The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, October 19, 1931, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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HJLTTS3I0UTU JOUEUAL
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Wednesday
Mr
pecnallG
Coys Leatherette Jaclxcts
. . Waterproof. Warm lining:. All-around
belt. Sizes to 10. Biggest bargain we
have ever shown in this line
$.69
Men's DlanTxet Lined JccTicts
Four pockets, Eaglan sleeves. 8-oz.
denim. Triple sewed and reinforced. All
sizes. Compare this price with anybody's..
Scedc Leather Sport JacTxcts-
Beindeer color. Leather collar and cuffs.
Sateen lined bedy and sleeves. Fancy
knit bottom. All sizes, only.
Children's Fine nib GtocIiinc
10c
Made of combed yarn. Reinforced toe and
heel. A. very unusually low price for this
quality stocking. Per pair.:
Hovclty Styles in Ruffled
- , Tie-Baclt Curtains
" Gpscial Value
49c .
Waste of Farm
Tested for Use
at Iowa State
Ins1ananoiT"a' Retort r at 'CdsT of
$15,000 Gives Impetus to
Research -
HOOVER TO VISIT Y0EKT0WN
Ames. Iowa "With the installa
tion of $15,000 distillation retort
in the chemical engineering labora
tories at Iowa State College the
search for new uses of agricultural
wastes being conducted here has re
ceived new impetus.
Research on utilization of agri
cultural wastes was started several
years ago by Dr. O. R. Sweeney, head
of chemical engineering, and his as
sistants. Last spring Congress pass
ed the Dickinson bill providing a
fund of $75,000 to be used in fur
thering this work which is now be
ing carried on in cooperation with
the United States Department of
Agriculture, Dr. P. B. Jacobs, chem
ical engineer for the Bureau of Chem
istry and Soils, is stationed here in
charge of the cooperative project.
The new retort is known as the
continuous type. By means of it the
waste material cobs, straw, oat
hulls or corn stalks is fed continu
ously into the top and carried down
a series of shelves, being subjected
to increasingly high heat.
From the waste materials in this
particular part of the research are
obtained wood alcohol, acetic acid,
acetone, tars, charcoal and a com
bustible gas. The gas l now being
run back and used to help heat the
restort, the primary heating unit
being an oil burner. All of these
products are standard materials used
in various manufacturing processes.
The purpose of this phase of the re
search is to determine whether they
can be economically manufactured
from agricultural wastes rather than
from wood.
Breakfast foods, fly sprays, shellac,
expensive acids and other products
have been made from agricultural
wastes. Wood substitutes, such a3
. wallboard which i3 stronger than
oal and insulating materials, have
been made in laboratories from corn
stalk pulp for several years. A few
concerns have started to manufacture
paper and wallboard on a commercial
scale.
Whether the old products .which
can be made from farm wastes will
ever be manufactured on a scale to
provide an outlet for wastes and
added income for the farmer de
pend. on whether present research
indicates that it can be manufac
tured at a lower cost than from
.wood.
HEW INCORPORATIONS
Lincoln. Neb.. Oct. 15. The fol
lowing articles of interpolation were
filed here today.
.'; Grand Island The Vine Street
'club: capital, one thousand, dollars;
! Lyman and'- Henrietta Wilkinson and
'Roy Rockwell, incorporators.
i Omaha Samuel S. Saizman. Inc.;
capital 10 thousand dollars; Samuel
and Elizabeth Salzman and L- Ferer,
Incorporators.
Fremont Union Transfer com-
pany; capital .100 thousand dollars;
incorporators Henry Ofrara, F. V.
Aleldman and M. Krupinsky.
Washington The program for
President Hoover's part in the York
town celebration, detailed even to
the rumlfling of twenty-one gun
salutes from an assembled fleet, was
completed by white house officials.
From the moment his battleship
transport, the U. S. Arkansas,
slows to a half off Yorktown at 8:80
Alonday morning until it weighs an-'
chor near sundown the same day
every detail of his activity has been
mapped and scheduled.
One of his first acts of the day will
be to greet aboard his warship Mar
shal retain of France. With him
will ccme Rear Admiral Decsottes-
Genon of the French navy and Cap
tains Brohan and Lacroix of the
French cruisers Duquesne and Suf
fren. After the president goes ashore,
heralded by a booming of guns, to
be met by Governor Pollard of Vir
ginia and other notables, his dav
will move swiftly. At 11 he will
speak; an hour Jater he will sit at
an official luncheon; at 1:30 he will
receive visiting governors and oth
ers; and a few minutes later he will
return to watch the pageant of the
British surrender and review troops.
The presidential party will motor
to Annapolis to board the sliip some
time Saturday.
COLORADO LAND WAR NEARS
Washington, Oct. 16. The
Interior department ordered the
Denver land office Friday to
withdraw from entry 20,000
acres of land in Colorado un
der dispute as the result of the
adjustment of an old Union Paci
fic land grant.
U
Denver. Oct. 16. An incipient
land war troubled many Colorado
farmers Friday, despite assurance
from the Department of the Interior
that they would not lose their prop
erty as a result of adjustment of
the railroad land grants of 1867.
Assurance that farm families
would not be evicted in favor of
homesteaders was little consolation
to the many who did not receive
proper title or deed from the Un
ion Pacific railroad when they
bought the land more than a half
century ago.
Land office attaches said these
would have legal difficulty in resist
ing the claims of a "jumper."
COVET JOBS OF HUEY LONG
Baton Rouge la Friday's quiet
aftermath of the stormy challenge of
Huey P. Long's right to be gover
nor and United States senator it de
veloped that not only were his guber
natorial rights attacked, but a man
out of a Job took the oath of Benator
and said he would go to Washington
and "occupy Long's seat." The lat
est title claimant is Joseph C. Land,
unemployed contractor,' who took A
senate oath at Shreveport and said
he would welcome the $10,000 sal
ary in Washington that is awaiting
Long. The position there Is vacant.
Land said.
Dr. Paul N. Cyr. the former lieu
tenant governor,, who last Tuesday
took i the- governor's .; oath at Shreve
port, will rgro.' to Newr Orleans Satur
day : to .'draw up ': the "intrusion of
office" suit -'he plana to file against
Long Monday.
The Jourril Jc rzrtrrrzt is
equipped to turn mt tsytiirj frcn
calUrg uri fc sab c&isls.
f H-I-M "I-M-I- H I1 1 I-1 1
t GREENWOOD
fl'HlM r-M-M-MlM-I-
P. A. Sanborn was a business visi
tor in Lincoln on last Friday.
The King's Daughters class met on
Friday with Mrs. E. O. Miller at her
home.
Mr. and Mrs. Good hart Vant and
son Jack of Fremont were in town
on last Thursday.
Dwight Talcott, who is attending
the University of Nebraska, spent the
week end with his parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Dudley Clouse and
family moved the first part of last
week into the Methodist parsonage.
Mr. and Mrs. N. O. Coleman and
Elva drove to Omaha on last Satur
day, where they shopped for the
day.
Mrs. John Gustafson went to Lin
coln Tuesday morning to visit Mr.
and Mrs. F. G. Gustafson for several
days.
Mrs. J. M. Wells and son, Merl, of
Lincoln, spent Sunday evening visit
ing their' old friends the White and
Bucknell families.
Wayne Landon, Don Parks, Lloyd
Wilson and Chas. Trader left on last
Sunday for the western part of the
state on a hunting trip.
Homer Meyers, of near Ithica, was
a visitor in Greenwood on last Wed
nesday and was looking after some
business matters for a short time.
P. E. Clymer and son, Clark, Evan
Armstrong and Goodhart Vant all
went to Ravenna on Monday after
noon to try out their luck at hunt
ing.
JucJse W. E. Newkirk and the good
wife were visiting for a number of
days last week at the home of their
laughter, Mrs. L. D. Lee, at Mur-
dock.
Dr. and Mrs. H. W. McFadden. of
Maywood, Ills., arrived Sunday for a
visit with relatives. While here Dr.
McFadden was hunting with some
ethers from Greenwood.
Mrs. Ella Marshall, who is staying
on a farm in thisi vicinity, accompan
ied by Miss Catherine Coleman, post
mistress, were visiting ?with friends
in and near Ashland on last Satur
day.
Whiie E. A. Landon was looking
after the escaped pheasants and some
that did not escape, the elevators
ffprs bpine look oil afttr hv C r Kul-
mer, who is a good man for thel
place.
Wm. Rouse, while the time was at
hand and he was not pressed with
ether work, has been painting tie
interior of his home and getting it
all spick and span for the coming
winter.
Announcements have been received
cf the marriage of Ivan Brunkow, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Brunkow,
to Miss Pansy Laster, of Kansas City,
Mo., on Saturday, Sept.. 26th. Con
gratulations are in order.
Jchn Weatherhog and wife and
r,on Curtis visited in Greenwood Sat
urdajr and Sunday, returning to their
home-'- in Bloomfleld Sunday after
noon. Mrs. Nutzman, who is teach
ing at Bloomfleld, accompanied the
Weatherhog family.
The grading machinery of Cass
county is here this week for the
purpose of grading the mile west of
town to connect the gravel with
Lancaster county, according to re
ports of the workmen who are grad
ing the road west of AIvo.
John H. Bell, who makes his home
some ten miles northwest of Ashland,
where he has resided for a number of
years, was a visitor in Greenwood on
last Wednesday and was visiting the
many old time friends whom he knew
some twenty-five to thirty years ago,
when he resided here.
E. L. McDonald and the good wife
departed for Kearney, where they
were to visit with friends and where
Mr. McDonald was to try his hand
with one of the very latest in fowl
ing pieces with the wiley pheasants,
which are said to abound in that
vicinity. They drove out in his car.
W. S. Allen, the carpenter and
cabinet maker and a workman who
need not be ashamed of his work, for
it is prime, and A. R. Birdsall, who
BAYER ASPIRIN
is ckvoyo SAFE
GENUINE Dner Aecirin. the
that docton prescribe and n??Snn. at
users have pewen safe for over thirty
years, can eay be iienrSed by the
name Drtr cad the weed gassae at
above.
Ce nu.i.se Dsyer AspSna is csfe and
cure; it is thrzvs (he same. It bastiae
wwywryd acssstsatsX cf pbytkiaxta
andiLi. JLjtM ettxyvere. Itdoes not
derresat rrtTtySMnobatrslJegectsi
iziywiZi era. .
lrer Arsria b tbe tverl ax
d3 torra cf CX tirj.
Gib v V.Ttrtt
M W .
u C-3 tcdg cf Erer
is OEIAEtfr Co Ctczt
vtTj end ZZ
VOU can count on a
Stetson to wear.
Month in and month
out it continues to hold
"its shape and gives you
the most hat for your
dollar. They're cheap
er, too, than they've
been for ten years.
07
Emersons - - $4.75, $5
New fall caps, $1, 91.C5
tPhilio Zlhi&udl
besides being able to conduct one of
the very best cafes, is a finisher of
woods, are making a set of fixtures
with which to equip the Birdsall cafe,
which were formerly contraband bus
iness., a former saloon, and the bar
fixtuies which were elaborate when
the saloon flourished are now to be
used after having been refinished for
the fixtures of the cafe. They are
very fine and will make elegant fix
tures for the purpose for which they
are now to be used.
Crops Good ia Filmore County
O. M. Hartsook and sister, Ethel
Hartsook, were spending about a week
recently visiting at their old home
near Geneva, and where they enjoyed
a very pleasant visit with relatives
and the friends of other years when
they resided there. Mr. Hartsook
tells of the jpxcellent corn crop which
is now being harvested there, and of
the excellent small grain crops which"
were harvested during the earlier
portions of the season. Filmore coun
ty, of which Geneva is the county
seat, boasts' of the very best crops of
any county in the state of Nebraska
this year.
Building Machinery
J. V. Stradley and the two sons
are kept very busy these times with
the construction of two shellers and
nlso two hammer mill erinders. They
have the shellers about completed
and one has been tested In tne sneii
ing of a quantity of pop corn which
was crown this year and which work
ed very fine, taking all the corn off
the cobs were lemt -intact, without
beine crushed or mangled. This is
one of the very best of shellers, hav
ing a capacity for , shelling a large
amount of corn in a short time. All
bearings are of the TImken roller
tvee. which reduce the power neces
sary to operate the machine to a
minimum. The hammer grinders are
also showing much merit over other
erinders of the same tVDe. for they
are also equipped with roller bearings
and thus much power is saved in tne
operation and at the same time the
verv best of results achieved in the
work which they perform. You who
are interested In this line of macnin
ery, step in and you will be quickly
convinced of their superior merits.
Hunting Near Belgrade
A number cf the nimrods of Green
wood who think it is great sport to
g?t their amount or allowance of
pheasants, the first day of the open
season, were over to the vicinity of
Belgrade on last Wednesday, where
they were looking for an opportunity
to get their one hen and four roast
ers, which is the maximum number
the law allows, and may be able be
sides having a taste themselves, to
furnish some for their friends. Among
those who were enjoying the sport
were E. A. Landon, L. C. Marvin. Dr.
W. II. McFadden, here on a visit from
Illinois, George Trunkenbolz, E. O.
Landen, L. C. Marion and John Hart
sook, the latter from near Eagle.
Attended Bankers' Meeting
Messrs and Mesdames Phil L. Hall
snd O. E. 'Miller, the bankers at
Greenwood, were enjoying the day
last Monday (Columbus day) at the
gathering of the Cass County Bank
ers' association, which was held at
Nehawka. The gathering was held
during the afternoon and the social
session and banquet in the evening.
Upon invitation of Messrs. Hall and
Miller. Greenwood was selevted as
the convention city for the year 1932.
We are sure that they will be prop
erly entertained when the time comes
to hold the convention here. H.;A.
Schneider, of . Plattsmouth was selected-a
presHent of the association
for the ensuing year. ; :
FAZUX T0H SALE 02 TOADS
Known at Cinen farm: four miles
south of Plattsmouth. Call or inquire
3522 Lineoln Blvd.. omana. rnce
reasonable. ol9-W-tw
Corn Yield
Average This
Year is Small
Only Four Tears Poorer Since 1900;
Cass County Will Average 25
Bushels to the Acre.
Nebraska corn yield is only slight
ly above the average of the four low
est yields since 1900. Present acre
age is 29 percent larger than for
those years and the production is
correspondingly larger, Bays the state
and federal division of agricultural
statistics.
Since 1900 the four years, 1901,
1913, 1918 and 1926 have lower corn
yields than the present year. The
average yield for those years is 15.3
bushels as compared with the pre
liminary estimate of 17 bushels this
year.
This year's acreage is the highest
on record with a total of 10,096,
000 acres. The average acreage for
the four years since 1900 having
lower yields is 7,745,000, making the
present year's ajcreage 29 percent
larger.
The present estimate of produc
tion is 171.632.000 bushels. A nor
mal or full crop yield on Nebraska's
present acreage would reach a total
of 358,408,000 bushels. The pres
ent estimate is less than half that
amount.
Corn yields by districts this year
are as follows: Northwest, 13 bush
els; north central, 11.4 bushels;
northeast, 13.9 bushels; central. 13.7
bushels; east central, 18.8 bushels;
southwest, 14.8 b.ushels; south cen
tral, 17,2 bushels; southeast, 23.8
bushels. Only eleven of ninety-three
counties have yields of 25 bushels
v a v x
v v
As Winter approaches you will
need Medical Supplies, such as
Cold Tablets end
Couch Cyrups I
We have All Kinds
MF.NTHflF.ATTIM ViriC'C I
j Platters, Liniments I I
I I Fountain Syringes, Hot Water 1 I
Bottles and a Lot of Other V
J I Things from the Drug Store
Let U Supply
You
UEiIHCH a niicanoA
y The Eed Cr&ia Drt Stcre
r 521 Main PIattimotn, Neb.
or more. They are Burt, Caaiir.ar.
aiivre. Cage, J?racn, RieLtrdicn
Cass, Lancaster, Sarpy, Seward, Flit-land Saline,
V For Wednesday
1 I
urn
0
E&Gafl
For Wednesday
L
in
ru
Lnrmnjj
(TO
is
Smart new styles in plain
and printed Sillis, Travel
Crepes, Wool Unit Jiys
and 2-piecc Unit Cults. All
wool Jerseys. Every new
color.
Jast the Dress for these
Cool Fall Days
My95
ITP. t SIZES
14 to 20 38 to 48 H . " to 20 38 to 48
IN OUR DOWN STAIRS DEPARTMENT
Snmairt Little Waolh Frock
, 2 Wvqccoz Cost
G
Guaranteed Fat Color 1 J L Reffular 51.00 Values
.oca's E3Scg ITfoQo OoHoS
wms
ImDi
Cass County's Largest Exclusive Style Shop ,