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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 27, 1932)
PAGE SIX FLATTSHOtTTII SET.TI WEEKlit JOtTENAL Roosevelt Gives Plan to Rebuild Farm Civilizat'n! IOWA TEOPLE WEDDED Adds Reforestation to Hi rova;w for Agriculture x llis At lanta Sp?cfli. Atlanta. O.i.. iVt. 24.-JW.mo m crowd that filled to orrfloln At lanta'? auducrium. O.oxorr.or t-Vank-lin I. Koosrlt lonUht f.Av. i-roKo on farm issues. Climaxing two thrill pacKcd day in lit-orgm. which h.is wtMly ao.laim kd Mr. Hoiwcvclt u- in adopted son. the democratic presidential nominee told the thousand who touljsht packed every corner of the city audl t.uum in Atlanta that the object of Lis administration in restoring pen e":il prosperity to the I'niled States mupt be the rebuilding of the rural civilization of America." Mr. Roosevelt made some more thrusts at President Hoover, saying the president was advocating a 'doc trine of despair." lie sent some punches also. the way of Mr. Hoo ver's secretary of agriculture. Arthur If. Hyde. Mr. Kooocvelt asserted that the i-om v-.lnfnilny' Unity Thts morning at the home of Hev. i O Troy occurred the marriage of Will Smith and Mury Thornhurgh. oth of Aft'.-n. Iowa. The bridal .ouplo were accompanied by Mrs. J. K. Sclti. of tMj city, sister of the bride. The bridal couple are among the best known and popular residents of I Alton where they have made their home for a number of years. Follow ing a short visit Mr. and Mrs. Smith departed for their home in the Iowa city. Present Trade Developments Declared Sound Financial Economist Says That Busi ness Situation Is Cause for Satisfaction., Smith Lashes at the Dry Lav in Opening Speech Talk at Newark, New Jersey, De voted Chiefly to Question of Prohibition. New- York. The present husines situation is decidedly favorable and forms a "base line" which it will be very gr:uifying to see maintained un til next sDrintr. according to Dr. lime has come to eliminate "political Llollt.i p Kli. financial economist secretaries of agriculture." Talk of Reforestation. A great part of tonight's addres3 dealt with the possibilities of refor estation as a double aid to agricul ture and to unemployment, a subject he touched on during his speech of acceptance in Chicago. Secretary Hyde has ridiculed the Roosevelt reforestation plan, and to night the New York governor, an swering the ridicule, said a child in kindergarten would have known Lis subjett better than did Mr. Hyde. The agricultural issues of the cam nnifn Governor Roosevelt see3 them, are summed up in the follow ing excerpts from his speech: "Mr. Hoover believes that farmers and workers must wait for general recovery, until some miracle occurs by which the factory wheels revolve again. No one knows the formula of this miracle. Lsaves for North, "I. on the other hand, am raying over and over that I believe that we can restore prosperity here in this country by re-establishing the pur charing power of half of the people of the country, that when this gigan tic market of 50 million people tthc rr.ral population) is able to purchase goods, industry will ptart to turn, and the millions o men and women row walking the street; will be em ployed." The Roosevelt special train left Atlanta immediately r.fier the gov ernor had compiled his speech. To morrow no win tarrry ai itanngu. N. C. for I Z minutes, ar.d in the In an address on "Business Funda mentals," delivered before the regu lar Monthly meeting of the Confer ence of Statisticians in Industry yes terday, Dr. Edie corroborated reports of economic recovery that have come from all parts of the country recent ly by citing additional evidence of marked improvement in business con ditions this fall. "General business has made a full seasonal recovery this autumn and, thereby, has achieved a degree of progress that was not experienced in the like period of any previous year in the depression," he declared. "This development should be cause for sat isfaction on the part of conservative observers, and the mere fact that business has net come up to the ex travagant expectations aroused by many leaders of public opinion should not excite any worry or alarm among sober-minded people. "The fundamental factors under lying the moderately favorable de velopments in business are to bs found in the financial situation and the commodity price structure. The financial situation, has shown im provement in the form of a sustained firmness in strictly high-grade bonds, in the form of the reduction in bank failures ar.d in the form of substan tial surplus reserves due to gold im ports and the return flow of cur rency. "The commodity price rtrueture has had a speculative rebour.d in man1 staple commodities, and has re- jtaincd from one-third to or.e-half of ether mere At reach Washington, and after ttcp. he will .o en to Baltimore, where he will deliver another major Newark. N. J. Al Smith, before a police estimated crowd of 20,000 persons, concluded his flr3t national campaign speech Monday night by declaring that nothing but the elec tion of the Roosevelt-Garner ticket would solve tho economic problems of America. The crowd was in an uproar virtually thruout the speech. At 7:30 the hall was so crowded that the doors were closed. Brilliant spotlights from crowded balconies crisscrossed the bunting draped raft er.-, while sirens and other noise makers punctuated the applause. An emergency hospital set up in the armory treated forty cases, most of them for fainting attacks. Helen Fahey, Montclair. N. J., was crush ed between the doors and taken to city hospital. One woman suffered a fractured rib. An unidentified man in the crowd outside of the armory died of a heart attack just after Smith's arrival. Smith had reserved mention of the name of his old political ally. Gov ernor Roosevelt, until he had lash ed out at prohibition and had made extended criticism of the republican administration. His call for a Roosevelt-Garner victory set off a demon stration in the auditorium w hich was many minutes in ending. And all the while Smith, in his favorite "Happy Warrior" pose, stood in the flood lights and grinned from the same platform which just four years ago he mounted to seek votes for his own presidential candidacy. Smith wound up by asking his audience to "go home and see if you can find one great public question that they (the republicans) have made a reasonably good attempt to settle. Instead of that," he contin ued, "we received a program of threat that if the republican party is defeated the return of prosperity will be retarded. I deny that and I deny it emphatically, and I state from this platform to my audienc that the election of the democratic ticket is the best way to bring bacK prosperity the election of Roosevelt and Garner." The speech was devoted principally to prohibition. "In 192S." he saTd, "both parties ducked the prohibition issue. They were both afraid of it. The democratic party wasn't a bit better than the republican party They both laid elown, in fear of the consequence had they taken a de- cided ctep looking to revision or re peal of the eighteenth amendment." State Journal. ROYAL COACH TO EX-QUEEN i tint' l ''utiUx.ti in 1 1 1 r l ij 11 in s i lit iir.i" aftemooi at RicLr.ior.d. Ya.. for an-, o,... ; . . . i ,, 1 ia.Lii-i.vui. nUU .i - rantcd in the ability of the commod-j j jiiiuiu laiiiLi; miu Ui.ui;:t i muii ij wdit ijng out hope that 1 01 nc.aiiuu. and women now unemployed "will i QualifvinT the optimistic tone of h iko .. tv t,-n,-.,nt Tiie democratic nominee, he as price structure in noiu and eo crted, had sponeored a plan hold- 10 million men address, tho last one on tin cam paign tcur. World-IIeral 1. FARMERS PAY SEED LOANS Minneapolis. Despite low prices farmers of eight northwestern states are raying federal seed loans at the rate of from $10,000 to $20,000 daily at the Minneapolis crop produc tion loan office. Altho President Hoover's recent order permitted farmers to repay but 25 percent of tneir individual seed loans, repay ments in full still are numbered in the dally receipts, L. J. Paulson, manager of tho Minneapolis office, paid. Since last August, Mr. Paulson said, approximately 3 percent or 3, &00 individual seed loans have been repaid in full to the United States department of agriculture. The daily total, of receipts has ebbed rdnce the president's grant of a 75 percent moratorium, but more htan a million dollars has been repaid on northwest seed loans, includiug both payments in full and payments of 25 percent, Paulson said. address. Dr. Edie warned against overestimating tho current seasonal recovery and recalled that the na tion has a stiff Ftruggle before it in connection with impending efforts at Washington to balance the fed eral budget. DENIES MISUSE OF IIAIL3 ENJOYS VISIT HERE From Wednesday's Daily Mri. C. E. Noyea, who is now mak lug her home at Gordon, Nebraska. came in this morning to spend a few hours on some business matters and visiting the friends in this city. Mrs. Noyes, since the death of her hus band, has made her home with her mother in the west part of the state, the mother now being in her 88th year. Mrs. Noyes while in the city was a visitor at the Journal for a very pleasant call. tSh will visit for a short tine at Louisville before re turning to the west. . Road paving In Cass oounty this year will run about tan miles. Rot so bad, for c:?rsc3lon" times. Washington. Postmaster General Brown made public a letter from Sec retary Mills calling "silly" the state ment by a democrat that the treas ury chief had "misused" his privilege of sending matter thru tho mails without postage. The democrat, John F. Costello, his party's commit teeman for the District of Columbia, had asked Brown to investigate. The postmaster general, in reply, said an investigation showed "the statement In question was of an official char acter and a3 such entitled to be car ried in th3 mails without postage." OIL COMPANY APPEALS Washington". The Pan American Petroleum company asked: the sup reme court to reconsider its recent refusal to review the decision of the lower courts holding title to oil property in the Elk Hill naval oil reserve in California belonging to the United States. The company explain ed that it and it3 sole stockholder were in receivership and protested against being "penalized" for what it termed the misconduct of Edward L. Doheny, who once controlled the company. 02IAIIAN SHOOTS SELF Omaha. Joseph Ludacek, forty- six. Qmaha. ehot and killed himself in tho basement of his home Sunday. He left no note of explanation and Mrs. Ludssek could "give ' no motive for hi aet. He aid such a plan was "fantastic" and u:-ktd: "Is this a new deal?" At the very outset of his address the president declared that the na tion's economic "tide has turned." Return of 300 millions of gold into the country thru restored confidence alroad: return of 250 millions of currency from hoarding; increase in the values cf bonds by 20 percent; increase in manufacturing produc tion by 10 percent, in some groups, such as textiles, by 50 percent; in crease in building contracts; return of ISO, 000 workers to the manufac turing industry in August and 360, 000 more in September; increase in earloadings from 490,000 per week to 650,000 per week; increase in ex ports and imports by nearly 23 per cent; improvement in farm prices and decrease in bank failures were enumerated. Stops at fourteen cities en route, with speeches at most of them, left tho president visibly tired. At the last stop, Monroe, Mich., he told the assembled crowd that he was saving his voice for the night. In his speeches before crowds reaching, ac cording to police estimates, up to 25,000, stretching from Charleston. W. Va., early in the morning, to Monroe after dark, the chief execu tive discussed campaign issues. State Journal. CABINET RESIGNS Prague, Czechoslovakia. Premier Frantisek Udrzal submitted the desig nation of his cabinet Monday to Pres ident Masaryk. who accepted and asked the premier to continue in of fice until a new government is ap pointed. President Masaryk called upon Jan Malypetr, president of thej chamber of deputies, to form a new cabinet. Phone the news fo no. C Bucharest. Reversing is previous refusal, the government sent a royal railway coach to the border to meet former Queen Helen, divorced wife of King Carol. The coach was waiting at the boundary when the entered the country. In koih political cir cles it wuh sa;d that Premier Maniu had a hand in forestalling the slight to Helen. She has been in London, where her son. Prince Michael, visit ed her briefly, the visit being termrh" ated by Carol, reportedly because he objected to the publicity resulting from it. Get your Scnooi SupDlies at the Bates Book Store where quality is high and prices low. SO PRONOUNCED are tSie savings here that food buying trends of hundreds of families is to HANKY-DINKY- where EXTRA VALVE is assured through good quality and low price Del Monte Sliced, Halves Dcl Monto or Larne Melva Halves APRICOTS PEACHES 1 c TaM c 10c II Oc No. 22 Can No. 2V2 Can O Del Monte Del Monte Sliced or Crushed PEARS Pineapple t7c No. 1 1 91 No. 2Y2 Can a Tall KtOC m ' 7' Tl QC Crushed, No. 10 A7 No.22Can Jl1- "Gallon" Can - JC Del Monte Royal Anno Gft & CHBEtniBO .Vi. 15C ; No. 2'2 Can Jj&c CABBAGE ESESS&m iocib.bag 98c SWEET POTATOES SSS.'SK. - 10c HEAD LETTUCE Solid, Crisp. Each - - A DDT EC Jonatnans. Fancy, Large Red a g ArrLfcO 5lbe.,19o. Dushel t1.4ll ORANGES urcrDize . 19c POTATOES iouPeEceKbr-0h.0! ... 12c Morningside Chocolate Covered Cherries Box - - 19c New Crop HALLOW 1 1 DATES a r 2 lbs. for - ZuC Pure Apple Cider Gallon Jug - - J7t Plus Jug Deposit Seedless Raisins 2-1 b. bag, 4-1 b. bag -25c Fresh, Fluffy Marshmallows Glasslne f O Bag. 1-lb.- l&C Fancy Pink Salmon 1-lb. Tall J Q Can, 2 for Gem Pancake Plour, 4-lb. tag' . i5 Fancy layer Figs, 8-oz. Cello pkg., 2 for ; 15 1 Eaglish Walnuts, medium size, per lb 15 Choice Black Figs, 3 lbs. for 25 Choice Adriatic White Figs, 3 lbs. for 29 Fancy Elue Hose Eice, 3 lbs. for 15 The 2 lt can Delicious 3 1b. can, v 02 o Ad for Friday and Saturday, Oct. 28 and 29 PoffEi Lonsm Roast lb. c Choice-, Iran nurk. Atrrngr wrlsbt 3 to 5 Mitiud. Jf SEnonaldeir Roast lb. lUlic 1 ! v corn frtl href. Our uxunl blcu tiualily. tSBmXJ 'IVuifer ninl ilrllriuiiM. Porli Chops Sce1Sfner ,J.ic Round Steali lb. 1 5c ( ut from eboiv unlit o- beet. JimJf Poirlt Sausage Ib. 7c I rrili mtiir purr balk. llb lii I'lantalion ra.unlnic. U Pourli TecadeiriloSiit . ... lb. 2UC Bs-eatilfast Bacon Lb. Ron Sc Siiift'M rnl bruutl. Sllc-eJ and raiptl la rrll'iphns. jr -i-lb. roll. MILK Carnation, Pet, Borden's or Roberts' can O w op 6 for -..29' Siloam TOMATOES L?e. No. 2Vz Sizo Ca t . .25' 2 for Casco Creamery BUTTER "Solids" Per Mb. 1 Qc Carton - - - ILc Quartered, 20c Ib. Fine Granulated SUGAR f.clo.,h. . 47c 100-lb. bag., $4.69 Challenge Srard Corn, 2-To. 2 can, 3 for -25 Banqueter Brand Small Peas, No. 2 car. 12 Y2 C Macaroni, Spaghetti or Shell Macaroni, 2 lbs. for '-- 15r Jap Eullcss Pep Ccrn, 3 lbs. for i -15c Santa Clara Prunes, small size, 4. lbs. fcr 25 Santa Clara Prunes, large size, 2 lbs 15C rm FREE OMAR CEREAL CEREAL DISH WITH EVERY PACKAGE OF New Wonder Vitamin Pkff. Food! CHIPSO or OJIYDOL Large Pkg. P 6c G or Crystal White ioap 10 Bars - - AUNT JEMIMA Pancake Flour 3-ib. J)2c Bag diO iff ' 9c i Hinky-Dinky COFFEE Quality fPfl C Low Price. Lb. - Our Mother's Chocolate 1-lb. Can ... .13) OLD GOLD Can - - 29 JcdmSll or Colled 1000 ISLAND or RELISH 8-oz. Jar, 13 mm a TREE TEA OXANCI PEXOE AH9 FEXOZfeM) SS? I7c : 33c CREEK DLACK JAPAN (firttn) Sff I5c 29c GOLD MEDAL Kitchen Tested 48 lb. bag . . i SEE Toilet Tissue Roll - - 5 Biscuits, Waffles, Dumplings in almost no time. ni Biscuit Cutter FREE rKg, Hlnky-Dinky FLOUR 5 lbs., 15o 4Q Q4-K 10 ibs.. 290 L lsSH)c 24 ibs.. 53o ib. yy tM.I s5 iw Sims cannio food A SALANCED RATION POft DOCS, rOWIfS and CATS (Sonne t-JdJ The wholesome nutty flavor of this natural 100 Bran makes the most Delicious Muffins BARTON'S Paste Shoe Polish FjZlc Black or Brown. Can - U 2 Dyanshlnc Ch c Blaok, Brown. Bottle - H JL Pilllllcbui?yfG Dcct More women1 use this "Balanced" Flour than any other. 24 CO- 40 lb 09