The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, July 13, 1931, Page PAGE FIVE, Image 5

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    PLATTSMOUTH SEMI - WEEKLY JOUENAL
PAGE FIVE
MONDAY. JULY 13, 1931
The Journal Job Department is
equipped to turn out anything from
calling cards to sale catalogs.
Benefit Supper and
Program
Tuesday Evening
JULY 14
LEWISTON
COMMUNITY
CENTER
Come and assist Move to
improve Lewiston
Cemetery
Fine Program Arrang'd
A Fine Time Assured All at
This Pleasant Gathering
Everybody Welcome
Don't Drive Your Car
without Public Liability Insurance
HUM !M, your mil omul.: I- VfJthoal nil-imile l'uhlic l.lnliilily uutl l"r
rrty Ilrnmsr inNiinim-c i- like ilrmitTi im nlun it trailer into which
I u hair luaiird jour home. kanaCH, m inline, bank , in mid
other Hliialle BOMaCMfliaaHk ou riw :hc om of vtryt hint vou own.
nil. in nildi'lon. if i j mi men i liulil be rendered UKniiiNi on thnt'n
l ijiiT Ihnn jon ean ir. uniler the urn Nelirfiku law. you lo.e your
Drlier' Umm mill the ritrht to reirisi er ;uur ear. ... lira know how
ilii nceroiin, it i . to drie ail nntoi'ibile. how easily nml free nent I ae
riilrnl hnen. ami lion ofteu hjllall mlm are rendered auaiiiMt ear
owaero imiihrd in aeeidrutH. Why eu.e mm H to thin tfiiuiit-rf
Adequate protection is Inexpensive, and Come what may.
if you have the proper Insurance you need not Worry
I'roieet yonrivelf Mitt, lrre it I too Inle. k un nli.nl thl valu
able, in i -iinI iiiMiiraut e thm will Kuarantee you lin-tiioiul palely,
add lo your peace of niiod aud Increase your iniuiiriuc itleiinurr!
Telephone No. 14 for Details or Rates
A. H. & R. M. DUXBURY
Representing the Oldest and Strongest Companies on Earth
I
West Bros. Amusement Co.
Shows Rides
WILL EXHIBIT IN
Plattsmouth Nebraska
Old Ball Grounds
Chicago
on
Man. July 13 to Sat. July 18
Auspices Hugh J. Kearns Post,
American Legion
4 Rides 7 Shows
Twenty Amusement Booths
Band Concert and Free Bridge Toll
WEDNESDAY NIGHT
Come to Plattsmouth Wednesday night to shop, enjoy the Concert
by Omaha post Legion band and attend the West Rros. Carnival.
Adult Admission, IOC
Including TWO Tickets one good for choice of any
ride on the grounds Really costs you nothing
i
Fall Plowing
Time is Here
We Have or Sale
3 Used Fordson Tractors
2 Used Tractor Plows
Also Some Good Used
Cars and Trucks
THE PRICES ARE RIGHT
Plattsmouth
Plattsmouth, Nebr.
JUDGE CONFIRMS SALE;
ENDS LONG LITIGATION
Falls City. District Judge Raper
Thursday confirmed the second
sherriff's sale of the Warren C.
Miles half interest in the 1,776 acre
Miles ranch near Dawson closing
years of litigation. John C. Mullen,
Falls City, and Bruce Dcrland. Hum
boldt, two creditors, bought the half
interest for $40,000. Previous to
that Borland had bought the interest
for $40,500. but the sale was set
j aside on the ground that too great
a levy was made. A dozen other cre-
Uora DOM liens approximating oo,
000. The bids are sufficient to in
sure collection of the Mullen-Dor-land
judgments and several others.
ROCK THROWN IN WINDOW
Cologne. Germany. A small crowd
of communists led by a woman hurled
a rock thru a window of the Amer
ican consulate. Shouts of "Down
with America! Free the negroes,"
came from the crowd. Similar dem
onstrations against the death sen
tence given eight negroes in Scotts
boro. Ala., already have taken place
at Dresden and Berlin.
Eight negroes, found guilty of at
tacking two white girls, are awaiting
execution in Alabama.
Bates Book and Gift Shop is ex
clusive Dennison decorative supplies
dealer in this vicinity.
Avenue
ocoso
Motor Co
Continue Cut
in Armaments,
Premier Urges
British House of Commons Leaders
in General Agreement With
Government Policy
London Remarkable unamity
among all parties was displayed in
the House of Commons when, at the
request of the Conservatives, the
question of next year's disarmament
conference was discussed.
Ramsay MacDonald. Prime Minis
ter, opened the proceedings with a
closely argued statement of the Brit
ish policy which, he said, is to con
tinue to lead the way in reducing
armaments up to the utmost extent
compatible with national safety, but
with the rservation that such action
cannot go on indefinitely upon a un
ilareral basis.
He was followed by Stanley Bald
win for the Conservatives and Sir
Herbert Samuel for the Liberals, who
boih pledged their parties to support
this attitude.
Mr. MacDonald began with a de
tailed analysis of the relative
strengths of all the great powers up
on sea. upon land and in the air,
firstly, immediately before the great
war, in 1924. and thirdly, now.
His purpose, he said, was to show
that whether the comparison made
was according to ships and other
material strength, or as represented
by monetary expenditure, or by num
ber of personnel maintained. Britain
had been making enormous reduc
tion, whereas this had been so far
from being the case with any of the
ether powers that it had become
necessary to call a halt although he
looked forwa'rd hopefully to such a
state of things arising from next
year-s conference as would render re
sumption of the cutting down pro
cess by Britain possible.
Mr. MacDonald dwelt upon the
sancity of undertakings entered into
by all the powers alike under the
treaties of Versailles. Locarno and
Paris, to reduce armaments, but de
clared that all must act together. Re
welcomed the fact that at the coming
conference the United States and
Russia would be represented as well
as member states of the League of
Nations. He also spoke enthusiasti
cally of the paricying influence upon
Europe of President Hoover's recent
war debts proposals which, he said,
showed insight into and conception
of sentiments calc ulated to move the
world to a better understanding of
the situation.
It might have been an oversight,
he also said, that while the Pact of
Paris eliminated war it did not seem
to have done the same with arma
ments. Nevertheless Britain could not
shut its eyes to this oversight.
Mr. MacDonald drew attention to the
need for understanding the difficul
ties which France had to overcome
as regards to disarmament owing to
all that it had suffered thrice in the
past century in seeing its fields and
vineyards overrun, its towns reduced
to ruins and the flower of its man
hood destroyed.
Smoke-Belching
Engine is Going,
Rail Men Advise
New Methods Are Discussed at Pre
vention Parley Held in Grand
Rapids. Mich.. Recently
Grand Rapids. Mich. Smoke
belching locomotives scooting around
the yards of terminals will be as
jrare as the "dodo bird" in the near
future, railroad men told delegates
; attending the twenty-fifth annual
I convention of the Smoke Prevention
j Association of the United tSates here
j recently.
The rail experts declared the long
j spiral of block smoke heralding the
j approach of a train across the prairie
soon will be as extinct as the buffalo
which once roamed the plains, and
that locomotives will slide into city
and village stations with no more
than a wisp of smoke.
L. G. Plant of Chicago told how the
abatement of smoke in city termi
nals had been accomplished through
direct steaming. The steam is fur
nished to engines in the roundhouse
from a central power plant. This
plant in the city does away with the
old method of eac h engine being fired
before ready to go on duty.
Mechanical firing, manually con
trolled, is the method for reduction
of smoke on the road, according to
Frank P. Roesch of Chicago, Mechan
ical control of the amount of fuel
will be the next advance, he remark
ed, but the fireman and engineer al
ways will be the men responsible for
the actual control and abatement of
smoke on the road.
Although a special committee
planned a draft of an amended model
anti-smoke ordinance. prohibiting
emission of solids and vases in smoke,
it did not reach the floor. The pres
ent smake regulations refer onlv to
'smoke density. It is probable it will
j be acted upon next year, it was said.
The 1932 convention will be held
in Toronto, Canada.
PLANNING TO SHOOT
A ROCKET TO MOON
Tripoli, North Africa Dr. Darwin
O. Lyon, New York professor and
interterrestrial rocket enthusiast,
left here for the plain of Misolia. in
the African desert, where he will at
tempt to shoot an experimental roc
ket to the moon sometime near the
end at this month.
DEATH OF OLD RESIDENT
Mrs. Katherine Dorothea Borne
meier, sixty-nine, who for a period
of some fifty-seven years has been
a resident of the vicinity of Elm
wood and Manley. died at the home
of her daughter, Mrs. Ed Rosenow,
five miles east of Eagle Wednesday
night. Mrs. Bornemeier was the wi
dow of Simon Bornemeier, one of
the prominent farmers of the cen
tral part of the county, he preced
ing her in death some ten years ago.
The deceased lady is survived by
four sons and three daughters, Ed
ward and Emil, Elmwood: Albert,
Wabash; Dan. Naperville. Illinois;
Mrs. Ed Rosenow. Eagle; Mrs. Anna
Richer t. Wabash; Mrs. Martha Kis
singer, Glenville; a brother, Peter
Reuter, Annheim. California, and a
sister, Mrs. Margreth Bornemeier, of
Elmwood.
German Loan
is Blocked by
the French
French Political Demands of Luther
Halt Negotiations ; Banker
Returns to Berlin
Paris, July 10. Bearing what in
effect is France's politico-financial
ultimatum to Germany. Dr. Hans Lu
ther, president of the Reichsbank,
wlli arrive in Berlin aSturday to lay
before Chancellor Bruening and
Foreign Minister Curtius the condi
tions under which Paris is willing
to join Great Britain and American
in extending financial aid to totter
ing Germany.
These political conditions, which
the world has know ti for many
months, are:
1. Abandonment of the Austro
German union project:
2. Definite armament restrictions
for Germany on land, sea and in the
air; and
3. Assurances that Berlin will not
join other powers in opposing the
French armaments program.
Following a prolonged conference
with Governor Clement Moret of the
Bank of France, Dr. Luther rushed
direct to the ministry of finance,
where he conferred with Minister of
Finance Fladin.
Meanwhile, developments in Ger
many reached such an alarming
stage that Dr. Luther definitely aban
doned his proposed trip to Brussels
in favor of the earliest possible re
turn to his own capital to take up
the French response with political
leaders there.
What is to be expected of Berlin
no one ventures to predict.
Dr. Luther found he could not dis
cuss matters with the French with
out entering the political phase.
It is made plain that Germany
cannot eypect the help of the Bank
of France unless Paris receives poli
tical compensation.
It is doubtful if New York and
London will supply the requisite fi
nancial aid for Germany as long as
Paris persists in its attitude. Bee
News. UNEMPLOYMENT RIOT
IN POLAND FATAL
Chelmno, Poland. A mob of un
employed which stormed the town
hall demanding relief refused to re
treat when police used gas bombs and
rifles. One man was killed. So many
policemen were injured by stones
that help was summoned from a near
by town. When the reinforcements
arrived order was restored. Unem
ployment riots also took place Fri
day in various towns in Polish Si
lesia. GAME WARDEN FOUND DEAD
.Richman. 111. State and county
authorities joined in investigating
the supposed murder of Charles W.
Eldrege. the wealthy game warden,
whose bullet marked body was found
Saturday in his private forty acre
game preserve nearby. He had been
shot by the same gun, with which his
brother Earl, also a game warden,
was killed twenty-four years ago.
Captain Carr of Aurora, assistant
state police chief and Sergeant Nofs.
have been detailed to work with Sher
iff Edinger and State's Attorney
Lumley of McHenry county on the
case. The state's attorney said he
was convinced that Eldredge's death
was not suicidal, but he said the
shooting might have been accidental.
AWARD $5,250 IN DEATH
OF WOMAN IN EXPLOSION
Lincoln, July 9. A state compen
sation award of $5,250 was made
Thursday by Commissioner Cecil
Matthews for Mrs. Carrie Perry of
Superior, employe of a fruit com
pany, burned fatally there last No
vember in a gasoline explosion. She
will also receive a $150 burial bene
fit. MEMBERS OF MISSOURI
SYNOD NUMBER 1,137.000
Ottawa, July 9. The Missouri sy
nod of the Lutheran church now has
1,13 7,000 members. During the past
ar there was an increase of 15,
000 baptized members, 12.M00 oom
municants and 2,540 voting mem
bers, it was reported at the conven
tion. NATIONAL TOUR AVIATOR
HURT IN PLANE CRASH
Yorkville. Ohio, July S. Charies
Suges, contestant in the national air
tour, was seriously injured Wednes
day in the crash of his ship againsi
a hill bordering the airport of York
ville, overnight stop of the air tourists.
Bonded Debts
Being Reduced
Cities. Counties, Villages and School
Districts Pay $336,993 Thir
teen Times New Issues
Cities, villages, counties, school
districts, and other units of local
government in Nebraska paid off and
cancelled during June an amount of
bonded incumbrances equal to thir
teen times what was issued in the
same month as new certificates of
indebtedness.
This remarkable showing apepars
in the monthly summary compiled by
Bond Examiner Ralph C. Lawrence,
who has charge of security registra
tions in the office of State Auditor
G. W. Marsh. It is a record that has
never been dupiicated, or even ap
proached, in any other month during
the past decade, if ever in the his
tory of Nebraska.
The total amount of bonds ap
proved and registered last month
was $227,850, but $202,000 of this
was represented by the refunding
of old indebtedness, which did not
increase the outstanding liabilities
of the issuing subdivisions. This
left only $25,850 of new obligations
that came into existence.
On the other side of the account,
Examiner Lawrence reports $336,99 3
of bonds retired by the municipali
ties, counties and districts that owed
them.
The city of Alma reported $45,000
paid. Included in this is a $20,000
issue of district and intersection pav
ing bonds dated May 1, 1929, which
is met in full.
Norfolk school district paid off
$22,000. The city of Seward paid a
balance of $20,000 which cleaned up
an issue of refunding bonds issued
June 1, 1931. Kearney redemmed a
total of $19,650; Keya Paha county
paid $15,000 bridge bonds; Greeley
county took up $11,000 court house
and jail bonds: DeWitt paid $11,000
which cleaned up an issue of re
funding bonds doted December 15,
19242; Hershey paid $1S.50, which
paid in full an electric transmission
line issue dated Nov. 1. 1921 and
leaves the town free from bonded
debt; Hastings paid $13,000. of!
which $8,000 discharged in full an
issue of paving bonds dated March
7, 1928.
Ansley paid $3,000, finishing an
issue of light bonds issued October
1, 1919; Arnold paid the last $4,000
of a batch of water bonds dated July
15, 1916; Anselmo school district
paid the last $1,000 of a school re
funding issue dated March 16, 1927;
and Humphrey paid the last $8,000
of a refunding issue dated December
15, 1924.
The following list will show the
municipalities and sub-divisions pay
ing bonds during the month of June
and the amount retired by each:
Ashton $ 2.000
Alma 46,000
Ashland 500
Allen, S. D. 4.000
Anslev 3,000
Arnold 4,000
Anselmo, S. D. 1,000
Alliance, S. D. 8.000
Auburn 5.000
Bloomfield. S. D. 2.000
Belgrade, S. D. 4,000
Bloomington. S. D. 500
Ceresco, S. D. 1.000
Columbus 5.000
Custer county rural school 1.300
Central irrig. dist. S. B. Co. 2,000
Dixon rural school tit
Danbury 1,000
DeWitt 11.000
Emerson. S. D. 1.500
Exeter 1.000
Elk Creek 1,000
Elmwood 1.000
Farmers' irrig. dist. S. B. Co. 500
Fremont. S. D. 4,000
Fillmore countv rural school 500
Fairbury 3.000
Greeley county 11.000
Gandy, S. D. 1.000
Hayes county high school 3,000
Haves county rural dist. 1.3 50
Hastings 13,000
Hershev 18,500
Humphrey 8,000
Imperial 1,000
Keith county rural school 600
Kimball. S. D. 1,000
Kearney 19.650
Keya Paha county 15.000
Lindsav 3.000
Louisville, S. D. 000
Logan county high school 3.000
Louisville Drecinct. Cass Co. 1.000
Morsebluff. S. D.
Mil ford
Minden
Minden, S. D.
Miniatare drainage, dist.. S.
B. Co.
Monroe, S. D.
North Platte
Norfolk. S. D.
Nuckolls county rural school
Newcastle, S. D.
Overton, S. D.
Pierce county rural school
Plymouth, S. D.
Pilger
Plainview
Pender
Plattsmouth
Peru drain dist. Nemaha Co.
Ruskin, S. D.
Rosalie
Rockville, S. D.
Snyder
Sherman county rural school
Bterline, S. D.
1.000
3.000
1,000
3,000
1,000
500
fi.200
22.000
500
2.000
2.000
2,000
2.000
2,500
2,200
7,000
3,000
1.468
1.000
1,000
2,000
1.300
2.200
4,000
Seward 20.000
Stanton
Tecumseh. S.'D.
Thurston Co. rural school
Upland
Wilcox
Weeping Water
Winnebago. S. D.
Wahoo, S. D.
Wayne
Washington Co. rural school
Yutan
1,000
5,000
500
500
1,000
4,000
5,000
5,000
4,000
1.000
2,000
Totals $336 993
, v
.
Legal ana commercial printing of
all kinds at the Journal office.
BRYAN REQUISITIONS
RETURN OF BERGE
Lincoln. July 9. Governor Bryan
Thursday issued requisition papers
for the return to Nebraska of L. A.
Berge, former cashier of Walton
bank, now in Franeitas. Tx.
W. M. Byrkit, Lincoln, special rep
resentative of the attorney general,
was quoted during the senate session
to the egect that Bryan had declined
to issue the papers. In the presence
of the governor Thursday Byrkit de
nied that was the case.
.The complaint charges the man
with forging two notes.
Gas7 and Income
Taxes are Raised
in Wisconsin
Legislature Adjourns After Filibus
ter Against La Follette Bills
Block $2,500,000 Bill
Mtdison, Wis. Approval by Gov.
Philip F. La Follette of a bill in
creasing levies on all incomes over
$3000 wrote finis to a tax legisla
tion problem which had seen only
partial realization when the Wiscon
son Legislature adjourned in the
midst of a filbuster.
The filbuster. directed by Con
servatives, blocked several revenue
measures which had the support of
LaFollette Progressives. Included
among them was a bill to raise $2.
500,000 for unemployment relief by
means of a general surtax on in
comes. A bill increasing the normal taxes
on all incomes exceeding $3 000 on a
graduated scale from one-fourth of
1 per cent to 1 per cent, and a bill
increasing the gasoline tax from 2
to 4 cents a gallon, were the only ma
jor administration measures to re
ceive legislative approval.
The administration's attempts to
obtain enactment of measures taxing
all dividends, however acquired, and
estimated to raise in excess of $3,
000,000 annually and to secure re
peal of the reciprocal inheritance tax
law, exempting estates of non-resident
property owners, were defeated.
On the basis of unofficial tabula
tions made following adjournment
of the Legislature, the session re
sulted in enactment of tax measures
increasing revenues by approximate
ly $11,000,000, while repealing meas
ures which hitherto raised about
$4,510,000 annually. However, a
bill passed earlier in the session
transferring $8,000,000 of a $10,
000,000 cash reserve into the state
general fund, more than offsets the
total increase in revenue enactments.
The principal taxation bills enact
ed included the 4-cent gasoline tax,
the income tax bill, an Increase of
one-fourth of 1 per cent in the taxes
on domestic Insurance companies, a
ton-mile tax on motor transporta
tion trucks, graduated from one
eighth of 1 mill to 1 mill, and a
bill taxing telephone companies on
an ad valorem basis.
The Legislature repealed the per
sonal property tax on automobiles,
amounting to $3,500,000 annually,
the personal property tax on farm
animals and vehicles, accounting for
$725,000, and the forestry mill tax
of $285,000.
KILLED IN MILK PRICE WAR
Birmingham. Ala. An unidenti
fied negro youth was killed and two
other persons probably fatally injur
ed when a bomb was tossed from an
automobile into the plant of the
Pure Milk company in the business
section here. Windows were shat
tered for almost the entire length of
the block, and scores of persons were
treated for minor cuts caused by fly
ing glass. The bombing was believed
to have been the result of a milk
price war here. Two previous at
tempts were made to bomb trucks
bringing milk into Birmingham from
central Alabama. The negro killed
and those injured were walking by
the milk plant when the bomb u
tossed.
AIR TOURISTS AT MEMPHIS
Memphis The nine remaining
planes in the national air tour
reached Memphis on their s wing
thru the south. One hour and twen
ty minutes after taking off from Sky
Harbor, near Nashville, James H.
Smith of Pine Bluff, Ark.,' landed
his tri-motored plane at the munici
pal airport to lead the field in the
final flight of the day.
Smart arrived at 3:25 p. m. Harry
Russell of Dearborn. Mich., so far the
leading point maker, slipped in three
minutes later. Lowell R. Bayles of
Springfield. Mass.. was two minutes
behind Bussell. Fourth to land was
Jack B. Story. Kansas City, Mo., next
in order came Eddie Stinson of Dear
born: George Dickson of Pittsburgh:
Joe Meehan. Marysville. Mich., and
Lee Gehlbach of Detroit. William
N. Lancaster, New York, the last
to land, came in at 4:04 p. m.
BOMBS IN A PRISON CELL
Marquette. Mich. An attempted
prison break was frustrated Thurs
day when Eddie Weinman. Detroit,
and Steve Madja. Bay City, were
caught trying to escape from the de
tention cell of the Michigan branch
prison here. Prison officials found
two improvised guns and four home
made guns in their possession. The
bombs were loaded with nails and
small scraps of metal. Officers said
the men apparently had used matches
la improvising the eyplosives.
Madja is serving a double life sen
tence for murder. Weisman is serv-
1inS a 15"25 vear sentence for rob-
i bery. Both were characterized by
: pnson officials as "bad mn." Each
rafj made two previo-.is attempts to
J escape.
Soviets Make
Conditions Hard
for Priesthood
'Smash Religious Organizations' De
clared to Be Objective by Rus
sian Periodical
Moscow The number of Ortho
dox priests in Russia is steadily dim
inishing. This is a natural and prob
ably inevitable result of the continu
ous drive against religion. ac om
pn.iied by the closing of many
churches and of the social and MS
nomic deprivations which are inflict
ed upon priests and their familie-
The priest receives no fond ard,
and consequently, unless he is sup
ported by gifts in kind from his con
gregation, he is only able to buy food
and manufactured goods at greatly
enhanced prices which do not corre
spond with his usually meager in
come. His children, for the Russian
priests are usually married, are ex
cluded from higher schools and given
only the rougher and less skilled
kinds of work unless they break off
all relations with their father and
renounce him.
Under these circumstances it is
natural that only those priests whose
religious convictions are strongest
remain at their post, and that many
formally renounce their calling. In
the Soviet Republic of Georgia, in
the Caucasus, it is estimated that
the number of priests has diminish
ed by B0 per cent since 1921.
Another factor in bringing about
this reduction is that only a very
few institutes of religious instruc
tion have ever been permitted to
exist in the Soviet Union and that
most of these have been closed, ao
that there is practically no provision
for the training of young men for
the priestly calling.
The problem of what treatment
should be meted out to ex-priests has
recently been raised in the Soviet
anti-religious press. There is no dis
position to welcome them into the
fold of Soviet citizenship immediate
ly. A period of five years' proba
tion, which may be shortened in in
dividual cases, is prescribed before
full citizenship rights can be grant
ed. At the same time there is a tend
ency to encourage apostasy by giv
ing ex-priests some alleviation of
their lot. So it is considered possible
to give them some kinds of techni
cal and physical labor, although there
are definite rulings prohibiting the
employment of ex-priests in military
service, in teaching, or in anti-religious
work.
The sort of distinction that is
made in this connection is illustrat
ed by the fact that an ex-priest may
work SB an accoantant in a state
farm, but may not be received into
a collective farm until the expira
tion of his prebationary period. The
distinction here is based on the con
sideration that in a state farm the
ex-priest's position would be purely
technical and he would have Utile
opportunity to influence other work
ers and employees.
In a collective farm, on the other
hand, where the members would
probably be his former parishioners.
the ex-priest might exert a kind of
influence which the Communists
ould regard as undesirable. Ae re
cent article In the Soviet magazine
in regard to ex-priests as follows:
"We must welcome the fad that
priests renounce their calling. Vet
we must not forget that such re
nunciation does not necessarily w an
that a man ceases to become a priest
at heart, or that he has become a
loyal Soviet citizen. He may have
been attracted by sordid material
considerations. Therefore we must
be vigilant in regard to such people.
And we must not go to the other ex
treme of placing them in an impos
sible position, so that life is render
ed unbearable for them .
"Our policy is to smash religion
organizations, to make useful citi
zens out of ex-priests, to extend them
certain facilities, provided that all
the necessary precautions are taken
against giving them an opportunity
for exercising clerical influence."
TWO LINERS IN COLLISION
New York The Radio Mat
ne cor-
poration reported Tuesday t
Italian steamer Carmia collid
the French liner France ne
brose Light at 12:30 a. m. d
heavy fog. The Carmia, inbo
New Ycrk, radioed it would
anchored until the fog lifts,
tent of the damage was giv.
hat the
ed wiih
ar An:
uring a
und for
remain
No ex
n.
The France wirelessed it
continue its eastward trip.
would
Don't Insure
your car with the "fly-by-night"
agent
When you have an
accident, you want
to know you can
find your Insurance
Agent,
SEE
Searl S. Davis
i
Loans Investments
1