THE FRONTIER D. H. CRON IN, PUBLI8HER, * *ft O. TEMPLETON, Editor and Business Manager. ffciEILL, NEBRA8K( Claims Ownership of 240 Acres of Land Awarded to His Sisters Lincoln, Neb., Dec. ““—-(Special) — Kverard L. Merritt, Dixon county ! farmer, has appealed to the supreme ! court from a decision of the district oourt that awarded 240 of the 280 acres of land that he farms to his two sisters. His father had willed him the 40 upon which he had built ‘ his house, and the remainder to his sisters, who live at Hudson, Wls. He claimed that an oral agreement with his father was to the effect that If he went upon the land, broke It and cultivated It he should have It when his father died. Meanwhile he was to pay the father a small annual rental. He did so, and the lower court held that the existence of the lease was not consistent with his claim of ownership. In addition to losing the land the court ordered him to pay |l,000 rental to the sisters. NORMAL BOARD UACKS MAJORS Makes Record of Discharge of Professor Eason— Ends Controversy Lincoln, Neb., Dec. *. (Special)— In session here tihe state normal board made the record! read that Prof. J, Lawrence Eason had been dlsmlss ed from the teaching staff at Peru. Mr. Eaaon an id that President Tom Majors had dismissed him on his own authority, and got an order from the supreme court that allows fhim to test the right of the ooard) to dismiss him arbitrarily. President Conn, of Wayne, reported that carelessness on the part of the Architect made necessary the relay ing of the floor of the gymnasium at an expense of $600. TWO SET8 Ob CHILDREN CAUSE OF DIVORCE Columbus. Neb., Dec. (Special) •—Children of two families attempt ing to live under one roof resulted in Mrs. Mary Bennlng todpy obtaining a decree of divorce in tihe district court here. Mrs. Bennlng who was married to Gustave Bennlng in 1920 alleged her husband compelled her children from a previous marriage to go to work while they were still tinder 16 years when they should have been In school and called) them scrubs nnd cripples while the husband’s children were given fell the privileges. She charged that the final outcome her demands for her children's rights resulted in her husband attack ing her and tearing off all of her clothing. 8AYS WATER POWER IS TOO UNCERTAIN Lincoln, Neb., Dec. ‘'—(Special) — Talking to the Nebrasxa Manufac turers’ association, at its annual state convention, O. J. Shaw, general man ager of the Lincoln Traction Com pany, said that the water powers of Nebraska were too unreliable as a source of power, and that while elec trical energy was certain to be called upon more and mdre to drive the factory wheels, tho principal supply would come from plants that were $t out of the 274 developments that operated by steam. He said that only have been made along the streams or the state In the past 26 years are now In operation. The others had to be abandoned )>ecauae the supply of water was too variable, and the com panies could not retain their markets because of this fact. ALLEGED JAIL BREAKER GIVEN HIS FREEDOM Lincoln, Neb,, Dec. t* —(Special) —Charles Sapp, Boyd county man, was summarily released from the penitentiary today by order of the board of pardons. Sapp had been •ent up on conviction for breaking Jail. He had been held on a charge of having broken into a store and stolen a safe. Ths board members doubted whether an old man of his weight 110 pounds, could get away with a very heavy safe. This charge had never been pushed. His wife and three little children appeared before the board, and were assured he could return home with them. Sapp said that the jail was unlock ed, and he just got tired staying around waiting for court to meet, CAUSE OF PARALYSIS IS NOT DISCOVERED Fremont, Neb., Dec. —(D P )—A form of paralysis that baffled doctors took the life of Frank Sedlacek, 22, Prague, Neb., in a hospital here. Early in October Sedlacek awoke P om a noon-day nap to find his body paralyzed from the hips down. Ail efforts of physicians to diagnose the disease failed. Sedlacek was brought to a hospital here a few days ago. STOLEN CHECK8 FOUND UNDER A CULVERT Beatrice, Neb., Dec. -—(Special) —While building a culvert on the Cornhusker highway two miles from here Tuesday. John Jurgensen found a box containing $385 in checks and money order* taken from the safe of the Evana Laundry Company of Lin coln o* f « night of Thankaglving. when t-fselcamen blew open the safe after overpowering the night watch man. The bank book of the Evans (BSnpany waa f* ’Nl in the box. u • - WHERE DO YOU F1TT Where do you fit in this world o* ours, With Its hustle mid bustle and work; Are you one of the throng that help It along— Or are you with those who shirk? Do yoti hit the Job with a smile or frown; Do you carry a grouch all day; Are you one of the flock that watches the clock; Are you workin’ for more than pay? Is your Job man-sized and worth the while. When you’ve tallied up your score: Are you keepln’ fit and doin’ your bit. And perhaps a vv? bit more? Are you one of the average Just drift ing along; Are you listed as Profit or Loss; Are you stallin’ for time or startin' to climb; How much are you puttin’ across? Just take In your slack and count up your score, Locate what you’re aimin’ to hit— Don’t waste ammunition and all your ambition But find out just where you fit? —Frank A. Collins, lr» F irbes Magazine Sample Ret# Gouge. From the Kansan City Star. The freight rate from Superior, Neb., to Galveston, the nearest sea port, a distance of 934 miles, Is 60 cents per 10o pounds. The rate from Freeport, 111., to New Orleans, a distance of 938 miles. Is 27 cents per 100 pounds. Why should there be a difference of 23 cents for the same haul? Let the railroads and the Inter state. commerce commission answer the question. There are those differ ences between the states east of the Mississippi and those west ot the Mississippi. No one can logically explain It; no one can successfully defend It. Therefore, the victims of the dis crimination must ruthlessly attack It. Unless the attack Is ruthless, per sistent and successful, the states of the Missouri Valley will continue to pay tribute to competing states east of tha big river. _ Half a Century of Service. From the Chicago News. Railroad workers throughout the United States celebrated notable occasion last Sunday—the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen. The firemen's brotherhood Is one of the oldest labor organizations In the United States and It has an honor able history. It is proud to he able to say that it has never violated a contract with an employing company, and that when Individual members have done so it has been at the cost of their membership. From its beginning the object of the organization has been to give real service to Its members. In carrying out that policy It has disbursed more than $28,000,000 In death and disabllty claims. Among Its 118,000 members It has In force Insurance policies ag gregating $160,000,000, and in addition It conduct* accident Indemnity, fun eral-beneflt and pension departments. The firemen’s brotherhood Is a solid, substantial Institution. It Is not only of benefit to Its members but a credit to the cause of trade unionism. Use Fish As Money. From Popular Mechanics. Fish are used ns money along the Labrador coast where there arc no stores, according to reports, and trad ers accept the finny exchange In pay ment for their wares. Currency almost is useless, for the residents prefer to he paid in food and clothing for their services. The last fishing season was unusually poor, because the schools of fish which have regularly furnished the chief means of livelihood to the natives, deserted the waters along those shores. In order to relievo the conditions, a pa per mill that will give employment to many persons is being planned, and fishermen are raising goats to provide necessary food elements lacking In the usual diet of fish, white bread and tea. Two Senate Presidents? From the Springfield Republican. The Senate, unlike the House, Is a continuing body; two-thirds of its members, except for vacancies caused by death or resignation, are always fully qualified. But lts presiding of ficer, the vice president, has become President. It must elect for Itself a president pro tern, not merely to pre side during the vice president's oc casional absence, since there la no longer A vice president, but to pre side regularly. Its president pro tern during thS last Congress was Senator Cummins of Iowa. Although Senator Cummins reached the Senate nearly 20 years ago with a reputation as a progressive, even a radical, he Is not regarded with favor by present-day radicals. It is said to be a question whether they will agree to his re election as president pro tern and whether he would not, in any case, prefer to devote himself entirely to the chairmanship of the Senate com mittee on interstate commerce, the position in which he sponsored the Cummins railroad law. Some conservative Republicans in Washington expect that the little group of Senate radicals will demand a presiding officer from their own number, although tho limited discre tion which the presiding officer has under the Senate rules seems to make the prise hardly worth their turmoil. At least once In the his tory of the Senate there was a dead lock which resulted In the election of two presiding officers, a Repub lican and Democrat, who solemnly presided on alternate days. The feel ing seems to be that If the radical Republicans should remain obdurate the con. ervatlve Republicans might propose to the Democrats that that extraordinary solution be tried out again. What Mrs. Albes of Norridgewock Canned. "From the Portland (Ms.) Press Herald Norridgewock wants to know an other woman 83 years old in the state who haB canned ns many fruits and vegetables as Mrs. Samuel Albee In her own kitchen, besides do ing all her housework and sewing. Here is a list of the good things Mrs. Albee has canned this year: Sne proudly shows her friends 20 quarts of strawberries, eight quarts of early apples, three pecks of peaches, all peeled by hand; three bushels of sweet corn after It was husked; this was boiled on the cob, then cut and dried; 12 quarts of plums, four quarts of ripe tomatoes, four quarts of baked apples and eight qutt’ta of picklaa GIVE VAJGRTS FULL FREEDOM Jury Holds Three Not Guilty of Murder—Public Sent iment Revealed Seward, Neb., D'ic. ~V (Special)— Adolph Vajgrt, his wife and their daughter, Alba, 15 years old, who were charged with the murder on Anton Lana, farm hand, were found guilty by a jury in district court here, Saturday night, following a sensa tional trial whidh lasted almost two weeks. The three were charged with the murder of Lana, October 8, on the Vajgrt farm south of Milford. Yhe violent death of Lana was not denied by the three defendants, each of whom at some tome or otiher since the tragedy had confessed to killing the man. In extenuation of any part they may have had In causing his death the defendants set up and show ed by evidence produced in court that the farm hand (had, while a friend of the family and member of the house hold for several years, taken advan tage of the girl and was responsible for her delicate condition. It was alBO shown that he was about to leave without making effort to legally right the wrong he had done. Evidence produced In court showed the Vajgrt parents were simple home loving people, who thought much of their children. It was shown that an amateur or self-styled detective was largely responsible, through throats and brow-beating for tihe alleged confession of the three, which were bo in conflict with the facts in the case as developed in court that sen timent of the comrnunituy was all of the time on the side of the three de fendants. WEDD1NGGIFT MOST UNUSUAL Court Permits Jaii Sentence of Negro After Perform ing Marriage Ceremony Hastings, Neb., Dec. • (Special) —Cupid laughed at locksmiths when Horace Patterson, colored, who was serving a 30 day sentence In jail, was married by Judge Turbyfill to Miss Katherine Porter, also colored. Patterson had already served 16 days and the judge remitted the other 15 days, as a wedding gift. He had been sentenced on a dis orderly charge. WAYNE FAIR ASSOCIATION. IN ANNUAL MEETING. Wayne, Neb., Dec. " (Special)— The Wayne Fair and Livestock as sociation, elected the following of ficers for the coming year at the annual election of officers held Saturday afternoon: H. J. Miner, president, Wayne; H. B. Craven, Vice president, Wayne; Wm Von Seggren, Secretary, Wayne; R. W. Ley, treasurer, Wayne; directors, V'. A. Dayton, Carroll; A. G. Rorke, Hoskins; Harry Tidrick. Winslde; Wm. Blerman, Altona; Frank Erxle ben, Altona; Wm. Lessman, Wake field; John Huff, Wayne; Henry Korf, Wayne l E. F. Shields, Wayne. The race track and several new buildings will be completed before the next fair. COUNTY ATTORNEY JAILED FOR CONTEMPT. Hartlngton, Neb., Dee. «* —R. J. Millard county attorney < i Cedar county, who appeared in district court here to argue In two drfvoree cases, was called before the bench by the judge and reprimanded by the court. A charp reply on the part of the attorney caused the judge to send him to Jail for contempt to court. He was released, the next day, however upon making an apology. Millard Is the father of Scott Mil same judge last week to the charge of lard who pleaded guilty before tne robbing the office of the Cedar county treasurer. SHERIFF IS SUSPENDED BY THE GOVERNOR. Lincoln, Neb., Dec. ' —Gov. Bryan announces he has suspended Sheriff C. D. Quinton of Ca?a county, and had appointed E. H. Stewart, of Plattsmouth, to temporarily fill'the place. Gov. Bryan said Ihls action was taken following telephone conferences with Sheriff Quinton and ids counsel, and with District Judge Button at Plattsmouth. "Sheriff Quinton requested ine to relieve him of his duties," the gov ernor said, "And I have is. ued an order suspending him from perform ing ills official duties pending deter mination of the indictments brought against him.” Two grand jury indictments were recently returned against the sheriff in connection with alleged irregulari ties in the enforcement of the pro hibition law. A number of others were indicted at the same time. HUGE SUM PAID TO BEET GROWERS. Seottsbluff, Neb., Dec. - .Special) Over a million and a half dollars were distributed to beet raisers of the north Platte valley last week by (he Great Eastern Sugar company. The amount was divided as follows: Soot tsbluff factory. *507,129.17; Bering factory. *604,379.68; Bayard factory, *461,378.37; Mitchell factory, *202, 861.98. Total, *1,615.749 20. This i« made on the Initial payment of *5.50 a ton. It Is not quite as large aa tha sum paid the company for October of last year. i War's Effect on Memories. From a Paris Letter to the Derolt News. The war has had a bad effect on people’s memories, according to the officials of the Paris lost proper ty office. In the last year, forty thousand umbrellas have been left In public conveyances—double the pre war number. Nearly twenty-five thousand pocketbooks have been found and returned, whereas the av erage number before the war was about ten thousand. More than twenty thousand wrist watches are turned in annually, and almost as many handbags. The amount of lost and found Jewelry has increased enormously. The officials believe that this In crease In the business of the lost property office is not all due to the greater honesty of flnedrs In turning in what they discover, but that It Is caused by the excitements and suf ferings of the war day and the stra. n of the years that have followed the conflict. The average mind nrul the average nerves of today are not what they were ten years ago. Some curious requests ave received at the lost property office. Race track followers write in and ask the possibility of getting a h^ris of field glasses found on a race-course, be lieving (hat possession of such a pair would brlng^them good luck. But the prize letter was that of an English man, who, in a crisis of sea-sickness in the Mediterranean knocked his portfolio out of his pocket, and wrote to ask by any chasce his valuable papers had been discovered in the belly of some fish sold In the Paris markets. KEEPING HUMAN LOVE ALIVE Let brotherly love continue.—Hebr. 18:1. Love for our fellow men Is a thing that is easy to profess, but bitterly harrl to prove. The faults and follies of human na ture are so apparent, the unlovely and contemptible qualities of many people thrust themselves so sharply upon our notice and repel us so con stantly, that we are tempted to re lapse Into a life that Is governed by its disgusts. If we dwell in the atmosphere of a Christless world, if we read only those newspapers which chrolncle the crimes and meannesses of men, or those realistic novels which deal with the secret vices and corruptions of humanity, and fill our souls with the unspoken conviction that there Is no man good, no woman pure, how can we help despising and hating mankind? Who shall deliver us from this spirit of bitterness? None but Christ. If we will go with him, he will teach us not to hate our fellow men for what they are, but to love them for what they may become. He will teach us . to look, not for the evil which Is manifest, but for the good which is hidden. He will teach us not to despair, but to hope, even for the outcast of man kind Ar.d so, perchance, as we keep company with him, we shall learn the secret of that divine charity whle*. fills the heart with peace, and Joy, and quiet strength. Tea Party Revived. Prom the Boston Transcript. TIja- mayor of Boston will be on safe siistorical grounds If he leads the "mob,” on Dec. 15, which will pic turesquely re-enact the scenes of the Boston Tea Party, one hundred and fifty years after It happened. It is understood that his honor, disguised, like those old Bostonians of long ago, as a Mohawk, will prance down Milk street to the wharf and with others similarly attired go through the mo tions of throwing some tea overboard. In so doing he will be but repeating history. The original tea party had the full sympathy and even the of ficial concurrence of the selectmen of the town of Boston In that stirring period. The selectmen had issued warrants for town meetings at which the protests against the landing of the taxed tea had been adopted, and they concurred in the ringing of the bells for all the popular assemblies In which the resistance was cooked up. Possibly no official personage was actually Included In the fifiy "Mo hawks" who rampaged down the street, boarded the ship Dartmouth, and threw the tea into the harbor, but the raiding party did Include such almost official persons as Moses Grant, William Molineaux, Paul Re vere, Samuel Sprague, Jonathan llun newell, John Prince and John Russell, and we may be entirely sure that ths honorable selectmen were all among the more than one thousand persons who crowded the wharf, quite ready to support the “Indians” If any at tempt were made to Interfere with their operations. It was at least a semi-official proceeding. The youth ful “first selectman" of the Boston of 1923 will not be out of place In the re enacted tea party. Nor Is there any reason why the event should not be recalled in till# spirited manner. The Sulgrave In stitution may not be In sympathy with the proceeding, but the great body of the citizens of Boston will be. It was in reality a heroio episode. The citizens of Boston of 1773, who by solemn vote "absolutely required" that this tea, for which they were to be taxed threepence a pound without warrant of right, should not be land ed, knew well enough that they were defying the British power, and they acted with due deliberation. They started, and started consciously, the movement for Independence by their action. _ _ In Europe, 200,00 Doctors. From the Manchester Guardian. Some figures compiled a few yeara ago by an Italian publicnst have an interest in view of the doctor’s dis pute with the minister of health. He estimated that altogether there were 200,000 qualified medical prac tioneers In Europe of whom 48,000 lived In Great Britain and Ireland. Next came France with 32,000. Ger many 26,000, Italy 24,000, Kussla 20,-. 000, Austria 13,000, Belgium 12,000 and Spain 8,000. The proportion of doctors to the population was much greater in England than in any other countries. Brussels, however, enjoy ed the distinction of being the most doctor-ridden town in Europe, the proportion there being 24 to every 10,000 bodies. Allens eligible to cltisenahip are re ported hurriedly taking out their pa pers In Washington and California now. Suita have been filed by the states tt evlce alien land holders, under the re cent ruling of the federal supreme court that lane covering such cases are constitutional. FARMERS BUY DAIRY CATTLE Numerous Shipments Re*, ceived In Platte and Loup Valleys of Nebraska Columbus, Neb., Dec. <— (Special) —During the past two months ship ments of dairy cattle for breeding purposes being made into this imme diate section of the Platte and Loup river valleys have been 75 per cent, more than for any entire 12 months period previous. Twenty lots have been sent in from Wisconsin points, 1 ‘ of which were Jerseys and the re mainder were Brown, Swiss and Hol stein. Several large deliveries of Brown Swiss and Guernsey have also been made into the northern part of Butler and the western part of Col. fax county. ARREST WOMAN FOR OLD GAME I* Alleged to Have Swindled Oelwein, la., Farmer Out of $15,000 Oelwein, la., Dec. «, (U. P.)—Fed eral officers are searching for two men following arrest of Gladys Nor man, 27 years old in Minneapolis, charged with "bilking" Ben Fereday, 82 years old, retired farmer, out of $16,000 in a new form of the old bad ger game. Fereday says he has "kissed the woman and the money good bye," but federal officers say they will require him to go to Minneapolis and pros ecute the young woman. Fereday met the Norman woman and courted her assiduously for six days and says he Induced hen to divolce her husband and mai(y him. Fereday deposited $10,000 in a safe ty deposit vault and gave Mrs. Nor man the key, as assurance he would keep his contract. Later at his hotel two men came Into his room and threatened to prosecute unless he paid them $6,000. He came to Cel wein and turned the money over to them. FORMER IOWA MAN IS FOUND DEAD Los Angeles, Cal., Dec. .—(U. P.) —Relatives of Walter Dove, founder of several Iowa rural telephone lines was being sought by local authorities today following discovery of the man’s body in a local rooming house two days after death, which resulted from hemmorrhages. Papers in the man’s possession indicated he 1 ad once lived in Onawa, Iowa. Onawa, la., Dec. (Special)— Walter Dove, reporter lo have been found dead in Los Angeles, worked as an electrician on the local tele phone plant when it was being in stalled in 1920. He never had r.ny part in organizing the company. He wa6 of a retiring disposition, accord ing to those who remember him, and never talked of his past. Nothing is known here of his relatives. STATE RESTS CASE IN WERTZ MURDER TRIAL. Iowa City, la.. Dec. ", (U. P.)— The state rested its case Monday in the trial of Mrs. Mima Wertz, charged with slaying her husband. Roy Wertz, after Frank Yogle had testified regarding property left Wertz by his first wife. The state charges Mrs. Wertz conspired with her daughter and son-in-law, Robert Leeper, to obtain this property through killing of Wertz. A motion made by defense attorneys to dismiss the c?>'e immediately af ter the state rested was overruled by Judge Ralph Otto. Introduction of defense testimony was started shortly before noon. JUROR SAID TO HAVE BECOME INSANE Lincoln, Neb., Dec. ‘ —Said to have become Insane following the dis agreement of a Jury of which he was a member, Roy Frahm is said to have attacked the presiding judge, Hon. Geo. C. Gillan, of Lexington, when the Jury brought in notice of its disagree ment at Sidney, according tq Lee Bays, a&Hlstant attorney general who assisted in the trial. HS RED POLLED CATTLE REGISTER AGAIN Mitchell, S, D. Dec. (Special)— After having allowed several years to slip by without exhibiting his red polled cattle at the International stock show at Chicago, W. S. Hill of Mitchell shipped a prize herd from the Riverside farm near Alexandria last week and captured four first and two championships. WOMAN SENTENCED FOR HER CRUELTY. Omaha, Neb., Dec. * —Blanche O’Nell was sentenced to 15 days in the county jail here today because she is alleged to have cut the throat of her pet canine in a fit of anger and to have sewed ur> the wound with thread. The animal waa Killed by the humane society. FREIGHT CONDUCTOR HAS A BAD FALL « Madison, S. D., Dec. ' s (Special)— Alfred Brakke, of Madison, a freight conductor on the Chicago & Mil waukee road, received severe Injuries at Pipestone, Minn., when, because of a sudden jerk of the train In coming to a stop, he was thrown from a re frigerator car. He was brought to Madison. MANY PAROLES TO BE SOW Several Women To Appear Before Nebraska Board December 11 Lincoln, Neb.,. Dec. ' (Special)— When the state pardon and parole board meets December 11 to hear a number of applications for paroles, commutations and pardons, George W. Hopperton, serving one to five years in the state penitentiary for as saulting Leslie W. Dotson, Crawford will ask for a pardon. County At torney Crites opposes a pardon ot> the ground that the affidavit of Les lie W. Dotson is a forgery and he will be able to prove it. Ten want to get out of the pen and 12 out of the reformatory. Four wo men, Inmates of the reformatory for women, want paroles. Craig Chester field, Dodge county forger from the state reformatory and serving from, one to 20 years, wants a parole. Ke Is alleged to have posed as an Eng lish nobleman when he was cutting" a wide swath in Dodge, but he ad mitted that there was really little to his bragging and that he was lis reality born in Baltimore, Md. The board usually spends a whole das out of the month listening to th« shut-ins who want to get outside. WATCHED THEM WORK ON STILL Then Federal Officers Cruel* ly Raided Place So Care fully Constructed Lincoln, Neb., Nov. (Special)— Fedeal officers working between Omaha and Lincoln have just con founded a pair of smart bootleggers. For six weeks they have watched the building of a hooch factory, and the* day tihe last nail was pounded In they raided it. The bootleggers had built a little house on a hillside, and from there had put a tunnel for several hundrer feet. At the end of this tunnel the officers found an 80 gallon still and 69 gallons of mash and also Mike Fucinero, and Omaha Italian, HUGE SUM IS ASKED IN SUIT Members of Walker Grain Co. Assert They Were Damaged $2,000,000 Lincoln, Neb. Dec. (U. P.)— Two suits totalling $2,000,000 were filed in federal court here Thurs day against .W. R. Ferguson, said to be former owner of the Elwood Grain Company of St. Joseph, Mo., by J. L. Walker, and Myrtle M. Walker of the Walker Grain Com pany of Fort Worth Texas. The suits are to recover damages al leged to have resulted from suit* filed by Ferguson in Texas in July, 1918. Ferguson charged the Walkers with Illegally converting tha funds of the grain company to their own use. The case was not prosecuted the Walker petition charges. Los* of property and character resulted from the Ferguson suit filing, the petition states. MOTHER TELLS STORY OF FARM TRAGEDY Seward, Neb., Dec. *\ (Special)— Mils. Julia Vajrt, charged, with her husband and their daughter, Alby, 16 years old, with murder In con nection with the death of Anton Lana ,the Vajrt's" hired man" took the stand Thursday in the trial of the trio and| told her story of the events eading up to the death of the farm hand. Mrs. Vajrt testified that she and her daughter went to the shed in which Lana slept, the morning of the tragedy, aroused the farm hand from his sleep and asked him what he proposed to do concerning hi* responsibility to the girl’s condition. Mrs. Vajrt declared that Lana told them he was going to leave. Then she testified she attempted to choke him. They rolled around on the hay floor of the shed. They regained their feet only to fall again, and Bhe on top. “Then I grabbed the plank and struck Lana over the head.” She fainted and did not regain con clousncss until she was In her bed in the farm house, she testified. - i ^ . - WOUNDED HOLDUP MAN IS DYINS Omaha, Neb., Dec. —Shot by Policeman F. Bradly when he is said to have drawn a gun on the officer when the latter attempted to halt b’m for questioning as a hold-up sus pect, George Broun, who told police lie was from Chicago is said to be dy ing. CORSETS ELIMINATE "•PETTING PARTIES.’ Omaha, Neb., Nov. -- (U P)— Corsets eliminate “petting parties” in ths opinion of Madame Antoinette, international authority on dress, de clared. “I have put corsets on girls, taught them to dress for poise charm and decency and they have gained the confidence of men and petting parties have been eliminated.” she ■aid.