T H E W E A T H E R .
NEBRA SKA: Cloudy to-
night and Saturday; probably
local rain or snow; no decided
change In temperature.
Lincoln: Cloudy tonight and
Saturday, probably occasional
snow; no decided change in
temperature. Lowest temper-
ature tonight about 25 above. THE LINCOLN STAR
Telephone B1234
Mew Police Number B6844
HOME
EDITION
T h i r t y - T h i r d Year
L I N C O L N , NEB., FRIDAY, F E B R U A R Y 8, 1935
1 fi P f l t r
0.0 r d g
IN OREATEK LINCOLN—
FIVE CENTS E.LSEWHERE
BRUNO HAUPTMANN RESTS HIS CASE
Attacks On
Relief Bill
Beaten Back
S e n a t e C o m m i t t e e
Against New Currency
for Work Expenditures.
NO FINAL VOTE TAKEN
'Prevailing Wages'
Amendment May Be Re-
considered on Monday.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 8— (AP)
— Reinforced against a strong bi-
partisan opposition, administration
forces in the senate appropriation
committee today beat back a series
of amendments to the $4,880,000,-
000 work-relief bill, including a
proposal to pay for the $4,000,-
000,000 work expenditures in new
currency.
The committee failed to reach a
final vote, however, and called an-
other riveting for Monday.
Senator McAdoo (D-CaL), who
voted with the majority yesterday
for the McCarran amendment re-
quiring wages on public works be
those prevailing in local private
industries, served notice he would
move to reconsider the 12 to 8
ballot Monday. The administra-
tion is opposed to this change,
planning to pay a $50 a month
wage.Chairman Glass Jokes.
Chairman Glass
jocularly
an-
nounced he had
been authorized
by the commit-
tee to make full
announcements
of the
execu-
t i v e proceed-
ings because of
"inaccuraci e s"
in prior an-
nouncements by
other members,
said McA d o o
"apparent 1 y
thinks he made
a mistake."
The amend-
ment to issue
(D-Va.), who
Infant Is Doomed To
Death By Starvation
GRANITE CITY, 111., Feb. 8 — (AP) — Without food
since birth, Robert, son of Mr. and Mirs. Bernard Jenkins of
Nameoki, 111., began his eleventh day of life today at St.
Elizabeth s hospital here.
Physicians said he is doomed to death by starvation, a
stricture of the esophagus preventing passage of food to the
stomach from the mouth.
At the hospital today his condition was said to be "the
same." Yesterday the child was so weak his cries for food
were scarcely audible. Only his robust physique has enabled
him to withstand the lack of food until now, the physician
said.
Apparently normal at birth, the boy became ill and an
operation was performed to correct an intestinal deformity.
Later, the more serious malformation was discovered, but
the child was too weak to undergo further surgery.
Senator Glass
$4,000,000,000 of treasury notes to
meet the expenses of the works
funds was proposed on behalf of
Senator Wheeler (D-Mont.) Glass
said it was "beaten badly" with-
Child Labor
Issue Put On
Senate Floor
Reported by Committee;
Bank Liability Bill
Also Sent Forth.
Among bills reported to the
senate general file Friday morn-
ing were S. F. 21, to ratify the
federal child labor amendment,
and S. F. 128, which does away
with the double liability of bank
stockholders in Nebraska. Both,
were turned in by the committee
on constitutional amendments.
One bill that came back from,
the municipal affairs committee
is S. F. 170, raising the salary of
mayors in first class cities (5,000
to 25,000 population) from $500
to $1,000 per year. The commit-
tee tacked on the emergency
clause, so_that officials elected in
April this year will get the bene-
fit.
S. F. 52 and 53, which raise
the maximum bond premium for
county treasurers to 1 per cent a
year, from one-half of 1 per cent,
and authorize refunds to treas-
urers and other officers who have
paid part of the premiums out of
their own pockets this year, were
•brought out by the same com-
out a record vote.
Another
amendment
rejected
without a roll call would have
provided that preference be given
war veterans in the employment
of men to administer the bill. This
was proposed by Senator Metcalf
(R.-R.I.)
Three More Present
Three senators absent hereto-
fore were present at the executive
meeting, McKellar (D.-Tenn.) and
Tydings (D.-MD.), just returned
from the Philippines and Nye (R.-
N.D.) who has been busy with his
munitions inquiry. Just how they
voted was not announced.
Nye lost an amendment 10 to 9,
to prohibit any of the money be-
ing used for building naval craft
in private yards. He announced
afterward President Roosevelt had
assured him none of the money
would be utilized for that purpose.
The committee eliminated the
Philippines from the bill, confin-
ing its benefits "only in the
United States and its territories
and possessions."
Senator Steiwer (R-Ore) lost,
10 to 9, an amendment which
would have required all public
works projects to be carried out
under the direction and super-
vision of the permanent govern-
ment departments concerned with
the various projects.
Another amendment rejected.
10 to 6, by Senator Copeland
(D-NY), would have prohibited
the government engaging in any
competitive
enterprise
in any
community where the existing
private industry was working un-
der normal conditions. This pro-
posal was advanced by the na-
tional association of
furniture
manufacturers.
Wilson Wins Oratory
t
Contest At Wesleyan
Willard Wilson, freshman from
Holdrege. and Paul Maves. senior
from Burwell, tied for first place
in the annual Peace Oratorical
-ecstcsl held Thursday evening.
The tie was broken in favor of
Wilson. He is entitled to represent
Nebraska Wesleyan at the State
Peace Oratorical contest lo be
held in Lincoln. March 14.
His
oration was entitled, "An Armv
for Peace." Eight students were
in the contest
mittee.
S. F, 20, for election of road
overseers, now appointive, was
trotted out by the privileges and
elections committee, but it carries
an amendment providing that the
appointive system shall continue
until 1938.
S. F. 8, the Wells bill to pro-
hibit county surveyors or county
engineers
from
doing
official
work and drawing pay and mile-
age therefor without the county
board's approval, was reported
with an amendment limiting ex-
penditures to $250 a year in all
counties of less than 50,000 popu-
lation, and $500 in the larger
counties, except by the board's
sanction.
STRICT OFFICER
LIABILITY HELD
Ruling Against Former
Peters Trust Officers
Is Sustained.
The Supreme court laid down
an important rule in an opinion
released Friday morning in which
it sustained the Lancaster county
District court in holding that di-
rectors of a trust company may
not delegate their responsibility
arid are not excused from liability
because they committed some of
their duties to an executive com-
mittee.
The court affirmed the
case brought by Minnie I. Ashby
against Richard C. Peters and
other directors of
the former
Peters Trust company of Omaha.
Six rules were laid down in the
opinion. Briefly they are:
1. Directors ot * trust company ma?
not drlejtate their liability or be excused
Irois liability lor »o —The automobile industry initiated its
iJ«o production activities with an output for all American automo-
bile factories of 306.000 units m January, according to a prelim-
inary estimate made by the Automobile Manufacturers association.
on the basis of this estimate, the industry's January output was
•*-r «VM aKnw. „,„ of U)C prcccdmg mo7llh whcn p3.oduct30n was.
PROBATE BILL
IN ABEYANCE
Vote On Motion To Kill
Is Interrupted By
Joint Session.
Three hours of debate on the
bill to permit laymen to make
filings in County court got exactly
nowhere in the house Friday, a
vote iff postpone indefinitely get-
ting: a 38-38 ballot and a vote to
advance a 39-39 split. The meas-
ure was left on general file.
A last ditch fight by lawyers of
the house to kffl Rep. F. A. Reu-
ter's pet bill, H. R. 14, permitting
laymen to probate estates, was in-
terrupted by the address of Ar-
thur Mullen, and a vote on a mo-
tion to definitely postpone was
laid over. Killed by the judiciary
committee, the bill was raised to
general file.
Chief argument of friends of
the bill is that it will end "pro-
hibitive" charges exacted by law-
yers for handling estate matters.
Opponents
of the bill
claim,
however, that since the bill con-
tains no provisions setting amount
of fees, laymen, with no bar asso-
ciation to account to will be in a
position to ask bigger fees than
lawyers now receive.
Rep. Reuter fought for the
measure at the 1933 session, but
lost in the senate.
The house, however, advanced
H. R. 144, by Finnigan, permit-
ting pupils to attend school out-
side the county when their own
school is closed for lack of at-
tendance, and striking
out the
provision for free transportation
if the school is two miles or less
from their home.
DRAFTING STATE
RELIEF MEASURE
Cochran Confers With
Legislative Groups
About Details.
Governor Cochran had a meet-
ing' scheduled for 3 o'clock Fri-
day afternoon with the finance
committee of the house and the
the senate
Constable's
Bullets Foil
Kidnapers
One Abductor Is Slain
Another Wounded by
Illinois Man.
KAPLAN IS SUBJECT
Auto Dealer Reveals He
Was Kidnaped Two
Years Ago.
CHICAGO, Feb. 8—(INS)—A
quick shooting Glenview consta-
ble, Edward Dews, 36, today was
the hero of a gun battle in which
one kidnaper was killed and an-
other wounded as they were try-
ing to abduct
Louis
Kaplan
wealthy business man, from his
auto salesroom.
Dews opened fire when he saw
the two gunmen dragging their
victim to a waiting automobile
Both were shot down as they
tried to return the fire.
Tony Pinna, 24, was shot in the
head and instantly killed and his
companion, Vito Messina, 28, was
shot in the arm and leg. Messina
fled in a commandeered automo-
bile but was later seized at
Mount Sinai hospital. The two
kidnapers were members of the
"42" gang of Chicago's west side.
Revealing for the first time
that he had been kidnaped at
Kenosha, Wis, two years ago by
members of the same gang, Kap-
lan said Pinna and Messina had
extorted $500 from him a week
ago under threats of death.
The automobile dealer told po-
lice that he was released two
years ago on a promise to pay
$10,000 in installments. He was
seized by the two gunmen last
night, Kaplan said, for refusing
tc pay an additional $500. The
two gangsters said they were go-
ing to kidnap and kill him for
his refusal to pay.
The association's report
has
JEWS PA PER I
that in
iw?
192<
special committee of
delegated
by their
chambers to act with him in
drafting a bill for the collection
of an extra 1-cent tax on gaso-
line to pay the state's quota of
52,000,000 a year set by National
Relief Administrator Hopkins as
necessary for obtaining
further
grants of federal relief funds
after March 1.
The governor told newspaper
men that a rough draft of the
measure would first be made up,
subject to changes and revisions
as the legislators and himself go
over it in detail- The taxing pro-
visions will be very simple, but
methods of administering the pro-
ceeds may bring out some di-
versity of ideas.
Speedy Action Sought
"Probably the bill cannot be
completed for presentation to the
legislature before the first of the
week." Governor Cochran re-
marked. "We hope, however, that
it will be ready at that time and
that speedy action may be had
upon it."
Cochran pointed out
that the occasion for the bill was
the flat requirement laid down
from
Washington,
leaving
toe
state no choice in the matter.
"The starting point," he sug-
gested, "is that we 'must raise
the money; otherwise, we get
nothing more from the United
States government
The next
thing to consider is: How shall it
be raised?
And finally:
How
shall it be spent and under whose
direction and control?
4"It seems lo me that imposition
of the added lax on gasoline is
the most practicable as well as
the most equitable plan for pro-
viding the revenue. I have been
and still am opposed to any new
form of taxation.
We already
have the machinery for collect-
ing this lax, and the proceeds will
t>e available at once without set-
ting up any new organization or
procedure.
"The extra lax is lo be
in duration lo a period of two
years. All provisions for levyanc
and collecting the tax and'ap^
portioning
and spending
t h e
Ship Crashes
Into Ferry;
All Rescued
Collision Occurs in River
at Philadelphia; 11
Injured.
PHILADELPHIA, Feb. 8—(AP)
—The ocean-going steamer Lon-
don Corporation and the Ferry-
boat Cape May crashed in the
Delaware river today, injuring 11
persons.
All passengers, more than 30, on
the Reading Railroad Co's Ferry
were rescued.
A possible disaster was averted
by the quick action of the steam-
er's officers in
thrown
aboard
having
a line
the Cape May,
respective lashing the two vessels together^
•
*-;— ™ and preventing the smaller boat
from sinking.
The British boat struck the fer-
ry amidships and buried its prow
six feet into the Cape May's sides.
The collision occurred as the
Cape May crossed the
London
Corporation's course on its regular
ferry run from Philadelphia to
Camden.
The injured and rescued were
taken from the ferry boat by tugs,
which rushed to the scene of the
crash. 150 yards from the Phila-
delphia side of the river. The Wil-
son line steamer City of Wilming-
ton, coming up the river behind
the 3,000-ton London Corporation
assisted in the rescue operations.
Tugs towed the ferry boat to shal-
low water.
Kidnaped Bank Guard
Is Freed by Bandits Art Mullen
Flays Child
Labor Law
"Communist - Inspired,"
Cries Former Demo
Committeeman.
Four
bandits
Ernest Newman, above, a bank
guard, during a holdup at Fort
Snelling, Minn., freed him in St.
Paul, Minn., and made their get-
away. Newman was forced to ac-
company the gang after they had
rifled his satchel of $15,000.
Hog Prices
Best Since
July,J931
Butter and Eggs Also
Soar; Cattle Top High-
est in Five Years.
CHICAGO, Feb. 8 — (AP) —
Hogs, butter and eggs led the
broad advance of farm commodity
prices today.
Best swine sold at a $8.30 per
hundred pounds, the highest price
paid here since July, 1931. Cash
butter touched a five-year peak
of 36 cents a pound and eggs sold
at 32 cents a dozen, the best price
in four years. The nominal top
Eor cattle was at $14 per hundred-
weight, the pinnacle since 1930.
Whirling steadily upward for
more than a month, prices of
these farm products, which with
the exception of grains comprise
the major items of production in
the agricultural middlewest, have
increased in some cases as much
as 50 per cent in three months.
Hogs were 15 to 35 cents higher
today as buyers, stirred by a sharp
curtailment in receipts,
hoisted
bids for better grades of swine.
Spot butter was as much as %-
cent up, while cash eggs advanced
as much as 1 cent, the produce
market being influenced bullishly
by the spectacle of greatly dim-
inished stocks.
Hunt Missing Girl
No trace had been found Friday
of Miss Thelma
Miller, 21, the
daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ned
Miller of Route
1, who has been
missing f r o m
ler home since
F a n u a r y 17.
Sheriff Hens el
reported that
Miss Miller
veighs 135
> o u n d s,
has
ight hah" worn
in bangs, and
and has light
blue eyes.
Thelma Miller
Cavein Kills 27.
•FORT HALL, Kenya, Africa,
Feb. 8—W>—A cavein buried 27
women of the Kikuyu tribe alive
today while they were digging
clay for the manufacture of cook-
ing pots. None was saved.
StringfelloAV Sounds
Opposition To Relief
Gasoline Tax Proposal
Rep.
J. I. Stringfellow, demo-
crat Oakdale, good roads advocate.
Friday sounded a call to opposi-
tion to Governor Cochran's plan
to add a cent to the gasoline tax
to raise the state's S2.000.000 quota
of relief funds. Stringfellow, the
chairman of the roads and bridges
committee, in a statement advo-
cated instead a sales tax for relief
purposes. He proposed adding %
of one per cent for relief to the
2 per cent proposed in
several
sales tax bills pending.
Stick To Farms, Recommends
NERA, Promising Assistance
Rehabilitation Asked By
5,000 Families In
Nebraska.
Nebraska farmers who are con-
templating giving up their lands
because of indebtedness or lack of
resources and equipment are be-
ing advised by the NERA rehabi-
litation division to stay on their
land and apply to the division for
assistance. More than 5.000 fam-
ilies have already applied for such
assistance. L A. White, rehabili-
tation division director said here
Friday.
While said that under the plan
to make* these families
^self-supporting but that it would
i locate all stranded
secure a small tract provide a
cow and poultry and enable relief
clients to produce the major part
of
their living
requirements,'"
said, by arranging for supplemen-
tary employment
White said advances made to
rehabilitation clients will nol be
gifts and loans made will ma-
ture in j< "period of time commen-
surate with the life of the goods
furnished"' and at a small rate of
interest Applications will be re-
ceived by county relief headquar-
ters and county committees -mil
work out a plan for applicant
with family's concurrence. Final
the <,tale
Stranded
il^o lo oe
program.
action wjll rest win
Tehibilitalion
off-re
families m loivn? are
deall with under the
OKAYS LIQUOR
BILL
Tells L e g i s 1 a ture Gas
Tax For Relief Is
"Only Way."
Branding the child labor amend-
ment as communist-inspired, Ar-
thur F. Mullen, former democratic
national committeeman, in an ad-
dress before a joint session of the
legislature Friday morning denied
the national administration is sup-
porting the amendment.
"I don't mean to say that every-
one supporting the amendment is
a red," Mullen cried. "They just
don't know what is behind it.
Many of these people, he said, are
honest but uninformed, declaring
that the momentum behind the
drive for ratification of the pro-
posed
f e d e r a l
constitutional
amendment "conies from Russia."
Names Grace Abbott.
He listed Miss Grace Abbott,
former Grand Island woman and
recently head of the federal child
welfare bureau, as ohe of a pow-
erful lobby comprising communis-
tic workers who have long advo-
cated the amendment. Miss Ab-
bott is scheduled to address a joint
session of the legislature in sup-
port of ratification next Tuesday.
Advocates of the amendment are
seeking to turn over to congress
power to control the family which
trainers of the constitution prop-
erly reserved to the states, Mullen
asserted. It'll be suicide to turn
any more power over to congress,
Mullen cried, delivering a tirade
on the "tyranny" of Washington
bureaucracy.
He challenged the amendment
as having nothing to do with child
labor, but instead gives congress
complete authority to pass any
laws it sees fit regulating the em-
(Continued on Page FiveT)
Stove Explodes,
Damaging Home
Of G.R. Moler
Considerable damage resulted at
the home of Glen R. Moler, 1621
North Twenty-first street, Friday
noon when a kerosene stove ex-
ploded. Before firemen could put
down the blaze, flames spread
through the kitchen. Mrs. Moler
and another woman were in the
kitchen when the blast occurred,
but neither was injured. Door and
window 'casings were burned as
was considerable kitchen furni-
ture. So intense was the blaze that
at one point the wall was burned
through to the outside.
State's Rebuttal
Witnesses Strike
Back At Defense
Witness Tells Jury He Saw Kidnap Ladder in
Possession of a Man Other Than Haupt-
mann 20 Hours Before Abduction—Lumber
Men Dispute State Wood Expert.
THE
WEATHER
Kansas' Cloudy tonight and Saturday,
probably
local rain or snow; no de-
cided change In temperature
The temperature lor past 24 hours.
3 p. m
4 p. m
5 p m
6 p. m
7 p. IP.
8 p. m
9 p m
30
.30
30
.29
29
.28
28
10 p. m
27
11 p m
. . 2 7
12 midnight
26
1 a. m ...
. 2 6
2 a. m
26
3 a
4 a
5 a
6 a
7 a
8 a.
9 a
10 a
11 R
U noon
27
1 p
2 P m
29
m. today, S
Wind velocity at 12-30 p
miles per hour.
Weather throughout the state at 7 a m.
rainy In the southwest, cloudy elsewhere.
Highest temperature » year ago today,
30. lowest, 21.
Dry Wet Bel.
Bulb Bulb Hum.
1 00 A M
. .
. 2 5
2t
87
12.30 P. M
....
28
26
79
Sun and Moon.
Sun rises, 7 30 a. m ; sets. 5:53 p. m.
Moon rises, 9*55 p m ; sets, 12 26 a. m.
Mean temperature yesterday, 28.
Degiee days yesterday, 37
Total degree dajs this season, 3,478
Normal degree days, 3,898.
NEW EVIDENCE
FOR SHEPARD
Army Officer Says Mouth
W a s h Could Have
Caused Death.
TOPEKA, Kas., Feb. 8—G4>>— tenor Yad been' refused" perniis-
(Copyright. 1935. by the Associated Press.)
FLEMINGTON, N. J., Feb.
8—Afte.- surprise testimony
that the Lindbergh kidnap
ladder was on the back of an
automobile near Hopewell 20
hours before Baby Charles A.
Lindbergh, jr., was kidnaped
and slain—and that a man in
the auto was not Bruno Rich-
ard Hauptmann—the defense
rested today in the" trial of
Hauptmann for murder.
• The state immediately launched
its rebuttal attack on the defense's
alibi and other witnesses.
A New Jersey state policeman-
identified a photograph he said
he made on March 8, 1932, of the
famed "rail 16," a part of the
kidnap ladder, and which showed
four nail holes. This was to re-
but an expert for the defense who
said there was only one nail hole
in the rail when he examined it
on March 13, 1932. The state had
charged the four nail holes proved
the rail was ripped
from
the
filoonng of Hauptmann's attic.
Harold S. Betts of the United
States forestry service testified he
saw four nail holes \vhen he ex-
amined the rail on May 23, 1932.
Judge WWarns Defense.
In cross examination of Betts,
the defense charged a wood ex-
pert of the department of the in-
jieut. Col. George R. Callender,
army pathologist, testified today
for the defense in the wife mur-
der fr;2l^f Maj. Charles A. Shep-
ard that Mrs. Zenana Shepard
could^ have absorbed enough poi-
son from a mouth wash used to
have caused her death. ~
He said if Mrs. Shepard had
.sion by the secretary of the in-
terior had been refused permis-
sion by the secretary of the in-
terior to testify after he had ren-
dered a report which would have
bee nfavorable to the defense.
Betts said he had .not heard of
that" and Justice
Thomas W-
Trenchard instructed the defense
not to ask such a question again.
Alfred
Budreau
of
Yonkers
been given a lethal dose of poison j came to rebut the story of Mrs.
M
H
1m£ WL.1- j.11
J.1
_ _ - — » !
*
^ym
T3 fjt-4-li»»
T&n-f-f
itrVin
4-n»4-?£i r+ J
-ffn**
4-L*.«.
STOCK DAMAGED
BY WATER LEAK
H. P. Lau Co. Basement
Flooded During Night
From Broken Pipe.
Water flowing from a broken
pipe on the first floor of the H. P.
Lau company, 245 North Eighth
street flooded the basement and
caused damage estimated at sev-
eral hundred dollars to grocery
stock
early
Friday
morning.
Robert H. Lau said a definite esti-
mate of the damage could not be
obtained until goods stored in the
basement had been moved and
examined. He said, however, he
doubted if the loss would reach
$1,000.
The damaged stock in-
cluded dried fruits, jams and
cleaning powder. The loss was not
covered by insurance, company
officials said.
The water was discovered by H.
L. Cooper, a buyer for the com-
pany, when he arrived at the of-
1 ice shortly before 7 o'clock.
Streaming from a broken pipe in
a rest room. Ihe water seeped
through the floor and trickled over
boxes stored
in the basement
Firemen summoned by Cooper
found the water shutoff valve and
then proceeded to mop and sweep
the water from the basement In
some places, firemen said, the
water was 4 to 5 inches deep but
the average depth was an inch or
so. An area of about 50 by 50
feel was affected.
100 MILLIONS ASKED FOR
MARKETING FARM GOODS
WASHINGTON, Feb. 8—«V-A
bill designed to facilitate 1he pur-
chase and sale ol farm products
through a 5300.000,000
govern-
ment corporation has been intro-
duced by Senator Frazicr fR-N.
D.). Thr corporation would br
cmpiv,vcred 1o opcralc
elcvato~.<
and storage warehouses, lo bu»-
in a highball the night of May
20, 1929, when she became ill at
Fort Riley, Kas, she could not
have lived 26 days. Mrs. Shepard
died June 15, 1929.
A negro cavalryman, Pvt. Rob-
ert L. Crawford, who worked for
the Shepards at Fort Riley, was
recalled and asked if he drank
liquor from a bottle which the
government has hinted was pois-
oned. He said he did and suffered
no ill effects.
Defense Case.
Against the government's charge
that the 63-year-old retired army
medical officer's romance with
Miss Grace Brandon, young blonde
army post stenographer, consti-
tuted a murder motive, the de-
fense brought out:
The defendant's
own
denial
that he poisoned his wife; testi-
mony of witnesses who said the
woman had threatened or talked
of suicide, and- statements of
medical corps officers and physi-
cians that Mrs. Shepard "had a
definitely fixed idea of suicide"
snd that the "stage was set for
suicide" during her last illness.
To this, Maj. W. A. Rose, medi-
cal corps dentist, yesterday added
the statement that Mrs. Shepard
had told him during her last ill-
ness that she did not want to get
welL
Senators Amuse
Themselves With
Governor's Sign
A practical joker Friday re-
moved the sign "Governor's of-
fice" from in front of Governor
Cochran's office and placed it on
the desk of Senator W. C. Bullard
(D)
of McCook
in the senate
chamber, Bullard. who was called
'the kingfish of the Nebraska
legislature" by Senator Holla C.
Van Kirk (R) of Lincoln, declined
the honor and transferred the
sign to the desk of Senator Cloyd
L. Stewart (D) of Clay Center,
president pro tcm ot the upper
house. On order of several sen-
ators, a page took the sign and
hung it behind the chair of Lt.
Gov. Walter Jurgensen.
Bertha Hoff who testified for the
defense that he was with the late
Isador Fisch when the latter had
called on her late in 1933 at Bay-
side, L. I, carrying bundles, the
defense implication being that
Fisch had the Lindbergh ransom
money and was trying to get rid
of it. Budreau said he never knew
Fisch and never called on Mrs.
Hoff, though he knew her.
(Copyright, ls-35. by the Associated Press).
FLEMINGTON, N. J., Feb. 8—
Bruno Richard Hauptmann today
rested his defense against the
charges that would send him to the
electric chair for the kidnaping
and murder of Baby Charles A.
Lindbergh, jr.
The defense case ended at 12:10
p. m , after sensational testimony
designed to place the Lindbergh
kidnap ladder in the possession of
a man other than Hauptmann 20
hours before the crime.
The defense also used two prac-
(Continued on" Page Five.)
As Rogers Sees Tt
BEVERLY HILLS.
Cal.,
Feb. 8 — I see where the gov-
ernment is all excited because
the debt negotiations with
Russia fell through. They are
bringing home a lot of our
representatives from
there.
Where the Russians made
their mistake was in even
talking about
paying the
debt. If they had never said
any thing about it. and never
had any idea of paying it.
why they would have the
same standing as all the
others,
There is a lot to be said
for, and against the recogni-
tion of Russia, but I never
talked to a well informed man
in the Far east who didn't tell
me that
vented
war.
Yours,
it absolutely pre-
a
Russia - Japanese
WILL.
Man Overjoyed During
Brief Spell Of 'Death'
ARLEY, England, Feb. 8—W)—A "dead' man has returned to
hie and health with a very" ?urgcr> v.-nrkcd
"What I saw dunns *r.y o,-i«.f sp?l] of *3cath.
h^ rrj-vc, 'has
made me regret that I cvr cam" back
I ivas Mjrrounrirri l.y thoij-
t lids of people, all *upr
bring hound and rabbit coursing
events within the scope of the
betting bill, though, not
subject
to the same scale of license fees
as horse race meets, came from
Senator O'Brien, who is sponsor-
ing a separate bill on that sub-
just.
Senators N e e 1 a n d and
Green
proposed the
change to
widen the distribution of finan-
cial benefits by including rodeos
and similar
events.
Announce-
ment was made by Sena tor
Brodecky, chairman of the com-
mittee on
agriculture, that the
hearing which was to have taken
place next Thursday on two bills
for reorganization of
the
state
board of agriculture
has
been
postponed to an indefinite date,
on the request of former State
! Senator W. B. Banning, a mem-
] ber of the
present
board, who
I said he could not be present at
' that time.
RITES FOR CRASH
VICTIM WILL BE
HELD IN LINCOLN
Mrs. Abigail Ellis Jacobson, 38,
a former resident of Wabash, Neb.
died Wednesday evening enroute
to a hospital at Alcester, S. D., as
a result of injuries suffered in an
auto accident, according to word
received here. A resident of Ver-
million, S. D,, Mrs. Jacobson was
born at Wabash, where she lived
until her marriage in 1918 to Rev.
S. A. Jacobson,
who survives.
Other survivors are three sons,
Donald, Richard and Holland, a
daughter, Darleen, three brothers,
D. B. Van Every of Omaha, E. M.
Van Every of Lincoln and W. G.
Van Every of Weeping Water, and
a sister
Mrs. J. M. Cramer of
Ogallala. The'faody will be brought
to Lincoln Saturday morning and
wili be at Wadlow's pending
funeral arrangements.
imerg
NIBR.
With
Fur Coat
Prices Reduced 20% to 50%
During This
February Clearance
You win save greatly by selecting
your fur coat now. Prices nave
never been so low. Selections are
sbll fine and size ranges complete.
Some of the Values
HUDSON SEAL COATS
$f A A
(dyed Muskrat) were $200
Now l"l"l
FINEST MUSKRAT COATS
$11/4
were $1S5
Now XX4
RUSSIAN CARACUL
,
$14/1
S44H
COATS, were $195
Now A*** and A*T
NORTHERN SEAL COATS
$fkA
Sfitt
idyed Ut\rc'i wore up to *135.. -Now V » and O w
Other Coals $49 up to $495
USE OUR MONTHLY BUDGET PLAN
COMMITTEES ON
GAS TAX NAMED
Democrats Generally In
Favor But Minority
Party Dissents.
With the March 1 deadline un-
comfortably close, the house and
senate acted quickly on Gover-
nor Cochran's request Thursday
for appointment of a joint com-
nv'ttee to assist him in drafting a
bill adding a cent to the four-cent
gasoline tax to raise the state's
$2,000,000 quota for relief. In the
house, Speaker O'Gara named the
finance committee, headed by Rep.
George E. Nickles, Murray. In the
upper house, Lieut. Gov. Jurgen-
sen named Senator John S. Cal-
lan, Odell, chairman of the fi-
nance committee, chairman of a
special committee of five to serve
with the house group. Serving
with him are Senators P. L. Cady,
Arlington, Fred L. Carsten, Avoca
and Archie C. O. Brien, Grand
Island, democrats, and Senator O.
Edwin Schultz, Elgin, republican.
Making up the house finance com-
mittee are Reps. Henry Bock,
David City, W. H. Diers, Gresham,
Henry Fleming, SL Paul, W. F.
H a y c o c k ,
Callaway, Ed F.
Lusienski, Platte Center, Ed D.
McKim, Omaha and Gus A. Me-
line, Kearney,
democrats,
and
Reps. E. Preston Bailey, Carleton,
Marion J. Cushing, Ord and James
E. Reed, ^republicans.
Governor
Cochran's
recom-
mendation that another cent be
added to the gasoline tax to raise
the state's share of the $4,000,000
the government is demanding Ne-
braska put up lor relief purposes
brought to the lore a subject dis-
tasteful to members of the legis-
lature. Democratic reaction was
generally favorable to the pro-
posal,
while
republican
ranks
voiced hostility to it The gov-
ernor's plan, however, drew sup-
port from the growing sentiment
against adding
to the already
I burdensome taxes on real estate.
Here Is A New And
Different Use For
A Cigaret Lighter
Using a cigaret lighter to look
'or the source of alcohol fumes
issuing from the motor of his car,
G. D. Pegler, 1445 Plum street, in-
advcrtcntlv set lire to the machinr
shortly after 8 o'clock Thursday
evening. When the blaze started
the machine was parked at a
Twenty-ninth and O street filling
station. Firemen extinguished the
flames before serious damage re-
sulted.
BY ARTHUR BRISBANE.
Senator Huey Long, a public
character, stepped from a train in
Louisiana. Leon Trice, a photo-
grapher for the Associated Press
took a picture. Senator Long, ac-
cording to the Associated Press
dispatch, said to his huge body-
guard, Joseph Messina, "do any-
thing you want to do with him
Joe."
Messina struck Trice, a small
man,
in the mouth, knocked him
down,
then with
a
blackjack
knocked him unconscious.
Kent Cooper who runs the Asso-
ciated Press will persuade "Joe"
that he blackjacked the wrong
man.The senator may say "I am
amazed at my own moderation."
Any other dictator would have
made him drink a quart of cas-
tor oil.
President Roosevelt must
be
hardened to complaints by this
this time,
but
Zion's
Herald,
weekly newspaper, published by
the Methodist church in New Eng-
land, finds a complaint interest-
ingly new.
The Zion's Herald editor, ac-
cuses President Roosevelt of prac-
tically forgetting God in his at-
tempts to bring back prosperity.
The editor
is disappointed
at
"having no call to prayer from the
pen of the president of the United
States, and impressed with the
crying need of such a summons at
a time like this," Zion's Herald
reprints President Lincoln's pray-
er and fast day proclamation of
March 30, 1863..
The editor forgets that in 1863
this was, in public opinion and
government an out and out "pro-
testant country."
(Copyright, 1835, King Features Byo.)
FRECHETTE NOT
SORRY HE SLEW
HIS EMPLOYER
Asserts Victim Boasted of
Intimacies With Many
Women.
" -
NEVADA CITY, Cal., Feb. 8—
(AP)— Clarence Frechette, who
admittedy killed a man in Michi-
gan January 29 and carried the
body to California by motorcar,
insisted today he was not sorry
for what he had done as he await-
ed the arrival of authorities from
the eastern state.
"I'd have done it again," said
the 25-year--old "flying bandit" as
he told of the fight that led to the
death of his employer, Robert
Brown, 24, of Kalamazoo, "and if
I hadn't somebody else would
have."
Frechette,
who
told
Capt.
Joseph Blake of the state highway
patrol Brown had boasted of in-
timacies with many women, in-
cluding the-accused slayer's "girl,"
apparently suffered no nervous-
ness at any tune after the shoot-
ing.He even went to a dance at Salt
Lake City, leaving the machine
with its cargo of death on the
street nearby. He told of holding
up two drug stores and a restau-
rant in Denver
for "expense
money." He brought three passen-
gers from Salt Lake City, chat-
ting with them and playing the
car radio.
Weli Drillers Give
4 Honorary Degrees
P r e s e n t e d to Larson, Lanj,
Dempster, Leifbaunt at
Jobbers' Dinner.
Rclaxinsc after a day of conven-
tion business 100 members of the
Nebraska "Well Drillers association
were the guests of 60 jobbers and
manufacturers
at a banquet on
Thursday evening at the Lincoln
hotel. A feature of the informal
program was the presentation of
honorary "degrees" to J. J. Larson
of Yankton, S. D.( Clyde Dempster
of Beatrice. F. J. Lang of Omaha
and J. A. Leifbaum of Oakland.
Gov.
R. L. Cochran welcomed the
drillers in an informal talk. Other
honor guests were Chancellor E.
A. Burnett, Sen. Cloyd Stewart of
Clay Center, Rep. W. H. O'Gara of
Laurel and Rep W. F. Haycock of
Callaway. Prof. M. I. Evinger and
Dr. G. E. Condra officiated at the
presentation of "idegrees" and H.
H. Kendall was master of cere-
monies. Entertainment was pro-
vided by George Brinton'i 15-ploc*
"hilly-billy" band, a 5-piece Ger-
man band and by Arthur Elliott,
harmonica expert. Charlei Putney
led group singing.
George H. Clark, 68,
Raymond Farmer, Dies
Georce H. Clark, 68, a native of
New York state, and a farmer In
the Raymond vicinity for the past
48 years, died at his farm home a
quarter of a mile east and a quar-
ter of a mile north of Raymond;
daughter, Alice of Raymond;
and
two
•inter*, Mrs. LeRoy
Combs of Lincoln, and Mrs. Hat-
tie Wilcox of Pa«adena, C«L The
body 1» at Castle,
Roper
and
Matthews.
Help Kidneys
^ If poorly functioning Kldnm and
9
Bladder make you suffer from Ottfc*
Up Nlf hta, NUTOUIIMRF, Rhmunitie
Film. StlfftMot, Burning, Omutiar,
sT.lv Acidit
.
IUhlnsT.lv Acidity try ttwnwantMd
Doeto?iFr«oer
Mtwt fiz you op or owner
tack. OB* W
BREMER KIDNAP
SUSPECT HELD
KANSAS CITY, Feb. 8—(AP)
—Enmity between two women
which ended in pistol shots was
believed by police today to have
driven Jess Doyle, Bremer kidnap-
ing suspect, into the dragnet of
federal
agents in their drive
against major criminals.
The 34-year-old ex-convict was
under heavy guard in the jail at
Girard, Kas., after his meek sur-
render yesterday near Pittsburg,
Kas. Shortly before he had driven
out of a bullet-spitting trap set by
police and federal agents »t Pitts-
burg.
Hunted for months as the sus-
pected money changer in the
8200,000 kidnaping of Edward G.
Bremer, St Paul banker, Doyle
was believed by officers to have
been forced from a Kansas City
hideout when his sweetheart, Mrs.
Vinita Stacey. 32, shot and criti-
cally wounded Mrs. Frances Tay-
lor, alias Mrs. Helen Rush, 27.
Mrs. Taylor is near death in
a hospital here and Mrs. Stacey
is held on a charge with intent
to kilL
Colds That Hang On
Don't
let
them
get started
Rght them quickly. Creomulsion
combines 7 helps in one. Powerful
bat harmless. Pleasant Jo take. No
narcotics. Your druggist is au-
thorized to refund your money on
the spot a your cough or cold is not
relieved by Creomulsion. — Adver-
tisement.
WiH
buy correct
fitting
glasses at Boyds.
Correct
in style a» w«H as correct
for
your tyes.
See our
Registered Optometrist to-
day!
Jcwele,
Saturday—One Day
Winter dean-Up Sale
MEN'S SUITS
& OVERCOATS
THAT SOLD TO $35
Saturday Clean-Up Price
$1995
All remaining suit* and overcoats, from our
Half-price sale, that formerly sold up to
$35.00, in this clean-up sale Saturday.
SUITS
321 fine all wool suits. All
new this seasons models and
patterns, single and double
breasted styles, all sizes and
plenty of desirable twist fab-
rics in the group.
OVERCOATS
97 fine overcoats in worsted
curls, cheviots, and kerseys.
Single and double breasted
styles. Coats with half belt
and belt all around.
Ide & Kingly Fancy Shirts
$129
Choice of entire stock of $1.65 to
$2.50 Ide and Kingly fancy collar
attached shirts.
Men's 50c & 75c Fancy Hose
29<
All sizes and a great array of pat-
terns in irregulars of a nationally
advertised brand.
Men's 50c & 75c Shirts & Shorts
Balloon seat and elastic side tie
style in shorts and the shirts are
Swiss ribbed combed cotton yarn. 34
$1.95 To $5 Men's Silk Mufflers
$115
Including our entire stock of reefer
style silk mufflers. All good pat-
terns and colors.
Men's $795 & *1095 Leather Jackets
32 suede, capeskin and calfskin
jackets. Full leather jackets
made with zipper front.
Men's $2.50 Pigskin Gloves
Genuine pigskin gloves in slipon
styles. Saturday's cleanup price
$1.89.
All $1 Winter Neckwear 59c
All $1.50 & $2.50 W-nterTies 99c
50 SILK & WOOL
DRESSES
VALUES TO $25
Lovely plain crepe and early
spring print dresses in values
to $25.00, in this Saturday
sale at $5.00. Sizes 12 to 20
only.
47 BETTER NELLY DONS
VALUES TO $16.95
Wool and crepe Nelly Don
dresses in sizes 12 to 20 only.
Saturday's clean-up price.
6 Women's Fur Trim Coats
VALUES TO $69.50
3 size 14, 2 size 16,
and 1 size 18 coat.
19 Women's Winter Coats
REGULAR $19.75 COATS
$§65
All wool Tweed coats that are
full silk crepe lined. Small
sizes only.
39 Women's Robes & Pajamas
VALUES TO $13.95
Included in the clean-up sale are
women's silk robes, flannel robes,
Nelly Don jersey pajamas, and cor-
duroy pajamas, values to $13.95. $259
$1.95 & $2.50 Ide White Shirts
Oiw entire stock of ?1.95 and $2.50
Ide collar attached white shirts
Is in this sale.
Boys' Tom Sawyer SHIRTS
VALUES TO $1.50
Broken lots of high grade shirts
in plain and fancy Madras and
broadcloth, sizes 12V4 to 141/2-
.•..m, .A. jkm, .m. i
79
Boys' Corduroy Long Pants
$265
Genuine hockmeyer corduroy long
pants in navy, cocoa and leather,
ages 8 to 20.
BOYS' LONG PANT SUITS
VALUES TO $20
All wool cheviot, tweed and
cassimere suits in double
breasted or
sport models.
Ages 12 to 20.
*1085
ECONOAW BAfEMElSIT
Men's Shoes
S3SS. KJ5 ani ,
oTKvtxSs and
Oxlords are all In I
srfscs and lAc vort
to large sites. $198
Child's Rubbers
24 pair OX child* Jl OT
In dzcx Vt to 3
cleaa up pries
35c a. pair.
Men's Fancy Hose
25
th»oarn-an-oed pattena ol
Tfm'lTi~
3*c boee.
AH
J»ve x*inlorcrd Jjrtl sad
lot; seam JO to « 10
Mens
R*pal*T
suedlae Jadrcis
J«ia navy. Oottirt
Trath tataa Ja*t*n-
crs. sizes 3s to 44.
Men's Ties
Brotca lots, diwxmtta-
ncfl sttin'brrs mud » Ic*
•licit »reond« 1)1 re?al»T
2»c and 38c ties.
Child's Play Boots
S-|75
10
C
Repalar KM n-d robber
boots. Only 32 P»H «a*
not all sizes.
59'
Men's Union Suits
Onr enUrc slock of Sl.OO
and SliB iriat*r ««lsM
salon
suit* to «ro.
»Wte or IT»T. *toa 39
to SO.
Men's Winter Caps
69
Brolen lots and
«T $3.50 a-nfl coo
Fur in bitnfls.
•"blc visors,
all
Tool
Men's Scarfs
SlUc,
rayon and
«*rff. AH mr»
J150. J1.3D «)d
rcrftr ncar's.
*20D49
Gowns and Pajamas
49'
Men's crattoc flumel a.ad
rmailln COUTH and naa-
Z3«] asd brokdcfclh 71-
jusu. Mo»Uj toll«5 ear-
nest*.
Silk Handkerchiefs
Men's rccular JSc tint
handkfrcWtTa
A Jurct
•vaTj'-t.y tif *tnjirt put-
terns sad color oonvbln- 7
Wool Gob Caps
Rerular SOo fcaJtted sell-
er
caps
JOT TrarmlTi.
*tattn« or sports -rear 25
Store Hours
Saturday
9 a. ITU to 9 p. m.
Store Hours
Saturday
9 a. m. to 9 p. m.
THE LINCOLN STAR—FRIDAY, F E B R U A R Y 8, 198»
T H R E E
'Allotment For Platte River Survey; County Official Is Injured
Will Determine Best Means
Of Putting Water To Use
T h o u g h t To Be Good
Thing By Backers
Of Tri-County.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 8—W)-—A
$50,000 federal, allotment for re-
survey of the North Platte rivecl
in Nebraska to determine most
feasible means of further power
and irrigation development was
hailed enthusiastically today by
Nebraskans here interested in the
state's development.
"I think very good results will
come from this survey," said Sen-
BANKERS ELECT
NEUMANASHEAD
Regional Clearing House
Association Meets At
Fremont.
FREMONT, Neb., Feb. 8—W—
C. C. Neuman, cashier of
the
Farmers and Merchants bank at
Oakland, was elected president of
the First Nebraska
Regional
Credit Clearing House association
here Thursday night at a meet-
ing attended by 75 bankers from
eight counties. He succeeds J.
J. L.
named
vice president and J. Dale Milli-
ken of Fremont was elected sec-
retary. Directors elected
were
Matt Pond of Lyons, V. E. Dol-
phes of David City, Charles No-
vak of Brainard, E. A. Stangle of.
Howells, Harry Holsten of Dodge,
Harold Roe of Bennington, G. K
Nelson of Millard, K. C. Brown
of Paplilion,
T. J.
Vlasak of
Prague, E. P. Fricke of Ashland,
L. D. Spalding of Arlington and
Sorensen.
E. F. Fold, Omaha manager of
modernization credits of the fed-
eral housing administration, told
the association the bankers of the
district are
cooperating
almost
100 percent with the FHA. He
explained
the
administration's
activities. "Banks are the hub
around which private and busi-
ness activities revolve and eco-
iiomic recovery would come more
quickly if people became better
acquainted with banking meth-
ods and service," Judge William
E. Johnson of Clarkson asserted
in a
speech
attacking
dema-
goguery, which he charged is giv-
ing
people a false
picture of
banks. William B. Hughes of
Omaha, secretary of the
State
Bankers association, stressed co-
operation in his address.
M. Sorensen of Fremont.
Kudrna of Wahoo
was
Federal School Fund
Procedure Outlined
Studebaker Points Out That All
Bequests For Funds Must
Come From Governor.
State
Superintendent
Charles
TV. Taylor Friday forwarded to
Nebraska county superintendents
and boards of education copies of
procedure prescribe dby the fed-
eral government in applying for
funds to operate schools which are
financially unable to furnish their
own expenses. The government's
policy will be to give help only
where local funds are complete-
ly exhausted, it is indicated by
U. S. Commissioner of Education
John W. Studebaker, who based
tnis conclusion on conference with
Relief
Administrator
Hopkins.
Studebaker states that the only
legal way for a state to receive
funds for school relief purposes is
through a written request from
the governor to the national re-
lief administration, requesting a
specific sum of money and stating
the purposes for which the money
is to be used.
Taylor is informing the school
officials in a letter attached to
Studebaker's communication: "We
•wish to make it very plain that
this office has no assurance that
funds will be available. We can
only promise that we will use
every possible effort to bring sit-
uations which have merit to the
atention of the governor and urge
him to request assistance. Our
judgment is, that unless your dis-
trict can show that it has made
the maximum levy and can show
that it is at least one year be-
hind in the-payment of its obli-
gations, there will be little chance
of securing financial assistance."
Death of Mrs. Suiker.
Word of the death of Mrs. H.
B. Suiker. 65. wife of a farmer
Hickman merchant ,has been re-
ceived here. Mrs. Suiker died at
Eugene, Ore., where she and her
husband have made their home
for the past twelve years. Mrs.
Suiker was the mother of Glen
Suiker.
caretaker
at
Pioneers
park. Mrs. William Boeke of Lin-
coln is a sister-in-law.
NEBRASKA DEATHS
Mr*. MalOda »«n»le.
•STAKOO— — Mr" MtitCdn DonMe.
77 5nr-i: a rr«i?«r.t oS Waljoo. iifi here
jodjrr « 1>« I30tr« ol ST son. A. Z.
Drastic, formtr Satradrrs cotratr todgr.
Ttn> dx-B chirrs aad another wa also s=r-
vtve her.
S. C MtJxm.
SIG SPRINGS— (API —•w«-a »»! re-
rr.vri l,crc of 1135 d"»th at Bants. On_
o! N C. S'r>on. ice *0 ir»T« a rrs'fl-at
rt W.s virlnlty He hud ]lv*a nt Sitrlce
ifci- luct
3D Tr«r.<:. Tbt tPfly is betas
licrp for tnirlal
CVril TtTni*Wn.
HO53TT5 — l APi— CTTil
TVjnplla.
97-
Tf»7-oU Civil •fK •f-trran dird ThamfluT
fit Ills Jjtnuf >rrf Ht h»I- s; nr i
SEWAIU>— L. G. GrsbM". SO of Tsm
»t
ator Burke, who originally recom-
mended it to Secrtary Ickes and
won the support of Dr. Elwood
Mead, reclamation commissioner,
for the proposal.
"The problem in Nebraska is to
make use of all of the water we
have," Burke explained. "I think
that as a result of this survey it
will be demonstrated that
by
locating storage reservoirs at the
strategic places, we will be able
to impound flood waters and solve
our state's water shortage."
Burke said he didn't know what
effect the survey would have on
any
individual project.
When
questioned about its possible effect
on the proposed $25,000,000 Tri-
county project, whose advocates
have been pressing for a public,
works study of revised plans,
Burke said he didn't think the sur-
vey would delay a final decision.
George E. Johnson of Lincoln,
consulting engineer for the Tri-
county project, said he thought the
survey was "a good thing for the
project."
Msgr. L. L. Mandeville
Installed At Y o r k
YORK, Neb., Feb. 8—(&)—The
Rt. Rev. Msgr. L. L. Mandeville
was installed Thursday as pastor
of the York and McCool Catholic
churches at impressive ceremon-
ies. The installing clergyman was
the Rt. Rev. Hsgr. Thomas Cull-
en, dean emeritus of the York
deanery. "Father Mandeville also
was made dean by Bishop Louis
Kucera to succeed Father Cullen.
Father Mandeville succeeds the
Rev.
J. J. Carey, who .resigned
because of poor health.. Several
visiting priests were present for
the ceremonies.
DR. SUMMERS OF
OMAHA IS DEAD
Widely Known Surgeon
and Writer Is Victim
Of Heart Attack.
OMAHA, Feb. 8 — (AP) — Dr.
John E. Summers, 77, internation-
ally known surgeon, died of a
heart ailment at his home here
Thursday night. He was the author
of many papers published in lead-
ing medical journals in this coun-
try and abroad
and his works
were widely quoted by surgeons of
Europe. Dr. Summers was born
at Fort Kearney, Neb., the son of
Gen.
John Edward Summers of
the medical
department of the
United States army and was
graduated from the College of
Physicians and Surgeons, now the
medical department of Columbia
University. He entered the army
as acting assistant surgeon and
served in frontier posts in Wyom-
ing for two years, resigning to
spend two years
in
European
study.
He located here in 1885 and be-
came surgeon in chief of Clarkson
hospital. He also was chief surgeon
of the Douglas county hospital
from the time it opened until three
years ago. Dr. Summers taught
at the Omaha Medical college and
later became professor of clinical
surgery after that institution be-
came affiliated with the University
of Nebraska. Funeral services will
be held here Saturday.
Asks Unknown Soldier
Have Perpetual Guard
WASHINGTON, Feb. 8—(AP)—
A report that the tomb of the un-
known soldier is not guarded all
the time has aroused Representa-
tive PettengUl (D-Ind). He intro-
duced a resolution saying that
"perpetual guards should be main-
tained over the priceless dust
there buried." The resolution
called on the secretary of war "to
take such steps as may be neces-
sary to carry out the sense of this
resoluiton."
MARRIAGE LICENSES.
(Special to The Star.)
SEWARD, • Neb., Feb. 8—Mar-
riage licenses have been issued
this week by Judge Wiegardt to
Franklin E. English, 42 and Letha
Fowler. 31, both of Omaha; Ed-
win Brandt 25. Milford and Marie
Beckman, 22, Garland.
SAYS NEBRASKANS
PAYING TOO MUCH
TO UNCLE SAMUEL
OMAHA, Feb. 8—(AP)—Ne-
braskans as a general rule are be-
ing more than honest with Uncle
Sam as regards income tax. Col-
lector O*Mallev revealed this to-
day when he said about 75 per
cent of the state's residents mak-
ing returns thus far are over-
paying their income tax. They
are,
he said, failing to take ad-
vantage of an. act passed by the
1934
congress permitting deduc-
tion of ten per cent from total net
earned income. Refunds probably
will be made within 60 days to
those who have already paid their
tax, he added.
EDWARD BEACH
DIES IN OMAHA
Was Formerly Chairman
Of Republican State
Committee.
OMAHA, Feb. 8—(fP)—Edward
D. Beach, 69, republican state
chairman from 1916 to 1919 and
manager of Charles Evans Hughes'
campaign for president in Nebras-
ka in 1916, died late.Thursday at
his home here. He was in the in-
surance business in Lincoln and in
Omaha for many years.
Mr. Beach attracted much no-
tice, when, as state fire marshal,
he returned
some of his salary
against the wishes of Governor
McKelvie, who favored the higher
code rate for state officials. The
difference ended in Mr. Beach's
resignation.
When 23, he was elected a mem-
ber of the FiUmore county board
of supervisors, serving two terms.
He also acted as secretary of the
state association of
supervisors
and in 1908 was treasurer of the
Traveling Men's Taft club of Lin-
coln.
Miss Verna Beach of Lincoln is
one of seven children who survive
him. Mrs. Beach died in 1922. The
funeral services will be held at
the home here at 9 a. m. Saturday
and burial will be in Forest Lawn
Memorial park.
Midwest Chiropodists
Group Will Meet Here
100
Expected
Attend
Sessions
From Saturday To Monday;
Prominent Speakers.
The fourth annual meeting of
the midwest association of chirop-
odists will be held at the Corn-
husker hotel from Saturday to
Monday. About 100 members from
the Dakotas to Texas are expected
to attend the sessions which be-
gin Saturday morning. A film de-
veloped by the national associa-
tion will open the'scientific section
at 7:30 o'clock on the evening of
the first day. J. 3C. Baker of Om-
aha, W.'H. Quigley of Omaha and
J. W. Carby of Kansas City will
speak at the Sunday session. The
Monday speakers include F. W.
Webster of Lincoln; Arthur L.
Smith of Lincoln, Dean M. S. Har-
molin, of the Ohio college of chi-
ropody; Dean W. J. Stickel of the
Illinois college and H. C. Fotre
of the Illinois college staff.
FORMER STANTON
CLERK ARRESTED
Pugh Taken At New Or-
leans As Fugitive
From Justice.
NEW ORLEANS, Feb. 8—(AP)
—A man booked as Floyd Pugh, a
former city clerk in Stanton, Neb.,
was arrested Thursday and held as
a fugitive from Stanton.
Police
said he is wanted for the alleged
embezzlement of $900 of public
funds. Pugh, the detectives said,
denied the charge and told them
he and several others had been in-
volved
in an
asserted "tax
scandal" after a change of ad-
ministration. He said he was will-
ing to return and stand trial
NORFOLK. Neb., Feb. 8—(AP)
—County Attorney
Pollock of
Stanton county today refused to
discuss his plans in connection
with the embezzlement charges
against Floyd Pugh. Whether Stan-
-rn )—Mr. and
Mrs. L. R. Frank, Route 3, Sarpy
county, are in a hospital with se-
vere injuries received Thursday
night when a car in which they
were passengers crashed into a
pole after colliding with a truck.
The driver of the truck fled.
Four State Music
Contests At Peru
PERU, Neb., Feb. 8 — (AP) —
The eighth annual Missouri-Iowa-
Nebraska-Kansas
music
contest
sponsored by Peru state teachers
college opened here Friday with
an entry list of 58 high schools,
largest in the history of the event.
Individual and solo numbers are
scheduled
for
Friday.
Group
events and the finals of other con-
tests will be held Saturday. The
Mink contest this year
has 47
events in which schools may com-
pete.
ED KAVANAUGH
FOUND ELECTED
Former Platte Sheriff
Wins In Recount
Of Votes.
COLUMBUS, Neb., Feb. 8 —
— A recount of votes cast last
November for Platte county
sheriff resulted today in the of-
fice reverting to Ed Kavanaugh.
Former Sheriff Kavanaugh, a
democrat, gained 24 votes in the
recount to win over Ed Cain, who
was declared elected last Novem-
ber by one vote.
Cain will hold office until next
week when Kavanaugh will sub-
mit a bond to the county board.
The
recount
was
held
after
Kavanaugh contested the election
of Cain, a republican.
QUICK RELIEF FROM
CONSTIPATION
That is the joyful cry of thou-
sands' since Dr. Edwards produced
Olive Tablets, the substitute tor
calomel.
Dr. Edwards, a practicing physi-
cian for 20 years, and calomel's old-
time enemy, discovered the formula
for Olive Tablets while treating pa-
tients for chronic constipation.
Olivl Tablets do not contain calo-
mel, just a healing, soothing vege-
table laxative safe and pleasant.
No griping is the "keynote" of
these little sugar-coated, olive-col-
ored tablets. They help cause the
bowels to act normally. They never
force them to unnatural action.
If you have a "dark brown mouth"
—bad breath—a dull, tired feeling
—sick headache caused by consti-
pation—you should find quick, sure
and pleasant results from one or
two of Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets.
Thousands take them to keep
right. Try them. 15c, 30c, 60c.—
Advertisement.
NIGHT COUGH
End it qttick with one nraHow of
Thoifat ind nil i mful tleep. Soothe*
tbro*t irritation, dtrrr» out cold.
Rdirfiml5mim.ormoncrrack.3Sc.
THOXINE
«t
-fl-ralca church
tn SeK-srd s! iT-o-'l-irtT Thr X-«T it a',
Chain anfl 'Wpifl rrirtnjirr >!r
GrTWlr
it -nrttif-1 "hj M? r-.f* »=d B-.S5 e;h.1STT
lc*TTftre f>: Tamp-* tJcaa» oT Sei'.r
-""'"a of Grwar-osfl
MJ».
'
Arr.ts», rtStVG 7T5-
F»c3aMC« of 309 *btrt», nro-
nice.
A«ortrd
MAm?ON*
Itox of SOD abnrtm
jtoe,
TOSCES.
XT,KKXEX HAXD TOWELS. Hollo
of 46.
I0C roll; 3 roll* 25c
REA BETA CXEA>S1>G TISSUES.
Rox of 100 — We;
3 boift 25c; 6 for 45c
TWlet Ow«a»— ITmt Door
Saturday CANDY Specials
CHOCOLATE TRLTFUL .1
TOBIIH vd
MB,—
mrosnai
flsvnfl
A?fT» BLT7CR TOFFKE.
OOOO4.MT I. T.
• *•
OTfftl.
Wo* or Ivwry
wllll CY>1d dfc—
omtSon.
SIX
»Mr » c 11
CJAIy—
$1
HmntwaST*
n«»r
Notice!
l/n*f/ March 15,
\cc tcill allow . . .
SOr OFF REGl^T-AK PRICE on any pit** of FEDERAL'S
CHIP-PROOF ENAMELWARE or VOLLRATTTS FAMOUS
KOffK-KrVG ENATHELWARE.
nerd not bolffr
to brinf in +mir
atmfil to obtain thin allmcancr.
f Jftft FJww
DOOR MATS
Composition niKbcr and rtcd.
Size. 14x24 to 18x29 in. Low prirrd, each—
MILLER
TC
ol^
FOUR
THE
L I N C O L N STAR—F^RIDA Y, F E B R U A R Y 8.
Lait
Will Rogers
Dayl
"County Chairman"
Tomorrow!
Iti-re at Last! The Mint Glo-
rious Love Story Evi'r Filmed
. . . From tlie Magic Pen of
Charles Dickem'.!
ID
£'%>.
Lionel Barrymor*
o* DC n Peygotty
Miurven O'Sulhvan
at Dora
Edn* May Oliver
as Aunt Betsey
Lftwt* Stone
I a* Mr. mckfitl
Frank Lawto n
as David
f reddiB Bartholomew
01 David tht child
Elizabeth Allanx
•* Mrs.
Copperfield
Rolind ?oun*
•i Uriah Htep
w. c *uu«\
as the lorfabl*
Mi. Micawbtj
Features At
r
1:44—4:27
7:10-9:50
ADDED
POPEYE CARTOON
"Barnacle Bill"
"RED" NICHOLS
STUART
Only 25c till 6 P. M.
Dance Tonite
DAVE HAUN
•nd His Orchestra
FLOOR SHOW—
Matftr Sinners
Dancing Girl*
11:45 P. M.
Adm. Sc jser person
Dancing Fret
*
Marigold Club
HERE IN LINCOLN
Good Skatbijr Oak Creek Park
Lake.—Adv.
Eat & drink at The Congress,
136 N. 14, Hill-Billy music.—Adv.
For your party serve Potosi
keg beer in % gallon bottles.—
Adv.
The old timer is back in a new
package. Get a Big pick % gal.
bottle of Dick's Quincy Beer.—
Adv.
Don't fall to sec the new Graham
six-cylinder, four-door sedan at
$758 delivered at Lincoln, Lord
Auto Co.—Adv.
TODAY!
All the Romance and
Glitter of the Glam-
orous . . . Amorous
Nineties!
with
DONALD WOODS"
HUGH HERBERT
NED SPARKS
As Tuneful and Gay As
"Flirtation Walk"!
—Added—
OUR GANG COMEDY
•
EASY ACES
Radio Stars
LINCOLN
r
MIBIAM
HOPKINS
^RICHEST
GffiEWORLD
with
JOEL McCRBA
FAT WKAY
Added
SILLT STMPHOirr
Cartoon
BUSTER KEATON
Comecly
VINCENT LOPEZ
Novelty
LIBERTY
'
TWO FEATURES! \
Eddie Cantor
Buth fitting
in
'Roman Scandals'
1 GivTMyTove1
with
Wynne Gibson
SUN
Mat
Franchot TONE
Madeline Carroll
Stepin Fetchit
In
"The World
Moves On"
—Added—
Pitts-Todd
Comedy
Popeye Cartoon
The buyer for Vera's Hat Shop
is in the east marketing this week.
The new merchandise will arrive
Saturday.—Ad v.
Texas seedless grapefruit
48c
doz.
Fresh Strawberries 29c. Red
Raspberries 25c. Beachly Bros.—
Adv.
Rabbi Jolt's Topic — Services
will be held Friday evening at 8
o'clock at Tifereth Israel syna-
gogue, with Rabbi Jolt speaking
on "Two Years of Terror: What
Now."
The choir, under the di-
rection of Mrs. M. Ciller, will
take part in the program.
Divorces Granted.—Mary Rojas
has been granted a divorce from
Juan Rojas and her maiden name,
Moreland, restored, according to
a District court decree filed Fri-
day. Earl R. Reed has been awerd-
ed a divorce from Mildred L. Reed
and he has been given custody of
their two minor children.
Settle In Court—The suit of
Charles D. Beshears against Wil-
liam W. Watson for f-20,000 which
went to trial before a jury in Dis-
trict Judge Shepherd's court Wed-
nesday was settled for $600 in
open court by agreement of par-
ties and dismissed Thursday af-
ternoon.
Want to sell your business?
There's lots of people with cash
in the market for
good
small
businesses and the way to reach
these people is through a .Want
Ad. We have a special rate in ef-
fect now of 7 days for the price of
4 days, a saving of nearly 50 per
cent. Write or phone the Want
Ad Dept of the Star.
Verdict For Carveths—A District
court jury returned a verdict in
favor of Carveth and Son after
weighing the evidence in the suit
brought by Henry Maser in which
he sought damages of $10,000 as
the result of a collision between a
car driven by him and a truck
ChildrenJOYO
Adults
6121
Havelock Avenue
Friday and Saturday
RICHARD
BARTHELMESS
"Midnight Alibi"
with
Ann Dvorak—Helen Chandler
—plus—
Musical Comedy and Popeye Cartoon
TODAY!
ON THE
STAGE!!
Victor !«»-"•
f
Arti*":l
ding
BBNNIE
*
- ft MtftPt*J
Screen/
"GIRL
Of
MY DREAMS"
with
MARY CARLISLE
ORPHEUM
tSc All" D«y
COLONIAL
106 MAT.—156 EVE.
ZANE GREY'S
"Rocky Mountain
Mystery"
•nd—
"Rustler*
of
Red Dog"
FREE
Movie Star
Stamp*
* wwrn cto. »
m m!f»rt? Jafcy.
«URA(
25c
J&
Tim
Seats Selling Fast
First Nebraska Appearance
CoL W. de Basil's
BALLET RUSSE
-de MONTE CARLO
The sensation of London, Paris and New York
The Glamour and pure Beauty of Russian
Ballet—Drama, Dance, and Orchestra
COLISEUM, Thurs., Febr. 14
Sponsorship of Lincoln Newspapers Makes
Possible these Lowest Prices.
Main Floor—52.20, $1.65. $1.10.
Balcony—$2.20. $1.65. $1.10.
General Admission On Sale Later.
C1TT TICKET
1-w'o SlJ*rt
Min,
TLQKEXCZ
C«rt- ttalf« M»«*e
driven by one of the Carveth em-
ployes at Seventeenth and Y
streets last October 28.
Advocates State Law—An ap-
peal for state enactment of child
labor laws instead of a national
amendment was made by Don
Woods, before a meeting of the
Anglo-Saxon club at the Lindell
hotel Thursday evening.
Woods
pointed out that national legisla-
tion on child labor is inadequate
to fit the needs of local situations.
Mrs. Florence Flannigan presided.
Suit Settled.—The $510 damage
suit brought by Ben Dolan against
Harry Butler was dismissed as it
was ready to go to trial before a
jury in Judge Chappell's court,
Friday morning. Dolan had sought
damages after his auto collided
with Butler's hayrack. In Munic-
ipal court a judgment was entered
in favor of Butler and Dolan had
appealed.
Divorce Petitions—Marie Bohn-
er has filed petition asking a div-
orce from Eugene W. Bohner. The
couple married in August of '1931
at Hastings. She charges "extreme
cruelty. Leona Thompson has filed
suit for divorce against Stephen
Thompson whom she married Oct
22, 1927 at Beatrice.
Charging
non-support and extreme cruelty
she asks resoration of her maiden
name, Brfete.
.Verdict For U. P.—A District
co'urt jury Friday
morning re-
turned a verdict for the Union Pa-
cific railroad in the suit brought
by Mrs. Hanchen Levi for $2,900
because of alleged injuries suf-
fered last June while enroute by
train to Los Angeles. The Bur-
lington had also been named a de-
fendant but it was released from
the suit Wednesday in a verdict
by Judge Chappell.
Rib Broken—Otto Smith, 46,
Route 3, suffered a broken rib
when his car struck a parked
auto belonging to L. L. Lawrence,
also of Route 3, at 3626 South
Fourteenth street Thursday night.
Smith was driving north on Four-
teenth street.
He was taken by
police to St. Elizabeth hospital
where he was attended by Dr. E.
E. Rider, and "Dr. L. D. James, in-
terne
Motion
Overruled — Federal
Judge T. C. Munger Friday over-
ruled the motion of Carl E. Dan-
ielson, former Swedeburg post-
master, to change his plea of not
guilty and demur to a six count
indictment charging violation of
the postal laws. Danielson was in-
dicted by the October grand jury,
and is at liberty under $1,000
bond. Danielson's motion for a
bill of particulars was sustained
in part.
Sermon By Rabbi Ogle.—Rabbi
J. J. Ogle will speak Friday night
on "Fatalism vs. Religion, What Is
Dance Tonight
At
The GREENWICH
1917
"O" St.
1917
"O" St.
Good Music—Good Beer
Fine
Sandwiches
Saturday Last Day
One of David. Belasco'i
Most Famous Plays
'The Return of
Peter Grimm"
Starring
HAROLD SUMPTION
balcony.
Other
seats
ISc. Saturday Matinee,
3:30 P. M. AD ttaU SOc.
At Mmcee's or Box Office
Curtain, 7:30 P. M.
University Players
TEMPLE THEATRE
Saturday Nite
REQUEST NITE AT
Star-lite
SUNDAY NITE
Martin Knker and HI*
California
Nirht Hawk* playing.
WEDNESDAY NITE
Eddie Hej» and His FamoTis Orchestra
Don't Mi« bearinc these (rood road
band*.
ADM.
25o—DANCING FREE
Bus leaves 9 A O at 8:50 p. m. East
to 13 * O, santh to Hifh street ouk-
tnf all stop*. Kecnlar fare.
the Difference?" at 7:45 o'clock nt
the Temple, Twentieth and South
streets.
Asks $200 Damage—Mrs. Alice
C. Zellars, 3948 South street, has
filed with the city clerk a claim
for $200 alleged damage to trees in
front of her property. She says
the damage was done by employes
of the water department.
Payroll Drops— The Lancaster
county FERA payroll for the week
ending February 6, was-consider-
ably lower at $11,913.47, than the
amount distributed on the previ-
ous Wednesday. The distribution
was to 1,570 workers. The pre-
vious Wednesday, 2,077 workers
received $17,090.86.
Convention Delegates — Myron
Bickel and Carroll Weberg were
elected delegates to the state con-
vention of Young Democrats at
Norfolk at a meeting of the Lan-
caster county club Thursday eve-
ning in the Lincoln hotel. Named
to the social committee were Herb
Stearns, chairman, Adrian New-
ens, Miss Catherine Stern, Walter
Steadman, Tom Donahue, Miss
Dorothy Miller and Miss Harriet
Cannon.
Guardian
Sued — Emma M.
Monk, on behalf of her 11-year-
old daughter, Helen Josephine, has
brought suit in County court
against the First Trust company,
guardian of a $5,000 estate left the
girl by her father who died in
1926.
Violation of trusteeship is
charged and removal from guard-
ianship and return of $4,900 is
asked. It is claimed in the petition
that a mortgage bond was pur-
chased with the $4,900 and that
although the bond has been of-
fered back to the trust company
and money asked in exchange the
company has refused to comply.
Heineman Suit—A $35,000 per-
sonal injury
suit brought by
Bertha Heineman against George
Wilson went to trial before a jury
in District Judge Shepherd's court
Friday morning. The suit arises
from an auto collision which oc-
curred Oct. 15, 1933 on the high-
way a mile northeast of Murdock,
Neb.
Mrs. Heineman was riding
hi a car driven by her husband,
Henry, when it collided with a
car driven by Wilson. She charges
Wilson with negligence and al-
leges that vertebra in her neck
and spinal cord
were
injured.
Wilson contends that the accident
was not his fault and that Seine-
man drove through a stop sign
onto the highway.
Suit Dismissed—Dismissed with-
out prejudice in District Judge
Frost's court Friday morning —
after a jury had been picked to
hear the case—was a suit brought
by the Utilities Insurance company
of St. Louis, Mo., against Charles
Stuart and Richard L. Kimball for
$7,497 plus interest from Feb. 1,
1933.
The insurance company
claimed that a general agency con-
tract was made in 1930 between
the Utilities Indemnity company
and the A. R. Talbot Underwriters
company of Lincoln. It is claimed
that the contract provided that the
underwriters be liable for prem-
iums and that if it should cease
business Charles Stuart and R. L.
Kimball would personally be sub-
stituted. The underwriters com-
pany was dissolved in 1931 and
the insurance company, which in
the meantime had absorbed the
assets of the indemnity company,
claim premiums in the amount
sued for are due and that Stuart
and Kimball are personally liable
for the indebtedness. Stuart and
Kimball claimed, however, that
the contract drawn in 1930 was
not binding on them.
Interfraternity
BALL
George Morris
And His 13-Piece Band
From the
Million Dollar Plxymore
of Kansas City
$150
Tax Included
SATURDAY FEBRUARY 9
COLISEUM—FORMAL
75e
BAYER
ASPIRIN
TABLETS,
100'f
53C
LOW CUT PRICES
50c
PEPSOOENT
TOOTH
PASTE
Large Size
3ic
49c History
Paper. Ream...
Royal Sterile
Gauze. 5 Yds...
85c Burma-
Shave, 1 Lt>...
35c Campana
Dreskin
35c Williams
Shaving Cream
55c Hudnut
Marvelous
Face Powder..
1.W Mar-O-Oil
Sham coo
3Qc Sal
Heaatlca
39*
39*
60C
39*
25*
50*
22*
SOc Phillip'*
Milk of
Magnesia......
25c Golden
Glint
SOc Bromo
SeltMr
60c Hopper**
Creams
25c Lysol
Disinfectant...
Z5c J & J
Talcum
35c Wilson
Cleaner
SOc Pebtco
Tooth Paste...
34*
19*
20*
43*
19*
17*
24*
35*
1.00 Campan*
Italian Balm...
65c Mittol
Nose Drop*...
TSc Listerine,
Large Size
TSc Kretnl
Hair Tonic....
SOc Barbasol
Shaving Cream
75c V»ek'«
Vaoo Rub......
soc vitai:»
Hair Tonte
1JOO Battle Creek
U»rto-
Dextrin
74*
49*
50*
ENDS STOMACH
AGONY
If TOT s«2X«r from Cm*. 3»«iirtttt!r&, *emr.
»e»». ereeM mda. *«!ntw,
.
eemdachn. »»B»ea. «r ^iziraw*. dco'l rely
on jifll*. ull*. oil* at etfoer *ltm
vttf
UUW4WJM...
[rort x maritof:
T%«i*« wfc? jtnj cxn
JITBH: ytmr eneluTt
vrrvrtjtOim
to
Only
Jflf
HOLD CUSHMAN
DECREE VALID
Supreme Court Sustains
$15,884 Judgment
For Ammon.
The Nebraska Supreme court
Friday morning sustained the Lan-
caster county District court decree
which found in favor of Charles
D. Ammon and against the Cush-
man Motor works in the sum of
$15,884. The appeal was taken by
Othello Beezley and others who
intervened as stockholders of the
Cushman company.
Ammon brought the case on be-
half of himself and certain as-
signors to recover from the Cush-
man Motor Works the par value
of 88 shares of preferred stock
with accrued dividends at' 7 per
cent from May 1, 1921. He based
his action on provisions of the
articles
of incorporation which
provided lor such redemption and
created a sinking fund for that
purpose. The sinking fund, at the
time he brought his suit, had a
book credit of $17,010.
On February 25, 1933, a judg-
ment in Ammon's favor for $15,-
884 was entered but on April 8,
on application of Beezley and 21
other holders of preferred stock,
the judgment was vacated. Beez-
ley then filed an amended answer
in which he claimed the cor-
porate articles did not provide for
redemption as claimed by Ammon
and in which he declared the pur-
ported sinking fund to be but a
bookkeeping
transaction.
The
court, at the conclusion of the
trial, again entered a judgment in
favor of Ammon and his assignors
for $15,884 and this is the action
which the Supreme court has up-
held.
The court upheld the District
court verdict in the case, In re
Estate of Alexander, which was
appealed from Rock county by
Oliver G. Alexander.
The high
court reversed a Douglas county
District court judgment in which
compensation
was a w a r d e d
Gladys Callahan for the death of
her husband, Walter Callahan. It
was claimed he died as the result
of an accident which occurred
while he was employed by the
Allied Mills, Inc.
i;ij{ to Earl V. Austin, chairman of
the arrangements committee. Sou-
vt-nlrs will bo given to the ladies.
Curds will be provided for those
who do not
dance.
The oilier
members of the
committee are
Ludden and A. W. Nelsen.
lof here.
All of the victims were
relief worken.
Fill your Rehlaender prcscrlp-
I tion at Gold's.—Adv.
M. Weil, president of the Bank
of Commerce, said Friday on his
return from a buMKCbs trip, Dial
there was at Icabt a half inch of
snow in southwest Iowa Thurs-
day. There also was ruin and snow
between Hamburg, la., and Kan-
sas City.
9 Relief Workers
Killed When Truck
Hits Canada Train
FORT WILLIAM, Ont., Feb. 8—
(AP) — Nine members of a high-
way construction crew are dead
and 13 others are suffering from
injuries received in a collision be-
tween their motor truck and a
Canadian National railways train
at a grade crossing.
The accident occurred last night .
at Kakabeka Falls, 10 miles west [
You Get Amazing Relief
From Rheumatic Pains and Twinges,
Musculur SortneM or Lameness with
vs^MOONE'S
^EMERALD OIL
FREE
Silk Shoe
Laces
given with every lady't
Half Sole & Heel
Repair Job
HALF SOLES (Ladles') JLf **
Regular 85c quality
">Jf
Men'. HALF SOLES.
M£*t
Reg.
$1.00 quality, now.. />
turn into ready cash- Advertise these thing.*- in The Star's
Want Ad columns. Rent that spare room through A Star
Want Ad. Use Star Want Ads to sell real estate, secure a
position, find lost articles, exchange merchandise, sell
household goods or rent a store. Do it now to take advan-
tage of the big savings- Eemember—six o'clock tomorrow
evening is the deadline for Star Want Ads to be accepted at
the Special BARGAIN I>ays reduced rates
Call —B1234
THE
L I N C O L N STAR—FRIDAY, F E B R U A R Y 8, 1935
FIVE
MULLEN FLAYS
CHILD LABOR LAW
(Continued from Page One.)
ploymcnt of all persons under 1
years of age, including employ
mcnt on farms and
in home
where they reside.
Recounts Previous Efforts.
He recounted unsuccessful ef
forts by various congressmen t
amend the' proposal to
exclud
farm and home labor from its pro
visions, and explanations that con
gross would never use the powe
given it by the amendment to leg
islate on those matters. "Tha
shows
what congress
had
in
rnind," Mullen shoutcdL. "If you
don't want congress to
use th
power, don't give it to it. I sa;
that advisedly. If they have il
they'll use it
"God
forbid that a free stat.
like Nebraska should ever turn it
powers over to a bureaucrat a
Vras:iJn?ton. The sheet anchor o
.Ame-ican liberty, American per
potuity, is not in Wasbdngton. I
is r.ght here in Nebraska, for one
Mullen questioned the existence
of any real child labor problem
at least in agricultural states like
Nebraska
"Nebraska, like mos'
all the states, has legislated on
child labor," he argued. "The leg-
islatures and the NRA have ended
child labor. If there is any weak-
ness m our state laws, they ough
to be corrected I for one woulc
like to see them corrected."
Cites Prohibition.
_ Mullen cited rational prohibi-
tion as an example of the "ill ad-
vised action by conscientious, hon-
est people" in turning power re-
served to the states over to Wash-
ington.
Disgressing further from child
labor, Mullen voiced approval of
Governor
Cochran's suggestions
for liquor control, terming them
reasonable.
"I don't care what liquor
lav/
you pass here," Mullen said. "But
the power has been put right back
where it belongs. No matter what
you do," he told the lawmakers.
it 11 be a great improvement over
prohibition and the days of the
bootlegger."
Liquor and taxation,
like the child labor amendment,
should be considered in a non-
political light, Mullen said.
Approves Gas Ta-x.
In another departure from his
chief topic, Mullen voiced approv-
al of Governor Cochran's recom-
(mendation that a cent be added to
the gasoline tax to raise the state's
$2,000,000 relief quota. He vigor-
ously opposed any additional tax
on real estate, remincJing the
legislators of the platform pledges
of both parties against new taxes
"Relief needs must be artel. The
one-cent gas tax is the only way
to raise the money, in my opin-
ion," Mullen declared. "Hebellion
will follow, and it ought to, if the
legislature puts any additional tax
on the people of this state. The
people, irrespective of p»arty, are
opposed to new taxes."
HAUPTMANN'S
CASE RESTED
(Continued from Page One.)
tical lumber men to dispute the
testimony of a state wood expert
that part of the kidnap ladder
came from Hauptmann's Bronx
attic.
One of these was the last de-
fense witness. Edward J. Reilly,
chief defense counsel, waited for
the polling of the jury after a
brief
recess,
then
announced
loudly:
"The defense rests:"
The state immediately began re-
buttal with Joseph J. ITarber, a
New York insurance man, on the
stand. His testimony sought to re-
fute that of a defense witness who
said he saw the dead Isaclor Fisch
leap over a Bronx cemetery wall
where and when the SoO.OOO" Lind-
bergh ransom was paid.
The defense used, in all. 53 wit-
nesses, many of them alibi wit-
nesses, and required 11 court days
to give its answer to trie state's
charges.
Detente Case In BrierT.
The defense case, in brief was
Hauptmann was in the Bro-ax.
more
than 60 miles from the scene oZ the crime,
when baby Lindbergh was stolera. the dead
German
furrier. Isador Fiscb_ and not
Hauptmann. p>t the $50.000 raEtsom moncv
Hauptmann innoccntlv took SI* 800 of the
ran;cm money from Finch fo— safekeep-
ing a man resembling Fisch and a woman
rc^cmblim: the dead maid Violet Sharpe
were srcn with a bab^ shortly after the
Kidnapmc, none of Hauptmaa^a's finiter-
prlnt-s was found: Hauptmanii d:d
not
build the ladder used in the
kidnapinc
moncv which swelled his a*set-s after the
rensorn payment came, unrecorded. Ircra
Fisch for stock investments. ZJauptmann
was at a
musicale in his ho-me on th*
nisnt of April 2. 1932. when Or
John T
"Jafsici Condon says he paid,
him
th-
ransom
moncr in a Bronx
craierard'
Hatippnann was at home fo- his" own
birthdnr parly on November 26
1933 when
a theater cashier sav; he *pe=it a" Llnd-
b-rch random bill, and persons other than
hauptmann wcr- seen in sn
au-omoblk
with a ladder near the LintJt>crch home
before the crimp
Th» stele had time before noo-n rrwv; at
12 .18 n m lo call three r'bafa.; •wi'.nr^sc*
Fsrber. Arthur lar^n and O^car Chri---.
intern. The lir«t tt. ran<.o.n
nichl—whrn Hncr t^id hr tax =ri" an airo
with * cirl md »aw Isadod 3Tsch IMP
over thr crmclrry njv;;
ST";T. t>r nisht of March "L J*37-lt"
kidr.s:) nicht—with him in a. hoase at
Onar'lca X J Carlstrra had
-"ttlfSriJ
hr MW Hauptmiinn in a B-OST; baVnr on
the Trfd— R? iiich* Christ is ncpiv^ cw~~i»- OT
.^_
««
,,
_ .
..n,. . .-„ *'«.,!-.
Oi
! sure from plcturM et th* ladder, tesil-
i tied he law and examined the luddtr at
1 13 u m , March 1. 1D32— about 30 hoori
1 bclure the kidnaping
I
The auto wan at his filling station, he
suld. to be Krtleed nlth casolin? and Us
I ocupai.ts were i> man ind a aoman
'''hs Hate contends Hauptmnn, alonf,
kidnaped killed and collected ransom Ssc
the Lindbergh bnb).
Hauptmann's attorneys heightened the
drama of their surprise by calling upon
th* defendant to assist
'Stand
up.
Mr.
Haupimano"
cried
Frtderick A Pop* of defense counsel
Hiuplmnnn came to hU feet.
' H that the man?"
Pope <»ept h.s
hand toward tne uaitinc defendant.
'Absolutely not1' s»id Boltnci
A
carpenter
pnd
millwright.
Ettuld
Mlelkc of Lindcnhurst. N Y, came next
and added his opinion to that of De BH-
schop that the ladder rail and the attic
board were not of one and the same piece.
Both a ere No 2 northern Carolina pine,
he said, but that attic board was a ' top '
piece and the ladder rail was a "butt"
piece. He said he determined this by the
number rnd character of the knot holes in
each board.
Bolmcr's answer to a request to describe
the ladder, was a gesture toward the kid-
nap ladder in court.
"Whj describe It," he asked, "I saw
that ladder there "
A man and a woman were in the car. he
said. Also, !•• t«5i:::rti, tnc same car had
visited his station several times before
His station was near Hopewell
Can't Identify Picture.
Bolmer a middle-aged
red-faced man,
could not Identify a picture of the dead
Isador Fisch as the man in the car He
>air ha saw only a part of the woman'*
face
"Now,
while the car was there with the
ladder, dirt you actually, physically touch
the ladder yourself?" he was asked
"I did, three times." he said.
Attorney General Wilen'z asked only one
cross-examining question.
"Did jou ever report the matter to the
state police'"
"I did not," he said.
He described the man in the auto this
rav
' His hai- was dark He had a smooth
face, no mustache or beard "
He later added the man weighed 130 or
140 pounds, end v,as about 5 feet, 10 or
II inches tall and thin-faced
He said he
thought he had seen a
picture of the man someplace
He couldn't
recall where.
Charles P
De Bisschop. contractor of
Waterbury, conn. who gave his opinion
late yesterday that the famed "rail 16' of
:he ladder and a floor board from the
attic had no relation produced a yellow
pine sapling in court to show, he said,
.hat such trees have more knots near
the base than above.
It was his contention that the attic
floor board from which the state charged
rail 16 had been sawn, had fewer knots
than the rail
The rail was used as an
upright in one of the three sections of
the Icdder
D- Bisschop testified further that the
adder rail showed no "shadows" of joists
,o which it would havs been nailed if it
had b:en a piece of flooring as the state
charged
Moreover, he said, it showed no
hammer or chisel marks which he be-
leved would have been present if it had
been ripped from the attic floor.
On cross-examination he admitted the
rail "might have been" nailed to Joists.
U.S. Land Actually
Being Given 'Back to
Indians' In Dakota
WASHINGTON. Feb. 8—(AP)
—Let's give the land back to the
Indians,"
I
That jocular remark has long
I been a
favorite
with
farmers
I whenever they Mt fed up with
| drouths, storms, pests or hard
times.
Now the government is doing
just that; taking land out from
under the plow to give to the
original Americans. It has just ac-
cepted options to buy 30,771 acres
STRICT OFFICER
LIABILITY HELD
^Continued from _Page One.)
Peters case, certain
legal" prin-
ciples having ben settled in a pre-
vious opinion. In that instance a
directed verdict of the Lancaster
county District
court was re-
versed.
The suit is one brought against
live directors of the Keystone In-
vestment company
and of
the
'eters Trust company and A. C.
Kennedy, the
investment
com-
pany's secretary. F r a u d u l e n t
•epresentations to purchasers of
Keystone bonds were charged. A
district court
jury
returned a
rerdict for $2,068 against the de-
fendants on April 18, 1934 and it
ivas from this that
the
appeal
Afas taken.
The defendants who
appealed were J. A. Sunderland,
Dr. W. O. Bridges and W. B.
?yler Belt who
claimed
that
hey were directors only in the
Peters Trust company and not in
he investment company.
The transaction on which the
uit is based is the action of the
Ceystone Investment company in
ecuring a 99-year lease on the
3ee building in Omaha for $181,-
00 in 1917. The capital stock of
he Keystone company was there-
after purchased
for $181,000 by
he trust company and 5 certifi-
ates of one share each were is-
ued to 5 directors of the
trust
ompany
to
qualify
them as
dummy directors." On May 8,
919 a bond issue of $400,000 was
ssued on the
property by the
rust company in the name of the
nvestment
company
and
the
raud charged by
the
plaintiff
that although the trust coin-
any owned the leasehold it did
ot disclose this fact.
toryell Opposed To
Gasoline Tax Boost
ays He will Post Signs Showing
Price of the Product and
Amount of the Tax.
Earl Coryell announced Friday
he is opposed to the proposed one
cent a gallon gasoline tax for re-
lief. He said he would post a large
sign at his station giving the price
of the gasoline and the tax.
"Such signs were freely used
until about four years ago, when
they were ruled illegal, and if that
shall be the status at the present
time I will be prepared to defend
my views to the highest court of
the state." he said, as he explained
his belief that the public should
know the amount of tax that it is
paying.
"In some states, at least in some
localities, the tax on gasoline is as
high as 12 cents a gallon, which
is almost prohibitive."' Corycll
said. "In fact, a five cent tax is a
125 per cent tax on the refined
product"' he added, and another
cent would hike that to 150 per
cent"
la Dsr.rtlm thsr nleh"
Laddrr.
Brric-o-1. Bote-T. t-.T.tn: v.s-ira mrn»r
and sraS-JitT ci-rtl cnciircr -xi~0 vjud TO
rro« t%riur.Ti-w
3~ S. r^nn*. T
TO!
M' i al
ALCORX-MASHEK.
r -Ti-VcMac." SakaO^r^Y.
ice tree scdica]
J5 defence mo'ion 1o
A
transfer had
been opposed by the attorney gen-
eral'i office.
I
Fill your Rohlacndcr prescrip-
tions at Gold's.—Adv.
in Todd county, South
Dakota.
Officials said the land, classed
as submarginul. is being acquired
from white seltleds who found it
inadequate for a living. The In-
dian bureau will take over this
and other land for the benefit of
reservation Indians, to improve
grazing facilities.
Under other portions of
the
government's land use program,
to be turned over to the biologi-
cal survey for wild fowl and game
refuges, approval was announced
for
two Nebraska
projects,
a
63,438 acre purchase for develop-
ment of a wild fowl refuge around1
the Valentine lakes
m
Cherry I
county and a 3,130 acre extension
to the Niobrara game refuge.
Plainsman Personality
Parade at Wesleyan
Wesleyan university is present-
ing its P J a i n s man personality
parade under sponsorship of Blue
Key,
men's honorary fraternity,
Saturday at the White auditorium.
Robert Townsend is to be master
of ceremonies for
the program
which has been arranged by Ray-
mond Wilhelmi of Chapman and
Edward Weaver of Genoa. Tak-
ing part in the parade program are
the men's glee club, and the male
quartet, consisting of Claude Otto,
Men ill Strombom, Alfred Boberg
and Ross Drulmer. The play di-
rection class will present "The
Dyspeptic Ogre"
Among those
presenting individual offerings are
Lois Conner, Lois Dillehay, Alfred
Boberg, Virginia Cotton. Dean
Reed, Yvonne Gay lord, Claude
Otto, Dorothy Daily, Betty Barnes,
and Phyllis Gordon. The string
ensemble,
under
direction
of
Geralyn
Walrath Bennett, will
offer the allegro from Mozart's
"Serenade.'"
Don't miss seeing the Frigidnir^s
at Gold & Co.—Adv.
Boundary Commission
For Iowa, Nebraska
DBS MOINES, Feb. 8—(AP) —
A Nebraska delegation had
the
assurance of Gov. C. L. Herring
today that he will consider join-
ing Gov. R. L. Cochran of Ne-
braska in designation of a joint
commission to settle state bound-
ary problems along the Missouri
river. Mayor Towl of Omaha and
Repiesentatives
from
Council
Bluffs, told the
Iowa
governor
they believe the river is m a sta-
tionary channel
now and
that
isolated tracts of land could be
exchanged by the tales.
SILVER WEDDING.
(Spnl«! to The Star.)
CLATON1A. Neb,. Feb. 8—Mr.
' and Mrs. Louis Blome, living near
j here, observed their twenty-fifth
wedding anniveisary Wednesday
evening and more than 200 of
their neighbors and friends at-
tended the affair.
HUSKY THROATS
Overtaxed by
speaJting, sing-
Ing, smoking
Ideal Saltecl Nuts
Freshly toasted in creamery but-
ter.
Half Pound.
1 7p
Saturday Only
—Street Floor.
Valentine Cards
5c
With envelope to
match
Others Ic to 25c.
Boxed Valentin* Materials. OK*.
—Street Floor.
3 assortments
ge^Guenzel Co.
SATURDAY STORE HOURS 9 A. M. TO 9 P. M.
B7141
For Your Valentine
'Personal Seal' Candy
50'
Pound
Box
ASSORTED -
CHOCOLATES
OMOOTH, hand rolled centers, in
O the flavors most people favor—
plus many nut centers, usually
found only in the most exclusive
boxes. A gift you'll be proud to
give . . . and one anyone would
be happy to receive.
Valentine Heart Candy
RED HEART shaped boxes, filled with assorted, rich choco-
late candies.
Quarter Pound ... I5c
Half Pound
25c
Pound
39c
2 Pounds
77c
JHERSHEYS
K
...
2l/2 Pound Box
59c
One Pound
25c
Fruit and Nut
HEARTS
(Bunte's)
Pound
50c
Half Pound ..25c
—Street Floor
For Four Valentine!
Dram Perfume Sale
WITH each purchase
of
your
favorite
perfume, you may buy a
beautiful Heart Top per-
fume bottle, ideal for val-
entine gift, at half price.
Regularly 50c,
Saturday
$1.20
$1.60
Vol de Nult
Shalimar ..,
L'Heure Bleue
CLKO'S
.Reflexions
Surrender .
Bouquet Antique..
CAKO-> S
Bellodgia
CX
'-VS
Toujours Moi
Vojage of Paris....
BOUK-JOI8
Evening of Paris...
Srringtimt In Pans
Karess
COTVS
Imtn
I/OriRan and Chipre ...
$1.15
$1.25
50c
55c
50c
Jsuit de Noel.
VIGN z '3
JE\N PAXOC-i
Cocktail Dry-
Invitation
$1.95
$1.90
... $1
$1.50
$2.25
68c
$2
$1.50
Moment Supreme ..
HLDM.T-S
Gcmej.
Emcraude. L'Aimant. Paris,
en
38c
Three Flowers
fclC
HOUBIGAM'S
Ideal, Qusl Ques Fleurs. fin
Bois Doiniant
OUC
—Street Floor
BARGAIN BASEMEN!
Jane Gray Stock Sale!
CONTINUES SATURDAY with dresses and coats from the
Jane Gray Stock, at tremendous savings:
DRESSES
All remaining
Jane Gray dresses
formerly to 57.97
SIZES 14 TO 48 IN
THESE GROUPS
All Sales Final: No Refunds!
ICo Exchanges! Xo C. O. D.'s!
No Approvals!
All remaining
Jane Gray dresses
formerly to S10.S7
One Lot Jane
COATS
s ij to -5S
Kur
.nei; winter coats
SPORTS COATS. S-S.95
Sale! Rayon Underwear
Special rvarcnase of pamreats that, should ordinarilj
sell at 25>c «*-h: Fars: £<3 wj l^Jts. pr.. ,
rXJTTON F L O C K S — Fnr
14 to
S2.
jttnjyyt. flo-
raK fast
SPORT OXFORDS
486
HOSE—Wld« and
Tiirrtrsr n"b. Al]
first. PI.
BOYS' SHIRTS—Bros a f
prfails uni noUfis. Fart col-
"T*.
SOYS" AND GIRLS*
ELK OXFORDS
Durable soles. Sizes
to Large 2
..
Leather Sole £4 >|A
SHOES.... >1«4T
Silk
Lingerie
I59
GOWNS — SLIPS
GIVE your Valentine silk lin-
gerie, if you want to thrill
her' A great special purchase of
rich silk crepe gowns and slips,
lace trimmed and smartly tai-
lored in high shades that she
will adore! Come in tomorrow,
and let us show you these ex-
quisite pieces, well made, full
cut, and long wearingl
—Floor Two
A Dainty One-Eyelet!
"Regma"
MADE of fine soft kid. the
"Regma" is only one of the
many new spring models we are
showing at So "Regma" comes
in blue kid, with blue patent
trim.
lawn
kid with
brown
trim; black
kid with
patent
trim, and black gaberdine with
patent trim.
Walk-Overs ....$8.50
Naturalizers .. .$6.50
—Floor Two
Cabretta
Gloves
I95
^ I.E.VETTE Cab-
^ » retta gloves in
new spring modes
h a v e
arrived'
Plain slip-ons, or
1 a n c v cuffs, in
•white, brown,
black, navy
or gray
—Street Floor
Chanel "Sparkling"
Jewelry $1
C
OLD METAl, with sparkling
colored stones, in earrings,
bracelets, pins,
clips.
Rose,
Rainbow. Green or Blue stones.
Spring Handbags
NEW u n d e r a r m ,
pouch.
or
vanity I
style bags, grain or <
patent finish, m black,
navy,
red,
white or
brown ................
Others $1.95
—Street Floor
$1
Smart Neckwear
Frilly neckwear,
m white and col-
ors Laces, or-
candy. f a n c y
weaves
linens.
T a i l o r e d or
dressy
Others at $1.00
—Street Floor
50'
SALE!
Boys' Wash Suits
Special purchase of Wash
Suits for Boys! Practical,
attractive and priced at
great savings!
One Free Wampum with
each Suit Saturday.
Lot I
i=uiJs of
.
Itecnc. broadcloth an 3 pop-
lin
Belled or
.Many colors
xn* styles.
size?
Lot Ji
PlKln *nd noiflty
rirnafl
fifth. SBitlnps and crash'1
Suit,": 1hat jftind many laun
doi-ings anfl
IS
3 to 30
tna many isv
79
Lot 111
BcKcr quality
In many styliR
•s-ilh heltcfl
wash
Fast
cellar
.
-
I
or
.•T>ort,5
5}-pt?
Sis
3 to 30 .
One Free Wampum with
••ell Suit Saturday.
N STREET, 12th TO 13th
Spring Prints!
Spring Plains!
$io
DRESSES that will brighten up
your future!
They're lively,
fresh and so attractive in crepes,
sheers, taffetas and matelasses.
Both plains and prints . . . and
many new JACKET DRESSES.
Navy, Black, Brown, Aqua, Rose,
Grey. Sizes 14 to 46.
Others $7.95 to $29.50
Spring SUITS
suit you every time'
finger-tip, or swagger!
1650
and $29.50
—Floor Two.
Spring BLOUSES
A
jackec length
to
Full length, short.
Included in these new
suits ire many Forst-
mann Hoffman
mate-
rials
Sizes 12 to 20,
in most wearable and
becoming colors.
Others $25
•"1*0 wear with new
suits!
Crepe!
Taffeta!
Lace!
In plaids, checks or plain
pastels. Sizes 34 to 40.
—Floor Two. I95
New Skirts
New Sweaters
Flannel and wool
crepe, m checks,
plaids and plains.
Sizes 26 to 32
.
Others at $1.95
—Floor Two.
2.95
Slip-on styles, in
lacy weaves,
pas-
tels a n d white.
Sizes 34 to 40, at
Others at $2.95
—Floor Two.
1.95
Your Spring Hat
$3
fUST arrived for
Saturday
J selling! Hundreds of charm-
ing new models, in turbans,
brims, Breton sailors, aad pill-
box styles. Straw fabrics, and
straws for individual wear, in
aavy, brown, black and red.
AJso felts in pastel shades!
Others $5 and $7.50
—Floor Two.
For Your Valentine!
"Millay" Ringless
Hose
V
ALENTINE Special'
Beautifully sheer
and clear chiffon and
semi - service
weight
silk hose, with all the
features of most ex-
clusiie
hose'-
Colors
that w i l l harmonize
with the most attrac-
tive costumes, in sires
8>i to 10^.
2
PRS.
IN GIFT BOX...S1.30
—Street Floor.
Introducing the French
JOCKEY SHORTS
S DIFFERENT AS
un-50
the old "Model T"
An innovation in
derarear for men!
The garment is knitted of combed
varn, has elastic all around waist
band, and for convenience the leg
holes have tapings of "lastex."
Undershirts to Match
50c
—Street Floor
Choice of Any
Suit in House
C
LEAR.\>'CE SALE oontiauas!
Any man's winter suit in tie
house - - - including . ^^
Sports. Tweeds, "J I l / S
Saxonies. Worsteds! • %•* I -f
AH sizes, 34 to 46. 197
Sale! Men's $1.25 SHIRTS
Sizes 14 10 17, in collar attached styles only!
White, tan, blue or patterned broad clotii, pre-
shrun'k and fast color. A really outstanding
value!
79'
Bright New Neckwear
Hand made NcchtJes in colors that will add spice
to your winter wardrobe!
Boucle atnpes and
checks, rep stripes, heather tones. A special pur-
chase to sell, 2 for $3,00. Ea.
MEN'S FRIENDLY SHOES
$5
—StJv«t Flow
55'
Saturday—In Our
CAFETERIA
Creamed chipped beef on toast:
Buttered corn. Poach and cot-
tige cheese sal-
id.
Roll:
But-
ter,
Choice of
irink
Baked Ham with raisin sauce;
Special b a k e d
potato:
green
vegetable salad,
R o l l :
butter:
Pineapple cream
pie:
choice of
drink
—Down Stairs.
Pcnch and ci
25'
i raisin sauc
45
Hour Sale
9 to 10 a. m. Saturday
Only
Broken Jots and sizes, small
groups, so No Mail or Phone
Orders—Please.
Street Floor
j
BOYS' OUTING SLEEPERS
AND PAJAMAS, reg.
Jl, sizes 2 to 10
BOYS'
FUR
BACK
MIT-
TENS, reg.
44c.
horsehide
mittens, small
sizes
BOYS 'CORDUROY SLACKS,
formerly 52.95, small sizes,
Hockmeyer corduroy.
Light shades only .
GARTER BELTS,
all sizes
19*
V A L E N T I N E
GREET-
ING CARDS, values to
lOc. this hour
and
STATIONERY,
one
half quire. White
only
MEN'S SOCKS, 300 pairs pat
terned rayon plaited.
Sizes 10^4 to 12 Pair
MEN'S PAJAMAS, formerly
$1.35, broadcloth.
sizes A. B, C. D
WOMEN'S HOSIERY, "Allen
A" chiffon and semi-service,
slight
»
irreKUlars
« prs.
Pair, 44c
PRINT
HANDKERCHIEFS
for women, hand «
rolled edge
3f
ANTIMONY, ash trays, bon
bon dishes, cigarette boxes
Each, this
hour
TOYS, chemistry sets. Me-
canno sets, magic sets, sew-
ing sets, drums, aluminium
dishes, paint books.
. etc.
Each
Floor Two
2-PC.
KNIT SUITS, brown
and rust. Only S. sizes 14,
16. 18.
Formerly S5 95
Floor Three
STAMPED
GOODS, scarfs, I
baby kimonos, 3-pc.
sets, each .
. .
HEAVY
IRONING
BOARD
PAD,
this hour
Floor Four
S U N
T E S T E D
WALL
PAPER, m room lot. 10 rolls
of side wall paper, enough
for room 12x14x9.
This hour
Basement
JANE GRAY HATS, remain-
ing stock to close out
Saturday, each
BOYS' AND GIRLS'TENNIS
SHOES, black, tan,
white
All sizes
to 6
25 W O M E N'S DRESSES,
nere 31.55 to S2.95. rovelty
rayons, in solid, checks.
Broken sizes 14 to 44...
MEN'S AND BOYS' UNDER-
WEAR, random on!v. Men's
sizes 36 to 44. Boys'
2 to 6 and 6 to 16 ...
SHORT
LENGTHS
PIECE
GOODS, fast color percales
and broadcloths.
Yard
T U C K
STITCH
UNDER-
WEAR for women. Samples
of 29c to 79c values.
Vests, panties, each..
( GRAPEFRUIT, dozen
this hour
CLEANUP L A R G E
PKG.
SPARK WASHING
POWDER
..
I
LETTUCE, solid heads,
each
CAULIFLOWER.
j>ouad
1
7-JEAR GALLON
PEARS
.
...
feC
IE!
4OC
TOILET TISSUE, each roll
•wrapped.
-m
at
y JOT
All Day Specials
Toiletries
Bars
Catnaj- Soap lor
Ears Lux or Life
•^•i BCTJT Soar
R. & G. Sanitary f>
$1
576
Econcroy Size
Package
.......
Barbara
Omald Powder a n a
Clrnp Hand
Cream. I
Far-* Pen
MM Wsi«r Soltl",' toiS
&"r
79*«,a98«S
SIX
THE
L I N C O L N STAR—FRIDAY, F E B R U A R Y 8, 19:J.
r>
THE LINCOLN STAR
BDt*r«d at the pottolUe* In Lincoln. Nfbr»«Jt». u wcand
tllM jsatttr lor traiLimliilon through tb< nin.ll>
PublUhed ou slake
Your thirst with some Guinness or
Bslluntlnc?
Do vou reckon LaGuardia made a mis-
take
In appointing Jimmy Valentine?
He'll get a snub in any pub \\ho limits all
his chinuiog
To what pertains to u assailing, to woo-
ing, or to winning.
The bar has lost Its standing as the mas-
culine confessional.
Talk must be on topics controversial or
congressional.
I
(BURGESS BEDTIME STORIES!
i
BY TIIORNTON W. BURGESS.
Suspicion
He's subject to suspicion who
Does not just as his neighbors
do.
—Old Mother Nature.
While it may occur at any time i prolonged
coughing lit simply
during the year, it is particularly
frequent
during
the
winter.
Twenty per cent of the cases oc-
cur during the first year of life,
and about 50 per cent within the
first two years of life. It is usu-
ally conveyed from one person
with the disease to another, al-
though there are some nistances
on record which suggest that it
can be conveyed by a third party.
For instance, in two cases it has
been
reported that whooping
cough
occurred in a new-born
infant and was contracted from
an obstetrical nurse.
The cause of the disease is a
small germ, which was described
first in 1906. It is found in the
from reflex causes. It is not as-
sociated with nausea, and is sim-
ilar to the vomiting that occurs ir
many other kinds of coughing fits
The danger in the disease lies
largely in the extreme exhaustior
which accompanies the coughing
spell. Sometimes pneumonia alsc
occurs, which is always extremelj
serious. Death sometimes occurs
from hemorrhage into the brain
and hemorrhages into the skir
from the high pressure which oc-
curs in the blood vessels are no
infrequent, but are not serious.
The nutritional
disturbances
which come from
the vomiting
and inhability to eat are also ser-
ious enough to make the disease
sputum in large numbers, even respected.
[PEOPLE'S FORUM!
TllllllllllllttllltlllllltlllllllllllllllltfllllllltllllllltllllllllllllfMttllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllt'
(Forum communications to The Lincoln
Star should be 'imited to 500 words, the
letters to this department represent the
individual views of tbe writers and ma;
or may not express the views *f thU
newspaper.)
James, A Pitcher
of Water!
Seward, Neb., Feb. 7.
To the editor of The Lincoln
Star: How time and conditions
do change people!
One's mem-
Training for Manhood.
Lincoln Nsb Fsto 7
To the editor of The Lincoln
Star: I have been somewhat in-
terested in the many articles writ-
ten on the Bible and its teachings,
according to the ideas of the 600
different religious denominations
in the world, and I am well aware
of the fact that these 600 denom-
inations have some 1700 different
teachings, while the Bible and its
teachings are supposed to be one.
How Will They Take It?
Kansas City Star makes the -startling dis-
covery that the people of Missouri and Kan-
sas are not all atwitter over the pending gold
clause decision. To the list it might add the peo-
ple of Nebraska.
Of the 1,300,000 Nebraska welcomed to the arms
of Morpheus last night, how many found sleep im-
possible because in all likelihood
the
United
States supreme
court next Monday will de-
liver its long awaited decision? That is one of
the sources of strength of this nation. It doesn't
waste a great deal of time in brooding over matters
it does not understand. Perhaps it would be bet-
ter if more people knew more about money but to
all purposes the, country has done fairly well,
as it is.
Here are the opinions from four widely separa-
rated groups:
Grocer—"I'm not worried."
Clerk, with $7,000 mortgage on his home—"My
mortgagee probably feels that he will be lucky to
get $7,000 in currency or whatever else we may be
using for money in the future and I feel the same
way."
Broker—"This is the best thing to write about
since the Northern Pacific corner and the anti-
trust case against Standard Oil. I can't imagine it
will make much difference which way the decision
goes."
Banker—"The general effect on business and
markets would be negligible."
Echoes From the Woodshed.
•nOYHOOD memories of the woodshed and of
father's slipper are awakened by the ficrv-
crusade launched by Mrs. John S. Riley on the
subject of spanking. Mrs, Riley. it should be not-
ed, 5s listed as a "socially prominent author and
lecturer." She also has been pretty mych of a
mother, with the richness of experience derived
from rearing seven children.
She insists spanking m moderation 35 necessary,
and without it, there is the danger ttial children
Trill grow into "bn»t.O
She goes one step further.
When the rod is
Mexican Red Shirts.
SOVIET Russia has moved to American shores.
^ Directly to the south of the Rio Grande in
Mexico, an organization commonly known as the
Red Shirts, but bearing the high sounding title of
the Revolutionary Youth Corpors is gaining rapid-
ly in membership. It is making its strength ef-
fective by a representative
in the Mexican
assembly.
The statement of principles of the Red Shirts
reads like a Lenin pronuncio. It is expressed as
opposition to capital, to religion, to drinking, and
to smoking. It is the Red Shirts boast that they
will mould the Mexico of the future, and to their
activities are charged five assassinations, and the
hanging of one of their own members.
There is no more fertile soil on the TCorth or
South American continents for the spread of com-
munism lhan Mexico. Its masses until recent
years were subjected to so much exploitation that
it is easy to understand why the task of recruit-
ing members would be simplified greatly. And
yet Mexico has made most substantial progress
for fifteen years, uninterrupted in the mam by the
frequent uprisings and governmental change that
took place prior 1o that time. The Calles and
Obrcgon governments accomplished much for the
Mexican people. They set up the first
decent
system of public school education in a country
hopelessly cursed with illiteracy. They bent their
energies toward the completion of a highway sys-
tem. The land reform they instituted was sub-
stantial, and Rave the Mexican peon class its first
opportunity in more lhan a century of misrule.
Uncle Sam's concern in Mexican development is
a natural one. There has been a proper policy of
keeping hands off, and its fruits have been evident
ory flits back to a
tember when groups of gentle-
men met to formulate plans for
the betterment of the state. They
were men with hearts of gold,
sympathetic towards the predica-
ment of the downtrodden. They
poured out their wrath toward
the powers that be that were
throttling the very existence of
humanity.
Witness what they
said:"Joined with these is the
determination
to tabe the
control of government out of
the hands of the powerful
special interests and classes,
and place it in the keeping of
the whole people, to be .fairly
and impartially administered
for the common good of all.
In the administration oS the
affairs of our state we de-
mand a government severely
frugal, in keeping with the
limited means of our people.
We are opposed to any new
form of taxation."
Then these men went out
among the "whole people" of the
state and" sold their doctrine to
them. "It will be our whole sal-
vation", said the dear "whole
people." So they sent them to
the capital to be their trusted
public servants.
Time went on and then we ob-
serve our public servants at work.
And how they work those first
few days and weeks. They were
unpaid but they worked on. At
last thought the "whole people"
we have public servants which
will be a credit to our state. They
will save us from the downfall
of too much taxes.
Time goes on and then comes
the last day for bills to get by
the doorkeeper. Then the "whole
people'' look once more to see the
fine accomplishments
of these
tried and true public servants.
But see what they behold. Over
there hangs a bill for a sales tax.|
Look at that one over there—it's,
an income tax bilL And that one
—an increase in' gas tax. And
that one—an increase in the auto'
license. There's another—a wheel;
tax on the auto. And there is;
one—creates a new inspector's:
job.
That one creates a new;
bureau and that one a commjs-
sicn.
"Whole people"' getting
dizzy turns away for a moment i
Then one last look.
At last—i
something for everybody.
Com-]
pulsory broadcast for Nebraska;
football
much.
games.
"Whole
That was loo
people" swoon
away overcome with Ihe realiza-
tion that bread and butter must
come before new tubes for the
old radio. Buncoed and sold out
again.
i
"Whole people" lies prostrate
at the feet of Fate. But the lips
move and say: "Now the Spirit
speaketh expressly, that in the
latter times some shall depart
from the faith, giving heed to
seducing spirits, and doctrines ol
devils; speaking lies in hypocrisy:
laving their conscience seared
with a hot iron. For we wrestle
not against flesh and blood, but
"• Hcv. nonny. nonny. no brand is abcne
This elegant Imported whisky
Why did the City of Brotherly Love
Fall out with Conductor Stavlsky?
Who chatters of church charities, or gos-
sips of the garden,
Or discourses on the horses must entreat
the barmaid's pardon.
She will deign to answer only if a man
refers to Aryan
Supremacy.or comments on the program
proletarian.
He.v, nonny. nonny, 1 hold the belief
A maiden needs wits at a bar
Sinc£^FErmany now nas a fuehrer-in-
Chiei.
What use can she ha\e for a Saar'
WILL SCARLET.
They
succeeded
in
keeping
"Within the Gates" out of Boston
And now there is Dr. Henry
Saphirstein, who protests against
next Monday's performance of
what he calls a play that is
"filthy, lewd, and obscene; and
an insidious attack on organized
government." The play is "The
Mikado," which also, according io
Dr. Saphirstein (D.D.S.) is "an
insulting and flagrant display of
rampant sex." Dr. Saphirstein, if
he wants to know who the open-
ing choristers are, doubtless finds
them libertines of Japan. And it
may well be that the sexophobian
dentist hears the well known trio
begin:
Three little disreputable women are we
Vile as a street-girl well can be
Filled to the brim with lecheree
• Three little girls from a night-club
We wouldn't put it past Dr.
i Saphirstein to have two trios, so
s i that he may protest that they
really are singing "Sex little girls
from school are we."
Maybe Dr. Saphirstein has a
delusion of oppression, and thinks
that Gilbert, in "Patience," called
a character the Lady Saphir as
a direct slap at him.
Have you ever read even the
first chapter of this book, and
have you read it through the eyes
of some or all of these 600 re-
ligious denominations, though you
may not belong to any of them?
Isn't it a fact that you and I, and
the vast majority of mankind,
have been taken in infancy by our
parents and trained to believe this
Bible and the teachings of some
one of the various denomination1??
To take a child and train it with
the thought in mind that it will
not investigate the teachings of
this great book to the extent of
not giving it up is nothing short
of imposition on the mind of the
child.
In the Formu of Jan. 3, Mr. W. a' sho^g
-
.
•
°
Against Dr. S a p h i r s t e i n ' s
charges of lewdness and obsceni-
ty we can't prove a thing. Lewd-
ness, like the tariff, is a local
issue, one man's obscenity is an-
other man's shining cleanliness.
But the doctor needn't worry
about the attack on organized
government.
On the 14th of
March it will be precisely fifty
years since "The Mikado" first
was produced at the Savoy Thea-
ter. Nobody can calculate' how
many thousand performances, in
how many countries that were
organizedly governed, have been
given of that undermining oper-
etta. And, we admit not without
a sigh of regret, the attack on"
organized government has been
less successful than the hurling
of a last year's tennis ball against
Gibraltar's celebrated rock. The
i moralistic doctor afflicts us with
H. Pine sprang a new religious
idea on us. I suppose he, too, has
a following. He gave his views on
the new year and the beginning
of time, and of Christ. Januarv
cuspid.
n a lower
iu
O. iUWGr
Tip to the Schenectady Police
or the Watch and Ward Society:
in ex-
istence.
Train a child in the principles
of manhood without the fear of an
imaginary hell as a scare crow be-
hind him, or without the promise
of a happy heaven after death as
a reward for living the common
principles of manhood. Be a man
from the standpoint of principle
and happiness in this life because
it is the duty of man to be a man
and live the common principles of
manhood without the fear of hell
as punishment or the promise of
heaven as a reward.
This principle of right is in the
minds of both men and beasts.
Even the birds of the air practice
the principles of right and wrong.
Watch them and be convinced
RUE ATON.
LUCKEY TO ASK
ARBORETUM FOR
NEBRASKA CITY
A bill providing for the crea-
tion of a federal arboretum in the
vicinity of Nebraska City, will be
introduced in congress soon, ac-
cording to •£ letter received by
City Clerk Berg from Congress-
man Luckey. Mr. Luckey is spon-
soring the project at tiie request
of the Nebraska dcnartment, V. F.
W. Harold Porterileld, the state
WHILE ARRANGING VERSES FOR
A BOOK.
I should approach these sheets -with rev-
erent eye
Thinking »ith mental halo, how I sought
The phrase to bring a tear, a smile a sieh
Or. failing that, I think at T feist I oufht
» sweat again on seeing fragile verse
I brought into the world \rith groan and
Whose every rippling foot was ripped and
fought.
Or think or how It should have been, and
moan,
It is odd, but it is true. Any
one who docs something in a
different way is at once suspect-
ed of being queer. Any one who
possesses a talent no one else in
the family or among the neigh-
bors has is at once regarded with
suspicion.
Nibbler the House Mouse and
Mrs. Nibbler, who had lived all
their lives at Farmer Brown's,
sometimes in the house and some-
times in the barn, and who, be-
cause they had for so long kept
out of the clutches of Black Pussy
the Cat, were considered smart,
were disturbed. They were very
much disturbed. One of their last
lot of children was queer. Yes,
sir, he was queer. He differed
from any of the children they
had ever raised, and these were
many. He differed from any of
the children of the neighbors. It
wasn't in looks that he differed.
He looked like his brothers and
sisters. When he was very little
there was nothing to indicate
that he was any different. But
when he was partly grown he
began to sing, and the older he
grew the more he sang.
When his mother first heard
him sing she couldn't believe that
it was he who was singing. It
wasn't until she saw his throat
as he sang that she believed that
thpt song carne from one of her
own children. She had to believe
it then, and it quite upset her.
Never had there been a singer in
her family, so far as she knew,
and never had there been a
singer in Nibbler's family, so far
as he knew. And never had any
of the neighbors known of sing-
ers in their families.
So the singing Mouse soon
found that he was considered
queer by all the Mice of the
neighborhood, and was looked on
with suspicion. Just what he was
suspected of he never did find
out He was suspected on general
principles, because he could do
something none of the other Mice
could do. A lot of people are
like that all the Great World
over.
So the young Mouse soon found
that he was being more or less
shunned, even by the members
of his own family. He was left
very much to himself. He wasn't
wanted around by the others.
The more he was left alone the
more he sang, and the more he
sang the greater the suspicion on
the part of the others and the
more he was left alone. They
acted afraid of him, though just
what they feared none could
have said. You would think that
his mother and father would
have been proud of him, but they
were not They shared the sus-
picion of the others.
"Making such a noise is simply
telling everybody within hearing
lust where you are," declared
Mrs. Nibbler. "No Mouse with
sense will do a thing like that It
is worse than foolish. It simply
isn't done."
But the young Mouse could no
more help singing than he could
help being hungry. There were
times when he just had to sing,
and if his singing didn't make
the other Mice happy, it did
him.
He found that when he
began to sing he was soon left
alone. So after that when he
found something good to eat,
especially if there was little of
it, he would sing and the other
Mice would stay away.
In evBi-y other way he was
just like his brothers and sisters.
He looked like them. He did the
things that they did. He lived
as they did
T
as they lived. He was just an
everyday
ordinary
Mouse
in
every respect but one—his ability
When his mother first heard him
sin? she couldn't believe that it
was he who was singing:.
to sing. And because he could
sing, while none of his relatives
could, he was regarded as queer,
and being queer was to be looked
on with suspicion.
"I can't help it," said he to
himself. "I just have to sing. I
don't see why everybody doesn't
sing And I don't see why every-
body thinks I'm queer because I
do. I think they are queer be-
cause they don't."
iCopj right, 1935. by T. W. Burgess)
The next story: "The Reward
of Talent."
PARAGRAPHS
By Robert Qulllen.
(Copyright, 1335. Pnbltibera Syndicate)
Many Russian names end with
"off."
In America the common
ending is "bumped off."
Chivalrous officers might shoot
at the lady bandit's weapon.
There's no such thing as a fe-
male machine gun.
Irrigation isn't the only way to
make the great desert attractive.
Wait till they start bombing cities.
The astonishing part is not the
number of cranks but the number
of things they can
be
cranks
about.
A writer never
says,
"Jones
calls me a wonder." He
says,
'Jones who is smart and wise and
discerning, calls me a wonder."
Nature adjusts things nicely.
Smoking dulls the sense of smell
and then you don't notice the ash
trays.
What a world! When you're
sick, you'll have your teeth pulled
as soon as you feel better; when
>ou feel better, it isn't ne&sssary.
Why separate your criminals
from hardened old offenders? You
can't corrupt those old timers.
If the officers shoot first, they
get criticised; if they don't, they
get buried.
So you were a great success in
1920 or 1928? Well, you could do
as well today, if you had a boom
to make it easy.
There's always a trick in it.
High priced gadgets will do the
housework, but you have to stay
home and steer them.
Fable: Once there was a smart
guy who used his wife's money to
finance his scheme and didn't lose
it.
We have two classes: Those
who have nothing and those who
see red when they hear the word
'"Huey."
But if the idle rich are worth-
less and ornery, why plan to make
everybody idle and rich.
effccts
nt
i * .
seem o
But .11 the things Td thinfc are flat
The words and sheets have memories ol
their own;
I ate brown sugar while I thought of this
«g nose tickled *-hen I worked on
tnat-
JANE BDTZNER.
The Dionnes, according to a
Canadian Press dispatch from
CaUendar, now are able to put
their toes in their mouths. That
as the fellow might say. runs
into toes— fifty toes: And "it is all
weH enough for Pop Dionne and
f»r. Dafoe to pretend that this
is nothing, or that it has to do
with the arrival of teeth. They
are being trained to go on th«
stage as the five Albertina Rasch
Dionnes. and don't trv to tell us '
different.
Mark Twain... beloved creator,
of
Tom Sawyer,
Huckleberry '
Fjnn -and Pudd'nhead Jones.—
— ., ________
,
chairman, is directing the cam- 'New York American.
aaign. The letter from
Also of the Emperor Wikon
rnan Luckey to the city clerk was But maybe Mr. Hearst was thank-
in response to a resolution adopted ing of Injun Jones.
against
powers.
principalities,
against rulers
against
ol the
the city council, approving the
arboretum program. Other mem-
bers of the Nebraska delegation
win support the measure.
JUST FOLKS
By Edgar A. Guest
THE BEST-tXIV£l> CHEAT.
"We trho amonc the n-ufiiraoc Jfie
Our age"* dr»na to teholfl.
Hare certain -words of pr*is« to cji
TIJ those -rtjo ipena Useir livci lor
•We've j>ljitw!ile JOT the m»a of POTCT.
W« shfTc Vbc popujjir
Ol tvry l)ri»r tri-crnpha]
Which ]1TU » lellcritnau to
Wie crest of trv«Tv tinfl,
adjnlratjra lor ijje -vif.
And stillfd hand and Iwllllan4 mind
darkness of this world against |
spiritual
wickedness
in
high |
Sol
TTOZJHW.
places."
Then
people"
in recent years. The rapid expansion of the or- PJaccs.
Jnen "whole
f ni^on of the Bed Shirt, is the first dismal J™™ %**£»***£ -g
tidings to come from south of the boundary
some years.
jdealh where is 1hy sting?"
1
IX)XALD F. LOGAN.
Anfl in 173" pr«1«e Hint -ve
May be no nerd of tov s: s i
Wno iTrMJsT) ir* }nr»js. IMS:: tr--*t ha
Sir-" —f»'
••m"-'fJOi -sor): it it
E CJurliKli
Naborhood Drugqists
The Night Phone
Out of the stillness of the night comes the call.
One of your loved ones is sick. Maybe Father,
Mother, Sister, Brother or Baby—You call the
Doctor—After the examination a Prescription is
needed — The stores are clos'ed. Who is your
friend in the hour of need—Your NABORHOOD
DRUGGIST, who serves you unceasingly and
untiringly Day and Night.
Did you ever stop to think of the NIGHT PHONE
SERVICE? Call these following mer, — Your
Naborhood Druggist. Save this ad for further
reference.
FLOTD
BRIDGES
B2685
J. R, EVERETT
F. O. 525
GUT BUTLER
F6895
M. C. MAYO
M2549
C. F. BAUGHAN
B1723
H. K. SHUTT
F4069
GEO. B. SCOFIELD
M4388
L. (Guy) TAYLOR
B4S33
BE SAFE...BUY ALL YOUR DRUG STORE
REQUIREMENTS IN A DRUG STORE
C. F. BAUGHAX.
TAYLOR PHARMACY
Z7th and O— BIIKJ
BRIDGES PHARMACY
37th »tia Hn
BUTLER DRUG CO.
141k
mnfl South— FIf37
SCOFIELD PHARMACY
Afe,~MZ724
EVERETT DRUG
lh »nrHffS Your Xaborhood Dructist ha« W
MAYO DRUG CO.
l«th rni ft.
NEWSPAPER!
WSPAPLRl
THE
L I N C O L N
S T A R — F R I D A Y , F E B R U A R Y 8, 1935
S E V E N
A Trip, A Ball, A Cruise,
Are Latest Society News
Mary Gavin And Janet Caldwell To Attend Mid-
Winter At St. John's; Military Hop On February
22; Nathan Golds To Cruise Caribbean.
B
ISCOVERED some, interesting things this morning — A
week-end trip that two members of the young set are
taking and which sounds nothing short of fascinating — A
cruise—A ball, and another bit or so which seemed readable
to us—We hope it does to you—
NOW
ABOUT
the week-end
trip—Miss Mary Gavin and Mi
Janet Caldwell will leave the end
of next week lor Delafield, Wis.,
where they are to be guests at the
St. John's Mid-winter, and at a
house party at the home of Col-
onel and Mrs. Smythe. St. John's
Mid-winter, for your information
includes all kinds of winter sports,
a hop, and a play, which will
mean a busy three days for the
guests.
* * *
AND THE CRUISE? Well, Mr.
and Mrs. Nathan Gold left Thurs-
day to do a little sailing, quite a
little sailing on the Caribbean.
They expect to return to Lincoln
shortly after the first of March.
* * *
THE MILITARY group of Lin-
coln does well to choose February
22 for a ball to honor Governor
K. L. Cochran (who, by the way,
is also a Lieutenant-Colonel) and
Mrs. Cochran. We understand that
the invitations are out for the af-
fair which will be held at Hotel
Lincoln. A limited number of in-
vitations have been issued and in-
clude a small group of army men
outside the officers of the national
guard.
* * *
HERD'S A BIT we saw in a
Los Angeles paper which we
thought might give a chuckle or
so—It is headed "And Will Greta
Be Surprised!"
"To Howard Greer's mother,
Greta Garbo is just a nice, pleas-
ant girl. The Greers met Greta
when she was first making a hit
in Hollywood and Mrs. Greer, on
being
introduced, a s k e d the
glamorous one if she were in pic-
tures. Greta took it with a grTn,
says Howard, and not only that,
accepted a dinner • invitation. 'Ma
doesn't know anyone outside of
her
lodge sisters,', explains
Howard.
-"The night Greta created such
a stir at the Trocadero, Howard
and his mother were sitting near
by, and again Mrs. Greer, motion-
ing Greta to come and sit witH
them, invited her to dinner. And
again Greta accepted.
"'But this time', says Howard,
"Mother had to phone to all of
the lodge to tell them Garbo was
coming to dinner, and to come
and meet her.'"
Howard Greer, as you of course
know, is a former Lincoln boy—
went to grade school, high school
and the University of Nebraska
here in the city—And his mother,
Mrs. Minnie Greer, . has a wide
circle of friends in the city.
Since those days, Howard has
gone far in the role of a designer
of clothes for prominent screen,
stars and society women.
MRS.
KINGERY P. T. A.
CONVENTION DELEGATE
Sixty attended the meeting of
the city council of P. T. A. held
Thursday at the board of educa-
tion. Miss E. Ruth Pyrtle spoke on
"Bills of Interest to P. T. A.
Members," and Miss Helen Emig
Lincoln campfire secretary, spoke
on, "Campfire Work."
Mrs. O. E. Kingery, local presi-
dent, was elected as 'a delegate to
the national
convention which
will be held in Miami, Fla., April
29 to May 3. Mrs. H. C. Schleuter,
was appointed new garden chair-
man and Mrs. D. W. Day, Mrs.
Fred O. Lingenfelder, Mrs. E. M.
Peters, Mrs. J. M. Neely. Mrs.
Fred Pike and Mrs. Allen Capron
were named as the nominating
committee. Mrs. W. H. Howey,
health chairman, will hold a con-
ference for all local health chair-
men and their presidents. "Wed-
nesday afternoon, February 13, at
1:20 ia the administration build-
ing. board of education. Dr. E. W.
Hancock, will be the speaker and
an educational health program
will be discussed.
The council
voted a S12 gift to the national
congres for Founders day. which
will be used for state and national
extension
work.
Mrs.
Oliver
Knudson. general chairman, for
the play, "A Howling Success."
announced $291 -was cleared
on
th* productioin. This money will
be used for the student aid fund.
VARIETY PROGRAM
FOR PARK P. T. A.
The Park P. T. A., will repre-
sent a variety
program
Friday
evening, in the school auditorium
at 7:30. The program will be as
follows:
Doe*. — Thr An; He
Scrcn»dcrs;
IVcfcrr
an* KaM»r.
M.iJc qa.»ri«t: Susvl G lawn Don J«clt-
wm. AUred R-id?r, William MUJrr 2ceoss-
p»a!*t, Be* ScJ
Soncs. SMrirr
Coming Events \
SOCIAL CALENDAR.
Events Saturday Afternoon.
Mu Phi Epsllon alumnae.
1
o'cock
luncheon, home ol Mrs. M. C. Lefler,
2101
Bc'vell street.
Mortar Board a'umnae, bridge tea. home
of Mrs. K. D. Latsch, 1436 South Twen-
tieth street.
Si?n:a Dslta Tau. benefit bridge party,
chapter house, 2:30.
CLUB CALENDAR.
Events Friday Night-
La Coteiie club, annual dinner for hus-
bands. University club.
University Piece P. T. A., dramatic pro-
gram. Jackson high school gym., 7:30 to
9 o'clock.
Bethany P T. A. play, high school au-
ditorium, evening.
Park P T
A., variety program, 7.30.
American
Legion
auxiliary,
benefit
brirge party, governor's mansion. 8 o'clock.
Nebraska Dames, Ellen Smith hall, 8
o'clock.
FRATERNAL CALENDAR.
Events Friday Evening.
Capital lodge No. 11, I. O. O. F., at I,
Odd Fellows hall.
Shcba Shrine No. 5, W. S. J., 7:30, 1122
O street.
Cotner lodge No. 297, A. F. & A. M., at
8, temple, 1549 NorNj Cotner boulevard;
entered apprentice degree.
Lancaster lodge No. 54, A. F. & A. M.,
7:30.
temple, 236 South Eleventh street;
entered apprentice degree, refreshments.
CHURCH CALENDAR.
Events Friday Evening.
First Christian, play. "Two Days to
Marry," under auspices of Cotner con-
ference club of church. 8.
First-Plymouth Congregational, Hi-En-
deavor party, 7:30.
Calvary
Evangelical,
Crescent
class
party.
Salem Evangelical, league social, 7:30.
Our Savior's Lutheran, young people,
7:30,
with Sam Peterson, 727 South 21st.
Elm Park Methodist. Senior league party
at Trinity church, 8.
Emmanuel Methodist,
young
people's
missionary meeting with Kev. and Mrs.
Williams. x417 B. 8.
Epworth
Methodist,
Father-daughter
banquet, 6:30.
Trinity Methodist, Campfire. 7:30, an-
nual suoirctr's party sponsored by high
school and forum; Methodist leagues of
Lincoln invited.
Second Presbyterian, dinner of Friendly
class. e:30.
Caldwell Memorial United Brethren, Ot-
terbeln guild, party. 7:30.
,
Klssrifcach
a
,
.«
"S«5-H?*a'-
DONALD SHARP
MUSICAL SUNDAY
Donald Sharp, piano student
with Mrs. Bertha Aydelott, has
issued thirty invitations to a mu-
sical
Sunday afternoon
at
3
o'clock, at the home of his par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sharp,
2015
Harrison street. Assisting
the young pianist will be Bobby
Foster who will sing to his own
accompaniment on the
ukelele,
and Mrs. Fay Foster, who will
give a group of songs, accom-
panied by Mrs. Aydelott.
LACOTERIE DINNER IN
HONOR OF HUSBANDS
Members of LaCoteric are en-
tertaining their husbands at the
annual dinner this evening at the
University club. Spring flowers
will be used on the table of thirty
covers. Court, whist is to be the
diversion of the evening. On the
committee in charge are Mcs-
dames Samuel Avcry, J. E. Le-
Rossignol, O. J. Ferguson, W. C.
Brenke, A. R. Congdon, V. L. Hoi-
lister, and J. E. Kirshman.
LORETTA THOMAS HAS
HI-LO BRIDGE CLUB
Members of the Hi-Lo bridge
club met Thursday evening at the
home of Miss Loretta Thomas,
4650 Calvert. Two tables were
arranged for cards at which high
score was made by Miss Theodosia
Johnson and the travel prize won
by Mrs.'L. E. Davis. The club will
meet in two weeks at the home of
Mrs. Davis, 3440 Anaheim drive.
CHAUTAUQUA
CIRCLE
WITH MRS. KREUSCHER
Alexandrian Chautauqua circle
met Thursday for a 1 o'clock
covered dish luncheon at the home
of Mrs. D. C. Kreuscher.
Mrs.
Everett Green led the study of
the book, "Art In America" and
the following papers were given,
"The Twelve Greatest Paintings,"
Mrs. L. W. Wilkins; and
"Glass
Making In America," Mrs. Green.
BIRTHDAY PARTY FOR
MARY LOU GRAHAM
Honoring the sixth birthday an-
niversary of her daughter Mary
Lou,
Mrs. Lloyd E. Graham, enter-
tained twenty-five guests at a
party
Friday -afternoon at her
home.
Games were played and
a valentine motif was carried out
when refreshments were served.
ALPHA DELTA THETA
LUNCHEON
SATURDAY
Nu chapter of Alpha Delta Theta
meets for luncheon at 1 o'clock
Saturday at Suydam's. Mrs. Erma
Smith Loeder, formerly of Grand
Island, is a recently affiliated
member.
THEATER PARTY FOR
MISS IRENE FUSS
Honoring Miss Irene Fuss who
is leaving Saturday for Colorado,
Miss Clara Kahm and Miss Martha
Worster, entertained at a theater
party Friday afternoon.
BRIDGE CLUB WITH
MR. AND MRS. BUTTON
The
T. N. bridge club met
Thursday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Everett Sutton, 1620 Arap-
ahoe street. There
were
three
tables of players and
refresh-
ments were served at the close of
the games.
PERSONALS.
Mrs.
W. C. Condit, 1336 Garficld
street, has been ill with influenza
for the last two weeks at
her
home.
Mr., and Mrs. M. V. Beghtol.
2500 South street, announce the
birth of a daughter, Friday, at
Lincoln General hospijtal.
More new Nelly Dons to greet
the spring. Just try one on at Ben
Simon & Sons.—Adv.
MOTOR PLANT
CONDITIONS HIT
WASHINGTON, Feb.
An NRA report criticizing labor
conditions In the automobile in-
dustry dropped today
into' the
midst of the controversy over the
auto code renewal.
It said the speed-up had raised
"production demands beyond hu-
man capability to produce day
after day," that spies keep watch
on workers "day and night" and
that men are virtually forced to
quit work at the age of 40.
"Labor unrest exists to a high-
er degree than warranted by the
depression," the report prepared
by the blue eagle research
and
planning division said. "The un-
rest flows
from
insecurity, low
annual earnings, inequitable hir-
ing and
rehiring
methods, es-
pionage, speed-up, and displace-
ment of workers at an extremely
early age."
Ordered by Roosevelt.
The investigation was made at
the direction of President Roose-
velt. The president, in extend-
ing the automobile code until
June 16, overruled NRA sugges-
tions on working hours and a la-
bor board. He approved one de-
signed to spread work.
The long awaited report, signed
by Leon Henderson, recommend-
ed a maximum 40-hour week,
with a 48-hour maximum permit-
ted for not more than eight weeks
in a year, and time-and-a half
pay for all work' over 40 hours.
The code, as amended and ex-
tended by the president, provides
for time and a half for all work
over 48 hours.
It retains the
clause saying the work week shall
average no more than 40 hours
through the year.
The national industrial recov-
ery board, in a letter transmit-
ting the report, recommended a
more comprehensive labor board
than the present one headed by
Dr. Leo Wolman. The president
continued the present board.
TO CLEANER
MOTORS!
SHELLY ADDS K'27
PASSWORD
C O U P O M
FREE-
Tear out this coupon, uke I*
to your Skclly station—«nd re-
ceive, without cost, your copy
of Jtmmie Allen's Air Battles.
If there is no Skellr station in
yonr city, do this: Write yonzr
name and address below.'Writ«
in the name of the serrice stab-
lion JOD patronize. Also write
the name of the gasoline you
bay. Mail it to Jimmie Allenu
c/o Skclly Oil Company.Kan
City. Mo. The game will
mailed promptly.
Lincoln Journal-Star
Serriee Static
JVo>M r/f
Now—let Skefly Aromax with K-27
added, double your mileage between
valve grind jobs and giv« your motor
neta car pep every mile of the way.
Skelly bag solved another big problem
that has long plagued the refining indus-
try. Skelly has discovered a solvent which
keeps the bad actors of gasoline in solu-
tion and compel* them to pats harmlessly
out the exhaust.
lour Carburetor Is Not Guilty
Don't blame the carburetor when symp-
toms of "engine weariness" develop. Serv-
ice managers for ear dealers say that in
9 out of 10 cases of "slow start", '•flood-
ing", "miss fires", and "gas eating" the
main villains are warty carbon deposits
on piston domes and valves. These de-
posits prevent vital engine parts from
doing their duty in correct rhythm—and
cause power leaks.
K-27 Lick* the ViOauu
!°±1(4BOM4X
Tgi"c*f*
M"BB>
and carbon—nsre been convicted as
motor fooler*, valve stickers, mileage
rottbers^nd repair bill makers. Skelly
Tailor-Making minimized their
dirty •work —bat no refining
process could eliminate them-
For several years, Skefly refinery engi-
neers have been developing a solvent to
render the villains harmless. Final result
of their work was the discovery of a sot
vent with a Kauributanol value (gum-sol-
vent ability) of 27—called by[them—K-27.
Tested for many thousands of miles in
fleets of cars, trucks and buses, Solvent
K-27 has positively proved that it makes
Tailor-Made Aromax:
—a gasoline that doubles the mileage
between the need for engine overhauls;
—a gasoline that reduces starting drag
and does away with the formation of
flinty, power-wasting carbon warts on
valve seats.
Use Thi* Exclusive Shetfy Product
]Vo other gasoline contains K-27—to
keep your motor clean and assure you
even faster starting than Tailor-Made
Skelly Aromax alone. Skelly has solved
another big gasoline problem—to give
yon another exclusive advantage without
increasing the price. Drive to your Skelly
elation today.
Only in Skelly Aromax and Aromax
Ethyl do yon get these two advantages at
no extra cost: Tailor-Making, and Solvent
K-27.
Begin enjoying them today.
414B
SKEL1T
AROMAX
GASOLINE
ON YOUR RAWCH.
?ttnrai* ABon » * Daring.
N«w Ait A
KVOO. TtO« ---- 5^45
WTMF. K«n miCfcr fc'S
KMOX,5t-LCTri«
.
.
WKY.OU».CitT..««00 WGN.CMoeo . . - 6OO
KTH. Widritt --- . ffcOO KFBI. AKJ«.fc.K»n»-S:4S
WOCO.MhmwotofwPO KGNF. North PUttr.
WHO, Dei Mohw*. fcU Net*. . . . . 8:15 m.m.
TAILOR-MADE FOR FEBRUARY IN NEBRASKA
-at Hardy's
CLEARANCE
of RADIOS
The Radios in This Sale Are All Current Models
Floor Samples! /Vo Reverts! All A'eio Sets!
The KENILWORTH model—Five tube "DUAL-
WAVE" superheterodyne, 8 inch electro dynam-
ic speaker. Beautiful console cabinet. Brings in
American and Foreign Stations.
$
2 Only $57.50 Stewart Warners
45
1 Only $65 Crosley Low Boy
American and Foreign six tube superhetero- £
• ,~ _
dyne. Two double purpose tubes, Automatic JS A i 150
volume control, Fuil-floating moving coil elec-
*•*( ~y
tro dynamic speaker.
"
| ^
1 Only Grunow $79*50 Console
All-wave true ALL
WAVE console receiver
with six tubes. Gets all American broadcasts,
foreign, short-wave, police and aeroplane. Wal-
nut Heppelwhite Cabinet.
$6950
2 Only Philco $89.50 Console
American and Foreign 8 tube receiver with . ^^ ^.
shadow tuning. Oversize speaker, 4 point tone c
Potatoc*. 100 Ib. b*f
J1.S9
Peart Hominy, -I Ibs. ...
. ;5c
Floor, 48 Ibs
(1.38
Sugar, S5 Ib. doth b»c
H.23
Sugar, • Ibs
.' 47c
Prnnw. ZS Ib. DOJC
11.59
Conntty Lard, « Ib. cans, Ib
19e
Haddock, per Ib
16c
Boneku Fbh, per Ib
l»c
FUlet of WhJHoK. Ib
T8c
Frei* Orvtcn, pint
S5c
Hamburger, made from rrr-«h
meat. Ib
10c
No cold storace meat used IB
our Hamburger.
Bt«f Boost, per Ib
]4c
Ijunb Boast, per Ib
14c
I-amb stew, Ib
lOc
'Salad IlrcMlng, quart
55c
Browti Susnr. 4 |b«
±5c
Teaches. No. 10 can.
.....
45c
Koral Gelatin. 3 pkc«
19c
MILADY COFFEE
FREE Measuring Spoon ana
Reseal
A 1-lb.
with
..........
A cans
GRAND GROCERY CO.
1000 P St.
It's the business side of motion
pictures that
appeals to Alice
Jane Perry, member if a wealthy
Texas
family, who gave up a
social career to become a •ward-
robe girl in a Hollywood studio.
(A. P. Photo).
Farm Notes
ON SEED CORN.
AMES,"la-—"Don't buy merely
'good looking' seed corn, without
knowing its adaptation, make sure
that it is a strain suited to your
area," Prof H. D. Hughes of Iowa
State
college, today cautioned
Iowa farmers. Varieties of corn,
for instance, adapted to the length
of day in northern Iowa, if plant-
ed in the southern part of the
state, will yield materially less,
said Professor Hughes.
TERRACING.
WASHINGTON — If
farmers
will see to it that terrace lines are
properly laid out and terraces
constructed to x proper height and
base, little work will be required
each year to maintain and to keep
them in good shape, says C. E.
Ramser, of the U. S. Bureau of
Agricultural Engineering. Fann-
ers who carefully maintain their
terraced areas annually receive
the greatest returns on the invest-
ment.
EROSION HINT.
MANHATTAN, Kas.—The best
time to stop soil blowing is before
it starts, observes H. E. Myers,
Kansas State college agronomist
He recommends a cloddy surface
as being the best protection for
areas free of vegetation and points
out that such a surface can be ob-
tained by the use of a shovel type
cultivator, such as the lister or
duck foot type.
SEED
CATALOG
Tour copy of our
1935 Seed Catalog is read v
for you. Get it HOTV and
begin to plan your sprine
garden.
You will -want to 1iy
some of the new, improve.}
varielies of rccclaWe and
flo-wer seeds that we list,
Phone or write us and
TTfl Trill gladly mail yo«r
catalog to yon.
NEW WRINKLE.
FORT COLLINS, Colo.—Fann-
ers in about 20 counties of the
state wiU test this summer the
commercial possibilities of what
may prove to be a new agricul-
tural industry in Colorado. Al-
ready 21 growers in 14 counties
have planned to grow trial plant-
ings of pyrethrum. the flowers of
i which are valuable sources of
| pyrethrins.
the
insect-killing
agents in sprays and dusts that are
non-poisonous to human beings.
Pyrethrum is a white daisy, which
is related to the '-painted daisy''
commonly found in flower gar-
dens.
SMtT TREATMENT.
MANHATTAN. Kas.—Oat and
barley seeds may be treated with
cercsan for smut control at a cost
as low as 3 cents a bushel, labor
included." says E. H Leker, Kan-
sas Slate college crop disease spe-
cialist. He says that for best re-
sults the ceresan dust should be
applied to the grain with a good
rnixcr. Trcatmc/it is especially " --
sirablc for seed of unknown origin.
Opposes AAA Plans.
WASHINGTON— (AP)— Oppo-
sition to plans of Secretary Wal-
lace to retire 100 million acres of
farm land from production was
expressed to the senate agricul-
ture com-nntee by a Xcw York
economist
"What arc joii goin^ lo do with
Ihe people on those lands'1" di-
mandcri B. M. An da-son. Jr.. of
the Chase National Bark
He ureed an expansion of for-
cicn trade, proposing that it be
brought about by lowerim: the
tariff and stabilizes currfncv on
Lancaster County
Application Dates
On Corn-Hog Contract
The schedule for application
writing on Lancaster county corn-
hog contracts has been announced
by Dale E. Weese, assistant county
administrator of the plan, as fol-.
lows:
Monday. Feb. 11- West Oak.
Agnew
schnol; Hock C eek Davey h»ll Tuesday-
Little Sail. Wier's hall, Raymond. Mill,
Huschmson house, Sec
27; Centerville,
Sprague Wednesday Elk. Malcolm. North
Bluff, Frank Hanson's
home,
Saltlllo.
Hickman school Thursday Oak. Raymond,
Waverly, Waverly school, Nemaha. Bennet.
Pr'day. Middle Creek. Emerald school:
Oli"e Branch. Kramer hall; Lancaster,
place not picked. Saturday:
Highland,
Dist. 123 s-'hool Monday. Feb
18 Gar-
field & West Lincoln court house. Ste-
vens Creek. Parairie Home church; Buda.
place not decided. Tuesday Denton, place
not picked. Grant Cheney garage; South
Pass Firth hall Wednesday Yankee Hill
Rokeby hall. Stockton, Dis. 24 school,
Panama, place* not picked
On Weed Control
A M E S , la. — Nine specific
changes in Iowa's present weed
and seed laws were included
among
the
seven
resolutions
passed at the State Weed and Seed
conference at Iowa State college.
Under the resolution "That the
state legislature be requested to
modify our present weed and seed
laws to meet changed conditions,"
the group suggested:
1. Classification of noxious weeds in the
weed law into primary »nd secondary
classes.
2. Adoption of a county weed com-
missioner plan under a itatewlde plan to
include a state supervisor of the weed law
as a substitute for the township commis-
sioner plan.
3. Destruction of all primary noxious
weeds on nubile highways and railroad
righU-of-way and the immediate proper-
ties adjoining when such elimination is
ordered by the state need supervisor.
4. Owners or operators of lands har-
boring primary noxious weeds should be
required to adopt a long time program
which will prevent weed seed production
and result In the destruction of said
weeds.
6. Compulsory cleaning of threshing
machines before moving from a farm in-
fested with primary noxious weeds which
were present in the field from which the
grala was threshed.
6
Appointment of the chief of the bot-
any and plant pathology section of Iowa
State college as state botanist to be a
member of the stafi of the state depart-
ment of agriculture.
7. Give the state secretary of agricul-
ture authority to declare any new weed
noxious when recommended by the state
botanist.
3. Require prompt destruction of areas
of new noxious seeds, the cost to be
borne by the county.
9. Require all seed* sold as seed to be
subject to the reauirements of the state
la*.
Uncover Numerous
Caches Of Old Hay
In Webster County
RED CLOUD, Neb., Feb. 8—
The general shortage of feed this
year is no doubt responsible for
the caches of old hay being found
in the Salem locality south of
here: In more plentiful years hay
which had been stored for years
remained unnoticed but not so
now.
Starting a week or so ago with
hay 23 years old in Lew Aubushon
barn, the record was next claimed
by Charlie Shackleton with feed
26 years old and he in turn has
been bested by George Shipley
who has about two tons of hay on
hand which was put in his barn
when it was built 32 years ago.
In spite of its age it is still un-
sable.
With the coming of snow after
an unusually bad fire season, the
Montana regional forestry service
spent $100,000 to recondition fire
fighting equipment.
Choice Corn Fed Beef
Hickory Smoked Beef Tongues, Ib... 25 c
Sirloin Sleak, Ib. ...'
33c
Rump Roast, ;b
2Sc
Choice O\en Roast, Ib
20c
Prime Bibs ol Beef, Ib
3»e
Short Ribs of Beef,.lb
9e
FRESH DKJSSbED POCT.TRY.
Choice Hens to Bake, Ib
, ....?5c
Choice Tnrkcjs. Ib
Ste
Large Baking Chickens, Ib
TSc
Veal Shoulder Roast, Ib
20c
Veal Bump Boast, Ib
25c
Ix>in or Bib Chops, Ib
2gc
Breast of Veal, Ib
15e
f'alf Llvi-r, Ib
45e
GENUINE SPRING I.4SIB. ,
Leg 0'l.nmb, Ib.
.
.. .30c
lamb Shoulder Roasts, Ib
23c
Lamb Chops, Ib
27c
Choice Fresh fonrnei, Ib
19c
Try Our Wonder Sausage.
After the First Taste
You Wonder Why You Didn't Try It Sooner.
Pare Pork Balk gansage, Ib
tic
Salt and Pepper Sausage, Ib
Z5e
Country St>Ie Hickory Smoke
Fla>or Sausage, 2 Ibs
SSe
Foliih Style, S Ib»
SSe
Milk gatuace, Small Link, Ib
SOc
Home Made Chill, Brick
23c
Barbecued Ribs, Ib
33c
Barbecued Pork, Ib
SOc
Barbecued Beef, Ib
45c
SOLID PACK FRESH OYSTERS.
Standards, qt. 55c; Selects, qt. 75c; Counts, qt. SOc.
Exclusive Meat,
li*-|/«*
IMA
FISH, poultry
marKei, inc.
Heitkotter's
140 So. 11th
CREDIT AND DELIVERY
83348
URGE FARMERS
TO TREAT SEED
Danger Of Infestation
By Smut Described
As Menacing.
Nebraska Agricultural college
agronomists warned that smut in-
festation may prove to be a
"grave danger" to small grain
crops next summer because of the
importation of large supplies of
seed into the state. The need for
treating is imperative, they say.
Amos Gramlich, Sarpy county
farmer, has been placed in tem-
porary charge of a smut-treating
campaign now starting in the
state.
Elevators, county farm
bureaus, farmers and civic organ-
izations are being asked to co-
operate.
Gramlich reported
that for-
maldehyde still is a satisfactory
method of treating oats. A mer-
cury compound is preferred for
barley, however, he said. Wheat
treatments
with either
copper
carbonate or mercury compounds
were suggested
DROPS ALIENATION SUIT.
YORK, Neb., Feb. 8—(AP) —
The $20,000 alienation of affec-
tions suit filed in District court
here recently
by «Mrs. Mabel
Kniess
against Mrs. Margaret
Richards and Mrs. Elsie Brown,
was dismissed without prejudice.
Better not make machines to do
everything. Natives
of
Africa
don't have to work, and look at
'em.
The Right Answer.
L U B B O C K , Tex. — The
weather on the plains has
been dry.
Lawyers were questioning
venircmen in a murder trial
and John R. Murrcll of Shal-
lowwater was asked his occu-
pation.
"If
H'd
rain,
I'd
be
a
farmer," was the reply.
They stopped court
pro-
ceedings for a while.
Ask $2,500,000 For
Chinch Bug Control
Members Of Farm Bloc Declare
Infestation To Be More
Serious This Year.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 8—(AP)
—A congressional appropriation of
$2,500,000 for control of chinch
bugs in the middle west was
sought today by a committee of
the prairie state bloc in the house.
Congress appropriated $1,000,-
000 for this purpose last year, but
house members of the states in-
vaded by the pests contend
the
additional sum is needed because
of expanding area of infestation
caused by the drouth.
Representative Gillett (D.-Ia.)
chairman of the prairie state's
farm bloc, called a meeting for
Saturday morning of the 14 states
now interested in the movement,
to hear reports from the various
sub-committees.
It will be the first
general
meeting of the farm bloc since it
organized.
TWO PLEAD NOT GUILTY
TO IOWA BANK ROBBERY
SIDNEY, la., Feb.
8—(ff)—Theo-
dore Hodgins and Wayne Jen-
Lincoln & Market
2207 0 STREETlgy 1207 O STREET
ITS FOOLISH TO PAY MORI-RISKY TO PAY LESS
Stewing Hens
Choice Young
Ib.
PORK SAUSAGE.
Country style.
Pound
MINCED HAM.
3r«t qual- •*<•!/ gt
ity, choice, tender.
Pound »f> /3t»
PIG LIVERS.
Machine sliced.
Pound
18*
IOC
CORN.
Standard .
quality. No. 2 can ____ y for
MATCHES. Quality strikers.
6 Box Carton
..........
LIBBY'S PORK & BEANS.
Can
—^
5*
Grapefruit Meats
No. 2 Cans. Specially
Priced
10
Nebia Peaches
Delicious
fruit
in
heavy
syrup. Large 2% cans,
nnced at
16
BREAD.
Freshly
~
9Oi£
baked. 16 ounce loaves 9 for AW^C
BUTTER. "Sunrise" fancy
creamery.
Pound
BLUE BARREL
L. Large <•.,*
SOAP
O
Bars 255^5
MACKEREL. The tall .•»
1 Lb. cans
* for
CORNED BEEF.
Wilson's
quality 12 Oz. tins
POPCORN. Jap Hull- 9
ttt or Dynamite .... Albs,
Cauliflower
Fancy Snowball Heads.
1 Lb.
CRISCO
The 3 Lb. Can
Roya! GELATIN.
All flavors
.
POTATOES.
Idaho Russets.
Fine for baking. Peck
.
APPLES. Crisp, juicy
—
Winesaps
...........
5 '"*-
GRAPEFRUIT.
Texas seedless, full
of juice,
•_
96 size
.............
7 for
FREE.
Cake Lava Soap
Wlth larae pka Oxyd01 —
MILADY COFFEE
FREE
Measuring
Spoon and
Reseal with
Cans
J.
„. both of St. Joseph, charged i taken from them and three pcrs-
with robbery of the Iowa State ons identified Hodgins as the man
bank at Hamburg, la., Wednesday,
pleaded not guilty before District
Judge H. J. Mantz today.
They
were arrested near Watson, Mo.
several hours after the Hamburg
robbery. A sum of money was
who entered the bank and after
getting nearly $1,700 fled to a car
in which his companion waited.
Visit Gold's new prescription de-
partment.—Adv.
QudgeavGuenzel Co
Basement Groceryteria
Bahery
Banana
•*«**
Layer Cake. 33?
Spiced Cup
Cakes, doz..
Crispy Crust
Doughnuts,
doz. . . .
Honey Top
Coffee
Cakes.
ea
.......
Cinnamon
Rolls, doz...
Spec. A s s o r t e d
Cookies,
4 A**
doz. . . . IOC
Hearth Bread,-
•white or
whole -nheat
Sugar
Granulated.
10 «».
Softosilfc
F1our
Tomatoes
3
Jumbo
Oranges
100 size California
N a v e l 9A0
oranges, doz. y~r
Basement and
Street Floor
"GRAPEFRUIT1
per
vte
Doz. ......
^ f ,
CAULIFLOWER
The
Qg
Pound
*r
ROME BEAUTY
APPLES
Fancy,
tC&
6 Ibs
•*»T
Basket
. ... S1-89
LETTUCE
Large
headPOTATOES
Idaho
Busset. pe...
.
100 Ib bag 1.43
DELICIOUS
APPLES
The
HO^
Dozen ... . J~T
NEW CABBAGE
4*
NEW POTATOES
5 Pounds.. 25*
CARROTS
Bunch ..
MUSHROOMS
Pound
box
BANANAS
Dozen
from
Meats
Choice Beef
Tenderloin.
Ib
Steaks,
cut
shoulder of
Jamb, Jb. ..
Center
cut
Pork
Chops,
22 £
ib
***•
Finest Quality Beef
Rib Steaks, 24*
Swift's
Sliced
Dried Beef. 4 fc A
half Ib. pkp.*wT
R
&
G
Special
Sliced
«4 *
Bacon, lb...3*r
Egg*
Country
fresh, do
Salada Tea
Half Pound
Package Green
or Black
.
Crisco
3
Pound
Tin
Meadow Gold
Cheese
2 Half Lb.
Pkgs
M. J. B. Coffee
2 Pound Tin of
D e I I c i o u sly
Fresh Coffee ..
Royal
Gelatin
Desserts
5 for
5S:.
Pineapple
Hillsdale B r o k en
Slice
Pink Salmon
Pound
Can ..
Cocoa
Our Mothers
2LCan
18C
Salad Dressing
Blackbird
Quarts
Tomato Juice
Pean
Pumpkin
No- 21*
cans . . .
Libby's
Sliced Pineapple
n 2* ..19*
Pancake Flour
*#... 15*
Rlnio
Large
Pkg
Blue Barrel Soap
lObars
39*
Lighthouse
Clean-
ser
3 Cans .... 9*
P. H G. Soap
lOroT 29*
Fell Naptha
10SS 48*
FEEE—Bar Lava Soap with.
Large Pkg-. OXYDOL
22C
BUTTERNUT
COFFEE
2
Pound
£,Aj*
Tin for
DOC
FOLGER'S
COFFEE
61C
PEACHES
Packed in
heavy
syrup.
No. 2^4 can
CORN
No. 2 can
Stand, qual.
CRACKERS
17*
Near Gallon
Fruits
Peaches . . . 41*
Prunes ____ i1**^
Apricots . . . 47*
Black
Raspberries
6
MATCHES
Box
Carton....
PEAS
No. 2 cans
Blackbird ..
MALTED MILK
Thompson's, - Lb .
Ireff.
39*
Milady, Coffeesk
1*1
v£•t^ cq]
*0
toll**
10
33
ACTUAL SIZE
went to<&S*irioS devfc*-
tese»v
tJve ^
for
-t'S- -±
Cotf*56
^T"
rrtZ® tJie
^X>>*
ONE POUND NET
tWrt? !fc0o6
{ea1
•i-a ^*«*.i*wa:**. «**2
.v^Z*0**'
Aor
XTLAXDER FOUND DEAD.
KANSAS CITY, Fcb P.— *v-
, Robert A. Nylandcr. 48. mercan-
1ilo companv salc-.'itcu~) -vi-ou-nd in the
basement of his home Tnurjcia;.
Th,-1 sholcuT; ->-a< nearby. Mrs X>-
land^r ^jd h" had bctn 3]] T^r s
year. His parents. Mr. and Mrs
H»J-I« Nyknder. three brothers am3
a sister, a]] ]3Ve at HoWr»r<«
ih 2 POUNDS of
-'/FT-vac
"-'" OK, « « r
if iS« !MS> cicpeniwr Hrtn ef tfir meal. WKa> c£Ke- food costing 35 f can you
tvrrt «rvery «•*»> for a «-e«1t ? Why try to »»»» * few celt* pci **f*& fcy Vaymj "i*rga5n
co*fc«" «"d "tl spotting yotn ol1»rT«»w* good mr»U TS* Jrnh, Hc?>, smeei^i fU*er of
MILADY Coffer roikfi «^rty «ne»1 merrt *njey«U«. Oriff
hmm jout f rocvr «•• an4 yr)
D-48
AH
During
February
AT YOUR
GROCERS
THE L I N C O L N STAR— FRIDAY, F E B R U A R Y 8,
1935
N I N E
The Star Grocery Section-Economy and Security Welcome Buyers
SYNOPSIS: Todav Morttana, El
Kccd to the Mexicans, is t-o marry
Ruth Lavery, the daughter of a
wealthy rancher, after s e v e r a l
postponements for which he is to
blame.
Now Matco Rubriz, the
quixotic bandit, has faked a chal-
lenge by Jack Lascar, in -«jrder to
put Montana afoul the law and
secure his help in recovering- the
emerald crown of Our Ladl^, stolen
from the church by the sovernor
of Mateo's province. Montana de-
cides to answer the challenge, in
spite of the insult to Rut*.
Sails for Orient
Chapter Eight.
PARTING.
''I've got the call that a. man has
to answer, Ruth," Montana said.
She only stared at him.
Her
lips were parted a littl-e. _She
looked older; she seemed to be
squinting at a bright, distant light.
The future, as like as not. IMontana
tried to feel sorry, but couldn't.
Richard Lavery did the speak-
ing. He said: "This will fc»e about
all, my lad. My girl has
put up
with a good bit. You'll. forget
about Jack Lascar here sund now,
or else you'd better forget about
Ruth."
Montana dismounted. Trie "wild"
mare started to follow him- up the
steps, but shrank away from these
strangers. Her master stocd over
Ruth.*
"He's speaking for you,
I sup-
pose?" said Montana. But she only
kept on staring. One could, not say
whether there was more 3>ain or
fear in her eyes.
"It appears that I am sneaking
for her," said Lavery. "W"« know
what we owe to you, but tJhere's a
future as well as a past to think
of."
"Wait a minute," said MContana.
"You can only talk for yourself.
Say something, Ruth!"
"I can't," she answered. "If I
try to talk — I'll only be weeping."
"People cry about things that
are gone, finished. Am I finished
as far as you're concerned?' "'
She shook her head.
"I gave you a promise afc>out the
riding of the mare, and
then I
broke
it. Does that maJke you
feel that you can never trust me?"
"Do you trust yourself?" she
asked.
This struck him very ha.rd, ap-
parently. He began to reason on
her side: "It's our wedding day —
and I ride off — I'll always be rid-
ing off. Is that what you feel?"
She was silent.
"I know," concluded Mlontana.
"I can see it. What's left in you
is mostly fear."
"I want to be braver and big-
ger," said the girl, "but
I can't
help it. Why are you this way?"
"Because the devil got into me
between breaths, I suppose," said
Montana. "You won't believe how
rny heart's aching for yoTi now
You seem to me everything that's
right and beautiful. If I go away,
the best half of the world will be
behind me. But I can't stay and
be the happy cat by the fire. RuTh,
I'm going away . . . No matter
what happens today, there's no
coming back, for me."
He took her suddenly
in his
arms.
The tears began
to run
down her face, but she said, very
gently: "I'm not pitying
myself.
It's for you! I think Gcx3 pities
you,
too — and loves you."
She lifted her face and rae kissed
her.
Then' he turned to Lavery and
shook hands. "I was hating you a
minute ago — but you're rieht " he
said.
''There'll be another chajice for
me to show you that I'll ne-ver for-
get you," said Lavery. "T-f you'll
still listen to me, I'll still foeg you
He checked himself. His un-
spoken words filled a
beating
moment of silence,
and
then
Montana was walking "jauntily
down the steps and waving his
hand.
''So long, everyone," he called
Afterwards,, as he sat ±3ie sad-
dle, lie heard Ruth cryinar "But
he'll be killed! Father, he~s going
to be — "
D i s r e garding
court
action
started by her former husband,
Harry Bannister, to regain cus-
tody of their 6-year-old daugh-
ter, Ann Harding, blond screen
star, sailed for the Orient.
She
is shown as she left San Fran-
cisco. (A.P. Photo).
memory of that other defeat, that
public shaming, had driven Jack
Lascar into i a frenzy at last, until
death was better than a life m
which men smiled behind his
back?
A freckled-faced boy ran out
from a yard and at the side of
Montana: "Are you gunna do it,
Montana?" he shrilled. "Are you
gunna kill him?
The sheriff'll
chase you if you pull a gun in
this town! Don't get yourself
chased away from us, Montana.
Everybody knows you licked Las-
car once. Everybody knows you
ain't Afraid1"
"Things will be all right, thanks
brother," said the Kid.
The boy, panting, drew off to
the side, shaking his head; and
then settled down into a steady
dog-trot to get to the appointed
place of the meeting.
Then Montana saw Hi Bailey's
blacksmith shop in the distance,
thin blue wisps of smoke leaking
out through the big, open doors of
the place. No horses were tethered
in front of it, waiting their turn
to be shod. Instead, the string
was hitched on the near side of
the place.
Well, if bullets were to
fly,
horse-flesh is as penetrable as the
bodies of men, but the Kid knew
himself and he knew Jack Lascar.
There would be no wild shots in
this fight!
No wonder the rest of the town
had seemed deserted. All the life
of it was concentrated here. The
windows,
the
doorways,
were
filled, and people stood at the cor-
ners of the houses. A dull mur-
mur rose, swelled into ""a many-
voice. The women and
gave the shrill to the
throated
children
sound.
The Kid looked down and saw
that he was white with dust. He
had stuffed the trousers into the
tops of his boots and dust was
thick in the folds beneath the
knee.
Then he saw a slender figure
walk slowly out from under an
awning and step into the street
with feet that lifted high, as
though this man did not wish to
kick the dust up over the polish
of his boots.
That was Jack Lascar. His
bright Mexican jacket
flashed
dazzling in the sun.
"I'll put a red spot on that
jacket," said Montana softly.
He dismounted. The mare fol-
lowed him, shying a bit from side
to side as she kept seeing fresh
crowds of humans on either side
of the street.
Lascar stood in the exact cen-
ter of the street, with his hands
on his hips. If he had more light
on the face, he would try his shot
for the head. Well, he might try
for the head, anyway. The bright
buckle of the hat-belt would be a
neat target—neat and small. And
the rather bad chances of Jack
Lascar would be evened a little.
Some one yelled: "Hurry it up!
Hurry it up! The sheriff's comin',
hell bent!"
Then out of the distance Mon-
tana could hear the small beating
of hoofs.
Jack Lascar had turned side-
of Schilling Mustard.
It's so strong
and full of flavor,.—,,
Schilling
A Schllllnt ACoB*«ity—$••
wise. He was not fool enough to
offer the full breadth of his body
to an em-my. He forgot thai this
turn brought the buckle of the
hat-belt into fuller view.
They were twenty paces apart.
"How
does this suit you, Jack!"
asked Montana.
Lascar's whole body jerked with
the violence of his words. He
barked his curses like a dog. Any
distance suited him. Ten paces
would be better.
The Kid smiled and walked
straight on.
(Copyright. 1935. Harper & Brotherj)
Wyoming: Will Join
National Park Move
CHEYENNE, Wyo., Feb. 8—
(AP)— Following a conference
with a delegation from western
Nebraska, Gov, Leslie A. Miller
announced the appointment of a
commission of 13 to be known as
the old Fort
Larmie
national
parks area commission. The group
will confer with a similar com-
mission appointed by the gover-
nor of Nebraska in working out
proposed national legislation to
establish an Oregon and Mormon
trails national parks area in the
North Platte valley of Wyoming
and Nebraska. The project will
include restoring and preserving
old Fort Laramie as a national
monument.
Boy Scouts Of
U. S. Observing
25th Birthday
NEW YORK, Feb. 8—(AP)—
Today is the 25thvanniversary of
the founding of the Boy Scouts
of America and in honor of the
occasion President Roosevelt will
address the nation from the white
house tonight.
The president
will be intio-
duced at 7:45 p. m., (Lincoln
Time) by Walter \V. Head, presi-
dent of the national organization,
who
will speak from St. Louis
where 10.000 scouts, will gather in
a silver jubilee circus. After the
president is finished. Dr. James
E. "West, chief scout executive,
will lead 1,000,000 hcouts in
a
radio recitation of the scout oath.
Tiic Boy Scout movement, orig-
inated in Great Britain, was in-
troduced in the United States by
the late William D. Boyce of Chi-
cago. In the 25 years of its cxii-t-
cncc 6,425,511 boys
have
been
members. Its present active mem-
bership is 1,004,266.
Woman Is Sentenced
To Year For Arson
FAIRBURY. Neb., Feb. 8—(AP)
—Mrs. Irene Young of Fairbury
was sentenced by District Judge
Messmore to one year in the wo-
man's reformatory at York after
pleading guilty Thursday to an
arson charge. She admitted start-
ing a fire in a clothes closet at the
farm home ot Joe Morrison, for
v, horn she was housekeeper.
Don't miss seeing the Frigidaircs
at Gold & Co.—Adv.
Rehlaender prescriptions now
on file at Gold's.—Adv.
WAKE UP
to the most
delicious
HOT
I
CAKES
you ever
tasted f
j
SOME LIKE IT HOT!
HOT or cold, Shredded Wheat keeps you
glowing with health and brimming with energy. But
try it this way on cold mornings: Dip biscuits into hot
water, drain thoroughly, and serve with milk and fruits.
SHREDDED WHEAT
NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY "Unetda Bator*
^
sudden beating of tfae hoofs
ox tac red mare drowned out that
coniplairt. As he ccme to -£he turn
of the road, he felt an invisible
hanu tu;£,ng at his shoulder and
therefore he turned into talc sad-
dle and rode Cut of view -with his
hat waving over his head.
A'o-.v he let the red mare race to
get through the pass between the
hill;.
pointing
towards
far-off
Bcntonville.
After that
he felt
that ne had slipped the fciand of
tnc p^st from his shoulder
He be-
gan to laugh like a child. He had
not r?al:zod how he had dreaded
druc.c hcrncss until
r==
-A-ss
stcrtcd on the empty trail -again!
H was ten-twenty by hus watch
ivn;n he headed into
street of Bcnlonville.
cut.:-.g the lime a bit short, per-
haps. but he did not want to burn
up the strength of Sal3y -cvith too
hard a run. For. supposing that
fcc me.. Lascar and survi-vcd the
fight with him, he might mc-d all
the speed that was :n thsc marc
jmmcdiately.
Gun-fights were barred an Bcn-
tonviljc. A message had tx=rn sent
to the sheriff, who ivas T-vrobablv
runninc a horse at a dcac3 callop
to get back to the town m time to
prevent this duel And ttisrt same
sheriff,
solemnly, with
careful
words, had warned Montana that
a sinclc flash of a sun in Jsis hand
would be enough to land him in
J33i»
It t\as curif-us. in a ivsay. that
Jack Lascar should have- called I
for a shew-down— public show- '
down. Because there ivas nothing
public abou^ the character- or the
past of J^ck. He loved -twilight
and twilight ways like a ctal,
There -R as some mys1cr>- bchma ]
this challenge — or was ji"tLhai the I
ACCEPT FROM YOUR DEALER PLEASE
THIS CAKE OF LAVA SOAP
With The Purchase of One (1) 25* Size Package of
OXYDOL
The New $1,000,000 Laundry
Soap
Invention That Soaks Out Dirt From
Clothes In 15 Minutes-And Does It Safely!
DEALERS' STOCKS STRICTLY LIMITED-ACT NOW BEFORE TOO LATE!
•
See your dealer at once! Buy one 251 size
package of Oxydol and he will give you abso-
lutely free one cake of Lava Soap. Don't delay I
OFFER MADE SOLELY TO INDUCE WOMEN
TO MORE QUICKLY TRY THE NEW AND
IMPROVED OXYDOL—PROCTER & GAMBLE'S
AMAZING NEW LAUNDRY SOAP INVENTION! I^=I^=^==I
LAVA BRINGS YOU
FASTEST, SAFE WAY TO GET "DIRTY
DIRT" AND STAINS OFF HANDS
—'
LAVA
GETS
GRIMY HANDS CLEAN
FAST AND HELPS
PREVENT^
INFECTION,
TOO.
Men who get their Iwnds grimy
have no ttsc for ordinary soaps
that get only the surface dirt.
They insist on Lara—1hc soap
(hat gels efl 1hc dirt fast.
Jusl as quickly as it deans dirty
hands, -this amazing soap cuts
proip frotn pots and psns, Drinit-
ins; sbninc lustre to shks, ba£h
•n-ash basins, and wood-
trorkj performs scores of oti>cr
cleaning tasks quickly and safely.
Thousands of mothers o«« Lava
to wash their children's dirty
W hands and fcaacs, for Lava helps
i \pivvCTt infection. Tests show
thai AS a preventive against many
common bacteria such as those
ca.'usini: IfiAnas, meningitis, sad
othw deadly diseases, Lav* is
severs! limes more effective than
carbolic »nd.
with purchase of large (25c aize)
package of Ornx>u
OXYDOL BRINGS YOU
SCIENCES FASTEST SAFE WAY TO
GET "DIRTY DIRT" OUT OF CLOTHES
15 minutes to soak oat dirt from
clothes — safely! No -wonder
OXTDOI. is called "the miracle
soap of m odern science." Because
it not only ends Jhe drudgery of
wrabbing and boiling, rwat abo
•works faster than even the fa.=(-
csrt-irashing soaps knfrsrn 1«dar.
Cuts wash% time 25%1o40% in
tab or machine. And gets clot Jics
whiter in one -washing than other
gnuwlated soaps can do in two
f
ONiy IS MINUTSf SOfMNO^\
/ -AND fT GIVES THE WHITEST
\
WASH YOU EVEK SAW/. . .
WE USED OXYDOL AT LEAST A
DOZEN T3MES ON MY SHEEREST
COTTON PRINTS...AND THEY'RE
JUST AS
BRIGHT
AND
FRESH AS
NEW! /
Yet, due to lie profection of its
new and improved formula— the
latest amazing discovery of the
famous Procter & Gamble Com-
pany—colors -won't fade, fabrics
won't suffer! Even your ^leerert
cotton prints and children's
dainty frocks we safe.
It cert more 1iaa one mSLian ^ ^
2^£ cans.
™*^
Gold Bar Green
LIMA BEANS
Tender fresh
Limas.
2
Medium No. *«^
2 cans
330
Gold Bar
SPINACH
Is delicious! It has
real fresh flavor, and
a natural green color.
2
Medium No.,
2 cans . .
2 Large No. -*MM
2% cans.... * IT
Gold Bar
TOMATOES
Solid pack tins large
whole v i n e ripened
deep red color, -won-
derful flavor.
2 Large No.
2% cans....
Gold Bar
Country Gentleman
or Golden Bantam
SWEET CORN
.Cream style. Enjoy the
creamy
goodness of
these tender kernels.
2
Medium No. «- "
2 cans
Fancy Head
RICE
Large -whole -white beads.
4
Pounds
4B"*«£
for
230
Small
NAVY BEANS
Nice clean stock, cook §o
5
tender.
t.Cf£
Pounds for .. *i,9T~
Nebraska
Yellow Cream
CHEESE
MUd yet tasty. «*A«i
The pound .... £fl>¥
R B C CATSUP
Adds
flavor
to
many
dishes.
Large bottle
Fancy Bulk
MACARONI
Pounds
> for
Extra Choice
SIRLOIN STEAK i 23° OVEN ROAST, t 16
Corn-fed b.iby beef.
Cut any thickness.
Splendid
Cut from corn-fed baby beef.
Freshly Dressed
STEWING
CHICKENS
Appetizragly clean, plump.
tender.
The pound
Extra Choice
PORK LOIN
ROAST
The
bound
Fresh
PORK CUTLETS
So tasty breaded or baked
in milk. The
4A4t
pound
*TFT»
Freih Baltimore
OYSTERS
Shipped by fast express.
All solid meat. teA
Pint
*5r
Choice
LAMB SHOULDER
ROAST
The
pound
Fresh Pure
Pounds
for
31*
Special Purchase
SWISS STEAK
Juicy.
flavor,
pound.
tender,
full
The
of
Extra Choice
VEAL ROAST
milk - fed
190
From tender
calves. The
pound
Fresh Ground
HAMBURGER
All Rood choice beef,
pound
*00
Extra Choice
RIB ROAST
Boned and rolled from
corn-fed baby
beef.
The pound
Choice
POT ROAST
Chunky cuts from corn-
fed baby beef.
The pound
Choice Lean
BOILING BEEF
A juicy tender economical
meat.
The pound
Saturday in Our
TWO SERVICE STORES
Enjoy the convenience of a charge account in t.
Frcadnch Service Store. The most complete de-
pendable .«ervicc.
B5511— 1316 N St.
BS31S— 2645 O S'
Fresh Florida
STRAWBERRIES
Xice flavor.
Pint box
Texas Setdlcss
GRAPEFRUIT
-Wonderful Ha*, or.
3
Dinner size
for.
California Navel
ORANGES
Filled -with rich raeet
jiaice. Dozen
4*74*
large size
31 ^
Fancy Wtncsap
APPLES
Firm. crisp, snappy.
** (S peck)
NEW PEAS
Well filled
pods. Potand..
Fancy Fttsh
CAULIFLOWER
Cic^cly netted, -white
ri",ads.
J'cnm'l
... .
Fancy Pattal
CELERY
Crisp, lender.
Larpc bundle
Dole's Hawaiian
PINEAPPLE JUICE
Refreshing and sal.?
X irsns.
Cans lor
Pearlettc*. The "New"
SWEET CORN
With all the tender.
Ire*h flavor ot corn-
2 On-the-cob <*B0
Cans for
4fcOy
Sweetheart Tiny
WHOLE BEANS
Wax or £re«i. Mon
tender.
The C4in
3 ^.
690
B L A C K W A L N U T
S P I C E C A K E
One of our most popular cakc5—
t-wo layers of rich moist spict1
ca';e with hand-picked black T.al-
nut meats thru and thru, butter
crram inn;;. STTCS S liberal hclp-
Inc:?. Saturday Special
PRUNE
j
BISMARKS
CUP CAKES
ch^ii of j^w
Rich SJ^cy cup c.jkcs
•sith pieces of S»cct
Santa Clara prunes 1hru
»d ihru.
2Qg
NUT TOP ROLLS
Rich
The <3oz:n ...
HARD ROLLS
Cripp and c r n n c h y .
1hcr re dslicious. Ortn
Th» dozen ...
dnnamcci.
CINNAMON
ROLLS
Made of
a rich roll
douch.
vanilla
The dozen
PAREERHOUSE
ROLLS
to (red
rrack.-r crumb* to )«ur uttertbrurl nolle
jour Ml hind U tied to your x. we should place a bit of
sroken crockery for drainage. Fill
box with soil and then level with
a piece of lath. Tamp soil with
a brick (but wouldn't a flat iron
do?)
Keep surface leveL Mark
out rows, using a beveled lath to
make shallow furrows that are
spaced properly. Fine seeds should
shaken slowly and thinly from
the packet Sift soil over the seeds
tor it should be fine, through your
dtchen sifter, or a coarse screen,
depending on size of seeds. You
may cover the box with a paper
for the seeds do not need light un-
til they germinate.
Be mre that toe wfl In the wrd Ixnt
i wet to toe very tmttojn. lx-l dry for an •
fcrferre yea spare lit yttd* «a the
Our rock garden sheet is avail-
able at this time. Write for it by
addressing Mrs. Graves. It is
free for a three cent stamped, ad-
dressed cr.vriope.
m*flrS
Jn ittt
•«W>
Whether you are or whether not,
you will like Cupid's college on
St. Valentine's. What shall I do
to entertain
my guests at the
party? May be your question, too.
This is how: Decorate a room to
look like the school room. Have
a professor and, as each guest is
handed an examation book, the
fun begins. On the pages of the
book each pupil writes answers to
questions asked by the professor.
The history lesson is first: Ques-
tions:
Describe your first date.
Geography, Where is the seventh
heaven? Astronomy, name favorite
movie star and why? Geometry,
Prove that a good line is the
shortest way to a man's heart.
English, What is a love apple?
Write a love letter in ten words.
Collect books and place on a center \
table for each guest to read. The
fun is now at its height.
One pound of cocoanut, two cups
cream, three-fourths cup sugar,
one-half teaspoon vanilla.
Cook
for twenty minutes. Cool and cut
in squares. This candy is nice to
stuff in dates or prunes and will
Two-Item Lunch.
This makes a delicious lunch
where only two things are allowed
to be served at your club. Make
a shortcake, cxira rich, or bake
a simple while cake in an oblong
pan.
Cut cake in two. lengthwise,
through center of cake, then in
squares. Place one square on a
bread and butler plate and spread
generously
with
the
following
mixture: One large can of crushed
pineapple, put on stove. Cook
with one cup sugar, one cup water,
two tablespoons cornstarch and stir
until thick.
Cool.
Add second
square of cake, spread again with
pineapple
mixture,
add third
square of cake, pile high with
whipped
cream.
This
serves
twenty persons.—MRS. C. E. RIT.
TERBUSH, Nehon. Neb., R. R. 3.
I'ltCb Haircut nlth I'ennBaentit
* wllh All IVr/ianenl.
Snt. and Mon. Ilrint Ad.
$3 French Curl
PERMA-
NENT1
Artlsllc
Peruui. B>o Fln«erw.ve
line* by ap- LadlM*
polntment
H.trruU .,
1.50 AH Oil
A
W .9HEIOH>>
K....2-50
LEADER BEAUTY SHOPPE
Strrel Ir'lnnr IIS
WHOOPEE/TtfE
rR£6ULAR PRIC€ Of CALUM€f
BAKING POUJD€R \$ NOW
ONLY 25^ A POUND/
AND
N-EtU CAN
lCCO€Af/.
TO OP€N/
Fashion Flashes.
Hot from the wires out of east-
ern marts comes the news that
spring will bring us compani'onate
knitted frocks and coats. And the
coats are three-quarter length with
nobby scarfs at neck. The flowers
are going to bloom again on our
spring hats for even now they are
in bud and this is early, we all
agree.
Natural colored hemp is
used in sleeveless jackets. And
the knit shoulder cape, of a bright
color over a white dress, is a sen-
sation. Extremes! That's the kind
of folks we are, we like extremes.
Hats are high and hats are low,1
brims are stiff
and brims are J
flared; mannish tight coats and
swaggers with buttons down the
front. And because we are rough-
ing it again this year, you may '
make little daughter's coat out of I
new cement sacks and you own '
suit, too, dying it any color you i
like.
If yon like such fame as Spooning on
St. Valentine's night, let the folks at the
GOOCH'S BEST
IS T H E MOST
;
E C O N O M I C A L
\
FLOUR YOU CAN \
BUY
B E C A j U S E
\
IT A S S U R E S
BETTED RESULTS
WITH EVERYTHING XOU BAKE!
-ASK
YOUR
GROCER-
WHITE KING
T H E ( ) R [ ( ; / \ M GRANULATED SOAP
Cupid's College.
j
Are you tired of school?'
Retired sailor 4tUfa> at "Coffee-Floating"
.CAPTAIN RUDDER, retired,
i
longed for a swaying deck under his
feet and a steaming cup of good cof-
fee. Mrs. Rudder did her best, and
tried to give the captain what he
wanted. She floated from brand to
brand—changed coffee every time
he kicked.
"Listen, Ruth," the
captain said one morn-
ing, "you're boss of the
galley, and you can buy
any coffee you want.
But why not anchor to
Why not anchor to one
we Jcnow is best
Longed for a swaying deck
the one we know IB
best?
"Let's stop this float-
ing around and set a
course for Hills Bros.
Coffee. It's as steady as
a towboat in a heavy sea. The flavor
doesn't heave and sway around—and
change as quick as the wind. When I
say I want a cup of good coffee, I mean
I want Hills Bros.'
JJ35 Hillt Srtt.
THE
L I N C O L N
STAR— FRIDAY, F E B R U A R Y 8, 1935
E L E V E N
These Pages Contain the Town's Most Attractive Grocery Bargains
Minerva's Mall
Take Your Troubles to Minerva
Persuasion Better.
Never argue with your husband
if you treasure a tranquil home
and a happy marriage.
That is a sweeping statement
and one to call forth animated
arguments
from
the women, I
know. Nevertheless, I believe in
the theory.
"But a' woman who always
gives in to her husband is a nam-
by-pamby, a jellyfish, downtrod-
den and wins neither respect nor
favors," I hear the feminine chor-
us chanting. So she is, all of those
things.
The meek woman, who
permits her individuality to be-
come completely submerged in the
masterful dictatorship of a man is
a sad affair. But argument is the
poorest weapon that a woman can
use either to gain her own ends or
to merit the love and respect of a
man. Through argument, she only
irritates the man and wears her-
self down.
Arguments in the home do more
to destroy a wife's attraction for
her husband than any other neg-
i ative force that I can think of. The
wise woman always seems to agree
with her husband, no matter what
her opinion is, or at least she
shows full respect, attentiveness
and desire to agree with him if
she cannot endorse his opinions.
Eventually, through strategy and
tact sweetly and gracefully ad-
ministered, she can often persuade
him to yield in favor of her opin-
ions, but the operation is so pain-
less that he doesn't even know he
is yielding. If a storm of protests
and heated words greet his voiced
opinion, he is practically certain
to stubbornly cling to his original
ideas If he should yield, it would
be done resentfully and bitterly
and the victory won'would be in
reality a battle lost
As long as a woman maintains
her serenity her mental equanim-
ity,
ihe is in command of any
situation. When she argues, loses
her temper and breaks into tears,
her defenses are down and she is
definitely the loser.
Hits Heart Balm Suits
Check Rein Needed.
Dear
Minerva: I don't know
how I can go on as I am. I dear-
ly love my husband, but I am al-
ways being hurt by him. He makes
no effort to see things my way,
but stubbornly insists on having
his own way about everything. He
treads rough-shod over things that
I have always held dear,
then
when I grieve about it, he either
laughs about it or becomes angry
with me. I resolve to keep my
temper and be sweet. Then ne
comes out with some remark that
cuts me to the quick and every-
thing is upset. He says I can't take
a joke, but it seems to me that
he is merciless / in his teasing, if
that is what it'is. An example: I
will have friends in for dinner
and he will say that is the first
good meal he has had for a month,
that he surely wishes we had
company oftener. Then he cannot
urtderstand why I am hurt.
He
says he is joking, but why joke
about such a thing when he knows
but the others don't that I am
always
painstaking
about one
meals.
~ Ibs.
Leaf
Lettuce,
large
bunches.
extra
*
tender
*§ bunches
Carrots, California extra
tender.
Bunch
Oranges, good size, A
full of Juice
Bread, Gooch's Large Loaves
3 for 20c
Oxydol. Bar of Lava
Free with large pkg...
Salmon, tall Alaska pink.
Can
....
Sugar, in cloth 4 A
bag
1O |bs.
Toilet Tissue, 1000 9
sheet rolls ..
3 for
Crackers,
National Bis-
cult Co. 2 pound box.
Nebia Gelatin, all flavors
Butter, Pure Creamery
Lb. 35c
Dates, new, fresh packed
Lb. 7Y2c
MiladyCoffee
Free Measuring Spoon
and Reaseal With
2 One Lb. Cans for 59.
I design costumes
for
particular
j productions. Some of the largci
! theatrical organizations
employ
, their regular designers, but most
I of them give the job to independ-
1 ent workers. A v^-ardrobc woman
i in the theater keeps the costumes
in good order. Sri-o has nothing to
do with the original designing or
making of them.
Suits for breach ot promise,
alienation of affections, seduction,
naming of co-respondents in di-
vorce proceedings and other '"heart
balm" actions would be prohibited
if a bill offered by Mrs. Roberta
West Nicholson, Indiana's only wo-
man state lawmaker, is approved
by the Hoosier legislature.
c
PORK CHOPS, Center Cuts, Light
Loins, pound
24c
SMOKED HAMS, Morrell's Pride,
16 to 18 Ib. average, Ib
23c
VEAL ROAST, Cut from Choice
Veal, Ib
15c
CHOICE FLANK STEAKS, Ib
19c
ROBERTS
MILK
Tall Cant.
Each
SUGAR
10
COFFEE
OUR OWN BRAND
Ji-b.
59*
BLUHILL
2 Lb. Can. 57*
BUTTER-NUT
Lb. Can
FLOUR
Grand Central
48 Lb'
Sack
GoocrT* Best
48 Lb-
Sack
J
NEBIA PANCAKE
FLOUR
Pko.
ROYAL BOY
KRAUT
No.'2 Can»
for.
Ubby or M-bia
Fancy PEACHES
No. 21 j Can*
for.
35*
NAVY BEANS, Great Northern,
First Grade, 4 Ib. cello, bag
25c
BLUE EOSE KICE, Fancy,
4 Ib. cello, bag
24c
CHOICE PRUNES—
Small Size
3 Ib. cello, bag 21c
Medium Size ...3 Ib. cello, bag 24c
Large Size
2 Ib. cello, bag 19c
MACARONI, First Grade Bulk,
3 Ib. cello, bag
28c
HEINZ CATSUP, Large 14 oz. bottle 18c
MUSTARD, French Style, large
12 oz. jar
^Sc
KARO SYRUP, Blue, 5 Ib. pail
30c
KARO SYRUP, Red, 5 Ib. pail
31c
MORTON'S SMOB^D SALT,
10 Ib. can
85c
UNKO PEAS, No. 2 cans
3 for 35c
IJBBY'S CHILI, Tall cans, 3 for... .25c
POTATOES, Good Cookers, V2 bu,. ..38c
ONIONS, Larfre Yellow, 8 Ibs
25c<
SWEET POTATOES, Yellow
Jerseys, 8 Ibs
25c
BEAD LETTUCE. Solid, Per Head
6c
CABBAGE, Solid, Ib
2V2c
TURNIPS, Washed Clean, 3 Ibs
lOc
CAULIFLOWER, Snow White, Ib
9c
Winesap or Roman Beatrty APPLES,
5 Ibs. ....„
23c
GRAPEFRUIT, Large 96 Size, 7 for 25c
BANANAS, Solid Ripe, dozen
19c
ORANGES, Full of Juice, dozen
16c
DATES, Bulk, 2 Ib. cello. ba$r
19c
MATCHES—Ohls
P Carton...XJ*
SODA CRACKERS
A-1
2
Pound
Ciddle 17*
SOAP
Quick Naplha
•Whit* Laundry
10 San.
R1NSO
t-sroe
20t
MILADY COFFEE
wiih 2 £ 59'
upholding the family honor. Oh
all that sort of thing, until I am
constantly
upset.
I don't know
what to do. I love him dearly, yet
I cannot manage him at all.—DIS-
HEARTENED
A. Didn't you ever suspect that
the trouble is that you don't man-
age yourself? Since you are con-
stantly in an emotional turmoil, it
must be because you have not
learned to control your emotions.
You are upset because you permit
everything to ruffle you. Every
woman is obliged to place a tight
check rein on her emotions, if she
is to lead a happy, useful life. She
cannot give in to any tendency to
be embittered, hurt and resentful
over small disturbances. She has
to learn to laugh at herself and to
take things lightly.
Answered Briefly.
Mona: You are giving away to
morbid thoughts when you fancy
that
you
were an
unwanted
daughter and that your parents
dislike you and merely tolerate
you as then: duty. I believe most
girl's entail some such thoughts to
a greater or lesser degree at some
time in their lives. Such brooding
is generally the result of too much
introspection, too much fancying
and not enough action. It's all ab-
surd, of course. If your mother and
dad seem indifferent, it is because
they are carrying burdens which
are overwhelming and they &re
not relaxed enough to be compan-
ionable. If they seem harsh, it is
probably due to over-anxiety, or
over-zealousy for your welfare.
Bertha: Costume designers for
the theater usually work inde-
pendently and are employed to
Recommend All Year
Program of Athletics
Recommending an all year boy's
athletic program under Y. M. C. A.
direction,
a group
of
church
leaders meeting
at
the Y. M.
Thursday night tixged that water
polo and straight swimming com-
petition be taken up immediately
after the close of the basketball
season. Kitten ball was urged for
the early spring, to be followed
by track events.
Touch football
was endorsed for early fall Ward
Gray
conducted
the discussion.
Later Cliff Cunningham led in a
discussion on the
development of
good motives.
RUSSIAN FACES DEATH
FOR KILLING INFORMER
KOSYN, U. S.
S. R., Feb. 8—
(AP)—Andrey Kulaokoff, a kulak, |
was sentenced to death today, and
three associates -were given long
prison sentences for the murder of
15-year-old Kikita Senm, who had
informed authorities of their anti-
soviet activities.
Hospital Staff
111 Of Malaria
KURUNEGALA, Ceylon, Feb. 8
—(/P)—The malaria plague which
has cost about 30,000 lives in the
last three months overwhelmed
the entire staff of this town's only
hospital today.
Every
doctor and
nurse,
ail
weakened by their day and mgnt
fight to aid others, had contract-
ed malaria. None was able to stay
on duty longer.
Reports from Kegalla said ef-
forts were being made to built
four temporary hospitals there to
accommodate the overflow of pa-
tients from the regular hospital.
Kiwanis Hears M'Cue
Talk on Rescue Work
A. T. McCue of St. Louis, Mo.,
special field examiner for the Red
Cross, told the Kiwanis club a'
its luncheon at the chamber of
commerce Friday noon that the
bulk of drowning victims lose
their lives 20 to 30 feet from
safety. In rescue work, he said
size is not
a particularly im-
portant factor, since a small, wel
trained swimmer can handle
a
poor swimmer twice his size in
deep water.
Don't miss seeing the Frigidaires
at Gold & Co.—Adv.
ANNOUNCEMENT
BY
Ben Heitkotter
I have purchased the meat department in Beachly
Brothers
Grocery at 1450 0 St and am operating it
under my
own name. This announcement is made to
clarify th.e confusion caused by the announcement of my
original j>lans to open a meat and fish store at 137 So
llth street;. The opportunity to combine the fine service
on choice meats, fish and poultry that has always been
connected with my name, "with the equally fine service
on fancy and staple groceries that the name Beachly has
always stood for, is the reason for this change in my
plans.
BEN HEITKOTTER
FISH
+ MEATS *
POULTRY
B1273
In Beachly Bros. Grocery
1450 O St.
No Attempt Made to
Serve Messina Capias
NEW ORLEANS, Feb. 8—(AP)
—Joe Messina, chief bodyguard
for Senator Huey P. Long, today
underwent an operation for'ap-
pendicitis at Touro infirmary lifi'c,
it was stated by his physician.
MeaiTwhule police had made no at-
tempt to serve him with a capias
charging him with assault upon
Leon Trice, Associated Press pho-
tographer, with intent to kill. The
charge against Messina was made
in a direct affidavit filed by Dis-
trict
Attorney
Eugene Stanley
Wednesday Trice, witnesses sai.
/
A FEW M/NUTES LATER
WELL HEAVENLY
PAY. ASLEEP
ALREADY'
Ne xr MORNING
WHY RALPH, YOU LOOK
LIKE A DIFFERENT
PERSON! I CAN HARDLY
BELIEVE MY EYES.
1
WHAT A SLEEP.'
WHAT A DAY/ WHAT
A COOD OLD 'WORLD.'
JUST VWAlT TILL I GET
TO THAT OFFICE?
'l TCU. YOU, HON
FHL AS FULL OF PEP
AS A 2,-YEAR-OLD.
FUNNY WHAT A.
DIFFERENCE A GOOD
NIGHTS SLEEP
CAN A\AK.E/
'ISN'T rr MARVELOUS,RALPH/J
I YOU MAKE ME THINK OF /
I
WHEN WE WERE FIRST
I
| MARRIED—THANKS TO
\
MABEL AND OVALTINe.
)
fc.
_^r
What Ovaltine Is ...
and How It Acts
s
. . . Try It For Sound Sleep Tonight
/"Y'ALTTXE is a delicious pure food concentrate appro— cd
V-/ by thousands of physicians and used in 54 different cocun-
1rics today. When taken as a hot drink at bedtime it promotes
sound sleep in a surprisingly short lime,
By this nwlhod you avoid the use of drugs. And when ^r
awaken in the morning you feel r<» freshed— clear-eyed, alert —
•snlh your nerves c?lm and mind dear— just tbe way
should fed after a aigbt of perfect, restful deep.
OvaHine is remarkably easy to digest, and because of its un-
usual food values, it assists nature in rebuilding nerve, brain,
and body fcsue while you sleep, increases energy, too.
So outstanding are the results accredited Ovaltine that, during
the World War. it fras used as a standard ration for invalid,
nerve-shattered soldiers. Thousands of poople,men and women,
use it regularly to restore vitality when fatigued. And it is
also highly recommended by physicians for nervous, under-
nourished children—and as a strengthening food for nursing
mothers, convalescents, and the aged.
Don't judge Ovaltine merely by what users claim for it. Dis-
regard, if you -wish, the fact that it is approvcd'by naore,than
20,000 physicians; Try it and fccfor yourself!
Phone your druggist or grocer for a tin of Ovaltine now. Or if
you prefer, ma3 tie coupon at the right for a 3-day trial supply.
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•
JEWS PA PER I
nFWSPAPFRI
TWELVE
THE
L I N C O L N S T A R — F R I D A Y , F E B R U A R Y 8, 1935
No Place for Lincoln On Gear League Circut
Topeka Club Demands
Cash; Griffin Refuses
to Consider Proposal
DBS MOINES, la., Feb. 8—(Special)—Projected re-
moval of the Topeka Western league franchise to Lincoln,
proposed by the circuit prexy, Dale D. Gear, apparently has
blown up quite as high as Little Willie's kite. The league
magnates, in session here until late last night, reported to-
day a final adjournment, their pow-wow having developed
nothing to indicate there is as much as a remote possibility
that the 1934 circuit, which included Topeka, will be sub-
ject to change this year.
Magnates Preferred Lincoln
•~
'
The league meeting developed
• " an almost unanimous decision
that Lincoln was much to be pre-
'
_:3erred to Topeka, but the club
X '
owners were not disposed to vote
the Kansas capital out unless the
Topeka owners were compensated
in some form for their property
rights, the latter mostly m players
on the reserve list.
When Francis "Pug"
Griflm
, "and "Cy" Lingle, Lincoln's base-
' ball moguls, treated with cold dis-
dain all suggestions that
they
should pay real money to the To-
pekans, the league scheme de-
scribed a sudden shift, to-wit:
What would the Lincoln owners
. take in cash for their territorial
•
• • rights? In other words, if "Pug"
and "Cy" were willing to sell,
the Topeka owners would be in
position themselves to transfer
•'""" " the franchise."
"No" In Few Words.
The Griffin-Lingle response to
1 • both propositions was
a
stern
• -• "nay," uttered in fewest possible
" words. They had been invited,
they said, to come into the league
by
taking
over
the
Topeka
franchise; they would neither buy
in nor sell out.
Lincoln, they explained, was
good to them last year and they
had done their best to respond by
giving the Nebraska capital a
State league pennant.
Wherefore, "Pug"
and "Cy"
__ packed their bags this morning
and headed for the old home
town, content with their lot and
only sorry they had taken the
Topeka transfer talk seriously.
Called Into Pow-wow.
After cooling their heels out-
side 'the Hotel Chamberlain con-
ference doors until late yesterday
. ^<. - afternoon, Francis "Pug" Griffin
"" ' and "Cy" Lingle, Lincoln toase-
::*"ball magnates, and' represent-
-T* atives of the Lincoln fans' asso-
rt" ' ciation finally were called^ into
'~-~~
c ths pOW_wc.w.
After the group
had expressed Lincoln's desire to
• -,
take a whirl at the larger circuit,
several
interesting
facts
de-
• "
veloped:
I—President Dale Gear had
bean
overstepping
his
bounds
•___
when he was quoted as announc-
ing the league was prepared and
Crete Hi Game At
Bethany Postponed
Bethany high school author-
ities made the announcement
Friday morning that the Crete-
Bethany b a s k e t b a l l game,
scheduled for Saturday night on
the
Bethany floor,
has been
postponed until Saturday night,
March 2.
COLLEGE
RESULTS
At Baltimore—Baltimore, 38; Catholic,
36.At Blucksburg. Va.—Duke, 37; Virginia
Tech, 19.
At RalclRh. N. C.—North Carolina State,
30: South Carolina, 25.
At Emmriaburg. Md.—Mt. St. Mary's,
36; St John's, 24.
At Princeton—Williams, 43, Princeton,
28.
At Ottawa, Kas.—Ottawa, 43; Kansas
Wcslcyan. 33.
At Moorhead, Minn.—Concordla, 29; St.
Thomas. 27.
At Tuscaloosa—Alabama. 27; Florida, 25.
At Akron, O.—Akron. 21; Case, 20.
At Ashland, O.—Ashland, 17; Woostcr,
34.
At Wcstervtlle, O.—Otterbcln, 43; Ohio
Northern. 32.
At Liberty, Mo —William Jewell. 28: Mls-
(Two extra periods.)
City—Phillips. 31; Okla-
soun Valley, 24
At Oklahoma
homa City, 20.
At Oakland City, tad —Central, 43; Oak-
land City, 17.
At Creeley. Colo.—Ureeley
State,
45;
Western State, 20.
At Clinton, B. C.—Citadel, 44; Presby-
terian. 39.
At Greenville, S. C.—Clemson, 43; Fur-
Mc-
man, 26.
At McPherson, Kas.—Emporia, 47;
Pherson, 42.
At Vrrmillion, S. D.—North Dakota, 52;
South Dakota, 42.
At Jacksonville, 111.—Illinois college, 44;
I James Milhkin, 37.
ready
to
franchise,
deliver
free
of
the Topeka
indebtedness
and without cost, to the proposed
•_ Lincoln owners.
. - -
Wanted Lincoln In.
2—The seven other club owners
wanted Lincoln in the Western
loop, but hoped to salvage some-
'-* thing out of Topeka's wreckage to
' ' compensate Jimmy Payton, the
Topeka manager, Larry Harlan,
Lincoln business man, and others
. -having an interest in the Topeka
franchise.
3—Topeka is the only doubtful
spoke
in the Western league
-* - wheel for 1935, the other clubs
~' being ready to start the campaign
but for the most part lacking the
financial backing to put up more
than a
money.
-"Pug"
nominal sum as forfeit
Griffin
and "Cy"
Lingle, Lincoln magnates, ex-
pressed little desire to part with
any coin to obtain the franchise,
which they declared at the pres-
ent moment was worth little more
than the paper upon which it is
written. -
Gear Makes Statement.
To be exact, the Western league
club-owners went on record as
unanimously favoring the trans-
fer of the Topeka franchise to
Lincoln, but only on the condi-
tion that such a, move be agree-
able to the present owners of that
franchise.
President Dale Gear and
Hi
Crete Tonight
Renewing a traditional athletic
rivalry that is invariably produc-
tive -of bitter contests, the Lincoln
high cage quint will face "Pop"
Klein's Crete high tossers tonight
on the Cardinal court. The Re-
serves will face'the Crete subs in
a curtain-raiser game.
Goad1 Bailer will call m his starting
lineup the same combination that was put
together last week to take a victory over
Omaha Tech here.
This quint bowed to
an alumni five Wednesday night, but has
mort
power
in
all
department! than
any other combination available.
Starting at the forwards will be Herm
Rohric and Leo Benson. Rohng starred in
the nlumni clash as high scorer for the
eening and has s=t a fast scoring pace m
all games this season. Benson, as a run-
nms- .mate, is a speedy floor man and s.
tenacious defensive man. Completing the
frcnt lien will be Bob Ramey at center.
The .ear court may see some revamping
during th" game, but
will open with
J?dc Fate and Bill Kinnsir.on at the
tvo posts. Fate may be sent into the front
line at Benson's post, with Frost talcing
he barr.er job. and Heizer or Bmger may
sec action in place of Kinnaroon. who is
a newcomer of great promise.
JINX REIGNS AT
WESTERN TRACK
Injury Likely to Prevent
Cavalcade Starting
In Rich Race.
SANTA ANITA TRACK, Ar-
cadia, CaL, Feb. 8—(INS)—News
of the mighty Cavalcade's leg in-
jury today gnarled the $100,000
Santa Anita
Handicap
picture,
where prior to yesterday it was
being freely doped as strictly a
two-horse race between Equipose
and Cavalcade, with most of the
emphasis on the latter.
One now wonders if Equipoise,
admittedly an unsound horse, and
Cavalcade, with his latest injury,
are headed toward
the
fate of
Twenty Grand.
Trainer
Bob
Smith
of
the
Brookmeade barn regards
the
frog injury, which came up sud-
denly yesterday,
as alarming
enough
to make
the
definite
statement that Cavalcade will' not
go to the post here until he tees
off for the big classic.
Only Few Sound Horses.
The mishap to Cavalcade seems
to recall a statement, made last
W GOES DOWN
ON DOTTED LINE
Cardinals' Ace Pitcher
Comes to Terms and
Signs Contract.
ST. LOUIS, Mo., Feb. 8—(INS)
—Jerome Herman "Dizzy" Dean,
the celebrated holdout, today was
finally signed to a 1935 contract
to do some more pitching for the
Cardinals.
Dizzy signed his contract late
yesterday while in the cloistered
quiet of the Cardinals' office in
conference with President Sam
Breadon.
What the figure was,
nobody seemed to know, but when
Dizzy arrived in town from New
York, he loudly announced:
"It will be $25,000 or nothing."
The pitching hero of the 1934
world series did say, however, that
his 1935 salary will be in excess of-
that
BOBS UP WITH
BRILLIANT IDEA
Hockey Magnate Advises
Baseball Men How To
Cure Their Ills.
BY PAT ROBINSON.
NEW YORK, Feb. 8—(INS)—
Les Patrick, coach of the New
York Rangers and one of the mas-
ter minds of hockey, who also
owned a minor league ball club at
one time, today comes forward
with a solution for the financial
ills besetting major league base-
ball.
The only fault to be found with
it from a major league club own-
er's viewpoint is that it is too sen-
sible and therefore probably un-
worthy of their attention. How-
ever, Ford Frick, president of the
National league, sees merit in the
scheme, although he does not
think it could be worked out.
Here's the scheme: Combine
both majors into one league of 12
clubs, dropping the four weakest
teams. Then divide the one league
into two groups, playing inter-
changeably during the season and
install the play-off system, as in
hockey.
Under Patrick's proposed plan
such a league—call it the Federal
—would line up something like
this:
American Group.
New York Giants.
Washington Senators.
Boston Red Sox.
Pittsburgh Pirates.
Philadelphia Athletics.
Chicago White Sox.
National Group.
St. Louis Cardinals.
New York Yankees.
Brooklyn Dodgers.
Chicago Cubs.
Detroit Tigers.
Cleveland Indians.
"If .we had two major hockey
leagues," said Patrick, "we'd lose
money like the baseball people
lose it. Our race would be over
right now and we wouldn't draw
playing off the schedule. In-
HISOR>L
RESULTS
At Hastings—Hustings, 42; York, 10
At Ken:ney—Kearney. 28: Mindi-n. 19.
At Pawnee
City—Burchard. Jl;
paw-
nee CilV. 17.
At D'ller-Diller. 35: Reynolds 20.
At Hemlngford—Rushville.
24: Homing-
ford. 22.
At Ejcrtet—McCcol. 22; Exeter 16
At Blue H1U—Blue Hill. 35. Fairflcld.
27
At Cortland—Cortland. 28: Hallam, 16.
At Ragan—Ragan. 22; Wilcox 16.
At Sidney—St. Patrick's
(Sidney), 33;
Lodgepole, 18.
At Brads.law—Eradshaw.
18, Grafton,
16. Bradshaw reserves. 26; Grafton re-
serves. 7.
At Elm Creek—Elm Creek, 33: Miller.
25. Ehn Creek junior high, 8; Kearney
junior high, 7.
Howard county tournament at St. Paul
—Preliminaries, Fanvell. 35. Dannebrog,
27. Boelus .13; Cush:ng. 6. Semi-finals.
Elba. 44: Fanvell. 17 St. Paul Rese.ves,
28; 3o;!us, 16.
!stead'
t e s t ls sustained for the
the $17,500 Cardinal offer
caused Dizzy to cry out in nain • ,
„,
.,
, ,
and threaten to do drastic thLgs jPla/-°ffs' \he crowds keep coming
in retaliation.
and we make money' *** we play
The Cameras Clicked. ,
Coming out of the conference,
Breadon
publicly a d d r e s s e d
Pitcher Dean thus:
"My congratulations on the con-
tract. It calls for a lot of money."
To which Dizzy replied that he
was worth it and "we both need
each other."
"Everything's okay now," Dizzy
continued.
"Me and Sam are
friends now, eh, Sam? Let's shake
on it."
Whereupon the cameras clicked.
Dizzy
Springs,
leaves today
Ark., to join
for
Hot
his cele-
week by
that the
"Lanny"
"sound"
Leighninger,
future
book
horses right now are Risknlus,
Mr. Khayyam, Azucar and Time
Supply.
Cavalcade's mishap is not the
only item of Santa Anita Handi-
cap interest at the present mo-
ment.
With very little gusto, a horse
named Gusto arrived
at Santa
Anita yesterday from South Caro-
brated
pitching
brother,
Paul
"Daffy" Dean, who has been of-
fered something like $10,000 by
Breadon.
Cardinal officials be-
lieve Paul will accept the figure.
BRONCHO CAGERS
IN CAR SMASHUP
HASTINGS, Neb., Feb. 8—An
automobile accident, in which five
members of the Hastings college
basketball team suffered severe
bruises and bumps, put a crimp in
Hastings' hopes for leadership in
the conference basketbaU race, to
jbe settled with Doane college here
'Friday night
Lee Todd and Albert Hopp, reg-
ular forward and guard, respec-
tively, Frank Lee, Art Steven-
son and Sid Chase were in the
car that skidded into the ditch
money. And we play
to standing room" only in the play-
offs.
"But in baseball, all too often
one o rtwo teams have the race
sewed up long faelfore the season
is over and attendance fades to
nothing except for the leading
teams. Under my proposed plan,
interest
would
be
sustained
throughout the year for three
teams in each group would have
a chance for the play-offs.
Box Office Gives Answer.
"Sports writers may frown on
the play-offs, but the answer is at
the box office, where the fans reg-
ister approval or disapproval, and
their answer to our play-off sys-
tem is 100 per cent perfect."
To this, Frick replies: "Granting
that it would work out well in
baseball, what towns could be
dropped? No town would want to
be deprived of its baseball."
And, in rebuttal, Patrick offers
this: "The four weakest towns fi-
nancially, \vhich would drop the
Browns, Braves', Phils and Reds.
Only Cincinnati would be de-
prived of a major league club and.
judging by the box office receipts,
that isn't a major league town,
anyway.
Take the best players off these
four teams, distribute them among
the remaining teams, and you'd
have a stronger and better" bal-
anced set-up.
Ruth Not Exploited Enough. '
"And imagine how towns like
j
i
•. .
••»««.
.***.» t»i^i_» it, nv W
\,\J Wiio Ai-T^t-
and overturned just east of Grand Pittsburgh and Brooklyn would
Island, enroute Jiome from a win I turn out to see Babe Ruth, Jimmy
Todd is definitely out of the,Pirates or Dodgers
Or
how
lineup as a result of the accident Washington and Cleveland'would
An infected foot added to the J go for Dizzy Dean and other stars
lina.
Gusto has not raced since 1933, «
Bronco
forward's
difficulties. I they never see.
Todd is one cf the conference's i "You may think Babe Ruth has
leading scorers.
The probability
of any of the five seeing service
indicating he may not have been
sound for some
tune,
but
he
threw quite a shock into the fu-
ture book operators when pur-
ported stable
money
appeared
last week in sufficient quantities
to drop his price from a thousand
to one to 30 to 1.
in the game with Doane is yet to
be determined.
'
Amateur Basketball.
Evidently the duffers at The j
Dallas, Ore., country club don't,
sink their niblicks deep enough..
Lee i Silver ore
was
discovered
264 i
Kcyser. Des Moines owner, led!feet beneath the course recently.j
the move toward Lincoln, and.
following the meeting. Gear had
the following statement to offer:
"The Western league wants to
come into Lincoln and
RECREATION TOURNAMENT.
Power club remained undefeated la the
Recreation tournament at Everett junior
, high Thursday riisht. nosing out Tag-Mays
122-20.
Tigers beat Wheatley Aces. 22-18:
Mage club took Bethany bv 23-9. ana
] Minks 'B- team walloped Spcchfs. 35-4.
'Scores:
:
Power Club. -
TiS-Mays.
B JTT F,
B FT F
Davison, I
atives that the league should take
over this obligation was met with
' a response from President Gear:
*_YS1114»
A44 t\S
AJ141\_V*H
<1 i 1U
14 LSVSt*
**O !
,
A
*«
n«%
recommendation favored U,c No- "The clubs at present arc m no
braska capital city over Topoka.] shape to assume further financial
However, it is up to Griffin and obligations.
T :——1~
*_ ' —_
*_
._
.
5?rtrakin£r
iHcto. c
Schuclke. i
Inhclder.
5 2 0 Wintcrhalfr. f 31
3 0 OiRyons. i
1 1
1 0 liTrac. c
1 0
0 0 2,H. Porfche. £ 2 1
3 0 0|R. PorVche, g 0 0
0 0 1'Scott, g
0 0
0
Totals
10 1 4] Totals
S 4 5
Lingle to 'come to some agree-
Speaking in bchali . o f the To- .-
Hahfer. f
I Kolpcr. I
ment with the present owners Tt | P<*a owners. Lan* Hfla?' ,^in: i ggE**"*
the Lincoln club."
l«>ln insurance man, who holds^a,
•«
»,
j „ .
! substantial block of stock
Demands Cash.
Score at half—POP er, 15: Tatr-Mays. 14.
Rclcrcr—Bi*s«c. Umpire—HaT^homc.
Hctrs.
Ace*.
B FT F
been over exploited, but. really,
the baseball people have been
dumb. They haven't exploited him
half enough. Think of the millions
they could have made with him
under such a set-up as I have out-
lined."
Well, there's the set-up, what do
you fans think of it?
'WIFFF DEFIES
SOGGY COURSE
Cox Shoots Dizzy Round
At Caliente In Spite
of Heavy Going.
AGUA CALIENTE, Mex., Feb.
8—(INS)—Wiffy
Cox, the
so-
called mayor of Dyker Beach,
Brooklyn, N. Y., winner of last
year's Agua Caliente open, today
was the center of attention
as
play in the second round of the
1935
golf sweepstakes got under
way.
Cox stepped to the fore in the
tournament
picture
yesterday
when he came in with a blazing
71, scored over a course that was
so soggy, heavy and muddy that
many would have ruled it un-
playable. Casual water was every-
where over the fairways, in the
traps and on the greens.
No less than three players had
their tee shots, on the first hole,
jland in a miniature river which
| crossed the fairway, and the balls
jwere washed away and lost. The
I rules committee, however, decided
| a ball lost in casual water cross-
ing a fairway should not be pen-
alized.
Two Tied With Cox.
Tied with Cox was Clarence
Clark of Bloomfield, N. J. Clark
is a player who has figured in the
forefront on open competition for
the past four or five years. The
amateur star, Dr.
Cliff
Baker,
Portland, also scored a 71 to join
the leaders.
However, even though these
three were pacing the field and
apparently had first place cinched,
there were 15 or 16 professionals,
many of them "big shots," who
were unable to complete
their
first round yesterday and will
finish up today.
Outstanding among those who
! still have a chance to come in
and take the lead from Cox, Clark
and Baker are Jimmy Thomson of
Long Beach and Horton Smith of
Chicago.
Plenty Others Close Up.
Other leaders who finished the
mud-spattered 18 yesterday in-
cluded Charles Lacy and Charley
Guest'with 72s; George Von Elm,
Walter Hagen, Bortie Dutra, Wil-
lie Goggin, Johnny Revolta and
Rod Munday were grouped at 73;
Johnny Dawson, the Chicago ama-
teur, had a 74; Vic Ghezzi, Olin
Dutra, national open champion,
William Hunter and Bob Pinnell
had 75s; MacDonald Smith had a
77, and Denny Shute, one of the
pre-tournament favorites, had to
be content with a 79.
The pari-mutuel booths are
holding the attention of gallery
and players alike. It was noted
that both Clark and Cox, if their
71s hold up
today,
will
pay
ticket holders S238 for each S2
ticket
Incidentally,
the
only-
tickets purchased on these golfers
were the ones they
purchased
themselves. Amateurs are not in-
cluded in the pari-rnutuel betting.
GERMANS PUT IP
CASH FOR HAMAS
Promoter Posts $25,000 In
Real Money With
Paris Bank.
HAMBURG. Feb. 8— (INS) —
"Tell Steve Hamas and Charlie
Harvey to keep their shirts on
and sail Saturday.
Everything's
okay."
Those
honored
A m e r i c a n
phrases
were
uttered in a dis-
play of Teutonic temper today by
Walter Rothenburg, who is much
harassed by the business of pro-
moting a fight
between Hamas
and Max Schmeling here March
10.
It was by way
of saying
that, through some f i n a n cial
wrangling that would have done
credit to
the
president of
the j
reichsbank, he had succeeded in
posting the 525,000 guarantee re-
quired by Harvey for
his boy
Hamas.
"I sent
$2,500 to Harvey in
New York and posted $22,500 in
the
Chase
National
bank
in
Paris,'' said Rothenfaurg.
Dodges Nazi Decree.
How he managed to dodge the
German currency export rcstric-
| tions, the promoter did not ex-
plain, except that the money went
to Paris and New York "through
the Austrian Credit Anstaldt."
Harvey, he said, would be no-
tified by the bank today that the
money was on hand.
Rothenburg was decicedly an-
noyed when
International News
Ireland Sends Giant
Fighter to File Bid
For Maxie's Crown
Service relayed the
that Harvey, calling
information
the promo-
Taw*.
Cif Sherman
ter
"ingenuous," had cancelled
sailing arrangements for Satur-
day,
demanding that 'he be noti-
| fied that the money was posted
i before he and Hamas sailed.
Schissler Out As
Pro League Coach
CHICAGO, Feb.
8— W)— The
Chicago Cardinals of the National
P r o f e s s ional Football
league
joined the Boston Red Skins to-
day in a search for a new coach,
following the resignation of Paul
Schissler.
Schissler
resigned yes terday
to
a considerable sum ot
up jn tf,e TopeJca
1 Walton. {
0, Crump. I
l.Cretrs. c
1 Set*, s
1 Tounz. 5
(Smith. I-c
iAdaas. e
The chief hitch involved tne: -j j,ave
value of several players owned
rooncv
_r ... __ _.. .
by the Topeka club and which
J franchise through loans I have
Harlan. Payton & Co. feel they ^^ ^ present management. I
should receive compensation.
A am m]iing and anxious lo see |Joht
suggestion by Lincoln represent- imcoln have Western league ball I Ma*
'and hope 1 can come to suitable
'terms with Griffin
and Lingle.
Otherwise. I shall be forced to
1 operate the club in Topeka next
summer.'
"Pnif Somewhat Irked.
Tug"
Griffin had a slightly
different
view.
The pugerino.
Totals
10 2 4
Tot ate
3
Sicore at halt—Turn;. 30. Ac*s. S.
t/sjpirt—Baccce.
Brtbany.
tree—Ha-wliorne.
Club.
2 14
Bef-
Cathedral High At
Havelock Tonight
The only Greater Lincoln league
basket game dated for Friday
night is the appearance of Cathed-
ral high at Havelock. with fourth
place at stake. The festivities are
due to start at 8 o'clock, with a
reserve game at 6:45.
Havelock's probable lineup is Ed
Helvcy and.Lee Jones, forwards:
P ]Vic Bauer, center: Max Hulburt
2 'and Hcrm Rcis. guards. Cathedral
i i probably will start Haberlan and
McManus. forwards: CosleHo. cen-
ter: Kilcoyne and Curtis, guards.
Joe
MaJone.
husky Cathedral
guard, is on he sick list and may
not see any action tonight.
SulJtr. I
Formas, Ie
FIGHTS
LAST
NIGHT
B FT F,
0 0 1 Fotrt. I
3 0 1 SWlrf. !
1 0 fl Vtrte*. c
1 1 0 Kinc." s
S
H 3 William*.
1 0 2 VoUcr, e
.
N-w Y»-*
*>-fi J
MrCatfrrlx. Its.
,
Taol.
affl Mirtr*
iflrnt «it r*atvi!«
At V»5*» mr. X. J— Jffi Ferrer,-, 15;
Mr.
irked at not being permitted to sit
in on the closed meeting, although
mviled to attend, declared:
"We won't pay a dime for the
Topeka franchise. When we came
In Dei Moinrs we were 3c be-
licvc the Icacuc was ready to
transfer the franchise to Lincoln
without cost lo us and I -don't see
why we should be expected lo
nay
our
money
to help
the
out of a bad situ-
i«i. i
M
>>3,
. N. T_
i — J-n
.
r"arv«.
atioiu If there was something to
38 rtrsniv
CtlS. ipay for
Total*
11 1 7, Total*
3 3 4
Snore Jit J)«1T—^T«»r5
1-6. B^Uunj.
S.
clcr"?—Tcficr, mnplrc—Van Htrmc.
S FT F
C Sjwclit,
Eclcy. 1
BBtrr, e
0 Hatpn'r. {
7 WNtUltCT.
1 v,-.c>. a
1 Mocirf, g
B FT :
1 0
I S O
•; 2
3 Sp"cht, t
Total?
SCOT? M
R*i'erer—Yrtvr.
TjaiTiire—Van Hern-
2 0 S
To!«Ts
hall—Mint*. IS; S
flr irj cists C M ""h* ChurcJi
** ihc
J*M ;mv tJilt itlrj
T'lsyrfl at t>» "Y~
jit "12 IS. Th? DTo
-,-"1 — Grarr M
for *J>c
Th"
. In "0"
slurflJT nnnn,
ni 1W« Ttf»r"1Ji
Cslmr- Ei »iE"i
St. Paul •«
M
Jort M.
Don't miss seems the Fngidaircs
at Gold & Co. — Adv.
DATE IS SET FOR
CHARITY BATTLE
SAX FRAXCISCO. Feb. 3 —
(INS) — An opponent will be
named today to m»el Max Baer.
the heavyweight champion, in an
exhibition bout here Feb. 15. the
proceeds -of the fight to go to the
widow of Frankie Campbell, a
local fighter who was accidentally
killed in a bout with Baer several
years ago.
Baer's manager. And! Hoffman,
and members of the commillee
staging the bout were scheduled
to meet today.
Tony Palazolo. Ora Forman and
Jack Bcynon, three Bay region
promoters, met yesterday, with
Claire Goodwin, stale boxinc com-
missioner, heading the committee,
and definitely agreed on Feb. 35 as
the dale of the charity bout
A. A, U. Basketball
A' riWi n«rrfi Kss — VtCTitfTfy
W. HatcbSiMa e as difficult opposition as the Aadre**-
jnw. Trill lace all j."a*on. As tec «rtiJT
Cardinal first* quad of thK wason Is
Zon b: crJduatlon. the Tc<*ne crtnr toll
step 'into recular jons and has been
5rroojn~d for that »11 season.
Slartlac lor the Hr*en«. Trtl] be Scott
anrt Challslrom. Torrards: Kfrw. CTIIJT
nod TOTnstafl and OaSI*? T>aTls. traards
an addition to U*we win T>c Capron arj-5
Ixatiorl'jL fflroutis: H-udspn. E>on DarJs
aad Rood, sroard«. asfl HiJtrjcocS. center.
TEACHERS HIGH.
•X>ac3r-s hith Trill Cfnclud- th" TW-V*
inprti'.inn at Crrriro tnnicht- Crach
Chirl't; AmUircBir ^J1! *1»n a '.ilslnlr
that -aorird 1o hrrt sflrsritar'- nca.n.'rt
Csth-flrnl r.-rtit- in 1hr •**?*
"SA Hpfh
trill *? at cralT Pnflfll'Tnrd nnd Mcasc
lor-wnrfls and EartraU and Prsy, jrunrds
when he was unable to reach a
salary agreement with the Cardi-
nal ownership.
The Boston club
is looking for a successor to Wil-
liam (Lone Star) Dietz.
Schissler, whose contract pro-
vided for a nominal salary and a
share of the profits, said the ar-
rangement was all right, except
that there have been no profits
since
he
started
coaching the
Cardinals two years ago.
Milan Creighton, veteran end
who played his college football at
the University of Arkansas, was
reported as the likely choice to
replace Schissler.
KAGGIE RASSLERS
FLATTEN HUSKERS
The University of Nebraska
wrestling team today still "was
seeking its first victory in a Big
Six conference dual meet Win-
ning
only two decisions,
the
Husker matmen last night lost to
the Kansas State college team. 26
to 6. Don Flasnick, 165-pounder,
and Jerry Swanson. 118-pounder,
turned in the only Nebraska vic-
tories as the Wildcats were taking
four falls and two decisions. The
summary:
118 pounds—Swanson (Ni decisioned Bctz.
(KS). 126 pounds—Fenscher iKS) won by
"
"
"
Time, 6:09. 135
dccisiuned Green
fall from Smiley INI.
pounds—Walters
(KSI
(N).
145 pounds—Jessup (KS) won by fall
Irom Hill iNI. Time. 8.01.
155 pounds-
Howe (KS> won by fall from Scverson IN).
Time. 7:20. 165 pounds—Flasnick
(N.
decisioned Young (KSi. 175 pounds—Sw.ft
(KSt
decisioned Funfcen
(N|.
Heavy-
weight—Holland IKS) wop
bv- fall from
DeBrown iN). Time, 1:00.
Keferee—Allle
Morrison, Illinois.
BY HYPE IGOE.
NEW YORK, Feb. 8—(INS)—Oh, look to your laurels,
handsome Max Baer! You are not the best-looking fighting
man on earth!x Jack Doyle, darling of Ireland, is in our
town, and I'll leave it to the dear girls to judge. Is that
Doyle gorgeous? See him for yourself and then pick between
Max and Jack. One of the most captivating individuals ever
to leave the little green isle.
Brought Over By Dcmpscy.
Doyle has been brought here by
Jack Dempsey and Walter Freed-
man, the fellow who found Primo
Camera wandering loose around
Europe and who lived to see his
prediction—that Primo would be
the heavyweight champion of the
wprld—come true.
Lioyle, 21 years old, 6 feet 4
inches tall, has the same kind of
black,
wavy
hair which
Baer
combs back each morning, dental
ad teeth, a million-dollar smile, a
brace of unbelievable shoulders
and a sweet Irish tenor voice that
will lull you to tears. The braw
boy starts from taw, loaded!
"I came here to win the heavy-
weight championship of the world"
he modestly declares. "I have al-
ways bad two idols, John McCor-
mack and Jack Dempsey. I only
hope I can be half as good as
either one of them. I can't be both.
I want to be a singer like McCor-
mack and a fighter like Dempsey.
String Of 36 Knockouts.
"I ought to
make them talk
about me here. I've had 37 fighti,
winning 36 of them with knock-
outs. When I fought Jack Peterson
for the heavyweight champion-
ship of the British empire, there
were 85,000 persons in the White
City stadium at Shepherd's Bush,
and a gate of $225,000, the largest
money
taken and the
greatest
crowd that ever saw a fight in
London.
"I guess I lost my head. I hit
authorities a'
are
drafting
broadcasting issue
bobs up again with the an-
nouncement coming out of Ames
that the athletic
Iowa State college
definite plans looking forward to
the construction of an adequate
fieldhouse for basketball games
and other indoor sports.
The present Iowa State gym-
nasium, where the basket games
are staged, has a seating capacity
of only
3.300.
Inasmuch as 3,-
300 student ticket
circulation at the
books are in
Ames institu-
tion, Ames townspeople and other
off-campus followers of the
Cy-
clones practically are barred from
the gym when Iowa State is per-
forming at home.
Recognizing the importance of
providing a more
commodious
arena for basketball purposes anc
other indoor activities,
Athletic
Director George Veenker and his
associates have let it be known
that before the end
of
another
year or two, they hope to break
ground for the construction of a
fieldhouse.
I
N THIS connection, it is signi-
Rival Track Planned
In Citrus District
LOS ANGELES, Feb. 8—(INS)
—Rumors that Los Angeles is soon
to have -a second horse racing
establishment gained h e a d w a y
here today, following reports that
members of the state racing com-
mission have been asked to grant
a permit.
Two locations, it was learned,
are under consideration, both lo-
cated in close proximity to the
heart of the metropolitan area.
Backers of the new track have
not been announced, but it was
rumored that Earl Gilmore will be
associated
with the enterprise,
along with Al Uniack and Alfred
E. Green.
GARDEN PONDERS
LEASE PROPOSAL
of the two institutions of the Big
Six
conference
which prohibit
football broadcasts, the Universi-
ty of Nebraska being the other.
And still more significant is the
fact that the athletic finances of
these two schools are in far bet-
ter shape than at any one of the
four
other members of the Big
Six circle.
Now what is the answer? You
probably guessed it right the first
time, to-wit: After dallying with
football broadcasts during several
seasons, the Cyclone and
Corn-
husker
authorities d i s c overed
their finances were at the lowest
point in history. Deficits were
piling up and bankruptcy loomed
ahead.
Whereupon both
Iowa
State
and Nebraska banned the broad-
casts and thereby ushered in a
new era of athletic
prosperity.
Iowa State, as a result, has been
able to clean up all of its unpaid
stadium bonds but 340,000, while
while Nebraska's fieldhouse in-
debtedness has been reduced to
$100.000.
And it won't be long now until
Iowa State launches its field-
house project and Nebraska pro-
ceeds to enlarge its
stadium.
Neither one of these improve-
ments would be practicable, even
possible, under the old broadcast-
ing plan which burdened both
athletic departments with a load
of debts.
wildly in the first round, but they
did not disqualify me. In the sec-
ond round, without transgressing
at all and when I had Peterson
helpless and ready for the knock-
out, they stopped the bout and said
I had fouled him."
The Guy Can Sing.
Doyle was stalking magnificent-
ly around a great $35-a-day suite
as he talked. He's a thoroughbred.
He ordered four quarts of vintage
champagne to
begin with. He *>
brought out a collection of Irish
shelalaghas. Hypus got one and all
enemies had better be sweet to me
from now on. He asked that
a
piano be brought up and. in
a
sweet voice, he sang, "When Irish
Eyes Are Smiling."
"I knocked out Mulligan of the
Civic Guards,
amateur heavy-
weight champion of Ireland, in two
rounds. When I was seventeen, I
joined the Irish Guards and won ^ ?
the heavyweight title while with
them. I knocked out Jack Pettifer
in two rounds."
I maintain that Mr. Jack Doyle,
a real darling of Ireland, will be
wildfire in this country. See if he
isn't.
B
UT why is that Missouri. Ok-
lahoma, Kansas and
Kansas
State permit the broadcasts? I've
heard that question propounded
on numerous occasions, the an-
swer being:
Neither
Oklahoma
nor
Mis-
souri, meaning their athletic man-
T»TT*O ™vr»
agemcnts. had the courage to re- MIAMI BIDS FOR
Il'Duce May Grab
Mrs. Dick's Adonis
ROME, Feb. 8— (INS)—Unmo-
.ested so far, but fearful of de-
velopments as he faces possibility
of conscription in II Duce's army,
Snzo Fiermonte, Italian ex-pugil-
ist, was in Rome today.
His "On Again-Off Again'1 wife,
the former Mrs. Madeleine Force
Astor Dick, was in Naples, in com-
munication with him by long-dist-
ance telephone and equally ner-
vous over the prospects.
Not only is there possibility of
enforced military service to.- be
considered, but also there ap-
jarently is some question regard-
ng Fiermonte's divorce'from his
first wife, sister of an actor long
famed as the most handsome on
the Italian stage.
It was understood Fiermonte's
divorce is not recognized in Italy.
Whether this means he is con-
sidered a possible bigamy suspect
in his native
ascertained.
land could not be
sist outside pressure that the
broadcasts be continued.
Concerning
Kansas.
Director
"Phog" Allen had begun to
the light and during one season,
1933.
banned the men of the mike.
Kansas Slate also quit the broad-
FIST ATTRACTION
NEW YORK. Feb. 8— (INS)—
sce Mike Jacobs, who promoted the
recent Ross-Klick fight in Miami,
is trying to arrange another fight
for that town next month. Jacobs
caste.
But thc'K-Aggics event-, is negotiating for a light-heavy-
NEW YORK, Feb. 8— (INS)— |UanV faltered in thciropposilion. I weight title fight between Cham-
Madison Square Garden today was ] The president of the institution P'°n B°o O'in and ->°e Knight
a step nearer solution of its box- I T,Vas the owner of the weak knees.
J . _______ .- — .
.........
--
- —
ang problems with a committee. | However, he refused to go the
.
appointed by the board of directors I whole route for when the broad- !hat la.b]e lcnn\s
££-SP*™; pSniifSnl* £& *»* "«««*» to him -
.Jr'I'^.t-t-L- ~< ^ ^^ 'dislocated knee...it must ru;
the advantages of
the
college.
When Kansas Stale faced about
U. was mixins up with the ping-
and
was a
run in
Glenn Cunningham.
the family.
former
Kansas
promoter on
rental basis.
a percentage a n d
HIGH.
Jad-M-a hirt stnool i caB*T« plac* 1h"lr
•3Dfl'1I»"ttM3 Hams to 1"Oparfly Tr.Sur nlzTit
•a-rtra the CrHnem llv Uaielf lo B«-»t-
ric» I IT a claj* mill
tri» iri-Bnfl-o'nt
G»C!!
CO'JIJt-f
1M17I. TbC <^>CTltaC Ujl 1=
Trocit'-a JOT 8 n'flnrt:.
Eu S1"f^.
nf ih" ttrr'' ailTri'Tit
D^n Fi47
- w j i j
V
pfTl'rri.nc at f''rsrarS jr. 71" »-
nt. -r>j1> Jijr
ArjrtfTttTTi Is Gw- 1ft T nrt
ft* 5^"("«'t"
9"licn»5) ciilT JOS Hnrrr F
follow suil.
Meantime. I take
naif
Iowa State's stadium bonds arc
selling at a premium—two above
par—and
Nebraska's
bonds arc brincinc J>ar
and
probably
would
be
the fact they can be "called on
Rehlacnder prescriptions now on I demand" by the Cornhnskrr au-
-Tayhawkcr and
record in the
that m^c •rur)- has a y°UI15er brother,
Coulter, trying out for the mile
California deer hunters travelled
an average of 430 miles and sprnl
nearly SI00 for each buck killed
last season, according to state fisn
and game commission estimates.
major
the
lile at Gold's —Adv.
1 OioritJcs.
BOWLING I T
jrr=: n I
Tn'l're
. 1*", s -WO r =t* Ib** VM
KBn « Trrr'
Tbu - ia-
IH1S AICD THAT: A hfi
for 1h"
lif'
rJ
JoolhfiJ]
vacancy
at
the
Univcr-Hy of
r»ik>rarj'-i <'jre t«-nis. .nvjI^'J ti \, = .1
Bou]f5'v ti f'i"mfT "*.i1h 1hr ilb-
ld if
council
Bur.ny
Oa >:<"",
ia 1" '0,-ich arrf forrr-T line
•he
Cisscll. The player proved lo be
3 bust m fast company and now
he js come back to the club that
?^nt him 1o the majors.
PILES
M fi-r- I'"1 I*
1" T>T.''-V.—Dick Lclb
~c: marked mediums. SsHc:
Pacific
S^,,.frMh- *h:;31 t";al«5 «r lirers. fancr.
3S«36>,c: Pacific coast standards. 35^1?
?.i,
clric eoart- shcn *re»lca or Jiners.
Mrdlams. 3S«35'ic: browrs. rcsalp of pr--
aiiam narks. 37'i<938c: n*arbr aad -rwt-
"1
1
'
$10TC-
Weekly Trade Review.
NEW YORK. y*},. g— tTi— The advaare-
siojt rrrorawj for practJcaHy all Sraacies
M trait since the fora o* the year 3s car-
rying wiUi It rich -week »ore
proofs of a gmcral definite rrrtval. Doa
Brad»tr«f» TrreMy trade rcrjcw
Aftcr the brief JutenajrtJBa.
Wheat:
Ma> .
July..
Ssp...
Corn:
May..
July..
Sep...
Oats:
May..
July..
Sep...
Eye:
May..
July..
Sep...
Barley:
Mey..
July..
Lard:
May..
July..
Sep...
I
95%
88%
867s
83%
79 Vi
76 K
49'/2
42%
40%
I 63%
63%
63%
95M:
SB'/B
36%!
89%!
87%
83'/2
80% 79%
V6
7/al 76'A
49%| 49«!
43%! 42%
40%
64%
64VV
64'Ai
63%
63'A
63%
96%
89
87%
80
43%
41
64%
64
64%
..| 74
..| 68
I
95=!.| 90%
88% I 89
85 »j 90
76V4
49V,
42'A
40%
63V"s
63'/i
63%
13.17 13.27 13.15113.27(13 07
13 25 13.42 13 25|\3 40|l3.20 6.52
13.32 13.50|13.32|13 45113.27| 6.72
51%
53'.'s
SoYa
36%
36y4
35%
60%
61%
63'A
50
50Vi
5.95
Kansas City Range of Prices.
(From Gooch & Co.. 315 First National
Bank Bldg.)
KANSAS CITY, Mo., Feb. 8—
|Open|High| Low |Close|Yest.
Wheat: .
May
July
Corn:
May
July....
91%
84%
84%
92%
85%
86 M,
83%
91%
84%
81'/4
92%
85-
'82-.
91%
84%
84%
81%
•Asked.
Winnipeg Range of Prices.)
(From Gooch & Co., 315 First National
Bank Bldg.)
WINNIPEG, Man., Feb. 8—
lOpen|Eigh| Low |Close|Yest.
Wheat:
May
July
I
82%
82
82%
82%
82%
82
82%
82 Vt
82%
81%
DAILY CARLOT RECEIPTS.
(By Gooch & Co.. 315 First Nat'l)
LINCOLN, Neb., Feb. 8—
CHICAGO:
Today Yest.
Wheat
10-
22
Corn
10
17
Oats
3
5
OMAHA:'
Wheat . ...*.
o
1
Corn
V
9
4
Oats
1
1
KANSAS CITY:
Wheat
15
31
Corn
:
29 31
Oats
i
o
PRIMARY MOVEMENT.
(By Gooch & Co.. 315 First Nat'l)
LINCOLN, Neb., Feb. 8—
RECEIPTS: .
Today vs. LastYr.
Wheat
'
131.000
478.000
Corn
178,000
686,000
°SHIPMENTSV
G2'°00
17°>00°
Wheat
313,000
430000
Com
312,000
279,000
Oats
105,000
162,000
CASH GRAIN MARKETS.
Chicago Cash Grain.
CHICAGO. Feb. 8.—
WHEAT— l(f?2c up. No. 1 hard 105%-
No. 2 mixed 1.02 H
'
CORN—l@2c up. No. 4 mixed. 86%;
No. 2 yellow. 89 li; No. 3 vellow 871/i
OATS—Steady to ',36 up. No. 2 white,
56c;
No. 4 white, 49?.; sg., 47.
Omaha Cash Grain.
OMAHA. Feb. 8.—
WHEAT—Ic up. No. 2 hard, 99c; No.
* hard, 98c. sgh.. 84V5.
CORN— Ic up. No. 3 yellow, 89c; No. 3
white. 55.
M. Kovis Cash Grain.
_„
ST. LOTUS, Feb. 8.—
WHEAT—2c tip. No. 2 red, 98c
CORN—l®2c up. No. 2 yellow, 92c;
No. 3 yellow. 88%@B9.
OATS—Itec up. No. 1 white. 59I860C.
No. 4
white, 53c.
Kansas Citr Cash Grain.
KANSAS CITY. Feb. J.—
WHEAT—Unchanged to l'*c up. No. 1
dark. 1.01V4: No. 1 hard, 96?iig.l 02' No.
2 hard. 96%iS1.01ii: No.l red, 35Yt®
S8c: No. 2 red, 95%-397%.
CORN—No. 2 white. 96',u$T99c: No. 3
white. 94«i96H: No. 2 yellow. 91I592S:
No. 3 yellow, 90SJ92: No. 2 mixed, 9052
91'.i: No. 3 mixed. 89«J31.
OATS—%«?l'.ic up. No. 2 white, 57@
61: No. 3 white. 55«t60c;
KAFFIR—No. 2 white, 2.10Q2.15.
few Tork Crude Rubber.
NEW YORK. Feb. «.—
CRUDE
RUBBER
FUTURES—Closed
quiet. 35-4Z higher. March 13.12: May.
33 23b: July 13 41-42; Sept.. 13 54-56.
Smoked ribbed j.pot closed 13.05n.
Minneapolis Floor.
MINNEAPOLIS. Feb. 8—(API—
FLOCR—Unchanged: shipments 22.177.
PURE BRAN—26 50927 00.
STANDARD MIDDLINGS—25 SOR26 OO.
Minneapolis Stocks.
MINNEAPOLIS. Ftb. 8— (API-
Bid
Ask Close
First Bank stock
8S
9M
s
Northwest Banco
4S
4*i 3'i
TREASURY BECEIITS.
WASHINGTON. Feb. S— » agrnry says, with prodac-
lion and distlrtnrtion about at an errs
pace, although the laror still leant towards
tli* forrarr.
' At fir.* gains in one direction «• an-
othrr now are raor; abundant."" the rcTltw
leratsnu'*. "the trtaord flews pm-lTO'lr
| hria regarding th? «rors» o! spring irafle
! hai"* Itwm rtrcrspd co*nplM*-jT in *3^c Urn.
«f the jnatni.rnanoe o! high distributive
Uftal« >nd ts* arrusrolatJiin of plans for
indtjttrial expansion, which -wire act ia
evifl'-nce wh*Ti the year ortprifd.
"TVitT- current dtrrfjopTTitT.is
rerf^Ung
no J-iflirji'.ions of a It-t-np in tl>» invprnnng
rteidi'Jtiw in agrimlt-aral ranEraniMw or
in tn? ronflar.t mlarciTrmi tit fati«rT
)—
The bond market continue-i
to
show
moderate improvement
»Caay
and
tb«
turnover was much heavier than in recent
dull sessions.
Indirect obligations of the TJ. S. govern-
ment advanced as mi.-ch as Ve of a point
and most of the trpasury issues were in
demand at slightly higher levels.
While
high grade corporate bonds were not aa
active as lower-priced issues, prices wera
well maintained in most all groups.
Trading activity was concentrated In
railroad and utility loans of the secondary
type and with few exceptions gains rang-
ing from minor fractions to a point were
well distributed. Baltimore & Ohio 4'/4s
•were % of a point higher at 53%,. Great
Northern 4%s sold 1 point higher at 77ft,
and Southern Railway 4s were % higher
at 56.
Others attracting buyers at higher levels
included obligations of the St. Louis-San
Francisco, New York Central, Erie and
St. Paul.
The higher trend was not quite so uni-
form in industrials and utilities, although
gains outnumbered
losses. International
Telephone 5s were in active demand and
gaied nearly a point before profit taking
or increased offerings shaded the advance.
Wetcm Union 5 and Pacific Gas 5s each
gained around %. Columbia Gas —
The curb market exhibited a fairly fair
undertone today, but the activity was not
much ahead of yesterday's dull session
and the majority of traders showed little
inclination to renounce their neutral at-
titude.
While sentiment seemed to be somewhat
improved, most observers felt that the list
would hold to a cautious range pending
congressional and Supreme court develop-
ments.
Among Issues edged fractionally higher
with Distillers Corp.-Seagrams a*. 17, Elec-
tric Bond & Share at E!i. Lake Shore
Mines at 503/i. and Wright Hargreaves at
8J,1. Pepperell and Hiram Walker eased.
Such stocks as American Cranamid "B."
American Gas & Electric, American Super-
power, Cities Service. Cord Corp. and
Swift ft Co-, were virtually unchanged.
Chicago. Produce.
_
CHICAGO. Feb. 8— -« on ihf vrtsny r,l st-ririnc trao? arc
fci; frnsi 10 i» 2S pt- c«it ;n fxcess
>" 35134 limrrs. T-r"7i IS* *»f!ins **a-
'fti ty the earlr dale «j
~
Chicago Baltrr and Eg* Fulsm.
CHICAGO. Feb. S— tJTi—
SBTTEH—
'
H'.ch t^ow Clnoe
Storage standards, TVb.
3«'i
31'-+ J«'«
Storage sUiaflaTfls. March 33>4
3J1
331*
Stwaee standard*. SOT. . 2S,\
2B-2 Z634
FrrVh standards. Jatse . 27
27
27
rocs —
Bring. rtandsrfif. Oct... 24'4 HV
24<4
Trts.1i STad^a firsts. Fcb
26% 25'/« 2SH
pactrd firsli APT. 23:« 13
ZS1-*
CHICAGO. Ftb. 8—Wi—Short .
In wheat by traders stimulated tie —^__
demand as" prices norcd upward on the
trchangc TcslcrflaT.
Al] trains finished
higher, with com and whra* luttircs -up 1
cent a 'buf.tirt from "Wcflntoday's final 7; 140-1GO Ibs., $6 25('(7;
slaughter pigs $5«i«.25;
feeders scarce;
nost good sows around $7 25: stags »o 50
7 25;
average
cost Thursday. $7 25,
weight 211,
Keprcientativc sales:
No. Av. Sh.
Price I No. Av. Sh. Price
HOGS.
CATTLE—Receitps,
killing classes slow
. ..
quality plain; stockers and feeders scarce
and steady; fed steers and yearlings most-
y
S8.50((ilO; short-fed yearlings, light.
$7 lleht
bnyini was said by the irsiie to be £h*r«c-
tfrt«Wc f>* Wic recrat inMkrt weod. Th-
open interest Jn tchcst lotcrcs Tras re-
Port fd tn br Hie rmaH'-'.l In stveral roenthii
»nd JD351 of the 3ioraia»ticra by tpfeulai^rK
has be~7i CTnplflei. CncTtainty over trjc
r ,titeflU.Tn prnflins » Sraprrms
rl*ltm OB Iht cf>lfl a»5"S h»< pot a
t on Vbt cniiirn'T-clal flTnanfl. and
has b»«i -Mrtremrty lisht as a rc-
243
162
231
204
198
180
17J
162
156
143
320
385
295
I
$7 65
7 60
7 60
7 50
7 40
7 35
7 25
7 00
6 75
6 25
SO VS.
$7.40
7 35
7 25
226
284
218
212
184
176
1G8
158
154
440
323
$7 65
7.60
7.60
7 50
7.40
7.25
7 15
7 00
6 50
$7 35
7.35
1,800;
calves, 400;
and
about steady;
Av.
S27
827
1320
1146
1013
1620
1310
158
120
Price
$9.25
7 50
$5 25
3 75
2 75
$4.65
4 25
S7 00
5.00
23
32
12
15
196
77
71
64
53'
72
39
36
21
(Clip Natives)
S4.00 |
$8 00
8 00
7.00
87
91
70
$8 00
8.00
6.00
FEEDING LAMBS.
$7.00 1
Chicago Livestock.
(U. S. Department of Agriculture)
CHICAGO. Feb. 8—(&)—
HOGS—Receipts. 11,000. including 6,000
direct; weights below 220 Ibs., 15 to 35c
jigher than Thursday; others strong to IOC
higher;
weights over 200 Ibs., S8.15®
8 25; top, $8.30; 160-200 Ibs., S8S8.25; 140-
160 Ibs., S7.50@8; pigs, $5.75g7.50; good
packing sows S7 55@7.65; light light, good
and choice, 140-160 Ibs.. $7.40(88; light
weight, 160-200 Ibs., $7 75)—
HOGS—Receipts.
1,500;
fairly
active:
mostly 10 to 15c higher than Thursday's
average on good and choice 200 Ibs. up:
bids and sales lighter weights about steady:
top $7 80: good and choice. 140-200 Ibs..
$6 35«t7.90: 200-350 Ibs.. $7 60CZ7 80: pack-
ing sows. 275-550 Ibs.. $6 2517.40.
CATTLE—Receipts. 500; calves. 100: gen-
erally steady on all prices: trade slow and
sonwwhat a cleanup affair: a few scattered
sales slauchter steers and ycarlincs up to
S10.50: steers, cood and choice. 550-1.100
lbs_ $8 2SR13 25: 1.100-l.SOO Ibs-. S9 25
•K13.50: heifers, good and choice. 550-900
Ibs.. $7 75«J10 50: cows. cood. $5 50i?7:
coznmon and medium. $3 50*35 50: Tcalers.
(mlUc-red>. medium to choice. MOB SO:
stortcr and feeOr rtecrs. sood and choice.
65S 50: Ktocier snd feeder steers, cood
and choice. —Quotations fcased en twes aad
•srethtrr.
Markets at a Glance
NEW IfORK. Feb. »—m—
STOCKS—firm;
list «[»ln
up In
uulft tlcaUnO.
BONUS—Higher;
secondary
rail*
lead advance.
CUKB—lii>i'rovtd:
utility
preferred
hsurs *trdit{.
FOKS1GN EXCHANGES—E»»j: dol-
lar gui'is-
COTTON—HUber; trade mid New
Orlcam Imylnc: local covering.
SUGAR—Ilicbcr; trade buying.
l/OFFEE—Lower; foreign srllini.
CHICAGO. III.. Krb. »_.<£')—
WHEAT—Hither; enlarged specula-
tive inltrr.st.
COKN—Stroii);; s h i p p e r demand
broadening.
CATTLE—Slow; steady to weak.
HOGS—Strong to "5 ccuts hlehcr;
top,
S8.30; small receipts.
Denver Livestock.
(U S. Department of Agriculture)
DENVER, Feb. 8—(/PI-
CATTLE—Receipts. 400; calves, 50; most-
ly a nominal maftat; odd loti of heifers
$5 50ffi8; cows. $T 50R5; few low cutters
and cutters, S2fi53; common to good bulls
$3(ti4 50; no demand for light vealers;
stock steers held above $6 50.
HOGS—Receipts. 2.000; 2 singles direct,
16 to California; practically nothing done,
early undertone weak on butchers few
packing sows fully steady up to $7 35;
average cost Thursday S7.62. weight 229.
Sheep 1.400; salable supply: 6 loads of
fed Colorado's, odd lots of drives: practi-
cally nothing done; asking steady to strong
on fed Iambs or 53 35, freight paid and
above; early undertone weak; late Thurs-
day.
3 loads of fairly good 68 Ibs. Colo-
rado's feeding lambs S6.75.
Chicago Butter and Eg£5.
CHICAGO. HI.. Feb. 8—(£>)—
BUTTER—Firm;
receipts,
4.438
tubs;
creamery specials
(93 score), 36Va—
LARD—Tierces. 513.15; loose, $12.80.
BELLIES—$lf.27.
New York Bar Silver.
NEW YORK. Feb. 8—()—
WHEAT—Steady. Closed: March, 68 %c;
May,
72%c; July, 75%c. Exchange, $4.87ft. '
New York Poultry.
NEW YORK. Feb. S—'JP)—
POULTRY—Live, steady to -weak.
By
freight: Roosters, 13c; other freight grades
unchanged.
Live, by express:
Chickens.
17gil8c; broilers, 9@18c; fowls, 17@20c;
roosters, 13c; turkeys and ducks, unquoted.
Dressed, steady; all fresh
and
frozen,
grades unchanged.
''
Paris Exchange.
PARIS. France. Feb. 8—(ff)—
THREE PER CENT RENTES—81 francs
40 centimes; 4V2 per cent rentes, 91 francs
56 centimes.
EXCHANGE ON LONDON—74 francs 32
centimes.
THE DOLLAR—Was quoted at 15 francs
23Yt centimes.
Turpentine and Rosin.
SAVANNAH. Feb. 8—(AP)
TURPENTINE—Firm, 50'/2; sales
IS;
receipts 35; shipments 450; stock 13,164.
ROSIN—Firm; sales 160; receipts 227;
shipments 2,300; stock 89,631; quote: B
3.90-95; D 4.05, E 4.20; F 4 65; G 4.65@
67%;
H 4.70; I and K. 4 75; M, 4.80;
N, 5.15 WR. 5 65; WW and X, 6 30.
New York Sugar.
NEW YORK. Feb. 8—OT—
SUGAR—After a quiet opening sugar fu-
tures developed "increased activity, and
prices advanced on trade buying against
sales of actual and started local and com-
mission house demands promoted by firm-
ness of stock.' In the old contract March
advanced from 1.93 to 1.91 and July from
2.02
to 2.03 while in the new March sold
at 1.92 and July at 2.00 and 2.02 or 1.22
net higher -with the market at 2 p. m.
holding around the best.
Futures closed steady, unchanged, to 2
higher; sales. 17,300 tons; March.
1.93:
May, 1.98 bid; July, 2.1* bid; September,
2.08;
December, 2.14; January, 2.12 bid.
New Tort Cotton.
NEW YORK, Feb. 8—C/P)—
COTTON—Cotton was more active today
with advances accompanied by reports
of an improved spot from both paid and
export sources. Much of the buying was
attributed to price fixing while offerings
continued relatively light. May contracts
sold up to 12.47 during the early after-
noon or 7 points net higher and about 21
points above low levels of last Saturday.
The mid-afternoon market
was
steady
within a point or 2 of the best.
Futures closed steady. 6 to 11 higher;
March.
12.42SJ.12.43:
May.
12.46; July,
12.46^12.47; October. 12.39"®12.40; Decem-
ber, 12.47; January. 12.48.
Spot, steady; middling;, 12.65.
Kansas City Hav.
KANSA S CITY, Feb. 8—
HAY—19 cars; unchanged.
Slcvx City
(XT. S. Department ol AcDcaHurel
sioux crrr. Feb. s—-w)—
CATTLE—Receipts. 1.TOO. jaort c3as=ej!
HiMc chanseo1: fluauty larg-ly plain: trv
rood SS3 Tb. yearllncs *10 5D: other risers
snfl ycarHries most!- short Jefls at SB iO
dnrn: choice absent: ofld lot* desirable
arcana $9: ijiort tref crrws $3 SO^f
5 fiO: 3cnr cutlers *ri<3 cultTs mairrtv S3 25
i'i3 35; *ratlcrca lots •common anfl mc-
flium rloctcT* $5 75 tfowi.
HOGS—Receipts. 4.000: roost:? 10 to 20c
Mchrr to shippers: ihipplns Sfmanfl fair-
ly broad on irrtshiit bflcrw 250 Tbs.; p*cl-
rrs WaflinE etfadv: better
2(10-260 Ib.
•buLcJier* *7 50i»l~ 70. 1op $7 70. :(K)-3flO Jb.
UcWts $7e' SO; 140-K.D 3b. Merit lirtits
S6 iS-nn- slauirM^r pits H 75S5-S; ftrrt
mnstfy $7 25; frcdcr pigs 130 Ibs., Wa
S SO
SHZEP—Receipt«. 5 ODD; slsucriLT lambs
srtMfl-.-. enoS fed
oSfcrincs
S-8:
y plain: noMmc Jr* t>^t
SB 7S m aborp; I"!-i3JnB l»rnbs
ill Tartare -op to 87; laic
st larebs B"Ktlr
J->c Icwer.
.bulk idler sr«throp of
Lincoln. He won five, drew one
and lost four.
'ft V.T
CHESS&-150.578. Jim. Pries*
«.4J
i ?"• of 3*f*rtriT
thi-Jtie'h »olnis o! «n»1 pressure. Airo»-
Hy Tt-itb the -Bind.
Tb?
but
WEATHER CONDITIONS.
muta &?•'*? ol ifcc roulh-s-e
Is s.\K f>""r N'-rstla a'S
irtTOCl; rrtr.fl* 1« T"%K« ana t.
Rp; 10 IMni.t
Th«-Tf it m'-l'T
.
fallrr. LiCht In m'ifl«raV- raiTi ha* Irl>n
in •i.s.frr, Xinrnt J»T"3 Otj»>"Wi» »•''T«vir'« » av
r^',-1 r. n>e I**" Ti-aon «n2 tt»' Tji-'h-
ra-t irfl «r- rr>' »v," JI«TTB»I I'hinJEh-
on 1J>|- "Tjnm' r~c?i iI'/M
1>>* '•'"' >
36 301 .B New Tort
34 in
HI) No Flail"
31 22 02 Ol'la
Cit-r
Wi Omaha
m P,1- o-nlx
2fij 00 PJlltV^reh
Chicarri
3021 . 'J Portland
CrTjcorflJa
3D 2
r>] <^4 Pueblo
Corptis Ch. Sn 6^ fti Rapid City
~
'
2B 2f
*0 t,T nf/ Siva: CjlT
Zf. in no Fpr.'nrfltld
Dearer
nn
28 2f,
tlO
tt,?.r, IP.
2C, 24
fin
61
3(1 32 0.1
54 ?.<; tin
40 20 «2
3026 01
32 2
SBM1 04
41 26 01
54 ?, 4
2B 24
r,n
(10
4?. 40' m
74 '•*
00
C-,'
'ii T'.l'-a-
00 V?l't,1
f-y.'n't-
Hn Vu T >i,'
f*< it' "1 V'rvr/br
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3E Z5J On
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25 ."2 1O
TO,
EWSPAPER
SIEWSFAPER!
THE
L I N C O L N S T A R — F R I D A Y , F E B R U A R Y 8, 1935
FIFTE EN
You Can Save Nearly 50% On Your Want Ad Now. Want Ad-taker B 1234.
'Oakie Doke' 7s 'Oke'
Claims Dictionary King
NEW YORK, Feb. 8—W)—If you ever get the heebie jeebies,
don't let It throw you, it's oakie doke.
From no less an authority than Charles Funk, who knows some-
thing about words and their meanings, comes the opinion that some
of America's more fantastic slang words and expressions deserve a
place in the dictionaries—they are part of the language and as such
should not be ignored.
Funk, whose business it is to publish dictionaries, was moved
tc make his observation on slang in a discussion with Dr. Frank
Vizetelly, the noted lexicographer, arising from the brazen use in
a Seattle court of the expression "oakie doke."
Dr. Vizetelly appeared greatly pained over the use of such an
expression, and voiced concern over the sanity of a nation in which
"lang flows so freely.
Such sayings as "oakie doke," "all rightie," and "you big
palooka" grate harshly on the Vizetelly ear.
But Funk, while drawing the line at some expressions, thinks
'palooka," "heebie jeebies,'' jitters," are "oakie doke." Americans,
he said, have abandoned "false prudery," and are willing to call
"a spade a spade."
So, if he has anything to say about it, there'll be some "spiffy"
new words in the dictionaries.
Congratulations to
- Cochran From Miami
By Way of New York
Despite all of the —cdern meth-
ods for the dissemination of infor-
mation, news sometimes travels
through devious channels before
reaching its ultimate destination.
Friday
Gov. R. L. Cochran re-
ceived a letter from an old Kansas
City friend, C. F. Lambert, wint-
ering in Miami. He congratulated
the governor on his election, say-
ing that he had only learned of it
a few days ago when he saw a
New York paper containing a pic-
ture of the governor signing the
gold usury bill.
Dr. Miller Assets
Valued At $97,938
Acting as special master for the
Dr. Miller Brewing Co. of Crete,
D. H. McClenahan reported
to
Federal Judge
Hunger
Friday
that the company's total assets
should be fixed at $97,938, which
he said is not sufficient to pay
the full indebtedness.
The com-
pany had previously submitted a
schedule of assets fixing the val-
uation at $122,862 and listing in-
debtedness of $128,310. Apprais-
ers appointed by McClenahan re-
ported
assets
at
$138,755. An
auclt just completed for the mas-
ter shows net income from July 1
to
December 31, 1934 totaled
Officers Of Welfare
Society Re-elected
The members of the executive
committee of the Social Welfare
society
re-elected
the
present
officers Thursday at the month-
ly board meeting: J. W. Easton,
president; Mrs. Nathan Gold, first
| vice president; the Rev. C. H.
(Walcott, second vice president;
and G. O. Smith, treasurer.
OFF THE RECORD
By Ed Reed
BETTING BILL
RESTS BRIEFLY
See E a s y Passage First
Of Week in Senate for
Ak-Sar-Ben Plan.
No effort was made by support-
ers
of the
Ak-Sar-Ben
pari-
mutuel betting bill, S. F. 14, to
have the upper wing of the law-
making diet vote upon it for pass-
age Friday, following the favor-
able action taken in committee of
the whole
Thursday afternoon
when the proposal was advancec
to third reading over feeble op-
position.
The bill was not engrossed Fri-
day morning, and its friends de-
cided to let it go over the week-
end. It will be on the third read-
ing calendar Monday or Tuesday
and they confidently expect it to
pass then with more than the 2
votes needed for a two- thirds ma-
jority with the emergency clause
Three More Passed.
Three other bills were voted upon, and
passed by the senate during the fore-
noon. Two o£ them. S. F. 97 and 98
are of Interest only to the city of Omaha
relating to pensions for firemen, theli
widows, and other dependents. The first
of these, creating a board of trustees to
administer the pension fund, and specify-
ing its sources of revenue, uent through
by 22 to 0. Its companion, fixing allow-
ances and barring adopted children from
benefits, passed by 85 to 0
S. F. 50, Increasing annual renewal li-
cense fees lor optometrists from $1 to $3
and givinp the extra money to the ex-
amining-and licensing board, received 2'
votes to 9 against.
A large rumber of additional petitions
from over th» state gainst chain store
tax legislation, and both. lor and against
the federal child labor amendment, again
poured In upon the senate Friday.
The resolution Introduced Thursday for
special senate »nd houst committeei to
confer with the governor and state su-
perintendent In regard to securing a ipe-
olal allotment of funds from Washington
to pay for school faculties for children In
families that have bsea placed In NERA
colonies was adopted.
The senate took an early recess In order
to participate in the Joint session with
the house for the address by Arthur F.
Mullen. It was due to reassemble at 2 p.
m . the plan being to adojurn over Sat-
urday and meet again Monday.
Smaller Balances
In County Treasury
Total balances'of $415,874 are
reported as of January 31 by
County Treasurer Albers. This
represents a decline of slightly
over 550,000 from the December
31 balance of $478,878 and is ac-
counted for largely by a decrease
in the cities and villages fund
from $55,676 to $8,825. -The bal-
ance in the county general is
$136,110 and in the district school
general fund it is $155,095. The
county relief fund of $34,597 in
the red—about $4,000 more than
the deficit at the end of the year.
There is now $7,444 in the county
old
age
pension
fund.
The
mothers' pension fund shows a
$659 deficit.
•Don't take those corners so fast while I'm shaving!"
Answers To Test Questions
Below are the answers to test qnn-
tions printed on Editorial page:
]. Black Friday.
•i. Beltium.
3. Distinguished English scholar and
educator.
4. One-third.
5. A name for the-Lord'i Prayer.
(From the Latin.,
6. Navy department.
7. Celebrated English jurist and law
writer.
8. Harriet Beecher Stowe.
9. Straits of Joan de Fuca.
10. Virginia.
STRANGE AS IT SEEMS—BY JOHN mx
For further proof address the author. Inclosing a stamped envelope for reply.
Reg. U. S. Pat Off.
(XT OS- OUP fUUMlNUM
Strange as it seems, for 40 ccn
tunes the Egyptians
liavc been
incubating eggs
artificially, ana
their methods, unchanged through-
out the agrs. get beMe.
results
than the most modem methods.
They hatch about f>5 per «cnt ol
the egfis. a record -u hich *-urpa«=es
&c modern jnrubator bv
-om 20
to 30 per ccm.
The typical Egj-ptian incubator
is a dome-shaped r-md hut, :nto
•which are placed up to 6,000 ecgs
spread out on the floor. An at- rain on a tin roof,
tcndant is on duty
coj-stantly |
«
•
«
from the time the eggs are put in | Lloyd's ot London, an insur-
until the chicfe emerge three ia.ice Association, was named lor
•vvceks later. The eggs are warmed Edward Lloyd, a rolfce shop own-
at first by hot ashes then later'cr at whose place of business
incubated by decaying refuse. The near the London docks underwrU-1
Egyptian hatchery experts caleu-.ers used 1o congregate to await|
late the hatchmc time almost to' prospective customers. Lloyd him-1
the hour, and the chicks emerge self was never in the insurance
from the shells almost simulthn- ' business '
'
cously—they set up such a noise
picVing their way out
of the
Tom carer*; Nebraska s
Great'
shells that n sounds like heavy, Navy.
J
LOCAL WANT AD RATES
Want Adi appear IB both the mornint
*nd evening coitions ol the Journal and
the eveuing coitions o! The btar or In Thi
Sunday Journal and Star lor tb* ot>e prlct
Want Ad classUlcaUoas close «t 8 p. •
{or the morning and Sunday editions, and
at 12 noon for the evening editions. Ad*
received after this closing hour will b* run
too iat* to cla»hlf;.
Cash Ratu.
92 cents per llu* per day. oat or two
dtyi.
20 cents per line pei day. thrM
four
five 01 six consecutive Insertions.
18 cents per line per day «»\en or mor
consccutl\a Insertions.
Cash rates, effectlv* within 10 days afte.
ad expires.
Minimum charge 75 cents, minimum cash
66 cents
When insertions or* not consccutlv* on
day rate applies.
Three lines minimum.
Charge Ratoi.
25 centf per line per day. on* or two
days.
22 cents per line per day, three, four
five or si: consecutive Insertion!.
19 cents per line per day seven or more
consecutive Insertions.
Cash rates «tfectlv» within 10 days aft*
•d expires
Minimum charge 79 cents, minimum cash
68 cents.
When Insertions art not consecutive om
d*y rato applies.
DEATHS
BUISING. THLOE M.—Funeral sen Ices for
Miss Buislng were held Friday afternoon
»t 3 o'clock at Wadlow's chapel, Rev
Mr. McKenzle of Alvo offlcaltlng. Pall
bearers were' Lafe Mullen. Simon Reh:
meicr, John Elliott, Elmer West. Prank
Taylor and Carl Rosenow. Interment a
Swanton.
\
CASSADY, MHS. LEOMA MILDRED—Fu-
neral senices for Mrs. Cauady
bo held at 10 o'clock Saturday mornini
at Castle, Koper & Matthews chapel
Rev.
Waltpr Aitken officiating. Inter-
ment at Wyuka. The family requests no
flowers. Pallbearers v,Hl be: Sam Mor-
ris, David Der.nls. Carl Saline, Bennard
Stearns. Merle Cameron and Edward
Trimble.
COOK, MRS. HELEN E.—Funeral services
for Mrs. Cook will be held Saturday
afte-noon at 2-30 o'clock at First-Ply-
mouth Congregational church. Rev. Ben
P. Wyland officiating. Interment
a
Wyuka.
CLARK, GEORGE H.—Died at his farm
home a half mils noilheast of Raymont
at 5:30 o'clock Friday morning. He was
08 years old. He Is survived by his wife,
Flora F.; a son, Harold of Raymond; a
daughter. Alice of Raymond; and two
sister*. Mrs
LeRoy Combs of Lincoln
and Mrs. Hattie Wlloox of Pasadena
Cal. The body is at Castle. Roper &
Matthews pending arrangements.
DAVIS, MRS. KATE W1NSLOW—Funera-
services for Mrs. Davis will be held
Saturday afternoon at Grace Methodist
church at l o'clock. Rev. Ira W. Kings-
ley officiating, assisted by Rev. Lloyd
L. Blewfield, Mrs. M. C. Lefier will
sin?, accompanied by Miss
Margarel
McGregor on the organ. The body will
lie In state at the
church
from 12
o'clock until 1 o'clock
Interment at
Kehawka
Pallbearers
wll] be. J.
L.
Harton. W. B. Rose A. W. Miller, J.
C. Scofield.
George E.
Hager
and
Charles N. Cadttallader.
BFGEL. MRS. CATHERINE—Funeral serv-
ices for Mrs. Hegel will be held Satur-
day afternoon
at the
home of her
daughter, Mrs.
John
Flrestme.
860
North Twelfth street at 1:30 o'clock,
and at Emmanuel Reformed Lutheran
church. Tenth and Charleston street, at
2 o'clock. Rev. Conrad Sauer officiating
Six grandsons ^ill be pallbearers. In-
termtut at Wyuka.
JACOBSON, MRS. ABIGALL ELLIS—Died
Wednesday evening at Alcester, S. D.
She was 38 years old and a former
resident of Nebraska. She is survived
y her husband. Rev. s
A Jacobson:
three sons, Donald. Richard and Hol-
land: a daughter. Darlene. three broth-
ers, D._B. van Every of Omaha. E M.
Van Every of Lincoln and W. G. Van
E/ery of Weeping Water: and a sister,
Mrs. J. M. Cramer of Ogallala.
The
body* will arrive in Lincoln Saturcay
morning and will be taken to Wadlow's'.
Funeral services will be held Sunday
afternoon at the Baptist church at
Wabash. Rev. Van Nice of York officiat-
ing. Interment at Wabash.
WHITED, HARRY C.—The body of Mr.
Whited was taken to
Palmyra
from
SplaiE, Schneli & Griffiths Friday aft-
ernoon. Funeral services and interment
will be at Palmyra Saturday.
ANNOUNCEMENTS.
FUNERAL SERVICES
Castle, Roper & Matthews
Mortici«n»
B8501
Ambulance
HELMSDOERFER
COR. 27th A Q.
PHONE B4028
Wadlow's Mortuary
AMBULANOi
B6535
MORTICIAN!
1225
Umberger Funeral Chapel
U« On* 81
AMBULANCE
B3424
133S
SPLAIN, SCHNELL
& GRIFFITHS
B6S07.
HODGMAN MORTUARY
B69S9
1238 K
aim
TROVER
E. L. TROTER
MRS. E. L. TROTER
WALTON G. ROBERTS
PERSONALS.
A HOME FOR invalids and elderly people.
Nurse
in charge.
Prices reasonable.
GET
-- YOUR 1935 Dos tax immediately:
You're subject to arrest and losing your
dog if you don't- B6312.
Good Will Industries, uccout-i cnurcn wel-
fare organization needs clothlne. thots,
furniture, mattresses, newspapers; pro-
Tides worn pat ch-uity. 10W Q
B454S.
HELEN—Meet me same place at nine. I'll
sure brins Wrigley's Spearmint. It does
help like yon said.—BELL.
SALVATION ARM?; needs vour tnagatincs
clothes and shoes. Call B6387 for truck.
PLEASE INFORM whereabouts of Jack.
Hazel, Edmond or Betty Mae Edwards
to Mrs. C. H. Will. 1448 O. B159S.
STOMACH ulcer, gas pains, and indigestion
victims, why suffer?
For "quick relief
Ket a free sample of Udga Tablets, a
doctor** prescription, at Fentoa
Drug
Company. Harley Dru?
BUSINESS PERSONALS.
8
TRUCK colng west wants load
to help
share expenses. Call Rural SOIL
STRAYED, LOST, FOUND 9
BROWN POCKETBOOK lost near Sth and
Que. Contained drivers' license. i>er»nal
papers. Pleace can wsil after C p. m.
Reward.
J200 REWARD. Ko ank holdup Fel>. 1.
M.
H.
Hffl,
SmIUi
Center. Kansas.
Fhoae Ko. J,
FOUND—Boston hull dor.
Describe aofl
par for ad. Phase B4293.
BOSTON JirlndJe tnflMoc JoK. On- Woe «y*
and one Srown. aa-rxtrs to name "ol
"
" Re-ward.
L4344.
JLOST—
Reward.
ch«ac. cash. haJltt tscket*.
Afldr«rs SMI Journal.
AUTOMOTIVE
USED CARS FOR SALE, if
WE PAT MORS CASH FOR AN? MAKS
OJ'*!ODEI-
CSED
CAR.
fKB
"MTTCH." 173D "O" OR CALL B24S3.
M30 CHEVROLET Coapt. otceHent ceo-
JiUon. good VTtt. Can B3S15.
UST NOW
1331 AUBTjRN Stfl. Soaaa
SS95
SBSS
IS3* A'ya'URN Deluxe Sedan Jin3S
J7W
IS3I AUBURN Uelox* Sedan J13SS
ssrrs
1B34 PACKARD Deluxe Sdr, «272S ilKSO
HOTfAHD * AFANADOR MOTORS
Paclcard * A-olmni Sales A Sertte-e
l N S t .
Bf,'.a«
1S33 PONTIAC sport cow*
..........
f.:,15
1WJ FORD V-J ™ach
..............
MIS
HS! S55- ="'««' «»i2i ............ »«o
1922 CHEV. ctmch
..................
?3«S
»2» FORP roadiOfr
................
$»0
1S30 CHEV. ccach
.................
$199
SEDIJ5S MOTORS. 13 & Q. B7027
W*2
CHEV.
«eZ
coacli »eS
35<5l
Tirana* dtl. « «OW »»flan. rtce *27S.
We tr»e for Jlvertoek aaa cram. N«.r.
__A;o! o Zxeh..a7ao O. B]Z77.
H1T390N
...........
KING MOTORS, INC.
HDd»cn A
R«e« A
_
TE PAT CASH FOR USED CARS.
COLN
MOTOR C0_
3S2« "O"
S3MW OS BG3P7.
ST.
IF YOU DON'T FIND
WHAT YOU WANT
Advertised below run a wanted ad of your own. The
wanted to buy ads do as good a job of getting results
as the for sale ads do. This ad brought "too many calls"
says the advertiser.
WANTED—One medium or
large
sized baby bed. Cull FO 120
ADS WHICH ARE~ORDERED~NOW
WE WILL RUN
/ Days for tlie Price of
You save nearly 50% at this special rate and the way
to be sure of results is to order the ad for a week. You
can cancel the ad at any time and we will charge you
only for the days it has run.
Ad-taker B1234
MERCHANDISE
S— Best
17c A 19c
Dr»siifd
& cheapest
fter
AUTOMOTIVE
USED CARS FOR SALE. H
CHEAP USED CARS
1928
WHIPPET 4 COACH
1928 WHIPPET 4 SEDAN
1928 WHIPPET 6 COUPE
1928
CHRYSLER * COACH
1928 PONTIAC COACH
1928 CHRYSLER 4 SEDAN
1928
DODGE 4 SEDAN
1929
DURANT 6 SEDAN
1929
HUDSON COACH
1928 BUICK 8 COACH
$50
$50
JSQ
$75
$75
S75
$100
S100
S75
............
.$100
LINCOLN MOTOR CO.
1824
O St.
Open till 9 p. m.
B3SOO
1B?» I-A-SALLB 5 pass, coupe, a steal at
tl50. Lincoln Motor Co. 1824 O. B3800.
*30 Ford sport roadster, light green body,
dark green fenders. Air tires almost new.
Fine condition. 2409 O at,
J830 FORD Tudor, new Drakes, tires and
paint, motor and
steering gear
over-
hauled. One side mount 2409 O St
FINANCIAL
MONEY TO LOAN
41
L O A N S
Made on your personal signature,
household
poods,
automobile
or
other securitj.
Monthly repay-
ments as low as $6.70 per hun-
dred, and protected by accident
health and life insurance.
Capital Credit Co.
S% Stuart BldB.
heavy hens
\ou order.
_ OMnjuullJ^p^jn.Jiiiit. ri9_So. t,_ B344B.
i'ANCY, smooth, I'rm Ked Triunli)~nnd
rural potatoes, elcsnnt cookem
Apples,
CannliiK Apples veitr'ables. EnRllsh wal-
nuts, 15r |b. Grapefruit, dot. 39c
Good
popcorn,
Ih
lOc. Basement, 3303 Or-
i-hsrd M3_20^
__
Focfo SAlUE — Home made,
lminu~"*.ro\\n
food*. J. C. 1'cnny Store. Silt . Keb. 9.
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
GENUINE Idaho potatoes, $1.35 per c«"fT
saclc at warehouse
400 No, Sth St. Op-
posite Burlington Freluhl House.
GOOD eating ana cooking apples ot all
kinds. No. l potatoes J1.40 cut Midwwt
Fruit Co. (18 & O. M1732.
OTH ST. MARKET—Red Triumphs ~$1.69;
sweet potatoes 7 Ibs. for Me; northern
white beans s ibs. for 20c. 133 So. Din.
YOU WILL FIND low prices every dav at
Snyder's Grocer? teria
specialty. 33rd & B St. Oood meats a
REALESTATE FOR RENT
— — HOUSES F O R ~ R E . l N ' f f t
J ST.. i>oi. loivef~auFu-x~7~rTSJ»7ri:w3 uiP
mvce, enrage. $:o
201.1 M. 6 rooms. $12.
2045 M. a ruin . uimtulrn $8.
1121 New
Hampshire, 3 rms., 510.50. Ceo. Uocrri,
1A30 it.
HU bO. !M>—l) room all modern house, Mill
basement,
cnriiKe
Kc.isonaWe.
Good
condition.
B7S37. Omicr
121 No 14.
27W IJUULKV—Modern
D roomhouse?
olenn. BOM location, good fur*ince. paved
__strect.
Kfa^wable^ _B3712.
ditlon, strictly motlern
Quiet neighbor-
hood
»•••-- — •
HOUSEHOLD GOODS
ATTENTION—Wanted
§9
used furniture and
rues, we pay cash or trade
Auction
Furniture Ex., 235Q 0,
B42M
Saturday Only
SEWING Muchlno allowance of $10.00 for
>our old machine on any now electric.
Just thlnlc $24.75 and jour old machine
buys a nnw portable electric. $29.30 and
jour old machine bujs a n&w Console
electric. Terms II weeklv.
GOURLAY BROS.
143 So. 12th
LS369
»Z9 MODEL A FORD COACH—Excellent
. condition. 4911 Calvert. FO438.
TRUCKS FOR SALE
12
USED TRUCKS
FORD Model T, l ton, cheap.
REO 1929 J-ton sleeper cab 34x7 duals.
CHEVROLET 1929, 154 ton, cheap.
DIAMOND T 1929 2-ton, long wheelbase.
DJT'L 1930 1-ton 5x8 U. S. mall body.
5JT-L 1930 model A-4 2-ton tractor.
CHEVROLET 1931 %-ton panel.
3-lNT'L 1932 114 ton, 7x10 bodies.
INT'L 1932 1^-ton, w-b- 12 ft stock rack.
INT'L 1933, 1« ton, B-3, .leeper cab.
DODGE 1934 2-ton tractor
CHEVROLET 1934 H ton pickup.
INT'L 1934 2 ton tractor, sleeper cab.
International Harvester Co.
635 J St
I^ELIEF
From Financial Worry!
A SECURITIES LOAN
IB simple, quick and satisfactory.
J50, to $500, $500 to *1,000.
TOUR PLANS TO CHOOSE FROM
AUTOMOBILE — FURNITURE
CO-SIGNER—STOCKS & BONDS
Securities Investment Corp.
1640
O St.—B7024.
HERE IS THE MONEY
to PAY ALL
Your Last Year's Bills
Credit 11 the foundation
of all
business
and State Securities Co. Is the Guardian
of jour credit
AT HARDY'S—Reconditioned Detroit Jewel
$S50; Speed Queen washer. $39 50; Gra>-
bar exerciser, slightly used $15.
SEWING
at S5.
LS369
MACHINE— Household or Singer
Gourlay Bros , 143 So. 32th.
WE HAVE
A LOT of good used furniture and we can
save you money.
See us
Kellison Furniture Co.
208-212 So. 11
B4991
-
„ _ _JL1"L.I52. to-'"! "''Predated I324M).
FOR RKNT In NorrivTi, 7 roorn~cottai:eT
FO "5"d"n' tW° loU' ro(1'or">Dle. Call '
Poll KENT—6 larse looms, modern hous(T
suitable for room-n. 210 So.
18th
In
_J.'ood_ condition _B3W8._
PRESUOTT DlSTRtCT~S|)len() 50
4628 Hillside. 7-rm. modern
SITioO
2JOO Vine, 2 apt»
S2».00
2137 P, 7-rm. modern
S15.50
991 So. 11. 8-rm brlclc npt
$20.50'
Manv other Kood rentals
"
!IirIin.l:!0I1 R5»!t> C°-
B3277. JI2962
142') SO. 28—5 loom Tiunyalowl light and
chccrv; newly clcnnod: icady for Rood
tenant Garage. F167I.
A, C. GR1SWOLD—Consoleum 49c sq. .%d.
6x9 Congoleum rngs $3.45, 7-6x9, $4.25.
114 Xo. 14. L660S.
SEVERAL USED
Ref. and
door sam-
ples, 1 gas range, used washers, wring-
er rolls and repair for all makes wash-
ers. Wedell Sales Co.. 245 So. 11. B5081.
3-PIECB living room suite, $34.80; B-pc.
dining room suite, J49 50; 3-pc. bedroom
suite as low as $29.50. '. A. Woods &
Sons. 209 So. llth. B3511.
FOR SALE—1930 Ford 1% ton truck, dual
wheels with grain body, $185. Lord Auto
Co.,
17th A O. B4359.
TWELVE
'
—
1933 D. T. 2 ton truck
'.".."" "$766
1933 Ford V-8 truck
r;..::.S325
Highway 17 foot trailer
;
$350
LaPeer trailer 15 it
$350
1932
D. T. 1% ton truck
$125
Ford Delivery Co.
B3294
MOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES. 15
FRAZIEH'S. 308 So. llth, L9174.
FHef
balloon $27.50, Admiral balloon $22.50,
2nd hand bikes $7.50 to $12.50.
U. S
_cham tires $1.75.
TOTAL COST ONLY «1^ PER MONTH
* to 12 MONTHS TO PAY
CHOOSE TOUR OWN PLAN.
Signers,
l, Mortgage on real
e
automobile and
,
Collateral, Mortgage on real estate or
household (oods.
State Securities Co.
^ Under Bureau of Banking.
FARM LO-' NS—5 percent ten year loans.
No commission. Quick closing. Woodward
Bros., 212 Richards Block.
AUTOS WANTED.
17
I WILL pay private party
model Ford or Chevrolet
_ B5076 or L4700.
cash, for late
No
dealers.
BUSINESS SERVICE
BEAUTY PARLORS.
18A
FREE haircut, shampoo, fingerwava with
standard permanents. S1.25. S1.70, $2.50.
This week
Bring ad. Eve. Appoint.
Leader Beauty, 122 No. 12th.
HEATING, PLUMBING.
24
FURNACES and tin work. Prompt atten-
tion. Arthur Larson. Call FO 309. Es-
ciusive agent for Wise furnace.
FAINTING & DECORATING, as
PAPERHANGING wanted 12c a roll. Also
extra fine painting, inside anrt out. Ex-
perienced. All work guaranteed. M4293.
PHYSICIANS.
29
CHRONIC—Diseases, Men & women. 3rl
A. B. Walker. B3SS5. 1105 O. Open Sun-
day.
No lost tune. No hospital. Piles
WE ARE making conservative loans at <
reasonable rate on good Lincoln Homes
to borrowers regularly employed. Month-
ly payments. W. L. Turner, Agent, 122
North llth.
GOOD two Piece mohair living room suite.
Slightly use.
Bargain
Eno and Taylor
Upholstering Co. 1615 So. 17th,
THE VERY BEST BARGAINS
In Lincoln In new and used.
See us. We
trade, give terms you can meet.
Nebraska Furniture Co.
127 So. 10th.
B1178
SLIGHTLY USED Easj washer. Bargain
if taken at once. New sweepers ?24 50.
Wedell Sales Co
B5081. 245 So. llth.
GOOD RKNTALS
1120 M St.. cozy five room bungalow all
modern, ?18 50
5™J p_alvcrt. 5 rooms all modern, SIS SO. '
4J05 M, all modern, acre ground, chicken
house, $20.00.
§3225
1218_I!°"
F4889
EXCEPTIONALLY" nice home in southeast
Lncoln on Ryons Street. Bin living room,
with fireplace, downstairs bedroom and,
biuh, three bedrooms and batJi upstairs,
all In excellent condition. Will lease for
$00.00
THE FIRST TRUST COMPANY.
___Real_Estate Department B1201.
MOVING.' Call star Van, BoTeS Uafetui
courteous men: free moving baskets* rr««
estimates; green trading stamps
flre-
"root warehouse: Moth Kill t-ault.
•
ONE ONLY—s room almost new
nouse7
lone Ihing room, finished
attic. S30.
__37oO Garfleld
Pauley Lumber. F237fi.
3, 4 AND 5 ROOM HOUSES with gardea
space. S10 to 521 mo.; e room* modern.
8119 Knox, tig. Trester. B256S.
HOUSES FURNISHED
78
5 ROOM, heated, lower duplex,
garage, completely furnished.
BS093.
740 F—Furnished
S22 50.
buagalow
rent,-
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
FARMS FOR SALE
82
FEBRUARY
Clearance sale
on pianos,
radios,
electric
refrigerators,
stoves,
washers,
ironers and cleaners
going.
Compare our prices and terms and be-
come our customer. G A Grancer Co.
1210 O St
REBUILT elec. vacuum sweepers, Euretta
with
attachments
517 50,
Magnetic
$12.50, Eureka $15. Bee-Vac $15.
Fur-
niture Exchange, 1434 O, B6014.
AN OTOE CO. Imp (160) all tillable, near
country school, S50 acre: (80}
near Ad-
ams,
55,000,, Imp. (100) near Denton,
acre; Imp.
(200) Gage Co.. on
,
S65
MUSICAL MERCHANDISE 62
WE RENT good upright pianos $2 and $3
a, month. Low prices for sale. Crancer's,
1210 O St.
WANTED—TO BUY.
66
OLD GOLD, gold teeth, platinum, silver,
watches, diamondst gold filled and plate.
U. S. government license. 231 No 12th.
5
MINUTE LOANS ON
AUTOMOBILE & FURNITURE
AUTO LOAN & FINANCE CO.
1554 O St.
Corner 16th & O
B3565
Cash Quickly
PLENTY OF TIME TO REPAY
EMPLOYED people can get S50 to 5500
on liberal credit terms.
Come in... .Write... .Or Phone.
Personal Finance Co.
213 Sharp Bldg.
13th & N St., Lincoln. Neb.B1043
AUTOMOBILE AND FURNITURE JbOANS
LOWEST RATES, EASY PAYMENTS.
UNITED FINANCE CO. 117 No. 14. BS07B
LOANS. on automobiles, lurnlture,
' diamonds, stocks, conds. No
signers. Loans made In a minute. Mo-
tors Finance. 1524 O St B5271.
I
EMPLOYMENT
HELP WANTED— Femaltt
EXPERIENCED girl lor
32
work.
References.
Star Box 513
general
Best wages. house-
Write
HELP WANTED MALE
33
EXPERIENCED
bookkeeper
and
credit
manager.
A permanent and well fi-
nanced Lincoln corporation desires a man
to have charge of bookkeeping and credit
department. State fully jour experience,
age, present employment if married or
tingle. This information will be stnctiv
confidential.
Address Lincoln Star Boi
WANTED 2 salesmen, wholessJe auto sup-
plies; also salesman for electrical sup-
Plies. Must have trade following.
Ad-
dress 839 Journal.
MIDDLE AGED MEN lor new order di-
vision of
national
organization. Men
with previous sales experience
desired.
No delivery. No collecting. Apply Ware-
house office 1375 So. 33rd.
WANTED—2 neat appearing iouns men,
must be capable and have
local refer-
ences. See Mr. Walton, Kresge Bldg., 9
to 12 a. m. Saturday.
Money for your Immediate needs
Refinancing automobiles. Chattels.
GLOBE FINANCE CO. 223 So. 13th
MONEt tor your immediate needs in-
stantly. Anto loans. Refinancing. Fed-
en.ted Finance Co 1503 O. F2508-
WANTED TO BORROW
42
INVESTORS—If jou want to make an ex-
cellent residence loan, we have it.
223
Stuart Bide. C. C. Kimball Co.
LIVESTOCK
LIVESTOCK
43
ROOMS AND BOARD
ROOMS WITH BOARD
67
3215
S—Exceptionally
nicely
furnished
southeast room, pleasant home, suitable
for 1 or 2. Reasonable. Meals. Garage.
, L8286.
SLEEPING ROOMS.
68
1234 D—Desirable room in modern home,
walking distance. Good heat. Just va-
cated, garage. L7846.
1521 SO. 20.—Nice room, modern home,
well furnished.
Private
lavatory,
gas
heat and continuous hot water. F466D.
CLEAN, modem rooms, newly decorated,
$2.00 per week and up.
Central Hotel
B2620.
SOUTHEAST Lincoln—Suite of two rooms.
Outside
entrance.
Adjoining
bath
1
sleeping
room.
Garage.
Reasonably
Priced. F8136.
BJue." SG5 acre: terms S5.000 cash,
bal, Fed Loan, and March poaa. Fctter-
man (1st Natl. Blk.)
_
_
FOR SALE — An improved 160 acres
two
miles south of Wahoo, Nebraska,
on
Highway f*o. 77: also an unimproved 39
acres located two miles south of SIcad
Nebraska.
Inquire
of Louie
Bobbins.'
Administrator, Wahoo. Nebraska
160 A. Improved farm, 11 mile H. E. Al-
liance. Potato country. 152 J^. cultiva-
__tion. Sale or trade. Lincoln owner. F6255.
CHOICE 80, Well Imp , March j>o«s. w'ith
easv terms; perfect unimproved SO on
gravel, east
Cass Co. Also have 480
acres choice le\el
farm. 293. acres In
wheat, Kimball Co.. gravel road, mail
route, -would
exchange for
something
near Lincoln. Herman & <"leinans
302
First Nat'l. B5336
GOOD Nemaha County farm.
3.60 acres
well improved. S miles from Hoi\e Price
575 an acre. Terms one-fifth
cash.
Hayes. 708 First National Bank
Bldr •
Lincoln.
POSSESSION and easy terms on four S0's
each improved, 2 at $75 per acre, one at
S90. one at $100. Choice, S2.0OO to S3,000
down, 240 rolling, cheap; 12O good -m-
provemcnts
$7,200. R.
A.
Bickford,
3448 "S"—B1344.
POSSESSION— Cass Co. 80, choice. 53,000
down; Saunders Co 80, S2.OOO down-
Johnson Co. 120, $4,000 down: Lancaster
Co..
valiey farm, 240. SO. unimproved
$7.000
B1344
,
.
.
R,
A. Bickford.
3448
"S. ,"
FARM for sale, quarter section Seward
county, 5% miles northeast
of- Crete
Well improved.
Joseph Drevxj,
Crete"
Nebr.
'
HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS 69
S ST., 2002—Nice room furnished for light
housekeeping. Gas, lights and heat fur-
nished. 58 month. L4654.
REAL ESTATE FOR RENT
APARTMENTS—Furnished. 74
C -STREET near 18th, 3 room completely
furnished, with garage S30. FS110,
C ST., 1335—Cory apt. witn sun parlor,
first floor, suitable lor two adults. Ga-
rage. B6227.
H ST.. 1223—WATSEKA—Two attractive
apartments: every convenience; one on
south with bedroom. Quiet people desired.
Garage.
RAY LAWS AUCTION. Won., Feb. 11 at
1 p. m.t IK mi. east of Waverly on high-
way and % ml. north. 6 horses, black
mares. 7 yrs. old., wt. 2SOO. gray mare
and gelding, 7 & 8 jre. old. wt. 2650.
black 3-yr. old, wt. 1250. bay horse, wt.
HOO; 3 sets of good Concord harness and
collars;
1 red cow and heifer calf. A
complete line of farm machinery, geese,
chickens.
household
goods.
Hai clock
Natl. Bk.. Clk. Forke Bros., The Auc-
tioneers. B1M2.
YOUNG MEN—Free to travel, transporta-
tion pa4d. Beginners can earn SIS per
week. Room 305 Victoria hotel.
*OUN(J MEN for sales work, good pay.
short hours, experience unnecessary. See
Mr. McCleery, Victoria. Hotel, 7 to S
p. m.
WORK WANTED—FEMALE 36
AN EXPERIENCED PERSON must have
work! References.
Competence: Secretary
(social included).
General office work.
Physician's or deotiit'i assistant. Ad-
dres» Star 521.
EXPERIENCED «tenogr»pner wishes worX,
full or part time; legal experience, knowi-
edce of bookkeeping.
Opal Storms. B6097.
Best references.
ROUGH-DRY
WASH 4c lb.. rough^ry.
flat work ironed 10 Ite. -sac. Double
totton blankets 25c pr. L6447.
FINANCIAL
BUSI. OPPORTUNITIES.
38
A BUSINESS CORNER
In Lincota.
aa
apartmeDt la Lincoln or ao apartsient la
Hasting! for oiortjate, bonds or Seor.
farm.
HARRINGTON
214 So. 13UJ St
EEALTY CO.
B171S or B327T.
BARGAIN — Surtrar6»n grocery Jor talc.
doiac p>od Imslsess. No flxrares to bur.
Good clean slocX. Address 323 Joamal
BURLINGTON LIVESTOCK COMMISSION
CO.—Sale every Tuesday, starting at 12
noon. A very fine line of li.estock last
Tuesday and a better line this coming
sale. List •vour livestock carlv so we can
advertise it. J. E. McBnde, "Mpr . J. E.
Hombuckle. Auct, FO G2S B43C2.
1834
PROSPECT—Attractive,
sunny 1
room apt., tile bath,
kitcnenet.
elec.
rcfng. Fine for business couple. F463S.
MODERN 5 rooms. Frigldaire and garage.
Close to capitol. Phone B1159, B2692 or
F6649.
WANTED—Young ladv to share furnished
apartment.
Call F2326
SHURTLEFF ARMS. 645 So. 17th—Lin-
coln's \ery finest. One of the most choice
furnished apts., now available. Compare
this with other apts, renting for even
more. LS964.
KIPLING 633 So. 17th—Small apt.
with
frigidalrc, newly decorated, at last sum-
mers rental rate. B50S7.
ViELL imp. 160 near Douglas, SS2.SO per
acre. Well imp. 80 near Lincoln. S95 no
per acre Lincoln Real Estate and Inv
C°- 812 First Nat'l Bank. Phone Bills.
160 ACRES Platte Valley, fair
Improved
ments, near paved
hiRhway,
540 per
acre, 51,000. cash, balance easy terms. '
M. A. Larson. Central City, ISTeb.
10, 30. 40, 80. 120. 160. 240, 32O ACRESr
ranches, 1.000 to 200,000 acres- ex-
changes. Consult John SchowaJter. 215
Little Bldg
B6408.
ACREAGES FOR SALE
CHOICE
.83
southeast
location.
%
acri '•
ground, five room all modem bouse
Ample space for garden. Consider well
located lot as part payment.
See now
by phoning.
B3225
Freci Shelledy
F4639
ACRES fertile well drained le-wel b'nck
loam, adjoining city, east, partly im-
proved, excellent
investment.
Forsj-tb.
B1441. F5058
d4
APARTS. UNFURNISHED. "-4A
FOR SALE—15 head of horses and mares.
Some brood sows. White lace bull, 7 gal-
loncow. 901 C.
25 HEAD of extra Rood horses and mules.
See me Tor your harness.
H. It. Wme-
land. B4355. 207 Kresge Bldg.
POULTRY & SUPPLIES 49
FOR
SALE—210
egp
Incnhator and
brooder.
FO 1G5J. 4705 South St.
MERCHANDISE
APOLLO Apartments. 730 So. llth St.—
Five rooms, ground floor. J. E. Kelly,
B5071.
ATTRACTIVE modern three room apart-
ment, fireproof building: heat, light and
gas. Close in. B3111.
G ,ST.. 1230—2-nn. Apt.. 2nd floor, fast,
steam heat. $13. available at once. For-
syth. B1447. FS326.
O ST.. 2626—Four room apartment, rrlctd-
aire, heat,
water,
garage furnished.
Call LS751.
HEATED— Only $25. attractive 6-rooms
and bath, ncwlv decorated
Best bus
service. Miller. B3611—F6033
S ROOM apartment, ground floor; base-
ment apt.. 3 rooms and bath. Phone
B5222.
MISC., FOR SALE.
FOR SALE—Camt>oara packing cases in
assorted sizes 10 cents each.
State
Journal Prlatinf: Co.
BATH TUBS, new S15.45: toilets. S1O: lav-
atories. St: lints. »50: range boilers,
S5: ioilct seats. J2, Trcstcr. B2S6S.
BUILDING MATERIALS. 52
FOR
SALE—Well
equipped
restaurant.
»j:o«1 location, 3ow rent, tioiac Rcx>i3 busi-
ness tlat caa ^e increased, . Can be
Addrewi ?5l Jotrnal
FOR KENT—2 places, Jcnthrooaj, ctnltc-
lioaerr, IMag room, acrcase, taratce.
No, «. L«4«. Bi 2. Box T«A,
FOR SALS — Goer« nrerchaadiM store.
Clean rtocJt. Irioflaire
nieat
Saxrorcs.
Barsala Tor "«>» »7. V. Earls, llasoa
CKr. N>hr.
riL.L.l^rG STATION
Ucm,
for Jcape, Good iwa-
CJty.
NVS.
Only
rtliaWe
with Jen or flflrra Jraadrrd dol-
lars 33~iJ apply. Prochasfca Bros, arrats.
St Paul. N>h
WOOD TP.tTCK ana rente JOT jatte. cbeaji.
Lwrtng cltj. Butt? enaTSTrt«a trusteed*
or an sale, Aflaron 857 Jrmrnsl.
W7LL BUT OR REST hatnTrurgrr stand,
crooery or frntat st»tlon In LiDcm» Jn-
t-est abaat tlSO. Aaflreit sss, Journal.
OLD wttablinTiefl Injsioees locatlTn. <5rc>«rv
ana mest mafkrt.
Store and reKlS'ticf
cmnWned,
Will CTCJJSBCT for -null
acreajre.
8e31lor fcpcatue of in health.
Star so.
INVESTMENTS
A CASH MARKET, for
Blflc. *
•toe**, sal* . jBtE. fccofln. local ji-carlUwi.
J. G TODD & CX), Inc.
A CASa~iaAJB^:T~l:oT~t>onan3s aaa'ioas
*W>clc, r^al fvtxtf TDorwntcR.
siDTt^azc
booda. Ooaptft on nnft. Christian A Paw*.
_23P-ail Foaern] SBC. Eapainc. ElTgg.
TRACK rotrr mtntoiccs. «toc3w trt~tiS50!i
lor fooi cjear Uooote property
HARRINCTOX REALTY CO.
214 So. 13th Si-
BJ73*; o» E"Z77.
FOR SALE—Eldnr-flve sqaare I«
while nuitile for offices, etc.. like
Ferdinand Risstr. Wltatr. ^'h
KINDL1NU J2..M). S3.50. S4.SO load. Lum-
ber tta to S35 Si: lath. SB M: fllrtr«a
3rd.
cu'-
1o
K3?cto-r
SALT:—A small _«Botiot «f Jaut ctrt-
AWi j"wne nice
BtrttrrnJH: .«
m" «21. ^-
*'*
1568 SO. 20—Corner of Garlield, nice 4-
room apartment, beat luralsbed. private
entrance and bath. F3S02
130 NO. 16—3 rooms, all modern. Murphy
bed, refrigerator, china
dO'Ct.
kitchen
cabinet- private bath
dressing room.
B1371.
116 SO. 29—First floor s rooms, coal lar-
nac*. 2nd floor saroc "srllh Kas heat. Trd
tluor 3 rooms, sleeping porch, gas heat.
Laundrr.
J»EWI,Y itmodcled 3 and 4 rooms, private
bath and entrance. 1008 E. Ready for
mwjMicn. Photn- B15O
525.00 (formerly J33.00). H«l
d € rooni1! aad bath.
oral»4. Best b-ns nerrtce. Miller.
_fwaz
TH?: KOLLT— 111* So.
rooms. «TTTT conv"5«
on routs Ptoon* B«2*
llth. Hoai^
ic», s»s ftea!. lir*
«ne
HOUSES F'JR SALE.
ALL modern 5 room bungalow, oalt f-ush"
like new. South cast location.
Close to '
school. Garage, paving, full lot.
Priced fl
at S2.750 to sell. Call B3S5T.
ATTRACTIVE, well
located.
V
rooms"
Sheiidan Colonial,
strictly
modern, 2
story, sunroom, fireplace, slecptng porch,
$6,750, B3027.
FIVE ROOM all modern Dungalcrec-. Corner.
Back fenced, cool, landscaped- Ttandolnh
district, 1044 Elmwood Ave.. 1^5972.
FOR SALE—9 lots, 5 room house, partly
modern. Equipped for <-j3lckena- T1941.
GOOD 6 room modem bungalow7! 3 hcd-
rooms. quick possession.
South side
Onl> S1850.00. Theobald Eros.TlSS North
llth. evcnlnes L7S62 nr RTJR>;
SIX ROOM bnck and ule home
In Rnn-
dolph district. Automatic heat
and hot
i»ater heat, insulated,
double
garace.
Priced very low or would conjlder an ex-
change.
Stuart Investment Co.
- B3308.
B3<07.
EXCHANGE—Real Estate sS
JEFFERSON CO. Half Sec. Level, blaci
soli, very fine bldgs. Want apartment-
E. M. Pardee. 126 So. 11. B116J- F100S.
RESIDENCE and business property,
S20.000. for farms. Addr4Vs I»
6.
1366.
Lincoln. Nebraska. Owner.
SALE OR TRADE—54 acre. *a«ui 4 r55S
house. Fall basement. Lfeht. waler. pa--
race, chicken bou.«e. On pavlnij.
Want
larcer house crjtside cltr ]imlt»- Incum-
brance tlSO. Owner. 2505 A.
WE HAVE client ttith clear Lincoln prop^
ertiis to exchange for rood ^»tbrask»
farm or ranch.
HARRECGTON7 BEALT"Y CO.
21« So. 13th St.
8171^ OT- B3277.
REAL ESTATE WANTED. 89
HAVE cash tajTir for jrood «o awrcs on
sraveled hlchway
near Unooio-
Also
hare c«h r-jyer for eood 6 roozza Jrazsa-
low la southeast UocoJa.
HARRINGTON REALTY CO.
21* So. 13th.
81716
cer B3777.
TWO and Stew-room jpts. ra>rnrnun<"t5.
Ten and livclTe dollars See T>OW .Jlrs.
17 No. -SSafl, or B32J6.
APARTS.—Fur, or Umur. 74-8
35*0 WOODS AVE.—3 Mocks rosin -of O.
* TOT3J* aaxS bmth. *l«rtrto!l
refrjem-
Jflea] lor Iras,
WILLIAM PENN
Hth * K St*
One «T OTT larcer apartments. « rmir.t,
tisrh. ncr» ataijaile cJUjfr fnrolnbea. !»-
lTmi1'h«"1,
Erery mofltrn eoavrnlrnpe
Call_Br,2f<2
O
PRIVATE PARTT »j«hcs ?o bTjj- ^wcJl^o;
C3l*a f, or 7 rooa Jiojre. Musi &»: rca*on-
aWe-jSiar 330.
WILL TAKE ovt'itase .ana
-, on SO 1o :r,0 a
jr iJO
Ca«h
urn
WANT TO^BUtljJnct Tixca
3o MIT rw carh. An .
or rnoicait htraf
Write :->raUo»
la letler. Slar 5:3
ST. 2snj — one a-rifl
cl«*nTi apartmcrrts.
rrTncmititm
Bu
R27B4
f«o-rfKiai. warm.
or
BUSINESS PLACES RENT 75
ATTRACTIVE
fmrlnw
coln for
«ms11 tf.'iT' roira
r. Un}vf-r|ST
*hyp, ittacli
main
Lin-
'-r or
FOR RENT—SrvTH.1 «n«l nc/re ruwnr. JOT
retail stores AB sood locations. F. D.
gagrr. E2351.
FA"RM LAND FOR
2<9
COA' AND WOOD
A?H
TIPT
EBB
i*)S" H'lT',',-1 S'i'C
3 M.
£ K, rveniaes aofl Saoflajx
-BS A
U-l Cr-BS
J ^»I'r5
SI .V] Fa— js-. »TIC»
Bros Co^ Mann ]«t
307 ?»c. M-J-. B'3
FOR SALE
Flo^r and Wall Show Casvci
2 Cith Rcgittcrs—2 Ocs^cc
AbdiTis Wsshine -Sid
Check protestor
Rcmsvsblc Balcony
131 So. 13th P. 0. Box; 929
FW9D
_
ACREAGES FOR RENT.
ACREAGE JOT rent or
trr B4522
Can
HOUSES FOR RENT
77
tmalms.
L«n
=K3 STH—",
zeta~ EM36.
1934
FORD TRUCK
DETROIT FINANCZ
.NFW SPA PERI
-IWSPAPKR!
S I X T E E N
THE
L I N C O L N
STAR — F R I D A Y , F E B R U A R Y
WHEELER FINED
$25 FORASSAULT
Y o u t h Found Guilty Of
Attacking Officer In
Beer Tavern.
Found guilty on an assault and
battery charge, Thomas Wheeler,
20, 2115 O street, was fined $25
and
costs Friday morning in
Municipal court. The charges were
filed after Ed Maroney, special
officer at the Coney Island beer
tavern, 1509 O street, declared
Wheeler fractured his jaw in an
altercation at the tavern Janu-
ary 26.
Maroney testified the trouble
started when he asked the de-
fendant to leave the beer parlor
and attempted to lead him out.
Wheeler, who was with several
other young men, "hada run-in"
with the proprietor of the estab-
lishment before the blows were
struck, the special officer said.
Say Drew Blackjack.
Wheeler, and several other de-
fense witnesses, testified he struck
Maroney only once and that the
blow came after Maroney drew a
"blackjack." He denied that Ma-
roney had identified himself as a
special officer. The defense wit-
nesses said Wheeler and several
friends had attended a University
of Nebraska basketball game and
stopped at the tavern for sand-
wiches on their way home.
Defense witnesses called to the
stand besides the defendant were:
Charles Wheeler, brother of the
accused, Jack Brandt, 217 South
Twenty-seventh
street;
D e a n
Chase, Woodrow Livingood, and
Isaac Williams, all of 1436 M
street, Richard Hutson of {he Cen-
tral hotel, and Dr. J. E. Weinman.
I. B. Skovronek, 439 North Tenth
street, was a state witness.
3 Former Nebraskans
To Submit Pictures
Progress Reported In Arrange-
ments For Annual Beaux
Arts Ball.
Three former Nebraska artists
have announced their intention to
submit a canvas for the annual
exhibit of the Nebraska Art as-
sociation, according to Dwight
Kirsch, secretary of the associa-
tion Friday morning.
Mrs. Louise Austin Kelly, former
fine arts instructor at the Univer-
sity of Nebraska, now of Des
Moines; Keith Martin of
New
York, and Anders Hauseth of Chi-
cago, former faculty member here
and an exhibitor at the Century of
Progress, comprise the trio.
In
addition, probably more than a
dozen artists living in the state
will add to the Nebraska section of
the exhibit. The various Nebras-
ka artists contributing to the ex-
hibit will be guests of the associa-
tion at the Beaux Arts ball, on
February 26, as will Governor and
Mrs.
Cochran and the army of-
ficers of the University of Ne-
braska faculty, and their wives.
Considerable progress was re-
ported by Mrs. E. C. Ames, chair-
man of the membership commit-
tee, who announced that a more
concentrated effort for sustaining
memberships will be started im-
mediately.
Mrs.' Walter White,
chairman of the ball committee,
reported on the progress
of the
living pictures committee, assur-
ing the members that the pictures
will easily be the "life" of the ball.
Mr. Kirsch also reported tKat there
has been considerable interest in
the annual poster contest.
Correct this sentence: "I kept
the facts of life from her till she
was fifteen," said the parent, "and
that made her good."
Visit Gold's new prescription de-
partment.—Adv.
Mail Orders Filled—Lincoln's Busy Store—We Give S. &. H Stamp«.
OVERCOATS *
Society Brand
Formerly 35.00 and 40.00
-2350
Size |36|37|38|39|40[42|
| 4| 3| 5| 2| 7| 6|
Clothcraft and
Stratbury Overcoats
Formerly 22.50 and 25.00
Now1695
Size J34135136|38|39[40|42|44|
i 2| 1| 1| 3| 8| 1| 2| 1j
GOLD'S—Men's Store—llth St.
One Special Group Overcoats only ^
Blue or grey meltons ... also some
full belted polo coats . . . broken sizes
...to clear at only
GOLD'S—Men'* Store—llth St.
1195
Blue Melton
Cloth Jackets
. . . tcith
Sport String Back
295
Fine quality all -wool jackets
..new sport suinc fitted
back . . . zipper froat,. .band
bottom -with buckle sides...
*izes 35 to -56. We have never
t>«rore been able to offer a
'imilar carmenl at yuch a
!<«• price While the limited
quantitr lasts...only 2.95.
GOLD'S—Hco'.i Store
—llth St.
Tico More Outstanding Values!
Men's SUEDE LEATHER Jackets
Cocoa
jtoede l e a t h e r
jackets . . knitted
bottoni*
snd
choi'-e ol kaliv-J
or leather collars
... upper frcmtf
... *1i<* 35 to 45
. . « each 379
«
cossacx
icl!*ts .=3p-
^ x^ /~n
rtafif.
."bund
/• .i 1 •
on
with /•
J *»
• ,«trsp<«. . . ^•Af^-' -^
cocoa c o l o r . .
•
«a»«-,« 35 to -45. .
•
ti-Ot-D S—M-TI-j Store—llth St
cr
jackets .s3j>-
ix:r frosts,
b o t t o m
-with
Special Purchase Sale
Boys' Slipover Sweaters
«rt crrw ntffiSt. ^-aecx. maa
J»f7 »fC\ *tT)«l . . . 3
tuur xa£ mcituUr,. ia
SPCOS, tut. s T i«n. RTICJ.
Mice, mrml «)« TvO . .
«-Cr« 4 to 1^. Rre. l.«i' -
«.«S »«<•«!lack, brown, navy, red ana
-white . . m patent, smooth
and rough grained leathers.
295
GOLD'S—Str»et Floor.
MMW
Lacey and Frillf
Neckwear
loo
and 1.95
Lace, organ-
ay, p i q u e
neckwear in
•white a n d
pastel -color*
...round and-
V necklines.
Tailored
or
dressy types.
GOLD'S—Street Floor
Stunning Jewelry
joo
Bracelets, necklace*, compact!,
cigarette cases, etc. ...
many
-with initials to give the
"personal" touch.
GOLD'S—Street Floor
HCere-'s Mi-lady's . . .
Handkerchiefs
Linen and Lawn
. pretty prints and white
Trith colored embroidery .. .
«tlso colored linen
1 f|_
initials, each
AV*-
Hand Made Linen
all -white . . . pastel col-
ors -with -white applique
•or gay prints - - -
« for 1.40 or each ....
GOLD'S—Street Floor.
Kick Yourself a Valentine!
Gay
Blouses
195
Clrepe. laHeta.
ad pique blons-
M . . . bricht
->laids.
istripes.
ilain colors Bad
•vhHe . . . all
ueclltae*.
32 to 40.
Sizes
GOLDS—Street noor.
Valentine Gifts
for Baby
Soft Toy» -. .
Soil loyn -«1th ceHtiToia
bewl* . . . dolls, animals,
etc.. cellophane
£Q««
-rraroed. each
*»S7V
Hand Made Dresses
Dainty df«w« In pa'tcl
/•ilort . . . all Jwnd em-
t>n>J(3er^d
«om* trt'A
13e wrtiw. Sizr*
-1 f|f|
1 sna 2
l.UV
GOLDS—TWrd Floor.
Kiddies' Hose
by Phoenix
Anklets, half socks,
etons...new colors,
new patterns, new
styles
Sizes 6 to
10%
4 prs. 1.00
GOLD'S—Street Floor
Breakfast at Gold's. ..any morning except Sunday from 7 to 9:30 a. m.
Demonstration
Wright's Silver Cream
Mies Wood,
factory
representative, 1* here
to advise you In >our
silverware cleaning..
two sizes
GOLD'S—Street Floor.
Mail Orders Filled at Lincoln's Busy Store—Corner Eleventh and 0 Streets—Phone B1211—We Give S. & H. Green Trading Stamps
Smart Buyers Will Shop and Save on
These Timely Items at COLD'S Saturday!
$50 Cash Awards
and
"David Copperfield"
Books
AUTOGRAPHED
T-
^
Famous Movie Stars
Sponsored by KFOR—
Gold & Co.—Stuart Theatre
'Enter this 200 word Essay
Contest today! You may
win! Entry blanks and full
particulars at Gold's Stamp
Desk—Street Floor.
Saturday
Only
Silver P
(Copyright
t
••' —•
Gold & Co.)
f
While They Ltut
N0.141J „.
a ted Holloware
(made by a well known manufacturer)
Regular 3.95
1
An Extraordinary Skyrocket
. . . for one day only . . .
beautiful silver plated hollo-
ware . . . including bread
trays, sandwich plates, cake
plates ... all with a neat all-over design
. . . also cream and sugar in plain finish
with gold lining . . . while they last Satur-
day 1.97.
GOLD'S—Street Floor
SKYROCKET No. 242
'
Famous Detroit Jewel
GAS RANGES
50
Another sensational Skyrocket for
Saturday . . . famous Detroit Jewel
Gas Ranges ... at a price that is
surprisingly low while
quantity
lasts. Here, indeed, is a range that
fulfills tomorrow's as well as today's needs in cooking appliance
. .. table top, fully insulated oven, all porcelain, automatic light,
two large utility drawers. Choice of tan and green.
GOLD'S—Fourth Floor
49
Goods News! Another Sale of
Stationery
/-% j
Paste
Note Books
Wax Paper
Pencils
Peng
Mucilage
Automatic Pencils Erasers Art Gum
History Paper, etc.
EACH
GCLO o—Street Floor
GOLDS BASEMENT
New FROCKS
595 ^ 595
New Spring Fashions
in SUITS &COATS
Brand New
Crepes and Prints
A grand new collection of fresh
springy-looking dresses .. . the
kind you want to wear now.
Featuring new tunic effects
and peplums. new "black and
whites," new straight line
dresses . . . three-quarter and
full length sleeves. Sizes 14 to
20 and 3S to 52.
GOLD'S—Basement
The Suits:
Tailored suits - - . dressy suits
short jackets.. .free-swing backs.4
three - quarter length jackets . . .
fitted jackets. Greys, tans and Wues.
Sizes for the miss or matron.
The Coats:
The.popular swagger coats in plain
colors, checks, large over plaids,
tweeds, herringbones.
Navy and
black. Sizes for all.
GOLD'S—Basement
Wool Skirts
New Sweaters
s -awl .skirts
Stjlcs that nui b«
fh"w
«k'
OT fancy
colors . .
i
naiu
1.95
f>T
-a- 1 1 1 o-parale
shirts . . . p a s t e l
shnfles . .
puff "T
]rrio»d to dear at
GOLD'S—Third Flow.
Clearance Girls' Wash Dresses
In thl« CTOTjn yon Trill find such Tnxdcs as
Jack Tar. JvJtfwtt*. Cinderella »nd Sar»
DeJDri* . - . broken sises and styles . . .
3 to S1- ...
7 to 32 and 12 to IS y*aw
...formerly 1 C3 to 395. to close fit
GOLD'S—Thrift Sijuare—Street Floor. Joo
j New Sweaters
KVTV sir!
in
a n t s *
f 1 *• »' " T
L95
COLD'S—Tlurfl Floar.
New Skirts
th«
R IT, is
waw
GOLDS— Tlwd
Saturday's
Hour Sales
A* these *i« small, odd an*
damnred lots . . . no >»>-
nnay* . . . phone
ordcn
filled on hour ialri . . .
please! All quantities limited.
10 to 11 ». ra. on!}.
Hardwood Clothe*
Pins . . . 2 dos. 5e
GOLD'S—Second Floor.
— Children'* Wear —
Sweaters . . .
sllpon and coat
>t>lcs . . . sizes
4 to 14 year*
. , . for. 1 00
and 1.65 . . .
to close at
GOLD'S—TT:T?
Women's Underthingi
Odd lot of women's
undertblngs . . . pa-
jamas, slips, gowns,
etc . . . formerly
100 to 1.95 . . .
some SECONDS,
to close at ..
GOLD'S—Third Floor.
Bens' Wear
Odd lot of Jack-
ets,
p & n t s,
shirts,
gloves,
stocking
caps,
helmets, etc.
. to close at .
GOLD'S—Second Floor.
t,
>25c
d Floor.
N«w Spring Hata
i,,, .women'!, missw Af\
tad children'! ....4UC
GOLD'S—TWrd Hoot.
Infants' Rummage
V e s t s ,
blankete,
wash suit*, union
suits, cape, etc. • • • OO
to close at, each..,^OC
GOLD'S—Third Floor.
Percales ——
Just a small lot
of percales .
g o o d patterns
. . while they
last this one 4 -I
hour, the YARD i 1C
GOLD'S—Second Floor.
Outing Remnant*
White outing rem-
nants . . . about %
3d in length . . .
priced to clear at,
EACH
GOLD'S—Second Floor.
Marquisette*
,
Fancy r a y o n
marquisettes ...
ecni color . . .
short lengths of
from 2 to 10
lards . . . this •] mf
hour, the YARD 1 / C
GOLD'S—Second Floor.
Printed Acetate Crepe*
Printed a c e t a t e
crepes and sheers
. . . S H O R T
L E N G T H S . . .
please do not ask
us to cut pieces . . .
to close,
tt\
the YARD
....... «S"C
GOLD'S — Second Floor.
— Karatol Bags _
D i s c o ntlnued.
•^le* of reg.
1 00 bags . . .
envelope
and
pouch styles,
GOLD'S— Street Floor.
Men'* 'Kerchiefs
M e n ' s pre-sbrunk
o
c o t t o n handker- O
chiefs . . . full slz« for
. . . while they
-t rt
last, this hour
lUC
GOLD'S—Men's store.
Gloves
Women's novelty
fabric gloves ...
shpon s t y l e s
. . navy, black,
brown.
Wash-
able. M o s t l y
small sizes
GOLD'S—Street Floor.
Neckwear-Scarf*
Odd lot of women's
neclra ear and scarfs m 0
... to close, at... IOC
GOLD'S—Street Floor.
— Carter Bella
Odd lot of gar-
ter belts . . .
priced to close
this hour at, es_
GOLD'S—Street Floor.
Odd Lot Thread
Silk thread . . . SO
2
yard spool* . . .
for
to close
f
«
5c
GOLD'S—Street Floor.
'Kerchiefs -
Women's
lawn
handkerchiefs..
bright prints . .
large size ...
•>
«"*
OC
GOUD'S—Street Floor.
BoncilU Toiletries
1 00 size lemon as-
tringent, face pow-
der,
creams . . .
to ckwe at
—w»
GOLD'S—street Floor.
•
Candy —
Peanut brittle.,
for this J/
hour, only y£ H>.
GOLD'S—Street Floor.
3 bar* Shampoo Soap
Was.
Quick and
easy shampoo . . .
r»
3 BASS
JfC
GOLD'S—Street Floor.
I
Wash Dresses
IRREGULARS
of better crado
. . . while Ui«y
Ian tain
•>•»
hour. «»ch ... Of C
GOLD'S—Basement.
Shanklos Ham*
T h e * «
*Jt» or
them . . . while 500
WJrt. EACH
Gooltic*
Trora
"3 — Ea»dBCi)1
V