PAGE SQL PLATTSM OUTH Sn,n - V7TEHLY JOTTENAL THUESDAY, JTTNE 23, 1922. 4-H Club Campers Observe Farmers' Hours in Capital Conference Hears 600,000 Boys and Girls Were Enrolled Last Year; 2456 4-H Club Camps Washington Long before the rest of Washington was up, 6 o'clock re veille sounded for the boys and girls of the 4-II clubs who have come to the capital a3 a reward for special success in farm work in 3S agricul tural states. Half an hour later most of .the groups had left the big encampment where they are sleeping out in army tents under supervision of the De partment of Agriculture, and had gone across to the municipal pool for an early morning swim. As the first commuters were sleepily board ing trains into the tity, the club members, who are accustomed to afrm. hours, were already well along on the first regulars day.- program of the session. Hoy's and girls' 4-II club work is! a part of the national agricultural! extension system, and through it! rural boys and girls 16 to 2 years of age in and out of school are taught better agricultural and home eco- nonics parctkes. and the fine and worth-while things of'rural life. The purpose of the gathering here is to rt-cruit new material for leader ship in the work and speeches at the opt-nrng session were devoted to this rurpose. According to figures pre sented, some Ci'O.OOO boys and girls were enrolled last year, of whom about -tvO.OOO gnished their work while 1430 4-H club camps were held. Speakers at the flrt day's sessions included C. W. Warburton. director of extension work. Department of Agriculture: C. R. Smith, chief of co operative extension work: and W. M. Gilbert, administrative secretary Carnegie Institution. The afternoon was devoted to in spection of the Beltsville Agricul tural Farm. where experimental work is carried on by the depart ment. Each clay's schedule calls for a "eampfire" from S to ft: 45 at night with "taps" at 10. Celebrating? Let ns help you. A full line of Firecrackers, Fireworks, Torpedos, Caps and Cap Pistols for the youth; also Picnic Supplies of all kinds. Get your Fireworks this year at the Bates Book Store. The best line in town. Also picnic supplies. Daily Journal, 15 cents per week. BUTLER NOT A CANDIDATE Boston, June 25. William M. Butler, former United States senator and until last week chairman of the republican national committee, has reiterated his decision not to be con sidered as a candidate for the repub lican nomination t the forthcoming primaries. In a letter today to Fran cis Prescot, chairman of the re publican state committee, he specifi cally asked that his name not be brought before the. meeting, of re publicans here on Saturday to sug gest a candidate lor senator. 63 are Injured! When Derailed Cars Overturn Cne Coach of Crack Missouri Pacific Train Plunges Into Creek; Occurs in Kansas. Ida. Kan.. June 2C. A broken rail near Durand. Kan., 1 miles west of here, early Monday sent one car of the fast Missouri Pacific passenger train. Southern, crashing into a creek and overturned two others, causing injuries to 63. six of whom ! were in a critical condition Monday ' night. The wreck occurred just as the train bound from New Orleans to Kansas City, was passing over the Owl creek bridge south of Durand at 4 a. m.. a steel chair car. in which most of the injured were traveling, plunged from the bridge and fell 20 feet, the ends wedging between the creek banks above the water. Two Pullman cars overturned, and several hundred feet of track was torn up. Twenty-six of the more serious ly injured were rushed here in a special car and removed to St. Jo seph hospital. Those critically injured: Miss Hazel Hemphill. 20, Trenton, Mo., skull fracture. Mrs. Matilda Johnson. 74, Osage : i - XT - ii V 1 lnrn Vi r 3 t ! V U f , iva .1., uvlu J ui vn-; i. Mrs. Emma Southard. Lake City, Kan., probably fractured spine. Mrs. Ella Crov.son. Kansas City, skull fracture and shock. Miss AnCe Ricketts. Kansas City, skull fracture and shock. Mrs. Ellen Locke. Kansas City, Negress, fractured skull and arm. j Missouri Pacific officials found a' section of broken rail, believed to : have caused the wreck, and held for a laboratory test to determine of defective material was responsible. When word of the crash reached divisional headquarters at Coffey ville, Kan., railroad physicians and nurses were rushed to the scene and administered aid to injured, some of whom were taken to Yates Center, near Durand. Others continued their journey. Omaha Bee-News. Women Upheld as Ones to Buy Family Homes Realtors Urged to Build to Suit Them, Emphasizing Convenience Cities Reaching Out Louisville. Ky., June 23. How he ?ias succeeded in "sweating out" use less space in apartment ami lencraeiu . bouses by increasing the number of I stairways and eliminating long dark corridors was explained to the Na tion Association of Real Estate Hoards bv Andrew J. Thomas, New York, architect for the Rockefeller Foundation model housing projects, for the new Marshall Field model model housing projects and for the Metropolitan Life Insurance com- pany. Having done this, Mr. Thomas was able to construct buildings which covered only 50 to 52 per cent of a1 lot, yet provided larger and better ventilated rooms and court and gar den space. He placed much of the blame for undersirable slum condi tions on the doorstep of the mortgage loan business, which advanced money on undesirable types of dwellings, he said. Ben A. Loftis, Cleveland, outlining the model home campaign which civic interests have been carrying out to advance the idea of home ownership, pointed out that such a campaign can help emphatically to weed out un desirable builders and sub-dividers. His criticism of the steel frame house being developed by the Russell Sage Foundation, brought out a protest that these homes can be erected by unskilled labor in two hours. Others, however, urged that such construc tion would tend to a dull uniformity in housing. It is the woman of the family who buys the home, and not the man, and the builder of a co-operative apart ment will do well to install electric dishwasher cabinets and build the window sills low enough so that the housewife can actually look out of the window. Roy G. Pratt, of Phila delphia, said. Builders may very well pay attention to the question of colored tile in the kitchen and bath room, too, Mr. Pratt said, to please, the prospective woman customer. I to attractive bridle j courses is what the i one side, including some orange trees. While super-highways and double decked streets are evidences of what the automobile is doing to real es tate, the airplane already has begun to have its effect on the physical con figuration of cities and will have its influence on land values, according to Stanley L. McMichael, Cleveland, Ohio. "Airplanes," he said, "are steadily extending the boundaries of cities now from 5, 10, or 15 miles, out to 50 or 75 miles. Distant lands pos sessing scenic beauty, which are now practically useless, will be acquired and developed into fine estates. The airplane is going to transmute great j practoi . .,1.11.1 ...... on.'l fir (iQ 1 Tl 1 r i La.i Ull'UlIll niin ...... attractive estates for those able to afford them." O'Neill Doctor Taken from Home to Face Charges Returned to Falls City Failure to Pay foi Support. for Alleged i Child ; Frazier to Meet Nestos at Polls for Senate Seat State Industrialism Big Issue in North Dakota Primary ;Big Issue in Politics This Year m O'Neill, Juno 25. Kidnaped from bis office early Sunday morning. Dr. C. H. Lubker, prominent local chiro- and phjsician, was thrown into a waiting automobile ly tnree Richardson county oliicers who then with their prisoner headed across the east line of Holt county, twenty miles east of here, to get beyond the jurisdiction of the Holt county courts and possible interference by the phy sician's friends. The officers were after Dr. Lubker for ignoring an order of the district court at Falls City to pay $S0 month j ly toward the support of his child- ren, pending the outcome of a di ! voice suit brought by Mrs. Lubker in Richardson county. This was the second attempt to get the doctor within the jurisdiction of Richardson county, the first being blocked by an application a month ago for a habeas corpus. Both Dr. and Mrs. Lubker are li censed chiropractors and Lave been in practice here for some years. About a year ago Mrs. Lubker in stituted suit for divorce at Falls City and obtained an order that the doc tor pay ?S0 a month 'for the sup port of the children pending out come of the decree. The doctor ap pealed the order to the supreme court and the answer date was ret for to day at Lincoln. In the meantime he has been under bond to suppport the children. Considerable indignation has been aroused here over the kidnaping. Lo cal attorneys believe Richardson county officers exceeded their au thority and are liable under the KMA G'i'PSIES 1" This entertainment and dance will probably be held Saturday night, July 7th, as weather man predicts rain the balance of this week. If further change in date is made, KMA wi!i broadcast it, line calls will be sent out and ad run in Journal to advise you! ftHiii t mtrm Ik 11 Nebraska and Iowa Exports for 1927 are Lower Country as a Whole Shows Gain of I c vt y-2 v& Million Lar d leacis in Eoth. Accessibility paths and golf average family today demands in buying a suburban home, street im provements and trees having become matters of course in a new subdivis ion, said W. Ross Campbell, of Los Angeles, Calif. Los Angeles, he said, is planning a 40-foot-wide bridle path alongside a 200-foot boulevard running some 40 miles out of the city, lined with evergreen trees at Fargo, X. D. Whether an im portant figure in the United States Senate's radical farm bloc will be continued in office for another term will be decided by North Dakota Republicans at Wednesday's state primary election. Lynn J. Frazier,' who has been aligned with the farm ; bloc, is opposed for re-eceltion by j R. A. Xestos, former Governor and a "stand-pat" Republican. Nomina-: tion at the Republican, primaries is; virtually equivalent to election inj North Dakota pilities. j Both candidates have spent most j of their campaign in discussion of! state issues, Mr. Frazier chiefly con-j corning himself with the Non-Parti-1 san League's program of expansion I of state industrialism. This is the; big issue in state politics this year, j and the campaign is one of the most , extensive in years. I The industrial program of the Non-! CPFWT1 TTT" Partisan League has ben in effect ! Juli.IU& XV &r&Ml3 ili, since 125. During this period thej SUMMER IN NEBRASKA fttate s bonded muenteaness lias in creased from less than $600,000 to more than $35,000,000. Indenendfnf Re nnhlirans have in- flr.rct.fi P.cnror. V Ti-ifor Atlnrni.v. j SUTViTTlpr at General, for Governor, while the Non-Partisans back T. H. Torestn, Tax Commissioner. The Independents would turn the state industries over to co-operative organizations after further trial, while the Non-Partisans demand further expansions. state's anti-kidnaping Journal. la vt 'tate ' Senator George W. Norris is i nected to arrive in Omaha within ; the the us Need help! You can get it quicklj by placing: yonr.ftd in tho Journal. next week or ten days to spend his home in McCook, Rraska. For seeral years he i been spending his summers in Wis jo:iHn. but this summer he will be in Ne braska, according to his pres ent plans. Senator R. B. Ho veil is not ex pected in Nebraska until the middle of the summer. He will not start his active campaign until September. A part cf .the summer he will tpend with Mrs. Howell, who is in the southwest for her health. Kxpo.-is cf merchandise from Ne braska and Iowa dining 1027 de clined from thosu of according to reports of the United States de partment of commerce. Associated Press dispatches from Lincoln and Moines relate. Nebraska exports for 1927 were valued at $ 1 4. 803,5".". compared witii $la,74r.,S29 .luring 1926. In Iowa, the 1927 exports were S:;0,. 364.47:1, a decrease trom ?33, 728,723. I.arci ranks first in both states. Nebraska e x p o r t i n g $3,299,733 worth, and Iowa. S10.436.51C. Country Shows Gain. The entire United States showed a gain of 45 milion dollars, from 4.713.553,066 to 4,758, 721. 07S in 1S27. T3ie Tiiit ten states in order of importance of value of export trade for li27 were: New York. $700. 706. S&6; Texas, 5647.026,141; Mich igan $32G,87L),r,S4; California. $309. 544.746; Pennsylvania, $290,497. 974 ; New Jersey, $232,799,892; Louisiana. $229.3'J4.S62; Illinois, S20S.045.111 ; Ohio. $186,091,545, and Virginia, ?136,41G,741. States making most notable gains in export trade for the year, with j the amount of increases, the report states, were: Michigan, $64,2S5, 366; Minnesota, $40, 54$, 270 ; Wis consin, $23.57S,346: California, $21,-' 943,062; Ohio. S14.641.361, and New Jersey. S 12,253.873. i It is pointed out that all the fig-' ur s are based on through bills of lading, and in some cases reflect only a j.art of the total foreign trade of individual states. After lard in Nebraska, other lead ing exports were: Oleo oil, valued at $1,504,204, followed by wheat flour, $1,361,081; wheat, $1,232,360; ba con, $1,118,638; hams and shoulders $1,025,909; lead and manufactures of lead, $875,973; eggs. $466,511; hides and skins, except furs, $379, 776; pickled pork, $338,065; canned meats, $245,054; sausage casings, $233,040; oho stock, $213,247, ami i-nima! oil.-; and greases (inedible), $209,494. Other Iowa Products. Second in Iowa exports was agri cultural machinery, valued at $3, 843.039, folowed in order by hams ?ncl shoulders. $3,741,972; bacon. S3.373.S52; animals and animal pro duits (inedible). $6S4,944 ; wheat Hour, $589,131; cannec meats, $552,142; oleo oil. $511,768; glu cose and grape sugar, $470, S94; pickled pork, $445,316: oats, meal and rolled oats. $452,323, and corn starch. $401,081. Othvr important exportso f Ne braska include fresh pork, butter, textiles, wood and paper, nonmetal lie mineral products, machinery, ve hicles and paits of chemicals; while the Iowa list includes also corn meal and flou i". -World-Herald. GOVERNOR'S AID SOUGHT Kenosha. Wis., June 26. Co-operation of Goernor Zimmerman in re moving members of Kenosha's city council was sought today by the "committee of 1.000," an organiza tion seeking a change in city gov ernment. H. K. Bardcn, president of the council declined to commen on clains cf the committee that the civic body had shown "admitted in competency." The committee asked the gover nor to meet a delegation Monday at Madison. Barden said that the re quest for state troops in Kenosha, denied several days ago by the gov ernor and opposed by the commu te of 1.000 and leaders in the strike of workers at the Allen A. company, originated with the city council. It felt, be said, that the situation at the time of their equest warranted such action. I I I 111 111 IMH . IUIip.jl..l-,ii i5. .i- Jll m : lAi if" mi m,m j mm.,y , , , , ,m ii.i.iit ij ill; il-ujw.i WJiW 'WUM'-J t 7gg Vjyy.-JHV.Jt'.WT'l'g" i J ' 1 i i'J1!".' V !'"----"f mt ,rmkit r?ninh- li ifil-rT titi' - fTrr -- f tnt it i r- ii.filrl 7-r-n 1 iiiiirii iWriT' i i.-m? .Vn3' ---" 9 A li if. f-m IS Through Our Personal Acquaintance we have been able to secure a High Grade Line cf Hand Tailored Merchandise, consisting of and i eg Men's Athletic Unions Cut big and roomy if i i 45c 1 u a B Harvest Handkerchiefs Red or Blue Lg. Size 7c each 220 Denim Overalls A mighty big Value 11 51 95c j 25c 0 I ' ii; 1 Children's Silk Hose White and Colors SEES Boys' Khaki Shirts Mothers, Look! 39c Men's Dress Pants Finest All Wool $2.45 Men's kiki pants. . .95 Men's Handkerchiefs White, Hemstitched 4c each and up. These are splendid values. Boys' Tennis Shoes White Canvass 89c Coates Sewing Thread Black and White 3c Men's Rain Coats Genuine Rubber Guaranteed to turn the rain. Here is your chance to get one at greatly : SEDUCED PEICE. We can fit any shape man in a Suit or a pair of Pants, so extensive is our ferge, new stock of Wearing Apparel. A personal representative from the clothing manufacturer will be with us for four days to help show you these new goods. Suits for Young and Older Men College Styles or Finely Tailored Staples Young: Men's Collegiate Suits S19-S0 up (Some with two pair of Pants) Men's high quality Suits, a real buy . . $12.50 up Men's Top Coats and Overcoats Buy NOW and Save Money Shoes for the Family We can outfit the entire family with Shoes at prices that will save you money. Here are listed a few examples of our low EVERYDAY PRICES Men's Leather House Slippers, big value . . $1.87 (Elastic sides, very comfortable) Men's Outing Bal Work Shoes, special. . .$.Q5 (Will give you lots of wear) Ralston Dress Shoes, per pair $2.85 (Newest. shapes, tan or black) Boys' all leather Oxfords, new styles ...... 52.95 (Sizes 22 to 6, inclusive) We Pay 26c for Egg s H Just Rite Chick Scratch a IM pound oacli tor If is u Bargain in Matches 2 large Boxes for 5c Morton's Bulk Salt 100-Ib. Sack for 95c li r 1 C I r II uuuu tjmoiingr cigars 50 in a Can, only $1.19 si Morton's Shaker Salt Iodized 3 pkgs. 25c QAr- T" il- r?i fl 48-pound Sack for $1.89 Four-Tie Brooms Extra Good Value I 39c I 49c J. M. Table Syrup Per Gallon Bucket 6-Gal. Stone Jars Extra Special at 97c Best Brands Malt Plain or Hopped 49c .1 Main Street, Plattsmouth Sam Giventer, Proprietor n' n nn .i'i