MONDAY, JTTLY 31. 1933. PIATTSMOTJTH SEMI WEEKLY JOtJBtfA PAGE THREE t GREENWOOD Miss Cassie Coleman was a Lincoln visitor on Tuesday. Miss Alice Boucher has accepted a position as clerk In the E. L. McDon ald store. Mrs. G. W. Holt and Mrs. C. E. Wiedeman were Lincoln visitors on Tuesday. Mrs. Rosetta Axmaker visited old friends at Louisville for ceveral days last week. Mr. ar.d Mrs. Warren Hand of Lin foln ppent Sunday visiting his moth er. Mrs. V. X. Hand. Miss Dorothy Countryman, of Lcw rllen visited from Friday until Sun day with Mi3s Thelma Leesley. Mr. and Mrs. Dwaync Gribble and Mr. and Mrs. Jcck Gribble were Om aha visitors last Tuesday evening. Mrs Ollie Trumble of Lincoln spent Tuesday visiting her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Head ley. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Hurlbut and two children of Fremont spent Sun day visting his mother, Mrs. Lulu Hurlbut. Mrs. P. L. Hall, Sr., returned to her home in Lincoln Sunday after a three weeks visit with her son P. L. Hall and Mrs. Hall. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Erakhage are the proud parents of a baby birl born Thursday, July 20. Mother and babe are doing nicely. Mrs. Minnie Mason went to Elm wood Wednesday where she visited her sister, Mrs. Ray Parsell and fam ily until Sunday evening. Bert Fisher and daughter cf Weeping Water, came over Monday to visit his mother, Mrs. James Fish er, who remains quite poorly. Elmer Coleman and family, of Ash land, were visiting in Greenwood on last Friday and as well looking after some business matters for a time. Mr and Mrs. J. C. Harncd and Mr. and Mis. Lee Howard went to Lin coln Sunday where they enjoyed the programs at the Epworth Assembly. Mrs. Ben Howard went to Emerald Friday where she visited Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Finlay and son ar.d Mrs. Myra Howard until Sunday evening Mrs. W. C. Boucher was pleased when Mrs. Clara Layton. of Lincoln, arrived on Saturday for a visit of (several days with the Boucher fam ily. Rev. W. E. Goings, pastor of the Christian church has 'been '-feeling poorly since becoming poisoned while rprinkling his potato vines to kill the bugs. Miss Helen Marvin went to Fre mont Friday where she attended a party announcing the engagement of Miss Valeria Walling to Willard Grove of Omaha. - Mrs. Lizzie Hartsook, Dorothy and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hartsook and baby visited the Gene Mayfield and Carl Foster families at Omaha over Sat urday and Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Eayre Lewis and fam ily of Verdon, spent Sunday here visiting relatives and also visited her father. O. F. Peters at the Bryan Memorial hospital. Mr. and Mr3. R. E. Mathews and son drive to Lincoln Sunday after noon where they visited relatives. Miss Maud Holden accompanied them home for a visit here. Monday night the Odd Fellows held their installation ceremonies with C. W. Newkirk as N. G. and Leo Peters as V. G. The installation was in charge of Chas. D. Palmer of Platts mouth. The Misses Helen Marvin, Thelma Leesley and Margaret Erickson re turned home last Friday from Lin coln where they had each taken spec ial summer school work at the state university. Mr. O. F. Peters who has been re ceiving treatment at the Bryan Me morial hospital for some time, under went a serious operation Monday. At last reports he was doing as well as could be expected. Mrs. Dora Leesley, Mrs. John Lees ley, Mrs. Nannie Coleman and Mrs. Ray McNurlin visited Mrs. Myra Howard Friday afternoon at the home of her daughter, Mrs. A. D. Finlay near Emerald. Mrs. Viola Anderson returned home from a three weeks visit at Kearney with her son, W. A. Wilson and family. Mr. Wilson accompanied her here and enjoyed a short visit with his sister, Mrs. Mable Hamilton and boys. The M. E. Guild will meet Tues day, August 1 at the church with Mrs. C. A. Mathis and Mrs. Otto Erickson as hostesses. The annual election of officers will be held at this time. Every'member urged to be present. Prof, and Mrs. H. E. Warren and eon, Mr. Ben Howard and Mr. Wat eon Howard drove to Emerald Sun day evening to visit Mrs Myra How ard. Mrs. Ben Howard who had been there for several days helping out, returned home with them. "Undergoes an Operation O. F. Peters, who has been at the Bryan Memorial hospital in Lincoln for several weeks, being under obser vation and taking treatment, under went an operation early last week for the removal of ulcers of the liver, as well as some other minor correc tions in his anatomy. Following the operation, the patient wa3 resting some better, for he had been in great pain, and it is hoped he will now re gain his strength, for it is expected that another operation will have to follow. His many friends are hoping he will soon be restored to health, for he has surely suffered much from his present affliction. King's Daughters Meet. The King's Daughters Sunday school class was pleasantly entertai in- i i.o ct Fridav afternoon at the church by Mrs. Hazel Anderson. There was a large crowd present. Af ter the usual business meeting a fine program was given by several of the smaller children which was greatly enjoyed by all present. Lovely re freshments were served at the close of th meeting. The next meeting will be August 4 with Mrs. Louis Wright as hostess. Guild Entertained. ' The Guild was pleasantly enter tained last Tuesday afternoon by Mrs. W. I. Miller and Mrs. Fred Creamer at the church. There was a good crowd present. The usual business meeting was conducted by the president. At which time it was announced that the annual election of officers would be held at the next regular meeting, August 1. The rest of the afternoon was spent sewing carpet rags, with fancy work and visiting. Lovely refreshments were served by the hostesses at a late hour. Mrs. C. A. Mathis and Mrs. Otto Erickson will be the next hostesses on August 1st at the church. Install Officers. On last Thursday . evening the Greenwood Rebekah Lodge No. 246 met in regular session with a goodly number of their members present and also a number of , visitors. The new officers for the next term were in stalled by Mr3. Kruger as district deputy president and Mrs. Olson as installing marshall, both of Platts mouth. The officers are: Miss Edith Landergreen, N. G.; Mrs. Ethel Arm strong. V. G.; Mrs. Gertrude Shepler, warden; Mrs. Lulu Hurlbut, cond.; and Mrs. Elsie Marvin, chaplain. Af ter the lodge meeting a social hour was enjoyed during which home made icre cream, wark cake and wafers were served by the committee. SILVER CHAMPION DIES Denver, Colo. Frank J. Cannon 73 year old veteran champion of the free coinage of silver, died Tuesday night of an infection after an oper ation which usually would not be re garded as serious. Cannon, first U. S. senator from Utah, waged relentless warfare upon polygamy in the Mor mon church, in which he was born. of one of his father's five wives. He broke away from the Mormon church and became a Presbyterian. TOR SALE One team of mules, set of harness and wagon. Chas. Stretten, Mynard. i jy31-2tw ORDINANCE NO. 56 Be it Ordained by the Chairman and the Board of Trustees of the Vil lage of Greenwood, Nebraska: Section 1 The following rates are hereby fixed for the use of the elec tric power, said rates shall be charg ed based upon monthly consumption of each customer as follows: 1st K. W. H 85c Next 24 K. W. H.10c per K. W. H. Next 25 K. W. H. 6c per K. W. H. All Excess 4c per K. W. II. Minimum monthly bill, 85c. COMMERCIAL RATE 1st K. W. II 85c Next 74 K. W. H.10c per K. W. H. Next 125 K. W. H. Cc per K. W. H. All Excess 4c per K. W. H. Minimum monthly bill. 85c. POWER RATE Service Charge 50c per H. P. First 400 K. W. H. 5c per K. W. H. All Excess 31c per K. W. H. Section 2 All bill3 due and pay able on or before the 10th day of the following month, and if not paid within the prescribed time are subject to disconnection. Section 3 All Ordinances and parts of Ordinances passed and ap proved prior to the passage and ap proval of this Ordinance and in con flict therewith are hereby repealed. Section 4 This Ordinance shall take effect and be in full force on and after the first (1st) day of August, 1933. Passed and approved this 11th day of July, 1933. E. A. LANDON, Chairman Board of Trustees. Attest: C. E. WEIDEMAN. Village Clerk. j BEGINNING Tuesday, Aug. 1 OUR STORE will ob serve the approved store hours, as follows Monday to Friday, Indus. 8 a. m. to 6 p. m. Saturday, 8 am to 10 pm Sunday Closed Descotfs Col. Charles Muecke Lays Arms Down in Cuba But American Who Fought in All the Island Revolutions Ready for a New Call. Camaguey, Cuba. Co". marles Muecke, American who has fought in all Cuban revolutions beginning with that against Spain, laid down his arms the other day after two months in the field and came back to his home to "remain quietly un til the next one." The veteran of the war for inde pendence, who became a colonel in that war, went to Ciego de Avila to appear before Dr. Luis Cowley, spec ial judge trying cases growing out of the recent movement against the government of President Machado and posted $300 bond for his free dom. Thereafter he returned to his mod est home in the Lo Mosca section of Camaguey. "I took to the field." Muecke said, "because I learned. I was going to be arrested on charges filed by a per sonal enemy of mine, a member of the army, that I was conspiring against the government. "About the only thing I found in the field was hunger." Muecke said he was given all re quested guarantees and showed all possible courtesies in connection with his surrender. Asked as to the revolutions in which he had participated, he re plied: "I was in all of them." "I rose to the rank of colonel in the war for independence," he added. "In the uprising of August, 1912 (called the race war), I was chief dynamiter of the veterans' column In the revolution of 1917 (against President Mario G. Menocal) I was chief of dynamiters with Gen. Jose Miguel, Gomez (former president) blowing up several bridges close to the government forces under Col. Rosendo Collazo." The remark was made that "You are now back at home, in peace." "Yes," Muecke said, "until the next one." The colonel said he had two daugh ters, one of them married, living in New York, and another, widow of an American army officer, in Washing ton. A son-in-law, he added, is a captain in the army at the Aberdeen, Md., proving grounds. CUT OMAHA SCHOOL BUDGET Omaha, July 2C. The Omaha school board Wednesday night adopt ed a budget for the coming year of 3,264,200 or $502,000 less than that of this year. The new fiscal year begins next Wednesday. Every de partment of the school system suf fered a cut as the new budget was drawn up. The board announced that the bud get was drawn on the present valua tion of Douglas county property and stated that if the board of equaliza tion orders a further reduction in valuations, a new budget will have to be drawn, with still further cut3. WOMAN DIES OF INJURIES Omaha. Mrs. Herbert Dubnoff, 60, Omaha, died Wednesday in a hos pital here cf injuries suffered July 2 when the car her brother, David Gross, Omaha, was driving overturn ed as Gross tried to avoid hitting a dog. The accident occurred three miles east of Lincoln. Mrs. Dubnoff, accompanied by her husband, another brother, Morris, and a sister, Mrs. A. E. Goodson, Oakland, Calif., was en route to Beatrice to visit relatives. Funeral services will be held Thursday. I Branches of Mormon Church are United Come Together at Memorial Service in Nauvoo, HI., Honoring the Founder of Their Faith. Nauvoo, 111., July 26. Two branches of the Mormon church, which went their separate ways when they were forced out , of Illinois in 1846, and have since maintained their distance from each other, came together here today in a Joyful yet solemn ceremony honoring the found er of their faith, Joseph Smith. From Salt Lake City, seat of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saint3 in Utah, came George A. Smith, of the council of the 12 Apostles of his branch. From Inde pendence, Mo., came Dr. Frederick M. Smith, president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in Missouri. With each of these leaders arrived a number of their faithful followers. In a spirit of reunion the two groups, together, listened to each other's speakers and in concord dedi cated a striking monument to Joseph Smith. It was here in Nauvoo that Smith (so he said) had a revelation from on high expressly approving and encouraging polygamy. A striking memorial is this huge slab of quartzite his modern follow ers have placed upon the hallowed ground where once stood the found er's store. On either side of it are seats and in front a sun dial. It hon ors Smith, but also it honors the Mor mon National Women's Relief so ciety, founded in 1844. Both branches of the church had their part in the preparation of it. The re organized. or Missouri branch, had landscaped the property, which it owns and the stone was set up by the Utah unit. World-Herald. Troops Ordered to Pennsylvania Coal Strike Area Governor Pinchot Acts Quickly After Sheriff Refuses Demand Gunmen Charge. Harrisburg, Pa., July 29. Gover nor Pinchot early, today said he' had ordered Pennsylvania national guards men to the Fayette county coal mine strike area. The governor at his home in Mil- ford, said he issued orders to Major General Edward C. Shannonn, Twen ty-eighth division, commander, to send men from Mount Gretna rather than from, home stations in western Pennsylvania because the movement can be effected much faster. The governgrj said the troops will be sent as soon as the railroads can move them. Earlier the governor had told Sheriff Hackney to remove his de puties or martial law would be de clared. The governor told Hackney that he "was deliberately provok ing strife and disorder" and that he was informed "that the Frick Coal company with your co-operation, was importing gunmen from New York." In reply to this Hackney refused to withdraw his deputies, saying that he could not neglect his official du ties. The governor then ordered out the guards. AGREE ON WAGE INCREASE Detroit. A wage increase Aug. 1 for 200,000 workers in plants allied with the national automobile chain ber of commerce was announced fol lowing adoption of a resolution by directors of the N. A. C. C. calling for a nupward wage readjustment in factories of its members. The resolu tion was adopted at a meeting called to approve a trade code to be sub mitted to the president by the auto mobile industry. At the end of the two day session it was revealed that no code has been formally adopted. It was announced. however, that a majority of the mem bers agreed that the proposed code formulated at the meeting should be filed with the national industry re covery administration as soon as sig natures representing a sufficient per centage of the industry could be ob tained. BEER DRINKS TALLIED New York. Americans have quaff ed 3,021,600,000 eight ounce glasses of beer since legalization day, April 7, said C. D. Williams, secretary of the United States Brewers associa tion. Total sales since April 7, he said, have been 8,324,472 barrels. Production in June over May in creased 351,000 barrels. UNION NEWS Mr. and Mrs. William Hansen of Iowa called Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Hensell. Mr. and Mrs. John Tuck of Nebraska City were also there. Mrs. Tuck is a sis ter of William and John Hansell. It was a bull's eye for Miss Martha Upton, 15-year-old 4-H club girl from Union. Miss Upton scored the first bull's eye made in archery prac tice by 4-H club members encamped at Bellevue. Miss Kathleen Propst, formerly of Union, now of Nebraska City, made the next best shot, the arrow striking the target in the first ring from the "bull's eye." Connie Mullis and Gwen Stites were other members from Union who attended the camp. : : -.ff:l Miss Mary McCarroll, ten year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Mc Carroll recently spent a four day va cation with Mrs. Ed. Lewis. Her visited lasted form Monday until Thursday night. Mrs. Herbert Ehlers and two chil dren, Donald and Arnold, and Miss Helen James visited Thursday after noon at the home of Mrs. Ehlers par ents. The Union Extension club will hold a picnic August 20 at the Ban ning home farm south of Union. A district picnic will be held at Weep ing Water August 4. CONTRACTORS TO MEET Grand Island. Nebraska building contractors will meet here Aug. 2 to formulate and approve a trade code in conformity with the national in dustrial recovery act. More than 100 are expected to attend. Members of the Lincoln builders burau, the Om aha builders exchange and the Mas ter Builders association of Nebraska have been notified, but all building contractors, whether affiliated with any buildings organization, are urged to attend the meeting. PLANE FALL KILLS TWO Watonga, Oklahoma, July 22. Hank Cinder, 23. Kingfisher, Okl., pilot, and Bill Good of Watonga, his passenger, were killed by the crash of Cinder's plane from a height of 3,000 feet. N ELLY DON " Dots" the map with Dotted Frocks falUwdar tWtr nod dot voim 4 wbfte Ubot h bwHoMk 2.95 0 0. 0 0CMJU (5 Two Performances Daily 2 and 8 P. M. Kelly's Educated Animals Bernice, Queen of the Wire Aerialist, Acrobats, Funny Clowns Prof. Lee's Concert Band Prices: Children, 10c; Adults, 25c PLATTSMOUTH ONE DAY ONLY Tlhiorsday AUGUST Show Grounds, Chicago Avenue Ball Park DRYS GRANTED INJUNCTION Phoenix, Ariz. Altho they failed to obtain enough signatures to place their own candidates on the ballot, Arizona's dry forces were awarded a temporary injunction restraining state and county officials from elect ing a state convention to act upon proposed repeal of the egihteenth amendment. The state treasury, secretary of state, state auditor, and Maricopa county supervisors here were order ed to appear before Superior Judge Rodger3 July 31 to show cause why a permanent injunction should not be granted. The election of the con vention had been set by Governor Moeur for Aug. 8. The injunction was granted Charles R. Osburn, act ing for the Arizona Temperance fed eration. He said the bill Betting up machinery for election of the con vention was unconstitutional. . DOTS ... be square with them, or round them off to a pleasant summertime. Dots in Nelly Don's voiles and imported Swisses. Designs for all ages at prices that command early selection. fb) Whirling atd fac ing us ... an imported dotted Swiss with am broidarod organdy M Whirling back to in ... dot voito with organdy collar raffs. 2.95. flock hug and 7.9S. THE 8HOP OF PERSONAL SERVICE 0 0 PLEA FOR FARM PAIR MADE Minneapolis. Letters were sent to Governor Olson asking him to in tervene in behalf of two farmers who face thirty days work house sentences here. The farmers, Heino Tanttila of Sax and Arthur Boelke of Little Fork, were convicted of disorderly conduct charges growing out of a clash between police and hunger marcher demonstrators at the city hall here last November. Their sen tences are to start Aug. 4. James Flower, secretary of the United Farmers' league, said in hi3 letter to the governor and to Mu nicipal Judge Wright, that "These farmers were arrested and held in Jail for the crime of defending them selves against the attacks cf the po lice." He urged suspension of the sentences because of the harvest and haying seasons. Phone the news to No. 6. (d) Sitting ... Or. gandy lacos a boot tha neck and onds in bow on this flock dot vol at . . . 1.95. with