MONDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1938. PAGE TWO PLATTSMOUTH SEMI - WEEKLY JOURNAL Ihe 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. FOUR SKELETONS FOUND SEALED WITHIN TREE LONDON, (UP) A mystery of the jungle is disclosed in the Col onial Office's report on the state of Brunei, Borneo, for 193G. The bones of about four persons were found completely enclosed in an artificial cavity in the living trunk of a ttee. The tree, which was about four feet in diameter, had fallen in the ordinary course of nature when the discovery was made by a sawyer. The age cf the bor.es was estimated at about 50 years, and an examina tion of the tree suggested that not less than 50 nor more than 100 years a po a panel of six feet in length had been removed from a side of the tree and the heart hollowed out to contain the bones, the panel being: then re placed and redrafted on the tree a irain. MEN RISK LIVES TO SAVE CAT ON 4C0-FT. CLIFF LONDON (I'lM On his way home one night Fred Burrage, of North Devon, heard a cat meowing from t10 400-foot Watermouth Cliffs. It was dark and he could see nothing, to he went home to bed. ile lay awake, however, thinking of the animal's plight, and in the early hours he roused two neigh bors and took them to the cliffs with him. They lowered him down the cliffs in tho darkness and. after a search, he found the eat stranded on a ledge 1:00 feet down and brought it to safety. WORKER AT SAW ESCAPES INJURY THROUGH 37 YEARS nUKMERTOX, Wash. (UP) Rear Admiral K. B. Fenner, 13th naval district commandant, paid honor to George Seit'ert, 60, millman in Puget Sound navy yard's boat and joiner shop. "I wish to congratulate you upon the good record you have establish ed," said Admiral Fenner. "Your record for 37 years you have been here is wholly without adverse com ment or criticism." Seifert completed his life of labor at the saw with all his fingers in tact on both hands. TOWN HAS 143 EXILES MANSFIELD. O. (UP) One hun dred forty-three former Mansfield ians are in "exile" from their home city. Their alleged crimes, on file in municipal court, condemn them to immediate arrest should they ever return to Richland county. Crimes listed range from murder to trapping 1'ur-bearing animals out of season. None on the list ever have been lo cate! DINNER FLOWN 1,500 MILES ADELAIDE. Australia (UP) The guests of a hotel at Katherine, in the far "outback" Northern Territory of Australia, rat a Sunday dinner which is ilown 1.500 miles to them. The hotel has arranged with an Ade laide catering ilrm to supply the necessary food by the regular plane that calls at Katherine. HOSPITAL SERVES CITY WELL PASEDENA. Cal. ( UP) Since the Pasadena Emergency hospital was opened here in 1923 a total num ber of patients, exceeding the popu lation of the city, has been taken care of there. The hospital has received 102,010 accident cases alone. CANADA HUGE METAL EXPORTER OTTAWA, Out. (UP) Led by nicel and platinum, Canada supplies approximately 25 per cent of the world's output of the eight major metals, according to a statistical re port released by the Bank of Canada. Canada exports 23 per cent of its base metal output. PALESTINE POPULATION RISES JERUSALEM (UP) The popula tion of Palestine increased by about 4,000 to 1,320,872 iu the third quar ter of 1937, according to the current bulletin of vital statistics. The in crease, was partly due to seasonal migration. SOPHOMORES CALLED WORST COLLEGE "CLASS CUTTERS" TROY, N. Y. (UP) Sophomores are the greatest offenders in "class cutting" at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Dr. Ray Palmer Raker, assistant director, reports. "Generally speaking," he said, "the "the freshman is too timid to risk it (cutting classes), the junior feels a little too grown up, and the senior, now deeply in love with his alma mater, sees his last year pass ing altogether too fast to deny her any time." A "follow-up system" which stops cutting before it becomes a habit has kept absentees at an unusually low average at It. P. I., Dr. Baker announced. HUNTER KILLS WOLVES FROM SPEEDING ICE SLED WARROAD, Minn. (UP) The latest fad in wolf hunting is shoot ing them on the run from the door of a speeding air propeller ice sled. The practice was started on the Lake of the Woods by Charlie Springsteel. Equipped with skis, the sled is more than a match for the fastest wolf. It is capable of up to GO miles an hour. Wolf bounties ($6 for cubs and $15 for full-grown animals) make this form of hunting profitable, too. Springsteel fires at the wolves by holding his gun in one hand, while he steers the sled with the other. E0LT PISTOL INVENTED TO SLAUGHTER ANIMALS VANCOUVER, B. C. (UP) A "captive-bolt pistol" which may revo lutionize present methods of killing animals in slaughter houses will be demonstrated here by Inspector George Hood of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals before a group of city officials. The pistol fires a bolt, which pene trates the brain of the animal, caus ing instant death, and then recoils into the barrel. The weapon, which is in the hands of the S. P. C. A., was manufactured in England. BALLOT FRAUD TO COST 5-10 YEARS IN PRISON UTICA, N. Y. (UP) Because he registered under assumed names in eight election districts, George Flans burg, Utica painter, must spend the next 5 to 10 years in prison. lie was found guilty after testifying that he was intoxicated and ciid not know what he was doing. EREAD BAKED IN COLORS CLEVELAND (UP) Colored bread that adds a bright touch to bridge parties and luncheons, and tends to make children's school lunuhcs more tempting, is baked by two brothers, joint owners of a bakery here. SHERIFF SPREADS TEARS BRIGHTON, Colo. (UP) Guests at a Business and Professional Wom en':? card party went home in tears here when Sheriff Louis G. Ballard accidentally dropped a tear gas bomb from bin pocket in the lobby of the Elks club, where the party was held. MINE MULE KICKS' OFF WALENBURG, Colo. (UP) Paul Martinez has decided to "drive" his mule from a different vantage point after being kicked in the face. Mar tinez was driving the mule in the Maitland mine when the mule balked and "let fly" with both feet. TAELES TURNED ON JUNKMAN SANTA CRUZ, Cal. (UP) Robert Sheffer increased considerably his stock of junk when hi3 auto-trailer, laden with junk, crashed a guard rail and ran away. The trailer was added to the junk pile after that. WILL SEEK RE-ELECTION DES. MOINES, la., Feb. 1 (UP) Governor Nelson G. Kraschel ended speculation over his political aspir ations today by announcing he will seek the democratic nomination for re-election for a second term as gov ernor of Iowa. FLOOD BLAMED FOR COM PANY'S $2.35 IN 'RED' PUEBLO, Colo., (UP) The mys tery of a $2.35 shortage in the ac counts of a creamery here which ap peared in May 1915, has been cleared up, but the shortage will continue to exist. When the lock op the strong box in the safe at the creamery needed repairs, it was necessary to remove the box from the safe. A faded check for ?2.35 dated May 15, 1915, was found stuck to the top of the little ! iron box. The check had apparently slipped through a small slit at the top of the box where it lay from 1915 to June of 1921 when the Hood came and the safe was under water. The water covered the chcL-k and left it stuck fast to the metal when it dried. The check is faded but plainly visible. To cash the check, it would be necessary to take the strong box to the bank. ! LASE TO RUN IN PENN CLUB INDOOR MEET PHILADELPHIA (UP) Donald R. Lash, Indiana distance runner, was entered the indoor invitation track and field carnival to be held i in Convention Hall, Feb. 11, accord ing to Lawson Robertson. Robertson, who is manager of the indoor meet sponsored by the Bonn Athletic Club, said Iash probably 1 .-1.1 . . 4- C.i ili.. c- i A r 1 WUUU irompciu in nil.- iii..-o-..iivi-.jui. race of about u mile distance. Lash, holder of American records of two miles, three miles, four miles: and 5,000 meters will vie with other stellar runners such as Glenn Cun- I ninjr'iam, Archie San Romani. John 1 Woodruff and Gene Yenzke, who have been invited to appear. PILGRIM FATHER SHAFT MISPLACED BY 7 MILES NOR WELL, Mass. (UP) A monu ment purchased SO years ago to mark the grave of a Pilgrim father is seven mile.? from his burial place and in another town. Selectman Herbert A. Lincoln says the monument, erected in Hingham. was abandoned in Norwell en route to Siituate when ox-cart teamsters found the load too heavy. lie says his uncle. Selectman W. Irving Lin coln of Scituate, may have the monument provided Xorwell is paid for upkeep and transpotration costs. HERALDRY COLLEGE ERRS 021 KANGAROO'S TAIL MELBOURNE (UP) An English steamship line operating here, as a centenary gesture, had its coat of arms revamped by the College of Heraldry, and as a further gesture to Australia had a kangaroo includ ed in the new bearings. Now Australians complain that the College of Heraldry evidently never saw a kangaroo as they got the beast's tail entirely wrong. JUDGE UPHOLDS RIGHT TO BET IN CARD PLAY BOSTON, (UP) Municipal Judge Joseph Donovan has upheld the right to play cards for money. "People have a right to play cards for money, so long as thev are nt in a place that is a gambling nuisance and regularly re. oiled to as -such," he ruled in dismissing charges against 1G defendants ROCKING OF BABIES HALTED LONDON (UP) Mothers can no longer rock their babies in West Middlesex hospital and they are com plaining. Since the maternity wards were opened eery bed has had a tiny swing cot close beside it so that mothers were able to rock their babies. But in all the wards now the cot:j have been wedged so that they cannot be rocked. SURGERY SEEMS PAINLESS LUBBOCK, Tex. (UP) A Lubbock man wat.-hed a surgeon remove a goiter from around his windpipe, and said he felt no pain, altho no anes thetic wan administered. He did not even flinch" when the muscles and skin were sutured after the oper ation. FARM FOOD SURVEYED TOPEKA, Kas. (UP) The typ ical farm family buys $38 of food stuff each year and produces its own food to the extent of $50 a member, a survey by Printer's Ink Monthly reveals. PASADENA PERFUME-MINDED PASADENA, Ca!. ( UP) The board of supervisors is considering a project for the growing of com mercial perfume plants in Southern California. CORNELL OPENS GRID COACHING SCHOOL IN JUNE ITHACA, N. Y. (UP) A six-day coach ing school on the modern meth ods of football training will be con ducted by Coach Carl G. Snavely and Trainer Frank Kavanagh of Cornell University this summer. The school, which is expected to attract student coaches throughout the cast, will be in session from June 27 to July 2. The course will present intensive study 01 the techniques developed by the Corne'l stall and other outstand ing coaches of the country, and will include a practical consideration of the care and treatment of athletic injuries. Snavely directed two training schools while head football coach at North Carolina University, and was ! football technician during one sum mer in the Marshall College and Vir ginia coaching srchool. WOODEN COINS EAGERLY TAKEN BY COLLECTOR RIPON, Wis. (UP) Math J. Lau dof took some wooden nickels, but it was only to gratify an obsession for collecting oddities that has made his Peebles farm home a virtual museum. He has gathered 3.000 books, specializing in state and federal pub lications, but never reads them. Row upon row of whisky bottles from different parts of the world line the upper hallway of his home, but the master of the place "does not drink a drop" of intoxicating liquor. "I just collect the junk for the fun of it," Laudoff explains. He is in his middle 40s, but so far hasn't "collected" a wife be cause, he says, he hasn't "had time." PLUMS IN SASKATCHEWAN FLOURISH DESPITE COLD DEGINA, Sask. (UP) Plums real juicy ones grow north of latitude 53 in Saskatchewan. James Watt Meteor, Saskatchewan farmer, has thorn to prove it. Several years .vo "Watt bought plum pits from r.n agriculture college. Bv 1032 his trees were bearing fruit. Now he harvests a plum crop as large and lurious as any harvested in British Columbia. So heavy is the yield that it pull.; down the brandies of the trees where plums never grew be fore. BOATMAN BURNS CRAFT. HOPING TO END JINX RODEO. Cal. (UP) Glen Hilton. Sacramento boatman, knows when he's had enough. When his motor boat beached here, he got out, drenched it with gasoline, and toss ed in a match. "Let it alone," he shouted to would-be rescuers. "It's bad luck. It nearly killed nie a couple of times." The boat burned to water's edge. DOG EARNS $350 A SECOND LONDON (UP) A dog which was bought for $10,000, Ralleyhennessy Sandhills, won for his owner, Mrs. (Varna, of Wimbledon, $10,000 in 29.39 seconds. The dog won that sum in the Whit" City 500-yard event. For every yard he ran he earned $20, or ?35 0 a second. WATER SURVEY BY PLANE OTTAWA. Out. (UP) Airplanes have bein used to speed up a sur vey of water resources in the west ern drought areas, according to a report published by the Royal Canadian Air Force. Two Air Force planes were sent to photograph some of the worst sections. TOWN'S FIRE SIREN FREEZES ! ARROWHEAD, Alta. (UP) Ar- ' ...... 1. .1 ..... .... I,,. it. I Ul'. lit'illl 13 11UL it t'l V lilJC IU u winter. When the home of Albert Siinmie caught fire no alarm could be sounded and the building was a total loss. The town lire siren froze. JOBLESS YOUTH BUILDS AUTO CLEVELAND (UP) Laddie Can ker, 22-ycar-oId jobless machinist, built his "Canker Special" a long, low and swanky-looking multi-make automobile with $200 and two years of work. CAPE TOWN HAS 300,330 CAPE TOWN (UP)- The popula tion of Cape Town grew from 293, 180 in 193C to 300,330 in 1937, ac cording to statistics issued by the Medical Officer of Health. SCOOTERS RACE "DOWN UNDER" WOY WOY, Australia (UP) In a five-mile scooter race here, the win ner attained an average speed of 11 Vz miles an hour, covering the dis tance in 2 6 minutes. RIVER PEARLING DOOMED TO BE LOST INDUSTRY PRAIRIE DU CilEIN, Wis. (UP) Martin Blazek is the sole survivor of an industry that once flourished in the upper reaches of the Missis sippi river. Blazek can remember the days when the river was "full of clam boats" and thousands of dollars in pearls and shells were taken from the muddy bottom of the channel yearly. Now Blazek is the only "clammer" still in the business and business is not so good, lie admits. "There's still a living to be made at the trade, though," he maintains. "I earn from $2 to $3 a day from sale of my shells, and once in a while I find a pearl." Blazek said he found two pearls recently. One he sold for $16 and the other brought only $3. He said that a few years ago they would have been worth $150 each. "This business does have its ad vantages," he said. "There isn't any competition." HUNTERS RESCUE DOGS FROM TREACHEROUS ICE AM HER ST BURG, Out. (UP) Capt. Charles Hackett and Herbert Courtney, 17, are heroes. They risked their Jives on the treacherous ice of the Detroit river to rescue two hunting clogs from a drifting ice floe. The dogs, caked with ice and almost frozen to death, were sighted by Courtney drifting down the middle of the stream on a huge block of ice. Courtney and Hackett ran across the ice, pushing a rowboat until they reached open water, where they finally overtook the drifting floe and rescued the ice-clad canines. WHY ATHLETES PAST 30 ARE OLD, IS EXPLAINED CLEVELAND (UP) A highly technical reason fcr loss of athletic agility by persons passing the age of 30 was advanced here by Dr. Virgil Hallidav. anatomy instructor in the! Still College of Osteopathy, of Des Moines. Lack cf outstanding athletes over the "nucleus palpostis ot tlie inter vertebral disk," he told a meeting of Ohio osteopaths. These elastic disks lose their sponginess in persons past 30 there by reducing the pleasure of ex.ercise as well as agility, he said. DYNAMITE UNDER BED NEVER WORRIES SLEEPER MONTREAL (UP) Sleeping with dynamite under the bid is common place to Mrs. J. O. B. Petersen of Montreal. Mrs. Petersen has spent the sum mer in Greenland with her husband since 1931 and in the primitive con ditions of an Eskimo settlement slept in a one-room house which also functions as a storehouse. The dynamite had to be protected from freezing, "so we put it under the bed," she said. TOWN HAS ENGAGEMENT BOOK ELLSWORTH, Me. (UP) This town has established a "community engagement book." The book has been placed in .Fred Scott's store. Any group planning a public enter tainment enters it on the scheduled date. Other groups will then know that this date has been taken and conflicting dates will be avoided. W0YMING RAISES SHEEP BAR CHEYENNE, Wyo. (UP) A spe cial quarantine proclamation issued by Gov. Leslie Miller of Wyoming prevents South Dakota sheep from being shipped into Wyoming before they have been dipped in a special disease-killing solution. MOUNTAIN APPLES THRIFTY LINDSAY, Cal. (UP) Mountain apples are a heavy crop in the or chard of the J. E. Garner ranch near here. An example of heavy bearing was found when three dozen perfect ly formed apples hung from a three-foot-long branch: THIEVES DUPE DEATH WATCH LEBANON, Mo. (UP) Thieves took advantage of a death watch over the body of Mrs. Artemissa Mizer and stole a flock of Buff Or pington chickens. Persons in the house heard a noise outside but did uot investigate. MASKED BOB WHITE RETURNS TUCSON, Ariz. (UP) The masked bob white which was exterminated in Arizona 40 years ago is staging a comeback under the watchful eye of the U. S. forest service. LOYALISTS TAKE OFFENSIVE HENDAYE, Franco-Spanish Fron tier, Feb 5 (UP) An official com munique said today that loyalist forces taking the offensive to Granada province in the southwest had cap tured a key hill. In the Estramadura sector it was announced the nationalists attacked Mounts Santa Maria and Miron, oc cupying the latter. The insurgents were repulsed elsewhere, the com munique said. Rebel air raids con tinued along the western MediteY ranean coast taking a large toll of civilian casualties. LENS TO BE "ALUMINIZED" INSTEAD OF SILVER COATED PASADENA, Cal. (UP) Experts at the California Institute of Tech nology have decided that the 200 inch telescope mirror now being per fected there will be "aluminized" in stead of silverized, as has generally been done in the past. Dr. John Strong of the Institute's faculty has developed a method of vaporizing aluminum atoms on the reflecting side of the big "eye" which will leave a film cf only four-milliouths of an inch thick. LITIGATION MAY DOOM HOUSE BUILT IN 1G50 WEYMOUTH, Mass. (UP) The oldest house in Weymouth, built in 1G50 by a son of the town's first set tler, soon may be razeu. A 15-rocm building, the house was modernized 40 years ago, Lut still retains hand-hewed beams, wooden pegs in place of nails and hand wrought hardware. The house was ordered sold by the court because cf litigation over set tlement of an estate. BANANA EATER BOASTS 52 DOWNED IN 20 MIN. SYDNEY (UP) The addition of a banana eating contest to the next Olympic games would enable Aus tralia to make a still greater Olym pic showing, it is believed here. Mcrvyn Walmsley of Coraki just broken his previous record for banana eating by disposing of 52 in 20 minutes. The first 25 were eaten in 5 minutes. All cf the bananas were evenly graded ranging from 6', 2 to 7 inches in length. PEACEFUL SMOKE ENDS IN SHATTERING BLAST REGINA, Sask. (UP) George Lowry, town constable of Woodrow, Sask., filled his briar pipe and settled back, in his chair for a peaceful smoke. Suddenly a loud blast shattered his pipe, scattering ashes, tobacco and bits of pipe around the room. Constable Lowry had somehow misplaced a bullet and stuffed it in his pipe with the tobacco. MUCH-PUBLICIZED PHEASANT SHOT DOWN BY HUNTER MONSON, Mass. (UP) Gone are the car-chasing days of East Hill's cock pheasant, but its death, unlike that of many a car-chasing dog, re sulted from the blast of a hunter's gun. The bird's habit of chasing auto mobiles made it the subject of pic tures and articles in sports maga zines. TAX COLLECTING TRAVELING JOB CARSON CITY, New (UP) It takes traveling to collect taxes in Nevada. Liquor Tax Inspector Wil liam Kelly Klaus has revealed that in the two and a half years he has been in office he has traveled in tin; line of duty SI, 000 miles, or a dis tance equal to more than three times around the world. PIGEON SETS FIRE TO BARN CANTON, N. Y. (UP) A pigeon caused a fire which destroyed a $3,000 barn 011 the farm of Fred Scott, near here. The bird, fright ened by Scott's entrance into the barn at night, knocked a lantern from his hand, setting fire to the hay. HERE'S RIP VAN WINKLE PUEBLO, Colo. (UP) Rip Van Winkle, a former resident of this city, is a butcher in a Burbank, Cal., shop. He sold a turkey to Mrs. Mary Christmas, who was visiting in Bur bank. OLD WINE FOUND IN CAVE CITY MOSCOW (UP) Wine distilled four centuries ago has been discov ered in Georgia in the Soviet Cau casus during excavations at Vardzie. a "skyscraper cave city" cn the shore J of the turbulent river Kura. BLIND OHIO PENSIONER GETS MONEY FOR DOG DES MOINES, la. (UP) The state of Iowa carries the "seeing eye" dog of one of its blind pensioners on the books at $2 a month. That amount is added to the pen sioner's check each month for support of the dog. Mrs. Bessie Regcl, director of the blind pension fund, did not disclose the pensioner's name. GIRLS TRY "DISCIPLINE MONTH' BERLIN (UP) A "month of dis cipline" is being organized for mem bers of the German Girls' Acsocia- (ion at Had Oeynhausen. The local leader of the association has decreed that all members must attend meet ings every night for a month to take a course which includes training in deportment and in the art cf wear ing clothes. DEAN READY FOR RELEASE MEMPHIS, Tenn., Feb. 5 (UP) Dr. Conley Sanford said today that the Rev. Israel II. Noe whose 22-day fast ended when he collapsed on January 24 was in condition to leave Baptist hospital. Noe when admitted to the hospital for intravenous feeding weighed only 100 pounds. Today he weighed 137 and was eating toliJ foods. SHOOS THE HOUSE MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Feb. 5 (UP) Patrolman Henry Wkkcnbcrg was ordered to investigate a report of a disturbance at an address on Col fax Avenue North, last night. Ho returned with the following: "No disturbance. A fat lady just rolled over in bed and shook the house." RECREATIONAL LITERACY STRESSED BY WPA DIRECTOR NEW ORLEANS (UP) "Recrea tional illiteracy" is more dangerous than intellectual illiteracy, John j Zimmerman, director of the WPA re has 'creational division for Louisiana, said in a talk here. WPA clients are ! taught to dance, as we ll as to paint. sing and participate in athletics. DOGS TO BE INOCULATED EL CENTRO, Cal. (UP) With the constant danger of epidemics of rabies being started by dogs that have been bitten by coyotes, a sys tem of dog clinics is being establish ed throughout the Imperial valley where all dog and pet owners can have their animals inoculated against rabies. CHERRY PITS IRK U. S. BOISE CITY, Ida. (UP) Because more than one cherry pit for every 20 ounces of cherries was found in a shipment of 10S cases here labeled "Pitted Sour Cherreis," federal au thorities attached the entire lot as misbranded in violation of the drug and food act. SAFE ROBBERS WORK HARD POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y. (UP) Burglars pried looso a 150-pound safe buried 2 inches in concrete and took the vault and contents away with them when they mid-Hudson river oil bu rglarized company. APPLE MEASURES 15 INCHES HUDSON, N. Y. (UP) An apple measuring 15Vt inches in circum ference was exhibited by Nathan Larry, of Stuyvcsant Falls. Larry jsaid he found the apple in his father's orchard. CITY'S CANNON DISAPPEARS TWIN FALLS, Ida. (UP) A state wide search has been ordered for a 300 pound cannon that formerly graced the city park. It was a relic cf the Spanish-American war. BAY STATE PORT OF FISHING MEN BOSTON (UP) Although New England once rated the fishing in dustry as a mainstay, it is now esti- maieu mat 0 per cent of the men fish out of Massachusetts ports. CANADA MISSES SLUMP MONTREAL (UP) Canadian business is holding up veil in spite of low purchasing power in western drouth areas, according to the last report of the Bank of Montreal. STEER STRANDED IN TREE SANTA P.O.? A. Cal. (UP) The Northern California fioodj kft a ctctr stranded in a tree 70 feet above the ground, and a 700-pound rock lodged in another.