PIATTSMOUTH SEMI -WEEKLY JOTJEITAE MONDAY, DEC. 2, 1929- PAGE FOUR .I,I.I,I,I,I,T,I,T..M,H,I.I,H. 4. f GREENWOOD Mrs. E. A. Landon was a visitor with friends in Lincoln on last Wed nesday, she driving over to the big city in her car. Gust Gakemeier, of near Murdock, was a visitor in Greenwood and was accompanied by Mrs. Gakemeier, they visiting at the home of Rex Peters and wife. Mrs. Earl Clymer, who has been in not the best of health for some time past, is reported as being quite poorly at this time, at her home in Greenwood. E. L. McDonald was elected as one of the executive committeemen of the Home Owned Stores, and will meet with the committee at the Lincoln hotel on December 5th. Ralph Clymer, who is agent for the Buick auto, was a visitor in Alvo and other partions of the county, looking after business for his com pany on last Wednesday. Mrs. John Ellwood has been very poorly for some time past and while 1 everything possible is being done to effect her recovery, still she does not improve as rapidly as she should. Messrs E. A. Landon, P. E. Clymer, Ralph Clymer and Carl Weidemann were over to Omaha last Monday, where they were in attendance at the boxing match which was held there that day. There were many from out of town in Greenwood for the two days shoot which the American Legion put on last Tuesday and Wednesday and a very enjoyable time was had by all those in attendance. Ray Friedrichs is sporting a new four door Chevrolet six sedan and thinks the car is an excellent one. These are the kind of cars which are sold by Theo. Carnes, the Chevrolet dealer of Greenwood. P. A. Sanborn, who has been taken with a very severe case of rheuma tism, is still kept to his bed with the disease. His many friends are hoping that he may be able to be out again in a short time. John II. Vick and wife, the latter a sister of Mrs. P. A. Sanborn, of Omaha, and Henry Deickman, a friend, of LeMars, Iowa, were guests for the day last Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. P. A. Sanborn. There is quite a bit of new corn being brought to market and which is being shipped out. Most of the grain shows pretty good as to con dition, notwithstanding the fact that the weather has been very damp. Henry Gakemeier and wife and daughter, of Murdock, were guests for the day on last Thursday at the home of Rex Peters. Mrs. Peters be ins a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Gakemeier. They all enjoyed the Thanksgiving together. Seme one told us it was the intent to divert traffic over the new grade from Greenwood to the end of the pavement near Waverly, and so the writer ventured that way, but we will allow others the privilege of traveling that piece of road in the future. Uncle John A. Grady, who has been having some trouble with one cf I113 eyes on account of a growth thereon, went to Omaha last week and to the Methodist hospital, where he had the growth removed. Although the eye has been very tender and painful, it is getitng along nicely. Robert E. Mathen3 and wife de parted on last Wednesday for Paola. Kansas, where they went to spend the Thanksgiving day with R. E. Matthews, Sr., father of our Bob, and with a sister. Miss Addie Matthews. 1 ney enjoyed the visit very much, even mire than coming home through tne snow. i.rauing was commenced east of Greenwood on the new highway and win it tne weather permits be con tinued until the work is done. The graders are able to work with the ground frozen some, but if the cold weather hangs on it will probably compel them to cease their activities in the near future. Art Reese, who by the way is an excellent farmer, is getting along nicely with the picking of his corn and has a piece which he had in sweet ciover last year, that is mak ing . 4 bushels to the acre, as well as another piece which he has had in alfalfa, that is yielding 62 bushels to the acre. The entire crop is ex pected to yield about 50 bushels to the acre. Mr. Tucker busied himself with the rounding up of some of the old Plattsmouth crowd, they all sitting down together to enjoy a very fine supper and a good time, and all the old friends meeting Mr. McElwaln, Died in Colorado Word was received of the death of Charles Pollard, formerly bt Green wood and Ashland and vicinity, but for some time making his home in Colorado, his death occurring on last Tuesday. The remains were shipped to Ashland, where they arrived on Thursday morning and the funeral and burial oceurred,on Thursday af ternoon. The deceased was 55 years of age and had resided in the west for about ten years. He leaves a wife and one brother. Mr. Pollard was a brother of Thomas O. Pollard, of northwest of town. Lignite 'CoaT Proving a Boon to Northwest North Dakota Plant to Turn Out 1000 Tons Daily and More Mills Being Planned BLAME PLACED ON ELAN I. 0. 0. F. Elect Officers At the regular meeting of the Odd Fellows of Greenwood held last week, thev followed the transaction of the other business which came before them, proceeded to the election of officers for the coming term. The one selected for the guiding of the ship of state for the order were as follows: Marion Dimmitt, N. G.; Forest Osnuts. V. G.; L. C. Marvin, secretary, and Harry Hughes, treas urer. The appointive officers will be announced at the time of the instal lation, which will not occur for some time yet. Charles E. Calfee was also elected trustee for a three year term DECLARE RUBI0 PRESIDENT Mexico City The Mexican con gress Thursday night adopted the re port of its election commission and formally declared Pascual Ortiz Ru bio, candidate of the revolutionary party, elected as president of the republic. The report stated that the success ful candidate had received 1.S25, 761 votes; that Jose Vasconcelos, candidate for the antire-electionists, had been given 110,279, and that Pedro Rodriguez Triana, communist, had received 23,279. The fall of the gavel marking the official consuma- tion of the Nov. 17 election was the signal for an outburst of cheer ing in the chamber of deputies. The parliamentary election com mission rejected 140.000 votes as il legal. Included in these were about 1,000 votes mailed from Los Angeles. A delegation of congressmen was chosen to visit the president elect and give him official notice of the result. The detailed figures showed he car ried each state and territory with a handsome majority. FIND RUM LADEN AIRPLANE Greenwood Xrans'er Line We do a general business make trips regularly to Omaha on Monday and Thursday, also to Lincoln Tues day and Friday. Pick up loads on these trips. Full loads at any time. FRED HOFFMAN. Meets Many Friends waiter iu. railing was making a trip to Lincoln and asked Mr. B. A McElwain to accompany him. They stopped on their way home at Have lock, where Mr. McElwain" met his friend of former days, William Tuck er, whom he had been intimately ac quainted with when they were boys pt Plattsmouth many years ago. Nothing would do but Mr. Mc Elwain stay for supper, and during the time It took to prepare the meal, Stock Hauling I have a station at Greenwood for Hauling by Truck service. We will jnve special attention to your needs day cr night. Very careful handling cf Stock and Goods. Call Phone 40, Greenwood, or Murdock, for best of service. Your patronage appreciated. J. JOH ANSON Detroit United States immigra tion officers Tuesday confiscated a rum laden airplane and arrested Its pilot at a landing field on the out skirts of Detroit, while across the Detroit river in Canada the Windsor provincial police raided ten liquor export docks between Belle river and Amherstburg in a drive against On tario's liquor problem, the illegal dis pensing of liquor declared for ex port. The American officers' arrest was made after they had gone to the field and were informed that an air plane carrying aliens would land. In stend of aliens twelve cases of whisky were found in the plane, they re ported. It was the fifth airplane which American officers have seized here for liquor running in five months. The Canadian raids also were ex tended to the north shore of Lake Erie near the Kingsville district, where supposedly a number of liquor running airplanes are lor.ded for their flight into the United States. Iehigh, N. D. Nature has lost her monopoly on the process of mak ing coal. Briquettes, which are lumps of man-made coal derived from lig nite, are replacing the old-fashioned product in many uses in this section. Last February this competition with nature was initiated here with completion of the first unit of the Lehigh Briquetting Company of capacity is to bet'soreanshrdleutao North Dakota s plant. Now the plant's capacity is to be increased to 1000 tons of finished briquettes a day, and a refinery for by-products is planned.. Moreover, two new plint3 are contemplated, a second unit in North Dakota and one in South Dakota. Lignite is beginning to be an im portant factor in another way. Elec tric generating plants, built at the mines, are converting it in to electric power for transmission to industrial plants in North Dakota and other states in the Northwest. The start was made at Columbus, in the north west part of North Dakota. The esti mated cost of the lignite for plants at the mines is 00 cents a ton. The briquetting process is termed by engineers simple and efficient operation. Lignite contains from oi to 40 per cent moisture. The ob jectionable moisture is removed by means of hot pases, evolved from the lignite itself. The tar oils are likewise removed. Large vertical ovens, more than MJ leet nign, con- tinuouslv receive lignite at the top and discharge a finished product. "char." r.t the bottom, the entire pro ces being automatic. The heating process is maintained by circulating hot gases continuously through the charge by means of blowers, under absence of air or oxveen. The smoke of the coal condensed into liquid, crude tr.r, which in turn is distilled as a pitch binder and by-product oils, contain ing base acids, phenols rid creosols. The pitch binder so obtained is a heavy, black, sticky, resinous body, kept liquid by ster.ni. At ordinary temperatures it quickly solidfies. Ac cordingly, when mixed with the pro cessed "char" from the original liir nite. it makes a plastic material which is compressed into small briquettes by a roll press. It is claimed by the manufactur ers and users that briquettes surpass even the best natural coal, giving n more intense heat over a longer pe riod of time. The fact that the fuel is smokeless i3 expected to enhance its desirability for use in cities. Denver Charges that activities of the Ku Klux Klan and the "penur ious" policy of the state legislature contributed to the mutiny of the Colorado state penitentiary Oct. in which thirteen lives were lost were made Wednesday by Thomas Tynan, former warden of the prison He testified at the concluding session of Governor Adams' commission in vestigating the mutiny. Tynan charged that the kan, as a political maneuver, had established a branch Inside the penitentiary to which both convicts and guards belonged. "It resulted in a complete break down of discipline and had a last ing effect," the former warden said. The state legislature, he said, had never in his eighteen years as war den of the state penitentiary appro priated sufficient funds for the prop er operation of the operation of the penitentiary. PUBLIC LIBRARY NOTES -t. WOMAN DIES FROM BURNS MINISTER TAKES OWN LIFE Tokyo, Nov. 29. Sadao Saburi. Japanese minister to China and form er Japanese charge d'affaires at Washington, committed suicide early Thursday at a fashionable mountain resort forty-five miles southwest of Tokyo. A telephone report from the re sort said Saburi shot himself with a pistol at the Fujiya hotel, where he had been staying. He returned to Japan recently from Nanking to con sult with government officials prior to undertaking new negotiations with China. Saburi was considered among the most brilliant members of the Japa nese foreign service with a distin guished career ahead. His friends were unable to give a motive for his act except that he had been de spondent since his wife's death in 1926. LOSSES TO CANNERIES HIGH Seattle, Nov. 28. As reports from canneries along the Bristol bay dis trict of Alaska continued to sift into Seattle Thursday, estimates of the damage caused by the terrific gale and tidal wave of November 24th had reached $200,000 indicating the storm was far more serious than at first believed. The only communica tion with the storm swept district is thru the signal corps, U. S. army, at Dillingham, and the bureau of edu cation station at Kanakanek. Seattle officials of Libby, McNeill & Libby were advised that all Its buildings and docks at Ekuk had been carried away; that shipways were destroyed and all floating equip ment beached. The cannery of the Northwestern Fisheries company at Naknek reported all floating equip ment, Including scows, on the beach.. Dispatches said the storm was the most severe and the tide the highest in years. - Short Horn Bull for Sale. We have a fine short horn bull for sale. Call or see either Raymond Hild, Mynard or P. A. Hild, Hurray. n28-3tw Ossirg. N. Y., Nov. 2S. Sparks from a short circuit in an electric cord set ablaze a secret tent water proofing compound in a locket labor atory, resulting in the death Wednes day of Miss Lucy Abercrombie, thirty year old daughter of Col. David T. Abercrombie, a sporting goods man. The sparks ignited a fifty pound pail of powdered parafine the base of the compound when she turned on an electric machine to mix the in gredients in an experiment. The burning mixture scattered in all di rections and Miss Abercrombie's clothing rauht fire. She ran for the stairway, but found the door locked. Charles Carlson, the family chauf feur and said to be the only person besides Miss Abercrombie and her father who knew the secret formula, was unable to help her. He himself was severely burned on the face and arms. CAPTIVE ASKS FOR HELP Shanghai, Nov. 2 5. The Rev. Ul rich Kreutzen, of Calumet, Mich., a Franciscan missionary, stationed at Wuchang, Hupeh province, who was kidnaped by bandits early this month has written Wuchang stating this his health is good, but that his captors are threatening to kill him unless troops seeking to rescue him are withdrawn. His whereabouts, said the letter, was beine; changed continually in the mountains south of Tayeh, Hupeh province. The Wuchang mission said that negotiations seeking his release were under way, the mission being will-ins- to pay what Chinese term "wine and rice money" approximating one thousand Mexican dollars ($500 in gold) but not the ransom of 6,000 Mexican dollars demanded. The bandits received the mission messengers but threatened to shoot emmisaries of the authorities who approached outer sentries. GALE HITS NORTHERN BAY Seattle, Wash. A terrific gale ac companied by an extremely hifh tide, did heavy damage to canneries and other buildings in the Bristol bay district of Alaska, Nov. 25. A mes sage to the United States bureau of education offices here Wednesday from the bureau of education radio station at an Indian village near Dil lingham Bajid: "An extremely high tide accom panying a heavy Southwest gale on Nov. 25, caused serious damage In the Bristol bay district. Wrecked some of the canneries totallq Some not heard from may be in ruins." Twenty-sir canneries , are in the district. Bureau of education offi cials here said the damage might easily run to $100,000. The Plattsmouth Public Library gained 29 new borrowers during the month of October. The number of books exchanged was 3o23, an in crease over October, 192S, of 1027 volumes. We feel that this is an un usually good record. The largest day's circulation was 223 books, and on that day Miss Jones and Miss Leo nard must have been very busy. A valuable gift has been recently received by the library. It is a plat of the city of Plattsmouth, drawn by Mr. Charles M. Lewis for Mr. D H. Wheeler. It is dated July 15, 1S5S. This map is now framed so that it may be easily examined by those in terested. The streets are numbered and named on the map, but the peo ple of today's generation will be sur prised at the difficulty in locating to day's familiar land-marks some of our "old-timers" will understand it better. It will be worth your time to see the book displays in the Stores for Book Week. You may see something that you would like to read. The fol lowing stores have displays: Wes cott's Clothing; Ladies Toggery; Soennichsen's; and Mrs. Emma Pease, Millinery. Five new International Mind Al cove books have been received and they are very attractive. The titles are as follows: "The Spanish Pag eant." by Arthur S. Rigcs. This is a very readable book on Spain, and should make a direct appeal to even the casual reader. "Understanding India" by Ger trude M. Williams. This author gives an excellently balanced view of life in India, and, as she herself says, brought away a different impression of the same country, of which Miss Mayo writes in "Mother India." The latter book caused so much comment and disagreement that it is interest ing to read other viewpoints. "Ireland, the Rock Whence I was Hewn" by Donn Byrne. It seems to embody all the dreams and poetic fancies we have had of Ireland and to give, in exquisite form, a lovely picture of the land of the author's boyhood. The book itself is so lively, it is a pleasure to handle it. "The League of Nations" by John Snencer Bassett. This Is one or tne newest and most authoritative books on the Leaerue of Nations. It will be invaluable for reference and study John Spencer Bassett is probably familiar name to many who studied his histories in college. "The Old Savage in the New Civil ization" by Maymond B. Fosdick This is the type of book which can be read at a sittinp:. It is written to stimulate thinking on the most chal lenging problem that confronts our treneration: "What use are we go ing to make of our new machinery? The above comments on these live books were quoted from the letter of the lady who chooses the books to be sent to our mind alcove. Sterilization Suit is to be Dropped State Board of Examiners Rescind Order Upon the Advice of Attorney General. Tho suit instituted by attorneys for Rosario Failla, an Italian of Oma ha, committed to the state hospital for the insane at Lincoln, for the purpose of testing the constitution allty of the Nebraska sterilization law, is to be dropped a3 a result of the action of the state board of exam ineis Wednesday afternoon, but At torney General Sorensen stated that it is understood a new action is to be commenced. Attorney General Sorensen con ferred with members of the examin ing board, made up of medical staff members of state institutions. He told members of the board he did not believe the order for sterilization in the case of Failla had been done un der the procedure as outlined in the amendatory statute passed by the leg islative of 1929. He recommended that the order of the board be re scinded. The board immediately re scinded its order. The attorney gen eral will file an answer in the suit stating that the order has been re scinded and that there is no order in existence which can be the subject of a court order of injunction. The attorney general said the board of examiners will adopt rules and regulations governing enforce ment of the new law and that it may then be free to proceed to reissue an order in the Failla case. He said this would be done, and his attorneys will file a new suit under a diffent state of facts. The amendatory law of 1929, pro moted by Senator Reed of Hamilton county and other members of the leg- slature, provides for sterilization of feebleminded, insane and habitual criminals in state institutions, upon proper procedure of the board of ex aminers, board of control and courts, after a hearing. The former law au- horized sterilization only of insane when relatives consented, upon a court order. Failla's attorney contended in his petition that he is not insane, tho committed as insane, that since com mittment he has been cured of his emporary malady. He is arried and as two children. State Journal. DAUGHTER GETS INSURANCE FUND Lincoln, Nov. 29. Mrs. C. E. Melvin, stepdaughter of the late James B. Harvey, former Fairbury railroad man, was Friday awarded the Insurance money from a -1,500 policy held by her stepfather with the Brotherhood of Locomotive Fire men and Enginemen. The money had been the subject of litigation between Mrs. Melvin and five sisters and brothers of the dead man since he was shot and kill ed by his wife, Emma A. Harey, on Oct. 5, 1927. The brotherhood, being unable to decide to whom to pay the money since Mrs. Emma A. HarveJ had become ineligible to be the bene ficiary because of having murdered the insured, brought the suit asking the court to decide who was the legal beneficiary. Bill to Slice 160 Million to Come Up Soon Will Make U. S. Santa Claus to Tax payers; Se3 Early Passage; GAMER'S arieiy Store at Plattsmouth is Prepared for the Holiday Shoppers Al! New Goods at Lowest Prices Full Line Toys Cars, Dump Trucks, Sleds, Wagons, Games, Erector Sets, Dolls, Dishes, and a hundred other items. Bring the kiddies here and let them see the many fine things we have secured for our first Christmas season's business in Plattsmouth. It Pays to Trade at Gamer's No Oppcsition. BETTER NOT SAY IT SEVEN NEW FIRES START Fresh and toothsome cashew, al monds and pecans, also chocolate coated almonds and peanuts at the Bates Bock & Gift Shop. Grants Pass, Ore. Seven new fires in southwestern Oregon forests late Monday sent every available official of the United States forestry service attached to this district office into active service. The fresh outbreak was reported at a time when it was believed all major fires were under control. James BillinKsIea. district supor- vsor, left at once to take active charge of the situation. While early rports indicated the Oold Beach fire bad been brought under control. latest word said the flames had broken out anew. With telephone lines burned out communication with many of the fire lanes was seriously handicapped, and in most places com munication was maintained only by runners. Meager reports of losses overnight indicated the situation may have reached a serious stage, Billingslca said before he loft. His office had received the earlier report lending hope that the fire condition had im proved. Fires in the Siskiyou mountains near the Oregon-California line swept over 300 acres of brush Satur day and Sunday and a fire was re ported on Dutch Creek Monday in three places. They were not serious. All were caused by campers or pros pectors who failed to extinguish their campfires. MEXICO WILL ADHERE TO KELLOGG TREATY Washington, Nov. 26. Ambassa dor Tellez of Mexico formally noti fled the state department Tuesday of his country's adherance to the Kel logg treaty for the renunciation of war. Phone your news to No. 6. Bad news travels faster than good news. There is an old saying, "No news is good news. Let a man De converted at a church service and there is not much of a stir, but let a resident be convicted of crime and the news leaps by word of mouth from one end of the community to the other. How thoughtlessly unkind we sometimes are when acquaintances of our3 suffer misfortune! Troubles are bound to come to us all in some shape or form, and what we say about oth ers today may apply to us tomorrow. News is no respecter of persons. We are prone to consider the ways of others not our ways when we should be watching our own steps What folks say to one another some times hurts more than anything they could have done. News, good or bad. grows and becomes exaggerated and distorted with peddling. When the news is good it makes no material difference how it is exaggerated or distorted it can never do anyone positive harm. But bad news given wings, may bring sorrow and ruin upon people who certainly are not de serving of a punishment beyond the penalty of their mistake. More charity for others will mean charity for ourselves and we will gradually come to take a keener de light in reporting something good of some person than something bad. Good is constructive, bad is destruc tive. Just before you are about to lot out a bit of "bad news" stop a moment. See if you can't think of something good to say in place of it. The chances are ten to one that you will. BURNS FATAL TO YOUTH Worcester, Mass., Nov. 28. Wal lace Schramm, twenty-two. of Pierce, Neb., died in a hospital Wednesday as the result of burns suffered a week ago in a laboratory explosion at Holy Cross college here. Schramm was a former student at Creighton univer sity, Omaha, and a graduate of Holy Cross. He was taking a post gradu ate course and serving as an instruct or in chemistry at Holy Cross. At his bedside when he died was his father, O. S. Schramm, of Pierce, Neb., who came here by airplane and train upon receiving word of the ac cident. Washington, Nov. 29. Decks were cleared by house leaders Friday for passage of the $160,000,000 tax re duction bill by next Thursday night, with prospects the senate will have acted on it before the Christmas holi days. "We are going to move full speed ahead to pass this joint esolution, which gives taxpayers relief and which should stimu late business," Hawley said. The joint resolution carrying the Christmas present for the taxpayers will be introduced in the house Mon day, the opening day of the regular session, by Representative Willis C. Hawley of Oregon, chairman of the ways and means committee, he an nounced. He will call a meeting of his com mittee for Wednesday, at which Un dersecretary of the Treasury Mills and possibly Secretary of the Treas ury Mellon will appear to urge pas sage of the measure. Use "Gag" Rules. Chairman Hawley believes the ac tion of his committee will break re cords for speed and that he will be able to report the measure Wednes day night for passage on Thursday. Should a minority in the house de cide to prolong debate on the meas ure and seize the occasion for leugi. ; speeches, the 'gag" rules of the house probably will be clamped down ar.f. debate limited. If Undersecretary of the Treasury Mills were not going to be absent from the city because of a previous engagement on Tuesday, the ways and means committee probably would have been called to meet on that day. But in view of the fact that the re publican committee on committees will be in session on Tuesday, this too obviates a committee meeting on that date. Chairman Hawley said. Vision No Opposition. Similar sentiments were express ed by Representative John N. Garner of Texas, democratic floor leader and ranking democrat on the ways and means committee. In view of the gentlemen's agree ment between republican and demo cratic leaders, reached at a confer ence with Secretary Mellon, there will be no formidable opposition to the tax melon. Republican and democrat leaders on the ways and means committee. as well as on the senate finance com mittee, have agreed to put through the $160,000,000 program without material alteration. Some difficulty Is understood to be facing the Treasury department in drafting the joint resolution. The in tention is to make the reduction ap ply only on earnings in the calendar year 1929, but payable in 1930. Omaha Bee-News. THE COALITION'S SUCCESS .REFLECTORS FOR TRUCKS ORDERED BY COCHRAN When the smoke clears away It will be recognized, we believe, that the coalition did most useful work In the special session of Congress, end ed last week. It has saved the coun try from a tariff which would have placed an unconscionable burden up on every household, and would have put American foreign trade In the products both of farm and factor un der severe handicaps. It has pre vented the Republican party from committing a gross violation of Its campaign pledges. It has awakened the country to a realization that tariff making by the President un der the flexible provision is a per version of sound constitutional prac tice. Through its investigation of lobbying it has done much to edu cate the country on the question of tariff making. It has saved President Hoover the embarrassment, and pos sibly even from the political disaster, which would have befallen him had he been compelled to choose between approving of vetoing the Hawley- Smoot bill. The coalition has done just exactly what the opposition un der popular government is supposed 'o do. We have no doubt that its success has come because it faith fully reflects popular disapproval of the tariff bill which the Republican Old Guard tried to enact. To say this is not to overlook the fact that the coalition is at its maxi mum strength in opposing the Kaw-ley-Smoot bill and that it would have great difficulty in writing a satis factory bill of its own. Being a coal ition, it does not represent a homoge nous set of principles. Our own posi tion may be taken as an example to illustrate the point. The Post-Dispatch has been thoroughly in favor of defeating the Hawley-Smoot bill, but it has little sympathy with the ultra-protectionism for agriculture which some of the Senators from the Northwest propose. We can see no good to agriculture or to anyone else in carrying protection to such ex tremes. Our own desire is not to see the tariff on agriculture raised to the skies, though we recognize a certain Justice in this form of retaliation against the past excesses of the East ern tariff interests. Our own desire Is to see the whole project of general tariff revision fail, and to substitute for its special revision of particular schedules. i We believe that the history of the special session demonstrates the truth of the argument that general tariff revision is a bad way of fixing the tariff. Invariably and inevitably it comes down to mere log-rolling in State Engineer Cochran announced Friday morning that all trucks oper ating in the state must carry a red reflector on the left rear side of the which any real consideration of rates on their merits and in the light of the available facts is forgotten. Every general tariff bill raises so many questions at once, and affects so many interests at once in so many unpredictable ways, that it acts as a general Irritant on the whole econ- ruck and a green reflector on the left front side, to enable motorists to more easily distinguish the side of the truck. Truck operators will be given until the first of the year to comply with this regulation. Under a bill passed by the legis lature the department of public FAMILY FETES TWO WED FOR 50 YEARS Stromsburg, Nov. 29. Mr. and Mrs. G. N. Ekstrana ceieDraiea ineir golden wedding anniversary at their home in , this city Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Ekstrand were married Nov. 27. 1S79. All of their nine liv- s children and many of tneir grandchildren were here to help them foiehrato. A dinner was served at the Park hotel, atw hich 30 of the immediate family were present. Mr. and Mrs. Ekstrand held open house during the afternoon to their friends. " " " e" . iv. . . lish such rules as they felt necessary r ""1- i country, it is a better traffic conditions on state tmue auu uusoieie metnoa of pro cedure, and the country would be well served if the two parties would abandon entirely the whole concep tion of general tariff revision. For the one certain thing about tariffs is that the economic life of the country can adjust Itself to any tariff if only that tariff is regarded as permanent. It Is the alteration of tariffs, up or down, whicn dislocates me economic structure. Therefore the alternation of the tariff on each particular occasion ought to be nar rowed to the smallest possible scope, to highways, if such rules were not con- rary to, or not included in the stat utes. While the weight, width and height of all trucks are limited by law. State Engineer Cochran said that this feature was not included in the statutes. This law is the same as the Iowa state law with the ex ception that a red reflector is not re quired besides the tail light. NEMAHA PAPER CHANGES HANDS Tecumseh. Nov. 29. The Nemaha County Republican announced in its and printing office by Jack H. Walsh, so aa to confine the effects within the publisher, to O. N. Smith of this city. BUI1"e ximus ana to permit consid Smith owns an auto agency here eration of these effects uninfluenced ana is not a neweiiapeiuidu. dt log-roillne banrntno o r .... not know what Smith Pnofon. said he did not was going to do with the property, but that possession will be taken next Monday, Those interested in the deal said . " " 7 " an 01(1 rnenl that the paper will probably be con- " . a" yww tOKen for the solidated with the Nemaha county wamuia season and now is the Herald, published at Auburn by J. time to call at the Bates Bv a C. voiiae. Girt Shop and mate w" awuLics