The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, June 23, 1930, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
PLATTSMOTJTH SEMI -WEEKLY JOURNAL
MONDAY, JUNE 23, 1930.
Alvo News
Simon Ilehmeyer and family were
visiting uii'l looking after some busi
ness in Lincoln on Tuesday of last
week.
Floyd E. Dickerson and George
S-.hccsley -were looking after some
business matters in Omaha on last
Thursday.
Joseph Benning and family of
Union were guests for the day on last
Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
J ilm Banning in Alvo, where all en
joyed the day finely.
John Coleman is at this time paint-
insr and embellishing the home of
Karl Bennett and we know when the
j"b is completed the home will sure
1 ok and be the better.
Pliillip Nickle last Wednesday pur
chased a new Farmall from the im
I '.ement distributing depot of Earl
I'.nniiott ntnl will irive the horses a
rest and expect more from the new
Machine.
A. B. Stroir.er and party were over
to Lincoln on last Wednesday after
noon, where they went to view the
:initnl building so that the visitors
f.xm the east might know what kind
of building it is to be.
E. L. Nelson, Chester Smith and
Crover Hill were the artists which
furnished the music at the barn dance
which was given at the home of
Frank Daugherty and sure they did
produce some good music.
Phillip Coalman has attached him
self to a grading crew which were
doing the work between Greenwood
and Ashland and accompanied them
to northern Iowa early this week at
the time of their departure.
Carl Johnson and Ed J. Schuelke
were making hay at the Johnson
farm on last Wednesday. They were
desirious of getting the hay out of
the way in order that they both could
get bark in the corn fields.
R. M. Coat man was looking after
the affairs at the postoffice in Alvo
for the first part of last week, reliev
ing Mrs. Elmer Rosenow who was at
tending the postmasters convention
which was convening at Fremont.
The new home of John Banning
and wife is getting along nicely and
last week the plastering was being
done by Roy Johnson and crew and
which, when dry will be completed
by the contractor, Gust Sorman of
Greenwood.
In order that he may make quicker
trips and haul more goods from Lin
coln to Alvo. Edward L. Nelson has
been having his auto overhauled by
the eminent machinist and mechanic,
Arthur Dingc-i and his able assistant,
Lee Coat man. j
Miss Kate Nickel went to Lincoln
on last Monday where she entered the
summer school at the state univer
sity. Miss Nickel has been a teacher
in the country schools for some years
and always endeavors to get a little
better qualified tor her work wi,tn
every year.
Roy Bennett and the family
departed some time since for a
in Kansas and other points,
who
visit
was
heard from at Burlington, Colorado,
where they were visiting with a sis
ter of Mr. Bennett. They are having
a. good time and did not know when
they will return.
Messrs and Mesdames Carl Rose
now, Lyle Miller and Elmer Rosenow
made a merry party who went to Fre
mont on last Sunday where Mrs.
Elmer Rosenow remained to Wed
nesday attending the postmasters
convention which was gathering
there for the first of last week. The
remainder of the party returned in
the evening.
Made Her Maiden Trip.
The nameless boat which the four
sports have just completed and which
was given a try-out on the l'latte
river on last Wednesday night, was
brought home to receive another coat
i i paint and to be embellished fur
ther by the artists. The owners are
somewhat puzzled at to just what to
call the boat. They were thinking of
calling it Hoover until they got it in
the water and got it all wet, then
they thought of calling it Smith, but
they have not yet determined.
Will See the East.
The genial rural carrier, A. B.
Stromer, has threatened to take a
week's vacation this week and will
see the windy city of Chicago, in the
trip which will be made up of the
family, will also take along a sister
of Mrs. Stromer and her husband.
Recce Coradine of Chicago who have
been here visiting for some time and
aho an Aunt, Mrs. Charles Peppel,
also of Chicago. While they are away
Roy Coatman will look after the rural
delivery.
Ga3 17 and 20 Cents.
Alvo. while a very lively city and
one who claims much independence
of action, is affected by the prices
prevailing in Lincoln and of the ac
tions there. There has been a gas
war on it in the capital city for some
time and family it crept into Alvo and
now the price of common gas is 17
cents a gallon while the ruby kind
demands three cents more.
Gava Bam Dance.
Frank Daugherty and wife were
host and hostess of a large number
of their friends on last Tuesday even
ing when they entertained at a
dance which was given at their large
and spacious barn. Thc.young people
any many older ones as well were
there in large numbers and had an
excellent time.
FOR SALE
One team black geldings; one
team black mares, sound and well
broke, guaranteed; harness and wa
gon. One mile west of Fort Crook.
jl6-3tv. HARVEY IIARGER.
ay Figures
Show Increase
of Employment
Six of Thirteen Industrial Groups In
cluded ir. Laboi Bureau Sur
vey of Employment.
Washington Increased employ
ment during the month of May as
compared to April Is reported by
the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the
United States Department of Labor
in six of the 13 industrial groups
which are included in its customary
survey. Anthracite mining, quarry
ing, electric railroads, telephone and
telegraph, power-light-water plants,
and crude petroleum production all
showed increases.
The building trades, which are not
covered in the bureau's regular em
ployment figures, experienced a mark
ed "improvement in employment con
ditions, it was learned from other
sources.
Excluding the manufacturing
group, the 12 other groups show an
increase of 1-10 of 1 per cent in em
ployment and a gain of 1 per cent
in payroll totals, the report indi
cates. The seven groups reporting
decreased employment were, manu
facturing, bituminous coal mining,
metalliferous mining, wholesale and
retail trade, hotels and canning. The
bureau points out that a slight fall
ing off in these industries is the re
sult of the change from winter to
summer trade.
The percentage of changes in May
in employment and pay-roll totals in
manufacturing industries are based
upon returns made by 13.3S8 estab
lishments in 54 of the principal
manufacturing industries of the
United States. These establishments
in May, 1930, had 3,271.015 em
ployees whose combined earnings in
one week were $S7.477,094.
Fifteen of the 54 separate indus
tries had more employees in May
than in April, the greatest gains hav
ing been in the ice cream, woolen
goods, cement, brick, rubber tire, and
slaughtering industries. The auto
mobile industry reported an incerase
of 1.5 per cent in employment and a
gain of 0.S per cent in earnings. Each
of the 15 industries reporting in
creased employment, also increased
pay-roll totals with the exception of
newspaper printing, which coupled a
small gain in emloyment with a
slight decrease in earnings.
Four groups of industries food
tobacco, stone-clay-glass, and vehicles
showed employment gains, the food
and tobacco groups, also, reporting
increased earnings.
The outstanding decrease in em
ployment was a seasonal one of 41.7
per cent in fertilizers, marking the
close of the spring shipping season.
Nine of 10 of the industries of the
textile group had fewer employees in
May than in April and decreased em
ployment, also occurred in following
important manufacturing industries:
electrical machinery (3.S per cent),
steam car building and repairing (1.0
per cent', foundries (2.5 per cent),
and boots and shoes (3.9 per cent).
Employment in the iron and steel
industry remained practically un
changed, a decline of one-tenth of
one per cent in employment occur
ring between April and May.
Decreased employment and earn
ings were shown in each geographic
division in May, with the exception
o fthe Mountain district which show
ed a gain in both items. Per capita
earnings in manufacturing indus
tries were 0.9 per cent lower than
in April, 1930.
In May, 1930, 10,776 manufactur
ing establishments reported an aver
age of 85 per cent of a full normal
force of employees, who were work
ing an average of 94 per cent of full
time; the percentages reported show
ed a decrease of 2 per cent in aver
age normal force with no change in
average time operated.
E0MES HURLED IN INDIA
Bombay Bombs Thursday bcomc
the newest menace to the adminis
tration of British authority in India.
In Lahore, Amritsar, Lyallpur, Gu
jrnwala and Rawalpindi explosions
of deadly missies tossed into vacant
houses and elsewhere have caused
injuries to officers and been the
cause of disorders. The outrages
have taken an unusual form. In
each case a bomb has been exploded
in a house or inn, after the police
have gathered there for investiga
tion another bomb has gone off. At
Ajnritsar this device was defeated by
the police who heard the ticking of
the timing machine of the second in
fernal machine.
At Lyallpur an inspector was ser
iously wounded and at Cujrnwald a
constable was wounded and consid
erable property damage caused. A
subinspector, head constable and
constable received slight hurts. In
an cases me plot seems to have be
een
aimed directly at the police.
FLORIDA TOWN INUNDATED
Fort Myers, Fla Flood waters
from the swollen Caloosahatchee
river were rising at La Belle, Hendry
county seat, Thursday night. The
town already was inundated to a
depth of from two to four feet in
all the streets. Residents of the
town were virtually marooned and
boats were being used for transpor
tation into and about the town. Train
service has been disrupted for forty
eight hours, and mail was brought
by boat from Denaud, a nearby
town. Telephone messages from La
Belle late in the day said the flood
waters still were rising, 'seemingly
at a slower rate than Wednesday
and earlier Thursday, when the rise
was reported at one-half an inch an
hour.
MORE EVIDENCE REQUESTED
Muskogee, Okla. Phil K. Oldham,
assistant county attorney, Thursday
advised John L. Wike and Lawrence
Sturgess of Connecticut, to obtain
additional evidence before swearing
to a murder charge against R. L.
Benton in connection with the deaths
of George and David Smith, Connecti
cut capitalists, who were slain in
their hotel room here the night of
April 26.
Sheriff Hamilton said Wednesday
night charges would be lodged
against Benton Thursday, but be
cause he was unable to work on the
case, in efforts to obtain additional
evidence and because Oldham be
lieved they had insufficient evidence,
the action was delayed. Oldham
said in bis opinion Wike's identifica
tion of Benton as the slayer of the
brothers was not sufficient to war
rent the filing of charges.
Senate Confirms
Mac Nider After
Brookhart
hgiit
Senator Assails Fellow Iowan as
Leader cf "Drunken Revel",;"
Old Feud Is Aired.
Washington, June 20. Hanford
MaeNider, of Mason City, la., con
firmed by the senate today as min
ister to Canada after Senator Brook
hart (rep., Ia.) had described him
as the leader of "drunken revels" at
American Legion conventions and
Senator Steck (dem., Ia.) had quickly
denied the charge.
Senator Brookhart, in voicing his
personal objections to his Iowa re
publican' political foe startled the
senate with his picture of American
Legion conventions as "drunken rev
els." He added:
"I have seen Hanford MaeNider
leading these revels. I know he is!
to blame for that more than any man j
in the whole American Legion."
Jumping to hi3 feet. Senator Steck
replied that Brookhart "does not j
know what he is talking about." He j
said MaeNider has been a "teetotal- I
er ' since he entered public life as
an assistant secretary of war four j
years ago. He called upon the sen-1
ate to confirm him. !
Old Feud Is Aired.
The senate listened attentat ively
to the airing of the old feud between
Brookhart and MaeNider and when
Steck had concluded did not even
take a record vote. There were a
chorus of "ayes" and the Iowan was
confirmed.
Brookhart reviewed the history of
his feud with MaeNider at some
length before referring to his foe
the leader of "drunken revels"
at :
Legion conventions. He said their ;
differences became "acute" when the
latter acted as "chief lobbyist" j
against him in the Brookhart-Steck j
contest for the senate in 1924. The
senate voted that Sfeck had won the j
1924 election from Brookhart. Brook
hart ran again and was elected two
years later.
Calls Him "Unfit."
Brookhart then read the senate
several newspaper stories quoting
speeches made by MaeNider criticis
ing him. He said MaeNider was "un
fit for any public office."
"Here is another charge I want
to make against the fitness of this
man especially at this time," conclud
ed Brookhart. "Too many American
Legion conventions have just been
drunken revels. I have seen this man
Hanford MaeNider leading those rev
els. I know he is to blame for them
more than any man in the whole
American Legion. I am not in favor
of sending as a representative of the
American government anywhere a
man that leads that kind of a situ
ation."
Formerly Took a Drink.
In his reply Senator Steck said:
"When my colleague infers that
Hanford MaeNider is a drunkard or
anything of that sort I will say to
the senator that he does not know
what he is talking about. He is eith
er ill-advised or he has no knowledge
of the situation. I will admit very
frankly that up to a few years ago
Mr. MaeNider did take a drink occa
sionally and there is no question
about it as thousands and thousands
of other men both inside and out
side of the senate at American Legion
conventions and nearly all other con
ventions have done. When Mr. Mae
Nider came into public life he ceased
to drink and has been an absolute
teetotaler for the last four years. I
defy anyone to deny that statement.
"MaeNider is fit for the position
in spite of the statement of my col
league. He has been chosen by the
president. He did not want the posi
tion but he was chosen and finally
agreed to accept it. I know that his
nomination meets the enthusiastic
approval of practically the entire
press of Iowa and of nearly every
citizen in that state, as well as over
the entire country."
World-Herald.
VISITING HERE FROM THE EAST
Mrs. Merle Rainey, of New York
City and Mrs. Frank L. Cross of
Pittsburgh, Pa., arrived here Fri
day afternoon and will enjoy a visit
here with their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. A. N. Sullivan at the farm south
of this city, as well as with the
many friends. Mr. Rainey accom
panied his wife as far as Pittsburgh
and from which city the two ladies
made the trip by auto to the old
Nebraska home. Mr. Rainey and Mr.
Cross are planning on coming later
iu join me lames in the visit at
old home.
the
Have you .anything to sell? Tell
the world about it through the Jour
nal's Want Ad department.
Crime Doesn't
Pay,
Declares
Ex - Convict
Reformed. Ho Is Tellinpr the World
His Message in Lecture and
Film To Be at Ritz.
"Crime doesn't pay."
"Money that comes easy, poos
easy. Crooked money burns the lin
gers. Its possession so sears the soul
of its possessor that he deires to he
rid of it in the quickest manner pos
sible." "Crime doesn't pay but the crim
inal does, with his life, his liberty, or
in some other manner. But the one
who pays4 most for his life of crime
is his mother, if she's living. She
pays for his misdeeds with thousands
of heartaches."
These are a few of the observa
tions made by Frank (Monk) Truin
lnrr, of Omaha, who led a life of
crime for 17 years, during which time
he spent more than nine years in
the Nebraska penitentiary, and who,
having learned for himself the lesson
that crime never pays and having re
formed, is carrying that message to
the world through a moving picture
depicting many of the incidents of Lis
own criminal career and plcad'iig
with the youth of the land, in a talk
accompanying the picture, to "go
straight." Trunimer and his picture
4 The Crooked Path" will appear at
the Ritz theatre here Tuesday, Wed
nesday and Thursday.
"I suffered plenty in my years of
crime," Trunimer said to The Journal
while in the city making arrange-1
ments to show his picture at the local
theatre, "but my mother suffered
more. I know it now; I've learned
the lesson she tried so hard to tenth
me that crime doesn't pay and
now I'm trying to make up to her in
some small measure for the heart
aches I caused her in the years before
I resolved to go straight."
Trunimer is an implacable foe of
the severe third degree methods em
ployed by the police in many large
cities in their efforts to make sus
pects confess. He says they are often
brutal beyond measure; that in nnst
instances the punishment they inllict
iis far greater than the nature of the
j crime warrants; that officers should
i be smart enough to get confessions,
'if they can be obtained, by buinan
j itarian methods and shrewd detec
jtive work, and that the third degree
'methods only too frequently make
I cor. firmed criminals out of first of-
fenders who could be saved from a
life of crime by the right treatment.
' Trunimer c arries several scars about
asihis bead which he says were inflicted
it'll on lio iiiilrVont hit first "third
(opi.0(i " Another, time, some years
ago wj1cn caught in a robbery, he
S0VSt iie was beaten into insensibility
j,y Omaha police, sustaining three
i,rokcn ribs and other injuries. This
incident is re-enacted in his film, he
say
The film was made after his re
lease from the penitentiary five years
ago, since which time he has been
going straight, and the Omaha police
department, he says, co-operated with
him in making some parts of the
film showing burglaries being com
mitted and arrests '.being made. He
says every scene in the picture is a
true reproduction-of events that actu
ally happened. The film has been
shown seven times in theatres and
before clubs in Omaha, including the
chamber of commerce and Knights of
Columbus, ho says, and in 13 church
es. It's morn I?' driven home in a man
ner that children and older persons
are not likely to forget, he says, is
that crime never pays and that hap
piness is found only in "going
straight."
Trummer believes he has ample
reason to know whereof he speaks
when he says crime doesn't pay, for
he was arrested 71 times, convicted
three times and estimates he 'made'
nearly a quarter of a million dollars
in those years. "But its all gone," he
says, and now lie is going straight
and through his films and his lec
tures he is making an honest living,
supporting his aged mother, and
carrying his message to the world.
Picture of the court house riot at
Omaha in 1920 have also been added
to the reels of interesting films, show
ing the rioting scenes that culmin
ated in the hanging and burning of a
negro.
This attraction of Mr. Trummer
has been secured for the Ritz by Man
ager Griffin on the earnest request
of many of the patrons.
VIRGINIAN FIRM AGAINST DIALS
Washington, June 19- Kind
words were spoken for hte ostracized
dial telephone in the senate Thurs
day but Senator Class of Virginia,
whose resolution to take them from
the senate passed, indicated firmly he
had not changed his attitude.
"I am not going to bother
with those fool dials," the Vir
ginian said. "I had enough trou
ble with algebra when I was in
school.
Senator Tytlings of Maryland
sought unsuccessfully to get consid
eration of a resolution permitting
senators who wanted the dial tele
phones to keep them. The senate or
dered alb the dial phones taken out
within 30 days. That period expires
on Saturday.
STEAMER DELAYED
New York The liner Berengavia,
due in New York Friday morning,
has developed trouble in one or her
four turbines, and is not likely to
dock until late Saturday, the Cun
ard line was advised Thursday. The
exact nature of the cause of the tur
bine breakdown was not announced.
MORROW NOT TO DICTATE
Newark Announcement that Am
bassador Dwight W. Morrow, New
Jersey's republican nominee for
United States senator, will meet par
ty leaders Monday to discuss putting
a wet plank in the republican plat
form was made Thursday by E. Ber
tram Mott, chairman of the state
republican committee. Morrow ran
on a platform advocating repeal f
the eighteenth amendment and state
liquor control. Mott indicated that
Morrow would make no attempts to
dictate a plank on prohibition and
expressed the belief the candidate,
v.ouid he disinclined to influence
candidates for slate cilices in drv
counties.
Mr. Morrow v.ili address the re
publican state convention in Tren
ton Tuesday, and will leave imme
diately afterward f. r Mexico City,
where he will spend about two
months in completing his ambassa
dorial duties.
Flint, Michigan,
School Gtoiv is
Invited Abr
Asked to Represent United States
at Lausanne and to Tour
Europe
Flint. Mich. To tin
m
uiihers of
; ca.ppel!
most p.ir
indus ri:-.l
the Central High School
choir of this city, for tb.
sons and daughters of
workers, has come the di
an invitation to rcprc-tii
t inct ion
of
-
ic
in
of
t-i
:!l the Unit
states at the Angh
Confcrcpc" at Liu
n:t rican 1v:
n;io. Svvit..,
i.i-i i, and to mal:e a
Sillgill!
ton
Kurope.
The purpose of the tour
i-
demonstrate what American sch? ,-.
are doing in the field of choral nius:;-.
and also that the colturM develop
ment of American cities is ke-?ei::
pace with their rapid industrial arc!
economic progress.
The choir was organized in 1!27
by William Wellington Norton, com
munity music organizer, and is un
der the direction of Jacob A. Kvan
son, assisted by William Kugel, stu
dent director.
In extending iiis invitation in be
half of the conference of which he is
British chairman, Percy S-.-holes,
London music critic, wroie to Mr.
Norton: "I believe this choir capable
of winning the hiThe-t ; pproval of
the best European critic-:. It has r 11
the technical excellencies, and also
the expr s.- ive sensitiveness th: t docs
not. always go h.uid in hand v.;!h
those, ;nd its repertory i; of th-'
finest. I think an Old World ionr
;vonld bring credit to American edu
cation, and would also be a stimulant
; M ho -1 music right along the ror.t
"The Anglo-American Music Con
ference would be happy if Mr. Kv:i;i
siin and his boys and g:r!s could ap
pear there. My particular desire is to
hear that choir in a program of th"
finest a cappe'ia t.iu-dc in beautiful
Lnu-anne Cathedral, of which the
loan has been offered us."
A s'tnilar invitation has also b on
extended to the National High Selic.nl
Orchestra, of which Jose;b. K. M -eddy
is founder and director.
The A Cappella Choir, which
maiT a choir singing unaccompan
ied, "as in a church." though it does
r.ot necessarily imply sacred music,
began attracting more than local at
tention immediately after its organ
ization. Explaining the purpose of the
choir, Mr. Norton said that " a mix
ed choir singing a cappella is the
only choral medium that can rival
the great advances being made in
the instrumental field of public
r-chool music. Its literature is the
only one that can stand comparison
with the great symphonies played bv
the school orchestra.
"The SO members of the choir, of
an average age cf 16 or 17. are fo-.-the
most, part nei.i tr. Every sopho
more voice is tested, and special
choral groups arranged. The school
opera is usually the goal of the jun
ior singers. There are, of course, a
few outstanding sophomores and
juniors in the A Capella Choir, but
that is the climax, reached by few
before the senior year.
"The music must help to produce
a right attitude toward life. Many
Of the boys and girls have known
nothing but jazz, and lnve h:'d no
previou : musical training, but ie
these choral groups they learn in a
surprisingly short time to love the
classics."
LAST LINK IN HIGHWAY
Denver The final link In a 1,
450 mile federal highway connect
ing Denver with Indianapolis was
forged Thursday when Colorado and
Kansas highway
agreed to change the
highway to No. SC.
similar markings in
nois and Indiana.
com miss'onc rs
marking of the
conforming to
Missouri, Illi-
PLAIIE IS STILL ALOFT
Chicago The City of Chicago, re
fueling endurance plane, was still
aloft at 10:10 Thursday night (cen
tral daylight time) as it neared the
litSth hour of continuous flying. Its
pilots, John and Kenneth Hunter,
are attempting to better the 4 20
hour mark set by the St. Louis
Robin.
FAVOR CAL DANF0RTH
ARMY AIR CORPS AID
Washington, June IS. A favor
able report on the nomination of Col
Charles II. Donforth to be brigadier
general and assistant chief of the
army air corps, was ordered tinam
iously Thursday by the senate mili
tary affairs committee.
A few of the large Cass county
maps left at the Journal office.
School Children to Hear
Byrd on Veedol Hour
- ? WV.v.
58;
m.mm
at
II M
3tQ
All
1
ft'
This summer's vacation lor more
than twenty-five million school chil
dren will not Include a more en
joyable hour than Rear Admiral
Richard S. Byrd's radio talk Mon
day evening. For to these young
admirers the South Pole explorer
has dedicated his first Important
hroadcast.
The event will Immediately follow
Rear Admiral Byrd's official wel
comes in New York, Washington
and Richmond, Va., and will go on
the air between 9 and 10 o'clock
Eastern Daylight Saving Time,
June 23d, from the--studios of
SvABC over the nationwide net
work of the Columbia Broadcast
ing System.
Sponsors cf the program are the
Tidewater Sales Corporation, niak-
son
Crop
is
lelow 1929!
Orchard Owner Blames Earn for Poor
Yield; Sees Bis Return in
1331, However. -
Falls City, June ID. A 25 to 30
per cent normal apple crop for Rich
ardson county Wednesday was pre
dicted by J. F. Schubert, prominent
Shubert banker and horticulturist,
after a survey of various orchards
in this region.
The yield will be approximately
5,000 bushels below the poor yield
of 25,000 bushels in 1929 of the
Shubert Brothers and the Loess Land
and Orchard Co., which are closely
associated.
"There is a wide divergence
of opinion on what caused the
small yields in 1929 and 1930,"
Shubert said, '.and perhaps no
one really knows what freak of
nature or climatic condition is
responsible for shortage.
Advances Theory.
"After checking up on many
theories and finding them er
roneous, I have reached the con
clusion that the excessive rain
fall in 192S and then again the
following spring was largely re
sponsible for the unusual amount
of wood growth which prevented
proper ripening of the fruit
spurs in both the falls of 192S
and 1929."
The yield of 20,000 bushels will be
exceptionally light in view of the
fact that the two companies have 700
acres in apples, more than half of
which are of bearing ace.
Sees Increase in 1931
''This spring so far has been
very favorable for the growth
and proper maturity of fruit
buds for the 1931 crop," bo con
tinued, "and if the present fav
orable weather continues, next
season should witness a yield of
4 00 cars, a crop similar to the
one harvested back in 1917.
"The outlook for a larger pro
duction is very promising as our
companies have set quite a few
trees and the young orchards are
practically all ready to bear
fruit.'
Shubert concluded by predicting in
the next few years southeastern Ne
braska would become an important
apple district.
AUCTION OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS
Furniture, rugs, antique and mod
ern picture frames, grindstones, an
vil and tools, children's urniture and
toys. To be held Saturday. June 2Sth
t 2 p.. ia. at the George O. Dovpv
home, North 6th street. Plattsmouth.
Journal Want Ads get results.
ff'CX. v ...vv 1 TO. .. ". ..
M '.it
k-: . . - v.- v
j;ji-Vt.-'i u
m -j
ers of Veedol Motor Oil and Tydol
gasoline, used exclusively by Byrd
on his expedition into Little Amer
ica.
It will be the first extended radio
description of Byrd's historic flight
on November 2S-29 last-; its dedica
tion to the bays and fiivls in the
United States was one of Byrd's
first requests on returning to his
family after an absence of almost
two years.
So young America awaits Ad
miral Byrd. He will talk for
about 25 minutes. He will give
a vivid description of the hard
ships encountered on his great ad
venture, and will present an in
teresting picture of life on tho
edge of the great Antarctic ice
barrier and its tremendous value
to geographic knowledge.
FOOD IS DUMPED INTO SEA
New York Further informal :n:i
about dumping of large iii:.i. t it it s of
vegetables into - the. ocean by rail
roads entering New lork was lur-
1 by railway ojcials Thursday.
s obtained by the Ik k' r. frr. i
and produce newspaper, which said
that in ten davs ended Tiiursd.-.
ithe Pennsylvania 'railroad had dump
ed 4 9 cads of perishables from south-
ern, and southwestern states and
Calii-irnia. The total included thirty
one c:rs of beans, one car of sqim-h.
sevt a c::rs of cucumbers, one car m'
cabbaare. one car of beets, and ciaht
cars of California lettuce. The EH
railroad reported dumping thn
cars of California lettuce last wek.
Both railroads were quoted .
denying that any of the food wa
lit for human consumption. Son-"
of the vegetables, officials s.iid. v. r
spoiled on arrival, while others w.-ie
refused by consignees on ;.c,-i;unt .
a price slump. Phillip H. Reed, per
ishable agent for th IVniii-ylvania.
said rules required railroad-; to s- ';!
refused foodstuffs if there -,vas a mar
ket for them. If not they are dump'-d.
SENDS REPLY TO TAX LEAGUERS
Lincoln. June 19. Attornev Cu-
eral Sorensen Thursday sent an an
swer to William F. Adams of I!a.-t-ings,
president of the Nebraska Tax
payers League, in the municipal
ownership controversy which has en
gaged them.
"As a citizen you have a pc
fect right, cf course, to work
with the power companies and to
help spread their propaganda,"
Sorensen wrote. "But why not
carry on the fight openly and
honestly instead of in the lively
of an alleged taxpayers associa
tion." Sorensen denied he has any con
nection with the Fairbanks More k
Co.; admitted advocating an amend
ment to the constitution for payment
or failed bank depositors, and ! ( it
erated that the state ought to set an
example by paying good wages to its
employes, excepting state officials.
Sorensen is president of an organ
ization which seeks to put a law m
the books broadening the rights of
municipal light companies.
INVITE HOOVER TO SC0TTSBLUFF
Scnttsbluff, June IS. President
Hoover has been invited by the local
chamber of commerce to travel over
the Oregon Trail route this summer
when he makes his vacation trip
westward.
It is understood that he plans to
make part of his journey by motor,
and, since has endorsed and support
ed the Oregon Trail centennial ob
servances under way this year, it is
thought he might favor such a trip
over the route traveled by pioneers
100 years ago. He would be in the
valley probably sometime in July.
Large map of Cas3 ccuntv on sals
at Journal office. 50c each.
.W.'M'Bl ""1.?'