The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, November 03, 1930, Page PAGE FIVE, Image 5

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    MONDAY. NOV.
o.
1930.
V
FLA'
OTTTH SEMI WEEKLY JOURNAL
PAGE FIVE
MURCOCK
OEMS
John Gakemeier was a visitor at
Nehawka on la3t Monday and was
accompanied by Mrs. Gakemeier he I
looking after some business there.
Mrs. H. V. McDonald was spend-!
ing last week with her daughter, Mrs. j
Harry Gillespie at North Loup, where
she was taken by her son, Bryan,
in the car.
A full gospel Bible class will be
conducted each Wednesday night in
Stewart's hall at 7:45 by Doctor V.
S. Barkey of Havelock. Everybody
is cordially invited.
Mr. O. J. Hitchcock and family
came in from Kavelock Sunday even-
and took Mrs. L. Neitzel home with
them
This leaves the scribe a bache -
lor for a little while.
John Elliott of near Alvo was a i
visitor in Murdock for a short time
on last Wednesday and while here
also visited at the home of his daugh-
ter, Mrs. Frank A. Melcin.
Dr. and Mrs. L. D. Lee were spend
ing a few days last week at Lincoln
and during their absence Judge and
Mrs. W. E. Newkirk of Greenwood,
parents of Mrs. Lee, were here look-
ing after affairs.
The Murdock schools were closed
on last Thursday and Friday that
the teachers might attend the teach-
ers institute which they are required
to do, and therefore the scholars are
enjoying a holiday
Paul Schewe was
visitor in
riattsmouth on la6t Thursday where
he went to attend a democratic rally
at which the county candidates were
present and where some prominent
speakers made good addresses.
C. E. Noyes and wife of Louis
ville were visiting in Murdock with
their daughter and also Mr. Noyes
was feeling the pulse of the political
situation, he being chairman of the
republican central committee.
Chester Elsman, the painter, paper- Hirch, a good friend of ours and a church 2, 20-22; to erect a building, ! make new level? of prosperity impos
er and decorator is at this time re- real sport. On Saturday w e went on called a holy temple in the Lord, the I Bible in the future."
finishing the interior of the Murdock a duck hunt up to Dunning on the foundation being the apostles and Dr. Jordan declared, moreover.
church, and when the edifice shall
have been completed in the redecor-
ation will present a very fine appear
ance. George Trunkenbolz of Greenwood
was a visitor in Murdock on last
Wednesday and was visiting with his
friend Mr. Paul Schewe and looking
after his campaign for county sheriif
he being candidate on the democratic
ticket
C. E. Ledgway of Plattsmouth. de
puty clerk of tne district court, ana
who is candidate on tne repuDiican
ticket for the position of clerk was in
Murdock on last Wednesday and was
meeting his many friends and mak-
ing more.
A. A. McReynolds of Xehawka was
a visitor in Murdock on last Monday,
coming to see Matt and Victor Thim-
gan about the construction of a body
for his truck. We can say when the
Murdock people shall have construct-
ed the truck body it will be a good
one.
I. G. Hornbeck who was spending
some time at Fort Worth, Texas,
where he was visiting at the home of
Mrs. Russell Hornbeck who is now
making her home there, her parents
living at Fort Worth, returned heme
on last Tuesday eveninc and icuried
his work at the Rock Island station
Tho ni irrT-i:io worn on tlipir wavictirti f,.r hnmo Wp hnTprl to lc:ive
by 7 a. m. last Sunday, this time
fulfilling a promise made last Aug
ust, to visit the Evangelical church
at DeWitt, where F. C. Weber is the
pastor. Arriving at 9:55 a. m.. hav-
ing driven BS rules, we listened to
an in .. :ig sermon, theme "An
venture in Faith," Peter walking on
tbs water. Then we had thep rivilege
to teach a men's Bible class of more
than twenty, after which we gave an
address to the Sunday school alto-
eether. It was a glorious day and
meeting, especially as we knew a
great many from former days, at Mil-
ford, Nebr.
Mrs. John Engines Doing Nicely.
Mrs. John Eppings who was taken
to the state hospital at Omaha some
two weeks since where she under
went an operation for ihe removal of
a growth from her breast, is reportea
as getting along nicely at this time
and it is hoped she will be able to t
return to her home some time in the j
near future.
Making Changes in Ecme.
K. W. Tool Wild recently disposed
hU home, is having the home of
of his home, is having the home of
his parents which he has acquired.
changed and made entirely modern
and will make his home there when
he shall have gotten the place in the
best condition. Frank Melvin is do
ing the work.
Home from Hospital.
The Rev. H. R. Knosp who was at
the hospital for some weeks on ac
count of an operation for relief from
appendicitis, was able to return home
an last Sunday, and is making good
progress toward entire recovery. His ;
v friends will rejoice with him
in his recovery.
Were Seeing the People.
Paul Schewe who if- the demo
cratic candidate for the position of
r presentative, and who has been
hustling for election, and whose card
you will find in the Journal, was en
tertaining on last Wednesday after
noon and introducing to the people
ot Murdock. Michael Hud, who is
""" '
t ndidate on his ticket for cl-rk of
CLEMENTS & CO.
Undertakers and
Ambulance Service
We solicit your kind patronage.
Over thirty years experience:
the district court, and a very able
I man. J. L. Stamp of Plattsmouth,
democratic candidate for treasurer
and entirely capable of caring for
the position, and W. H. Puis present
county assessor and also candidate
for relection. You know Billy, and
can well afford to vote for him.
Has Severe Eeminorhage.
Charles Kupke was early last week
taken with a severe bleeding spell :
from the nose, which was very ser- ;
;ius and required the services of a
physician to stop the bleeding. While
he is still weak from the loss of blood
he is resting very well at the time.
Purchased Eome in Murdock.
O. E. McDonald who disposed of
his home in Murdock several months!
since, and who moved to the Ms.
Sarah Thimgan place, with the sale
i of the place to Fred Dieckman last
week, he in turn selling the place to
Mr. McDonald who now occupies the
place. In the selling of his place Mr.
McDonald expected to look for an -
other home and has now settled with
but one move, and has a very good
place to live.
Hunting Trip
On Oct. 22nd. five sportsmen from
the western part of Cass county, left
for a good time and a little hunting
trip up in the sand hills as follows:
Walter Leonard, Albert Kraft, V.'m.
Shoeman. Alvin Tite and Jotn
Scheel. Jr. They went to Stanton and
ll the way up to the northwest some
counties were not worth going to as
the pheasants were not there and
every farmer had his land posted, no
hunting, till we got sick of them, so
Up we went to Loup City, put up tar
the night, next morning out at sun
rise and had our limit at eight o'clock the "children of disobedience" crea
so we went on west, checked our tures of whom he could say: "Now
birds on the Custer county line by
Game Warden Stutzenker from Gm-
na. That was the only warden we
saw for four days, then we went to
ilvprn?i where we staved with Art
Charles Rau ranch, but Charles was
:not home. He was in Omaha with
some cattle. We got a few ducks on
his lake so we hiked on to the Black
and crept up on a flock of mallards
and after the smoke cleared away we
picked up 5
out of the water
so
we went on and on. niu alter dim.
. ... m , v Ml
Then we stopped at a prairie clog
town and shot a few oi tnem. inure
we killed 13 rattle snakes, some raa
to 12 rattles on tnem. so we went
Dn up the river to Thedford. We
crossed the river on foot and we ran
four deer out of the willow bushes,
They sure did move when they saw
us. So on we went and came around
;a hill, there we saw a big black
eagle and we got one shot at him,
but our gun never hurt him a bit at
close range Then we came to '.he
end of the trail, we had the front
wheels of the car in the river but we
did not cross on account of the sard,
So we had to turn back and take .he
same road and we could not see that
one very well, it was starting to :t
dark and the gas tank was gett ng
low and our stomachs were empty.
bin we had a eood time. Then we
got 18 more ducks on the way back to
Dunning. On Sunday morning we
the west but we will go back again
soon. At Arcadia we came through
and stopped for a hunt Sunday and
we shot 23 pheasant before dinner,
and then checked the birds and ate
Cur dinner and homeward bound
Ad-'came through on Highway No. 16
to Wahoo, arrived in that city for
supper. One man got sick on t!ie road
home so we stopped the car and rest-
a little while then the car stop;ed j
on us an.l we had quite a time to get
her going. Had to send for a truck
to pull us home. When the truck got
there the car started and we got
home at a late hour. We sure ha: a
real good time. Hope we can go
again. This was sent in by a back
driver
Gasoline 6 Gallons A Dollar.
I am selling gasoline 17 cents pe:
gallon or six gallons per dollar.
Geo. Utt, Murdock. n3-2tw.
Fqut
The !pour S(aarB club met for
their regular meeting Oct. 27, at
7:30 p. m. at the school build' ng.
seventeen members were n-e" em To
YL.11 WCTS lOBenL TO
make the meeting of greater Vlliue
o those attending 5t was voted to
follow Robert's Rule of Order. The
parliamentary work for the tran tac
tion of the business of the club, un
der the direction of the president,
Mrs. A. J. Tool, was very interesting.
The project leader, Mrs. Lacey Mc
Donald and Mrs. John Gakemeier had
their lesson well prepared and many
helpful ideas pertaining to "Ironing
Day Made Eeasier," were discussed.
What kind of an ironing pad do
you use?
Is your ironing board the right
height?
How do you protect long curtains
or table cloths from reaching the
floor when ironing them?
How long does it take you to :tron
a man's shirt?
Is your ironing equipment com
pact, easily handled, and convenient
to assemble for use?
What can be done for tired feet
while ironing?
You have the very things ne:ces-
1.; u; ,.
Ba, """s
his trip to avoid wrinkles and muss-
ing. Do you know what they are?
Our lessons are not only for the
duties of the housekeeper. By the
help of a pianist and the phonograph
our social leader, Mrs. L. D. Lee pre
sented the games and the scngs.
"Our Wills" were amusing; Our Fox
Hunter and Gun made Pheasant hunt-
ing tame; "Swing Low Sweet CJiar-
iot" and the listening' number, "Wei-
Ranch It was one of 12.000 acres and those that are nigh, to be "build- maT't , Z-u a
aTd had 1025 head of cattle there, ed together for our habitation of God, I !.r"SPifvie through tiu' resources
We went to the lake on the pasture through the spirit." " J, "SLl-'111"
tette" from "Lucia Di Lammermoor"
were enjoyed.
Twelve members pledged to keep
records of their accounts.
The next meeting will be Nov. 24,
:30 p. m. in the school building.
NEWS REPORTER.
Bull For Sale.
For sale, a short horn bull.
rot
LW.
Gakemeier, Murdock
nS
Famous Cities of the Bible
ROME XIX
Epistle to the Ephesians. This let
ter was written from Rome. It will
pay well to study this letter, and di-
: gest it's contents.
1. The design is to set forth the
origin and development of the church
of Jesus Christ, and to display, to
the Christian dwellers
under the!
shadow of the great temple of Diana,
the unity and beauty of that trans-
cendently more glorious spiritual
temple of which Christ himself was
jthe chief cornerstone, and the saint,
! portions of the superstructure. Chap
2, 20.
2. The style of writing shows that
it ahonnrtw in thu siihlimp thoncht
. . , .
i lie iiiusi pious excoriations, aim iiie
most affectionate admonition, and for
variety and depth of doctrine, exalt-
ed metaphor, and animated fervour,
it stands unrivaled. In the epistle,
the divinest composition of man, we
have contained every doctrine of I
Christianity ; first those doctrines pe-
cuiiar to I hnstianity. and those pre
cepts common to it with natural re
ligion.
Part I: Address and salutation 1,
2. 1. The glory of the church 1,3;
, 21
2. Ground and goal cf the church
2, 1-22. How God brought forth from
therefore ye are no more strangers
and foreigners, but fellow citizens
with the saints and the household of
God."
3. Extent and mission of the
prophets. Jesus Christ himself being
the chief cornerstone; All men are to
be brought to the knowledge of the
Son cf God. those that are afar off.
4. Office and service of the
church: 3, 1-21. To make all men '
see. what is tne reliowsnip oi tne
A. 1 nil TTnW.
mjsiery ueau veises j-h.i "V,
now is set forth the service ot tne
cnurcn m-u, me intercessory pnr
er ana soucuuue oi tne minisirj. iui
the body of the Lord his saints.
Part II. The spirit ruling in the
church, 4, o-6. 1. The theme oi tne
whole part, 4, 1-
members.
Motives to unity; Every one
working to and for the one purpose:
"The perfection of the saints for the
work of the ministry, for the edify-
ing of the body of Christ, till we all
come in the unity of the faith, and
of the knowledge of the Son of God.
and unto a perfect man and unto the
measure of the stature of the fullness
of Christ."
General duties of Christians:
That the members henceforth walk
not as other Gentiles walk, in the
vanity of their mind but put on con-
cerning the former conversation the
old man and put on the new man,
which after God is created in right-
eousness and true holiness.
4. Special Christian duties-
-read
Chap. 5. 20-27. This is a compend-
mm of doctrines and duties and cor-
tations. if followed by members of
his church, will make for an effi-
cient. clean. sanctified, glorious;
church, an honor to God and a bless-
ing to man. How much men could
learn in this Epistle, if they would
diligently and prayerfully
StUCly
God's word
This Epistle came from a pi
rison
cell in Rome. The next will be Paul's
letter to the Plnlippians
L. NEITZEL.
R A TTO WAVES NOT CURATIVE
tions for industries. C. P. Wood, New
Pittsburgh A criminal court Jury York City industrial engineer, de
decided Thursday that one who uses ciared that due to modern super
radio waves as an agency for theipoWer systems the location of a city
treatment of numan ins is guutj oi
obtaining money under false pre-
tenses. Treatment by radio were giv- .
en from the office of Dr. J. E. John
ston, and even if there is no response
in the case of Judge Samuel H. Gard
ner, who was a party to an experi
ment in the courtroom, there was a
ment in the courtroom tnere was a
1, nuraber of Dr. Johnston's pat
ients to testify that his treatments
were of benefit to them. Dr. John
ston testified he used electrified treat
ment now in common use. thirty-one
j-ears ago and was ridiculed. He de
nied in cross examination that he
ever had promised a "cure."
The penalty as a result of the con
viction is not more than three years
imprisonment or more than $500 fine,
or both.
T Tn7TTC ulTni, m TyriTTVP i
Sx- -LOUIS MAYOK La XLLLL
St. Lcuis-
While 200 jobless men
and women, mostly negroes clamoreo
and waited on the steps of city hall
Thursday afternoon, a group of ap- j
proximately a similar number, nut :
: representing influence and resources
gathered in Mayor Millers office to
discuss ways and means of relieving
unemployment here. The counter
meeting of the unei.iployc-d group on
city hall steps threw a tension over
the meeting in the mayor's office.
Many of the jobless gathered early.
1 . .1 j,
"iu w ueu cue muvur reiurneu irom
lunch he was met at the elevator with
demands: "We want you to do some
niing. We want you to do it right
w
rne mayor jeraed away trom a
group of five or six as he got into
the elevator and his overcoat was
torn.
Phone yonr Want-Ad to
nal office. Call No. 6.
h- Jonr-
U. S. Prosperity
is Independent,
Realtors Told
Overproduction Theory Is Called Ex
cuse for Lowering Wages Is
"False Conclusion"
Detroit. Mich. "The Unittd
States does not depend or wait upcn
the prosperity of the rest of the
world," Virgil Jordan. New York
Ci'y economist, told the industrial
conference of the National Associa
tion of Real Estate Boards here
Oct. 27.
The overproduction theory he de
cried as a "false conclusion" on
which to demand restriction of out
nut, limitation of industrial expan
sion, exclusion of foreign goods and
labor, reduction of wages and lower
ing of living standards.
The present business inactivity, he
declared, "does not mean that our
e'-onomic system
and our business
, ., .
philosophy are inherently weak, that
jour production is excessive, and that
our standards of living are too high.
It merely means that we have failed
I in this instance to administer our
esourees wisely and well, and there
is no reason to suppose tnat. wun
i intelligent, aggressive and creative
leadership, we cannot in the future
administer our resources wisely.
Any attitude of pessimism on the
part of business men Dr. Jardon felt
"is blind to the strong features of
the present situation and the per-
manent grins of the past rew years.
; while overoptimism, he he Mi, ignores
the real and inescapable problems
which must be met for a general
permanent recovery.
New Frosperity Possible
"There are no underlying actuali
ties in the economic situation in this
.cm' lit rv." hetisserted. "which will
I tnat uannu expansion m iu-
jture will be based fundamentally on :
iraBsrormauun oi um iui
uusm w"J
"The next great industrial expan-
nt i 111 T7-r.l' hi v lui nrwin rr
t- - . , A- i a ---
I center in the chemical field, in those
industries involving the utilization
pf hy projU(,ts 0f coai, petroleum.
wood sad farm products.
he ex-
lpiane4
'We shall more and more be using
our coal and oil. not for the simple
aiirl (ijreet purposes of heat and
Conduct ot tne;poweri but for the manufacture of
new materials out of which new prod
ucts will be made."
Cheaper Power
"Industrial expansion of the future
Is going to be based on cheaper and
more widelv distributed sources of
rovcr, which will be mainly gas and
.lectricity."
"The next great industrial boom in
l is country is going to be based
upon improvements in tne ou'.itnng
: industry, which is perhaps the most
backward of all our industries to-
day." Dr. Jordan said. "This will
come as soon as some powerful guid-
n;r iuciersnip comes imo me picture
to reorganize, or merely to organize,
i the building indusirv ;;nd put It on
the same basis that has been achiev-
ed in the automobile industry.
"It is in the southeastern states
; J 7nHH-tH-.l iVnan"irn
-ar;,esi l.i nuu.nti expnuaiou.
Subsidence Weeds LOW
"In the United States the require -
mer.ts of sheer subsistence do not
cover more than 0 per cent or uO
per cent of tne average workers m-
IS"1 111 1MM1 liyil tucar icquiiruicuin
: cover 60 per cent ana in c nma w
Per cent. The remainder of tins coun
try s worker s budget is ihe margin
to which old and new industries alike
must cater."
The main theme of the conference
was discusion of latest practices find
methods of finding successful loca-
j0o miles from power resources
no longer a drawback,
is
OPPOSED TO TAX BOOST
Fremont The democratic party is
unequivocally opposed to any increase
in state taxes or the addition of any
new taxes until the income of Ne
braska taxpayers is materially im-
proved, Charles W. Bryan declared
in an address prepared for delivery
here Thursday night.
During his tenure
governor
as
eight years ago, Bryan added, he was
able to reduce state taxes 3 3 per cent
"This," he said, "we were able to
do by reducing the number of state !
employes nearly two-thirds by elim
inating every unnecessary expense in
.f' , it , il
Considering the employment situ- L,
the state.'
ation. Mr.
Bryan declared that nro-
Vjsjon must be made to prevent dis-
crimination against employment of
men above forty-five vears of age.
"And it js time that plans were
bt!ing considered for insurance or old-
lage pensions for men too old to work
land unable to support themselves
land those dependent upon them," he
! added.
ROBBERS IDENTIFIED
Pine City, Minn. Two men
ed in the woods near here after an
extensive search were identified late
Monday as the pair who robbed the
Burnett County State bank at Web-
ste . Wis., Saturday. Byron Selvers, j aggregate rrom tbe like month of ! 146. which compares wdth $145, 718.
president of the bank, viewed the men H929, the foreign trade statement for 1268 for the corresponding period of
and stated he is positive they were tne m0nth of September is not with- j last year. Tha value of newsprint
the ones who forced him and four out jts favorable aspects. Not only do 1 exports in the month of September
other persons into the vault of his exports and imports sho a monferafe was $10,909,295 w-hich compare
institution before fleeing with ap- iexpansion over those of August, but with $9.8.12.775 la August and $11,
proximately $2,500. jthe contraction from the like month (5S9,63S in September of iast yearr.
1. First country school
EARLY SCHOOLS IN
NEBEASKA MOTHER
ED A LUSTY BACE
Beginnings are always interesting.
But when they com-em so valuable
an institution as the common school -,
they are more than interesting, they
are of tremendous importance.
School was held for children of the
soldiers quartered at Fort Atkinson
in T Vi nrp-wttlpmpnr rlnve of 7 -
; hnaVa nI KipmB Hti- rtonb-
that tflp twv nclrt in isr,7 in thf.
: lor house of Wm. Young tn Cass
countv. three miles west of the now j family '.nip and well, the house was
forsaken village of Rock Bluff, ami' torn down to make roam for a mod
six miles south of Plattsmouth. was fern home, but D. A. Young, son of
ian earlv mother of the rural schools the builder, restored that part of
i of the state. When Mr. Young com-
I pleted his two room. house of white
j oak in 1S56. the neighborhood saw
! in that commodious structure of two
rooms, each 18 feet
labilities for holding
square, nossi
a session o
school. Next spring a subscription
1 war taken to nerray tne cost or tne
j school and Miss Mary Stocking was
engaged as '.eacber. Town school had
been held in Plattsmouth the year school but the war set school activ
hefore but this was a school for rural itios temporarily at ret. A session
,pupus.
erous h
The Ycur.g family, with g.n-
ospitality so typical of the
pioneers, vacated naif tnetr nouse cuumy ooanis in issue uueus m mt
and Miss Stocking set up school with i aggregate of $15,000 for the build
the rude eouinment at her com- ir.g of high school stru tures. This
mand.
A pupil of James A. Garfield, who
,
,
Improvement
in Dominion
Has Headway
Wheat Experts Grin
The outstanding feature of the
Slow Upward Trend in Trade and month's export;-, is the Bto In ' -
Industry Textile Mills
More Active
Ottawa. Ont. While business
conditions in Canada are still far
from being normal, there are unmir
takable signs of a slow upward
movement in most branches of trade
and industry.
, haye taken on new a(.tivity and arr
workmg at substantially greater
capacity by reason of the recent
tariff changes. Silk and rayon mills
are also well employed, and there arc
indications of more act ivit v in woolen
fa(-tories.
Electrical manufacturers and
plants prodcing hvdaulic equipment
are busier than even with sufho: ;,
business in sight to insure capacity
operations
spring.
until well on in the
Big Hydroelectric Program
According to a recent survey, there
is a little over 2,000.000 horsepower
evelopment being provided for in
the many construction programs no
in progress. This work is not only
benefiting the electrical manufactur
ing companies, but also the lumber
ing industry, which supplies the tim
ber and lumber for the dams, and the
cement mills, which have big orders
from the power companies.
Mining operations continue on a
large scale. In September. Ontario
mines produced gold to the value of
$2,925,589, an increase of -204,000
over August, and of $223, 00 over
Qpntamhpr 1Q0Q In th i bntipH ninp
arrest-imonthg cruue bullion from these
mines had a value of $26,213,324. or
$1,486,626 more than in the corro-
sponding period last year.
Though showing a decrease in the
in Cass county. 2. First High Bdtool in state at Nebraska City.
Cass county house used for school as it looks today.
'in his early years was a successful 'of the town board of education, bonds
j teacher, said of him: "A leg with a j in the amount of $15,000 were is
good pupil on one end and James ;sued, bearing ten per cent interest.
'Garfield on the other was i uuiver- jJ. Sterling Morton promptly took
Isity." The record of Mary Stocking's jthe whole issue, except $2000. Other
Ir-chool is not engraved on bronze or i persons took these and the campaign
i marble, but some boys and girls were j was launched. In 1864 the building
iher pupils who afterward.- made fine i above shows was completed at a cost
! cort ributions to the state and so
.ciety. Three months was all the
j school the log house held. Before
another summer came, other r.rrange
ments had been made for caring for
the educational needs of the neigh
borhood youth.
In 1001, after serving the Young
the building that was u?ed for a
school and there It Btaadfl today on
nis larm. tne old ou:ig nomestead.
; inrrloriously but sturdily serving the
family for a fuel house.
There ::s little drubt that the first
high school to be built in Nebras-
ka wa3 constructed at Nebrasly
City in 1S64. Several years earlier
j t here had been agitation for a high
of the Nebrsiska legislature the year
j before passed a Mil which allowed
was the imnetus for which Nebraska
City hnd been waiting. On request
of 1929 was much smaller in Septem
ber than it had been in August.
Expor.s for the month totaled
$81,046,227, compared with $87,
75 l.o. 14 in September last year,
while imports at $87,900,201 were
considerably below thp figure of
99.379,84 S in the similar month of
929.
ports of wheat, the month's total : t
$39,911,203 being well ahoad of the
$22,135,922 exported in September,
1920, and more than S8.000.000
ahead of the August exports. Ex
ports of dairy produc ts improved over
those of August.
Production in the iron and steel in-
dustrv for the first nin months of
this year totaled 810,851 tons of
steel ingots and direct steel cast
ings, a decline of 25 per cent from
the 1.087.951 tons made in the likf
period of last year. The output in
September was below that in Aug
ust and much less than In Septem
ber. 1929.
The lumber industry alsn shows re
cession. Most of the big logging
camps on the Pacific Coast are now
operating at about 25 per cent of
apacity, and sawmills have curtail
ed production until mey are running
aiong on the basis cf about 4 0 per
cent.
Wholesale and retail trade
throughout the East has taken on
a more active pace. The week oi" Oct.
11 to 18. which was celebrated as
Canadian Prosperity Week, in an ef
fort to stimular general interest in
Canadian products, resulted in in
creased sales in many provinces.
Some improvement is noted in the
automobile business. Sales of new
cars in September weri slightly
ahead of the August figures In some
sections of the country, but still
much below last year's total. Shoe
factories are still well employed, but
the general leather gooai trade is
only slightly improved.
September Paper Experts Up
The total exports of both pulps and
paper for the first nine months of
;the current year stand at $133,738,-
.isiMaB! iniMf . r"-
3. Part of old
of $31,000. A Nebraska historian
has written of this school that it
was the first high school building
to be erected west of the Missouri
river.
These crying but hopeful infants,
nourished in the cradles of educa
tion in Cass and Otoe counties, sur
vived the undernourishment and neg
ioct of those lean days and with
others like them became the progen
itors of the great common school
system of Nebraska which now has
for its glory the fact that its people
excel in literacy and maintains an
uniminished zeal for education.
The Cass and Otoe schools have
grown to 7,593 school houses In
this state, affording the advantages
and comforts of education to 325.-
204 pupils in the rural, village and
city schools in 1929; employing 14,-
377 teachers; teaching everything
from the throe "r's" to agriculture.
manual training, domestic science
and the arts and sciences. Surely the
faith in education, displayed by those
courageous pioneer citizens, has born
splendid fruit in the present splen
did school system of Nebraska, that
is free to every student.
The value of building permits
issued by 61 cities during Septem
ber stood at $11,081,706, this being
a decrease of $2,736,039. or 19.8 per
cent when compared with the total
of $13,817,745 reported in Aupus;.
Tin eumulauve total frr the firs:
nine months of this year was great
er by 1.7 per cent than the average?
for the similar period of Xie 10 years.
1920-29.
Announcement has been made of
an issue of $9,000,000 Ottawa Valley
Power Company 5 per cent first
mortgage 4 0-year sinking fund gold
bonds. These bonds are being off ere '
n denominations of $1000 and $50C
at 954 and interest, giving a yield
of over 5.30 per cent.
The factor pressing most heavily
npofl tne ger.eraj trarte ttxvatfcm is
the low price of farm products, par
ticularly wh at. For the current crop
year Canada's exportable surplus of
thi-; cereal is estimated at 264.000,
OM bushels, but the price is belov
the line of profit and the outward
movement, while increasing is still
unsatisfactory.
FIND MONEY IN CORNFIELD
Owatonna, Minn. Walter Baer,
Waseca county farmer held here in
connection with the robbery of the
First State bank of Meriden, Oct. 14,
Thursday told authorities he had par
ticipated in the holdup of a bank at
Hardy. Ia.. Sept. 16. At Baer's direc
tion agents of the Minnesota state
bureau of criminal apprehension re
covered $300 of the Hardy bank loss,
in a cornfield four miles from hi3
home, seventeen miles south of Was
eca. Baer said his share of the loot
was $900, but that $600 had been
spent. He said he drove the car in
that holdup.
UR0L0GIOAL ASSOCIATION
IS MEETING IN LINCOLN
Lincoln Neb., Oct. 30. Physicians
from eight states arrived in Lincol
today for the tsnth annual metinjL
of the southwestern branch of the
American Urological association
wfcich opened this afternoon.
Dr. A. L Folsom, Dallas, Tex., is
the retiring president. Dr. R. Lee
Hoffmann. Kansas City, Mo., vice
president, is slated to succeed him.
Dr. Albert D. Munger. Lincoln,
secretarv-tieafcurer, and probably
will be re-elected.