The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, October 30, 1933, Page PAGE FIVE, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    1GE FIVE
MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1933.
PIATTSMOUTH SEMI - WEEKLY JOTJENAI
Ako News
John Banning and wife were net
hunting pheasants last Sunday, but
were visiting at Union with relatives
and they say they had just as good a
time at that.
John Skinner drove over to Lincoln
last Tuesday and brought home the
wife and young son who was born to
them some two weeks before. John is
happy to have the family back home
again.
Jcscph Parscll was having a new
crib constructed on his 80 acres, so
he can have seme place to store his
ccrn until it sells for 65 cents per
bushel, which he does not think will
be long.
John B. Elliott, with a party of
friends from Lincoln were hunting at
Albion over the week end and report
a good time and plenty of pheasants,
for they say the northwest is alive
with them.
Frank E. Cook and Simon Reh
rr.eier were out to Friend for their
pheasants, and found it did not take
them leng to get the limit, but they
surely did enjoy the trip and the sport
cf hunting the b!rd3.
Frank L. Edwards, who is a farmer
and knows the ins and outs of the
agricultural game, is picking corn
for S. C. Eoyles and is turning many
bushels into the crib each day, to be
stored and sold at SO cents a bushel
when the price gets there.
Teachers Name
New District Offi
cers Yesterday
H. W. Anderson Heads Dist. No.
Hhode3 and Burnham Named;
Conventions Close.
2;
SUPPORT FEDERAL PROGRAM
Peoria, 111. Eight thousand Illi
nois farmers heard their leaders ex
plain the federal government's recov-
ery program for corn and hog pices
and then pronounced the measures
good and pledged their support. The
farmers, members of the Illinois Agri-!
cultural association, cheered the pro- New Policy Adhered to in Face of
Price for Newly
Mined Gold Put
Up Another Peg
SHOWING IMPROVEMENT
Appeased Their Appetites
Edgar Edwards, Carl Rosenow,
Lyle Miller and Elmer Rcsenow had
a decided longing for a few meals of
pheasant and on last Saturday they
drove out to Woodriver, where they
hunted a portion of the day Sunday
and got their limit, setting right out
fcr home with the birds and now they
are fed up cn pheasant for a while at
least.
Going on a Cash Basis
E. L. Nelson, who has been engag
ed in business in Alvo for four years,
has dene a general credit business,
piling up more than a thousand dol
lars in uncollectible accounts on his
bocks, and although he feels there are
seme who are worthy of credit, he
says he cannot go on losing money
as he has been doing, and ha3 con
cluded to turn over a new leaf the
first of November and sell for cash
enly after that date. With the credit
hazard removed, he will be able to
offer goods for less money and that is
what most everyone is looking for
nowadays.
From Saturday's DaJ'y
Omaha. Homer V. Andersen, sup
erintendent of the Omaha public
chools, Friday was elected president
of District 2 division of the Nebraska
State Teachers association. The elec
tion, in which Anderson was unop
posed, featured Friday's sessions of
the district convention. J. R. Citner
of Fullerton is the retiring president.
Other new officers are Charles Speedie
of Nebraska City, vice-president; and
Miss Jessie Kriedler, Fullerton, sec
retary-treasurer.
Norfolk, Neb. Teachers of District
3 of the Nebraska State Teachers
association ending their thirteenth
annual convention here Friday after
noon elected II. N. Rhodes of Laurel,
president.
Other officers chosen were: II. R.
Best of Wayne, vice president; Miss
Amy Mahood of Plainview, secretary,
and II. D. McEachen of Neligh, treas
urer. Allen P. Burkhardt of Norfolk,
was elected as a member of the state
executive committee. Norfolk was
chosen as the 1934 convention city.
Scottsbluff, Neb. Archer L. Burn
ham, superintendent oT schools here,
Friday was elected president of Dis
trict No. 6, Nebraska State Teachers'
association, which closed a three day
convention Friday night.
V. M. Rauch of Ileniingford was
chosen vice president, Elora Dustin,
county superintendent of Dawes coun
ty, secretary, and Edna Work, dean
f women at the Chadron Teachers
college, treasurer.
Prof. II. E. Bradford of the Uni
ersity of Nebraska and Dean J. V.
Breitwieser of North Dakota univer
sity were tha principal speakers at
the closing sessions Friday night. The
1934 district convention will be held
at Chadron.
nouncemc-nt of Speaker llainey when
he said congress would force com
jliance with the program by the pack
ers if they should prove to be recalci
trant. Many county delegations came
bearing banners demanding CO cent
corn, others sought 70 cent corn, or
federal loans in that amount of ware
housed corn.
Falling Commodity Markets
! Eighteen Cents Higher.
! Washington. The administration
pushed the price of newly mined gold
still higher, supported by a formal
opinion from Attorney General Cum
mings upholding the legality of the
method chosen for carrying out Prcs-
I ident Roosevelt's new monetary pol
icy. The gold quotation was fixed at
$31.54, a figure IS cents higher than
that of Wednesday, and 48 to 57
cents above the price of the metal on
th? London market.
Nevertheless, news from the com
modity markets brought the first re
verse in the chief executiv's campaign
for a lusher general price levl to
be achievd by artificially raising the
Johnson to Head prkc of gold. Wheat fell off 2. to 3
cents a bushel, cotton 50 to C5 cents
a bale an dleading stocks 1 to 3 dol-
lars a share. Officiate, however, ex
Washington. Formally ordering r.resse(1 no discouragement. A steady
reorganization of NRA's staff, Hugh continuation of the upward trend of
S. Johnson created a new compli- Monday and Tuesday was hardly to
ance division which will have charge have been expected, they said. They
saw onthing in the day's develop-
ill intr in InHl'nntn thilt t V k rpAlinmlP
Mrs. Homer Sylvester, who is at
the St. Joseph hospital at Omaha, is
reported as showing some improve
ment and had a very- restful night,
messages to the members of the fam
ily state. Mrs. Sylvester was in very
critical condition for some time after
reaching the hospital and the mem
bers of the family were greatly wor
ried, but the reassuring news from
the hospital has cheered the f.-.mlly
very much.
Nfcw Compliance
Setup Shaped to
Guard Ail Codes
General Hugh S.
Division Created Through His
Own Reorganization.
Farm Strike
Picket is Killed
in Wisconsin
Grander Felland Shot by Guard Con
voying Produce Truck Vio
lence During Day.
Talk of Raising
Amount for Use
in Public Works
President and Advisers Consider Ask
ing Congress to Boost Total
to Five Biilions.
Wiiy Hospitals Use
a Liquid Laxative
Found the Birds Timid
Mayer Arthur Dinges, Herman L.
Bornemeier, farmer, A. D. Stromer,
rural mail carrier and C. D. Ganz, the
banker, were cut in the wilds, where
they spent the week end and were
able to get all the pheasants they
were entitled to, but found that the
birds did not come up and ask to be
shot, for they had a time in getting
their quota with the birds more timid
than in j-ears heretofore. The speed
of the pheasant makes the hunting
of them snlendid sport and it takes
one with a quick draw and ready aim
to pull down everyone they fire at.
Lester Frolith and Wendell Kitzell
comprised another pair cf pheasant
hunters who went out by themselves
and got all the law allows, but like
wise had a time in getting them.
They enjoyed their trip however, and
the sport of chasing through the corn
fields of the northwest without hav
ing to throw the corn into the wagon.
l7akes Change in Store
The Barkhurst store has been
given a thorough coins over in the
matter of re-arrangement of the in
terior and plans for displaying their
goods and sure they hav? worked
wonders with the change. The can
ned goods now occupy the north wall
and present a neat appearance. The
ether goodj are all grouped and ar
ranged for quick selection by the cus
tomer, who has opportunity to see
just what he is getting. There are
fruit display stands and a special scap
display, also a department for confec
tions and tobacco. Then comes the
market department, with a display of
Jueats and kindred items and also the
dry goods and shoe departments still
in another place and withal the en
tire scheme Is very pleasing and so
well arranged that tho work of serv
ing their customers will be greatly
reduced.
Visited in Iowa Few Days
Mr. and Mrs. Simon Rehmeier and
the children, with their grandmother,
the mother of Mrs. Rehmeier, left
last Thursday for Clarion, Iowa, at
which place they visited with Louis
Ilenricksen and family, a brother of
Mrs. Rehmeier. and at Lattimer
Iawa. where they visited with a sis
ter cf Mrs. Rehmeier, Mrs. Jack Mad
i6cn and family, they driving over to
the elster etata in their new V-8 Ford
which is serving tbera splendidly and
PLEA OF BOY IS EFFECTIVE
director.
chairman
board, which will be the final Nil A
agency to act upon charges of viola
tion before tohse which defy adjust
ment of differences are turned over
of enforcement cf permanent codes
thruout the country. Johnson
head this section of NRA himself, tiieory behind Mr. Roosevelt's poiicy
pending appointment of a permanent was unsound.
He will likewise act as The day also saw the issuance of
of a national compliance an executive order by President
Roosevelt, authorizing the Recon
struction corporation to make the
gold purchases and the publication
of treasury regulations instructing
to the federal trade commission or RliRts arHi aay offices i:i the man
ner in which gold is to be handled.
Mr. Roosevelt's order authorized the
tha attorney general for punitive ac
tion.
Trenton, ZI. J. Adam Schmidt, a
12-ycar-old schoolboy who worried
about a $5,400 mortgage on the fam-
ly home, found out he won't have to
'sleep under a tree" as he wrote Pres-
dent Roosevelt he was willing to do.
Puzzled a bit by the legal machinery
but fully cognizant of the significance
of it all, Adam was jubilant as fore
closure of mortgages on his parents'
home in Trenton was averted, the first
n New Jersey to benefit under the
Home Owners Loan corporation.
Adam, his mother and father, Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Smith, and a friend
of the family, were present in the of
fice of G. F. Shanley, state manager,
to see the two mortgages cancelled
and receipts for corporation bonds
made out to the mortgagee. The fam
ily's plight, resulting from six
months' unemployment by the fath
er, long had weighed heavily on
young Adam. Then he heard in school
about "some things" the president
was doing in Washington.
Unknown to the famliy, he ad
dressed a letter to "Pres. Roosevelt."
"Please, sir. Pres. Roosevelt," he
said. "I feci sorry for my mother.
Mother cries day and night because
we are going to lose our home. There
are seven in the family, counting me.
Please, sir. Pres. Roosevelt," he con
cluded, "I always worry that some
thing might happen to my mother.
Please, can't you do Eoim thing for
our family? l am willing to sieep
under a tree, but I feel sorry for my
mother and father and sister and the
rest of the family. Thanks a thcu-
and times."
The boy's letter was forwarded
from Washington to Shanley, who investigated.
PINCH0T ON LIQUOR ISSUE
The order also set up a trade a?so- mjnts anj assay offices to receive on
ciauon envision unaer i nomas s. consignment for the RFC such gold
Hammond of Chicago whose job will as they are satisfied met with the re
be "to prepare plans for and to ad- qUircments of the order, and dele-
vise the organization of industry for gate(i the necessary authority to the
industrial self government." 1 nrv to vowIvp hnld flisnnpp of
Important in the enforcement set- the mtt:i. The treasury regulations
up was an order for procedure by supplemented this with exact direc
which complaints will not be referred tions on tlie procedure to be followed,
to the code trade authorities by re- the wnoie surrounded by restrictions
gional officers unless specifically or- i:itended to prevent those who have
dercd by Johnson himself, so the ad-' heM gold il violation of previous
ministration will retain a maximum anti-hoarding orders from taking ad
cf policing control. During creation vane Qt the new and lusher price.
of a permanent regional organization,) The United States mints and assay
district managers of the department ofrice3 are hereby authorized, sub
cf commerce in two score principal ject to such regulations as may from
cities will be charged with receiving time to timc be preScribed by the sec
and seeking to dispose of all com- rctary o tne treasury, to receive on
plaints of cede violations in their re- consignment geld which the mint or
spective areas. 'assay office to which the gold is de-
The remainder of the NRA staff iivere(i is satisfied has been recovered
was diviacc: into tour units which from naturai deposits in the United
will be in the charge of deputy ad- states or any piace subject to the
miniotrators K. M. Simpson. Mai- jurisdiction thereof,
coim Muir, C. C. Williams and A. D. ; The Rpc is authorized, subject to
Whiteside. Each will have a num- such regulations as may from time to
ber of the seventeen other deputy ad- time be prescribed by the secretary
ministrators under him. together of the terasury, to acquire gold which
with a complete staff of legal, eco- has been received 'cm consignmnet by
nomie. industrial, labor and consum- a United states mint or assay office,
er advisors permanently assigned to and to hol1 earmark for foreign ac
each section. count, export, or otherwise dispose of
Simp-on will have charge of met- Euch goid." state Journal,
als, coal, automobiles, shipping and :
Madison, Wis. G under Felland, aj
farm strike picket of the town of
Burke, was shot and fatally wound
ed at the junction of highways No.
15 and 51 by a guard in an automo
bile convoying a produce truck. The
convoy car fled with its occupants
immediately after the shooting and
the guard's name was not learned.
Felland died a short time later in a
hospital here.
Fellow pickets said that they were
massed at the highway intersection
and that the convoy car stopped when
it reached them, the truck following.
There was a movement toward the
truck and a guard suddenly pulled a
revolver from hi3 pocket and lired.
the rackets said, pointblank into!
their ranks. Felland fell mortally
wounded.
Another man was near death and
a dozen others were nursing minor
injuries as violence supplanted peace
ful persuasion.
Witnesses said the truck proceed
ed into Madison. Two motorists who
refused to give their names reported
they had "stopped to see the excite
ment" and when they saw the men
in the truck were armed, they went
back to their car. That was before
the shot was fired. They said they
followed the truck into Madison but
lost it.
At Marshfield, Theodore Weber was
hovering between life and death in a
hospital. He had been struck over
the head by pickets who demanded
he turn back with a load of fence
post3 he was hauling from Tripoli to
Marshfield. Physicians held little
hope for his recovery.
related industries; Muir, construe-;
State College, Ta. Gifford Pin-
shct, Pennsylvania's dry governor,
appsaled to wets and drys to join in
a fight "to keep liquid and politics
apart." The governor reaffirmed his
position as a dry in an address before
the Penn State Christian association,
but added that "nothing is more ob
vious than that the American people
have decided against the egihteenth
amendment."
He appealed for a "working com
bination" of wets and drys to prevent
return of conditions that existed be
fore prohibition. And he listed these
objections:
"The saloon must not come back.
Liquor must be kept out of politics.
Liquor must not be sold without re
straint. The iniquitous Brooks high
license law, wnicn dragged our
judges into liquor politics, must not
return. The eale of liquor must be
so handled as to discourage bootleg
tion, machinery, lumber, and metal
products; Williams, chemicals, leath
er, and miscellaneous manufactures;
Whiteside, trades and services, rang
ing from banks to barber shops, tex
tiles and clothing.
Johnson also announced that.
pending formal election by the retail
trades of members of the national re-
tail trade council and the national
retail drug trade council, the admin
istrative committees for the retail
code, the board of directors of the
several trade associations subserib-
i lg to the codes would name the coun
cil members. Each association will
have two repersentatives of the coun
cil except that two shoe retailers as
sociations will have one representa
tiv3 ?ach. I
Also issued were instructions tc
O. B. Ryder, chief of tli3 imports di
vision, not to wait for complaints but
to begin immediately a study of im-j
port statistics to be kept up to date
so NRA may know whether any prod-
VALENTINE KL0TZ IS QUEEN
Valentine Klotz, Lincoln, was
crowned queen at the farmers' for
mal, annual college of agriculture so
cial event, at the Student Actviities
i building Friday . 'night. Mildred
Tickler, Inland, was Miss Klotz' maid
of honor.
Miss Klotz is a senior in the col
lege of agriculture, majoring in home
economics, a member of Tassels, wom
en's prep organization, and of Mor
tar Board. She was chosen by popu
lar student vote in the college. About
150 couples attended the "formal"
garbed in ging'am dresses and over
alls. An autumn motif was carried
out in the decorations for the ball
room and stage on which Miss Klotz
was presented. Freshmen boys car
ried jack-o-lanterns to the affair,
while freshmen girls were required to
wear "beads" made of corn.
Washington. President Roosevelt
and his advisers are considering ask
ing congress to increase the huge
fund set aside for public works con
struction in an effort to stimulate em
ployment. Congress last spring au
thorized the expenditure of Z.Z bil
lions. To date $2,105,21G,525 has
been allocated to federal and non
federal projects in all parts of tha
country. About a quarter of this has
actually been withdrawn from ttu'
treasury.
The exact amount which the pres
ident may ask of the next cor.giess
has not been determined, altho Sec
retary Ickes, public works administra
tor, is known to favor an ad iiticr.al
1.7 billions. Enough to bring the to
tal for public works to 5 b;llio:i.
Pending a decision of the amount
of new public works to be sanctioned
Mr. Roosevelt is deferring completiop
of his fiscal program for the ensuing
year. He expects a report next week
from the special committee invent!
gating proposed taxes on liquor in the
event of repeal. A tentative deadline
on which the present 3.3 billions s
to be allotted has been set for Jan. 1.
A rapidly mounting number of ap
plications from states, smaller politi
cal subdivisions and private sources
for funds has convinced Ickes that
manv communities will have to be
turned down unless the fund is aug
mented. In addition, several hun
dred millions must yet be taken from
the fund for the federal housing cor
poration. This corporation will direct
actively the erection and leasing of
low cost housing in all parts of tho
country.
Creation of the corporation and
the allocation of a large sum to it
would leave less than a billion to
meet several thousand applications
now at the public works administra
tion.
Fonntain Pens and Pencils of every
description for school at the Bates
Bock Store. The store that tries to
have just what yon want.
If you spend your money in dis
tant cities or with mail order
houses, you will retard the return
of prosperity to Cass caunty.
Hospitals and drnrtors have alwavs
used liquid laxatives. And the public
is fast returning to laxatives in liquid
form. Do you know the reasons?
The dose of a liquid laxative can ba
measured. The action can te con
trolled. It forms no habit: you need
not take a "double dose" i day r
two later. Nor will a mild liquid
laxalire irritate the kidneys.
The ris'it liquid laxative brine; a
perfect movement, and there is
no discomfort at the time, or after.
The wrong cathartic may kerp
you constipated as Ion;; as you keep
on usin it! And the habitu.:! use of
irrit.ilinq salts, or rf powerful drun
in the hiqhly concentrated form of
pills anil tablets may prove injurious.
A week with a properly prepared
liquid laxative like l)r. Caldwell's
Syrup Pepsin will tell you a lot. A
few weeks' time, and your boweM
can be "as regular as clockwork."
Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is an
approved liquid lavitive which all
druggists keep ready fur usc.lt makes
an ideal family laxative; clTcctive for
all ages, and rnay be given tiia
younirest child. Member N. iL A.
Waich
The Hallowe'en
Parade
In a Suit of Good
Warm Underwear
Course it might be well to wear
a few other clothes over them
or a mask, o: something
but the idea wc are trying to
get across is: We've loads of
high grade Underwear, and it3
all priced below replacement
costs. That is neither pooey or
hocey it just is. So, get your
share of this unusual bargain!
Try to beat
our prices
Then smile
with the Hooey
Bird!
Philip ffhivzcij
The Largest Exclusive Hocey Sale
in North America
H
SELLING AND
hi
b JIT? C"TT
HALLOWE'EN FROLIC
The Newest
Fur Collars
EUROPEANS PUZZLED BY NKA
-State Journal.
PROPS AT LEAVENWORTH
ucts are cutting into domestic mar-.
kets unduly. Ryder also was given' Washington. Europe was describ
authority to question witnesses at ed by Senator McAdoo as "a bit dazed
any hearing which may be held by about tne American situation because
T,o tariff onmmlwlnn on r-nmnlaints ther d not Understand" the domestic
originating unuer uie inuusiriai aci. -I
. vlpwa in n nrpss eonfprpncp on Ills
( ...
! return to the capitol from a sumr.
in Europe.
I He said he had found England "in
Leavenworth. A secret depart
ment cf Just'ce investigation was re
ported under way at the federal
prison. Selection of prisoners for
transfer to Alcatraz Island in San
Francisco bay or efforts to identify
Harvey Bailey, Albert liates and
George Kelly as part:c:pant3 in the
Kansas City plaza massacre were con
sidered as possible reasons for the
activity.
the most hopeful frame of mind" of
any country he had visited and busi
ness was better there than anywhere.
Asked about conditions in Russia, to
which he made a flying trip, McAdoo
said, "you cannot judge conditions
in Russia three days."
LOST OR STRAYED
, I
If you have sometnina to soil.
Seven head Shorthorn tattle. Any
one knowing whereabouts please
notify Carl Schlophoff, Wabash. Neb.
7 ArsaO v,As3 ... (
ml i iff w
G( f fj $9
.-&reS37 'IS fat,
and Choicest
New Fabrics
0.75
27
IF YOU KNOW COAT VALUES you will
agree that this is cne cf the mcst remark
able and outstanding offerings of the sea
scr.. V7c suggest that you shep r.ct7 . . .
while tho quantity lasts. They are all
finely tailored ccat3 of excellent fabrics and
bcentifcl furs . . . They are silk lined and
rlincd . . . ard every model is fahion-
th every new style line . . . making
in ccats a garment ycu will le able to
wear . . . even next season and net be
lack-slyle conscious. Women's, Misses' sizes.
You must see these f3brir to anpre iate
the extreme values offered. . . . There are
hcuclen, ruedes and creepy woojena there
is every new weave and of the finest wool
ens. . . . There is body to these fabrics,
which insures long wear.
T3
mm
The Shop of Personal Service
with which they are well pleasad.
ging by making it unprofitable."
try a Journal Want-Ad. )
o23-4td