The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, October 08, 1934, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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PAGE TWO
PLATTSMOUTH SEMI - WEEKLY JOURNAL
MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1031
r.
it
the Plattsmouth Journal
PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA
Entered at Postoffice, Plattsmouth, Neb., as second-class mail matter
MRS. R. A. BATES, Publisher
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 A YEAR IN FIRST POSTAL ZONE
Subscribers living in Second Postal Zone, $2.50 per year. Beyond
600 miles, $3.00 per year. Rate to Canada and foreign countries,
$3.50 per year. All subscriptions are payable strictly in advance.
Who remembers when Latin trans
lation was made easy by the use of
a "pony?"
:o:
The Stockton Record says it's too
bad that the world's series and elec
tion come to close together as most
folks can't afford to lose more than
cue bet a year.
:o:
There seems to be some confusion
minus duck hunters about the use
of the stamps they have to buy this
year. The law isn't definite whether
they are to be stuck on the ducks.
:o:
General Johnson has the tempera
ment to become a "czar" over some
thing or other, such as Will Hays
is to the movies and Judge Landis is
to baseball. But he should be ad
vised never to becom a judge of a
baby show.
:o:
Having traveled more or less and
biT.hed shoulders with all kinds of
folk, we have come to the conclu
sion that a lot of people who sneer
at "hick" towns could learn much
cf good manners and noise from
"hick" town folk.
:o:
The poet who sang long ago about
man wanting but little here below
probably could have soared to great
er poetic heights if he could have
heard the humble statements by the
du I'onts and others. He could have
changed the rhyme to something
about man wanting the world with
a fence around it.
:o:
I f James Whitcomn Riley were in
the audience, he would be interest
ed to learn that the fodder's in the
shock, but the frost is not on the
pumpkin for the very good reason
that, there are no pumpkins. If we
have pumpkin pie for Thanksgiving
this year, we probably will iake it
out of last year's canned pumpkins.
:o:
Mary McCormie, the opera star, of
whom much has been printed about
her romances but little about hei
singing, announces that site has
fond her "ideal man" and that she
irs going to make him her third and
permanent husband. We do not wish
to libel Mary's unidentified hero, but
it is only fair to point out that her
last "ideal man" was one of the
Princes Mdivani.
i Sm-licaK, lac. Gioi Bnco nctra mcr-4
i mm) pS5!mBlm.
ml Iwl RfnR0 KfiSXmK
l :., m (MIS- ot0,ff 6
It's difficult to concentrate in a
stnffv room, when the air is filled
with a world series game.
. :o:
A man complained that he had lost
some money. "Hole in the pocket or
hole card?" inquired a friend.
:o:
Oh. it's Dean. Dean. Dean! You're
a better man than you thought you
were, if that's possible, Dizzy Dean.
:o:
After a man has been everywhere
a couple of times, the vacation prob
lem becomes getting money enough
to go there again.
:o:
Upton Sinclair spent $674 in the
California primary, so we know now
that he has made some headway with
his vow to end poverty in California.
:o:
There seems to be no ca'.l for a
third political party at this time
as we already have one that can ac
commodate both Carter Glass and
Upton Sinclair.
:o:
Hitler undoubtedly would have
some reason for handing out cups of
hemlock to so-and-sos whom he
doesn't like, but In this country just
anybody will take a sw:g of new
blend and for no reason at all.
:o:
The language purists have made
some headway probably in weeding
out "ain't" and "ain't got no" to
gether with other violations of gram
mar. But government has played
hob with what little progress was
achieved in downing "gimme."
t:o:
While mothers, chiefly, are the
ones calling to say their children
are given too much night work by
school teachers, there is probably a
dad here and there who complains
he has to sit up with the children so
that lie can put the cat out and douse
the lights after the ordeal with the
books is ended.
:o:
The California man who would re
vive business by paying everybody
$200 a month of government money
and requiring him to spend it. has
a good scheme, but it doesn't go far
enough. He should also require each
beneficiary to spend half of it for li
qor and habit-forming drugs. Then
the national demoralization would be
complete.
Sounds Like a Major Operation
MANLEY NEWS
Herman Dall was looking after
some business matters in Plattsmouth
on Tuesday of last week.
John C. Ruth was getting in his
wheat crop during the past week, he
seeding some twenty acres to this
cereal..
David Brann was visiting in Kan
sas for several days, returning home
last Saturday. He says it was much
drier down there than here.
Theo Harms was not feeling the
best early last week, having a severe
cold and was compelled to refrain
from work at the store for a short
time on that account.
Many of the Corn-Hog signers from
this vicinity were in Weeping Water
Monday, where they were listening
to an address upon the proposition
cf continuing the same, which is to
be decided by a vote.
Mrs. John H. Cotner, cf Platts
mouth, who has been assistant nurse
and housekeeper at the A. Steinkamp
home for some time past, was a brief
visitor in Plattsmouth last week, go
ing over to look after some business
matters there.
August Krecklow, who has been
rather poorly for some time, was in
Omaha last Tuesday with a load of
stock, and said this was the first time
in six weeks for him to visit the big
city up the river, which he did not
find much changed from the last time
he saw it, however. He was accom
panied on the trip by David Brann.
and they returned via Plattsmouth,
where they also had some business to
look after.
Visited at Elmwood
John Palaeek, Sr., and son, John
Palacck, Jr. and wife and Misses Ce
celia and Anna, daughters, all of
Plattsmouth, and Messrs John A.
Stander and Andrew V. Stander were
gests lor the day last Sunday at the
home of Edward Seiker, of near Elm
wood. -Other guests there included
the A. W. Seiker family.
Many Attend Tango Parties
Just recently there was a Tango
party held in the Manley hall, at
which many were in attendance. The
party was given as a benefit by the
ladies of the Catholic church of Man
ley, and from which they realized a
nice return as well a3 had a splendid
time for themselves and their guests,
many of whom won .prizes. ,
Attend Wedding Anniversary
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Fleischman were
at Ashland last Sunday, where they
were guests at the celebration of the
31st wedding anniversary of Mr. and
Mrs. Orville Gade. Mr. and Mrs. Gade
are the parents of Charles Gade, who
is a son-in-law of Fred Fleischman of
Manley. All enjoyed a very fine time
and extended the wish that this
couple might live together in happi
ness for another 31 years.
'See it before you lauy it.
Episcopal Women
Make Gifts to
Their Church
Woman's Auxiliary o! Church Itas
Presented $4,000,000 to the
Church in Past Years.
A golden alms basin on which has
been placed through forty-two years
approximately $4,000,000 in gifts to
the Episcopal church by the women
members of the communion, will be
used in Atlantic City on October
11th, when the Woman's Auxiliary
of the church, meeting in conjunc
tion with the fifty-first triennial
Episcopal General Convention, will
present its seventeenth united thank
offering to the church at a corporr
ate communion service in the Atlan
tic City Auditorium. It is the hope
alike of the officers and cf the ai
pu.ximately 500,000 members of the
organization in all parts of the world
that the 1934 united thank offering
will not fall behind the million dol
lar mark which was established for
the gift at the general convention of
192S, meeting in Washington, when
$1,001,130.40 was deposited on the
golden alms basin. At the Denver
convention of 1931, the U. T. O. to
talled $.1059,575.27.
A romantic story of women's de
votion and Christian zeal attaches
to the famous alms basin which
has been an object of deep interest
in the exhibit of the Episcopal
church at the Century of Progress
exposition in Chicago for the past
two years. Back in June, 1S52, Wil
liam Heathcote De Lancey, bishop
of western Xew York and Samuel Al
len McCoskry, bishop of Michigan
accompanied by Rev. Jonathan M
Wamwright, secretary of the Epis
copal House of Bishops, went to
England on the invitation of the So
ciety for the Propagation of the Gos
pel, to represent the American
church, on the occasion of the third
jubilee of that venerable society
They were received enthusiastically,
and on the afternoon of June 21st.
they found themselves at Oxford
where, in the garden of Exeter Col
lege, in the presence of a distin
guisneu assembly including the fa
mous Dr. Pusey and Lord Chief Jus
tice Coleridge. Regius Professor ot
Divinity concluding his address ol
welcome said:
"It was the ancient custom of this
great university, that guests should
Dear witn tliem trom its halls some
little memorial of the joy with
which their visit has been wel
comed; ' and thereupon presented to
the two American bishops the alms
basin, which Bishop McCoskry ac
eepted as an "unexpected and beau
tiful testimonial of affection, not to
us. but to the church which we rep
resent." The alms basin is about 22 inches
in diameter. The border is silver gilt,
beautifully chased; the central panel
of solid gold, showing the offering of
the Magi. Its total weight is IS oz
12 dwts. On its face is the in
script ion :
Ecclesiae Americanae
Dilectae in Chisto
Oxonieses,
1S52.
The
church
Woman's Auxiliary of the
was organized in 1S71. Its
first United Thank Offering was pre
sented to the church in 1SS9 as the
result of a suggestion made by Mrs.
il. II. Soule, tht ii a member of the
Episcopal Diocese of Pittsburgh.
Then, and since, every United Thank
Offering has been presented on this
historic alms basin. On this basin,
during the successive triennial gen
eral conventions of the Episcopal
church since 1SS9, have been pre
sented the United Thank Offering
which is woman's own special con
tribution to the church from the ut
termost parts of the earth. In far
off China, in the snow-fields of Alaska,
in equatorial Africa, the Philippines
and the West Indies, as well as in
continental Untied States, the women
of the church lay by day by day,
their yen, rupees, pesos, shillings,
milreas and pennies to swell the
fund .The native women of Alaska
make fur bags and mocassins, the;
Indian women lace and bead work,
Chinese women and the women ofj
Hawaii, as well as Brazil, Mexicc
and the West Indies contribute their
handiwork; and into every city, town
and hamb t in the United States and
foreign lands where the church oper
ates, go to the little blue boxes of
the Woman's Auxiliary, into which
a steady stream of contributions
pours. At the end overy three-year
period, in the early days of every
triennial general convention of the
church, the combined gift is placed
upon the golden alms basin at a
special corporation communion serv
ice, to carry forward the work which
the womtn of the church are doing
throughout the world.
i . ? lU. iknn b
fiom Email Deginnings iue n-auj
offering has grown into one of the
largest individual revenues of the
Episcopal church. The first offering
that of 1SS9 amounted to $2,
1SS.64. Three years later it was
$5G.10S.35. The $100,000 mark was
reached in 1901, and then, by leaps
and bounds, the triennial gift in
creased until the million dollar mark
was reached at the general conven
tion meeting in Washington in 192S.
Government
Funds to Reach
Stale This Fa!!
Flow of Money in Crop Reduction
Program Expected to Aid in
Material Prosperity.
Reports compiled recently in Wash
ington show that the payments tc
1)0 made by the federal government
in connection with its 1934-19:.5 crop
reduction program in N'fbr.-.ska will
reach a total of $41.4S5.000. Of this
amount only $r.,i::s.000 had been
paid up to August 1 of this year.
This leaves $36,347,000 yet to be
paid in this state. It is exported that
this full amount will have been paid
out by next March. A larg part is
being distributed now and will be
during the next two nirmlhs. The
figures given here do not include
drouth and other relief payments.
There has been a general impres
sion that a large part of the money
to be paid out by the government
in connection with its crcp reduction
program has already been distributed
and there has been a feeling of dis
appointment that these payments
have not had a more beneficial effect
upon business conditions. It is prob
able that when discussing this mat
ter with your townsmen, :-v.rge:-ting
that the crop payments should be
bringing an improvement in your
community, they have come back
with the statement that they have
not as yet been able to see ;.r.i; h im
provement that they ceuid trace tc
that source.
The answer to thi is provided by
the figures givon above. Crop re
duction, payments to farmers have
had comparatively little effect on
local business conditions in Nebras
ka because very little money has:
been paid out so far in this state.
When Xebraskans are advised that
of the total amount to be paid tc
farmers in this state only a little
more than 10l." has been distributed
up to August 1 and that ?3C. 347.000
is yet to be paid. 1
paid since August
expected to take a
the situation, and
.ss what has been
1, they may be
di.'Vcrent view of
be more inclined
to consider tjking on
for the purpose of i:
some expense
.-.proving theii
businesses and putting
a better pesiiion to
themselves in
take care ol
about by the
is eir.g placed
the business brought
additional money that
in circlation in their communities.
Crop reduction payments in all
states for 1934-1935 are expected to
total not less than $775,402,000 not
including drouth or other relief pay
ments. Of this total only $248,093,
S39 had been paid on August 1. Most
of this money went into nine south
ern states, which together with Kan
sas, Iowa and North Dakota, received
7C.6 7o of the total.
It is generally known that the con
ditions in the south have been much i
better this year than in other sec
tions of the country which gives us a
good slant on what wc may expect in
Nebraska in the near future.
AWARDED $7,500 DAMAGES
"Wahoo. A Saunders county Jury
Friday night awarded Krma Mae
Sterns, 10, of Valparaiso, $7,000
damages against Adolph llellerich.
also of Valparaiso, for injuries re
ceived in an accident last Nov. 24,
in which two sons of Ilellerich were
killed.
John Sterns, her father, who
brought the suit on her behalf, al
leged the lower half of the girl'i
body has been paralyzed since the
crash. She was a passenger in a
car driven ny Acioipn nenericn, ji.,
when it crashed thru a bridga rail-
ing four and a
Valparaiso.
ha'.f miles east ot
LiaUCE CASE DISMISSED
Fremont, Neb. The Dodge Coun
ty Allied Youth movement issued a
statement denying Mayor Dohn ot
Fremont instigated il3 activities
against alleged liquor law violators.
The first of the cases against per
sons for whom warrants were issued
recently on evidence collected by the
youth committee was dismissed Fri
day by County Attorney Richards
for lack of sufficient evidence. An
other defendant, Doll Watkins, plead
ed not guilty in justice court and
was bound over to the district court
for trial on a charge of illegal sale
of liquor.
J
tjere's a secret discovered by smart women
J- J- hose are twice as flattering when worn
inside out. So Munsingwcar makes a stocking
that has the dull, flat surface on the outside. And
this extra dullness does wonders for legs and
ankles making :hem look more slender, far
more stunning! Then, too, the texture appears
sheerer, clearer yet the close, flat weave con'
ccals skin blemishes and resists snags and runs.
xThe ribbed surface on the inside grips the skin
preventing twisted rear seams, ankle wrinkles.
Ask for "Smart -Side-Out" Hosiery Reversed by
Munsingwear in the lovely new costume shades.
LADIES
Story of Life
of One of the
Old Residents
Funeral Set vices of Mrs. 12. G. Han
sen Held at Home Near Keha-.vka
p.nd Interment There.
In the early morning of Oc. 1
1934 after several months of suffer
ing, the Angel of Death summoned
Mrs. K. G. Hansen, who passed away
at the Claikson hospital at Omaha.
Funeral services were held at the
country home on Wednesday after
noon, Itev. Taylor bringing to the
family and friends his kind words of
comfort.
During the services Mrs. Herbert
I'untz rendered as duets two old be
loved hymns, "God Will Take Care
of You," and "Just As I Am." Mrs.
Dodson sang as a solo the special fav
orite of the departed, "We Are Go
ing Down the Valley. One by One
Rev. Taylor used as his text Tim
othey 7:2. "I have fought a good
fiht, I have finished my course,
nave kept tne taitn. interment was
held at the tS. John cemetery.
The pall bearers were nephews ot
the deceased, they being Wallace
Hunter, Arthur Hild, Clarence Han
sen, Fred Hansen, Howard I'hilpot
and Harry Knabe.
The many floral tributes and the
many thoughtful deeds of friends
were beautiful, silent testimony ol
the high esteem in which she wa:
held. The services at the grave were!
conducted by the Nchav.ka Hcbckah
lodge.
Obituary.
Mathilda Magdab-ne Dork, daugh
ter of John and Magdalene Dock
was born August 31, 1S74 at the
home of her parents near (Vdai
Creek, Nebr., and passed away Octo
ber 1, 193 4, aged 60 year, 30 days.
Following the age of five years up
until she reached the age of eighteen
mu:'h oi nrr lite was spent with an
runt livin.'.r in I'lattsmouth and
where she also
it tended the public
schools. At the a
was confirmed in
e ot -sixteen, sne
the Presbyterian
faith.
On October 1, 1S9G, she was unit
ed in marriage to Kmmanucl George
Hansen and to this union was born
one son, John, and one daughter
Edith, who with tne nusDanu survive
lur.
She also leaves to mourn her pass
ing one granddaughter, Frances Jane
ar.d five grandsons, Ivan, Donald,
Howard, Allan and Arthur; one bro
ther, Julius F. Dock of New Castle.
Wyoming aad five sisters, lira. Ce
cflia Wulf of Avoca, Mrs. Win. Peters
of Weeping Water. Mr:,. Jake 'Hild
of Mynard. Mrs. Wm. Piiilpot and
Mrs. rl Gansemer of Nehawka. Also
many other relatives and a. host of
kind friends. One sister, Mrs. Anna
Hunter, preceded her in death just
seven weeks before.
Siie became a member of the It
bekah lodge at Nehawka, being a
faithful and since worker for many
years.
Her life closely followed the gold
Hosiery
REVERSED BY
MNSING
war
prevents wavy,
twisted seams
TOGGERY
en rule anil she was ever mindtul
and considerate of the feelings ot
others.
One of her finest pss ssions was
her generous heart. The hand that
she held out to a passing friend wa:s
never empty.
She has gone from our sig'.t but
the memory of her kind and gen
erous deeds will live with us for
ever. We cannot say, and we will not
ray that she is dead. She is ju.t
away. With a cheery smile and a
wave of her hand as she wandered
into an unknown land, and left U3
dreaming, how, very fair. It needs
must be, since she lingers there. And
we, yes we, who wildly yearn for
the old tim-2 step and the glad re
turn, must think of her faring on,
as dear in the love of there as the
love of he-re. Think of her still aj
the same and say: She is not dead;
She is just away.
FRANCE ABANDONS QUOTAS
Paris. The I'nited States is ex
pected to increase its trade with
France as as result of the latter na
tion's announcement of intention to
abandon the import quota system
Nov. 1. Altho tariffs probably will
be higher under the new unlimited
entry system, importers say they will
sell more American goods than they
were allowed to import under the
small quotas.
Benefits to the Fnited States also
include clarifications of a hitherto
confused procedure. It was recalled
that whenever France changed her
duties during the past year, simul
taneously the United States was de
piived of the benefits of the mini
mum rates she enjoyed and was put
on maximum schedules. In some
cases the United States returned to
the minimum position after embassy
protests.
ASK QUALITY STANDARDS
Omaha. The Douglas count 3' con
sumer council, organized recently
under federal auspices, Wednesday
repeated that in the opinion of the
council "consumers must demand
that NItA codes he revised to stinu-
te use of labels which tell plainly
the qualitv- standard of the goods."
The council also reported that "the
new N it A labels ma3' mean some
thing to the trade but are of little
help to the consumer who wishes to
buy on quality specifications." A
third conclusion was that consum
ers must be educated to interpret
the labels after they are revised to
show plainly the standard of the
goods.
WIG-WAG COPPER 'STUCK'
Omaha. Patrolman J. J. Dudley,
Omaha's human semaphore traffic of
ficer, was ordered to pay 5 weekly
emporary alimony by District Judge
Rhoades. "Semaphore" wa-; flagged
down by the judge and advised to
get an attorney when he attempted
to plead hi3 own case.
Journal ads bring you news of
timely bargains. Read theml
iff
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