The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, June 12, 1930, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
PLATTSMOUTH SEMI'- WEEKLY JOURNAL
THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 1930.
Union
For the Best
Groceries & Meats
SEE US
We make it our practice to
furnish absolutely the very
best goods at a price within
the reach of all. Highest price
paid for Country Produce.
R. D. STIHE
Union, Nebr.
The ladies of the Methodist church
served a very fine dinner to the
Union Business Men's club at the
library building.
Earl Merritt who was so poorly
for so long was able to return to his
work, painting on last Friday and is
improving with every day.
Mis9 Dorothy Foster who recently
returned from school at Columbia,
Mo., was spending this week in Oma
ha visiting with relatives.
The home of Mr. and Mrs. John
Sheared was blessed on last Monday
by the arrival of a very fine baby
boy at their home and allare doing
nicely.
At the school meet which was held
on last Monday evening, V. B. Ban
ning was selected as moderator, thus
completing the members of the board
of education.
Wavne Proust of Tecumseh and
Nebraska City was a visitor in Union
for a few hours on last Tuesday and
was looking after some business mat
ters while, here.
D. B. Porter and Harry Niday were
over to the river fishing last Sunday
and met with not the very best luck,
but are willing to wait until fishing
it better before going again.
Glen Todd from near Murray was a
visitor in Union on last Tuesday and
was getting a load of wheat at the
Stites elevator, as well as looking
after other business matters in town.
Rev. W. A. Taylor and wife were
called to Nebraska City on Monday
of this week to look after some niat
atters of business, they driving over
to the Otoe county town in their car.
George A. Stites was a visitor in
Omaha where he was called to loci: i
after busines, he having shipped i'.
number of very fine hogs to the mar
ket there and also some to Nebraska
City.
1). C. LaRue was over to Omaha
this week where he was called to
look after the settlement for the dam
age which occurred to him and his
mr by reason of the- wreck of last
week.
E. G. Osborne of Plattsmouth was
a visitor in Union for the day last
Tuesday for a short time and a guest
at the Business Men's dinner, also
visiting his friend, It. U. Stine, while
in town.
Orville Hathaway and wife who
have been visiting at Missouri Val
ley for a number of days returned
home on last Sunday and took up his
work on the mail route again the
first of the week.
Miss Ova Clarke was a visitor at
Greenfield, Iowa, for a number of
day extending over the week where
she was the guest of a cousin, re
turning home on last Monday after
having enjoyed a very fine visit.
Thomas McQuinn who recently
purchased a new mower with which
ot make hay with, and believes in
having labor saving implements
which will enable him to giX the most
out of the work which he performs.
Mr. E. G. Osborne when speaking
before the Union Business Men's club
on last Tuesday said that he did not
know anything about making a pub
lic address but he did know when he
sat down to a good meal and he had
just done that.
Henry A. Chilcott and W. B. Ban
ning who were out to Arriba, Colo.,
foabout a week returned home on
last Saturday night and report that
they found the crops very spoted,
some places good, some not so good
and some very bad.
M. R. Gehard, representing the Ne
braska Power company, who was
looking after some business in Union
said at the end of the dinner of the
Union Business Men's club that he
had not eaten as good a meal for the
past year as he received there then.
Miss Anna Bauers departed on last
Monday for Ponca City, Oklahoma
where she will visit at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Nickles for some
time and enjoyed the visit with the
folks and with the kiddies, who are
We Offer You Some
Good Serviceable
c-A-R-S
Put in Fine Condition for
Good Service
1927 Chevrolet Truck with 4-
speed transmission
1827 Chevrolet Coupe.
1927 Whippet Coach
192S Ford Roadster
1925 Ford Coupe
We maintain a first class repair shop
and Authorized Chevrolet
Sales and Service
CHAS. ATXEBEflRY
Union, Nebraska
partsneni
Prepared Exclusively for The Journal.
great friends of herself and Frank.
Eugene Roddy has traded his car
in and gotten a new one from the
Cole Motor company of Weeping Wa
ter, and sure has a nifty one this
time. He is well acquainted with the
Model A and likes it well. His driv
ing every day of one has given him
a good idea of the relative value of
cars.
C H. Whitworth, and the family
who have been visiting for the past
two weeks at the home of their par
ents. Rev. J. O. Whitworth, his fath
er, and Thomas Brennenstahl and
wife, her parents, returned home on
last Monday morning and immediate
ly began his work again. J. 11. Whit
worth of Kansas City and W. August
Whitworth of Topeka were here visit
ing while Mr. C. II. Whitworth and
family were here. They have a sister
at Marysville, Mo., but she was not
able to get home at this time. Claude
Mctcalf of Council Grove, Kansas, a
brother-in-law of Mrs. Whitworth
was also there which made visit very
fine.
Has House Repaired.
Rev. W. A. Taylor has been having
the house repaired which he has for
rent, the work being dona by that
eminent workman, Joe Bauer, while
Joseph Dare, has also been construct
ing some concrete walks about the
place. The repairs have been made
in order tor a home tor uavii An
drews, who has been rooming in tha
Dr. Achenbach offices. The boys were
In hi ncr Dave about moving and he
said their guess was too soon
Carol Mow King
of the Country
that Exiled Him
Parliament Returns Dynastic Rights
and Proclaims Him Monarch
Vote 301 to 1
Bucharest Carol Caraiman, citi
en, Sunday became Kirg Carol II of
Rumania by a vote of the Rumanian
parliament which lacked only one
of being unanimous. Thus the first
successful airplane coup d'etat in
history become a spectacular and
constitutional conclusion.
A man who renounced his royal
rights Jan. 4. 1926 and went into
exile with a woman companion, now
wears the crown of his fathers; his
son Michael, the boy king who hr-
ruled with a regency council, re
turns to his sandbox and velocipede
with the status of crown prince, and
there are indications that King Car
ol's' divorce from Princess Helen,
mother of Michael, will be annulled
for reasons of state.
The accession of the former crown
prince occasioned a widely enthus
iastic popular demonstration. Amid
splendid weather the city was gaily
decorated, and 200,000 cheering sub
jects lined the two mile route from
the royal Cotrecini place to the
chamber of deputies when the prodi
gal prince moved in a state proces
sion to take the oath as Carol II.
Royal Rights Restored.
King Carol's royal rights were re
stored by a srecial session of the
senate Sunday morning. Then, at
o'clock in the afternoon, the na
tional assembly of the senate and
chamber of deputies was solemnly
opened to consider the p;-j?lamation
as king.
The first speaker was Prof. Nich
olas Jorga, once Carol s tutor, his
friend thru prosperity and adversity.
With his voice choking with emo
tion. Professor Jorga declared the
decree of Jan. 4, 1926, which ban
ished Carol, was a monstrosity.
"It was wrung from the late King
Ferdinand, the victim of intrigues, by
Carol's enemies, and signed by the
king with trembling hands and tear
filled eyes," he exclaimed. "The act
was also illegal because the prince
could not renounce the succession,
which had not yet been opened. To
day reparation is due Carol. It is
also due Rumania for the fate of the
country and the dynasty."
The entire house arose and cheer
ed, and when a ballot was taken on
the restoration of rights 48G favored
it. Only one negative vote was cast,
this by M. Bratianu. liberal leader
State Journal.
FORD'S WORKERS BARRED
New York Henry Ford's plan to
have a fourteenth century English
cottage set up in Dearborn, by skill
ed foreign workmen was interrupted
today when immigration authorities
detained two workmen on technical
ities concerning visas. C. T. Trough
ton and W. II. Radcliffe, master ma
son and carpenter, were engaged in
England for the job and arrived here
on the liner Tuscania. Immigration
ofiicers found they had only visitors'
visas, wnicn narreu mem trom en
gaging in their trades while here.
It was expected, however, that a
representative of Mr. Ford would call
at Ellis island soon and post bonds
to insure the men's departure by the
time their visitors' permits expire.
MRS. R00LE TO VISIT
PORTO RICO W. C.
T. U
Evanston, 111., June 5. Mrs. Ella
A. Boole, president of the National
Womau'3 Christian Temperance
union, left Thursday for Portor Rico
on business for the W. C. T. U. She
will visit Mrs. Edith Irving-Revera
at Santurce, P. R., president of the
island W. C. T. U.
Phone your news items to No. 6.
Delegation
Favoring Rod
man as Governor
Says Group Opposes Weaver Mys
terious Conference Is Solved
by the Statement.
The mystery surrounding a poli
tical conference in room No. zbb at
the Lincoln hotel Monday afternoon
attended by State Senator James A.
Rodman of Omaha and others, was
solved by A. A. Misegadis of Tal-
madge, believer in the doctrine of
the "Constitutional Sentinels" abol
ishment of democracy and return to
representative form of government,
altho this doctrine was not a suDjeci
for discussion at the conference.
"The main thing we want is Jim
Rodman for governor," said Mr. Mise
gadis, as he came out of the meeting
place accompanied by B. R. Zastera,
also of Talmage. "We called the
meeting and it was attended by sev
eral prominent men from over the
state whose names I do not care to
mention. We are opposed to Gover
nor Weaver and his policies. We
want Rodman to run for governor.
Rodman, mind you, has not promised
to run, but we intend to file his
nomination by petition. We will start
Wednesday circulating a petition for
him in Omaha. It will be filed with
the secretary of state and Rodman
can accept it or let it alone before
the time expires. He has the matter
under advisement. We like Rodman
and his theories of government.
"Others not connected with our
meeting expect to start circulating
a petition in Richardson county nom
inating Governor Weaver for United
States senator. We are not behind
that movement. My first choice for
senator is General Pershing, and I
have petitions for Pershing which I
intend to send to him in France to
obtain his permission for filing.
Those who propose to nominate Gov
ernor Weaver for senator, I assume,
are to do so in the hope that he may
change his mind and run for senator.
He would have petitions on file which
he could accept if there is such a
thing as his changing his mind.
"There is another group of ex
service men bent on filing a nomin
ation by petition for Dr. G. E. Con
dra of Lincoln. We want State Sen
ator Wherry of Pawnee City to run
for congress. Of course there is no
use trying to tie up Wherry and
Rodman in the same campaign, with
their divergent views on ; banking
and other things, but we want
Wherry for congressman and a peti
tion Is probably to be circulated to
nominate him for congress in the first
district, just to have it on file leaving
the way open for him to accept that
nomination. He is talking of run
ning for state senator."
WILL NOT HOLD UP MERGER
Washington Members of the
house from northwestern states dis
closed Monday that they had been
written by Chairman McManamy of
the interstate commerce commission
that the commission would not hold
up negotiations toward consolidation
of the Great Northern and Northern
Pacific railways. A delegation of
house members from states traversed
by the two lines appeared before the
commission last month to urge that
it defer action toward consummating
the consolidation until further legis
lation was enacted.
McManamy wrote that "so long as
laws provide for consolidation of
railroads remain on the books we
must continue to administer them in
accordance with their provisions.
Therefore we cannot consistantly re
spond affirmatively to your sugges
tion," he added.
V. F. W. HEAR OFFICERS
McCook The afternoon session of
the convention of the Veterans of
Foreign Wars consisted of open meet
ing at which national and state offi
cers were introduced all of whom
spoke brieffly.
M. C. Reeds, McCook, junior vice
president made the address ot wel
come for the local post. Mrs. John
Mette, Palisade, gold star mother just
returned from France, gave a short
talk.
An American flag was presented by
Mrs Malinda Burr, Omaha, past de
partment president, to R. B. Sommer
ville of the local Red Cross chapter.
Relief funds and hospitalization
were the subjects discussed. The an
nual parade was headed by three
color squads and the McCook high
school band. Three hundred mem
bers participated.
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to thank all the kind
friends who so kindly assisted us
during the funeral of our dear bro
ther and for the beautiful floral of
ferings. We wish to thank the pall bearers
and Mrs. Harry Schultz and Miss
Gladys Bushnell for the songs ren
dered. We also wish to thank Rev. H. E.
Sortor for the kind words of com
fort. Louis Beckman and Family,
John Beckman and Family and
other Relatives.
Call at the Bates Book & Gift Shop
for a card or remembrance for dear
old Dad for Father's day, Sundav,
June 15th, .
Want Secret
Papers on the
Navy Treaty
Senator Borah Says Adoption of Such
a Resolution Not Censure
of President.
Washington The senate foreign
relations committee is prepared to
assert in a formal resolution its rights
to the notes d enied it by President
Hoover. Just how far the adoption
of this resolution, which is generally
expected by the committee members
on Thursday, will go in the row over
ratification of the London naval
treaty is problematical, but there
were indications Tuesday night that
some members would insist that ac
tion on the treaty be deferred until
the papers have been received. The
papers were exchanged among the
various powers in negotiations prior
to the parley.
Senator Black, Alabama, who has
been counted among the supporters
of the treaty, proposed the resolution
asserting the committee's right to
the secret papers. There is more than
a possibility that Mr. Hoover's re
fusal to give up these documents may
be made the excuse of several sen
ators in opposing prompt action on
the pact.
Meanwhile, both those circulating
petitions asking a delay in consid
eration of the treaty and those so
liciting signers to one asking the
members to stay here until the pact
is voted upon claimed twenty-five
signatures Tuesday.
Young Guard Feels Secure.
The "young guard" republicans
who started their petition proposing
to keep the senate here for the treaty
debate seemed willing to let the mat
ter rest where it is, confident they
have checked the move of the repub
lican old guard "irreconcilables," led
by Senators Moses of New Hampshire
and Hale of Maine for postponement
until next fall.
Senator Watson, of Indiana, the
republican leader, was signed up on
the round robin of the "young guard"
proposing the enate stay in session
this summer until the treaty is vot
ed upon. With the names treaty advo
cates were confident they could mus
ter a majority if necessary.
Chairman Borah, of the senate for
eign relations committee, announced
after a second day's discussion of the
protest of Senator Johnson, Califor
nia, against Mr. Hoover's refusal to
turn over the secret papers, that the
committee appeared to be ready to
state its attitude in a formal resolu
tion. However, Borah was of the opinion
the action of the president in with
holding the papers was "conclusive."
He remarked, there was "nothing"
the senate could do about it "except
impeachement, and that is too slow."
Opposed to Secrecy.
The committee asked Senators
Borah, Black and Mose3 to redraft
the Black resolution. While the text
of the resolution was not made pub
lic, it was stated it set forth the view
that the senate is authorized by the
constitution to "advise and consent"
with the president on treaties and
that therefore it has a right to any
paper dealing'with the treaty."
"I am opposed to secrecy in diplo
macy." said Senator Black, "and I
think the senate not only has a right
to all papers in connection with the
treaty, but has the right to deter
mine which ones shall be made pub
lic."
The committee will meet again
Thursday to take up the treaty. Sen
ator Borah is confident a vote will
be reached in the committee this
week on reporting the pact to the
senate. Whether an attempt will be
made to have the senate on record
in the Black resolution was undecid
ed. Senator Borah and other treaty
advocates, who are prepared to sup
port the resolution setting forth the
committee's view, do not consider
that it is a censure of the president
in any way. State Journal.
43 Counties
Lost During
Last Decade
Possible Figure Will Reach Goal If
Two Big Remaining Districts
Show Increase.
Des Moines, June 9. Iowa's 1930
census, now nearing completion,
probably will fall several thousand
short nf the 9 nnt nnft.mark. fisnires
fjrrftvr - u
made public by supervisors for 83 of
the state's 99 counties indicate.
Unless the remaining " counties
show an increase greater than those
already reported, the state's popula
tion for 1930 will not exceed by any
great number 2,450,000. In 1920,
Iowa had a population by the federal
census or 2,404,021
Forty Have Gain.
Forty of the S3 counties first com
pleted by supervisors have shown a
gain over their populations of a de
cade ago. The other 43 lost in the
census count.
Included in the 16 still to be com
pleted, however, are the two largest
counties in the state, Polk and Wood
bury, both of which are expected to
show material increases over 1920.
In those counties are located the
state's two largest cities, Des Moines
and Sioux City, neither of which has
yet been reported.
For the 83 completed, a 1930 popu
lation of 1,895,107 has been record
ed. The same counties in 1920 had
a total of 1,864,XS0 persons, a net
that withsiaiaels
evcai stairway a&nsc
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The varnish on your floors and stairways
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search, Sherwin-Williams
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Per yz pint :
S-W Floor Enamel
A bcav.t enamel finish for wood,
concrete cr linoleum floors. With
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Per quart $2,05
Flies on your farm stock takes dollars from your rcket
IDs Mess IFlgr Ceases?
saves feed by keeping animals quit and contented.
PREVENT the usual falling off of milk during fly time,
requires only a few minutes to apply
FOR HOUSEHOLD
Use the Wonderful Misty with the pleasant odor it
gain for the group during the decade
of 30,327.
1,605 Per Cent Gain.
This increase is equivalent to 1,
605 per cent, which, if not exceeded
by the remaining 16, would give the
state an increase in population since
1920 of 40,606 persons or a total of
2,444,625.
Supervisors, seven of whom nae
completed the enumerating of popu
lations for all census divisions in
their districts, have indicated that
most of the remaining 10 counties
will be completed this week. Oma
ha Bee-News.
Remember Dad on next Sunday
with a card of greeting:. You can
find a large line at the Bates Book
& Gift Shop.
Phon'e your news to the Journal.
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needs by this famous maker. Each is supreme
in its field. Let us save you money on your
varnish needs.
fioor rai'tiish
A. pale, durable floor varnish
made to take the daily punish
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EIGHTEEN REPORTED CITED
St. Paul, Minn. A two weeks in
vestigation of the Ten Thousand
Lakes Fur Farms corporation by a
federal grand jury was climaxed
Monday by the reported indictment
of eighteen persons for using the
mails to defraud in furthering the
affairs of the company. Federal gov
ernment officials refused to discuss
the matter, but it was said two form
er state officials and two former offi
cers of the defunct fur corporation
were among those named in the in
dictment which carried twenty
counts.
M. F. Kinkead, assistant district
attorney, said no details of the in
dictment would be given out until
all those named in the true bills had
been apprehended. Most of those in
dicted are believed to live in St.
Paul and are expected to surrender.
Losses to investors thru failure
SDsy Is BJene
7ATHER is a great institution. In fact, he is one of
JL the necessary evils, or otherwise. Ever since Adam
there have always been fathers. Nearly all of us have
had one at some time or other.
Now they have set a day apart for him for his
very own. He is the big guy in his own house for the
day. . . . Lets all give our dad something to make him
happy a nice shirt a tie a box of socks.
fctaangi iii s..-i.'j. !" ""
t
10
Mar-Not la a pale var
nish of pigskin tough
ness. And man how it
can take punishment!
Stands up month after
month under the con
stant tramp of nailed
heels. The eliding, scuf
fling feet. The moving
of heavy furniture. Hot
S-W Porch
anil Deck Paint
Especially prepared to withstand
outside exposure and hard wear on
porch floors, steps, decks of boats.
Per Quart .J&l.lO
kills Flies and Moths.
. I" 1 .WTOIMTLIH'-"JJ TtUt
of the corporation in 1929 were esti
mated at $600,000. More than seven
ty witnesses, including Governor
Christianson, were heard by the
grand jury in its inquiry which was
started subsequent to the collapse of
charges violating the Minnesota
blue sky laws filed in state courts
against llobbins and O'Malley.
STARVER, FAST OVER, GAINING
Danville. Va.. June 9. His self-
imposed starvation at an end, Frank
. uavis, bi), Monday was reDorted
to be gaining strength.
Saturday Davis broke hs 2G-d.iv
fast under the threat of being trans
ferred from the care of friends to
the state hospital for insane.
He had expressed the desire
to
end his life by starving.
Read the Journal Want Ads.
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