Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (June 17, 1946)
t a ' . -Wi fc:'t:-"li'ti, jfiHM CLf v, - ;'i - Si 1 ! , . VOL. NO. 40 PLATTSMOUTH, NEERASKA 1 Temperatures Soar Above 100 Here During Week-end ( MONDAY, JUNE 17, 1946 : NO. 453 ?i-arir.r heat that ranged up to 10,") -iegrees Sunday after a high of 0G Saturday wilted Platts-v-outh during the week-end. The United Press reported the blast furnace temperatures "cooked" wheat fields, wilted tender corn and damaged most other crops as the whole state suffered under a k'azinjr sun. High temperatures, ranging fiom 80 to 90, were forecast for .Monday, but unofficially the mer cury was up to 88 here by 9 a. m. today, indicating another swelter ing day Monday. Betty Faye Reed Marries Kansas Man Here Sunday Miss Eetty Faye Reed, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Reed of Plattsmouth and Loyle Van Horn, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Van Horn of Baxter Springs, Kans., were married Sunday at 2:30 p. m. at the First Christian church. The church was attractively arranged with flowers for the Gardeners here reported potato i double ring ceremony performed crops were "cooked" by the heat ; by Rev. J. V. Taenzler, pastor nnd peas were also damaged. Small i of the church Small Grains Hit grains were hardest hit by the soaring temperatures and scorch ing winds throughout the state. Preceding the ceremony, Les ter Thimgan sang "Because," with Mrs. Jess Hodge as accom- A. E. Anderson of the state agri- ; pamst culture station said, and most of Nebraska's crop will be damaged if the heat wave continues. Weather forecasters predicted slightly cooler weather for Tues day in the southeast section of the state. Merritt beach, north of Platts mouth, was jammed Sunday as hundreds sought relief from the heat. Father Gives Bride The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore a street length aqua dressmaker suit with white accessories. She carried a bouquet of red roses and a white prayer book. Her only attendant, Miss Cath erine Conis, wore a shell pink dress with pink and white acces sories and a corsage of red carn- assis. :i-v:w. ........... ............... c FLYING BOAT TO ASSEMBLY POINT The gigantic 220-foot long fuselage of the Howard Hughes' flying boat crawls down the highway on truck dollies after leaving Culver City, Calif.. on its way to Terminal Island, Calif., for as sembly. The 28-mile trip was made at 2'J miles per hour. Note the size of the man on top cf the hull. (XEA teltphoto) Conferees Fail To Agree on Teen-age Draft W A S II I X G T O X (U P.) Sen ate and House conferees failed again Monday to i gree on d' sfl ing of teen-agers, but vot'.-d to ex tend the selective service law un til May 31, 1947 The expiration date was a com promise between a House propo sal to end the draft next Feb. 1 " and a Senate bill which would have extended it to May 15. Schedule Another Meeting Conferees scheduled for Mon- jday afternoon another attempt to jwork out an agreement on wheth er teen-agers should be subject to the draft. They also faced the question of raising military pay to induce vol unteering and reduce the need for exercising draft authority. Teen-age Question OP A Orders Increase in Retail Price of Butter WASHINGTON, U.R The OPA Monday ordered an 11 cent in crease in the retail price of but ter to be put into effect almost 'm mediately. The retail price of cheddar cheese eoes up six cents a pound. OTA also announced it is in ci easinir evaporated milk one cent i-.r a ounce can. These increases result from buosts in manufacturing ceiling The high recording for the state ations Saturday was 111 at Culbertson jhe Rroom Wore a light brown which also reported Sunday's high j business suit with a white cama of 110. ition boutonniere. His father, who Two Girls Drown was be?t man, also wore a brown Two 11-year-old girls. Darlene , business suit with a white carn Foulk and Helen Sinsel, were theat;on boutonniere. first reported casualties of the j The bride's mother wore a light heat wave. They drowned at a j blue dress with a corsage of red family reunion picnic at Riverside j carnations and the groom's moth park three miles from Central j er wore a black dress with a sim C ity. , ilar corsage. Farmers Holding Wheat in Legion to Bring Protest Against Program Carnival Here By United Press , tremelv resentful" of the govern- - 7- ppjr Statin A bumper wheat crop was fill- mint's wheat program. He said ; tCA uiailu ing storage bins in the central they regard it as "an attempt to. trhe Hugh J. Kearns post No. plains states Monday but grain deprive them of higher prices that j 5q American Legoin, will sponsor dealers believed farmers would! may be granted later." , a carnival show here for one week hold their wheat for higher prices "Reports are the same every-: beginning Sunday, July 21, Roy, be drafted only upon certification and that the nation would contin-j where," he said. "Farmers will : jjiy, who j, jn charge of arran-il.y the president that their con cV,rvt Vii-ond rations. ' nnt pll nnv annreciable amount .,.., onnLnn! Mnmlav. isciintion was the only way the Eagles Score 5-3 Victory ! Over Sluggers 1 The Plattsmouth Eagles scored j a 5-3 victory over the Omaha ! Sluc-e-ers. a Neero nine, here Sun- Chairman Elbert Thomas, D., day under a blazing sun before a Utah, of the Senate military af- i K0d turnout. fairs committee, said they were j Eagles forged into an early trying to solve the teen-age ques- ! , , countinc three runs in the t'on dv esiannsnini; a sfiies oi a series draft categories: 1. Volunteers. 2. Draftees 20 or older. The bill would give authority to draft men through age 44. The army, however has given no indication of wanting to take men over HO. Z. Nineteen-year-olds. 4. Eighteen-year-olds who would Meanwhile, the bread shortage j 0f their grain Proceeds fiom the week-Ion? armed forces could obtain enough grew worse and spokesmen for the j Frank Jungewaelter, executive event w;ij be USed by the Legion man power, baking industry said scores of: secretary of the Associated Retail : pOSl f(11- sponsoring such activities Efforts Fail Completely bakeries across the nation would Bakers of America. Predicted that : as The Legion Junior baseball team Thomas Friid efforts to exempt be forced to close this week. I bakery shutdowns would increase an, the drum and bugle corp. i i R-vear-olds completely had failed Harold Rice, brother-in-law of the bride, was usher. Miss Joan guest book. Reception Is Held Eighty degrees was the low both j Saturday and Sunday here Lem uel Gessel, Masonic home weather observer, reported Monday morn ing. Southeast Suffers Most The southeast portion of the because of lack of needed rainfall de s parents with Mrs. Harold since the middle of March. High "'e' -Ster r DTS- t ' temperatures, accompanied by!Mlss .K5 putz aund Ms Tiekot brisk winds are ripening wheat jf PIfsldedTTat the Punch bowl. nd nt, too mnidlr. PIl5S Bettv Henton served the ice The blistering heat wave came on the heels of severe hail storms i in parts of Cass county. The bail, reportedly as as large as base- Walter R. Scott, secretary of : sharply beginning today. He said the Kansas City Board of Trade, reports indicated that 175 bakeries predicted that despite Kansas' ; Jn Philadelphia alone would be Tiekotter was in charge of the i bumper crop, far exceeding recent ' forced to close this week estimates, the amount of wheat i Bakers Criticize Sugar Cut Holly announced that the J. i-;n the conference committee meet Leeright shows has been obtained jn jje nothiny was done con and the carnival will be located on :Cerning the pay increase proposals, the local athletic field. The House has voted pay in- The carnival now playing in.reapes. for each rank from buck prices of 10 cents a pound for butter and five cents for cheese and 35 cents a case for canned milk. . Take Two Other Actions The manufacturers' increases are effective immediately.' For consumers they e:o into effect when retailers make their first purchases at the higher price from distributors. The office of economic' stabili zation first announced these in creases May 21 as part of the dairy products program- Milk prices were raised one cent a i quart for most consumers June OPA took two other actions, i effective Monday, to carry out j the program. It established ceil ; ing prices on milk sold to manu I facturers of dairy products and I to other commercial and indus i trial users. These ceilings, es- tablished for the first time, are ! set at 4 0 cents above the Novem ber, 1945, average price paid to i a ? m-m-. t ,i i i i, ill! II ft ft: in ti tri-f rt mpa tv ?ir i opening inning. With the oases' I :.;,. , .1 r .11 l-rlo,! nnH two out. "Chonnv": v'" iu o.j ' Ault laced a triple into deep left ! field. Plattsmouth added another j 'in the second frame when Bob , .... , of commercially-separated cream dav to score as Watson, Omaha . , , , , from actual producer, i left fielder, made a three-base er-, 1 ! ror I and sales of farm separated cream i '. c tu t- i bv distributors or others;, aside Sluggers Score Three limes - i, ' x. , , . . These prices are frozen at the ! Neither team was able to tally ,. , , . ., A, . , i higher price per pound of butter- until the seventh inning when ther , , 1 . n , . 1 ,.. . fat bv the sellers during the per- Slugger? put three runs across the; May j and M ,5 , ; plate on two singles, a hit bats-; TheRp actjons wej.e by the :man and two Plattsmouth errors j vernment in an effort 0. prc. . The Eagb-s added their final jvent furlher diversion 0f;butter- tally in the e.ghth inn.nsr when fat from butter manuf acturers to Joe Noble beat out an infield hit, j other manufacturel.s. stole second and scored on Lesi cent butterfat content. Frozen at Higher Price OPA also put under price con trol, for the first time, biiik sales Following the wedding, a recep- i a trickle, tion was held at the home of the ! Farmers Resentful Scott said farmers were ! reaching the market would be only I The board of governors of the ' Oklahoma, includes six rides, fo'ir private to five-star general. The I American Bakers association ; shows and 34 concessions at th? , Senate version would provide pay charged that ''bureaucratic bung- I present time and it will have more , increases enly for the non-com- "ex- balls, in some parts of the central and westerns section of the coun ty, damaged gardens, some small grains and broke out windows in houses. Jew Extremists Blow Ud Bridges the time it arrives . missioned ranks. otwta. cream and Miss Doris Johnson the cake. Others attending the wedding reception were: Mrs. E. G. Ofe, Mrs. J. R. Stine, Mr and Mrs. Russell Reed, Mr. and Mrs. Glen 1UMI!SI, "u t,, T l-,J,n fm. I ,vn,V, of i,i ,T T rpl, !., Tlf- nA lilt? raiesuiic-lianj i.-.. 11 i.i.i.. iivi.. in " .im?i, .urs. luui;- iK-wiici, ."i- " u i; j ; i : n i fi;.tv, , a c...u tii:.:. LI" I UUI llli; Ultr iiifr, ii i. ii a. v j j i 'riiain'Mia iiu i. wu'iniii tt.iiivi? ated attack, it was announced of- i harvesting better than average rvops. At a halt dozen snots in ling and mismanagement have ' attractions by caused intolerable bread short-, here. ages and breadlines unparalleled ; Wot hi war II member of the in history." j Legion po?-t will assist Holly in Bakers criticised the govern-handling airangements when the ment's reduction of their sucrar1 vlw ts get up here. wm- - -. . ciisnuting the theory that j JERUSALEM (U.P.) Uniform-j it would increase bread nroduc-! ; ed Jewish, extremists with auto- j tion bv cutting nastrv output. ' matic weapons land mines and i Farmers Sto-e Wheat bombs, blew up eight bridges along i Meanwhile, combines rolled. Mrs. C. M. Reed. Mr. and Mrs. r " , , i Eugene Gruber. Mr. and Mrs. several v-ass county iarmers - . t i t, -m Film Director Highest Paid - WASHINGTON (U.Ri- Nr. n,t r.i.v xt,- i ficially Monday. rtnH- qct txL- rrrlitrt h o r nr f . 7 K 4- Lof f f n vlaj " v. v rv pi v,v- c-v ti.. .... j rl V M;t,na DoHir : ! m A . 1 T- ll.A rainfall comes, much of the wheat , p V i ; jured in the latest Jewish under-, their wheat in shed. b?n, even rvnn ;! tio sovorok- onmi, iMaxme ruckles, tieien Keed anu i. a n- nm-fUtnl .u ,.t,. ti,n- -,1 less the neat wave is broken and ; , '1 , . " i known dead and 14 seriously in- , farmers s?. d tnev would store Florence Reed. j After a short wedding trip the couple will return to Plattsmouth ! to "make their home. Screwball Takes Ostrich's Place HOLLYWOOD. 0J.P.) Sentimen- it t i im nTr pc . ' l t n Tin iif li nim a ttt-i nrr i , i.. . tai Jim .vioran, wnose aarty an-1 " k---. vc,, ot wneat nronnt to terminal needed $75,000 tics delighted the nation in pre-: V: . , ""um!m aMUU; m" , noin. storing the rest under the I the first Jewish extremist attack j along the frontier. crop will be severely damaged. Rites Wednesday For Mrs Hansen Funeral services will be held j Wednesday at 3 p. m. at the Sat-1 tier funeral home for Mrs. Han-' sina Hansen, who died in Lincoln Sunday. Burial will be at Horning, cemetery. I Mrs. Hansen was born Oct. 2. j 18G5. in Denmark. When 17, she I came to this country and lived fo j a short time in Illinois before moving to Nebraska. She has lived J near Murray for the past oo years. ; Pf.jp in n , article ways of combating a possible TT. 1 1 J Tl TT 1 nt?i nuMJanu, l nomas iiause'i and one daughter preceded her in death several years ago. She is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Christine Jasnersen of Weldon. Colo.; Mrs. Ray Young of La Poite, Colo.; and Mrs. Hanna Van tine of Lincoln; one son, Arthur Hansen of Murray, and one broth er, Andrew Hansen of Freso, Calif. Visiting hours will be from 7 to 9 p. m. Tuesday and from 9 to 11 a. m. Wednesday. Mrs. Jane Morris Dies Sunday Mrs. Jane Morris. 87, died Sun day at 3 p. m. at the home of her son. John Morris, on South Sev enth street. Funeral services will be held j Thomas i Tuesday at 2 p. m. at the Sattler j ' f t 1 ! Leo McCarey, director for Para- , i unerai nome. . , ; . ' . , ill ' n-nnnt PJ r i j was rankpd as -wrs. .uorris was uui n --ii'i n At least four persons were ! the Kansas wheat bowl, however, . n.ount 1 ictuits, was lanKeu as , ih A mei ica s highest paiu person .hum- --"-i ; day on the treasury's new list of j daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joshua blue ribbon incomes. j Casper. j McCarev. who directed "Bells I Neil's single to left. Eagles Get Eight Hit Bill Fox and John Jacobs di vided the pitching chores for Plattsmouth. Fox gave up six hits and three runs and struck out five in seven innings. Jacobs struck out three and issued 'no hits in two innings. Gall and Albin Chovanec led the local hitters with two safe blows each. The Eagles con nected for eight hits, Shiffer, ,! Ault, Noble and Neil each collect- I ed one. eore by innings: Omaha 000 000 000 3 6 4 Eagles 310 000 Olx 5 8 3 Ex-GFs Buying Surplus Planes ;! Betty Meisinger On Journal Staff Miss Betty Meisinger. sopho more at Nebraska Wesleyan uni versity at Lincoln, Monday re placed Miss Mildred Hall as so ciety reporter for The Daily Jour nal. Miss Meisinger, daughter Mr. and. Mrs. Lester Meirfitr, was employed by The Daify tuilv last summer and has returned tem porarily during the summer. Miss Hall, who has been on the Journal staff since October, 1945, resigned on the advice of her doc tor, i Discovery of New Anesthetic Reported ! it to market. i Grain EWator of St. Mary's"' and other box of iice hits, was credited with salary y Selected Group to Arab-British clash A.. i . . (Jrain Kipvator operators nt P.ilpstinp authorities and K Abdullah of Trans Jordan mobil-' w KarysB .u, e:,, 1 ' alt!es a"'L ot.h M. .lomp nsa . il.Parn Tricks Ot . , - ...i-m """I-- cicii.i o;, in i ,n tho treaslll'V s ' izea tner torces in a pursuit oi , f demanding "storage i waters of the River Jordan. It was i tK ablm them to le.a.n . enda ye and w45 flstal years. V V.' I I I ' I I i l I It- Vi 1- Cl i of SI. 113,035 in the treasury's partial listings for the 1944 cal- Mountain Fiehtinff CAMP CARSON, Col. (U.R) The ; have bouirht more than half. The, M B Moore and j. T-.Rapala WASHINGTON (U.Ri Govern- j mcnt sales reports showed today! ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. (U.P1 that veterans are flocking into the j Discovery of a highly effective, aerial transport business. yet inexpensive, local anesthetic Of four principal types of j was reported recently to the transports sold by the War Assets American Chemical Society's div Administration to date, ex-GIs ! ision of medical chemistry. As in the past, Hollywood's fab- j The Kansas City market re-!,, iriIi,. Qr,H tv,p al,tn- i school bell will ring July 1 lor a view renortpd that srrowers .-j. a ;,o,.i 1. i '-elected group of officers and en- rr-i T , i a. . - -.lllOUilt 1I1UUM1J UUIIIIIlonu nit i - - iiic urniMi ifui-i juufiiit .uuu ,plpa in nn v .-, to ".t nov rtl. ...i. illsteti men WHO Will X'l A -1 T" - war days, was off Monday on!I,tiai anncuncemenc saia. rour ,ifkft SVstem. his first postwar project, sitting 1 road and four, railroa'J bridges i J on an ostrich egg to hatch it. I.e. ,sab.tf ed- t - . . It was Moran who sold an ice-1 . .IIlgh f'Y1 and 'lltalT author- AVC Begins DriVC box to an Ksk mo. led a live hnl ' ,,,v ..ui.-, .uuima through a china shop and found i mormn apparently to The list contained 539 names learn the tricks of mountain combat and winter warfare at this U. S. army . Ic amp in the shadow of Pikes Peak. The school, under direction ot ihips apparently are going mto)of the Abbot Laboratories, Chica service on the 300 non-scheduled j gQ paid the ew anej.thet5c is de. lines that have sprung up since - ; riv. from nhth.li(. HH com- I mon substance used extensively in the manufacture of plastics. discuss tor Membership of . i i i L-uiiiLiaLiiis a possioie nsn YpstPrdav Mnrsn rpnlacpd ,-! upitrau uuiuifas oi terrorism. , W . , J Day. Established airlines also have been heavy buyers, the sur plus property agency reported. Veterans have bought 425 twin- According to their report. I Others will be added in supplemen tal renorts. j Present Charles E. Wilson of j Col. David L Ruf f ner, w,U pre- ; ; - f - imil to the lar pain-killer. ! General Motors ranked fifth in serve and develop the techniques procaine, can be derived from est- ;the country but first in the auto; and tactics ot mountain ana win- - - one-en- erf ieing phthalic acid. Most of ' ; l i - fr'ari V '-.1 J in iHT ai jwi - - v- v-.-& heating pnd which had replaced! Eve, the mother ostrich at Los' A J IJ Angeles ostrich farm. She be ) Accidents in Homes came jealous because her hubby! Take Toll of -.-SflO DES MOINES, la., U.p-The youthful American Veterans com- my announcement. ! Joe was making eyes at Mamie, the ostrich flirt and refused to sit on the eg-g. The round-faced, deadpan pro fessional screwball started his 25 day vigil appropriately enough on Father's day. URBANA, 111., (U.P Home is the best place for comfort, but i C-47s more than one-third of the 194 4. However General Motors ex plained that part of this payment j was for bonuses earned for pnerj-"- , t tal; d 10 four-motored C-54s, mittee. under the guidance of lib-!' Carman Miranda, the Brazilian they will study the various meth- , . eral elements elected to rational bombshe!l of 20th-century Fox, j ods of fighting in mountains and ! h ;y p1 tranports Come choap! office, began a drive Saturday received $201,458 to become both under wintry weather cond.t.ons : crPIrlnfmtS $7750 fr lor i,vuv,uvu memners. i highest paid aci tress and the high-; LU - , ( har PS Knltp nrpctum-h : :J 4V, TTn'ito1 i tl'CODS. , , . ' - ' iL i;:Ki VNWMiClll III iiic V.' I ' ' i t meies aiso no piace UKe nome lor. Conn., was elected national chair- state an accident. ! man at the final session of the! " Home accidents took a toll ofjAVC's constitutional convention! 33,500 killed and five million in- late yesterday. Bolte. who lost'Qeni Theft Principals im ji. a iee. while servinsr with the Urit- gine Norseman ships, 90 per cent ! the well-known anesthetics now ; of total disnosals: 150 two-motored j marketed have benzoic acid for a Children in Japan Taught to Use Arms, Trial Witness Says TOKYO, (U.R) Japanese school children were prepared in their jQianCe for Major classes for world aggression and . weie evn taught how to use lieht j Showdown at Paris Nobody sent me anything on Father's day" said the 38-vear-; L,lscussing the home accident . ish at El Alamein, had served as ... , , . - J . ! rafp Miac nia,li-! Wn-J i ' j. old nacneior Moran. lm senti-' ' -v.. jume ismpuiaiy ii" mu- mental about such things, so I'm j "la"? en?ent sPecialist, University ; groun's formation three years aco. of Illinois College of Agriculture,' Gilbert Harrison, 31. AVC parent compound. The best compound discovered in the new method is said "to be N-gamma - diethylaminopropylph thalimide. It's easier to taTe than to pronounce. . Call Me Mister! Two men reported their dis- even if it's an ostrich." Big Four Sidesteps machine guns and bayonets, the first prosecution witness testified Monday in the trial of former Premier Hideki Toio and other leading war criminal suspects. The witness was Lt. Col. Don ald R. Nugent, former educator in Japan and now chief of allied headquarters, civil information and education sections. .eign ministers, apparently chuck -I ing any chance for a major show down at the outset of their newly Tesumed meeting, decided to dis cuss the relatively uncontrover sial economic aspects of the Ital ian peace treaty Monday. j The agenda for the afternoon i meetinsr of the foreiem ministers He said that in 1941 between ;was drawn up Monday morning at 30 and 40 per cent of the entire! the meeting of their deputies. The high school course consisted of j main session of the day was for military training. i practical purposes, devoted to. the He testified that training cour- j program to be considered, ses consisted of outdoor drills, l While repatriations were includ conductng marches, handling wea-jed among the economic angles of pons up to light machine guns, op-J the Italian treaty, the council was en country maneuvers, street jiiot expected to get that far along fighting and bayonet drill. Monday afternoon. said that, although in many cases jit is the little careless acts that j do the most damage, often people become "so accustomed to living with dangerous household hazards, I they forget they're there." j For example: A frayed wire ion an extension, cord, may seem a PARIS (U.P.) The Big Four for- j smaH matter when plugged into the wall, but it could destroy the house. It's obvious that a hot kettle or lid should be picked up with a pot holder, yet many peo ple hurriedly use their hands. Quite often bad burns result. Claims Miss Ward: "Working and living safely mean using com mon sense and developing a safety-consciousness so that hazards will be recognized and corrected." Fined for Disturbance Beverly Sutton was fined $10 and costs Sunday by Judge C. L. Graves after he had pled guilty to a charge of disturbing the peace. The complaint was sign ed by Emma Egenberger. - founder,, was elected vice-chairman. Delegates adopted a platform calling for control of atomic ener gy by the United Nations and cessation of atomic bomb manu facture; creation of a league of veterans of all United Nations; creation of a world armed force; cheapest Cessnas to $100,000 for t."Z?T-JZ Primary trailers havwen the j . - nmcf nnmi :if I tih.Tvnp n antw nlsn .... pons, clothing and equipment.!,' ' - f 1 " , 1 charges from the armed services to TU... lo ...ill K ,-r,.tir.r, Qn 'a,c waum ,, f,r C!,1lr. iv corvifo office Friday it was announced Monday. Botn from the army they are Joseph Garrett of Plattsmouth and Robeit J. Dankleff of Avoca. c-v wm- .- -- r m3 Planes have been almost impossi- WASHINGTON. (U.RAn army lashinS and use f P8 ;. animal., tQ , r i t w n,, 1 as well as care and conditioning of , , . . , plane carrvinsr Col. J. Y . Durante i Though prices have been cut to and his wife. Wac Capt. Kathleen j mules horses and dogs the bone ($i,250 for a P-38), only xt t. t- i 4-v. Soldiers at the school will take ,. , , , , Nash Durant. nrincipals in thei . , , . . ' 31 fighter planes have been sold. theft of $1,500,000 worth of,1" L"c VT.ZlT "'-"L Other salens records on tactical tie, took off for Europe today.; They'll skim over A War Department spokesman shoes and f urlined the snow skis, sleds and toboggans. o-i rtvi tin c " rlanes: Licrht bombers. 18: med- on tium bombers, 20; big bombers 5. announced that the plane left' be license4-for. civilian flying. a. m. Washinerton at 5:15 (Plattsmouth time) . ..JLarson to'Resume Jie saui die tuu'iie was ujiig , immediate restoration of f ood ra-1 sent back to the Eur0pean theatertpost Office Work tionins: and a break in relations with Spain and continued oppo sition to Argentina. Lincoln Man, Omaha Girl Married Here Donald Lewis Case, 23, of Lin-; coin and Doris Louise Nelson?4,: of Omaha were married Saturday in the office of Couty-JuSgf Pal Fauquet. . - . .- , v s A marriage licence was also is sued Saturday . to", Loyle Dwayne Van Horn, 21, of 'Plattsmouth a,nd Betty Faye Rjeed,- 22, alao of Plattsmouth. ; . vt- California Iowans Invited to Return i SACRAMENTO (U.R) The Gov- orated to reverse the traditional Iowa-to-California immigration. Gov. Robet D. Blue of Iowa asked Gov. Earl Warren of Cali- n-f nniirntinnc nt thp rpnnp;t Ctf . . - i 4i Mr. and Mrs. Rav Larson and tne commanaing trerieiai Liit-ie, . - . . ernors of twn ;tats bavp collah r Tt, t MA'arnPv Tho ' family arrived Tuesday evening ernors oi two states nae couao snokesman did not disclose their and are llin- at the Larson apart specific destination, jment on Fourth street. The couple was in custody of L Larst" was recently discharged t- jt r.iv, from the army with a rank of oi. .-v. v. mrnei u t ui xw.pu , - fnrnia tn vpnnpst fnrn-.Pr Tnwans W. Pierce of the provost mar-i v W , " mme woik aiine posi oiiice -Juiy i ivum m 1. Before entering the service in j attend the centennial celebration 11)42, he served as assistant post- j of Iowa's admission o the union, master. " Gov. Warren, in relayin; his Their youngest son, Ray, grad uated with honors this spring from Colorado Springs high school in a class of about 350 students. Their other son, Lars, has recent: ly been discharged from the navy Commissioners Get Closing Petition A petition signed by court house officials and employes asking for the closing of the court house on Saturday afternoons was submitt ed to the county board of commis sioners Monday. Henry C. , Backemeyer, chair man of the board, said that no of ficial action had been taken in the petition yet. sh'al's office. A Wac, Sgt. Eliza beth peyomung, was assigned to Mrs. Durant, Fined for Speeding W. W. Mockenhaupt. jr., was fined $10 and costs Saturday by County Judge Paul Fauquet on a charge of speeding on highway 75. ! nrkl1oivn'i? vi A e rrct nrrcai rif irn , vuuva in ui vu ia-i v Iowans to attend the celebration. There are so many Iowans in southern California that Long WEATHER - Nebraska forecast: .. Partly cloudy, few scattered thunder stoims east and south. -Not so warm. High temperatures 80-90 Monday. Partly cloudy .Monday night and Tuesday. Cooler east and extreme south Monday night. Beach is known apocryphally as Tuesday slightly cooler southeast the capital of Iowa. " - quarter. -3 A