THURSDAY, MAIICH 14. 1929. PLATTSMOUTH SEMI -WEEKLY JOURNAL PAGE ITVE Jplllllillll Small Size 2(5 Small size Sunkists not quite as large as our 18c dozen size, but large enough to make them hard to distinguish. Thous ands of these are sold over the country as "mediums" at 15c a dozen. You can buy all you want here Saturday at 1c each. And here's another a good size orange (lots larger than our 18c grade) that we offer 3'ou for Saturday in unlimited quantities at 2c each. See these Oranges in our window and select the grade you prefer. Both are exceptions! values. Good big Grape Fruit, ull o juice, six or 25c. Best Creamery Butter In quarter lb. wrappings, at 49c per lb. We guaran tee this butter to be the equal of any sold. Here are a few specials in Canned Goods that you will want to take ad vantage of: Black Raspberries, No. 2 size cans (syrup pack), 2 for 45c; Com (med. size, fey. quality), 10c per can; Peas (sweet and tender), 12c per can. BiackWhite Cass County's Big Economy Center Telephone 42 Eiiii!ilii!l!ISHii!i!!iII CCEDS' ANN OYER FIRES FOUR SHOTS AT POLICEMAN j Repeated an- i ci' Nebraska Lincoln. March 12. novaiies to University - l on th campus aftt was climaxed Monday n I'olHmar L. C. Heeler w cet for five shots fired nightfall ght when is th tar it him at close range by a costed four girls. man who had ai STAR BRAND S.m Arr Urtl M E ... i i i k $m$k A 1 t ft. I -jtm Brwd 5 Jfc Full o Juice Esislto S r I The oilicer stood his gruond and escaped unscathed though one bullet whizzed pasi his ear. The four coeds, directly in line of lire, dropped to the ground to avoid injury. Emptying his weapon, the stranger darted between near-by buildings and escaped. As a result of the affair, olice protection on the campus will be doubled. These shirts are most correctly styled and finished. Full cut and custom tailored. Smart, nobby color effects. All the desired fancy patterns. A new shirt if one fades. $ 1.45 to $2.85 each Superb Shirts of full-count white imported Broadcloth, meaning finer weave, more lustrous finish, smarter ap pearance and longer wear. $1.45 and $1.95 NEW SPRING PRINTS Newest Varieties in the most Colorful Patterns 23c, 43c and 65c per yard SHOES FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY I 1 I " firemj Vo Smart Spring styles for Women, Misses and Children Straps, Pumps and Ties at popular prices. Comfort giving lasts, in fashion correctness. Women s . $3.90-$4.85 pair Misses . $2.95-$3.25 pair Childrens r.$1.35-$1.85-$2.25 pair YOUNG MEN'S OXFORDS With the unique styling, fit and comfort giving qualities that com pare with much higher priced lines. Combination lasts, rubber tipped and solid leather heels, in the new shades of tan and dressy blacks. $3.90 - $4.85 - $5.50 Senate Wades Through Ghrist of Minor Bils Final Action Is Delayed on House Measure Defining Insolvency of State Banks. Lincoln, March 12. Two minor measures were indefinitely postponed and seven were advanced during a short session of the state senate Tues- ' day afternoon. During the day con siderable progress was mdae in clear- j ing the board of bills on general file and tomorrow will find a large num ber of the measures up for passage. j The first bill to be done to death jwas S. F. 194, which provided that : where the beneficiary of any polic y 'of insurance, including fire, or both ! real and personal property brings an action to recover thereon, a reason able sum shall be allowed for attor ney fees. House Roll No. 48. designed to prohibit the use of tokens, slugs and other devices in coin boxes or pay sta jtions of telegraph and telephone com panies in obtaining service, was the other measure to be killed, j Final action was delayed on the advancement of H. R. No. 98, a bill defining the conditions under which a state DanK may oe declared msoi 'vent, when Senator Dwight GriswoldioO per cent below the rate charged I objected that the provisions might .be too stringent for safety. Under the provisions of the meas iure a bank could be closed when the factual cash market value of its as jsets are insufficient to pay the lia jbilities, when the bank is unable to .meet the demands of its credoitors, jwhen the bank fails to make good its 'reserve as required by law. and when the stockholders fail to make good impaired capital of the bank. Oma ha Bee-News. FRESHMEN BARRED BY DEAN FROM ALL N. U. ACTIVITIES Lincoln. March 12. "University students cannot participate in extra curricular activities unless they have 27 hours in two preceding semesters." declared W. C. Harper, assistant to the dean of student affairs at the University of Nebraska, when inter viewed Tuesdaj- concerning an ulti matum issued by the administration office to enforce eligibility rules. This ruling will eliminate fresh men entirely from outside activities. "These rules are the same as now apply to athletics." said Mr. Harper, "and not only freshmen but urper classmen are included in their scope." "Many students take too many ac tivities and neglect their scholarship. .Some come just for social life and make scholarship secondary. Their grades show it." e rules, which were laid down by the university senate last year. had not been enforced strictly up to !thc present semester, ! Such a ruling, according to author- ities, is destined to eliminate students coming to Nebraska primarily for ac tivities and to bar freshmen in order to give them more time to study. Lee BenneM departed this morning for Omaha where he goes to take a course of treatment at the Uni versity hospital as he has not been in the best of health for some time. Stpr BramJ Snoci 3 X NEBRASKAN GETS SENTENCE Santa Fe. N. M. Thomas A. Cof fey, jr., young Nebraskan cattleman was sentenced Tuesday to serve five years in Leavenworth prison and to pay a fine of $500 for using the Uni ted States mail to defraud in a $ 29, 000 sale of cattle owned by the war finance corporation. Coffey pleaded guilty to an indict ment Monday. He was alleged to have shipped lean cattle out of New Mexico into Nebraska pasturage,, where they were fattened and sold without authority. Californians Vote to Slice Income Taxes Would Cut Levy on Earned Incomes 50 Per Cent; Address Reso lution to Hoover. Sacramento, Cal.. March 12. By unanimous vote, the state senate Tuesday went on record for reduction of the federal income tax upon earn ed incomes. Senator Charles V. Lyon's resolu tion which urges upon congress the enactment of legislation which will cut the tax on that form of income on unearned incomes was passea without dissenting voice. Senator Lyon urged these points: "We know that this tax is wrong in principle. "We feel that the same rate of tax should not be imposed upon those that earn their incomes as contrast ed wit hthose that inherit and do not accumulate by their own earn ings. "This tax is a burden imposed upon professional people, on skilled labor, on many who have passed through long periods of toil to get a place of earning capacity. And when they get to that point, the government comes along and takes their earn ings away from them. "The doctor, the dentist, the law yer, and scores of others in many professions and trades, too, went through long periods of "lean years." "After they reach fruition from their many years of effort, they are faced with this tax which eats into their earnings at a rate entirely be yond what seems right and just." The memorial is addressed to the president, the secretary of treasury and congress. Assemblyman Morgan Keaton, be ing informed that the resolution had passed the senate, announced that he will substitute it for one of his own in the lower house, and secure early action upon it there. Omaha Bee News. LARGE NAVY IS PLANNED Washington -Chairman Britten of the house naval committee said Mon day the British naval budget in his opinion indicated that Great Britain proposed to maintain a navy ejual to the combined sea forces of all other nations instead of pursuing its pre sent policy of a navy equal to that of any two nations. The British budget, made public Friday in London, calls for naval expenditure of S2S0.0lt0.000 this year, of which amount $48,000,000, Britten said, is for the construction of new warships including five crui sers armed with eight inch guns. These he said in a statement were in addition to the eight cruisers new being built. Britten reviewed the British crui ser tonnage and said that a "care ful study of these figures would show that England has abandoned her tra ditional jolicy of having a navy equal to any two on the seas, and has nub stituted therefor the policy of a royal fleet equal to the combined navies of the world." AIR TRANSPORTS SHOW BIG INCREASE New York. March 10. United States Air trr.nsport companies cov ered 10.472,024 miies in 1928 with 294 planes and carried 52,934 pas sengers, say figures disclosed Sunday by the Aeronautical Chamber of Commerce. The figures show an in crease of 420 per cent in passengers and 100 per cent in mileage over 1927. MERGER OP TOUR AVIATION CONCERNS BEING RUMORED New York. March 12. Aviation corporation, recently organized with initial capital of $35,000,000 as a development and holding concern, was understood in Wall street today to have arranged to acquire control of four large aviation companies in carrying out its program to cover all phases of aviation development. The companies reported to be in the new group were Fokker Aircraft Tnrnnration of the Americas and j Universal Aviation corporation in the I transportation lines. Aviation corporation also was re ' ported to have made offers for in i terests in the Consolidated Aircraft I fornoration. Buffalo. N. Y.: Stear- man Aircraft Co., Wichita, Kas.. and ! nther rnmnanies. although it was j not believed anything definite had come out of these negotiations. For eiiKines. the company was be- lieved to be counting on obtaining i rights to manufacture the motors of Armstrong-Siddeley. Lid., of Eng land. Prominent officials in several of these companies are on the Aviation corporation board and Graham B. Grosvenor. identified with the Fair child Aviation interests, is president ; of the Aviation corporation. j No confirmation of these reports could be obtained from financial in terests backing the corporation. 1 1 . Advertise ia the Journal! Judges in Court Virtually Agree on Reservations America May Ttake Place in World Tribunal if Senate Willing;; Ac tion May Be Delayed. Geneva The world court jurists, including Elihu Root, virtually have reached an agreement concerning the American reservations and, if the United States Senate is willing, there seems every probability that the United States will take its place as a member of the great Hague trib unal of international justice. The big idea by Mr. Root has gone thru. Its phraseology has been put into other terms but its fundamentals remain unchanged. Presumably the Geneva agreement will go down in history as the "Root-Hurst agree? ment" just as the scheme for elec tion of judges of the court drawn up a decade ago is known among inter national jurists as the Root-Phill-more accord. Sir Cecil Hurst. British jurist, did not change the substance of the Root formula; he transformed its composi tion and gave emphasis at some points where Root in helping to frame the statutes of the court sub mitted the idea that the best way to elect the judges was by concur rent elections in the council and as sembly of the League of Nations. Would Quiet Apprehensions. He believed that this would quiet apprehensions of both great and small powers that they might not have ade quate voice in the choice of judges. This proposal was eagerly seized upon at that time, but Lord Thill more changed the phraseology of the formula just as Sir Cecil now has done some shifting in the Root for- mula concerninc the delicate nrob- lems of advisory opinions which the council has got into the habit of ask ing of the court. Nicholas Politis, the Greek jurist, and also Prof. V. J. M. Van Eysinga of the Netherlands, who presided at the conference in 1926 which reject ed the American fifth reservation con cerning advisory opinions, also con tributed modifications but the main work was done by Sir Cecil, who in troduced a written proposal. This effort was gone over care fully by a subcommittee composed of Hurst, Root. Politis and Vittorio scialoja of Italy. They reported agreement concerning the first three paragraphs and agreement in princi ple of the fourth and last paragraph. Hurst, Root and Politis were expect ed Teusday night to bring in the complete draft Wednesday. Sir Cecil Wants Speed. Sir Cecil's idea is that possible difference of views with the United States concerning the feasibility of requesting an advisory opinion on a subject connected with a particular international dispute should be clear ed up at the start. He prefers this to running risks of delays and mis understandings which might be in volved in holding consultations with the United States after the court it self has been asked by the council to render an apinion. Ke wants speed. He believes that if the council contemplates reauest ing an opinion the United States should be notified immediately. In this way the council will be made cognizant as to whether the United States has any objections. If it has, negotiations will be immediately in augurated and presumably would re sult in an agreement as to whether the opinion should be insisted upon or dropped. Think Question Political. The Root formula provided for its early consultation but gave more emphasis to its occurring after the court was in possession of the affair. Hurst and his colleagues are con vinced that the problem of whether an advisory opinion should be ask ed is fundamentally political in character and should be treated and solved as such by the league coun cil and the United States thru the in viative of the court would not be made impossible. The fourth paragraph, which has yet to be drafted, is connected with article 73 of the court statutes. This article instructs the court to give notice of requests for advisory opin ions to all states "entitled to appear before the court." This includes the United States because it is mentioned in the annex of the league covenant as one of the original members of the league. Little Hope for Hurry. Washington Little hope is held out here for consideration by the sen ate before the regular meeting of con gress in December of the new for mula agreed upou Tuesday at Geneva for American adherence to the world court. Chairman Borah of the senate for eign relations committee, which must first act upon the new scheme evolved "by Elihu Root with the rules commit tee of the League of Nations, statea he would be unwilling to proceed un til the League of Nations council it self has formally approved the pro posal. The council does not meet un til September. Mr. Root has worked out a for mula seeking to adjust the differ ences between the world powers and this country on the senate's reserva tion to adherence. The American reservation "which never has been ac cepted by the other powers stipulated that the world court should not un dertake to render an advisory opin ion on a case in which the United States has. or claims to have, an in terest without the consent of this government. State Journal. Tkere is no slacfc "business period tor tit znercjwait "wlto advertises iiis joods tie yW 'round. . Legislature to Hear Kearney Normal Row Scheme to Oust School Head by Fi nance Cut Proposed by Committee. Discontent with management of the Kearney State Teachers' college has come before the legislature with the admission by Representative J. D. Saunders of Kearney, at Lincoln Tuesday, that he he demanded the designation of George E. Martin, president since 1919. President Martin told The World Herald he had no intention of re signing under fire, and that he had asked the normal board, but without avail, to investigate rumored charges against him. Members of the finance and edu cational committees of the house of representatives, which recently visit ed Kearney in their routine inspec tion trips, pooh-poohed the sugges tion that appropriations would be re stricted until Martin stepped out, ad mitting, however, that had been pro posed. Wants Him to Quit. "It is true that I want President Martin to resign," Representative Saunders told the Associated Press. "I might say further, that sentiment among the citizens of Kearney is over whelmingly in favor of his retire ment. You're going to hear a lot more about this matter before we get through." Representative Saunders was one of a delegation from Kearney that called on former Governor McMullen last fall to ask for the appointment of a man on the state normal board who was known to be unfavorable to President Martin's retention. An other contingent from Kearney wait ed on the governor about the same time to ask that no one be named on the board who was avowedly hostile to the normal school head Governor McMullen finally ap pointed T. F. Hamer of Kearney, the anti-Martin candidate, on the normal board, but with the agree ment that no steps would be taken by him for the removal of the presi dent. That arrangement has kept the matter from coming to a head in the normal board up to the present time. Board Change Coming. When the finance and state insti tutions committees were at Kearney their members said they heard com plaints in regard to normal school administration. Some said they were convinced that a change will be nec essary to erostre harmony and serve the best interests of the institution. Three appointments are to be mad' on the normal board by Governor Weaver, subject to confirmation by the elgislature, b'-fore the end of the session. These appointments may to some extent, determine the outcome of the fight being made on Martin. Two are for the regular six-year terms and the other is for the seat now held temporarily by Mr. Kamer. World-Herald. Electric Heating System in Homes Found Practical New Method Is Successful in Eight Eoom House at Cost of $350 for Winter Philadelphia, Pa. The electrical ly heated home, without chimney or coal bin. predicted years a?xo by Dr. Steinmetz, is a reality. Homes and buildings in a half dozen differ ent cities are being successfully heated by this means this winter. This fact was made known by Chester I. Hall, president of the Hall Electric Heating Company of this city, who as research engineer of the General Electric Company, iu charge of its experimental labora tory at Fort Wayne, lnd., developed this new method of electrical heating. The method consists of heating large thermal storage tanks of water, using electric current only at night, when it can be obtained at the low est cost, and releasing this stored heat to the home as required. The same plan, either in conjunction with the home heating system or independently, can be used to supply the domestic hot water needs. The Hall heating system can be installed as a hot air, hot water, vapor or double-inine steam system. The charging or storgae of hat is sub stantially the same in all. and the only difference is the matter of dis charging the heat. "Electric heating is no longer ex perimental, the cost reasonable," ac cording to Mr. Hall. "It is the second winter for its use in Fort "Wayne and from data received from that city, as well as other restricted territories in which the company is operating. I feel sure that it is firmly established. I believe that the average eight-room home in the ceneral belt of stated, comprising Pennsylvania. Ohio. Indi ana and Illinois can be heated elec trically for approximately $350 per winter, providing of course that the building is well insulated. Otherwise the cost will be greater. "There is neither flame nor com bustion of any sort in the house," Mr. Hall explained. "Heat by elec tricity is not the product of com bustion and does not consume oxygen. The total, oxygen in the bouse ordi narily used to a great extent by coal, oil, gas or wood fires, is therefore ielt intact. The further products c! iaty) lMir5rn 'tin"1 Vi oc cm rlr ft c n sacc soot or ashes, etc., do not exist." v Bring ks your Cream aztd share In all pro Cits made Shippers, per lb.. . .52c At the Station 500 Bring us your Poultry and Eggs end receive the high est market price. We have c special market on Duck Eggs, doz. . . . Z7q Hens, per lb 22c Farmers Co-Operative Creamery On Lower Main Street PLATTSMOUTH - - NEBRASKA O'Maliey Has New Pian on Bank Deficit Bill Reimburses Depositors Up S20.000.000; State to Con tribute $5,000,000. to Lincoln, Neb., March 12. A com plete new plan for reimbursing de positors in failed state banks to an aggregate amount of $20,000,000. of which ?5, 000, 000 would be appro priated from the state treasury and $15,000,000 be raised by continuing semiannual assessments on banks at the rate of one-half of 1 per cent a year, was offered in the Nebraska house Tuesday by Representative O'Maliey, Greeley, democratic floor leader, as a substitute for the guar antv fund "first aid" bill, H. R. 299. after the latter measure had been "shot to pieces" on the floor. Same Plan in Senate. The same plan was to be offered in the senate, as a substitute for its pending bill to take care of the guar anty fund deficit, S. F. 242. A. N. Mathers, Gering banker and former legislator, was said to have given it his approval. Mr. O'Maliey said the new sub stitute represents the combined ef forts of several leading attorneys and others, including Judge F. S. Howell and William Ritchie of Omaha. Tiie house at one time got into such a tangle that Speaker Coulter asked : "Whoever said this house could act intelligently?" Bills Provisions. Principle features of the O'Maliey substitute are: 1. Assessment of solvent banks for 12 years, once every six months, at the rate of one-half of 1 per cent on deposits; estimated receipts, $1C 000.000. 2. Appropriation of $2,000,000 from the state treasury for payment of claims already been brought by depositors based on charges of mis management, fraud, collusion or neg ligence of the state's officers and agents and bank receivers. 3. Additional appropriation of ?C 000,000 fro instate treasury to pay similar claims which may be filed. 4. Acknowledgement of state's liability to depositors. v. No state bank to liquidate or consolidate with a national bank without first paying its share of the deficit. 6. New banks put up a guaranty fund reserve equal to 4 per cent of the capital stock, readjusted after one year to 1 per cent of average de posits. Omaha Bee-News. May Name Dawes for Post of Ambassador Retiring Vice President Being Con sidered as representative at Court of St. James. Washington Charles Gates Dawes, who retired from the vice presidency on March 4, is reported in well in formed circles here to be under con sideration as the next ambasador from the United States to Great Brit ain. The ruror lacks official confirm ation, with President Hoover stating that he will make no appointment: in the diplomatic corps pending th! arrival here late this month of hi new secretary of state, Henry L. Stimson. The president, however, i known to have a very high regard for the ability of the Chicago banker and soldier, dating from their asso ciations in France during the war. Mr. Dawes has revealed he was making plans to return to Europe this summer. The intimatiou was thsit this was a personal visit, but this is now linked with the rumor of his succession to the court of St. Jame:. It is assumed here in the saire connection that Alanson B. Hough ton, the ambassador to Great Britain, intends to retire from that post, if not from public life. State Journal. We print everything but money and butter. Piione your order to So. 6. Prompt service. " t Mm