PAGE TWO PLATTSMOUTH SEMI - WEEKLY JOUENAL THURSDAY, APRIL 18, 1935. liie PEattsmouth Journal ! PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT Entered at Postoffice, Plattsmouth, 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, J3.00 per year. Rate to Canada and foreign countries, $3.50 per year. All subscriptions are payable strictly in advance. RESCUE GIRL FROM JAIL Salzburg, Austria. Love, needless of the danger involved, engineered a jail break and rescued an Austrian Cirl held at Haallein as a nazi agent. The girl was arrested for smuggling documents to Austria from Bavaria. Her fiancee and her brother smashed the bars of the little jail, momen tarily unguarded, and the three fled to Germany. Journal ads bring you news of timely bargains. Read them I LAND, FARM and RANCH BARGAINS FOR SALE Grimm Affidavited Alfalfa seed. "Will Minford, Murray. al5-2tw FARM LOANS Ten year loans, five per cent. No commissions. First Trust Co., Ne braska City, Nebr. m28-4w sw DEAD ANIMALS Dead animals removed free of charge, Telephone South Omaha Ren dering Works, Market 462S. Reverse charges. no-tfw Bible School Sunday, April 21st "The Future Life" Luke 24:1-12; John 14:1-6. This all-abscrbing topic sets more nen thinking than any other. The question, "Is there a life aftej Jhis? ' cannot be dismissed by ignorln&liU because the evidences are so numer ous and so pronounced that they force themselves upon men's consciousness and must be properly weighed and analyzed; and according to the find ings, men's conduct must be govern ed. "Where will I spend eternity?" becomes a most vital question, and the earnest, sincere seeker after truth will seek until he finds a satisfactory answer. Our belief of a future life i3 based first of all on" the immortal ity of the soul. All through the Scrip ture, man i3 pictured a3 a rational, moral agent, with reason and dis cernment; hence accountable for his acts. And since not all inequalities are straightened out and settled satis factorily in this life, there must fol low a day of final judgment, of reckoning. In the cecond place, it is the justice of God which demands a final Lallancing of accounts. The teaching of our blessed relig ion about the future life is brought cut in cur lesson. The authenticated resurrection of the Lord Jesus is the pillar and cornerstone of this great doctrine. The proof of a future life stands or falls with Jesus Christ. In this day when so many are not only denying the fact of the bodily resur rection of Christ, but are stating, even from the pulpit and in theologi cal text-books and Christian litera ture, that it docs not make much dif ference after all whether Christ did rise frora the dead, or if we really believe that he is living in glory to day, one should notice what Paul Lays we must abandon if Christ did Hot bodily rise from the dead: First, our preaching is empty; Second, our faith ii empty, i. e., it is of no value; Third, we are found false witnesses of God; Fourth, redemption has fail ed and we are yet in our sins; Fifth, hope has collapsed and those who are asleep in Christ are perished, i. e., are eternally lost. The importance cf the resurrection of Jesus Christ may be realied when it is learned that this tremendous fact is mentioned directly one hun dred and four times iu the two hun dred and sixty chapters In the New Testament. What happened to the body of Jesus? That it had disappear ed, all, even the most prejudiced crit ics of the record, admit. The Jews who killed him would not remove the body. The friends of Jesus would not do so, .and deceive the people the soldiers were there to prevent that. The soldiers did not remove it; they had no interest in the removal. Jesus PLATTSMOUTH, NEBEASKA Neb., as second-class mail matter TRAIN WITH WAR MOVIES Addis Abada, Ethiopia. World war films depicting the French , de fense of Fort Verdun were adopted as a medium of Instruction for Ethiopian officers being trained by a Belgian military mission. Chiefs of Emperor Selassie depart ed for their provinces after having been warned by him to "be prepared for any eventuality." Altho it was officially denied Ethiopian forces are being mobilized, it was known troops are quietly assembling on the fron tier and Thursday more fighting forces departed, apparently bound for the border. TWO DIE OF POISONING Peoria, 111. A mysterious poison took its second victim when Miss Al berta Swanson, 29, died in a hos pital. Her mother, Mrs. Lena Swan son, 51, died Monday. An inquest into the mother's death failed to es tablish what caused the fatal illness. Testimony was that the mother and daughter had eaten boiled rhubarb tops, but medical testimony classified the fatal poison in Mrs. Swanson's case as cf a mineral nature, not trace able, the doctors said, to the vege table itself. A son, Laverne, who ate sparingly of the same meal, became ill too. Lesson Study! By L. Neitzel, Mnrdock. Neb. could not walk out of the tomb, had he been only in a swoon, as some be lieve, for the soldiers would have pre vented that. But heaven proclaims: r 'He i3 risen ! ?. vj - The virgin birth and the resurrec tion were announced by angels. This fact being established, now Jesus tells U3 something about heaven, our fu ture home. Many are the reasons that trouble man's heart, but Jesus allays the fears, by telling the disciples that "Belief in God" and in His Son ought to quiet any fears; their future is secure the Father's house ha3 room for all. The "mansion" on yonder shore is to be our eternal abiding place here we are but sojourners there is our home. "O Dculah Land, sweet Beulah Land, As on thy highest mount I stand; I look away across the sea, Where mansions are prepared for me, And view the shining, glorious shore My heaven, my home forevcr morc." Jcsu3 has gone ahead and is now awaiting our coming after him. Many times he said: "Follow me!" The age old question: "If a man die, shall he live again?" is answered by the return to life cf dormant nature. God ha3 said so. "The first man, Adam, was made a living soul; the last Adam was made a quickening spirit. Howbeit that was not first which i3 spiritual, but that which is natural; and afterward that which is spiri tual." This is a plain statement and needs no explanation. Job had caught the vision in his day, exclaiming with a shout of triumph: "For I know that my Redeemer liveth and that he shall stand at the latter day upon the earth; and though after my skin worms destroy this body, yet in my flesh shall I sec God." (Job 19:25. 26). The same confidential note rings out in these words: "For this cor ruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal must put on immor tality," "(I Cor. IS: 53) and: "If we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so them al3o which 'sleep in Jcsu3' will God bring again." "And I saw the dead, small and great, stand before God." Yes, "Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord from henceforth. Yea, saith the spirit, that they may rest from their labors and their works do" follow them." (Rev. 14:13). "Comfort one another with these words." (I Thes. 4:18). " .know my mansion He prepareth, That where He is, there I may be; O wondrous thought, for nc He careth, A I'd He ct last ivi!l come for me." Residential Building Shows Marked Gain Report for First Thirteen Weeks of: the Year Shows a Very Definite Gain Over the Country. Residential building for the first 13 weeks of 1935 shows definite im provement over the same period both in 1933 and 1934, but is below the level of 1932, according to an article i in the April issue of the Federal Home Loan Bank Review, just pub lished. A comparison of the monthly totals of home construction for the first three months of 1935 reveals a re sumption in March of the acceler ation show in January and inter rupted in February. Figures for March show' that the average daily volume of residential building con tracts awarded was more than 71 percent above the daily average in February, which is far greater than the normal seasonal increase and rep resents an increase of 19 percent over March 1934. Residential building volume up to March 30 of this year is more than 23 percent above the same period in 1934. Activity in non-residential con struction, due to the falling off in new governmental contracts, remain ed about 44 percent below the total for the first three months of 1934. A chart accompanyin gthe article shows that whereas industrial pro duction had by February 28 reached a level only 8 percent below the 1923 1925 figure, construction remained 76 percent below that average. For over a year the cost of building ma terials and labor has been practi cally unchanged, while housing ren tals have move steadily higher, di minishing the spread between those two factors and providing an incen tive for increased residential con struction. As contrasted with build ing costs, all commodities during March continued the advance which began in February 1933. With this issue, the Review, for the benefit of home-financing insti tutions, begins publication of current figures on the number and value of one-family, two-family and combin ation home-ancVbusincss structures for which building permits have been issued. The information i3 compiled by the Federal Home 'Lotin Bank Board from "data ) collected by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The value of one arid two-family home construc tion in February showed an Increase of 9 percent as compared with Jan uary 1935, and was about 72 per cent greater than in February 1934. Figures assembled by " the Federal Home Loan Bank Board disclose a continued trend since 1930 toward construction of one and two-family dwellings, in contrast with the large volume of apartment construction from 1926 to 1929. This reversal may be in part a reflection of the greater volume of mortgage credit available to owners of small homes, through building and loan associa tions and similar institutions, and the relative difficulty of financing! large apartments projects in recent years through the traditional invest ment banking channels. FELLED BY HOODLUM'S GUN . Chicago. A hoodlum's gun, rem iniscent of gang war days, barked on the fringe of the downtown "loop" and Sanford (Gimpy) Rosenbaum, bodyguard of Edward "Spike' ODon nell, fell dangerously wounded. Double-parking his sedan for a quick get-away on Wells St., western rim of the loop, the gunman stroll ed acroFr. the street and accosted Rosenbaum. They chatted a moment, then the stranger pulled his revolver and fired three times. Bullets ripped thru Rosenbaum s right arm, left shoulder and chin. He slumped against a steel pillar of the elevated railway. The gunner jumped into his car' and sped off. Physicians said Rosenbaum prob ably would recover. . Detectives, be lieving he knew his assailant, tried to question him at the hospital but he refused to talk. HOSPITAL INMATE WANTED Falls City, Neb. Sheriff Irvin Gates Tuesday said a man giving his name as J. D. Miller, under guard in a hospital here, was wanted in Elk River, Minn., on charges of grand larceny. The prisoner was identified thru the bureau of identification at Wash ington as John N. Roebling. who served time in the Minnesota state reformatory for a tire theft, officers said. Roebling has been in the hos pital since suffering a fractured skull when, while handcuffed he leaped from Deputy Sheriff Ralph Ranisey't automobile. IF YOU KNEW YOU COULD BUY A Tailor Made Suit with 500 different fabric selections as cheaply as you could buy a hand-me-down wouldn't yon pre fer the tailor made ? A3k us for a demonstration ! WESCOTT'S Since 1879 FOUR ARE DEAD IN A FIRE South Dayton, N. Y. Two women and two little girls were dead of burns after a kerosene explosion and fire had trapped' them in the living room of their home. They were: Mrs. Elizabeth Rugg, 59; Mrs. Clarl bel Rugg, 26, her daughter-in-law, and the latter's children, Violet, 6, and Audrey, 4. The explosion result ed when Mrs. Clarlbel Rugg threw a quantity of kerosene into a wood stove to speed up a fire. The cloth ing of all four was set afire immed iately. The children, standing near the stove, had been waiting for the room to become warm enough for them to take baths. YORK WANTS CITY BUILDING York, Neb. Efforts to secure a federal building here to serve as na tional guard headquarters and a city auditorium, which have been pro gressing quietly for several weeks, will be discussed at a meeting of a promotion committee Tuesday. Capt. H. - R. Beckley commander of the guard unit here, and York civic lead ers are attempting to secure grants for construction of the building. Beckley has received notification from Adjutant General. Paul that he is working for the building thru the military affairs committee at Wash ington. York,: which has no civic center, is seeking co-operation of neighboring towns and cities in its drive.' HOOVER PAUSES AT CHICAGO Chicago. Former President Hoo ver, journeying to hi3 iome in Palo Alto, reached Chiqag.o by motor from Columbus, O., and- went to the home of a friend,. Arch W Shaw, in sub urban" Winnetka. Paul Sexson, sec retary to Mr. Hoover, said the for mer chief executive will rest "for a day or two" and then depart for the west coast by train. Hoover, Sexson said, had no statements or comments to;EEake,' political or other wise. - JTLES CLAM FOR REWARD Austin, Tex. Noland Aired, Tu pelo, Miss., youth who revealed Ray mond Hamilton's hiding place, filed a claim for the $500 reward offered by Governor Allrecl for information lead ing to the desperado's capture. HOME RULE AT CHICAGO Chicago. Edward J. Kelly was in ducted, into office for his first elec- ! tive term as mayor of Chicago short ly after he announced he would seek i "home rule" for the city in so far ! as utility control was concerned. TO THE MUSIC OF '.'The Nile Owls 8-piece Band -7 Saturday, April 20 EAGLES HALL reouce For Top Prices and Quick Service Come to Our Convenient Location at Corner 5th find Main Home Dairy Our Service Always Satisfies Phone 39 Plattsmouth Higher EAGLE NEWS MS Miss Louise Kaatz of Lincoln spent Sunday with home folks. Miss Lola Lewis was the guest of Miss Pauline Wall last Thursday evening. Mr. and Mrs. N. E. VanSickle of Farragut, la., spent Sunday with Mrs. Sarah Keil and Dorothea. Frank Young and son of Omaha' called Sunday afternoon at the J. L. Wall home. Harry Trunkenbolz and family of Council Bluffs were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Frohlich and Loren. Mr. and Mrs. Ted Spahnle came out from Lincoln and spent Tuesday evening with Mr. and Mrs. George Trimble. Miss Helen Nelson came out from Lincoln and spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Nelson and Edith. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Miller and son of Nehawka visited Tuesday after noon with Mrs. Miller's grandmother, Mrs. Sarah R. Keil. Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Piersol and son, Donald, enjoyed Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Scatter good and daughters. Mrs. Pauline Ollerman returned home last Wednesday afternoon after having spent several days at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wulf. Fred Trunkenbolz, who has been in ill health, was taken to the Bryan Memorial hospital for treatment last Friday. His condition is reported to be improving. George Caddy and Harold Tettit have enlisted for a term in CCC work and plan to leave the first part of this week for Fort Crook where they will be located for the present. Chas. Trunkenbolz from near Su perior gave his relatives a very pleasant surprise when he arrived last Thursday evening for a short visit. He returned home on F riday. Mr. and Mrs. George Pickham and Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Wall drove to Omaha last Sunday afternoon where they visited Mrs. Jasiel Wall who is in an Omaha hospital for treatment again. The Junior class enjoj'ed "Slouch Day" last Friday. A short program was presented in the assembly and the day's activities ended when the group motored to Lincoln for a the ater party in the evening. Fred Beach organized a garden club at his home last Thursday even ing. If weather- conditions are fa vorable and the enthusiasm of the members does not wane, some won- derful Gardens will be grown during the summer. The public is invited to attend the Achievement Day program to be given at the school auditorium on Wednesday evening, April 24th, by the extension clubs of this commun ity. The Eagle band will play sev eral numbers during the evening. m Kt fcttjwi itUM Ul. Gnat r)iO mm mi I ft $imw'm tmBW'f yW ' 1 tj V'V1 iVlj-jLy vVvVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVWWyVVVVVVTVW. IfUe Finance loots From One to Three Years No Down Payment No Mortgage OUE PLAN $100.00 Job, we add $5.26 interest, 12 monthly payments of $3.77 100.00 Job, we add 7.G9 interest, 18 monthly payments cf 5.08 110.00 Job, we add 11.13 interest, 24 monthly payments cf 5.0G LARGER JOBS IN SAME PROPORTION SPECIAL FEATURE We will finance Eepairs, Alterations, etc., np to $750.00, providing 25 per cent of the job is Roofing Materials. E. J. Phone 128 Lumber and Coal Plattsmouth Mr. and Mrs. Fred Rudolph and family entertained at dinner last Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Orill Allen, Kenneth and Laverne of Emerald, Mrs. Emma Smith of Raymond, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Umland and Dorothy Jean and Mr. and Mrs. John Fischer and sons. The Girl's Glee club went to Om aha on Saturday where they parti cipated in the music contest. They were rated as excellent. In the small group, the sexet,was also placed as excellent. Caroline Ronhovde, Melva Wall, . Lucile Oberle, Laura Smith, Pauline Wall and Madonna Adec are members of the small group. Eagle M. E. Church. "God does not give unless we take." E. S. Brightman. D. J. Schuylcman, pastor; G. H. Palmer, S. S. Supt. Of all the seasons of the year, the Eastertide is perhaps the most hope ful. This year wc have more than ever to be thankful for as we con sider the encouraging prospects for the future. Everywhere we see the bursting buds and the peeping flow ers and our hearts thrill to the an nual resurrection of nature, as our minds turn to that other resurrec tion morning so long ago. Sunday school at 10:00 a. m. Ev erything depends on what we do this week as to who wins our contest. A week ago last Sunday we made 29 points and they made 67 points. Last week we made 101 points and they made 111 points. What will tho re sult be this time? Everything de pends on our Easter attendance. We still have a slight lead, but we can not 6tand another defeat. If you do your part we can wini. Remember to come on time so that we can get the extra points for attendance on time. Morning worship at 11. Special Easter devotional services on this our Lord's resurrection day. Mr. and Mrs. Bender are in charge of the Easter anthems, and the Ladies' Aid represented by Mrs. Kaatz and Mrs. Kildee will decorate the church. Ep worth League at 6:45 p. m. Richard West is leading on the " Will this elephant forget? Easter topic in the study of Christ'3 personality. There will be special music. 8:00. It is fitting at this time that we celebrate the Lord's Supper in a communion service. Mr. Chad wicke will be the guest minister and will deliver the message of the even ing. This service is for the re-consecration and re-dedication of Christ's followers. Once to every man and nation conies ths moment to decide In the strife twixt truth and false hood for the good or evil side. Some great cause, God's new Messiah, giving each the blocni or blight, Sets the goats upon the loft hand and the sheep upon the right. And the chance goes by forever twixt the darkness and the light. James Russell Lowell. Friday, April 19 at 10:30 a. m., the Eagle Union will hold their local W. C. T. U. Institute at the Meth odist church. Thi.i will bo an all day meeting with a covered diih lunch con. The ntate director cf "better Ttloviesy will be one cf the speakers of the afternoon. Plattsmouth sic res orTcr shop ping advantages the equsi of any to bo found. Why net give your home town merchant first oppor tunity of serving you? Monday, April 22 H K. OF C. HAIL 8 Menu . Breaded Eeef Tenders h , . .. r I 8 i Hashed Pctatce. Brcwn Gravy o Carrots and Peas - Hells 3 Lettuce Salad Asserted Cakes - Coffee 8 t Serving from 5:30 to 8S v Aauiis OiC Children 5 K St. Jolin's Pariah 8 If I Easter Slipper 8