MONDAY, MARCH 25, 1935. PAGE TWO PLATTSMOTJTH SEMI - WEEKLY JOURNAL The IPgattsmeutii Journal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA Entered at Postofflce, Plattsmouth, Nb.. as second-class mail matter MRS. R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 A YEAR IN PIRST 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, $3.60 per year. All subscriptions are payable strictly in advance. Wild Flowers are Easily Tamed in Home Garden The Gardener Learns Their Require ments and Aided by Nursery-Grown Stock. There is a seductive softness about the sun in late Winter, even though it shines upon discolored snow, slush and mud. It awakens within us a consciousness of the stirring of life underground, the near coming of pink-flushed arbutus blossoms, of un folding hepatica buds and of the pure white blooms of the bloodroot. Wild flowers have a special appeal for all who love growing things; and Spring is the season when their shy beauty is at its lovelinest. Trips to the Spring woods are delightful, but for the city or suburban dweller not always easy to arrange. Even the greatest wildflower enthusiast may mis3 the blossoming of his favorite woodland plant because of some mis calculation or unavoidable delay. Therefore it is a real satisfaction to have a planting of wild flowers in the garden. Then the gardener may be sure that the thousand and one duties and pleasures of modern life will not keep him from glimpsing any one of the bright little flower faces as they appear in magic rota tion. More Cooperation Today. Fortunately the wild-flower lover now has every encouragement to cre ate a wild garden. Not so long ago the making and stocking of such a garden presented serious difficulties. But the growing active cooperation of both the nursery man and the landscape artist has changed all this. It is against the law to rob the wood lands and hedgerows of their rapidly diminishing treasures, but there are men tcday who have cherished these little native beauties, who have learn ed their strange necessities of soil and sun and drainage, and who are ready to supply the gardener with thrifty wild plant3 and with cultural information regarding them. A visit to any of the large flower shows will provide notable examples cf really distinctive work along these lines. The fact that such beau tiTul plantings constantly draw ad miring crowds about them, and that high rewards of merit are bestowed upon them by the judges, proves that there is an active and ever-growing appreciation of the use of wild wood land flowers in American gardens. Location tlis First Consideration. The first consideration for the amateur in wild-flower gardening i3 that cf location. Shade, of course, must be prvoided to make the wood land dwellers thoroughly comfort able, but the sort c" shade is just as important as the shads itself. An apple tree is good, or a locust or elm or even a spreading, gnarled dog wood. Evergreens create very acid soil and therefore are good for only certain wildling3 such as seme cf the woodland ferns, columbine, pink moc casin flower, painted trilliura, bunch-berry- and trailing arbutus. A de ciduous tree which 'has a far-searching and greedy root system is a poor choice to shelter the wild-flower gar den. Poplars or maples, for instance, are unsatisfactory. Those who -are preparing only a few square feet of space for wild flowers may plant apple saplings, young pints and hemlock, s, or, better etill, native rhododendrons and laurel where they will provide a tack ground and offer increasing Ehade as time passes. Of course, any trees will eventually sap the ground's vitality and injure the flowers beneath them useless they are kept cut out and new soil i3 occasionally addei. A small wild garden may also be planted on the shady side of the house if dripping frcm the caves 13 prevented. The wild-flower garden of my childhood was placed in such a' location and was a satisfaction and delight for many, many years. Plenty of rock drainage and a yearly supply of fresh leaf mold were the two se crets Of itS SUCCCS3. Drainage Vitally Important. Drainage indeed is a necessity in the wild garden. The plants are small and fragile and their roots cannot tol erate "wet feet." Even tne Dog plants like to perch on hummocks above the water line. A bed of ashes or broken rock forms a foundation for a six-inch covering of mixed gar den soil (medium sandy), leafmold and sow manure (or one of its com mercial substitutes). Experience has proved that the wildflower bed is best located where water is easily available, for wildllngs do not like drought. Watering cannot be neg lected. Those who are fortunate enough to have a natural or artificial stream in their grounds can utilize at least part of its banks for a wild planting. Having thus given consideration to their several necessities food, water, shade and drainage the gar dener next turns to the procuring of wild plant material. He may visit a nursery which specializes in wild plants and there select the inhabi tants for his new garden bed, or he may order them from a catalogue. Whether the space prepared is large or small, a succession of bloom is of course desirable, with the emphasis laid perhaps on early Spring blossom ing. ' Trailing arbutus 'is the first to bloom and every wild-flower garden er will probably want to start with this harbinger of Spring. It is not one of the easiest flowers to grow, but -nursery pot-grown plants are now available which are far hardier than the "collected" specimens pre viously offered for sale. Hepatica, though only a little later, is even more beautiful as it lifts its nodding groups of lavender stars beside some gray rock or rotted stump. The bepaticas are susceptible to cultiva tion, the roundlobe variety prefer ring acid and the sharplobe neutral soil. Bloodroot comes next, and, in addition to its showy blossoms and lovely, characteristic foliage, it i3 very easy to grow. The trilliums are another group of beautiful Spring wildfiowers, and there are many species to choose from. Common periwinkle,1 though a fugitive from Europe, is thoroughly at home now in the American coun tryside and may be depended upon to cover a whole bank with its glossy green foilage, while hundreds of un believably blue blossoms open in early May. Anemones, fringed poly gala, twinflower and the many moc casins and other native orchids are all desirable for a shady woodland planting. Blue and yeliow violets, creeping buttercups, bluets and other more prolific bloomers may be plant ed out in the full sun, while the shy, dainty lovers of shade are set back where they will get protection from too strong light, but also from care less feet and rampant growing neigh bors. Columbine i3 the glory of June in the woods, and there are a dozen oth ers to rival It. Wild roses, black-eyed-susans and meadowrue are only a few of , the beautiful sun-loving Summer wildlings. After the asters have faded in Au tumn, the wild-flower gardener will be glad if he has provided for this barren period by planting buncn berry, partridgeberry and winter green. Bog Plants and Ferns. Tliose who have facilities for rais ing bog cr water-loving plants must not neglect the lovely wild iris, the Mertensia, which endures dry soil but which burgeons to glory in mois ture; the forget-me-not, the wild calla, the pitcher plants, the orchids, jewelweed, beloved by all the tribe ot humming birds; and in Autumn, the gentians and the glorious crimson cardinal flowers. Indeed, there is so much to' choose from when planting a wild-flower garden that its boundaries may threaten to widen until it engulfs the tulip bed and the dahlia border. But whether it occupy a meager cor ner or extend itself over a whole wooded hillside or through a rocky glen, almost every gardener today want3 a wild-flower garden. By Esther C. Grayson in the New York Times. FOE SALE 100 ton3 ensilage, 60 tons alfalfa hay. 150 bu. Dakota No. 12 alfalfa seed. MYRON WILES. mlS-tfw-2td Phone the news to Ro. 6. Chic Body En dorses Convers'n of Warrants Chamber of Commerce at Meeting Endorses Move to Reduce Interest Costs. From Saturday's Daily The Chamber of Commerce at their meeting this week adopted a resolu tion in which they endorsed the proposition for the conversion of $45,000 of city warrants now out standing Into low interest rate bonds. This matter is to be presented to the voters at the general city elec tion on Tuesday, April 2nd and Is one in which every citizen that votes should give study and thought. Those who do not vote on the propos ition are In fact casting a vote against the measure as it must carry a certain percentage of all votes that are cast. The city has, as many know, a large number of outstanding war rants from various improvement dis tricts and which draw from seven to five percent interest which makes an added burden to the taxpayers of the community. It is possible under the conversion of the warrants into bonds to secure a rate of Interest that will be at least as low as 4 per cent, saving the taxpayers this amount in interest from the present rate on every Varrant. The city council has acted on the matter of presenting this proposi tion to the voters of the city in the hope that they might by this means be able to reduce from $700 to $1,000 a year the interest rate that is paid by the city. The matter is now up to the voters to determine whether they wish to adopt this means of cutting the interest rates or not. The proposition is one that has met with the general approval of the residents of the city as a money sav ing proposition but must be confirm ed by a vote of the people and in which everyone should see that they vote to assist the city government in making this saving to the taxpayers in interest rates. , FOUND DEAD, GAS ON ... ,. . - . Omaha. Jlennis; Jrlan Hurley. Z0, wa3 found dead in his gas filled club room of the Allied Mill Em ployes parly Frida. Six gas jets were open in the rdem when A. It. Stark, janitor, found the body. Hurley, father of seven children, worked at the mill until recently. Ho suffered a nervous breakdown last November, Mrs. Hurley said, and lately had been sleepless and depressed. A note, ad dressed to a salesman for the con cern, read: "Thank3 fcr the drink. First one in ten years. Now 2: 30 . a. m. So here goes. No regret, not after what I have been thru. Well, so long." The widow, three sons and four daughters survive. Ideal Giri.oi.1936" Crowned. x:- .-.-V . : 4 i - r 'y ' - s V " - ' ' r . : 'v-: ' - i ' .' :; 2- . v. : Her "perfect figure" won Miss Marian Quigley, left, the title'of "the ideal girl of 1936" at the annual convention of beauticians in New York.1. She was crowned by Misa Marion Pierce, center, who won the title of the "ideal girl of 1935", while Miss Ethel Hampton, rislit, who held the crown in 1934, looked on. Miss Quigley is five feet cne inch in height .aa4.Y.e.ighs J.PQ .pounds. O wax n n rarm Leans it 8 with 8 Prudential Insur- asice Company D We can loan you more money at as good a rate and terms as can be had! i THE Pitzcr Agencies 115 South 3th Street Nebr. City, Nebr. POLICY OF ISOLATION SEEN London. A startling Iilnt Great Britain may adopt a policy of isola tion was dropped by Sir John Simon, foreign secretary, when he said in a speech near Leeds "We cannot in dulge in every sort cf foreign adven ture over all the world or pledge our activity to everybody's quarrel." Sir Austen Chamberlain, former foreign secretary, told a Birmingham audience the same spirit "which plunged Europe into war, caused not only her enemies but the world to affix to her the guilt of the great war" still throbs in Germany. As serting the rcich had "no justification for a unilateral breach of the Ver sailles treaty," Chairmerlain said "Germany has gone thru two revolu tions since the great war, but it seems to me the old spirit is little changed." ' i Altho Simon's statement was un expected, it apparently was not a slip of the tongue. In preliminary re narks about his forthcoming inter view with Adolf Hitler he said: "The task -which rests upon us, perhaps especially upon me, is far too grave and serious for any man to use a single sentence without the fullest consideration.-" He concluded his statement about Britain's determination not to pledge its activity to everybody's quarrel with "it would not be a contribution lo peace if wo did that. It would be contrary to the solid; good sense of iho British people." JAILED FOE PETTY THEFT Los Angeles. Two policemen ar rested David Kanard, 69, and placed him in jail for taking two potatoes -worth about a cent eachfrom a box in front of a grocery store. He said he was hungry. Arraigned in municipal court sev eral hours later on petty theft charges, Kanard pleaded guilty and was remanded to jail. Judge Clem ent Nye deferred sentence until Fri day. By that time, Kanard will have spent two das in jail. At the rate of credit given on fines $2 a day he will have lserved out $4, or 200 times the value of the potatoes, be fore he even appears for sentence. "8 v V- r . i : h ) v. ! '.y X - : J Ask Exemption of Book Accounts from Taxation Measure Proposed in Legislature to Relieve Merchants of Burden of Taxation on Accounts. A proposal to exempt book ac counts from taxation blocked a vote Friday in the Nebraska house of rep resentatives on a bill to increase the Intangible tax. Representative Edward J. Dugan (D.) Omaha, sponsoring the exemp tion movement, said: "It's time we did something for the merchants of our state. They're broke. They can't even pay their rent. It's unfair to tax these book account because many of them are never col lected." Representative Eugene Perigo (R.) Scottsbluff, author of the bill, object ed to delay, pointing out only a few days remain before the April 1 assess ment date and the bill must be passed by both houses and signed by the gov ernor before then in order to apply to the 1935 assessment. Perigo proposes to boost the rate from 2.5 to 5 mills on cash and other Class A intangibles and from 8 to 10 mills on securities and other Class B intangibles. He favored a measure of relief to merchants by shifting book accounts from Class B to Class A. Ac tion on the bill wa3 delayed when Dugan confessed he was worried about a suggestion from Represen tative Marion J. Cuching (R.), Ord, that removal of book accounts from the intangible tax law would not exempt such assets, but would make them subject to taxation at the full rate applied to personal property, which might run up to DO mills in some citie3. Dugan favored exempting all prop erty now included under the intan gible scale, but Perigo objected. "The trend of wealth is to ward stocks and bonds and other intangibles. Intangibles amount to about a billion dollars or about a third of the prop erty in the state. We can't ex empt all that." Cass county is one or tha finest agricultural centers in tne state. Improved farming conditions and better prices fcr farm products will react to the advantage of ev ery town In this territory.' I ERE is the tire th& muddy, icy, slippery roads this winter. Built especially for these driving conditions to eliminate the necessity of chains. Look at these advantages: , 1m Tread bites deeply when traveling in mud, snow, sand and gumbo. 2a Tread is self-cleaning. 3 Treed wears slowly and evenly, rides smoothly on hard surface roads. Am Easy to steer. 5 This thick, powerful, long-wearing tread is built on a body of high stretch Gum-Dipped cords, giving maximum protection against blowouts. Equip your car today prices are low we have a Firestone Mud and Snow type for most popular size cars. CSWmt, .;',., .. i, r.",'.n..."n"ii. i r,r ,i i ., n . ii.i..... , "i ., rV , i ,.. , , - ami M V, ,f , j,,' , V, j 'fr 1 Pi Ti Phone 44 Plattsmouth, Nebraska Wabash News Frank Reese and wife received a letter from their daughter, Mrs. Er nest Westerland of Eagle saying they were down with the chlckenpox, but were getting along very nicely. Ivan McBride was taken with an attack of scarlet fever last Monday. He was a guest of his friend, Harold Richards, and when he woke up in the morning he was broken out and has returned home until he shall be entirely over the malady. Warren Wickham and family, who were visiting in Wabash last Monday, departed for Everett, Kansas, at which place they will visit for some time until work starts here. During their stay there, he will overhaul his truck and also the car of his father, who resides there. Leslie Bosworth was over near South Bend during the early portion of last week, where he was doing some plainting at the place on which his sister, Mrs. Clarence Ohms and husband recently moved and where they will make their home for the summer. Grandmother Mrs. Ira Bos worth was also over visiting with the daughter. Shower for Miss Gerbeling A shower was given at the II. P. Hinds home on last Monday night in honor of Mis3 Alcie Gerbcling, who was to become the bride of M. M. McCoy, cf Lincoln, the following even ing. A very enjoyable time was had and a large number of the friends of the bride-to-be were pre-ent, bring ing beautiful and useful gifts to grace her r.cw home. Returns from Sooth Mrs. Henrietta Lawton, who has been spending the winter at Okla homa City with a daughter, enjoying the mild climate there as compared with the ccld weather that prevailed here, arrived home last Monday. She wa3 accompanied from Lincoln by her grandson, Henry Rymers, who is attending school there and who came down to assist in getting the house streightened out after being closed all winter. Married Last Tuesday At the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry ' II. Gerbeling, their daughter. Miss Alcie Gerbeling, was united in marriage to M. M. Mc- you need to drive over r WITH THIS gS&M -4K "I HAVENT HAD A GOLD III FIVE YEARS" t th in the old dayi I nsed to dread MM coming of Winter. I was always coloWeeltnB about half -t1" worlTwltlx my body achlnf and every nerve """Then a friend told me about McCoy'i OodUWOU Tablet, with their m?"0" rltimln- A and D I 'rtentohS . cold fire years ago and X haven t hid a cola Since that time. tv. "McCoy's tablets put new life in folks, fcufld tip resistance so anyone can laugn as Cld germs. They make weak, skinny people trong. steady-nerved and vigorous. They r "oe'the genuine McCoy's Cod Liver Oil Tablets from your druggist today. Don t TMti money Imitations. Ask for McCoy s. ! Coy, of Lincoln, there being a large number of friends of the bride and many of the groom present. The bride has been making her home in Lin coln, where she was employed in one of the large department stores of that place. The groom is an employee of the Gooch Milling company, as a miller. The newly wedded couple will fnakc their heme in Lincoln. The wedding lines were read by Rev. W. A. Taylor, former pa3tor of the Baptist church of Wabash, who came to perforin the ceremony of his friend, being accompanied by Mrs. Taylor. They drove over from their home at Union. The Journal joins in congratula tions and test wishes to the young couple in their new home in the cap ital city. HITS MADAME SECRETARY Bcrkelcy, Calif. Cecauso Secre tary of Labor Frances Perkins whom she described as a "mere politician" will be charter day speaker at the University cf California Saturday, Miss Martha Ijair.s, prominent alumna of the unlverslt5 has re fused to serve as a hostess at the alumni dinner Saturday night. Miss Ijams In a letter to Robert Sibley, executive secretary of the Alumni association faid: "I believe the university should stand for re cognition of achievement in the edu cational and scientific world. I do not believe that the world 13 so barren of persons warranting recognition that it should be necessary for the university to delve Into politics to find someone worthy to receive the honor of Leing choccn charter day speaker.', , , .., ...... 'See it before you touy It." liiftf. Listen to the VoiceofFirestonefeaturing Richard Crooks, Gladys Suarthoutor Nelson Eddy, every Monday night over N.D.C. WEAF Network ..A Five Star Program. til.' .'"iV.V otor 6th & Pearl Street