AS3 TWO FLATTEUOTJTH SEM WEEKLY JOURNAL THURSDAY, SEPT. 29, 1932. little one were visiting1 for the day oa last Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Troop. Fred Armstrong of Plattsmouth in employed on the farm of Fred Drucker, ncrth of Nehawka. Mr. L. II. Young who has been 0 111 for such a long time is reported as being slightly better at thi3 time. Little Rosemary Kropp has been very ill for the past few days but was showing improvement during the first portion of this week. Fred Drucker end wife were oTer to Omaha on last Friday where they were called to look after some bus iness matters fcr a short time. Nels Anderson has been feeling ruitc poorly for several days and while he is slightly better he is still far i'rem being in hfs usual health. Eugene Nutzman was a visitor in Fremcnt where he was called to look i;fter some business matters on last Friday. drove to the town on the Platte in his auto. Victor Wehrbein last week pur chased a new Chevrolet auto which' he will use In the transportation of himself and family. All are very well pleased with it. Mr. and Mrs. Geerge Pollard en tertained a number of their friends at their home on last Tuesday to a bridge dinner and where all surely enjeyed the occasion. Miss Mary Ketch who is working in Lincoln, was homo with a number cf her girl friends on last Sunday and visited with her mother. All enjeyed a splendid time. Gayle Sturm shipped a number of cattle to the Scuth Omaha stock yards test Monday night, they go ing by truck and being hauled by Frank Trotter and Robert Taylor. Albert Wolfe and daughter, Miss Gladys, were ever to Weeping Water on last Monday where Albert was having some dental work dane and Miss Gladys was visiting friends. Baedeker and Wehrbein East ship ped a large number cf their hegs to the Omaha market early this week and also recieved one hundred and fifty stock hogs to put cn feed again. Earl Troop and wife and their Mrs. M. M. Tucker was a visitor in Lincoln last Saturday where she went to the initiation of Miss Jane Sheldon into the Cappa Capfta. Gam ma sorority of the State Uni erstty." fira. Ttiefcef'is" a' member of thfffsbr crity. C. R. Trcop and wife of Platts mouth were visiting at the home of the brother of Mrs. Trccp. Mr. L. II. Young and wife, on l33t Saturday evening. They also stopped for a short time at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Victor Wehrbein. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Pollard were visiting for the day on last Satur day night and Sunday at the heme of tbeir daughter and husband, Mr. and Mr3. Taft Pollard of Oakland. They enjoyed the day and the trip very mueh. Their scn-in-Iaw is with the Standard Oil Company of that place. Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Lloyd and two daughters of Omaha were visiting for the day at the home of Mr. and Mr3. John Opp, Mrs. Lloyd be'ing a sister of Mrs. Opp. They epent Sunday with them and enjoyed a very fine dinner as well as gather ing walnut3 to take heme with them. W. O. Troop of ncrth of town and Charles R. Troop of Plattsmouth were visiters in South Omaha on Monday cf this week where they were looking over the offerings of feeders at the stock yards with a view of purchasing some for feed ing. They are looking for feeders as they both have large amounts of corn and other feeds. John Chri.stweisser has been busy for a number of days making a road trj the new quarry on the Carl Stone lands The quarry is scon to open and will be operated by Ole Olson cf Weeping Water. On Saturday Mr. Christweisser broke his grading out fit. This was repaired by Herb Kuntz and John was back on the job again cn Monday morning. Robert D. Taylor and hh crew of assistants were ever to Nebraska City on last Friday and brought a boiler home with them which had been purchased far the new quarry on the Carl Stone land. The crusher frcm Weeping Water will be install ed there and from there the crushed sione will Le delivered to the paving crew to be uiod on the O street work. Carrcll D. Quinton. former sheriff cf Cass county, and wife of Lincoln were guests for the day on last Sun day at the home of Mr. and Mrs. James Palmer. All enjoyed a very pleasant visit and a fine dinner. Mrs. Palmer and Mr. Quinton are brother and sister. Mr. Quinton has not been enjoying the best of health for same time past. ' lie has just been asked tn tola t nncitlnn -. t V a noJ. r ,- tafB ,nrf ha r ..Kh - . - t now located - ririihcbtnT-TftV''inafty friends of Mr. Quinton will be pleas ed to know that he is feeling some better than formerly. Returned From. Coast Messrs and Mesdames Parr Youngr and W. H. Kruger, who hare been touring the west for the past three weeks, returned home on last Sun day. They went west to attend the national convention of the American Legion which was held in Portland. They remained to Fee the interest ing sights In the west and viewing 4he Pacific ocean end seeing many wonders of the west. They drove in their car and enjoyed every min ute and every foot of their trip. Visited in the South Mrs. J. W. Magney and daughter Miss Doris and D. C. West departed early last week fcr Kansas and Ok lahoma where they were looking af ter some business as well as visiting with friends. They concluded their business and returned home on last Saturday. Visited at Omaha Albert Anderson and wife and son and Den Anderson and family were visiting for the day on last Sunday ,at Omaha where they were guests of Alfred Anderson and family. In the afternoon they went to Elem wodd park where they took their dinner and picknlcked and enjoyed a splendid time." Accepts Good Position Miss Virginia Pollard, who has heen working in Grand Island, has accepted an offer at Wayne with the Herald, a newspaper of that place Miss Pollard graduated last year from the journalistic department of the state university. The mother took Miss Virginia to Wayne last Thurs day to begin her work. Two Hundred Meet to Greet Under the auspices of the Busy .Workers of the Methodist church there were some two hundred of the people of Nehawka and vicinity gathered to make a most hearty wel come for the new teachers as well as the old ones and for the new min ister, E. S. Pangburn and wife. A - - most delightful time was Iiad but while they extended a. very cordial greeting to the teachers of the schools they were denied the' pleas Byre of greeting the .minister ashe did not, arrjve. Hj:$e ver ; Jhe1 warni feelings fcr them existed and-, all were teady to extend the' gland 'hand of welcome. . United Brethren in Christ Otto Engebretson, pastor. Slogan The unusual 'year. Motto -Saved to serve.- Aim rWin some one for Christ. NEHAWKA CHURCH Bible church school 10 a. m. Mi38 Mary McClanachan of Day ton, Ohio, will have the service at 7:30 p. m.. Miss McClanachan is an able speaker and we are looking for a full house. Will you come to hear her? It will be well worth your while. Prayer meeting at the church Wed nesday night. The Womans Aid societies of Ot terbein and Nehawka churches will unite in a meeting at the parsonagd on Wednesday, October 5th. Every one welcome. The Boys and Girls club meets on Tuesday night. OTTERBEIN CHURCH Bible church school 10 a. m. Morning worship service 11 a. m The Otterbein Woman's Aid so society will meet with the Nehawka aid society on Wednesday. Oct. LTh at the parsonage. All welcome. Men will also come and cut wood fcr the pastor. Full announcement will be made Sunday. The Y. P. S. C. E. will meet at t,,e F- Hogue home Friday, Sept. 30. ! rAina Tlafiloti v linn a . vwr -vi.i, ui vup uao illC F1V- gram! The Junior3 will meet Saturday afternoon "The fool has said in his heart, there is no God." Ps. 14:1. MYNARD COMMUNITY CLUB The Mynard community club will resume Its fall activities on Friday evening. September 30th. The mem bers and friends aro cordially invited to attend the meeting. FOB SALE One team mules; also one pur a bred milking Shorthorn bull. Shorthorn bull. A. G. CISNEY, Nehawka. s29-2t sw , Nearly a thousand head of cat tie on feed in the Plattsmouth yards and employment provided fop a dozen or fifteen ,rpen;. Isn't better than noihia tp. "drive depression away- Brooldrart to Enter the Race for Senator Veteran Progressive Will Oppose Henry Field at General Elec tion in November. - Washington, la., Sept. 26. Sen ator Smith W. Brookhart Baid Mon day he would be. a candidate for re election Nov. 8. "Sure," the Iowa insurgent, who was defeated in the June primaries for the republican nomination by Henry Field, said. "This rebellion is too sweet for me to stay out of. "Why, I have 10,000 signed pledges already." Brookhart made the statement to newspapermen shortly before the beginning of the third party conven tion, which had been called to draft Brookhart as a candidate. Delegates from various parts of Iowa thronged to Brookhart's home town for the convention in the after noon. Frank J. Lund of Webster City, temporary chairman and keynote speaker, called the session to order. He offered Senator Brookhart as the third rarty candidate as "the most outstanding advocate of human rights that ever graced a senate seat from Iowa." Lund said "the long tenure of of fice of the present political party," was the cause of present economic conditions. He condemned the currency sys tem and the failure of the federal reserve board to issue money to pre vent deflation. Lund attacked the federal farm board and the federal sales tax and accused the administration of turn ing to great industrial and financial leaders for suggestions to relieve agriculture' and labor. The tariff he condemned as cost ing "us our foreign market." He ad vocated reciprocal agreements and a "tariff equal to the difference in the cost of producing at home and abroad." Lund advocated the equalization fee and farm debenture plans. Indi cated" his sympathy with the farmers strike movement', attacked public utilities' and railroads as levying un just rates on the basis of : inflated capitalization, and-- advocated ' pay mettt'bf the' bonns S3 aeur&ftcy ex pansion measure. 1' .- rn dosing, he advocated formation of the new party. ' He urged the con vention to "lay aside our petty dif ferences" and organize a permanent party to "fight against peasantry and economic slavery of the gerat mass of common folks." SENATE VACANCY IS FILLED Denver. Walter Walker, Grand Junction newspaper publiisher and retiring chairman of the democratic state central committee, was appoint ed United States senator by Gover nor Adams to fill the vacancy result ing from th edeath of Senator Wa terman. With the appointment of Walker the political complexion of the senate is forty-eight democrats, forty-seven republicans and one farmer-labor. Whether Walker will serve in the lame-duck session of congress beginning in December and complete Senator Waterman's term up to March 4, or whether a short term senator will be named at the general election in November wag the subject of considerable specula tion in Colorado political circles. Colorado's election laws make no pro vision for the nomination of a short term candidate in an instance of this kind. Washington. Democrats gained mathematical control of the senate when Governor Adams of Colorado appointed a member of that party to fill the unexpired term of the late Charles W. 'Waterman, republican. BEGIN ROAD WORK Cozad, Neb. Construction work on highway No. 30 between Cozad and Lexington has begun. Contract ors plan to build the grade this fall and place the slab in the coming spring! The completion of this con tract will make a continuous paved road from Overton to North Platte, a distance of eighty miles. Local la bor will be employed where practi cal. MRS. OWEN IN IOWA Shenandoah, la. The wave of in dignation against' bootleggers and speakeasies "Is almost as- great as against the old saloons,'' Mrs. Ruth Bryan Owen, Florida congresswoman, told an audience in - a democratic catnpagin speech here.- ' "However, prohibition is not the paramount quection,"-Mrs. Owen declared. "Peo p le are mane hungry than . thirsty." mb& borah Showing gain ' Boise, Sept. 25. Continued im provement was noted Sunday in the condition of Mrs. William E. Borah, who is ill with psittacosis or parrot fever, but "physicians said Is still was serious. Mrs. Borah, wife of Idaho's senator, lias received three doses of convalescent. serum since the first injection early Saturday shortly after its arrival from Washington. . Her physician. Dr. Ralph Falk, said he believed the treatment marked the turning point. ' Small Loans are Made to Create Jobs Call for Applications Is Issued by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. Washington. The Reconstruction Finance Corporation wants propon ents of small self-liquidating projects to hurry in their applications and thu3 help create jobs. Making this known, it also an nounced a $2000,000 "work" loan to the Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany, creating an estimated 2000 Jobs. It made as well an emergency relief allowance of $263,307 to Vir ginia. Through Harvey Couch, a director, the corporation issued the call for small projects. The statement, he said, was "to correct a false impres sion that seems to exist in the minds of some people to the effect that the corporation i3 not interested in mak ing small loans for self-liquidating projects." "It is the policy of the corpora tion," lie said, "to look favorably upon rJl applications regardless of the amount involved If the projects meet the requirements of the act as to eligibility, selMiquidating char acter and sufficiency of security,' and will create employment." ' ' The corporation has before It a number of very large projects, which would create thousands of jobs. It has advised the' Southern California Water District "that it will bid on 140,000.000 of "bonds of the project. It has before ft" such projects as the - r - $75,000,000 Thirty - Eighth street tunnel 'ih New'York City and the Beit Line Drltfgff ' at " New Orleans. LMany1' slriiihft -'rejects' are ill tight but he snralf ldah'-prbjects are com paratively few." ' " "" ' ' The Unusual " situation of the Fi nance Corporation announcing a loan before tho Interrtata Commerce Com mission announced its arproval, fea tured this advance. The commission's approval was given last week, but thb opinion did not become public after the corporation made its an nouncement. There is one other such loan' now before the commission.1 The Central Railroad fcf New Jersey Saturday ask ed for $500,000 to repair its equip ment. The corporation has made two oth er somewhat similar loans to rail roads. Three months ago it loaned $27,000,000 to the Pennsylvania so that road might be able to continue electrification of its New York-Washington line. Saturday a loan of $3. 830,000 was granted the De-nxer & Rio Crande Western Railroad that it might build the 40-mile Dotsero cut-off in Colorado, thus creating hundreds of jobs. GRANGE KEETS OCT. 11-13 Broken Bow, Neb. The Nebraska State Grange will hold its twenty- second annual session here Oct. 11, 12 and 13. Following registration on the morning of Oct. 11, there will be a business session with C. L. Dietz, Broken Bow, state master, in charge. In the afternoon there -will be an addres.1 of welcome by Mayor. Ralph Johnson of Broken Bow,, a response by S. W. Samuelnon, Ravenna, chair man of the executive committee, and an r.ddress by N. W. Gains, Lincoln, of the agricultural college.. Degree work will be conferred at the eve ning session. A business session will be conduct ed on the morning of Oct. ;12, and a. lecturers' conference will be led by E. G. Dahlstrom. Loup City. Attor ney General Sorensen will speak, at the afternoon meeting, while the eve ning will be given over to a memor ial service and degree work. Election of officers and other busi ness will take place on the morning of Oct. 13. Installation will take place that afternoon. Officers are C. L. Dietz, Broken Bow, state master; D. Ream, Broken Bow, overseer; E. G. Dahlstrom, Loup City, state lecturer; Thomas A. Hodson, Goth enburg, secretary';. Mrs. Sv A. Dean, r.rnl-en Pnor ''T.n.lerirKf 'Jln?' t"hf''t- ecutive committee: S. W. Samuelson, Ravenna.; J. H. Lake, Oshkosh; E. E. McCullough, Berwyn. Labor Survey Urges Workers' Wage Raise American Federation of Labor Says -Income Loss Is Obstacle to Recovery. Washington, Sept. 25. Present business trends indicate a period of convalescence, but a cure cannot be achieved until the nation's buying power has been restored, the Amer ican Federation , of Labor declared today through its monthly survey of business. The survey stated that the stock market had shown its recent rice was not justified by actual business im provement. Signs cf that improve ment, it said, were coming rlowly, the unemployment rinc was checked in August, but 11,400,000 workers were stiil jobless. "The gain3 taken together are too modest to rouse enthusiasm, but they do hint that since the end of finan cial panic we may have entered a period of convalescence," th3 survey declared. "Confidence i3 spreading, but we cannot exn?ct ouvalescence to develop into cure until consumer buying picks up. Blame Income Lose. "The chief cbstr.cie to recovery in consumer buying i3 workora income loss. Wcge and eruall Salaried work ers, with incomes u::der five thou sand dollars a yer.r. fcuy 83 per cent of the good3 and rsrvl-es consumed in our country In a year of cctive business. The effect .of v?;k:ri' iucomo loss is told in the drastic cuti in unto production ;(for vcrkErs o-.vn and operate well over I.r.l cf tb.3 pas senger cr.r3), thi trler-honc tcken out, declines in h?me aud r.paitmcnt building becsur.c vorkers families have been forced to double up, the losses in Mich ccnsrcr.ier ir.(Tutrios as textile, cloth'.ng, hca:e furnishings and ether products which make up the stream of retail trcd;." The time hn come , ti:e turvey stated, to revc-rse the downward trend of wngea and buying power The object ncv,- it 'averted, chould be not to rotluce wre; t'Jt to raise them. j Wages Kutt RIs?: "Only ihuz tan we build up buy ing power and keep buInen2 rising," tne' iiibor pu6n?5tion tdVr!afcd'.:'' ,iThc wage deflation thoor7 arose in S scarcity economy wherj production could i:ot supply cr.Ounh 'for all. But the time3 have changed; wo are suf fering from problem-: or c-rer-surply and under-crmmT.rticn. I?.ss pro duction industries cannot grow un less the ma?3 ir.crearc-. At present, with prices beginning o rise, con suming power will decline unless wages rise too. "In the past, luveetcn have claim ed surplus wealth. as belonging to them; often wnges have been cut to pay dividends. In our prc-'cnt econ omy profits depend on increasing con sumer markets. Industry must cre ate its own r.irliCi out of the wealth it produces by turning back as large a portion as possible into wage in creases." "Even r.ov: tt the bottom of de pression, many companies couiu in crease tho wages pail to workers. In the last eight montlis. 190 com panies have paid dividends and 27 have increnecd divider: els. If a com pany can incrcs.ee dividends it is la a position td increase the income of its - wage corner". Some companies aro already reelcrir.g wage cuts made last year cr beTcre. A move- ment fqr wr.go lncreares would at onco carry intfusty . forward." World-Herald.' ' KNATP YGTZE- TldJORS' POST The ctr.ts nomr.l beard at Lincoln Monday electa J Fred S. Knapp, pres Ident of the Omaha Box Co., as pres ident, ta nicceeS the late T. J. Ma jors, the Associated Press reported Mr. Kr.arp had bceu v:ce president. Edgar Frr.cau cT Auburn was elect ed vice rrcsli-snt. . The heard re-elected Fred W. An derson cf Cozad C3 . Eecretary. He was net" at tin meetings, still be ing confined to hh home by injuries suffered last-, wee': in an airplane crash. .Stata Fuperintenden C. W. Taylor," hart' In the same accident. also was' absent Monday morning. Governor Bryan eald Monday he probably would not fill the Majors vacancy until about he first of "the year. The board voted 'to fenew its con tract with the Central Power Co. of Grand Island to furnish natural gas to heat the Kearney Normal school for the" present. school yeaK" The flat prifr 1s 910.600. '$500 below- that paid last year. A resolution eulogizing Colonel Majors v.3 passed by the board. peXtWIMacKs r. f. c. " rates on stock loans Lincoln, Sept. 26. D. F. Felton, deputy secretary of the Nebraska agriculture department, Monday said ho could see no reason why farmers and stockmen engaged in raising and feeding cattle should be charged a higher rate of interest for loans from the Reconstruction Finance Corp. than other groups. The Reconstruction Finance Corp. announced Saturday the interest rate on cattle loans from the regional agricultural credit corporations would be 7 per cent. Felton said he was certain banks, railroads and oth groups borrowing from the Recon struction Finance Corp. didn't pay 7 per cent. Greed Said to be at the Root of Depression Catholic Charities Keeting Opens at Omaha With an Address by President. Omaha. Led by Rev. Franci3 J. Backman, archbishop of Dubuque. Ia., and Rev. John J. Glennon, arch-bi.-hep cf St. Louis, hundreds of Cath olic charity workers gathered at St. Cecilia's ccthedral here Sunday to attend the religious ceremonies marking the opening of the eight eeth annual national conference of Catholic charities. After the opening ceremonies a scries cf conferences were held in the cftsrnoon, followed by a public meeting at night at which Jame3 F. Murphy of Detroit, president of . the conference, a3 a leading epeaker. In his opening address, Mr. Mur phy said: "Whatever else historians may re cord of tbi3 depression there i3 one feature they aro certain to note the suddennces of the surprise with which it took the world. Statesmen, economists and business men were ac claiming the final defeat of poverty. Social . workers had discarded the word 'charity' and the remnant of re lief had been taken out of the hands of uublie poor commissions and glori fied into family case work by private family agencies. The poor box in njoat churcheg was so cunningly hid d?;i -a, to, dey.dispovery,''; ... ,"We say . with Leo XIII and with j Pius, that greed and that , in all claspes of society is the root cause of this depression, and we say with them, that the love of material wealth, both individual and nation al, must first be brought within bounds before we can have any sound and lasting recovery." Mr. Murphy concluded hl3 address with the assertion that he "saw lit tie of comfort In htis pre-election boom, and even If it be the begin ning of recovery, at least this winter and probably this whole year will know the same, if not greater de mands upon our charities," and urged hi3 fellow delegates "to plan well this week and then go back to cur work." Frank P. Walsh, chairman of the New York state power commission, and a nationally known labor au thority, outlined relief work that Is being done thru the organization of co-operative groups in which the un employed all bend their efforts to ward aiding each other. He asserted he saw in these groups the best end . most easily handled method of dealing with the problems of relief. Thru organization of such groups, he said, the unemployed and the needy can exchange with each other whatever they can produce with theTr labor. State Journal. CONVICT PHYSICIANS FOUND Kansas -City, Kas. Two convict physicians who employed a ruse and surgeons' scapels to escape from the Missouri penitentiary were held here for return to Jefferson City, Mo. The convict3, Drs. George Kowertz anO Alvin Hetzcr, serving long term3 for robbery, were captured without re sistance In a house after police were Informed of their whereabouts by an anonymous telephone call. Kowertz and Hetzer, making use of a faked telephone call for their services at Algoa farms, a reform atory near Jefferson City, were car Saturday night under escort of Joe ried out of the prison by motor car Szwabo, a trusty, and Homer Yancey, guard. The trusty and guard, re leased in Kansas City Sunday after a wild night rite, said Kowertz and Hetzer had presented knives at their necks to overpower them. :iGHT MILE 0R0VE " LUTHERAN CHURCH Sunday, Dctoher 2- ' 9:30 a. m. Sunday school. 10:30 a. m. English services. Safe Pleasant Way Lose Fat How would you like to lose 15 pounds of fat in a month and at the came time increase your energy and improve your health? How would you like to lose your double chin and your too prominent hips and at the same time make your skin so clean and clear that it will compel admiration? Get on the scales today and see how much you weigh then get a bot tle of Kruacben Salts which will last you for 4 weeks and costs but a trifle. Take one-half teaspoon ful In a glas:i of hot water before breakfast tvery morning cut down on pastry and fatty meats go light on potatoes, butter, cream and sugar and when you have finished the contents of this first bottle weigh yourself again. New you will know the pleasant way to lose unsightly fat and you'll also knew that the C salts of Kru chen have presented you with glor ious health. But be sure for your health's sako that you ask for and get Kruschen Salts. Cr.t thf-m at F. . Fricke & Co., or any drugstore in the world and if the results one bottle brines do not delight you do not joyfully satisfy you why money back. 1-7 Schmelling is Winner Over Mickey Walker Kanagsr Eearns of Y7alk;r Stops Fight in Eighth Round as "Toy Bnldog" Out on Feet. New Ycrk, Ccpt. 20. The punish ing power in Max Schmcllns'3 deadly xijht hand abruptly checked the heavyweight rurge of gallant Mickey Walker tonight and -ave the German heavyweight a technical knockout victory over the chui.ky little Irish man after eight sensational round3 cf a 15-round match. In a dramatic and unueual finish, the fight was rtopped after the bell ended the eighth round with Walker so badly cut and bleeding around the eyes that he was unable to continue. Ilickey Is Badly Eattered. Knocked down twice for counts of six and nine Ecconds in the eighth. Walker Etaggercd to hie corner with hi3 left eye tightly closed, his right eye cut, gashes about his nose and moiiib. Without hesitation his veter- an manager, Jack Kearns, accepiua defeat for the fighting Irishman, and notified Iteferee Jack Denriing, who immediately awarded th3 decision to Schmcling. In effect Walker was "stopped," the victim of his firrt technical knockout since was baited in 1926 by Joe Dundee after previously losing the world welterweight title to Pete Latzo. A crowd estimated by Promoter James J. Johnston at 55.000, con tributing to gate receipts of about $175,000, saw Walker battered to shreds in the eighth round y Schmellng's spectacular right hand attack after a ppirited rally had car ried the fighting Irishman back from the verge of being knocked out in the very first round. RUSSIANS HEAR NEW EDICT Moscow. The shortage in meat resulted in a government edict under which supplies will bo collected from the whole" peasantry under a system operated in the same manner as tax ation. For. the next fifteen months every pear-ant family must deliver to the government at fixed prices a cer tain percentage of the meat it pro duces. The decree, figned by Joseph Sta lin, head of the'coinmunist party, and M. Molotov, president of the coun cil of peoples commissars, subjects those who fail to complete their ton tracts to a monetary fine amount- ng to the market price cf the unde livered meat. The crder was design ed to prevent farmers from taking advantage of a recent decree permit ting them to sell their surplus pro duction in private markets. It3 aim Is to make it importable for them to dispose of more than they r-hould at the expense of their government con tracts. LANCE JONES DIES . Omcha. Lance Jonea, fifty-five, voteran Omaha . grain dealer, idled Sunday at the home of a daughter, Mrs. R. L. Itice at Crcighton, Neb. He came to Omaha n 1914 from Nio brara, Neb., and was in, business here until 1927 when he retired. A bro ther, Seth, lives atWampon, Neb. The New York police are investi gating a. group of nudists, but we don't see how they are ever going to pin anything on thsm. Roed nevlnn In Cass county this year will run about ten miles. Not so bad, fb "depression" times.