MONDAY. JTJNE 6, 1938. PIATTSMOUTH SEMI - WEEKLY JOTJRNAL PAGE FIVE Arrests Made in an Alleged Espionage Plot Two German Ship Captains and a Designer of Naval Vessels Ar rested by Federal Agents. NEW YORK. June 4 (UP) The p. Most of two German ship captains and a designer of the navy's newest destroyers brought startling new 1 -imifieat ions tn the investigation of espionage plot today. The captains. Franz Friske of the I .amburg-Amerlcan Line, freighter Ilindenburg and lleinrich Lorenz of the North German Lloyd, freighter Chemnitz were arraigned in federal court last night as material wit 1 sses in the plot that in two months has involved more than 3 0 persons. They were released on $2,500 bonds each and immediately boarded the North German Lloyd liner Europa, apparently with the 'federal men's I now ledge. The Europa sailed early today for Europe. The other prisoner taken last right. Christian Danielsoi.. a drafts man for the Bath Iron Works at 1 1:: t h . Maine which is building new ships for the navy was held in jail j under $10.iut0 bond. j It was renorteel tliat some of the! plans for the new destroyers had i litcii stolen. Danielsoi: 's importance ritcry today, and fortified their ele rs a witness, was attested by the fense lines, as their most recent fact that his bond was set four times I frontier incident again threatened tc linger than that of most materia 1 i cause war over their 4"0-year-old witnesses in the case. The two captains had been detain ed to testify before a federal grand jury that has been investigating the case for a month and their ships sailed without them several weeks o. Their sailing today, while uri-j der bond, was a mysterious develop ment. In arraigning them. Leon U. , Tc-rrou. a G-man and Lester C. Duni- i pan of the l S. attorney's office told j Judge John . Clancy they had in- j formation that the captains intend- j e.I to sail en the Europa and for that , reason rhey requested the bond be j set. The y told the court that once ' the men go! to Germany, where two! other material witnesses have taken ' up residence, while under subpoena. there would he no wav of forcing' the in to return. I CITE SWIFT & COMPANY WASHINGTON, June Z (UP) Secretary of Agriculture Henry A. ! Wallace today ordered Swift & Co. j Chicago meat packing firm, to cease' "unfair, unjustly discriminatory and deceptive" practices in the sale of its products. j Wallace held tlie company liad violated the packers and stockyards act from 1!0" to 1937 through un lawful practices in distribution of its products. Department attorneys said the or de r w as based on hearings in New York on Swift V: Co. practices in eastern territory but that it applies to the concern's operations through out the country. The alleged violations Included: 1. Denying certain purchasers dis counts while granting them to others. 2. Requiring some purchasers to pay for meat at factory weights and others at weights when sold to con sumers. Giving long 'oino purchasers credit to others. term credit to and short term j LET HIGHWAY CONTRACTS LINCOLN. June 4 (UP) S'.ate j bv.sinccr A. C. Tilley awarded eon- tra ts today on all except five high way projec ts for which bids were re ce i ved Thursday. Tilley said low bids had been ac cepted on the following projects but that awards would not be made until work agreements are filed with the highway department by the parti cipating county, city, or railroad: Through west and New port-Jami- j so;:. Max Stratton; Trcnton-Stratton and Oxford-Atlanta. TW0 CASES OF SLEEPING SICKNESS REPORTED LINCOLN. June 4 (UP) First ra"s this season of "sleeping sick ness" among Nebraska horses were ii; iosed today by Dr. J. S. Ander son, state vetorinrrian. Dr. J. D. Lindgren of Edgar re pi rtcd two c-ises to the state office. Dr. Anderson said the disease prob ;.b;y is carried by mosquitoes. He believes the condition spreads more rapidly after wet weather. "RAIN LAUNDRY DELIVERY MAN BERKELEY. Cal. lUP) BerVceiey huh school lias opened a course for laundry route men. No effort will 1 !" -ii'(.c to lnvrc.isc tlfir g( ncr:l c .'.it'.:rc. Lut rather on how to get the pacl ages delivered on time. ; SNITE FAMILY ENCOURAGED CHICAGO, Jue 4 (UP) Billings Memorial hospital physicians today began an examination of Frederick B. Snite, Jr., infantile paralysis vic tim, to determine the progress he has made during the past eight months. He returned to Chicago yesterday from Miami, Fla., in the "iron lung" in which he has lain for 26 months. He was stricken in China while on a world tour. "Everyone is very much encour aged about his condition," Snite's father said. "He is now able to re main outside the respirator for 24 minutes at a time, an increase of about two minuttos in three months." Young Snit? will be taken to his home in suburban River Forest in about ten days. He will return to Miami next fall South American Nations Prepare Armed Forces Peru and Ecuador Both Send Troonsjmcnt 01 Ine act- "1,5S ,'ins Into Disputed Jungle Territory ! fssktd c- !- ' collaboration in the as Result of Clash. j proposed study The British act war i passed in l'.27 after England's gen- P-UENOS ARIES. June J (VP) Peru ur.d Ecuador sent vein fore ments to the w-'.d Oriente jungle ter- boundary dispute. Peruvian and Ecuadorian govern ments, in statements issued at Lima and Quito, exchanged charges that as the result of a border clash, the ether side was preparing for a fight. Ecuador said that strong cor.ting- ents of Peruvian troops had arrived jn the Tumbes district and that hence "Ecuador had ordered reinforcements for the Fuarti detachment? s at Oro and: dash which! I a s!.-..rf.roent i Rcca Fuerte, scene of the causet ne trouble p mum..,! w-it, a statement that Ecuador was h avi'.v fortifing the frontier. Hence, it was said, it was necessary for Peru to take de fensive measures. It was reported in Quito that r. Peruvian gunboat arrived at Port Viz- .-,vr,f, r.-.to Ti, r.i,.;,n fn.!"f the New York Timer, wrote in tier, with 30u troops. j At Quito. Ecuadorian army ofT'cers j pledged their support of the govern-: ment in defense cf "sacred national i interests."' At Guayaquil, crowds par-' aded the streets shouting '"long iive Ecuador." : Toe Ecuadorian cabinet, composed; mainly of armv officers, resigned last i night to give Gen. G. Alberto En-! riquez, supreme chief of the republic in the absence of a formally elected I president, a free hand in the crisis and so thev could return to thtir ' army commands i Gen Enrique: retained Gen. Guil- lermo Frtiii as war minister and Dr Luis Bassano as foreign minister but ; released other cabinet members. Cay- i etano Uribc was named new treaury i minister nd Alberto Ordtnana war named social security minister. I FINANCIERS TESTIFY NEW nanciers YORK, June 4 (UP) Fi tcstifying at a securities and exchange commission investigation, todav defended the etnics of their dealings with a group of six mcr charged with having acquired and panics of SlO.ooo.finO. Gerald Real, president of the J Schrode r Banking Corporation which ev-.o ;n,l,ve nno f ft,,. tmct Continental Securities C:rp lid his ncgoiations were with Alexander B. i Beverly of Toronto, who had b?er ! highly recommended to him bv the i Royal Bar.k of Canada and others. I David Schenker. commission coun j scl, had questioned Beal as to wheth ; er he was not suspicious of the onci , of S20 a share made to him for Con- t jnor!tal stock when it was "undei water'' at minus Sll a share, and whether he had not felt enough re- sponsibilitv toward holders of Con- tmential debentures to investigate tnci buyers. CARL0ADLNGS GAIN u .Mii.Mj 1 u.. June 4 ic i 1 LEBANON. N. II.. June -3 (UP) The Association of American Rail- Seized by a poss i:i his hideout in a roads announced today carloadings j n-ni yard. John Henry Gray, a wood for the week ending May 2S totaled chopper, confessed today to the axe i.2.UM cars, an increase ot tni ee per cent over the preceding week. The week's loadings, however, were 28.9 per cent below the same week in 103 7 and 3H.5 per cent under the corresponding week in 1930. Loadings of grain and grain prod fcts totaled 33.344 cars. 1.1S4 above the previous week and 0,"S2 over the same week in 1937. Livestock loadings totaled 12.050 1 '..!;. decrease of 1.317 beb.'w the previous week and 52S less than the same week in 1937. British Labor Act Study is Not Approved Labor Leader John L. Lewis Fears May Bring- Changes to the Wagner Labor Act. By LYLE C. WILSON United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON', June 4 (UP) A rousing battle impends today on the left wing of the new deal-democratic party if President Roosevelt's "ed ucational" study of the British trades dispute act accelerates the movement for amendment of the national labor relations act. Chairman John L Lewi.? of the Committe for Industrial Organiza tion opened fire yesterday a few hours after published reports that amend ment of the act might follow the study of British legislation. Lewis wrote to Secretary of Laboi Frances Perkins that the C. I. O. "could not sanction" anv study of the British act leading- toward amend- eral strike of l'.cj; had brought the nation to ths brink of re olutionary j disorder It especially protects the British government against strikes "to coerce the government" and es tablishes criminal liability of union officials, members of the strike com mittccs and pickets who participate in strike-? defined by the act as il legal. The act also forbids lockouts. Mr. Roosevelt, in a press confer ence coincident with release of Lewis' challenge, quickly denied there was any relation whatever between the labor act and the proposed studv cf the more comprehensive British leg islation He said the British r.ct had been misinterpreted here and that the udv mission would get some real .acts for rurpores of comparison be - t'.veen American and British law. ! But his desire to send a mission ' abroad recalled that there have been 1 White House intimations that some phases of the P.ritish labor legislation technique might be In Fehruar- V.'T. applicable here Arthur Krock a Pulitzer prize interview after several conservations witn -Mr. Roosevelt: "The President believes i is neces sary net onlv for the federal govern ment to be able to regulate against over-production and under-production . . . But it is also necessary for the federal government to have sme auth ority to compel collective bargaining and to enforce the maintenance of ci ntract both by employers and em ployes." There are limited "responsibility" provisions in the Brtish act. They arc most effectve in ciefining types of illegal strikes and in limiting the freedom of civil servants or employes of public (cither public! v or private ly owned) utilities to strike. One of the notable provisions of the British act forbids, expnditure of trades un ion funds for specified political cb jects unless the objective has been approved by a majority ballot vote cf members. Such expenditures must be made from a separate political fund to which union members need not contribute, nor mav unions put to disadvantage any member who doe; not contribute. TO MAKE GREAT FILL HASTINGS. Neb.. June 4 (UP) Mo:;t spectacular construction unit I of the Tri-Ceunty Bow er and Irri- 1 gat ion project will be launched early in the summer as the result of a call for bids for the big earth fill at the Kingsley dam on the North Platte river. July 5 was set as the date for letting the contract. The fill, which will extend from bluff to bluff will be capable of im- 1 pounding 2,000.(300 acre feet of v.rter. Its construction will be over I a line of sheet pilin: It is imper vious brule clav for the entii-p lerir-th of lnp (,am r(,re T,ip Jg t , f .... seepage beneath ... ...... ...... the valley level. CONFESSES SLAYING cta vintr of a man and a bov at near by Cannon. "I don't know why I did it," he said. Police Chief C. W. Wright said he had been unable to ascertain the motive for the killing of Paul Barris. 24. and his 9-year-old brother-in-law. Arthur Cullen. both related to the slayer by marriage. A 20-man posae trapped the 54-year-old wood chopper 12 boms nftr bis slaying which occurred in an isolated farm house 15 miles from here. DR. FREUD LEAVES VIENNA VIENNA. June 4 (UP) Dr. Sig mund Freud, world famous psy choanalist left with his family today for Paris, en route to London. Dr. Freud, who is Jewish, pre viously had been denied a passport, and prevented from leaving the coun try. His money was impounded to prevent his departure. Dr. Freud is S2 and has been ill. After the nazi annexation, his home was raided and searched and his books were among the first to go into the public bon tire. Freud left today with the con sent of the authorities. At the station his friends remained ! ' ciscreetly in the background to avoid embarrassing him. inasmuch as the oTieials emphasized that he must depart without a demonstration. He was permitted to take his library and any furniture he desired. Make Survey for Purchase of Relief Supplies!' Secretary Wallace Directs Enlarged Program for Purchasing of Relief Supplies. WASHINGTON, June 4 (UP) Secretary of Agriculture Ilcnrv A. Wallace directed the federal surplus commodity corporation Friday to survey need for an expanded federal program of purchasing food and cloth ing for unemployed. He requested corporation officials to cooperate with state and local re lief organizations in determining "the extent of unfilled need for food and I clothing among people on relief." j The request followed a White House! conference at which Wallace, Sect e- tary of Treasury Henry Morgenthau. j ()f rural 1(roject superintendents dis Jr., and Assistant Works Progress j cussed feasibility of continuing a portedIv dif!cussed u?e of ?1ro,ooo,,oo Cd debuted to c ; of . funds for th? pin.cha?e ofj various districts ; farm Parplu5CS for distribution to the Districts represent 1 , , ., .Aun.iniSiiat.or .-uorey w uiiams re- needv, The inclusion of "clothing' lace's order was regarded a: ing intention to expand pi operations of the corporation. Here- toforc, the corporation has purchased only surplus foods, principally per- ishables. Funds for surplus purchases arc derived from a fund made up by set- ting aside SO per cent of import duties. ! made history last night at Bucking amounting to alout ? 120,000,000 aihaiu palace when she sang "Nice ye.ar. Expenditures, however, have averaged only about S:j0,0of?onf a vear. FIND YOUTH SANE NEW YORK, .Tune (UP) Don- aid Carroll Jr found sane by Bel levue hesDital psychiatrists in a week- long examination ordered after a jury ! freed him of murder charges in the slaying of 18-year-old Charlotte Mat thiesen was formally released from custody today. County Judge Thomas Downs sign ed the release of the 16-ycar-old high school student after reading thtj report submitted by the psychiatrists who examind him. The boy had been in custody since last March 21 when he killed his sweetheart in what was planned as a suicide pact because she was about to become a mother. He lost his nerve after shooting the girl and calied the police. Had the jury which acquitted him "bv reason of insar.it v" not failed tc add the words at the time of the crime" Donald would have gone free May 27. The jury's failure made it mandatory upon Judire Downs to or der the examination. MUST FILE SCHEDULE LINCOLN, June 4 (UP) Inter state truckers operating in Nebraska will be required to file interstate rate sclieclnlcs with the state railway commission, it was announced today. Chaiiman Floyd L. P.ollen explain ed the railway commission has haa no way of corroborating testimonies of interstate motor truckers concern ing rates they charged when they apply for state certificates. The commission adopted unani mouslv resolutions establishing vol ume rates on truck load shipments of burlap bags and classifying in greater details rates 011 transporta tion of agricultural implements. WILL MAKE SURVEY LINCOLN. June 3 (UP) State Auditor W. H. Pi ice announced today that his office for the first time will make a comprehensive survey of the outstanding bonded in-lcbtedness of all Nebraska governmental subdivi sions. He explained that less than half of the governmental units with bond ed indebtedness give proper notice of compilation cf bonds to the county clerk or state auditor's office. WHEAT CROP 1,077,000.000 CHICAGO, June 2 (UP) Private corporation experts today forecast ' for 193S the largest U. S. wheat : crop ever harvested, the average! estimate being 1,077,000,000 bush- j c-ls as compared with the previous: record crop of 1.009,000,000 in 1915 J Favorable crop weather in the past! north resulted in an increase of I o7, 000. 000 in the average estimate of' die winter wheat crop which experts ;oaay placed at t 1 0,000.0 0 j com pared with their average estimates! .1 month ago of 743,000.000 bushels, j Today's forecast on winter wheat is; m'y I0.000.00o bushels less than ; .lie ! 193 record winter wheat production! approximately S0.000.000 111 WEATHER EEST SINCE 1921 LINCOLN. June 2 CP Nebras ka moisture conditions are better than at any time since 1921, Meteor-' ologist T. A. Blair of the Lincoln! 1 weather bureau said today, j Unusually heavy rains during May' he reported have provided subsoil eserve which will benefit corn. Biairi emphasized that normal rains will 1 j be needed through the growing sea-; .son to assure a good com crop. ' j Only two of the 25 stations re-' jporting to the weather bureau here1 i were below normal for precipitation j recived since January 1. They are' Bridgeport and North Doup and each ; lacks onlv a few hundredths of equalling normal figures. SUGGEST TRADE PUBLICATION COLUMBUS. Neb.. June 1 (UP) Superintendents of nine rural public power districts have agreed to pre sent a proposed trade publication plan to the state association of rural power districts. j t n mppfinp' liere the ft cyr if-i 'A I i nil small trade naner started last month istoniers in the nted were eastern Nebraska. southeastern Nebraska. in al- i Norris. Lancaster count v. I'olk coun-indicat-'ty, Cuming county, Burt county and rchasinp j t he Loup river. The next meeting will be held at Lincoln June 25. ! j SINGS BEFORE KING I LONDON, June 2 (UP) Evelyn Pall, a 20-year-old American singer, Work if You Can Get It" to King George and Queen Elizabeth, other members of the royal family and 1,000 guests. The occasion was the royal derby night ball. Among the guests were I". S. Ambassador Joseph P. Kenned;, and Charles A. Lindbergh. Evelyn "swung" it in typical American fashion. The ball was considered 1 one of the most informal ever Held at Buckingham pa'ice UNABLE TO DOCK LONDON. June 2 (UP) The liner j Queen Mary was unable to dock at j Cherbourg today during a severe summer gale which lashed southern j England, the English Channel and j the French ports. The wind velocity reached SO miles an hour in many places and several towns were flooded. RECEIVES APPOINTMENT LINCOLN. June 2 (UP) Francis E. Fitzgerald of Omaha today was namec' acting supervisor of statistics! in the state assistance office. He I succeeds Charles G. Now acek of j Plattsmouth who was :i imoin t eei sta-! tistician in the state unemployment compensation division. INDIAN CHIEF CARRIES MAILS CHARLEYOIX. Mich. (UP) Ai full-fledged Indian chief has carried! the mail here for 25 years. Dan I McSauba, 45-year-old postman, is I the grandson and heir of a once-1 powerful Ottawa Indian chief w ho I iu!ed in this area before its settle 1. .ent by white men. PREFER AMERICAN CARS JOHANNESBURG (UP) South Africans bought nearly eight times more American motor cars and heavy motor vehicles than British during 1937. the latest licensing figured is sued by the Department of Census and Statistics disclose. CAPT. HERRESH0FF DIES BRISTOL. It. .. June 2 (UP) Captain Nathaniel Greene Herres hoff. 90. pioneer yacht builder, who constructed many successful defend ers of the America's cup, died at his home today. Used cars, livestock, household aoods all can be sold throuch i inexpensive Journal Want Ads. APPEAL BRIDGE BOND CASE LINCOLN, June 3 (UP) Dakota county commissioners appealed to the supreme court today from a ruling by District Judge Mark Ryan invalidating Dakota county's pur chase of a private bridge spanning the Missouri river between Sioux City, Iowa and South Sioux City, Ne braska. Judge Rvan held that the 1925 in- jterstate county bridge law permits j counties to construct bridges or com plete bridges already started but for Jbids their purchase of an existing nricige and the issuance of revenue bonds. The county bought the f ridge last the M issouri river I .Sioux City Bridge "company, a Dela- ware corporation, and already has1 issued $l.SG5.00n in bonds. George' j E. Leanier, South Sioux City attor-' i ney. was the objector. Judge Ryan ilirst ruled the county had authority; jto bu the bridge but later vacated I i the decree. ; I i i-'EART BOMB" INVENTED I BY BRITISH MILITARY MAN I j j LONDON t UPt With the millions' 1 of dart players of Great Britain in 'mind. Maurice Darling, former army 'officer, has invented something new in hand grenades the dart bomb. ' Darling says that he has submit-! ted to the War Office a tiny hand j grenade in the form of a dart, but t iled with high explosive. "The dart bomb should revolu- tionize close warfare." he said. "On a big ser.le they could be made at a j cost of only fourpence each. 1 "When an enemy soldier is about "0 or 4 0 feet away, a man with good aim. such as the many dart j players of this country, could draw the pin and throw the explosive dart. As soon as the point makes, contact it will set off the explosive." BRITISH YARDS BUILD WARSHIPS FOR ARGENTINA I BARROW -IN- FURNESS. Eng. 1 1'P 1 A training cruiser and three ! destroyers which are being built here for the Argentine government are i Hearing completion, i The training cruiser La Argentina has left Barrow for Birkenhead for idry docking, preparatory to under- going sea trials. This ship which I was built by Yickers Armstrong Lid.. was launched on March 2G. 1&M7. It carries a total complement of COO officers and men. with special ar- rangements for training of cadets. It ; is r. 1 11 feet long, and has an extreme ! shin and influence to a nationw ide j breadth of 5C feet, (j inches. His- scale as organization details are com j placement of C'ihi tons and it is j plcted. .expected to develop 30 knots speed. I ! Of the three destroyers, the Buenos j Aires has completed successful trials; j the Enti e Rios is undergoing trials, j and the Corrientes soon w ill make a trial run. SOUTH AMERICA TROUBLE QUITO, Ecuador, June 3 (UP) The -100-year dispute between Equa dor and Peru over the vast jungle ; district, the so-called Oriente. lias i been intensified into armed conflict j it was revealed today. Forty Peruvian soldiers attacked i an Ecuadorian patrol in the jungle' country. Equador dispatced a t.harp! note of protest to Peru. ) In Quito popular feeling against i Peru ran high tod; and n strong 1 ruard was placed around the Peru vian legation. The Oriente is tangle of forests, bv savages. a vast, roadless inhabited largeh LEAVES LARGE ESTATE LONDON. June 2 (UP) The will of Lady Piunketl. who was killed in an air crash at San Simeon. Calif., last February, was published today. rev.aUng that she left a net estate of $2,204,510 to her mother, Fanny Ward. Death duties on the estate to ital nearly $S7.000. j Lord Plunkett, who was killed in j t lie .lame crash, died intestate. He I ieft ? net fortune of approximately $3.2S OeiO. DENIES MOTION LINCOLN. June 4 (UP) The su-; pre me court denied seven motions for rehearing inc luding Kirk, admin- istrator vs. Taekett. Richardson coun-j ty. in which Kirk's claim as the rep-; resentutive of relatives for the estate of Grant Oeamb. Rulo bachelor, was denied and validity of the will grant-! ing it to Taekett upheld. CONVICTS BUY RADIOS PRINCE ALBERT, Sask. (UP) ing their own money, inmates of !u Prince Albert penitentiary have bought a microphone and a loud-! speaker to bring the ter t iiunent of radio The prisoners devised news and on to their crll?. a subscription IVn for purchase of the apparatus. Tariff League Seeks to Gain Farm Support Old Organization Revived to Com bat Lowering of Imports of Foreign Farm Products. FRESNO. Cal. (CP) California farm and industrial leaders are re cruiting members for the Grower's Tariff League to protest, eventually on a nation-wide scale, the lowering iof American tariffs on foreign agri- ; c --i 1 1 11 ru I products. The league was organized here. Its aim is to protect farmers from the competition of imported food stuffs. In reality, it is a revival of a body, inactive for many years, that waged a war on tariff-lowering poli cies of previous administrations. Spokesmen for the league aim a specific attack at the proposed re ciprocal trade treaties now being ne gotia'.ed by Secretary of State Oordll Lull. Publisher Heads Group Included among suppo.ters of the new group are representatives of isu.h powerful farm organizations as the California Almond Growers Ex- chan-re. the California Fig Institute. : the Associated Fanners of California, i Inc.. and the California Prune and Apricot Growers Association. John ! K. Pickett, of San Francisco, pub- : Usher of the Pacific Rural Press, a ! w k !y farm paper, is chairman, j K. Clement Hoist of San Fra li cisco. a large-scale grower, declared in a speech at the recent organizing (invention here that "now is the time to enter a formal, organized protest against the administration's policy of lowering import duties. . . . The reciprocity treaties would only increase the harm to agriculture resulting from our present low-tariff policy." Fear Widespread Injury O'her speakers pointed out that the reciprocal pacts and the result ing increase in agricultural imports threaten widespread injury, and in som t rs. C. cases ruin, to American grow- A. Hawkins, of Fresno. long a of low tariffs, declared that in ess conditions in this counirv. foe- j "b at their present low level, as well as damage d' ne to industrial trends and lowered agricultural prices, can be ' attributed to tariff rate cuts." j Leaders of the anti-tariff body 'plan, to extend the league's member- TESTS FLUNKED ON SLAN GUAGE BY PROFESSORS I FORT WORTH. Tex. (UP Sim j pie campus "slanguage" flunked four i Texas Christian Unive rsity faculty members, who for once were called j open to answer rather than ques 1 lion their students, j Three of the four professors have I doctors' degrees and the fourth is an Knghsh teacher. Dr. Colby I). Hall, dean of men. made a grade of 70 on 10 every-day campus words although he knew the precise definition of only C. Dr. Newton Gaines, head of the T. C. U. physics department, answered " of 10. the same as Prof. Mabel Major of the English department- Dr. Clinton Lockhart. teacher of Old Testament in the Bible college, i could answer only three-. I The terms that the teachers j couldn't define, or sometimes even j pn-nouiK e. included : j "Gaudy frail" a pretty girl. j "Sourpuss" an unpleasant per- , son. j "Slurp" to eat I "Slap - happy ; bended. j "Rtt b" n sc hooi ; "High as a kite" or drink noisily, siliy c r light dance. simple drunk. DEATH REVEALS EXTORTION McCOOK. Neb.. June 2 ( UP) Alfred Barnett, 82, pioneer lumber man and financier died last night in a hospital here where he had been confined for two months by illness. With his death it beca.ne l.r.own that a few weeks before being taken to the hospital Barnett had received two extortion notes, one asking ?("'), 00i) and the second 5.'i5.o0 ). The writer of the extortion rotes specified that the money be tossed fram an automobile at the western edge cf the city. Barnett was inclined to consider th" fiist note a hoax but unon receipt of the second demand the case wa; turned over to the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Agents laid in wait or three occasions for the extortionist without avail. Barnett, father-in-law of John M - Carl, former comptroller of the -ui- ic:iev was regaicieei as one ci western .4r.ar:a'r- wealthiest mcr lb a native of Ga'.csburg, Illinois coai irg here in 1S82.