The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, August 10, 1931, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
PLATTSMOUTH SEMI -WEEKLY JOURNAL
MONDAY, AUG. 10, 1931.
Weyrich & Hadraba
PRESCRIPTIONS
Drugs Kodaks
Radios Candy
School Supplies
Wife of Chinese
Regains Rights
of U. S. Citizen
Mrs. Lillian Ying Kiang First
Receive the Benefit of New
Cable Act
to
SOIL PROBED FOR LIQUOR
Washington Members of the Na
tional Woman's Party were rejoicing
today with Mrs. Lillian Ying Lu
Kiang. American-horn woman of
Chinese allegiance, who had her
United States citizenship restored by
Jjldge Joseph W. Cox, of the Supreme
Court of the District of Columbia.
Mrs. Kiang lost her citizenship 11
years ago when she married Dr.
Kiang Kanghu, internationally
known Chinese scholar. It was re
stored in accordance with the provi
sion of the new Cable Act. passed
in the closing days of the last Con
gr B. The bill was sponsored by
the National Woman's Party, and
this is the first case to come up in
the national capital under the Act.
The new amendments to the
Cable Act provide that a woman who
was a citizen of the United States
at birth, and lost her citizenship by
residence abroad after marriage to
an alien or by marriage to an in
eligible alien, may become natural
ized by a short method. They also
provide that a woman who was a
citizen at birth shall not be denied
naturalization by reason of her race,
repealing the provision that denied
naturalization to a woman married
to an alien ineligible to citizenship.
Mrs. Kiang is a native of San
Francisco. Upon her marriage to
Dr. Kiang Kanghu. then a professor
in the University of California, she
lost her citizenship. Dr. Kiang has
been connected with the research de
partment of the Library of Congress
for a number of years and is at pres
ent of Chinese Studies in McOill Uni
versity. In China, after her mar
riage. Mrs. Kiang took an active part
in the educational program, direct
ing the government kindergartens
for five years.
MAN SHOT FOR THIEF
LEAVES THE HOSPITAL
Madison EL B. Alexander, twenty-nine.
Antlers, Okl., who was con
fined at a Norfolk hospital because
I .1 ballet wound in the hip received
in a shooting fray at a garage here,
has disappeared from the hospital.
Gilbert Seibler, who county officials
Sid admitted shooting Alexander,
was arrested and released on his own
recognizance. Seibler said he
thought Alexander was attempting
to carry off some garape tools. No
charges have been filed against ei
ther of the men.
Central City Several hundred per
sons were probing the soil of a Silver
Creek farm Thursday in hopes of
finding liquor in addition to the 730
gallons discovered in a raid Wednes
day by county officers.
Two men arrested in the raid and
brought to jail here were identified
as James Reynolds, twenty-eight.
and Charles White, thirty-one, of
Omaha. Sheriff Mohr said Reynolds
had expressed willingness to plead
guilty to liquor charges. The farm
was leased by a third person, how
ever, and Mohr thought the men ar
rested were merely hired hands.
A 700 gallon still also was con
fiscated. Brought to the courthouse
here along with the liquor, it at
tracted 2,000 curious persons.
Most of the confiscated liquor was
in jugs and barrels buried beneath
the ground. Officers found it only by
patient probing for thirty hours.
They believed they had discovered
it all but scores of other persons con
tinued the search.
The still was operating in a new
ly built chicken shed. Officers were
of the opinion it had been working
about a month. An automobile and
a truck also were taken by the officers.
SLAYING SAID JUSTIFIABLE
Rapid City, S. D. A coroner's
jury brought in a verdict of "neces
sary and justifiable"' shooting in the
death of John "Blackie" Borland,
killed by officers frustrating an al
leged plot to blow up the Warren
Lamb mill in this city. Borland was
shot and instantly killer, by a sher
iff's posse as he was about to flee
from an ambush.
Sheriff Nielsen was the only wit
ness calid. He testified that he
was tipped off Tuesday that a plot
had been planned to blow up the
mill, and that he had been furnished
with a description of the man. had
been told when and how the plant
was to be blown up and what was to
be used. A sheriff's posse of seven
waiting there saw two men approach.
Flashlights were turned on the
men as they neared and they were
ordered to throw up their hands.
One man complied while the other
turned to flee and made a motion
to throw something, the sheriff stat
ed, whereupon one of the officers fir
ed and the man fell. The identity of
the officer who fired the shot is not
known, the sheriff stated.
WIDOW BUYS 280 ACRES
OF UNIMPROVED LAND
Wymote, Aug. 6. A 2S0-ac-r-tract
of unimproved land belonging
to the Morris Jones estate was sold
at referee's sale to the widow for
$75 an acre to facilitate settlement.
Mrs. Jones outbid a large field.
FINAL CLEARENCE
127 Pairs of Summer Shoes
Blonde, White Kid, Linen, Suva
Cloth and Patent Pumps, Straps
and Oxfords. Low heel, medium
and high heels. Values to $6 pair.
Regardless of the
Former Prices
$2.49
!
HOSIERY
selling to $1.65. Good shades
Discontinued numbers of very fine first
quality Stockings formerly CO I
Sizes 9 to 10i2
Men's Dress Oxfords
Values to $8 Sizes 6V2 to 11
36 pairs Medium and Broad Toe Tan
Calf Oxfords. Clearance price
NO APPROVALS ALL SALES FINAL
$3.49
Fetzer Shoe Co.
Quality Footwear
GREENWOOD f
X
W. P. Bailey, of Ashland, was call
ed to Greenwood on Monday of last
week to look after some business mat
ters here.
Mrs. A. R. Spires and daughter,
Miss Genevieve, departed a few days
since for Lincoln, where they will
make their home in the future.
Mesdames A. N. Wright and Lewis
Wright were called to Lincoln on
Monday of last week to look after
some business matters for a time.
Albert Ethrege and his daughter,
Mrs. Martha Hise. were attending the
funeral of the late Nathan Marks,
which was held at Ashland on Satur
day of last week.
Mrs. Wayne Landon who has been
suffering so much from a large boil
on her knee, had the same lanced a
few days ago, since which time the
afflicted knee has been improving.
George Trunkenbolz. who has been
assisting with a threshing crew near
Walton, completing the work, return
ed home late last week and is now
employed here with a number of bits
of work which conn's his way.
John C. Lomeyer was called to Lin
coln Wednesday of last week to look
after some business matters and made
the trip with his friend, Mr. Kelley,
the cream station man. who operates
the truck between Greenwood and
Lincoln.
Win. Mauzer and wife, of Red Oak.
Iowa, who have been spending some
time in the west, where they were
seeing the mountains and enjoying
the coolness of the climate there,
stopped on their way home for a
short visit with their friends, Mr.
and Mrs. P. A. Sanborn.
Thelma. a granddaughter of Uncle
John Mefford, who makes her home
with an uncle, Preston Mefford, of
Kansiis City, is visiting in Green
wood with her grandfather, and also
spending some time with another
uncle. Stephen Mefford and family.
1 I Ashland. She will visit here for
about ten days.
G. W. Holt, the genial and effici
ent agent of the IJurli7igton at Green
wood is at this time taking his vaca
tion and has been spending a num
ber of days at Quincy, where ho
formerly was employed by the Bur
lington and where the folks of the
late Mrs. Holt reside, and while there
is having a monument erected over
the resting place of his deceased
wife. While Mr. Holt is away on
this mission, business at the depot is
being looked after by Extra Agent
L. C. Hixon.
Murray Says
Offers of Funds
are Made Him
Money Olaimed His If He Would
Control Oil Proration and
Run for President.
Caught Plenty of Fish
Vern Shepler and family. L. C. Mar
vin and family and Clyde Newkirk
and family, who were spending a few
days last week fishing and camping,
art back at work again and are for
getting the chigser bites ami the sun
burn, hut they sure remember the
excellent taste of the fish wnich they
caught for the eating of the crowd of
fourteen fishermen.
Are Seeing the West
lb m y W liking and the good wife,
after having secured Mr. W. H. Dol
larhide to look after the barber shop,
departed early Sunday morning for
the west and expect to be away for
about thirty days seeing the interes;
ing places in the west and enjoying
the coed climate that abounds in the
mountains and higher altitudes dur
ing the heated spell here. They are
surely fortunate that they are able
to see the wonders of the west dur
ing this excessively hot season.
Met at Arbor Lodge
O. F. Peters and the family, of
Greenwood, and the family of E. L.
James, of Omaha (Mrs. James being
their daughter) and the family of
Barye Lewis, of Verdon (Mrs. Lewis
also being a daughter) arranged to
meet at Nebraska City on last Sun
day and there, in the shady grove at
the state park, formerly known as
Arbor Lodge, enjoyed the day and in
spected this historic place, eating
their dinner in the shade and making
a most pleasant day of it. They re
turned to their respective homes in
the evening, well phased with the
brief reunion.
SEVEN PERISH IN FLOOD
Mexico City Seven persons per
ished in a flood at Tampuche, Tama
ulipas, bringing to thirteen the total
of known dead from floods and vol
canic disturbances in three stais
since Sunday, with a probability that
there have been many more victims
and millions of dollars of property
loss. Dispatches from Tampico
Thursday said an overflow of the
Panned river buried Tampuche unt'ler
I six feet of water and that seven of
the inhabitants were caught in the
current and drowned.
Dispatches to Excelsior from San
Luis Potosi said the supervisors saw
numerous human bodies and hund
reds of drowned cattle carried past
their retreat by the flood waters.
Two persons are known to have been
killed at Coseompatepec, Vera Cruz.
Wednesday when Mount Tlanapa
erupted and buried houses at its
base under tons of mud.
TRIO SENTENCED IN
BANK HOLDUP CASE
Pratt, Kansas, August 7. Wesley
F. Raner, 25, Beggs, Oklahoma; Glen
C. Hobbs, 28, Pawhuska, Oklahoma,
and Robert R. Dean, 37, Milo, Iowa,
who confessed robbing the Inka.
Kansas. State bank, were sentenced
to serve from ten to fifty years in the
state penitentiary Thursday. Be
tween $12,000 and $13,000 in regis
tered bonds taken from the bank in
the robbery were recovered Wednes
day by Pdatt county officers along the
highway ten miles south of Cedar
vale. The bandits were arrested in
Kansas City.
Oklahoma City The uniformed
ambassadors of Governor Murray 's
oil field shutdown edict worked to
smooth out curb complications in
the greater Seminole area while the
executive himself told how interests
who "wanted to control me on oil
proration" offered him $138,000 for
campaign funds if he'd run for presi
dent. "I turned it down," he said. "I
was offered $8,000 a month for six
months and $15,000 for the next
six months or until next spring.
"I would rather live in private life
than have my hands tied."
Meanwhile Lieutenant Colonel
Murray, the governor's cousin who
is running the field end of the shut
down operations affecting about 3,
000 oil wells, received reports at
Seminole from oil companies on the
number of wells they had shut down
in the forty miles square area and
the number of "water wells" they
claim should be exempt from the ed
dict. Wells pumping water and those
making less than twenty-five barrels
of oil a day will not be forced to
close, Murray has indicated.
Already major companies in the
Seminole area had curbed as many
producers as they believed would not
be injured. Units of national guards
men stood ready at Seminole for en
forcement of the edict. Others had a
quiet time in the Oklahoma City
"doorstep" pool. " Oil men wateched
with interest the progress of the
Texas legislature's conservation work
in the hope it would close the oil
floodgates of east Texas, generally re
garded as the greatest menace to the
Oklahoma market. State Journal.
eeeM$MeJ
T
ATA. -
Now! at Soennichsen s
STRUCTURE WILL BE SHOP
Akron, O. The huge dock where
Mrs. Herbert Hoover, wife of the
4re.-4dent. wil! christen the navy's
new dirigible Akron Saturday, is ex
pected in a few years to be the work
shop for great transoceanic air lin
ers. In this dock, so gigantic that it
has weather conditions independent
of those outside, engineers putting
together girders and fabric, have
created for themselves a new fund
of knowledge of dirigible building.
This knowledge accompanied by
years of experience of veteran Zep
pelin builders imported from Europe,
will go into the new transaceanic air
liners. Accord' "g to Dr. Karl Arn
stein, vice president of the corpor
ation, the structural design of the
navy ship may be easily adapted to
the liners. Ships the size of the Ak
ron will be capable of carrying 100
passengers. They will have a total
deck area of 12.000 square feet.
SEVEN DIE AT CROSSING
Vincennes, Ind. Seven persons
were killed when a Chicago & East
ern Illinois passenger train struck
an automobile at a crossing threi
miles south of here. Those killed
were:
Joseph Sannemau. forty-five.
Mrs. Catherine Sanneman, his
wife.
Anthony Sanneman, six, their
son.
Mrs. Joseph Vieke. forty-two.
Lucille Vieke, five, daughter of
Mrs. Vieke.
Hilde Deem.
Stella Deem. six.
All were residents of Vincennes
The party was en route to the home
of .Mrs. Vieke s daughter, Mrs. Joint
Smith, who lives near the crossing
where the accident occurred. Wreck
age of the automobile was carried
for 100 feet and the bodies were
strewn along the track for a con
siderable distance.
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Not for years such low prices, such big values as we are offering in this, our annual
X
August Blanket Sale!
C
I'o fcJiV, y'" iln tlififftm'. in )t we are
quoting what 0m ' kets vM for last year.
3
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1 1 IIS
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You can buy these Blanket on the Club Plan. Ask us about it,
Part Wool Plaid
Single Blanket
70x80 Inches
98c
tint "irV rl-i- -
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2.49
I l.iin nrN prlrf, :!.!.
j Same Blanket, 72x84. . . .
Part Wool Plaid
Double Blanket
Fluffy, Warm Big Full Size
70x80 Inches
$2.79 j
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Cotton Plaid
Single Blanket
"lr t.urtif
72x84 Inches
79c
I rat )lr' 1 rift- on 'itxl.
Cotton Plaid
Double Blanket
Ncte the Large Size
72x84 Inches
81.58
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j Extra Heavy, Ex. Big Size j j Large Size Double Blanket j
PART WOOL
$2.98
New Plaid Designs
72x84 Inches
1. 11st cr' jirli-o miih :i.Ss
! !
IX WOOL
These r a the famous Amana
Blankets, made of finest
virgin wool.
S6.98
!
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We Invite Comparison of Prices!
DON'T FORGET
Used Child's
Body as Shield
from Bullets
Tony Trobina. Gangster, Admits He
Was Target in Harlem's Lit
tle Italy War
Eight Mile GroTe Lutheran Sun-
driy Bo!-OC Fair. Tuesday Aug. 11,
at C o'clock. The Farmers Union
hand ot Louisville will play at the
fair.
New York, Aug. 6. Tony Trohina,
admitting that he was the intended
target of the gangland hullets that
killed one child and wounded four
others in Harlem's Little Italy, told
an amazing story to police today ol
how he used tin- body of a little child
as a human shield from the leaden
spray.
The admission was made to a de
tective whose identity was not made
public Shortly thereafter Trohino
was arraigned on a technical charge
of robbery and ordered helc without
bail.
Trobino is said to have admitted
to the detective that he was a mem
ber of a narcotic ring recently split
up and that the word had gone out
that the faction of which Trobino
was a follower was going to have
trouble.
According to the admission to the
detective. Trobino said be was sit
ting in an automobile in Harlem
when the gangsters started to fire
from their automobile.
Feigning a wound, be opened the
door of his car and crawled along
the sidewalk to where a group of
little children were playing.
Then, Trobino said, as the gang
sters car approached the spot to
which he had crawled he grabbed a
little boy and held him up as a hu
man shield. A spray of bullets burst
frrth from the ear, killing little
Michael Vengali, wounding four oth
er children who had been playing in
the vicinity, but harming neither
himself nor the boy he held in front
ol him, he said. World-Herald.
EIGHT MILE GE0VE
LUTHERAN CHURCH
Sunday. August 16th
9:30 Sunday school.
Mis-ion Festival. Rev. Xolte of
W.stbro, Missouri, treasurer of the
synod, will bring to the church a
message in English at 10:30 a. m.
Rev. J. Schrader, influenclal in
synodical affairs, will preach in Ger
man at 2:30 in the afternoon.
In the evening at 8 o'clock Rev.
X ite will again preach in English.
Choir practice on Thursday and
Friday evenings.
The Germans have named their
1931 wine vintage after Hoover. On
the assumption, perhaps, that it has
a kick, though it may look weak.
Will Mb SSfflBiBiHi Jf w I'MBHWnCSfffnTBMaWIlk
No-Rip
"This underwear is guaranteed
not to rip. If it should, return
it to the store where you pur
chased it and it will be replaced
without charge.
That is the guarantee
with each No-Rip
Athletic Suit. That is
why No-Rip is the
cheapest to own at
the price of
& Swatek
Plattsmouth, Nebr. Telephone 151
Hardware - Plumbing - Pump Repairing - Electrical Work - Tin Shop
Heating Installations of All Kinds - Exclusive Skel Gas Distributers
The following items can be bought at our store on WEDNESDAY, August 12th
Steel Wool
In Boxes (per Box)
Ait
tmnuu. X m m mm. " m W M frrr miM mm
Egg Beater
The new "Beats-All" egg- beat
er or cream whip beats large or
small quantities faster and will
not splatter. Ex. special-14c
Steel Toys
for the Children
All made of extra heavy steel
and very strong. Airplane, Farm
Truck. Dump Truck or Coupe.
Your choice, each 25c
'Tarolectant
Spray
A product that rids the chicken
houses of mites and lice. Will
rid horse and cow barns of flies
and if used in runways of rats
and mice it will drive them
from the place. Tarolfectant
sells at $1 per gallon. Bring
your own jug or can. Satisfac
tion guaranteed.
Let us put your Heating Plant
in shape for Fall now. Call 151.
Estimates Cheerfully Given
Razor Blades
To fit Gillette 3 for 10c
Eveready and Gem4 for lOc
22 Shorts (any brand) 20
In lots pf 600. 17y8
410 gauge Long ShellsB
Smokeless Powder
Oak Kegs
Plain
5 gallon Sl75
10 gallon aas
15 gallon 9fts
1
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Phone your Want Ad to No. 0.