FLIERS SAFE AT HARBOR GRACE
Nebraska: Generally fair to-
night and Thursday; slightly cooler -
I in south and extreme east portion to-
[ night.
Kansas: Partly cloudy, some-
what cooler in west and north central
portions, possibly showers in eastern
portion Thursday; Wednesday cooler
in extreme east portion.
(
TWENTY-EIGHTH
YEAR. THE LINCOLN STAR HS3SS
Nebraska's Best Newspaper
LINCOLN, NEB:, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 25, mo.
SIXTEEN
PAGES
/«r»nnn /"• E* JV7T C >$ GREATER LINCOLN—
THREE L&N 1 D FIVE CENTS ELSEWHERE
HOUSE APPROVES VETS BILL CHANGES
SOUTHERN CROSS
CONQUERS FOG IN
SPANNING ATLANTIC
With Only Four Hours' Gasoline Supply
in Tanks, Captain Kingsford-Smith
and Companions Descend in New-
foundland Early Wednesday After
Hazardous Flight From Ireland—Ad-
venturers Fly Blindly During Night,
Their Sense of Direction Lost-
Directed to Landing Field by Radio.
HARBOR GRACE, N. F., June 25— (AP)—The airplane
Southern Cross landed here early today after spanning the
Atlantic ocean from Ireland and the fliers immediately made
plans for flying to New York, then" to San Francisco. Such
a flight would virtually complete an around-the-world flight
for the Southern Cross, which previously had been flown
from San Francisco to Australia and England.
01 NEBRASKA
MAN IS KILLED
IN WINDSTORM
Heavy Damage Done In
Vicmity Lexington
and Cozad.
SEVERAL PERSONS
BADLY INJURED
The plane will leave at daybreak
tomorrow for New York.
The
fliers
expenenced almost
perfect
weather until they ap-
proached the Newfoundland coast,
when the
trip almost came to an
unfortunate" end as fog enshrouded
the plane. For more than an hour
during the night the aviators flew
blindly and but for radio stations
providing them with directions they
might have been lost.
The fliers, Capt. Charles Kings-
ford-Smith,
Evert Van Dyk, J.
Patrick Saul and John W. Stan-
nage, were in good condition and
excellent spirits when they landed
here at 5:57 a. m. (E. S. T.). They
talked briefly of the dangers they
had
encountered and then all
sought sleep.
Says Radio Saved Lives.
Kingsford-Smith credited the ra-
r dio with having saved himself and
I his companions, but said a shortage
I of gasoline was responsible for their
having failed to reach the United
(Continued on Page Twelve.)
C. OF C. DRIVE
ADDS 112
New Members Total One
Third of Week's
Goal.
The chamber of commerce mem-
bership campaign entered its third
day of the week when fifty-nine
workers attended the daily break-
fast at the chamber Wednesday
NO SHRINKAGE
IN WHEAT CROP
Opportune Rain Gives
Assurance of Full
Harvest.
Precipitation in Eastern
and Southern Sections
- - Of the State.
Wednesday morning's rain pre-
vented shrinking
of the winter
wheat crop in the opinion of A.
E. Anderson, federal crop statis-
tician.
The beneficial effect on
alfalfa and small grains was em-
phasized by F. D. Keim, professor
of agronomy at the agricultural
college.
The rainfall, which was fairly
generous throughout eastern and
southern Nebraska, brought tem-
porary relief from the excessive
heat of the past week.
Lincoln received .84 inch pre-
cipitation and a slight amount of
hail. No damage was reported.
The heaviest showers were to
the south.
Two onches of rain
between
Reynolds
and
Diller
washed out a sixty-foot section of
Burlington track and delayed the
Denver to St. Louis fast train a
hah* hour.
The entire Wymore
and Omaha divisions of the Bur-
lington reported heavy rain.
Ashland ........ 97
Columbus
47
Pairbuiy
1.46 O Nclll
34 Omaha
24
Grand Island
.08 Red Cloud
SI
.02
morning from 7 to 7:45 o'clock. I
The local weather bureau had
Fifty-six new members resulted the following precipitation records:
from the second day's solicitations
Tuesday, which is the same number
enrolled Monday. The total new
membership is now 112 towards the
week's goal of 300. Two life mem-
berships also were received Tues-
day, it was announced, bringing the
first two day's total in that division
to fourteen.
E. L. Smith, captain of division
four, reported sixteen new mem-
bers, for first place honors at the
breakfast. O'her division reports
follow:
Division one. E. L. Greenslit, cap-
tain: Monday, four; Tuesday, ten;
total, fourteen.
Division t^o, Leo Soukup, cap-
tain: Monday, nine; Tuesday, four;
total, thirteen.
Division three, George
Hartlngton
68 Tekamah
S?
North Platte ... .32 Valentine
04
The Lincoln Telephone and Tele-
graph Co. reoorted that lightning
caused considerable trouble on its
toll lines. In .addition to the weather
bureau's records, the telephone of-
(Continued on Fuse TwelveJ
BURKE COMPLETES
CONGRESS FILING
OMAHA, June 25—
-c h«; ucwiit them from a man on
a track on the highwaT. He claimed
he had the guns and fishing equip-
ment for a recent camping trip in
South Dakota. He was unable, how-
ever, to name any point in South
Dakota or to tea what highways he
had taken.
Tells Varyini: Stories.
He told the county attorney he
was on his way to Fremont but of-
ficers who made the arrest picked
him up on the edee of University
Place. Pursuit of the men -was be-
cun on a tip telephoned to the
county sheriffs office by Ed Mc-
| Mullen, a fanner living near Darey.
I
He phoned Deputy Sheriff Oedl
'Ward that a man had been stack
i ia the mod near his f a*rn over night
and that chickens in the man's car
looked like his. The man was head-
ed toward Lincoln, he advised.
Deputy Ward, accompanied by Offi-
cer Hollers-ay of She city police
force, drove out on «« Comhusker
high-raT. meeting the man in a blue
coniw about 7 miles north of Have-
lock.
Sheriff Ward estimated the man's
speed to have been around 45 miles
County Clerk Morgan
'Seeks Renomination
J. B. MORGAN.
Mr. Morgan filed Wednesday as a
candidate
for
renomination
for
county clerk. He is asking- the re-
publican nomination in the August
primary,
TWO CHICAGO
HANGARS RAZED;
LOSS $2,000,000
More Than Score Planes
Destroyed in Municipal
Airport Fire.
Blaze Follows An Explo-
sion; No Interruption
In Service.
CHICAGO, _June
.
hangars
and.' twenty-seven " air-
planes, twelve cf them tri-motor
passenger planes, were destroyed by
fire at the municipal airport early
today. The loss was estimated at
more than $2,000,000.
The
hangars
destroyed were
those
of the Universal Airlines,
Inc., and the Grey Goose An- lines,
the latter under lease to the Stout
Air lines. The fire followed an ex-
plosion cf undetermined cause in
the Universal hangar.
Explosion Follows Spark.
One of the ground men at the
mile .square airport said lie saw a
spark leap across the darkness at
the rear of the Universal hangar,
and that the explosion followed.
Almost at once the building was
in flames.
Several men, including pilots and
mechanics, were in the building but
escaped before the fire reached the
(Continued on Page Twelve.)
TO FIX DATE~FOR
STATE CONVENTION
Chairman Fernean Calls Meeting
Of Executive Committee For
Friday Afternoon.
A meeting of the executive com-
mittee of the republican state com-
mittee, to be held at the Lindell
hotel at 2 p. m. Friday, has been
called by State Chairman Edward
Ferneau.
The committee will fix the date
for the holding of the party's state
convention, and will determine the
county apportionment of delegates.
The number of delegates will prob-
ably be between l.OOOaaad 1,100.
HAVELOCKLEVY
UNSATISFACTORY
Lincoln Council Would
Refuse Added Funds
After Merger.
(Continued on Page Twelve.)
Mayor Says Shop Town
Officials Promised
To Maintain Rate.
It was indicated by city officials
Wednesday thai, in the event of
annexation of Haretock, that su-
burban center will have to - get
along with no more money being
spent there than the amount re-
cently appropriated under a 7 ma
levy by the shop town council. This
attitude was expressed today by
Mayor Love and
Commissioners
Foster, Troup and Bair. Commis-
sioner Schroeder indicated he is
now opposed to annexation under
any consideration.
T believe,*1 Mayor Love stated,
"that if annexation is consummated,
no more money should be spent
there by Lincoln than has been ap-
propriated by the Havelock coun-
cil Certainly Havelock people and
the suburban council cannot reas-
onably expect Lincoln, in its pres-
ent financial straits, to spend rooie
money in the suburb than the
council there i> willing to spend, as
indicated by its appropriataon.*'
Aopropriation Cat 513.OW.
According to a statement by
Claries A. Cunte. city treasurer of
Hmitock. that city has appro-
priated only $30.000 bv levy for the
cgming_ycar. _This is SlOjOOO betow
(ContJnned on Page Twelve.)
WRECKEDPLANE
OF LOST MAIL
PILOT IS FOUND
Craft Located in West-
ern Utah Wilds After
Months of Search.
HUNT STARTS FOR *
MAURICE
GRAHAM,
Flier Disappeared in Rag-
ing Storm; Cargo
1 Found Intact.
LOS ANGELES, June 25—(&)—
Discovery of a wrecked airplane
last night in the mountain wilds of
western Utah was expected today
by Western Air Express officials to
clear away the mystery surround-
ing the disappearance January 10
of Maurice Graham, airmail pilot.
Officials of the
company said
they were certain
the
wrecked
plane was in one in which Graham
started on his last tnp with mail
from Los Angeles to Salt Lake City.
When the plane was discovered
near Cedar City, Utah, by two
youthful shepherds, Ward Nortenson
and Elburn Orton, James Carson,
Graham's flying buddy, rushed to
the scene from Ely, Nev. He later
reported to Western Air officials
that an unopened parachute sten-
ciled "Maurice Graham" had been
found beside the
plane.
Carson
said he
found in the cockpit a
jacket worn by Graham on his last
flight.
Mail Cargo Intact.
Both Carson and the shepherds
discovering the plane reported that
it was not badly damaged. The
mail compartment, they said, was
unbroken and locked. The wings
and one wheel had been broken,
the pilot reported, apparently when
the plane nosed into a soft snow-
drift on the mountainside. Carson
expressed belief that Graham was
uninjured in the crash.
Officials at Cedar City immdei-
ately established a guard over the
planes and residents of the region
organized a search for traces of
Graham, who, they believe, must
have perished in the storm which
raged at the time of his disappear-
ance.
Graham had taken off at the Las
Vegas, Nev, field about 10 o'clock
the night of January 10. A plane,
thought to have been his, later was
heard ,over St. George, Utah, and
Leeds, traveling in the direction of
Cedar 'City in the face of a howling
blizzard.
The storm, increasing in inten-
sity throughout the night, was the
(Continued on Page Twelve.)
GAS ORDINANCE
Attorney Allen
States
Petitions Are Being
Circulated.
Makes Argument Against
• Measure Passed By
City Council.
The natural gas franchise ordi-
nance passed by the city council
Monday, "is not satisfactory" to the
people represented by T. S. Allen,
attorney, he declared Wednesday,
and petitions hstVe *een placed in
circulation with a view to a refer-
endum on the measure. At least
six circulators are at work. Bepons
that the men doing the work are to
receive 15 cents name for each sig-
nature, were denied by Mr. Allen.
Mr. Allen stated that Uic u
ordinance contains a provision that
the rate here shall not be higher
than the rate charged in Omaha.
He contends that this doesn't mean
anything, because the
company
prob&tiry will not get a franchise in
that city. An application already
has been made there for a fran-
chise and rejected. This was be-
cause the rate specified was too
high, although it was a better price
than the maximum price fixed by
the i^mcoin ordinance, the attorney
said.
"If the claim of the company
that natural gas will be much
cheaper is correct why did not the
Lincoln city council fix the maxi-
Tni2i? rate at ~5 cents psr 1.000 cu-
bic feet? j If this had been done the
people would then have known that
the maximum would be lower. The
gas company would have readlV
agreed to this because natural gas
can be supplied for 75 cents oer
1.000 cubic feet and still leave a
splendid margin of profit," Mr.
Allen asserted.
Another reason why the com-
pany would have accepted such a
maximum price before the ordi-
nance was passed ss u>at it does,
not now have a franchise to dio-
tribute natural gas in Lincoln. Mr
A31en said. The old ordinance is
not broad enough to permit this. Jf
the council had been diligent Jt
could have had a maximum rate
that would have meant somethiirK
he added.
Everybody knows now that tne
maximum rate to the small user
wffl be SI per 1,000 cubic feet in-
stead of lower. Any tali to the
contrarv is propaganda, the attor-
ney concluded.
Named New Catholic
Bishop of Lincoln
KEY. L. B. KUCERA.
Newly appointed bishop of the
Lincoln diocese of the Catholic
church. The Rev. Kucera comes
here from. Pro thin, la. He was
formerly a professor and dean at
Columbia college, Dubuque, la.
POPE'S ILLNESS-
FEARED SERIOUS
IN VATICAN CITY
Tendency In Official
Circles to Discount
Seriousness.
Malady Described as Re-
currence of Old Acute
Bladder Trouble.
VATICAN CITY, June 25—(JP) -
Reports still persisted today that
Pope- Pius is indisposed, despite a
denial by authorized officials that
he is suffering from a uremic
crisis.
It was learned that several Ro-
man doctors have been consulted
recently concerning the
pontiffs
aggravated
bladder trouble
and
that the possibility of an operation
has been discussed.
It is most difficult, to ascertain
the exact nature of the pope's re-
ported malady since Pius XT, un-
like his predecessors, has noi ap-
pointed an "archiater" or papal
physician. The result is that when-
ever the pontiff feels the need of
medical advice Dr. Milani, direc-
tor of public health services of
-Vatican City state, is called in. He
in no wise is the pope's personal
physician and is not in daily con-
tact with, htm and .his calls on his
patient are extremely intermittent.
VATICAN CITY, June
25—{ff^~
Ulness of Pope XT, who has sat on
the throne of St. Peter since 1922,
(Continued on Page Twelve.)
Airplane Tourists
Arrive At Alliance
First Reach City From Hay Springs
At Ten O'clock and Others
Continue Daring Morning.
ALLIANCE, Neb., June 25M/P)—
Residents of this vicinity turned
out today to welcome pilots of the
second Nebraska air tour.
Planes started arriving from Hay
Springs. 60 miles away, at 10 o'clock
and continued to land all morning.
The welcoming program began at
1 o'clock. Soon afterwards the fliers
hopped off for Scottsbluff,-where
they will spend the nieht.
Jimmy Collender. the first pilot
to arrive, circled his speedy Spar-
tan high over the city. Others 'fol-
2c—cd at intervals for an hour and
a half.
The American Legion was in
charge of arrangements here. Ten
thousand spectators were nresent.
The pilots had perfect weather for
their stunts and passenger carry-
ing above the quarter section land-
ing field.
High altitude handicapped some
of the planes.
BLAZE IX WASTE BASKET.
Lincoln firemen made a ru nto
the Stuart building ear;y Wednes-
day afternoon and put out a blaze
in a waste paper basket in the
office of the American Credit Cor-
poration. Room 841. No damage re-
sulted from the blaze.
WAY CLEARED -FOR
HOOVER'S VETO OF
RELIEF MEASURE
Senate Amendments To Veterans Relief
Bill Accepted Without Record Vote
And Legislation Goes To Executive
Where Stinging RejectionlsExpected
—Republican Leadership Of Lower
Branch Agrees To Support Presiden-
tial Rejection—Measure Acceptable
To Administration To Be Formu-
lated.
WASHINGTON, June 25—(AP)—The road was cleared
for President Hoover's second stinging veto of a veterans
relief bill today by house acceptance of senate amendments
to its measure to aid World war soldiers.
Branded "bad legislation" by the
************************
THE WEATHER.
if
LINCOLN. June
5—Forecast
if tonight and Thursday
for
•
Lincoln and
Vicmity
Generally *•
^ fair tonight
and Thursdaj, some- -fr
if \vnat cooler tonight
•A'
if
For Nebraska. Generally fair to- -fr
if night and Thursday: slightly coo'er *
ir in south and extreme cast portions if
4- tonight
*
if
Kansas—Generally fair tonight and y
•*- Thursdaj: cooler in east and extreme -x
if south portions tonight.
if
^
„_
^f
if
The temperatures during the past *
* 24 hours
•*- 3 p. ro
89
t p m..... . 90
* 5 p m
SO .
*
7 p. m
86 I
8 p. m
83
*• 9 p m
83
if 10 p. m
82
* 11 p. m.. . .13
* 12 midnight. -.'2
* l a m
72
if
3 a. m
74
*
*
68 -*•
.66 *
3 a m
4 a. m
S a m
60 *
7 a. m
64 -*
8 a m
68 *
9 a" m
71 *
10 a. m
76 *•
11 a m
77 *
32 noon
79 *
1 p. m
80 *
2 p. m
82 *
Wind velocity at 12-30 p. m. today. *
+ 5 miles per Jinur
*
if
Weather throughout the state at 7 if
if a. m today, clear -nest; clear to rain- if
if ins east.
*
if
Highest temperature a year ago to- +
if da}, 82; lowest, 54.
TT
Drv
Bulb
7.00
A. M
64
63
12-30 P. M
80
70
Sun and Moon.
Sun rises, 4-56 a. m.
Sun sets, 8 03 p. m
Moon rises, 3.39 a. m.
Moon sets, 7 45 p m.
Wet Re! *
Bulb Hum. *
96
63
***********************
Wheat Falls To
New Low, But
Closes Higher
CHICAGO, June 25—<£>)—Wheab
prices sagged at the
opening of
today's market session to another
low record of sixteen years' stand-
ing, but at the close of an erratic
trading day rested 1-4 to 3-4 cent
a bushel above Tuesday's
finish.
Wheat, corn and rye all established
new minimum pnces for the year.
The final wheat quotations were:
July 88 5-8 to 3-4 cents after a low
president, it goes to him at once.
He is expected to repeat his objec-
tions in a decisive veto message,
after which the house will be called
upon to sustain or override him.
A two-thirds vote is necessary to
override a veto and, with the re-
publican leadership behind Mr. Hoo-
ver, proponents of the bill are' ex-
pected to be defeated. The senate
would not then be called upon to
act on the veto. The house will be-
gin formulation of another veterans'
bill aimed to overcome administra-
tion protests.
The first such bill vetoed was for
relief of Spanish-American veterans.
Both senate and house overrode Mr.
Hoover's wishes. He repeated his
objections to that legislation after
it was enacted into law.
Agree To Support Ve%.
In a caucus last night of 154 re-
publicans, it was agreed to" support
a veto of the bill by the president.
Immediately after the house con-
vened, Speaker Longworth recog-
nized Chairman Royal C. Johnson
of the Veterans committee, who re-
quested that the house unanim-
ously concur in the senate amend-
ments
He explained he did not
believe it would do any good to
(Continued on Page Twelve.)
ELSIE PACKER'S
STORY ATTACKED
Witnesses, Say She Told
Them Would Wed
Another.
Charges that Elsie Packer had
been seen constantly with B. F.
Crook, for whom she is now keep-
ing house, during the period in
which she
claims
Emil Carlson
courted her, were made by defense
witnesses in the trial of her $10,-
000 breach of promise suit against
Carlson Wednesday morning. The
case, which went to trial Tuesday
afternoon, is being heard by a jury
of 87 3-4; September 92 1-8 to 3-8, in District Judge Broady's court.
and December 97 3-8 to 1-2
Growing apprehension
over the
imminent glutting of storage facili-
ties in the southwest, where the
wheat harvest is moving rapidly,
seemed to be discounted in the rip-
ples of buying that brought wheat
back from the early low point. Less
favorable weathtr at home and less
bearish news from the
European
continent helped in the revival.
Burglars Flee,
Leaving Large
Loot in Sacks
Frightened away by some un-
known cause, burglars were forced
to content themselves with $1 in
pennies after they had prepared tc
loot the S. C. Zipp grocery. 744
IWest A street, of most of its stock
cl merchandise Tuesday night
Patrolman
Hallocfc, detailed to
the grocery to investigate areported
break-in, said that a crm^derable
quantitv of goods had been sacked
and
deposited
near a window,
where it was found by the officer.
The intended loot included 500
cigars, five dozen cans of tobacco,
ten dozen mittens and gloves, two
dozen shirts, a dozen suits of under-
wear, three alarm docks and two
•watches.
Wheat Harvest Well
Under Way in Kansas
j TOPEKA, Kas.? June 25—(i?)—
The federal weatner bureau today
reported that from 10 to 20 per cent
of the wheat crop in the south cen-
tral and southeastern counties of
Kansas had been cut.
Harvest, the bureau report stated. !
has begun in the casern half of
Kansas, north almost to the Ne-
braska line and is starting in the
southwestern counties. Northwest-
em counties •arill not begin harvest
before July 1.
Mrs. Mary Hudkins pub the chief
spoke in Miss Packer's case Wed-
nesday morning when she opened
the defense. The jury was con-
vulsed with laughter several times
during
her
testimony.
Among
other things she told of peeking
through the keyhole of a room to
see Miss Packer sitting there with
Mr. Crook, who was called "Jiggs"
by all witnesses who took the stand
for the defense.
Both Mrs. Hudkins and Mrs. Mar-
garet Kelly, who operated a room-
ing house where Miss Packer had
stayed, testified that the plain-
tiff in the suit had often told them
she had no intention of marrying
Carlson, but that she would marry
"Jipgs" if anybody.
Earl T. Knowles. local lawyer,
when called to the stand by the de-
TWO MORE FILE
FOR COMMISSION
Sanford and WHkins
Seeking Places On
Rail Board.
Two more candidates
got into
the race for the republican nomin-
ation for state railway commission
Wednesday morning. They were
Wilber E. Sanford of Lincoln and
Georce Wilkins of Omaha.
Wilkins is a former member of
the stlae senate. He served during
the sessions of 3S23 and 1825. His
home at that time was at Emcr,«&n
Sanford has been 3n the coal
busJn<*ss in Lincoln for a number
of years.
Prior to that he had
j seventeen years experience in r&il-
Iroac" traffic. He was a candidate
for the commission In the primary
election two years ago, but lost to
I John Curtiss, present member of
commission.
tive of another lawyer, shortly be-
fore ha was :uJ:n:ti3d to the bar.
Judge Broady refused to permit
te^'juoriv as to the conversations.
Miss Packer's case rested early
Wednesday morning after B. F.
Crook had Jesttljed in h«"x behalt
As Rogers Sees It
CHICAGO, June 25 —
Around June 22, 1950, here
is what will be headlined in
the planet Mars morning
papers: "A young man
from a place called earth
flew in here yesterday. He
had been in the air continu-
lot'sly for two months. He
| had some letters of intro-
duction from the Chamber
of Commerce from a plat^
called Englewood, New Jer-
sey. He asked to have his
ship refueled as he is tak-
ing off for Venus in tht
morning."
Yours,
WILL.
LWSPAPLRl
TWO
THE LINCOLN STAR-WEDNESDAY,
JUNE 25, 1930.
a*
I?r
Today
The Pope's Illness
A Cautious Elephant
Easy Day, Easy Money
Cradle Training
By ARTHUR BRISBANE
THRONGS GREET
AIR TOURISTS
Rome sends disquieting news con-
cerning
the health of Pope Pius.
When he recently appeared in pub-
lic at a canonization in St. Peter's
before 50,000 worshipers, he seemed
In excellent health, his voice re-
sounding through the great cathed-
ra!Hot weather on the day of the
ceremony.
accentuated
by his
heavy vestments, is believed to
have brought on an internal at-
tack from which he is now suffer-
ing.
Millions all over the world hope
that the attack may pass speedily
and that Pope Pius, now only 73
years old, may live Beyond the age
of his predecessor, Leo.
He will be remembered as the
"Pope of the conciliation" because
of the accord brought about be-
tween the Vatican and the govern-
ment of Italy during his reign.
An elephant takes a long time
making up his mind, especially'
when crossing a bridge. You may
see the biggest, wisest elephant,
dragging a British cannon, with
one foot on a bridge, waiting be-
fore deciding, that the bridge will
hold. Then he goes over.
The republican elephantffn New
Jersey is in the same thoughtful
mood.
But Dwight W. Morrow has
shown him that It is possible to
gallop over a wet bridge to victory
on the other side. And he will
force the republican elephant to
come in and be wet also.
Those were easy days in Wall
street, a few nonths ago.
One Wall street broker now in
bankruptcy, who flew extra high,
while high flying was the rule,
really can't remember to whom he
gave thousands of dollars worth
of jewelery purchased in a few
days.
He said it was necessary to live
well, at the rate of about $400,000
a year at least, merely as a matter
of advertising.
Money is cheap in Wall street,
only 2 per cent for the "call
money" used for speculation. Yes-
terday the desire was still to sell,
not to buy, although some" good
stocks, like call money, are
very
cheap.
Big Insurance companies, and
other lenders if they chose, might
promote business and building by
reducing the present high
mort-
gage rates.
Uncle Sam feels prosperous. Last
Saturday he had a surplus of
$223,000,000.
Congress appropriations and the
government effort to corner wheat,
may easily eat that up. Wheat fell
off 4 cents yesterday. Corners are
expensive.
Mr. Franklin D. Roosevelt says:
"Character building begins in the
cradle." Parents should train chil-
dren from their babyhood.
And old English horse trainer
was asked: "When should I begin
training my colt?" and told that
the colt was 3 weeks old, said.
"You have lost the three most im-
portant weeks."
Children should be trained with
kindness and explanation, never
with whipping -'or other brutality,
from babyhood.
But don't waste too much time
correcting and nagging concerning
faults that the child will outgrow
with time, and not otherwise.
For seven years, Kemal Pasha
has been modernizing Angora, new
capital of Turkey. Now, in half an
hour, a~~ clouubursi/ w&ahes away
nearly all that has been accom-
plished, roads and sidewalks, model
i dwellings, children's playgrounds, all
gone.
Can you Imagine the shaking of
ancient Turkish heads, certain that
the prophet Mohammed, with the
aid of Allah, the only God, came
down to start the cloudburst?
Kemal took the veils from wom-
en's faces, and the fez from the
heads of men, making them wear
derby hats.'He erected huge statues
of himself, although Mohammed
said you mustn't. No wonder the
cloudburst came.
Those Turks are almost as su-
perstitious as some of us.
The airplane Southern Cross with
four plucky men on board, coming
westward across the Atlantic, is
nearing ^Newfoundland as this Is
written.
The fliers, talking to ships by
radio on tha way over, report their
airplane, veteran of the America
to Australia flight of two years
ago, doing -well, at 100 miles an
hour.
Those Irishmen will be welcome.
H. E. Folger, once chairman of
the Standard Oil company of New
York, leaves $10,000.030 for" a "FW-
ger Shakespeare memorial." The
memorial will have a Shakespeare
collection in Washington and ac-
cumulate
information
concerning
Shakespeare.
The
income
from
$10,000.000
might have been used better to
give ft good edition of Shakespeare
to every boy and girl graduating
from high school. But anything
i
that honors Shakespeare Is well '
done.
^Cojrnieht 1190. KtOB Frtturc* Sjijdl-
cite. Iac->
'
SCHOOL BUDGET CUT.
< Special to The Stan.
BEATRICE. Neb, June 25—The
annual budget of $241,805 for the
city schools for 1930-31 was adopted
at a meeting of the board oT ex-
ertion Monday night This is $7,700
less than last year.
HEADACHE
RELIEVED
QUICKLY
Hays Springs, Long Pine
And Valentine Are
Visited.
HAY SPRINGS. Neb.. June 25—
UP)—Crowds that smashed all exist-
ing: records for Hay Springs, Val-
entine and. Long Pine greeted the
Nebraska air tour planes and their
passengers Tuesday.
Twelve thousand were present at
Hay Springs while four thousand
turned out at Valentine and five
thousand at Long Pine.
After being feted
at Valentine
the ships took off in the face of a
threatened storm. They took off to
the south, veered westward and
then turned north to slip between
two groups of clouds and continue
on to Hay Springs without incident.
At Long Pine the crowd waxed
CHILD INJURED IN
ACCIDENT IS DEAD
(Special to The Star).
BEATRICE, Neb., Jun« 25—Chris-
tina
Rademacher,
four-year-old
'daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jurg_en
Rademacher of the Adam* neigh-
borhood, who suffered internal in-
juries in an auto accident last Sun-
day near Adams, died at a hospital
here yesterday.
enthusiastic over the ships. Many
came as far 'as 75 miles to view the
many different styles of planes.
Bands from Long Pine and Basset
were present.
Three ships made an emergency
landing on the hop from Norfolk to
Long Pine. One of these was that
of Flight Commander Harry Sidles,
who apparently landed to aid the
other two. He signalled "OK" as
the other ships went overhead.
Ralph Anderson, Lincoln, was
forced
down
when a cylinder in
his motor cracked. He was unhurt.
PEACE KEYNOTE
ROTARY MEETING
H. H. Rogers of Tulsa
Lauds Program of ,
§ervice Club.
x
CHICAGO, June 25 — (ff) — Th«
wheel of Rotary's silver anniversary
turned today on international peace.
feparks>ot good will, kindled by
Paul P. Harris. Rotary's founder, at
yesterday's session burst into blaz-
ing words last night as 20,000 Ro-
tarlans and their wives gathered at
state and national dinners and re-
dedicated themselves to the ad-
vancement of understanding, good
will and international peace.
- The promulgation of peace con-
tinued * • be tne keynote of today's
session topped with an address by
Harry H. Rogers, Tulsa, Okla.,
banker and put international pres-
ident.
"In the troublous countries of
the world, notary's influence is not
to be found," Rogers pointed out.
"Or if it Is found. It is so small as
to be almost unnotlceable. If IndJ*.
China and Russia could only rea-
lize the great good tv come from
wholehearted acceptange of Rotary's
program, how much would be added
to the tranquillity of the world."
Nominate Officers.
"Rotary cannot decide issues, lo-
cal or international, but it can In-
fluence its members and friends to
approach the discussion and de-
cision
of important, perplexing
problems in the proper spirit," be
said.
The nomination of (officers at to-
day's session found two candidates
for international president: Ray-
mond J. Knoeppel, a New York at-
torney, and Almon E. Roth of Palo
Alto, business manager of Leland
Stanford university.
Sir Henry W. Thornton, K. B. E
chairman of the board of the Cana-
dian National railway and a prom-
inent delegate, was the other speak-
e,- at today's session.
BYRD HAPPY OVER
SAFETY OF FLIERS
ALBANY. N. Y.. June 25—W—
Admiral Richard E. Byrd left Al-
bany today for New York wearing
the distinguished service medal con-
ferred upon him by Governor Roose-
velt for the state.
Informed
that
Capt. Charles
Klngsford-Smith had landed at
Harbor Grace In his east to west
crossing of the Atlantic, the admiral,
who has on his own record a trans-
Atlantic crossing by air, expressed
pleasure over the safety of the crew
of the Southern Cross.
Walton League State
Meeting in September
Dates for the annual state con-
vention of the Izaak Walton league
of Nebraska have been set for
September 12, 13 and 14, it was
announced Wednesday by Miss
Malone, state secretary. The con-
vention will be held at O'Neill.
BOSTON
MARKET
1333 O St.
BC52Z
Thursday Specials
Choice Corn Fed Steak, <*p _
Lb
Z5C
Swift's Pure Lard.
4<%1/ A
One Lb. Pkg
14 /1C
We carry the largest assortment
of cold meats in the city.
Rectal Diseases
Successfully treated without hos-
pital operation. Hemorrhoids
(piles), fistula, fissure,
purltus ant. etc.
No pain or J-ss of time. Latest
equipment nnd facilities. Lady
assistant for women oatlcnts.
Dr. H. C. Leopold
627 Sharp Bids.
JHIce Boui« B to 6 nnd bf Aj/oolnt-
mcnt-B4M8
PAULEY
LUMBER CO.
Own a home—don't
spend a cent.
Invest the money you
now call rent.
quickly corrects the
digestive disturb-
tcjtinal poisons, aad sick headache ;
fjuackly (fisappeaTS. \onrwhole sys-
tem enjoys a tonic effect, constipa-
>
tion Taaisbes, and yon fed a renewed
<
vigor. Avoid bromides sad dope, j
they »rc depressing and harmful i
A3! Druggists 25c and 75c red pk£&
CARTER'S luuPILLS
I t
.'SPAPLRflRCHIVE®— .
All items quoted below are in limited
quantities—early shopping advised
Pepperell Sheets
Size 81x90
95c
Size 81x99
LOO
Pepperell Pillow Cases, 42x36 at 25c
Crinkle Bedspreads
size
80x105
Beautiful Rose and Gold Stripes '
Fresh From New York
Summer Frocks
Silks and Rayons
Smart, new—and such wonderful values—you can't
afford to miss the opportunity.
Kiddies' Novelty Anklets
Double elastic cuffs. Size 6 to 9.
Assorted patterns. Sale price, pair
Millinery Clearance
Better Hats Greatly Reduced
$149
Drastic reduction of women's better grade summer
hats ... straws, hair braids and silk crepes in-beau-
tiful pastel shades. All need size*.
Third Floor
Dotted Silks
Shantungs
Striped Rayons
Flowered Silts
Clever Prints
Dainty
Chiffons
Sleeveless and short sleeve modes. Sizes up to 50
in this lot. Quantity not expected to last all day — so
early shopping is advised.
Third Floor
Smart Costume
HAND BAGS
Novelty bags in shades to go with all costumes.
Many with shell tops, fitted with mirrors AC A
and coin purses. Well lined
»5 V
Main Floor
Great Savings On
Rayon Flat Crepe
Lingerie
79c
Choose from tailored or lace trimmed garments
in a variety of styles. There are chemise, bloom-
ers, panties, step-ins, gowns and slips. JSach gar-
ment a rare value at this special sale price.
Third Floor
Cretonne
39c
1800 Yards
Sunfast colors, large variety
of patterns and colors for
your selection. The values are
exceptional. Sold to 75c yd.
For three days only.
Main Floor
Sheer
Curtain
h
Material
yd. 14C
*
2,100 yds. of Sheer Curtain
material, Grenadines,
Mar-
quisettes and Voiles—White
Cream and Beige. Plaids or
dots. Values to 35c yd.
Main Floor
2700 Yards
Cretonne
19c
Our
™ Mattress
In This Sale
95
45 Ib. layer felt mattress covered in good qual-
ity art ticking, made with neat roll edge. Spe-
cially priced for this sale.
'
Fourth Floor
Tots9 SunTan
Beach Suits
39c
Knitted Suspender Style wf**
Mesh Fronts, VM Vtlut
Diapers
Blrdseye 27-3a. by 27 in,
finest quality, per "t f
dozen
-'••"
These are regular 39c Cre-
tonnes, large and small pat-
terns on light and dark
grounds. Every yard perfect,
on sale Thursday morning. ,
Main Floor
Gorgeous New
Rayon
FABRIC/
The $2.00 Kind in
This Sale at
Yard
[Washable
flat
crepes—rich,
new, beautiful — positively the
latest designs for fashionable
frocks. 39 inches wide. You'll
love the quality and colorings.
The miy just HAD to sell—so
you get this bargain.
Main Floor
Also Great Selling
Wash Silks
'Attractive Summer Pattern and Colors
Yard 59
These dainty pure silk materials at 59c a yam will sur-
prise you with their smartness in pattern and coloring.
Splendid, firm quality and a good variety for selection.
One of our best sale specials for this event Greatly re-
duced. Do not miss this important item.
Main Floor
A Marvelous Offer—Women's
AH Silk
Full Fashioned Hosiery
T»» values are up to 1.95 a pair—every pair is first quality
and perfect—every pair an extraordinary value. Ail SIIK
chiffons in the desired summer shades. Also all silk service
and mid weight hose of flue qualities. This is by far the
best hosiery value we have seen in a long time anywhere..
Main Floor
89
SEARS, ROEBUCK AND Co.
mf
\
c* A _ _ ^
Free Service
Tires Mounted
Batteries Installed
RETAIL DEPARTMENT STORE
Corner
10th
and 'O' Streets
Store Hours
9 a. m. to 6 p. m.
Saturday.
9 a, m. to 9 p. in.
1
WSPAPfcRI
I
THE LINCOLN STAR-WEDNESDAY,
JUNE 25', 1930.
THREE
A-NICE-GIRL
COMES-TO-TOWN
By
Mays ie
r e t g
SYNOPSIS:
Mary
Lou
Leslie
comes to a parting of the ways with
Brynmor Whlttaciore. He thinks
her a "nice" jtei from the country,
and becomes «ngaged to a night club
dancer.
Mary
Lou, however, re-
solves to iive down the "nice £irl"
reputation and have a good time
vithout Brynmor. Tony Tithering-
ton, a reckless young aviator, takes
her to parties and Mary Lou short-
ly loses some of her demurcness.
He takes her to visit his Aunt Ethel-
berta,
a temperamental,
wealthy
spinster. Previously she had refused
i > back
Tony
financially on a
flight around the world. She likes
Mary Lou. and tells Tony that she
will finance his flight if be becomes
engaged to her. Tony is hi a dilem-
ma, for he has sworn never
to
marry. Finally he decides to talk
it over with Mary Lou.
t
Chapter 15.
MAKE-BELIEVE.
Tony
wanted to introduce the
subject tactfully, but he was at a
loss for words.
'
"You made a hit with Aunt Ethcl-
berta,""he finally blurted out.
"I'm so glad you think so," Mary
Lou rejoined.
In her own mind Mary Lou knew
that .Miss Trtherington had liked
her. Hadn't she gone so far as to
kiss her good-bye?
To her, it seemed that the big-
gest obstacle to capturing Tony was
out of the way. Mary Lou had been
clinging hopefully to this thought
ever since they had left Ham Green
cottage.
All sort of hopes and fancies had
been flitting through her brain. She
was roused from a trance to hear
Tony saying:
"You'll probably have a fit, but
Aunt Ethelberta actually suggested
that I should become engaged to
you!"
Mary Lou's head swam. This re-
mark didn't seem to fit into her pic-
ture.
"That was funny."
"Deucedly
funny—quite ridicu-
lous, in fact."
Mary Lou suddenly felt sick.
"And she's set on it," Tony
re-
sumed. "She said she won't finance
my flight unless I become engaged
to you."
Mary Lou was limp. "A-and—what
did you say?"
"I said you'd laugh at the ^nere
suggestion."
Tony seemed to think it was a
joke.
"She persisted in her nonsense,
too," Tony frowned. "She won't let
me have a penny unless we become
engaged."
"What are you going to do?"
Tony
slackened his speed. "I'm
putting it up to you, Mary Lou. My
fate lies entirely in your rands."
"Do you mean that you want bo
marry me—Just because of what
your aunt said?"
"Heaven forbid!" cried Tcny in
dismay. "I've no intention of mar-
rying anyone, my dear. But I'd sure
be grateful if you'd be sport enough
to become engaged to me—for a
time."
Something stuck in Mary Lou's-
throat.
"I say," he hazarded, "you're not
offended?"
"No. not offended." After a pause
she added. "Do you mean you don't
want to marry until you fall
in
love?"
"Not
even then, Msry Lou."
"But—but why?"
Tony was silent for a moment.
"I'll try to explain. Mary Lou, al-
though you're the first girl I've ever
taken into my confidence,"
Tony
was more serious than she ever had
seen him.
"As I see it, an airman like my-
self, bent on establishing records,
ought never to marry. It wouldn't
5
be very pleasant to be in constant
anxiety over'my safety, would it?
"I simply can't Imagine any sen-
sitive girl doing it Because ol her,
I would hesitate to take risks—and
then I'd never establish those rec-
ords. I've sworn t osacrlfice every-
thing for Hying, and I'll do it."
Mary LOu hesitated before she
spoke.
"Don't you think a girl would take
the risk, if she 1 oved you, Tony?"
"She might but I wouldn't let her
Why should a girl suffer for my
sake? You see—" his voice dropped,
"I never can forget about my own
mother. Dad's accident killed her,
you know.
And do you think I
could stand the strata of flying if I
knew the girl I loved might have to
face—"
"Stop!" Mary Lou hid her face
in her hands.
"There, you see how right I am?"
Tony queried triumphnatly.
"I—I suppose so."
"That proves conclusively
that
marriage is not for me." Tony ar-
gueC ' 'But look here, Mary Lou, If
you'll only consent to become en-
gaged to me for a limited period,
I'll be your slave for life.
"No one need know of our ar-
rangement. When the flight is over
you can-pretend you're bored with
me and chuck me over. That's very
simple. Besides, we'd get a great
deal of fun out of it, witn everyone
getting romantic over us, and our
knowing all the time we were hood-
winking 'em.
"It's for you to decide. I won't
blame you if you refuse, but some-
how I don't think you will."
He turned his attention again to
driving, and gave her a chance to
think it over.
Mary Lou knew that Tony's am-
Amerlea's Delegate
In recognition of her outstand-
ing work in the juvenile courts, the
United
States
department
has
named
Judge
Kathryn
Sellers
(above), of Washington, D. C.,. as
its representative to the Pan-
American
Child
congress.
The
meeting • is to be held in Lima,
Peru, early in July.
bitioii was centered on this flight.
And she realized, with that practi-
cal streak which is womans heritage
that half a loaf is better than no
bread at all. Even if she never mar-
ried Tony, it was something to have
been engaged to him—if only for a
time.
"All right, I'm on." Tony was too
I
After the first
Ktventy-five
Thousand
THE VALUE of sound design, good materials and careful craftsmanship is especially
apparent in the new Ford after the first twenty-five thousand miles. Long, con-
tinuous service emphasizes its mechanical reliability and economy of operation
and up-keep.
3
As you drive the Ford through many months and years you will develop an
increasing pride in its appearance and a growing respect for the substantial worth
that has been built into it From every standpoint—in everything that goes to
make a good automobile—you will know that you\have made a far-seeing, satis-
factory purchase.
Wherever you go; you hear enthusiastic praise of the car and this significant,
oft-repeated phrase—"I'm glad I bought a Ford."
>
A FORD owner in New York fells of a
13,000-mile trip across the United States
and back in sixty days and says "the car
was extremely economical to operate,
comfortable and speedy." A grateful
father tells how the Triplex shatter-proof
glass windshield saved his wife and
children front serious injury in an auto-
mobile collision. •<
To test tires, a large company drove a
new Ford day and night, for an average
of 500 miles every twenty-four hours. It
was still giving satisfactory service after
105,000 miles.
A Ford car that had fallen into Fenian
Lake was submerged for twelve days
before being raised. After a new battery
and carburetor bowl were installed, it
was driven back to Spokane under its
own power.
Many police departments have written
of the special advantages of the Ford in
crowded traffic because of its alert speed,
acceleration and ease of control. An in-
creasing number of fleet owners are also
purchasing the Ford because their cost
figures have given conclusive proof of its
economy of operation and up-keep.
T«« XKW ronm srvmr
In addition to important triumphs in
Germany, France and Italy, the Ford won
six out of seven leading places in a con-
i
*
test in Finland, first and second in the
Raf aela races in Argentina, first and sec-
ond in the run from Copenhagen->tc*
Paris-to-Copenhagen, three gold medals
in England, first ranking in the durability
test over the tortuous Amancaes road in
Pera, and first place in the 1930 reliabil-
ity run conducted by the Royal Auto*
mobile dub of Sweden.
This contest was an exceptionally
severe test of endurance and sturdy con-
struction because it was held in the dead
of winter and covered 600 miles of
steady miming over snow-covered conn-
try roads and mountainous hills.
NEW LOW FORD PRICES
Roadster
$435
Phaeton
44O
Standard Coupe * . . . . . .
495
Tudor Sedan . . . . . . . . 495
Sport Coupe . . . . . . . . 525
De Luxe Coupe
545
Three-window Fordor Sedan . . . 600
Convertible Cabriolet
625
De Luxe Phaeton
625
De Luxe Sedan
640
Town Sedan
660
AH prietf /.«.*. Detroit, ptm* frtiglil and
Bmmftn mid *pm* tin extrm, m low eort.
FORD MOTOR COMPANY
elated to notice the strained note in
her voice.
"That's great!" he exclaimed,
He looked at her. and her quiet-
ness made him uncomfortable.
"I say.
you'll think I'm beastly
conceited, but there—er—Isn't any
danger of your growing too fond of
me. Is there. Mary Leu?"
That piqued Mary Lou's pride.
"Of course not!" she said sharp-
ly, and laughed. "You're the last
man In the world with whom
I'd
fall seriously in love!"
Tony
sighed contentedly
and
grinned. "Well, that's reassuriiiR. I
suppose I'm not the type you ad-
mire?"
"1 like you well enough to play
around with," Mary Lou lied. "But
the sort of man I'd marry would be
quite
different—serious—er—intel-
lectual . . better looking, prehaps..''
Tony chuckled.
"That's a bit of a sting, the bet-
ter looking part. Still, you'ie jus-
tified m having your own ideas on
the subject."
It set Mary Lou laughing. Some-
times she had found, it's better to
laugh than to cry.
"What's the joke?" he demanded.
"Is it on me?"
She shook her head. A knowing
voice whispered to her; "Mary Lou,
the jcke is on you!"
Copyright, 1930, Maysie Greig
Has Mary Lou played her cards
cleverly—or not?
Tomorrow the
game of make-believe starts.
Oh These Women
By Leola Allard.
You middle aged men who refuse
to consider marriage with anyone
but a pretty .cheerful yonng woman
will now have the pleasure of lis-
tening to a woman from Seattle,
Wash., who arises to remark thai
you "better get out your carpet slip-
pers, stop trying to be collegiate,
and act your age."
She wishes
toremark that the
despised middle-aged woman still
has hair and a figure, while the
middle-aged man has
bald spots
and a stomach.
"The silly age starts around 35.
says this woman. "Men get
the
young girl complex about forty. Un-
less they snap out of it they are
just hopeless old bores at 50.
The more unattractive a man Is,
the greater his ego. There are
some clever attractive men of mid-
dle age. but as a rule they are
among, the rich and well-bred. Tne
average American
business man
grows stingier every year, and by
the time he's 40 or over, he can't
help telling the price of a meai
after inviting you out to dinner.
"What, pray tell me, can they
discuss except their business, or
what they read in the daily papers?
What have they to interest a wo-
man, much less a girl? If a wo-
man gets a good home at middle
age, she can stand it to be boren
to death by a middle aged husband
for a few hours each evening before
he begins to snore behind his news-
paper. But a girl? No- Youth wants
youth, and in the end these older
men who write you about wanting
young wives will find it a lot more
comfortable associating with a wo-
man in the thirties who won't be
dragging them places and craving
constant entertainment.
Another
thing, if he won't gad, someone else
will. Then a divorce.
"Now,
let's bring out the easy
chair, the carpet slippers and some
good sound sense.
This obsession
will pass. All men have it. You
know—like measles. It's not
a
chronic ailment-"
All right, Adele, now I've told it to
the gentleman' from Oklahoma
at
whom you say you are shooting.
Perhaps he is 40 and will recover
as you say. But it's pretty diffi-
cult to set marriage ages, because
some men are young at 50 and some
are old at 30. I've known women of
50 who had the spirit of youth and
young girls who were nice old- la-
dies. Mr. Oklahoma may be one ot
the exceptions.
Home Play Week
The Family That Plays Together
Stays Together.
L INDIAN WRESTLE.
Two players lie on the ground,
sid; by side in opposite directions,
with their right arms locked to-
gether. As they
count three in
unison they raise their right feet
and lower them twice. At the third
count they lock their heels to-
gether suddenly and each one tries
to force the other one's leg down
to the ground thus throwing him
over.
2. PUSH CONTEST.
Two players stand facing, toes
touching. Palms of
both their
hands are touching and they push.
The object is to make your part-
ner lose his balance.
Match. i»
won best two out of three.
3. TOE TAP.
Two players each have a stick
three feet long. Object is to tap
the toe of your opponent with the
stick.
Left hand is behind the
back. Tactics used are similar to
fencing.
Noted Violinist Loses
$40,000 Damage Suit
PARIS, June
-(I. N. S.)—
Jacques Thibsujd. the famous vio-
linist, has lost his suit for $40.000
damages brought against a news-
paper published at Nantes. The
twelfth civil court refused to enter-
tain his claim.
Thibauld arrived late at Nantes one
evening last winter after
having
driven through a snow storm. He
played to an almost empty halL The
following day. the local newspaper
reported that Thibaud had failed to
appear. The suit followed-
inside
Feen-a-mtnt is
the answer. Cleansing action 01
smaller doses effective because
yon chew it. At your druggists—
tbe safe and scientific laxative
Feenamint
FOR COPSTIRATION
"We always
recommend
RCA Radiotrons"
says
DR. FULTON CUTTING
Chairman of the Board
COLONIAL RADIO
CORPORATION
"/COLONIAL engineers are
V_y enthusiastic about RCA
Radiotrons and test all Colonial
sets with them. It has been re-
peatedly proven that inferior
tubes are a serious handicap to
complete radio satisfaction, for if
the tubes do not function prop-
erly, nothing functions properly.
RCA Radiotrons are recognized
as the standard of the industry
and are built with scientific pre-
cision. So we always recommend
RCA Radiotrons to owners of
Colonial sets."
RADIO ENGINEERS ADVISE:
Replace all the vacuum tubes in your
radio set with RCA Radiotrons at least
cnce a year. This is the only sure way
to maintain good performance and
minimize disagreeable noises and other
troubles caused by inferior tubes. RCA
Radiotrons will give you the maximum
Leek for the redandUaA
carton and the famaut
RCA tradt-mark
Old tubes may impair the
performance of the new
RCA RADIOTRON CO., INC., HARRISON, N. J.
RCA Radiotrons
THE HEART OF YOUR. RADIO. S£T
CHILDREN
AT PLAY
—must be cool, comfortable, happy children.—
and are, when they are dressed in these new,
practical, smarfc wearables, you will find at
MILLER & PAINE!
Dress them in
Cotton FrocKs
1
FROCKS with French panties
and bloomers "in sizes 2 to 6.
Sheer prints and printed broad-
cloths with yokes and smocking,
bodices and dainty skirts, cape-
lets, tiny ruffles, and other
notes as interesting.
$]95
X ea..
DRESSES of printed broad-
cloths, dimities and lawns in
sizes 7 to!4. Empire styles, but-
ton-on modes, straight line and
flared versions — -with pert
touches of trimming.
Most" of
the styles in sizes 7 to 10 come
•with shorts.
—Second Floor.
Rayon and Lisle
AnKlets
Plain colors, striped effects end novelty patterns. A new
arrival in mercerized lisle anklets features the summery,
meifa weave—all white. Anklets have straight and fancy
tops. Sizes 6 to 8% in children's anklets; sizes 8 to
10 in misses' anklets. Priced- pr.—
—First Floor.
Vanta Sun Suits
—for wee tots!
WOOL SUITS AND COTTON
SUITS that may be worn when
bathing as well as for play ana sun
health baths. Come in green, yel-
low, blue and orange. Every small
kiddie should own one of these
suits this summer! Priced—
Wool suits, 1.50
Cotton suits, 1.00
AMOS N'-ANDY
Fresh Air Taxicab
—A NEW TOT wiUi all of the amusing fea-
tures you would expect to find in one that iook
Its inspirations from the t3?o popular radio en-
tertainers. A miniature that big and little will
enjoy! Priced—
Toys—Fourth Floor. 95
FOUR
THE LINCOLN STAR—WEDNESDAY, JUNE 25, 1930.
RITZ-CARLTON
HOTEL RAIDED
Dry Agents Also Invade
a Fashionable New
York Cafe.
Charges of Liquor Law
Violations Filed Against
Twenty-six.
NEW YORK. June 25 —W) —
Charges of liquor law viola lion
were on file against twenty-six
persons today as» the result of raids
by Federal prohibition agents on
the Ritz-Carlton hotel and the
Casino restaurant in Central Park,
two of the city's most fashionable
gathering places.
Among the prisoners were eight
male patrons of the Casino, charged
with possession of liquor. Others
arrested there included Sidney Sol-
omon, the owner; Rene L.. Black,
maitre d'hotel, and eight waiters.
Solomon and Black were charged
with maintaining a nuisance and
the waiters with aiding and abetting
in the maintenance of a nuisance.
Those arrested at the Ritz-Carl-
ton were Thomas Sarvas, iranager
of the roof garden, chargea with
permitting the sale and service of
liquor, six waiters, accused of sale
and serving, and Charles Williams,
an elevator starter, who, prohibi-
tion agents said, sold a quart of
champagne and a pint of whiskey
to one of their number.
Released On Bail.
All of the prisoners were released
in bail after being taken to police
stations.
t
Assistant
Prohibition
Adminis-
trator James Donovan, who lead
the raideK at,the Casino, said both
that place and the Ritz-Carlton
had . been under observation for
several weeks. At the Ritz-Carlton,
he said, the agents had pursued the
same tactics used in raids on other
large hotels recently, where federal
operatives registered as guests and
lived for several week gathering
evidence previous to the raids.
Much confusion and uproar at-
tended the descent upon the Casino,
but the raid at the Ritz-Carlton
was conducted quietly. •
Seven agents rode to the roof
garden, informed the manager and
headwaiter of their purpose and
ordered the diners to keep their
seats. Then they went from table-
to table searching for liquor. None
of the patrons was arrested.
At the Casino, one of the most
expensive and fashionable eating
and dancing resorts in the city,
about 600 persons were in the din-
ing room when the raid occurred.
Caterpillar Army
75 Miles Long Is
Crossing Nevada
TONOPAH, Nev., June 25—C/P)—
Destroying all vegetation as they go,
green-bodied caterpillars
with a
saw-like tail today were advancing
• like an army between Lunlng and
Mina, Nev. The tail cuts twigs of
greasewood and' sagebrush,
and
•locomotion is provided by fifteen
legs on either side resembling the
centipede.
Farm experts say they never
heard of such a visitor before. One
motorist who drove through the
"army" asserted it stretched sev-
enty-five miles and was advancing
•with incredible speed. Where the
pest originated is a mystery.
STRANGE AS IT SEEMS—
BY JOHN
MORE CHILDREN
ON PLAYGROUNDS
MUSHROOMS
c&n burst their
wfcy through
pavement
OF THE UHITED STATES,
WERE HOT MEMBERS
OF AttX CHURCH
-705-
vNcWrrson roped
rew a, steer in t4/f
seconds.
^
© McClure Newipjfvr Syndicate
V
IF YOU DONT BELIEVE ANY OF THIS. WRITE TO THE
AUTHOR FOR PROOF. SEND STAMPED RETURN ENVELOPE.
United States May Claim
Part of Vast Antarctic
Region Explored by Byrd
Declaration Of Sovereignty Over Frozen Wastes
Would Mark Abandonment Of Traditional
Policy Of Government.
WASHINGTON, June
25—(IP)—
Whether the United 'States will lay
aside a century of precedent and
lay claim to a part of the vast Ant-
arctic region was learned today to
be under consideration at the state
department.
Although the department is con-
templating the claim of Rear Ad-
miral Richard E. Byrd to part of the
snow-hid southern-most end of the
world, over which he flew in his
dash to the pole, it was said a de-
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«.
not
be
cision
probably would
reached for some time.
Much of the 150,000 square miles
over which Byrd flew, comprising
an area roughly the size of Indiana,
Illinois, Ohio and West Virginia,
already is claimed by Great Britain
as lying within the huge, pie-seg-
ment of the .Ross dependency. Im-
mediately to the east, however,
bordering along the 150th meridian
west, lies Marie Byrd land, explored
bv him and hitherto unclaimed.
State department maps showed the
area to border partly on the coast,
thereby offering a point of ingress
outside the British claim.
Never in the past however, has
the United States declared sover-
eignty over any part of Antarctica,
itself a land bigger than all Aus-
tralia and Europe, excluding Rus-
sia.In 1821, Capt Nathaniel B. Pal-
mer,
on a sealing voyage from.
Stoningham, Conn., became one of
the original explorers of the Ant-
arctic through finding a point of
land, which was named Palmer
land.
Less than a score of years later
Lieutenant Wilkes of the Untied
States navy was dispatched there
by the government with two sloops
of war and four smaller vessels on
a scientific and commercial explor-
ation. He skirted the Antarctic
shore for a long distance, a -terri-
tory now bearing his name, although
he did not land and take posses-
sion of it for the United States.
Hughes Discussed Land.
Discussing this land in 1924,
Charles Evans Hughes said:
"It is the opinion of the depart-
ment of state that discovery of
lands unknown to civilization, even
when coupled witt a formal taking
of possession, does not support a
valid claim of sovereignty unless
the discovery is followed by an ac-
tual settlement of the discovered
country."
Discoveries and, in some cases,
claims have been made in the terri-
tory by Russia, Norway. Ranee,
and Germany in addition to Great
Britain, despite the fact that the
land today is inhabited only by
penguins and seals.
The state department has re-
ceived no notes from other govern-
ments relative to claims of land in
the Antarctic since 1928, -when the
British ambassador offered aid to
Byrd while he was in either the
Falkland
or Ross dependencies.
The note was not acknowledged un-
til a year later, and no comment
was made upon the claims of land
mentioned, •which included more
than half dozen sectors.
Today In
Congress
(By Uic Awiocimted Press.)
Lindberghs' Baby
Nameless, But Has
Four Pairs Shoes
ENGLEWOOD, N. J., June 25—(.^
—Instead of being without a pair
of shoes to his name, the 3-day~cld
Lindbergh baby hasn't a name to
his four pair of shoes.
Arrangements were made today to
add the fact of his birth last Sun-
day to New Jersey's vital statistics,
but it was learned from friends of
Colonel and Mrs. Lindbergh that the
birth certificate would be filed with-
out having the name of the infant
entered upon it.
There is no disagreement in the
Lindbergh family regarding selection
of a name, but the parents wish to
take all the time necessary to choose
the best possible name for their son.
The four pair of shoes are the gift
of a New York shoe manufacturer.
One pair, fashioned of the "soft-
est white kid imaginable," is em-
broidered with gold beads of in-
finitesmal size in a design repre-
setning the monoplane in which
Colonel and Mrs. Lindbergh made
their record flight from Glendale,
CaL, to New York.
Another pair of pale blue kid has
the aviation insignia of & pair of
wings -worked on it in silver beads.
There is a pair of white kid with a
fleur-de-lis motif, symbolical of the
father's flight to Prance, interspersed
with hand painted rose buds. The
fourth pair is of pale rose kid with
tiny green buds worked in beads.
ELECTRIFY CANADIAN FARMS.
SASKATOON, Saskatchewan—{#)
—About $2,000,000 is to be spent in
1930 by the Saskatchewan govern-
ment power commission on the ex-
tension of electric power lines into
rural communities. About $30,000,-
000 will be spent In the next two
years in northern Ontario on de-
velopment of electric power.
Attendance S h o .w s An
Increase Over That
Of First Week.
There has been an increase In
the number of children using Lin-
coln's playgrounds.
During the
first week, 7.378 attended and dur-
ing the second week the total was
7,952.
Friday night on most of the play-
grounds is
set
aside > as "specia
night." Last Friday was "whee
night." with activities being planned
to include everything with wheels
such as bicycles, pushmobiles, rol-
ler skates and wagons.
Results of the contests at Ran-
dolph were as follows: Everett Mey-
ers won first in the bicycle race, ir
the pushmobile contest "Ladybird.'
driven
by Dick Partwood
and
pushed by Everett Meiers, won
first.
Yleen Burwood and Wilma Pate
are the
editors-in-chief of
"Peter Pan Piper," playground pa-
per.
The most interesting activitj
at the playground is the making o:
paoer canoes.
F street park is to have
free
movies this evening. The F street
baseball team defeated the Sarato-
ga team 11 to 0.- Results of the
wheel show held Friday were as
follows: Bernice Deers first place
with wafron, Mildred Spamor first
place with her doll buggv, Althea
Oxenh'ardt first place in the roller
skating race. Robert Amen first
place with his scooter. Judges were
Mrs. Oxenhardt. Martha Klipper
Ruth Zakem. and Helen Bauer.
Give Indian Program.
Pentzer playground had an Indian
Night. A chief was chosen, Indian
games were played and the children
brought Indian relics.
Gretchen
Howard is the eaitor-in-chief of
the Pentzer Pars news.
This Friday night Trill be "stilt
and rope night." The children will
make their stilts at home and bring
them to the playground for the
events planned. Rope jumping, rope
jumping, rope climping and lariat
stunts will also be a feature of the
evening.
Belmont
playground is
open
Monday
Wednesday and JTiday
afternoons. The attendance shows
that it is becoming more popular
every day. The equipment commit-
tee is composed of Arthur Bartzatt,
Melvin Biggs and Wilbur Mease.
Willar'd is open Tuesday, Thurs-
day and Saturday evenings. T»
equipment committee there is com-
posed of Fred York. Alex Green-
wold and Henry Oreenwold.
COSTE, FRENCH ACE,
TO TRY OCEAN HOP
PARIS, June 25-rt>»tci; -rontnT rruR Din.
OoC-iiatrs jnisceTJuOctro': WTlf approved
fcv the s»Tftl nlfalrs eonnnlttre.
"8»nMng comBJlttre hear» swrrtmrj- Mel-
Jon on 1& Mcr«*soi tdU to Pferrst £<*-
rr«l Bcr«re tasks fcnn jmr«2j**isg Ocr-
JB»T! rcpiratltrai bonflt.
committee ctnuiden oanapwr-
TCTSOAT.
dotare proposal presented to Salt ft-
fcue cs srcsna tfeflcJracy W31.
AKiwfl to cenlcrcooe arjxut on
tafl Jjartoi* wm.
Oer.c!dn?d siewr Ira* WH-
AzreiJd to neaste mnrodaraU to
OsmiJms rtv>—If. 35.00C
signatures are obtained for the pe-
titions to put the municipal owner-
ship of power plants question to
the vote of the people, Nebraska
will become the battleground of the
nation this fall. Attorney General
Sorensen told a meeting called by
the People's Light and Power as-
sociation last night.
Only 15 persons, one of whom
was the meeting chairman and two
others who were speakers, attended
the meeting.
The people of America are watch-
ing this lignt" he said. "If we fail
thousands will be discouraged; if
we win, Nebraska will become the
battleground of the ration *his fall
on the question of whether munici-
pal power plants should be allowed
to live and grow. I resent the in-
terference of p"nvate companies to
get legislation that will not permit
the municipal plants to expand "
Other speakers in behalf of the
move were State Representative
Trenmor Cone of Valley, and C. W.
McCanaughy of Holdrege
Nebraska Rotarians At Chicago
BEATRICE PLANS
TO BUY BUILDING
FOR A CITY HALL
(Special to The Star)
BEATRICE. Neb. June 25—At a
meeting of the city commissioners
yesterday the annual expense bill,
which amounts to $141,000, was
adopted. This is about 58,000 more
than last year due to the inclusion
of
$13,000 for the
Hugo Arnold
building and firemen's halL The
Arnold block will be used as a city
hall 5n case the deal goes through.
FAMILY REUNION
BIRTHDAY PARTY
SUNDAY AT TALMO
(Special to The Star.)
TALMO Kas., June 25—A fam-
ily reunion and birthday celebra-
tion for J Johnson, 84, father of
a former county commissioner and
representative in the legislature.
Ben H. Johnson,
former banker
and resident of Talmo, now chief
grain inspector for the state, took
place at the aged man's home in
Talmo over
the
weekend.
Mr.
Johnson and
family,
of Kansas
City, Kas.; XDscar Johnson,
an-
other son and banker of Burrton,
Kas.: the
only daughter, Mrs
Ernest
Cousins and
family-
of
Talmo; a niece, Mrs Jacobson, of
St. Paul, Minn.; Mr. and Mrs
August Larson and daughter, and
Mr and Mrs. Larson's son, Carl
Larson and wife, all of Frankfort,
Kas., and
Charles Larson
and
William
Mikesell,
of
Belleville,
made up the gathering.
Two SosptcU Taken Into Cwtody
In Council Bluff*. Followinf
Gun Battle In Omaha.
COUNCIL BLUFFS. June 25—(/P)
—Two men are in custody of police
here, held in connection with the
shooting last night of two railroad
detectives in a gun battle with four
alleged box car robbers in the Om-
aha yards of the Union Pacific
railroad.
The wo detectives. Everett John-
son and O J Buckmaster, were not
seriously injured by the shots.
The pair being held by police for
questioning are Roy Fox of Council
Bluffs and Earl Limerick of Omaha.
Fox was arrested early today after
a
check of automobile records
showed him to be the owner of an
automobile abandoned in
Omaha
and confiscated by police there
Johnson
and
Buckmaster
say
they caught the robbers in the act
of pilfering cars.
An attempt to
arrest the quartet resulted in an
exchange of shots.
Rotanans from all over the world have gathered at Chicago to
attend the Rotary International jubilee in thac city. This particular
group of delegates hail from Fremont, Neb., and arrived in Chicago
just in tune to meet a 96 degree heat wave. They are' Jrred Bader
(left) and Mrs. Baaer and Andy E Anderson.
Boy Scout Board
of Review Thursday
At Elliott School
A board of review for Lincoln
scouts will be held Thursday eve-
ning at the new Elliott school.
This board is in preparation for
the court of honor which will be
held at the can-p July 3.
Scouts who desire to qualify for
the rank of either second or first
class and all scouts who have
earned merit bsJges in first aid
, are required to appear before the
board of review. This examining
body carefully reviews the tests
which the scouts have passed and
certifies their fitness to receive ad-
vancement. Men who have
had
long experience in scout work serve
as members of the board.
Courts of honor are also held
at the close of each camp period.
The next court of honor will be
held on Friday evening of this
week when the second period will
come to a close. Scout
afficials
urge that parents and friends of
scouts who are in camp avail them-
selves of this privilege to visit the
camp and to be present when
honors and awards are presented.
Another feature of the summer j
program of lincojn scouting is the I
emphasis being placed upon the j
O'Night camp activities. The camp
is open to scouts on Monday, Wed-
nesday and Friday afternoons and
on Friday evening the scouts may
remain for an overnight camp
Practically all tests of the second
and first class rank may be passed
at the camp and merit badges in
cooking, pioneering etc.. are offered
at the tjune- when the camp is
open. Scout officials report that
nearly every evening troops are at
the O'Night camp with their own
leaders working on scouting
ad-
vancement and learning the art
of camping.
A great many scouts are regis-
tering daily for the additional per-
iods of Camp Quivera. The third
period opens next Monday, June
30 and scout headquarters ha\e
made known that additional boys
may still register for this period.
Work is being secured for a great
many scouts so that they may
earn a part or all of their fees.
Bank Robber
Slain By 'Main
Street* Posse
TOLEDO,
HI.,
June
25—«">—
Chased by a "main street" posse,
three bandits
were in jail here
today and the
fourth
was dead
following the robbery of the First
National bank of Noble of $10,000
cash and $30.000 in bonds yester-
day.
The possemen consisted of
business men who fired a fusillade
of shots at the robbers as they
fled from the
bank
into their
automobi] and
down
the
main
street of the town.
Farmers, sheriffs
and
business
men chased the four robbers more
than ninety miles,
finally sur-
rounding them m a field where
three submitted to arrest and the
fourth of shot
dead
as he at-
tempted to shoot his way to free-
oom. Everett Woolen, a" druggist,
was wounded by the robber but
not seriously.
The loot was re-
covered.
Kingsford-Smith's
Fiancee Happiest
Girl in Australia
MELBOURNE.
Australia.
June
25—W)—Capt. Charles Kingsford-
Smith's pretty fiancee. Mary Powell,
was the happiest girl in Australia
today. She had laced gravely the
difficult task of waiting for netre
of the safe arrival in America in
! the Southern Cross
of her ad-
venturous husband-to-be
"Isn't it wonderful,"
she
ex-
claimed.
"My mother insisted that I spend
last evening playing bridge to keep
me from worrying," she said with
real British cheerfulness. "Oh. but
what
terrible
things
I did at
bridge." Waicmg for the flight to
start, she added, had beed almost
as hard as waiting for it to end.
Miss Powell was radiant ftith
happiness. She had been receiv-
ing
occasional
radio dispatcher
j from Belfast, the
first
reaching
her yesterday morning in which
{her fiance said he was 500 miles
out.
Finally came the news that
the plane had sighted Newfound-
land and she felt sure of her hero's
success
"I could not .refuse to let him
make the attempt," she exclaimed
"It was the only big thing left
for him to do in aviation. It would
always nave been there, nagging
in the corner of his mind, if he
had not done it
"So I thought it was the best
thing to let him get it over with.
He promised that once the Atlantic
flight was
done he
would not
undertake any other big flights.
Our_mamage is fixed
for Sep-
temoer "
jurtd critically last night when
their biplane crashed
near here
Papers in their pockets revealed
they wre recently students at Le-
land Stanford and had graduated
i from * Palo Alto flying school.
Hill* Bros, kave tktritkt
idta if roastiff
cog*
PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM
£«»•«« DioJnrf-Sw vHiuFl&of
inputs Color «ivd lUauty
to C»r
tec u4 $i oo
FLIER KILLED IN KANSAS.
"WICHITA, Kas, June 25—UP)—
Leopold C Schumacher of Palo Al-
to, CaL, was killed and W. S. Ed-
wards of Brooklyn, N. Y., was in-
No ButK-ROAsnxc method c»n ,
produce the flavor that Hillt
Bros.' exclusive process—Con-
,
trolled 'Roasting —can pro-
duce. Every berry is roasted
evenlv and a matchless uni-
form "fiavor is the result.
Fresh from the original vacuum
pack. Lastly opened with the key.
HILLS
BROS
COFFEE
©1950
PITY
THE POOR
SILKWORM:
THINK of the lifetime of toil *
silkworm spends to give you
ulkea lingerie tnd stockings.
You ought to know—you hare
to pay plent) for it. It'i only fair,
to both yourself and the worm,
to make your silk things last as
long as possible.
White King Granulated Soap
is made only from fine vegetable
and nut oils—oils good enough
to eat. It's the safest soap you
can use in T* ashing expensive
underwear. And at the same time
its purity makes it the most effec-
tive soap for greasy dishes, dust-
heavy woolens.
\Thite King Granulated Soap
washes etcrytbmg. And it's eco-
nomical—a teaspoonful is plenty
for the wash basin, a cupful ample
for^he washing machine, even
in hard water. Put it on your list
for today. Your grocer his it.
ENGINEER AT END
OF RUN DIES OF
A HEART ATTACK]
OMAHA,
June 25—V?i—Leaving j
the cab of his loeomottre to go to ,
a restaurant at the
end of his I
,, regular run from Perry. Ia^ Jake
' J. Brown, 7s, Milwaukee railroad i
engineer, died suddenly of heart'
trouble here last night.
'
. Brown, rho had seen 43 years |
service with the railroad without'
any previous illness,
was taken j
back to Perry in a baggage csr of j
the same train he had piloted here ,
a few hours previous.
,
The veteran
railroader
began [
•work with the Milwaukee road in |
1881 and became an engineer in '
1887. His years of service with the '
road were surpassed by only seven j
men.
ALBION MASONIC
BODY INSTITUTED
FIFTY YEARS AGO
(Special to Tie Star.?
ALBION. Neb, June
25—Albion
lodge No. 73, A. F. M., celebrated its
fiftieth anniversary Monday •with
a picnic at FuHer park. There was
a large attendance from all over
the county, and
these •were also
present three officers of the grand
lodge. Grand Master Ornlle A. An-
drews of Lincoln, Deputy Grand
Master John A. Tapster of North
Bend, and Past Grand Master. A.
H. Vehe, of Norfolk. In the eve-
ning there was a joint installation
of officers for aH "the lodges of the
county. Of all the charter members
and those who were members dar-
ing the first five years of the Al-
bion lodge, only three remain.
i Fewer Liquor Cases
I
,.
For Federal Courts
RURAL PUPILS IN
TIE FOR HONORS
IN GAGE COUNTY
(Special to The Star.)
BEATRICE. Neb_ June 25—Ixiis
Haupt. Cortland; Ida Buss, Ellis,
and Velma Fulton. Wymore. tied
for the high grade average of the
Gage county rural eighth graders.
They each received an average of
95 13-14 Lois Haupt and Ida Buss
also received their final
Palmer
method
penmanship
certificates.
There were 39 other eiehth graders
on the honor roll, wsth
averages
above 90
FUNERAL SERVICE
FOR J. T. FAUBIAN
'Special to The Star)
REPUBLICAN CITY. Neb- Jane
25—Funeral services were held at
the Methodist church here Sand"
conducted by Rev, E. V. Pnce. for
John T. Faubian. 79. who had been
a resident of this vicmitv since
1?72. Mr. Faubiaa. who died at the
home of his daughter. Mi^ Boss
Cazafcbell. in Denver, had been a
prominent real estate dealer for
many years. Interment •sras in the
EepnbLcaa City cemeterv. in the
presence of a large nambeV of rela-
tives, ne^ehbors and friends.
SEWARD NOTES
_ (Speoal to The Star)
SEWARD. Neb., Jane 25— Notice
of the sadden death of Mrs. Har-
ry Logan oa Staxiay at Alliance,
•sras received by Hush Locan. Har-
ry Locan is the son of Hagh Logan
and an employee of the Standard
Oi3 Co.
The Sewaro couatr board of so-
oe..iHm> was in session oa Taes-
day at aa aojo-zmed meeting as a
board of eguaUzatSon.
CoTTrmenctng with last Scndav.
thirty-two rcsmbers of Oak Ridge
Goif clnb are parttaoatsa: la a
Scramanrent lasttag ratn aext Sua-
ir«r >TS on Tuesday for
a Tiat •aiai re&trres at PiaJts-
Wherever You Go-
You Find
Blue Ribbon Malt
In millions of households Bin* Ribbon Milt b
the permanent favorite. Such firwly established
and ever-increasing popularity is proof that
America's Bissest Sefcr ionf a«o set the standard
of quality. Always packed roll three poands.
*Vif* far Imn'* Frrr R*vap* Bool; /or «}«,
Mdnu* franitr M«*C £Un Co-, 7» .V M
Blue RibbonMalt Extract
CKienzeiCo
Special Purchase Sale-of
Handmade Russian
Filet Cloths
S"
$145
General Electric's
New Fan Makes
the Air Breezy
$500
8 inch Blades whirl noise-
lessly to contribute to the
room's comfort.
—Basement.
\^ Size 54x54
SEATS 4 TO 6 PEOPLE—LARGER SIZES IN PROPORTTON
This ss your oDpomimty to secure that esamsate lace table cloth
you have always wanted Or, at these low prices, to have several
72sSO. seats 8
S5.29
72x108, seats 12
S8.75
—Street Floor.
Cover the Floor
With Congoleum
For Slimmer
65-
Shade Your
Windows With
Canvas Awnings
One of Our Best
Numbers—
63iS3, seats 6 ....
72x72, seats 6 to 8 ...... S4-69
Home Owners!
Tenants!
Pajper Your Houses
at These Wan raper
Clean-Up Prices!
Sq. yd.
{6 ft. wide)
It's the coolest floor cover-
ing imaginable — bright,
colorful ana easy to clean.
—Floor Three.
c*!t in-
terest entered. National Bank
ci
Commerce, 13 & O street.—Adv.
Would Add More Tables '— J. D.
Boucher applied to the city council
Wednesday for a permit- to place
two more tables In his billiard room
at 1311 M street.
Gets Divorce—Mabel 2 Harm got
a divorce frcza Henry Hahn in a
decree signed late Tuesday by Dis-
trict Judge Chappell on grounds of
cruelty
and failure to provide.
Restoration of her maiden name,
Button, was authorized.
Gets Verdict—Omer \V. Vogcg was
awarded $4,610.56 by a jury in Dis-
trict Judge Broady's court late Tues-
day in his suit to collect $5,000 fire
insurance on a Nebraska City build-
ing, burned in 1927. The suit was
against the Mechanics Insurance Co.
The only controversy was as to the
amount of damages to which he was
entitled.
Asks Accident Damages—Suit was
filed In District court late Tuesday
by ' Augusta Strauch, mother of
Kobert Lovs, 8, asking $5,000 for in-
juries suffered by the child in an
accident June 18, and $20 damage
to the bicycle hit in the crash. The
boy, riding the bicycle, was struck
by a car driven by John Parsons at
Twenty-sixth and Vine streets, the
petition claims.
Given f300 Judgment—By agree-
ment of attorneys for both parties,
District Judge Chappell early Tues-
day afternoon entered judgment of
$300 for
Lulu Colley, adminis-
tratrix of the estate of Walter An-
derson, against John and Howard
Horton. The judgment was in set-
tlement of an accident last October.
While walking across a street, An-
derson was struck by the Horton
car, and died from injuries sus-
tained.
Want Administration — Appoint-
ment of Charles F. Adams as ad-
ministrator of the estate of Sam-
uel H. Perry who died May 16,
1929 was asked in a petition filed
Wednesday in County court.
It
estimates the estate to consist of
•10,000 of real estate and $5,000 of
personal
property.
Heirs
are
William W. Berry, Elgin; John J.
Perry, Sweetwater; Maude M. Mar-
kel, Clarinda, la., and Pearl P.
Perry. Clarinda, la., all children of
the deceased.
Protests Re-Zoning-—Holy Trinity
Episcopal church, Twelfth and J
streets, late Tuesday protested to
the city council against the reclassi-
Jication for business purposes of
property on J street
between
Twelfth and Fourteenth streets. The
protest was hi the form of a letter
signed by Paul F. Good, senior war-
den of the church. The letter urged
that the street should be kept as a
residential and apartment
section.
It also urged that the maximum
height of apartments on the street
fixed at the height of two now at
Fourteenth and J streets.
Grants Appeal—Federal Judge
ET. C. Munger Wednesday morning
granted an appeal to Clarence
Bliss, receiver for the state of the
defunct Nebraska State bank of
Humboldt, in the suit successfully
brought by the government re-
jeently to recover $501.05 in postal
Junds which were on deposit at the
Jtime of the failure. C. M. Skiles
fcmied for the state banking de-
partment and the federal govern-
ment was represented by George
jBeorge A. Keyser of Omaha. The
case involves
the
question
of
•whether or not postal funds are
^preferred
claims against
failed
Banks. The issue has never been
Definitely decided, and Mr. Skiles
declared that the state is carrying
the suit to the circuit court of ap-
peals as a test case.
f
.,
Dakota Crops Damaged
« By Severe Hail Storm
ABERDEEN, S. D., June 25—(#>)
^-One of the most destructive hail
storms known in this section swept
through three counties of northern
South Dakota
last night,
with
property and crop damage running
The storm, which continued for
Into thousands of dollars.
irn hour and covered an area prob-
•fcbly ten miles wide in sections, cut
* swath through McPherson, Brown
'and Day counties.
CHAPTERS READY
FOR EMERGENCY
Red Cross to Act Prompt-
ly In Case Of
Disaster.
Spurred by the preparedness les-
sons of recent storm disasters in
Nebraska, the Lincoln and Lancas-
ter county chapter of the American
Red Cross has organized a complete
emergency organization. The com-
mittees were appointed by Dr. Earl
B. Brcoks, chairman of the com-
mittee on disasters.
The local chapter has always had
a disaster committee of & few per-
sons. National instructions, how-
ever, call for a number of sub-
committees ready to act on a
moment's notice to, provide trans-
portation, shelter, food, finance,
clothing, medical aid and communi-
A lore ttory •' enf
in—for all
Nancy Carroll
In "The D«Tll'»
Holiday
—STAGE—
Frojlnl *
WlneMsUr *,
The Letfon
of UK
Damned -were ttwj
Hitlnr—
•THE BIG
HOUSE"
RIALTO
WW.M.—TVta^—WEtJ.—OXIT
BUSTER KEATON
In
"FREE AND EASY"
with
WW. HAIXES—AVITA TACK
rttJXIE FIUGAN7.A
XAW, DA^C-CCCTL T)E MILl*
A >I«>IT «f St»r«—A
A Cmnr<7 Camfra] •
and Lore.
Wat, Ste—Etc. 55*—CAB.
SHOWS AX 1-2^-T-H
Detailed instructions for each
group from the national headquar-
ters have been distributed. A meet-
ing of the entire emergency per-
sonnel will be held in the early fall.
at which time a representative of
the national office ™ill speak.
The appointments are as follows:
A
Finance.
£ N. Van Home, chairman; F. D. Eager,
C C Carlsen, W S Whlttcn, Archie M.
Furr
Transportation and Communication.
H P Kauffman, chairman; G. H. Mur-
phy.
C. II Dean. H. T. Quinn, W. E.
Taylor. A. D Grant, representing all rail-
roads In Lincoln
W. A. Bobbins and Agnes Neylon, repre-
senting Auto club,
Yellow Cab, Corn-
husker. and Checker Cab companies, Globe
Delivery, Sullivan's, and Star Van Trans-
fer company
Wolff Cycle company.
Peter Johnstone.
Sidles Airways Corp
Lincoln Aircraft Corp , and Lincoln Air-
plane school
Western Union, J. B. Pemberton
Postal Telegraph. A. B. Nebelslch.
Lincoln Telephone company. J. H. Agee.
Miss Ada Barker, representing Travelers
Aid.
Food.
J D. Lau, chairman; Herman F Koenlg,
David H Harris, J. Leslie Grainger, James
M. Hammond, Miss Rebecca Gibbons.
Shelter.
MaJ. H. C. Stem, chairman; Capt. W. E.
McConnaugHey, Trev. Glllesple, Byron E.
Yoder, Nathan Grossman.
Registration and Information.
C W. Motter, chairman; C W. Roberts,
L. H Watson Rev. Jack Leonard, Miss
Lulu Horn, Mrs, C E McGlasson.
Clothing.
Joe Simon, chairman; Richard Spangler
John Lawlor, Bryan Stephenson, Margaret
Fedde, Mrs Fred Gardner.
Medical Aid.
l
»»"« R^H' Whltham. chairman; Miss
Myrtle Dean, Dr. M, F. Arnholt Miss
Beulah Wiedman. Mrs. T. F A. Williams,
E C Hlld. E. F. Bur,ke, Claude Donley
5r' *• J- Wiedman, Mrs. Gladys Smlt^
Dr E u. Zimmerer. Dr. C. F. Andrews.
Qravel Roads
Will Be Qiven
Oil Treatment
State To Experiment In
Hope of Eliminating
Dust.
Within another week the state
highway department will be ready
to begin its battle against dust on
the heavily traveled graveled high-
ways.
Two oil distributing machines
have been purchased by the depart-
ment and are now being assembled.
One will be sent to the western part
of the state and one will be kept
in the eastern part.
,. "S656 two machines will spray a
light film of oil over the road bed
which as it works into the gravel,
il15 hop611. wlll tend both to settle
ine dust and to hold the loose
particles of gravel together.
It is just an experiment," Secre-
tary Roy Cochran explained Wed-
nesday morning, "if it works satis-
factorily motorists should be greatly
benefited and much of the unpleas-
antness of driving on graveled roadf
during the dry summer months will
be eliminated."
Tried In Other States.
The use of oil has been tested
ky a %w states, but owing to the
difficult conditions of soil and
weather found in various places
those results cannot be depended
upon to be obtained in Nebraska
The machine will be»put to work
first m the vicinity of Lincoln. The
first test will probably be made on
«^l °j£T,fxt> 3^oad to the entrance
?£,™£ Shr^e club. Another on the
Cornhusker highway south -* the
city and another test will be made
Seward3" Y" ^ between Lincoln and
The machine which is being sent
£ £f. J65^1?- PF* of tte sta<« wUl
*><• trjed out first in the vicinity of
Minatare. Soil conditions vary con-
siderably in- the west and northwest
sections and tests will be made in
a number of scattered localities.
ine machines cost the state $2,200
e?ch- exclusive of the trucks which
$Mf ^P^f* *> the department.
E£i ^i kJS?1 ^ to be "sed is a thin
fuel oil with an asphaltic base
It
will cost about eight cents a gallo"
- F the experiment works out sat-
isfactorily, the state may also un-
of ?^fn° spFay the raveled streets
of smaller towns through which
main highways run. Heaw dust
y continuous traffic has
cause of considerable corn-
*£ran Jointed out.
t^at the oil treatment;
also meet with some objec-
tions because of the possibility of
it being tracked into houses and
business places.
Nebraska Spring
Pig Crop Shows
Slight Decrease
A recently completed survey by
the stale and federal crop statis-
tics bureau shows the spring pig
crop m Nebraska to be about two
and o,:e-half
per cent smaller
than it was Jast year. A. E Ander-
son said
Wednesday,
However
Tanners are planning a slightly
larger crop this fall.
The Nebraska production is about
on a level with the other middle
western states and sOightiy above
the figmjes for the nation as a
w&oie. The nation's crop is nearly
six per cent smaller than the 1929 ,
spring crop. The cornbelt states '
have about a three per cent '
smaller crop of pigs.
Tornado Strikes
Northwest Iowa
SIOUX cm", la, June 25— '^~
A tornado whlrn swept through
Sioux and G~Bnen countJw Tuesdav
nlcht caused damage estimated at
about $50,000 and resulted in in-
juries to at Heart nine persons.
The storm vented most of its fur
at Granville. a village of 390 in- i
habitants in Sioux county, with I
damage esUnaiss riost to "$25.000. •
Other jowns that -were in the path t
of the twister -were PauBtaa, Altoa i
and Orange City.
i
Karl King To Direct
Sunday Band Concert
KARL L. KING.
Noted composer, and director of
the Port
Dodge, la., municipal
band, in a concert of his own com-
position, at Antelope park, Sunday
evening. The concert will start at
7 o'clock.
DEATHS
Miss Betty Brandt, 53, died at 6
o'clock Wednesday
morning at a
local hospital.
She had been an
invalid for twelve years. She is
survived by her mother, Mrs. Au-
gusta Brandt of Oakland, Calif.;
three brothers, Fred C. and R. H.
of Lincoln and Henry of Malcolm
and two sisters, Mrs. Augusta Tat-
sukawa and Miss Emma Brandt of
Oakland, Calif.
The body is at
Henry Brown's pending funeral ar-
rangements.
Mrs. Nelson Taylor, 82, died at
9:30
o'clock Tuesday night
in
Lincoln. Her home was at 2504
North Forty-ninth street. She is
survived by a son, Dr. A. P. Taylor
of Lincoln, and a daughter, Mrs.
Mamie Taylor Hursh, at home.
Funeral services will be held at 2
o'clock Thursday afternoon at the
First Methodist church,
Fiftieth
street and St. Paul avenue, with
Rev H. P. Fox and Rev. C. M. Mc-
Caskill of Beatrice officiating. Miss
Vera Upton will sing and Mrs. Edith
Ross will be at the organ. The pall-
bearers will be: Harry Gilbert, Joe
Carr, Clem Young, Nelson Christian-
son, A. C. Fish and Ray linen. In-
terment in Wyuka. The body will be
at Castle, Roper and Matthews' un-
til time for services.
Funeral services for Mrs. Lena
Anderl, 61, will be held at 3 o'clock
Thursday afternoon at Helmsdoer-
fer's chapel with Rev. F. C. Mills
of Omaha officiating. Interment m
Lincoln Memorial Park cemetery.
She was a member of the Royal
Neighbors lodge of Martel. She is
survived by her husband, James
Anderl; one daughter, Mrs. Frank
Willesey of Omaha, and three sons,
William F. J. of David City, Walter
and Homer H. of Kansas City.
The body of Hannah M. Crawford
was taken to Sioux City for funeral
services and interment.
Funeral services for George M
Flannigan were held at 9:30 o'clock
Wednesday morning at St. Mary's
cathedral with Msgr. P. L. OTLaugh-
lin officiating. Interment in Cal-
vary cemetery,.
Funeral services for Mrs. Mary
Kokesch were held at 3 o'clock
Wednesday afternoon at Harvel and
Houser's chapel at Wilber. Inter-
ment in Wilber cemetery.
Funeral services for George B
Ferguson were held at 2 o'clock
Wednesday afternoon at Hodgman's
chapel with Rev. H. L. Overdeer and
Rev. F. F. Travis officiating.
In-
terment in Wyuka. The pallfc-aarers
were: M. N. Adams, C H. McGregor
W. M. Sibley, A. W. Miller, E A.'
Baker and O. A. Strickler.
Funeral services for Pardon B
Shepard were held at 10 o'clock
Wednesday morning at Hodgman's
chapel -with Rev. Ervine Ingus .offi-
ciating. East Lincoln lodge No. 210,
A. F. & A. M. was in charge of serv-
ices at the grave in
Lincoln
Memorial Park cemetery. The pall-
bearers were: Smith C. Wilson
George Ludden, Nathan Grossman'
Guy Harris, L. L. Kurtz and Earl V
Austin.
REED SUGGESTS
FOR WHEAT
Kansas Governor Pro-
poses Farm Board Buy
25 Million Bushels.
TOPEKA, Kas.. June 25—yf>--As-
serting that Kansas, the country's
largest wheat producing state "is
facing & catastrophe caused by an
unduly depressed
wheat
price,"'
Gov. Clyde M Reed today suggest-
ed that the federal farm board en-
ter the market an«J purchase an
additional
23.000.000 bushels
or
more at current prices.
Coming Events
"WaJhaJJa «j!.
»nfl
s
Ma-
Ba>;t Lincoln
A M. traijrtr
*lTrrts Th-orti3»T. 3
son degree. Dinnrr. 6 30 o'clock.
Part Presidents' club. W. R C . I o'clocc
Itrathrcm. home of Mrs E. E- Blaclnnan.
338 Souti Tjrcnty-nfoth
rtrert, Tbar*-
t. A. TrpoprapWcal unltm. hoai»
ol
Vrs A. W. Modra. 120g South xtTceu
Th-oTjBricka was in charge
of the" dining room. On the serving
table were pink tapers and a bowl
of pink flowers. Miss Dorothy Daw-
son, Miss Helen Walter, Miss Vesta
Ludden assisted with the serving.
Mrs. C. C. Cadwell and Miss Vir-
ginia Cadwell of Omaha were pres-
ent and stood in the receiving line
with the hostess and honored guest.
MRS. BOLZELL ENTERTAINS
FORTY AT BRIDGE PARTY.
Forty guests will be entertained
this evening at a bridge party
which Mrs. C. E. Bolzell will give
at her home. 61C South Thirty-third
street, in courtesy to Miss Lucile
Lelsnd. Supper is to be served at
quartet tables, appointed in yellow, i
A miscellaneous shower will be pre- i
sented to the bride-to-be in a large i
basket shaped like a rose and dec-
orated in shades of yellow. Those
from out of town will be Mr. and;
Mrs. Clyde Rick cf Crete, and Mrs.
Lulu Hastings of Bennet.
LOIS STEEN HONORED
AT INFORMAL PARTY.
Mrs. Roy Steen is giving an in-
formal party at her home, 1908
North Twenty-seventh street, this
evening in prenuptial courtesy to
her daughter. Miss Lois Steen. The
gi'est list includes members of the
bridal party and those from out of
town will be Miss Wilma Talbert of
Bird Island. Minn, Miss Leota Walt
of Comstock. Neb- and Dr. fcwin
Lietzfce of Olivia, Minn. The late;
supper will be served at a table ap-
pointed with summer blossoms in
pastel shades.
MRS. BURKS HARLEY
ENTERTAINS HER CLUB.
Mrs. Buries HnrJey presided at
luncheon at the Shrine Ctunts-y
club today
for
members of her
bridcre club. Garden flowers were
used on tbr tables and the after-
nocn was spent with bridge. Eight
were present.
THIS IS
GOOD TIME KITE AT
PLA-MOR
Apron tic Overall
2 te U
I to Ott
O«l an4 Try T«i»r Iwet.
Dale's Bif * flayta*
Kf name at FU-Her
ToiMrraw N
OUT OF TOWN GUESTS AT
CROM-8TIMBERT WEDDING.
Out of town guest* at the mar-
riage of Miss Mildred Crom and
Elden Stlmbert which took place on
Tuesday evotng at the Wlllard so-
rority house included. Miss Effle L.
Ryan of Merna, Mr. and Mrs. C. T.
Stlmbert. Miss Leola Stlmbert. Miss
Abbie Jean Stlmbert. and David
Stlmbert of Inland; Mr. and Mrs.
J. L. Crom and sons of Seneca;
Mrs.
Morris Mann and daughter,
c.nd Miss Florence Uhl of Omaha;
Glenn Miller and son of Wellington,
Kas.; Lionel Loder, and Miss Ger-
trude Anderton of Waverly.
Others present from out of town
were Miss Helen Wescott, Miss Ella
Margaret Wiles. Miss Helen Vallery,
Miss Florence Wiles of Plattsmouth;
Miss Blanche Engleman of Litch-
field; Miss Mary E. Kiechel of
Johnson; Miss Velma Frushour of
Beatrice; Miss Harriet Ouster of
Plattsmouth. and Miss Margaret
Morrell of Holdrege.
ENTERTAIN IN HONOR
MR, AND MRS. SANTONE.
Honoring Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Santone of Schenectady, N
Y.
whose marriage took place last Sat-
urday at Des Moines. la.. Mr. and
Mrs. Melvin Reid entertained thir-
ty-five guests 'at a surprise lawn
party Tuesday evening at their
home. 1934 South street. The lawn
was decorated with Japanese lan-
terns and cut-out hearts. Games
were played until a late hour when
refreshments, were served. Mr. and
Mrs. Santone were presented with a
set of crystal goblets and matching
sherbet dishes on behalf of the
guests preseht. Mrs. Santone was
formerly Miss Marie Loro of lA
coln.
GARDEN LUNCHEON
FOR HELEN BOYD.
Miss Harriet Woods entertained
at a garden luncheon at her home,
1724 South Twenty-second street
Tuesday as a courtesy to Miss Hel-
en Boyd of St. Louis who is her
house guest. The three small tables
were adorned with daisies and
other appointments were in green
and white. The afternoon was
spent with bridge with Miss Eliza-
beth Betzer making high score.
MARIE LORO MARRIED
IN DBS MOINES SATURDAY.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Loro an-
nounce the
marriage
of their
daughter. Marie, to Harry Santone
of Schenectady, N. Y. The -wedding
took place Saturday at Des Moines,
la. Mr. and Mrs. Santone came to
Lincoln for a few days' visit with
the bride's parents, and will leave
on Thursday evening for Schenec-
tady, where they will live.
SHOWER GIVEN FOR
MRS. DON WHELCHEL.
Honoring Mrs. Don M. Whelchel
who before her marriage on June
18 in Council Bluffs was Miss Alice
Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. F. G. John-
son, her parents, gave a miscel-
laneous shower for thirty guests at
their home, 1635 Euclid avenue on
Tuesday evening. The time was
spent with games and a light sup-
per was served at the close.
ENTF.RTAIN JOHNSONS ON
WEDDING ANNIVERSARY.
Mr. and Mrs. A. Almquist, 318
South Twenty-fifth street, enter-
tained a group of friends at their
home Tuesday evening honoring
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur O. Johnson
on their fifth wedding annivers-
ary. The evening was informal and
a supper was served at the close.
Personals.
Charles F. Reisch of Cincinnati,
O. is the guest of his brother J. P
Reisch.
David Haecker and Donald Kil-
bourne left Lincoln by automobile
Wednesday morning for Madeline
Island, where they will spend their
vacation.
Miss Mabel Blgnell has returned
to Lincoln to spend the summer
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs E
G. Bignell. after attending the
Merrill-Palmer school in Detroit for
the past year.
Townsend-Portrait Photographer-Ad
IOWA BANKER AND
WIFE TORTURED IN
HOME BY BANDITS
OXFORD, la., June
25—{#)—
Bandits last night bound and tor-
tured Fred Rapp, president of the
Farmers Savings bank, and his
wife in their home in an unsuc-
cessful attempt to obtain the com-
bination to the bank's safe.
The arrival of James Sherlock, a
nephew, who was attracted by the
screams of Mrs. Rapp, caused the
bandits to flee.
It was the third attempt in less
than twelve hours which bandit
gangs had made to rob Iowa banks,
[n robberies yesterday
afternoon
approximately S11.5CG was obtained
from the Union Bank c»Jl r>«.tJ«c-c so co..;.oji at uu Jr* inirieyeiory prtc.
FREE
FREE
.
WJtfc *«<* ?t,rt7inw th.x -»"'V o; o-r «<•. 1-1 " Trf rpnrrJ* T'is.er- •' t . J
:l%r s*so3Dl"ls ire* of
SI '•'> vyil* t: Surt!"-'.- P-r' -:- * j 5 - J! "' «•' ' •
ci«*n Fsot TonC'r
f r . :*it< »'ina<- *wti «.'•). ;•• V
<•• •- '<: ""••
VAKE
Wiil Order* jfrc EniJa To Cotcr Pcoti
V
•S
THE LINCOLN STAR—WEDNESDAY,
JUNE 25, 1930.
SEVEN
LEGGE SPEAKS AT
HASTINGS JULY 7
Address Gathering
Of Nebraska Farm
Leaders.
College of Agriculture
Sponsors Educational
Program.
The wheat problem and the gen-
eral agricultural situation of the
•world will be discussed in a meeting
of Nebraska fatm leaders at Hast-
ings July 7. All plans for the meet-
ing were approved at the agricul-
tural college Wednesday morning.
The gathering will be sponsored
by the University of Nebraska and
its agricultural extension service. It
•will be strictly educational in na-
ture and will be open to the public.
Alexander Legge of the federal
farm board has agreed to be one of
the speakers on the program. Uni-
versity authorities told him they
•would accept no substitutions and
that if he could not come the meet-
ing would be cancelled.
He prom-
ised to be present.
Harold Hedges of the rural eco-
nomics department of the univer-
sity, and an authority on the agri-
cultural situation, will be another
speaker on the same program. He
will tell farm leaders what other
countries and other parts of this
country are doing with wheat pro-
duction. Farmers will be asked to
draw thiir own conclusions.
Preliminary arrangements were
made Tuesday with Hastings offi-
cials by J. F. Lawrence, marketing
specialist and H. G. Gould, district
leader of county agents, both of the
agricultural extension service. Uni-
versity authorties had conferred
•with Mr. Legge and with 'C. W.
Warburton of the United States de-
partment of agriculture at Man-
hattan, Kas., last week.
Repre-
sentatives of Oklahoma, Kansas and
Colorado agricultural colleges were
present at this meeting. They all
agreed on the same plan of a gen-
eral meeting like the one schet"-
ulefi at Hastings.
Everyone is entitled to know the
existing conditions of the wheat in-
dustry at the present time, univer-
sity authorities believe. No one can
nredict accurately just what will
happen In the next two, three, or
five year period, they say. Those
who have the facts in mind and
know what has hapnened before
under somewhat similar conditions
•will be better prepared to meet the
coming conditions than those who
blindly guess.
About People
County Judge-Robin B. Reid and
Mrs. Reid returned Tuesday from
a 1,900 mile automobile trip to
Illinois where Judge Reid attended
a reunion of his law class. They
also visited in Chicago and other
Ulinois points.
Tecumseh Church Sixty Years Old.
TECUMSEH, Neb., June- 23—The
Tecumseh Presbyterian church vas
organized sixty years ago OP. June
28. The officers and pastor of the
church are planning
a two days
celebration of the event, to occur
on Saturday and Sunday, June 28
and 29. As many of the former
pastors as possible will be in at-
tendance, and the history o'f the
church will be given.
There will be a banquet Satur-
day evening, and a full day's pro-
gram of history and reminiscences
on Sunday, Invitations have been
sent to Jormer residents here, liv-
ing at-"many points,
who have
been members of the church, to
attend. Rev. J. M. Mahaffey is
Ithe present pastor of the church.
RULES MILITARY
COURSE OPTIONAL
Mitchell
Opinion ' in
Wisconsin
Case 'Says Not Requirement
Land Grant Colleges.
WASHINGTON, June 25—(AP)—
Attorney
General Mitchell sus-
tained the interior department to-
day in ruling that students at land
grant colleges cannot be required
to take military training.
Secretary Wilbur had held the
University of Wisconsin lawfully
could place military training on an
optional basis. The Mitchell opin-
ion said land grant colleges and
other institutions affected by the
Morrill act and similar laws comply
sufficiently with the law
when
they make military courses avail-
able.
Land grant colleges are
those
who receive revenue tiom land set
aside by the federal government
in each state to aid agricultural
and
mechanical
education.
In
general, they have co'nsidered mili-
tary training to be required.
In
1923,
however, the University of
Wisconsin, under authorization of
the state legislature, placed mili-
tary tactics on an optional basis.
Although the University of Ne-
braska is a land grant college and
Horseshoe Unlucky
CHICAGO, June 25—(AP)—
A' horseshoe is nnluckjr, and
Henry Bysoot doesn't care what
anybody says to the contrary.
Henry found a horseshoe. He
spat on it and tossed it over
his
left
shoulder. It
went
through a store window. Inside
the
window was a suit of
clothes. Henry, needing new ap-
parel, took the suit and walked
away. A policeman caught him.
That's how Henry knows that
all
this
conversation
about
horseshoes being lucky is a lot
of banana oil.
requires courses in military science
and tactics Regent Earl Cline ex-
pressed the opinion that the ruling
by Attorney General Mitchell would
have no effect here.
Although
not familiar with the facts, Regent
Cline said he believed that the
"ruling would effect only the Uni-
versity of Wisconsin and the Wis-
consin legislature.
In an attempt to help beautify the
city, Pittsburgh, Kas. club members
tore down two dilapidated houses
after gaining permission of the own-
ers.
On Sale
—2nd Floor.
JULY CLf ARANCE
1,200 Beautiful New
House Frocks
FOR WHIRLWIND SELLING TOMORROW
CRETONNES
ENGLISH PRINTS
DIMITIES
GINGHAMS
FLOUNCE SKIRTS
SASHES. TIES
AND JABOT
TRIMMED
Sizes for everyone
op to 56.
tfOO.
House .
Frocks
CHOICE OF THF HOUSE
Ths finest st?3cs in OUT stocks
included in this (jreat bargain
arr&y. VsZu-Ts to 2.95. Every
one cuarantced fast
coir-,-.
Kent? or stoats and extra
Jarse" sizes, ~*ch
—Second Floor.
INFANTS'
Rubber
Pants
Garters. Sanitary Aprons,
Step-ins. •
Tweed
Shorts
All the rage! Wool tweeds.
All sizes.
69C
—Second Floor.
$1.00
Berets
White and pastel colors.
Knitted silk.
49
Light Bulbs
25, 40, or 60-watt size.
6 FOR
—Basement.
Kotex
PER BOX
Limit— Not More Than 3
to a Customer.
Smashing Reductions for Whirlwind Clearance
E N T I R E S T O C K RUGS,
FURNITURE — Reduced
now 15% TO 50%
D/tlTMCUHT STORE,
HOPE M U S L I N — 36-inch
genuine Hope Muslin.
Fully bleached. Yard
JULY CLEARANCE
Everything
Reduced
Throughout
Entire Store
**
—
Lowest Prices of the Year
Mr. Bernsteine's Entire New York Purchases Included!
SILK DRESSES
Values unmatched in our entire history of
greater value giving—Silk Crepes, Silk
Shantungs4, Polka Dots, Printed Crepes,
Sleeveless, Jabots, Capes and Jacket Effects.
White and a myriad of summer colors, 200
of these frocks. Sizes 14 to 46—
Sixes 14 to 46
r
Second Floor.
PEQUOTS, LINENS
AND DOMESTICS
47c
Pequot and Wear Well
Sheetings and Tubings.
B R O W N P E Q U O T
SHEETING— 9-4
width. Yard
B L E A C H E D
FEQUOT
SHEETING—
9-4 width. Yard....
PEQUOT PILLOW TUB-
ING—42-inch.
**,»
Yard
35C
BROWN WEAR WELL
SHEETING—
9-4 width. Yard.
BLEACHED WEAR WELL
SHEETING—
A*i~
9-4 width. Yard.... 47C
FOX CROFT P I L L O W
TUBING—42-inch
Linen finish. Yard
THREE STAR BROWN
SHEETING—9-4
width. Yard
Pequot and Famous
Fort Mill Sheets and
Cases.
81x90 Peqnot Sheet...SL39
"2x99 Pequot Sheet...Sl-39
81x99 Pequot Sheet.. .$1.49
42x36 Pequot Pillow
Cases, each
33c
81x90 Famous
Mill Seamless Sheet 98c
81x99 Famous Fort
Seamless Sheet SL10
81x99 Seamless Sheet 85c
42x36 Gold Seal Pillow
Cases, each
24c
SILKS
36-inch Print-
ed
Ail-Slik
Foulards ..
36-inch Print-
ed Tub Silk
39-inch Print-
ed R a y o n
Flat Crepe.
39-inch Kayon
Fl a t Crepe,
plain shades
39-inch Silk &
Karon Twill
Satin, pI31n
colors
79
ALL -SILK SHANTUNG
AND HONAN PONGEE.
Washable. 32-inch all-
silk washable Shantung
and Honan Pongee in
the rough weave effect
for summer dresses and
sport wear. In all the
wanted sharies, includ-
ing white.
Yard
85c
BROWN MtJS LIN—39-
inch, good weight
Yard
9c
BROWN MUSLIN—
36-inch. Yard
5c
19c - PRINTED PERCALE
—36-inch good quality
standard percale, neat
printed designs, light
and dark patterns, 2 to
10 yards length. 4*.
Yard
1ZC
3 LBS. QUILTED SNOWY
OWL COTTON BATT—
72x90. Big. f l u f f y ,
stitched, bleached HAM
cotton batt
7™C
Silks—Wash Goods
and Rayon
P R I N T E D MARJORAY
CREPE. 36-inch fine
quality Marjoray Crepe
in handsome printed de-
signs. Mostly li^ht pat-
terns- Rich color com-
binations for summer
dresses. Also small polsa
Yard
1.75 ALL-SILK FLAT
CRErE—39-inch all-silk
flat crepe. Good- weigh;.
Rich, lustrous finish, for
summer dresses. White,
Ivory, Eggshell, Pink,
Maize, Cherub, Orchid,
Jadeite, Coral, La Baul,
Plage Fleurie, Bermuda.
Navy, Black.
4 44%
Yard
I.IT
1.25 MATTRESS COVEK§,
—Made of good quality
muslirt Full
size
T U R K I S H TOWELS—
First quality. D o u b l e
thread. 18x36 fine double
thread Turkish Towel,
closely woven, soft, and
absorbent.
4t«
Each
IOC
6 for Sac
25c PRINTED BATISTE
AND DIMITY — 36-inc*i
Batiste and Dimity. Neat
printed designs. Good
color combina-
4CA
tions. -Yard
49 V
25c LINGERIE MATE-
RIAL—30 to 36 inches
•wide, consisting of
Windsor Plisse Crepe.
Pajama Check, Splash
Voile and
Jersey
Weaves. iJnEerie colors
and white.
4 • ~
Yard
17C
WASH
GOODS
39e to 50c Values—Fart Coloi
39-inch Fairy-
•and Printed
Voile
39-inch Print-
ed Pinehyrst
andNiftee
Voile
39-inch Print-
ed Batiste,
neat Prints
and Polka
Dot
39-inch Swiss
Dot Voile....
28
YARD
25% Off On Our Entire
Stock of Wool Dress
Goods.
STEVENS ALL-UNEN CRASU.
Bleached or tinbleached. Af**
Yard
15C
123
PLAID BLANKET—70x80
Beautiful Plaid Single Blanket.
Good color combina-
OA*»
tions
976
Off On All-Linen
Lunch Sets
VARIOUS SIZES
20% Off of Our Stock
Of Linens
CcnsasUns of Damask. Napkin?.
Pattern Cloths. Also Fancy LJuen.
Men's All Wool
BATHING
SUITS
WASH
GOODS
FAST COLORS
36-inch Ever-
fast Printed
Dimity
32-inch Ever-
fast Playtime
Prints
36-inch Print-
ed Handker-
chief La-wn.. 35
YARD
15%
Fast color dyes, 100%
•wool- Sizes for Men and
Boys—
48-inch Qnfltcd TABLE
PADDING. Yard ...
54-roch Qailted TABLE
PADDING. Yard
98c
1.10
54x76 Qs3t«i MAT*
TRESS PROTECTORS
DISCOUNT ON ALL
'O BLANKETS, including
Beacons. All-Wool. Part Wool,
and Cotton Blankets.
DISCOUNT OJ5 ALL
O RATON AND COTTON
BEDSPREADS. COMFORTERS
AND PILLOWS.
PRINTED CRETONNE AND
CHALLIES — 36-inch Printed
Cretonne and Comfort
Challies. Yard
L25 Printed CELANESE
VOILE. 39-inch, Yard..
1.50 ALL-SILK BROADCLOTH.
32 and 35-inch.
4
Cltum matter lor tr»aomlMlOD taroucb th« mall*.
The
Ui'tolo
Sunday SUr
I* published emj SuucU.i
morning.
NEBRASKA'S BEST NtWBrAPBB
Published dally except Sundaj by The Star Publishing Co.,
ol Llpcjm Nebraska
HA1I, SUBSCttlPTlON KATES
(Within Nebraska. Northern Kansas and En»tern Colorado)
Six
Three One
Year
Mos.
Mos.
Mi.
Dally
Without Sunday
...........
'. 4.00
2.26
1.25
Mo
Daily With Sunday ....... . ........ 8.00
3.25
1.75
65a
Sunday Only
.......................
3.50
1.50
1.00
«c
(For points outside Nebraska. Northern Kansas and
Eastern Colon-.ao.)
Six
Three One
Year
Mos.
Mos.
tin
Uallv Wlthjut Sunday
..............
7.00
375
ZOO
75:
Dally With Sunday
..................
9 OT
475
2.50
9fk
Sunday Only
........................
4 00
2.25
1.40
50c
BT CARRIES
Dally and Sunday, per month
..............................
.85c
In ordering change of address, aJwayi glvt old as well ai
r.;w address.
(All mall subscriptions payable In advance)
PHONE-ALL DEPARTMENTS-BI234
The Associated Press Is excluslvejy entitled to the use for
republlcatlon of all news dispatches credited to It or not
otherwise credited to this paper, and also the local news pub-
lished therein
Al rights ol republlcatlm ot special dispatches herein are
also reserved.
The Stai
"vtll
not
knowingly
publish any
misleading,
fraudulent or questionable advertising cr any advertising re-
flecting upon any race or creed
•
ROOTS OF CIVILIZATION.
Dwight Morrow said something at a Rotary lunch-
eon in Chicago last week which is too often over-
looked and ignored:
"Business is exchange of good£ for goods and of
goods for services. Though we speak of bargaining as
sordid, when men first began to exchange, to trade
or bargain, instead of using force to
capture what
they wanted, the first great challenge to barbarism
had been made."
That invites attention to the other side of eternal
arguments advanced by critics of modern business
and industry. The cave man certainly suffered no
attack of conscience when he beat his rival over the
head and stripped him of his possessions. The law
of force was the law of the land. Brute strength,
cunning, agility and all that contributes to physical
domination settled the questions of possession or loss,
of life or death. When Nature endowed a man with
great, bulging muscles, a sharp eye, and coordinated
that strength with a crafty and' stealthy brain there
was none to challenge him in the taking of anything
which caught his fancy and stimulated his desire.
There is no authentic record when the Jaw of force
broke down and the beginnings of modern business
and commerce took root. The dusty trails over which
passed ancient civilizations of Asia Minor, long since
obliterated and buried in the sun baked sands, are
the first milestones of the civilizing influences of
trade and barter. Prom the East they passed into
the West, bringing the products of their lands to be
exchanged for the things which they needed. At in-
tervals the conqueror led his armies along the same
broad highways' to ravage invaded lands,
enslave
peoples, and despoil their towns and cities. The
story of the upward advance of civilization is an en-
grossing one and it should not be forgotten that its
actual birth-occurred at that minute when some man
offered to give another a prized possession in ex-
change for somethirs
That is the real ar-.--.er to all attacks upoa modern
business and industr •.
As between the ; ... _ui world's system of a recog-
nition of poreptry rights, and the custom of exchange
and'barter, and the oldest law of force even Mencken
and other literary clowns, who derive their livelihood
by ridiculing modern business and modern business,
men would hesitate to return to the old order,
v There is no perfection today. Grave and serious
abuses are to be found in business and will continue
so long as man possesses the frailities which make
him human. But each century has closed with ad-
vancement and progress. Each hundred years added
honesty and character to business. The practices of
one generation which will not stand the sunlight are
.outlawed by the next. Business cannot be torn down
if civilization is to endure, for it has its roots in the
elements which constitute business.
A MATTER OF FAITH.
It is a far cry from the proud assertion which Her-
bert Hoover made in 1928 before an assemblage of
Virginians that "here in America we have all but.
abolished poverty" and the spectacle which is un-
folded now. For in the swiftly moving events which
have transpired, thousands have found themselves
out of work, their savings gone as a result of foolish
speculation in the stock market or depleted in provid-
ing the necessities of life for their families while
seeking work.
These men are pounding the pavements of Ameri-
can .cities, seeking to find employment
In the face of widespread unemployment the most
encouraging sign on the horizon is the attention which
the problem is receiving. The interest and concern
which financial, industrial and business leaders are
showing is being echoed in the press. As a result
_ there is every reason to believe that in the last six
months of 1930 there will be an appreciable improve-
ment in conditions. Before a cure can be perfected,
it is necessary to locate the trouble. That is exactly
what has been done. Factors which made it possible
for America to establish new records of production
and distribution over a 3c=£ period of time ar» b»ing
recognized. Foremost among them was an employed
and highly paid working class. It had money to
spend and it spent it
So long as it did factories
were busy, retailers prospered, and business remained
"normal." There is no doubt that much of
the
trouble at this time may be attributed direcUy to a
diminished domestic market due to unemployment
Time and patience and courage an
intelligent
thinking both on the part of the employe and the
employer -**11 be required to work out of the situa-
tion. There is r.o magic wand in the
field of
economics and business. Wishing will not breathe
value into commodities. The only thing which can
do thtt 5s desire and the ability to satisfy that de-
sire. The last ten years general]- have been good to
the •worker the same as they have been prosperous JOT
the employer. It Is not logical to expect the hieh lev-
els of the last decade to be reached lor some time to
come. Both employe and employer should readjust
themselves to that conclusion.
The population shifts from farm to city, -a-hk-h
started shortly after the close of the Civil war and
have continued anintermpted since then, exciting
botli amazement and apprehension, h&s made anern-
plojrneat ol ttic urban population of equal Import-
ance to the farm issue. The fanner who OWIM his
land is at least sure ol a place to sleep and plenty
to eat during a period of readjustment. There Is no
such assurance In the crowded cities. There the
worker may have food in his dinner pall and a bed
upon which to throw himself one month and a month
later he may find himself in the street. During
periods of stagnation and depression the indepen-
dent character of farming is more clearly revealed
than at any other time.
Finally the question of unemployment simmers
down to a question of faith and confidence In the
future.
Has America definitely passed from the
levels of 1920 to 1929 or are the conditions which
prevail today temporary? The pest business and In-
dustrial brains today adopt the latter view.
SHIFTING THE TAX BURDEN.
It is always to be expected that when a bunch of
"experts" gather for the
purpose of revising
the
taxation scheme of the states and the nation, some
fantastic proposals should be put forward.
Men,
supposed to be legislators from fifteen middle west-
ern states, met in Chicago Tuesday for the an-
nounced purpose of starting a national campaign to
relieve the owners of small homes, farms and business
enterprises of a part of the tax burden which they
now bear.
That the idea is a commendable one, few will at-
tempt to disprove, but the substitutes proposed are
in most cases worse than the ills they are designed
to displace. For instance, Claude H. Mackenzie of
Minnesota would have a gross sales tax and force
the federal government to abandon its inheritance
lax plan. Should such a proposal be advanced by a
New York or Massachusetts man, it would occasion
no surprise, but coming from a midwesterner, it Is
nothing short of appalling. The only conclusion one
can reach under the circumstances is that the Min-
nesotan has been imbibing quite freely of eastern
propaganda.
'
Of all the federal taxes collected none is more fair
and just than the inheritance levy. It strikes most
heavily against the vast estates, accumulated for the
most part by residents of the eastern states, but to
which the entire nation has contributed. The great
industrial and transportation enterprises are owned
in large part in the east, but they gather tribute from
the people of Minnesota and Nebraska, and every
other state In the union. It is just and right, there-
fore, that at least a part of the accumulation should
in the courseof time revert to the entire nation, for
all have contributed to It.
On the other hand, the sales tax is the most un-
just one ever proposed, for it falls the hardest upon
the ones who are least able to pay. It is a tax upon
consumption, and everyone knows that the
man
with the smallest income is generally the one with
the largest family.
He would therefore be taxed
altogether out of proportion to the wealthy man, who
might be unmarried, and whose consumption tax
would be unnoticeable, in comparison with his ability
to pay. Under a sales tax system, the widow with a
large family, which she supports by working as a
charwoman, would in all probability pay more than
the unmarried building owner who employs her.
There can be no doubt that there is inequality in
taxation, but^the gentleman from Minnesota
has
failed to suggest any feasible remedy.
THE PIRNER PROPOSAL.
Refusal of county commissioners immediately to
assure the city council of assistance in the council's
plan for handling the opening and paving of North
Eorty-eighth. street when consulted Tuesday was a
sound step. It assures time for a rational analysis of
the difficulties of the whole problem.
To recognize the advantage of having Forty-eighth
open and paved, making the only paved entry from
the University Place area to Lincoln's business dis-
trict between Cotner boulevard and
Thirty-fifth
street, is one thing. To determine the sanest way of
securing such a development is another.
There exists serious doubt as to the fairness of the
Pirner proposal. While the city council is justified
in looking for a solution which would not mean vir-
tual confiscation of the Pirner land, it is by no means
justified in assuming that the public purse should
be opened for the paving of that strip while property
holders on either side are required to pay lor their
share of the paving. The explanation offered by
Commissioner Bair when confronted with this, ques-
tion at the Tuesday conference was obviously unsat-
isfactory. He said that Pimer's offer to give free
right-of-way through his land and to pay a third
of the paving cost balanced up the situation. It was
pointed out that this would amount only to around
$7,000 while the county would have to expend $14,-
000 more. The right-of-way could be . secured by
condemnation proceedings for a nominal figure as
compared with the cost of two-thirds of the paving.
THEY LIVE IN FEAB.
Through the eyes of Bernard Tfey, the French bi-
ographer, Hollywood is no paradise even for those
who win distinction and renown upon the screen
and draw salary checks with more figures upon them
than appear upon vouchers of the president of th'e
United States.
Asked what he thought was the predominating note
of Hollywood's celebrated atmosphere, Fay unhesitat-
ingly replied fear.
"I have never seen and felt fear so palpably in my
entire existence as among the famous stars of Holly-
wood. Fear that fame will turn its shoulder upon
them. Fear that someone will win their niche in the
spotlight of the world through some fluke of luck
which is pretty much the way some of them have
won their recognition. Fear, when they enter vthe
room, that some more vital personality will come in-
to it. Fear that those they meet will think them
commonplace."
If the French biographer
has seen accurately,
Hollywood possesses more real talent than it has been
given credit for. Mention Hollywood and generally
the dear public thinks of whoopee and gaiety. Tliey.
poor souls.' are not to be blamed for such an erro-
eous impression for a large percentage of the pictures
support it. "Who could be sad when the most beau-
tiful women of the world are to be seen? Who could
feel gloom when the money pours !n faster than a
naturally extravagant taste -will permit one to spend
it? But Fay is a very discerning young man and is
supposed in know.
Possibilities for young inventors: A device to save
sole leather for young reporters.
Homely Philosophy
MEK SHOtJLO COMPLtMEST THEHl
WIVES AND PRAISE THEIR UNSELFISH
SERVICE.
"Men are funnr". says a married woman.
•When my husband tells me what he ordered for
lunch down town, I have to laugh, for I know he
would make a great fuss if I gave him the same sort
of a weal at honse."
And men. isn't this ttie truth?
Yet you seldom compliment your wife on her nice
little combinations.
Of course you think TOOT hearty appetite should
tell her you arc satisfied and that you appreciate her
efforts.
But that is not rnough,
When you have done a cood job vou want a little
praise, don't you?
Peels mighty fine to have satisfaction expressed at
-our good work.
Little -sine isn't a Wt different In ttnis respect.
A]M> when she joins you for an evening out. •why
not compHTncnt her on how wefl she looks? SbeTJ
Htc 3t
A woman likes to be told that sne pJeasss the owe
man.
A compliment is a fine way to start, an enjoyable
evening.
SUCCESS.
The man stood at his post all day
And every week of all the year,
And some there were who went to
play,
Whose merry laugnter he could
hear.
Some rode him by in costly cars,'
Some took the ships that cross
the sea.
But duty's stern, forbidding bars
It seemed would never let him
free.
And yet always through gloom and
smoke,
And pain and hurt and tedious
care
And dust that often made him
choke
v
He saw a vision wondrous fair.
He saw his children schooled in
truth
As bravely at his post he stood,
He saw them happy in their youth
And grown to men and women
good.
And later when his strength was
spent
And all the dreary years had
flown,
To him great happiness was sent.
In their success he found his own.
(Copyright, 1930, Edgar A. Guest).
uestions
and Achievements," a third to
"Poems
and
Rhymes"
and
a
fourth to "Modern Stories." All are
beautifully
illustrated,
and' the
whole collection is worthy of »
prominent place in every household
blessed with children.
(Copyright. 1930, New York
Tribune Inc.)
Answered By
DR. S. PARKES CADMAN
(Copyright 1930, New York Tribune.)
Questions iron Lincoln Star readers are aoiwtrcd dally Bf the BAT. Dr. &
Farkea Gttduui, ol the Federated Council of Cburebe* of Christ la Amer-
ica. Or. Cadman ffetf
to anrwer Inquiries tbtt appear to be renrtieat*-
• tin ol the trends of thoucbt IB tb« many letter* wUsb be
QUESTION.
AutryvUIe, N. C.
Can you tell me of a. Protestant
history which gives the facts re-
yarding the persecution of the dif-
ferent churches, Catholic and Pro-
testant; also, when, each church ws.3
first started, and by whom?
ANSWER.
"Catholicism and Christianity," by
C. J. Cadoux, is a massive work on
this subject running to 700 pages.
"The Wars of the Godly," by Reu-
ben Maury, deals with the persecu-
tions of Cathloics and Protestants in
America, "The Catholic Protestant
Mind," by C. H. Hoehlman, is an
interpretation of American Catho-
licism from the Protestant stand-
point. "The Reunion of Christen-
dom,"edited by Sir James Marchant,
consists of essays by representatives
of different
denominations. "The
Social Sources of Denominational-
ism," by Richard Niebuhr, is a
scholarly discussion of the economic
forces which influenced the rise of
denominations in the United States.
Consult the Catholic Encyclopedia
and the Encyclopedia Britannica
(fourteenth edition) on the> origin
and history of the various branches
of Christianity. They contain much
valuable information.
'
QITESTION.
Pittsburgh.
Consider the case of a woman who
In youth lost her sense of truthful-
ness; in college lost the meaning of
education; after marriage lost
in
turn her integrity, her lover, her
husband's affection, her home, her
social standing and her children's
love. What losses can yet remain
for her to suffer?
ANSWER.
Your Inventory represents an un-
usual instance. I have seldom if
ever met with such a succession of
moral calamities in one person. "He
who loses his money;" says an old
Arabian proverb, "loses little." He
who loses his" honor loses much. But
he who loses his spirit loses all."
Can you agree with these findings?
Perhaps not.
Monetary losses are so real for
many people that they conceive
nothing more disastrous.
Honor
truthfulness,
integrity, what
are
these for Mammon worshipers? The
mere cant of pious simpletons. But
as the woman in the case has dis-
covered, they are life's
essentials
and can never be violated with im-
punity. Taking the case as you state
t, her condition is so desperate that
[ would not for a moment add to' its
burden. Reproach by a mere out-
sider is no remedy.
Sympathy,
rather than denunciation, instruc-
tion and not Pharisaism; these are
her soul's medicine. .
Conceding*"the full extent of her
depravitv. so long as she is contrite,
she has'not wholly surrendered to
a desolate fate. Like Media in the
ancient Greek drama, though
stripped of everything, even of her
children, she can say, "I have my-
self." The vitality of a living soul is
still hers. By its right direction she
may retrace the painful path to vir-
tue and well being.
Marshall Foch's declaration is cor-
rect that no one can be defeated
until he acknowledges defeat The
New Testament Gospel is sufficient
for the redemption of the
most
abandoned offenders. From the first
it manifested its power to lift the
fallen, cheer the despairing and re-
store the penitent. God's ear is not
deaf to Ihls woman's appeal, nor His
arm shortened that He cannot save
her. Though her own heart con-
demns her. He is greater than her
heart, and He does not condemn
her. Christ's words to her weeping
sister are hers also: "Go in peace,
and sin no more"
QUESTION.
Oswego. N. T.
(1) Can yon give me any informa-
tion about the present trend of the
evolution theory?
'
(2) Will you abo tell me -whati
book or books I can fxt, soluble for
my
three
boys—nine,
ten
and i
twelve years old?
ANSWER.
1. Study "The Evolution ol Earth
and Man.' 'edited by G. A. Baitsell.
and published by the Yale Univer-
sity Press. It is" a collection of es-
says by specialists who demand your
close attention because they deal
with large matters in a large man-
ner. But their relation of facts is
conservative, ttwlr reasonings on the
facts are sound and their conclu-
sions heloful.
The origin and age of man. aboav
which you are specially concerned.
is discussed in «ae light of the latest
available knowledge, and the mental
differences between him and the
aoe are described as immeasurabJe.
The moral and spiritual attributes
of the human race are said to have
been of long; and arduous develop-
ment, a statement verified by 3ur
experience and also by
revelatory
scripture.
__,
2. Tor the brrys secure "The Chil-
dren's Hour." published by Hough-
ton Miffin Company, Boston, and
containine in ten volumes one ol
the best and most comprehensive sc-
JccJicns of literature suitable for
youngsters I bave come across. The
contents include folklore and fairy
j tales for aie child's Imagination, the
myths of many lands, tales taken
[from
the classics, accounts
of
jletcnaarv heroes, extracts
frcm
i "Pilgrim's
Progress.*'
•"Robinson
| Crusoe.-' Gulliver's Travels," TWa
! Quixote.-* "Arabian Nights." Shake-
Jspeare and The Book of Humor."
One volume is dedicate*! to "Out
! rf ^oors," another to "Adventures
s
Forem
(Forum oomtnuntolloni to The Lincoln
Star »houl« be limited 1o 500 words.
The
letteri to thin department repretrnt the
Indlrldual »lew§ of the writer* and may
or mar not express the views of thl»
Heroes of The Pant
LINCOLN, 'Neb., June 24.
To the editor of The Lincoln
Star: Praise and honor and glory
are now being accorded to Colonel
Byrd and his gallant crew, who
have braved the dangers and the
vicissitudes which befell them in the
two years adventure while cruising
through the air and investigating
the
unknown region which we
letrned in geography as the South
Pole,
It is said, and. with a bit of truth,
that the south pole is the ,more
dangerous, the most hazardous of
the two and the work of the under-
taking that has been experienced
for thousands of years has at last
been overcome and that through the
medium of one man and his gallant
crew, the same being made through
the air, one of the newest methods,
although prophesied by the Men of
Old, thousands of years ago.
And while we are offering praise
and adoration to the famous men
who have so succesfully braced the
difficulties that have overcome the
dangers to a certain extent of the
discovery of the north and south
poles, so to speak, let us net forget
the intrepid warriors of the sea,
that have for years been trying to
reach these ooposite points, with
frail barks and ships that could
weather no such expeditions, but in
the coming of the new devices the
way seemed exceeding clear, and
through the instrumentality of man,
the same has been successfully ac-
complished.
We, who are of the old stock, can
Peter Gets More Than He Bargained For
BY THORNTON W. BURGESS.
(Continued on Page Sixteen.)
You'll find through life that an ex-
cuse
Is seldom of the slightest use.
—Peter Rabbit.
Peter Rabbit had thumped twice.
as hard as he could, on the roof of
Jerry Muskrat's house, which was
a hole in the bank of the Smiling
Pool. Then Peter had scampered
to the edge of the bank to look over
to see if Jerry would come out bf
his doorway, which was under wa-
ter. Some one came out, but it
wasn't Jerry.
No, sir, it wasn't
Jerry
Muskrat. Peter
thought it
was. He thought so right up to the
time that a. brwn head appeared
above water and a pair of eyes
snapped at him angrily.
"Oh!"
exclaimed Peter. "I-I-I
hope you'll excuse me. Mrs. Musk-
rat," for that is who it was. "I was
just knocking for Jerry."
"So you were just knocking for
Jerry!" snapped Mrs. Muskrat, and
her voice was very harsh and an-
gry. "So you were just knocking
for
Jerry! It is a ivonder you
didn't thump a hole in the roof.
You need to be taught a lesson,
Peter Rabbit. I have more than
half a mind to come up there and
teach you one right now."
Peter backed away hastily, as
Mrs. Muskrat began
swimming
towards the bank. "I-I-I'm sorry,
truly I am," said Peter. "I wanted
"Oh!"
exclaimed Peter.
"I—I—I
hope you'll excuse me, Mrs.
Muskrat"
some one to talk to and I thought
Jerry was probably in there asleep
and that he would come^out if I
thumped."
"Well, Jerry wasn't in there, but
I was!" sputtered Mrs. Muskrat. "I
was, and so were my babies. It was
enough to frighten them half to
death. How would you like to have
some ope come thumping over the
(Continued on Page Sixteen.)
that o/J saying
the
PROOF
-^•PUDDING
"A DISTINCTLY FINER GASOLINE"
New Red Crown Ethyl looks like any other red gasoline. But
i
there the likeness ends.
Nebraskans and visiting motorists find
many points o( superiority in this distinctly finer gasoline.
T
•ff
b
Instant power for quick starts and a smart getaway—less gear
shifting in slow traffic—mastery of hills on ntgh gear^unrivaHed
power—no gas knocks—low gas cost per mile I
The proof of superior gasoline is better motor performince—
on all points, in every type of motor*
Fill up the tank of your truck, tractor and passenger ear with
new Red Crown Ethyl. You'll notice better motor performance
in the first five minutes. At the end of a week you'll find this
distinctly finer gasoline gives low gas cost per mile.
At Red Crown Service Stations and Dealers everywhere in Nebraska.;
STANDARD OIL
C O M P A N Y OF
N E B R A S K A - «
"A NEBRASKA INSTITUTION"
COMPLETE REST ROOMS AT STANDARD OIL SERVICE STATIONS
THE LINCOLN STAR—WEDNESDAY, JUNE 25, 1930.
NINK
rSE THE BUDGET PLAN OF EAST PAYMENTS! BUT AT CLEARANCE PRICES!!
DAYS.. June 26 to July
Starting Saturday
Ward's Great Clearance Sale oi seasonable merchandise! Odds,
ends, floor samples, and remnants.......all in limited quantities.......all A-l quality, are
Hours offered NOW at huge savings. The items here are but a few of the many values in this Hours
sweeping Clearance. Bargains galore throughout the entire store! In many cases the
S:30to6:OO articles are priced 50% less than the regular selling prices......in order to clear our 8:3Oto6:OO
Saturday stocks immediately! Remember! Our famous guarantee of "satisfaction or your Saturday
money back" prevails even at these low prices! Save on scores of items you need......
and CAN USE RIGHT NOW! BUT IN THE CLEARANCE!
GIRLS' RAYON
Clearance Price
Clearance Price
Clearance Price
EACH
Clearance Price
Clearance Price
Clearance Price
Clearance Price
Clearance Price
Tested and guaranteed
Built like a cord tire
50 ft. complete with
. Buy at th.s
low price!
Full - fashioned chiffon
Hose in lovely colors!
Buy now—and
save!
Regular $155 value.
Ideil for those summer Jiar-
tiee and picnics You will
m a r v e l that we can sell
them, e v c n at a July
Clearance for 39s.
Beautifully tailored. 1 e n 7
wearing. Pactlei, VeiU. and
Bloomers
Such dainty un-
dies so verr lev priced. For
girls from 3 to 13 years.
Smart new patterns and
colors! A real "buy" for
every man! Regular
79c value. "
Wear them for-general
household use! Good
quality red rubber.
Regular 39c value I
Keep you cool at the
cost of a few cents a
day! Save at
this price!
Exceptional quality!
39c values. Smart and a
fine bargain!
6 Beautifully Upholstered
Living Room Suites
Regular Price $79.00 to 889.00
JULY CLEARANCE PRICE
»5900
Here's the chance of a lifetime to get a
marvelous new Living Room Suite, at a
saving that is irresistible! Two-piece
Snites—Three-piece Suites—and Bed
Davenport Suites—all offered at a sweep-
ing reduction in the Clearance! Style!
Quality! Beauty! Use the Budget Plan!
87.50 Down!
SMARTLY STYLED
ROOM SUITES
Regularly Priced at $79
JULY CLEARANCE PRICE
OO
Think of it! Smartly styled Bedroom
Suites at a price that means an actual
saving of Y5 to you! You cannot dupli-
cate these values anywhere. A wide
choice of styles! Come early tomorrow!
Get the cream of the choice! Use the
Budget Plan of Easy Payment S7.50
Down!
FINE QUALITY
Dinning Room Suites
Formerly Priced S85 to S95
JULY CLEARANCE PRICE
'Prices Smashed
PEPSODENT TOOTH PASTE — Regular 50c
size at Ward's July Clearance - -
~ ^
Price!
29C
LISTERINE — A fine antiseptic that every
home needs! Regular $1.00 size.
Clearance Price
TURKISH TOWELS with attractive colored
borders.. Buy them by the dozens.
. .
Clearance Price, each
14C
WASH CLOTHS — fine, soft and absorbent.
Buy enough for a year! Clearance
Price6for
HINDS HONEY AND ALBOND CREAM v—
famous for its quality!
Clearance Price!
MELLO-GLO FACE POWDER— Regular $1.00
value. Buy it at our low
^ *
Clearance Price!
...............
O4C
WILD ROOT HAffi TONIC— here's a bargain!
Regular SI size — at Clearance ..
Price!
........................
MARCELLE CURLING FLUID— a $1.00 size
at Ward's big July Clearance
Price!
.......................
JOHNSON'S BABY TALCUM— very mother
will welcome this bargain! Clear-
-
ancePrice! ........ .
...........
IOC
MENKEN'S BABY TALCUM— another value
for baby!. Julv Clearance
^ —
Price!
.......................
15C
ASEPTIC COTTON — for home or hospital.
Sterilized and absorbent. 1-lb.
roll
..........................
ODORONO keeps yon dainty on warm days!
Regular 60c size in July Clearance
Sale
.........................
WILLIAMS SHAVING CREAM— the favorite
with hundreds of men! Clearance
Price!
..................
.....
GEM or EVERREADY BLADES— strong tem-
pered steel. July Clearance Price
Pkg.of5
......................
^
BOYS' UNION SUITS — famous Commander
brand. Standard nainsook. Sizes
6tol6
........................
BOYS' UNION SUITS — athletic style, taped
back. Sizes 6 to 16. Clearance
— ._
Price!
.......................
J9C
BOYS' SHORTS— colorful sports cloth, man-
nish patterns. Geaxanct;
A «r
Price!
........................
43C
CRASH TOWELING that will give years of
satisfactory service. 18 inches
wide. Clearance Price
-«
PRINTED PIQUE to make charming sports
frocks, 36 inches wide. Fashionable
modernistic print. Clearance. Price,
yard
*
GINGHAM suitable for aprons, house and aft*
ernoon frocks. Fine quality. 36
. —
inches wide. Clearance Price, yd..
1J C
INFANTS' BAND of part wooL Pinning tabs
front and back. Fine bargain.
Clearance Price, each
..»
CHILDREN'S UNION SUIT to wear under
short clothes. Greatly reduced.
Clearance Price
*
NAINSOOK mOOMERS — comfortably full
cut with elastic at waist. In white
or pink. Clearance Price, each..
PRINT DANCE SETS with sport length pantie
and snug fitting brassiere. Don't
miss this value! Clearance Price
BLEACHED MUSLIN of firm, fine weave.
Keeps its original body. Launders
beautifully. Buy a bolt at this very
low price. Yd
9c
MEN'S ATHLETIC SHORTS — Special
eains at great savings. Clearance
Price
.........................
bar-
MEN'S ATHLETIC SHIRTS— full, roomy and
cool. Fine lisle thread weave.
p/\
Clearance Price
................
50C
patterns
FvKTO K1CAN liUWiss — assorted
and colors. Lovely sheer nainsook.
Clearance Price
................
MEN'S ATHLETIC SHDRTS — pull-over style
in popular Swiss ribbed knit. Here's
your chance, men! Clearance Price
ENAMELED STEEL
REFRIGERATORS
Regularly Priced $40 to $45
JULY CLEARANCE PRICE
Outstanding values—coming just at the
time when you need a refrigerator most!
Shining white enamel interiors, with at-
tractive exteriors. Spacious ice compart-
ments. Fully insulated. Tight-fitting
doors. See these bargains! Buy now!
GUARANTEED
LAWN MOWERS
Regularly Priced at $8.95 to §10.95
JULY CLEARANCE PRICE
$795
Don't miss this great value! Lawn
Mowers, tested and guaranteed to give
you years of faithful service . . . and
drastically reduced so that you can easily
afford it NOW! Lakeside De Luxe, with
14-inch blades that go clipping through
tall grass and weeds!
PORCELAIN-ENAMELED
GAS RANGES
Regularly Priced $49.95
JULY CLEARANCE PRICE
95
We've absolutely slashed
prices on these suites. Excep-
tional values and exception-
ally fine styles, but we must
clear our floors to make room
for
incoming merchandise.
You'll find just the style yon
^•ant in this selection. Re-
member! The Budeet Plan
means only a S7.50 dowm pay-
ment.
MONTGOMERY WARD & Co.
13th & L Sts.
B1277
Lincoln, Nebr,
Exceptional values! Big bar-
gains for the woman who
wants real cooking comfort.
Come in! See these wonder-
ful stoves! Buy now! Savings
have never been greater!
$4 Down
$4 Monthly
I ALE
.NFWSPAPFRf
TEN
THE LINCOLN STAR-WEDNESDAY,
JUNE 25, 1930.
f :
i
ii
HARDENBROOK
ACCEPTS FILING
Ord Man Enters G. 0. P.
Race For Attorney
General.
Gives Out 'Statement
Discussing State
Problems.
Bert Hardenbrook, Ord attorney
who Tuesday accepted a petitloo
filing for the republican nomina-
tion for attorney general, has is-
sued the following statement:
"Some weeks ago, petitions were
filed in the office of the secretary
of state .requesting that I become
a candidate for the nomination of
attorney • general upon the repuD-
lican ticket. After a careful sur-
vey and upon solicitation and con-
sultation with thousands of people
from all walks of life, I find thai,
there is a demand for my candi-
dacy and the principles which I
have been advocating for. years, so,
I have filed my acceptance and
will make an active campaign for
the nomination, subject to the w:)l
of the voters at the August 1930
republican primary election.
"It has become a custom, almost
a fad, for candidates seeking nom-
inations in the state of Nebraska,
to declare and advocate a platfonn,
while in'truth, the platform of the
party is, by law, delegated to the
party convention held after th«
primary election. However, it is
2robabiy proper that a candidate
lor the Important office of attor-
ney general make a statement.
Born In Ion a.
"I was born on a farm near
Albia, Iowa, in 1874, my ancestois
belonging to the Jerseymen of the
revolution who took a prominent
part in our war for independence;
I am a member of the Methodist
' church; have resided in Nebraska
at Fremont, and in Valley county,
since 1889, except for a lew yeais
in the Dakotas; was city superin-
tendent of schools for ten years
and have practiced law for moie
than twenty years. Was county
attorney of Valley county for more
than eight years and was for three
years president of the County At-
torneys' association of Nebraska,
during which time a number of
surveys were made relative
to
criminal conditions in Nebraska.
Have made an extensive study of
crime and criminal conditions, in
the state and nations and in- July
1926, participated in-the program
of the American Bar association at
Denver, Colorado, in its symposium
upon crime and criminal law.
Causes Of Crime.
"We Americans bear the reputa-
tion of having the most laws and
yet being ,the most lawless nation
on the face of the earth. There is
a sad failure of law enforcement, a
dismal lack of law observance and
the" president recently said, "That
life and property are relatively
more unsafe in the United States
Sanford Files For
State Rail Board
WILBER E. SANFORD.
Mr. Sanford filed Wednesday as a
republican candidate in the August
primary for the state railway com-
mission. He has been a resident of
Lincoln since 1907 and lives at 2101
South Thirty-fifth street. Prior to
going into the coal business he was
for seventeen years a traffic man
with trunk line railroads* He is a
veteran of the Spanish war, and a
member of the Lincoln Y. M. C. A.
than in any other civilized country
in the world."
"Our multiplicity of laws—our
highly
technical
procedure—our
lack of adequate facilities to appre-
hend criminals—in aany instances
our courts' delays, the uncertainty
of speedy and adequate punishment
—the advantages given*, the
ac-
cussd in our criminal procedure^
the maudlin sympathy for the
criminals disregarding the rights
of society—the shocking increase of
crimes of 'violence, the increase in
commitments to our penal institu-
tions and back of all of that, is
the alarming condition, a large
percentage ot our criminals today
are between the ages of eighteen
and
twenty-five—our
failure
to
collect and preserve criminal sta-
tistics—then there is our annual
ten billion dollar crime bill—these
are among the present day prob-
lems that should receive the most
thoughtful attention of the Amer-
ican people.
"I am heartily in sympathy with
prohibition. I realize that there are
those who insist that it is the
cause of the present condition but
I do not believe that the outlawing
of 177,000 saloons has increased
crime. In former days a large per-
centage of the crime came from
the saloon. I am in favor of the
strict enforcement of the prohibi-
tory law.
Protests Monopoly.
"In a study of the history of the
past- civilizations, the money of the
Montana Woman Lost
19 Pounds of Fat In 4 Weeks
Here's a letter written October
21, 1929, by Mrs. Fred Barringer of
Lewistown, Montana, that ought to
be read by every overweight wom-
an in America.
When stout women can Jose fat
and at the same time gain in
energy and vigor.
Gain in cnarm and vivaciousness.
Gain a healthy complexion and
have eyes that sjaarkle with buoy-
ant health.
And at insignificant cost—isn't it
time to use common sense?
Please read this letter carefully:
"Gentlemen: I first saw your ad-
vertisement dn a Billings, Montana,
paper and decided to try Kruschen
Salts.
I was the first to purchase a
bottle in .Billings.
I started takin
gtHem every
morning as directed as I was -very
much overweight and wanted to
reduce.
I had tried going on a diet but tvould
get so huigry that my diet would i-ot
last long, so I decided to give "Kruschcn
Salts" a fair trial The day I started to
take them I weighed 256 Ibs. and at
present, which has been just four weeks.
I weigh 239 Jbs. And I must say. I Jeel
better in every way, besides looking much,
better. Kruschen Salts had a decided ef-
fect upon the quantity, of food I took
and stimulated my desire to greater
activity.
I have n-nommendcd Kruschen Salts to
many of my friends, in fact, have « num-
ber ol them taking Kruschen Salts.
May all large people, both men
and women, who want to reduce 'in
an easy way. gi>-e Kmscheii S^lts
a fair trial. I am sure it will con-
vince any one."
A bottle of Kruschen Salts that
lasts four weeks costs out 85c at
Harley Drug Co., or any drugstore
in America.—Advertisement.
Daily Cross-word Puzzle.
Accident Toll
In Nebraska
Is Mounting
Two Week's Average Is
Three Deaths, 33
- Injured Daily
Nebraska's accident toll for the
two weeks period ending June 17
was almost double that ot the same
period last year, according to a re-
port of the Nebraska Safety council
released Wednesday. An average of
almost three persons killed per day
and thirty-two injured daily was
maintained during the two weeks.
Three tunes as many lives have
been wiped out in the state by au-
tomobile accidents since January 1
as- Were lost in Chicago gangland
killings in the same period, accord-
ing to the report.
Nearly forty persons were killed
and more than four hundred were
injured during the last two weeks
covered in the safety council's sum-
mary. This brought the number of
accidental deaths in the state since
January Ijto 315, of which 124 were
duei to automobile accidents. In-
juries during the
same
period
totaled 2,592, with 174 permanently
disabled.
people has always accumulated in
the hands of a lew and that con-
dition ultimately caused the down-
fall of government. We are living
in an age of mergers, of great com-
binations of capital; to illustrate,
we call attention to the recent
formation of the Chase National
Bank of New York City, the in-
creasing number of chain stores
and like combinations.'" With the
constantly occurring mergers, the
creation of new holding companies,
it \yould seem apparent that the
ownership
and
management of
American
business
is
gradually
merging in the larger financial
centers of the east; Business men
are rapidly becoming "clerks." If
this condition continues to grow in
the next decade as in the imme-
diate past, we will be dominated
by chain banks, chain stores, etc..
and all competition will have van-
ished, a condition detrimental to
the commonwealth.
"Combinations
of
capital
arfe
necessary in order to hanale our
business of today but mergers when
once, effected, which create a inon-
oply
and
destroy
competition
should not be allowed. We have
corporations 'in Nebraska that have
to do with marketing of our pro-
ductions. The capitalization, the
profits and the operation of thes^>
corporations are the 'cause of much
speculation and of grave concern to
the common people.
"That there are discriminations
between, the larger
corporations*
and the smaller concerns, there
can be no question. For the bene-
fit of legitimate business and io
protect the public, such discrim-
inations should be stopped.
"I-am not unmindful of thp fa"t
that there are other problems of
state too numerous to mention
which the attorney general is re-
quired to pass upon or administer
some of which will be discussed in
the progress of the campaign. I
have stated my position upon some
of the major issues which concern
the office. I am not inclined to
make promises but 'if elected at-
torney general of Nebraska, I shall
adyocate changes Jn our criminal
laws and procedure so as to meet
the present conditions and make
criminal trials more nearly a search
lor the truth. I am opposed to any
»cr.fase in taxation, if elected I
shall do all in my power so far as
tne constitutional and statutory
provisions permit, to enforce uni-
*J™& a.U laws, without fear or
favor. My acquaintance'with the
public prosecutors of Nebraska and
my knowledge* of their duties places
me in a position to work with them
in complete harmony.
PARAGRAPHS
By Robert Qnillen.
(Copyright. 19», ftbifeben Syndicate.)
ACHOSS
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borax
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tack
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21. IJnderttand
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St* Ilascnllnc
nlclnamt
34. Slid
3C U>Mtrc
Indian
37. 100 tqtar*
meter*
J<- Cvnleod
St. Italian tltTJ
•bbr.
4ft. AnlumobUt
. 4L Follsbcd
41. Silkworm
4«. Grer» letter
««. Cl«»r proat
43. Fcmal* uod-
plper
41. Deserter
•*. Chnooe
U. 5«i baring
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«(. Small particle
Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle
It. Short for *
man's name
•J. Follower
Co. Jndce
SI. Tbov who
Mre: rare
Si. hlnrt of cat
68. root engaged
OB either *ld«
44. Capable of
belnc oala-
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SL fienn* of long-
lewd har*
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name
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iS. Political
• party: abtr.
•*- Ctianrc
•I. >preaO loosely
K. Tampan point
«. Color
33
34
64
£f
So
4*
IpO
/V
32
^
26
1,2
th
afc Dentist who says most of
™ * £,rW s successful men are short
probably means in a bear market.
rn^,^011^16?! Dairyman says the
country should become more cow-
minded. And less bullminded.
Premonition: The uneasy -feeling
?K f?16 ,of a nomely talkie herb,
mtautes
g to sing in a few
Note to Gandhi:
No man ever
won an argument by biting himself
to make the other fellow ftel sorry.
"Every child should know the
national ui:>' True; it's a dumb kid
recognize *
Maybe a woman looks longer in
long dresses, but the men don't.
There's one great improvement
A man down and out isn't tempted
to spend his last dune for a drink,
How hard it is for the poor to
save money-especiaUy if they work
in Uie land of clothes the rich dress
up in.
Boy Lost on Mountain
Beats Back to Safety
Young
Scont Pita Skill Against
Treacherous Crap for Four
Days and Wins.
CORONA, Cal., June 25— (AP)J-
Harold Johnson, 12-year-old Boy
Scout, rested at home today, proud-
ly exhibiting
the
raTtles
of a
snake, one of the many menaces
to his life thwarted by his skill
during the four days he was lost
among the snowy, forbidding crags
of Mount San Jacinto.
While blanketed Indians, vet-
eran mountaineers,
fellow
scouts
and army aviators searched with
little hope
of finding
the boy
alive, Harold calmly walked into
the Snow Creek canyon fish hatch-
ery near Banning, Ca., yesterday
and asked for food.
A few hours ' *3r the scout was
reunited with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. B. J. Johnson of Corona, and
told in a matter of fact way of
conquering the dangers of rugged
San Jacinto.
Resorts to 'Scout Lore.
Lost from his scout companions
Friday as they were descending
from the mountain peak, Harold
said he wandered until he realized
he was on the treacherous north
slope of San Jacinto. By nature
calm; the boy resorted to his scout
lore, and followed the course of a
mountain stream.
Scaling precipices where a mis-
step meant death, the frail scout
pitted his skill against the track-,
less
crags,
which
mountaineers
have never been known to ascend,
and won.
Harold, who was "pretty hungry"
when he reached the fish hatchery,
said he slept under shelving rocks
at night.
Once he encountered a
rattlesnake
in his .path
and
promptly killed it.
The boy said he saw the planes
looking for rilm and unsuccessfully
attempted to signal to them with
his blanket.
By Lulu Hunt Peters. M. D.
Diet and Health" and "Diet for Children."
CONSULT A SKIN SPECIALIST.
SUFFERER FROM ACNE
IS TOLD.
QUESTION.
"DEA*R DOCTOR: I have a acne
rosacca. Am 19 years old, interested
(slightly lo girls, and am planning
to enroll im college next year'- I am
6 Si. 3 in. tall. My rosacea is con-
fined entirely to my nose, which is
prominent enough without jreser.-.-
blingr a flag.-The redness and pim-
ples and blackheads make the situ-
ation
intolerable. I have had the
disease for the prst three years
and have consulted five doctors in
this town, who seem to contradic;
one another.-I am so terribly seir-
conscious, and I do want so bafiiy
to clear this scourge from my face.
Can you help me to resemble, to
some degree, other humans?
MR- K.-
ANSWER.
You say you have been to several
doctors, K., but have you been to a
skin specialist, one wno makes a
special study of skin disorders?^
The treatment of acne c; the'nose
is similar to acne elsewhere on the
face, and there are two phases, as m
every skin
disease;
the
general
treatment and the local. The gesi-
eral treatment, naturally, has to do
with the general hygiene, especially
the diet. Fats and greasy foods, con-
centrated sweets and starches have
to be cut down markedly. You're a
pretty big boy, K., so you* need a
lot of food; so, in order to make
up for these foods, you would have
to take more milk and increase your
vegetables and fruits considerably.
Alcohol, highly seasoned foocs.
smoking, etc., have to be elimin'atec
entirely-
Scrubbing the nose with hot wa-
ter and soap and extracting the
blackheads before they become in-
fected, is a part of the daily local
treatment.
This should be ro«-
lowed by ice cold applications, to
help contract the dilated vessels.
You should have an examination ot
the internal part of the nose, too,
to be sure there is no growth or
abnormalities of the bone, whicn
might be pressing on the blood ves-
sels and making them engorge.
A lotion known as calamlne-zlnc-
oxide lotion, which the
druggist
would put up for you, is a medica-
tion that has proved effective
in
many cases. The latest treatment
is the X-Ray, but this should be
given only by one who is qualified
in their use and knows their dan-
gers.
You should have your eight hours-
sleep and some good vigorous exer-
c se every day, to improve yoijr cir-
culation.
I hope I have given you some
suggestions which will prove help-
ful.
Our article on acne goes into the
diet a little more fully- (See col-
umn rules.)
M. L. S.: You need a physical
check-up by a competent physician.
You shouldn't try to be treating
yourself. If you do have kidney
trouble, as you suspect, taking so
much salt as you say you do may
be extremely harmful, for in thai
disease, salt is reduced to a min-
imum, and in some cases eliminated
entirely.
I think you had better send for
our article on Balanced Diet and
the pamphlet on Kidney and Blad-
der Disorders.
Editor's Note: Dr- Peters cannot
diagnose nor give personal advice.
Your questions, it of geneial inter-
est, will be aiibwcred in the column
in their turn. Requests for articles
or pamphlets on hand nuibt be ac-
companied by a idlly j>cll -addressed.
oUimpcd envelope, plus the follow-
ing small charge to help cover cost
of printing and handling: for each
article wanted, two cents in coin.
The pamphlets arc Reducing ana
Gaining. Hyciene of Women, Kid-
ney and Bladder Disorders. Address
Dr. Peters, in care of this paper.
Write legibly, and not
over 200
words.
About people
Mrs. Josephine Creekpaum enter-
tained the woman's council of the
East Lincoln church at her home,
700 North Twenty-fourth street on
Tuesday
afternoon.
Foi 7
were
present and thp hostess was as-
sisted by Mrs. \Charles Sherwood,
Mrs.
Roy
Steftn.
Mrs- Thomas
Maxwell, and Mrs, Roy Miller.
The program was as follows:
Violin solo, Robert Sherwood.
Piano solo, Ruth Mary Stone.
Piano solo, Martha Jane Stone.
Piano solo, Helen Farmer.
Violin solo. Max Endleman.
Saxophone solo, Max Endleman.
Banjo solo, Glen Mahon.
Readings, Helen Rice.
W£3C3»
ART
WORK
In Many Unusual Lines.
Poster Board
All Papers
Water Colors
Linoleum block
CUTTING AND PRINTING
Cut-Out Menus
In Any Design.
What nobody else docs, we
will attempt to do lor you!
GEORGE
Yankee Hill
Beauty that will
last forever.
.
be worse. Nobody has
yet thought to serve spinach Jn
onght colons.
-
hot a013
about some terrible menace
that you will forget tomorrow when
the headlines change.
Indications are that the army
imenipJoyed soon will contain
statcmen who believe in straw
<
t
that a boy with a new air rifle
A hick town is a place where you
c lnto Bother house and
the natfonahty of the last
Of course machinery will make
i war Jess cruel. Think of having a
• mechanical arm to do the salatang
Ejecting congressmen for 30-year
terms would at kast make tt neces-
sary to Increase pensions only once
to 20 years.
j
Another Shine the navy needs is
j a set of admirals who airnt pro-
, Tofced by these darned newfangled
w3eas.
i
AdveriJsinjj is making us breath-
i conscious and garter-conscSoBS and
navy-consc3oos. If only for a little j
i white itt»uld maj? w
=— '
what's back ot tn
to PHILLIPS 6
Big Swin
Claim your right to pep, power and mileage, when you pay for gasoline. Take a cue from
mousands who have found extra value in Phillips 66. It's the new-day gasoline—with vola-
tility controlled to fit eqjch season's special needs. A winter gas in winter. A spring gas in
spring. A summer gas in summer. A fall gas in fall. Product of the newest science in re-
fining. Fill up with Phillips 66 and start for anywhere—with a new fine feeling at the^wheel.
Kill-up
*
with
• Jf
• ItjansBElpiPrtKfcsaCa.'*
™
• •I IDS
I
R E G 66
U L A R and
E T H Y L
FORMERLY STATE OIL COMPANY STATIONS
loth and N Sis.
10th and N Sts.
Hth and B Sts.
27th and Sooth.
16lh and V Sts.
33rd and Holdrege.
3rd and P Sts.
22nd and 0 Sts.
ll!h and South.
13th and F Sts.
171h and I' Sts.
33rd and A Sts.
58lh and O Sts.
.NFWSPAPFRf
nFWSPAPFRI
THE LINCOLN STAR-WEDNESDAY,
JUNK 25, 1930.
idio Programs
(CMntrmi Standard TtmtJ
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 25.
WEDNESDAY FKATUEES.
f
! Orcheitral eoucert; Nathaniel Sbllkrct.
director—WKAF network.
Old Counselor; Cblcaio
Little Sym-
phony orcheitra—WEAF network.
I In a UuuUn Vlllafe—WABC network.
Orchestra concert; Olive Palmer, Paul
Oliver—WEAF network,
measure hoar—WJZ network.
' Symphony concert! Inward Ssrlow, di-
rector—WABC network.
Topnoteheri—WEAF network.
California Melodle*—WABC network.
Royal lork orchestra—WJZ network.
NBC NETWORK (WEAF).
5:30—"Back of the New. In Wasblncton,'
William Hard—WOW,
WOC-WHO,
WBAP, WOAI. KOA.
S: 15—The Plareri; presenting humor and
drama In romance—WOW, WOC-
WI1O.
0:00—Fait of Cairo; dramatic sketch with
oriental music—WOW, WOC-WHO,
WDAF.
6:30—Orchestral concert; Nathaniel Shll-
kr»t, director; Gladys BJce, soprano;
piano
duo — WOW, WOC-WHO.
WDAF, WON, WFAA. WOAI. KPBC,
KOA.
7:00—Old
Counselor;
Chicago
Little
Symphony orcheitra; Georje Dascb,
director—WOW, WOC-WIIO, KXW,
WOAI, KPEC, KOA,
7:30—Orchestral concert: Olive Palmer,
soprano:
Elizabeth
Lennox, con-
tralto; Paul Oliver, tenor; the Re-
velers,
male
quartet;
Gustave
Ilaenschen. director—WOW, WOC-
WHO,
WON, WFAA, WOAI, KPRC.
KOA.
8:30—Topnotchers:
"Mickey"
Cochrane.
baseball
player.
Interviewed
by
Grantland
Bice;
Leonard
Joy's
strlnr orchestra—WOW, WOC-WHO.
WDAF, KYW, WOAI, KPRC, KTHS,
KO/1
ii:00—Mystery
Home;
melodrama with
musical background (JO mill.) —
1VEAF and stations; until 9.13 —
WOC-WHO, WDAF.
rf»:15—Uncle Abe and David; rural -.kit
with Phillips Lord and Ar'hur Allen
(15
rain)
— WOC-WHO, WDAF,
WENE.
9:30—Central Park Casino orchestra: Leo
Reisman,
director — WOC-WHO,
WDAF, KOA.
n.00—Jack
Albin's
dance
orchestra (I
hour)—WEAF and stations; until
jn-30—WOW, WDAF; from 10:20 to
10:30—WOC-WHO.
,
CBS NETWORK (WABC).
k:45—Kaltenborn Edlti the News—KOIL,
I
KMBC.
1:00—Manhattan
Moods; Claude
Mac-
Arthur's orchestra and mired vocal
ensemble—KRLD, WIBW; after «.15
• gO—Forty Fathom Trawlers; dramatized
tale of the sea, "The Gauntlet"—
KMOX, WMAQ.
'00—In a Russian Village; Peter BUJo's
Russian orchestra; quartet and con-
tralto — KOIL,
KMOX,
KMBC,
•
WMAQ, KELD, WIBW.
• 30—Smoker; Senator and Major; orches-
II
tra
and tenor — KOIL, KMOX,
I'
KMBC, WMAQ.
•TOO—Symphony concert; Howard Barlow,
"
director — KOIL, KMOX, KMBC,
_
WMAQ.
1.00—Bert Lawn's dance orchestra—KOIL,
I
WIBW.
1:15—Heywood Broun'i radio column —
I
KOIL, WIBW.
I
1.30—California Melodies; Mltzl
Green,
ten-year-old
movie actress, fnest
artist;
Chief
1'owlatchl,
Indian
baritone;
orchestras
and
negro
.
chorus—KOIL, KRLD. WIBW.
1.40—Guy Lombardo's dance orchestra —
• ' KOIL, KMBC, WIBW, KFH.
1:30—Nocturne! Ann Leaf at the ortan
(30
mln.)—KOIL,
KMBC, KELD.
WIBW, KFH.
NBC NETWORK (WJZ).
onesome Cowboy; dramatic sketch
with John White .tenor—KFAB.
:SO—Vincent Lopez dance orchestra —
KFAB, WREN, KOA.
I:00~-Harry
Kerens'
orchestra;
male
I
quartet—KFAB, WLW, KTW. WEEN.
1:30—Foresters' male quartet and orches-
I
tra—KFAB. WLW, KYW. WREN.
1:00—Old Masters—WLS, WEEN.
1:15—Reflettlons by quartet—WLS, WREN.
V:90—Pleasure
hour;
Charlej. Prcvln's
I
orchestra—WLW. KYW, Tl'EEN.
|,:30—On the Sunset Trail; musical pro-
I
gram—WJZ and stations.
6:00—•Slumber moslc; Lndwig Lanrler's
string ensemble (1 hour)—WJZ and
stations.
1:30—Amos
-n'
Andy—KFAB,
WMAQ,
WDAF, WLW KIW, WREN, WBAP,
I
WOAI, KPRC. KTHS, KOA.
0:45—Topics, Jn Brief; Floyd Gibbons —
KFAB, WLW, WENR..WREN.
1:00—Roy»l Yarlc orchestra: Fred Cnlley,
i 1
director—KFAB. WLW, WREN.
^30 paramount hotel orchestra (30 mln.)
—WREN.
KFAB. tlncoln^3«9.4—770 k-
I 30—New Yorker hotel orchestra (NBC)
-45—Good News magazine; Recordings.
B-15—Lonesome Cowboy (NBC).
30—Vincent Lopez orchestra (NBC).
OO—Harry Kogcn's orchestra (NBC).
1.30—Fcresfers' male quartet (NBC),
l-oo—"Ike" Walton half hour.
6.30—Amos 'n' Andy (NBC).
5-45—Topics, Floyd Gibbons (NBC).
_0 oo—Royal York orchestra (NBC).
•0:30—Leo Beck's orchestra (30 mln ).
I
WCAJ. Lincoln—508.8—S90 k.
|9:00—Address
by Rev. Grant
Shlck.
CroTell Memorial home, and musical
program (1 hour)
.
KFOR. Lincoln—S47.R—1210 k.
17-00—Gospel singers (20ra ); Hayward and
I
Thompson (10m.): Y. W. C A,
I 8:00—Orchestra (30m ): Aunt Betty.
i-OO—frciiuiius' issca orchestra (l nr.j.
NEBRASKA'. IOWA AND MISSOURI.
KOIL. Cf-nncll Bln«<—2S8—1160 k.
S-00—News: Grccler teacher's collese.
5 45—Kttltcnborn Edits the News (CBS).
8-00—Sports (15m.). Manhattan (CBS).
6 :0—Songs: Russian Villase (CBS).
7:30—Smoker (CBS).
j-oo—Symphony concert (CBS).
9-00—Bert Lown's orchestra (CBS).
9-15—Heywood Broun's column (CBS). •»
9:30—California Melodies (CBS).
SO-00—Guy Lombardo's orchestra (CBS).
:0.30—Nocturne (CBS).
11:00—Musical scrop book.
[1:30—Tom Collins, jr. program (30m.).
WOC-WHO. Davenport-Des Motnes
M9.8—1000 k.
5-30—WEAF (4^4 hours); Weather; Scores,
-io—Nels
and
Svea
(10m.):
WEAF
(40m 1.
'0:30—Hawey* ensemble.
1 00—Dave's Barnstormers (1 hour).
WDAF. Kansas City—193—610 k-
5:30—School of the Air.
.
6-00—WEAP (1 hour*: Evening w&odles.
7:30—Candv cops <30m.l; Singers.
8:30—WEAF (1 botsrl: Amos *n' Andy.
9:45—WEAF (45 m!n_): Orchestras.
11:45—NichUuwk Trolic (It hours).
WOW. Omaha—SOC.S-.WO k.
S.OO—Police bulletins: Roads- Music.
S-JO—Talk. William Hard (NBC).
5:45—The Players (NBCi.
6-00—East of Cairo concert orchntrm wllh Liter
Marfb.
toprano; Leonard
Jvy'a
JHfb Ilatlert' orcheiln, (u«i arl-
liU— WOW.
WOC-WIIO,
WOAF.
KVW, WBAP, WOAI. KTHS. KOA.
9.00 — Claolcal »crles; "The Father ol
Muilo," Jobann Kebaitlan
Barb
protrsm; O»are Sodero, orcheitra
director (1 hour) — WEAK mnd »U-
tlonm »fter
0:39— WOW,
WOC-
WIIO.
0:1B— Uncle Ab« and David; rural sketch
with Phillips Lord and Arthur Al-
Irn— IVLAF and itationt, Includlnc
WDAF. WENR.
10:00 — Governor Clinton hotel
orcheitra;
Kay O'Hara, director (1 hour) —
WOC-HMO; until 10.30— WOAF.
CBS NETWOBK (WABC).
o:30 — Tiptop club; variety — KMOX.
0.00— The Gauchos; Vincent
Sorey's or-
chestra playlnr Spanish and Ar-
gentine
muilc — WHOM,
WIBW,
KF1I; after «-t>5 — KOIL.
6:16— "The Politic*! situation In Wain-
Incton Tonlfht," Frederick
Wll-
Wile— KOIL, WBBM, WIBW,
BUCK ROGERS, 2430 A. D.
Sub Hurls Lightening
By PHIL NOWLA
N and DICK CALK11VS
KFH*
0:30— U. 8. Marine band concert— KMBC,
WBBM, KFH; until
(i:4fr-KOILl
after e:45-KMOX.
7:00 — Arabetqne; a modern
"thousand
and one r.lfhta" — KOIL. K'HOX.
KMBC,
WBBM.
KHLD,' WIBW,
KFH.
7:30— Icelandic Millennium;
celebration
of one-thouian4(h anniversary
of
founding of Iceland
*oi eminent,
»orld'i oldest republic; rebroadcait
addresj from London, VllbJalmur
ttlefanison, noted American! Aran-
erimur Valatllls, Icelandic
tenor,
ffuest
solofit — KOIL,
KMOX
KMBC,
KBBM,
KELD,
mBw|
8:00— Mld-Week hour; symphony orches-
5
1
8:30— National radio forum from Wash-
».no_r,Brt0n~^MOX- W1BW- KFH.
8.00— Dream Boat; Emery Deutsch'g or-
chestra— KMBC. WIBW, KFM.
».lo— Heywood Broun's radio column —
KMBC, WIBW, KFH.
8.30— Guy Lombardo and his Boyal Can-
f,dJ?i!TKMBC' WIBW- KF"' *««
in •*,
":45— al"0 KOIL.
10 00— Scrappy Lambert's dance orchestra
in.a«_rK,011" KMBC- WIBW- KFH.
10:39— Nocturne; Ann Leaf at the or-an
In the Good Old Summer Time;
mixed icxtet and Bill Daly's orl
raKFjlB' ;VEEN-
dance orchestr» ~
- Hatters' orchestra—WBEN
dl?e°r?o?L1
WLW
d S*nford' °«"""-»
WBAP, WOAI KPRC KOA WKEN>
SS^^JS1^
WREN.
«»wyn
«acu—
8:15—Mellow Melodies; Mildred
U """I—
Laurier',
and
in
n in
>
, KPRC. KTHS KOA
WML >^\
THEY TWINK
THE'VE QIQWN , , „
UP A SUB <4L?,Z~
THEY ONLY
EXPLODED ONE
OF OUR TORPEDOES
NOW WATCH THE
PERISCOPE. OF THE
LIGHTNING GENERATOR
WHEN WE
PRESS
BUTTON,
LIGHTNING
LEAP PPOM THE SKV
GENERATOR
^>r»»// t«
COULD
HOOK IN ON THE
THE BUJSGLE FAMILY—
Lawyers Come and
By H. J. TUTHILL
HEAVEN Uf
DAVS! /
GEORGE
K
WHY ARE \
YOU HOME
SO EARCT. J
HAPPENED. .)
WHAT— ?
PLENTY. I LAID OPF
ANOTHER LAWYER WHEN
I CAUGHT HIM RIDING
AROUND ,WITH AN
AUTOMOBILE FULL. OF
CAROUSAL ALL-STAR
FILM VAMPS.
FINE
STUFF, EH?
TRYING
TO SE.TTUE MY CASE
FOR A FEW
TELEPHONE
NUMBERS.
6-25-.
SUCH A BUSINESS
THAT MAKES TWO
LAWYERS YOU'VE
HAD.
WHY
DON'T YOU
SIMPLY
FORGET
THE WHOLE
SILLX
AFFAIR
AND-?,
NOT ME.
I'VE
ALREADY HIRED
ANOTHER
LAWYER AND
GAVE. HIM
ORDERS TO TEAR
INTO THOSE. FILM
PEOPLE LIKE A
HIRED-HAND
RUNNING TO
SUPPER.
THREE *-\
LAWYERS! ]
HEAVENDT
I
DAYS. YOU /
CHANGE /
THEM J .
ALMOST M1
AS? OFTEM j
AS YOU
CHANGE
YOUR
WELL, ILL ADMIT THERE'S
BEEN PRACTICALLY AN
EPIDEMIC OF LAWYERS
ON THIS CASE BUT
V
EVERY TIME 1 CHANGE ]|
LAWYERS 1 FEEL BETTER.
AND TOUGHER. 1s
LAWYERS
ARE LIKE
STREET-CARS,
ANY TIME
I FIND
MYSELF
RIDING IN
THE WRONG
DIRECTION
I GET A
TRANSFER
YOU'VE BEEN RIDING
IN THE WRONG
DIRECTION EVER SINCE
YOU STARTED THIS
APFAIF? vyjTH THAT
FILM CONCERN. AND
MARK MY WORD. ALL
YOU'LL GET OUT OF IT
IS THE HABIT OF
CALLING EVERY THIRD
RATE LAWYER IN
TOWN BY HIS FIRST
NAME-
THE GUMPS—THE
ONE LEGGED MAN
, .„ KFAB, Lincoln — 389.4 — 770 k
« 00— Good Morning
'
'
0
(NBC,.
program
«>«
.
•
-
0
1
L
0
"
fOOT PRINTS AfclMN-
RUSMING OUT &ON IN
HAND. rXHOY F'N&S
THE 'WvME TELL-
TALE CLFW —
THE PRINT OP r\
RltfT SHOE ON THE
SIDE WALK -
TRAILEO FROM THE
ANYONE KNEW TWE
AMOUNT OF SECURITIES AND
WEU.-tH»r'S PRETTY
FOOR MILLION- E'&KT
THOUSAND OOLUARi OM THAT
WHO t& THE
WHISPER** /MAN
A
PEEK IN 6r
IN THE
TlWES ANO EACH
TIME ME TRIES TO
TELL
CLOSt T 0 3
ooOO.^ PROFITS FOR
Y SMIPP1N& INTERESTS-
J>0 YOO VJONDER THAT I
NT TO GET /AARRIED **^
HAVE SOMEOMEMELP —
, AS YOU ANO
Rtf U S Pit OK . Copxng
by The Cnirago Tribune
A Sad, Sad Story
Ocpyrig&t 1836 bj a L. Ooldbof.
O 8 P»( 00
Bu RUBE GOLDBERG
TH».S FOfiR VAt>
COMM\TTEDA «=ftIMS _
AAib» '
1A3TO
LxioRLti POLL
TBA~r
OF
H£.
Or A FURMlTURE MX\Ai
FbR A RltaE -^ TE9vi
rM^vrres AFTER. HE
-m
HAS
\jAAi
FoOAits. IT
A Lor
-r/He
-Ttti^
HE" CAM'T
BRINGING UP FATHE R—
By GEO. McMANUS
KTW. Cbl
S 00— WJZ and WEAP (S icon'.
R Ot>— Mf3odr»nsa
m 1; WEAF <30a.l.
9.-00 — ^NOTJ: SU:t !lr~l: WJZ.
c« cimdc Q1* hourO
WENB. -Clilcato— «».«!— »7« k.
I S
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SPAPFRf
NFWSPAPFK!
THE LINCOLN STAR-WEDNESDAY,
JUNE 25,1930.
NORTH DAKOTA
TO POLLS
Where The Southern Cross Landed Early Wednesday
Townley, Seeking Nomi-
nation for Congress,
Holds Spotlight.
FARGO, N. D., June 25—{/F5—
A. C. Townley, founder of the non-
partisan league in North Dakota,
held the spotlight in today's state-
wide primary election in which ne
is entered~as a candidate for the
republican nomination for congress
In the Third congressional district.
Townley, running without
the
endorsement of the organization he
founded, is opposed by the incum-
bent, J. H. Sinclair of Kenmare,
the
nonpartisan
endorsee,
and
Staale Hendrickson of Coteau, en-
dorsed by the Independent Voters
association.
Townley
and Hen-
drickson have expressed themselves
as "wets."
No Senatorial Race.
The state's three congressmen.
Sinclair, Thomas Hall and O. B
Burtness, all sought renomination. j
There is no race for United States '
senator this year.
Gov. Geoige P. Shafer, endorsed
by the independents, sought re-
nomination, and was opposed on
the republican. Ballot
by. H. T.
Brant of Linton, the nonpartisaa
league candidate.
With the exception of the guber-
natorial race, all candidates on the
democratic ticket have no opposi-
tion. Pierce Blewett of Jamestown,
endorsde by the democratic con-
vention, Fred L. Anderson of Minot,
'and F. O. Hellstrom of Bismarck
are in the democratic race for
nomination for governor.
Two Women For Treasurer.
Two women are contesting for
the republican nomination for state
treasurer — the incumbent, Mis.
Berta E. Baker, ncnpartisan candi-
date, and Delia M. Wardrope of
Leeds, the independent endorsee.
Two initiated measures, providing
for amendment of the law so as to
permit Sunday "movies" and other
theatrical productions and creation
"of a one-man game and fish com-
Tnission, are before the voters.
Two measures referred by the
legislature to the electorate are
also to be voted on. These provide
for an increase in the gasoline tax
from 3 to 4 cents a gallon, and for
repeal of the depositors guaranty
fund
act. Two
constitutional
amendments on which voters will
express themselves would lengthen
terms of District judges from four
to six years, and would increase
terms of Supreme court judges
from six to 10 years.
—Associated Press Photo.
The Southern Cross landed safely at Harbor Grace, Newfoundland, early Wednesday after a flight
fronT IreS though Tallin* short of th* goal to New York. Abovf is shown Capt. Charles Kmpsford-
Smith and the proposed route, with Harbor Grace Indicated by a cross.
•
ANNUAL CHURCH
MEETING OPENS
Expect 2,000 To Attend
State Conference
At Bethany.
- Delegates from widely distant
points of Nebraska were expected
to boost registration for the an-
nual convention of the Nebraska
Churches of Christ to near the
"2.000 mark as the meeting got un-
der way at Bethany park Wednes-
day afternoon. Registrations were
being received Wednesday morning
and It was announced that the
total number registered Tuesday
night was 300.
Principal speaker for the session,
"which will close Sunday night, is
Dr. Arthur Holmes of Philadelphia,
jwho will use as the theme of his
addresses through the week, "Great
Fundamentals
in the Christian
Faith."
Lack of clear thinking upon the
part of church leaders has resulted
in partial .failure to produce^ the
type of life reflected in Christ's
teachings, declared R. E. Deadman,
^president of the church association,
-who
addressed a meeting Tuesday
night.
That Nebraska has 30,000 mem-
be^s of the Christian faith and 150
churches, was reported by John GT
Alber, state secretary.
Rev. W. P. Hill of the East Lin-
coln Christian church presided at
the Tuesday night meeting.
Dr. Bromfield
,
Is Victorious
In First Round
BROADMOOR COUNTRY CLUB,
COLORADO SPRINGS. Colo., June
25—W)—Dr. Lawrence D. Bromf ield
of Demer, the trans-Mississippi
medalist, eliminated Robert Con-
liffe. Jr.. of Oklahoma City, 5 and
4. in the first round of match play
today.
Bromfield gained a four hole ad-
vantage of the outward nine, spite
of two stymies, one when he had
a two and one-half foot putt on
the eighth, and the other when he
had a two foot putt for a birdie
on the second.
Bromfield was putting superbly
except »t the thirteenth where he
missed a two foot putt and a chance
to end the match. He ran down
a twenty-five putt on the seventh.
L. B. Maytag of Newton. la., last
year's runnerup in the trans-Mis-
sissippi golf championship, elim-
inated Perry Carver of Omaha,
sensational 17-year-old youngster. 1
up to a first round match. Maytag
is registered from Des Moines.
Two up going to the fourteenth,
Garver lost the next two holes •when
Maytag collected a birdie and par
in succession. Squared going to the
eighteenth. Garver drove 300 yards
to the edge of the lake for an al-
most unplayable lie He half dubbed
his shot trying to play safe, •while
Maytae teas on in 2 and down in 2.
This pair played sensational golf all
the -way. but Garret appeared to
feel the strain of the tough com-
FLIERS LAND AT
HARBOR GRACE
(Continued from Page One.)
States. New York was the original
goal of the fliers, but when the
weather conditions led them to
doubt that they would reach that
city they set their hearts on at
least landing in American territory.
By so doing they would have sur-
passed the distance record of the
German Bremen fliers on the first
successful westward crossing of the
Atlantic by airplane.
Kingsford-Smith was brief in ins
comments. He said:
"Only for the wonderful wireless
radio we would never have been
able to land here. We had a rotten
night. We flew over this territory
almost all rjght waiting for a
chance to land. We were in the air
move than 32 hours and experienced
very foggy weather and trouble
with the ccmpass. These caused de-
lays. We will leave for New York
at daybreak tomorrow after refuel-
ing. We were hoping to reach New
York without a stop, out shortage
of gasoline prevented this. We viill
fly to San Francisco alter reaching
New York, thereby rcmpletin^ an
around-the-world flight."
Make Safe Landing.
HARBOR GRACE, N. F., June 25
—(/P)—The airplane Southern Cross
landed here at 5:57 a. m., eastern
standard time, today after a haz-
ardous flight across the Atlantic
ocean from Ireland. The plane had
gasoline for only four hours of fly-
ing when it landed.
"Happy that they had landed
safely, after flying through a dense
fog which provided little or no
visibility during the night, the fliers
said they would refuel and take off
for New York.
The plane fought its way to the
Newfoundland
coast
through
a
night that presented almost every
danger -to aviators. The fliers said
that for more than one hour dur-
ing the night they had
flown
blindly, not knowing where they
were or in which direction they
were heading.
Directed By Radio.
The airmen were finally directed
by radio to the landing field here.
After circling the field for consid-
erable time they asked that a plane
be sent up to guide them down.
This was done and the Southern
Cross glided safely onto the field.
The four aviators were in good
condition and. although disap-
pointed in not being able to reach
their goal, said they were de-
termined to finish their flight to
New York'.
' Captain Kingsford-Smith and his
companions made their
landing
where Harry Hawker and Com-
mander Grieve hopped off in their
first attempt at a trans-Atlantic
flight.
Eleven years after
the
epochal atte ipt of the British
aces'and the first Atlantic crossing
of Alcock and Brown, the Aus-
tralian fliers had beaten the record
of bad fortune that overtook every
previous attempt at a westward
crossing except that of the Bremen.
Praise For Wireless.
After landing Captain
Charles
Kint.'-ford-Smith, m charge of the
Southern Cross, said the plane
would never have reached Harbor
Grace but for the "wonderful radio
wireless." He said the plane would
have had-to fly about waiting for
the visibility to improve if it had
not been for the means of commun-
ication which permitted the plane
to seek aid from the radio stations
here. With but a few hours' gaso-
line supply in the tanks, the cap-
tain would not chance a guess at
what might have happened.
Kingsford-Smith said: "But for
the wonderful radio wireless we
would never have got out of the
fog."The plane appealed to land sta-
tions for guidance and was directed
to the field here. Led by a plane
sent up from the Harbor Grace fly-
ing field. th° Southern Cross landed
easily at 5:57 a. m.. eastern standard
time, or 8:27 a. m., Newfoundland
daylight savL-g time.
petition, crackixig when he
parently had his match won.
_
ap~
_^
Rirth«
UULUO
S1STMJU*— Mr. and Mrs Clare, Mary
Bedford. 3 a ; June P. » irlrl.
CLAHK—Mr *ad Mrs Bonal T_ OH-
lian Dorcas Ebrr*). Uncora; June II, *
p°-
THE roLMwrso «cfissss TO WED of damage done to the roads and
•hare b«a issned ta coaarty coon:
j^e lack of sufficient water storage
needed to carry this year's crop
Ace
38
»«•••
21
Havelock made the appropriation
for this year, the total would not be
less than it was for 1929. Now il
Lincoln extends its boundaries I can
only say that the amount appropri-
ated must b« all that is spent there.
This wQl probablv mean shutting
off the street lights before the end
of the year, and other economies
practiced, to make up the difference
between the budget and the money
actually available,"
Sees Water Department Shortage.
The other members of the council,
except Mr. Schroeder agreed with
the mayor. Schroeder pointed out
that there would immediatelv be a
shortage in the Havelcck water de-
partment receipts after annexation.
As soon as annexation takes place,
he declared, the water rate will de-
crease from 25 cents per 1.000 gal-
lons to the Lincoln rate of 35 cents.
Commissioner Poster pointed out
that to give Havelock the same pro-
tection Lincoln now has will cost
his department no less than $10.000
a year. This would be divided m
$7,000 Tor foremen and the balance
for police. This cannot be done on
the appropriation made by the
We have seen
how the
right
heel furnishes
your contact and
anchorage dur-
ing your back
swing, so now
iefs see what
the left leg does.
It does virtually
nothing
during
the back swing.
As your upper
body tunts your
left knee falls
over toward the
right and the
heel naturally
lifts slightly, the
toe holding onto
the ground solely to enable you to
keep your balance- Now. from that
wound-up position at the top. start
forward— first— with hands and
arms all the time, however, main-
taining that solid anchorage of light
heel and ground. This you keep all
tie way forward and until the club-
head goes into the ball At that in-
stant—and never before—your an-
chorage releases and passes rapidly
to the left leg and foot, but m that
same fractional speck of time the
ball has been dispatched. Your left
foot instantly anchors against a
similar but much faster, pivoting
action to the left, which results from
the arms reaching through after the
ball The head stays still, so that
you find yourself, at the finish an-
chored against your left leg.
AB K
Vermas cf 3 0
Dewey c
3 P
Park 2b
2
Orth ss
3
How'd 3b 3
Brown rf
2
Wied Ib
2
Winters If 1
»*ones p
2
n
n UIHorn s?
2
7
OIWlgiE 2b 3
0 "IH. Htrr rf 3
0 2'!Goudle Ib 3
0 0|White p
3
0 OlSh'fer 3b 3
5 o|Weyand c 3
0 o;c. Hgr If 2
0 l|H. Bell cf 2
AB H O A
Totals
21 6 12 5 j Totals
4 7 15 7
Board of Education
0 2 0 1 0—3
McGrews
32 1 1 x—9
Runs—Orth. Howland. winters. Horn 2,
Wigg 3. H. Hergenrader. Goudlc. Shaf-
fer. C. HergenrMer. Errors—Park 2, Otn
2 Howland. Wied. Horn. Two-base hit—
Rowland. C. Eergenrader. Wigg. Stolen
base—Winters. Wigg. Shaffer 2. Base on
balls—Off white 1, off Jones 2. Struck
out—By White 6. by Jones 6. Hit by
pitcher—By White (Park), empires—Hel-
ser and libsock.
Lincoln Telephones
City off Lincoln.
AB H O A!
AB H O A
Conn'rs 3b 1 0*1 OITowle ss 3 1 0 0
Datghy Ib 4 I 3 0|Rea c
2 1 4 0
Mills ss
3 0 1 O'Mstrs p
1 0 1 3
Stopsn 2b 3 2 t OjFeast-r Ib 2 1 S O
Herzog p 3 0
Smith c
4 1
Brndlo If
1 2jwar'r 2b 2 0 2
7 1'Brink If 2 0 1
Edited by OREOO
HASTINGS CITY MEET.
A triple tie for medal honors fea-
tured the opening of the Hastings!
Junior Chamber W Commerce cltyl
tournament. R. E Foot, J. Ouder- ]
kirk and Coal Whisinand turned in
35s for the 9-hole qualifying round.
BREAKS STERLING RECORD.
Jay Closman of the Sidney Coun-
trv club smashed the Sterling, Colo.
Country club course record Sunday
with a 68, but it wasn't enough to|
Eive his team a win in the inter-1
city match.
Sterling copped the]
event. 42-12.
LANCE WINS MATCH.
Mart Lange went into the third
round in the second flight of the
senior
tourney at Pioneers club
Tuesday when
he defeated Donj
McBride, 4 and 3.
'
Fred Kissler won a first round,,
first flight match in the Junior
tourney, defeating E. A. Schaff, 3>
and 2.
HAPPY HOLLOW MEET.
Information received at the Lin~|
coin clubs lists the Happy Hollow,
club open day for women golfers
as July 1.
ANTELOPE WOMEN'S TOURNEY.
Five women have qualified for.
the women's open tourney at Ante-*
lope club. Early qualifiers:
1
Mrs. O. B. McCracken, 45-47—92.]
Mrs. C. M. Thusen, 47-44—91.
Mrs.
Don Berry, 54-64—118.
Mrs.
Kos, 57-57—114.
Mrs. Batsford, 47-51—98.
CREWS ON MARK
ROW ON HUDSOI
Oarsmen Await Sigm
To Compete in Classic
On Eastern Course.
BY TED VOSBURGH.
POUGHKEEPSIE. N. Y., June 2l
—(&)—Nine
of the most evenlj
matched varsity crews in the 35|
year history of the Intercollegiat
Rowing association regatta werj
primed today for the biggest sportl
ing spectacle of the college year
On the broad expanses of t
Hudson river tomorrow, the pick
young heavyweight manhood of two
far western universities, one fronj
middle west and six from the easl
•will fight it out in the four-mill
feature battle of a regatta thai
brings into action a record-breaking
total of 23 eight-oared crews.
Dopesters Can Only Guess.
With the big event just one
i
away, the assembled experts, and
even the coaches whose business ifl
is to knov, were certain of nothing
except that the struggle would not]
end in a foul. When asked to piclf
the probable winner most of their
started
by naming Washington!
made a couple of false starts anf
then mentioned Columbia, Navy and
California, winding up with the
phatic statement that Syracuse.l
Cornell, M.' I. T., Wisconsin apdl
Pennsylvania cannot be figured
of the running, which makes it
about unanimous.
If there is a favorite, It is
doubtedly not the defending cham-1
pions, Columbia, but the towering'
eight from the University of Wash
ington. which has come up to thJ
climatic event with two victorie
and no defeats on its record.
Confidence In Husky Camp.
In fact, there is some disposition
among loyal Washington alumni tc
declare that the boys from Seattlel
may carry not only the varsityj
event, but the junior varsity ana
freshman races as well, thereby per-1
forming the unprecedented feat of|
sweeping the river in three eight
oared events. None of the Husk
eights has vet been beaten and,
a result, all three are among the!
favorites.
I
But history records that such!
hard-rowing crews as the Navy and!
Columbia and California have been]
able on occasion to take the measure j
of the tall man from Seattle and]
they will be out to do it again. I
These four are the colleges that!
have monopolized varsity honors on ]
the Hudson ever since the war, andj
if any of the other five contenders!
comes through, the result will be-an]
upset of the most sensational kind.
Of the "big four," none is better
equipped physically than Washlng-l
ton, whose aerage altitude is 6 feet]
3 inches and whose weight is 179. f
The Huskies constitute the tallest]
crew on the river and probably tbej
lofties that ever was seen here.
o i
0 0 .Miller rf
2 1
Orcr'h cf 3 2 0 O'Luedkc cf 1 0 I B
Gere rf
3 0 0 l|Flnncy 3b 2 0 1 0
1
Totals
26 7 15 41 Totals
17 4 IS 4
Telephones
0 0 8 3 0—11
City
0 0 0 1 1 — 2
Runs—Connors. Datishcrtv. Mill*. Siaip-
•ton . Hcrzop. Brendle 2. Overcash 2. Gere.
Errors—Daucheny. Smith 2. Brendle, Bea.
reasler Warner. Brink. Miller. Ftaacy 2.
Home run—Sirnp«on.
Three-base
hit—
Orercash. Two-base hit—Simpson.
Over-
cash, Fcaster. Base on balls—Off
Masters
5. Struck out—By Hcrzoc 7. by Masters 4
Hit by
pitcher—By
Hcnos
(Mastere.
IwitKc): by Masters (Herzo:, Simpson I.
Stolen basr—Connors. Smith.
Fra'tcr.
Lnedtke Umpires—P. CUsirom and Bor-
through to harvest.
Reds Plan Try At
}
Night KascbaUl
CINCINNATI. O., Jnnc 1Z—\
fA. P.)—The Cincinnati R*ds
vifl
vj*T7p
the
CTJKTICTICC of
Iplayinjr nicM baseball President
Weil will hare a lighting systftn
.Installed at Pcoria, lit, the
Reds' farm, and the !*•*» wul
play an exhibition sanw. there
the aigM of July 39.
HIGH FOOT SHOWS
FAST SET HEELS
CHICAGO. June 25-^P)—Rail-
birds again were predicting big
things today for High Foot, ics:-
peramentel three - year - old colt
! sporting the peach and green colors
jof the Valley Lake stable.
The colt, which made such a dis-
appointing showing in the Ken-
lucky Derby, brought new cheer to
his supisorters yesterday by win-
ning the HibbanJ Handicap at
Washington Park and tying the
mile record of 1:37 2-5 as he did
so. It was the first good race he had
run since he raced so impressively
at New Orleans and the rallbirds
believe he is back in form to stay.
Hickey Cracks Down
On Pair of Rowdies
CHICAGO. June 25—W>—Harold
WarKiJer. shortstop, and Charles
Dorman. outfielder, both with the
Indianapolis club, have been jn-
defirjitely. su_q5crided by Thomas .7.
Hickey. president of the American
association.
The
players
were
charTrefl wjth inciting a disturbance
during ihe Kansas City-Indian-
apolis game at Kansas City Monday
sax! using abusive language *o Um-
pire
George
Johnston.
Umpire
| Johnston, in his report 'o Pre^d^nt
I Hickey, recommended the suspen-
ISOB,
.
- ^.^.Jk.
/CROST
NET
Lincoln -women tennis players, who havj
betn shoeing a line brand of the court!
sport this reason, -will be represented ml
the Mid-west tournament at Omaha next I
•xeck. Amore the capital city entries -rut]
be Cora Malder. 1929 Lincoln single chaai-l
pion. Marlon McClaren. former Lincoln!
hlsn champion. Roth Murray mod Louisol
Kiiehl. The name of Virginia Woolfollcl
I txwiblT may br added to tils rroup.
I
j
In the intercity matches this season J
the -s-ojnm hare betn particolartv sue-1
eessful- At the Omaha Temit* dob. M«-l
*a;rt Ward JWIler and RutS Murray camel
I ihroucb, -Kith factories. Warn «» Cnnaaa.
; Tennis club Inrtdrd the capital city «.
Jort3ilcht. *-E^« l^&siJ"C TCxwJiJ Gcl'stwi An* 1
jta Carrej-. former stale woman's cham-J
pjtm. and RBtt Murray turned haci Mi«.l
An Setibner. The tiro -rtcMrrte* in tbf 1
latvr matca eventually proved the point r
mat dfdded the play in favor of thd
Lincoln dub.
Ccnrortinz )n the
,
mrnt, ttaeoln »oarn trill be arnlwa fartl
cTmprtJtlon
The rosl/er of comprtitonl
ulrcadv includes Mar Cuervost of W)chi-|
1n. th" Mtarori valjrr and Kansas Ktato I
•uotnrn's t'-nnh champion. Oth*r cntnnl
include Mrs, W. B Millnrd. former ttatol
and Omaha champion; Anita Currey. for-J
m«r Omaha Tennis club title holder. Alice]
K"»gh. 5S-7C*r-old Omaha phraom.
BATTET WINS NET HATCH.
.
•Walker BattT ir*nt into the third rcronoj
of th» Wncoln Tennis tlub h»nfl>c»p tour-T
namewt TueRflsT uhra h» drfeawa
Haurt, 6-3. «-4
L*4* r'TOH'-s
.
S-cnnd rowd—WaltT Satt'T noil
Jrrnn 1, H»wl -C'. f>-7. «-«, Mont* Mrvpr I
'JTj»rit -rill b* nn '"I
tit tV lrin"Qln T*nnls tlnb Satordav *• 1
•>-ur/fi»T Th» Urnra*v is f"p*n 'o all otr,-
M«; combitiat'OTit anfl *K1 i*
up" JOT the city an a f t»t«
•5»rH' mtrift ntlufl" Pa*l
j->hi ward. Frrd ArtMnJ
Jtctsftae. Art Ho«z an<3 Joe
sorth and Georce Oobscm, Berole
tea aaa Haga Beta.
NEWSPAPER!
THE LINCOLN STAR— WEDNESDAY, JUNE 25, 1930.
THIRTEEN
QotKam C^ars Conjure Scheme Hang Ban On Foul Racket
New Yorkers Fear Low
Bloiv Nuisance Threat
BIG BILL VICTOR
LN TENNIS TILT
Tilden Turns Back Young
To Life of Ring Qame\ *"%££££*
BY DAVIS J. WALSH.
NEW YORK, June 25—Perhaps the next large gentle-
man who offers to do a Bonnie Annie Laurie in front of the
customers here and "lay him down an' die."' may hear the'
clock strike 10 while he lies there, so pitifully still, so
pathetic, so inert. This is cited as a possibility. It will be an i
actuality, if the New York commission's preliminary tests of
a new foul device are sustained under the fire of practical
experience.
there will be no foul punches recognized in New York; only decisive victory
knockdowns, knockouts and fadeouts, these being named ! ^T^afje
strictly in the reverse order of their dramatic requirements, j of the Briusii championships.
BELL BOWS TO COCHET.
Wimbledon, England. June 25—
Henri Cochet of France, the de-
fending champion in the men's
singles, today was forced to fire
exciting sets to defeat an Amer-
ican rival. Berkeley Ben of Aus-
tin, Texas, in the British cham-
pionships. The scores were 6-2,
6-2, 5-7, 4-6, S-L
WTMBLZDON, Bag., June 25—
T- .
, .
, ,. ., ,
-
, , ,
, Big Bill Tilden, veteran ace of the
It Tfte new device is definitely adopted here, American tennis forces, scored a
over his youthful
Life of Boxing: Threatened.
This drastic action Trill be taken,
if and when it proves practicable,
as a curb upon the epidemic of
million-dollar fouls that is threat-
ening the life of bo:ong, here and
elsewhere.
Another item that may be taken j
as considerably more than a possi- j
bihty concerns the fact that the j
large gentleman in question is not
likely to be Primo Camera. He
probably groveled himself into the '
big money detachment in Philadel- i
the other night when George |
Godfrey struck himself out in the '
fifth round, but
Pnmo, it seems, i
•sill gnpe not, neither will he grov-
el for local appreciation.
Primo Stfll Banned.
They say Camera will not hare
the bars lifted in New York until
he is squared away with the Cali-
fornia commission, which may or
may not be shortly after the lioa
and the lamb become bedfellows.
Anyhow, they don t intend "Even
M Listen to TTim Here" Unless Call- i
| Money Back If Foul
|
Ends Kaysee Bout
i
KANSAS
CITT, Mo., June
25—(rf=3—Apropos the epidemic of
i unsatisfactory endings in
fight
! circles, "fool checks" will be
1 issued for the heavyweight bat-
tle between Babe Hunt, Ponca
, City,
OkUu, and Al Friedman,
Boston, here July 9.
1
"If
a
fishier,"
says Gabe
1 Kaufman, promoter, "wins on a
J low blow, intentional or otber-
• wise, the
cash customers wQI
I find solace at the box office."
JEFFS PULLING
AHEAD IN RACE
Gregory Mer.gtn, youthful star of
Newark. N- J.. carried the Stars
and Stripes further to glory m the j
• early third round matches of the j
i Wimbledon tennis championships
1 by defeating the flashy Japanese
player, R. Miin, in straight sets,
6-4, 6-3, 6-2.
J
Both played from the base-line
I hi the firss set, which "was a nip- .
I and-tuck affair until almost the '
i last stroke. The young American
j hailed here as William T. TUden's
j successor, showed a magnificent ,
j all-around game in the second set,
! overwhelming his stubborn oppo-
nent, with marvelous recoveries and
attacks.
George Martin Lort, Jr., of Chi-
[ cago, continued his brilliant; ad-
! vance by defeating Harry O. Eor-
Tnan of Australia, 7-5, 6-3, 6-3, in j
the third round of. the men's
singles.
/
Qneen Helen Easy Victor.
Continuing her sweeping advance
i in quest of a fourth successive
1 Wimbledon crown, Helen
Wills
jo jLosien. oj nun xrcic uiiicas w
H.
over the ^Generals. 'The
anT a YavorabS report bv them win j *> complete then- drive to the Gen-1
mSrf Se adoptiST of a no-foul ends? cam£ whereas the. Jeffs]
rule here. This would mean that mad«Lthe **& to Norton,, via the I
the old
swashbuckling
phrase, j ^^fJJ^i and steppeu on tne|
'evervthxng goes," would come back i
*•*?*. - \a i.
successfully
of Prance,
6-0, 5-3, 6-2,
rcti A.* pvaiMns w^1^' ny^
_ Mrs. Phoebe Watson. Trtio starred fa
TICIOTT in ise Wightsian. ccp
J-& tix United States, has been
MIRACLES OF SPORT.
BY ROBERT EUGKEN.
NEBRASKANSIN
PLAY FOR TITLE "i
Three Omaha Golfers In I
Championship Flight
Sippi Tourney.
MAJOR.
LEAGUE
NATIONAL LEAGUE.
rr
Cardinal],
151.
Rum batitd In—Klein. Polllln, 73.
Hlti—Tcrrr. GLaoU. iW,
Doublrs—Frixb, Cardinali,
S,
TriplM—CT»yl*r. Cnt». 11
Home
runs—WU»n.
CcM;
B trier.
BROWN QCAIJFIES.
Jo* Brown, former Lincoln city f«II
rhaaaJan. 1> smonr tiost
qnmUfyini
for the Trans-MUiittippl cnampJotishlp
play.
Joe had a ~9 for the Monday
round and came In Tondar with the
77 necessary t« land In the top flight.
He l« playia; under the colors of Ei-
celaior Sprmr*. Mo.
Stolen b»»e»—Cojlrr. Cnbi, 15.
AMERICAN LE*Gt"E.
Battlnr—Stmmont. Itthleilei. .402.
Runs—Rntis. Tankers. 76.
Bout tutted In—Gehrir, rjuikt*». 7t-
Htts—Hodapp. Indians. M.
Doubles—Gchrinitr, MeManu,
21.
TriplM—Comb*. Yankees, 11.
Home mn«—Kuth, Vanke**. -J.
'
Stolen bates—Biee. Senators, 12.
COLORADO
SPRINGS.
Colo.
June 25-Three Omaha players COUNTY TITLE AT
were among the field of competitors '
in the championship flight of the
annual Trans-Mississippi golf tour-
nament which got under way at the
Broadmoor club today.
The three Omaha contenders
were Rodney Bliss, jr. Nebraska in-
terscholastic champion; Perry Gar-
ver. another Nebraska prep player:
Walter Chadwell, Karl Bock of the
Omaha Field club also qualified for
the title bracket but was forced to
withdraw because of the pressure of
business. Bock shot a 155 for the 36
holes.
Larry Bromfield of Denver won
the medal honors with a 144 card.
Scores of 156 or better were neces-
STAKE THURSDAY
The Lancaster county American
Legion junior baseball champion-
ship will be decided Thursday at 3
p. m., when Strauch Kandy Kids
meet tne Umberger Wildcats st
Landis Field.
The Kandy Kids beat the Eokuia
Terriers of University Place Tues-
day on the Twenty-seventh and A
streets diamond, 18-6. The Have-
lock Lion Cubs forfeited to the
TJmberger Wildcats when it was
discovered five ineligible players
were included on the Shoptown
sary for the 32 places in the first squad. The ineligibles were over the
round of match play.
age limit. Score of the Kan
First Kamid
age
Terriers game:
Sandy Kids-
L. D. 3ro=lield. De=vcr (144), vs. Bob Kandy Kids 8 0 0 2 2 4 3-^-18 11 4
oallile, IT , Kansas Cltv (151).
*
Terriers
0 0 5 1 0 0 0 — 6
47
T. -a «.««„ v.,™,
T, „«> „
Kneger, Woods and Bork; Talbot
of
,
.
_Z_,~r,-iTMr -VIP i 1-uc -WU^LO i-vn-mg-
^— entered -Bi:h SJ=y McXane Qodfree.
lllegal piinctes in COmDUZing uie 1
"~
> ~»r -Them ^a« ^aken a serious tcra and
points after a round, but DO ilie-
>orton Defense Cracks.
< a specialist has beec called •-
gal nunch would end the fight— Norton's defense broke down in
unless the receiver refused to arise, the first tr -o innings, the Jeffs,
take up his dogs and fight.
! cashing m to the extent of twoj
1 tallies in the second frame anrj as
all L>uL the fourth i nimri( [ J. C. Gregory or tn» "aT-g-T^fr t*A3t
Ccallf3. Majtag. Ne's^oc. la. (H9>, TS.
Perrr Garrtr. Omaha
(154)
Ja=ss Masloc, St. Louis '14S), vs. Ear!
Berrrhin, Sap-jlpa, ot-a (15Zi.
Gilbert Carter. Kansas C.ty <150),
vs.
Talwr Oberj. Denver (1SS>
.
Waljer Croats, Dezrer, (145), TS. 2od-
1 cey BiiES, Oraaha (!52i.
1
?. W. Dold, Wichito, (I3fl), vs. H. C
Daslev. Cijevenae, Wyo, 1154).
h'a:haa Gnzes. Denver. (It9>, TS, C,
j 2- Poler, Sal; Lake City (153).
Fraat J. Eag^ih, Kansas C:rr (151),
vs. Mortori Beseiic-.. Kansas dty'dss).
1
Oe=5ar Miller. Des Mo^ts (146).
TS.
David Career. Kansas Cltv (151).
Hcoen McCrarr. D.S Mo^es (ISO), vs.
V. V. Roir-. Denver <:$*!
2r=irsori Care—e. Jr. Huichinsoru Has.
(150), TS. Sen GoocTtn, St Lcrais (154)
K. C. Carpenter. Denver (15H, T s.
Wafcer Ciad-s-eJl. Ctoiaha (icfi.
George Johiuinn. T-Xsa. (14S>. TS. CL-s-
ter Jones. La-rrence. Sas. (IS).
Creel. ?u-bj) (150). TS Harrj
er. Coloraca Sprinss (153).
and Stevents.
O. 0 GEES. Denver (151). vs. Joe :
Szce^ior Springs, Mo. ,153).
O^ner >Te5rasiia scores include*
31s^l» Tcnixg, O=aha, 83-SS—168.
Jack H=5tes? Cfa?n?. 80-77—157.
WARNING PASSED
OUT BY VORfflES
i
Boxing Head Declines To
, Stand for Foul Racket
In Omaha Battle.
1
OMAHA, Neb-, June 25— When
i Pnino Camera
meets
Bearcat
Wright in a ID-round bout here the
'rang under strict instructions from
Boxing Commissioner Vorhies 'in
i regard to a f ouL Wright also will
be thoroughly warned.
- Following the fight at Philadel-
CUBS TUNING UP
TAKE ON ROBINS
State League Scores.
COAST LOOP STAR
At
Bruins Start Important
Series With Leaders
At Chicago Park.
The league-leading Brooklyn:
. _ .. w
_.^ „_ ?
0 0 0 0 .
,-B-"
1 1 0 0)
Tl
0
At St. PrcL
-, - 3 Toleco
0 5 1 2 2 0 0 0 0—10 21
; _ ,st. ?aai
_o o o o o i o o o— i z
34 S =7 14 • ^«=ach s^i. Z. Salti; Beta,
GROGAN LOSER IN
TTTPTT T TATr< T> A TBTTT -p P11^ Monday night, when the giant
A J-Ln.xl-dull> \j 15A J. 1 Utli Italian won on a foul from George
IN-EW TORK. June 25-Tony Can- ^°^?' •*«;. "°% *** p^21 ^
zoneri advanced a st*3 in his cam-' ^o^r6? ^d .to o£iS^ and was on
- -
- --
^^
*^= -"«"' *" victory when the negro
ouled him twice. Box-
oner Ira
"Vorhies
he would issue a drastic
warning to both, fighters that they
would receive no
ended in a fouL
Vorhies Gives
"I will personally warn both Car-
nera and Wright that if either :
BOUGHT BY GUKT^IS^^^^^^^^^^J^ I
NEW YORK, June 25-^-The i ^^14 ^ ^ £ ?TF S^o^
Ne~ Tor_k Giants_today announced -^ IQ-TO^Q batCeTThe~Ve—'^ork £tated he
w<
tt
Angels Advance In
i loses on a fo
I pay and -sill be
receive no
suspended," said
•rar
6-3, 6-3. 3-6. "S-4.
SSeen Bennert "KruitirigstEn, 2ng-
fmil save bcoong from
.AND1S DECREE
TAKEN TO COURT
4-3 in the islanders' fevor up to the i Vr^eu' ai Frarre in~sifaiga; se^,* cs^
-nr.r'h T^tigji Manager TTp-| Brofcaw i cl'ied ^ scow's "' 8-t s-3.
_MLpresra« as a pinch-ja^^f^L ^E*";2!*111
starting tomorrow with the Chi- I
cago Cubs, who have distnrfaed I
Ruling In Bennett Case
Defied By Owners of
Milwaukee Club.
--
&
I-^«-;>JT-SJ^W WA m jaa .
_ a safe blOW Which i SUzabetn = van,
opened the gate to a five-run rally 2=#*=
"
"
Cabs land FarrelL
CHICAGO, Jane 25-«=5—Man-
ager Joe McCarthy breathed easier
i today, ss Eddie "Doc" ParreU joined
) the Bruin reserves.
Since jaomsby -injured nis ankle,
CHICAGO, June 25—Cfi»'—Besort i Hay 30. the Cubs have been going ,
TO court action bv the Milwaukee along- withont one reserve infield- '
-Mnencan association club in a i er. Lester BeH, and he is stiU both- ,
player transfer dispute with Kene- ' ered by a sore arm. McCarthy at-
saw Mountain Landis. commissioner • tempted to buy one before" the '
of orearused baseball, todar was re- June 15 limit but failed.
sarded as a definite indication that
.rarrell. who can play any infield
class AA minors were rjiarm-np- to .position well, cainejp the CUBS via ,
establish, an independent organiza- , the waiver route, jae joined then '
uon.
"
today.
A meeting: of the class AA minors, j
including the American assocation.
_.
°
_
_
.
T - .
STANDINGS
OF THE
CLUBS.
rf ,
,
»
i v»i_«^^ii,
i^«iB.tfcUi,
«*-*-e.-""'i
-k——- —
series is noc to be tne start of the
piaj—G-SSSOU M> carcpaen to 2ar=sd.
Fairbsry.
A3 H O A)
Pacific and International leagues, is
to be held here August 5 and MH-
CHICAGO. June
23— MV-The I?
ladies have just ?-bout forced Wil-
waukee's revolt has tended
to iiara Teecfc. president of the Cubs,
strengthen reports that they are cc- ; to^toss ap his hands.
ing to fight renewal of the draft
It is a gi-eat hobby of winlam
ent and form a triple en- ; Wrigley. jr.. owner of the Cubs, to
have ac least one ladies day a week
Browns' Boss In It.
i at Wrigley field.
The rush for
The dispute between Milwaukee pcfc^s «sd. entrance to the park,
and Commissioner T^nrfis involves, nowever. became so great
tnas
Fred Bennett. Milwaukee outfielder, i Vesck, after a lot of thought. fin-
Phil Bail, owner of the St. Locus
Browns and part owner of the iH-
waukee club" sent Bennett to the
American association club on a two-
AMERICAjLEAGrz.
G
W
Philadelphia
..........
S3
jWasita^toa
...........
51
'
* . . . . . . . . . . . . g
;~". ........ S
st. Losis
.............
ss
..............
XATIO.VAI.
long-predlcted Brooklyn slump,
Blair and Wilson of the Cubs'
lethal row, along with Stephenson
anri, Grimm, each got two hits yes-
terday and the under-stung person,
Hark WEson. who has cracked out
22 homers thig season, may again
lead fr"s teammates in an undoing
attack.
Benton Sobdnes Giants.
Handsome Larry Benzon subdued
! his former teammaies, the Giants,
_.... 4 to 1. The Cincinnati red-head
teased along the New Yorkers by
?ct, allowing them 11 hits, but when
•??f i it came to transforming three into i
"3| runs, Mr. Benton was fearfully.
^453 firm aai eieht Giants died on the
-«5, baes.
"
I
•JSl j Winning their third straight from '
.'3351 Cleveland, 7 to 0, the Senators i.,^^^
f gained on the column-toppirLg Atfa- i sn=s—3a=-t
P_ \ leticE. HadZey gave tli Tndiai«
only Sve bingles.
Wallie Berger tied Wilson for the
'Sase—Soriolt 7, Grand TslBTir' 9. Base
on baHs—02 Consy 4. all Jx>ng l_ sciict
00—37 Coney 4, by long 5. =ii 07 jsicoer
—~Sj Cms? CHav; by Long rcarz?3a3).j
passed feafi—•arnTOia-n. Uzrpire—Darjaa- j
Tide—1:13.
At Milirackee.
0 0 0 1 0 1 3 0 0—5 14 0
i 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0—3 S 2
Mer-rr and T5io=:?so=; Sofaer;-
3cri4 gr*
S^I^e!^J?S!_!^,5_Su^ ' S°^? » be one time when Carnera
At Norton.
At TT">»»« Citr.
|I=dia=3polis
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1—1 2 =
jSaasas CSt-
1 0 3 1 0 3 0 0 x—S 12 0
'
-> S?g7r~ Fetie and Sayfier.
fTMuascofonrai as
6agUe Season
Texas League.
Wichita. PaHs, "7-!: Hczstoc. 1-13.
Shrereport. 8: Beannnr'. 3.
Dallas. 0; Waco. 5.
to beat his man in order
are going to fight
this out in the ring, and may the
best man win."
/
Ticket sales for the show have
passed the 88,000 mark which is a
certain indication
of a record
house for this great fight
Xorton.
A3 H O A
Totals
Stein
31 3 27 4.SCSS
I
1 3=tler ss 4
1 C. 5-ei; ci 4
0 aabtise If 3
1 Toiler 3b 3
CSarc'n rf 4
li?aal e
3
OBe-'=t 2b 1
0 F. Sole 2b 3
OHarr-3 23 2
p
3
0 3 1
ENJOY YOUR
HOLIDAY
0 7
0 0
0 O
3 1
C
0
1 3
31 S 17 11
is Sta.
. 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0—4
.S 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0—3
=• 2.
rr
35
22 =
.507
.593
.532
.
,*33 ; wnen he noasered off fTaiiahfin
lead in Natasnal league ctrcoiiers' 2. ?. siae. DoaKe
pasteboards several days ahead of
time. Bui. instead. Wrigley field
>-^ tro rushes a —eek—one to get
Brookl^s
Chirac
^cr Tort ....
Ss. ix^ris
G
=3
53
SP
30
SS
ss
32
=0
ordered Ban Kthsr to take M-— back,
^ -*i«^ S A^:rTt?S.:eag^1Ci''^ i the farces without tickets each
S^^±Jjfa^^'^?frJ1^; i Friday
With the league-leading
s sr _s 2S^S-^£ tS
.
.
.
.
.
-T^e pass iecoiu is expecteu u> kOp-
isg with a few gatgkgfi>cis.
J*
?sl
25
27
30 .500
32
.'33
3s
.3S7
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION..
con
srcer. The case
>««.y)u4
_«^ -.jl.J'.-, .»*!*-»
2=res lo Defy Csar
It was the first w=e s"-ce
-as
•*r? ! the
Cardmals overwhelmed the '
;g| Boston Braves. 11 to 3.
" !
K«d Sox and Tigers Drride.
' Sweeney pace-hit around the
sacks to win for Boston. 5 to 4.
.503 over Detroit, but the Tigers evened
the coubieheader fay crabbing tiie '
second, 8 to 7, in 10 innings. Alex-
ander whaled three hits for the
Bengals in the tea-tmer.
Rainswept away Brooklyn at •
, Pittsburgh and Philadelphia. St,
P^ ' Icuis. Kew York and Chicago were ,
•|g idle in ths American plant. Tnes-
1563 day's =ajor leaeue resnlts:
-«3 ,
AHEKICAV LEAGCE.
Ai Bcotoa.
Gallett 3, ?- SISle. Double pla--
ha=er to GaDet » Easser.; F. Sit
Sztler to Harrison: Sargerii to Harrisoa.
Sacrifice hi:—GtSet- El: by plseher—3y
Syin iwe^tl: Base en ssEs —OH Eteia
GLOVE SLINGERS
IN BUFFALO RING
Home Boy Clashes With
Bronx Whirlwind In
15-Rounder.
sat one of his aioitrarr rulra
have been takes to corrrL Bali .„.
thrsate3sd_ to ?a :o «rsrt a year ^
aco whea Loacis sacs free acciUs , "
out of serarai p^ysrs. as a charge .
they had been --———« —- -^— '
duccd aira to -rigid"
e feel that Jtsire Landis sx- '
reeded
in iscTTSssris tie ccr
.
rKaicsi cf resniat:c=s is*
stst
SUFr ALO. N, T_ Jsns 25 — OP) — |
Jirsray Slattery. 3uff ak> speedster. I
holder of the light-hsavyweiEht ]
r Jiaapjcnship so far as tie New j
York state atlilstic crosmissian is i
cosceraexL battles Maxie Hesseo- !
blooia of Harlera in a 15-rosnd )
ttj* in Bisccs- park isre j
.3S3 Deceit
1) 4 S 9 0 3 0 0 0—4
.3wtc=
; 0 S 0 C 4 0 a
C 3 0 C 5 1 I O O 5—8 S 1
3 ; S 3 : B 2 ! ) 1—7 ;j 2
Otlab=a C.1J
.......
SS
...............
$5
...........
S4
Western League.
is Tjot afced as a threat at h;s ran- i<^r=»
1"!
*
o_
of 3-JTaio a a
Sonthern Association.
Pacific Coast League.
s
Sippi Valley League.
oa (am Kcd S«i 5-4 -rtclw-r «rr
B o . t « »
fver ftndo. t
aa< trrrr ia
SALE
TIRES ont/TUBES
style of rrmirg- has rrjade j£ia the
despair of tie 'fg^it-bad... -fetzats.
a slieit farante to ils'tlw
irrsa Stattsry's aea lires.
prices are knr. ion yet more titaa
for ytwr money.
for Special Soaaer Otxs^^
Offer OB Goorfyear DocM«
X«w Heary
Sfaadard A
«o6S
lifetime
Gucranteed
Superior to many high-prked makes. Values
only the largest uraHtyr can offer
FULL OVERSIZE
BALLOONS
29x4.40
-S5.-55
30x4.50
56.35
28x4.75
S7.55
30x5.00
£3.15
31x5.25
S9.75
TRUCK TIRES
Snx-5— 8 pi" §19.45
02x6—10 pT~ §34.10
BIG OVERSIZE
CORDS
30x3^2
54.70
02x4
53.25
Pairfnl Motmiinf—-Xo Chai^t
Tubes also tow priced
USED T1R3
BARGAIN'S
Kinsey Tire Co.
TIRE REPAJBS
1400 M.
B6784
OPEN DAT AND NIGHT
4
JEWS PA PER
IFWSPAPFJ
FOURTEEN
THE LINCOLN STAR—WEDNESDAY, JUNE 25,1930.
KET OUOTATIONS
GRAIN MARKETS.
By the Associated Press.
CHICAGO. 111., June 25
It was nip and tuc< today between Ira-
dltlcns that urged speculatvle buying of
wheat and corn at thl» time, whereas
current 'economic
developments
tended
toward an opposite procedure. Taken us
s whole, tradition won for at least the
NEW YORK STOCK MARKET.
By the Associated Press.
,
NEW YORK. June 25
The bear faction seemed bent on de-
stroying the resistance points of last No-
vember in today's ttock market, but met
with scant success, save la the rail group,
and
some
of
the
tant Industries
Urn- being as to wheat, but not so as to »"u
8U"":
ul •ur •«•>«"«•" "«"••"»..
corn. Throughout the day. wheat prices ] closed a little higher. While tome bank-
averaged
higher, notwithstanding much crs juere of the opinion that speculative
apprehension
expressed regarding
grain
storage
facilities
southwest
becoming
overcrowded 'owing
to hartest progress
and relative lack of export demand.
Wheat closed nervous, Ji to 3.iC a bushel
higher than yesterday's finish.
July. 88'-»
c; December.
97 '"k rn "• c
Corn"closed.',» to %c off.
July. 74%'Ti'
pessimism was being carried to extremes
unjustified by actual conditions, banking
Interests did not offer any aggressive op-
position to the bear:.
Bears, however, found the market at
least temporarily oversold, and during a
shoit lived rally in the eany hours of
74\c; September,
73V«fe.ViC;
December, i trading, a long list of shares moveu
68',«ft. '4c.
'|1 lo ';. Furthejmore, specuators for the
Oats ',» to -ic up.
fall had difficulty in bringing out any
Provisions varying from lOc decline to a large volume of selling. Public liquidation
rise of 17c.
Wheat values scored early upturns here
today but not until after the market spas-
modically had once again broken low price
recoros of many years standing. Compar-
ative flrmnes sof Liverpool wheat quota-
tions toUay -Induced considerable buying
here, together with reports of heavy dam-
age to wheat crops in Greece and absence
of rain in North American spring wheat
territory.
Opening at >«c off to Uc up.
Chicago wheat sagged a Httel more, and
then, advanced all around. Corn was eas-
ier, opening unchanged to 'Uc lower, and
subsequently keeping near to the initial
figures.
Oats were firm.
dined downward.
Provisions in-
At noon, whea't was 'i-'ic net higher,
and corn ',-i-lc down.
Enough scattere Iselling from discour-
aged holders and from other sources at
the outset today proved sufficient to bring
about « fresh
repetition
of
downward
swings "of the wheat market to below pre-
vious bottom levels since 1914. The new
setbacks were of only fractional extent.
however, incentives to obtain profits by
speculative ventures on the selling side of
the market being greatly reduced by the
fact that farmers In various domestic win-
ter wheat sections were reported as re-
ceiving but 59c a bushel for newly har-
vested w"heat.
Moreover, some trans-At-
lantic advices at hand said a constant de-
mand to fill immediate European require-
ments was being looked for abroad.
Helping the wheat market to advance at
times was attention which in various quar-
ters was given to the circumstance that
to^ay was a traditional favorite date to
purchase wheat. The so-called trade cal-
endar, which frequently influences many
operators either to buy or sell in accord-
ance with long-time experience, mentioned
today as one of the times generally re-
garded as auspicious for assuming owner-
ship of wheat rather than disposing of
- such ownership. A fair volume of export
business in North American wheat over-
night was noted. Including some new crop
winter wheat from the United States.
Corn
temporarily
underwent a pro-
nounced break in price today but after-
ward recovered nearly In full when wheat
values bulged.
The transient downturn
was associated with selling based on talk
that high prices on corn as compared with
other cereals could not
be maintained,
barring a calamity to the new corn crop
ArrivaU of corn in Chicago today totaled
53 cars, against 84 a week ago and 134 at
this time last year.
During the late dealings corn was un-
der renewed selling pressure with the
nearby months selling within a fractfcn
of the inside figures of the season. Dec.
was at a new low.
Weather conditions
generally favorable for the new crop,
with Iowa receiving more < or less moist-
ure
Country- offerings to arrive were
small.
Oats were influenced by the
government weekly report which said the
crop was heading short in some sections.
Rye sold at a new low on the crop for all
deliveries, with '"spreading operations fur-
nishing the bulk of trade.
Provisions averaged lower with scat-
tered liquidation on in July lara.
NEW YOEK BOND REVIEW.
By the Associated Press.
NEW YORK, June 2TI.
Bond dealings on the New York stnci
exchange accelerated today without dis-
turbing price levels which have remained
stationary since the first of the week ex-
I seems well completed! and" such further
genuine liquidation as remains to be done
appears to. be coming from cool-headed
sources.
Trading was dull and highly
professional.
Col. Leonard P. Ayres of the Cleveland
Trust Co., whose statement that the bull
market was committing suicide during the
wild upward movement of 1928, created
something of a sensation, has now ex-
pressed the opinion that the bear market's
life is drawing to u close. He stated that
"an abrupt
and
consequential
upward
movement in stock aid commodity prices
should be well under way by labor day."
While a considerable sector of the Wall
street banking interests agrees with Col-
onel Ayres. several large professional mar-
ket operators remain extremely bearish
over the present outlook, and some bank-
ers seem to be in tactic agreement with
them.
The weekly -steel
trade
reviews
were
somewhat more favorable than expected.
Iron Age said, "an impending general Bus-
mess recovery is sensed by leaders of the
steel industry who have passed through
many cycles of trade expansion and con-
traction."
This publication estimated in-
got production at 64 per cent, only 1 per
cent lower than last week, but indicated
that further curtailment may be expected
during the next few weeks.
Iron Age's
composite price for finished steel showed
a reduction for the first time
in
five
weeks.
A lurther survey of business conditions
by Standard Statistics expressed the be-
lief that. "an early, sustained strengthen-
ing m commodity prices is not probable."
This survey Indicated a seasonal upturn
in business activity in the fall, with pro-
nounced recovery in the early months of
1931.
•
Price movements in the pivotal indus-
trials were narrow.
U. S. Steel sagged
slightly to a new low fo rthe year under
LIVESTOCK MARKETS.
By the Associated Press.
OMAHA. Neb.. June 25
CATTLE—Actlvlty became more general
In the fat cattle market today and another
moderate run of steers, yearlings and heif-
ers sgold on an unevenly higher basis, av-
eraging over yesterday a margin of fully
25c. with many steers especially of the
better grades 50c higher than Monday.
CLOSE—Cattle, 4.800; fed steers, year-
lings and heifers. 25c higher; cows and
bulls, mostly steady; vcalers strong to 50t
higher; stockcrs and feeders scarce; fea
steers and yearlings. S9.00& 10.75: several
loads SlLOOtplMO; weighty steers, til.60;
heifers, s8.25Si9.5fl; bulk beef cows, V5.50W
5.25; bulk all cutters, $3.50^4.50; medium
bulls. S4.50W5.75;
practical top
realers,
$10 00; few to independents up to $11.00:
few' lots stockers. $7.00Q8.25.
Tuesday'* Representative Sales of Cattle.
BEEF STEERS.
Ctllcmia Sac(« •) Frlcef.
(From the Updike Oraln Co, 724-72S Ter-
minal Bids.)
CHICAGO. 111.. June 29
I Open | High I Low I Close | Vent.
No.
21
9
38
22
12
15
40
29
22
11
11
24
13
27
26
7
38
13
14
8
4
5
11
15
8
111
3
11111
AV.
1016
654
673
746
765
739
983
814
1057
897
897
1131
•886
1218
1303
Price
* 7.75
8.00
8.25
8.10
8.50
8.to
8.75
8.85
8.90
9.00
9.10
9.25
9.35
9.45
9.50
No.
20
9
49
10
24
20
36
19
19
33
32
16
21
34
18
AV.
1203
961
945
1100
1079
1330
1378
1180
1218
1206
1075
1141
1234
1524
1490
BEEF STEERS AND HEIFERS.
824
673
728
760
660
1092
1128
697
843
780
1150
1270
1230
1330
,150
240
230
380
340
7.65
8.25
22
8.40
6
8.50
14
8.65
BEEF COWS.
3.50
5
4.00
3
FAT HEIFERS.
8.25
10
8.35
21
8.50
70
BULLS.
5.25
1
5.35
1
5.40
1
5.50
CALVES.
5.00
1 •
6.00
2
6.50
2
7.00
1
7.50
1
685
698
645
865
1063
1096
800
702
741
1230
1050
890
160
440
325
220
150
Price
S 9.65
9.75
9.85
10.00
10.25
10.35
10.50
10.55
10.75
10.85
11.00
11.15
11.35
11.50
11.75
8.85
9.CO
9.25
9.35
5.00
7.00
8.60
8.75
9.10
5.75
7.00
7.50
8.00
8.50
9.00
9.50
' 10.00
Wfecat
July....
Sep
Dec
Corn
July
' Scp
Dec
Oats
88-
»l?i
92-
91*1
97-
96'.i
15-
74*1
13 M-
73 "i
68 3»-
68'i
July
1 35»i
Sep
38'.j-
1
IHiL
85 !J
93%
38s;
75i'4
74
68%
36 'i
3«%
87 'A
91V.
96'i
73 '/i
•mi
67 ?i
,
88%-
88 »;
92V.-
•.•»•
»•.',-
87?.
74-i-
74%
73'.-
73 'k
68'»-
68V.
]
35 •;
36 5»
35 «i
36?>a
88 3i-
88 li
91?.-
91S
97Mi-
98%
74%-
75
73/<
81%
85 '.i
89 Vi
89
73 ',
74%
71%
63 "j I G3T»
DAILY CARLOT RECEIPTS.
(Furnisued by the Updike Grain Co.)
LINCOLN, -Neb.. June 25
CHICAGO—
Today Yest.
Wheat
1"
J*
Corn
52
33
Oats
22
2J
OMAHA—
Wheat
H
0
Corn
!>l
2J
Oats
a
4
KANSAS CITY—
Wheat
91 . 1"
Corn
27
3u
Oats
i
»
6
cept speculative issues.
Prlc» movement throughout the
list
was sluggish.
Fluctuations were small
both in size and number, and about
evenly divided in, the course they too*.
Some of the prime rails, legal issues lor
saving banks, were in demand and higher
while others eased fractionally. Con-
vertible bonds attracted
little attention
and steadied somewhat after yesterdays
slump. Several stock privilege issues nave
been making frequent appearances in rec-
ords for new low prices for- 1930,
de-
pressed by the heavy liquidation in equity
issues for which they are exchangeable.
International Telephone 4lis lost
one
point and Warner Brothers 6s. 54, point
to reach new low prices for the year.
German government Issues were moo
erately accumulated in the foreign group
with little price change. Kreuger and Toll
Warrants 5s were easier. Chinese
Hu
Kuang Railway 5s make a, new low with
a loss of IVa points, both European and
South America governments were dull ana
steady.
United States governments showed lit-
tle response to prevailing low
money
rates. " Sales were few and
Liberty 1st
4>/4 was the only bond registering » gain
in the early sales.
Offering was made today of tne S4.000.-
000 Porto Rico funding bonds, carrying
4\i per cent coupons.
Kansas Citv H?.T.
By tho Associated Press.
KANSAS CITY. June 35
.HAY— 16 cars;
alfalfa. No. 2, SIS.SOQ
OTHER HAY — Unchanged.
152, compared to the November low of 150
American Can reached a new low around
109.
The tail shares remained the chief
weak spot, as the breaking of the price
index for this group beneath the Novem-
ber low yesterday brought in considerable
nervous liquidation.
, Wall street feels, however, that with pos-
sibly a few exceptions, rail dividends are
secure, an dthe attractive jield bases at
which many carrier issues are now selling
is said to be bringing in consderable n-
Union Pacific, Norfolk & Western, Atch-
vestment buying. However, such shares as
ison and Delaware & Hudson lost 3 to 5
points.
North American, Western Union
and International Business Machines also
lost a few points.
• Credit remained extraordinarily abund-
ant, with call money renewing at 2 per
cent for the first time since March. There
Is even some vague talk of a 2 per cent
rediscount rate.
* *
Shares were still under unremitting sell-
ing pressure at the opening of today's
stock market. American Telephone, Amer-
ican Can, Johns Manville, International
Harvester. Eastman Kodak, Chesapeake &
OBio, and United Gas Improvement lost 1
point or more, Westinghouse Electric IVt,
Allied Chemical, Canadian
Pacific,
and
Tobacco B 3%.
U. S. Steel opened un-
Delaware & Hudson, 2Vi, and American
| changed at 152 \~.
i
After absorbing a wave of selling in the
first 20 minutes, however, support" ap-
peared for pivotal shares, and short cover-
Ing turned the trend upward. Some of
the erratic issues rose sharply as bears
sought to cover. Vanadium rose nearly 6
points, and National Biscuit, Westinghouse
Electric, Case * and
Columbian
Carbon
mounted about 2 to 3 points.
During the early selling TJ. S. Steel sank
?i to 152Va, another new low for the year,
and- Amercan- Can sold at 109. also a new
low. Both of these Issues, however, soon
showed gains of around a point. Several
rails sank further Into new low ground
during the early selling. Delaware & Hud-
son extended its loss to 3 points, and
Southern Pacific, Southern Railway. Nor-
folk & Western, the Erie preferred Issues.
Frisco and Missouri Pacific lost a point
or more.
The overnight news was mixed in char-
acter. Reports from the steel trade were
a little more favorable
than
expected.
While crudf oil productoln was reported
as higher last week, there was a sub-
stantial drop in gasoline stocks. Freight
car loadings as reported for the latest
•week showed a drop of over 7,000 cars
from the "previous wek.
Foreign exchanges were steady, with
sterling cables holding at S4.86.
The character of the—trading did not
change to any greaf extent "in the late
afternoon, prices falling when bear pres-
sure was, applied and steadying afterwards
•when selling diminished. The list, in gen-
eral, worked olwer with several of the
pivotal industrials hitting new bottoms
for the movement before showing any re-
cuperative
power.
Atehlson.
American
Telephone, U. S. Steel, American Can sod
Westinghouse Electric rallied from I to 3
points above their low figures in the final
hour.
The close was heavy. Total sales ap-
proximated 3.400,000 shares.
Faster Growth—More Eggs!
\ OOCH'S Best Poollry >e«d» now contain th.
VJ wonderful new Slinrol-ProUa— science'* rrcat-
«Tc*oimit
Ml-ml-It-alia.
at
Gooch Milling & Elerotor Co.
33*.
llncola. 3>ebr.
ATMO
trouraftK ' urn »
»>T
Tlr«t
Vjtoviv
"ATOM!,
7H««-r.
>«*«irtm1 rrodnrtu and other
Cnla Food*.
SEE THE GOOCH FEED DEALER IN YOUR TUWN
HOGS—More moderate receipts combined
with an urgent demand on shipping ac-
counts resulted in a brisk session at levels
strong to 10 to 15c higher than jesterday;
top for the day $8.75.
CLOSE—Hogs: 1400; strong to 10 higher;
top, $8.75 or sorted 220-lb. averages: bulk,
180-280 Ibs averages. S8.50a8.65; weighty
butchers, down to $8.35; packing sows,
$7.50(g7.75; smooth light sows, up to S7-90;
average cost Tuesday, $8.20: weight. 265.
Wednesday's Representative Sales.
Av. Dk. Price | No. AT. Dk. "-* —
No.
37
42
54
65
63
$7.65
8.25
8.60
8.70
8.80
91
44
72
73
309
291
244
223
$7.75
8.55
8.65
8.75
366
396
314
80
259
ISO
M
268 ...
«-»- ue:
950t(1100 Ibs $9.75R-12: comsioa and rae- ;
diam 850 Ibs up J6.75W10.25: fid yearlings i
f-oo medium -430
ft 6.40: vealers (milk ted» -coo-I and choice!
J9.MKM1; medla-n SS.50tr9.50; cnH and;
^common
S€ft8.ri"):
stocker
aad
feeder
steers, sood "and choice, aU -weights _3.30
^20.00: common asd 323cd}o*n £6^*.*? '5
" SHSSP—Receipts
30.000
*icat*; choice •
Tat la-ate weak to lOc lower; oU-ers ISM •
25c lower: best -s-esJcrns S12.43:
sorted natives J32: ImlS aa«*>es $
11.73; cans largely J7fi~.23: j.3**ej>
best
*-mndrw£lt-3t
tat
rwe*
lajabs. Rood and choice 52 Ibs .
FOR SALE AT
Robt. S. Griswold Seed
& Floral Co.
L19 North 10th.
2 Doom North of O.
•R17W.
Kansas CHy Uvertot*.
By the Associated Press.
,
KANSAS C1TT. -JOT* 25.
<*C7n*tri States Uepsitmeat Aj-ricnitore.*
HOGS—S.ecei-Jts 8.OTO: 550 Ibs, *9.S*6»
33 75- S50 to 3,309 Ibs, *f OO-31.M: coja-
•0001 aad medium S50 Ibs. up" $7.25«
fl 50" ?ed yew-line*, tfood and c3xrice, 750
to ?SO K*. J9.56O13.7S; heifers.
zood
sad esojw SSO *bR.. derm JS.35ei30.75:
corn'CC'ns. and 7->cHii*i"—*"W<"el5ts T.*K>0: ***nl*s, $-e3*rT*7Jy
•rtrtrac to Jfta hl-jJjtr: -Cape-p steady: elKCc*
Tjntn-* l»-a*K. 31.70; la-nSs, cood »nd
choice, S2 *hjt, dom. TrO.75^13.RS: -Jie-
ditr-n S9.00 *o Slo.75; caH »*ad corsawa.
JS.OOi59.OP: f»w tnfdJKn to claolce,
19**
**x .
Beatrice Creamery
Bethlehem Steel
Brooklyn Un
Brunswick-Balke Col.
Briggs Mfg, Co
Bordens
Borg Warner
Bucy Erie pfd
Bush Terminal
Burroughs Add
Calif. Pc.cking
Calumet & Hecla
Canada Dry
59
Canadian pac. R. R
184%
Case Threshing
165
Cerro de Pasco ...,-
44
CommonwealtTo • Co
13
Ches. & Ohio R. R
171
Chicago Gt. Northern pfd
27V,
Chicago North Western R. R
66
Chrysler Motors
,
25'.i
Coca Cola
168
Collins & Aikman Corp
20
Colo. Fuel & iron .;
43'~
Columbia Gas
60'/i
•Com. Solvents
2l'/j
Congoleum
10 'a
Congress Cigar
31'/=
Consolidated Cigar
37 'A
Consolidated Gas
-
101'3
Cont. Can
50'/s
ont. Insurance
5iH'<
Cont. Motors
31
Cont. Oil
18%
Corn Products
38*>«
Crosley Radio
10 '/<
Crucile Steel
T2fe
By
New Tork Cotton Fotares Open.
the Associated Press.
NEW YORK, June 25
' COTTON — Futures opened barely steady;
4 to 12 points lower; July, 13.05: October,
12.90: December. 13.06: January. 13.05. New
contracts: October, 12.67; December. 12.77;
January, 12.79; March, 13.00; May, 13.16.
New Tork Rnbbsr Futures Open.
By .the Associated Press.
NEW YORK, June 25
RUBBER—Futures
opened
irregular;
July. 11.70; September,
12.20; December,
12.70
New contracts: July. 11.84; Sep-
tember, 12.30: December. 12.95.
INVESTMENT TRUSTS.
(Quotations for June 25.)
Bid
Basic Industries Shares
77*
Corporate Trust Shares
8*4
Diversified Trustee Shares B. 17*4
Diversified Trustee Shares C.
7?4
Incorporated Investors
46 .
North. American Trust Shares 8%
Asked
8%
9Vi
18 ii
7%
48'.-i
Uverpoot Cotton.
By International News Service.
LIVERPOOL, Eng., June 25
COTTON—Spots cotton opened dull wtih
prices easier today. Sales were 2,000 bales,
and receipts were 5,000 bales.
At midday, middling fair'was at 8.82d-,
strictly good middling at 8.37d., good mid-
dling at 8.02d., strictly middling at 7.72S.,
middling at 7.47d., strictly low middling at
7.22d. low middling at 6.67d.. strictly good
ordniary at 5.97d.. good ordinary at 5.57d.
Futures' were quite with July at 6.96d..
October at 6.80d.. December at 6.80.3., Jan-
uary at 6.83d.. March at 6.90d-
Chicago Poultry.
By the Associated Press.
CHICAGO, HI., June 25
POULTRY—Alive,
receipts. 4 cars. 29
trucks:
easy: fowls.
20c; springs. 30c;
broilers. 20^23c; roosters. 14c: turkeys.
18c; spring ducks, 16©18c; spring geese,
20c.
TREASURY BALANCE.
' WASHINGTON. 'June
25—UP)—Treasury-
receipts for June 23 were S18.981,155.72;
expenditures, $24,269,627.17; balance, J367.-
983,870.91.
-New York Cotton.
By the Associated Press.
NEW YORK. June 25
Cotton opened barely steady- today at a
decline of 4 to 12 points.
According to early estimates,
notices
representing about 117.JOO bales were is-
sued against New York contracts, includ-
ing 18,400 bales to be delivered at Savan-
nah-
Scattering liquidation continued, how-
ever, with July working off to 13.03. or
10 points net lower, while the new October
contract after selling off to 12.64. rallied
to 12.67. or within 3 points of yesterday's
closing quotations,
Chicago Cheese Market.
B; the Associated Press.
CHICAGO. HI.. June 25
CHEESE—Per lb.: Twins. 17c; daisies.
17*i«S17'Ac: longborn*. 17««tlT?lc: young
Americas. 17'.i*il7%c: brick. 17c: lim-
burter, 22c; Swiss, 30«l32c-
Chlcmto Butter an* Eft*.
By the Associated Press.
CHICAGO. HL. June 25 —•
BUTTER—Receipts. 11.465 tubs: prices
•unchanged.
EGGS—Receipts. 11.509 cases: weak: ex-
tra lirsts. 22Hc: fresh graded firsts. 22c:
Iresh current receipts.
19@20c:
storage
packed firsts, 22"ic; storage packed extras.
Opening Liberty Bonds.
By International News Serrtca.
SEW YORK. June 25
LIBERTY BONDS—Opening --rice quota-
tions for liberty bonds today -were: First
4H*S. 102.5: lonrth 4'4's. 102.25.
UXCOLS rOCtTRlr AND EGOS.
"uUSCOLN. Neb.. June 25
strictly, fresh
39c
Bens, heavy
ISe
Hens. light
»...-....-. ~.4c
Heas, Leghorn ....................... I"*
Heai-y oroilcrr.
-wr
- -
leghorn
J7e
.,,»»-*•-»»*••-•-•"»••"»"••••-»•» *0 '
l+c
Ducks. cVrr 4 Ite.
Pigeons, per dot .
LJXQOLX CREAM.
Neb-,
.
- Jot* 25
The ttSOowiaf is ibe cash price paid lor
reiKa in LSaeora today:
Churning creasi
iSweet ca-ea-a
-He
•RTSMTEO TO CIXJSE JTLT 1.
..-NIPEG. June 25— (APi«-The "*!nnl-
»,_. grain oschanj-c -will br cloned Tnw-
dair, July 3, becaBW! of a holiday. IXimffl-
ion d»7.
Sew Tor* ECO,
By the Associated Press.
NEW YORK. JtTOe 25.
-JOGS—Ret*'*-!* 30,565: ir-rcalar. Mixed
colors, recnlar p»ck-)d. closely »t**-*rd
heary 26-27'i; extra 2S-25'4: extra
Tirst
24-I4"*4: ura**? beune*"? bro-ra. extra Jirst
24H-SC.
Oth-r fr««e» -onehanf-rd.
Xr-r Tortt Tftntter and Cbef-ie.
By the Associated TrvsS:
3SZW TOR3C. Jnn. 25.
BTJTTER— Recrtpu
Cresjnerr.
.
16.601;
unsettled.
Wfhtr Ui»n extra
33-J3H: rxtr» <92 score i 32 H: Hr*t l9 Biflk flats, fresh, lancy lo Jancy
special
70
22
V'i
42
2"'"*
H3'»
-12
62 vi
2H«
30V*
49
)ii
53
54
Ja
4J
204»,
21"
82
ll"«
40 vs
.l'J7
• 3*
'. 20
.10«?i
! 21Vi
. 75
. 75%
'. 14 Vi
. 15
. 74
. 25',i
. 34
. 31
.' 62 Vi
14%
Mew York Curb Stocks
From Lamton Bros. & Co.
Close
Amrr. Natural Gas
H'»
Arknnsns Nut. Gas
9%
Arkansas Nat. Gas A
9\
Cameo
'2
Canadian Marconi
4",
Cities Service
2«'u
Cities Service pfd
89'ii
DtForrest Radio
3*.
Durant Motors
2'k
Electric Bond & Slmre-v
75's
Ford of EngUnd
H'J
Ford of France
1.0'a
General Baking
2'-
General Baking pfd
27".
Goldman Sack.;
18S«
Gotham Knltbnc
1
Gulf
Oil
119'i
Humble Oil
83%
Int. Utll. B
13 H
Missouri. Kan. Pipe
23
Columbia
Pictures
33
Newmont Mining
804
Niagara Hudson Power
16
Ohio Oil
62'.i
pcnroad
10'*
Radio Products
7'i
Salt Creek Products
9'»
Stand. Oil, Ind
48',n
Stand. Oil. Kentucky
31»»
Stand. Oil of Ohio
78
Trans. Air Transp
7 '
United Light & Power ;
56
United Verde
9>i
Vacuum Oil
79%
11 Vi
75
29
25a«
8'j
10 "i
15
26»i
7
CHICAGO STOCKS
From Lamson Bros & Co.
Close
All American Mohawk
I'-a
A. M. Castle
Art Metal
Beatrice Creamery
Bendlx
Borg Warner
Butler Bros
Chicago Corp. .-,...-.
Continental Chicago Corp
Cities Service
Cord .
Klcctrlc Household
40s.
Grlgsby Gvunow
13"s
Illinois Brick
21
Lion Oil
21'i
Maj. Housch'd Utll
384
Meadows Mfg
1J'«
Morgan Lithe
1'\
Muskegon Motors
S'-i
National Standard
28=*
North Amer. Car
39 ':i
Northwest Bancorp
42
Pines Winterfront
24
Stand. Dredge
17
Swift & Co
28'.s
Swift Intl
31
ITJnit Corp
'.
-14V&
TJ. S. Gypsum
38
Zenith Radio
7%
CASH GRAIN MASRLTh
From Updike Grain Co., 7J4-725 Term.
Building.
It Lom» Ca»b Gmln.
ST. LOUIS. JU1»- 2S.
. WHEAT—Red 2c higher, hard Ic higher.
CORN—Steady to 4c lowr.
OATS—Steady tg <,ie lower.
WHEAT SALES—No. 2 red. 96c; No. 1
hard. 8Mc.
CORN SALES—No. 1 yellow. 8H(82'.ic:
No. 2 yellow. 81c: No. 3 yellow. 80c.
OAT SALES—No. 3 white. 38; No. 4
white. 37*t3T,:!C.
Omaha Cub
Grain.
OMAHA. June 25.
WHEAT—Unchanged; No. 2 hard, ^3';c.
No. 3 hard. 76c. weevlly; No. 3 hard. 82c.
CORN—Unchanged to
".,.0 lower; No. 2
white. 75c; No. 1 yellow. 74'aC; No. 2 yel-
low, 74li Vi; No. 3 yellow, ?3c; No. 6
yellow. 67«t"0c.
OATS—Unchanged ta 4c lower. No. 3
white, 34c.
BARLEY—Unchanged. No. spelcal 4V.ic.
RYE—None.
Chicago Ca»h Grain.
CHICAGO. June 25.
BARLEY—Easy, sales 5Sc.
WHEAT—H-c higher; No. 2 nor spg.,
88V1; No. 2 yellow hard. 884c;
CORN—Steady to Ic
higher:
No. 2
mixed, 71c; No. 3 mixed. 76c, No. 1 yel-
low, 78lii78V«: No. 2 yellow, 7TV.i18'i;
No. 3 yellow. 77 Vi (it 77%: No.
1 white.
81c; No. 2 white, 81Ci8iy<.
OATS—U6i% higher. No. 2 white 38 Vi
©39V4: No. 3 white, 37c.
RYE—Vic higher, no sales.
Kansas Cash Grain
KANSAS CITY, June 25.
WHEAT SALES—No. 1 dark hard. 82'iiff
87%: No. 3 dark hard. 83(riS8c; No. 4 dark
hard. 82V4; No. 1 hard, 81ifi83',.c; No. 2
hard. 80ft85c; No. 3 hard. 79&82c; No. 4
hard, 77'/iff/80c.
CORN SALES—No. 2 white, 764f(78c,
No. 2 yellow, 78'-ic; No. 4 yellow. 71V.
No. 2 mixed. 74':r/,
','.'.'.'.'. 40'
43
35
65%
52
40%
16
361/.
25%
59
9'.i
6
19V,
.--_ -. 30
15»i
I8'.~
72
20
'. 14-/Z
70'i
27>i
114
10
'.'.'.'.'.'. 80 "
69',A
23
41
79
3
ISli
37%
2%
224
28%
234
77-ii
33'.i
.=5%
Chicago Board of Trade
(From "Lamson Bros. & Co.) Close
Allied Mills
9'A
Armour & Co., III., A
4»»
Armour & Co., HI.. B
2?i
Breman Packing Co
19
Guardian Inv. Corp
4
Mid-Cities
10-Ti
Mining Corp. of Canada
1'A
Square Deal Co., "A"
19*4
William Wrigley, Jr
69
Elec. Bond. & Share
75'i
Stand, of Ind
47*4
Supplemental New York Stock List.
(From Jackson Bros., Boesel & Co., 202
First National Bank Bldg.)
,
Close
,
26
Abltibi
Amer. Metals
Amer. Sumatra
Armour & Co.. Del. Pfd
Chesapeake Corp
Cluett-Peabody
Gulf States Steel ..7
Houston Oil
Inland Steel
Kelsey Hayes Wheel
Lehigh Valley R. R
Lehn & Fink
Jewel Tea
Nat'l. Distillers Prods
Peoples Gas -...«.
Simms Petroleum
St. Louis Southwestern
Texas & Pac
U. S. Distributors
Virg. Carolina Chem
Virg. Caro. Chem, 6 per cent pfd...
Warner - Quinlan
Westinghouse Air Brake
i Western Pacific
'Wilson & Co
Warren Bros
Sup.
Man. Elec.
Maytag
McKeesport .
Mexican Seaboard
Miami Copper
Oil
.. 63
.- 86%
.. 10
.. 50'/i
32
8
33%
71%
17Ti
16
Mid-Cont. Petroleum
22=*
Mathison Alkali
/.
32=»
Mo. Kan. & Tex
;.. 33
Mo. Pac R. R
58
Mo. Pac. R. R. pfd..
120'-;
Montgomery Ward ..'
32%
Moon Motors
6
Motor Wheel
:2Ti
Murray Corp
13**
Nash Motors
:
30',.
National Biscuit '
." 74
Nat. Cash Register '
47
Natl. Dairy Prd. '
46'A
Ntl. Pwer & Light
33U
N. A. Aviation
SVj
N. Y. Central R. R
153'.-.
N. Y. N. H. & Hart. R. R
99V:
Norfolk & Western
215=i
North .American Co
96
North Pac. R_ R.
67y,
Otis Elevator
56
Otis Steel
2514
Pete. Corp
-
19'.i
Packard
13
Pacific Gas
5474
Pan-American B
55 "i
Poor Co
2114
Paramount
-
53V:
Parmalee Transf
9"»
Pathe
3%
Pittson
21
Penn R. S
vu
Phillips Pete
30
Pierce Pete
«V4
Prairie Pipe
45
Prairie Oil
•-
36
Proctor Gamble
WA
Public Service of N. J
91
PuZlman
62
Pure Oil,
'.
•.
20
Royal Dutch
Sl'i
Radio
35?i
Reading
100
Radio K. 0
29**
Real Silk
•-
39=!i
Remington Rand
: 24Vi
Reo Motors
87*
H, J. Reynolds
47
Richfield Oil
15»i
Rock Island
9St-
Reynoldi Metals
24S
R. G. 0
15"i
St. Joe Lead
35
St. L.-San nan
S7*i
Saint Paul
12J,
Saint Paul pfd.
21*,
Schulte Stores
t"%
Sears-Roebuck
KZ'.i
Stand.' Brands
".... 18
Shell Union Oil
18%
Theater
12!'.
Simmons Bed
23
Sinclair -
20*«
SkcJly Oil
28=.
Southern Pacific
309
Standard Oil of Kansas
29H
Standard Com- Tobacco
4'i
Standard Gas
87'i
Standard Oil of California
58*4
Staadaid Oil of N3V. October 7 M. I
I "De«fin*-*T 3.«4"J*.
I
Spot -wJjent—.JJo, 1 Mairito*»
l.**0*A3
w-7 cent.
i rreacli 3,07V,; resale. uos%,
i
TSKEZ
BAR SILVER— 15 *-36fl per
_
LONDON, Jtm» 25.
BAR S1LVZR— 35 »-3«fl yrer orow.
MOTET— 1'3 P*T cent.
RATES-^ShOTt WIU 2 S-3S
i-2 5-JS pet eeW.
. 9%
. 76
, 51%
. 31
. 40
. 69%
. 68
. 25 Vi
. 57 »i
'.
48
. 25%
.251VJ
. iOVi
. 55'^
.1161=
10
4
23
37 %
3V-J
41
NEW YORK CURB BEVTEW.
By the Associated Press.
NEW YORK, June 25
The curb market bobbed -up and down
uncertainly today, but the list was more
active on the declines than .on the brief
rallies, and prices
showed
considerable
heaviness under the pressure of further
short selling.
Utilities lost ground at the opening, re-
covered their losses and then turned down-
ward agaln.
In the industrial group, whicn was soft.
Technicolor went to another new low. Oils
suffered from renewed liquidation, Cosden
falling to a new low for the year. Stand-
ard of Ohio broke several points but re-
covered part of the loss. Cities Service
was r'f about a point.
In\ * ^ment shares were heavy.
United
Founders dropped through its previous re-
sistance level into new low ground.
LINCOLN CASH GRAIN.
LINCOLN. Neb. June 25
The following cash prices were paid for
grain in the Lincoln markets today:
WHEAT— No. 1 hard, 69c; No. 3 hard,
«7c: No. 4. 65c.
CORN— No. 2 white. 66c: No. 3 white.
64c: No. 2 yellow. 66c; No. 3 yellow, 64c.
New Tork
Money Rates.
By the Assocaited Press.
NEW YORK. June 25.
CALL MONEY — Steady,
per cent all
day.
TIME LOANS— Steady. 30-60 days. 214-
231: 90 days 2'.i-2}4. 4 mos., 23/«-3; 5-8
PRIME COMMERCIAL PAPER — 3ii-3',i;
Bankers acceptances unchanged.
Chicago Bank Clearing*.
By the Associated press.
CHICAGO. 111.. June 25
CHICAGO, ' June
25— Bank
clearings
$115.000.000: balances. $20.100.000.
New York clearings, $1,291.000,00; bil-
anees. »is.000,ooo.
New Tork Metal*.
By the Assocaited Press.
NEW YORK. June 25.
COPPER— Quiet; 'electrolytic spot
and
future 12.
IRON— Quiet, unchanged.
'
*
TIN— Steady; spot and nearby
31.10;
future 31.35.
LEAD— Quiet; spot New York 5.25; East
St. Louis spot and future $4.25-4.30.
ANTIMONY— 7.10.
Toledo Cash Grain.
By the Associated Press.
- TOLEDO. June 25.
CASH GRAIN— Unchanged. Aliike cash
a** Oct.. 11.50 bid.
Market* at a Glance.
By the Associated Press.
NEW YORK. June 25
STOCKS — Weak: rails and some pivotal
industrials at new lows
BONDS — Irregular: easier tone prevails.
CTJRB — Weak: Standard Oil of Indiana
touches new low.
FOREIGN EXCHANGES— Firm: Spanish
peseta at aew low.
COTTON— dead;: improved trade de-
mand.
SUGAR— Higher: steadier spot situation.
COFFEE — Lower: European selling,
CHICAGO. EL. Jane 25
WHEAT — Steady: good export trade aad
foreign crop reports.
CORN — Barelj steady; beneficial rains
central ircst.
CATTLE — Strong to higher.
HOGS — Steady-
Kansas City Produce.
By the Associated Press.
KANSAS CITY, June 25.
• POULTRY—Broilers. 18"~24. ,
Other produce unchanged.
Chicago Potatoes.
(United States Department Agriculture.)
By the Associated Press.
CHICAGO, June 25.
POTATOES—111. on track 310. total U.
S. shipments 1123: weak, trading
fair;
southern
sacked Bliss
Triumphs $2.00-
2.50; best mostly 2.35-2.40: sacked Insh
cobblers various states, best $2.25-2.35;
poor 2.00 up: North Carolina bbl.
Irish
cobblers S3.75-4.15: Virginia bbl. Irish*
cobblers, S4.50-4.60, mostly 4.50.
New York Cotton.
NEW YORK. June 25.
By the Associated -Press.
COTTON—Early declines in cotton at-
tributed to further July liquidation -follow-
ing the Issuance of notices and selling of
new crop positions on relatively easy ca-
bles and favorable weather reports, were
fol'owed by rallies on overing today.
The noties appeared to be qite readily
stopped and July recovered its early losses,
while there was a little buying of new
crop months en reports ot continued high
temperatures in the belt.
The demand
was readily supplied, however, with the
mid-afternoon market ruling about net un-
changed to 7 coints lower.
-
COTTON—The first impression made by
the weekly report of the weather bureau
appeared to be bearish and offerings in-
creased slightly right after its publication,
with July selling off to 13.00 and the
new October contract to 12.55. making a.
net decline of about 10 to 15 points on
the general list.
At midday July
was
selling around
13.04 and the new October contract at
12.63 with the maret showing net declines
of 4 to 9 points.
Turpentine and Lard.
By the Associated Press:
SAVANNAH, June 25.
TURPENTINE—Firm; 40U -4014:
sales
900: receipts 650; shipments
21; stock
13861.
ROSIN—Firm: sales 2839; receipts 2187:
shipments 1529; stock 111.441. Quote: B
525; D 525: E 530-35;: 5. G. H. L 535:
K 540-50: M 545-50; N 570-75; WG 600:
WW 700-05; X 715.
Fereisa
By the Associated Press.
NEW TOR3C. 3-LOf 23,
FOREIGN
EXCHANGES— Finn;
Great
Britain
demand. «.«
J3-16:
caWei,
1JSS 3-32: 60 CUT bill; on bank*. 4 .S3 33-76
France demand 3J>2 5-16; cable*. 3^2 13-36
JtulT demand 5.23'i: cables. SM.
DEMANDS — Belgium
13.95:
Germany
23.33'4: Holland 40.37: Norway 2«.7«H:
Sweden 26.8SH: Denmark 2S.7S: Switzer-
land 35 38: Spain 31.53: On»oe !-»*;:
Poland 31.5: Czechoslovakia
2.9S 9-3S:
j-ucofOaria 1-T6'<; A-sstrta 3H.33; Rmmmla
-S9'i: Arrcntlne 35. SO; Brazil 11.30; To-
CTO 49.40- Shane'tad 3£.QS1«; Montreal
300.Great Britain in doEar*:
others
to
cent*.
New Tort Sfltrr.
'
By the Associated PTCJ*.
NEW TORK. Jtme 25.
BAR SILVER— 33 S.
New Tot* Dried FraK aa« Bar*.
} the Associated Press.
NEW TOHK. Jon,. 25.
DRIED FRCTT AND
By the Associated 3
LARD—SSi 7.S.
RIBS—S* 3.75.
BELUES—833.75.
.
CHICAGO. Jtrae 25
. . LDING<£LOAN
ASSOCIATION
Save with Safety
132 North 12th Street.
Boston Wool.
By the Associated Press.
BOSTON, Mass., June 25
WOOL—Market values on wools are fully
firm as compared with last week although
the volume of sales <^e small,
priglnal
bag 64s and finer western wools carried
a large proportion of sales. Fair quanti-
ties. 58-60s and 48-50s territory graded
wools are moving and some demand is be-
ing received on 56s quality.
New York Cotton Futures Close.
By the Associated Press. -
NEW YORK, June 25
COTTON—Futures
closed
steady,
20
points higher to 2 lower; July $13.33W34;
Oct.
$13.016104; Dec. $13.19; January,
$13.18.
New
contracts: Oct.
- - - - -
Dec. $12.92; Jan., $12.92fi93:
May $13.29Q31; spot
$13.45.
SI. Louli I.lif.totk.
By the inatrnatioiisl News Service.)
CHICAGO, Juno 25.
CATTLE—Receipts 2.300; calves
1.000;
steady: steers 19 65-11.00; vrnlers 10.50;
cowti $5.00-0.00; cutters $3.00-3.50;
bulb
$0.00.
HOOS—Receipts 10.000: f»'rl.v active 60
to lOc higher: plBs bulk »9.00-8.10; pac?-
1ns sows. $7.75-7.85.
SHEEP—Receipts 4.000: steady;
Umw,
10.50-10.5>.
New York I'oultrr.
By the Associated Press.
NKW YORK. June 23.
POULTRY—Live
weak. Fowls
by ex-
press 19-32: ducks, express 22.
Wlniilpfjf C«»i» Gralo.
By the Associated Press
WINNIPEG, Juno 25.
CASH WHEAT—No. 1 northern
93'',:
No. 2 northern 91c; No. 3. northern 681.;
No. 2 while oats 45S; No. 3 white, I 2 ' j .
New York Coffee.
By the Associated Press.
NKW YORK. June 25
COFFEE—Spot easy; demand light; Hlo
No. 7, 9; Sn.-los No. 4, m». Rio futures
closed
ca.sy;
approximated sales 34.UOO
bags: July $7.22; September $7.20; Decem-
ber $7.01
March 50.86; May $6.75. San-
tos
futures
eas,y;
approximated
sulrs
31.000 bass; July S12.26; September $11.31-
December
$10.50;
March {10.18; May
$10.05.
Chicago Butter and Egg Futures.
By the Associated Press.
CHICAGO, June 25.
Rcf. stand, Nov
37-S
27-}i 27'i
BUTTER—
Storage stand. Nov.
,.
36'4 36% 36'i
Fresh standards, June ..
32!«
32% 30'»
Storage itand. July
331^
By
Liberty Bonds Close.
the Associated Press.
' NEW YORK, Jun« 25.
LIBERT!' 3'.-s, 6-100.31: Liberty
4'
•with tfa* vtad. o
Cbac.
O P****? OoadJ.
SPAPERf
THE LINCOLN STAR—WEDNESDAY,
JUNE 25, 1930.
FIFTEEN
'orch And Yard Furniture Sell
At This Season,
Adtakerc
rjfORK MAN KILLED
ACCIDENTALLY ON
KANSAS RAILROAD
SALINA, Has., June
25—«P>—
—"rank Busenloff, 50, of YorK, Neb_
Iwas killed late Tuesday, when a
[dump cart with which he -*as
[•working In a railroad construction
I gang at Kallville, 14 miles south of
Isalina, overturned, crushing ms
I skull.
Cousin of Coolidge,
Demo, Is Nominated
BUBLINGTON, Vt.. June 25—
. CARS—We mean
High Grade, the nicest assortment In
Lincoln
The following ctrs tre as Good
as New:
J927 CHEVROLET SEDAN
5275
1923 CHEVROLET COUPE
J315
1928 CHEVROLET SEDAN
...»495
1928 CHRYSLER COACH
J375
1823 PONTIAC COACH
J425
1923 PONTIAC SEDAN
»450
192s OAKLAND ALL jt M E R I c A N
COUPE
1650
1828 OAKLAND ALL A M E R I C A N
SEDAN ,
$695
1923 FORD COACH
S310
1923 PONTIAC COACH. COUPE. ROAD-
STER OS SEDAN.
WE HAVE 50 CARS—Call ns for a demon-
stration. We will be glad to bring the
car to you.
warns MOTOR co.
B-S200—1B32 O ST.—B-5189.
EMPLOYMENT
MERCHANDISE
Help Wanted—Female
32 j Business and Office Equipment M
coney for your «pare hours.
Beautiful portfolio Christmas
Greeting
Cards loaned free
No charge for en-
fraving customers'
names,
addresses.
Highest commissions dally.
We deli*er
and collect
Tom P. Thornton Co., Desk
C. Dallas. Tex
33
WALNUT—Flat top desk and cbar; oak
tjpewrlte' desk, swivel chair; arm chair:
oak table. L7666. F8493.
Good Things To Eat
57
Help Waated—Male
I GET ON THE LIST FOR FARM WORK—
Now is the time. Co-Op Emp. Bureau,
419 Funke.
OPPORTUNITY—
VULCAKIZER experienced to take
complete cbaree of modern shop
in Lincoln. Nebraska. Salary and
commission. Replies confidential.
Star Box 655.
CANNING APRICOTS—And p!um«.
11.75
lour-baskrt crate.
Midwest Trail Co..
Mth and O. M173;A
CHOICb STEAK—23c Ib.: short rib boll.
ISc porS chops. 27c. Tidrow'j, 302 So.
19th. L3894.
DtMWA
PRODUCE
CO.—209 So.
9tSL
B2474.
Headquarter* for ==C*toei. ap-
ples, fruits and vegetables.
EAT DOMESTIC RABBIT—It
is
better
than chicken. We deliver. Lincoln Hab-
jitjyssoctation. run;.
NEW POTATOES—Larne sire, SOc a p-ck.
il.90 per bushel.
2221 F.
Call 405-J
Haveloct.
WANTED—Twelve men, 7 a. »., Thursday
moralng.
Lincoln Packing Co.
Help—Male and Female
34
BUY YOURSELF A JOB—We
have
all
! kiads of small businesses Jor sale. The
Curran Agency.
SFRLVG FRIES—Alive or dressed. Call F
O 187-W. C. F. Goddard. 2811 So. 40th
street.
=====
; 59
I AT HARDY'S—Battleship
Ksoleun
rem-
nant.-s, regular price $3.00 per square
vard, now J1.75; window shades. 36x6.
59c each.
Household Goods
REPOSSESSED 1926 STCDE3AKER—Four-
Door Sedan.
Rich mohair upholstering,
meenamcally sotnd.
Good finish.
Will
b* sold for balance due. Federated Fl-
casee Co. B2735. F2503. '
1927 CHEVROLET
COACH—Virst
class
condition. Only 21.000 miles. WiH give
terms. H. F.'Cornell. FO 438.
1928 HUDSON SEDAN—$585; 1923 Dodge
Sedan. $67.50
Dodge Used Car Dept,.
1546 O St. B2921.
1929 FORD PHAETON—Finish like new.
runs like new, 8.000 miles, brand new
Firestone tires. *3SO.
vNebr. Auto Ex-
change. 1724 O.
34708.
1329 PONTIAC—Like new; 1S29 Chevrolet
Sedan, excellent condition. McGexr Uo-
tor Co., 1743 O-
18
Anto Trucks for Sale
MODEL A FORD—1%-Ton Truck, platform
.stake body, A-l conditian; cash, or terms.
B5016.
Garajes—Antes for Hire
14
GARAGS—For rent. wpH desirable loca-
tion. 2212 O; rents reasonable. Inquire
B3S43.
NEW CARS FOR RHNT— Witbcmt drrvgr.
Capital Auto Livery Co_ K. W. Corner
, llth and Q. B6826.
BUSINESS SERVICE
Easiness Services Offered
18
ALL KINDS—Of electrical appliances, in-
cluding washers and vacuum cleaners,
repaired and adjusted. Work guaranteed
Charges reasonable
M1C34.
Building and Contracting
19
FURNACE AND TIN WORK—Prompt av
tention. Arthur Larson. Agent for Wise
Fum>ce Co. Dial F O 309
Bugs Cleaned & Made
20A
Strayed, Lost, Found
10
LOST — Glasses in Woodward & Tea case
Et Pioneer Park June 19. CsH B?235 or
F61S6. C. A. Beaeg.
jRUG
CARE
SERVICE—Attractive
rugs
mads from old materials at one-hall cost
and upholstered furniture cleaned. Lia-
coln Rug Factory. B6735.
GOOD POSITION — May
be "sees
liroush Mrs. Marti, Lincoln School of
Situations Wanted—Female 36
COLORED GIRL—Wants general honse-
work.
B4512.
CTRL—Desires office work, straight typing.
Phone F3779.
WOMAN — Wants
housework.
F3002.
Phone
YOUNG LADY—Wants housework: country
preferred.
Star. Boi 699.
Situations Wanted—Male
BOY 17—Through school, wants job in.
grocery or meat market; three years' ex-
perience. Call 214-J Havelock.
FARM
WORK—Wanted
by experienced
man. Star, Box 679.
YOUNG MARRIED MAN—Desires job at
once. All kinds of work win be consid-
ered.
B5280.
FINANCIAL
Business Opportunities
38
O ST..
2128—Best equipped garage in
Lincoln lor the money.
W. N. Hate
31650.
AN AUCTION—Of a modern hotel and aH
equipment at Arcadia. Nebr,. Monday,
June 30 at 2 p. m. Doing nice business.
Positively sells to the hignest bidder. W.
I
Judah,
owner.
Forke
Bros, The
Auctioneers, 132 No. 12th St.. Lincoln,
Nebr.
BUSINESSES—Room trig houses, notels lot
sale. Jobs lor nurses, hotel and drag
clerks. F.Knlest, Peters Tr. BdL
FOR SALE—Garage in small town,
business. Star Box 694,
Good
SELLING PURSITUHE—Of good, profit-
able rooming house.
Good opportunity
lor some one. Investigate this. 33958,
L37B3 after 6.
FOR SALE—Modem 2-chair barber shop,
m go3d Bohemian community. Star. 3oz
697.
LOST— Phi
Aluha symphonlan. pln.
Finder please call F5567. Reward.
LOST—Black. German Police cog.
Answers
to name "Jack," Tws slits in one ear.
249 LindeH Hotel- Reward.
LOST—Small blacs traveling case contain-
ing clothing and inventory papers. Re-
ward. 645 So. ITta. Apt. 103. 36980.
LOST—About sa: miles south of Lincoln
on 77. small female dog. white with a
few black spots, long haired; has Sa-
vtnna .license tag- S£warji__ Dr. Ting-
ling. Havenna. Nebr.
LOST—Wl-ite gold bar pin. 6 pearls and
out. diamond
Mrs. S Peters, 432 So,
llth. BS453. Reward.
STOLSN—June 17th, little
white
long-
haired female dog with brown spots on
head and ears and O3e near rail: S25.00
reward.
Call or write Sari
Cortlasd. Nebr.
AUTOMOTIVE
.06
»94.
-1C I
.03
.00
.on
.08
.00 i
.«3|
Automobiles For Sale
11
i SSW 3ATTERT—S4.7S Ecc.
We also
make a battery with a two-year guaran-
tee for a little more money. Buy direct
iron; manufacturer and save money- Er-
pen battery service, starter and genera-
tor work.
Hoyse-Johnson -Battery Co.,
1135 M. S2121.
rVERT SPECIAL BARGAIN—Late 1S23
WSippet Coach, Just like
new. worth
S450. our price is S385. Also Ford 1929
Coach, like new. S3SS:
Chevrolet 1S29
Coach, extra Tine; candy 1926 Chevrolet
Coupe, refinished. S125; 1925 Ford Coupe,
S40; keen Ford Sdst-.. *85. Wickstrum
Auto Exchange. 1620 O St.
Investments—Stocks, Bonds
33
I CAPITAL—Wanted for expansion in thriv-
ing business. Investigate, it will pay.
L5058-
Heating, Plumbing, Roofing
23
SCEAFER'S PLUMBING & HEATING SER-
VICE—New location. 414- So. Tlta St.
CaD us lor service- B1684.
Laundering
24
FEATHER SIATTRESS & PILLOW CO.—
Wai make leather mattresses, cushions;
can wash leathers, make them sanitary:
one-day service, FB153. 1009 No. 23rd.
Moving. Tracking, Storage 25
3LACSSAWS
THA»raFS31 — Moving
and
nauling done right, reasonable;
any-
thing any tiiae anywhere. Insuzed car-
IP ITS WORTH MOVINO— Irt w o r t b
moving right. SnErran Tncsfer it Stor-
ase "Co. 3211L
Fainting, Papering. Decorating 26
ATTi KINDS o' painting; paper Hanging:
samples and esamaies gladly gives, ia
or out of city. L5146.
HIGHEST CLASS
ana pa?5>
haneinz. canvassiaz. paneltne and san-
Itas.
sneeialties: reasonable
prices.
Frank Medley. 33790.
.001
no I
.IS I
OOi-AuTO TRAILER—Is good shape. S 15.00.
~00
Right Furniture Co.. 142S O. 36014.
.03 I
.03 3RAND NSW FORD TuDOR SEDAN—Very
.03 ' latest type t30 discount. ^F803^
-" ' FOR 3STTEH CSED CARS—See otcr large
•*°' stocks of good lines. De Brown Auto
INTERIOR decoratine and paper hanging.
12 mo. to nay. Outside parncing. Labor
and materials. 'g>m*fle Bros^ FS89L.
PAPER HANGING— Wanted, 15c per roll;
work guaranteed, fc 34137.
__
I PAPER- HANGING — Psiating. neatly done;
I wHl can at
your home with
sample
books: also carpenter work. *-^>-i'OL
W-T-T' ?AIrs^' — T^T** i-j-ritc rnil ^Ti.-l TTp
work zuaranteed. A. 3. Weeks & Soi-
Famiture. Wall Paper. Paint. 10th »^^
K. 3297L
Sales Co, 1717 O St.
.00
-BO
•Qi \ When Pat Crawford was traded to
-|2' Cincinnati, the Giants recalled Sam
; !s! Leslie from Toledo to be the pinch
,3s i hitter.
.00
-"?i Granvilie Bush. Hd brother of
;^ I Guy of the Cubs, is pitching for a
is: i semi-pro dub ia Chicago.
Professional Services
28
ASHWORTB—Chiropractic offices,
ftraeuate. 402-408 BrowaeH Block.
Of-
flee 33478
Besldence L4078.
DR. A. 3. WALE2R, 33885—Physician a="a
Surgeon. Chronic •^"gv^ men and wo-
me^. Health examinations. 1113 O St.
VARICOSE Vii-Ns—A privaM clinic lor
tie cure of varicose retes b? ti» Injec-
tion method wffi be held in Lincoln ia
July by a prominent Sassa? citv special-
ist. Ozlv a liiaited number "can be
treated. For Information address Star.
$80.
Mickey (Himself) McGuire
OlS ACCOUr>lT OF MC&U1RE, Ai-r~1OST EVERY KIP !M THE
NES^HSORHOOP HAS BEEN FCRCET> TO <=ET RIO OF HIS POCa .
Sii AND 6^i INTEREST—On vour savings.
Every dollar backed by first mortgages
on improved real estate conservatively
valued. Union Loan & Savings Associa-
tion. -
Money to Loan—Mortgages
40
A-A-l—AtitomofaSe end fnraitnre
loans.
No signers. Easy terms. Lowest rates-
United Finance Co., 117 No. 14th. 35076.
AN AUTOMOBILE LOAN—Cars refinanced,
also loans en lumirure, cattle and chat-
tels of al! kinds: strictly conlidential.
Motors Kaan.ee, 8JS Fed. Trust 3!dg.
35271.
"LOANS—
F7JBMTUHS LOANS.
BUSINESS EQUIPMENT LOANS.
LIVESTOCK LOASS.
AUSTIN CREDIT CO.
555 NAT" BANK OF COMMERCE—3-51SL
CHARACTER LOANS—Low rmte, ao SBJrt-
gage-
We furnish money to pay TOOT
*^ff«
dear's time or less to repay US-
States Securities Co.. 124 So. 12tb.
FARM AND CTTT LOANS—Al rawest zmtM.
Quick closing. Woodward Brothers. HI
Richards BJoefc.
LOANS—On automobiles,
diamonds
and
furniture, licensed to the state, bonded
to the people. Industrial Loan & Inr-
Co., 1125 P. 31550.
MFET TOU2 OBLIGATIONS—Coafldeailal
loans. $50 to $500. on automobiles, Ittr-
nifljre, stock? aad txracs; no signer*:
easy terms; lowest rates. Licenced by
state. Anto Loan tad Finance Co, eor-
' ner 15th and O Sts. 33565.
Wanted—To Borrow
41
GOOD SSCUHTTT—Wanted S4.5OO private
monev. 6*A-. no commissiaci:
property
Southeast Lincoln; refused offer $12^00.
Star S?8.
INSTRUCnON
Local Instruction Classes
43
& B C SHORTHAND—12 30 days: 1B01-
vitrual
testrnrfno:
terms.
tUeUnaaa
S«cret«ri»l School, JP3 MehartU Block.
321SL
LEARN—Barber science.
Sew
.
Small tcitkio.
Waees paid. Western
Tri-Ciry Barber CoIIeg*. Wis Frsnlc.
il»r. Easr payment s.'aTt. 918 P. Lin-
coln. Nebr.
LITE STOCK
Horses. Cattle, Vehicles
48
STOCS—
CATTLS FOR SALS—
250 Ttarllng
steers.
IBB
calves! 73 T-arlins aeifers.
Tfcfse are all cich jrade 3-rfora
catCr, Also 53 choice tlatk rtar-
ISs steers. Located near Lincoln.
Phon- or wjr» J. H. La-.tuce.
Cor=£zsker Eotd.
AUCTlOif—Friday. June 77, 7:00 p. m.. at
church, 731 J. Repossessed finance fur-
niture.
Walnut Simmons bed. Perfec-
tion oil stove, trunk, suitcase. Cat top
desk, chairs, antique walnut chair, gar-
den tools, white enamel kitchen table,
etc. We will sell lor anybody. Frank
Gilmore, Auctioneer.
A FEW UNCLAIMED—Storaze Bargains:
Breakfast set. $6:00; 22—-1I. hose, $1.00;
5-gallon crock, 75c; tools at all prices:
good carpet swecpjr. SOc; and a host of
other bargains.
Right Furniture Co.,
1428 O St. 36014.
CLEVELAND KUG CLEANERS—SchceJMT
& Son.
"When We Get Thrn. They'!)
Look Like New."
505 A St.
F6063 _
ELECTRIC FAN—$8 50; porch swing, S3.25;
lawn mo^er. $7.00; camp stove. $3.50;
refrigerate-. $7.00 and $10.00. Van Ande!
and Son. 132 So 10th.
EIGHT-PIECE WALNUT—Dressing
suite,
$65 00. Woods & Sons. 203 So. llth St.
33511.
FOR SALS—Kitchen and
ranch
room
equipment, steam table, all hot top
range,
candy
makers
furnace
and
6x4i^i marble slab, dishes, glasswar..
soiled dish table, double pot and pan
sink with drain board.
Chefs table,
hot water heater, square and oblong
white glass top tables, porcelain «'nv».
_See Mr. Leese. Gold & Co.
FURNTTUR3 AUCTION—Thursday. June
26, 154S S. 22nd. 1:30 p. m This wiH be a
consignment, sale of good and useful
furniture consisting of tables, chairs,
refrigerators,
beds,
dressers,
electric
cleaners, etc. Bring whatever you have.
The ladies of the Tabernacle Christian
church are consigning a van load of
furniture and merchandise which has
been donated to them by the marchants
and people of Lincoln- H. M. Wineland,
J. Cook Lambs Auctioneer, 207
34355.
NOW IS
your
tiire. Our July sale prices are now on
and we can save vou money. Kellisoa
Furniture Co.. 208-212 So. llih. 34994.
iii'CHKN CA3INSTS—10x12 tent, doable
camp cot and pad. a few slightly dam-
aged Gold Seal rugs, 20^ off. Speschley
Furniture Co., corner ICth and Q.
LINCOLN MATTRESS CO™ B-2S2S—Old
mattresses repaired and made n*> new.
Feathers ts«!« into zcattressei, *21 So.
7th,
NEW
FANCT—And
plain
quilts. 1629
South St. Phoris F40Se.
RUGS—Slightly ased. bargains: end ta-
bles. $2.00 up; sewing machine, $2.50.
Home F-jmiturg, 1028 P. 35152.
TO SELL TOU3 yDBNTTUBB PO3 CASH
Can 33438.
USED CAMP STOTS—S2.00; -used
wind
shield wings, $3.00: new high chair,
$3.00; used refrigerator, $8.00. Flana-
gan, 1016 P St. 32983.
WE HENT SEWING MACHINES—Treadle
or electric, $1.00 weeklv. $3,00 monthly
Gourlay Bros., 143 So. 12th. L6369.
WE HENT SEWTNG MACHINES—Treadle
or electric, $1.00 weekly. $3.00 moatnlr.
Gouriay 3rcs.. 143 So. 12th. L83E3.
YOU WILL JFIND—The better grades of
used Furniture such as tables, chairs,
buffets, beds, daofclds; esc. in Rudge &
GaenzeVS Used Furniture Dept-
•
7ii USED CONGOLSUM—Bug. $2.75; nars-
err chair. $1.95: Eloyd baby carrteee,
SI2.00. ?aap Furniture, 235 So. 9th.
LS147.
8-PIEC3 WALNUT—Dining
room
stslte,
slightly used.' S69.50. Larson Farmtnre
Co.. 344 SO. 9th- 32168.
Machinery and Tools
61
COMPLETE WATER PRESSURE—pumping
outfit, with, electric motor, reasonable.
L445L
Musical Merchandise
62
PIANO ACCORDION—Larse shipment just
arrived Irom. Europe, Dieii Mosic Shop,
1308 O.
SHONINGER PIANOS—a= =ii =ndarfi
niaie wiUi bench. $125 $10 down. $5
inonthlv.
Gourlay 3ros_, 143 So. 12th
L3369.
•SICTOR OR COLUM3IA—Orthophonic 10-
inch records, vocal, instrumental. 5 for
Sl.OO.
Send
money
order.
Folimer's
Record Exchange, 235 West 42nd, New
Tork City.
WING S: SONS PIANO—$65; $5 down. $5
monthly. Goarlay Bros, 143 So. 12th,
LB369.
WA3N5S PIANO—$85: »5 down. $5 month-
ly. Gtmrlay Bros.. 143 So. 12th. L8369.
Seeds, Plants, Flowers
63
FRESH CUT FLOWERS—Eitra large bou-
quets. SOc: gladiolas. 75c dozen. 940 So.
•4Sta- F5170.
WS HAVS—In pots. 15.000 narfiv Sower-
ing plants which we have no roost Us
in our narsery rooms. Win sen any va-
riety 1M each. This lot induces an
plants, that sell up to SOc each. Come
see teem. Avalon Nursery and Green-
house. 3200 .O St_ M2634.
Wearing Apparel
HUMMAGS TA3L25—lOc and 25e-
TJa-
traal valaes of aH desctptions. 115 So,
10th.
i
ROOMS AND BOARD
Booms With
14TH ST_ SO™ 836—Nicely lursished room
2s all modem, private home; business
L4C35.
Booms Witbom Board
A ST_ 1820—Attractive mite of tm> roo=s
•with private bath.' lor
D ST.- 1321—!>arce famished room in =o
era hotae. 35206.
TO-'UH DSAD
to
Rendering
13TH ST_ SO_ 114—Sice TicOtt Hesne;
ortsice rooms: moderate rates.
REAL ESTATE FOR RENT REAL ESTATE FOR RENT
Apartments Furnished
74
Q ST.. HIS—A 4-roozn furnished iparl-
ment. clo;e in. B1019.
H ST., 1327—To
sub-le»s"
for
surnn-.tr
months, clean, cool apartment la The
Bins.
Roof eardea. Jrlzldalre. itrlctly
modern, reasonable. BS029.
L ST.. 1230—Two.
clean,
cool"
larje
roons and private bath. Also southeast
sleeping jooa-.5.
N ST.,
1741—Furnished apartments, al-
ready lo» rentals, radically
reduced.
B1170.
P ST. 1423—Clean, nicely furnished two
or three room apartments; also sleeping
rooms, reasonable. S2702.
11TH ST.. SO. 949 — Three rooms, sleep-
Ins porch and bath, southeast
front,
nicely furnished. «45. L6268.
11TH ST.. SO., 517—Fara'sted or unfur-
nished two and four-roons apartments;
clean and comfortable.
1210 G—Tiled bath, kitchenette and three
cool, well furnished rooms.
Separate
bedroom. Insulated walls, continuous hot
wat»r.
LS208.
Furnished and Unfurnished
Apartments
• 7CB
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
Farms and Land for Sale
FURNISHED OR
UNFURNISHED—Phone
t l TRADE—Modfrrj ftparcmfr.il and cattle
rsnches lor !»rm«
Ch««. A Hrrnan."
402 Fedfral Trust Bids
Phone B533C
Business Places for Rent
75
'WELL IMPROVED-Trn ncrr< on ^rn^<•'^•
i
bis barn, ctiltien coujes. lenct all Ucht.
'
Rural 5112
A REAL OPPORTUNITY—
THE BEST LOCATION—In the
city
of
Lincoln lor anyone interested in ignition
and battery service business.
ABOUT 1800 SQUARE FEET—Of 11 0 0 r
space: modern. In every respect. Heat
Included in rent. Very reasonable.
Houses for Sale
14TH ST., NO.. 1504 — F!;e-roo:n house, all
modern but heat, 2-stalI garage, II 050
Terms.
Easy
payments.
Call B4611
atter 5"30.
_
3400
MOHAWK— Five-room
all
rnodmi
house, oak finish and floors, small pay-
ment down, or will take >our vacant lot
or old house, balance monthly. Trestrr.
"
GENERAL TIRE CO.
£20 SO. 13TH ST.—B-122S.
12TH ST.. NO . 229—Two-room east frost
apar-nent. also lar;e east Iroct sleeping
room with running water
33S68.
17TH ST., SO., 904—Second "floor aparV
ment, in New Linden, with bedroom. Apt.
B-2. Call F4324 cr B2511.
18TH ST., SO.. 726—Furnished apartment,
very convenient, good draft
«T^JJ good
sleeping porch; private entrance; adults.
L7139
ATTRACTIVE—Front
second and
IlrSt
floor apartments, latter,
private en-
trance, bath, fireplace, lursished, 521-
furnbhed, walking
distance.
adults.
B2555.
BEAUTTFULLT—Finished in walnut first
floor front, three room apartment, new-
ly decorated
Two closets, $35. 932 So.
10th.
ROOM 55x142 FT.—In our fireproof build-
ing at 2415 O, to lease July 1st; suitable
lor grocery store, or would make nigh
class auto sales and service location.
Call Auto School. 32165.
Booses for Rent
77
BELVEDERE
APARTMENTS—Are
under
direct supervision and ycur wishes are
met on the spot if justifiable. 1124 N St.
CORNHUSKZH. 1317 L—Close in. rurnishea
apartment, low rentaL Inquire at build-
1=E- B4416. Office LS207.
EAGLE APARTMENTS—228 No. 12th St.
Modern, well furnished apartments; just
right for business people. See then to-
day. 32411.
EUCLID ST.. 1811—8-rooms and sleeping
porch, all modem Double garage." J40.00.
Inquire. 1312 Euclid. F1660.
EOLDREGE ST.. 2735—5-room buajalor
J M ST.. 1822—Seven-roonTduplex. all taod-
i
em. suitable for
two
small families;
I
garage; close ia. L7468. F7785.
S ST. 3069—Modem two rooms, upstairs,
i sli down, occupied by owner till July
' 1st. 530.00. L4412.
WASHINGTON ST., 1323--Five-room house,
modem but heat. lull lot, garage, 522.50.
F2316.
17TH. SO. 1116—Six room modem house.
July 1st.
< »TH ST . SO .
,
ozk frame burgalow, splrndld s!-ap» *"*
appearance.
See this and
the
pilcc,
S35CO_ BilIC
Mr Grl^gs.
i ACREAGE
AUCTION— Wednesday
juni-
I
25th. at 6.30 p m..
at 3430 'ssi. 33rd
I
street, one
block south of
S-icritlan
Blvd
This fl=e 6 acre tract has a 7
room modern, semi-btingabw. full oase-
msnt. with heating plant in good con-
dition. garage, chicken houses, cher-
ries. apples, plums, pears grapes, and '
all kind of small fruit
This is one or
tn» finest and most up to date aer«*
ages around Lincoln It is located lust
south of wher. Lincoln has done its
most building in the last 3 years. This
tract is suitable to plat lor" lots
now
Com? and buy it for a home, or invest-
ment.
Open
for Inspection.
Easv
terms. Col. D K. Brrson. Auc., B2170
Jacob Bedrich. owner
ATTRACTIVE 6-SOO1I— Bunsalotr.
Ran-
,
dolpb district, c:ose to school. .'4500: 5-
i
room buusaiow. Randolph dicfict S*2r0 •
•I
°~ L. y.rmstrpag. ^1447. LS332.
i SPLENT3ID
LOC ATION^Sev-n-rorm
all
I
modern home, full basement and garag;-
j
also gas sto-. e
B1407.
LA FAYSITE APTS.. 314 SO. 12TH—
nlslicd; gas lights and ice Inmished;
ilTifTTi and dishes 11 deiired.
By day,
week or month; summer rates. May 1st.
B4942. 37888.
LIGHT. AIP.T— Well ventilated nicely fur-
slshrd all modem
apartment,
ground
floor, walking distance: use
of wash
house: low rentals. 2330 Vine St.
NICELY FURNISHED—One
and
2-roorn
apartments, clean and cool, close in.
Call 33809.
NICELY
FURNISHED—Two-room
south
apartment to private
modern
home.
324S3.
PERSHING—Jlodren and up-to-date apart-
ment, frigldaire; will give special sum-
mer rates on lease: close In and very
desirable location, 1202 F St. 35058.
39TH AND ADAMS—Five rooms, two lot*,
S15.00. F2592 or B33g6.
^T.-. ilODEHN—Five or eight rooms, full
basement and garage: near State Faro.
Phone F1287 or M3702.
FOR RENT—Four-room house, 1219 Dawes
Ave.
Call L3363.
.
FOR RENT—8-roonJ modern house, 242
So. 13th. will show by appointment
Call 32622.
FOR HENT—Choice, seven
room home.
2310 Sewell; garage: oil burner. Inquire
during business hours.. 33815.
after
business hours, 3O9 ask lor 8103.
$6500.00.
NICE—Sis-room
home
wr.h •
breakfast onok, screened sleeping porch;
fine location: modem throughout- terms.
See W. L. Turner, 122 Nd. nth.
Lots for Sale
85
FOR SALE—Choice comer lot, 90x120 2EAb
and Woodsdale. B1716.
To Exchange Real Estate
88-
ADD THE COST—Of feature
difference
and we win trade you a brand new
house for your present one. large or
smalL
Pauley Lumber Co.. Real Estate
Dept. F2376
FOR HENT—Five-room modem bungalow,
1627 NO. 28th St.
3473?.
SO. 17TH., 1734—Two lour room apart-
ments, 1. 3 room nicely furnished, private
baths, line location,
£n
ideal place.
F4076.
WILL GIVE SPECIAL SUMMER RATES—
On lease in — ost <3ejir&b!e nicely slur-
nished small apartment, walking
dis-
tance, Et 648 SO. 12th St., Apt. 2. 31720-
FOR RENT—Seven room house, all mo<5-
em. Can S3S01.
IFIVS-ROOM COTTAGE—And garage. 2037
N. modem except heat. Inquire 2038 N.
L7875.
FURNISHED ROOMS—For light housekeep-
teg: one or two-rooia apartment, clean,
rent reasonable: shade and large porch:
private entrance; walking cistance. 1127
G. 35230.
Apartments Unfurnished
74A
C ST, 1620—Five rooms and bath, north
and south exposure: open for inspec-
tion. CaH 34292. business hours.
ST. 1347— 5 room laodem apartment
dunlei. east porch, vacant Jtrly 1st.
L934S.
25TH ST.. SO, 1744—Lower duplex, five
rocms, an modem. Call F O 232-W.
BUSINESS IS GOOD—Thar Vs. Tie first
sir months of tbig year have eclipsed the
same psiiod in 1S29. People are buying
rsal estate from us.
Valnes are good
and prices so reasonable that every per-
son can afford to own their own home.
Our price list on homes ranges
from
$3,000 to J40.000. We have somethine of
interest lor every home buyer. Tte First
Trust Co.. Real Estate Dspt. B120L
FOUR—Large rooms, soart and east ex-
posure, oak finish, hot water, Irigidaire,
£40. Sstellg Apartments. 24th. years "eacpiTieace terrisf esalorerr
and eszpiors* a Nearaslta and otter
states, ^e save scrrei U:o=Ernii- Cme
a or gise. 124 Sa 12ta. Uneoln.
SHOW
CASES
Reg. S100.00
$2950
rc?-NACSS
INSTAliED—And
renairesl
r sza V!n irorlL Screens rtcoverec
relrtecratcr* rtpalrsC. IHTs FSr-
_So._ ISta.
REPAIR
50c
.25
FCBNTTUHS 3SPAI3 CO.— 1C52
St. 'We are 1=2? esiinped » Co
TTKNZSS— 3o*?. r
tsr rrsair. palatine,
O. 335S8.
LAHGS WELL
Ponllry and SpppOes
43 j y-rfa prtf errrf. 322M, 32S4.
TO'^3 CAB — ?»
GLASS AND PAINT
: ISGHOSNS—SHe: beavSes. 7*ic. :
:ar Jell price lisa. UaroS) B««S-
err. lit and ?.
Nfftfcaj Staler Car Co- :?:
£ Pstst Co« I3J So 16t
ST, 3Z5S— 2 pleasant fsrr
TStTCJC— 3r;-rr r. T3^
rrtcs.
National Ko".;r Cai
Co. :?;* o St.
MERCHANDISE
COOP
HyGS TO EAT.
?ASTSTE1ZED MILS AND
««• SaaiUTT D»irr Co Piao? voci trr-
Articles for Sale
ST. ;cr7— Two moiss, nlrt;? Izmi
jES — Wr carrv » fsH lio" o
Harvrv T-^-^art 1:39 O
B42B5
SO. :CTH— Two mo=j lurs
ca Mcsafl f.oor
B4M4.
>-t»1-r r:»rss',r»S to S» KstUfsrtorj tn
TT r-stwct. Sobt. S. Grira-oii Co_ 110
"
Iv'TH ST- SO- 5»— Two ftr^ishri ri>«r:«
vtt'. al«o one room and fc*.t-
FTRNACSS—Join CrtnV-.
255* O Si
3t:«t Jtet»] Wcrts.
BIEE2.
lEWSPAPERr
AT FHAZIEB'S— Nr» ITTT WCTO»
He-
tfftts.
aai rtSJrei DfUL.
SSS So i:ia.
7Nt;TST?.rCTO—•arari
cartii'.iaa.
AND EEATTTO ENG
:TH ST. so.
nsra. IS 50. an£ s>rr
BnJtiness and Office Eqiilp
:ST3ST_ SD, <~— Or* 1>rr
~
BUSIXES5 A>*D OFFIOE
EQUIFMEST.
ALL SINIJS—OI
a=S safe*:;:i o.
T.'sas. C Ei:«cr, M.: rr Co. TZ Si irts
St.
RPAIRING.
TO?- SALE— Oae E-intftrarS siSlav
?TN3 HOOKS— Rf»KBi-
SHOE SHOP—3<3J 5 St
BU51VESS SER^CES OFFERED. CH:"
5- REAL ESTATE FOR RENT
«'- Sert-re*
?T«.« S^iJ
D 57 . ; SH — Ti"a:
MERCHANDISE
a '" " , •
• ^ i ^
rotost»«Ss
OO*T?A3tIES— Be»J-
:=r=Sb*$. «
rsr.t*
BiU*.
33* 8s.
Krrtes. Rrpalr Shsp. J14 Sa ait.
Tfc IB So illS SL. 3ET*L
i Battleship Floor Linoleum,
'Reg. 83.00,
square yard
'30 ft Shoe Shel- §
; ving, Reg. S4.00, ft.
jMeilink Safe Cab-
inet, Reg. S500.00..
1 Safe Cabinet,
Reg. S600.00
1 Dieboid Safe,
Reg. S350.00
X-Ray Foot 3Ia-
chirel Reg. ?600.00.
1 Cash Register,
Reg. 8350.00
Office Chairs,
5
Reg. 59.50
Fixture?.
Display
Stands—Backgrounds, etc. at
Ridicalouslv Lo^ Price?,
MAYE
"200
S50
si?5
LINCOLN NEBRASKA,
EWSPAPER!
SIXTEEN
THE LINCOLN STAR-WEDNESDAY,
JUNE 25, 1930.
MINERVA'S MAIL
Take Your Troubles To Minerva
Something for Nothing.
A lot or people in this world try
to get something for nothing. Some-
times the attempt is made in the
business world, and it spells failure
Some times it is in the general game
of lire and this likewise spells fail-
ure. There are both married men
and women who wish to receive al
and give nothing. Some people fail
to make the right social adjust-
ments. They demand everything of
their friends and eive nothing. Con-
sequently they lose their friends. We
,all have to give in equal proportion
to that which we receive.
A Drear Specter.
One of the tragic episodes of mar-
ried life is outlined in a letter to-
day from "Five Years Married." In
these five years, two children have
come into the home. The wife has
been engrossed with the multitudin-
ous duties of child-bearing and baby
caring. She has grown stout. She
nas fallen out of things. Now she
suddenly sees a dread specter in her
path, that of losing the love of her
husband.
She says that when he is home,
he acts very bored, and finds fre-
quent excuses to take him away
from home. The wife is ready for
the first time in -several years to
look about her and have some pleas-
ures, but she finds a devastating
lack of interest in her husband to
all of her suggestions. She feels des-
perate, cries a great deal, is quite
o\srcome with self pity, and asks
what she shall do .
She must keep up her courage
and clean house thoroughly. Before
cleaning house, one takes a thorough
inventory. What is to be discarded,
what saved, what replenished and
what rejuvenated.
Applied personally, she must ask
herself: "What was it about herself
that originally attracted her hus-
band and what share of those
characteristics has she neglected?"
It doesn't do one particle of good
to bemoan and wail, to feel self
righteous'and virtuous and brood
upon the fact that she has been
giving her time and her strength to
his babies. She must simply look to
the present and the future and meet
conditions as they are .
She is stout. He probably prefers
the flapper type. All right. She need
not remain stout. Any woman with
Intelligence and perseverance can
regain her figure. She has become
On Radio Programs
liary Hopple, contralto, is in two
NBC programs. On Tuesday nights
she
appears in the
Plane of
Dreams, WEAF chaw, and on Fri-
days she sings with the Quakers,
WJZ network. '
stale in mind and flabby of muscle
and wit. All right. She must, with a
toss of her head, find means tff
catch up. Let her seek outdoor exer-
:ise and varied companionship and
nterests. She should read, avidly
and with a retentive mind. She
should
deliberately
court
fresh
charms and new life. No matter
how worthy the cause, she has be-
come stale, and it is up to her to
make a come-back.
Making the Fight
Dear Minerva: I ani writing to
you for greatly needed advice.
I
lave been married five years and
we have two children. Now I am
afraid my husband has ceased to
ove me
Why is that husbands so fre-
quently cease to care for a woman
after she has had dhildren. It is un-
fair. My husband Is very youn
looking I don't look so young, fo
I have worked very hard and ha
sonic ratner serious physical crise
to go through Now I am heart
broken I cannot look pretty. I can
get no joy out of anything.
I have gotten quite stout and
know he doesn't like that. I look in
the mirror and am so discouraged
for I know he could attract any
young girl he wished. I would stil
be good looking if I had not given
over these five years to caring foi
the babies and the house, with no
very much money to do with. Now
he is making very good money bu
he does not love me any more so
what is the use of anything.
The evenings that he is home he
says are so long. He lies around on
the davenport and yawns and is
very restless. He says he
woult
rather be working. When I sugges
that we go places, he finds some ex-
cuse. It is all because he is tired of
me and longs for another.
I just cannot give him up for I
love him so much. I cannot see
wherein I have failed, for I have
always done what seemed to be my
duty and have never complained
ric matter how hard it was. Every-
one looks pityingly on me. I hac
pictured matrimony- and mother-
hood so very differently. Five Years
Married.
A. Many women go through the
same thing that you are suffering
and many women have made the
brave fight and won out.
So can
you also. A husband likes to take
pride in his wife's appearance just
as she does in his. There is no ex-
cuse for your being fat
and old
looking, and it is a condition that
can be remedied. Think of yourself
a little more and go through a pro-
cess of rejuvenation.
You are an intelligent woman. Get
help in the home and get yourself
out of it for long walks, outdoor ex-
ercise, to visit with other women
and regain some sparkle and zest.
Seek things which will create new
interests and freshen up your mind.
Make yourself attractive to your-
self and to other people and your
husband will be attracted too.
You love him and want
him.
Don't brood over the injustices of
the situation. Don't mope.
Don't
even consider giving him up.
Put
up a clever, game fight. There is no
reason why you should not be hap-
pier than you ever were before.
Peoples Forum
(Continued from Page Eight.)
remember in tie days of our boy-
hood of reading of these great
heroes, of almost every nation and
clime, ot trying to outdo the others
in the efforts of reaching these
solitary and
far-sfway
indistinct
points. I remember a poem which
I learned at school more than a
half century ago, when Franklin at-
tempted the unaccomplished feat.
The poem reads something as fol-
lows:
Sir John Franklin.
Ob, -whither sail tbou. Sir John EranWin?
Cried a whaler la Baffin's bay.
To know it between the north and the
south
I can find a broad seaway.
I charge you back, Sir Franklin.
If you would live and thrive,
For between the land and the polar (zone
No iran can, sail alive.
But the story which interested me
the most in these Arctic explora-
tions. Is the following, in which one
of my own family was a partici-
pant, who went out on the following
expedition:
The Crew ol the "Proteus."
With 'the Greely Arctic Expedition Dur-
ing the Years 1881-1884.
[See Accounts in Books of the Unhersily
Library )
"Tnret Years in the Arctic Service."
Greely. 1881-1884.
Clasi 919.8 Book C 81
Vols. 1-3.
Captain Penn's Voyage to Baffin's Bay,
H19.8, Su. 8, Vols. 1 and 2.
House
Mlscellanous
H—738. H.
Documents,
734,
First Lieutenant—A. W. Greely, Fifth
Cavalry. Arctic Signal Service.
Second Lieutenant—P F. Lislingsbury,
Eleventh Inf., Arctic Signal Service.
Second Lieutenant—James P. Lockwood,
Twenty-third Inf.. Arctic Signal Service.
Sergeants—Edward Israel. Signal Corps.
TJ. S. Army; Winlleld S Jewell. Signal
Corps, TJ. S. Army. George W. Rice. Signal
Corps. TJ. S. Army: David C. Ralston. Slg-
rul Corps, TJ. S. Army; Hamden S Gard-
ner. Signal Corps. U. 5. Army: William
H. Cross, General Service: David L Brain-
erd, Co. L. Second Cavalry; 'David Lynn,
Co. C, Secondw Cavalry.
Corporals—Daniel C. Starr. Co. F. Second
Cavalry: Paul Grimm. Co. H. Second Cal-
alry; Daniel C. Starr. Co. F. Second Cav-
alry- «p«l Grimm. Co H. Eleventh Cal-
alry; Nicholas Salor, Co. H. Second Cav-
alry: Joseph Ellson, Co. E. Tenth Cavalry.
PrtTBtes—Charles D. Henry.
Co.
F.
yifth Cavalry: Maurice Cornell. Co. B.
Third Cavalry: Jacob Bender. Col F. Ninth
Cavalry: Francis Long. Co. F. Ninth Cav-
alry: 'William Whlsler. Co. F. Ninth Cav-
alry: *Henry Bierderblck. Co. C. Seven-
teenth Cavalry: "Julias Fredericks, Co. -I.
Second Cavalry: James Rvan. Co. H. Sec-
ond Cavalry; William A. ""«. Co. C. Sec-
ond Cavalrv.
•GrimrB deserted and was re-
placed by Private Roderick P.
Schneider.
*A difference occurred in the list-
Ing of names, those of Linn,
Whissler and Frederick.
Dr. Ociave Pavey was ordered to
report from Disco. New Foundland.
The three years of exploration
was filled •with many hardships and
privation. The Proteus failed to
make the grade and the company
was left floating on the ice. on
mainlands and many nights were
spent asleep on the ice.
Lieutenant Kislingsbury died while
asleep in his sleeping bag. Sergeant
Brainerd tra* overcome with sun
blindness and was left on the ice
to die. He was the one man In the
party that set the stake the high-
est point in the Arctic sea ever set
by man at that date. Some said It
was "Mt McKinlrv." others differ
The explorers were at test rescued
by Captain Schley. afterwards a
nero of Manilla, who -was seat out
with a ship. I think it was named
The Bear."
The ordy survivors of that fate-
fnl Toyagre today are lieutenant A.
W. Greely, and Sergeant David L.
Brainerd, the latter having partlaHy
recovered his sight through the
Rovernment securing: the best ocu-
lists in the -world, and each of the
two are now on pensions provided
by the government They are still
living at Washington, D. C_ and the
last reports I have are that the
government furnished them with
homes.
Two brothers of my step-mother
George nnd TFI^m Baylaes. sailed
out of New Bedford. Mass.. in the
pood old days when "whalinc" was
one of the principal occupations. I
hare «»t many an hour and listened
to 'Unde George" tdl of the art of
whaling in the Sooth Sea. It was
said that he was the farthest south
pf any whaler fbe and his ship and
the crew) of any man of that day. i
His stories were always filled with
romance and adventure that would
shock the most placid, and many a
night after that I have sat and
brooded over the tales he would tell,
for, he said, the South Sea was the
most
dangerous and the
most
fascinating of the two, and when
one went through the South -Sea
alive and returned safe, he would
not be*afraid to enter the North
S^ea, and feel perfectly at home.
HENRY ALLEN BRAINERD.
Bedtime
Stories
(Continued from Page Eight.)
heads of your babies, Peter Rabbit?
How would you like it?"
"But I didn't know there were
any babies," protested Peter. "How
was I to know? I wouldn't have
have frightened them for the world.
Jerry hadn't told me that you had
any babies."
"I'm glad Jerry has sense enough
not to be telling our private affairs
to everybody," said Mrs. Muskrat.
"However, that is no excuse. Peter
Rabbit. No excuse at all. You
had no business to be thumping on
thai roof."
By this time Peter was beginning
to feel a little provoked. "This
bank is free, so far as I know," said
he. "I'd like to know who has any
better right to sit on it, or thump
on it, than I have. If you don't
want your roof thumped on, why do
you build a home here, anyway? I
might have thumped -here without
knowing that your home was there
at all. I guess I've a right to do as
I please up on the bank."
Mrs. Muskrat's eyes fairly blazed.
She started up that bank in a
hurry. Peter took one good look at
her.
He noticed her long- yellow
teeth as she drew her lips back.
Then Peter suddenly decided that
he had business somewhere else.
Away he went—lipperty-lipperty-
lip. He glanced back. Mrs. Musk-
rat was out on the bank and actual-
ly chasing him, and she was mov-
ing surprisingly fast for such a
stout person with such short legs.
"Phew!" exclaimed Peter. "She
must be angry to think that she
can possibly catch me. I guess I
shall have to keep away from there
for a while. But how was I to know
anything about those babies? I got
more than I bargained for. Yc«,
sir, I got more than I bargained for.
Well, Mrs. Muskrat can't catch me
and'I'm glad she.can't. I wouldn't
like to be very near her when she
is in such a state of mind as she is
now."
Of course, Mrs. Muskrnt
didn't
chase Peter far. No one could know
better than she how useless such a
chase would be. She merely wanted
to work off a little of her anger
and to perhaps give Peter a little
fright. So presently she turned
back, dived into the Smiling Pool
and went back to those precious
babies in the snug house in the
bank.
(Copyright, 1930, T. W. Burgess.)
The next story:
Explains."
"Jerry Muskrat
BOLTS PULLED AND
TRAIN IS WRECKED,
'BUT NO ONE HURT
ST. PAUL, Minn., June 25—(AP)
—Four cars of the Mountaineer
Chicago-St. Paul train of the Soo
line, were derailed last night four
miles southwest of St. Paul. None
of the 150 passengers was injured
Railroad officials said switch bolts
had been pulled from the rails,
causing the derailment.
i
Baby Stars
Wanted
To play in natural color
movies for proud parents
THE time to start making
Kodacolor movies of the baby
is now — before he grows up.
It will mean more to you than
you can ever realize liow, to
h»veapermaftent,livingCine-
Kodak home movie record of
your children as they grow up
—in full color.
Complete,details regarding
Kodacolor are available here.
We'll give you a free Koda-
color exhibition including
movies other parents hare
made. Drop in at your con-
venience.
Complete Cin£-Kodak outfits
on our easy budget-buying
plan — only $1$ down.
EASTMAN KODAK
STORES, INC.
1217 O Street
As the Main Feature of
SANITARY GOODS WEEK
these 3 sanitary
needs to give
women, perfect
comfort
KOTEX
KOTEX BELT
KOTEX APRON
The Belt ...vtca . ~, not c&tand
fot-
/(»
~-N.
Ifel Xs
.
felo^i IJCtCt Will iHlfc
Y
OU'LL discover, once you
use Kotcx, any number of
dings about it -which distin-
guish it from any ordinary sani-
tary pad. Kotcx is bygicnicaUy
safe. It protects health at a time
•when vitality is low. Our lead-
ing hospitals use it.
Kotcx is shaped to fit. Yon
can -wear any kind of frock
under the roost difficult o'rcnai-
The ApT
Imenn. lti*tbei
naitatT pad of milliotu of
woacn »ho wiUacccstau*
ANOTHER step in sani-
tary progress! Tbc makers
of Kotex have developed a
dainty and wonderfully
comfortable sanitary belt
and apron, which give, with
Kotex pads, a new kind of
sanitary comfort.
THEKOTEXBELTisas
soperior in its way as Kotex
pads! It is woven so that it
fits perfectly without a fold
ora wrinkle. Two widths—
1-inch and 134-Inch. Three
sizes—large, medium and
small. The price is but 60c,
THE KOTEX APRON
tcrfredittrcm'tcc:comar or Kid?.
stances and feel entirely free of
Rswde-prooC. Ce.
self-consciousness. You can fed immaculate
has many unusual advantages. It is made of
and dainty, for Koccx deodorizes by a special
delicate silk, rubberized just enough to be
process, t* hich is most effective,
water-proof, not enough to be gummy, sticky,
or have an objectionable rustle. This lovely
apron is light and cool. Women will wear it
to avoid untidy skin wrinkles, as well as for
Kotex is disposable
Then, of course, there is the reason most
women first began to use Kotex: it is so easily
disposed of.
sanitary protection. When you buy Kotcx,
buy a Kotcx Apron—85c,
l
Lincoln's Busy Store—Cor, llth & 0 Sts.—"The Best for Lcss"—S. & H. Green Discount Stamps Are An Added Saving
THRIFTY THURSDAY AT THE BIG
^/TStampJubilee!
Another big day of Jubilee bargains ... and TEN
FREE S. & H. GREEN STAMPS GIVEN to you for clipping and
presenting coupon at the third floor premium section... no pur-
chase necessary...one to customer. Profit by this special extra
stamp offer.. .and be sure to ENTER THE MISS THRIFT CON-
TEST ... costs you nothing ... particulars in our corner show
window.
REMNANTS at
Ginghams, Piques, Prints, Voiles,
Domestics, Outings, Muslins, etc. hundreds
and hundreds of good usable lengths in de-
sirable colors and prints and offered Thurs-
REGULAR
day in this great cleanup sale—at just
PRICES
GOLD'S—Se:ond Floor.
Great Thursday Selling of Smart Flannel, Gay Printed Crepe, Silk, Voile 6- Rayon
DRESSES
This Coupon Entitle) the Bcartr lo
10 a«f STAMPS FREE
Upon Freientatlon at
•Vf«*-a/"
PREMIUM
1U.S4.
SECTION
Third Floor.
GOOD ONMt
Thursday, June 26. 1930
(No PurcnasE ts
Necessary) (S)
FOR SPORTS
AFTERNOON
AND
INFORMAL
OCCASIONS
At
Plan, with-
out fail, to see
these Frocks,
such a profusion
of pretty,
sum-
mery styles at
this
remarkable
saving is an OD-
portunity not to
be negiectedW..
Frocks for imme-
diate wear. ..that
will look fresh
and
stylish
through sujnmery
Jays.
% Pastels, high shades,
sprightly prints. ..types
for all occasions.. .wide
selection of modes and
materials. Crepes, piques,
voiles, flannels, silks, etc.
GOLD'S—Street Floor.
SEE WINDOW SHOWING
SLIGHTLY SOILED
Silk Underwear
Clearaway of
Women's Smart
i Slippers
BROKEN LOTS
339
About 200 pairs
of light colored and
patent Pumps also
Strap patterns — all
greatly reduced.
Not all sizes but
wonderful bar gains
for those who can be
fitted.
jj
GOLD'S—Second Floor.
«
t
<» * «» ftm **mm «•««»»» » » » « » »««»».
Stepins, ted-
dies, dance sets in
dainty lace
trimmed
and tailored styles, of
soft- fine crepe de chine
—pastel colorings, teg-
ular 155 values, only
slightly soiled. In this
Thrifty Thursday sale
at
98
Garment
GOLD'S—Third Floor.
GIRLS' ROMPERS
Sleeveless, and made of
fast color materials with perky
bow ties on shoulder...elastic knee,
drop seat and tiny bow tie at back.
Good assortment of shades in printed
materials.. .2 and 3 year sizes. Each
GOLD'S—Third Floor.
BABY SLIPPERS
Only 58 pair of these In-
fants one strap Slippers with
w>ft soles and made of floe black pat-
ent or white kid. Sizes 0 to 3. At toe
pair, for Thrifty Thursday.. .
GOUTS—Third Floor.
ISO PRETTY
Home Frocks
Thursday at
Crisp, cool prints in
these attractive H o m e
Frocks, made with Cares and
straight linss. Short or sleeve-
less models... some tastily
trimmed with organdy... in sn
assortment
of glorious colors.
Sizes 14 fo 44. For
Thrifty
Thursday at
...................
GOLD'S — {Third Floor.
69
Each
WEE GIRLS' OVERALLS
Clever outfits for the
miss 1 to 8 yrs. of gay red jean
cloth, light weight, long legs, suspend-
ers and cunning pocket trim. A spe-
cial at only
GOLD'S—Third Floor.
RELISH DISHES AT
69
Clever little
popular Pewter ware
Dishes in
with its
rich dull gray finish... flu ted rim. and
a convenient dish for relish, candy or
nuts. A special for Thrifty Thursday at
GOUTS—Street Floor. 87
USED FURNITURE
Taken in Exchange
Under New-for-Old Plan
These will go quickly Thursday at the low prices listed— Be early!
2 Piece Tapestry Living
Room Suite
17.50
2 Piece Cane Suite, velour
covering
12.50
2 Piece Mohair Suite,
solid mahogany
frame
37.50
Overstaffed Velour
Davenport
12.50
Oak Rocker, leather
seat
2.50
1 Round Oak Dining
Table
6.50
6 Library Tables, each 3.00
1 Iron Frame Spring 1.50
1 Quarter Sawed Oak
| * Combination Desk arjd
Buffet
..........
7.50
BookCase
1 Solid Walnut Drop Leaf i Oak House Desk . .4.75
Table
...........
7.50
1 Oak Dresser
6.50
1 Fibre Rocker
3.75
Imitation Leather
i 2 Iron Frame Bed
Davenport
8.75
<
Springs, each
75c
, Arm Rocker
1-00
\
Set of 3 Dining Room
Chairs, Each
1-50
9x12 Wilton Rug ....'7.50
Walnut Veneer Din i n g
Room Suite, 66-in. Buf-
fet, Large O b l o n g
Table, 6 Chairs, com-
plete
69.50
COLONS—Fourth Floor.
i
|
!•