MONDAY, NOV. 18, 1929. PLATTSMOUTH SEMI - WEEKLY JOURNAL PAGE FIVE MURBOGK BEPMRTMEMT. PREPARED EXCLUSIVELY FOR THE JOURNAL. Dry Cleaning and Repairing Absolutely Best Service Leave Work at Barber Shop Prices Right i, the Cleaner Plattsmouth, Nebr. Lugschj A telegram of congratulations was received by L. Neitzel from a nephew from Los Angele9, Calif., which was very much appreciated. Mr. and Mrs. Lacey McDonald were over to Elmwood on last Monday, Armistice day, where they were en joying a Tisit with friends and rela tives. We are indebted to Martin Borne- meier, John Bornemeier and Charles Buell for assistance in getting: thru the muddy roads on our last trip to Murdock. John H. Buck and 9on, Carl, were ver to Ashland on last Monday where they were looking after some business matters as well as visiting with relatives and friends. On account of the prevailing bad weather of last week, and it not be ing possible to work on the lines of the telephone company Floyd Hite was spending the time at home. Shelbv Brideremon was a visitor in Elmwood during the most of the last week where he was assisting in installing the heating plant at the hotel in Elmwood, the work being completed last week. Meredith Weddell who is employed at Red Oak, Iowa, was a visitor in Murdock for last Sunday, and re maining over Armistice day, and en joying a fine visit with his parents and other friends in the city. Misa Elsa Bornemeier and Mrs. Mary Rush were over to Lincoln, go ing on Wednesday evening and visit ing with friends and looking after some shopping until Thursday noon, they returning on the fast train. Paul Stock, who was fortunate in getting two excellent corn pickers from the "Show Me" state, which were indeed dandy pickers has his .corn all out and the gentlemen are now assisting in getting the crop of Louis Bornemeier in the crib. I Howard .Brunkow of Greenwood was a visitor in Murdock on last Thursday looking after some business matters and took home with him an excellent black Poland China boar to head his herd of fine hogs. and also was looking after other business matters. L. B. Gorthey and family and Mrs. George Vanderberg were enjoy ing a visit on last Sunday at Weep ing Water, where they were the guests at the home of Arthur H. Jones and wife, and where also Clif ford Jones of Lincoln and the good wife were guests. Louis Hornbeck and daughter, Caroline, of Lincoln, were in Mur dock last week, acd while Caroline was meeting with the teachers in convention Louis went to the hunt ers lodge on the Plattee river where he Joir.cci in the chase, with the other hunters of Murdock. Ferninand Brunkow has just pur chased a new Chevrolet six coatch from the Dowler Brothers service at Weeping Water, and is well pleased with the new wagon, for the use of himself and family. He exchanged the car which he has been driving for some time, in the transaction. J. Johnson was over to Greenwood and took a load of hogs to the south Omaha market for J. M. Armstrong, getting back about noon, notwith standing the very bad roads, and went out to the Wm. Heier farm to superintend and to do the dressing of a number of hogs for the use of Mr. Heier. Miss Hilda Schmidt who is em ployed in a mercantile establishment at Ashland was a visitor at home last Sunday and had to go from Ash land via incoln to Elmwood on bus and was there met by Mr. Schmidt hex lather, this was a long .way around but the excellent visit which it afforded was well worth it. L. Neitzel celebrated his seventy fifth birthday last Tuesday in the family circle. A beautiful birthday cake prepared by Eleanor Harting adorened the table, with 75 burning candles illuminating the same. A fine dinner was served, assisted by Mrs. C. Harting, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. Neitzel and mother of Eleanor Harting. Miss Helen Bornemeier, chief oper ator of the Murdock Exchange and Miss Marjory Twiss of Louisville, oc cupying the same position in Louis ville were over to Nebraska City to a meeting of the chief operators of this district of the Lincoln Telephone & Telegraph company, on last Wed nesday. During her absence Miss Mary Bornemeier was looking after the exchange at Murdock. Burial Vaults. We have the only self sealing buriel vaults, automatically seals it self, excluding water or any other substance. We deliver them on call to any place in Cass or Otoe coun ties. MILLER & G RUBER, Nehawka, Neb. Back From Their Hunt. The party of hunters composed of A. J. Tool, Henry A. Tool, Harry V. McDonald, all of Murdock and Hugh Armstrong of Omaha, who were spending from last Friday until Tues day of this week hunting and camp ing at Pawnee Lodge on the Platte river, found the hunting not the very best, still their camp life and excel lent outing which they had was well worth the time and effort, for they sure had a good time, even if the birds were scarce. Has Two Excellent Houses. By keeping everlastingly at the matter Herman R. Schmidt who is sure a fine workman as is demon strated in the rseult of his work, has just completed the two twin houses which he has constructed on the property where the former school was located. The new buildings are entirely finished and ready for oc cupancy, and are for sale at very reasonable prices. Either of these buildings will make an excellent home for any one who desires a home in this hustling little city. The buildings will not be offered for rent, as they are now in the best of condi tion and are only for sale. in the M. W. A. hall. Nov. 8. The following officers were elected: Rev, H. A. Norburg, Chairman; H. J Amgwert, vice chairman; Mrs. Lacey McDonald, secretary-treasurer. The program to be carried out by the branch for the year was planned Roll call, which is an annual event, was placed in the hands of a com mittee. This committee being Mrs Ed Thimgan, Mrs. H. V. McDonald, Mrs. P. J. Johnson, Mrs. H. J. Amg wert, Mrs. Henry Gakemeier, and Lacey McDonald is to be developed if enburg as director of committee. Be sides roll call, two other distinctive programs were voted to be carried on First Aid under the management of acey McDonald is to be developed if a class of thirty can be secured. Vol unteer service under the manage ment of Mrs. Ed Thimgan will be along the line of reconstructed gar ments, used clothing, etc., to be used where needed. This will be made pos sible by holding a clean-up day in January when our store rooms will give up the things that will be of service to others. The meeting, however, was not well attended, but when we know it was 200 years after the crucifixion of Christ before the Christian re ligion was accepted by any nation, we must not be discouraged when Red Cross does not gain the interest of all in this fast moving world. Those cf you who can, please keep faith with your local organization by tak ing a membership so that Red Cross can keep faith with the people. PROGRAM AND BOX SOCIAL A program and Box Social will be held at the Belmont school, Dist. 64, November 22, 1929. DELLA NEBEN. nl8-2tw Teacher. FOR SALE Buff Orpington Cockerels, 1.50 and $ 2.00 apiece, if taken soon. G. V. PICKWELL. nll-4 M Murdock, Neb. Enjoyed Visit Here. Mr. and Mrs . John W. Kruger were host and hostess at a very pleas ant gathering at their home on last Sunday, when they had as their guests for the occasion Jess Landholm of Omaha. Messers and Mesdames Tage Berglund. inas Berglund, with their kiddies and Gunner Erickson all of Omaha. A most enjoyable gather ing was had. Getting the Home Along. Matthew Thimgan and son, Vic tor, are getting along nicely on the new home which they are construct ing for Paul Kupke, and which will make this gentleman and his family a very nice place to reside. The plumbing goods, fixtures and piping was taken out last Wednesday, and the completion of the building is be ing hurried along in order that it can be used during the coming win ter, which is almost here. Red Cross Meeting Held. The anual meeting of the Murdock branch, American Red Cross was held will soon be here! Make the housewife happy by a present of one of our Kitchen Kob Kabmets Convenient, Cleanly and a Very Handsome Piece of Furniture Ask Us About Them L M. W TopI Xumber Co. Murdock, Nebr. Armistice Day Address. Address delivered at Evangelical church last Sunday on: "Armistice Day the Forerunner of World Peace." When in the years to come, some one will write the history of the World War, there should be one chapter headed, "He Hath Appointed a Day." Acts 17:32. God in his great answer to the multitude of prayers, that the carnage of war might cease, "appointed a day" when this conflict should cease. It was at 11 o'clock on the 11th day of the! 11th month. 11 years as:o. when the bugles sounded the signal "cease fir ing." These notes re-echoed around the world. The stillness and absolute silence which followed, was so pro found that its meaning was not un derstood for some moments. Th booming of guns, the shrieking of bursting shells, the rattle of machine guns, that had been heard continu ously for four years, stopped at once when finally the realization came to the boys in the trenches, in first aid camps, in hospital, s the joy was in describable. The first thought was "Now we are going home!" They finally came home, but not all; some seventy-eight thousand of the nowe of America's young manhood did not return. This brings us to the place of sad memories, the cemetaries in France. First we stop in Lorain where on November ICth, 1917, the first three Americans fell. Corporal J. M. Gresham, Private Thomas En- right and Private Merl D. Hay; then we go to Sureness near Paris, where 150 S of our boys sleep, now we visit Montfacon where more than 14,000 rest. These are but a few places sacred to the memory of the berieved families in America. We will not speak of the shell-shocked, the blind the maimed, the gas poisoned, the widows and orphans, not to mention the sorrow, the heartaches of fathers and mothers at home. Time and the grace of God will heal those wounds et us rather speak of the signs that point to a better day, which is com mencing. The Locarno meeting, the Geneva, conference, the Briand-Kel- logg Pace Pact, Ramsay MacDonald's visit, the coming disarmament meet ing next January, the result of last year's work in behalf of world peace; The reparation question has been settled; France will remove her sold iers from German soil; all foreign governments have agreed to restore tariff antomony to China; in Mexico the church and state have made peace; England and Egypt have come to an understanding; the oldest quar rel in South America, between Chili and Peru has been settled; this is one year s progress. Nations are learning to arbitrate their misunderstandings, and world peace must come, because God says so. Nation shall not lift up sword ae-ainst nation any more and the angel choir will again soon chant the refrain "Glory to God in tne Highest, peace on earth, to men good will." (The new reading) When righteousness shall cover the earth, as water the deep, when the Prince of Peace shall rule in the hearts of men, then man will not learn war any more; when once the brotherhood of men and the Father hood of God is recognized by the masses, then world peace will come by mutual understanding to the glory of God and the good of man! L. NEITZEL. Kansas City Men Abduct Officer in Robbing Raid Edgar E. Willcnt, Motorcycle Patrol man, Forced to Accompany Them in Holdup Kansas City Two young robbers kinnapped Motorcycle Patrolman Ed gar E. Willcut here late Friday af ternoon after he had showed eus- Weaver Rules Against Town; Deci- picion of their movements, forced sion Follows Recommendation mm accompany mem un epruiliuii ill iuib utimi aim lurii Of Two .hngmeers. released him unharmed on a busy street in the eastern part of the city. Lincoln, Nov. 15. Residents of While special police details pa- Ashland emerged Friday second best trolled the city streets and high- in thei clamor for rerouting of ways leading out of town the rob- D. L. D. hiehwav throueh that city bers looted a bank and two stores, instead of south of the present Bur- besides stealing an automobile. Will- lington right-of-way, which, they say. cut was Kianappea vnen ne are is a "Chinese wall" segregating the "P oesiae a seaan wnicn naa arouseu Ashland Fails in Its Attempt to Gain Highway AIR MAIL INCREASES place from the rest of the state his suspicions. Two men leaped from A formal decision by Governor the machine and covered the officer Weaver in the long-pending fight, ith revolvers, forcing him to enter the motor car paving until next spring, accepts the authorities who which has delayed about 14 miles of original routing as projected by the state department of public works Ashlanditea, however, the gover nor said, need not feel that their dispatcher police reserves in motor cars and on motorcycles to search for the bandit car. While Dolicemen nntrolled the wishes in the matter will be entirely streets and highways, the robbers ignored, for the proposal will in- wltn their prisoner appeared in elude an adequate "turnoff" for mo- Hickman Mills, a suburb, and after torists who want to enter the city. Best Thing for All. "I consider that my decision is the best thing for the great er number of people, it is con siderably less expensive and in every way the most feasible un dertaking," the governor asserted. loitering on the streets, entered the general store of George Lorimer, forcing Lorimer and a customer, Roy Cox, to lie upon the floor, the rob bers rifling the cash drawer of $60. Prodding the storekeeper and Cox before them, the robbers entered the Hickman Mills bank, across the street, and forced Robert D. Barry, it: V .3 ,1 ,1 cTln.r.A I -" nit ocv... -""K ms UfUSlUU, lie auucu, xiuru , --n tw rr.KV,ora rotnrnl tn closely upon tne recommenaaiions oi the.r car stm compelIing. Willcut two impartial eiiKiiieei a, a. v. xinvy and D. D. Mickey, the latter of the federal engineering Btaff, who were assigned to investigate an oi tne pro posed routes to accompany them. The highway men then drove to Leeds, another suburb and held up a coal and grain company. After the Leeds robbery, the sedan was abandoned and a small in nis determination to proviae an coune Darked on the street was acceptable entrance from the re- stolen. routed highway into Ashland, the Eluding a cordon of police thrown governor has added an estimated cost around the city, the robbers drove of $25,000 for this work. to Thirtieth and Forest streets, where nt onlv is the accented line the incut was forced from the cor. shortest of all. but it is also the most His revolver and cartridges removed secure from flood damage, and will he had them returned to nmi nrovide the greatest medium of safety Willcut reported to the Flora ro- Based on poundage carried dur ing the first ten months of this year, the 1929 air mail loads on all routes in this country will aggregate 4,00 9 tons, according to an estimate made today by Boeing System, which flies the Nebraska air mail route. The 1928 total was 3,542,000 pounds. This year's air mail will be approxi mately double the total air mail car ried by all European lines, exclusive of Russia, last year. The mail planes, Boeing System estimates, will carry a total of 320, 000,000 letters this year contracted with 141,000.000 last year. Im proved service, extension of the air mail network, a double transcontin ental schedule, cooperation of post masters and growing familiarity of the public with air mail, are assign ed as reasons for the increase. Ancient Indian Art Discovered in New Mexico Highly Developed Culture of Mim bres Valley Studied by Anthropologists TIRE' LURES CROWD AS TRIO ROES RANK Peoria. 111., Nov. 15. After turn ing in a false fire alarm three blocks away, to attract attention, three arm ed robbers Friday afternoon raided the South Side State and Trust bank and escaped -with $9,000 in- cash. While the robbery was goin-oc, nearly everyone in the vicinity -was hurrying to the "fire." from grade crossing eliminating all that are now present. This route, he h1i1a(1 o Inn rt ft a "hn nli IV XL' 1 1 M Highway 37. a short route to the -L"lc South Omaha market Four routings were considered dur ing the period of controversy between Ashland people and the state depart ment, comparative costs entering in the final analysis to a large extent, the governor said. Will Cost $919,849. The accepted line or Route A will lice station and went to police head quarters. He told newspapermen he had not been bound or mistreated. CRIME COST IS ANALYZED Washington The treraondous cost of crime to the nation was analyzed Friday by a committee of the na tional law enforcement commission. The study ranged from cost of police court and prisons of federal, state and local governments to " racketeer cost $919,849.55. inclusive of a new inK." issuance of fradulent siock and bridge over the Platte river south of bank defalcations. the present Burlington structure. In Chairman Wickersham of the corn- contrast. Governor Weaver pointed mittee. Judge Kenneth Mackintosh of out, Line B, an alternative offered Seattle, and Henry W. Anderson of by the state, would cost $986,820, Richmond. a., attended the n.eet- and Line C, one of two routes sug- mg together wun tne commission $ gested by citizens of Ashland, would expert, Boldthwaite Dorr cf New cost $993,931.05. The latter routing York. Another meeting of the ccm- miiiee wun us imra menioer, juugc Paul J. McCormick of Los Angeles, would be directly through the city r.nvcrnmont dnrfnpprft thp trover- nor added, have approved the route to who yas absent Friday, will be held here in December. Having previously announced they would carry their protests against any other routing than the ones they proposed to the courts, Ashland resi dents are expected to appeal from The cost cf the crime study will include the direct cost incurred by government agencies for the pre vention of crime, and the indirect and private costs, the latter phase rnmnrisinc the expenditures of rnr- the governor's decision, it was in- poraticns and individuals in the timated Friday. Omaha Bee-News, maintenance of private guards and armored automobiles for the trans- BAGGAGE TO BE SEARCHED portation of valuables. Washington Immunity from search of their baggage enjoyed by tourists returning from abroad in third class steamer accommodations, which resulted in minor smuggling. COLLEGE GIRLS EAT OWL Charleston, 111. Names of three young women or eastern unncis Teachers college, who ate an ov,i was ended Friday by Commissioner of prepared for them as "pheasant' Customs Eble. Wednesday night could not be learn- It was the first such order issued ed Friday. They are reported in since that against hip-slapping by inspectors to learn whether liquor was being carried, which Assistant Secretary Lowman discontinued sev eral weeks ago. Passengers com plained of the hip slapping, and of- good health. The dinner was given the three coeds by three men stu dents, who had previously charged the girls with breaking dates with them. The dinner was all ready when ficials Friday said many tourists took the young women arrived and they advantage of the perfunctory exam ination given baggage of third class passengers to slip in a few hundred dollars worth of foreign merchan dise. The practice of tourists re turning in third clas3 cabins has grown in recent years. In years gone by, it was said, the entire third class passenger traffic consisted of immigrants. Because years of search have shown that im migrants seldom had anything of suitable nature, customs men de- don't know," he answered veloped a practice of merely mark- ate an owl." were requested not to wait for three boys' who had been detained. They had completed the meal before the youths arrived. "How did you like the cock pheasants?" they were asked. Great," one girl replied. But is wasn't pheasant. It was owl," one Romeo advised. One of the girls fainted. A science instruc tor at the college was called, and asked if owl would hurt them. I never ing such baggage with chalk and rushing it thru to clear the docks. Tourists returning from abroad soon discovered the advantage or quick passage thru customs and the practice of not searching their bag gage. Commissioner Eble, however, upon learning that the tourists baggage was not submitted to a thorough search, telegraphed instruc tions to customs officers to see that hereafter .was closely inspected. The order will not cause any change n the method of handling immi grants. The three youths announced they were getting even lor the broKen dates." THOUSANDS AT THE SHRINE Maiden, Mass. A heavy downpour which fell thruout the night and most of Friday drenched more than 10,000 persons who thronged to Holy Cross cemetery, many of them carry ing or otherwise assisting their crip pled ones to the grave of Rev. Pat rick J. Power, reputed to possess miraculous curative qualities. TTT TDTOftC rYTJTPT I xiuuuit-ua nau iruiai.itu in n.c -f- li-J-C-U' fjTJjl I r?aT-L- onrl ririnninir irrorornrH tliivl- N0 DJDEPENDENCE out the night, praying at the shrine and kneeling in the cemetery Manila, Nov. 15. The Times Fri- chapel, where for the past twx weeks day said Filipino political leaders there has been accumulated a varied see no prospect of anything approxi- collection of discarded crutches, mating independence during th next canes and leg braces. Scores of those session of congress in Washington, who truged thru the mud of the nar- So strong is this conviction that I row cemetery pathways and, after either Senate President Manuel long waiting in the rain, knelt in Quezon nor Senator Osmena (ma- the wet grass at the grave's edge. ority leader) will accomany the in dependence mission to the United States. Phone ycur Job rrfcitins, order vto claimed to have been cured of their infirmities, a claim .which hundreds have made since the pilgrimages began. Minneapolis. Minn. Boxes and crates containing hundreds of bowls, stone implements and other discov eries, literally dusted from the ancient soil of the Mimbres valley of New Mexico, have been unparked and their contents placed under the critical eyes of anthropologists in an effort to solve the mystery of an American culture that varnished 1,- 000 years ago. The work is under the direction of Dr. Albert E. Jenks, head of the department of anthro pology of the University of Minne sota. Aside from the fact that the Mim bres Indians were a peaceful, agri cultural people living in hundreds of villages scattered over a 100-mile area which comprises the Mimbres valley and mountains in southwest ern .New .Mexico, little 13 known about this varnished group, Dr. Jenks related in telling of his expedition which spent last summer excavating in the region. The expedition, consisting of Dr. and Mrs. Jenks and six university students, uncovered and studied mi nutely 52 rooms in a 10-acre lot which was leased for the work financed by the University cf Minne sota and the Minneaplois Society cf Fir Arts. The rooms were discovered on five house levels, indicating. Dr. Jnks believe?, that as the adob houses crumbled and collapsed and as de bris and the elements covered the sitts, Fucceeding generations con structed their homes above the bur ied estates cf their forefathers. Carefully digging the baked and packed earth from the village site, the excavotor? us;d whisk broom? to sweep dirt from nearly 350 bowls. The bowls arc cf especial interest because the pottery of the Mimbres Indiar.s bears the finest geometric designs and is the most highly de veloped of any culture of the West ern Hemisphere, IT. Jenks remarked. Realistic designs of animals, insects, lizards are said to b the only ones of their type in prehistoric archiso1 ogy. The designs are often drawn in black on a white background but also in red on gray. Lumps of r.iw mate rial paint red. green and bTue the bluest blue Dr. Jenks hasever seen were discovered. "The Mimbres culture is an un solved archaeological problem," Dr. Jenks commented in speaking of his work. "There is no evidence that it was tranrplanted to otber tribe3 or people. It may have existed 100 0 years before Christ and it was gone 600 or 700 A. D. The Spanish con querors, who passed and repassed the Mimbres valley, have no record of these people. "Their number likewise remains a mystery. Nothing has been published as yet about this culture. We simply do not know where it came from or where it went." The Mimbres Indians were firt called to the attention of natural scientists in 1913 when some pottery was discovered in the region. Wesley Bradfield, curator cf ths Museum cf New Mexico in Sana Fe, has spent five summers working in the valley and has a large collection cf Mimbres relics. Blames Lax Banking for Mal colm Failure Frozen Loans and Overvalued Real Estate Responsible, Says Shallenberger. Lincoln, Neb., Nov. 14. Laxity in banking supervision, the accumu lation of slow and excessive loans, and real estate "grossly overvalued" on its books were elements assigned today by A. C. Shallenberger, head of the guaranty fund probe, for the failure of the Malcolm State bank. Three depositors whose funds are now tied up in the institution sev eral daj'S ago became parties to a test suit launched in district court here to determine the priority of payment ou of a 2 60 housand dollar appropriaion for payment of deposi tors in banks operated as going con cerns. The Malcolm bank was taken over by the state department on April S, 1927, and at that time loans and discounts amounted to $121,232.55, while real estate, carried as a re source a.mounted to $78,882.04. De posits were $209,351.09. State Operation Cost 043,052. Operated as a going bank, further losses were sustained to the extent of $43. 052. OS, and $14,999.73 was added to the deficit under receiver ship, Mr. Shallenberger summarized from recently completed audits. "Based on the valuation of the remaining assets," he added, "there will be a still further loss, exclu sive of operating expenses, of $50,- 483.29." The total loss, he stated, will ap proximate $108,814.90, while a 15 per cent dividend has been paid de positors and the estimated value of remaining assets is approximately L7 per cent of the preferred claims unpaid. When the bank wa3 taken over, Mr. Shallenberger pointed out, total loans included five amounting to $35,701.49, which were in excels cf the legal limit. Likewise, real es tate was carried at five times the legal limit. Warned Two Years Ahead. Citing laxity in butti vision, the investigation direff.- says he found that in 1925 and lS2f.. two years prior to the closing, the attention ' f the dej-artmeet w:.s called to tK.f f-ct that 'he Mi.'; "--os cvt : loaded with reJl estate, fr 11 aiul execs:-, loans." Mnr.y 3".s w.r" ci. second and third real estate mortgages, he said. Preferred claims unpaid now ag gregate $107,478.95. auditors found. While no part of the stockholders' double liability has been paid in, A. Otterman, president .has transferal to the bank, to be held in trust for the stockholders' liability fund, 4S'J acres of Colorado land. C. E. Gorve?. vice-president, made a similar agree ment, transferring a half section of Utah land. World-Herald. INDEPENDENCE IS SOUGHT SECRET BALLOT ON WINES ASKED Washington, Nov. 14. Express ing a belief members or congress would vote for modification of pro hibition if permitted to ballot sec rotly, Representatives Sol Bloom (D.), New York, Thursday introduc ed a resolution to permit such a bal lot on a bill to legalize manufacture and sale of beer and wine. "No one who is upon a foot ing of personal acquaintance with anj- number of senators and representatives," Bloom said, "can be ignorant of the fact that many of them, per haps a majority of them, vote diametrially opposite to their own conviction, in order to con form to what they conceive to be the convictions of their con stituents, whenever a liquor measure is before them for ac tion." He added that many members of congress were not so mindful of the people's welfare as to the security of their position. POSTPONED PROGRAM AND BOX SUPPER Program, box and plate social at the ' Lewiston school. Dis't. -7, post poned to FRIDAY, Nov. 22nd. at S c'cloct. FREDA KLINGER. W a s h i r gton Representative KnuU-on. republican. Minnesota, who introduced a bill Thursday to grant the Philippine islands their inde pendence, issued a statement in which he described the islands as constituting "tbe greatest drawback u .agricultural rehabilitation" with which this country contends. "The Philippine islands today con stitute the greatest drawback to agri cultural rehabilitation that we have to contend with," Knutson asserted. "Anually we import from out far eastern posses-ions over one billion pounds of vegetable oils which enter into direct competition with Amer ican dairy products and animal fats. "Th Philippines r.l;;o export to the United States each year some thing like 600,000 tons of suea whlch competes with the products of our beet grwoers. I do not be lieve that congress will ever legis late to place a limitation on these huge imports, which so ?eriously af fect our welfare, so long as the is lands remain unr'er the jurisdiction of the United States; hence my de fire to give to them complete inde pendence at this time in order that they may be rlaced on the same eco nomic level as other competing countries." DEPUTY, EANDIT QUEEN 'LOST' Rome. Ga., Nov. 15. Sheriff O. L. Betts said today Le Lad "no reaso'i to suspect foul play" in the disap pearance of Deputy Sheriff O. B. Jar man of Rome, on his way here from Crown Point. Ind.. with Elizabeth Brooks, alias "Honey" Sullivan, sus pected Rome pay-roll bandit, in his custody. Betts expressed belief that Jrr man was delayed on an automobile trip by bad weather. They left In diana Tuesday. Some believe that Jarman either was waylaid and slain after obtain ing tbe extradition papers from th governor and his documents stol:::. and used by the j-oung woman's com panions, or that he was slain while en route back to Georgia with her. VETERANS' HOSPITAL PLANS COMPLETE Lincoln. Nov. 15. Plans and specifications for the Veterans' Bur eau hospital to be built five miiei east of the city, will be ready Nov. 20, says a telegram from Washing ton to the chamber of commerce. and a set will be mailed to the Lia coin Builders' bureau for the con venience of local contractors. Separ ate bids will be taken, acceptable up to 11 a. m., cn Dec. 31, on gen eral construction , plumbing, heat ing, electrical work, electric eleva tors, refrigeration and ice making: plant, bteel water tank and radial So. 6. Prompt service Phone ycur news to Ho. 6. nlS-daw Teacner. brick chjimiey.