T H E W E A T H E R .
Nebraska: Generally fair to-
night and Thursday; •lightly
warmer tonight and east por-
tion Thursday.
Lincoln: Fair and somewhat
warmer tonight and Thursday. THE LINCOLN STAR
HOME EDITION
Telephone B1234
Member Associated Press
THIRTY-FIRST
YEAR
LINCOLN, NEB., WEDNESDAY,
AUGUST 30, 1933.
IN C.KKATKR LINCOLN—
me CENTS ti.sKwnt.RB
PAYROLL ROBBERS SLAY POLICEMAN
Roosevelt Asks Report On Ford's Failure To SignjCode
ST. PAUL GANG
ESCAPES WITH
$30,000 LOOT
Moving Behind Smoke Screen, Bandits Stage
Spectacular Holdup in Front of South St.
Paul Postoffice—Officer Mowed Down by
Machine Gun Fire and Another Wounded.
PROPONENTS SAY
3,000 JOBS IN
TRI-COUNTY PLAN
SOUTH ST. PAUL, Aug.
?0
(AP) — One policeman
was slain and another wound-
ed seriously today as bandits,
hiding their movements be-
hind a smoke screen, robbed
two bank messengers of a
$30,000 payroll.
Driving into this livestock market
center in an automobile which had
a screaming siren, the bandit gang,
believed to number five, killed Po-
liceman Leo Pavlek, 35. and wound-
ed Policeman John Yeaman before
they fled.
.
, .
A machine gun. shotgun and pis-
tols were used in the spectacular
raid, which took place in front 01
the local postoffise.
Use Smoke Screen.
As the bandit car swept to a quick
stop in view of the two officers and
the bank messengers, Josrph Ham-
ilton and Herbert Cheyne, a huge
cloud of black smoke came from
the rear of the car.
Witnesses said the smoke ob-
scured movements of the bandits as
they alighted. They were unable to
tell whether it came from the in-
terior of the car through explosion
of smoks bombs or the exhaust.
The two messengers represented
the Stockyards National bank here.
They had just left the postoffics,
in the center of the business dis-
trict, in company of the officers.
The messengers carried tho money,
which came from the district fed-
eral reserve bank in Minneapolis.
Offered No Resistance.
Accompanied by Pavlek, Hamilton
and Cheyne went to the postoffice.
Yeaman had gone down the street
to park his automobile.
The bandit car pulled up to the
curb as the messengers and Pavlek
came down the postoffice steps car-
rying the money in satchels. As the
smoke came from the
car
one
bandit shouted "Stick 'em up."
Hamilton said Pavlek threw up
his hands without attempting to
reach for his gun.
Hamilton said they dropped the
satchels and threw up their hands.
One raider held a shotgun against
Pavlek and another tok his gun
from him.
In the meantime Yeaman hurried
toward the postoffice and shooting
began. One bandit, who jumped
(Continued on Page Nine.)
24 SMESNOW
IN WET COLUMN
Washington Follows 23
Others In Repeal;
12 More Needed.
Hearing On 27 Million
Dollar Project Held
By State Board.
A $27,447,552 power and irrigation
project to irrigate 500,000 acres of
central Nebraska land and to gen-
erate 200,000,000 kilowatt hours of
electricity annually was sketched
Wednesday before- the state public
works advisory board by sponsors
of the tri-county project. The hear-
ing was held in the
Cornhusker
hotel.
The entire morning was taken up
with the presentation of the tri-
county power and irrigation plan.
Most 'of the afternoon session was
scheduled to be spent on the fol-
lowing projects:
Scribner water
plant, $15,715; Albion water exten-
sion, $4,000; Grand Island library
addition, $40,000; Kearney, repairs
to teachers college building, $42,082
H e n d e r s o n school gymnasium,
$4,000; Hall county road and bridge
construction, $8,000.
R. O. Canaday, secretary of the
Central Nebraska Public Power and
Irrigation district, which is making
the application for a federal grant
and loan, said the project, reduced
from original plans, could furnish
power for the central Nebraska area
around Hastings and bring it to
Lincoln's door.
Divorced from Sutherland.
The project as outlined Wednes-
day,
eliminated any plan for the
Sutherland project. Canaday ex-
plaining that Sutherland sponsors
preferred to go ahead by them-
selves. It called for
diversion of
water near the convergence of the
North and South Platte rivers, stor-
age in the proposed
upper
and
lower Plum creek reservoirs, two
power plants-on the reservoir sites,
and supplementary diversions from
the Platte river below where part
of the water is turned back in.
Land in Gosper. Phelps. Kearney
and Adams counties could be irri- j
gated.
^ - -1
Canaday told the board he wanted I
all objections to the project heard
and a chance to answer them, sav-
ing he didn't believe "we would
hurt anybody and it would benefit
our territory greatly."
Many Delegations Attend.
Representatives to urge the proj-
TIT
*
-D «. iect were present from towns and
On Way
tO J-TO-, rarms from Bertrand to Lincoln
t*wf AtriM-irans Frnm
! while a delegation from Hall county
teCl Amei leans rruiu
Which has opposed diversion of
Platte river waters and thus the
tri-ccunty project,
also
was on
Chief Of Police
Is Reported As
Long's Attacker
Webber Smiles W h e n
Asked if He Beat Sen-
ator; Denies Story.
BROOKLYN N. Y., Aug. 30—{£»)
—The Brooklyn Eagle said today it
had learned that the man who load
smacked Senator Huey Long at
a
Long Island party Saturday night
was Chief of Police Steve Webber
of Port Washington, a former boxer
and army
drill sergeant.
Chief
Webber, when asked about the mat-
ter, smiled and denied he had struck
Long.
The Sands Point club In the out-
skirts of Port Washington, where
the senator was knocked down by a
man whose identity the Louisiana
"kingfish" did not learn, is within
the Tjolice district under command
of Chief Webber
In Milwaukee, where
Senator
Long had gone before news of the
fracas Isaeked out. Long issued a
statement in which he said that be
had been "ganged" in the
club
washroom by four men.
The board of governors of
the
club, meeting last night, asked all
(Continued on Page Nine).
U. S. WARSHIP
DISPATCHED TO
FOOCHOW, CHINA
Kansan Is Charged
With Embezzlement
(A. P. Photo)
W. W. Finney, above, Emporia,
Kas., banker and father of Ronald
Finney, broker accused i& Kansas
bond forgery scandal, was arrested
on charges of embezzlement.
Red Menace.
HONG KONG, China, Aug. 30—
(;p}_-The United
States
gunboat
Sacramento and the British de-
hand..
Canaday said the project would
wide
chow to protect American and
British nationals against the men-
ace of Chinese communistic armies.
FOOCHOW, FUKIEN POVINCE,
China. Aug. 30—'if}—American
and
Japanese warships steamed toward
this city today to protect nationals
of those two countries from an in-
creasing red menace.
As a result of the
communists'
swift incursion into north
Fukien
and their capture 'of
Yenping, a
number of American missionaries
fled here and others in nearby
Kienning were endangered.
(Continued on
Nine).
SEEK AGREEMENT
ON GRAIN CODE
Exchange Delegates Want
Government to Make
Desires Known.
^
WASHINGTON, Aug. 30— (iP) —
United" States consular autnort- New efforts to agree on a code for
ties asked the state department to |
*
SEATTLE, Wash.. Aug. 30—W)—
Two-thirds of the 36 states needed
to erase the Eighteenth amendment
from the constitution were lined up
today. Washington
following
23 to proceed to Foochow. The gun-
others Into the repeal column. None boats Tulsa and Sacramento were
of the states which have voted fa- at Swatow and Hongkons. onlv a '
vored retention of prohibition.
| short steaming distance from Poo- .
Only one legislative district, the | chow).
j
Ninth, in rural eastern Washington, ]
jap Warships Enroule.
voted dry on the basis of available : Two Japanese destroyers and one
returns. The district will have only j cruiser were enroute to protect the
two of the 99 delegates who will
.
.
.
meet October 3 at Olvmpia to rat-
ify the decision of the voters.
The popular vote from 1.924 Of
the state's 2.682 precincts rolled up
a total of 316.064 wet ballots to
132.359 cast for dry candidates. The
exchanges were undertaken
b y their repr-rtives and
time they con-
get clear
exactly
what
;" Peek was insistent upon
recent assertion that the
house or
' large Japanese colony and property
interests here.
Meanwnue, a dispatch from Nan-
i chang said _Gea._Chianj; Kaishek.
(Continued on~Pase~NJneT)
statewide total, however, had no
beanne on the outcome, as dele-
pates were rhosen by legislative dis-
tr.cts.
an
election
arrangement.
<
—
which wet leaders attacked during "We Wanted
the campaign.
Innocent of Hoeh Killing,
Peter B. Carey, president of the
Chicago board of trade, who head-
ed the
exchange delegation, said
the trade was "dissatisfied" with
the present limit on daily fluctua-
tions in the
prices of grain. 5
cents for wheat, barley and rye: 4
cents for corn and 3 cents for oats.
Carey said
that
doubling the
figures now provided as the limits
NOW IN 1,374
LINCOLN STORES
Hundred Per Cent Goal
Expected Be Reached
By Thursday Night.
With the Thursday night dead-
line for
NBA employer signers
drawing near, l;374-of- Lincoln's 1,-
500 employers have now placed the
blue eagle in their windows. This
90 per cent cooperation is expected
to jump to virtually 100 per cent by
Thursday
evening, Earl Middle-
kauff, colonel ir charge of Tues-
day's drive in the business sec-
tion, said Wednesday noon.
"Whether or not the code for any
particular industry is drawn up in
Washington yet, all employers are
expected by the president to sign
the
blanket
code by Thursday
night," Middlekauff said.
"Alter-
ations can
then be made after
their code is drawn up."
Middlekauff reported
only two
instances of indifference from the
entire canvass and these, he said.
were due to a lack of -knowledge of
what the NRA means. Eighty,-one
employers signed agreements Tues-
day and thirty-three more Wed-
nesday morning.
Thus the canvass to get every
employer to sign an NRA agree-
ment has
reached a
successful
conclusion. Middlekauff
declared.
He said that during September an
even more extensive canvass would
be made by his recovery sales com-
mittee. Purpose of this drive will
be to see to what extent employ-
ers are co-operating with the NRA.
how many men have been employed
through it. and how much pay-
rolls in Lincoln
have
been in-
creased.
The block to block canvass of the
women's consumers division under
Mrs. Ellery avis is gaining momen-
' turn, she said
Wednesday.
All
workers under her will meet at the
chamber of commerce. Thursday
neon, to turn in consumer pledges
already_signedjmd make plans for
(Continued on Page Nine).
HOME ECONOMICS
MEETING
KRATZ IS CHOSEN
AS NEW HEAD OF
STATE LEGION
Grand Island Gets Next
Convention Nebraska
Department.
KEARNEY, Neb, Aug. CO—tAF)
—Golden P. Kratz of Sidney today
was
unanimously
electsa com-
mander of the Nebraska American
Legion. E. H. McCarthy of Oma-
ha, who also had sought the office,
withdrew midway in the rollcall.
Grand Island was selected
the
1934
meeting place in the third
week of August that year.
Frank Shonka, Jr., of Schuyler
and Arnold Webbert of Kearney
were elected vice commanders. The
third candidate, Mrs. Nell Krause
of Newman Grove, was a nurse
overseas during the" war and was
the first woman who had sought
office in this state.
The Rev. Father Elmer McFad-
den of Milligan was selected chap-
lain.
Fee Is Delegate.
Harold Fee of Cambridge
was
elected delegate at large to the
national
convention, along
with
Robert Armstrong of Auburn, the
retiring
commander; Kratz,
the
new commander; and H. H. Dudley
of Lincoln, the department
ad-
jutant.
Alternates are John Cur-
tiss of Lincoln, Verne Taylor of
North Platte, J. R. Bitner of Ful-
lerton, and Robert Samardick
of
Omaha.
Mrs. Nora Patrick of Alliance
was chosen president of the auxil-
iary; Mrs. O. L. Webb of David
City
national
committeewoman;
Mrs. Sadie Stahl of Kearney his-
torian.
The president
and the
secretary, wj»6 is yet to be elected,
will be delegates to the national
convention.
Commander Is Lawyer.
Kratz, the new commander, Is 41
and a Sidney attorney. He was the
first commander of the Legion post
at Eads, Colo., and belonged to it
two years bef9re movim to Sidney.
He" became finance officer of the
Sidney post in 1927 and •wasjcom-
mander in 1928. He was a member
of the state department's executive
(Continued on Page Nine.)
RECOVERY DRIVE
GAINSMOMENTUM
IN FINAL PHASE
Three Boys
Stranded On
Sheer
Cliff
Rescuers Climb Mountain
Near Lake Placid to
Free Youths.
LAKE PLACID, N. Y., Aug. 30—
<£>)—Two rangers started a descent
irom the top of Wall Face moun-
tain this afternoon, hoping to help
three Boy Scouts, marooned on the
1,500-foot cliff, descend to safety
Before dark closed in and halted
the day's rescue attempts.
Because of sharp rocks which
threatened to sever the 1,000-foot
rope, no attempt was made to hoist
the youth.
A state policeman was dispatched
from the
rescue camp to Lake
Placid, 15 miles away; to get 500
feet more of heavy rope. Because
of the weight, the rope was to bej
put in an airplane and dropped to
the party on the mountain top.
ADIRONDACK
LODGE, Lake
Placid, N. Y.. Aug. 30—OP)—Sand-
wiches, water and
oranges were
lowered over a dizzy cliffside today
the club attendants if they knew
who struck the Louisana senator
and received
a negative answer.
Then the board issued a statement
saying:
"Senator Long apparently got into
an argument in the washroom with
MANUFACTURER
KEEPS SILENT
ON AGREEMENT
No Word Received From Auto Maker—Now
Paying More Than Agreement for Industry
Specifies — Opposes 'Handing Over All
Business to Union Labor Leaders.'
(Continued on Page Nine).
TRIO CAPTURED
IN KANSAS CITY
STORE ROBBERY
************************,
*
* '
if
THE WEATHER.
•*•
*
*
*
LINCOLN Aug. 30—Forecast for *
* tonight and Thursday:
*
*
Lincoln and vicinity
Pair and *
* somewhat warmer tonight and Thurs- *
* day.
*
*
For Nebraska: Generally fair to- *
* night and Thursday: slightly warm- *
* er tonight and in east
portion *
it Thursday.
it-
Kansas- Generally fair toninht and *
*• Thursday; slo*Jy
rising
tempera- *
* tures.
*•
The temperature daring 'he past •
55 if
*
if
* 24 hours:
* 3 p. m
"6
*
4 P- m
™
*
5 p m
76
if
6 p. m
75
*
7 p. m
•* 8 p. m
*
9 p. m
67
i
-V 10 p. m
65
I
*• 11 p. m
63 I
if 12 midnight...6J
if
1 a. m
61 I
if
2 a. m
60
i
*
Wind velocity at 12.30 p.
if dM 5 miles per hour.
*
i(
Weather throughout the state at 7 *
* ». m. todsy. clear to cloudy in ex- *
if tremi east; clear elsewhere,
ir
•*
*
*
Highest temperature a year ago to- •*•
* day, S2; lowest, 69.
*
*
Drv Wet Re! *
3 a. m
57
4 a. m
56
5 a. m..
6 a m
54
7 a. m
55
8 a. m
61
9 a. m
65
10 a. m
f>9
11 a. n>
72
12 noon
74
1 p. m
76
2 p. m
78
m. to-
to Buy Shfrls" She
: Rale" Accuses
;
CHICAGO.
Aug.
30 —
v.Tiilc returns
catalogued
Wasn-
incton as the twenty-fourth state
to ratify national prohibition repeal
state superintendents of the Anti-
Saloon league met here today to
decide the future of their
isat;m.
CHICAGO. Aug. 30 —
Sobbing, in sharp contract t3 her
customary phlegn-.ati; attitude. Mrs
,
Eleanor Jarman today told a crim-
inal court jury she had nothing to
do with the wanton slaying of an
organ- aged haberdasher during a holdup
several weeks ago.
The *rr':-.;: was srr""*:j"-(3 tn de-
Mrs. Jarman. and
two com-
rirje whether the prohibitionist or- pamons. Georpe Dale and
Leo
csniration is to retire from the re- Mmneci. were charscd with Tnur-
r^al battlefield or orcanlse a last derinp Gustav Hoeh as the climax
ficht to Work the wet pa- to numerous robberies the;,- pcr-
prtratc.1.
The 30 rear eld woman, mothrr
Mated ih- of two children, broke dnwn nacn
she rerounled her We rtory.
rado of st-itcs
P-ft M-Br;de
national .vjpertn-
the le.iciie.
ld r.-snlt
Sobs Mrs. Jarmin to Jury ! might be satisfactory, that many
j elements in the trade favored their
abolition entirely but that no ac-
tion of this sort was contemplat-
ed unless it. had the approval of
BEATRICE. Neb. Aue. 30— A
wooden bridce over Cedar creek
eicht miles cast of Beatric" ccl-
]a:rvsed tcdav when a truck loaded
•srit-h sand drove onto it. The driver.
whose name was not learned, es-
caped injury, but the truck turned
over into the stream fifteen feet be-
low
1-v," r~i • <•; hr-lri rrfrrend'J'n
and 40 ytato suner-
inxndTt.* nr<- r\prrfd to take part -h" said, referring
;n the srsfiTi
the theme of which W,TS thn* ero-
nomir ne-essitT had forced h-riit->
a career of banditry
' W<- weren't out for a holdup "
Ruth Reaches
End of Career
"We .lust wanted "to buy some jhirts
for Dale"
Dale plared the blame for
th4-
actual killmc upon Muineri State's
witnesses have accused Dale a'
having fired the fatal shot.
FORMER LINCOLN
MAN IS KILLED
Concert Saturday
A. C. Wilson Fatally
Injured In Crash
Near Minneapolis.
TIFTROIT ,v,r
'~r'.i '-i'^s -r-rf
1
in Try md»r
eont-art at in a<-t;
m^nts wer" romp; el ed by
^ L C Ch/Th** Wednrsfla-.. to a^-
"'^riC'* tr1" cist** rv' tl*r I^Tia^ rr>rjrfrt
^^ Vv 'h*"
1 M'sTiriTJvil b^rif3 at An'^l^r''*
"•• -"i: In S^urriav mcTr at 7 CTnm arranced fee "ast Sun-
'" l^v fvrmnc '"ill
be ci'-en
The
hr.ncc ;s m?.ff to rrnform with the
if rcoeram arranged for S'.mdav evm-
'J-- me a; th*> ««t« fair, and to cive
"f
ivnr>1e more time to attend the ded-
5ff :ra-;«n eTercises at Roberts park In
• tji9 afternoon.
A-jsr
30—
?-)d A C
F Newman
MON-TTTOFO. Minn
if'—Ca'iTTnr L'-vifl;
\Vilscn. 64. bo4?!
wr<- kiil-d ar.i H
12 rmles *rr>m here lav ^.T.N'I
XVr^on and Xr-aTnan wrre sa"l<~s-
men. La-.l5.ke was dririrje f^r thorn
er: rA:it<> to Sioux Palls
Wil«5on will be burled at Linroln.
Neb. his former home, after fonenfl
tn Minneapolis Thursday.
Profession Developing
Students, Declares
Flora Thurston.
The fifteenth annual conference
for vocational home economics in-
structors came to a close at the
coltege of agriculture Wednesday
with Miss Flora Thurston. promi-
nent New York educator, as the
chief speaker on the
morning's
procram.
Miss Thurston told the 150 in-
structors that teachers have gen-
erally
agreed on
trends in
the
home economics profession during
the past ten years. She empha-
wsed that there has been a shift-
inn cf emphasis to the rievelop-
nr-nt of student", anrl voiretl ron-
firtenre in the future development
of home econornir" train;nc.
Management of l?rce MZC rloth-
inc clashes was d:v:ussed in de-
tail.
Lillian Brehm. Lexington;
Lcoba Ickman. Falls City; Grare
Lee. Callawa?; and Mary Carroll.
Harwud. cave reports. Anita Bit-
ner of Jarkson hich. Lincoln, closed
the Tri*minc passion with a di^u^-
sicn of method"; of tearhine foods.
The Wednesday aft/rnoon pro-
cram wa,«: short.
IVT Fanscl'iw ^f
Arnold. Carolyn Whi'e of Exeter
and Ethel Fhielfls nf Seward rave
croups in
'eafhinc
child
^inenl in hir'i f'noo]
Mif-s
Vorh:rs nj
the
vor-ational
irn d'par'TTi^r.'
T^f."
about
afternoon
th1" •earlT>r=
were told by ;<.!;.« ThurMon that
sroveTTiTnental ch^n*ces and
orffan-
iTatiorj af'frt
fawnlv
l;fp
much
more drastically than does educa-
tion.
Johnson Estimates Two
Millions Have Been
Re-employed.
WASHINGTON, Aug.
30—(JP)—A
delay until the
middle of next
week on the master code intended
to blanket the millions of retail
I workers over the land was indi-
cated today as Arthur D. White-
side, a deputy administrator of the
NRA.
presented a revised version to
retailers' representatives
for con-
sideration.
The retailers code was described
as altered in many respects from
previous drafts, but not drastically.
The text was withheld.
WASHINGTON. Aug. 30—
—
Intensified striving went today into
the mass movement to re-employ
jobless workers and create billions
of new purchasing power under the
sign of NRA's blue eagle.
Hugh S. Johnson, after being tied
to his desk for days on end by crit-
ical problems of the industrial con-
trol movement, himself took the
field to deliver at Boston a major
i address of this week's windup cam-
paien for plastering the country's
store windows with the red. white
and blue poster of co-operation.
"We can scarcely realize that per-
haps 2.000.000 have been removed
from the ranks of the unemployed
and are again self-supporting citi-
zens." was Johnson's estimate as he
spurred on the door-to-door work
of the volunteer armv of a million
and morejnen and_women busy up
~t Continued on Page Nine.)
Peck Heads Board
:
Of Government Bank
i
For
Co-operatives
!
WASHINGTON. Aug. 30—/AP>—
.The Tarm credit administration to-
idav appointed the seven directors
for" the government's new «n^|
bank for co-operatives, which will
assume money lending functions ol
the old farm board.
F W. Peck. St. Paul, now co-op-
erative credit commissioner of the
'administration, is ex-oIIlcSo chair-
man -with three directors chosen oy
Gov. Henry Morgcnthau. .ir, to rep-
re--^nt the public and three more 10
rcnre'tn' laim co-operatives.
Thofc represent^.* the publ:c are:
ThMnas Coowr. Lrxmeton. Ky.. J
D. Miller. Susquehanna. Pa., ana
H Lane Young, of Atlanta. Ga.
The -rntral bank
will
handle
1arc« loans to farmers co-operative
• and purchasing orpani-
"its activities •sill be sup-
i--J bv the establishment of
rfgional co-operative credit
o»ns* m^thr cities where federal
land and intermediate credit bank-s
are now in operation.
O M
AlfA~HAS~FIFTa
ENCEPHALITIS
CASE
OMAHA. A4;r SO— >r —A Tifih
Gunmen Kidnap Two Girl
Employes and Flee
Amid Gunfire.
KANSAS CITY. Mo., Aug. 30—(IN
S)—Three bandits, who kidnaped
two girl employes after robbing
Kline's ready-to-wear store here of
an undetermined amount of money
and escaped amid gunfire, were cap-
tured shortly before noon by Mis-
souri officers who chased them
across the state line into Kansas,
detectives headquarters here were
advised.
The girls were released before the
officers captured the men. They
were Miss Lydia Steele and Miss
Alice Graham, both employed at the
cashier's desk at Kline's.
The amount of money taken in
the robbery was not determined at
once by offcials of the store, but
officers believe ail the loot was re-
covered.
As the br-ndits were captured in
Kansas they were being taken to
Kansas City, Kas., to sign waivers
necessary for their return to Kansas
City, Mo.
_
SELECT STYLE
SHOW WINNERS
Ruby Kayser,WilmaMay
To Represent County
At State Fair.
Chosen Wednesday to represent
Lancaster countv in the 4-H style
show at the Nebraska state fan-
were Ruby Kayser of Walton and
Wilma May of Bennet.
The two
girls are winners in the c:u»ty
style show held during the morn-
in—In the
absence -of both Henry and Edscl
Ford, comment was withheld at the
Ford Motor Co. offices today con-
cerning the statements in Washing-
ton of Gen. Hugh S. Johnson, that
"maybe the American people will
crack down on" Ford if he did not
obtain the blue eagle.
No statement has been authorizes
from the Ford
offices since the
automobile industry's code was ac-
cepted in Washington without the
participation of Henry Ford.. Ford
has been represented by associates
and others close to him as feeling
that the code as drawn up meant
Dietz said.
Defy
Ruling:.
"Farmers from
whom we pur-
chase milk receive a higher price
from us than from other milk deal-
ers We supply 250,000 persons in
Chicago with milk and will continue
to do so. We don't believe the fed-
eral government will deprive us of
our businesses."
Dietz said attorneys for the as-
sociation were planning to appeal
the case to the Supreme court as
(Continued on Page Nine.)
NEBRASRAN DIES
OF ENCEPHALITIS
Hastings Sleeping Sick-
ness Victim 111 Only
Three Days.
HASTINGS. Neb., Aug. 30—OP)—
Charles Guest, 30, died here today
of encephalitis, better
known as
He was stricken
and physicians
sleeping sickness.
suddenly Sunday
said his case was unusually acute.
Guest was employed at a battery
factory here and is survived by his
widow and two children,
native of Missouri.
He was A
soon as possible.
,
Officials of the Pure Milk associ-
ation, organization of dairy fanr.- I
ers indicated they had made lutle |
progress in conferences with dealers i
Prof. Filley Heads
New Grange Chapter
Formed in Lincoln
Prof- H- c- Filtey of the agricul-
mast€r
pounds under the code.
cf the newly organized Comhusker
It has been indicated the retail ' chapter of the
National Grange
price in Chicago might be raised ,Tuesdav night. The group, organ-
above the set price of 10 cents a 'ized two weeks ago. is composed of
quart in order to provide greater 1 several members of the agricultural
return to the farmers.
.colleee faculty and persons in Lin-
.'coin interested in sericulture. About
T nvt iii-oil • 25 arc charter members.
loriurea,, othrr officers included in the in-
J/I«
Feft
stalls t ion wore Harold Hedges, sec-
ni9 rtn
In Demand for
Money
PLEASANTV1LLE. la.. Aue. SC-
OP)— Miles Galvin. elderly farmer
livini a mile cast of here, last night
was 'beaten and tortured by two
men who ran&acted the home for
money.
The men asked for Gahin and
demanded money. Wh^n he replied
that there was "none in th" house
he was .struck over the head and
si the fare wilh a revolver one of
th« men carried. Gahin said
The bandits then forced Galvin
1<> accompany tlr-m upsta:rs wh"rc
thev bound both Mr. nnd Mrs Gal-
inn and repeated their dfrianrts for
money
They took a f"w dollars
from Galvui's billfold
and sonv
chance brloncmc to Mrs. Galvin
The men Him applied biirninc
matrices 1o his bare leet in an *"f
fort to compel him to 1ell wh"re
anv cash was hiddm
Frampton. treasurer:
L. Thomas, ciapiain: L. L
• in charge of programs.
Fatties Girl Will Ask
ff. Heart Balm
3UOS ANGELES. Auc 30— 'INS —
A brr-a-ri of •pttmi'e rotrp'ainl d^-
mandine $250.001 damae1-- f^r BM'v
KaT"-. Jo]];'": eirl,
a^aim
Alar;
Dirrhari Hollv-worwj a''o- a ir3 di-
Trrlor. wa.': rfa<3v for lilmg n tn*1
here
v •Bh"n pnvsirian^ con-
4h?ir diarnnws cf 'h* ill-
.«* rf Mi's C^ilia Houeh. 27. a
domrstir. Her condition was said
to be improving
Other cas<-,s are
( also reported
sho-sttng
improve-
ment.
..
and ih" .Mat* hiehway drpartw-nt
arc f"o.wiv siudyinc
f>n'> °r '~"0
T>rMX)«l«i ths: namrd lovr prices
and if th« wjuipmcnt which th»7
rovfr is found suitable, it wi] bo
bcnisht in prMcr»nrf to machines
that «re wore widely knerxa.
attorn"--.- for
-dv.
H? .'-. '^f-
D.rrJ a*i ~
-haired f:im aft-f^
ivd 1" marrv Mr-s Kae-er a*,rl
ne had f«i>d to earn- oliticians.
?.v 1h<-' wr-. did anybody
p-.-fT
Fff
a United Slate?
senator '" "^ hom^ slate,
afu-r tlio nijiht h<* is elect-
ed ? I have m^ >m all over
1h" world when conpre?1?
wa« nol
in s-^ion. but
neier ?a->v on*1 at home.
Yours,
WILL.
IN E>V SPA PERI
SPA PERI
TWO
FARMERS SWAMP
LAND BANKS WITH
LOAN REQUESTS
Return of Fees Offered
Until Appraisers Can
Check Property.
WASHINGTON, Aug.
30—(xP)—
The rush of farmers seeking aid
under the emergency farm mort-
gage act 1« so great that most fed-
eral land banks are offering to re-
turn application fees so farmers can
use the money until an appraiser is
available.
The farm credit administration
made this statement today in an-
nouncing that while more than
1500 trained appraisers are in the
Held, 2,100 would be required to
handle present business promptly.
It said July applications alone ex-
ceeded those of 1931 plus 7932 and
the first five months of 1933.
Attention To Emergencies.
Henry Morgenthau, jr., governor
of the credit administration, said
first attention still was being given
emergency cases—cases where the
financial situation of the farmer is
such that "urgent action" is re-
quired.
"In federal land bank districts
where the number of applications
for loans is so great that the farms
offered as security cannot be ap-
praised promptly with the force of
appraisers
available." he
added,
•"the banks will offer to return the
initial fees deposited by th? appli-
cants. They will be told that when
the time arrives that their applica-
THE LINCOLN STAR— WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1933.
UXI-tmOSTKET
PLIABLY
RESPONSIVE
TO THE
DEMANDS
OF THE
MODERN
MODE
ALASKA
SEAL
HUDSON
SEAL
Two furs whose slim
and youthful effect has
not before been imag-
ined nor realized, now
transformed into slim
youthful coats of classic
chic and enduring dis-
tinction — available
in
deep black or rich
brown. Our early wir-
chases enable us to of-
fer these prices.
ALASKA SEAL
$295
HUDSON SEAL
$179.50 - $195
$225
To replace three coats
rww w<*u]d m^wi an ad-
vance in price of $25 to
$75.
! in 3 silhouettes,
•wagger lengths with
sl:ght flare
Boxy straight han? full
Irngth coat
Classic flttfd lull lengtn
oo»t.
Sizes 14 to 44.
Uncovered Oklahoma Baby Mart
Miss Helen Schaeffer. director of the Children's Service bureau of
Tulsa, Okla., who recently revealed that a "baby market" exists in
Tulsa, wherein babies born out of wedlock were sold for adoption at
prices ranging from $70 to $100. Inset, Mrs. Mabel Basset, state com-
missioner of charities and corrections who caused an investigation of
the matter. It is alleged physicians took money a» "cost of hospital-
ization."
tions can be acted upon with rea-
sonable dispatch they will be so
notified and requested to return
the fees to the bank before ap-
praisal is made.
Offer Use of Money.
"This action is taken by the farm
credit administration, not to dis-
courage applications, but rather to
give farmers the use of their money,
should they require it, until shortly
before appraisal of their properties
can be made."
"To datt," Morgenthau said, "one
out of every five loans made have
been to farmers whose debts have
i>een reduced by their creditors.
Since it is scarcely three months
since the emergency act was passed
and already closings are being made
in increasingly large volume, it is
expected that the coming three
months will witness a very large
volume of money disbursed as a re-
sult of loans closed."
Today
Science Goes Ahead
Back to Gold, Perhaps?
What Power Is in Women
3y ARTHUR BRISBANE
Marconi, truly great because he
increases knowledge, comfort and
safety, announces a short wave in-
strument to protect airplanes and
ships.
It will tell the flier his
height above the earth and the ship
captain how near the bottom is to
the ship's keel. Marconi provides the
improved "altitude-measuring1' ma-
chine that fliers need.
Less important news coming from
Berlin says Chancellor Hitler will
dress his police hereafter "in red
stripes and gold braid." That will
please them. Men love ornament.
Kings knew it long ago, when they
put fancy uniforms and feathers on
their fighting soldiers, with music
leading them, leaving peasants and
ditch-diggers in their rags.
But red stripes and gold braid
will not make better policemen. Bul-
let proof vests would be better.
New York state is trying to fight
the crime wave, financed and built
up by prohibition folly.
Governor Lehman
signs a bill
making it a felony for any but a
police officer to possess or sell a
submarine gun, favorite,
efficient
weapon of crime.
Such a law, well meant, will mean
that criminals only will have sub-
machine guns, Just as prohibition
has meant whisky only for bootleg-
gers.
As that line is written comes an-
nouncement of President Roosevelt's
decision to let American gold pro-
ducers sail their
precious
metal,
where they can get the best price
for it.
The original ruling com-
pelled American gold miners to de-
liver all gold to Uncle Sam's mint,
taking for it. per ounce, in depre-
ciated paper dollars, the price paid
when our dollar was gold and worth
100 cents.
The treasury will re-
ceive gold allowing owners to sell it
abroad or at home, for as many
j dollars per ounce as they can get.
This rule will help gold produc-
ers, and be far better than allowing
[ogld "mats" or csncentrates to be
shipped abroad. jiving the work of
[refining to foreign
workers and
I smelters.
It will mean. also, that
: United States gold will be drained
jout of the country, building up the
jpold reserves of foreign countries.
j How much. If at all that will hurt
i this country, depends on our final
gold attitude.
i Another girl, number eight, has
swum the English channel, Twenty-
i two vears old. named Sunny Lowry.
she finished in fifteen hours forty
minutes, one hour and ten minutes
behind Gertrude Ederle's record.
These channel swims show what
terrific power of endurance nature
has siren to tromen, lighting chop-
py waves, strong currents, cold wa-
ter, and swimming violently
with
strain on heart and courage, all the
:way. Women nped the power, since
part of their task Is to produce the
en*.ire human race.
iCopjripil.. 1P33. KmsTV»VuT*»S5T>~l!)t-J
ORDERS GLASS OF
WATER; SHOT DEAD
CHICAGO. Aue. 30'AP'—An w-
jrumrnt over a glass of water police
-.a'd jct3 10 the slaying ol a cus-
iorntr in a wuth side restaurant
today and the arrest of one of the
owners ay the Viler
The victim WES Siirmijnd Majew-
ski and the man in custodr. who
polkf said nadiH-
admitted Uie
shoo'lns. is Vin Churov part owner
(of a chili parlor.
The lieht stars rd. witnesses told
police, when Ma;i«*-sW and a friend
. arsrjSfxJ Chiarov by ordering * fflasu
of water after ft 'prrflcmRwJ persuai
of the menu card.
DESHLER YOUTH DIES
i
DESHLER. Neb, Aug.
30—tf>—
j James Cunningham, n-yw-old son
;of Mr. and Mrs. William Cunnig-
;hjcn. hotel operators h-re. died last
InSfrJ* from heart failure aTt«x an
i.^_ 0j seTcral months.
CHICAGO BROKER
WILL MARRY WIFE
FOR FOURTH
TIME
LO« ANGELES, Aug. 30— (&) —
Just to help make things "sort of
permanent," Thomas Ezell, former
Chicago stock broker, is going to
marry his wife for the fourth time
next Saturday.
It's a good old family custom.
The Ezells do it every year. They
married for the first
time
four
years ago in
Chicago. On each
wedding anniversary they take out
a marriage license and have a min-
ster read the vows.
The ides, Ezell said,
originated
with friends of his
who live in
South America. They have been
married 14 times, said Ezell, "and
;hat's a mark to shoot at."
Mr. and Mrs. Ezell filed yester-
day their intention to wed. Ezell
gave his age as 31, and Mrs. Ezell
is 22.
"We do this to remember the
ihings we said when we were first
married," the husband explained.
MIDWEST TRADE
GAIN REPORTED
Merchandise Sales Show
Best Advance In
Four Years.
Favorable development in trade
and industry, in spite of the de-
cline of agricultural prices, marked
the month of July in the territory
of the Kansas City federal reserve
bank, the monthly report of the
bank states.
The summary is, in part, as fol-
lows:
"Sales of merchandise at both
wholesale and retail showed the
best improvement over the corres-
ponding month a year ago of the
past four years. Production of flour,
coal, petroleum, and shipments of
zinc ore and lead ore were larger
than for July last year, but the
output of cement was smaller. Mar-
ket receipts of-all classes of grain,
except wheat, and of all species of
livestock exceeded the July, 1932,
totals. Meat packing establishments
operated at a higher rate of activity
than a year ago. Building opera-
tions remained inactive.
"Debits by banks to individual ac-
counts increased substantially both
as compared to June this year and
July last year.
Business failures
showed marked improvement, being
less numerous than for any month
since September, 1928. with . the
amount of liabilities smaller than
for any month since September,
1920."Prices of most agricultural com-
modities declined during the month.
Declines in grain prices were severe
although at the close values were
higher than on June 1 and sub-
stantially above a year ago and the
lows of the current year. The fore-
most unfavorable factors in the ag-
ricultural situation are the extreme-
ly poor crop prospects and a con-
tinuation of low prices for livestock
and livestock products.
Livestock
feeders, dairymen, and poultrymen
are confronted with higher feed
prices and lower returns than ex-
isted at this time last year. The
position of sheep raisers has im-
proved somewhat as mutton and
wool are higher than a year ago.
"Preparations for the fall seeding
of winter wheat are general but
soil conditions in the major wheat
producing counties of Kansas are,
due to a shortage of moisture, un-
favorable."
Lexington Votes
Bonds to Extend
Its Water System
LEXINGTON,
Neb., Aug.
30—
(AP—Approval by a
margin of
eight to one was given by Lexing-
ton voters in a special
election
Tuesday on a proposal to issue $18.-
000 in bonds for improvement of the
eity water system. Application will
be made at once for federal aid.
Backers of the project said local la-
bor would be used and that the
work would eliminate unemployment
next winter.
Lincoln Qarages
Add Over 100 Jobs
Group
Asks Roosevelt
For Quick Action
Upon Code.
E. R. Pinney, president of the
Lincoln Machine and Automotive
Service Dealer's association, esti-
mated Tuesday night that more
than 100 additional men had been
employed in the garage business as
a direct result of the signing of the
NRA.In the regular meeting of the as-
sociation
Tuesday night at
the
chamber of commerce, the commit-
tees on standard prices were not
yet ready to report.
About SO members of the associa-
tion signed a petition to President
Roosevelt that some type of na-
tional code be accepted in the near
future. The Lincoln group pledged
its whole-hearted support to the
action of the government.
Wisconsin Pair Find
Alleged Swindler @n
Chicago Loop Street
CHICAGO, Aug. 30—OP)—James
Kellogg,
alias
George
Williams,
alias H. O. Becker, of Washington,
la., was in jail today on a $34,000
swindle charge brought by Gustav
Knak and
Clement Bartzen, of
Sheboygan, Wis.
Knak saw Kellogg while walking
in the loop last night and had him
arrested.
He said it was the first time he
had s:en Kellogg since Kellogg and
a "Mr. Wakelin" had tricked him
out of $28,000 and Clement out of
$6,000 in an involved confidence
game earlier in the summer.
Knak said he had found a purse,
ostensibly lost by Kellogg's friend,
Wakelin. To show his gratitude at
its return, Wakelin gave the Wis-
consin men racing and stock tips
by which they amassed a paper for-
tune of $360,000. All they had to do
to collect, they were told, was to
put up the $34,000. They did. The
men disappeared with the money.
Kellogg denied having seen Knak
before. Police found he has a record.
Search Abandoned
For Missing Boys
NEW YOKK, Aug. 30-X^P)—The
coast guard announced today that
the search for the sloop Postscript,
missing since August 20, had been
discontinued.
The 23-foot craft, carrying three
sons of New York city neighbors of
President Roosevelt, set out from
Manascnian, N. J.. for Nantucket in
the face of one of the worst coastal
storms in years.
Pierre P. Irving, son of L du Pont
Irving, stock broker, and Charles L.
and John L. NUes, sons of Dr. Wal-
ter L. Niles, were missing.
L A B O R D A Y
\\7
V\eek-end
O F T H E Y E A R !
We're ready with the newest Eastman cameras—fresh Kodak Film
New Brownltf with Two-Way
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new Six-16 and Six-20 Brownies get
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previous box cameras. Smartly de-
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Six-20 (2V4
$2.50
Make Your Snapshots Look
Their Best Bring us your exposed
films for careful developing, print-
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workers give each negative indi-
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best possible prints your negatives
can produce. You'll like ourKoda-
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B,>RING back your holiday
in snapshots or in movies.
We have everything you'll
need from Brownies to
Cine-Kodaks ...from film
to filters. There's not an
item of snapshot equip-
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But we suggest you stop
in early to avoid the pre-
holiday rush.
Simplest Folding Camera Jiffy
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one button... it pops open. Touch
another...it takes a picture. Smart
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For pictures 2V4x3V«,
O./O
Low-Cost Movies Have you seen
the wonderful movies you get with
the $29.50 Cine-Kodak EifihtP
These movies cost less than lOp a
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Here are movies you've wanted
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No Other Film Is Like It We
sell more Kodak Verichrome Film
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It assures good snapshots from
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INCORPORATED
1217
O STREET
Ihere are other
good cigarettes
out they are not
like v^hesteriield
.... and Chesterfields are
not like any other cigarette.
As soon as you light up a Chester-
field, we believe you will notice that
they are mild. And before very long,
you will certainly notice that they
taste better.
These things don't just happen so.
There isn't any accident about it. For
we put into CHESTERFIELDS all that
Science knows and money can buy to
make them "satisfy."
Just try them!
w&cijarefle tfoati MILDER* t/t&cigarette t/iatTASTES BETTER
'SPAPERl
THE LINCOLN STAR-WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30,1933.
THREK
'The HIDDEN DOOR
by FRANK L PACKARD
BARREL TAX ON
BEER TO STATE
SYNOPSIS: Colin Hewitt has
tome all the way from New York
to the Gulf of St. Lawrence to de-
liver a mysterious letter to Joe
Lazarre, and finds him just as the
crooks' club where Lazarrc lives
is attacked by a gang of Dol-
laire's hi-jackers. Lazarre, upon
nhose help Colin had counted
against the
Mask, brutal New
lork killer, is shot under Colin's
eyes. Colin has been bound to a
tree by two of Dollaire's men;
waiting; for him in a motor boat
is Germaine Tremblay, whom he
loves and for whose safety he
fears. The fight goes on.
Chapter 25.
THE FIRE.
For a little time Colin lay there
with his eyes closed, fighting for
composure—but there was no com-
posure—either mental or physical.
And physically he was acutely con-
scious again of the brutal throbbing
in his bead, and conscious that the
gag in his mouth had become a tor-
ture
He looked around him again. The
power-house door was open, and he
could see figures milling about in
the lighted interior, and other fig-
ures grouped just outside the door
Dollaire had obviously got inside
with some of his men. but there did
not appear to be any fighting going
on there. Dollaire's quarry evidently
had taken refuge down below
Something impelled him against
his will to let his eyes rest again
on the clubhouse door and the ver-
anda Kenniston was still sprawled
there, head downward on the steps,
but unless he was the victim of an
hallucination Lazarre who was ly-
ing half across the threshold, was
making an effort to move.
A minute passed Twice Lazarre
attempted to gain his knees only to
sink back again. Lazarre at least
was not dead.
A strange, vague hope came to
Colin. Even though he was power-
less to reach or aid the other, it was
something to know that Lazarre
was not dead
It was not the end
—not yet. Lazarre was not dead
Mechanically Colin strained
at
his wrists again No good in that
But there was no one to watch him
now,
and surely there was some
way of getting the gag out of his
mouth.
His arms made a looo
around the tree, but his legs were
free.
He struggled to his feet, working
his arms upward behind him. Then
with the idea of dislodging the
necktie that held the gag in place,
he pressed the back of his head
hard against the tree trunk, and
began to rub vigorously on the
necktie.
After
a
moment, still
knotted behind, it slipped down and
dangled like a noose around his
neck
He spat out the gag His
mouth was thick, his tongue swol-
len He made a guttural sound
Well it didn't matter
Speech
•would come back quickly enough
Anyway, the thing was gone now
and no longer tortured him
There was firing now He could
see flashes through the trees on
both sides of the power house He
nodded to himself in understand-
ing. There was a hole in the rat
trap, as Chnstophe had phrased it,
and the rats had emerged—only to
run into Dollaire's men who. stra-
tegically placed, were waiting for
them.
But Dollaire himself did not seem
to be making much headway so far
as the power house was concerned
He cculd see figures moving around
Good Rules Inspection
Cost May Be Taken
Out of Revenue.
Attorney General Paul F. Good
Wednesday said there is no ques-
tion, but that the 93-cent a barrel
beer tax goes to the state govern-
ment and not to the schools.
'It is a tax and not a license,'
Good said
^*.idpr t^e Nebraska
constitution, all license fees go 10
schools, but Good said as a state
tax, the state naturally would re-
tain it
Good said also that the depart-
ment of agriculture may
deduct
from the tax the necessary expenses
of operation and turn over to tne
state treasurer the
"net' tax as
provided for m the beer law. There
had been some question whether
the net provision in the law was
sufficient to constitute an appro-
priation or whether the entire tax
would have to be collected and held
until the next legislative session.
Police Bullets
End Rampage Of
. Chicago Maniac
i
CHICAGO. Aug. 30—(A>>—Police
I bullets ended Joseph Stassl s manial
'spree today.
Stassl, recently re-
leased Irom a psychopathic hospi-
I tal. was shot down as he was alone
in a room with a 4-year-old girl,
menacing her v.ith his rifle
The arrual of officers ended an
hour of terror for tenants of the
building in which Stasii h\ed His
wife told police that her husband,
(frequently afflicted with delusions,
leaped from his bed this morning
and seized his rifle, imagining that
someone was threatening him.
Screaming, he routed his wife
and child from the building then
invader' the quarters of a neighbor
Mr and Mrs William Huesings fled
and summoned police, leaving the
madman alone with their daughter
Geraldme
When Policeman Henry Sprengel
i entered the room Stassi fired four
1 shots and missed Sprengel shot five
times killing Stassi
Colin could do nothing.
inside, presumably searching for
Bouchard's "elevator," or the way
to operate it, and, outside, the
figures he had seen before were
still grouped near the door.
He looked across again at the
clubhouse door. Lazarre had man-
aged to shift his position a little
and had drawn himself back just
over the threshold. Colin watched
in bitter impotence for a few mo-
ments as the wounded man made a
succession of feeble and unsuccess-
ful efforts to retreat still farther—
and then he abruptly turned his
attention once again to the power
house
Something of moment was going
on there now Those inside were
pouring out of the door, and, join_
ing those without were all running
away to one side of the clearing
What was it all about' It wasn't
that in some way the club "mem-
bers" had got the upper hand, for
there was still desultory firing going
on in the woods on both sides of
the power house, and, besides, Dol-
laires men must outnumber the
others by more than two to one
Colin stared perplexedly while
perhaps a minute, perhaps two,
dragged by—and then the front of
the power house seemed to bulge
suddenly outward, and there came
the flash and roar of a terrific ex
plosion.
The lights in both the power
house
and
clubhouse went out
There was onlv the moonlight now
With an exultant jell, the crowd
that had gathered at the edge of
the clearing was rushing back again
to the power house
Colin remembered Larocque's con-
temptuous disposal of any difficulty
that a trick opening in the cement
floor might present "We can blast
the whole thing open," Larocque
had said. That was what they had
done, of course They were swarm-
ing in and out like bees at a hive
Colin circled his bruised lips with
his tongue What was it they wers
after in there? He couldn't see
nearly so well as before. The blast
.obviously had wrecked the dynamo,
and the interior was black except
for what appeared to be the bob-
bing and wholly inadequate lights,
like flitting fire-flies, of a lantern
or two. He could still make out
Lazarre though, a crumpled shape
on the threshold of the club, the
moonlight was sufficient for that,
and—
A voice bellowed out, full-lunged,
in French, from the direction of
the power house, and earned dis_
tinctly across the clearing to Colin's
ears
"Hen1 G<>t some more light here'
Some of you take these cans of oil
and spill them over the veranda
there, and touch them off
They
won't used their club after tonight
It will make a good bonfire!"
That was Dollaire undoubtedly
Dollaire the fox! Fox? The msui
was an incarnate— Colin strained
forward
involuntarily,
wrenching
violently at his wrists, as the full
significance of what he had heard
burst upon him Set fire to the ver-
anda- The whole club would burn
like tinder There was Lazarre
He saw figures running toward
the clubhouse, then a queer spread-
ing glow, then a flame An inar-
ticulate sound came from Colin s
lips Ha could do nothing They had
started the fire on the side of the
veranda
that
faced the
power
house—but it was only a matter of
time—not long—not many minutes
—before the fire would catch the
walls and creep around to the front
(Copyright, 1933, Frank L. Packard)
Tomorrow, Germaine takes *
hand in this dangerous game.
Interest Rate On
Delinquent Personal
Taxes Now 9 Percent]
'
Nine per cent is now the legal
interest rate on delinquent per-1
sonal taxes. Attorney General Good .
t ruled
Wednesday,
thus
settling
conflicting provisions in two laws,
passed by the last
legislature on'
I Delinquent interest tax rates.
|
i
Good said S F. 4, carrying the
provision for the 9 per cent rate,
was passed by the legislature aft-
er S F 17, which provided a 10
per cent rate on delinquent per-
sonal taxes, and in addition S. F
4 carried the emergency clause so
took effect then.
The bills were not in disagree-
ment on other
tax interest rate
provisions.
AND YOU SAY
IT TASTES
JUST LIKE
CHEWING
CUM?
ITS SAFER AND
MORE EFFECTIVE
BECAUSE YOU
CHEW IT.
HEADS GRAIN FIRM.
OMAHA, Aug.
30—(ff}~
E W.
Taylor, Omaha, former president o:
the Nye and Jenks Grain company
here, has been again elected presi-
dent of the concern. For tne past
six months Taylor Has been associ-
I ated with the Fanners' National
] Grain corporation as vice president.
JOHN SANTO DIES
FALLS CITY, Neb,
Aug. 30—
John Santo, 65, life-time Richard-
son county resident, was found dead
at his home here Tuesday, a prob-
able victim of heart disease. The
lone survivor is a brother, J. Santo
of Falls City.
YES, Feen-a-rmnt tastes just like any
refreshing mint gum. You chew it and be-
cause \ou chew it, the medicine is distri-
buted "bit by bit through the intestines,
insuring a gradual, natural action! That
makes it safer and more efficient. It's the
modem way to take a laxative.
Feen-a-mint
FOR CONSTIPATION
MOWS THE TIME TO BUY A
Get ALL* of the features
in this one Tire . . .
AO EXTRA
COST
BLOW-OIJT PROTECTION
The New Fatigue-proof Registered tire is mode
with Gum-inforced Plies, rubber-impregnated
under tons of pressure, almost indestructible
and blow-out proof.
MORE NON-SKID SAFETY
By testy the new Fatigue-proof Registered fire
is from 95% to 300% more non-tkid than any
other leading makes. "You just can't tkid
them."
MORE MILEAGE
fl hat bigger, deeper, thicker treads of Vital*
ized Robber, firing you more mileage and
longer non-skid perfection than ever was
known before.
MORE RIMX6 COMFORT
fl* orcr-sisfd and balanced construction with
full flexibility from bead to bead wul fire on*
equaled riding comfort.
WHT be Mti.fied with or* or two (rood fea-
ReaxMrred tire is the crowning achievement tm
tare* in a tire when hi KelK - Springfield
oar career and it bv far the finest.
Fffff^fm^.
... r. i. f. ~.~
. f * m^ ••••%.'X-
•
-
.
" -^
.
«afe«t tire ever made. Don t be satis-
fied with onK a few gnod feature*—
get EVER\THI>G that a modem
rireeonldhave — at no extra cost. »2^
rou (ret E> ER1TH1>C — and
at no extra co«t? For forty year*. Kelly-
tire* have been the reeoicnited
leader*. The new
Fetifme-proof
THE SAME AS Oit*t\AKY
TIKES
4.40x21 $7.10 S5.55
4.50 x 21 7.90 6.30
Sta.
Jt>*irt*rW
4.75x19 $MO $6.70
5.00 x 19
9.00 7.20
5.25x13 $10.00 $8.10
5£0xl9 1L50
Weston €t Griffin Co., Inc.
1709 O STREET.
DRIVE IN
SERVICE
Service M.Uon
Rarte,0ararr
Crete. Xebr.
VMand. Xebr
f arrrl?'« Tire hr.
A M Master Service Station, Inc. Rastinfc Neb
»bra«*a Citv. Xebr
^•»™ ^^
•**a*™1
- • « . — • —--.*.• ». •• T . *•« w*
KELL Y- SPRINGFIELD
HOLLAND HEATING
SYSTEM!
PRICES WILL NEVER BE LOWER
ACT NOW AND SAVE
FTlAKE advantage of today's low prices. Have yotu
X Holland Vaporaire Heating System installed now
at a real saving—and get exceptional value.
Does your present furnace burn too much fuel? Does
it leak smoke or gas? Are some rooms hard to heat—
others too hot? Let a Holland heating engineer study
your heating problem without obligation.
Tliere's a Holland for every size of home—every pock-
et-book. Each system is individually designed for the
residence it heats and installed under direct factory
supervision. Get the facts and you'll get a Holland.
• HUMIDITY AND CIRCULATION
Heat nlone »s not comfort- Artificial!} warmed air must be
scientifically circulated and humidified. Holland provides a
refreshing, stimulating indoor atmosphere by properly warming
and humidifying the air and keeping it in constant circulation.
• ABSOLUTE CLEANLINESS
The Holland Heating System rn-U the drudgery of constant
darting and sweeping—cats do i the "wear and tear" on
drape*, carpet* ami other furnishings by eliminating the daily
acconralation of dost and gnme.
• GREATER FUEL SAVING
AH beat and smoke are forced to travel completely around die
Holland radiator before- entering the chimney—jnst twice as
far a* in ordinary practice. This principle combined with
other features of Holland construction extracts maximum heat
from the fuel, resulting in greater savings.
• 5-YEAR GUARANTEE
A five-year guarantee bond poes with your installation, making
the factory directly responsible for your heating satisfaction.
• CONVENIENT TERMS
Boy on easy, convenient term?. Ton can betin enjoying at owe
the healthful comfort and convenience of Holland Heating.
• BUY FROM FACTORY AND SAVE
Every Holland branch is a local institution emploving labor
from your locality—vet you are dealing direct with tne world's
largest installers of Home Heating Systems. This unique plan
means rnbrtantial savings for yon.
WE VACUUM CHAN YOUR HEATING SYSTEM
AND TAKE ALL THE DIRT AWAY
Many thousands of bcat-
>O£ systems are cleaned
every year by patented
Holland-owned! giant Taennm furnace cleaners. This
cleaner removes all the soot and dirt from yoor heating;
M«tcm—JOT type of plant—in^nnnc better performance
and far less fad consumption. The cort is moderate.
Holland Furnace Co- Holland. Michigan
Whbotrt obligation pka«e §ir»e me foil information
about
O R«T*'T fV.j \ite,
O Cleaning S«^««.
D Forced-Air Hratine and Cooling.
d Ox of Holland Healing System for my borne.
HOLLAND FURNACE CO.
237 So. Hth St.
Lincoln. Ncbr.
B1860.
We Al«o Install Gas Fnrnaoe* and OM Burner*
Holland Heating Makes Warm friends
Holland ha* arm SOO fartorv branches Ownh your trfrpbooe
directory for the me UUKM yoo.
Off-to-School
It Won't Be Long Now
rHEREUPON v>e enter a few suggestions on up-to-date ^ays of dressing for
school. Smart, sensible, budget-wise wa\s they are—the kind you'll heartily
approve. Bring your son and your daughter around, while selections are at their
newest and most attractive.
Boys' Shop
Suggests...
SWEATERS FOR
SCHOOL DAYS
1.00 to 2.95
«tt WOOf
>«» fall ««yl« !»
A bnuhcd wool and plain bcatbrr
effects.
Slip-Die.-
9tjl«.
Lonn-
ileeted.
Turtle or crew mclu or
tipper front)
The kind a "rciralar
fellow" ««n't be without' 4nT«Ue
,Ues — I, « and 8. Blf boys' sites —
U to 36.Boys 'Shop — Third Hoot
Figure On
These
Knickers
Too!
1.00 and 2.95
»IX HWIt. FABKICS: •!»<• CO«-
A DITBOTS AND TWEEDCBOTS.
F«n rat phis-fours.
Mtrtr k«H
cnff«.
Grrr*. Brawn*, tan
a»4
BUTT
effort*.
Good-tooklnc
awl
•eiilet-tUIng: A(tw S t» is.
BoyV Sho|>—Th»r«
Or Trousers
If You Will!
1.95 and 2-95
TTtr.rn«. >«vr WOOL*
I
COH
vrfl-ral.
Wool Jackets
Sum Up
A Need
350
ot XM.W* cixym
rr«. t» »*»»» ««*OTII »f "»*7,
nu. Mtiwn »4 r*« T*« **T
he
wnurtnt
TiM Blm"*t
Ck»
trrm Ifcmot* »«« • «• 1»
Printed Frocks Are
Head Of The Class
Sizes 1
to 14-— 025
C
LEVER, LITTLE STYLES that one
just knoHs will be among the
smartest—and the most practical,
too! Wee frocks in high shades for
"pre-rclioolers." These are straight
line, •-'. -l-sleeved and cunningly de-
tailed. All nith panties (in sizes 1
to 3).
Jean Carol and other frocks
in sites 4 to 14—*ith new, square
shoulder treatments, skirt pleats,
E
uffed sleeves and many "very dif-
srenl" notes. Patterns in prints are
out-of-the-usual; fabrics, fine quality;
styles, ,very pretty on! See them!
CblldiTO'i Section—Second Floor
New Subject to take-
"Twin Sweater" Sets
A SWEATER for whatever way one
•"• (and the weather) feels—or
both, if one will! The set includes
a SLIP-OVER SWEATER irith snort
sleeves and crew neck,
and a matching COAT
SWEATER, long-$leeced.
Smart patterns. Pretty
hand?, one thinks! Site*
.
Children'* S«tlon—Second Floor
8 to 16.
Sweater and Skirt Sets, Too!
PLEATED \tOOI, SKIRTS
SWEATERS.
WITH ENSEMBLING SLIP-O\ER
Skirt* are in plain colors of blue, red, green.
nary and brown.
Sweaters are in no\elty pattern*.
The ideal
school-girl outfit, if eier!
Sir*. 8 Q95 I Size. 12 C()0
to 10— %J
I to 14 — J
CMMra'i Section — Secon4 Floor
Sixes 4
to 6— 2
95i
Notes On Under Needs
CMALL BOYS' VMON SLITS of good weicht cotton.
Short
"^ sleeves. Button down front.
Supporter tab*.
Outstanding
values! Sizes up to 6 Tears.
With French f^^n I w«'n kn«« length
legs—
Oi>C I legs—
SMALL GIRLS' UNION SUITS of fine cotton. Supporter ub*.
French legs.
Sleeveless stvle
C1 I Short-slee^ed «uits
)— r:?A I
(sizes 2 lo 12)
(sizes 2 to 10)
CMIdrttT* Scrtlo
-Second
Simplex
YOUNG KET YOUNG
Always Have A High
Foot Health Report
Writ tain
dnrr-*mt*cith lininft
A of a nnflr lack
5tnttii!r omit
\1adr on fimtth font*
F«ll«f 05 X-rcrv
F\U. P \TTF.RN* I\ RICH
AM»
O X F O R D * *
rile in plain and punched
effect*; rrnnf*t
/-Jfc; ten rlk «ilh
brown trim or »hark«kin tip*, fml-
rnt Irvthrrt.
Shor« one can hr
sure to promote fool health and
proper sronlh during the form«-
tH-e year*.
to
8 — 2.75 to -1.OO
to 12 — S.7.? to 4 Off
to
3 — .?„>« to 4_>0
SIM»
12' 2
MlLLER&PAlNE
JW/f
THE LINCOLN STAR— WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 193$.
Esther Petersen
To Wed William
Bergstraesser
The
marriage of
Miss Esther
Petersen, daughter of C. P. Peter-
sen, and William Bergstraesser, of
Avoca,
will be solemnized at
7
o'clock this evening at the home of
the bride's father, with a double
ring ceremony. Rev. G. Bergstraes-
ser of Avoca, father of the groom,
^^
v^
...sheer, clear
Kiffons
in the smartest
Hosiery shades
for fall:
ROSE DIJON
I p |
...the neutral tone that
ra"
gors
with
every
en- —.—
sembl"
O3C
PONY
...the
deep fawn that * pair
blends with all browns
BRONCHO
SI. 2 5
shade
dark
...the
flattering
to
wear
with
browns
NOCTURNE
...for very dark effects
n-.'lr
P3"
Street Floor
G
....smart
LOVES
In plain and nov-
elty styles. .4 and
5 button lengths
... in slip-on and
m ousquetaire
styles.
Both
brown and black
at
Street Floor.
will read the services in the pres-
ence of fifty relatives.
Before the ceremony, Mrs. A. C.
Kolterman will sing "Because," and
Miss Gertrude Hauschild, accom-
panied by Miss Marlon Hoppert,
violinist, will play the nuptial mu-
sic.
Preceding the entrance of the
bridal party. Miss Dorothy Jean
Hoppert, dressed in ruffled peach
organdy, will light the tapers, and
Joanne LaShelle, in pink organdy,
and Jimmy Petersen, in a white silk
suit, will drop the ribbon streamers
tied with swansonia. Miss Grace
Petersen, sister of the bride, will be
the maid of honor and will wear a
pastel green crepe dress and carry
a colonial bouquet of Johanna Hill
roses. Miss Edna Bergstraesser, sis-
ter of the groom, will be the brides-
maid and will wear a pastel pink
crepe dress and carry a colonial
bouquet of rapture roses.
The bride's gown will be white
triple sheer made floor length and
sh? will carry a colonial bouquet of
white Killarney roses.
William Bergstraesser will be at-
tended by Carl Petersen.
The setting for the service will
be a bank of ferns, palms and tall
baskets with pink and white gladi-
oli at each side of which will be
placed
seven-branch
candelabra
with white tapers.
Following the ceremony, a recep-
tion will be held for one hundred
and fifty guests. In the receiving
line with the bridal party will be
Rev.
and Mrs. G. Bergstraesser, C.
P. Petersen and Mrs. H. Hauschild,
aunt of the bride. Mrs. Palmer Mc-
Grew and Miss Gertrude Hauschild
will invite the guests into the din-
ing room. Mrs. P. A. Diehl and
Mrs. Ray LaShelle of York will cut
the ices the first hour, assisted by
Mrs. Robert Black, Mrs. C. L. Smith,
Miss Gladys Soukup, Miss Gertrude
Krueger and Mrs. R. Robinson.
Mrs. E. H. Hoppert and Mrs. A.
Stubbsndick of Palmyra will cut
ices the second hour, assisted by
Miss Marion Hoppert, Mrs. A. C.
Kolterman, Miss Eva Petersen,.Mrs.
A. B. Cook and Mrs. E. G. Shalk-
hauser of Peoria, 111.; and
the
Misses Margaret Hoppert and Caro-
lyn
Shalkhauser.
Miss
Maxine
Petersen will have charge of the
guest book and the Misses Mary
Kulla and Lois Petersen, sisters of
the bride, will have charge of the
gift room.
MRS. FRANK FULLER TO BE
HONORED AT LAWN PARTY.
Mrs. Frank Fuller, who was Miss
Olivia K. Moudry before her mar-
riage, will be honored at a lawn
party Wednesday evening, for which
Miss Lois Gates is to be hostess at
her home, 3435 C street. Lanterns
and colored lights will be used on
the lawn, where four tables are to
be placed for bridge. Mrs. Fuller
will find her gifts in an improvised
fish pond. Supper is to be served at
the quartet tables, on which pink
and green will be combined for the
appointments.
MISS AILENE NESTOR
HONORED AT BRIDGE.
Mrs. Edward Richardson
enter-
tained at an afternoon bridge Tues-
day at her home. 1647 Harrison
avenue, honoring Miss Ailene Nestor
of Tecumseh, who is leaving to teach
in Chicago. A group of eight Delta
Zeta sorority sisters and friends of
the honor guest were present. Mrs.
Edwin Olmstead received the high
prize and Miss Nestor was given the
guest awai'd. Pink and green were
combined for the appointments.
TO ENTERTAINS FOR
MR AND MRS. GRAY
As a farewell
courtesy to Mr.
and Mrs. W. A. Gray who leave the
middle of September to make their
home in Albert Lea, Minn., Mr.
and Mrs. T. B. Strain are presiding
at a dinner Saturday evening at
the Lincoln Country club. Twenty
guests have been invited, and fol-
lowing the dinner will remain at
the club for dancing.
SKoe Question
for Tall
Is always interesting... when
there are Selby Styl-Eez
patterns from which to make
a wise selection ..
A trim three eyelet tie In
black and broicn kid. Bouie-
rsn] heel. In «l»j 4 to 9.
AAAA to B Trldihs.
On'Danielson
Wedding To Be
Qarden Service
One of the smart weddings ol me
late summer will be the garden ser-
vice at 7:30 o'clock this evening ui
the home of Dr. and Mrs. H. Win-
nett Orr, wXch will unite in mar-
riage their daughter, Miss
Jose-
phine Orr, and Robert B. Danlelson,
son of Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Daniel-
son.
Rev. Dean R. Leland will react
the lines in the presence of one
hundred guests.
The ceremony will be solemnized
beiore the pergola
with a
back-
ground of natural greenery.
Preceding the sen-ice, Miss Katn-
ryn Dean will sing, "Pale Moon,"
and "Drink To Me Only With Thine
Eyes," accompanied by Mrs. Leon
Schoppe, sister of the bridgegroom.
Mrs. Carroll Pauley will play "Vaise
Triste," by Sibelius as a proces-
sional. There will be no recessional,
but during the period of congratu-
lations Mrs. Pauley will play a
group of numbers.
The bridal procession will enter
the garden from the house.
Miss
Marion Helen Jonnson of St. Louis,
a classmate of the bride at Grin-
nell, will be the maid or Honor. She
will wear a floor length frock
ol
peach lace with a wine colored sash
and wine colored slippers. Her arm
aouquet will be of Talisman roses.
The bride, who will »e given in
marriage by her father, will wear a
lovely gown of white satin, its smart
lines somewhat modified by a touch
of quaintness.
The high neck ol
the bodice is fashioned of Brussels
lace, and the
dolman sleeves are
fitted from the elbow to tne wrist.
The skirt is fitted closely around
the hips, and falls with soft grace-
ful lines Into a short train.
She
will carry a bouquet, of white orch-
ids, sweetpeas and lilies-of-tne-val-
ley.
Arthur Danielson, twin brotner ol
the bridegroom, will serve as best
man.
The receiving line following the
service will include the parents ol
both the
bride and
Bridegroom,
and the members of the bridal party.
Mrs. Orr
will wear an
ankle
length gown of dark green crepe,
and Mrs. Danielson will wear blacK
crepe, fashioned on long lines.
The refreshment tables will be
arranged in the east garden, and
presiding the
first fiour will be
Mrs. Robert Harrison and Mrs. B.
P. Williams. They will be assisted
by Miss Jean Towne, Miss Doris
Powell, Miss Margaret Day, Miss
A'Louise Trester, Miss Edna, Eddy
and Miss Lois Erickson.
During
the second hour, Mrs. Fred Shep-
herd and Mrs. F. F. Teal will pre-
side at the table, and will be as-
sisted by Miss Gwenith Orr, Mrs.
Munro Kezer, Mrs. Duane Boulder,
Mrs. F. F. Teal, jr., and Mrs. Ber-
narr Wilson of Omaha.
Assisting with the receiving will
be Mrs. Dean R. Leland, Mrs. Fred
Williams and Miss Jean Whitney or
Omaha. Dr. Grace Loveland and
Miss Mary Eugenia Balz of Omaha
will be in the gift room, and
tne
guest book will be in chrfrge of Miss
Gertrude
Krausnick
and
Miss
Elizabeth Leland.
Mr. Danielson and his bride will
leave late in the evening lor a
noneymoon trip and upon tneir re-
turn will reside in Lincoln.
The
bride will travel in a gray suit with
blue accessories.
Coming Events
KOCIAL CALENDAR.
Erenti Wrdnrtdiy Etrnlni.
Mnrrlnge of Mlm Josephine Orr
«nd
Robert B. Danielson. Kirden, home of the
bride's parent* Ur. «nd Mrs. H. Wmnett
Orr. jioi Sheridan boulevard. 7:30 o'clock.
Marrl'ge of MI»J Esther Petersen and
Wllium Bpr(!strae»ser, home of the bride's
father C. P. Piterten, 1337 Oarfleld it:eet.
^ o clock.
j
Miss Doris Wilklns. and
Miss Marjorle
1 B'rns'.rln. linen shower, home
of
Mlv
Wllkins. 1232 South Thirteenth street, In
honor of Mils Cornelia Oant.
Miss Dorothy Craig, 1330 J street, party,
in honor of Miss Oemldlne Fleming.
Evenlnp bridge for wives of new Comus
club member*. Lincoln hotel, 8:30 o'clock.
Miss Lois Gates. 3435 C ttrcet. lawn par-
ty, in honor of Mrs. Frank Fuller.
Miss Holly Bhurtleff. 4724 A street, din-
ner and ?lumber party. In honor of Misses
Mary and Louise Matteson of Button.
Eventi Thursday Morning*.
South Side »e*lng circle, all day quilt-
ing,
home of Mrs. Fred Knack, 838 Sum-
ncr street.
Events Thursday Afternoon.
Eastridge club, ladles' golf tournament.
Shrine Country club, ladles1 day and la-
dies' golf tournament finals.
CHURCH CALENDAR.
Eventi Wednesday Evening.
East
Lincoln
Evangelical,
preaching
service, 8- District Superintendent E. A.
Jackson
will speak;
quarterly
business
meeting. 9 in church.
Our Savior's Lutheran, social In church.
Trinity Lutheran, Junior Walther league.
7; senior Walther league. 8.
Elm P»rfc Methodist, Fourth quarterly
conference at church, 7:30: Dr.
H. B.
Hess, presiding
Emmanuel Methodist, official board «t
church, 8.
Events Thursday.
First South Lincoln Bible class
with
Mrs.
Meredith, 2340 Sumner, 10 ». rn.
' FRATERNAL CALENDAR.
Events Wednesday Evening.
Lincoln lodge No. 16, K. P., 8, hall, 1210
P street.
GIVING SHOWER FOR
GERALDINE FLEMING.
As a courtesy to Miss Geraldine
Fleming whose n»rriage to Mar-
shall Keyes will take place next
Saturday afternoon, Miss Dorotny
Craig will entertain informally this
evening at her home in the Ambas-
sador apartments. The six guests
are members of a sewing club to
which Miss Fleming and the hos-
tess belonged. The tipie. will be
spent sewing for the bride-to-be,
and with a personal shower, alter
which supper will be served at one
large table. A motif of yellow and
lavender
will be featured in ihe
appointments for the table.
CONGREGATIONAL SORORITY
ENTERTAINS AT PARTY.
Active members of Sigma
Eta
Chi. Congregational girl's sorority.
! entertained at an informal evening
| of games and music Tuesday at the
home of Miss Hazel Meier. 3326 S
street. 'Prizes were awarded Misses
Mary Bannister, Jeannie
Young-
blut. Altheda Swift,
and Flora
Kathryn Ewart.
Miss Ewart ana
Miss Bernice Rundan
of
Wafloo
were out-of-town guests. Twenty-
four attended.
QUILL CLUB HEARS
STORIES BY LINCOLN WOMEN.
A regular meeting of the Quill
club was held Tuesday evening at
the home of Mrs. P. C. Swift 2210
Sewell street. A short story, "To
the Brave, the Fair," by Miss Dor-
othy Thomas, and an article on
Indians in early Nebraska by Mrs.
Fred Easterday were read for cri-
ticism. The meeting September 12
will be devoted to short, short
stories.
ENTERTAINS AT BRIDGE
FOR THREE TEACHERS.
Mrs. Elmer
Blinde entertained
at bridge Wednesday afternoon at
her home. 27000 F street, honoring
Miss Ruth Amen, who teaches in
Hardy this year. Miss Lois Leffer-
dink. who goes to Randolph, and
I Miss Josephine McDermott.
who
I will be on the Marquette
faculty.
i The eight guests were all members
i of Mu Phi Epsilon. honorary mu-
1 sical sorority. Luncheon was served
at small tables.
Mr s.Ray Page
Is Married To
Chris Abbott
Tea Planned
In Honqr Miss
KathrynMurray
In courtesy to her niece, Miss
Kathryn Murray, who is to spend
the winter at the "University of
Wisconsin, Mrs. John C. Thomp-
son will entertain at tea Saturday,
September 9, at her home, 1681
Smith street.
Fifty guests will
call during the receiving hours of
3 to 5 o'clock.
During the
first
hour.
Miss
Barbara Harrison will greet the
guests-at the door and Miss Leah
Carlsen will invite them into the
dining room, where Misses Eliza-
beth Proudfit and Betty Baker are
to pour. In the second hour, Miss
Betty Kelley will be at the door,
with Miss Betty Everett inviting
the group to the
dining
room.
Miss Evesia Damewood and Miss
Marjorle Pope will
relieve Miss
Baker and Miss Proudfit at the
table. Mrs. Thompson
is using
crystal and ivory for her tea table
appointments.
Guests from out of the city will
include Miss Jean Campbell, Nor-
folk; Misses Elizabeth Kelly, Jane
Stein, Imogene Souders and Mary
Donnelly
Robb, Nebraska
City;
Misses
Margaret
Moore,
Tyler
O'Connor,
Madeline
Johnson,
Louise Condon, Harriet Love, Betty
and
Marry
Alice
Kelley,
and
Phoebe McDonald, Omaha:
Miss
Alberta
Gambell.
Des
Moines;
Miss
Marjorie
Pope,
Chadron;
Miss Jean Warfield, Beatrice; Miss
Vera McPherson, Hastings;
and
Miss Jane Von Seggern, Wayne.
Miss Murray leaves September
10 for
Chicago
to
attend
the
Century of
Progress
exposition,
and from there will go to Madi-
son.
—Townsend Photo.
Mrs. Chris Abbott, who
before
her marriage last Saturday eve-
ning in Fremont,
was Mrs. Ray
Page of Lincoln. The bride's moth-
er, Mrs. Isabella Schmitz of Lin-
coln, and Mr. Abbott's two daugh-
ters and a son, were
present at
the service.
Mr. and Mrs. Abbott
and
the
family left immediately for Chi-
cago to attend the
Century of
Progress exposition. They will re-
turn in a few weeks to Mr. Abbott's
home in Hyannis.
H.E.O. Club Has
Family Picnic
A group of forty was entertained
by the H. E. O. club at a family
picnic Tuesday afternoon at Ante-
lope park. The hours were spent
informally, after which ices and
cakes were served. In two weeks,
Mrs. Raymond Rolfsmeyer will be
hostess for the club at her home,
2811
Dudley street.
• • •
Mrs. Carl:ton Wells and Mrs.
Lillian Marget of Fairmont, were
guests of the Loyal club Tuesday
for the regular meeting with Mrs.
W. C. Wells at her home. 926 South
Twenty-second street. Two tables
were placed for pinochle, with Mrs-
Ira Boswell receiving the first prize,
Mrs. William Manchester, the sec-
ond, and Mrs. Harry Bell, the con-
solation. Late in the afternoon, re-
freshments were served. The meet-
ing in two weeks will be with Mrs.
R. R. Eyer at her home, 4302 Hunt-
ington avenue.• • •
Two tables were placed for bridge
Tuesday, when the L. V. club was
entertained by Mrs. H. E. Baldridge
at her home, 2548 W street. Mrs.
T. A. Hickerson received the high
score and Mrs. H. E. Rood, the sec-
ond. Mrs. B. E. Craig was a club
guest. The club meets Thursday,
September 7. with Mrs- Charles
Bowen at
her
home, 2311 Vine
street.
DOBEN BAILEY HOSTESS
IN HONOR MRS. O. L. POLK.
Miss Doren
Bailey entertained
eight guests at her
home.
2975
Holdrege street. Tuesday
evening
to honor Mrs. O. L. Polk, who was
Miss Edna Frick before her recent
marriage.
A
late
supper
was
served at one long table lighted by
pink and green tapers and cen-
tered by a miniature bridal couple.
PRENUPTIAL HONORS TO BE
PAID CORNELIA GANT.
Ill prenuptial
courtesy to Miss
Cornelia Gant, whose wedding is
to be an event of later September,
Miss Doris Wilkins and Miss Mar-
jorie Bernstein will be
hostesses
Wednesday evening at the home of
Miss Wilkins, 1222 South Four-
teenth street. The ten guests will
spend an informal evening, after
which Miss Gant will be given a
linen shower. Supper
is
to be
served at foursome tables, with
shades of blue featured in the ap-
pointments.
ANTELOPE LADIES' DAT
G~LF ATTRACTS MANY.
Ladies day at Antelope club Wed-
nesday attracted a large number of
golfers including Kathro Kidwell.
Margaret Anderson and Mesdames
Harold Requartte Ted Weiderspan,
J. Weiderspan, Florence Myerhoff.
H N.
Remington, Dudley Price,
John T. Kos., B. N. Amspokr.
SURPRISE SHOWER GIVEN
FOR MRS. R. E. MORRIS.
Mrs.
R. E. Morris was honoree at
a surprise shower at her home, 3017
North Fifty-sixth street, Wednes-
day afternoon. Fifteen were pres-
ent for an informal afternoon.
ENTERTAIN IN HONOR
OF GUESTS FROM SUTTON.
The Misses Louise and
Mary
Matteson of Sutton will be hon-
ored this evening when Miss Holly
Kathleen Shurtleff will be hostess
to six guests at a dinner and a
slumber party. Purple asters will
center the dinner table.
LINCOLN P. T. A. PLEDGES
CO-OPERATION WITH NRA.
Support to the national recovery
act was pledged by the
Lincoln
Parent-Teacher
association at a
meeting of the executive council
in the south administration build-
ing Tuesday. Plans were
formu-
lated for a P. T. A. instruction
school to be held at the Y. W. C. A.
September 14, and Mrs. I. O. Lan-
sing was named chairman of a
membership enrollment
campaign,
October 9 to 13.
A jirmciiol Mandnicca Vi*
*lth
cronforlab'e
Iri1h«r hffl Tor vattlng. In
bro»a . . . *!»» 4'j to *
... la AAAA K-idthS to A.
482 Nebraska Couples Married 50
Years or More Seven Months 1933
Thirty-six
couples
celebrating
fifty or more years of married life
in July, increased the total for Ne-
braska
during the first
seven
Brainerd. historian of the Nebraska
Press association. Mr. and Mrs. P.
M. W. price of Lincoln, was the
couple who
had
been
married
jrtrap in crait>in»t!oiw ct
blur*
ro«5r
mS
Wuck
unfl
pttrni
.
.
»na Mart jinmt Jrithfr. A
dlrtlncttre rtj-Jt . . . »t
months of 1933. to 482. according to j seventy years In July. The list fol-
tJic record compiled by Henry A. loirs:
Mr. and Mr*. W. C. "WTiitroorf..
. T>*fl3 C-ity
20
55
Mr. anfl Mrs. O-r:l XcTjk
Waj-.oB
is
M
Mr. and Mrj. wiTJlua Rrotrr
Snrdrr
9*
SO
Mr. Bnfl Mr*. Efl Aldrirh
Ar»p*!ios
30
SO
J-J:T
T*»r»
\!r. nnfl Mr-. SrlpTrr I. Coawr
T»lrn»flsr
1
Mr. nr* Mr* .1 H. fl!rfi
Warn*
1
Mr. »r,fl Mr«. Fritz W^]1I
Omirm
1
Mrs.
. S'37T*TijBP . .
B"rtrpfifl
Tr(rumsfh
FLEMING ORDERS
HEALTH PAY CUT
Salaries of Physicians
To Conform With
Slim Budget.
Mayor Fleming has issued orders
that the salaries of health depart-
ment physicians must be reduced,
effective with the beginning of the
new fiscal year, September 4. The
cuts must be made to bring depart-
mental expenses within the appro-
priation of $39,000.
A tentative schedule of the new
basis of pay has been prepared and
was to have been presented to the
mayor Wednesday afternoon, ac-
companied by a resolution making
the reductions. It shows that the
superintendent, whose base pay has
been $3.000 annually, will receive
$2.700 under the new schedule.
The monthly pay now received by
the physicians after reductions to
balance the past year's budget:
Dr. M. F. Arnholt, superintendent,
$190.Dr. W. M. H. Jones. $104.50.
Dr. L. J. Owens and Dr. W W
Carveth. S95 each
Dr. E. W. Hancock. $76.
Dr. W. A. Campbell. $47.50.
The reductions in the base pav of
physicians other than Dr. Arnholt
will be in about the same propor-
tion. It also was learned that the
number of men on the siaff will be
reduced.
Iowa-Illinois Milk
Producers Given 10
Days to Draft Code
WASHINGTON. Aug. 30 —W) —
Factions representing producers of
milk in the Davenport. la.. Moline.
East Moline and Rock Island. Hi-
areas today had ten days in which
to iron out their differences in a
proposed cede or to present alter- ;
FIFTY ATTEND COl'MTRIf
CLUB LADIES DAY.
Fifty women attended the Indies'
day lunvheon
and bridge
at tilt.'
Lincoln Country club today.
The
majority of the
groups, ns usual,
were foursomes, with now and tncii
an eight some.
MRS.
DILL ENTERTAINS
LA JOIK DE V1K CLUB.
Mrs.
Ray Dill was hostess to Ln
Joie de Vie club at its regular meet-
ins Tuesday evening. High scores
at bridge were made by Mrs. Max
Johnson. Miss Ambqr White, and
Mrs.
Morrell Doran; consolation by
Miss Elsie Anderson. A Ruest of the
club was Mrs. P. L. Evans of Have-
lock. A business meeting is planned
for September 5.
WIVES OF COMUS CLUB
MEMBERS TO PLAY BRIDGE.
Th? wives of the members of the
Comus club will be together for an
evening of bridge this evening at
Hotel Lincoln. Seven tables will be
arranged for the players. Late in
the evening supper will be served
at the small tables. The committee
in charge of the
party includes
Mrs. T. O. Blaschke, chairman.
Mrs.
Don Warner and Mrs. Harold
Van Burg.
Miss Mary Belle FORK 1x
*oon from
her
summer
stay a*.,
Guthrie Center, la.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Taylor ntul
daughter. Beth
Eluine.
returned.
Monday evening from their sum-
mer home
at
Lake
VenniUlon,
Minn. While at the lake they were
visited by their
.sons, Setli C. H.!
Taylor and family and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
John W. Taylor.
Miss Vm-
ettn Long of Lincoln
and
Miss
Margaret Decamp
of
Clearwater
were also summer visitors at the
Taylor home.
i
Mrs.
Nell Smith
and
children.
Oak.
and
Wendell
are
expected
home Friday from a month's stay
nt Traverse City. Mich.. whrr« thfjf
were the Kuests of Mrs. Smith's
mother. Mrs. Sam Smedley.
Miss Irene Flint cnme home last
Sunday alter having visited at the
fair and with friends in Chicago.
A party from Lincoln
who
will
leave l-Viduy to spend some time at
the fair includes Mrs. Grace Ar-
nold. Miss Eloise Keefer. and Miss
Christine
Keefer.
Miss Eloise
Keefer is in Lincoln now. the guest
of her parents. Mr. and Mrs. G. F.
Keefer. she spent the
past
year
at Madison. Wis., where she worked
toward a Ph. D. depree. and will
leave Chicago
for
Milwaukee to
teach the coming term.
<
Personals.
Mrs.
Chris Beck and Richard Beck
left recently by motor for Pocatello.
Ida., where they will be the guests
of Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Pearson and
family for two weeks. From ther?
they will go to Leadville Colo., to
visit Miss Lucile Frazier wfio is
teaching
in
the
Leadville
high
school.
Before
returning
nome
they will also visit friends in New
Mexico.
Mrs.
Walter O. Ernst
and son,
Jack, will spend the week-end with
Mrs.
Ernst's parents. Mr. and Mrs.
George D. Weints at Sioux City.
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Colbert and
daughter, Beverly, are expected to
return Thursday from a vacation
in Colorado.
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Flansburg
have returned from a
six weeks
trip abroad. They traveled through
England, Belgium, Holland, Ger-
many, and France. Miss Clarissa
Flansburg and Charles
Flansburg
returned last Tuesday from a sum-
mer at the Tousands islands.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Williams of
Quincy, 111., who have been
the
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Don Stew-
art left Tuesday evening for their
home.
Mrs. May
Morley. principal of
Prescott school,
will spend
the
week-end with her mother, Mrs. B.
E Watkins at Julian. Mrs. Wat-
kins celebrates her eightieth birth-
day Thursday.
Miss Ruth Pratt is expected
home September 1 from a month's
vacation in Iowa. Illinois, and Cin-
cinnati. Early in the summer she
went to Madison, Wis., where she
was joined for the trip to the fair
by Miss Eloise Spencer, a summer
school student at Wisconsin state
university.
Mr. and Mrs. D. X. Bible and
children returned Sunday evening
from a six weeks visit to the home
of Mr. Bible's parents at Jefferson
City, Tenn. and
to Mrs. Bible's
home at Fort Worth.
They also
spent some time at San Antonio.
They were accompanied home by
Mrs. Bible's
mother, Mrs. A. M.
Rhodes of Fort Worth, who will re-
main here until the Texas-Ne-
braska game, October 6.
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Byers will
leave Wednesday for Nebraska City
where they will make their home.
Miss Frances Drake, and Miss
Bernice Miller will return Septem-
ber 7, from a month's vacation at
eastern
points. Miss Drake has
spent the summer
at
Lexington,
Mich., and
Fletcher's
Farm, Vt.
Later she was joined by Miss Mil-
ler for a world's fair visit.
_
// You Would
• irn/c/i the raw fur market
riiet.
• note the daily adtancf* in the.
tcholciale price nf fur
citalf,
• or compare the. retail price*
in Lincoln icif/i those in the
eastern cities,
Then you
would
• fully realise the lavingt you tenuld
make by the immediate purchase
of a Cadicallader fur coat.
We purchased a great
quantity of
pelts last winter before
prices
sd-
vanced . . . we give you the benefit
ol this foresight now. But soon these
low prices -will be history not to be
repeated for years to come. It is the
greatest opportunity to make a wise
investment you have had . . . that's
why we urge you to BUT FURS NOW.
August Sale Prices
Continue to the End
of Fair Week
Hudson Seal.$175
(Dyed Muskrat)
Alaska Seal..$295
Broadtail $118
Russian
Caracul .. .$135
Muskrat
$ 78
Northern Seal $ 78
(Dyed Hare)
to $295
to $350
to $295
to $395
to $145
to $118
YOU SAVE WHEN YOU
Buy Furs Direct From the Factory
Braver
'.rch
Mr. «n
Mr. urifl Mrs. John MrCOT
Mr. B-rirt Mr«. •„ .1 W Curlspn..
Mr. nnfl Mrs. W. H. Psriln-T ...
Mr. unfl Mr?.. Hrnrv AMnr:am ..
Mr. and Mr?. J»mrs Varcnfrm ..
Mr. anfl Mr*. "W. H. HMTT.T ...
Mr. »~a Mrf. J W. Tennuljrn..
Mr. unfl Mrv Charl't H»r,«*o ..
. .
.
MT. »na Mrs. Jfn« AnStrtrn
Ru-t-.n
«
Mr. *na Mrs Ti Mf'rtiT
Soyfl'r
f,
Mr. »na Mr*. Jolin AnC'rwri
Ctflim*
r.
Mr. »nfl Mrs. C W. MrTrsr*fn
S- Pnul
«
Mr, nrifl Mr*. C. r. TrlmW
fl-)11-
II
Mr. ana Mr«.
Mr urifl Mrv
Mr. «r,1 Mr«.
Mr. ar.l Mr?
Vr. r~.fi Mr'.
Mr. »nS :,^re
?^r. «rn! Mr.'.
Mr. »nfl vr«.
Mr
M-
Vr
Mr. »r« Mis. Oiris
Mr. *-« Mr«. THrn'ir' K'r.Tn
T>-«>>r
Mr. ir-fl Mr«. T. T>. t^~tf.»
.V,::••••;•-
...
Mr
aTK3 M""«. Awv*! A^fi*r*ftTi
.....'Wt'jta
Mr. »ri3 Mrj rr»n.-ij M. TC. FTJer.
L-.n.-oSi
..
rifoTffp Sr>?:«i
:-'r»r' vi'-'i; '.
J H Bntji-.f!!
Ah" S'-imr .. .
F 1 KH-.
»nfl M
«nfl Mr«.
arfl Mr'.
A SB?-..'
»'•:»**
**•(--"*
H i.^No'st
in
.. 12
.'. is
if,
fiO
so
so
Ml
Jlfl
HI
SS
M
i The proposed rode provided for
• an increase In the price t>f milk :
.from 6 to 9 cents a quart with a
price to producers of SI 53 a hun- ,
drcdwcJght.
'•
Durinc rhc hrarinc. R. K. FroTtcr.
' a drpaJltnrnt of acrJr.Jl1iirc wo-
, nomist. demanded that E^ Curtis, j
rrprrtrnlinp the producers, revise;
hw Jieurfis so That producers, lirinc i
far out tvf 1hc arra, would stand on :
a competitive basis with those living i
Americanism: Educating thechil-j
drrn so thtr can be somebody; ;
ranking a near illitcral? amone
lh<~ land's (treat because he has
millions.
HEMORRHOIDS
To immediately relieve tbe it<&-
inc «t>i! «**« the {uin.«fiplT healing
ResinolI
Thursday—Friday—Saturday
1038 O St-Open Saturday 9 A.M.To 5:40 P.M.
For Women and Misses
Spita
Cuban
•«by L.o*t>
Heels
BOYS' AND GIRLS'
GYM SHOES
WQHEI'S MCI SHOES
Soft l»1*ck kM,
arch. a1t«s
!ra»«r fieils.
UN'S lew Brm Qrftrfc
Oun meui with
tsutner and com*.
ao*r«. Alt stew. »1
CUT TnMjl.
flurjbld
»clM. *irM
to 6.
School Oxfords
On Sale
Thursday,
Friday, _^
Saturday ^»—«->
Children's HI 4 UwSlioei |
MISSES' AND CHILD'S
Dress Slippers
Ounmrtal. El* l» •!«•»
15 ';rc* 2.
JE.
lEWSFAPESr
lEWSFAPESr
THE LINCOLN STAR— WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 30. 1933.
FIVE
five Appointed To Pass On Service Men's Cases; Man's Neck Is Broken In Crash On Highway
VETERAN CLAIM
BOARD CHOSEN
Flory, Price and Taylor
To Review Nebraska
Pension Matters.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 30— WPi —
President Roosevelt's
appointment
of a special board to review Ne-
braska veterans' claims has just
been
announced
by Brig. Gen.
Frank T. Hines, administrator of
veterans' affairs.
The
following
were appointed:
Robert Flory of
Albion, G. E.
Price of Lincoln, Frank J. Taylor
of St. Paul. Alternates are: The-
odore W. Metcalfe of Omaha, John
F. Cordeal of McCook
and
Phil
Hall of Greenwood. Veterans ad-
ministration members,
completing
a five man board, both from pes
Moines. are Dr. Albert J. Weirick.
medical examiner:
and
Malcolm
Travis, rating specialist.
They will decide whether veter-
ans whose disabilities are not ob-
viously traceable to actual service
are entitled to compensation.
Every reasonable doubt ought to
be resolved in favor of the veter-
ans. General Hines said in a let-
ter to each board member, written
at President Roosevelt's direction.
He stressed the governments ob-
ligation to disabled veterans and
urged "the most careful
possible
consideration
of
each
separate
claim."
Give Veteran Benefit.
Regulations made recently by the
president strike off
the
pension
list those veterans whose disabili-
ties are not service connected, but
the board is established to consid-
er "border line" cases, where there
is doubt as to the origin of dis-
ability.
"If. in your judgement in any case, you
believe that the condition of the veteran
Is connected 'with the military or r.ava!
service you should continue him on the
rolls." General Hines wrote. "You- find-
ing must not be based on any speculation
or purely sympathetic grounds, but must
be based on ihe evidence of record tefore
you when you make your det3rmination."
He sflid "the burden of proof is on th?
government.
I believe that the roll o!
veterans in receipt of pensions for disa-
bilities Incurred in tbe active military or
naval 5ervice should be an honor roil and
that no man should .remain on that roll
•unless he Incurred his disability in the
line of duty." General Hines continued.
Stewart Rites At
Dorchester Thursday
)—
• A committee representing Thurston
: county unemployed laborers Tues-
day decidad to accept a compromise
offer in a gravel unloading dispute
here.
It was announced that a type cl
unloading machine which will re-
quire the aid of five men will oe
i used
by
the
Yant Construction
i company of Omaha, holder of the
contract.
The
laborers Monday
gave the company a written de-
mand asking that hand labor be
I used.
•
The demands for hand labor on
i the
Decatur - Winnebago
cucoli
i gravel unloading brought an ulti-
! matum from the federal road bur-
> eau office in Omaha that the work
mieht be cancelled completely H
i there was interference with use ot
I machines as
planned under
the
i contract.
The contract is a fed-
I eral one.
MARRIES AT ST. JOE.
(Special to The Star.)
FALLS CITY. Neb.. Aug. 30—
News reached here Tuesday of fhe
marriage at St. Joseph.
Mo., oi
William S. Titus of Falls City and
Miss Mary Prather of St. Joseph.
FINAL BAND CONCERT.
< Special to The Star.)
ALVO, Neb., Aug. 30—Tne Alvo
COrununity band of thjrty-eigct
i pieces, under the direction of Supt.
j Robert A. Quick, gave^the last, of a
j series of fourteen band concerts
ilast Saturday evening in the village
j park. The Alvo merchants treated
! the band members to homemade
i ice cream and cake. Tne band js
! a new organisation and is
com-
I posed largely of school children.
PRESTON FUNERAL.
(Special to The Star.)
| FALLS CITY, Neb., Aug. 30—
'• Funeral services
were
held
at
j Preston Wednesday for Mrs. Al-
' fred A. Draney. 30, who died sud-
denly of
Bright's
disease.
She
leaves her husband and two sons.
Score Governor On Beer
and Fair Board On
Walkathon.
STROMSBt-iG, Neb., Aug. 30 —
Deploring the sale of beer and
declaring the walkathon now
in
progress on the fairgrounds to b:
''detrimental to the morale of the
lair," members of the Covenant
Young People's Bible camp
re-
cently held at Horky's pa-.k, Crete,
has protested to the governor, de-
clai-cd the Rev. Fred Hall, super-
intendent of the association.
Tne
resolutions as adopted by the young
people, follow:
"We do hereby resolve to express to the
sovcrnor oi Nebraska the following mes-
"inaimuch as w* have always enter-
tained the greatest conlidence and faun
In your attitude regarding the prohibition
ls«iie. v.-e now wish to register cur disap-
pointment and disapproval of your indif-
ference and compromising stand in recent
legislation.
"That we deplore the legalization and
,«3le of beer within our state, believing
that it will greatly facilitate the support-
ers of th» liquor interests
In
brincmg
about unrestricted sale of intoxicating bev-
erages with Its train of attendant evils.
-That we maintain that the only per-
manent basis for prosperity and a more
jun social order -cai be attained alone
through
clean
and
temperate
living.
Therefore
we solicit earnestly your co-
operation in prohibiting any further leak-
age in the prohibition dam.
"We hereby voice our resentment and
disgust to the beard of the state fair re-
specting th» walkathon-marathon contest
now in progress on Ihe fair grounds. We
believe that the pagan ethics of this con-
test will be decidedly detrimental to the
morale of the fair.
The end dees not
Justify the means.
We definitely protest
requesting its immediate discontinuance.
RHEA ROUNDS OUT
SUMMER ON FARM
ARLINGTON, Neb., Aug. 30—
Hugh Rhea, former University of
i Nebraska football tackle, has left
! for New York to join the Giants,
professional football team.
Rhea,
i who played last season with the
! providence team, spent the sum-
mer conditioning himself by work-
ing on his father's farm.
FUNERAL SERVICE
FOR W. H. CUSHING
HASTINGS. Neb.. Aug. 30—)—Officials
of the Federal Land bank of Oma-
ha today said the rush of applica-
tions for farm loans under the
emergency farm mortgage act is
being handled here speedily.
Reports fronj Washington today
said that because of the rush most
land banks are offering to return
application fees to farmers until
appraisers are
available,
but A.
Kopperud, vice president
of the
Omaha bank said no fees have been
returned here and that it will not
be necessary to return any.
"Of course we are a few days be-
hind our applications," said Kop-
perud," but we are in better shape
now than at any time since the
rush of applicants began. Our ap-
praisers are doing a wonderful job
in keeping up with the rush and it
should not become necessary to
turn back any applications."
Collision With Car From
Hastings Results
Fatally.
AURORA. Neb., Aug. 30—(AP)—
Don Bearnth. 30, truck driver for
a bakery here, was killed late Tues-
day
when his truck overturned
after colliding with a car driven by
Bert
Nichols,
son
of
William
Nichols. Hastings.
T)ie accident occured six miles
south of here. Bearnth's neck was
broken.
The widow, a son. his mother and
several brothers and sisters sur-
vive
Authorities said no inquest
is likely.
Funeral Services
For Fred H. Howey
Held At Beatrice
(Special to The Star.)
BEATRICE.
Neb..
Aug. 30—
Funeral
sendees
for
Fred
H.
Howey 64, late president of the
First "National bank, were held at
the
First
Presbyterian
church
Tuesday and were largely attended.
The floral offerings were profuse,
beautiful designs being sent from
Lincoln. Omaha and other points.
A number of out of town bankers
were in attendance, and during
the afternoon banks of this city
were closed.
The Rev. Ross McCown delivered
the sermon, and active pallbearers
were Dr. J. W. McLeran. H. L.
Dempster, C. F. Shaffer, D. W.
Cook, H. H. Waite, Homer Reeves,
E. L. Hevelone and John Delehant.
Honorary pallbearers were: Samuel
Rinaker, C. L. Aller. S. F. Nichols,
A H. Kidd Dr. J. C. Waddell. Dr.
F W Buckley, Wallace Robert-
son,
Dr. C. W. Walden, George
Speigel Richard Shaffer, B. D.
Hotchkiss and M. A. Shedd.
SEND CAUSE TO
FEDERAL COURT
Public Service Corpora-
tion Wins Transfer in
Mitchell Case.
SCOTTSBLUFF, Neto.. Aug. 30—
tfp>_The Western
Public
Service
company won an important con-
test in its fight to prevent the i
city of Mitchell
from
acquiring
company oroperties
there
when
three district judges sitting here
yesterday passed the contest to
the federal District court at North1
Platte.
j
The city of Mitchell wishes to,
operate the properties as a mu-;
nicipal enterprise, and had suc-
ceeded In getting
the
Nebraska
Supreme court
to
appoint
the
three judges as a board to hearj
condemnation
proceedings,
and j
determine the value of the plant. \
The company sought to prevent
the board acting.
The judges said it appeared the.
appraisal court has no jurisdiction
to decide whether the cause is re-,
movable, as prayed, and the fed- j
eral court would have to
decide j
that.
If the federal court de- j
cides -it has jurisdiction in the i
case, it will try it. Otherwise the
case will be returned to the ap-
praisal board for hearing1.
The
board will meet again December
11.
WEIGMAN
REMAINS
HEAD OF LUTHER
LEAGUE OF STATE
HASTINGS. Neb.. Aug. 29---Th;'
city of Blair will do its part in the
recovery campaign, ii was decided
last night when by unanimous vo; •
the council adopted the blue eagle
as the city's emblem of work towr.'rc!
better times. All municip:'! r.tiH •:••,;
will be put on the Edison electric in
stltute code as was recommend-':! to
the municipal plants of N;'lv;-. *kn
last week at the meeting of the util-
ities section of the Nebraska l.'.-ajui;
of Municipalities Bt Fairbury.
DR. FARRIXGTOX
r.iri- for Ihr only pair cf
you ui:l rver hnvp To
1* cov.ly--:uid olien
!t is injurious to you!
:i. As everyone knor,.s
«••.—•»
irircs nre rising in all tr-
t'.usmrs r.nd professions—so It w!!l be
to your fidvantapf to cnrp for them.
On*
, Dar
FREE EXTRACTIONS "
With All Better riatei and Brldfework
Loose. Plates Tightened br
Our Clint Tile Method.
CLING-TtTE Pl»te«,
$20 rallies
PEACH GLO PUtei,
S60 ralue
$10
$29.50
Phmit
I B266*
FARRINGTON
Ind Floor l»t Nafl Bank Bidg.
(Hours S t.
• ' "
'
Isun. 10 to
In Brown
Bottles
IS
FIRST
Social Functions At Crete
Continue Through Week-End
this new, 3-times-safer tire!
E
VEST year thousand* of tragic
cases like thete, •ppear ia the
daily aevsptpers.
Wh»t are Ton going to do about
itt Bon tb* risk yourself—or get
b3o»-oD* protection freef
fabric don't separate- Thus blister*
dost form inside th« tire. Blow-
outs axe prnniid br overcoming
tie rtrj coast of blow-onts before
thej
H**i
ia-bd. t
T sad labrlc— rt«r!»
enr »ioci crov mat
BAVG ...•&r»-c-Bt!
What c«wt«< Mvw*
•i<
% speedometer read? 40.
50 and 6P — mile after mile . . . tie
beat inside the tire care*** 'heroine*
terrific- Bobber and fabric begin
to separate. A blister riart* . . .
tr.::er :br irrf •where TTOJ can't
fff
it . . _Aad groin . . . Until BA>"G!
A
The Tray to be «afe i» to make
sure roa get tbi* Lif»-Sarer Golden
P3j Tire. It costs not » pennr more
than standard tires. Pnt a set of
Goodrich Safety SilTertotnas oa
jc*r e*r before it is too late.
Ererj new Goodrich Safety
8Jl~ertOTn bac tbe amazing life-
Sarer Golden PJj-. Thin isTeaiion
resorti terrific beat — robber and
This insignia indi-
cates that The B.
F. Goodrich Com-
complies
irijh the
P r e i i d e n t ' *
blanket eode-
• Here's TOOT chance to be 3 time* safer from blow-outs over
ihe Labor Dav Week-End and ewe money, besides. Take ad-
vantage of this special opportunity to trade-in your old-ftyle
tire* a* part payment on a new set of Goodrich Silvertown*
with tb* faxnoTM Ufe£**er Golden Fly. Don't delay!
CRhTE, Neb., Aug. 30— Mrs.
Homer Osterhout entertained the
O-So-Ga club at luncheon Friday,
summer flowers being used for dec-
orating.
At bridge Mrs. A. p.
Ehernberger tron high award. Mes-
dames Khernberger and D. Glenn
Hutchison were guests.
In birthday compliment to Mrs.
Frank Kobes. the S. O. S. club held
a covered dish luncheon at her
home Thursday. A bowl of snap-
dragons centered the table with
covers for ten. An informal after-
noon was spent and a gift was pre-
sented to Mrs. Kobes.
*The Rebekah kensington held a
family picnic supper at Tuxedo
park Friday. Games and & social
time followed the business meeting.
The southwest division of the
Ladies Aid society of Grace Metho_
dist church held a farewell party
i Friday evening at the home of Mrs.
: M. O. Smith for Mrs. Ray Whitney.
j who will leave Wednesday for her
new home at Boulder Colo. Mr.
and Mrs. John Brauer entertained
| at dinner Sunday noon in compli-
i ment to Mr. and "Mrs. Whitney and.
ithat evening Mrs. E. H. Merriman
i honored, them at dinner.
'
Dinner For Guests.
; Complimentary to Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Atteberry and
daughters.
; Betty Ixra and Belle Marie of Pow-
:eiL Wyo.. who were en route to the
fair at Chicago and who visited
here from Saturday until Monday
with his sister. Mrs. Anna Fuhrer.
brother and sister-in-law. Mr. and
Mrs.
Richard Attrberry and with
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Fraricl. a covered
dish dinner was held Sunday at the
Francl home.
1 Mr. -arid Mr.;. Mark Woods enter-
tained at luncheon Friday, fvr Mrs.
• Lottie Earl of May-wood and her
hostess. Mrs. Susan Hooper. That
f-renlnir. Mrs. Earl left to visit
friends in Dorchester.
i
In honor of her brother D. C.
'Skinner. Cody. Wyo.. who arrived
'Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. John Mc-
Caaeney
entertained
at, dinnrr
Sundav." her parent.? Mr. and Mr?.
Phil Skinner and their daughter
and son-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. F. C.
Bachoritch of Tobias.
In
of thrir birthday?.
Franfc Kt>bps. Ed Do-
v. Edward Plouzck and James
Goodrich
Silvertown
WITH LIFE-SAVER GOLDEN PLY
WE
NEVER
CLOSE llompcs Tire Cs
WE
NEVER
CLOSE
Master Service Statfoa
17th
COLON AND
RECTAL DISEASES
DR. H. C. LEOPOLD
SFECMLJST
SS*-«r: SB.HItr BtTLIHNG
OfT3c» Bran » u S
Hudson and their daughters, and
Anna Mae Hastings, held a picnic
supper Friday afternoon at Tuxedo
park.
Miss Agnes Herget entertained
eight guests at dinner. Saturday
evening
complimentary to Mrs.
Emily Ferguson of Lincoln.
At
bridge, Mrs. Joe Kolarik received
high score, Miss Lucy Parker, sec-
ond high, and Mrs. Ferguson was
presented with a guest prize.
Dr. Harvey McDowell who has
been an interne at the Forsyth hos-
pital at Boston for the past year,
left Saturday for his home at Har-
vard. following a visit with his
cousin and her husband, Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Crawford. Dr. McDowell
graduated from Doane college in
1926.
Back From Trip.
Misses Alice Boekel and libby
Havlicek. Herman Wissenberg and
Joe Prochasta returned Saturday
from a two peeks' motor trip to
the fair at Chicago. Port Arthur.
Canada and Minneapolis.
Dr. and Mrs. Victor Craig of
Denton. Texas, visited the past
week with his mother, Mrs. Jennie
Craig, and daughters.
Mr. and Mrs. John Wielage and
daughter, Verna and son. Charles
returned
Friday from Sheridan.
Wyo.,
where they
visited
her
brother. John Baker. En route Ihe-.-
ivjsit.ed at the O. T. Atteberry home
iat Morrill.
j
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Plouzek and
daughter. Jean, left Sunday to at-
tend the 'air at Chicago.
!
Dr. and Mr?. O. G. Button and
] daughter Lois, of Tacoma, Wash..
:came Friday and visited until Mon-
{ day with "Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
iDredla.
i
Mr. arid Mrs. John Wriss of Bu-
:ft>Td. Wyo_ came Thursday and re-
mained until Sunday with her par-
'ents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Renner arid
i his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ctlo
w?iss.
Mrs.
Carrie Gwian end family
r»tum»d Thursday Jrren Chicago
where they
visJtVd the Arthur
Stoker fam'il- whilr attendinc the
'air. Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Osifrhcnr:.
Dorothy and David, who also vj.s-
3*«3 t.h? Stofrrrx. rrtumrd Friday.
Mrs. Lrona R^t Farr t>f Oiis-
hraia
Crty. OMa.. sprnl ^rvrrsl
days the past wrek in th? horn? oi
Mrs. W. R. Pierre.
Lemrf for West.
On Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. C3ydr
Knisht and children left for a two
weeks' motjrT trip to Denver and
othrr Colorado point*.
Mrs.
Earl Weineart Jeft Mondar
for Hot Sprtr.sp. S. D.. to Tint J?cr
mother. Mrs. William Nrsl'DTj ar.i
her s;.=>r. Mrs. R. S. ClE-r*.
tJ^n
1!. ar^
Mr?
Efl-a-in
E
rrivrn S-jrjtJay 5r"rr; a 'hrr
••;?:t at th? h^TTi*
<••* ir.v
WHY
Mr-
G>-D Or'.-,
sr,n Mr--
R--JT-:-'-:-
wh"r" trifv n-.I; visit thf.r f-r~. r?-
j-
and 'amilv. Mrs, Ma-rthfrja F-jhre:
accomr!a-;?d t-he~ :o Adrian, El.,
• where she will Tint relatives.
THE answer is short. It has a flavor superior
to that of other beers.
Why is it better? Because SCHLITZ scientists
have solved a problem that puzzled the best minds in
the brewing industry for many years. SCHOTZ has
worked out a secret control of enzymes in beer.
What are enzymes? They are mysterious sub-
stances that exist in all living cells. There are many
kinds of enzymes. Each kind has its own particular job.
Some enzymes produce a pure brew and some
enzymes produce a brew which is actually injurious
to health.
Never mind the details. It is sufficient to state
that the enzymes digest the different ingredients until
into solution—which we know as beer. But
— the enzymatic activities must be controlled. How
to control them is a SCHLITZ secret.
You know that any brewer can put malt, hops,
yeast and water together—but unless the enzymatic
action is skillfully controlled the result is a rank,
ropy beer that may produce indigestion or be harmful
otherwise.
But SCHLITZ in Brown Bottles—The Beer That
Made Milwaukee Famous—is healthful, uniform, spar*
kling, brilliant. It is a health giving, predigested food.
Drink SCHLITZ freely. It is good and good for
yon. It is fully fermented at the brewery — it will not
make yon bilious because it is brewed under perfect
enzymatic control. The Brown Bottle protects its
goodness from the brewery to your glass.
By the COM or in the attractive SCHUTZ Handy Six.
Ask your Dealer-
Lincoln Brokerage Co. inc
PbOM BZ242
900 No. ISth St.
In Brown
Bottles
^
^heBeer
That Made Milwaukee famous
iWSFAPERl
SIX
TffE LINCOLN STAR-WEDNESDAY, AUGUST SO, 1933.
HERE IN LINCOLN
Weyant numbing. B6463-— Adv.
Clean cobs for sale. B4757.— Adv.
G«t your new fall felt hat at Lin-
coln Hat Works 1418 O— Adv.
Vacation Time — Add to your va-
cation pleasures by taking The Star
with you on your vacation trip. Call
circulation department. B1234.
Lincoln Man Enlists — Jov
Strong, Lincoln, was s,worn in as an
enlisted soldier at Fort Crook Wed-
nesday.
Girls Aid Seal Drive— Aiding in
addressing of envelopes for
the
mailing out of
Christmas seals at
the Lincoln and Lancaster Tuber-
culosis association office are Elinor
D.
The Lincoln Motor Express, 1828
N St, B5522, operate a daily motor
freight service between Lincoln and
Omaha. They are bonded and in-
sured and their rates include free
packing and delivery.—Adv.
Occupation Tax Paid.—The IJn-
coln Telegraph and Telephone Co.
occupation tax on July earnings
was paid Wednesday, according to
a report filed with the city clerk.
The tax was $696 35, which is one
per cent of the earnings.
Columbus
Dividend—The state
bank receivership division is mak-
ing a 5 per cent additional pay-
ment to patrons of the
defunct
Home Savings bank of Columbus.
It amounts to $3,890. Altogether,
the depositors have now received 40
per cent, totalling $31,120.
Brought to Reformatory— Four
_
Indian youths, Cleveland Priest, Ed
Wv^Malivlomsey/RutVbunniire, Logan, Joseph Bigbear. and Ivan
"'•i'.™ .1
,
r _ j T „,.!,„ rtnvA
Whitewater, were received at the
state reformatory
* LV~~ j
™i ,-r.uo vsinpri at S3! t° serve sentences of one vear each.
^r^akenTrtCho^V^^The quartet w*. fenced from
South Forty-sixth street, Mrs. Paul
W. Jones told police Tuesday aiter-
n°^n. o i t A
- P A vanDoran ' date" of September 12" has been
Not Related - E. A- VanDoran {^^ ^ 'taking
testimony on
Known inai, charges of professl0nal misconduct
against Attorney Roland F. Ireland
of Lincoln embodied in a complaint
filed by form-r Attorney General
C. A. Sorensen before the state su-
preme court. H. W. Baird of Lin-
coln
will preside at the inquiry,
which will be held in courtroom
No 2 at the capitol.
Per.der in Thurston county for
breaking and entering.
Disbarment Case Sept. 12— The
court Tuesday on an internal rev-
enue charge, isn't any relation to
him.
Teachers Meeting—Rural
schsol
teachers will get their supplies for
the coming year at a meeting to bs
held Saturday m Countv Superin- i
tendent Jesse Correll's office. Many .
of the schools in the countv begin |
next week.
Anderson to Speak—Max Ander-! tomobiles and radio equipment for
son,
chairman
of the
speakers
.
. _
bureau for the Lincoln NRA. will
Call For New Bids — It will be
necessary for the city council to
I advertise for new bids on six au-
the police department. The engi-
. neer's estimate of $3,300 was
too
talk before the Kiwanis club Fri- low. After the estimate was made,
it was learned that the price of
day noon at the chamber of com-
merce. A musical program is also
planned.
Tools, Whistle Stolen— Theft of
tools and an automobile exhaust
whistle valued at $22 was reported
to Lincoln police by S. R. Gayton,
Burlington special agent at Fair-
bury. Gayton said the articles were
stolen from a flat car at Fairbury
Monday.
Miller Heads Plumbers—William
Miller was elected president of the
Master Plumbers of Lincoln at their
regular meeting. Other new officers
include Victor Anderson vice pres-
ident; Jack Niblock. secretary, and
A. J. Weyant, treasurer The grouD
sirens, special tires and other ex-
tra equipment had advanced.
Arranges Free Swim — Salvation
Army children will be given free
swims at the municipal pool Sat-
urday afternoon under
arrange-
ments made by Park Commissioner
Oberlies. The children must have
their own suits, and must be ac-
companied by
the
Salvation
note from an Army official.
Seek Divorces—Two petitions for
divorce have been filed in District
court. Perry J Stepney seeks a di-
vorce from Grace Stepney, charging
cruelty. They were married Mav 16,
tr representative of
Army or have a
1921
at St. Joseph, Mo. He asks
approved the new plumbing ordm-
^Glven
Divorces-Two
divorces gj^ as°kl f^^fr™ Mane
have
been granted by District <-"ouse aslc" a °-i'°rce irom mane
Judge Shepherd. Chnstina
Frost
was given a divorce from William H.
Frost. She charged cruelty. She ob-
tained custody of the two sons. Jean
Miller received a divorce from Har-
ry H. Miller on a charge of failure
to provide.
of the son.
She was given custody
STUART
5,000 new facet . . . ncte
actor*!
Startling
in
ttceep!
Dramatic in intensity!
—ADDED—
RUTH ETTING MUSICAL
MICKEY MOUSE
LINCOLN
Mat.15cEve.25c
LIONEL
BARRVMORE
Miriam Hopkins
Franchot Tone
Stuart Erwin
In
.The Stranficr's Return*
OPERETTA AND COMEDY
COLONIAL
Tuesday—Wednesday
FirU Tim« in City!
Blazing a Trail of
Terror Thru the
Underworld!
r»*Va *n6 3. Sri on
•5 LAP DERBY TONIGHT
BEST SHOW IN TOWN
BASEBALL GAMES
AT SEWARD FAIR
SEWARD, Neb., Aug. 30—{&)—
The Seward county fair
opened
here Tuesday with an attendance
of 5,000. More than 400 exhibitors
are showing their wares. A series
of baseball games between women
teams, in which Goehner beat
Beaver Crossing, Middle Creek beat
Milford and Pleasant Dale
beat
Garland, featured the day.
Agreement On Sewer
Repair Is Submitted
A copy of the resolution embody-
ing an agreement between the city
and Sanitary district to share re-
pair costs on the intercepting sew-
er north of the
fairgrounds was
filed Wednesday
with
the
city
clerk by W .C. Frampton, secretary
of the sanitary district board of
trustees.
A provision of
the
resolution,
which was passed by the trustees,
is that the amount to be paid by
the district will not exceed S3.500.
NOW—
Showing
To a woman succes* mean* only
one thing — LOVE!
Dramatic! Romantic! Thrilling!
FAY WEAY
GENE RAYMOND
PITY MEL-/ ""
»"0 LpV E A -O
ANN ;
CARVERS
PROFESSION
Here Are Samples of Damage by Eastern Storms
—(A. P. Photo).
These two pictures provide some idea of the extensive property damage caused by severe storms along
the Atlantic seaboard. Above is a scene at Elizabeth, N. J., taken at the height of the storm there, and' the
picture below shows how a large tree fell on a parked automobile in Washington, D. C.
Use of Bryan's Name
In Fair Walkathon
Was Not Authorized
Governor Bryan made it
clear
Wednesday morning that he is not
sponsoring any of the walkathons
now running near
Lincoln
and
does not desire to have his name
used in connection therewith. His
statement was called forth by an
advertisement which one of these
concerns caused to be
published
designating Wednesday as "Bryan
day."Tie governor's repudiation was
emphatic. He called the manager
on the telephone and notified him
that unless the ad was withdrawn
at once, Mr. Bryan would hold him
personally and legally responsible
for the unauthorized
use of his
name.
"I am not lending my name to
the furtherance of commercial un-
dertakings," Mr. Bryan told The
Star, "and I resent this attempt to
give the public the impression that
I was endorsing something that I
have had nothing whatever to do
with."
Hastings Man Fined
No-Fund Check Charge
Pleading guilty to passing a no
fund check, Jack Burdow of Hast-
ings, was fined $35 in Municipal
court Wednesday morning. Burdow
told Judge John Polk that he gave
Harris-Goar Co.. a check drawn on
a Hastings bank for $34.70 In pay-
ment for a suit, extra pair of
trousers and a hat, Tuesday after-
noon.
Burdow said Ike took the
hat
when the purchase was made but
called later in the afterscca for the
suit which needed alteration.
In
the meantime a report from the
Hastings bank stated Burdow had
no account there. Buraow alleged
that he intended to pawn the suit
for money with which to receive
medical attention for two broken
ribs.
MAT.
lOc RIALTO
NITE
I5c
She Wanted a Man's Freedom—
But Did Not Want to Pay
a Woman's Penalty.
BEBE DANIELS
RANDOLPH SCOTT
BARRY NORTON
Bair Proposes Arrest
Property Owners Who
Do Not Trim Weeds
E. M. Bair, head of the street
department, asked the members of
the city council Wednesday if they
would support an ordinance pro-
viding for the arrest of property
owners who do not keep
weeds
cut.
Bair declared. "Weeds are be-
coming too much of a problem for
the city to handle. The expense of
keeping them cut is prohibitive."
Bair told the council that he has
conferred with the city attorney,
and learned that complaints can
be filed if the proper ordinance is
passed.
NOW— LIBERTY—
ALL STAR CAST
I» « riot of thrill*, cWH» mmd
excitement that irzfl feat*
you brnatUeui
"The
DEVIL PLAYS"
PLUS
"The Three Musketeers"
19C
NEWS
Anytime lOe
Taxi Parking Rules To
Be Relaxed During Fair
For the convenience of state fair
visitors. Mayor Fleming expects to
issue orders to the police depart-
ment that taxicabs will be permit-
ted to park anywhere in the busi-
ness district during the exposition.
They will be required to conform
to the parkine limitations, how-
ever. The order is being issued at
the request of Commissioner E. M.
Bair. head of the street depart-
ment, to whom the taxi
owners
appealed for the ruling.
Eleanor Holm to Wed Singer
—(A. P. Photo.)
Eleanor Holm, Olympic swimming champion and film actress, is
shown in Los Angeles with Arthur Jarrett, a singer, when they filed
notice of intention to wed.
WALKATHON
TONITE— ANOTHER
GRUELLING FIGURE 8
7> « AJ i
ar3 vou«-
15e r«h will admit
ariy to the Wnl^aSh
I
1558 HOURS
Capitol Beach
Harley Drug Co.
Home Owned 59 Year*
NEW
LOW
PRICES
On Standard Brand
Razor Blades
Gillette Blue
Gillette Regular
Valet Auto Strop
Prob'k
Package
e»
*•£**
of
$ NOW A>C
^lOHOwW*
of
Hearings Scheduled
For Reappraisement
State School Lands
Preliminary hearings to gather
data for the general re-appraise-
ment of school lands to be made by
Land Commissioner Conklin under
the legislature's direction will begin
during the third week of Septem-
ber and continue thereafter during
the fall. The schedule to be fol-
lowed for that month was given out
from his office Wednesday as here-
with:
Franklin county—Sept. 20, «t Franklin.
Harlan—Sept. 21. «t Alm«
Purnns—Sept. 22. *t Be»ver City.
Dundy—Sept. 27. at Benkelman.
Frontier—Sept 2«. at StockvlUe.
Gostwr—Sept. 29. at Elwood.
Either Land Commissioner Conk-
lin himself or his deputy.
J. H.
Wehn. will visit these places to con-
duct the hearings in conjunction
with the county boards. At each
place the proceedings are scheduled
to start at 9 a. m. in the courthouse.
County commissioners and super-
visors are allowed $1 a day each
for the time they spend sitting on
school land appra'sals The legis-
lature appropriated $10.000 for all
expenses of the statewide undertak-
ing.School land acreages owned by
the state m the counties named,
and the average amounts at which
they are appraised, are as shown be-
low:
Franklin. «.WS actr*: arerase. »13 91.
Harlan. 4.VJS acre*, arerait*. »17 M
Furaa*. 10.720 acra: »Tera«e. til 73.
DundT. 32.268 aeits; »verairr. «S.«n.
Froouei 21.798 acres: averaft. M 81.
Co*per. 3.120 acres: aware. *l«.28.
Modern Woodmen To
Defer Encampment
OMAHA. AUK. 30—W>—Postpone-
ment of the Modern Woodmen of
America state cncamnment, sched-
uled for KTUK park Sept. 1. 2 and
3. was announced tcxiay following
a special mertms of the state com-
mittee here last n.ght.
"Circumstances over -*hirh we
had no control" was the reason
given by J. E BurtrT, committee
Kcretary. He said It will be held
later In the falL
Chicago Unemployed
Stage NRA Protest
CHICAGO., Aug. 30—(/P)—Carry-
ing placards and banners pro-
claiming their grievances
against
the NRA. a group of about 1.500
demonstrators marched
through
downtown streets today.
The demonstration was orderly,
the marchers keeplnsr unwaverng
lines and shouting with the precise-
ness of s college rooting section.
Their grievance, as manifested by
their placards, was that ths NRA
had not created jobs for the unem-
ployed.
PLAYGROUNDS
AWARDS^MADE
Winners in Newspaper,
P.T.A., Recreation
Contest Named.
Awards in the P. T. A. news-
paper and recreation board back-
yard playground campaign are as
follows:
Playgrounds costing less than $5:
First
place, Ray McCune. 834
South Tenth; second, R. E. Taylor,
859 South Thirty-sixth: third, Kyle
Bayless, 1718 Vine.
Playgrounds costing $5 and more:
First jjlace. Guy Burcham, 2430
South Thirteenth: second, W. G. S.
Cook, 1431
South
Seventeenth;
third. Fred Seacrest. 3045 Van Dorn.
Eight school districts were repre-
sented by contestants who com-
pleted the campaign which ended
Saturday, August
26:
Bancroft,
Saratoga. Park, Clinton, Randolph,
Irving, Sheridan and Prescott.
Medals awarded by the newspa-
pers to winners will be presented
Thursday afternoon, September 14,
at 3 o'clock at the Y. W. C. A. dur-
ing the first meeting of the Lincoln
council of Parent-Teacher associa-
tions.
Judges named for this campaign
were O. H. Bimson, Mrs. H. Chan-
ning Collins and James C. Lewis.
Many Coal Station
Not to Come Under
NRA'
Harm Reveals
Commissioner A. C. Harm, head
of the municipal gasoline and cot.
June
Beet.
1S.JI
1333 1933
Beans
243
350 4.25
Rica
2 45
2 98
3 40
Oatmeal
140
2 00 3.41
Codfish
8 70
8 98
11 W
Cheese
10.65 12 85 11.37
Sugar
4 35
4 64
4 88
Ham
8 23
9 K 8.90
Flout
1 IS
1.48 2.63
Cornmeftl
9f
1 03
1 S2
Bran
37S
.48
.88
Organizations Asked
Submit Nominations
For -New Health Body
Complying with Instructions from
Mayor Fleming and Commissioner
Harm. City Clerk Berg Wednesday
notified organizations which are to
have representation on the public
, health advisory council, to submit
'their nominations at once.
1 When the nominations have b«n
submitted, they will be approved by
1 the city council and the county
commissioners.
Bryan Receives $752
For Young Pigs Sold
Under Federal Program
Governor Bryan's carload ship-
ment of young pigs to the South
Omaha market on Monday netted
him $752, after payment of freight,
commission, yardage
and
other
charges. He received the price of
$7.85 fixed by Secretary of Agricul-
ture Wallace for the lighter weight
animals and $5.85 for the heavier
ones, weights ranging from 50 up
to 95 pounds.
The governor thought there were
182 animals in the lot consigned by
him, but the commission firm's re-
port credited him with only 180.
"I found an item of 25 cents for
'meat fund' charged on the state-
ment.'' he said. "I haven't found
i out mst what that means, but may-
Ib" it accounts for the two missing
! pigs."
The governor added that possibly
the two animals were smothered or
trampled to death in the car dur-
ing shipment, which
would, of
course, preclude their being sold
and counted in.
The freight bill was $22.40: yard-
age. $21.60: commission. $25: feed.
$1.80; and fire Insurance. 30 cents.
South Dakota $500000
Feeder Road Program
Has Federal Approval
PIERRE. S. D. Aug 30-';Tv—Pre-
liminary plans for about one-third
of South Dakota's proposed feeder
or secondary road constmcijon pro-
gram have been approved by a spe-
cial boar dof public works in Wsssh-
; Ington. the <-tate highway depart-
ment announced today
1 The work, designed to relieve un-
employment, tril] cost approxiTnatelv
, £497.000 The procram calls for m-
1 proximate!? IBS miles of grading
, and 199 mile's cf gravel surfacing
in 22 counties.
>
Mixed Dancing
TONITE
Ladirt JOe
Grnllrmrn 25c
Big Dance here Sat. and
Sun.
Nile
Eu« leaves "0 and O »t * o'cl
Sjntfay M :*
A3-n 25c each.
O.-nc ng Free
Announcing
THE OPENING OF
PLANET
MARS
On West P St.
Corn Crop Maturing
Fast, Average Yield,
Says Iowa Director
DES
MOINES. Aug.
30— •>?"—
Iowa's corn crop as a whole is not
far from the average of the last 10
I years in productiveness r-nd further
i ahead than usual as to maturity.
I Director Charles D. Reed of the
J state weather and crop bureau re-
I ported today.
i Corn made satisfactory prepress
toward maturity during the week.
he reported, but is premstarelv dry-
Ing up In several areas where Hie
rajnfaH Uuough the season has
been persistently deficient.
Claim Board Plans
To Meet Next Week
KEARNEY. Neb, Aug. 30— '/P—
Robert Finn- of Albion, a
ni 1hc Nebraska vcttrans
board, said today that a
probablv would be held at the Vet-
erans hospital
in
Linrotn
next
Tuesday. The board wll] tlr-n or-
ganize 'and agree on procedure It
will pass on doubt lul
disability
cases.
About People
i
Mrs. Mary Pleswnan. 75. of Crete.
was brought to Or. A T BftllcV*
sanatorium Jatc Tuesday afternoon
JOT m-a ".menl of a fractured shiul-
d*r •Rhufi .she r»celv«sJ stm* tlm"
s>s are
planning a Inp to the
Chicago
world s fair n»xl wrefc under the
auspices ol the local Y M C. A-
j and WanJ M Gray.
TCTJ are ex- I
pectctf to b* to ttoe party.
1
GARBCTS GREAT TRUE
STORY BEGINS FRIDAY
TWO MILLION COPIES OF
TRUE STORY MAGAZINE
NOW BEING RUSHED
TO DISTRIBUTORS
•
EIGHTY THOUSAND DEALERS READY FOR SALE
W
HAT is there about this
strange and silent woman
that will send sixty million people
throughout the civilized world to
the picture shows to see her act?
What is there that will start sixty
million discussions whenever she
acts?
We begin to understand for the
first time, when we read the true
story of Greta Garbo and the true
love story that has been woven
through her life, the decisions she
has been forced to make. And
then we understand what all the
argument is about.
We begin to see how the ex-
perience of this woman parallels
the experience of millions of other
women throughout the world.
We begin to see that the decision
she made is the decision that mil-
lions of others have to make.
For this is no idle expose
from Hollywood. It is thoughtful,
powerful, stirring drama that goes
deep/into our lives, especially
into the lives of the millions upon
millions of everyday women who
have had plenty of talent for the
making of a career and who have
had to surrender that talent to
the making of a home.
Garbo has no children. She
•will probably never have any
children. Garbo has no home.
She will probably never have any
home. Here is a great human
document, as deep as life itself.
True Story Magazine, contain-
ing the first chapters of this great
True Story will be ready on Fri-
day, September ist. Better tell
your dealer today to hold a copy
for you when it comes.
At Hardy!s
Term* are Now as Low as $1 a Week
on These Fine New
IPHILCOS
Console Model
$3995
It has everything you want in
a radio! Genuine electric dynamic
speaker, 4 point tone control,
Pbilco patented
full
floating
chassis, illuminated station re-
cording dial, automatic volume
control.
Gets police and airplane calls
clearly.
All put up in a band
rubbed walnut cabinet 23'4 in-
wide and 39"i inches high. For
only S?0 "5.
Compact Philco
$1g75
A genuine Philco superhetero-
dyne, a new small, compact built
to conform to Underwriters' Lai>-
oralories Safety Standards. Sur-
prising selectivity. Gets all police
calls, many amateur and airplane
shortwave broadcast*
Save $10 By Buying Your
Philco Car-Radio
Only while tie present stock of Pbilco
automobile radios la*ts can we »el1
tfcesi at ttii* price. The next thipment
will nave to sell at $49 »5, no buy VWITU
BOW! Marvelous selectivity. Can b»
installed hi any car
Ask lo !«- 't
here!
now!
$39
195
Other* Priced Up to $125
wESTABLISHED
IS7I
GOOD FURNITURE
.NFWSPAPF.Rf
SFWSPAPFRI
THE LINCOLN STAK—
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1933.
SEVEN
ROOSEVELT TO
END VACATION
President
Cleans Desk
After Relaxation of
Gold Embargo.
|
Ready to Sign Code of
Soft Coal; To Name
,
Oil Committee.
i
HYDE PARK, N. Y., Aug. 30—)—De-
layed Chinese advices from Cheng-
tu, capital of Szpchwan province in
western China, today said 100 per-
sons were killed and considerable
property WES destroyed August 25
when an earthquake shook Chengtu
and the surrounding territory.
AGREEMENT COMPLETED.
LONDON, Aug. 30—(INS)— A
political and economic agreement
between Italy and soviet Russia has
been completed and will be signed
within a few days, it was staged in
a Central news dispatch from Rome
today.
Only
Huey Has $1,000 Offer]
'
To Sit at Coney Island
as Great Freak Exlubit
NEW VORK. Aug. 30—(INS> —
Huev Lore can ha\e a new job
if he wants it.
I
Dsclwms the flame-thatched U.
S senator from Louisiana by vir-
tue of his "recent pugilistic activ-
ities" may claim to be "the most |
picturesque man in Amcnca." the •
management of Coney Island's Luna
park tcday sent
a
telegram to
Huey offering him Sl.OOO nichtly "to
appear as a freak attraction at
Lura park ~
Bert Xevms. spokesman for the
park
management, ceclarrd the
offer ^as made in pood faith.
'\Va brlicvc" he ??.id. 'net as
jrrrl? cor.rrrr.?d *Jih co'or but as
ti\v-«-cs rn<-n co::crrn offrr JT>U $1.000
r:cji:"v :o s^prar as a fr^ak n'trac-
•-"n at L .na par1:. Conry Island
W.T nrrrot^ricc w r?;~cl-on Iminc-
c vr^v.
CALL MO\EY^RATE
RE HIT ED O.V A. 1*.
STOCK EXCHA\GE
NF/A' YORK. .Vic "ft- • Af—Car.
irTT on I'T- Xf-T "i orlt 5t, the Golden State Limited lav
today, mute evidence of the trag-
edy which took eight lives and in-
jured more than two score.
Repair crews waited for abate-
nent of the torrent to salvage the
,'iecked can and repair the bridge
,hile a board of inquiry was called
o
investigate
Tuesday's
early
.loraine wreck. The board will be
smposed of railroad officials and
members of the New Mexico state
orporation commission.
Physicians cared for absut 35 of
he injured here in hospitals or ho-
el rooms.
Most of those able to
ravel left last night for the east on
\ special train made up here and
outer! via Dalhart, Tex.
Two Victims Unidentified.
The revised death list, with two
ctims still unidentified
C. J. Croft, engineer, Tucumcari.
James Randall, fireman. Tucum-
Tl.
W. H. Varley, Qumcy, 111.
Mrs. Varley.
F. D. Cook. Southern Pacific em-
"Icve, El Paso.
Sister Mary Cecilia, Tucson. Ariz.
Two unidentified women.
Of the injured, Sister Mary Rosa
of Tucson. Ariz, was not expected
to live. She suffered a skull frac-
ture, severe cuts and
was badly
scalded.Train Moving Slowly.
The train was proceeding slowly
about iie miles from here in a
heavy rain. Then, as survivors tell
it, there was a sudden lurch as the
engine and five cars of the eleven-
coach tram toppled
off the trestle
and piled up in the torrent. The en-
gine was buried deep in mud and
water.
Screams of the injured and dying,
prayers and curses mingled in the
darkness and confusion as terrified
passengers sought to escape. Chaim-
cey Depew, conductor of the train,
escaped from
one of the
rear
coaches which had remained safely
on the track and made his way
Troop 41 Wins Boy
Scout Swim Contest
1
Nearly 80 boy scouts took part m
the first
swimming meet of t"e
J Lincoln scout aiea Tuesday night
| at the municipal swimming pool.
I
Troop No. 41 won live Hist places
in the nine events, and was second
i m two others
Second place went
I to Troop No. 11, Troops No 5 and
j No. 14 being tied for Uiird place.
Eight troops were entered.
I
B. B
Dawson, scout executive,
said it is planned to make the meet
i an annual affair.
He was director
I Tuesday night.
The
troops win-
ning first, second and third places.
1
Dnlng—41
11 and 14
|
50->ard backstrokt—41. 48 and 11
Head carry Hie saMng—11 41, and 14.
Sjrlacc dne—41, 5 and 56
Tug of war—41 56 and 14
Scissors kick—5. 14 and 18
50->ard breast •st-okc—41 14 and 11
lOIMard free st\le- 11 41 and 5.
200-jard relav -13
18 and 5
The swimming judges were W A.
Day,
Fred Easterday, Otto Brink-
man and Alex Wekesser. Fred Eas-
terday was scorekeeper. Fred Davie,
jr. starter; John Marrow
timer,
and Bernie Masterson. John Mar-
row, and
Fred
Davie, jr., judged
the diving.
The event closed
the
summer
swimming program of the scouts.
As soon as school opens, the winter
program will be started in trie high
school tank.
CITY PREPARES
FOR STATE FAIR
through the storm, over rain-soaked
roads, to summon aid from Tucum-
can.
The concrete and steel bridge, 100
feet long, spanned the arroyo at a
point where the bed is approximate-
ly 40 feet deep. Residents of the vi-
cinity said a wall of water about 30
feet high had swept down the ar-
royo. after a cloudburst in the "Mal-
pais" — badlands — upstearm. Un-
known to the engineer the eastren
section of the bridge had been car-
ried away.
All Street Lights To Be
Burning; Post Safety
Instructions.
Every street light in Lincoln will
be burning and every stop button
that needs it will be repainted be-
fore the gates to the state fair
open
Sunday morning, Commis-
sioners Paul W. Doerr and E M
Bair,
promised
Mayor
Fleming
Tuesday.
To fulfill their promises,
both gave orders
at
once
that
sunejs be made
and
the work
started.
"We want the city to be clean
and bright for t~Jr visitors," the
mayor declared. "New lights will
aid guests dm ing at night"
Five hundred
placards
of in-
structions "for public safety" are
being posted in all parts of the
city by the chamber of commerce
as a reminder of cautions to be
observed during
the
fair.
The
following points are emphasized.
Visitors should constantly carry their
\isiting and home address on a card on
their person- men should not carry Bal-
lets in hip pockets nor should am one un-
necessarllj expose their money in public,
Msitors should get all information
from
reliable sources, no one should lea\e ihelr
I home without someone left
in
charge,
strangers should not be permitted to enter
a home under any pretext
Walter Whitten, chamber secre-
tary, reports that
guidebooks of
Lincoln will be placed
on street
corners during fair week for the
benefit of visitors.
Driver Is Accused
Of Causing Death
OMAHA. Aug. 30— W-Charges j '££ accident near" T»ere" "Sunday
of causing death while
speeding I night In which Raymond Soren-
and falling to observe a stop sign i sen. farm hand, was killed.
have been filed by County Attor*
ney Bcsl against
Henry
PeUrs,
Millard. as a result of an automo-
VETERAN IS DEAD
HEBRON, Neb., Aug. 30—Harvey
M. Morgan, 90, of Belvidere. died
Monday at the Soldiers' home
in
Grand Island. He was a civil war
veteran, having served In the Illi-
nois
infantry.
Funeral
services
were held at the Methodist church
of Belvidere today. He is survived by
a daughter. Miss Bertha Morgan of
Belvidere, and
a son, Earl of
Omaha.
Borah Will Campaign in
Colorado Against Repeal
DENVER, Aug.
30— (INS) —
United States Senator William E.
Borah of Idaho will speak in Colo-
rado against repeal of the prohibi-
tion amendment, Rev. R. D. Dex-
heimer.
superintendent
of
the
Colorado Anti-Saloon league, an-
nounced here today.
The exact date of Senator Borah's
appearance in Colorado has not
been set. but it will be sometime be-
tween now and the repeal election,
to be held on September 12.
,
FOR YOUR CHOICE OF
23 Women's Silk Dresses
2 Women's Coats
Sizes 12 to 20—Values to $19.50
A Sale for Larger Women!
165 Nelly Don Dresses
Mostly 42 and 44 Size
1.95 and 2.95
Dresses 79° *f
rORHBttyARMSTRONGS
CHICAGO
WORLD'S FAIR
EVERY FRIDAY,
SATURDAY, SUNDAY
Tickets good on all train* in com-
fortable coaches and chair car*.
10 DAY RETURN LIMIT
Similar low fares to Chicago
all points in Iowa and flihr
T^" la,-/ i «-<• call jians
v.a:a{)> K'. si -IOTT an official JlR-
l> a:
of ^r<- •pr c*ril for
v>rr- iim*. a" i -> ,r , ->f stork rx-
TT.f r"s ra*/- c >i * rrrc "Sj'Ti Ihe
''S^ifT' 1~~r o! <"frij' ,,"~r
Roca Fccdfr Gets
$6.35 Top at Market
Ira 3>eals. tior^ i^y
lAnoed
yards Tn-f-lar.
cording to officials there.
'•SPAPLRflfiC
Also—Every Day
CHICAGO
with 16 day return limit
Good in coached and chair cars, also in sleeping
and parlor cars with
25% reduction in sleeping car rates
Tickets with longer return limit at slightly
higher fare*.
_
Go by Train — Enjoy the Fair
Safe, fast, comfortable and economical. Arrfr*
rested, ready to enjoy its marvelous sights and
attractions — avoid delay and congested street*.
•W fmntur Smjotmutitm mfply to
m KMNGTOV ROt TF
^ ROCK ISLAXD UXE5
CHICAGO * NORTH WESTERN BY.
3J» S. JStS St . rSJOt* B-21C4
OR AT STATIONS
TRACKS
UIRT'SOOT* GRIME
NOT THIS WINTER
ilr iiwi *uiaJ(
NRTURRlGfU
TRACKS.
basement.
. TRACKS . .. TRACKS ... from attic to
On the rugs; the kitchen linoleum; the tiled bathroom
floor; everywhere, appear mysterious, sooty footprints to
disfigure and mar.
Why put up with these annoyances cdming from old-
time heating methods again this winter? Natural gas
heat erases them for all time.
Drapes and curtains remain fresh all winter. Hous clean-
ing is easier. Laundry bills are lower. Living standards
are higher. Homes are more modern.
Make up your mind now to free yourself and family from
furnace slavery forever.
Install Natural Gas heating. It
is the ideal fuel for comfort, health and economy. Ask for
full details about our second great Master Stroke term
plan.
cheery and pleasant is the home where Natural Gas is the
heating fuel.
ChilK and drafts snd all the Jiscomforts of 1he old furnace, are
exchanged for a "M-ipic Man" who tends the furnace and guaran-
tees comfort and vamilh all hours of 1h*> dav or nclil.
Yorr>s>1ers ejijov1 il hi ^au^c tho healthful, even temperatures make
it s.Tfe to play where th'y <-hoo«p. The coal l>in Ivconus a co?y
pi-".; room or home vrork«hop.
jjlf A CAS BURNER
\f hll-rsi for uour present furnace
Tkto Itmrmrr •vrtll fit prtrtlcaHr rrnr fr*e •' 1arm»ff «
keattav »!•»«- ttncvr fcararrn for larcrr tmnmtr* and 0tkc
U»«» of hc*«tBc »I"»t« •!•* •Tillable at proportloufcly lot
price* m« terms.
in
i*1
for a
An au
ifiT, m ti i <~ h Tnil
maintain Ihr corr«"-t
1"-"1 nT T*-"«'li. '•Van
atlns: r>an at all tlnv*.
IOWA-NEBRASKA LIGHT AND POWER COMPANY
Approved appliances may also be purchased from ether reliable dealers In this community
MAOICMAN
NEWSPAPER!
EIGHT
THE LINCOLN STAR— WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 193,1.
THE LINCOLN STAR
Entered at Ih* postoffic* In Lincoln. Ncbraslo. M lecond
matter toe transmission through the malls.
published dally and Sunday by The Star Printing Co. of
Lincoln. Nrb.
FRANK D. THROOP. Publisher and General Manager.
J. E. LAWRENCE. Editor.
WALTER W. WHITE, Advertising Manager.
O. E. JERNFR. Circulation Manager.
MUllI, SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
(Within Nebraska and Northern Kansas.)
Six
Three
One
Mo.
DOc
80C
4Sc
Year
Mod. Mos.
Dally Without Sunday
< on
2.25
1.25
Dally With Sunday
6.00 3.25 1.75
Sunday Only
2.50 1.50
1.00
(For points outside Nebraska and Northern Kansas.)
Six
Three
One
Yrpr
Mos.
Mos.
Mo.
Daily Without Sunday
7.00
3.75
2.00 75c
Dally With Sunday
9.00 4.75 2.50 90c
Sunday Only
400
2.25 1.40 50c
BY CARRIER IN LINCOLN.
Bvenlng and Sundny
80c ppr Mo
Evening Only
50c per Mo.
Sunday Only
10c per copy
In ordering char.Ro of address always give old as well as
new address.
(All
mall subscriptions payable In advance.)
PHONE —ALL
DEPARTMENTS —B1231
The Assoclatfd Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for
republlcatlon of all news dispatches credited to It or not other-
wise credited to this paper, and also the local news published
therein.
All rights: o? republlcatlon of special dispatches herein are
also reserved.
The Star will not knowingly publish any misleading, fraud- |
ulent or questionable advertising or any advertising reflectlm
upon any race or creed.
CREDITOR AND DEBTOR.
T
HERE is woeful ignorance reflected in the belief
that a wide gulf extends between creditor and
debtor. Actually, there is a mutual interest between
them—assuming, of course, that both are honest, that
the creditor asks only what properly belongs to him
and is seeking in no way to gain an unfair advan-
tage; and that the debtor likewise is intent upon dis-
charging his just and legal obligations.
So frequently in these trying years, the fate of in-
dividuals would have been different had there been
an appreciation and a realization of the facts and
of the decencies by both.
In South Dakota, near Millbank. a deputy sher-
iff, John Nord, was beaten by a crowd attending a
farm foreclosure sale Monday. It is not a new de-
velopment, but it goes directly to the heart of one
problem as yet unsolved. For the next year and a
half, the vast burden of farm indebtedness must be
readjusted and placed upon a new basis. There will
be more and more of these disturbances, more and
more flouting of the law, more and more useless and
futile sacrifice, unless leadership and public opinion
step in to clarify the situation. We say this because
until now in a large number of cases, the debtor was
granted a moratorium by the honest, fair minded
creditor. There has been no disposition to push col-
lection, to insist upon settlement, to proceed under
the foreclosure law in thousands of cases literally.
It is true there have been foreclosures, more of them
perhaps than
circumstances warranted.
But the
creditor who has been fair, who has been generous,
who has shown no inclination to push his claim,
can't be expected to continue indefinitely along that
line. There is coming a day when he is going to
demand that his debtor arrive at an understanding
with him, and it is in the knowledge that that sit-
uation is approaching, that this is written.
• * *
A
S TO the mutuality of interest of the honest
creditor and the honest debtor, there should be
no dispute. It is to the benefit of the creditor that
his debtor be in a strong financial
position; that
every encouragement and hope be given the debtor,
to enable him to place himself upon a sound finan-
cial footing, in order that the debtor may meet his
obligations at the time and in the manner specified
in the contract. It is a dishonest creditor who loans
money in the hope it never will be repaid, so that
he himself may seize the property offered as securi-
ty for the loan. A good many debtors seem to think
that type of creditor is in the majority, but it isn't
the fact nor the truth. It is to the advantage of the
debtor to meet his obligations in the manner he
pledged himself, for in that way, he acquires the
standing, the reputation, the confidence most sought
for In American life.
The great trouble between creditor and debtor has
come from an attempt to substitute the morality of
legislation for the inherent decency of human na-
ture. We have tried to rely too much upon law and
too little upon human beings.
We have tried to
make the law do what individuals will not, and
while that principle may apply in suppressing crime
and lawlessness, it will not
extend to the
realm
where the rules defining contractual obligations and
property rights have been determined specifically by
constitutional provision and in unvarying interpre-
tation by the courts.
• * *
FB*O MEET the farm debt situation, congress passed
M. three separate and distinct pieces of legislation.
It first enlarged the authority of the federal farm
banks to expand its credit facilities.
It then pro-
vided avenues whereby the borrower might secure as-
sistance through other governmental agencies. Fin-
ally, by amendment of the bankruptcy law, it ar-
ranged for the appointment of a conciliator in the
case of hopeless indebtedness to enable debtor and
creditor to arrive at an agreement. Except in the
instance of bankruptcy, all of the
legislation
was
purely voluntary and not compulsory.
Even under
the conciliatory plan, it is doubtful if the creditor
of which he had been an inmate since his earliest
recollection, there has been nothing of that tender
affection expected by mothers and sisters.
It is complained that the boy is vain, cold and
independent, the truth of which charges would not
be at all surprising. Self-reliance and
self
suffi-
ciency are the natural results of a life such as he
has lived, and it is a fact known to all observers that
older heads than his have been turned by the sud-
den and unexpected smiles of fortune.
At best the taking of the youth Into such a home
must have been an experiment. The Paterson fam-
ily evidently expected something which the boy was
unable to give, and the members are disappointed
and disillusioned. They hoped for a replica of the
drowned boy, and Pete couldn't make good. Maybe
he didn't care to. Perhaps he is just as badly dis-
appointed as were the wealthy people with whom he
went to live.
But because he failed there by no means indicates
that his life will be a failure.
He evidently has a
mind of his own, and if he is also blessed with ini-
tiative, energy and a sense of fairness and integrity,
he may in the end prove to be a greater success than
though he had continued to bask in the luxury that
was so unexpectedly thrust upon him.
In the first round the government scored its first
victory. Insull's arrest at Athens was held legal.
Slowly but relentlessly the law will move against him.
It would have been better had he faced the con-
sequences at the outset, and endeavored to establish
his innocence.
FACING THE MUSIC.
H
AD Samuel Insull been inclined to face tho mu-
sic, he would have saved himself a great deal of
trouble. He now is confronted with the second at-
tempt to extradite him, and to return him to the
United States to stand trial in connection with the
failure of some of the companies interwoven into
his once gigantic industrial empire.
The man who once was voted Chicago's most val-
uable citizen had a shining example to aid him in
determining his course of action. Before he fled to
Greece, and its protecting arms, he
should have
pondered over the case of Blackmer, the oil magnate,
involved in the disclosures centering around the Tea-
pot dome scandal. Mr. Blackmer was wanted only
as a witness, but refused to accept subpoenas. The
government, kept on pounding away at him and,
while it did not succeed in procuring his return, it
made things so thoroughly disagreeable that more
than once, it is to be imagined, Mr. Blackmer wished
he had come to his native land to testify.
No man desires the role of exile. There is a time
when he wants to return to his home, to his friends,
to familiar surroundings. That will De the case of
Insull. He is gambling on a country's forgetfulness
and forgiveness, but at best, it is an uncertain gam-
ble.
The sensible thing for Samuel Insull to have
done, protesting as he has that he was innocent of
any wrong doing, was to have sailed from Europe to
this country, and to have faced his accusers.
THOUGHTS OF A CASTOFF.
was a day whe'n the New York
Giants
TI pointed to Bob O'Farrell and boastfully said he
was the best catcher in major league baseball. That
was some time ago. O'Farrell now is nearing forty,
has been up and down the river a good many times,
his batting eye is no longer as keen as it was, and
his throwing arm does not possess the snap and
whip it did.
The Giants let him go—to St. Louis, where he pre-
viously had played.
In New York last Monday, O'Farrell walked up to
the plate, twice smashed the ball into the faraway
stand for home runs, and virtually
defeated the
Giants single-handed at a stage in the pennant
fight, when games won or lost mean everything.
A baseball player wouldn't be human if he did not
get a certain amount of pleasure out. of pummeling
a club which had set him adrift, and most of the
athletes earning a living in professional baseball are
intensely human. We've often
wondered what a
castcff thought when it came to measuring bats with
the club which let him go. At any rate, O'Farrell
can supply the answer, for he evened the score with
his old management beyond question.
O
AN OBJECT LESSON FOR ALL BUSINESS.
INE thing that has forcefully
impressed itself
upon the mental consciousness of the American
people is that when a big life insurance company
gets into financial difficulties the policyholders do
not, as a. rule, suffer any substantial loss. Usually
some other company is prompt to step in and take
over the business, assuming all the liabilities for the
sake of the assets and revenues that go with them.
In the case of the Missouri State Life at St. Louis,
now in the hands of the Missouri insurance depart-
ment, a former well known Nebraskan heads a new-
ly organized company which has offered to do this.
It is to be capitalized at $2,000.000. most
of the
money being furnished by an eastern
investment
trust. This assures the enterprise of adequate finan-
cial backing to safeguard the interests of all policy-"
holders.
There is a cogent reason why the life insurance
business possesses sufficient vitality to survive when
one of its vehiciles is wrecked. The laws of all states
require companies engaged hi it to secure licenses
and forbid their engaging In cutthroat practices and
ruthless price competition.
In other words, they
are restrained by statute from doing what would en-
danger the reserves they are compelled to maintain
for paying losses on policies.
were unwilling to accept the terms, he could be pre- I It is impossible, of course, to prevent occasional
vented from ultimately taking possession of the land, failures in the insurance field brought about by mis-
It is a conciliatory spirit which is needed most ur-
gently, and that can be developed only through per-
sonal contact of the creditor and the debtor. Let the
management, lack of foresight, or plain rascality on
the part of responsible company officials. However,
when a failure does occur, the reserves are usually
latter refuse to deal with the former, and a situa- | sufficient to make it worth the while of some other
tion arises which in the end will mean the loss of i company to step in and assume responsibility to poli-
the farm home under debt. To avoid it. let the I cyholders.
debtor talk to his creditor, let him outline his posi-
Other lines of business might find it profitable to
tlon frankly, fairly, and honestly, and then let both examine into the way the life insurance business Is
of them in a spirit of decency and justice try to fig- organized and conducted with a view to attaining a
are out how what appears to be a hopeless muddle similar status. This is substantially what the van-
can be untangled.
ous NRA codes are intended to bring about—an end
We know of one instance in Lincoln where a man *o vicious trade customs, the selling of goods and
has brought fresh hope to hard pressed debtors be- ' services below cost., and the payment of starvation
cause from out of his hurried routine of business af- j wascs to overworked employes.
fairs he was willing to sacrifice his own energies and
To destroy competition would not be desirable, and
strength to aid them in reaching a settlement with lna* is not the aim of the national recovery plans,
their creditor. He is a man of years of banking ex- T"6^ $°»1 is 10 put competition on a rational basis.
perJence. He is a kindly being, a fair man. a man Employers who deal fairly with their employes and
to command widespread respect for his integrity. | *he general public will not raffer a handicap in the
Knowing what he has done, knowing that there are struggle for business against unscrupulous rivals,
many men in numerous communities so public spir-
ir 3ifr insurant* companies were not prohibited
ited. so thoroughly concerned wiih the welfare of In- i °~ Jaw from cutting rates below the established mor-
dixlduals and of localities, that, without thought ol ' la^ty tables, their reliability would suffer and the
compcnsaljon. they are willing to do what they can public would harp lew assurance of
icetti'-.g its
to aid in the farm debt, situation. It is conciliation money's worth in the form of protection. In the mad
embodying careful thought and study and a spirit scramble that would ensue, reserve funds would be-
ef decency and JuMicr which will straighten out this «>rn? impaired and when a company collapsed its
Everyday Questions
I—-
ANSWERED BY
DR. S. PARKES CADMAN
(Copyright, 1933, New York Tribune)
PARAGRAPHS IfBuritess Bedrime Stories
Question! from Lincoln Star readers are answered dally by the Rer. Dr. 8.
Parkes Cadman, of the Federated Council of Churches of Chr'.st In America.
Dr. Cadman seeks to answer Inquiries that appear to be representative of the
trends of thought In the many letters which he receives. Address Dr Cadman
In care of the New York Herald Tribune Syndicate. 230 West 41st ttrtet.
QUESTION.
Washington, D. C.
Can you direct me to one or two
devotional books which deal with
present religious problems?
ANSWER.
Anything Evelyn Underhill writes
is worthy of your study, especially
entitled "The
her
latest
work
Golden Silence" «=
pu b 1 i s h e d by
Dutton & Co.,
New York City. ==
Her reviews of
the type of work
you mention ;irc
exes! lent C'jn- =J
sidering t h e i r ~y
compass. These
you
will
find
p u b l i s h e d in
"The
London
Spectator."
A s
the reviewing of
religious books
in A m e r i c a's
secular journals
is practically a
lost art, why not take "The Spec-
tator1'?
Since you are averse to the more
mystical volumes, read the Dean of
Exeter's "Seven Words." published
by Hodder & Stoughton. for about
half a dollar. Dean Matthews is not
a
sentimentalist.
He
deprecates
Manuals on Our Lord's Passion
which fix attention on His physical
sufferings, and deems them ener-
vating and injurious.
His aim is to direct the signifi-
cance of the Cross and all its impli-
cations toward the challenges mod-
ern life presents. He is keenly sen.
sitive to the intellectual and social
aspects of Christianity. The word
of forgiveness leads him to the con-
sideration of sin in its latest phases.
The word to the penitent thief is
the basis from which the Dean ex-
plores the issues of penitence and
restoration.
These hints will give you some
idea of the book as a whole. It is
scholarly, painstaking and provoca-
tive of serious thinking on the
Christian motives of life. The au-
thor departs from evangelical orth-
odoxy in advocating prayers for the
departed as a sacred obligation. He
asks for no tame agreement with
his conclusions, but stimulates yolr
own reflection in various ways.
Read, in conjunction with Dean
Matthews's
book, Harnack's "A
Scholar's Testament," which con-
sists of thirty-seven short medita-
tions by this great theologian writ-
ten during the dark days of the
World war and is full of strength
and consolation.
*
*
*
QUESTION.
Williamsport, Pa,
Why is it that so little interest Is
taken by many chnrch members in
their own religions affairs?
ANSWER.
To concentrate on one cause, con-
sider the journalistic diet they con-
sume. The majority of Protestants,
Catholics and Jews are sold to the
daily press. It has more to do with
creating the mass mind than any
ether single agency. Before Radio's
appearance secular journalism held
;he field of information and opin-
on in undisputed supremacy.
It furnished the mirror in which
:he great American citizenship saw
itself reflected and was satisfied.
The commonplace man was its ob-
jective, and he naturally desired to
'establish ihe rule of the common-
place. Religious weeklies, monthlies
and quarterlies began to decline In
circulation and
influence. Sensa-
tional news items, comic strips, lit-
erary supplement's which did not
always
exploit the
best
books,
gradually supplanted even the best
church periodicals.
Some of the most illuminating
articles on manners and morals
j passed unnoticed except by the few,
and even in their case it was an
instance of preaching to the con_
verted. Could the state, finance, in-
dustry or business endure similar
treatment and continue to hold
their own? Obviously not. The con-
sequence is that fully one half the
romance and the courage of com-
rades of the cross axe utterly un-
known to fully one half its pro-
fessed adherents. What are Albert
Schweitzer's mid-African crusades
compared with some politicians ap-
pointment to a job or a rise in the
stock market?
Preachers, priests and rabbis have
to sluice spiritual teaching over au-
diences already saturated with the
grotesque admixtures of bulky Sun-
day editions. Indeed, not infre-
quently their parishioners are bed-
ridden by these editions, and can-
not get up to go to church at all.
If every believing household in the
land subscribed to at least one dis-
tinctly religious journal there would
be a marked decrease in the pro-
found ignorance which now pre-
vents vigorous religious action.
*
*
*
QUESTION.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Our children are crazy over the
dog we grave them for Christmas.
Now we want to give them one or
two good books with stories about
dogs. What would you suggest?
ANSWER.
Any or all of the stories written
by Albert Payson Terhune, a great
lover
of
dogs.
"Rab
and
His
Friends," by Dr. John Brown, is a
classic of the kind you need, which
should be purchasable at any book-
store. "By Canoe and Dog Train
With the Nelson River Indians,"
with its tales of Dr. Egerton R.
Young's adventures in the Far
North of Canada, is interesting.
Jack London's "White Fang" and
"Call of the Wild" are capital
stories for which I suspect the au-
thor owed something to Dr. Young.
Alfred Ollivant's "Owd Bob" is in
the same category, written while
Mr. Ollivant was flat on his back
in the hands of surgeons for four-
teen years. He centers his dog in the
hiils of Cumberland, and his book
is alive with forceful characters,
great and small. Who can forget
James Mcore and his gray dog of
Kenmuir, or Adam McAdam and
his shaggy shadow "Red -Wull"?
But "Owd Bob" is the hero . lnte
it. On the under side was a little
her
to pass through easily.
She j
shuddered when she looked at it.'
Mr. Blacksnnke could slip his head
and neck in there just as easily.
And there would be no escape for
j. **w
^w**jjiiwii
JJCUI^IG
a.L c
ooac
'U<•»•*!** "
while press photographers are per- iv.m:i,.
mitted to snap the first pair in the smlpnl"
act of scratching.
Don't expect too much in a land
where the average man thinks re-
forestation just a slick way to train
troops.
for there was but one entrance.
"Come on Danny. We've got to
place for our
in
look for
another
said
the season."
"Danny
Meadow Mouse," said
minute think that I co'uld live in
that house knowing what had hap-
pened there? Mr. Blacksnake may
not come back here, but it is
for me to know that he
here once. I want to get
as far from here as we can."
Nanny's
mind
was made up.
There was no doubt about that.
You need enemies. Friends fur-
nish the praise to ruin you and
enemies furnish the criticism to
save j'ou.
This is a tough time for critics.
By the time their smart criticisms
get in print, some smart official
has corrected the trouble.
The sticks is a region where peo-
ple can endure their guests without
a few cocktails to numb the pain.
Sophisticates are people who buy
a. radio to hear the hill-billy music
that rubes can hear without one.
Mr. Roosevelt has such a per-
suasive radio voice that you keep
expecting him to mention the name
of the tooth paste.
Correct this sentence:
"I am
convinced," said the old judge,
"that most witnesses try to tell the
truth."
squeaky voice.
Little Mrs. Peter looked as sur-
jrised as she really was.
"What
for?" she asked.
"Because where Mr. Blacksnake
has been once he may come again,"
u«
•<•.,»»,,
*"v.*»-
*» t»o
j.nj
uuuui*
etUUUU
LJ.U1L.
ner
funn> I Nothing that Danny or Mrs. Peter
replied
again.
Nanny,
and
shuddered
"Pshaw!" exclaimed Mrs. Peter.
"I tell you I haven't seen him
around the Old Briar-patch for a
long time, not since he visited that
nest.
I guess he just happened
along then."
"And
he might just happen along
again," retorted Nanny Meadow
Mouse.
"I doubt it.'1 replied little Mrs.
Peter.
"That was in the season
when most of our feathered friends
were nesting and he made it a busi-
ness of hunting for their nests.
You know how fond he is of young
birds. Now the nesting season is
over he won't be looking for bird
nests."
"No,
hell be looking for Mouse
nests," replied Nanny drily.
"But he won't be looking for
Mouse nests in bushes or trees,"
said Mrs. Peter.
"You never can tell where Mr.
Blacksnake will be looking," re-
plied Nanny.
"But jrou don't mean that you
are going to give up that nice
home after all the hard work you
have put in on it, do you?" asked
Mrs. ePter.
Nanny nodded her funny little j
didn't stop to argue. She started
for the other side of the Old Briar-
patch. Of course Danny followed.
There was nothing else for him
to do.
(Copyright, 1933, by T. W. Burgess.)
The next story: "What Mrs. Peter
Saw."
Test Your Knowledge
Can you answer seven of these
test questions? Turn to page 13
for the answers:
1. What is a lapidary?
2. Where is the original statue
of Venus de Melos?
3. Name the capital of Ru-
mania.
4. What is the term of office
of members of the president's
cabinet?
5. Who introduced the 18th
amendment to the constitution in
congress?
6. In what continent is Lap-
land?
7. Who wrote the opera La
Traviata?
8. Are American Indians citi-
zens of the United States?
9. In what year did the San
Francisco earthquake occur?
10. For what do the initials
"E. G." stand?
CONTRACT
How to Play
AND
How to Win
BRIDGE
,By JOSEPHINE CULBERTSON-
By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D, Author of "THE HUMAN BODY" |
iiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiutiitiiiitiiiiiiitkiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiti'^ifiiiitiiiiiHiiifiniiiiiiiiiiiMiiT
CAREFUL PLAY.
In the recent team-of-four match
neld at
Asbury Park the two
eventual finalists won the semi-
11 final event by fairly comfortable
I j margins. One of the swings which
enabled the team of Messrs. Wal-
demar von Zedtwitz. Louis H. Wat-
son, Samuel Fry, jr., and Edward
Hymes, jr.. to win their match oc-
curred on the hand below, in which
Mr. von Zedtwitz and Mr. Fry sat
DISCOVERY OF SCHICK TEST
AND RESULTS OF ITS USE
The conquest of diphtheria is one
of the most inspiring triumphs of
modern science.
Let us set up a contrast and com-
pare what diph-
theria was and
is. For what it
was we do not
have to go back
very far—only to
1890. It attacked
children usually
—and under five
years of age. Its
effects were swift
and powerful- It
killed nearly
half of those at-
tacked.
In
a
'ew days a happy
youngster, the
joy of its father
and mother
would wilt, turn
white and succumb. The
usual
method of death was that of an
overwhelming poison. But such a
mode of exitus was mild compared
to the suffocation
and
choking
death which followed the closure of
the windpipe from the membrane.
From 1890 to 1894 in the city of
Philadelphia there were 119 deaths
per hundred thousand population
In 1932 in Philadelphia there were
eight-tenths deaths per
hundred
thousand population.
What has made this change?
O A I 0 8 7 6
Dr. Clendeninc
he introduced a tiny amount of the
toxin elaborated by the diphtheria
bacillus into the skin, a red reac-
tion would appear in about two
days in those persons who were sus_
ceptible to diphtheria. In thoss who
had had the disease, or who had
acquired immunity in other ways,
any redness disappeared after the
first few hours. By using this test,
then, physicians can tell whether a .
child is likely to acquire the disease i Jfc A 103
if exposed.
Then it was found that by mixing
some of the toxin and some anti-
toxin this could be injected under
the skin without harm, and would
turn a positive Schick into a nega-
tive Schick. This toxin-antitoxin
mixture has been given to hundreds
of thousands of school children dur-
ing the past ten years. Lately an-
other and better preparation known
as "toxoid" has supplanted the
toxin-antitoxin mixture-
north and south.
West, dealer.
North and south vulnerable.
A J 8 3
QJ
OK109642
*AQ42
trick with the ace of clubs in his
own hand and finessed the spade.
Had the queen of spades held the
trick, south could have discarded a
heart on the ace and made his con-
tract,
provided
only that
the
trumps broke. However, the king
of spades was in the east hand and
east returned a heart, which Mr.
Jacoby won with the king. The de-
clarer cannot be blamed for mak-
ing the wrong guess. Even if Mr.
Jacoby had held the heart king,
there was also a chance that he
held the spade king, in which case
nothing would have been lost by
the refusal to take the first finesse.
Today's Question.
Having the knave and two small
cards of the suit bid by the part-
ner, am I obliged to lead a small
card against an adverse suit bid in
order not to mislead my partner as
to the number of cards I hold of
his suit? In other words, if I lead
the knave, does that give him the
impression that I have only two
cards of the suit he bid?
Answer:
Not necessarily.
The
lead of a small card from three to
an honor is usually best, but very
often the bidding has been such
that the lead of the honor is in-
dicated. There is no definite rule
which can be laid down for this
situation, although in general the
low card is to be preferred.
(Copyright. 1933. King Features Byn.. Inc.)
TWO MORE ROAD
PROJECTS LET
the nine
Part of Shelton Paving
Held Up For Removal
Traffic Light.
State
Engineer
Roy
Cochran
Wednesday
announced
contracts
had been awarded for two more of
the paving projects on which bids
were received last week, although
part, of one project was held up
pending an agreement with Shel-
:o light.
*v»v v,vmv» «*"w
1^4
Ilfrti l-o.
A lii."1 »;«• *.
»i*t;
v«^v«»* *-••
,
•_—
K f*
of getting a difficult problem. With a correct gL Pf"n5...
the heart g^ Of the diamond suit, or an i ^Si ^.fe $
* "
First, the introduction of diphtheria 'And to prove that it
anti-toxin in 1893. This has been i «•?, that did the wor
,uw iuf
imtni iv iuji wc ijtoi,
the most valuable asset. But it is j0"5; that; ?«« ™?r»MT«.TI a *« n T^-K
_*•
—
ease will never becin at all. To do
this we have the means.
The Schirk Reaction.
a
r
i
n
€
m
i
n
immunSatiorf of Ihldi
briow 5
Tpar-
.
j^fJ! the declarer. This play was :o al-: tricks, however, it was neccs,i.:ld t
logical impossibility. Th? environment
boys was never th* same, and without
Inherited rharartfTislir* wpre fr.*ir*!y niff^fr.i, Prte
exhibits no affection for th? woman and girls who
varited and fXTwied surh ID^rnfestition. wh;rh is
not at all surprising. He has lived among boys and
men. and while he doubtless felt respect for Father ,
and others at the head of tt* institution
SPAPERf
THOVGHTS OX A MOUNTAIN.
racing, maddening thoughts must have
filled the n.inds of the three youths who be-
came stranded on a cliff above a sheer precipice of
a mountain near Lake Placid. N. Y.
The boys set out on a pure adventure of fun and
sport. When they reached their high position, they
frmnd that they could not. with safely, climb high-
er or rif>cer!r!. Night's shroud enveloped them and
man? resnjf at ]rast twelve hours distant. Bitter
e-.-Tunr cales ripprrf thrir slweless shirt*.
Th" depression must have been
very remote to
?h«*s» boys. Th« nrxt world's series sorely was not
'tnporta-;. FTrfiriTit Roosevelt
was probably pir-
•t
lirfd as a ew-fl wont only if h? could do some of
his mirarlrs with 1h:.> blasted mo-jntain.
W? "civilized" h-.:mans make much over our petty
comfort* and luxuries, but when some stroke of fat«
strips the veneer from our hides, we're darned glad
So be. alive and safe, If nothing els*. -
Just Folks I
By Edgar A. Guest
American Journal of Public Health.
The consensus at present is that
St. age for immunising a child
diphtheria is from 6 to 9
m v e a ton and I co
J5£hwaT* and Cort»«n
,h^Vwn,m. S?rk
playing on the «sunpl»n. spades. The .opening .lead .of ;ne ^ dow Jhorc T^ ?ta1c
Shelton and
of a
of
town
agreed to
on 1h<-
heart., and the second trick was
In Vountr? dttrict* %£ jwon with the ace. The rest of the
s 3s considered preferable, be- Play was quite simple. Trumps were
fewer of the mothers in the. drawn, and the diamond ace was
oountrv districts are immune.
knocked out of Uie west hand.
-•-
'which now did not have a heart
t put east in for the setting
which seemed pretty certain, that, nine of hearts certainly looked like t tnontv }0 bar such stop sifns in
east had five hearts and west had the top of nothine. for it appeared
, ic/a-ns" of less than 2.500 popula-
?o.
'Improbable that Mr. Jacoby would jion.
West, of course, continued with a make such a ]<-ad away from the
xftp other unawarded
contract.
;T studying for work near Sewa-d. «tiH is br-
__
j
_
th* ace of inc h<-ld up by neht-of-way diffi-
and then' took the next. ' ru)1ir.s. Corhran said.
The declarer, alfr
HHe married her. and then
there
Across his path some ten years
late
A woman, young, with eyes aflame.
Who made his" wife appear sedate.
And he who should hare shut his
eyes
]
To beauty such as hers, went
i
mad
Serking a second paradiv.
Forgetful of the me h" had.
Of blunders surh as this is made
Th" iraredy nf hu.Tjan live*.
JLyv. «• orly fuljv v repaid
%v><-n mm
b"M:>w'
•<.'• ^n Hr-ir
w:ves.
J»l"&J4J J^VU VI Lll
ft
»<••• *-v.
—•—
uijj. to Dr. Logan Clendeninc. in
•e of this paver. The pamphlets
are:
"Indigestion and Const'pa-
jttoa." "Heduclar
—" <^»<«'"»"
'"Infant Feeding.'
and a losintr heart, and "club were
discarded on the diamond queen
and knax-e. Thus the contract was
'fulfilled by means of careful play.
! which was marked to south from
tt39 "** apd Sm"
Afra:r5. the R'wnri
That she might .-iiifer ?urh a
•STOng.
j How soon or where sfte never knew
j Her rival fair would come along.
(Copyright, 1933, Edgar A. Owst.)
COMMrNTTY FAIR.
'Sperial to Th« Star.'
BLUE SPRINGS. Neb.. Auc. 30—
A rorrjmijnity fair will be Irld h^re
Thursdav.
Thf fair as sponsored
by th" Blue Triarjcl1-
flub
and
TnTrhanlf. nf thf
1iwn. A iriiii-
strel sr-ow. wrestlinc. snrt ail sorts
r.f conre^fion* will hvn "i" ^J'^iT
The
ramaval will
b?
stretched
alnrig Main j-lrfrt.
Thank goodness!
If this as a
.revolution, the daughters wont be
j few er«OTZgh|to be snooty.
At tJae other table, west. Mr.
Hymes. chose to pass his hand, and
east and west, accordingly' never
Titered the bvddirx. Mr. Hymes.
with no biddinc to Co by. alsrho.v
as his opening lea^ the" hrart king,
and it turned out to b<* a brilliant
If-ad, indfvd. South in this instance
had no ros.—Denials
of charges of "iniquitous acts" in the
closed First National bank-Detroit
and the Detroit Trust Co.. made in
recent testimony by U. S. Senator
James Cauzen.'. and the Rev. Charles
E Cougnlin came today from two
banker witnesses before the
one-
mr'n Detroit bank jury.
A A McGomgJe. auditor for the
First National, questioned as to
charges bv t he militant priest uho
Toonerville Folks
n w ,
restore nitrogen to the | read
lhe
statement of Father
*o«. Water, he said, could be sup- Coughlln tha Accounts of the bank
plied farmers
for
S2.50 an <""•" yvus*^**
_
under the plan outlined and
a 10-year period, probably at less
cost.
Coold Double Production.
"Farms now." he said, "we ha\e
been told are not paying the farm-
er. He is operating "at a less. We
have been told that if we could
use the water from the natural flow
^cre had'been deliberately padded before
aner the state banking holiday Febru-
ary 14
Thomas G Long, counsel for the
First National
and
the
Detroit
Trust Co.. denied charges made by
Senator Couzens, also on the stand
last week, of check "kiting" and re-
ciprocal deposits between the two
institutions which tended to show
of the rr.er, it would double crop greater than actual assets,
production and if we could irrigate
in dry months as well, it would
double production again and treble
our farm population "
From a public works standpoint,
Canaday said the project would pro-
vide employment for three years to
3.000 men and
if
speeded, more
could be put to work. He said this
would "adequately relieve the labor
situation through that whole dis-
trict and up even to Lincoln "
"It would produce cheap power."
U. S. WARSHIP
DISPATCHED TO
FOOCHOW, CHINA
(Continued_from Page^OneJ
~anti ^communist
_
ex-
.
leader of an
he added. "There is
no
reason peditionary force wuh
headquar-
•why
Nebraska
should
send its lers there, announced 100,000 Mexl-
to
wheat to the milk of tne east
be processed.
we ought to
our own materials at home "
Hearing' Only Preliminary.
Dan V. Stephens
of
Fremont,
can dollars would be paid for '-he
With cheap power, head of either Chu Teh or
Mao
be able to process Chetung. the principal communes:
leaders wno have for weeks been
causing
the
government
endless'
trouble.
•
All foreigners were said to have ,
,
chairman of the state public works
advisory board, explained that the
hearing was merely
preliminary
and that the board planned an in-
spection on the ground later.
A statement filed with the board
showed the estimated income of the
project, from power none for three
years, $750,000 the fourth year and
increasing to $1,125,000
annually
from the tenth year on and from
irrigation, beginning at
$375.000
the fourth year and increasing to
$1,012.500 annually from the tenth
year on.
A number of long time residents
of the area within the projected tri-
county proposal presented individ-
ual appeals for approval of the ir-
rigation work. O. T. Anderson, resi-
dent of Phelps county for over
fifty years, predicted that the pop-
ulation of that county alone will in-
crease by over 5,000 if sufficient
water Js supplied through irriga-
tion.
"Others who spoke of the need
for additional moisture were Ernest
Peterson, Axtell, who has served
four terms in the state legislature;
C. J. Jurgensen, Minden; George
Junkin, Gosper county; Frank O.
Peterson, Gosper; Julian Bassett,
Hastings; and R. H, Duff,
Carl
Johnson and E. H. Meyer, all of
Gosper county.
Simmons Voices Opposition.
Opposition to the project was
voiced by Robert Simmons, repre-
senting Hall county, Grand Island.
and the Grand Island chamber of
commerce, and by E. E. Binfield.
evacuated Yenping before the in-
vaders entered it.
Hungry, tatered hordes of com-
munists have been on the move in
Fukien since early in August, when
they moved on Amoy, an important
port, but they were turned back
from there
by General Chiang's
famous
Ninteenth
route
army,
heroes of the Shanghai warfare last
year.
U. S. Missionaries Safe.
HANKOW. China, Aug. 30^-W5)—
Eight American Passiomst mission-
aries who two months ago were
caught in warfare at Yaunchow be-
tween rebels and provincial troops
were today reported safe.
A telegram received by mission
headquarters from Chinese auhon-
ties at Hungkiang, said the Ameri-
cans were still at Yuanchow after
government troops had captured the
town and ousted rebels.
The Americans are Rev. Edward
McCarthy of Boston. Rev. Francis
Flaherty of Cincinnati, and six sis-
ters sent from the American Pas-
sionist mission in Pittsburgh.
British Join in Move.
HONGKONG. Aug. 30—(INS)—
The British destroyer Wishart was
enroute to Foochow, Fukien pro-
vince,
China,
today
to
protect
British interests against attacks of
Chinese communist armies operat-
ing in the vicinity.
The Wishart left here last night
soon after receipt of orders from the
British government, which, joined
THE POWERFUL KATRINKA'S LITTLE BROTHER is THE ONE AND ONLY KIP
NOT AFRAIP TO LAUGH WHEN SOMETHING HAPPENS
TO MICKEY (HIMSELF) MCGUIRE.
tionals in the danger zone.
Hall county farmer, at the close of i Washington and Tokyo in taking
hearing,
j action for the protection of its na-
Simmons said he was not dis-
posed to argue the benefits of irri-
gation to the counties in the project
but wanted an opportunity to pre-
sent the factual and legal objec-
tions of the Hall county people as
well as some farmers in
Buffalo
and Merrick counties.
Chairman Stephens said as the
board understood it, "we have noth-
ing to do with the question of water
Trapped Deer Scorns
Man-made Bridge as
Way to Escape Ledge
WATKINS GLEN. N. Y., Aug. 30—
W)—A deer trapped on a narrow
rights and that question should be ; ledge in Watkins "Glen state park
taken up where there is jurisdiction." today spurned the man-made bridge
Expect Court Action.
Simmons agreed but said he
wanted merely to inform the board
and those interested that any
tion to divert water
works for that purpose
sisted in the state courts and
across the narrow gorge which ap-
parently was ais only way to free-
Tbe bridge, 25 feet long End 5 feet
need be in the federal courts.
Binfield pleaded for an oppor-
Below the bricge is a narrow gorge
200 feet deep into which the deer's
mate fell to her death several days
tunity for other
farmers
than ago
those favoring the project to ap- J g^ jgj. jj} -^s engineering skill
pear.
and technical knowledge of the park
Delegations numbering nearly 50 • authorities and the state conserva-
from Gosper county. 31 from Phelps, i uon department have failed to de-
21 from Adams and 8 from_Kear- | vi^ a means of freeing the animal.
ney were introduced and Val Kuska, whose only food and drink has been
Burlington colonization agent, dis- ' foliage growing
from
the
rocky
cused the agricultural possibilities walls and dew which has fallen dur-
of the region if placed under irri- , ing- the nieht.
gation.
_
i He left the sweet corn and water,
Foresees permanent Need.
I which was lowered to
him, un-
"Unless they get some other crop i touched. Now accustomed to the
an wheat or corn." he said, "they i spectators who^throng the toonste
wufhat^to'have-hripTrom^e train on the opposite side of the
government permanently or turn ?.°rse. the ocer no longer shows
fi,. i__.. Har>vt,, tv,» rniff«.iop«"
i signs of fear. He gazes with curl-
•VS&SSi »?£5S?«?Kott»' 3* « "» "«• «t»ct«d bs- us
' 3$?S?3& SfMES:
5.^^^J?SS A\i«™r!5£f' snee. Mohawk Indian chief, who be-
Phelps, Kearney and Adams coun- ^^ ne ^j, rescue the deer without
t»CS.
.
.
.
.
frir>i;*>T^nir liim 1nf.n 1*>»™np into
The three members of the state
sdvicorr board. Dan V. Stephens.
J, T"! Lawrence and John La^nser.
ir.. ^Iso had with them for the hear-
ing. Clinton J. Campbell, attorney:
A. C. Arend. engineer and Albert P. ' r>?po5:t a coin in the typewriters
Benne, regional inspector for the in Berlin post offices and you can
works administration.
.
use the typewriter for 10 minutes-
NRA INSIGNIA
NOW IN 1,374
LINCOLN STORES
(Continued from Page One.)
completing their drive in the resi-
dential districts.
Following is a list of additional
workers in the recovery sales arms':
C. O. BETJCE DIVISION.
W. A. Lnkt. Captain.
Jotn White
William Gray
I Cliff Cunnincham
H. J. Hubert
i R. E. Geigcr
L C. Beers
I
Fred E. Mockttt, Captain.
1 C. E. Prevey
E. E. D-jnaway
I D. L. Morse
Oscar W. Olscn
i Dean E. Snelhec
Harry Reed
I
Ben Heitkotier, Captain.
Louis Van Dora
Orac Kir.j
Pat Glen
Bill Oliphsnt
Henry Jensen
Jerry Howard, Captain.
A. J. Afanador
C. C. Dawley
L. C. Schwcdop
W. H. 3oyd
E. M. Wilting
R. P. Hitcncock
G. V. Keller
Henry Kauffman. Captain.
A. C. BlatI
A. D Grant
G. H Murpay
Don Karnnjtoa
H. E. Marts
George l£xnon. Captain.
B«n Gfflespie
Arthur Nor.h
Wheaton Batt;r
Ma* Roper
Hark KinjrJohn F. Ajres, Captain.
A E Wolf
S J. Beaur.vage
Sob Burns
R O Kindy
E. J. Dole
Ira Baker
Bill Hinman
Cnrry Watson. Captain.
A. A. Dallas
W. L. Hall
V p Hoover
J. Knox Joael
Georie N. Kloidy
D. B. Marti
O. T. McCracien
Frederick J. Pati
Dr. Q-ay L. Spenc-r Fred Stone
George'H. Tumsr
Henry Westphal
Walter Herbert, Captain.
Stanley Tatter. Captain.
(Helpers to be selected.)
Witness Claims
Discord Shadowed
Lamson and Wife
SAN JOSE. Cal.. Aug. 30—(INS)
—Springing a surprise, the state to-
day for the first time brought forth
testimony that discord existed in
the home of David A. Lamson.
Stanford university press executive,
on trial for the campus "bathtub"
murder of his wife, Allene.
The hitherto unrevealed witness
was Frank Taylor. San Francisco
advertising writer, who asserted on
! the stand that Lamson had told him
ithat "his family relations were not
I happy."
"He told me that his wife was
not satisfied at home: that she
wanted
some work away
from
home." Taylor testified.
I
"He said. This cant go on like
iit has been: we are
IKRATZ IS CHOSEN
(Continued from Pase One)
CHIEF OF POLICE
IS REPORTED AS
LONG'S ATTACKER t£
flj^
ffijft
QF
STATE LEGION
(Continued from Page One)
committee in 1927 and 1928. Also
serving the state organization as
judge advocate.
Benson Loses Ottt.
Voting 198 to 63, the convention
refused to recommend that a sep-
arate charter be granted for a Ben-
son post. The issue was raised on
the floor of the convention after the
resolutions committee had turned
down a recommendation to create
the separate post. For years the
Benson group at Omaha has bsen
trying to obtain a charter from the
executive committee.
Sam Reynolds of Omaha was
recommended unanimously by the
convention for national commander
and Commander
Armstrong ap-
pointed a committee to work for
his election.
Oppose Centralization.
Resolutions
proposed
by
the
standing
committse
also
were
adopted unanimously.
Tneir key
notes were opposition to centraliza-
tion of veterans bureau acthitv at
Washington and a pledge of allegi-
ence to the president "m every ef-
fort which he mav make in an en-
deavor to find an answer to
the
economic chaos which now exists."
The naticnal convention was re-
quested in the resolutions to take
a similar stand against centraliza-
tion of veterans bureau activities.
Three Boys Stranded
On
Sheer
Cliff
CContiued from Page One.)
a gentleman not a member of the
club, x x x Senator Long's state-
ment about being ganged is. of
course, not worthy of comment."
Veterans Praise Press.
MILWAUKEE, Aug. 30—'Fr—
Delegates to the national encamp-
ment of Veterans of Foreign Wars
went on with their convention busi-
ness today inclined to dismiss Sen-
ator Huev Long's outburst against
the press as a personal
quarrel
which did not reflect their opinion.
Although the senator preceded his
speech here yesterday with a caus-
tic tirade against Milwaukee news-
papers because of the
attention
they had given the now famous cut
over his left eye, the convention was
on record as sorry it all happened.
"The officer* and members of the
Veterans of Foreign Wars regret
that an attack upon the Milwaukee
press by Senator Huey P. Long of
Louisiana Should have interrupted
temporarily an otherwise splendid
reunion.'' stated
Admiral R. E.
Coontz, commander in chief of the
organization.
The convention itself
gave a
"roaring: expression of approval and
thanks to the newspapers for the
fine way thev have co-operated on
encampment busines."
Yesterday in his address before
the veterans Long launched into an
attack on newspapers growing out of
the stories of the recent attack up-
on him while attending a New York
society charity function.
Observing that there has been an
"exodus of polecats from Louisiana,"
he said, "I knew where all the pole-
cats had gone when I picked up
your Milwaukee News."
The senator demanded that the
photographers in the hall be eject-
ed^ and they were.
At another point, he said he was
not at all worried about the ques-
titon of patronage control in Louis-
iana.
"To hell with it." he cried, "I'm
going to wait until Roosevelt gets
back on the right track, the track
that he was on when he talked of
redistribution of wealth."
As for the civilian conservation
camps—he said he'd offer to eat all
the saplings that do manage to
thrive, but that "I'd starve running
from one to another."
"Payment of the soldiers- bonus."
he said, "would do ten times mor3
good than the sapling bill."
RECOVERY DRIVE
GA1SMOMENTUM
IN FINAL PHASE
iContiued from Page One '
and down the land explaining the
NRA
agreement
and
obtaining
pledges of support
Six Million Jobs Is Goal.
'
Using the 2.00.000 f.gure. Johnson
said it represented at least $30.000.-
000 more in pay envelopes each week
But not until after Labor day, with
its objective of 6,000,000 new Jobs.
will the NRA begin to assay whether
its sweep netted enough re-em-
ployment
and
wage-boosting
to
gne the Roosevelt iecoiery pro-
gram its desired momentum
Johnson left his office as labor
hailed an end to non-union labor
in bituminous coal fields and set
about plans to unionize workers m
automobile plants.
The
recovery
chieftain also
said
bluntly that
1 Henry Ford either would subscribe
1 to the automobile code or ''not get
the blue eagle."
"I think maybe the American
people will crack down on him by-
putting their blue eagles on other
cars," Johnson told newsmen re-
garding the automobile magnate.
Johnson Elated.
Much of Johnson's elation rose
from the gradually resolving ne-
gotiations which had brought the
coal industry to the drafting not,
only of a code of fair practice, but
of contracts by -which the great bi-
tum.nous fields,
north and south.
a:e to go solidly union.
A measure of the magnitude of
this accomplishment was the state-
ment by John L. Lewis, president
of the "United
Mine
Workers of
America, that it represented "the
greatest forward step to date in the
recovery movement."
The coal job, however, was not
yet complete and not due to be
before tomorrow at
least. The
agreement already announced was
upon the basic principles, and pa-
tient labor still was in progress to
complete the contracts and the
code.
Similar work continued for the
less sensational but even more far
spread code of fair practice for the
entire retail trade of the country.
Both are intended to be at Hyde
Park for President Roosevelt's sig-
nature before next Monday—La-
bor day.
Some NBA officials were saving
privately
that
the
wage-raising:
agreement and permanent codes of
fair practice do not
yet
appear
destined to create sufficient, pur-
! chasing power to keep ahead of
higher prices resulting
from the
greater costs which business is un-
, overtaking for NBA. Expansion
of
credit through the Reconstruction
I corporation, "was planned to help
business bear these higher costs un-
itil mass purchasing can take over
>thp job.
•
Jesse Jones. Reconstruction cor-
' poration chairman, was back at his
desk after conferring with Presi-
dent Roosevelt. He declined ccm-
1 ment on the president's proposal for
] advancing credit to aid NRA in- j
j dustries. but high official quarters i
, said "four or five days" would be j
required to complete detailed plans. |
1
A big drive to develop this mass i
'buyine also is intended but not be- !
fore the administration
can
feel 1
confident that recovery is well es-
tablished,
i
But the less sanguine officials ex- ]
j pressed the belief, that a "major au- i
i xiliary" would be necessary—some ]
| measure of inflation. They were not:
I ready to say or intimate, however. J
that this thought was in the mind i
of Johnson or of President Boo- i
sevelt."
l
Property Worth $856 Stolen From
Automobiles Here During August
Lincoln
mrtoristy
h a v e
lost
$850 7j \\rrth ol rijui)_:nent and
son.il aruc-lcs throuch petty
i •,••<. s:nc-" th» !irr4 of Auc'ust po-
!irv i.-.-ctis
indicated
Wednesdnv
Up to t'ie pirMT.t trne, sixtv-thrce
th •'!.<• from automobile \u-rc re-
po:;rd for the month
T'ie above figure does not inclucl •
niticles whjch uere later rviwered
lof-s through the theft of the car
itself. In some cases rary were re-
ported stolen but recovered later
stripped of tires, wheels and remov-
able accessories.
Greatest losses were reported by
motorists who left personal articles
inside their cars. The largest single
loss was reported by a traveling
man *hose gladstone bae. contanmp
clothing and other articles valued 11
$100,
was removed from his parked
car.
Stealing at Parks.
Valuations of articles taken in
other cases run
from $1 to $50
According to the records, a large
part of the pilfering was done at
amusement parks and almost all of
the thefts occurred at night. Locked
automobiles were not exempted, as
I in many cases locks were forced or
windows broken.
These thefts from cars were re-
ported Wednesday morning. R. M.
Anderson, 1601 Euclid street, told
' police that someone stole the top
from his light roadster which was
parked in a garage at the rear of
his residence. He estimated the lo?"
at S39. C R B°ll Of Omaha
n
sa!er:r.?n. reurned ihp th-ft cf a
spare tire and •nhr-el from
)-.!•= cr."
which -BBS parked in '".ID Mcinuj of
Twelfth and M strrcts.
The third loss v, as reported by
C. E. Graham. 1701 Pepper avenue
I who stated that tol , driving glasses
and personal articlrss valued at S10
taken from his oar.
3U36 W stif-t. TWi-d:u in h:.
Inrrrasip Over Two \>»r».
Ch'cf of Police W. C. Condlt in
ooinnirntinc upon the statistic* Mild
that he did not bcliru- car th.e\-
ciics arr more numerous at thi
1'icscnt tune tt'.an the\ were earhri
in the season
' I do think " he saiii. "that surl'
petty thefts have increased greatl>
in the last two years, however
Omaha
officials
report
a lot 01
trouble with car thieves. Drivers
should be very careful about leav-
inc valuable articles of any kind in
their cars, even for a few minutes.'
He stated that the police depart-
ment has made R concentrated ef-
fort to catch the thieves and m a
few cases have been successful.
ENID PERSISTS
SHATTERING PAR
EXMOOR COUNTRY CLUB. II1..
Auc 30— iAPi— Bru-hmg aside h»r
oppc-nent with a game sha;te:mg
par by three shots, Miss Enid Wil-
son of England entered the quar-
ter-finals of the women's national
golf championship today with a 4
and 3 triumph over Mrs. Harley
Higbie of Detroit.
Other second
round results:
Charlotte Glutting West Orange, N. J .
deffstfd PcRpr Wntiles Buffalo. 3 and 1
Virc.n.a
Van
Wic
Chiraco
drfeated
M:' lyo Federma.v Krr Vo-k 4 ard 5
Mr* L-c^n Cv-nr^
Sn-. C-nbrirl
Cl\I .
dp'rat-J
Ar..-'...
Gt-rr;vca. Fo: t Worlh.
T< •
t
*••<>
•>
:.'.:•. .-t.. O c.'- Ka«nr:h
N' .T.. d-'rol-
K r
Krr^a-i C.ty. clef-atrd
i
1 :i i Philadelphia 4 and 3
".elfi
H'Ck11
Ir.uooo
N Y . defeated
M-s
Ben F.'i-H-jjth. Vicksburg. Miss. 4
and r
Ljnl'.e Kobirson
Des Moinei. defeat*!
Marcarp; Mnddax. Atlanta. Ga.. S and 4.
U St.
about our payment pla
to three bovs. marooaed on a nar-
row ledge of rock 40t) feet high
since yesterday morning.
PLACID. N. Y.. Aug. 30—
YOU ALWAYS DO BETTER AT
Grand Central Markets
On Sale Thursday and Friday
SHORT RIBS OF BEEF, «]./ 4
Pound
. . .
tf /jE T*
HOME MADE FRANK-
44*4*
FURTERS, Pound
*W*
P «. G SOAP,
<*£»j»
10 Bars
J»9¥
SWANS DOWN CAKE
'•fit
FLOUR, Pkg
^"^T
WATERMELONS.
3/ j*
Kansas Round, Pound..
/&^
CONCORD GRAPES,
•*•»!/ 4
Per Basket ..... ...
Ajfi /i^
PURE LARD. Pound
HAMBURGER, Pound
SPARE RIBS, Pound....5V*
FIRST GRADE OLEO,
^kw
Pound..
™w
CORN, BEANS or
TO
t*nl
^
MATOES—
Tor 25^
POTATOES
Best Home Grown Ohio*.
°er Peck
'*-
Per Ru*M
88c
"
Texas League.
3 T-.llwt 4
Worth. 4. Otlahooia City. «•
r:;. 3: Hoasion. 0.
r;. 6 Ssa Ar.tosis. P.
Boy Scouts on Parade
GANG
GETS $30,000 IN
PAYROLL HOLDUP
—
Four men were held for questioning
•.odav as federal officers and police
investigated local angles of the
$36,000 Denver bank
raessenger
hclisp and robbrry of a postoffjc*.
Only CD?, Harry Paid Kva*. was
b«W m ror.nrrticrj wssii the Den-
ver rnbbtrv. The others. Charley
aad Albert" Stopc. brothers, and
Eobrrt A. Duan. wfre sejaca at the
face of Wall Cliff mountain in a
determined effort to reach three
Plattsburgh
youths
trapped
for
nearlv 24 hours without food or
water" on a narrow ledge with a
sheer drop of 400 feet below them.
The vouths were William La Due.
Robert" Glenn and Tyler Gray, all
between the aees of 18 and 21.
When they reached the ledge yes-
terday during a climb they found
they could neither proceed higher
nor" retrace their steps.
While rescuers were helpless dur-
ing the niebt. the boys huddled to- (
gether to seek sheltel from cnilling \
blasts that swept the cliff- The j
temperature was down to the freez- j
ing point and they were in their i
shirt sleeves.
t
Rescue parties set out from Jie ,
Adirondack iodee. seven miles away. >
and the Lake "placid club late in ;
the afternoon after Robert La Due.;
brother of William, had made a |
dash through the mountains to re-
port their predicament. He had re- '
mained behind while they scaled ]
the cliff, and went for help when
he saw they coiild not get down.
i
"lhe ycutns were sighted by the
pflot of an airplane sent out ahead
of th» searchers to locate them, i
The mountain they were climbing ,
was far removed from ttie nearest
(
settlement and could be reached
only by walkint. The pilot said they
were aprarently safe unless th?T
attempted to ciimb down.
ROO^VSTASRS
REPORT ON FORD
CoatJuea from Page One''
Bank Babbcr SUin
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Mcvt'T Co.
JT.Ti.riCj. :-x<~ Jx1 h^ped lo aJ-
FRIEST SEVTENCETD.
iX>RTMirXD Gtrrnarv. A-JK 3D— M:
A?—fir..
Aura*;
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a ArrjT.-=.r. F^'ra'nT.
ST.- •*-,:: r-.ate 8Trv.c:*v.?r
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:he Nsz; r«r-^f '":~ -'•*
ai Chicago, where nacic&su BC»T Seoul day was_observe^ Fr> ££ "ktrTturfe^ Jl'b&OJXtD ar-K-ia':^ s^'rW?r"ar.i'Mrs''c."i
every C«te, icaicaed Jjy ftteoSs dd kmsfoit, ires* state "inspectcr aad KysTriiiyr Ka* tWevrly Wednesday
]B. Seweil reports.
I
public is
"
WAVFRLY CHt"Rf H DINNER.
"a'.*
n«f** vfvg,*
"t iJV*
«.V*»*
Zbc
Make the Pennies
(i O 9 When James Buchanan was president and tall beaver
hats were in vogue; when gentlemen wore broad
cravats and ladies wore hoop skirts, the pennies they
tossed to children were as big as quarters. But the
cart-wheel coppers your grandfather got for keep-
ing his lace collar clean were not as big in buying
powers as the pennies of today.
9 9 O A penny then might buy a pastry, or ten of them
take one to the fair, but your great-aunt and great-
uncle couldn't have gone to a movie at any price.
9 9 9
9 9 9
9 9 9
You can pick up your daily newspaper and in fifteen
minutes you can know what the different shops are
offering in fabrics, patterns, varieties and qualities
the great-grandmother never dreamed could be
gathered together under any condition?.
Times have changed, and so have merchandise and
business methods. One of the influences that has
helped to bring about so much of change, that has
helped to multiply opportunities and increase the
spending size of our pennies i? advertising.
Even- merchant, everv manufacturer knows that
*
•
advertising materially reduces selling costs by in-
creasing the demand for and the distribution of the
products of hundreds of thousands of mill?. Indeed,
many of the thing? we count today a? necessities or
simple luxuries could not be made and sold at their
reasonable price? except as advertising ha? created
a broad market for them, makir.g millior.? of ?a>? at
little prices and littk- profit?.
'SPAPERJ
TEN
THE LINCOLN STAR-WEDNESDAY,
AUGUST 30, 1933.
Ace Flops Over to Pros
Cochet Steps Out of
Amateur Picture to
TieUpWithTilden
PARIS, Aug. 30—(INS)—Henri Cochet, great French
ace of the tennis courts, will abandon his amateur career,
the International Professional Tennis Players' association
announced today, to play in the Anglo-French professional
tournament at Roland Garros stadium, Sept. 22, 23, 24. The
association said Cochet would pair with a Frenchman to
oppose William T. Tilden and another American in a doubles
match.
cflmateur
FIGHTS
LAST
NIGHT
At New Tork—SttTc Hamas. 1R7}4. Pas-
«»lo. N. T., and Charity Massera, 177Vs,
Flttsburjch. drew In 10 rounds.
At Chicago—Jackie Shirker. l«7".. Mln-
Beapnlis. derlsioned Lou Vine, 129, Chica-
go, six rounds.
At Rerere, Ma55.—Xornun Cflnrad. 1ST,
Wilton, N. H., drew with Vlttorio Livan,
I701i. Boston, 13 ronnds.
At Charleston. S. C.—Tommy Beck. Jack-
sonville. Fla.. drclsinned Leroy Brown, 160,
Charleston. 10 ronnds.
At Oenrer—Baby loe Cans. 117 Ne»
Tork. (topped Buddy Jackson, 117, Dn-
ranio, Colo.. In elirtith round.
*» Rome. G«—^W. L. (Toang) Strlbllng.
Omr(U hemrywelKht, knocked ont Benny
Oddl. Syracuse, N. T., in second round.
PATZ-K.RAUSMCK MEDALISTS.
Miss Gertrude Krausnick. and M.S. Fred
Patz are co-medalists of the Eastridge
women's tournament, each tourinc the 18-
hole layout wl'h 94s during the Tuesday
qualifying.
Pairings.
Championship
finht — G~rtr\icie Kraus-
.
Botstord \-, Mrs. P. R. Che\allcr. M s.
J. A. Konler ^s. Mrs. W. A. MechUng.
Mrs. F. J. Patz \s. Mrs. Don Beiry.
Second
flight — Mrs.
Hal
Boweis vs.
Mrs. C. E. Brown. Mrs. H. O. Henderson
vs. Mrs. H. A. Scott. Mrs. F. W.
Al-
brecht vs. Mrs. Ken Lawson, Mrs. R. R.
Robinson vs. Mrs. J. I. Fitzsimmons.
Third flight— Itrs. O. H. Kuse vs. Mrs.
Paul Royal, Mrs. Gregg McBride vs. Mrs.
Ed Fogarty, Mrs. .Toe Albin vs. Mrs. Har-
old Requartte, Mr& Paul Ohlheiser
vs.
Mrs. R. Johnson.
FEED VETTE WINS TITLE.
Fred Vette, former University ol Ne-
braska golfer, won the Beatrlc*
eity
title when he heat Lew McSwen. 2 and 1,
to a 38-hoIe match.
Decides to Turn Pro.
PARIS, Aug. 30— (APj -- Henri
Cochet .bulwark of France's Davis
defense for five years, finally has
decided to turn professional.
The
famed tennis ace, once a ball boy in
his native town of Lyons and later
the undisputed
kingpin
of
the
game for the three-year interval
covering 19?8 through 1930, is cx-
E
ected to announce his decision of-
tmlly next week.
His first professional engagement,
it was learned
wilt ccme in
the ! nick/s. MI-S._T. M^ Madden._ Mrs. cv J.
France-American matches, starting
S"pt. 22 when he will nave a chance
to" renew his old rivalry with Big
Bill Tilden.
Barring a last-minute hitch, Co-
chet and Martin Plaa will repre-
sent
France
in
these
matches
against Tilden and Bruce Barnes,
the former Texas amateur.
Monej Offer Wins Him Over.
Friends said Cochet had no inten-
tion of turning professional even
after France had lost the Davis
cup to Great Britain this summer.
He planned instead, they said, to
devote himself to business, chiefly
because professional tennis did not
particularly appeal to him. Since
then, however, they said
Cochet
had received such substantial offers
as to make him change his mind.
The nature of these offers so far
has not been revealed.
Cochet. now 31 years old, has been
ranked among the world's first 10
tennis players continuously
since
1926. In that year he won his first
major title, the French hard court
championship at Auteuil. repeating
in 1928, 1930 and 1932. He won the
British title in 1927 and 1929 and
the American
championship
in
1928.Dazzles In Davis matches.
But it has been in Davis cup play,
especially, that he has earned his
chief fame, starting with his de-
feat of "Little Bill" Johnston at
Germantown in 1927, when France
dethroned the United States as cup-
holder, Cochet ran through 10 suc-
cessive singles victories in challenge
round play before he was beaten by
Ellsworth Vines in the last match
of the 1932 series, which France al-
ready had clinched.
His grip on world honors defin-
itely slipped this year, however, and
he lost to Jack Crawford in the
French hard court finals and to
Vines in the semi-finals at Wimble-
don preliminary to
suffering his
most costly setback—a five-set trim-
ming from Fred Perry in the chal-
lenge round.
That reverse cost France the Da-
vis cup, giving Great Britain the
one victory it needed to clinch the
series, three matches to one. Andre
Merlin, second-string French sin-
gles player, lost to both Perry and
H. W. (Bunny)
Austin.
France,
ready to concede these
victories,
still expected Cochet to win both his
matches and thus, with a victory in
doubles assured, retain the cup.
Cy Sherman
R
SHRINE CLUB EESULTS.
Wednesday found the Shrine
women
rapidly nearlng the finish of their club
championships.
Tuesday results:
Championship
flight—Mrs.
Ed Taber
beat Mrs. B. c. Stednitz, 1 up.
Second flight—Mrs. J. B. PuU»
beat
Mrs. R. L. DuCharme, 5 and 4. Con-
solation—Mrs W. I. Black beat Mrs.
R. F. Mallory. 2 and 1.
Third flight—Mrs. Gregg McBride beat
Mrs. H. P. Brehm, 3 and 2; Mrs. H. R.
Wilson beat Mrs. W. W. Carvcth. on 10.
GOGGIN UNDER PAE.
Willie Ooggin, runner-up to Gens Sar-
azen in the recent national P. G. A.
championships was one under par for a
friendly spin around Eastridge Wednesday,
taking a 71. Frank Mulqueeney. Antelope
club pro who was in the fivesome play-
Ing with Goggin, had a 70.
EEEVE WINS ON TWENTY.
Frank Reeve went 20 holes to beat
Gordon McEntire in a first round match
of the Shrine club tourney Tuesday. In
the second flight. Bill Fink beat O. A.
Barber. 2 and 1. In the third flight. H. A.
Capek beat Max Rosenblum 3 and 2- Lo-
ren Green defeated John Senning, 3 and
2, in the fifth flight.
PEGLEB WINS FIRST MATCH.
Don Pegler, medalist
went into the
second round of the Eastridge club cham-
pionships Tuesday when he beat Ralph
G. Scoi:, 3 and 1.
Kenneth Jones beat Tom Hudson, 5 and
3. In the second flight and Beverly Finkle
won over Alan Johnson, 3 and 2, in the
third flight.
ROGERS WINS AT FRIEND.
FRIEND Neb., Aug. 30—Paul Rogers of
Friend beat Herb Deurmyer of Lincoln. 1
up, to win the Friend open tourney Sun- i
day. Rogers won the last three holes.
Rogers beat F. J. Kllngel of Lincoln
in the remi-finals and Deurmyer turned
back Bill Murrell ol Geneva.
Leo Cunningham of
York
won
ths
championship consolation. Other iligtu
winners Included P. O. Southwick, Friend
and John Cunningham. York.
FAIRBURT GOLF FINALS.
FAIRBURY. Neb., Aug. 30—Bradley Pel-
ton and William Sutherland will meet
Sunday in the Fairbury Country club golf
finals.
In the semi-finals Felton beat
Earl Jackson. 3 and 3 and Sutherland
trimmed Anderson. 6 and 5.
DARK BOYS CLASH
AT LANDIS FIELD
A five-run scoring spree in the
eighth broke up a nip-and-tuck ball
game staged by negro clubs Tues-
day night at Landis Field, with the
Chicago All-Stars handing
the
Memphis Bed Sox a 6-0 lacing be-
fore a sparse crowd.
Howard and Mitchell had been
setting the oposition batsmen down
with regularity for the first seven
frames, Chicago's only tally com-
ing when Bray's easy lofter was
dropped by Jones to put the Windy
City catcher on second. A fielder's
choice and an error by Saunders
scored the run. In the eighth, five
hits, including Bray's double, a
walk and two errors did the dam-
age. Score by innings:
Memphis . . 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0—0 4 6
Chicago . . 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 5 x—6 7 1
Howard and Taylor; Mitchell and
Bray.
l lN'T1
EitKer an employer signs the President's code—or lie
doesn't. Webster-Eisenlohr, Inc., did not stall! It has
the distinction of being the FIRST member of the
cigar industry to sign. Boxes of Girard cigars were the
first to display the bine eagle.
G I R A R D
REDUCED
FROM lie TO5
C I G A R
STRAIGHT
$ 1 0 , O O O
bf paiJ to Jomertic.
ROTHENBERG & SCHLOSS
DISTRIBUTOR
OUNDING up in the "old
home town," after a stay of
several days in Chicago, where I
witnessed the East-West gridiron
joust at Soldier Field and devoted
the major part of my time to an
endeavor to give the Century ol
Progress exposition at least a
casual inspection, finds me in
possession of a few distinct im-
pressions of the events of the past
week in the Windy City.
First of all, take this tip: Don't
make the mistake of attempting
to "do" the big fair within the
space of a few days. The most
one could get from a survey of
the show limited to a brief period
of time would be a general shov-
ing-around at every center of in-
terest, meaning the exhibits that
ars genuinely worth while.
The daily crowds are surpassing
the fair management's anticipa-
tions and the jam is a constant
provocation of ruffled feelings in
virtually every important building
on the exposition grounds.
To se* that which actually is
worth seeing demands that tbe
visitor shall fall in line with the
mob, then to engage in a physical
battle for a place in the front
line. After a few aggravating ex-
periences of that sort, the average
person is willing to admit he is
licked and has had his fill of
"seeing the fair."
m/WY IMPRESSIONS of
the
1TJH East-West
football
fray,
staged Thursday night, Aug. 24,
on Soldier Field sod, may be
summed up as follows:
1—The paid attendance,
re-
ported officially as 52,000, was a
stunning surprise to the pro-
moters of the game.. Advance
estimates had fixed the probable
crowd at 20,000.
2—The East team, in reality a
squad recruited with but a single
exception from Big Ten confer- .
ence and mid-west sources, gave
the West a thorough shellacking,
out-playing and out-generalling
Howard Jones' Trojan stars and
their Pacific coast associates so
decisively that far western foot-
ball had no peg on which to hang
an alibi.
3—A considerable portion of
the net profits, which undoubt-
edly totalled a substantial sum, is
now lining the pockets of the
promoters of the game, the same
being none other than the di-
rector and head coach of North-
western university.
STILL another slice of the net
profits, according to informa-
tion from a dependable source
within the Big Ten conference
circle, is to go to the student wel-
fare fund at Northwestern U., the
money to be disbursed as loans to
"worthy students," under faculty
supervision.
It follows, therefore, that a por-
tion of the profits eventually will
be parcelled out as loans to ath-
letes, the same as to other stu-
dents. This might suggest a doling
of special favors to Northwestern
U. athletes, but my informant as-
sured me that the Western con-
ference, while having confidence
in the faculty control arrange-
ment at the Evanston institution,
will take particular pains to make
sure that conference rules and
regulations
pertaining
to
the
loaning of funds to worthy stu-
dents shall be observed in the
spirit as well as the letter.
The discovery that the heads of
the athletic department at Xorth-
western U. profited handsomely
from the Aug. 24 game (their
"cuf was estimated at S4.000 to
$5.000 each) was such a shock to
followers of college football, espe-
cially those who hold to the belief
that "amateurism in
athletics"
should be something more than
an empty phrase, that the convic-
tion grips me that the National
Collegiate association soon will be
stepping in to hang a ban on fu-
ture contests between teams of
former college stars when spon-
sored and promoted by college
authorities for private gain.
I
N EJevfr-jsuT. the game of Aug. 24
was an invasion, pure
and
simple, into the rralm of profes-
sional football. The players of the
two squads received no compen-
sation other than traveling and
training expenses, but their par-
ticipation at Chicago, with the
attendant publicity ballyhoo, in-
evitably will be used as "a means
to an end. to-wit:
A portion of the players in-
volved will be looking forward to
offers at fancv salary figures
from the promoters of" the" Na-
tional Professional league, and
possibly will profit indirectly from
their participation In the Aug. 24
game.
As to the college authorities
who gleaned so handsomclr from
the affair at Soldirr Field, the
excuse has been presented that
they took a chance to lose and
therefore wrre rnUtled to their
chance f0 win. This attempt at a
justification, it seems to me, has
no place in a discussion concern-
ing the ethics of amateur athletics.
LUTZI SHOWS OFF
AS MAIN EVENTER
*B*HE
M two Chicago game presented
two features worthy of com-
mendation. The low "admission
price of SI 10 was jn un, with
th<> trend of ttir limes and thr
contest cave football followers 1he
opportunity 1o w" two accrrsa-
tions of star players in srtion on
th" rridiron
ThTp rivuld br r.o ju.-lifiablc
rrJIiriem if it h?r3 br^n arrancrrj
that arir financial ca-n Tvirr 10
cro to a worth" rtian'v. curb as
1hp Hospital for CrinplTj Chil-
drf-n cf San Prannwo.' sn insti-
tution •which annuBllv c>ans s
substantial contribution from thr
ShTinr's Easl-W*-*4 cam? during
the Christinas hr>]lt3avs.
As mattTS .M-and. th» Tirs-ds of
th» department cf aihletirs at
Xorthwr-strm TJ. wer* out of Mfp
with coilT* smat'-infm info-fr-
Jnc a pro-"T"! which n^rr;-! brine
tVm a r-frsfna] profit
Tills i< not HIT •riftr alonr. ss
ftrn prrmin'-nt firnrcs in National
CVdicc'.ii'f a,«?«ria'!f>n rirrlr* havr
a«Wfd
JTJ" ?n rTa:n -«-.-•- ;haj
•otnolhine «">" harr 1« bf- drvnr—
ard doix- Mrifl!r—in t>,, :.-.~\tfT
nf rrc"r'"i>tirc fftttrcr
Tr.rn from
cftTirrrtiTij thr frr?',i-*i of rolln^-
STwrU inlo a rafkrt. And the
sorncr this H accomplished, the
brttrr
it
wffl
be for
football.
Former Lincoln Pride Is
(Easy Winner Over
Ray Richards.
BY GREGG McBRIDE.
Paul Jones (Andy Lutzi to tnose
who knew him when he was
the
local Y. M. C. A. pride a dozen or
more years ago) was the guest ar-
tist, at the state fair grounds wrest-
ling show Tuesday night. It was
well they had good old Paul tnere.
lor the remainder of the card was
distressingly
terrible and
nardly
worth
the time and trouble of a
trip to the 4-H arena.
I
Jones disposed of Raymond Rich-
ards, former Cornhusker tackle, in
straight falls,
displaying
enough
wrestling ability to indicate why the
has been meeting with success the
time he has been away from .home
wrestling on foreign mats.
Wins In Straight Falls.
The "figure four" scissors, Paul's
pet hold, pinned Richards to the
mat. in spectacular fashion for the
two lalls. The first came alter
26:34, Jones leaping through the
air to entwine Ray and clamping
on the pressure after Richards had
| twice slammed Paul to the mat.
The second fail came
after
5:20,
v.ith an arm strangle working in to
apply the finishing toucn.
In the
boresome preliminaries.
John Lehl of Raymond used
all
arm strangle and nead scissors to
flop
Emil Dusek, Omaha
alter
10:30.
They wrestled only
five
minutes more to no further decision,
the time-keeper having been in-
structed to take the five-minute
rest, period
out of the 30 minutes
the pair was supposed to toil on tne
mat.
Mike Nazarian, the Greek from
Boston,
gave up to Sid Nabors,
Memphis, Tenn., fat boy, after 16
minutes of wrestling. Rough House
Nelson, Hamilton, Ont., and Babe
Camera,
Des
Moines,
kicked,
slapped and bit 15 minutes without
damage.
STANDINGS
TODAY
.NEBRASKA LEAGUE.
W L Pet
Beatrice
38 IB .608
Soo Falls 28 20 .565 Norfolk
Lincoln
W L
23 23
15 31
Pet
.500
.336
AMERICAN LEAGUE.
W
Lr
Pet'
W L
Pet
Wash'ton 82 43 .656 Detroit
63 68 .488
New York 73 so .593 Chicago
60 67 .472
Cleveland 67 63 .515 Boston
54 73 .425
Philadcl.
61 63 .492 St. Louis
47 82 .364
NATIONAL LEAGUE.
w L Pet1
w i, tret
New York 72 47 .605 St. Louis
67 3S .536
Boston
68 55 .553 Brooklyn
51 69 .423
Chicago
G8 57 .544 Philadcl.
50 71 .415
Pittsburgh 66 56 .510 Cincinnati 48 77 .384 j tendance lor all but
the ir.ost al-
AMEKICAN ASSOCIATION'.
W L Pctl
W t
Pet
Columbus 90 47 .6571 Toledo
66 73 .475
Mlnneap. 81 62 .566i Louisville 64 74 .464
Indianap. 73 65 .529, Milwaukee 61 82 .427
St. Paul
65 56 .1961 Kas. City 54 85 .388
GRIDIRON
GO UNDER KNIFE
WESTEKNLEAGt)E.
W L Pet)
W L
Pet
Sorlngl'ld 32 17 .653] Omaha
26 24 .520
Topeka
32 17 .653'Bartlesv'le 22 29 .431
D. Moines 34 19 642' Joplin
21 31 .404
St. Joe
28 21 .571,Muskogee
7 44 .137
Soft Ball Leaders
Planning Tourney
Plans are under way for a
Lincoln city championship play-
ground'ball tourney to be played
within the next two weeks. Play-
ground managers, under the di-
rection of Jimmy Lewis, city re-
creation directors, are consider-
ing promotion of the tourney.
Sioux Falls Gains
On Beatrice Clan
Sioux Falls was within two games
of the pace-making Beatrice Blues
in the Nebraska league Wednes-
day. following a 9-7 victory at the
expense of the Norfolk Elkhorns.
The Canaries, performing at Sioux
Fails, scored eight
runs in the
first three Innings and the Elks
came back with six In the eighth,
but that wasn't enough to knot
the score.
Beatrice beat Lincoln, 13-8, in
an exhibition game at the Arling-
ton fair. The Norfolk-Sioux Falls
score:
Norfolk
......
0 0 0 0 0 0 1 6 0—7 11 7
Sioux Falls ..2 06 0001 Ox— 9 9 1
Elston, Tarantola and Homan,
College Managers Slash
Admission Schedules
All Along Line.
BY ALAN GOULD.
NEW
YORK,
Aug. 30— (AP)—
College football, already well primed
and lortified to crash the sports
picture again, will meet keen com-
petition this .fall with the lowest
scale of prices for spectators sine:
pre-war days.
On top 01 sharp reductions made
within tne past year or two, in
the attempt to check declining at-
.
luring gridiron attractions, nearly
half the nation's colleges and uni-
versities will slice admission costs
further this season.
A majority of the so-called "big
league" colleges are among those
lowering the scale, notably alons
the eastern front but also in the
middle west, southwest and on tha
Pacific coast.
Reductions range
from 10 to 50
per cent in the east, an
average
of about 20 per cent in the mid-
Hubbell's Brilliant
Hurling Keeps Giant
Club In Forefront
BY COPELAND C. BURG.
NEW YORK, Aug. 30— (INS)— Considered rank out-
siders at the start of the season, the New York Giants have
been grinding along at the top of the National league for
weeks, wondering just what was keeping them up. Today
the answer appeared to be Carl Hubbell, their only con-
sistent pitcher.
POWERS WIN IX TOURNEY.
COUNCIL BLUFFS. La. Aug. 30—low a-
Nebraska, Power. Lincoln city league cham-
west and from 10 to 40 per'cent In ' B^^oV^n^fco^^rBiuas"^6^^
the far west, according to figu e. >'°"r"am"nt 'otiay. the Powers bavin;
complied in a survey icr the As- ' ?:3.tci.n...?chu.>lc^ 8-4
A ho™<:
r bv Bool
,
McDermott;
Harnisko,
and Brandon.
Conaway
Western League.
Springfield. 1: Des Moines, 2.
Joplin 6; Omaha. 9.
Topeka. 12; Bartlesville. 2
American Association.
Indianapolis. 8; Toledo. 2.
Minneapolis, 3; Milwaukee 1
Louisville. 9; Columbus. 7.
Exhibition Baseball.
City, 4; St. Joseph. 5 (10 In
Kansas
nings).
Big League Box Scores.
National league.
St. Louis
Martin 3b
Watkins rt
Prisch 2b
Medwick If
Collins Ib
Orsatti cf
Slide ss
Wilson c
Hallarian p
aO'Farrell
bDean
Johnson p
AT NEW YORK.
&b ti o a| New Torlc
411 5| Davis cf
4 0 1 OjCrttz lib
3 0 3 SiTeiiy Ib
4 1 3 OiPeel If
4 111 1'Moore If
4 0 0 l|Ott rf
3 0 2 2|Vergez 3b
2 1 3 01 Mancuso c
2 0 0 21 Ryan ES
110 OiKubbell p
0 0 0 0|
0 0 0 0|
-I
ab h o a
3 0 0 C
3 2 1 1
4180
3 1 1 0
1 0 0 0
3 1 4 0
2 0 0 1
3 0 12 1
3 1 1 2
3 0 0 2
Totals
31 5 24 16| Totals
28 6 27 7
aBatted for Hallahan In eighth; bRan
for O'Farrell In eighth.
St. Louis
000 000 000—0
New York
000 300 OOx—3
Runs: Davis, Terry, Peel. Error: Ryan.
Runs oattsd in: Terry. Ott, Vergez. Stolen
base: Martin.
Sacrifice: Cntz.
Double
play:
Terry
(unassisted), Jlancuso
to
Critz.
Left en base: New York 4. St.
Louis 6.
Base on balls: O££ Hubbell 1,
Hallahan 2. Struck out: By Hubbell 12.
Hallahan 1. Hits: Off Hallahan 5 in 7
innings, Johnson 1 in 1. Hit by pitcher:
By Hubbell
(Wilson).
Losing pitvher:
Hallahan.
Umpires: Rigler, stark and
McGrew. Time 1:57.
SECOND GAME.
St. Louis
001 001 000—2 4 0
New York
000 000 000—0 5 1
Batteries: Walker and O'Farrell; Fitz-
simmons, Luque and Mancuso.
AT BROOKLYN.
Chicago
ab h o n Brooklvn
ab h o a
W.H'rm'n 2b 4 1 2 3 Boyle If"
5 2 2 0
Kotnig 3b
2 0 0 2 Taj lor cf
5 4 3 0
English 3b
2 1 0 0 Fiedenck r£ 4 2 2 0
~ '
"
5 2 0 0 Ltslie Ib
5 2 8 0
4 0 1 0 Wright 2 b
5 1 2 2
4 1 6 1 Stripp 3b
5111
3 1 3 1 Frev ss
4 2 3 4
4 2 10 0 Lopez c
4 3 6 0
4 1 2 2 Beck p
4 1 0 2
0 0 0 0
1 0 0 0 ;
Cuyler cf
F.H'rman rf
Mosolf If
Campbell c
Hendrick Ib
Jurges ss
Malone p
Hensbaw p
L.H'rmann p 1 0 0 0,
astephenson 0 0 0 Oi
Nflson p
1 0 0 Ii
Totals
35 9 24 10i Totals
4118 27 9
Chicago
000 003 200— 5
Brooklyn
065 020 OOx—13
Runs: F. Herman, Campbell 2, Hendrick.
Jurges. Boyle 3.
Taylor 3, Frederick,
Wrlsht,
Stripp, Frey 2.
Lopez. Beck.
Error: Cuyler. Mosolf. Campbell, Frey.
Runs batted in: JurgM 2. W. Herman.
English. Hendrick. Beck. Taylor 2. Fred-
erick 3. Leslie. Lopez. Boyle 2. Two base
hit: Hendrick. Wright. Taylor. Stolen base:
Frederick. Bovle.
Double play: Stripp to
Wrtsnt to Leslie. Frey to Wright to Leslie.
Left on base: Chicago 11. Brooklyn 5. Base
on balls: Off Beck 8. Malone 1. Struck
out: By Beck 4. Nelson l. Hits: Off Ma-
lone 6 In 1 2-3 innings. Henshaw 5 in 1.
Herrmann 6 'n 2 1-3. Nelson 1 !n 3. Hit
by pitcher: By Beck (Mosolf and Camp-
hell).
Wild pitch: Malone. L. Hemnann.
Losing pitcher: Malone. Umpires: Pfirman.
Barr and Kiem. Time 2:02.
SECOND GAME.
Chicago
000000 150—« 9 1
Brooklyn
000 000 002—2 7 1
Batteries: Waraeke and Hartnetl; Car-
roll. Ryaa and Outen.
t> h o a
4 0 1 0
4 1 2 4
4 2 1 0
4 0 9 0
4 2 3 1
4 O 5 0
3 O « 4
2 h o a| Fhll».
i
Jtrora If
5 1 1 0 FuJHs cf
I-indstroni cf 5 3 4 <1 Bartell **
P. 'AVnrr rt 3 0 0 0 Kl'in rf
S 2 0 7 Hurst Ib
4 3 2 « r>aTl!< c
5 1 IS 1 SclfUlnTch If
4 1 1 3 iVam*r 2t»
4 2 1 0 Jvnolhc 3h
3 1 0 3 .iMoOurdv
McLrrol SS
I>
Ttaynor 3t>
Vauphin «ys
Suhr Ib
Mtlni t>
1-3.
Winning pitcher: Stewart. Umpires
Dineen, Hildebrand and Van Graffln. Tim
2:10.
SECOND GAME.
Washington
000 000 002—2 2
Cleveland
003 202 OOx—7 11
Batteries: Burke, McColl. Chapman an
Berg, Co'.ton; Pearson ana Pytlak.
AT DETROIT.
New York ab h o a.| Detroit
ab h o
Lary 3b-ss
311 4 j Rogell ss
6 4 0
F. Walker cf 411 O'Foxcf
4 1 0
.
Ruth If
Byrd If
Gehrig Ib
Chapman rf
Lazzeri 2b
Dickey c
Crosetti ft
Devens p
4 1 5 0,Gehringer 2b 511
0 0 0 0|G. Walker U 5 1 4
5 1 13 11 Greenberg Ib 4 1 11
4 1 0 O.Hite rf
4 3 2 3 Owen 3b
4 3 4 1 ; Hayworth c
2 0 0 1 Pasek c
2 0 1 2,Marberryp
MacFayden p 1 0 0 0, Fischer p
Moore p
1 0 0 HHogsett p
aCornbs
1 0 0 O'cStone
bSewell 3b
2 1 0 2 dDoIjack
leSchuble
If Davis
-I
3 1 3
4 1 1
3 0 6
1 0 1
3 2 0
0 0 0
0 0 0
0 0 0
1 1 0
0 0 0
1 1 0
Totals
37 12 27 151 Totals
40 14 27 9
aBatted for Crosetti in seventh; bBntted
for Devens in seventh: cBatted for Hay
worth in eighth; dBatted for Fischer in
eighth; eRan for stone in eighth; fBatted
for Hogsett In ninth.
New York
000 010 145—11
Detroit
120 010 023— 9
Runs: Lary. F. Walker, Byrd. Gehrig
Chapman 2, Lazzeri 4, Sewell. Rogell 2,
G. Walker, Greenberg 2. Hite 2. Owen,
Schuble.
Runs batted in: Gehringer 2,
Marberry 2. Dickey 2, Combs. Gehng 2,
Chapman. Lazzeri 5, Owen. White, Dol-
jack, Rogell, Davis.
Two base hit: Mar-
berry, Dickey 2. Rogell, Gehringer, White.
Three base hit: Rogell. Gehrig, Lazzeri.
Home run: Lazzeri.
Stolen base: White,
Owen. G. Walker. Sacrifice: F. Walker.
Double play: Greenberg (unassisted). Lary
to Gehrig. Left on base: New York 6,
Detroit 10. Base on balls: Off Marberry 2,
Fischer 1. Hogsett 3. Devens 3, MacFay-
den 2, Moore 1. Struck out: By Marberry
4. Fischer 1. Hogsett 1. Devens 3. Hits:
Off Devens 6 in 6 Innings, MacFayden 4
in 1 2-3. Moore 4 In 1 1-3. Marberry 9 In
r 2-3, Fischer none in 1-3. Hogsett 3 In 1.
Passed ball: Dickey.
Winning pitcher:
Hoore. Losing pitcher: Hopsett. Umpires:
Onnsby and Owens. Time 2:35.
AT CHICAGO.
Phila.
»b h o aj Chicago
Williams 2b 3 0 1 0 Swanson rf
2 1 1 0 Haas cf
4 0 3 0 Dykes 3b
5 2 2 0,Simmons If
5 1 7 1 Appllng ss
4 2 1 3 Kress Ib
3 2 O 0 Hayes 2b
1 0 1 0 Borry c
3 1 0 1 W. Miller p
3 1 8 0 Hcvlng p
0 0 0 0
1 0 0 0 ,
1 0 0 1 )
0 0 0 0|
0 0 0 0 !
0 O 0 2'
i o o o:
3ishop 2b
Cramer cf
lochrane c
e»xx Ib
McNair its
ohnson If
Colcman If
ab h o a
4 0 3 0
3 1 3 0
4 3 0 3
4 1 3 0
3 3 0 3
5 2 130
5 2 3 4
5 2 2 0
2 0 0 2
2 2 0 1
"Inney rf.
Barrett p
aMadjcskl
Walt>«K p
bE. Miller
Coombs p
flahaffey p
cCihocJU
Totals
38-10218' Totals
37162713
aBatted for Barrett in third: bBattoJ for
aiherg la sixth; cBatted for Mahaffey In
ilnth,
Philadtlphlsi
OJO 004 ooo— 5
Chicago
220 041 02x—11
Runs: Cochrane. Foxx, McNair 2. Cole-
man. Swarwon. Haw 2. Dykes. Simmons.
Appltnc 2. Kr«$!«. Brrry 2. Hayes. Runs
•v:icd in: Johnson 3. HlpglTis. E. Miller.
laas. DyX»s. Applinp 3. Krc*«. Hayes 2.
J«-rry 2. H^vinc. Two hue hit: Johnsnn.
•Simm-m*. Appling. Berry. Htvinc. Three
hit: Hay-i. Sacrifice: Swanson. Haas.
V. MUI«T.
Double piaj: Hayes to Krr*«.
»rt on li»«c; 3'h11vJ»lrih'» s. Oi'csro Jl.
Bxff
i.-n f>a!:«: Off Kurrrtt 4. CoomVs 3.
Mahaffey J. »V. Millrr 2. H«-vins ". Slrark
mit: B* Wsivrc J. w. Miller I. H«-liK 1.
Totals
38 14 17 20
for KnMh
T-Malu
..............
ojfl onn 201 — «
Pin»fl«it.ai*
...........
000 ooo <>c*3— 1
S-ans: HTMjnrom. Tni-ranr 2. Va-acTinn.
Klein
Krror. Mflnr. Han'rn. Run« M»m-fl
TTwv*i-in.
bar» nit. Vn-jclisn 3. <:r»c». Llnfl-
«1rnjn. Kl^'n. SarufK-*" T. Wnnrr. IVniM*
play Barf'l m Wnrntr In Hurl I
Iftt
mi h««f-
FMtlVutsh U. nnUHS'lI'Ma S
Bw* «rt hv,>. OJf 33anr.Tl .'!. jairu'-n <™1
Bv Hin«r-, J. Nlri-r- l
HI1«: WT HHT.-TI
12 :n * iTininc". rmrii 2 in 1
wnfl •pii'-h-
Harjf-n
lynMnt ititrh'-r. HUTH-ITI
JC&rati API M« ^~).u;1*i
Tim*- ] *
n o o o i H"*: orl r-arrf" S in 2 innine*.
i 4 ft> 3. Oor>int«» 1 in O '!».
ah h n a « '-irinn
S 2 n :. Pr.:-rr rf
4 5 2 « ritrf:} rt
S I S fi AT'ill f f
< n 2 :, Vwtiik IT
4 0 3 " Hull- ?h
4 2 T. " K.-.-nm .1h
4 1 .1 : I-'*' Ih
4 2 3 2 r<
2 0 'i •'. H
fl 0 1 fi n
nnfl
iTi h p a
3 1 3 fi
1 Z 1 S
,*, fi 3 fi
a o «i 2 l
a i a 4 |
4 1 rrM]
iv fit h T.
r. hi 1*1 f
P-< w»i ;.
TM«1«
AT ST. i o« is.
r. 3 o i i^\'-i *«
s 2 i .-. iv«>; rr
4 : ; o r.»»j>Mfl« ir
5 4 4 0 ruTnt't'''.! rt
S 3 " " F.urrn Iti
S fl 7 1 Mtllllrt ITi
4 1 1 f I SI nrt I 3ti
.1 f1 2 7 ll'Tn^trj c
; fi fi 1 (-•«-. f
] rt fi n t.', t-t r*
fl (I fl fl Hc'.r-n p
P 0 0 fi t.r.u'l
sociatcd Press
East Slashes Prices.
Thirty out of 62 eastern colleges,
replying to a questionnaire, indi-
cated reductions in ticket prices.
Twenty-nine others will stand pat
on their 1932 scale, with a few ab-
sorbing the new government tax.
Only
two,
the
University of
Maine and Geneva college of Beaver
Palls, Pa., expressed sufficient con-
fidence in an "upturn" to announce
they will raise admission
charges
this year. One, Bethany
college
of
West
Virginia,
will continue
last year's policy of free admission
to all home games.
Top prices vary with the attrac-
tion, but the $4 game, plus tax,
will be more of a rarity than ever.
Onlv the Yale-Harvard game
re-
mains in this price class on the
schedule for either the Blue
or
the Crimson, leaving it on the same
level with the Army-Notre Dame
classic in New York. "Tops'1
for
such old standbys as Yale-Army,
Princeton-Yale and Harvard-Army
now are listed at $3.
Even the "big game"
on ths
west coast, between Stanford
and
California, is a S4 affair this year,
as compared with a previous top
of $5.
Top Price at Notre Dame.
Only Notre Dame of the big
school group holds to the pre-de-
pression prices, box seats for
the
Southern California game at South
Bend going for S6.60 each, with the
best reserved seats at S4.40.
Prices for the most attractive
games in
the
mid-west, scuth,
southwest
and
Rocky Mountain
conference groups range from $1 50
to $2.50 in most cases, with soms
at $3.
Although the University of Den-
.
and triples bv D.iu*on and Tuber tinned
the trick. Score.
POT, crs
.........
3 1 0 2 1 0 1 0 1 -8 13 4
SchuylT
.....
1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 1—4 P 3
Kronk and Nietzel; \Vlrks and A. Mack-
c.istadt.
Iowa-Nebraska Power
will play West-
boro. Mo. or M»mphis, Neb . In the sec-
ond round of the Council Bluffs tourna-
afternoon.
Westboro
and
their first round
game
ment Friday
Memphis play
Wednesday.
SWANTON BREAKS EVEN.
SWANTON. Neb.. Aug. 30. — Swanton
broke even in. » pair of baseball games
played at the Swanton plcnlo last week-
end. Swanton
beat
Western, 9-5, and
dropped a 6-3 decision to Plymouth af-
ter 10 Innings.
GAMES ARE POSTPONED.
FALLS CITY. Neb.. Aug. 30—All Sun-
day games in tho Nemaha Valley and
Richardson county leagues were postponed
on account of wet grounds.
PLATTE VALLEY LEAGUE.
••V L Pctl
W L Pet
Papillion
11 3 .786'Elkhorn
7 7 .500
Valley
3 6 .5711 Yutan
7 7 .500
Chalco
7 7 .500 Benn'ton
6 8 .429
Arlington
7 7 .500 Gretnn
3 II .214
VALLEY. Neb. Aug. 30—Gretna staged a
three-run spree in the ninth stanza to up-
set Chalco. 5-4. in the only Platte Valley
league game Sunday.
Schuman. Gretna
pinch-hitter, singled to bring in two runs
and tie the score in the last of the ninth
and scored the winning run on Hansen's
sigle.
JUNIOR HUSTLER
IN SEMI-FINALS
Hubbcll's Nineteenth Win.
Hubbell refused to give the St.
Louis Cardinals more than five hits
yesterday and scored a 3 to 0 shut-
out. He fanned every man in the
starting lineup at least once and
got Watkins three times and Col-
lins twice for a total of 12 strike-
outs. It was Carl's ninth shutout
tliis season and his nineteenth vic-
tory.
But the faltering Giants failed to
gain on the idle Boston Braves.
who remained in second place only
six games behind, as the Terrymen
dropped the night-capper to the
Cardinals, 2 to 0. The swift pace of
the National league race, topped by
a flock of doubleheaders, is begin-
ning to tell on the league leaders
and they lacked any sign of punch
behind Pitcher Freddy Fitzsimmons
as they lost.
Bill Walker, another of those
Giants' castoffs, was the winning
hurler. He actually cracked a fat
homer
himself,
and
Manager
Frankie Frlsch supplied the win-
ning run.
Pirates Trip Phillies.
Pittsburgh pulled up seven and »
haLf games behind the Giants after
pushing aside Philadelphia, 4 to 1.
for the third straight win. Meine
lost a shutout when he made an
error and gave two safeties in the
ninth.
Linus Frey, a youngster Brooklyn
recalled
from
Nashville, played
shortstop for the Dodgers as they
divided a twin bill with Chicago's
Cubs. Frey
fielded well enough,
made two hits and got a debit of
one error. Beck held the Cubs to
nine hits as his teammates collected
18 off four Chicago pitchers to take
the first game, 13 to 5. Lon Warneke
won the second for Chicago, 6 to 2.
Cleveland's
belligerent
Indians
forced Washington to go 10 innings
to win the first game, 2 to 1, and
beat the Senators in the vesper, 7
to 2.
Lazzeri Pounds Pellet.
Tony
Lazzeri
hit
successfully
three times, drove in five runs and
scored four times himself to give
the New York Yankees an 11 to 9
beating of Detroit. Moore was the
winning pitcher.
Barrett, Walberg, Coombs and
Mahaffey failed to stop the slug-
gers of Chicago's White Sox, who
ver,
the
has
with the biggest
Rocky Mountain stadium in
conference,,
abolished the 50-csnt seat as
a "non-paying" proposition. Stan-
ford will try selling end-zone seats
at only 25 cents for lesser games,
and the University of Kansas win
offer
the same price to School
boys.
Big Six In Line.
In addition to blanket reductions
in single
game or season ticket
prices in the Southwest canferencs,
Pacific Coast conference and Big
Six conference, colleges
announc-
ing 1933 reductions so far include
the following:
South—North Carolina State.
Rocky Mountain—Utah and Den-
ver.
New England — Boston college,
Trinity, Springfield, Yale and Har-
vard.
New York state — Colgate.
Roch-
ester. Army, Niagara and Fordham.
Pennsylvania—Allegheny,
Bucb-
nell, Moravian. Gettysburg,
Grove
City. Muhlenberg. Franklin & Mar-
shall. Pittsburgh. Westminster. Ur-
sinus. Temple. Washington & Jef-
'erson. Lafayette. Carnegie,
St.
Vincent's and Lehigh.
Also Navy, Western Maryland
and Rutgers.
Williams Rings Up His
Third Victory In '
Net Compet.
Harry Williams, hustling young I pounded out 16 hits for a 11 to 5
Junior player, swept into the semi- «™P^ ^ B
fmm
finals of the Lincoln Newspapers' i behind to win the opening tilt, 10
annual junior tennis tournament to 8, from the Boston Red Sox, only
Tuesday when he
brushed
aside to drop the sec
Clayton Ankeny, 6-1, 6-0. It was the clubs were idle,
third victory of the tourney for
Williams.
During
these
t h r e e
matches he has lost only two games.
Merlin Mason and John Haberlan '
also have reached the semi-finals,'
the fourth spot in the round being
argued by Robert Kovarik of Hal- ' Q
lam and John Dietrich.
In the men's singles, Hugo Dean.
to drop the second, 9 to 4. Other
Huco Dean vs. winner Merlin Mason-Bob
Harrison.
Junior Singles.
Quartcr-rinal round—
Savage Bristles
Up at Mat Foes
Steve Savage, heavyweight grap-
>ler from Chicago, is pulling on
he bit and otherwise declaring his
desire to show
up
the
bone-
crushers of the Tony Stecher-Jake
saacson stable who performed on
Tuesday night's mat card at the
4-H arena.
Today's
mail
from
Omaha_
brought a challenge from Savage
n which he offers to back him-
elf for as
much
as
a round
thousand dollars, risking his money
on the proposition that he can
latten Paul Jones. Ray Richards
and all others
involved
in the
Tuesday show in 'a single night's
>erformance. In a c
'
"
o The Star, Steve's
part:
"As Is well known, I "bate" had SLOW) nne*treat"jWry Mar.;d-r and O.lTrr Mar?-
Neil Lane, Roberto Mario and Mer-
rill Flood already have reached the
quarter-finals. Mario and Flood won
tight matches Tuesday, the former
beating Glenn Griffith. 6-4, 2-6.
6-4, and the latter winning over
Lloyd Mills. 3-8. 6-1. 6-0.
Voris Peden and Ted Cruise went
into the quarter-finals of the men's
doubles by beating Caxy Hopt and
Kenneth Brown, former prep cham-
pions, 1-6, 6-4. 6-1. William Geist
and Francis McDonnell reached the
junior
doubles
finals
Tuesday.
Scores:
Men's Singles.
Third round—
Third bracket—John DiMrich beat Ed
Hendry. Jr. 6-3. 6-3
Fourth bracket—Merlin Mason beat Hu-
bert Kennv. 6-4. 7-5: Bob Harrison beat
Fred Fercibt. 4-6. 6-3. 6-3.
Fourth round—
First bracket—Merrill Flood beat Lloyd
Mills. 3-6. 6-1. 6-10
Third
bracket—P.oberto
Mario
beat
Glenn Griffith. 6-4. 2-6. 6-4.
Fourth bracket—Hugo Dean beat Oliver
DeWolfolf. 6-2. 6-2.
Pairings—Merrill Flood vs. winner Vorls
'
—'
TKAXSCREL IN FINALS.
Milton Transch'l, Lincoln Junior cham-
pion, went into the finals o! the Omaha
city Junior tourney Tuesday when he beat
Lloyd Friedman of Omaha, 6-2. 3-6. 6-1.
He plays the winner of tho Charles Flem-
Ing-Heiman Blumentnal match.
Transchfl lost to Dick Zoesch in the
men's singles In a 4-6. 6-4. 6-3 match.
CALVEKTS WIN ALt TITLES.
NORFOLK. Neb.. Aug. 30—The Calvert
family of Pierce
has
monopolized
the
Northeast Nebraska tennis titles. Al Cal-
vert beat brother John for the singles
crown. 6-4. 6-4. 6-1'. and the brothers
teamed up to beat Glenn Davis and Clar-
ence McNamce fcr the doubles title. 6-U
6-3, 6-4.
Big Four Lined Up
To Battle Invader
EXMOOR
COUNTRY
"CLUB,
Highland Park. 111.. Aug. 30—l "TO .Tiri— S I
3(>r> (III ?..1I -3 'i i
,. -.
/-1-rl.a.
1
'
JlfTMBT! J*
* r*r'l *•
4.,
x>'-1ed for more than a. month In Omaha.
Tins to prt cne of the bunch who work
>r Ton?- StrchTr and -Tatr Isaacson ti
cC"-nt my challenge.
To daf. not one
I them. Jor stechT Included, has had
4v- cer.-race lo wrc.Mle me on Ihe le-.tl.
nrt my rnor.tv bus had
•wrert linir public
r»*l!» h»« b«n foolrd
«atsoa Tor more than .
mr thtir hippoflromiac
nH:r Jiunch. trltb th* po=J!lH» fxoerrfiin
f J.-HII!. ha* brtn palllnf Use hiTOwJrom*
lull for a lor.i time. ?nd it now Ipolcs
IT I,7jla! Is 5n -wllh iJirai. at t-f
•«««
r**H1ng n!1h th* ««n« eriwd Monflvr
sM In Ornnha and Tu-tiaT in Unrein
' I arn willlnc. T^s MTIXICT;' "^ r">m«" 1^
Linroln ard T-ovt a ihoasanfl tfoilnrt Hint
1 <-»n Jviii ihf-m all In cm" nlcht Thl<;
<-.cn
dcf.nii!:
Coral Dubrr
and Willis
YO-J-.Z boat O!i*« DfWolI and John Cron-
]CT ' ovfaiil".: Mrrrill Flood and Grore"
Dbb<*m
brat Kmn-l1! Elliott
and
Bill
Huchrs. dels-all: Ed HTSdrr and Em To*t
beat F H. Erokair arid w. O Eic*t!. «-3
campaigner who almost defeated
Glenna Collett Vare in the 1929
championship.
Virginia Van Wie of Chicago, de-
fending champion, faced Mrs. IXK>
Federman of New York, anotner
veteran who was capable of scor-
ine an upset.
The* other members of the "Bi?
Four" were Mrs. Leona Cheney. San
Gabriel.
Calif., who met Anieia
Gorrevca,
21-year-old
southern
from Fort Worth: Mrs.
Kansas City, who mei
opposition irom Frances
Williams of Philadelphia, and Mau-
reen Orcutt. Haworth. N. J., star,
wno
was
challenged
by Mrs.
Charles Ncwbold of Wichita. Kas.
A stiff battle also was expected
between Lucille Robinson of DP-"
Moines. western champion,
anrt
,o'n default jnr r^rKlnlj; and -"nhn Mcll«-i
>r»:. Leonard VBVtr«-«brre and L £r>>r. «-C.
brat Leonard
-
-
; , „
c-0 P-2- PT'd Frrc'ot *rA H"rrT Wj).i»:n*
brat Ert"w».r f.6 GTIS MJr";-
»".. I".
7Tiur=i5»-
•At • -.'i 14
IT. in fi-
tti'
Sf
p.'.
•antlinc
Ely's Engagement As
%'•
Helper Not Certain T-
Chris MalhiR. Twumsfh athM* '.".~
whose sprints through a
broken .-ir
Held provided Cornhu^fr spcr'a- W'
1ri
"Oi pv ?t»-«-»r! s. Hi rtfV»r.!] .".
Stnrin J a » 2-S tnrAr.ft, Romx
H ••
Of?
,) B'Tlt St
Biac-
rTi"" Ely 1/1 'Red" Yoke's
rri't^r Elv ha« b^rn t^rid^r
aprKyinlmTit. but mar dwlin?
drr to attend law rch-»: at
1 Ins* on, D. C.
;,--• V-7V- '
H-H vr;?- l
for
several mont-hs. todav wired Rsno.
Ncv.. promoters his acceptance 01
an offer 1o batllr Kins Tut. Min-
neapolis wHerwdeht. in a lO-round
bcrat on Sept. 5.
Eddie and
Tut
rnllidcd Julv 21 at Reno, the Min-
TT--nta battler celling the verdict
in live ro«n'i«. but Anderson's iin"
shTaine made ft hit with Reno Tine
fans nntl trie return engagement iv
the reMilt.
Anderson, in ccwng acainM
Tu:.
Till be meaning in his 47mjj Jinn
battle.
He ranks third
in mat
flcht,*.
Johnnie Dwidf* tops t"'
Jirt. with Jartt Britten ranking wr-
OT)(3.
Omaha Tennis Club
Play* Here Sunday
Thf Omaha Trunk clnh will
mrrt thr Uwoln Tennis <-l«h In
xn jnl«T-
WOW
6J5—Pintel Harmonic j
|Q1US-WABC)
KFJR
.6^>0-Gporge
Olseft s orchr^tra nnd Fan-
nie Brlce iNBC-WEAFi WOW
« 00—rho Nomads (NBC-WJ^i- KOIL
am—Curtain Calls lOBS-WASC' - KTOR
« 30—Kate Smith (GBS-WABCi—KFAB
* 4S—Talk: Under Ausplcci of Committee
for the Nation. ' Freeing o£ Frozen
Bark DepoMH
lyiMng J Rosen-
wa.d. ipcfker (N3C-\VJZ|—probab-
ly KOIL
7.90—American Legion Broadcast
(NBC-
WJZi—lilting unannounced
7 00—Ferde
Groffs
orchestra
INBC-
WEAFl—WDAP
1 i5_vera Van contralto (CBS-WABC)-
KFOR.
t 30—Ono Mans Family INBC-WEAF) —
WOW.
":SO—Guy Lombardo and His Rojal Can-
adians, George Burns ana Grade
Allen comedy team (CBS-WABO —
KMOX. KMBC
» 00—Fred Wai Ing and 111' Pfnnsylvan-
lan, (CBS-WABC i—KFOR
ft 00—Corn Cob Pipe Club (NBC-WEAF) —
WOW.
* SO—MUSIC
Msglc—'NBC-WJZj—WENR.
KOIL Carter 8 45 I
t SO—Ship of Joy INBC-WEAFi—WOW
* 45—Edwin C Hill commentator (CBS-
WABCI—KFOR
B'OO—Ho»ard Barlo* and Colurifcia Bvm-
phony
trrthestra
(CBS-WABC) —
KFAB KFOR (after 9 151
9 00—Mcver
Davis1
orchestra
(NBC-
WEAF)—WOW
<» mi—Amoj 'n' Andv
i NBC-WJZ) — KOIL
» IS—Th«
Foe'. Prince
(NBC-WJZ) —
KOIL.
B IS—Budch Roger'.1
orchestra
(NBC-
WEAF)—probably WOW
9 M—Tom
Gerun -
orchestra
(CBS-
WABO—KFAB
9.30—Richard Cole and orchestra (NBC-
WEAFl—listing unannounced
9.M—Jack Denms orchestra (NBC-Vv'JZ)
—KSO WENR
JO.00—Ted Leu is and his orchesttra f CBS-
WABC)—WIBW.
WCCO.
KFAB
(after 10 15J
10.00—Mill! Blue
Rhvtnm Band. Ethel
Waters and George Dewey V. asMng-
ton
\ocallsts
I NBC-WJZ I—KOIL
30:00—Ralph
Kirbcrry.
dream
singer
(NBC-WEAF) —WOW
10.OS—Ben Bernle, the clde irasstro and
«I1 the lads INBC-VEAFI— WOW
10-SO—Mark Fisher's
orchestra
(NBC-
WEAF)—listing unannounced
10:30—Henry
King s
orchestra
(NBC-
WJZ)—KOIL
Her Honor the Mayor,
THURSDAY. AUGUST 11.
The state of New Jersey has its
first woman mayor in the person of
Doris W. Bradway (above), who
heads the municipal government of
Wildwood, N. J. Her honor didn't
say if she would attempt to elimi-
nate the "wild" from the fair name
of her new domain
Oil Station Entered;
$23 Taken From Safe
Fred Rhoda. attendant at a Phil-
lips oil station. Twentv-second and
O street, told police Tuesdav after-
noon that someone had entered the
station the previous night by means
of a key and took $23.73 from the
safe. Entrance to the safe, Rhoda
said, was apparently gained by use
of a key.
NETWORK HIGHLIGHTS.
5 00—Amos 'n' Andy INBC-WJZJ—WLW.
6:00—Morton
Dov.ney
(CES-WABC)—
KFAB
8:15—Concert
Footlights
(NBC-WJZ) —
KOIL.
5 15—Dance Time (CBS-WABC1— KFAB
5:30—The Mills Brothers (CBS-WABC) —
KMOX.
5-45—The Goldberg, (NBC-WEAF)—WOW.
5:4S—The Texas dangers (CBS-WABC)—
KMOX.
5:45—Slgmund Spaeth
tune
detective
(NBC-WJZ)—KOIL
I
6.00—Rudy Vallee and His Connecticut
Yankees Stars of Stage and Screen
In varletv
entertainment
(NBC-
WS4J*)—WOW.
«:00—windv City Revue (CBS-WABC)—
KFAB.
1:00—Caotaln Henri's Show Boat (NBC-
WEAF)—WOW.
7:00—Presenting Mark
Wsrnow
(CB8-
WABCJ—KFAB.
1:00—Death Valley Days
(NBC-WJZ) —
KOIL
1-3»—Wavne King's
orchesttra
(NBC-
WJZ—KOIL
* 00—Al Jolson, Paul whltemsn and his
orc'iestra. other entertainers (NBC-
WEAF—WOW
S 00_Deep River (CBS-WABC)— KFOR
S:OO—Attorney-General Homer S
Cum-
mln?g speaking before Grand Rap-
Ids Bar Ass'n. "Modern Tendencies
In the Law' (NBC-WJZ)—probably
KOIL.
8:30—Dinner of the Society of Automo-
tive Engineers (W3C-WJZ)—1'stlng
unannounced.
»:45—Gladys Rice, soprano
with con-
cert
orchestra
(CBS-WABC) —
KFOR. KFAB (after 9 00)
9-00—Amos 'n' Andy (NBC-WJZ)—KOIL.
9.00—William Scotti's orchestra
(NBC-
WEAF)—WOW.
9:15—Phil Regan
tenor (CBS-WABO—
KFOR.
S-15—Bennv Meroff.; orchestra
(NBC-
WEAF)—probably WDAP.
9:30—NRA
program
(CBS-WABC)->
KFAB.
9:30—Jack
Denny's
orchestra
(NBC-
WEAF)—WOW,
9:SO—U S. Army
band
(NBC-WJZ)—
KOA. KOIL (after »-45 )
9:45—Freddie Martin's
orchestra (CBS-
WABC)—KFOR.
10:00—Eddie Jungbluth's orchestra (NBC-
WJZ)—KOA.
10:OJ—Casa Lores orchestra (CBS-WABC)
—WIFW. KFAB (after 10 15).
10:00—Ernie Hoist's orchestra (NBC-WJZ)
—listing unannounced.
Ifl-O*—Ralph
Klrberrv.
dream
singer
(NBC-WEAF)—WOW
10:M—Mark Flsher'j
oreh»str»
(NBC-
WEAF)—Tjrobablr WOW.
10:30—Johnnv Hamo's orchestra
(CBS-
WABC)—KFAB
How to Quickly
LOSE FAT
Without Drugs, Starving or
Violent Exercise
Lose 15 - 20 Lbs.
Safely in 2 Weeks
Fat
girls usually
are
"wall flow ers."
"Wives w h o allow
themselves to become
fat
and
flabby
too
often find their hus-
band's love growing
cold.
It Ton want to lose fat
so quick you will almost
want to dance with joy
—- and regain physical
beauty and attract^ «-
ness, make jour own
test Yourself, at home.
Get Sleepy Salts today.
Take it regularly for
Just 7 davs. If you are
not delighted at results.
if \ou have not lost
weight, both pounds and
Inches, if you haven't
become slenderer, taken
on new, daintv fashion-
able curves, new health.
new Mgor, if you don't
look
> oanger and
fe«l
iouneer. all sou have to
do Is to bring back the
unused Sleepy Salts and
your purchase price will
be refunded In full. You
run no risk, no chance,
no doubt. Tou must feet
and look better for los-
ing it or no cost
Be
convinced.
Try Sleepy
Salts today.
LOSES MPOUNDS
»LtuTlian4WMks
"I sttrted iiklnc Sleep;
8*1 ts Sunday room lot be-
fore golnx to Church. In
three d*yi I WM mble to
set In * stiill dre» thtt
I hid not been able tn
wetr for tome time
1
im 5 fret 5*4 Inches tall
sod tare almdj Icit 38
Mn Hal Campbell.
lost N. roiico St.
Dratur. Ill
A»k for Sleepr Sdts
at
Harler Drue Co.. Fenton Drni C«.. Meier
Drug: Co . and all leading drnic stores.
Bay Simpson of South Bend Ind. I
made a hole-in-one, but took a
I
score of seven on the
hole. His'
first six shots were out of bounds. I
If joar dealer cannot Rvpfrir 7*n,
$1 f«r medium i«iae direet !• th*
W.ICT C.^ 40^ W. Eri. St., CfcJe.g.. 111.
Daily Cross-'word Puzzle I
ACROSS
•olutlon of Yesterday's Puzxl*
i
«.
U.
14.
II.
11
IS.
IS.
II.
-2.
13.
IS.
K.
t7.
tt.
M.
•I.
14.
15.
l«.
IS.
If.
Poisonous
element
Bidperllk.
Animal
Certificate of
graduation
100 tquar*
meter* of
land
Act of taking
away
Llk»
Sailor
Railroad
•attnc cart
colloq.
Grow old
Unclosed: poet.
Title of respect
B=o!t o£ tho
Bib>
Dors not
consent
Br «-»v ot
Profound
lethargr
American
soprano
Spread to dry
Jfivo-j*
Mimics
Southern
constellation
CTI«T> cooki*
T*Met
44. Note of th«
•cal*
«. Recipient of 4
41.
41. Be?c>r»
47. Inside
4S. One, who ent»r«
•with ho«ll»
Intention*
SO. Build
K. Asr.cul'ural
H.
1.
1. Protect ITO
railing
t. Xear
4. Pronoun
5. Vehlcl* for
snow travel
I Preeminently
^••a^ltiful
<-hr.rs:e*
DOWN
7. Lorce stream
S. Bnx
S>. AMliloTi to a
10. NegatlT*
11. Pnll-gTow*
insect
12. Containers
IT. Money hoard*
20. Disproved
12. Poisonous
substance
obtained
from oil at
bitter
almonds
14. Swindles
2t. Directions!
Scotch
2X. Sward
29. Duct
31. Banquet
32. Greed
33. Is penitent
35. Monks
34. Particular
point In tht
orbit of a
heavenly
body
IT. Author of
"The Arc «T
Reason
II. Writer of
bors' books
41. Qe^rp* Eliot
character
42. Prophet
'45. Bor
4«. Ace
4*. Brother ef
Odin
SI. SrinhHl for
fS
3*
35
•C1
,53
-
4?
'8
33
6-
ff
3?
Mileage Fee Notices
Sent Out By Price
Notices are being sent out
by-
State Auditor Price to all state de-
partments and Institutions that un-
der the provisions or H. R 14 en-
acted by the last legislature no
more than 5 cents per mile may be
charged or collected by officials or
employes using their own automo-
biles for traveling on public busi-
ness.
Their attention is being directed
further to the irquirement
that
only one mileage bill can be col-
lected for the same machine, re-
gardless of how many travel in it,
and that the trips must be lor
mileaee "actually and necessarily
traveled by the most direct route."
Where adequate bus or ti».n ser-
vice is available, the mileage allow-
ance for a private machine must
not exceed the amount of fare on
ths public conveyance
A sample blank certificate Is en-
closed with each letter showing in
what form vouchers for mileage
must be prepared and filed, with
the approval of the
department
head.
Chicago Murderer Is
Given Death Penalty
CHICAGO.
Aug. 30— M»)—Offi-
cials conducting a war on crime In
Chicago counted another victory to-
day with a death verdict for John
Schcck.
Scheck, who recently created a
panic in a courtroom by shooting
to death
Policeman John Sevlck
with a smuggled mstol. was con-
victed late yesterday by a
lury
! within 21 minutes after the Jury
'had received the
Lincoln Restaurant
Men Form Group to
Aid in NRA Program
H. A. Detwellcr, Fred W. Iselin,
L O True, D. W. Sinder. William
F. Matschullnt
and
William H.
Meier weie elected to the execu-
tive committee at an organization
meeting
of
Lincoln
restaurant
owners
Tuesday
evening in the
Federal Trust building.
The spreading of reliable infor-
mation concerning the NRA and
the nat.onal
restaurant
owners'
code and assisting in the enforce-
ment of the code after its adop-
tion will be the chief purpose of
the group.
Another
open
meeting of
the
group will be held Thursday. Sept.
7, at the chamber of commerce.
A. E. GKANTHAM OF
LEXINGTON DEAD
LEXINGTON. Neb. Auc. 30 -i.-\I»
—A. E. Grnnthum, president of thr
Farmers State bank here, died Int'
Tuesday in Demer of asthma, from
which he had been suffering loi
several \ears He peneiallv went ( i
Denver in the summers, nna \\n.s
prepaiint; to return home. He had
been i nthc banking business here
many jeais.
City as part of the ROV- I < imv.cnt ho;; reduction pio^ram.
COUCHLIN
AIR ACAINI
RADIOLAND
Read about this
famous Clcricll
air crusade
Slaughtering Hogs
At Nebraska City
NEBRASKA CITY, Neb, Aug
30—'Jf—The Morton-GreKsoti Pack-
ing companv,
a branch
of the
Wilson & Co. packing firm, started
operations here the
first
of the
week on a run of
slightly
more.
than 5000 pigs shipped here from
OTHER FEATURES
O. O. Mclntfic tells what's wrong with Radio... How to get
• Radio job . . . Stories about £dwm C Hill. Jeannie Ling,
Biog Cnxb/ ... Ida Bailey Allen solves Women's Problems
.... Pictures and Humor.
15 CENTS AT ALL NEWSSTANDS
BUCK ROGERS. 2432 A. D.—
FALLS IN PACIFIC.
IJy PHIL NOWLAN and DICK CALKIN?
VVlLMA,
iDEKrmY HAD BEEM
D1SCOVEBED.
HAD FLED FTSOW
HAWAI 1 - AND
' RASH1M6
SOUTHWARD OVER
THE PACIFIC, HAD
OUTDISTANCED
PURSUIT- BUT
THE PtM/ER o?
HER PlXlMG BELT
TO Give
OUT- THE
WEAKEMED-SHE
WAS LOSIMG
ALTITUDE-
SUDDENLY SHE FOUMDA
RAY Of HOPE'
OFT TUEEE ON ^N
THE HOC! TOW/-IS
THAT A ROCK?-A LITTLE
KLAND?-CAU-X MAKE
COPYRIGHT JOHN F. D1LLE CO
BUT SHE WA-S STILL A
/WILE PROM UcC GOAL WUEM
UGH/-8-8-9UJ8/-IV6-
GOT TO WAGGLE our
Of THEM IF - US H / - SLUB/
I'M-I'M eoiMG TO-TO
ASHORE
EQUIPMEMT, AMD
DEGPAVrTATOC, WEKE
MOW DEAD WEIGHTS-
DRAGGING HEC DOWN-
QOOOOH/-TWE
POWER'S ALL
GOMe/-l'M-X'M
THE BUNGLE FAMILY—
OH MAMA!
By H. J. TUTHILL
PARDON ME. PEGGY, BUT v—>.
THAT WAS MR. EL DORADO )
ON THE PHONE, WASN'T
J
IT? MY GOODNESS, HEjf-^
DIDN'T WAIT mrr-^ar-^
LONG AFTER.
THIS
PHONE
CALL,
MOTHER,
WAS FROM
GETTING BACK
TO TOWN
TO PHONE
YOU, DID
HE? I
HEA.RD
YOU
TALKING
VERY
PLEASANT-
LY TO
HIM TOO,
AND
A BOY I MET
THE OTHER.
EVENING.
YOU SAY IT
WASN'T MR.
DORADO? AHEM1.
WELL...ANYHOW I
JUST HAPPENED TO
REMEMBER HE LEFT
A PAIR, OF
HERE. LAST
WINTER. ONE
OF US OUGHT
TO CALL
UP AND
REMIND
ME CALL UP
MONTGOMERY
EL DORADO?
ME? OH
MOTHER!
OH PEGGY DEAR, PLEASE ^\
DON'T FLY INTO HYSTERICS )
MERELY BECAUSE YOU
/\
HAVE AN OPPORTUNITY (\
TO BE POLITE ABOUT ^x
A PAIR OF LOST GLOVES
TO A NICE MAN WHO
GOODNESS KNOWS
WOULD '
CERTXlNLY
CALL YOU
UP IF HE
FOUND
YOUR
UMBRELLA
v OR
OH
IT'S
JUST OUT
OF THE
QUESTION.
ME CALL
HIM UP?
INDEED
NOT!
THE MORE
I THINK OF
IT. WHY
MOTHER, I
JUST CAN'T
IMAGINE HOW
YOU EVEN
SUGGESTED
THAT
I
WHAT IF I MAY BE BOLD
ENOUGH TO ASK, IS SO
TERRIBLE ABOUT
LETTING A VERY
IMPORTANT MAN
KNOW HE LOST A
PAIR OF GLOVES?
SUCH A HULLABALOO
ABOUT DOING
A LITTLE
FAVOR FOR.
A FINE MAN
WHO DID
OODLES
OF THINGS
FOR YOU,
PEGGY.
THE GUMPS—
O, HAPPY DAY.
Dy SIDNEY SMITH
MILLIE 1M 1WE
v' MOONU6HT LAST MK-rMT-
A LONCr STROV.L M4 'WE PARK —
THI-& MORNIN6* AT BREAKFAST,
MtLUE. SUVkY &LJPS HER. HAMD_
ACROSS THE TA6LE- /-" ui.jV'r''"'
MAS.
PROPOSE&YO
YOU
OH, MY DARt-IMG*
I'M ^O PROUD OP
YOU DEAR-
I KNOW THAT YOO'UIL (
BE
\
AMO
t HAVE
AMD NEVER RE&RET
MARRYtNCi SUCH
AN OPRI6WT AND
HONORABLE MAN
AMWfcNY,
THE DOOR.
AND
BIIA
ENTERS-
YOU
APPROVE
OF
AS A
SON-»N
LAW
DO-
CHILOREN-
YOO HAVE ^
MY HEA.RTY
SHil'FY—
IT'S IN THE AIR.
Bv PERCY L. CROSBT
MY
THAT'S <&ONNA
OFF
t Hope we WINS
Prrcv I- Cro^bv. Grral Bntain riRlils
© I933.-Kins Features Syndicate. Inc
WROTE A^N'TOCO
COUSIN /M AUiT-RKUA W^.'D BE
BRINGING UP FATHER—
By GEO. M'MANUU
UTTLE PAVJ »•=
- DOM'T
THERK L\KE
A FOOL- GET
DOCTOR- OU\CK!
TME. ONJV>f PL^VCE. TO
FlMO
AROONJO
AN" '
CAN1T SPEUL
t"
1 i 'tt *,•'< ffa'w-*^ Vr»*J '« t !••_ <•' A' fc tiifl f c*t»
1TLLIE THE TOILER—
GOOD FOR A SHARP APPETITE.
Bv Rf<5 V/ESTOVBR
.*»
.NFM'SPAPFRf
^WSPAPER!
TWELVE
THE LINCOLN STAR—WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 30,1933.
Late Rally In Stock Market Substantially Reduces Early Losses Of 1 To 3 Or More Points
Closing Tone in
Shares Irregular
Final Gainers Confined
Mostly to Few Utili-
ties and Oils.
NEW YORK. AUK. JO —./1V-
Stocks rallied late tgday coincident with
a sharp rebound In
wheat,
and
early
losses of 1 to 3 or more point1; were re-
duced substantially.
Final minis ot :rac-
tlons to urour.d a poi.".t. however, were
confined mostly to a lew
unities and
oils and at the close prices wsre moder-
ately irregular.
Approximately
2,4UO,000
shares changed hands.
Equities, led by the gold minim! croup,
turned
heavy
in
the
morning
when
traders failed to exhibit any special en-
thusiasm
for
Hie
official
order
letting
down some of the bars of the tcccm
stringent, gold embargo.
Wheat jumped
about over a ranee ol some 6 cents a
bushel.
Closing sains of around 3 cents
a bushel In this staple were attributed
partly
to
Argentine's
approval
o! the
London
wheat agreement.
Tlu-re were
also fresh
rumors of
early
recognition
of Russia.
Cotton
rallied and sacked.
Bonds were Irregular.
The
dollar
im-
proved In foreign exchange dealings.
Homestake Mining, off 21 points at one
time, got back most of this.
Mclmyrc
Porcupine. Dotnc Mines. American Smelt-
ing and Cerro de Pares were off 1 to
around 2.
U. S. Smelting lost about 5
and other issues down 1 tn 2 or more
Included
Allied
Chemical.
U. S. Steel.
New York Central. Western Union. Ameri-
can Telephone. Santa Fc. National Dis-
tillers and American Commercial Alcohol.
Shares of Standard Oil ot New Jersey.
Amerada.
Standard
Oil
of
California.
Houston Oil. Consolidated Gas and Elec-
tric Service of New Jersey were up frac-
tions to around
2 points.
With market opinion uncertain as to
Just how much, if any. inflation was por-
tended in the cold decree, many traders
who bought stocks yesterday for a quick
turn decided, in the face of various un-
certainties
to relinquish thorn and wait
for the sizeable reaction which hns been
expected in some quarter?.
At the same time, sentiment was not
too pessimistic.
Of interest to proponents
of the advance was the statement of Gen-
eral Johnson. NRA admlmsfator.
that
some 2001000 persans had been returned
to work under the aegis of the Hue eagle.
The general estimated that this number
represented, at the lowest conjecture, an
increase of some 530,000,000
in
weekly
payrolls and an addition tj the yearly
purchasing power of the public around
$1,500,000,000.
The growing easiness of money rales wns
further exemplified when the
New York
stoc kexchange, early in the session, an-
nounced a reduction of the call money
renewal rate Irom 1 per cent to 3i per
cent
The outside call rate his been at
% for sevedal weeks, and the downward
readjustment of the official rate was in-
terpreted as an authoritative recognition
of the plentifulncss of funds.
President Roosevelt's modification o, the
gold embargo, although not establishing
a "free" gold market in the stnse that one
exists in London, permits the sale by
American miners of newly mined mct.il.
under restrictions, ni world prices rather
than at the legal quotation in this coun-
try of $20 67 which the order
did
not
change. Thus the chief immediate effect
will be on the earnings of gold producing
companies and possibly, also, on iho vol-
ume of their output.
Some sections of the financial commun-
ity endeavored to read inflationary impli-
cations into the
new order, wondering
whether it foreshadowed a cut m the
dollar's valuation, but in high br/iking
quarters it was said that the step appeared
to have no such connections.
The dollar rallied slightly during the
earlier foreign exchange trading.
Ster-
ling was off half a. cent to S4.55li at the
opening,
while French francs dipped 3
points to 5.55 cents.
Mid-week trade statistics gave further
evidence of seasonal recession in business.
Steel output, according to "Iron Age," has
dropped to 47 per cent of capacity from
50 per cent a week ago.
Electric Power
output's gain last week avor a year ago
•was 13 5 per cent, the smallest rise since
the week ended July 1. Also, total pro-
duction was somewhat under the previous
week.
Omaha Produce.
OMAHA. Aug. 30— (APj—
Country produce was generally
un-
changed on the local market today,
went a law cents higher.
Dairy producs
is expected to show a firmer tone soon
due to developments toward settlement
ol differences in the milk trade.
POULTRY—No. 1 poultry delivered in
Omaha:
Native broilers. Siia'.ic: springs.
4V4 3bs and over. 8i&9c: Leghorn broilers
and
springs,
6<&7c: old roosters. -IVic:
native hens, heavy, 8ft8',~c: light hens.
7%c; Leghorn hens. 6Vi@7.
Most buyers
pay slightly higher for choice selected
EGGS—Fresh eggs, delivered in Omaha.
loss-olf basis. S3.15 per case: in used
cases, 25 less; graded basis extras, 13c:
standards 8c; under grades. 7'/ic: loose
eggs, that is. without cases, about
per dozen less.
Buyers pay a fair pre-
mium for specials, commonly known as
hennery eggs, strictly fresh, largo
and
uniform in size and color.
BUTTERFAT—No. 1 cream, dchevcred
at receiving doors in Omaha. 16c:
at
country station. 15r: direct shipper once.
track "in
nearby territory.
16c; No. 2
cream. 2c less.
BUTTER—Dairy: Fresh fancy rolls. 11
"S12c per pound; packing stock. 8!=*?9c
per pound.
Creamery, quotations to re-
tailers:
Best butter. 1-lb carton, solid.
23'ic; ditto In 60-lb toubs. 23c: good
butter, 1-lb., cartons. 32'.'=c; Quarters, '/ic
more than solid; sweet butter. 2c more
than salted.
FRESH MILK—Fresh milk; testing 3-8
per cent
butterfat. dclieved. SI'. 64 per
hundred weight. This is the basic price
on which most large dairies contract for
milk for the bottle trade: variation for
each point of butterfat.
Milk over end
above that needed for bottle trade, known
as surplus milk and used for Industrial
purposes, is bought at discounts Irom the
basic price.
GREEN VEGETABLES-^Prices to retail
dealers.
No. 1 stock, f. o. b. Omaha:
Potatoes, cobblers and triumphs S2.35fi2.5B
cwt.: homegrown mo gradei. Si bushel;
southern sweet potatoes. SI.65 hamper:
cauliflower. SI.75 crate: dry onions., crystal
wax, SI.75 bag: yellow. $1.25: red. Sl.SO
bag:
cabbage. 3c lb.: tomatoes, market
price: cucumbers. 35c per market basket:
celerr. $1.50 per dozen; head lettuce. $3.75
crate: beets, turnips, carrots. 25c dozen
bunches: brans, green or wax. 35c market
basket: watermelons. 1'ic lb.: eantalouues.
NEW YOUK STOCK MABKET.
Ad;iniM
Hf
lh« /\««(><-lnlrd I'm*.
VOflK,
.
.
Rocky Ford. $1 crate and other vegetables
at market price.
LINCOLN
LINCOLN. Neb..
AUK.
Hens, heavy
Hens. :ieht
H*nj. Leghorn
Heavy sprinc*. 4 Ibs and over
Hearr sprlncs. under 4 Ibs
30
11=
8c
. ~c
6C
Old roosters
*<=
UXCOLN CREAM MARKET.
LINCOLN. Neb.. .VIK. 30
Buttertat
l»«
LINCOLN CA5H CHAIN MARKET.
LINCOLN. Neb. AaE. *0
The folio-wine cash prices were raid for
irraln Ir. Lincoln rnarm? lodsy:
WHKAT—No. 2 hart 70c: No. 3 hard.
We: No. 4 h»ri S7c.
CORN—Xc. : while. 3Bc: No. 3 yellow.
Air I'.edtictlo
Alaska June.
AlU'Khan.r .
AI Chun *
AIII»-Ch ilfg ,
Amermla
* ..
Am Bank Note
Am Bfct Sun . .*.
American C.TM .
Am Car 4 l-'dy
Am Coml Alcu
Am & For 1'ow
Am Homo Prod
Am
Ire
,
Am Internal
.«.....
Am Loco
Am Maeh 4 Fdv
Am Metal
Am Pow t l.t
,.
Am Had Slrf Han
..
A.li .Roll .MID
Am Smelt /i K
Am Stl Fdre
Am Sugar Rtt
Am
Trl I;
Tc-l
Am Toll
Am Tcb H
Am Wat Wks
Am "Woolen
Am \Vuol pf
..,
Anaconda
Anchor Ci;»
Armour Del pf
'.'..
Arm III A
Arm III P
Arm
111 pf
Assf! Hr" r,ondt . .
Atcli T A S K
!
Atl Cut Line
All Refining
]
Auburn Auto .
Aviation Co';i
'..'.'.'.'.
Baldwin T/>c
Bait ft Ohio
ElrnsdVI
Beatrice Cr
Beirtice Or pf
Hindis Avlr.t
Beat ft Co
Bethlehem Stl
Bonn .Mum
Bordei
"
Bo.-,~-V.'arner
Briccs Mre
Bl:lyn-Man T
Burr Art Msc-h
\ m ' . [
Byers Co
Calif Pie';
Olutret f: rlec
Canada D O Al;
Case (J I) '."".'
Cnterpll Trin
|'.
Cerro de Pas
Ches t: Ohio
Ch°s Corn . .
Chi & N "V/
" '
C:ii Gt '.Vert
Chi M St P & P pf
."
Chi Pneu T
Chi R!t Is & P
Chryslor
Coca-Cola
Colagte Palm
Colum G & El
Colum Carb
Coml Invest Tr
Coml Solv
Com'wlth & Scu
Con Gas
Con Oil
Con Textil;
2ont Can
Cont IM
I^ont ?.Iotor
ront Oil Del
;om Prod
Cream of Wheat
thrown Corl;
7uban Am Sue,
^urtlss Wright
-uclahy Pack
nssre & Co
Del & Hud
Del Lack & \V
Diamond Mat
Dome Mines
Douglas Airc
Drug Inc
Du Pont de N
Eastman Kod
r;i Auto-L
r-:i POW {- Lt
El Sto-ag3 Bat
Eric R R
Firestone T & R
First Nat Strs
Foster Wheel
Fresport Te::
CJen Am Trans
Sen Asphalt
Ren Bait
Sen Elec
Sen Elec spl
Sen Foods
Sen Mills
Ren Mot
Gen Ry Sir.
Gillett-i
Gold Dust
Goodrich
Goodyear .
Gotham Silk H
Graham Palgo
Gt No Ir Ore ctf
,
Gt No Ry pf
G: West Sugar
Grigsby Grunow
Guantan Sup
.
Halm Dept Strs
Homestake M
Houston Oil
Houston Oil new
..'.'.
Hudson Mot
Hupp Mot
Illinois Cent
."
Indus Rayon
Inger Rand
Inter Rap T
Int Bu« Mach
.....!
Int Cement
•
Int
Harvest
".
Int Nick Can
Int Silver . . . .
In* T«l 4 Tel
"..".
Johns llr-.yjlie
Kayser .
Kelvinator . .,.,....*"..".["..'
Kennecot;
'.'.'.'.[
Krejfte S S
"..'!.".
Kroser Groc
Lambert
"
i-ch vai R R !.!!";;""
Lehman Corp
I.lbby O Ford ..'..'.'.'".
LISK & My B
;
Liquid Carb ..
Loews
Loose-WH Bis ..
Lorlllard P
Ixiuisv & Nash
Mack Trucks
Macy R H
Marsh Field ...
Math Alkali
.'
Mclntyre Pore
McKeesport T ... .
Mld-Cont Pet
Mo Kan T
Mo Pac
Mo Pac pfd ..
Montgomery- Ward .."".'.'.
Motor Prod
Nash Mot
Nat Biscuit
Nat Cash K A
Nat Dairy Prod
Nat Distil]
Nat Pow 4 Lt
Nat Stl
Nat
N Y Central
N Y Investors ..
*H
:::
Noranda Mines
Norfolk & IV
;
No Am Avlat
North Atn
Northern Pac
.
Ohio Oil
Otis Kiev
'..".
Otis Stl
Owens-Ill Gl
Psc G * El
.'!.'.'!.".'."."
Pac LtK
'.
Packard Mot
Pmlck & Ford
Palhr Kxth
'
p'£C>
l*rt
.« G.-H L *C
Prtro Corp
Phclrs Dodge
""
Phila R c A 1
Wheat Clo'f.
LIVERPOOL.
A-UK. 30—f API —
WHSAT—Clcs«S. October «>c: TVcrsiTirr
71Hc: March
7J»iC: Mar 75".r.
Kx-
c£»ns» J4 55.
RAIL EARNINGS.
WASHINGTON. AUK. SO-'APi — Th-
1ntfT*t»1* epEimfrrr rotnTnlssion "nd»r ari-
nornc-a ncnrc* tnowlnr th»t 1M minor
r»llrpafl« 1n ihr Vni:?d Slj>«rs »* » CTOI:^
TinTnr in .Jnrir of J21.27S.73?.
"t>miiaTpa'**lth*'» deficit "MP.W2.7P3 'frr
Jurir. JP32
Proctor A
Pub ?trv :
rullaisn
Pur* Oil
Purity Bak
"
Radio
Radio rt 8
r.trn Rand
;.
Rer«vb st]
r.ejnoja» Mrt
.'....
Reyuo 7 o> B
«"j™ L«ii ..','.'.','.'.'.'.'.'.''.'.".'.'
-VsNuriJ Oil
r R
-J <".]
K",I r.v
F'TuJ B
in ,7unr rnnrr ihni fo'.ir limr's
wh»t It »»* In Junf of lust yr»T.
NEW
TORJC.
Aiie.
30-••-?•>-RuHrr-iif
i^ilrnifnl." Ir-r J'jlv i.«t"cd .-o f»r msirit''
a Ipljil n't orx-rnlinc inrnrnf for nil rtsff
3 ^fcrrtf* of *BJ!.7«:o.non nrainst »rfa»l nr>-
rrtUnc !nrrrni» if tn.SP«.SS3 Jor J^lv.
1933. »n inrr'n"""
f>f n^nu; ->1
nf Jalr 1. 1»31. in j?!1" r..1 l?ir drcrrs?"
Wilson & Dana
4 •„
Tide
TUB!:
Tn PS-
,
.
1, Tr
• A« .
,:; B
218 So. 7«i St
Since IW3
B353S i
"The OM Reliable Firm"
}
Urarr hens . 8r Springs 4 Ibs.
i
Spring,
less ^
and orrr
Rr
"
than 4 n^. . 7r star^
4r
^
hens... 7c '
""
hen* fie
..
iiv r.vx-cr * WO.: A.
11
H'l
lor.
3"%
ft ' i
»7',
211 !i
44'-,
20 «4
11'-,
!I2
K'i
C4
H'l
21
12%
ir,v.
23 • H
:is\
23 '/2
|>.V4
12714
m u.
sou
:io v,
13!',
ni'l
17"'«
20 li
81
.18 V-
Ifi
68 U
r.o
29-%
fin!;
.T. *;
in
IT
IS'-.
31 "
',0
47:w;
in-';
11 'U
.v.
' ir,~',
nr> ••;
27 '/•
K'\
30 V,
1(1-1
4-.-:
46 'i
12 V,
5U
14^
10 ;i
91
18 !4
19 '/•
311
23'/.
SOVft
13 li
66 Vb
30
so
36
SO
36 'n
32 U
1434
40
SlV-
•S4
21%
0%
45 ^L
23=1,
^6li
24 ;i
12 Vi
3T>i
67 >4
33%
42
14%
9'i
16%
38%
Wheat Prices at
Chicago Advance
Market
Closes Strong,
2% to 2% Above
Tuesday Finish.
CHICAGO. A'IZ. 3 ' . - - i A P l -
Grair.s fluctuated nervou.sly today in a
-datively light and easily imiuciicvd mar-
ket, but finished strong.
Wheat .skidded around ovr n ranee of
more lhan (i cent'; a bushel ar.ci by its uy-
ratlo:i3 .milled all other era""1 tip and
down.
A mixed opening In wheat was
followed by sharp breaks of 3 cents or
more, but thc.'e wore
later
recovered.
Liquidation of September contracts before
thf* first delivery ti-.tr. Friday, was the
chief
unsettling " influence.
Vhe general
run of news was bullish, but was of little
consequence.
Corn and
o.it* were
de-
pressed a;id rallied by wheat action.
ylhalha!l:
;:'8uaP.i2y.-,hr c sh
cmfwypcmfp
Wheat closed strong nnd n?ar the lil^h
point of the day at gains of 23» to 2~i
ccnl5. compared with yesterday's finish.
S?ptembT 36;V« 'se, December S0^'"91c.
llav Ol'a'iiSSc.
Corn w^s also strotip and I7ii to 2'i
cents higher.
September 50c. December
b.i^j'-i'BC. May. 61!
Flsk I'.lll
Ford .Mot Ltd
(Hllf
Oil
Jlnmhli; Oil
Mill West i;tll
Nat Bellas Hrsn
Nev.-mont Mining
Nlag Hud Pow
Ohio Cop
1'cnnroaU .,
Koin A Cup
Salt Cr Prod
.stand Oil Ind
Stand Oil Kv
Stand Oil Nehr
.Stand Oil Ohio
Swift i Co
Hv.'lft lull
Tci'l! Hugh U
Tubizc Chat
United Founders
United Gas
Un Power & l.t A
CHICAGO STOCKS
Allied Products
Bcndix
Bei'shuff Brew
Borg-Warner .
Butler Bros . ..
Chi Corp
Cities Service .
was
bullish, drousht still prev^illnc
in I Comwlth Edls
th? Argrntino nnd only a l:ttle moisture ! ^'oixl Corp
reported in Australia.
Wheat opened
~* of a cent lower to "*
of a cent higher than yesterday's finish
j and inter showed ahr.est no chance. Corn
Martcd unchanged to
3n of a cent lower
anrf aftcrv.'ard held steady.
wheat
dropped more thau 2 cents n
bushel from early t?p levels on selling by
commission houses. Much of the pressure
was liquidation of S?ntrmber contracts by
traders un^villin^ to accept, delivery. Some
buying appeared around 90 certs a bushel
for Mav and trade steadied for a time,
but later May broke to 89',4.
The market was narrow and easily in-
fluenced.
Rallies from declines were fee-
ble.
The grade seemed discouraged at
the
extent
of
liquidatins sales.
Cash
wheat was scarce, even with primary re-
ceipts fairly liberal.
Corn and oats were both affected by the
action of wheat and sold lower, with liqui-
dation of September contracts noticeable in
corn.
Growing crop
conditions
would
force traders to notice the short corn crop,
some traders said, and ultimately induce
mere buying pov.-er.
Provisions eased with grains.
<'IP«€
77
1.1 \
15
;i ' j
18
9-1C
12 -\,
25 \
T\
.r):N
.'i7'i
82'i'i
3
47'«
9'i,
16 li
17
32
18U
26',i
fi?4
13
1%
4 fe
Close
13 U
18 ?i
12'A
19-Ti
4';i
o'.'J
r3"i
12'-'.
ll'i
2'»
15
Around mid-session, wheat, was l?s to
'a cents below yesterday's finish and corn
was =i to !•> cent down.
Weather
reports
indicated
rain
had
fallen in parts of Illinois last night, but
with belief general that moisture would
not materially help the crop, corn traders
ignored the repoits.
Corn generally dis-
played more resistance to pressure than
did wheat.
Elec Household
GrfKSbv.Grunow
Ma.-hall Fit-Id
Mid West Util
Noblltt-Spark?
25
Norwest Bancorp
7';
Pines Winter
2 -".I
Prima Co
24 ',5
Quaker Oats
133
Sef: rs Roeh
42:;',
Swift ft Co
18-i
Swift Intl
27
Utah Radio
l-'i
Walgreen
160i
CHICAGO BOAKU OF TRADE.
By the Associated Press.
Swine Market Is
Slow and Uneven
Few Omaha Early Sales
to Shippers Steady
to 10 Cents Lower.
OMAHA. Aug. 30—(API —
(U. S. Department of Acrlciiluirc i
HOGS-Recelpts 20,000 liencl. Including
10,000 pigs and 500 piggy sows; market
slow nnd
uneven; few early snips
to
snippets steady to mostly lOc lower: sows
open lOc lower; Instances biddinn
15c
lov.-cr on butchers and 25c lower on sows;
top $4 paid sparingly; early bulk 160'-t
250 Ibs. $3.50'u3.90: 140i
I
44',i ! -il^i
55'"3| 53 Vi
•i-! 59V»-
59 V*
68'i
1
71'/«
75 Vi I 77'-i
80% i 83'/«
53
I 53
!
F3
i 53
58'.= ; 58',i
I 62'A I 63
5.42
I 5.45
67
73
79
50
50
37',i-l 37
37 Til
40^-1 39'i7
£3"/4—'
42 ' 6 —
"tsV.i 42'°
70V«bi 68'ib
76Vab| 74%
82Vbb! 80 i.i
51%b| 513,i
.....I S1,,
DJC
! 5.90
58
! 57'A b
62'.s ! 63
i 62 "t
I
I
5.32 I 5.45 I 5.40a
5.35 ! 5.D7 I 5.92
-
tic corporation list, changes in bond prices
were narrow today. The market's tone was
fairly steady with trading in light volume.
High grade varieties were firm.
There were some soft spots in the sec-
ondary rail group, reflecting 'or the most
part apathy on the part of traders.
Utilities, including the communications
issues, gave another
spiritless perform-
ance.
Industrial issnr-s were mixed with
some s:zeable gains in theatre descriptions.
The foreign division presented a firm
No. AV.
47
217
57
21 >
38
227
3.75
•
19
MS
3.60
!
SOWS.
5 277 ...
$2.80 i
in 284 ... $2 75
12 293 ...
2 75 !
18 306 ...
2.75
15 261 ...
2.75 i
3 323 ...
2.65
5 346 ...
2.65
STAGS.
1
410
70
$2 75 i
1 380
70
S2.75
CATTLE—Receipts 6.500
head, calves.
300 head: light steers and yearllnss slow;
practically no early sales; undertone weak
to 25c lower: largely a fed steer
and
yearling market; she stock weak to 15c
lower;
bulls
10
to
15c lower: vealers
steady;
stockers
and
feeders
scarce,
fteady:
most
fed
steer- and yearlincs
elicible to sell at $5^ 5.75: several loads
held at SG and above; choice 1132 pound
steers late Tuesday
$6.40;
fed
heifers
$4.75^7 5.60; fed
c:rair. fed cows 53.50'r.'
4.25:
odd head
S4.50W4.75: grass
cows
S2.25">3: cutter
grades S1.75W2.1J:
few
low cutters SI.65; medium bulls S2.40«i.
2.65:
practical top vealers $6:
stockers
and feeders S3.50W5.
Rsprcsontative sales:
HEIFERS.
No.
Av.
Price
! No.
Av.
Trice
28
730
$5.60 I
40
722
SS.60
COWS.
1
1.380
$4.75
1
1.260
$4.25
1
1.275
3.25 11
1,160 2.75
12
1.134
2.EO i
10
1,092
2.15
6
982
1.75
I
BULLS.
1
1,710
$2.75 I
1
1.620
$2.60
1
1,590
2.50
I
1
1410
2.40
VEALERS.
1
210
S6.00 I
1
190
$6.00
2
250
5.On I
1
440
4.50
Denver Livestock.
DENVER. Colo.. AUK. 30—(API —
(U. S. Department, ol ARriculturc. i
CATTLE— hecelpts 800 head, calves 5
practically nothing done on bcei steers.
Mti«l! ic-ts
1U'J«
jbs.
down
510;
luverai
carlots on sale; best llRht heifers steady
to
strong,
all
other
classes
around
ttenay;
bs5
;b mixed yearlims ss.60:
ti81-7i!b lb huiers $5.85;
U42
li> $5.'i5;
801 lb $5.50; lew grassers and shortfcds
S2.60 -
LIBERTY BONDS Close-
Liberty 3'.*
1 71 103.20, 102.17. 102.111; Liberty lir.st 4'.s'
18 102.15. 102.10. 102.12; Liberty UrM-.-ec-
ond4'.«s. 2 102; Llb-rty lourtli 4V:. 1«
I 102.30. 102.25,
102.27; TrcnMlry 4',s
'I
i 110.24
110.2*
110.21;
Tre.iMir'v
4»
8
! 108.20. 108.Tt. 106.26; TrniMirv" 31,5
37
! 104.31. 104.30. 104.31: Treu.Miry 3-'»s '4.0-
43. June. 30 102.2. 101.31. 102,2: T'ens-
| tlry
3-'»5 '43-47. 61 102.7. 102.5
102 7'
Trt-asuiy
3J»s
'41-43
March,
•>
102 1:
TreiiMlry 3'^. 271 101.4.
101.2.
101 3'
I Treasury 3'0.4. !00.4; Treas-
ury 3>. 99 98 22. i'8.20. fl8.21!.
t'hltajo 1'rovitlons.
CHICAGO. Aug. 30 — (AP) —
LARD—5 45
BELLIES—6.00.
Kansas City liar.
KANSAS CITY. Alls. 30—(AD-
HAY—6 cnrj. unchanged.
New York Sugar Futures Close.
NEW YORK. Alls. 30---IAP) —
SUGAR FUTURES-Closed steady. 1-2 '
. .
lower; saies
itisoo
ions
s-p
i 43B- [Bambino had tired of hearing that
RUMOR PERSISTS
BABE TOMANAGE
But Bijj Barn's Decision
Is Deferred Until
Next Spring.
BY BUD SHAVER.
DETROIT, Aug. 30 — (INS) —
"Through?"
repeated
Bnbc Ruth
wearily.
He sat humped up on the Yankee
bench at Navin Held in the final
game
between
the
Tigers
and
Yankees here.
It was as if tho
Dec.
1.56; Jan.
July 1.75B.
.
1.55;
March 1.65: May interminable question.
'
don't know," he growled. "Let's
i wait lmtil ncxt spring bclorc we
try to answer that question.
It
depends
upon
how I feel then.
Right now, at the tail end of the
season, I might feel a little tired.
100 lb range ewes steady
at
SHEEP—Receipts 15.000 head, including
2,800 direct to packers; salable supply 75
per cent feeders: lambs 25.43: Denmark. 20.30: Switzer-
CATTLE—Receipts 9.000 head:
calves, i J.a
n
IJd:_2
1
7-42; Spam, 11.86: Portugal. 4.36
2.000 head.
Shippers
buyers., bidding j SHTr^^^^llo^"'^?,™*-
Yearling
heifers
fully
steady,
better
grades $5.50(a6.00.
Bulls and
vealers
scarce, steady.
Slaughter cattle
vealers: Steers, good and choice.
and
550®
.
900 Ibs. $5@7; 900B1100 Ibs. $5 CiMi Grain.
CHICAGO. Aug.
»u
84
51
13
36
2
36
38
2
30.
New York Metal*.
COPPER—Quiet
ELECTROLYTIC—Spot
ancl
future
»
asked.
TIN—Barely steady; §pot and nearby
45.62; future 45.80.
IRON—Quiet, unchanged.
LEAD—Steady- spot New York
East St. Louis 4.35.
!
ZINC—Barely
steady:
East St. Louis
: spot and future 4.72«4.75.
|
ANTIMONY—Spot 6.87.
4.50;
Chicago livestock Estimates.
CHICAGO. Aug. 30—(AP>—
Official estimated receipts tomorrow:
CATTLE—7.000 bead.
HOGS—€0.000 head
SHEEP—18.000 bead
4 white. -SO;; UC.. 33«r.42c.
OATS— No. 2 white
36'i«?37c:
whiif
33%:o. 4 hard. 7S'-«Slc: No.
2 *-t)rln? 90c
CORN—No. 2 Tflloir. 3. B ypllotr. 37c: No. 3 vhlte
44r: Np. 3 -while. 3d: S>7l
SSc
>--c. Sir; May. je'-b.
K=nsi« C:1r Cash Crain.
KANSAS crrr
AUC. 30-'Api_
r.-JJK.AT™.'!!! rtrz
;' , li-a-rr
1^
3
ichrr: No 2 «,ir',: •h^rrt
r,
.1 s;'.
iv- Srrii . R;-. : TT-: . MS,- MaT «!'•»
COT!N
71 rar'
•
New York .Money Ratn.
NEW YORK. Aug. 30— (API-
CALL MONEY—Easy J, p«r cent
all
day.
TIME LOANS—Steady; 60-davs »i; 90
PRIMS COMMERCIAL PAPER—1'4.
BANKERS' ACCEPTANCES—30 days 3i
good and
choice.
500W1050 Ibs.
S4<34.75: common
and
medium. $2.50!f?4.
SHEEP—Receipts 15.000
head.
Native
lambs openintr strong to 25c higher, talk-
ing around steady with Tuesday's
late
advance on natives. Early sales desirable
native $7(g7.2S. few to city butchers 7.35
or above.
Lambs. 90 Ibs. down.
good
and choice $6.50(57.50; ewes. 006150 Ibs.
good and choice. $1.5002.75; all treights.
common snd medium. 75cig2.00: feeding
lambs. 50@75 Ibs. good and choice. 5.85
Q$«.40.
Wednesday
Tuesday ".
Week ago
Month ago
5C
Ind'Is
close 95.S
S6.6
93.3
65.5
Sioux City Livestock.
S1O0X CITY. !».. AUjt. 30— 'API—
fU. S. Department of Agriculture.!
CATTLE— Receipts
2.500
head:
beef
steers and
yearllnes
market
not es-
tablished: sellers asking stronger, buyers
askinp price concessions: fat sh;
stock
fully steady: stockers and feeders
firm.
scarce: choice lone yearlinits held above
$6: large share train feds salable $5-75
down: choice heifers held around $5.50:
most coxs «2.5fr«73: low catters and cut-
ters.
chiefly
S1.75«i2.25:
f e w
plain
Ktockers $4 down; choice 600 Ibs stockers
lat* Tuesday. S5.
HOGS— R-ccipts 25.000 head: run
in-
cludes 19.000
slow, steady to
and
50<1 olKKT sows:
lOc lower to shippers:
packers inactive: ton M: early sales 180
: 60-90 days ••}«
mos.. "i y %.
4 mos.,
Chici«o Batter and Etc Futures.
E3G FUTURES—
Rcfrij:.. stand.. Oct
Rcfrig., stand.. NOT.
High
.18'.
.18'-
BUTTER FUTURES—
Storage stand.. Nor
22'i
Lotc close
17?i 18
18
18\-
18S
fi240 lb. welchU $3.75«?3.90: nothlr.it done
on heavier butchers: sows mostly $2.35
*52.SO; few up to $2.75: common
pigs.
$3 doim.
X
SHEEP—Receipts 3.000 head: slow, ask-
ine higher for limited
SUDD]T
nutlvr
l?mbs; choice slaughter offerlnes
held
above SS.75; ferdlns lamb-, firm:
latr
bulk rliusht^r lasts. Tuesdar
t€.30 In
mrjllr *5 50: several loads 70^73 pound
S6W6.2S.
Three years ago. 167. 3
Six years ago... 136.0
High 11933) ..... 102.1
Low (19331 ...... 42.3
High (1932)
Low (19321
High (1931)
Low (1931)
72.3
35.1
140.2
60.0
20
Ut's
ao.4
89.8
86.5
102.8
222.6
119.6
113.7
61.5
111.0
51.8
90
Tot.-.l
83.1
R9-0
85.6
67.2
169.7
126.4
96.9
43.9
73.9
35.0
144.3
61.3
Chicago Pctatoes.
(tT. S. Department of Agriculture.)
CHICAGO. Aug. 30—(AP>—
POTATOES—45. on track 237. total TT.
8. shipments 435; dull: supplies liberal
demand and trading slow; sacked
per
cwt: Wisconsin Round Whites U- S No.
1.
Z.10«i2.25.
unclassified
1.65«!1.90:
Minnesota,
partly
graded.
SI.804*1.95:
Idaho Triumphs U. S. No. 1. S2.20«?2.35:
Russets
$2.40*22.50:
Nebraska Cobblers
partly graded S1.80W1.90.
2C
RR's
53.7
S4.8
51.5
34.3
120.6
120.7
58.0
23.5
39.8
13.2
106.2 203.9
30.8
92.8
BV BILL CORUM.
NEW YORK. Aug. 30—iZNSi—One of the i
best liked pieces ever to appear in this [
column was a story about Frank W. Cav-
anangh, who died yesterday at Marshfisld.
Massachusetts. It struck a popular note,
more because of the subject matter than
any particular literary quality, but for
weeks after it was printed we continued to
get requests for copies until the supply
was exhausted. So completely exhausted
that If Grantland Rice and Harford Powell
hadn't
generously
Included it in their
book. "The Omnibus of sport,' I wouldn't
now have a copy myself.
Tho story was called "Sometimes the
Dice Come Seven,' and at that time It did
look as though they finally had come
seven for Cav.
But sometimes they come
ace-deuce, too.
There are two chances.
And yesterday on the little chicken farm
not far Irom Cohasset. to which he had
regretfully retired to live out his remain-
ing days, they spun over on the one-two
for the iron maior.
Still, he had no great complaint on that
score. I think.
For 15 years be had been
living on borrowed time fighting 111 health
and fbe stealthy fllmr shadows of ap-
proaching btindneis. dog-fed!y and relent-
lessly, like tbe dogged relentless fighter
h« always was.
Ho had a bl( heart in
more watrs that one. Car did.
Considering
his
lifelong
profession,
coaching football, it probably Isn't
sur-
prising that I should have see'n the ma^
first and last on a football field.
What
is unusual is that the two fields were as
far apart as the foothills of the Vosgcs
Massera and Hamas
In Ten-Round Draw
NEW -YORK,
Aug. 30—(INS) —
7'- Charley Massera, Pittsburgh heavy-
weight, again today boasted an un-
marred record.
After
20
bouts
without a defeat, Massara boxed
a 10-round draw
against
Steve
Hamas of Passaic, N. J., here last
night.
Hamas fought one of the best
bouts of his career
and
in the
eighth round opened a cut over his
opponent's eye.
He looked on the
way to a knockout in the
fifth
when he dazed Massera with a
right to the chin and left to the
stf mach.
In the tenth,
they
fought at
close range
without" a stop for
three minutes Massera was land-
ing the more blows, but Hamas
! was hitting harder.
Major Lea&ue
NATIONAL LEAGUE.
Itattinr—Klein,
Phillies.
.378;
Davli,
Phillies. .Ms.
Runs—Martin,
Cardinals.
J01; Klein,
Phillies. *:!.
Buns batted In—Klein, Fhillici.
106;
Ott,
Giants. 89.
Hits—Klein, Phillies, 184; TulHs, Phillies,
Doubles—Klein,
Phillies, 38; Mcdwlck,
Cardinals. 35.
Triples—Vanghan, Plratei, 18; P. Wancr,
Pirates, 17.
Home runs—Berjcr, Braves; Klein, Phil-
lies. 24.
Stolen
bates—Martin,
Cardinal*,
19;
Frlsch. Cardinals. 14.
Pitching—Canttrell. Brarei, 18-7; Par-
melee, Gtants, 12-5.
AMERICAN LEAGUE.
Batting—Foil.
Athletics.
.354;
Sim-
mons, White Sox.
.3.19.
Runs—Gehri£, Yankees. 312: Foxi, Ath-
letics: Mannsb. Senator*, lol.
Runs batted in—Foxx. Atnlellr*.
J3!>:
mountain-; near Ncufc'iateau
in Franco i Simmons. White Sor. 113.
New Torfc Butter and Cbeese.
NEW YORK. Aug. 30— (API—
BUTTER — 15.303 tubs. Irreizular. Cream-
ery. first (87 to 91 scores) 19R22Vic: cen-
tralized (90 score> 20Uc.
CHEESE— 149.018 Ibs. steady
changed.
and
un-
range
22'i 22''.
GRAIN NOTES
t. 30—.^i—Liquidation has
proves 1.0 br thr siTorpr.n "ador of in-
rr oa the inartf.. a: ",he prcwnt and
Kansas CHr Lirrstork,
KANSAS CTTT. Auc. 30—'AP' —
'T7. S. Department of As:riculti:r«" '
MOGS-Reeelpts 32.000 hrad: Includinc
?20 direct:
around
23.W
covrmrnrnt
pics: unrvrn. i-cak »o lOc lower
ihan
Tutsday's avTrasc: too J4.0S on 3W>i210
Ibs; cood and choice 14niff;W Ibs. SS.ISfri
Chicago Produce.
CHICAGO. AUK.
30—fAP>—
POULTRY — Prices ruled stcadr In
local markets today.
BUTTER—Unsettled.
EGGS—Unsettled.
Mlnarapolli Floor. Bran ant
Standard Middlings
MINNEAPOLIS. Auc. 30—'API —
FIXDUR—20 lo»er. Carload lots familv
patents quoted ".2S«i7.3S a barrel
In
98 r»ound cotton sacks, rhioments 23 047.
PURE BRAN—15.50nr
would hire
— 1 car. 35 trucks. I tBr T,-nr nrn w;lh Thom br wa« a«o-
10«?ll',c:
Irghprns
?c: | ,i»trori Isckins. Ni;mrrous rlcp :wi fict-flopJnc "n ihf hrents. -u-nc air.o
civrn us a fnclor in ruas.n; the *har;.
rte. «? 130 Jb5. $2.75
«S.V2S 'nominan.
CATTLE—Rrn-ipts O.OOD hr»d:
rulrrs.
f09 heail; kjrjnc
elusws 1*M-
ncUv-.
choice" 305R :b.. f.nrt
$f.I5;
sl^cWrs
sl^a-Iy: Traders we«* in 2Sc lon-er: stiers.
cnod .-nti rhoicr
SS?»(,ifKi
Ibs.
$.V1S'"
lino jirt. S5.«« «!!)• iir>0f.7i3no
r-jli.SO:
13rr,f71500 Ihs.. *4 R5'l
I r,xr romm'^n. and mrfilum
J.^n
i>"3niT»;
' u p
tt'SfotS;
hn'er!:. cor-d
»nfl chol-» i
JSnudDO IV. *4.7!.«i;.(i:
errniTT.r.n
nnd
nwJIum
Ji.SCir^poi
IH.^
r. sn'.i«.7S.
im>it. I
v,_ ,...-,, c-f
"vffW TOHK
N-Aft-- B*I dVri
^J'in
K-otuV. 3
J«lanfl. f.
Dsvrnport at Quinrv; ra!T
h.T-
Th"
r^nmirion
p;
.,:,?.- -:
Imr rutte* anfl tutirr SI /..V'r
renlers 'milk-fed' rn'rlMim m choir"
Vnr Tiy
vrr,v YORK
Hf.rt
i r.rr».
A-r.
ol
nor arras in s-naiJ-i'-r.-i M»rii!r>ba.
in* *.-.jr3 t*-, >•*; ramrtant 1n
*:r1.cn»"«'an
^n-1 licht
Trr>M^
'nil
wrichlsi
t««iS.M:
fommon
and
SHEET-'
'
i native lambs
BT» »E US'
lb«! . rtrrr:
•.^rd:
liil.nc
SS «s.' c'ol-i:»dr.s h'-ll
Cpnfl
nfi (3 ChMfT '^'
••••'1 in wt;: r<-n
ror: s;. is.
Ir.
<
;t KO •;••••; rrn'
':^n-i richt tn tf-
S»O:atfT;»wan inr r*-
-?*?> AlV-rin ibT'thlne
-rl^T.t:
TTT-flium
»? VH-,4.75; r
on'it!.n iht.'ll
'-j'. 7S.
chr^r*.
opment of » flrrnff Ion" In 1h" tr^ln arid
Hnrk j-iartr!?:.
DTrrmber rontrfe'?
»<*.-
vancrfl 1o f . 13 wnh Ihr general lirt rnnr-
1r»g bcfk 1o nbotit -t^slr-rflhv-.^ fins'-. Hn-s-
»ver. so-nlh'rn rcllinc a7ir"--ired in
»h»
b'jlce ?nrt ?' 2 Vrinr.- 1he llrt wn- rulinc
« 'o 9 mints nrt In—e*.
Cblr*»rf* Cflsh CtnotatiAtit.
CHIC^GD. Aiic 3 0 - - ' A T 1 ' —
Th" Chlrarn Viarrt
nT trrrt" n ill b"
closed S»:ura»y snd Mnnflur labor Ca~.
^arannah Ttrrtiffltine and Rft*in
SAVANNAH. A-JC. 3 0 - ^ A P p —
r— Tlrr-..
'.1i',:
«.«>>r
if.:
rer^rrt« 5PP. <^jprn"nl.s 473: s1rir.i: 1S.3M
ROSlN-Flrrn: stirs tn
rcrflni* 1 7«7; j
tMTirnmti
5 WO-
.«.t.r.r.!;
114*13:
cnmH1
B. T>. E. r. G. H »nfl 1 3.7!.: K »nfl V. '
3 "0. N.
?. M-
WC*
4 f>V
TtTV an1! T
4 2S.
DIVIDENDS
Northern Leajrue.
-c. 3: Cr'wTtslin. 2
. 2-B: o:«r)fl For'oi. 1-3.
ire. «: TaTCi. 4.
Pacific Coast League.
International Ix;aguc.
Ttfwil.i.'j.'MT.1r'->V. «
Southern Association.
i t:r>C.
i
O
i s: -.('
rtRMITS.
Ze>n. 2JJS O i-Tft. fr-rr.rltl
rtwe.
flfrt.
frsmr
T-ll'nr
$.300
Ai-r KrriTn. R27 A firr*'.
3.1tilr
S - l .
CAR W\ DINGS
YORK
V:r
V> - Trr-.tt.i V^
NSW YOHK. A'
'MJlh Porlo Rirr,
a I; :fl»r' 1s r
( rtovra
cm
&COMPANY
OC4IM STOCK
315 HWT NATKftU GANt H.OO
Pigs Pigs Pigs
Wire ui how many pig*
you want to tell. We
will get a ptrm't for
you.
Corn Belt
Commission Co.
Orn^ha
SPAPESJ
THE LINCOLN STAR—WEDNESDAY,
AUGUST 30, 1933.
THIRTEEN
New And Used Cars Are
Up * * Trade Yours In Now * * See Class. 11
LOCAL WANT AD RATES
W»nl >di appear In bath Ibt nvrnlnc
»nl (TtnlDf <«Jl—Two
holes In one scored on the same day
was the record claimed today by
Mrs. T. A. Heyer, who shot aces on
the
fourteenth
and seventeenth
holes at Medinah Country club. The
fourteenth measures 170 yards, while
the seventeenth is 1S5 yards.
KOfH, MRS. MARY—Funeral ser\Kes for
Mrs. Koch were held at the home. 115 I
D street, and
nt the Zion ConKrcca- j
tlonnl
church.
Ninth nnd
D str'eti, I
w i t h Rrv. Johnathan Weber officiating. |
Wednesday
afternoon.
Interment
jn
\Vyuka_
LOTTtR."~kRANK^TTic~bodv of"Mr. Loiter
was taken to Falls City Tuesdnv evening
for Junej^l senlces and burial.
SCHRANK7 GEORGE -- Funeral" ;erv.ce»
Jor Mr. Schrank will be held at
the
St
Paul Evangelical church. Thirteenth
and P streets, at 2 o'clock
Thursdav
afternoon.
Rev. F. L
Hodenbeck will
ha\c charge.
Interment will
be
at
Wyuka.
The body will be taken from
Splaln, Schnell & Griffiths to the home
at 1 o'clock Thursday. Honorary pall-
bearers will be members ol I. O. O. F.
lodge No
11.
They arc: L. R. Fitch.
J. W. Kelsey. Sam Lann, J. R. Quack-
enbush. W. A. Brlttian. W. T. B. Ir«-
Jand, Henry Bralne'd. and J. W. John-
son. Active pallbearers are James Reiff,
Arthur
Young.
Julius
Doerr.
Nick
Brockcr, William Goldstlne. Julius Diet-
rich, o. J. Perkins, and Ed Buettner
The active pallbearers are members of
the Burlington Veterans_a«oci£tlon.
SCHAAD. WERN:ER^Fimerai~Mr"vlce5 for
Mr. Schaad were held Wednesday after-
noon at the Hallam Methodist
church,
Rev. T. E. Porter of Bennet officiating.
Interment ixan at Zlpn cemetery.
fHRAi;rr~ECCEHOMb — Funeral services
for Mr. Thrapp will be held at
2 30
o'clock
Thursday
afternoon
at
the
Ulysses Christian church, with Rev. T
A. Maxwell officiating.
Interment will
be at Ulysses.
The bodv Is at Helms-
do«rfers' and will be taken to Ulysses
at 1 o'£h>ck_Thursday.
BTELbW,
GEORGE
F — Dleo. at
4 30
o clock Wednesday mornine at a local
hospital
Ho was 61 ycnr.s old.
Hi- '
home was southwest of Lincoln
near
i
the Yankee Hill cemetery
He is sii--
v!v»d by two orothers. Charles B
nf
Lincoln, and Fred B. of Albuqueraue,
N. M.; four sisters, Mrs. George Weber.
Monros. Cal.. Mrs. Charles Beck. Palm
Springs,
Cal.
Mrs.
A. D.
Safford,
L'ncoln. '»nd Mrs J. J. Shea. Lincoln.
The
bodv
is
at
Wadlow's
pending
funeral arrangements
VAN-DERPOOL;
GEORGE
GRANT—Died
at a local hospital at 9 o'clock Wed-
nesday morning. His home was at 1335
South Twelfth street. He was 65 years
old.
He was engaged In the produce
brokerage business for
the
past
15
years and lor the past seven or eight
years had operated the Rating
Pro-
duce Brokerage Co., here.
He li sur-
vived by his wife. Mabel- one
son.
Eugene: and a brother, Ed of Balti-
more
Md
The bodv is at Wadlow's
pendine funeral arrangements.
FUNERAL DIRECTORS.
B2424
1110
AMBULANCE
FLOYD H. POTEET "" ;
FS96U
243 No. S7tb
__
B4023 '
CASTLB. ROPER 4k MATTMKWB
Mortician*
1319 N St.
Ambulance
Phone BM01
E. L. TROVER
B17T1.
.
RELMSDOERFER
COR. 27TH ft ».
PHONE B40»
WacDow's Mortuary
AMBULA1ICE.
MORTICIAN*.
122& 1*
Since I87h
WALTON G. ROBERTS
Chapel ojj;lhs_Cnlmes.
~
_
__
*~OR1KKITH8.
MORTICIANS.
AMBULANCE.
_
1335 L.
B650T.
HODGMAN MORTUARY
BBfl.TO
___
^3» K
PERSONALS
'
STUDENT wishes to drive or share ex-
penses to New York this week. Harold
Holllnssworth.
L4222.
______
THE
SALVATION ARMY can use your
old papers, magazines, clotnes and lur-
nltnrp. The trucK will caM._ Call B6387.
BUSINESS PERSONALS
8
CLOCK
~na
watch
repairing.
Mantle
cloci.s rcpa'red SI 00.
Alnrm cloclis SOc,
watch deaiinR
51-00.
Electric
clock*
and chime, i-locks a specialty by factory
man
V.'orlc called
for
and
delivered.
L6559
Jlr. Helm
FALL" PRICES
effective
in
painting.
papering or •lecoratmg, larger selections,
best workmen. Call Curran. B6324.
HAVE youFlaflTelt hat renovated now, be-
fore the rush, at Uncoln Hat Worka,
1418 O St.
LOST AND FOUND.
9
FIVE younK xurkeys wandered away from
612 So. 53 Monday a. m. Finder please
call F7633.
LOST—Black ana white Boston bulldog,
answers
to
name of "Sunny Jim."
Reward.
F-2432.
.
WILL PARTY who took pair of glasses
from 127 So. 2Sth pleas* put them in
any city mail box.
They are of value
to owner only. B4110.
STRANGE AS IT SEEMS— By John
Ftor further proof address the author. Inclosing a stamped envelope for reply.
Reg. u. S. Pat. Off.
'"'"'"' ' -^
"80UHCEO 75 V
•Surf'
CteT A M-PZ. \Mfl6rtT
•S&l TRUCK'S
on 3
„_.
manuf^crurer,
Churchyard,
Seventy-five yard; ic no distance
at all to send a golf ball with a
mashie—but to send a ball that
distance with somebody's head is
a feat (cw golfers can claim to
have performed. Just such an inci- , The ball caught the caddy oo
dent happened, however, when Ed- the head, elanced off and bounded
ward
'
caddy
hit ball.
Sladward's
got in the
South
way of
V. S. DEPT. OF AGRICULTURE WEATHER BURBAU
CHARLES F. MARVIN. Chief
African ! 75 vards farther down the course
a hard before it came to rest. A blow like
that, might knock some people out.
but not this caddy. He did not
even suffer a headache.
o-«.
Harold G. Lentz. surf casting,
cast a little four-ounce weieht the
incredible distance of 465 feet with
a rod and reel. For comparison,
this distance is about 50 yards
longer than a football field, it is
seven times farther Than the
dis-
tance between the pitcher's box and
home plate, and farther even than
Babs Ruth's longest hit.
Up to a certain paint the heavier
the bait the farther it can be cast.
2ven with
srgall bait, however,
casts of amazing distance have been
made. Using a quarter-ounce bait.
Fred Abrogast madr an average cast.
of 240 feet, in 1926. The longest cast
25E leet. was made by W. C. New-
comb ins same rear. The ihrce-
eichlh* ourics record was set in 1931
by Fr-ed N. White, with a cast of
294 feet- The half-ounce distance
record was broken in 1927 bv W C
Ncwcomb with a cast of 306 feet.
He also set a record the vear before
with an evcrace cast in this class
of 293 Icct.
I I. rr-olri
OInrjT.tiorn t»ten « 7 » m Air crr»-
Nor15i 1
rn.-« -r3JCT« 'o »c» Ifrel »nfl l!ai flr»*ri Hirnnn
canal
tire wr.%THT«.
Arre«»
Piatlt
- H-d Clora
1 I Mi- T CVT
01
*t,
TS
R;
78
',«
77
-S
*1
"»
Tf.
ST
Tomorrow;
•UL
Thf
cure-
Sr— •
no 14 39 ?0 JP l
nj :» 13 11 a
i
DO JP :: 20 r,
ro is -s ri 64
r>o IP 17 sn •;.•!
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TO 11 1J r= i-D
On 33 77 2P *W
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P" 14 DO SS D3
C'D 14 :S 14
;.<,
T.
R
K'lTS
r
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TT \TPS3iA TUSKS ;\-
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n]
M
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'•' :,< 47 '.i o?
"» :s ".7 is 55
-W ;t 9t :» i:
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CT.MCfl
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fll Ir> ,
7J M -X OS » C "
74 ••«• n? pvr- •-'(«
^ J Of R»t.a C/
74 «
70 Sf
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B4 W
T ".4
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9? fr
7f, .>,
COT
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nn
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n'i
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D"
-« SI
OH
5fi}K **
", V .•;
-4 M ''
•ES4
W
M « fifi
«5
OD
00.
Answers to Test
|
Questions
j
Briow aw Uir amvcn to the
r has bffti
ap-
.
3. R f p r c s r n t a Uvr Fdirard
Wehh.
and
Senator
MJ.TTW
Shrphrrd.
6. Europe.
7. Gnwrppi Verdi
!
S. Yes.
•
9. I906.
1*. Exempli gratia
(for ex-
ample).
j
Here is the key and each month just one check does
the rest. A lovely apartment with everything fur-
nished. Refrigeration, heat, light, janitor sen-ice, etc
Yes Sir! You'll be money ahead. Turn now to classifi-
cations 74, 74A, and 74B.
BRING RESULTS
AUTOMOTIVE
AUTOS FOR SALE
11
1929 FORD roadster
S 85
1926 C'HRi'SLER coach
* 4.1
1927 ESSEX sedan
570
1926 CHANDLER seaan
S 80
1927 JORDAN sedan
S100
102s HUDSON ssdan
S115
SIDLES MOTORS, INC.
B7027
Open Eve, till 9.
13th * Q
FOR SALE—By owner, late 1830 Graham
sedan, thoroly reconditioned, $355. Terms.
Hee at 1229 Harrison ave. Phone F7291.
41
LATE 1831 CHEVROLET Tudor aedan.
Excellent condition.
A real buy. J275.
Payments.
'Vill trade.
226 So. »th.
B1694.
.
1ATE 1930 PLYMOUTH coupe, excellent
condition, low mileage, *18S. 1-3 cash
•will handle for reliabl* party.
Owner.
B2871.
.
1925 OVERLAND, $20. New tires and
battery. Take oil stc-ve as part payment.
1230 South First.
Total net cost % % per month.
STATE SECURITIES CO.
1832 TERRAPLANE coupe $365. 1829 Ford
roadster $135,
1930 Ford coupe 1225.
Nebraska Auto Esch.. 1724 O. B4708.
1931 LIGHT SEDAN, good, clean shape,
priced right, little down, tenna suitable.
furnitti.e, auto loans. Baker Finance.
B3708
1929 BUICK Master Sedas, 1145. 1137 P.
B-1614.
PROCRAST1NATORS pay by ha.vlng con-
stant • ar trouble.
Have your car re-
paired right now at Complete Automobile
Co., 1J22 Q. B5218.
AUTOS WANTED
17
WILL PAY SPOT CASH
i
FOR USED CARS: BUT KQU1TIES.
LINCOLN MOTOR CO.. 1824 O.
B3800
BUSINESS SERVICE.
BEAUTY PARLORS.
18A
JESSIE GANNON'S all Shclton croqulgr.ole
oil permanent. $2.50 complete. »Bort time
only.
Campus Beauty Salon. 3513 Hol-
dre'i!. M1551.
HEATING, METAL WORK. 24
FURNACES and tin wort--
tion. Arthur Larson. C*n
cluilre agent for Win furoact-
Prompt i
FO 30*.
MOV. TRANSFER, STOR.
26
CALL US—Let in do your moving »ny
time. This week or next, NBA mem-
bers. Eberle Transfer. M2116.
BUSINESS SERVICE..
PAINTING, DECOR.
PAPERHANGINO—Cleaning
and
paint-
ing. Rooms aa low at 13.83 for last
year'n paper. Call for fro
estimates
B4914.
PAPERHANGING—9e » roll, also painting.
All work guaranteed. Call M201«.
PROFESSIONAL SERVICES 29
B. C. CRABTREK, physician and (urceon.
chiropractor, specializing In asthma, bay
fever, and chronic dUrases. B1371. 130
1 North letn.
EMPLOYMENT
HELP WANTED—Female 32
UEMONSTRATORS—Two neat young la-
dles under 25. Experience unnecessary.
Good salary, permanent position. Don't
phone.
Cull after 6 p. m., 1202 P st.
Room J12. E. MePeajt.
EXPERIENCED bookkeeper salesgirls. 2S
to 30. salarv. experienced maids, good
wages.
Applv at once. Interstate Em-
p!oym-nt, "08 Secuntv Mutual.
MIDDLE aged or elderly lady wanted for
home.
Small wases. M3534.
WANTED girl for housework and care of
children.
Prefer
Christian
Scientist.
Phone L7719 evenings.
WANTED
Three competent salesmen, should have
car and be able to give bond.
Ex-
perience In selling pianos, radios or elec-
tric refrigerators will belp bu^ 1* not
essential.
This Is a straight commission Job. altho a
reasonable drawing account can be ar-
ranged.
If YOU art a producer this Is a cood open-
Ins.
Wriie Immediately, gWnr age, experience,
and other qualification*,
also
pnone
number.
Address 822 Journal.
HELP WANTED MALE.
33
REGISTERED
pharmacUt wuited. The
Drue Mart. 11 & G.
SALESMAN. AGENTS
35
NEW MOSEY MAKING PLAN
Big spire time ?ay.
Experience unneces-
sary.
Bell Christmas assortment 21 ai
folders,
parchments.
metallic.
gold.
silver eff--c'.s.
J«l5g«>t II value.
100«%
profit
of)c-75c boxes.
Friendship Stu-
dios. Elmlra. N. T.
SALESMAN
wantid.
No
canvassing
L-a«s furnished.
Salary and coroml*
aioa. Small
Investment required.
For
personal interview. STarBor €57.
SALESMAN -xlth car.
Nebraska. K*n*a»
Iowa and Mismurl. See Mr. Hale;
Comhusker Hotel. Tuesday. 9 to 4
WORK WANTED—Female
36
_
FINANCIAL
MONEY TO LOAN.
~NEED"$100
$150, $200, $250 or more?
BORROW IT FROM US! Repay according
to your Income over any convenient pe-
riod.
Personal Finance Co.
Hoom 213 Sharp Bids., 2nd Floor.
206 So. 13th. St., Corn, N St,
FhoDB B1043.
Loins made In nearby towns.
CHARACTER
COLLATEKAl
1
AUTOMOBILE
MORTGAGE
124 So.
12th.
[ r^AM^ oa
automobiles,
furniture,
L\Jf\WtJ
dlaraondi, storks, bonds. No
slgcers.
Zxians made
la o.
minute.
Mo'ors Finance. 1S24 O St. JM2T1.
lor vour
immediate needs m-
•tantly. Auto loans. Refinancing. Feder-
ated Finance Co.. 1503 O. B7073. F2508.
LOAJS8—Diamonds, furniture, autos, un-
claimed diamonds lor sale. We buy old
gold.
Industrial Loan Investment Co.
1125 P. B1.WO. License bonded to state.
AUTOMOBILE * FUP-NITURE LOANS
LOWEST RATES. EASY PAYMENTS
UNITED FINANCE CO.. 117 Nn. 14. B5076
Our Loan Plan
IS ADJUSTABLE TO YOUR INCOME
EASY TO BORROW. EASY TO PAY.
A FRIENDLY. COURTEOUS SERVICE
CAPITAL CREDIT CO.
B4377
856 Stuart
CHARACTER, and collateral loans. We dis-
count your note 9'"p. There is no other
charge or commission. Boss P. Curtice
Co.. 515 Sharp Bids.
LIVESTOCK
LIVESTOCK
48
CONSIGi-fMSNT Sale at
Burlington Feed
Yards. 1'rlday at 12 o'clock. 100 head
shoats, 25 head cows and calves and milk
cows. Bring your livestock to us.
Lin-
coln Livestock
Commission Co. T. A.
Stubbs. Auct. B8811.
MERCHANDISE
ARTICLES FOR SALE
BATH TUBS S10.
toileta *S. lavptones
**. alnkt J3.SO. r«ng» &•>•> -3 K. toilet
aeats *2.
Caab or paytr'-.i.
Trester,
B28R8-
MERCHANDISE.
"MUSICAL MERCHANDISE. "02
"BEAUTIFUL GRAND"
PIANO
"ule tiv a well linunn ir/inufnchirer
fn'!\
n.lr'intr"-(l
Will bo nold fur pniall l > i '
n"( c Uuc on CUT.
Ju?f cot'.timie ^eeklv
ivivicnts
of
SS.
Follow'IK <'ur u»L'il
custom
all returned Kr.imls lire Bold In
this rnunner.
Offer*
exceptional
\alue
for somcnnr.
Answer Quick.
\Vant to
move It this v,rek.
Telephone or write J. A. Terry.
Schmiiler & Mueller Piano Co.
Dispenser* of llapplners
121_J_0_St.
B672r,
SEEDS, PLANTS
C4
FIKBT~~i:raae nomi: grown ultalta seed loi
*ale George Jlorrur. 2919 Dudley. M.12&9
_
WANTED TO BUY."
66
CASH for old gold tenth, silver, platinum,
nnd old wntrheji
'.Ml No 12th
'ANTE") 'o huv 'ised baby
buggy. Ad-
clrrs-; ?37 Jour'i.il.
^
\VANTKD~TO CUV—MacSnes. " bundled
nev,3papcrs. raK3 and scrap
Truck for
phone calls.
Lnvlr.e Bros. B106:. 234
^o
9th_
.
ROOMS AND BOARD
ROOMS AND BOARD
67
S ST.. 1544—Exceptionally pleasant room
v.Mth irlvata ,avatory. in modem private
hon". Meals If desired. F4S21.
tiS
SLEEPING ROOMS.
LOCATED •onvcnlent
to
university
and
business centT, comfortable sleeplnp or
liclit no'jsckeepir.s rooms and apts. 1121
_Qu- St
rLEA~SANi'" large room, newly decorated.
suitable lor *.wo In private modern home.
Kitchen privllc-K'i
Garage
If desired.
H30 Bumner F7<2'.
1 OR 2 ROOMs7privato"bath7ne.ar <-ap,tol.
Attractively furn. Kesaoaablc.
Garage.
£2419
_
_
HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS. 69
Y
ST., ~~ 2037— Two"" ".lean
holisekeepini:
rooms.
Gas. light,
heat
nnd
laundry
furntfn«'d.
garage. Call I/i635
N
ST.^
1734-^Nlcei cieoi^
cool,
small
npartm-nt.
A'57 sleepinE rooma.
Mrs.
Schroder. B4951.
QUB ST., 2745—2 furnished rooms, closet,
gas, light, bath, phone, gas heat, laun-
dry privileges: newly decorated.__B4j_311
1535 Nb~32Nb^3~rob"ms and private bath,
first floor, 2 rooms and private bath,
second floor. 1I350T.
28TH ST.. BO. 303—2-rm. apt., nicely fur.,
large closet, gas, lights, [rood heat, elec,
washer, garage.
Reasonable. L8032.
32S2
HOLDREOK—Three
unfurnished
light housekeeping rooms.
Private en-
trance. Phone M1553.
GARFJELD ST..
1045—First and second
floor apartment, entirely modern, excel-
lent heat, S14.00 month.
F60J5.
THE BALO.VIN" Apts. include lights and
gas and confcijntlous service interded for
honest people who '.vant to rent at rates
they le nncitiK
IM"H two
t^ f >ur HI >'ni
Trices Sl.'t t i » 5-~ '''' iHe
Mr- Doerch In Apt. 1 or rail BISW
K ST.. 10U—Near c.ifltol. .1 Hrcc clean
second floor rooms, 3 closets, east front,
cars.
Fine building,
close In. S?e today.
L71C3.
UNFOkNlSHED~APTS^-ComFreteiy" mod-
ern.
Well
located.
Very
desirable.
B2511.
REAL ESTATE FOR RENT
HOUSES FOR'RENT
n
•4i~jtooM n.uiws. jiu to j?i" now, J
roonn
modern.
M19
Knox.
1/22.50.
TrrMer
I»2r88.
OK K K N 1
,'t
tnmiH mink-rn onk, $Vfl*M7t7
;. rwnn-i nu'dern, $;n oo
.% rooms mod-
ern, dene n. jso oo
,% rooms modern
hut hen-. SI2 00 _ 1,4027.
FlYK KOOil Hunciinw. furnished or un-
furnished. MIS Arllntton.
AKHVIEW—We»t Hue St~Very "good "5
room rfnise.
I room duple-;, lone lulng
room.
2
garages.
Private
entrance.
F13'4
12TH ST . NO. 2^8 — Modern one and" two
room opa-tments.
redecorated, private
bati end F-iRlJ.-lre. Eagle Apartments.
__
_
___
_
___
2520 R — THO largo rooms, sun parlor, klt-
chenet, fri^ldaire. bath, continuous hot
water. Oil burner B193»
AT "UNl~PLACE— Vcry~"aeslrable J room
apt., private bath, partly furnished or
unfurnished. ?28 00 up.
M3444. M364H.
NEWLY REMODELED and redecorated,
3, i rooms, bath,
1004 E.
1419 G,
new duplex. 234 So. 26th. B4649. L4953.
WHEN MOVING CALL B3294.
FORD DELIVERY COMPANY.
FIREPROOF, FURNITURE WAREHOUSE
WE GIVE S. Ic H^ GREEN STAMPS.
VIIY nn apartment when a clean warm
comfortable
home.
5 rooms.
Karaite.
kitchen furnished. $20 50,
adults pre-
ferred
B2259.
3 ROOM HOUSE—2 lots. (Cood condition.
$7.00. 3435 Cleveland Ave.
ST. 1327—S rooms, bath and laundry,
hardwood 'loors hot air heat, close In.
Rent reasonable.
-!8th and K—Walking distance to umver-
mty, 7 room modern home, Frigldalre,
5afafre._LS433._
^_
1120-1124 F—Two 5-roozn cottage*, excel-
lent condition, walking distance, $12 to
$13. E. SI. Forsyth, B1447.
THE PALISADE
1035 So. 17th
Large 4 room apartment with every luxury
and convenience. Either furnished or un-
furnished. Phone Mrs. Holcomb, hostess.
B1093. L7203.
VIRGINIA APT.
22S-244 No. 16th.
Very desirable four room apt. and
bath.
ne'Aly decorated.
furnished
or unfur-
nished:
Fngidalre.
vacuum cleaner,
laundry facilities. Prices ranee from $30
to S40.
Close to university and
down-
town. Call B4361.
REAL ESTATE FOR RENT
74"
G ST.. 1203—Large living room, bedroom,
kitchen, private bath, new oak floors:
fine condition: vt-alkinE distance.
H ST.. 1223—Watseka—Quiet, thoroughly
clean, fully furnished, careful attention
given to provide
for every convenience
and comfort. E1I01.
K ST , 1216—Desirable living room and
kitchenette, front cpt.
BverythinK fur.
Reasonable.
Also sleeping room. B6420.
TWO MODERN. nc»ly
decorated dwell-
ings. One 5
bedrooms: other 4
and
sleeping porch. Inspection Invited. B16S2.
B4S37.
P ST. 2811—3 large rooms, first floor,
good condition, private entrances, desir-
able. naraRes. B1139.
41)8 SO. 17TH—Real
nome, entire llrst
floor.
Long
living room,
bedroom,
kitchen, dinette,
bath, closets, porches.
B3407.
412 SO. 11TH—Living room, closet, kitch-
enette,
fngldalre.
private
bath, hot
water.
Good condition.
Close in. Rea-
sonable. 1/J163.
130 SO. 31ST.—A 3-room apt. Gas, lights.
heat
and
telephone.
Garage,
adults.
L7854.
827 SO. 12TH—Bidroom and kitchen, lights
and heat, $15.
1141 D.—Cheerful 3 room apt., nicely fur-
Tri/ate
Dath.
Electric
refrigeration.
Laundry. Garage. B2723 or B5340.
1409 "G"—Nicely fur. 2 room apt.
Over-
stuffed.
Hot water always.
Laundry
privileges. S4.50 week. B3111.
BUILDING MATERIALS. 52
LUMBER, *15 to *30 M. Lath *«. Doors
Jl op: wlndowi SOc up. Pilot J2.5O gal-
loo. Roofing paper SI.SO. Trester. B2868.
GOOD THINGS TO EAT
57
CHOICE TOMATOES. 75c: grapes, apples,
51. Brnc coatalner. 2721 Que st.
GHAi*KS—Grand View Vineyards. 1
mile
north on 1st St. from No. 2 highway
crossing. $1 per hu. V, crop this year.
EVERGREEN sweetcorn, tomatoe*. pota-
toes, cabbage, carrot*.
Fries delivered.
F7672.
FOR
SALE—Fancy
canning
tomatoes.
F3319.
FOR SALE—Tomatoes. SOc and
75c per
bush-1.
5313 Li
Salla
Street. Phone
FO 28.
.
JELLT GRAPES, canning tomatoes. Jelly
plums, green peppers.
Larger
display
fru-ts, vegetables. South Street Market,
14th and South. F4707.
PICKLING CUCUMBERS, 40c bu. oa up:
California Ba.tlett pei-s. S2.35 box: can-
ning Concord grapes, SI. 10 bu. : Illinois
King pack peaches.
52.15 a bu. : Ne-
braska City canning tomatoes. 75c bu.
Bring Container.
Mldweit Fruit
Co.,
56th and O. M1732._
KNIGHT. 731 O— High test pure cider
vinegar. 2»c. No. 2 potatoes, bu. 49c:
10 cantaloupe. i5c: pumpkins. Se: onions.
2',ic, 3s lb. Good toms cheap. Hot green
and reJ pepper?.
Even the watch a man keeps
on his tongue will run down oc-
casionally.
1600 SO. 22NO—Very nice 2 room apt. and
kitchenette.
In modern,
private home.
Slecnlne porch if desired.
1742~SO 14TH—Lirge living room, over-
stuffed, i.am-it fumr.hings, kitchenette,
private bath. First floor. Private
en-
trance,
"turphv bed. Garaqe.
1834 PROSPECT—3 nicely furnished apart-
ments: Fricidaire. SIS to S28.50. F4272-
1836 WASHINGTON—Pleasant modern two
room apt.
Private bath, frigidalre: no
children: good for business people. F5221.
26TlFsT. SO.. :Tso—Two or three room
apartment, clear,
nicely
furnished, Jn
private •nodem home, good heat. LG373.
Garage.
33RD & HOLDRHGE—Attractive lone liv-
ing room, bath, kitchcnct, dressing room.
$2S..ril).
15. M. Forsvth. Rl-147.
3455 ORCHAR ) ^Attractive, sunnv li-ruom
apt.
Gas heat,
automatic hot
water.
Tele.,
bath.
elcc.
refrigeration.
Nice
yard.
l.'ear
ag
college.
References.
1I21S9 for appointment.
1729 K—Neatly furnished, very clean, con-
venieitly arranged 6 room apartment.
Bedroom end . unroom.
Murphy bed.
Llpht.
Alrv.
B3029.
M3743.
932 SO. 10TH— 3 roo-n light apt., well fur-
nished ^nd decorated, best heat. light,
gas. hot vater, laundry privileges.
'
_
2Tdi VVASHINGTOTT— • Furrils'hed. unfur-
nished. first, sscond floor, parlor, din-
ette, bedrooms, bath, kitchenette, desir-
able. rnoder-i. groinds
FS257.
_
~
ALHAMBRA7^129~NO. 12TH— Ne»ly dec-
orated apts.
Everything furnished. $16
and S20
roonUi
_
A LOVELY 4 room apt.
Furotsbed In wal-
nut
Private bath.
Oil heat. South lo-
otion. Adults.
F4035.
ALL MODERN furnished apt., electric re-
frigeration, Inquire Wagner A Walt, call
B33S3.
TOMATOES ana cucumbers. 75c bu.; po-
tatoes. 50c. M.25 bu.; apples. 75c bu.:
witermeloan. 1C 'h.
All kinds of fruit,
Boyds. »cstn of Capitol Beach. West O
St.
TUMAfOSS. all Kina*. Get tnem irein.
Other vegetables
H biocX north on Cot-
ner Blvrt. at Smitn St. Prices right
A NICELY FURNISHED 3 room apt., good
heat and clran. second floor, lights fur-
nlshea. south location, adults.
F4035.
AUTOMATUTGAS HEAT, hot water, pri-
vate oaths. 2 and 3 rooms. 320 00:
rooms. S25 00: carace If djscircd.
CLOSElK—OIKE5SA~"AITS~345 No. 12T
ON'LT 3 BLOCKS FROM 32 * O. THE
_BEST FOR LESS. FIREPSOOF^JSTSET.
CHOICE apt. In the clean and cool Colon-
ial. 1741 K. Bedroom and laadoor bod.
FriKidalre. B4442 B6104.
ItlDDLEAGKD »oai»n wants poiiuon ax
hoisse*«epcr PT work Jor aororltj. Best
references.
F36SS.
STRONR nign school jtlrl desires to iissin
with housework or care for cnlidrra in
exchange for rooai. board aad *mall
waxes
A4dr. i3c
ft-. SMI So. 40th.
Phone FO «nj.
i303 RANDOLPH—Room in modem home.
buiin«» co-jr'e or
teachers.
Between
Hawthorne at;rt Haado!r>h schools. Meals
opt'onal.
Oarace. F41S7.
HOUSEHOLD GOODS.
59
. «re«lnc 1a6!e $3. >fd $1 M).
SI r,p. Co=co:rum rer^ 9x10 fi and
Llarola lPcrnltTiTe._afg» Sn-_l_:Hi __
"
__
aTTrnCKlerTi 2 rocni .Tt trnh ess.
Suitable ror 2 rdu!t». Btth^ny.
Only
Sir
P-«. II.
R727 S-arrji. V?2*?
~ ~ P T " p ^ f ! I S So. 16t!l. 1441 M.
S E. F-jnal-hH anfi unfurnished aru..
to J4."-
T.vw.
F.~. -CT>r-r-lBrl»x. 2 i'. 'n-'t
laic' rcxia aitlal street, autnmntlc
h»at fur.
Eicc'.ric -washer. Reltrences.
8
ROOMS,
Frtgfdalre.
Janitor,
garage,
near capltol. B1159 or F0649.
L5th ST . SO. 901—Apartment for one or
two; tub, shower, fripidaire, etc. Roll
bed. unusually clean; Quiet; homelike.
L715B
HOUSES FOR RENT
R ST . 2430—10 room house, oak
finish,
newly decorated.
Phone B2207.
R ST.. 3179—10 rooms, all modern, oak
floors; suitable to rent out rooms.
A
barRaln. S25.00.
B5328.
__
K
ST..
1654—Near high school, ciean
6-room, 3 bedrooms. 3 closets. Beautiful
floors. F.xcellcit furnace. GaraKe.
1011 E ST.—Ouplex 5 rooms and bath.
First class condition
Call B1180.
:?67 WASHINGTON—Modern six rooms;
garage
F7S73
2837 NO. -19TH— Unl i'lace. 6 room, all
modern up to 'late house.
Call
Pester
Jnventment Co.
M4252.
NEARLY new 5-room bungalow, gas heat.
2-stall FaraS«. tennis court, $30.
Call
FO133 for appointment.
721 SO. 37TH—All modern 6room house.
In fine condition, nice yard, garage, near
Randilph and Catholic -schools. M2297.
K
ST.,
-00^—Fi-'e roo-n modern.
oaK
floors,
newly decorated.
All
in A-l
shape.
BU84.
Sunday and
evenings
call T.9175.
1630 SO. 27TH—Neat S room modem oak
uic?-10K-.
F.15S1
710 MARSHALL AVE.—6-room oaK finish
bungalow.
Garage.
Automatic
water
heater. S30. L. M. Williams with E. M.
Forsyth. B1447. L8203.
1810
PEPPtfR
AVE.—Newly
decorated,
strictly modern, 4 bedrooms,
sleeping
porch, Kunrooin. double caraEe, reason-
able. F2592. B33S6.
192S SO. 10TH—5 room modern cottage,
oak throuBfcout, day light basement, ga-
rage, '.loso to . cl.ool. Call
F7346 or
F2095.
3028 "S" ST.—'I room . oltttKe at *2.V
bathrooms. Can arrange for two couples
nlcclv if desired. B31in
1224 SOUTH—Modern 'i room house with
parade, closs to school, $20.50. B6511.
Freidrl'h Bros.
2009 SO 23RD—7 -ooms. den. toikt ana
breakfast nook, first floor; 3 bedrooms,
sleeping oorca
F2439
10TH ST. SO.. 9u3—Six room modern cot-
tage, 'lose In. good condition, rent rea-
sonaole: adu^s preferred. Call L4S36.
2930 D ST.—Surprise opportunity. 5 rooms
almost ne*T, long
living
room, $30.00.
4719 tvnox.
$20 00. F2371.
6 rooms. 1120 So. 17th
$32.50
190J South,
room bungalow
$27.00
2627 A, 7 TO—.s. oil heat
$50.00
1825 Par*,
'j rooms. f:as heat
15000
8 room ortck. furn'shsd. oil heat
$15.00
R. L. Armstrong. 301 Federal Trust.
B4332. E2331.
CLEAN*. 3 room house and garmce. Inquire
1424 No. 19. Ptone B270S
DANDY
HOUSE—11
siwplnK
rooms,
plenty of plumbing, double parlor, plenty
of closctf. basement dining roctn and
kitchen, close 10 downtown campus: Im-
mediate possession. KM S3. Star Real
•estate. 133 No. 11th.
6 rooms
K2
1900 South. 5 room bunizalow
S27
2627 A. 7 rooms, oil heat
S50 00
1925 Park. S -roms. gas heat
S50.no
8 rora brlcl:. .i:m'.sh-d. o:i heat.. 56500
R. 1. Ars-.;trorE
_
_
FINE large 7-roorn mocem home.
ing porch, garage, oil burner, r'ce jsrd.
Mock soutli
Wcsleyaa campca.
t3S.
112113.
_
SIX HOOM modern hnuseTliewiy d«corat«37
new tile bath and kitchen »lth new fli-
tuies ^r.araue
B1107
TRld'LY modrrn blx room house" Newly
decorated thrucut
New
bathroom fix-
tures
A iea itif illy tiled kitchen
Oak
floors
Olr.iRe. etc. Call B1107.
3009
U'ajn.it Tourt 'Q>.
" SAVE ON" RENT
1443 O st , 5 rooms, KM heat
123.00
182S O.arfield, 6 rooms, ns new
$39.00
441 Rose, 3 rooms, garage
S2S.GO
-'31S Lynn, 8 rooms, modern
(28 OO
309 No. isth, 10 rooms, garage
J37.30
1409 No. 30th, 9 rooms, near school.530-00
101 So. 15th. 8 rooms, gas heat
$37.50
We have many attractive residence prop-
erties for salo or rent.
Cail B3223.
1218 "O" Street.
4018
GARFIELD—Almost ntw 6
Bung.
B3485.
B4834.
HOUSES r
78
28
ELMWOOD—All modern
7 rooms,
new'y decorated,
nicely
furnished, ga-
rage.
New gaa furnace, $50. F2785 or
F4385.
1025 SO. llth—Lower floor of an all mod-
ern home. Full basement. Good furnace.
Reasonable rent. Oarage. F3006.
iyii7~ GAKFlELD^-WiriThare~8-room mod-
ern home with parties who will furnish
board for i, 2 adults. F3412.
BEAUTIFULLY FURN. 6 room home, gas
furnace, Kclvinator. Grand piano. Imme-
diate possession.
Will
lease.
1013
D.
Owner.
B4351.
F.r>019.
DUPLEX—Almost new 5 rooms, strictly
modern, overstuffed,
walnut furniture;
laundry; rr.rage; heat fur. S35. F3693.
4319 J.
FURNISHED s-room bungalow, all modern.
So.
13th
location.
J25.50.
Available
Sept. 1st.
F1020.
S ROOMS—All modern, baby grand piano,
hardwood floors, cicely furnished, double
Karage.
$37.50
B2725 or B3985
WANTED TO RENT
YOUNG couple v.isb furnished
apartment,
private home, garage if possible.
Con-
sider small furnished house.
Reference.
Address S34 Journal.
WANTED to rent, good *6C acres or more,
or might consider qnod fifty-fifty
farm
lease. Address 835 Journal.
KEAL ESTATE FOR SALE
FARMS FOR SALE
82
16U ACRES, well impioved. only 10 miles
fro-n Lincoln.
No better
farm In Lan-
caster Co. '.00 ac.'es, second bottom land,
3 ml. from Ashland. Good Improvements,
S50 00 ~er acre. Buyer gets 2-5 of th«
100 acre corn
crop. R. L. Armstrong.
B4332. B2331. 318 Federal Trust Bldg.
ACREAGE
83
66th AMD VAN DORN—25 acres
good
farm land with full set of Improvement!,
outside
city
limits. E.
M. Korsyth,
B1447.
HOUSES FOR SALE.
A ST.. 3216 — Modem oak finish 4-room
bungalow with garage. Nicely located.
E. M. Fnrsyth. B1447. F832fi.
_
AUCTION Friday. Sept. 1st, 6:3%- Fullr
rented, nnd a
v.-,iitins list of renter*.
New bull line.
$6 000 cash will handle.
This is 3biol,tt2'y the best nnd safest In-
veslmer.t In Lincoln.
B585S. B1410.
EXCHANGE—Real Estate
88
108 /iCRES ^. W. Arkansas. 40 ecre« tim-
ber
2'- acres good bottom,
balance In
cultivation. Good spring*. 5 room home.
30x40 bam. 2 rallts from town of 600.
Can make «. nlci
IWng on thli plice.
Plenty of wood for fuel. Lincoln owner
will trade for .mpnrred city property.
Star 6V»
1ST EASTERN Nebraska, ail In cultivation,
fair mpriveme^t. mortgac* $3,OOO.«»-
su'j
\Vant
IJncoln property. JS50
first njortgace bond for «uity In good
.*i mnms
*^027.
_^
r
IMPROVED"* «cres~nemr Omaca.
W«nl
prpp»rty near or In Lincoln.
Addren
S3S Jc-jnu.1-
AT HAR3TS— Rrrona c » "range
^ ttt-.ric •sra^^f^ $15. r
c'lwi'i'ie rarc^ S37 *-o
„
A-anltn A Furnlfjre Kuciince. 2350 O.
»a . A-OC an - p. m . 2100
r st.. « rc-CT« ep-^a u'tfai iB-r"-i-».
:IT]T>S Too-ni ra".t. S-T"'"'
fl'alic
r^r.rn
JTJ t*-, rues. Eureka
*~M3>fr. ^tl^T t»f 1».'>. fl"i:. «t«mn Mr.
VlTifrt-er.
StrcW. *
Co . Aucllci-ir-r.
E31S1
cufe for rral
Wim or -wl'licrat fixture
-
T»T1C»
While They Last
1$ TMRKt, PlKfE ^'•^ro^^^l
rant
»•
oil TTJ-. *34 75 19 tS? "S. S«« ^"si*
Kellison Furniture Co.
t—314 jso. lua. oes. i:pat!>.
frlgldalre, <3!sn*a »3d linns Tuml»h^l.
B» ';K *-!BTIT out of 10 lai]^ 1*> re*iev tnnr
leise at '-S* B''nna"v-i as "f Ser»'.. 3<1.
Th? »«. f sv»,ji'.e »t
this «rf.:r.=.
)«r 2 aflu ;*. Kea-
re n %-••*
Nr«lj !•.:•-
nf 111*1 1'. c«.
16!i*«.
"H?- BKLVKli- HE
A7'». -s~e I'J «r-
f JIT**, 'y'•Ji m f'
1*"'
r~v ft "3 i "ffl*
Jt*ifl
+*t .*r
SL "nrc72_ "
vnniiKO'V
XNU
ltONAl.li—CWT3l1Iiii!v
fi3"n,jtl3**a; i*ry
hointv,
v.'n ^le^-l^—i roi^ h**'
K^'ITiftl'T
"'. "
ll"e _
"•
_„_
i
near Trci-rttt anfl
blcn 1
roo SO j7T!l—3fl'«: «'i; ex. f.nrf.y mta-
fm
f-ioflace, »T
i*
r*>^''l rf^rtMi''a.
r>Jpc>:
827
Ff>
] _ s * 1
» w ' »
*-'•
.
.
Nebraska Furniture Co.
1212
O.
5x24 CK~t'l
Wiittm c»r
Furanare
of re
*7
«. J7S. BS014-
1414 O.
I- STRK> T- .S
ti*i' TO *«». 172J. C.
F2SO«.
LIVE at the LINDELL!
Thrift y Rates . . .
Conveniently Located
living at
Live at lh<- Linu
romj-'s anV SPA PERI
SiEWSPAPFRI
THE LINCOLN.STAR-WEDNESDAY,
AUGUST 30, 1933.
inUIUtU
IMIIMI
UltlllUIUIIIIIIIIII
IIIIIMIHtMIHUIIMUIIIIH
lull
tUIMUOIIIIUIIMIMMIIIIIIIMIIU
IcMlNERVA'S cMAILJ
!
TAKE YOUR TROUBLES TO MINERVA
!
Why Worry?
"We have harmony or discord;
need, lack, want, or plenty accord-
Ing to the nature of the thoughts
we hold '
Thui writes "A I." in answer to
a letter quoted recently from one
who signed 'Frankly Speaking"
"We have always had and always
will have with us. those who are
vhionlesi, unable to see anything
but the dark side of the clouds,"
says "A I" "Why should we use
up our energy in thinking of that
which we do not want' Is it not
better by far to use our minds in
creating the things or conditions we
want' For all there is in this world
that is or is not worth while was
launched into objective existence
through
the
power of creative
thought. So no matter what our
conditions are, we have no one to
blame but ourselves We may have
created
our
present conditions
through fear, but created it we
surely have
"When
\ve learn to look above
and beyond the seeming and behold
the real, discount the false and
claim the true, then and only then
shall we have that which pleases,
that which satisfies"
For which letter from "A. I.," we
express our thanks. Surely, "the
world is as full of a number of
things," that we might just as well
be ' happy as kings" in enjoying
those things which are beauteous
and gladsome "Frankly Speaking,"
you remember, thought we were
somewhat lopsided, in our answers,
because we always looked at the
happy side of problems We don t
mind a deformity of that sort in
the least, much prefer it to a uni-
formity of useless, profitless pes-
simism.
Trouble Anticipated.
Dear Minerva' I am writing in
hopes you can help me regarding
my future mother-in-law.
Almost three ye^r? ago I met and
fell in love with a splendid young
man. Within a very short time we
were going steady and were very
happy Then things began to hap-
pen.
I discovered he was the
brother of a girl I had known and
disliked for years
She discovered
my existence about the same tune.
Her mother was informed about it
and—well, it wasn't very pleasant.
The sister, and her girl friends, dug
up various skeletons, mostly false
and others terribly exaggerated, and
created a great disturbance I, as
proudly as possible, faced all these
issues and we failed to break up
over these school-girl stories, his
mother entered the fight He was
at that time attending college and
partly dependent on his folks. His
mother told him never to see me
and made various threats. She re-
fused to see me I had never met
her and she has never seen me We
continued to go together. Things
calmed down quite a bit I have
been to see her twice
She talks
lovely to my face but quite other-
wise- behind my back. She never in-
vites me to her home, though my
boy friend is always invited to
meals and such and is almost a
member of the family.
He secured work four months ago
and has been promoted twice. He
still thinks he owes his folks all
they need and has been very gener-
ous to them. His car is, as his
mother wanted it, in her name, and
their property which is part his, is
also in her name. She refuses to
change either.
We have been engaged for two
months and our weddine date is
set for the middle of October. Only
my family and a few intimate
friends know this He cannot tell
his folks, nor could I announce my
engagement because of the uproar
it would create. She has said he
would be cut off entirely if he mar-
ried me.
I assure you I am not bad. I
have a higher social position and
more devoted friends than his sister
has. My father is better known and
better fixed than his father is. It is
only jealousy on their part. If I
would get his sister into my crowd
her mother would love me I re-
fused to put myself out, as I think
I owe her nothing. I really dislike
her very much.
T know my fiance loves me but
could I be both his family and his
wife? It bothers me very much, this
"in-law" relationship. Should I ig-
nore them or what? It hurts me
very much to have someone hate
you for nothing. My fiance and I
are ideally mated and I am assured
of happiness there. Please advise
me. MARY LOU
A. I know I wouldn't let the dis-
agreeableness of any familv come
between me and the man I loved.
But—I would expect to make
some sacrifices and not ask the
man to give up his family—and I
would feel that it was entirely up
to me to prevent any serious clash
with family that place the man in
an unhappy position.
The only way to conquer a diffi-
cult "in-law" situation is through
control, patience, a sincere endeavor
to understand, and then still more
control and patience.
It appears to me that you are
somewhat
intolerant
and
have
'Miss New York"
Holding the trophy
emblematic
of her title. Miss Elsa Donatii, of
the Bronx, New York,
pictured
after she had been selected from
among 1,500 girls to be "Miss New
York" at
the
national
beauty
pageant
in Atlantic City, N. J.,
next montn.
closed your mind too completely to
this sister, whom you so thoroughly
dislike. There are few people indeed
that we cannot like a little if we
sincerely try to do so. Have you
honestly tried to like her, and per-
haps help her to be a little happier
and more likeable' I'm afraid not.
Isn't your attitude a bit too much
on the aggressive defensive? You
don't have to be chummy and close-
ly intimate with the members of
your fiance's family. But don't
marry him with the idea that you
can supplant his family entirely in
his affections. That isn't Just or
reasonable.
BUSY SCENE AT
FAIR GROUNDS
Tent Village Rising;
Concession List
Swelling Fast.
Preparations for the state fair
were shaping up rapidly, Tuesday
morning.
The state fair board,
which has now moved its offices to
the grounds, reports that seventeen
counties have so far entered ex-
hibits and more are expected to be
heard from today
The tent village on the grounds
is beginning to spring up with sev-
eral campers already installed. A
number of race horses are now in
the stables but Perry Reed, fair sec-
retary, expects most of them to ar-
rno later in the week rrom Des
Moines, where they are now at the
lows exposition
J. N. CJilder. in charge of conces-
sions, reports that more machinery
exhibitois have
already
reserved
more
space
than
there
were
throughout the entire fair a year
ago
While most
concessionaires
usuallv register later hi the week,
he says present indications point
toward a larger number of them
than a year ago.
Horse show entries are coming in
rapidly, according to Keitn Walker,
manager. Entries have been received
from Mrs R. W. Brooks. Colorado
Springs: Mrs. M. C. Lewelivn. Chi-
cago: Joe Beeler Jewel. Kas. Mrs.
N. N. Dalton, Kansas City:. Mo.:
and from a number of Lincoln and
Omaha people.
George Brandeis'
Senator Crawford and Al DuTeau's
high school horse, Ritzi McDonald,
are entered
in
the
five-gaited
classes, along with many o'.her
horses.
Every town has one hostess who
seems generous to everybody ex-
cept the merchants who charge
it.
The dumb animals are the ones
itnat never deliberately do
any-
thing they know will hurt ttoein.
Make This Model
At Home
•
SENSIBLE SCHOOL RIG.
PATTERN 1534
BY ANNE ADAMS
Top the young girl going to school
smartly but -aisdy! Choose first a
captivating jumper frock
add a.
bevy of gay blouses . . .there's a
complete "wardrobe for her' The
jumper frock sketched is irresistib1.-
in noreltv cotton and sheer wool
JJoie its staple details, .the eulmpc
•with Touthful collar, bonr and ador-
able puffs the Jumper with
chic
diagonal seaming.
Pat1«rn 1534 is available in sizes
4. 6. 8. 10. 12 and 14. Size 10 tafccs
15« yards M inch fabric and 3a<
yards 36 inch contrastine Illustrat-
ed slep-by-^tco M-sring instructions
included with this pattern.
Send fifteen cents <15ci in coins
or stamps fooins preferred, for this
Anne Adam* pattern Write ttolnly
name, address and style number
Be sure to stai? size
Th» Anne Adams pattern book
features a rharmme collection or
aftpmo-m. sp>ris. polf frnnif drss.?-
e< jumryr<; ho-is? frocks * JOT juniors
and }OV"]T rk>'nr«
for voTjne*t*r«
and instr.jrlion<: for rr.aicinc a chic
sweater S*nd for rour ropr
Pric"
of ralAloc fifteen c^nts Catalog su>d
pattern, sogc'her lwcntT-fJv» cents
Address orders to Lincoln Star
Pattern department, 243 West 17th
street, Sew Tort City.
BAR PRESIDENT
HITS CORRUPTION
Martin Sees Danger in
Drift to Social
Democracy.
Proposes Reforms to End
Racketeering and
Speed Justice.
GRAND RAPIDS. Mich . Aug. 30
—4^ r^-or«ee
jn
7't'?**'"* * j* iJ't
pc^lc Kwrp'Tip
AHO
S^CTpt-BTJi"
1 *7*^3il71jf
D I C K I N S O N
SECRETARIAL SCHOOL
K1C1.
11 * O. f« mirtmrto ML
REORGANIZATION
PLAN
WITHDRAWN
BY ARMOUR FIRM
CHICAGO, Aug. 30— W —The
management
of
Armour ing
Mrs Anderson was shot as she la-
beside hei
3-veai-old
v>n, Eail
Tin- child clutched hu, mother fian-
tically and ten urn fiom the cot-
tage
Neighbors found Andctson on
the floor of his own bedroom
Tots' Apparel 27c
Boj •' Sletvelui Wash
Suits. Broadcloth* . .
Glrli' Summer Dresses
. . . broken
sizes 2 to 6 .
Corset Clearance
rorindt dlrdln t 9.1
Combination)!, Sldchook
(.Inlln. : 99.
Fa rm (I t
Carter &
I. a x I t e
Foundation i
t n r m e r 1 >
2 9a
(n
1 50
' .1 1'rlcc
(ornrlettm with under-
bill to clo*o 1 93
—Third Floor
Scores of Interesting Economies await you Here
. the Big Last-Thursday-of-the-Month Bargain Day!
CHT A \yf~DC
OlAJVliO
for Clipping and Presenting Coupon
at 3rd Floor Premium Section.
Don't miss sharing in these and scores of other timely specials that await you Thrifty Thursday at
Lincoln's Busy Store ... and remember 10 S. & H. Green Stamps FEES for clipping and presenting
coupon at third floor premium section ... no purchase necessary . . . only one to a customer, please.
j
.
^
,
Thrifty Thursday Sale of New
Fall Millinery
Snug Beret*
Small Brim*
Draped Toque*
50
Satin*
Felt*
tiovdtiet
Come early for,
best choice . .
quantity is lim-
ited!
(SEE 11TH ST.
WINDOW)
GOLD'S—Third Floor
Imperfect* of a Famous Make of
Fine Silk Hosiery at
Fit-all tops In •eml-service...both
Chiffon and semi-service weights in
the lot...»llk from top to toe...Ir-
regulars of a much higher priced
hose...special Thursday at
3 PAIRS 2.25
GOLD'S—Street Floor 79'
Carter Rayon Underwear
Carter's first" quality Rayon
Vests and Panties . . . fine soft
candv stripe rayon that •wears
excellently . . . panties have
yoke front, band knee, pink . . .
sizes 34 to 43 ...
only 68'
New Rayon Gowns and
Pajaims
Gowns are trimmed with at-
tractive laces and nets . . . Pa-
jamas come in one piece styles
with
ruffly
trimmings,
cap
sleeves . . . several color com-
binations
125
GOLD'S—Third Floor
Hundreds of Handkerchiefs at...
Colorful prints,
hand appliqued,
h a n d embroidered . . . women's
handkerchiefs in lawn and linen
. . . men'» and boys' 'Kerchiefs in
all white and white with colored
woven borders . . . choice
GOLD'S—Street Floor 5
Boxed Stationery
White and tints . . .
nicely boxed . . . linen
and vellum finish . . .
24 sheets and
envelopes
25c
500 History Paper
500 sheet ream of fine
grade history paper
...standard size, ruled
tiro sides.
^2«»
two rinic
«*•»*•
Women's
Silk Gloves
Eight button length,
tiro snap fastening
tray and mode . . .
sizes S*? to S . . . also
brown end black C^.
. . . pair..
Sample Belts
Only size 28 . . .
black,
brown,
navy,
red. gray . . . high
style trims, m e t a l
stitchings . .
1 to 3 inch .
New Neckwear
N e w satins. crepe».
piques . . . s a i l o r
backs. V necks and
high round
collars
only
Odd Lot Gloves
Broken lot of capeskin
Gloves,
kid
mended
Gloves. Suedes . . . ra-
rious colors . . . some
slightly roiled |
or damaged.. *
GOLD'S—Street Floor.
Rock Crystal Necklaces at
Sparkling and dear, strung on chain . . .
iClS and 30 inch lengths
1 AA
. . . only
».W
4 PC. Pewter Coffee Sets
A gracefully shaped, smart Set.
Coffe«
Server, cream and suear to match and trav
. . . well finished, hesvy
A QC
weight ... complete
•»•«*•*
GOLD'S—Street Floor
Two Important Watch Features
WEN'S « J E W E L
WATCHES
. chrom-
rom casts, squar* or
Inous dials »err}ceab>
5.95
OTMS yew.
WOMEN'S 15 JEWEL
WATCHES . . rtircm-
ium
CASKS,
assorted
rtylra. rectal! g -a 1 » r
«haj»e. fruaran-
GOLD S—Street Floor
Big 2c Notion Sale! |
Tyxrlh ftrw*
A*hr«lT» T«t»
9m*n *nt Rrrt
'2
C r«™>
BTW
fill •<
Purninc
n»tv H«nv»
T«f
Ttimfe
PREV1ER SHEARS and
SCISSORS-* 7. S iii-h
and small fn>-
sdssor*
»ni A1t«-l otie ATWI
jwiUd
rrdora
ore
mil t w o f l e « »
f\n
. ony
..
*i>W
t O*K RCFFET A Kn
out}
^.OW
1 OAK RLFFET 17 ten
1 S I M M O > S
MTKING . . .
fun .Ire
2.00
1 IRON BED
only
£ LINK SPRINGS
tw In nice cadi
1 CHILD'S
CRIB only
1 DAVEJiFORT . . mo-
hair
If K(\
coTered .
. ' '**v
1 CHI>A CLOSET . . .
5.OO
»LNI>G StITK.
•}!*
Kft
0''OU
HAL-
only
1 »-Pe
It.Ilar
Rennalssane*
1 COMBINATION"
MT BED
A fin
full iilir .
. *««»V
1 L A R G E COLONIAL
OAK
-|2 "in
DESK .
A*.OV
1 SOLID
W A L N U T
COFFEE
O Eft
TABLE
. «>•«•>"
1 OAK BED
only
COLD'S—Fifth Floor
3.00
Used Pianos, Stoves, Refrigerators
1 ISED. 5 rnbli foot
•old "tin !•*'
1 I SEI» KELVOATOR.
sli cubic
T*6* Oft
fool .
... <»'W
1 KITCHEN TABLE and
1 PORC E L A I > TOP
DROP LEAP TABLE
1 ISED
U P H I G U T
riA>0
30.00
2 ALL STEEL CRYSTAL
REFRIGERATORS. SO
5.00
1 PENINSILAR 8TO\E
..only .
. 13 45
DETROIT
t K W E I.
STO\*.
18.45
KALA-
MAZOO STO\ E
1 DETROIT
t E W E I,
STO\ t.
8.50
2.50
8.50
1 A. B C.
RANGE onlj
BI-RNER
STO\E
. .
1 GASOLINE P R E S S -
I RK. table
o
Kf\
model STOVE •>••»"
1 EIREKA STOVE, with
11.50
•tnnll
ovrn
oniN
tnent
STO\ E. npart-
hon«n
model
15.00
GOUTS—Fifth Fkwf
Clearance New Kitchen Kook
GASOLINE AND
KEROSENE RANGES
Only one of • kind
be early for your choice
. .they'll BO in a hurry
*l 2S
V*^«^
STOVK . . . 1 OIL STO\ K
72.25 |
86.25
STWE
SOLD ON TERMS IF DESIRED
Houseware Features...
LARGE
CH
SMV - - -
for lira ...
KS .
. «wjf
. 21 and in
BOX
HK.H
TW1
OJOTHI^
NV?i
i*.bo
i Hi-Hi
«mlj
MMi
T.m
CAST
IRO^
R*l-Ht
A l l VIM M
< t MT R I. II I. A »
M?!'. SKI1.1J.T
tor
*tl
• vr.\ r. K A o r
» AR-
• III, «>M F.
all
nvljll tiltTfdlr
rrrnUT No
t,
OR\