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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 8, 1946)
THE JOURNAL," PLA'fTSIVimJTK NEBRASKA MONDAY. SIIPTZM2LXI 8, 104G The Plattsmouth Journal ESTABLISHED 1881 u!tehed sem.wkly." Mondays 'and Thursdays, at 409-413 Mal Street. Plammouth. Cass County. Nebraska. Dy The Journal Pub istifna Company. ' ' IESTER A. WALKER ...4. .Publisher xt j. AT.OOTT - General Manager - t the Pesto rtce at Plattsmouth. Nebraska, as second clasa siter in accordance with the Act of Congress of March 3, i WKS's The ' Political Wather in Paris, irC. 1 - 1 fFrh.Note-i-Todav Drew Pearson, back un jo-r.iCRIPTIOM RATE: $3 per year, cash ia advance, by fc-c ' cutside the Plattsmouth trade area. - - tVAY Jf'JPVAL SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Oelivered ky car In th? City of F!atsmuth. 15 cents per week, or $7.00 per t.r c?s!i in advance: by mail In the Plattsmouth trade arc;: ? - "tar, $1.75 for six months. $1.00 for three months, cask ' i'rci-. Sy mail outside the Piar.srrtoutft trade arc. $5.00 . .00 for ilx jcoath?, 40 seats ;e ssaUi. cash It Wo aren't familiar with ths 11" it- : theater. 1 i i t we feel safe i1? tre dicting" that Russian playgoers- are in for a dreary season. For the top prop aganda command is riding hord again V on the playwrights and producers. These propagandists, though pol iticians and not artists, not only crit icize plays, books, music, painting, etc., i.jt even lay down rules for the pro duction of those artistic commodities. Their latest order accuses play wrights of being "apolitical," of con- ; donmg or emphasizing bourgeois stan dards, and of insufficiently glorifying . Soviet aims, accomplishments and cul ture. It also takes the producers to task for presenting unworthy drama tic fare. This last is a little surprising.. For the group of English and American plays singled out for special condem nation includes two comparatively re cent and familiar works which could scarcely be Said to glorify capitalism. One of them, Somerset Alaugnam's "The Circle," is a bitter and brilliant denouncement of the wealthy, idle, snobbish, superficial branch of Eng- " land's upper classes1. And Marx him self could hardly have been more con- -temptuous of the middle-class life, philosophy and virtues of capitalistic society than is the principal character of the other, George Kaufman and Moss Hart's "The Man Who Came to Dinner." -.-. But be that as it may, Messrs. Maugham, Kaufma?' and Hart have now joined the illustrious and grow- . ing Anglo-American group in the So viet doghouse. Anything that pic tures capitalistic life for the Russians as anything pleasanter than hell on earth is the object of official scrutiny and action. - This makes it tough on the Russian playwright. The rules which govern ' creative action, are so vague and so d'cal that he can scarcely know i:,t offends until. he gets the official d on his completed product. A - . rural consequence of such restriction -' 1- stiffness, self-consciousness and fear, v. hich in turn produce bad writing. Likewise, his choice of subject matter almost guarantees a dull and i r.porary drama. Any play which . ; s shining virture against sable vil ; :y is almost sure to be either boring " silly. And the Russian playwright ' ; apparently must show communism as perfection and capitalism as evil. This artistic' insulation of the So viet people is only another section of the iron curtain. But it is particularly V regrettable because the direct, force- ul channel of emotional expression through arts could be a powerful stim ulant to mutual understanding, if it v.-ere only given the chance. " Washington, writes , his column in the form of. a message to the. diplomats of the raus ''peace -conference,-' which he recently attended.) To the delegates of the peace conference; For manydays": gentlemen, I watched, your deliberation in Paris. For many weeks I have studied all the reports on your progress. I am not alone. Millions of ethers also have watched you- mothers . who pray their ' sons may live in a warless world, wives whose husbands', future depends on you. All are watching you. ' . We have watched you win. a point of pro cedure and hail it as if you had won a but tle. We have heard you debate claims and .counterclaims, restitution and national hon or. We did not send you to Paris to defend our honor; we.dcitnded it ourselves in but tle. - . We sent jou to Paris to secure peace. Yet you have' sat in the red piusii seats of the palace oi .Luxembourg, prim, proper, hc.p . less, watching a new oria ctausuopne aes cend upon you, doing lawe to head it oii. Tins is supposed to , Da tune tu . recon struction, oi bunding' up. i.et, at the Puiuce of .Luxembourg, mere is no lilt m any man's voice, no- file in any statesman's aim... Once . again disaster is' sweeping upon us and you, sedate anu solemn, sic oblivious'- w . tnal iact. Look around. you, .gentlemen. 2 he .country side is sun Meeuuig; iiui-aumiy is uiwuu;a. ' liavc you noucvd now icw uiu pi-cgnuiii uu- by Q What occupation is followed a "grunt?" A A grunt is a steeplejack's help er. Q Where did the Nazis develop . their rockets? ' . A Proving ground wai at Peene- ; munde, on the Baltic. It is believed that Soviet experiments there are re sponsible for the recent rocket falling ) in Sweden. :. ,. Q Have there been any more earthquakes in the Santo Domingo area since the series of Aug. 4- ' ' . A -More than 400 "aftershocks.'.' Q What state has the lowest per capita income? A Mississippi, $556. Vr) j rlCJftfeiroverjjor of -Alaska? I . - v . . V i - . .(VT! n.c':c:.n 1 t - 'IJffp pi & . . egZPr . , .... M I. 0& : ' " . -- : v.. "V -rr-.-r --'7 '---- t T PM - ;i ' "Y-r :: American lines. position on the high VAKiIJV;,TO:'., D. C. (ImJA) tor tne lest law ;,-,;srs Atr. to move in on the woild passenger business with the revival of tourist trade after the war. - Before the war it was r.evcr cons!dc:l ' f55liiC:-.'.l;-Ie. to-travel, cn, le-jiing ct"-ViC.-.:tiY.tcJ A.r.; lice's nncond-rats ,503 fcr esJttcceng'U' lir;-& ?:.:-J; ' .Ths Dutch, Swedish, French zmd -Bnifash linci were ccnsic-c-rcd belter and lTct most of the business. ; ; ' ' ' L Then during the war! the Maritime Comrr.L-sioa v-;-nt ahead with plans to build' seme new liners which wcu'd bo cbk to ccmpatc in luxury and speed with foreign paen er sYai.z. Tt rrcrr.cded with approval of President Roosevelt and under auihe ration cf the Maritime Act cf 1935. Fart of the plan ;as to help exse the shipping industry back to a peace-time basis. - But the other countries had the same idea. Enrjlnr.d started building new and faster passenger lir.er3 before the v;ar ended. Sv.-3dc-n got. new luxury ships launched even before peace ca:rc and they r.Q i carrying passengers right now. j TIIZX a ccnplc cf weeks rgo came the blow which now hr.s the ! American sh!pbttil-5;ng" ineuslry in a lather. T.c conversion j Director John E. Steel man suddenly r-rdercd censtruction he'.-cd cn i two U. S. superliners which would have been used for South Arr.sricc.n trade. He said the work was taxing materials awcy from tne veteran housing program. H. Gorrish Smith, president of the Shipbuilders' Council of Amer ica, wrote a sharp letter to Steclmsn charging him with striking a "serious and unwarranted blew st the shipbuilding industry, as well I as the American Merchant T.lorine, at a mrst critical time." id 3 it ' clear th'at 1:3 d T rvman iced tiiC oid invii uiuhgJ nic'iieius 6i'r ranee?' ' t .'Cvifv?'"":' f x ihe young generation, ana- vaijMicd. ii'iac Cannot suinu auouicr wr. Civiiiauoii tan noV itand an'uuier ' war. 'it ; will do tne end. .Vv tU Srw. Int. : Look up, geiiiiemen, at-.Uie oici-cnci;uiU.l, carved woodv. oi'i-o -ol iiic- p&iaue of i-uxiii-bourg, lumnaiius -.oi, Um iutii aays oi tne 1J0 Mcaicis. .look up and- close "iui-. ty-a ii'aainu tne ; curvoa wuouwofs to ue v.utc txoss es...At uuauaicaaai and-:t5ii iji-au, at -'l o brcue and iaierno, at Minsii ana uaiUKcrCiUc, at tiie KaptUyj and on lu jnua. licnicraoer that tiiousanus 01 eyes are watening you staring out ironi urcr . JAwae. vuit 01,0. llity cannot ( spcaK!, 'out' tney wih' liovr 'lor ' 'give, ".viii you oe aoie to i&vp, ftl liear, tiu-; lemon, witn tnose eyes ' liaunang yo'u.' Our Allies Forget' 7 " Ihe war as' over one short year, ; yet som' of jvu nave ' set yourselves apart ironi us. Worse,. -you are getting- 'us apart' irom caen othei e v. ho were -inoti . ah war' aie tee--coining custiusuui sit angers "m peae'e. Way is at that you have such b'non memories.' Do you not recall how one country rusiied airpiancs, looo, jeexs, taruts, all tne mat . ciaais ei .war to iMuimaaoK and the ejuli of Persia to help an any. wltn its bacst. to trie wail at JStaimgrad.' iictve you iigotten how the American people; gladiy iortwenl uiead to send wheat to a nation 'which now shoots its airplanes like iron, .ducks -izi.. -shootUM. gallery? - . ,r Mr. Byrnes told you,, as the, conference opened, that the American people chu wbt intend to draw back into the shell of the it traditional isolation. He might also say that even . though- one country's policy is a. dip lomatic .war of nerves to discourage Amer ica's part in keeping the pace, she will not . be discouraged. The American people learned once the tragic result of yielding to Hitler ian bulldozing. They, do 'not "intend" to mak'J that mistake again. "'. Peace Rests, on People Every' war' is followed by proposals for hi? ternational. peace. During . the wars of r'e- . ligion in the 12th century, Pierre. ' DUpois . ' . said, "Det us have a union of European princes, with a council, a court, and col .. lective action to ( enforce, peace." In 123, . world court and a yorid union. The "Grand Design" of Henry IV was as hopeful as hopeful as your United Nations. William Penn, Abbo . Saint-Pierre, Jean Jacques Rousseau,, Jer emy Eentham, Immanuel Kant all proposed plans for world peace...... 1 These things have been tried and tried - again. They, have never been enough. Even ' without the paralyzing "veto" they have fail- eded. For peace is not to be found in - trebt-r ies alone. Peace must rent on a new .spirit of cooperation, a new spirit -.pi friendship, -a new dotermintion to build foV peace. ThnV ' ; determination is present in the hearts of men, but not always among' their governments especially: certain governments which seem , to think they will slip from power ' unless ' their people are stirred up against a bogus foreign enemy. v Peace, I repeat, does hot come from a union among nations. It comes from an un- 1 derstanding among peoples. And there can ; be 'no understanding . when people are separ-. j ated one from the other. - - . ' Trials for Guilty Diplomats . , -r i The people of the world do' not' want war. '. They want to go back to work. They want' to rebuild, .readjust, reemploy. S-Thi3 is : just f tis true o the people of devastated Russia '. " ' as i is of the people of war-weary America!' All .want, peace. And they 'have sent' you to' ' Paris .Cto. carry out their; wishes'- !'-': - . Some of you, however, supposed to skilled ; in diplomacy, seem rooted to the precepts of ' the German philosopher HegeL "Men learn .x nothing, from history," he said, ' "Except that j men learn" nothing from history." ..; .'..( : .- c...a-.:i-.i:!. t.,.,r : :.:'..:-;:; i ' ., We -standi at -the ; eulmin-atipn. ,of two World ; i. Wars;;. yet : ive arp. no .. nearer z avoiding .war. ! No guarantee will be born of this conference that h our - sons vill not -have- tp iight again, i You seem rnore concerned with making your i seem more concerned with , making your point i ,. '"."...'.!' ... '.j-.rt'-i ft-.--.--?".-- V.IV-. -v.i v:.; ...... Stcelman's answer backing fn-the move and that he had r.o intentions cf beektraeiiing. He further explained whet rpparcntly will be Truman's future policy on the whole question. He wrote: "Frankly, it seems clcer to me that a heelthy Unl'cd S'r.tc Merehr.nt ! Marine will be develooed. not by the rrevorr.mcnt tekii-g tite iratiative and sole financial respeneibility for building end cpctaUn;- u:v?eone:r.ic -j vessels, but by private cp-eretors developing, with the vid cf the shin- ' i builders, vessels in which they are willing to invest their capiisl." npnuMAN'S position on this matter is el) rlht if he wcu'd ie,v? A America rem?. in a second- rr thirtl-rato nation in the pe.r.:e:iger : line field, cfficials at r.-I?ritirre Commdscien say. U. S. raecr.g-er hr.es ; rennet .ecrnpete with foreign lines on a p:c-at end less basis. It i. I rowii1 that the '!ai?Ish end- Swedish gove::r.".c:its ftel it important ' enough to. f ifv.:e u,;;.-fiigl;t pasccr.ger Lnes to the extent that they ( ' underwrite IceecsT ' " j -i The ships on.whieh Cteeifr.an. .iicered construction stepped were j ; to be America's first bid for the' big mr-ncy in the patcencxr bueness. ! t whcie die -out e is likelv to raeu't in another re-evalttct'on of ; just whet America's basic policy should be tovard its passenger and 9 Theresa Colbsrt T -Mr. and Mrs. Diller Utt ; and Leon. Mr. ana Mrs. .nac:a f w r.,i r.illv. all .of Lincoln, Mr. a: sons', and Frank Reese u;mJ:SSrU. S. Vulnerable i - .v ..... a.., . -iv,i. r;-,Aii- yi- . Horn Arctic -' - Ldguv Golden is uuneang a gar- i g. at .his .home, in Wabash. : A A E W,.pc - Roberta Smith and EdcUe Goi- tI'LSL If CI j North Pol-?.. i , "Similar compari wil ' the vulnerability of almo-t ' tegic areas in the wo: id to i by polar-based aircaaA i said. ' "At present v.- hav : II. Cio din::., teriwc, .v as a e-ui'-id ' - J .: t'- a'.:! retired Wiiy.' iM'od fl irt Idis. John 'Cardweil an l; had din ner Sunday at the Ermisi Under- den visited Shirley and Janice Me , seihiccr Friday aiternoon. ' ' Carroli Cc-ibert and twin sons oi" Imperial. .Nebraska caked on Mr. and Mrs. Frank Colbert and ! ... . , ; V-.r.i.-. 1 WOOU liunit; ii - !;' Mr. and Mrs. Frank sa; a . . Tnerc-a Saturday enroute to th-r ' ',, : heme. Tiiey had t-pnt"' several C,e: t da iu Omaha and Weeping Ya- ! shopped in PkUtMuoutn -.io;uay u,.; v,i;.n friends and relative;. I .. -.i,. a "1 Thc-i f.-a . , , .- ..j-. t :....t WUllC uieii uawa"." ' . I'.iyrr.U iiaCnardj u. t.i;ieuia eai.ie Coibert, attend . leaeher s 'stiturtk.y . morning ' to spend the frcat te here. - 1 week-end .wiih h.er- grandparents,. u-orLl. with a range cf-10.0J0- miles. 'giv ing it a striking radius of 5.01 WASHINGTON '( UP) Amerka miles," ' is vulnerable to 'attack from Eu The analysis warn; r..n or A.-ia over the poler ice ; havoc that could be cap. the nation's new frontier in ' the unheralded (Lapping cf a s-inj-tae air age. t!i"A'rmy Air Forces j le atomic bomb as the opening vld War II. ' Ihe North Pole is the center of! , Long, rcr.Je .Ijocjirc'iTaent tir-i the great land masses oi ' fcAirope, ' traltf ftti-fcig-SHe f-?lar ait cx iiia.and America, the AFF said, prwacHr.cculd c.ulckly sUlke viv and the count v eerorc-v W. J. Lrcsiy, wn; n.'t.ic-u uvm litis, the .ncss la-c Tunc, was found Itaiig. by in? from a bedpoit by ids 20-n..'.r. oi-i sen vcsterij.y, Ur. rrauo.s J. niter, dae to v-! ckath svai scif-stranpuiatioii. ie laud masses contain the c tuagr$at iniass-ii? cjntterf; Ox industrial areas of the.sJaies. Mrs. Sadie Nicholson of Wa'an jfr. i;Ad Wa'nvn Richards.1 The analysis points. out ' that It then? tasks : what protection the oceans or scF.co'ast defenses would was also attending the ieau.er , Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd iwenaras were y Jl0 nutIon3 that have ever bo against sticii an at.acK. J i noa. Institute" at "plattsmouth 'Mortday. -..ue:ts' of las parents Sunday and p'icati in a. great war, or tliat the only force capable of cie-: - Ralph Home,-Mabel iliclrs- 'nJ Myrna returned heme with them. , th--- industrial octential- . to fending the northern frontier is her friend Visited Mrs. Florence Sunday guests of the Edgar T. o shove 33 ' degrees the AAF. "Eiiciv state is vulnerable to at- Ivt-Iukivc- suil Cro-doy sufiei'ed a r.eivr.us Lreuk-i'.Asn seven years ' ugvi. and icciitly un.leiv. nt 'ircat nient at, t'te Pviinsyh anil hcs,'. tal l'o- i.K-ntai and nervous uis-ea-er tiv j v. i-.ca Wilson Friday. Ltaiea family were Mrs. Inez La- ; ithiide 1r nnd Mr. Frank Colbert and cty i.r,d daun'ter, Frances of Wil- Llncol vi.-t '.a n.vton, loith Dauxua, Airs. r..i-i . .! e-. .1 ,,- T-V'iiv r.f T'-lrn a ThoiTM were L.ncoA Vi.-t Thursday. While tliere th-y calle , tac d . power to strike across the lronif-r, ire rf..-tr c. b has rar nc Fac'a .. X u, , - - --- Airplanes can iravei scklv between some of i jynt.ty, n vi:-i n y t 1 1 st . i i-ii iej: .. amis. . tnii4. naiuju - . . .. tcw uiuji - tit uiv i.oii'i. r ' . . . . . . ih.n nv tn r.wms me usual eoar- . and Mrs.. w , resnonsiouuics m tne aiamenaa-e ses .sehr. U.R Flood dikes in tfie- north port of town kept Mnp-le Crt c-k waters from swerpiuir into the business dis-' tiiet Fri.lay night aider niurethaa" four inches of rain foiL i tShiriev homes, and Mr. Coiocit ol bpnngtieia r.na mi. T:rr.,v; Ilmun .'it tin' !iiS U.'lV'li" A iCliOlr.t.ll. U aOUsll. I Ul till ,'(.'..'.'. let e.v i I'll .. itiiiii.i. -J . u i. . , . . -. . - - . . . .. r - - - .... . . ' : a i . . i . . wv.r. . - ... - - ----- I . ' -Move iain iiair iwliva s P lloo-.lod. Indians. nests Sun- eago via the polar -region that it.- threat -ith the' format: to nivot a oi is by regularly traveled routes," : ion::--ram?e strategic bombing fcr- nital. - t;,.; Qmith :tfnr?,J :I S,; ; m- Thoi esa iiad as their , , :.. t t;., ... driv. Mr. and Mrs. Perry Coluert . . c- am ;. r ap.i Airs, najuti euioti., . . . w ..4.uiwi.u .. wnu - in. ..n-.-. - day eycrun a -w , on.un ,a.,a - - Lincoln and Mrs. Rhoba Ash-1 That was emphasized in 1937, guard units based in each of the ! I ivoDcria went u .: . . , . . ! o..,.: -.- v,n.. Ml'-- Eltiur Bui" ! Cr Oi MP.ia CUUa, Ciiimiuiw. , -ahuii uie oe-.ieia r.iawv. v 1V and family called at the Fivnk Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Willi; ins- teaching mis yar at me etuiu j to ami oaenuu, eam. .,.-1 1-r.i- Vallcv school just east oi weep- me route irom xutu iu. v;i. BY UAL, CCCIIliAN t.t; ... Tho.-r-i r,,y,pyt u in fancht no ar fJiLTifc irem r.ioscuw . to at Wabash the past two years n i Vancouver Barracks, Wash., and and daughter of Lincoln at father, Bert Barden left Friday mg .vaicr. , cago is 2,700' miles closer via the its based in each of the; a WISCONSIN men hoe driven ady for instant action. -V almost - SGodCCl) miles in his ar. Jduid-ung rpe.ee id ccvv : ,oo! Our iuea. cf a risk is an ir.r.czc: r;u titrtrsncc ci'3fnder. ' r j r L- - I ..W - v. By Alice M. Laverick Nc v- xix ! TVTOT many people came to ex- J- 41,; cwmmthv trt the ; iFitzgcralds there at Innisfail. ! Mrs. Fitzgerald had not paid any ; attention to these people in life, !thus at her death, hardly knowing i her, they hesitated to come to the house: But - the church ' .was ; ; crowded. I I knelt beside Cousin Ellin and ihid my face ini my hands Curing iMass. Innisfail would never be liho same without its mistress. In I her own brusque way she had been kind to me. Sne had not wanted me to work, because she had thought me too young. And she had wanted Ellen to give me the best to eat and have me get put in the sunshine every day. And she hod been a great lady in her day. I remembered- Ellen savinff. "Ah. she was like a queen: inrlped. she vas a queen," And I thought how, watching the cor terrc that took llonora Murray Vit7.fferald down the drive be tween the tall maples, it had seemed to me that the trees, them selves had been more erect than ever, as if to pay her homage ''"'. rmrr. Fit.7crerald men mourned a .t for their mother in their own characteristic fashion. M.arkdwnS quieter than before, and a trdfle grayer, and the expression oi ms mouth became even more stern. He kept himself shut up; in his study, a large part of the time in the weeks immediately followting her death," but he continued his work, still patiently tryintr to an still ' a little knowledge, into -ihe hrads of the two hopelessly doll -young athletes. And he stijl cured for his garden, thougn.it was now . rm-Hpmen. that with- makimr - our Deace. A - " loaded- -gui Sstat rX "had "tuj - v I jglorio'tK olloom, iteciJiiTg; awiiy weeks of talking ot procenuie. - mut s. Colin wandered in and out rest lessly and seemed not to know what to do with himscii. iou might come upon him in the li brary, whore he was turning over leaves of books but never settling himself to read, or see him .walk- ins ranidlv un and down tne ter race, smoking one cigaret after another - And then suddenly no would get into his car and drive off, only to be back ogam almost at once to start pacing again. Sometimes he would stand staring down at the little river and his black eyes then had a bleak ex pression that I had never seen there before. Dinners were chaslly. Miss Charlotte, keeping up much better than cither Ellen or 1 had leareu, tried her best to make conversa tion, but it was not much good. . "If only they'd tight, an, n. oiu thrvM fieht." Ellen said to me one night niter sne imu ih rreist. in the mldot OI a GCcC! silence. And then-she burst, into Honrs. For Colin and LlarK were su v.t.r.rthrrikincrlv polite and con siderate" of one another., When one of them venturfcd a quiet opinion on something, the other listened respectfully and even op- o..i in rrrme. I had nover thought I should live to see the day; ' ' ' i.'u, n cn'mi! more often than "he .bad before. andt managed !rv-f-.;rri' Marie into playing chess finally, but, of course, there was no more music. Ihe huge grand piano was closed, its voice hushed. ' Innisfail, house of. i itz- gerald, was in mourning. Inn sf.nl Without iu '.mi .i rrii d-,r. Visrl been helpless tt'-u ..uiv-;.' - - . .. ana waiiuuv U1 " , tr . m MhHui -but anechofcg sile itiwfts fiabifatlon. A - havrnting : memory to the dynamic personality that once had ruled it.. v ..-'- .- AS Cousin Ellen had wept when 4Un T-; - - r- 1 rl rn-icH t n nr- rue, so I was almost n'lov'ed to t(irs myself, that first night they resumed. It was, perhaps, three weeks after Mrs. Fitzgerald had died. I had started, to serve dinner and was just removing the place plates, when some chance word of Conn's concerning pontics oaev a swift and flat contradiction from Mark. Without an instant's hesi tation, Colin flashed back at him, with voluble rhetorical evidence to prove his statement, and Mark was just as instantaneous to refute it. Before very long, they were quoting the Constitution of tne United States and various well informed historians, and their voices rose and stayed risen. In the kitchen, Ellen's face was wreathed in smiles. She locked at the cold food left on the plates and she gave me a little squeeze. Ah, theyre the strong-minuet lads," she said, "these Fitzger- nlds." - After that, the atmosphere w-as t a little more normal. .The first I sharp edge of their gnet, naa dulled slightly and though the spirit of Honor a Fitzgerald stnl hovfrTed about the house, and ?he was still mourned, they were no longer so , dwattatingiy, polite to each other. . Beatrice Harrington," as was to be expected, was a great help to, us during this sad time. She came often to Inmsfeil and each tune she came she made us all thank f ' il for. her practical sympathy. We were, brightening, under her. influence, and the house, was beginning-to bVighten, as.. well. How could we know" that tncre was sthl a shadow ' of - disaster hanring over Innisfail, a shadow that was to- make the first' one seem small, and that was to settle on it to suay, unni mv.- Wind Tricks Yesthet tnp.n OMAHA, Nebr. (UF) Nobras- j ka had no official weather fore- i I cist, for 20 minutes recently. The . Omaha wcether bureau lest it. Folks who play the races rsu A weather bureau employe ex- ally wan mere with herseshc2 plained that the loss was caused luck than with horse sense, by a "high wind" thot wivpeed I .;: tlirough the oifice and blew the; the ulsc vicri lies roi,u;ig i CO U'lt'l I.'iC Jt.OU' .tl a i-aj , filing cabinet forecast behind . i? Arizona, although generally co! Lots cf tliO seeds being planted c;,i,0,i -, ,i.och hr. is.no- now will ccrao up eut no, uo ex- 0,000 acres of forest land. peetatloits. THIS CURIOUS WORLD By (To Be Contuni:d) ws O K;-t iv-.f ;. 'CHCEiVHS OMLV. ABeTjr CF TME ENERGY RATI ATED , BV THE SUM .l.SlSsdE TV-'E ' RADIATION !S ETUAL- !M .. ALL DR.n.CTCKS . ......... -..... r-f yi ;; ' - ;' .'"-' -. d r--r'.-' '?".".- ;'':,- -j.: '.'"r..-r - -. ' -'. rr i it 1 I- ARE SdtdHAU'A, . c e li'sc fS, . Ct-iM i.vmtath A7e,r','tAA7T::-V THKES DZEN SiKDS. - . " ' - .2 EXT' taraatles t&icx a ship's ptc:.resj?. s-" 'r,-?--' riT; s il ft; fcff? f, S f - "i f,f f "''-' i ft ' i;; .. . ; . .'j :' i ;