PLATTSSIOTJTH SEMI - WEEKLY JOURNAL PAGE THREE MONDAY, JANUARY 2S, 1S35. i ft 5 paESE Modern Three-Minute Way to Esse Sore Throat 1 Crush and stir 3 BAYER Aspirin Tablets in a third glass of water. J Gargle Thoroughly throw your I head way back, allowing a little to Do not rinse mouth. 3 If you have a cdd. take 2 BAYER . Aspinn Tablets. Drink full flass of ! watnr. Repeat if necessary, f otiowing (taeniae package. State Monopoly in Liquor Busi- cOj v- 4 O. . Jl ' Cass. It provides ness 1 roposeciticn. wank, Many Measures Brought Before the Legislature to Cover Liquor Control-Local Option. In the flood cf house biils intro duced Friday was one by Richards giving to the state a monopoly, net alone in the liqucr business but in the business of selling beer, wines and other drinks, ail profits to the stale general fund to be used as re placement for benefit of payers of real estate tax. The measure, unlike four previous liquor control bills, is short. It car- neb iucti un ua iuu -i' - ; liquor commission, it propusi-b ! ,int;nn -,f iinn nnn i ..iw.i v-,". "created and into which existing OldH.R. 510. much discussed and: boards u .g disputed 20 percent county salary , claimed tQ as3Ume additioRal serv. leduction Dili oi two years ago. iiao reappeared under new number and with Vcgt as introducer. It strikes at salaries of more than $1,000, same t- t-r vr o T-c ncrn whirh TSSR- . . , . i ed both houses Dut was vetoeu u the governor. Haycock, Burr and Barnes intro duced a bill extending from 64 to 70 years retirement age for the Ne braska adjutant general now reported to be C3. It would rcrmit his con tinuation as head of the military de partment for seven years. General New Kidneys U yon cm Ud trade your neglected, tired and lazy Kidneys for new ones, you would auto Bia Ucally ret rid of Sight Rising. Nervoosueaa. JJuxmesP Rheumatism. Burnin. Itchme and Acidity. To correct functional kidney disorders, try the guaranteed Uoctor a special prescriD. toon called CYSTEX Si-tex). Mus? fiTS W in 8 days or money back, it mi D.-utX'iti. Something to V,'; 'i'- K Ih-Yf- - YYY Y '"' ' Ii YL 4 I - . - i -1. X ' K u M f?h- t. ;V.H . Y J'0 S. J?StZ3ti U , ; " v V ;'rSome idea of what the bathing girls will be wear ing and, ahem, leaving off on the beaches next summer migm oe gaineu irum inc th latest stvles in beach IreneCo!man, erstwhile film Ease Pain, Rawness, Soreness Almost Instantly Here's a safe, modern and effective way to relieve sore throat. A way that eases the pain, rawness and? irritation in as little as two or three minutes. Many doctors advise it and millions are following this way. Try it. All you do i crush and stir 3 BAYER Aspirin Tablets in H glass of water and gargle with it twice as pictured here. (If you have signs of a cold, take BAYER Aspirin and drink plenty of water.) Get real BAYER Aspirin Tablets; for this purpose. They disintegrate J quickly and completely, making a: gargle without irritating particles. BAYER Aspirin prices have been' decisively reduced, so there's no' point now in accepting other than the real Bayer article you want. F25EES en Cnin firr u ;.'!. Cadkaly Tyicd ' e - . Paul was appointed about 16 years ago. A bill proposing to perpetuate names of members of this 50th ses- sion was introduces oy .mckiw ui es for an appropria- for placement of bronzs tablets in legislative halls upon which shall be engraved names of officers and members of this ses sion. A measure by Sullenberger pro vides that taxes on personal property shall be a lien from an after date of assessment. Another bill pumped from the busy hopper Friday con tains the state FERA set-up as pro posed in model sent out to the sev eral states from Washington. Representatives Hyde, Schroeder, Hastings and others" sponsor a bill providing for a comprehensive co ordination of the public welfare pro pram, representing various groups of ! civic and industrial groups. Dis- buraement of public relief funds may be administered thru the department . ices ss well as meeting the present emergency. A nonpay, nonpartisan commission is to administer the act. j and the plan is set up with the idea of avoiding duplication. For that :vr.son the bureau cf health, labor and social service are brought under its provisions, as also child welfare. SUFFERS DTJTJUY Mrs. Harry Wilson, who is em ployed at the plant of the Norfolk Packing Co., was severely injured Wednesday evening when returning heme from work shortly before 7:30. Mrs. Wilson fell and in doing so suf fered the fracture of one arm. The patient is resting as easily as possible under the circumstances. Phone the news to lo. 6. Look Forward to backless knit suit; right, Lorett Neuberger, model ing a shorts outfit, fashioned after the bandanas worn by natives in the Caribbean regions; below, Ethel Farrell showing her suit made of lace no una wjuui, attire. Left, Miss 1 beauty clad in her J foling.Oh,bojrl Nebraska Deaf Down Platters by 24 to 18 Score Game Hotly Contested and Repeatedly Tied Until Last Few Moments of Hectic Battle. From Saturday's Dany The Nebraska School for the Deaf of Omaha, which had won six and lost five of their games in the season, last evenig chalked up their seventh win in which they took the blue and white Platters by the score of 24 to IS. The game was a see-saw from the first quarter and neither team held the lead for a long period until a scoring rally by the NSD netted them a margin too wide for the locals to threaten. In the opening quarter Hendrix and Wooster each registered to se cure four points while the visitors were annexing five. The second period saw the two teams show much fire as the visitors fought to hold their narrow lead against the efforts of the local sharp shooters and at the end of the period the score was 10 alike. Hendrix brought the Platter to tal to 12 at the opening of the third but the visitors came back to tie up the score when an under basket shot by Wooster gave the Platters a two point lead that was wiped out in the next few seconds for a 14 alike tie at the close cf the period. When the fourth period opened Ne braska Deaf advanced their score to 1C which was tied by Cotner a few moments later with a well placed shot from the side. Visions of victory came w hen Wooster sank a field goal to place the locals in the lead and with the game fading fast away. The Nebraska Deaf, however, started a rally that netted them three field goals and with the game in seconds the desperate efforts of the Platters to secure at least a tie was fruit less and the visitors retired victor ious. The floor wcrk of the visitors was excellent and they carried plenty of fight in the rangy five that was used throughout practically the entire game. Hendrix was the chief scorer for the Platters who had many chances at the basket but were unable to make the ball stick as it rolled around the hoop only to fall score less. The box score: Plattsmouth FG FT FF TP Wooster, f 3 0 0 6 Hendrix. f 5 0 2 10 Cotner. c 10 12 Case, g 0 0 0 0 Forbes, g 0 0 10 Hula, g 0 0 0 0 18 TP 7 2 2 0 11 2 K. S. D. FG FT PF Sparks, f 3 11 Rosenblatt, f 10 1 Sieskal, f 10 1 Auxier, c 0 0 1 Garner, g 5 10 Cafferty, g 10 1 11 5 24 Referee, Parish. on the Beaches SAY GIRL FATALLY KICKED Vale, Ore. Spurred by public In dignation, officials launched an in quiry to determine whether Phillls Westfall, 9, had been fatally kicked by small boys. Deputy Sheriff Leav itt raid the girl was tormented by four boys of her own age on her way home from school Jan. 9. When she was almost home they began to kick her, he said. In terror she rushed back to the school yard. Her mother, critically ill, saw the girl's plight but was unable to go to her rescue. About a week later the girl's plight but was unable to go to her rescue. About a week later the girl became seriously ill, was re moved to a hospital where she sank into a coma and died a few days later. Dr. Charles Palmer, Ontario sur geon who attended her, said a blow she received on the abdomen could have caused her death. He said he found indications of catarrhal jaun dice, but suggested a post-mortem examination. Million Seed ling Trees are Requested Cherry County Farmers Alone Ask for 23.000 to Plant Douglas Second with 10,400. Applications for Clarke - McNary seedlings and transplants distributed thru the agricultural college exten sion service this week totaled more than a quarter million. Earl G. Max well, state extension forester, says. More than a million trees will prob ably be ordered before the applica tion deadline is reached. Cherry county farmers continue to show the most interest in the tree planting program. They have applied for 23,000 trees to be planted for windbreak or woodlot purposes this spring. Douglas county stands sec ond with 10,400 trees applied for. Butler with 7,700 is third. Other counties showing unusual interest in the tiee planting are Howard, Adams, Dawson, Jefferson, Valley, Phelps, Nemaha, Lancaster, Fillmore and Holt. Broadleaf and evergreen varieties are again available to all Nebraska farmers. The latter trees are grown on the national forest at Halsey and will be shipped from that point this spring, while the broadleaf trees are in storage at Fremont. Last year 1,123,000 such seedlings and trans plants were distributed to Nebraska farmers thru the extension service and its agricultural agents. SENATE VOTES FOE INQUIRY Washington. An nivestigation of the government's land and water policies was ordered by the senate The inquiry was authorized In a resolution introduced by Senator O'Mahoney and approved by the sen ate without debate. The resolution authorized an appropriation of 1 5, 000 to finance the inquiry by a spe cial committee. The committee was directed to "make a survey and study of all land and water policies and projects ot the several executive agencies and establishments of the government and to report to the senate, as soon as practicable, the results of its sur vey, together with its recommenda tion for necessary legislation." I MONEY 1 for 8 mm g Prompt Closing fl Low Commission a S No Stock g 2 Terms and Payments u to Suit x 2 CALL OR SEE J Jloward Davis 3 OFFICE OF A SDuxbury & Davis 5 z Plattsmouth M River Work at Mouth of Platte is Picking Up Kansas City Bridge Co. Calls for Additional Fores and Quar ries Start Operations. The Kansas City Bridge company, contractors on the revetment work along the Platte river north of this city, Friday started a larger force on the job and made call for thirty-five workmen who were supplied by the local re-employment office. The company is moving their land driver today from the north side of the Platte to the scene of operation on the south, making four of the land drivers that are now in service on the scene of activity. The land driver is being moved by the Mc Maken Transfer Co., to the scene of activity and will be ready for service at once. Fifty car load3 of material have been ordered sent to the scene cf the work and twenty-four of these are now on the siding of the company and ready to be unloaded at the scene of construction. With the opening of this line of river work the local re-employment office has received word that sixty one had been placed at work in the Jasper quarries at Weeping Water, where stone is being quarried out for shipment to other points where river and construction work is in progress. The Pickens quarry of this place is also taking on additional forces as they will be called on to supply a great deal of the stone used in this section of the river program. The work on the Farney project here is still closed down until the opening of the river when their ac tivities can again be started. Second Corn-Hog Program is Being Told to Farmers More Freedom in Use of Acreage Is Feature of New Contract Preliminary Meetings. Details of the 1935 corn-hog pro gram are being explained to Nebras ka farmers in practically every coun ty this week, as preliminary educa tional meetings get under way. Ap plications for contracts are being signed in a few counties. District conferences with allotment committee members and agricultural agents at twelve points opened the 1935 program. Elton Lux and M. N. Lawritson of the state AAA office, together with district supervisors, were in charge. The corn-hog program is designed to adjust probable production to probable demand and to prevent, if possible, a series of violent ups and downs in corn and hog production and prices. Lux told those in the con ference. The normal tendency after a dry year is for increased acreage and production of corn. Livestock numbers are so low there will be less demand for corn next fall. Farmers in the drouth territory without feed and breeding stock will be slow to recover from the drouth By the time they have corn and hogs to market, the allotment committee men were told, everyone will be "back In the game" and prices, with out some adjustment, would prob ably be low. The new 1935 contract calls for an adjustment of 10 percent below the corn acreage base and the hog base establishment for 1932-33. Signer can take up to SO percent of their corn base and get corn benefit pay ments for it. There are no contract ed acres, and Bigners can use the land taken out of corn for any other crop. They may also increase the acreage under the plow if they wish. FARMERS Save time and money by having your feed ground on your farm by Beezley's Portable mill. Call Bar row's Hi-way Service Station, Platts phone 3503, or Jeff Sals berg, Louis ville phone 1703, for information. DEAD ANIMALS Dead animals removed free of charge. Telephone South Omaha Ren dering Works, Market 4626. Reverse charges. n5-tfw FARM FOR RENT 200-acre Cass county farm for rent. See J. M. Leyda, Plattsmouth. J22-ld; 2sw Duy now ALL tne things you need. Prices are going higher, so don't wait longer. Manley Grain Company of Manley, Nebraska BALANCE SHEET December 31, 1934 Current Assets CASH: On Hand 5 102.10 Manley State Bank (Sched. A - Accounts Receivable (Sched. A-2) Inventories (Sched. A-3) Total Current Assets Investments First Real Estate Mortgage (Cass County Farm) Fixed Assets Land, Buildings and Equipment T.psr Allowance for Denreciation Residence Property Less Allowance for Depreciation Furniture and Fixtures Less Allowance for Depreciation Total Fixed Assets TOTAL ASSETS NET Capital Stock Outstanding Surplus January 1, 1934 Less: Dividends Paid Add: Net Profit Year 1924 NET WORTH, December 31, 1934 MANLEY NEWS Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Rauth were in Plattsmouth last week, where they were doing some shopping. Mrs. J. C. Rauth has been suffer ing from a very severe cold and sore throat, but is reported as feeling some better at this time. Ralph Murphy was a visitor in Union last Monday, Avhere he went, along with several hundred others from all parts of the country, to view the wreck on the Missouri Pacific. Mr. and Mrs. John C. Rauth en tertained at their home last Sunday, having as guests for the day Mrs. Joan Carter of Weeping Water, and Miss Sue Mockenhaupt, of Manley. All enjoyed a very pleasant time. Theo Harms and August Krecklow were called to Omaha on Tuesday of last week, where they went to look after some business, Mr. Harms pur chasing goods for the store which they brought home in their truck. Father Patrick Harte and John Gruber were in Union last Monday, where they went to view the wreck on the Missouri Pacific and to see the engine being placed back on the track from its reclining position alongside the right-of-way. Mrs. William Casey, who has been afflicted with a very sore toe, caused by infection, found it necessary to have the nail of the toe removed. The operation was very painful, but it got the desired results and the injured member is now showing marked im provement. Otto Schafer was in Manley last Wednesday on his way back from a trip to Greenwood, where he had gone to get a mule which he had pur chased and which will be offered for sale at the horse and mule sale Mr. Shafer will hold on January 31st. See his ad elsewhere in this issue of the Journal and if you are in need of good work horces or mules attend the sale, where there will be plenty of them sold to the high bidders. Held Annual Meeting The Manley Grain company, com posed largely of farmers of this vicin ity, held its annual meeting one day last week. Reports, were read, Ehow ing a nice business and pleasing profit in spite of the drouth that prevailed last year. The audit of the books for 19 34 had been completed and all the figures were laid before the stock holders. A page from this audit, best known as the "Balance Sheet" is be ing published in this issue of the Semi-Weekly Journal. John C. Rauth, Joseph Wolpert and A. Steinkamp, whose term3 a3 direc tors were expiring, were all re-named for the ensuing year. Under the continued management of Mr. Hawes, the stockholders are looking forward to a profitable year's business in 1935. Ia. Charge of New Store The Earl E. May company, of Shen andoah, Iowa, opened a new store at Mason City, Iowa, last Saturday, Jan uary 19th, and have placed Claude Breckenridge in charge as manager. Mr. Breckenridge has had much ex perience in merchandising and has been an employe of the May company for a number of months, serving as manager of a store in Dakota and later in the stores operated by the company at South Omaha and Des Moines. He is capable and accommo dating and should make good in his new position as manager. l) 4,921.. it 525. 31 5.50O.OIJ 1 1 ,04'J.2'J ;,!) f Art 10.19C.03 3.17C.92 J7.0in.ll 1,620. 00 115.S5 2.400.00 7 80.00 4 54.33 33S.4 8 5 2 4. S 'J 4.1; WORTH 3.325."0 18.34S.17 50C.25 17.S41.92 3.C37.24 21,479.10 52 1.SU4.1C (Signed) Lester M. Buckley, Certified Public Accountant. Discuss Public Yorks Today at Weeping Water Several From This City Present to Discuss Work That Might Be Secured Thru PWA. From Thursday's Dally In response to the request of Con gressman Henry C. Luckty that th" counties in this district Bt-h ct proj ects that might be started under the PWA to relieve the unemployment situation, a number from this city were in attendance at Weeping Wa ter. It is desired to have all of th" prepositions lined up so that when the new rrogram of government work is started that the various commun ities will have their plans in con crete form to be presented. There were a number to attend the conference from all of the towns and cities of the county and to dis cuss how the plans could best be prepared. A. L. Tidd, chairman of the work ing men's council, Judre A. II. Dux bury and T. T. McM asters were among those attending from this city to assist in the project planning. Horse & Mule Sale Consisting of 30 Horses and 5 Kules At the Otto Schafer farm. 6 mile9 west and north of Murray; C mile3 east and north of Manley, on gravel highwaj' No. 1, on Thursday, Jan. 31st starting at 12:30 p. m. Lurtch will be served at noon by Ladies' Aid of Eight Mile Grove Lutheran church. One team black Jack Mules, S and 9 years old. weight 2900; One team of brown Jack Mules, 6 and 7 years old. weight 2S50; One bay Jack Mule. 9 years old, weight 1100. One team bay mares, coming 5 and 7 years old. weight 2900; One team black geldings, cominp 5 years old. weight 320 0; One team gray geldings, coming 4 and 5 y'ars old, weight 2S50; One team black fold ings, 6 and 9 years old, weight 3'5o; One team, black mare in foal and gelding. 4 and 7 years old, weight 2S50; One team, bay and rone mare in foal. 9 and 10 years old, weight 2900; One team bay gelding, smooth mouth, weight 2700; One bay mare. C years old, weight 1350; One bay mare in foal, 6 years old, weight 1250; One bay gelding, coming 5 years old. weight 1350; One gray gelding, 7 years old, weight 1500; One brown gelding, 7 years old. weight 1409; One brown gelding, saddle broke, 9 years old, weight 1250; One bay gelding, smooth mcuth, weight 1200; Sorrel gelding, coming 5 jears old. weight 12 00; One brown gelding, corning 3 years old, weight 1350; One coming 3 year old spotted saddle pony; Ore black sucking colt. The teams in the sale are all well matched. Have had some on the place several years and extra good horses. Bought most of th? single horses in South Dakota and north western Nebraska. Bought from men who had no feed to winter them on. Thsy all will make good work horses. Have got two extra good teams of mules. TERMS OF SALE Six months time will be given on bankable notes drawing 8 per cent interest. No property to be removed until settled for. Otto Schafer &. Son REX YOUNG, Auctioneer. MURRAY STATE BANK, Clerk.