents would be a fair price. This Is 2 1-4 cents below what is now being charged in Lincoln by regular deal ers. The state controlled station here today continued selling at 15 centa a gallon. Retail dealers said they had received no instruction from the companies they represent to meet the cut. No move has yet been made to enjoin the state from embarking in the business, it was said today at the ; state house. GOVERNOR BRYAN'S NAME PRESENTED TO THE CONVENTION Eugene O'Sullivan of Omaha Offers the Name of Nebraska Execu tive to the Convention The democratic national conven tion is still engaged in the task of listening to the nominating speeches for the candidates for president and at noon today, or 2:30 New York daylight saving time, the roll call had reached New Jersey on the list of states and the name of Governor Silver was being presented. When Nebraska was reached on the roll call, Eugene O'Sullivan of Omaha, took the platform and plac ed the name of Governor Charles W. Bryan before the convention. At the conclusion of the speecn nominating Bryan, the band broke into the strains of "There is a Long, Long Trail a Winding," and the demon stration for the Nebraska executive was under way, Nebraska, South Car olina, Montana, Georgia and Florida joining in the demonstration and forming a parade about the hall, while other state standards were waved to the marchers as they moved along their way. As the march con tinued, the band took up tne strains of "Onward Christian Soldier" which served to increase the enthusiasm ami the demonstration took almost twenty minutes to subside and per mit Chairman Walsh to have the roll call proceed. EARL IRELAND IMPROVING. The word has been received at Nebraska City that Earl Ireland, formerly of that city and a resident of Plattsmouth for a year, where he was employed at the Journal, ia now showing some improvement. Earl has been in very poor health for the past few years and was taken to , Colorado where he was placed in a ; sanitarium there for treatment. He , showed great improvement and was ; later a hie to leave the hospital and i was thought to be getting along . fine, until a few weeks ago when he i wras taken critically ill. He is ; being taken care of by Mrs. Ireland who returned to Colorado I from her old home in Nebraska City where she was visiting when the word of his illness was first received. Michigan Barrel Salt while it lasts. Quality guar anteed at the lumber yard. J. W. BANKING, Alvo, Nebraska NEBRASKA