ALTA YELLOW IS USED IN DEWEY Constitutes 67 Per Cent of County's Corn Acreage limber Lake. S. D. — -Alta yellow dent will be planted on 32 per rent of the land devoted to corn in Dewey county and the Alta, Ful ler and Rurtler varieties trill consti tute 67 per rent of the county s com acreage. County Agent H. D. McCul lough found by sending out a ques tionaire. Alta corn ft as introduced into Dewey county in 192J, when 10 bush els were brought in and distributed to 4-H club members, McCullough said In its seventh year, this variety leads all others and will occupy ap proximately a third of the corn acre age ®I the county. Developed at the Highmore .sta tion as a variety, especially adapted for the. two northern tiers of coun ties in South Dakota, Alta has con sistently won first place In Dewey county corn contests and has made good with most of the critical farm ers, the county agent said. Puller’s yellow dent lias also shown up well In corn contests and is being grown more generally this year than ever before. “Rustler” is the name g*ven to MVeral local strains of white dent, formerly the most popular variety in the county and thought to be the only one which would mature safely. It. has bee* giving place to Alta the last few years because of the higher feed value of a yellow dent corn when alfalfa hay or pasture are not available, McCullough explained. “t’ALF DAYS” PLANNED Milbank S. D - a local hospital. Police are seek ing a man who brought Smolinski to the hospital and gave a fictitious name to attendants. The burned man would not tell them who the man was nor wha’ their relations were. MANY OMAHANS NOT EMPLOYED Census Report Shows 5, 124 Persons Are With out Work There __ ^maha, Neb.—(UP)—There is much unemployment here accord ing to Census Director Victor Rey nolds, who announced the unem ployment census Monday, placing the figure at 5,124 or 2.39 per cent of the city's population of 214,184. This figure includes all persons who usually work at a gainful oc cupation but who were able to work and were unsuccessful in their quest for employment when census enum erators called on them. Tabulated figures showed most un employment in the down town that is often not realized by the na tion is owed to the veterans of the Spanish-American war. Rice W. Means, formerly senator from Colo rado, declared Monday in addressing the annual encampment of the Spanish-American war veterans of Nebraska. Two hundred veterans and one hundred auxiliary members opened the convention Sunday and the ses sions will close Tuesday. “The service of the Spanish American veterans played an im portant part in the prosperity of wards, with the packing house dis trict running a close second. NATION OWES DEBT TO SPANISH WAR VETERANS Columbus, Neb.—(UP) — A debt the nation from 1900 until 1912,” Means said in his address. "The people of the nation owe a great debt to these veterans, and it is a debt that too often is not realized” With formal and picturesque cere monies, the convention opened Sun day. Former United States. Gilbert Hitchcock, Omaha newspaper pub lisher gave the address at the Flag day program Sunday and a flower placing ceremony in tribute to the dead also was held. Rev. William H. Talmage, pastor af the Grace Episcopal church, at Columbus, gave the address at the Memorial service in the evening. LACK OF CO-OPERATION CAUSE OF BAH BUSINESS Lincoln, Neb. — (UP)—Committee reports on the activities of the clybs during the last year were present ed Tuesday at the eighth annual convention of Cosmopolitan Inter national here. Edward L. Young, of Decatur, 111., president of Cosmopolitan Interna tional, blamed the lack of co-oper ation for bringing about the unus ual economic conditions being ey perienced. "The curse of the country has been the greed of manufacturers in their cry for volume through mass production with no thought of the effect this mass production would have on the distributor,” Young said. “Co-operation is the farthest thing from their minds. If forced co-operation had not been brought in through the medium of chain re tail stores, this country would have been in a state of chaos.” NEWSPAPER MAN’S WIFE GIVEN DIVORCE AT LINCOLN Lincoln, Neb.—A divorce was granted to Mrs. Doris Tilton Sea crest from Fred Seacrest here. He is the son of J. C. Seacrest, owner of the Nebraska State Journal, and is business manager of the Journal. Seacrest did not contest the di vorce. The wife is given custody of June, 3 years old, and the husband custo dy of Ann, 7, and Mark, 10 The husband is to pay $90 a month for the support of June until she is 8 years old, then $100 a month until she is 15, and thereafter $119 a month until she is 21 Each of the i two summer vacation months that their mother has Mark and Ann, their father is to pay $250 for their support and $100 at Christmas vaca tion. — ACCUSED WOMAN SAID TO BE SERIOUSLY ILL Fremont, Neb. —(UP)— Mrs. Eva Rouzee, whose heart balm suit re cently collapsed when her suppos edly dead husband appeared in court, is in a hospital here, after having furnished $1,000 bond for re lease from the county jail where she was being held pending investi gation of possible perjury in the testimony offered. According to Sheriff W. A. John son, Mrs. Rouzee had been seriously ill for two days. She had previous ly furnished bond on a statutory charge filed against her and James Rice, filling station ow’ner, whom she was suing for $35,000. i HOMER, NEB., WOMAN HAD ! CHICKEN WITH TWO HEARTS Homer, Neb.—(Special)—A chick en having two hearts may be unusu al but not an impossible condition as evidenced by the fact that Mrs. Ot to Swanson of Homer dressed a chicken that had two hearts alike in size and apparently perfect in con dition. The foul, a Rhode Island Red, was of good size, in healthful condition and not otherwise unlike the rest of the flock. R. O. T. C. ENCAMPMENT OPENS AT FORT CROOK Omaha, Neb.—(UP)—Annual six weeks’ encampment of R. O. T. C. officers of this division got under way at Fort Crook Tuesday. Five universities are represented with a total of 153 men. University of Ne braska has 82; Iowa, 33; South Da kota. 26; Creighton, 11, and Illinois, 1. TWO FAIRBURY, NEB., BANKS CONSOLIDATED Fairbury, Neb.—(UP)—Consolida tion of the Harbine State bank of Fairbury and the First National bank of Fairbury was announced Tuesday. The new bank has re sources of about $4,000,000 and is capitalized at $400,000. Luther Bon ham, president of the First Nation al, will be head of the new institu tion and H H. McLucas, C. M. Hurl burt. Frank Moon. Frank Houston and E P. Conrad will be directors. The consolidation was brought about through the acquisition last fall of both banks by the North Wes'. Banoorporation. UK 1 DOE WORKER DROWNS WHEN FALLS INTO RIVEN Nebraska City, Neb.—The first fa tal accident on the Waubon.ue bridge job here occurred Monday af ternoon when Harvey H. Smith, steel worker, 35 years old, slipped off ehe piling of a false-work and tell into the Missouri river. He came to Nebraska City with Mr*. Smith only l~-t E-turday, and this was his fir: u?.y of labor. Fellow workc . Smith fall 15 feet as ho v.-.j trying to un fasten a cable near pier No. 2. The swift stream carried him down the river, and he was seen only once after he went, under. He seemed to be struggling to swim toward shore, 60 feet sway. Tins drown ing makes the Missouri's toll for this year reach five, four Nebraska City business men having been downed in March. Work on the bridge was suspend ed for the rest ol the dfty, as i; customary following such an aeu dent. WOULD DEBATE ‘POWER’ ISSUES President of Nebraska Tax payers’ League Has Some thing to Say on Subjeci Lincoln, Neb.—(UP)—William F' Adams, president of the taxpayers league, who said he had been busy in his cornfields near Hastings since he was drawn into the "power bill” controversy, wrote Attorney Gen. C. A. Sorense*. that he would be glad to debate Joseph Bums, of Lin coln, at Hastings on the night of June 28. The subject of the debate is the various power bills that are being circulated in the initiative petitions now being circulated in the state. Adams, in his letter, denied that, the taxpayers league has paid one cent for circulating the petitions; that no one has been hired to cir culate these petitions, and revealed that Attorney McNehy, af Red Cloud, drafted the petitions far the league. Sorensen ha$ intimated that the petitions, be\pg circulated in opposition to ones hd had drawn, were sponsored by the power interests. "I will have my chores done by 8:30 p. m., Saturday evening, June 28, and will meet you pr Bums at the courthouse in Hastings and dis cuss with you these questions from the taxpayers’ viewpoint,” Adams wrote. BUYS YEAR’S SUPPLY OF LUBRICATING OILS Lincoln, Neb. — (UP) — Contracts for supplying $40,000 worth of lu bricating oils and greases to the state for the next year were awarded Tuesday to the Standard Gil com pany, Independent Oil and Gas company, and Mona Motor Oil com pany, all of Omaha, Purchasing Agent Blaine Yoder announced. The Independent’s contracts total about $30,000. Its average bid on oil for Internal combustion engines was 43 cents a gallon, delivered in all except dstrct No. 5 on the eglit hghway dstrcts. The Independent also will furnish axle grease in all districts at 4 cents per pound in 50 pound lots. Standard Oil company will supply lubricating oil in district No. 5 lo cated in the far northwest of the state, at 48)4 cents a gallon. Transmission oil at an average price of 2314 cents a gallon in bar rel lot* is to be supplied by the Mona Motor company. This firm al so has the contract to furnish inter nal gear grease at an average of 5 cents per pound, cup greases and chassis lubricant at 4*4 cents per pound, all in full drum lots. BOY SCOUT CAMT ON NIOBRARA OPENED O’Neill, Neb.—The North Central district camp for Boy Scouts has opened for 10 days. The camp is on the Niobrara river, south of Spencer. The capacity is 100 boys. An advance foe of $1 was asked with registrations. Camp charges are $10 for 10 days. The Niobrara camp was planned to care for scouts from Atkinson. Creighton, Bloomfield, Newport, Plainview, Wausa, Vercligre, Bruns wick, Ewing, Spencer, Bassett, Nio brara, Page, Crofton, Lynch, Butte. Bristow, Santee, Stuart, Osmond and O’Ne.Ul. FORMER WAYNE STUDENT FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL Tecumseh, Neb. —(UP)— F.. C. Radke, who served as private sec retary to Charles Bryan when he was governor of Nebraska, paid his filing fee here Tuesday as a demo cratic candidate for attorney gen eral. He is city attorney of Tecum seh and is a former Johnson county judge. While In his senior year in the University of Nebraska college of law, he was elected state repre sentative from Gedar county. He i was elected Johnson county judge in 1924 and served four years. Radke entered Wayne Normal in 1907 and following h4s graduation taught school near Tekamah. He was admitted to the bar in 1917. He was a delegate from Cedar county to the Nebraska constitu tional convention in 1920. NORFOLK HOG THIEF - GIVEN PENITENTIARY TERM Norfolk, Neb. —(UP)— Lambert Classen, known also In this vicinity as "Cyclone Taylor,” under which name he formerly engaged In sev eral pugilistic enterprises here, was taken to Lincoln Monday to begin serving a term in the state peniten tiary. He was sentenced to two years and 11 mqnths on his plea of guilty to a charge of stealing six hogs from the Theodore Pclakl farm last April aa.