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Lincoln Journal Star from Lincoln, Nebraska • 2
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Lincoln Journal Star from Lincoln, Nebraska • 2

Location:
Lincoln, Nebraska
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

i tnCOLN EYFMNG JOl HVKL TuJn; May 31. 1949 Districts Ask Crash Injures Five North Bend Persona Engine Trouble Delays night to Wife' BedaideU Gen. Graham Will Speak Four Promiiient-' Americans To Receive N.U. Honorarics Robert Crosby, North Platte, attorney for Platte valley, contended the court should not recognize the union became Its petition fails to shoMt that a At Creighton Banquet Dismissal of LOS ANGELES. VP).

Tha Trans-Pacific journey of a navjr chief petty of ficer to the bedsjjrta jj labor dispute exists. Hydro Hearing The Nebraska court of indus Walter said the Loup district has only two employes that are union members. Crosby said the Platte district has but one union employe The union is seeking a change In the working rules and an increase' in wages. COUNCIL BLUFFS, la. W).

Five North Bend. persons were hospitalized for cuts and bruises Tuesday When their car overturned on highway 275, about eight miles south of Coun-cU Bluffs. Mrs. Harlan K. Karalt, ,29, the driver, told Deputy.

Sheriff Jim Huych she thought a truck forced the car onto the shoulder and she was unable to bring- it back on the highway. It rolled over. Also hospitalized were John A. Karak, 73, and his wife, 63; Ed Kern, 86, and his wife. 76.

trial relations was asked Tuesday to dismiss the hearing of the al leged labor dispute between local union 739, IBEW, and the three Nebraska hydr-electric districts. The request was made by at oi nis cnucaiiy-ui wue nil a delay Tuesday. i Chief Storkeeper William jj Kopytko was aboard a navy! plane two hours out of Honolulu, but it was forced to turn back" because of engine trouble and! bad weather. He was on the last leg of a 5,000 mile trip grom Guam, Navy officials said it was not definite when the flight would! be resumed- Meanwhile, the condition off his wife, aMrion, 30, in a general I hospital iron lung, was unchaged. i The young mother of two layj near death from an attack of in-fantile paralysis.

torneys representing the districts Maude E. Clark, Ex-Kansan, Dies on the grounds the union has not made a Showing that employes of the districts do. not receive wages comparable to thost paid in the same labor market area. The court was scheduled to hear evidence in' the case but 4-H'crs Told I. 'I Si DR.

EISENHOWER granted a recess after hearing 'Think Ahead' By Dr. White attorneys for each party outline Mrs. Maud E. Clark, 72, of 520 So. 25th, a resident of Lincoln for 32 years, died Tuesday morning.

She came here from Logan, where she lived for six years. Surviving are her husband, Horace; two daughters; three sisters; a brother, and three granddaughters. Funeral services will be at 11 a. m. Thursday at the grave in Lincoln Memorial Park, with Rev.

Ronald Dickson officiating. Burial will be in Wyuka. Maturity means not only thinking of the present but( in terms of several generations ahead. So spoke the Dr. C.

Vin White, mm pastor of Lincoln First Pres-by terian church in an address to more than 300 4-H club mem briefly what they expect to prove. The court granted the recess at the request of David Omaha, union attorney, who said he wanted to work out a stipulation with district attorneys. The hearing was to reconvene at 1:30 p. m. Robert Beatty, North Platte, attorney for the Trl-county district, told the court the district has no employes that are members of the union.

He also stated that Tri-county should not be a party in the action because it is no. longer a member of the Nebraska public power system, having terminated its association last April 1. Otto F. Walter, Columbus, attorney for the Loup district, and bers attending Club Week at the University of Nebraska college "1 of agriculture. Blessed Relief From Constipation Misery Speaking on "Evidences of Maturity," the Rev.

Mr. White urged the clubbers to think" in 'A OMAHA, (if). The man who guards the health of President Truman will speak in Omaha Tuesday night. Brig. Gen.

Wallace H. Graham, personal physician to President Truman, give the main address at the annual Creighton University senior-alumni ban quet. Thirteen" years ago General Graham was at a similar function, only that time he was a member of the. 1936 graduating class of the Creighton University school of medicine. Planting of Corn Neara Vj Completion The state-federal bureau of agricultural statistics-'-- Tuesday said 75 to 80 percent of the state's corn crop should be planted by now.

Weather the past three days was very favorable for the work. As of last Saturday the intended crop was 67 percent planted. The breakdown showed planting near complete in the north central and northeast areas, 72 percent complete in the east central, but only 42 percent done in southeast. In the southwest and panhandle it was 70 to 80 percent done. THE BUREAU'S weekly report said there were some reports of damage from cut worms and from hail.

Winter wheat was listed as unchanged. Generally, the report said, the, crop has stooled well and most of it has made good growth. But development has been offset to a certain extentby thin stands, orange leaf rust, aphids, weeds, root rot and some reports of mosaic. Hail did considerable damage in Dundy, Chase, Perkins, Deuel and southern Garden counties. ONE REPORT from Chase county said damage was 80 percent in an area of 434 square miles.

In this area some corn and sorghum will replace wheat. There were reports of oats and barley turning yellow, apparently due to a lack of nitrates. The cool, wet weather has been unfavorable for development of nitrates. In nearly all of the south Platte counties and in northeast Nebraska the first crop of alfalfa is ready for harvest. Cattle were reported as doing fine on pasture with a good demand for calves because of the good pasture.

Mrs. Linda Roope terms of indebtedness to society. The only good basis for ownership, he said, is willingness to share possessions. He praised the progress of 4-H clubs in teaching youngsters mature thinking. One of the or J.

P. CROWD EN DR. MAJOR "Irregularity made me feel so miserable I often had to stay home. My trouble ended when I made KELLOGG' ALL-BRAN a part of my daily diet." Clement L. Bothmer, 131 So.

61k Street El Centra. Cheyenne Tops ganization's big contributions, he Wheat Output said, is teaching people to live in peace with others. J'whether you like them or not." Four prominent Americans will receive honorary degrees from the University of Nebraska at commencement exercises held Monday. They are: Dr. George W.

Beadle, head of the division of biology at the California Institute of Technology; Milton S. Eisenhower, president of Kansas State college; Dr. Randolph T. Major, vice president and scientific director of Merck Rahway, N. 'and James F.

Crowdon, chief hydraulic engineer of the Aluminum Company of America. All but Mr. Eisenhower attended the University of Nebraska. DR. BEADLE, born in Wahoo, received his bachelor of science degree from Nebraska in 1926, and holds the master of science and doctor of philosophy degrees from Cornell university.

He has been on the faculties of Cornell, Institute de Biologie in Paris, France and Harvard and Stanford "universities prior to his appointment as head of the division of biology at California Institute of Technology in Pasadena in 1946. He is an outstanding authority on genetics. MR. EISENHOWER was graduated from Kansas State college in 1924, and began his career of public service as American vice consul at Edinburgh. Scotland, in 1924.

He joined the staff of the U. S. department of agriculture in 1926 and two years later was named information director of the UJ5.D.A. In 1924 he was named head of the war relocation authority and later fcecame associate director of the office of war information. In June, 1943 he was appointed president of Kansas State college.

Mr. Eisenhower served on President Truman's commission on higher education and since .1946 has been chairman of the U. S. national commission for U.N.E.S.C.O. Mr.

Eisenhower will also be the commencement speaker. DR. MAJOR received his A.B. and M.S. degrees from Nebraska in 1922 and 1924 respectively and his PhXt.

degree from Princeton university in 1927. He became associated with Merck Co. in 1930. Dr. Major has been responsible in part for development of the company's chemical researchv laboratories and its Institute for Therapeutic Research, and its advances in the field of alkaloids and antibiotics.

He is well known for his research in medicinal -chemistry. MR. CROWD EN, a native of Iowa, attended the University of Nebraska for one year and then quit to accept a job in 1906 with the Burlington railroad. During the next 17 years he worked for several firms in the Pacific northwest except for a period during Wqrld war I which he distinguished himself for bravery in action with the Fourth engineers in France. He joined the Aluminum Company of America in 1925 and was named to his present, posi-'tion in 1938.

He is recognized as an international authority on hydraulic and hydroelectric, develops personality, skill and character and good fellowship essential to living in society. The youngsters were entertained by the-Lincoln high girls' glee club under the direction of Miss Dorothea Core. The young visitors toured the agricultural college campus during afternoon. A banquet is scheduled for them Tuesday evening at the Student Union. Calif.

This is one of hundreds of unsolicited letters. If your constipation is due to lack of bulk in the diet, try this: Eat an ounce of ALL-BRAN daily, drink plenty of water. If not satisfied after 10 days, send the empty carton to Keljogg's, Battle Creek, Mich. Get DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK I Buy today. One of the greatest evidences of maturity, the Rev.

Mr. White said, is realizing indebtedness to society and the fact that one will not live long enough to repay it. The 4-H'ers were led in rec Markets Hit '49 Lows oh Key Issues Wheat, Rye Are Off Sharply NEW YORK. CP). Stock, bond nd "grain price dropped abruptly Tuesday.

Leading stocks declined a few cents to around $3 a share in one of the year's worst setbacks. The general price level of the market hit a new low for 1949. Many individual issues sold at the lowest prices from a longer period. Wheat in the Chicago board of trade cracked sharply, following a severe decline in the price cash wheat at Kansas City. Eye also weakened.

The decline in security and grains prices had no immediate connection. Another cut in steel production schedules for this week sev-nth in a row was considered an important market factor in Wall street. U. S. Steel Corp.

old common stock, for instance, sold at the lowest price since 1947 with a decline of $2 a share to about $66. Also disturbing to Wall street thinking was the fact that the market had broken thru price levels which in the past have attracted strong resistance to selling pressure. Generally, tho, the price declines were considered the latest twist on a deflationary road. The latest report of the Federal Reserve board for April disclosed the fifth straight monthly drop in industrial output. The board added that the decline continued thru early May.

People are disturbed about this contraction in business activity. Today's price trends are a reflection of jthat concern. Other key issues Youngstown Sheet Tube, General Motors Chrysler, Montgomery Ward, Allied Chemical, International1 Paper, Standard Oil (N.J.), and Santa Fe. Wheat lost more than 5 cents bushel before some buying support developed. Rye was down around 3 to J4 cents.

i Lien Doesn't Hold Againsi Insurance The, lein a county has against property of a recipient of old age assistance does not attach to the Insurance money paid when the residence is destroyed by fire. This was the ruling Tuesday of Atty. Gen. James Anderson in response to a question raised by Co. Atty Elmer Witte of Pawnee City.

Witte said an old age client owned a home which was destroyed by fire and asked if the county had a lein against the proceeds of the i'Sirance policy. Andersonsafd if does not, and that the cojnty's claim is subject to the preferred- claims for funeral expenses and medical serv-ives. The lein, he said, attached cipient may have owned but the to any other real estate the reinsurance money can't be regarded as real estate. Two Arabs Killed TEL AVID. (UP), Two Arabs liave been killed and ten injured in an attempt to infiltrate Israeli lines to their former homes in the Judean hill villages near Jerusalem Tuesday.

Some 40,000 Arab refugees, most of them returned from Jordan, are reported to be in the Jerusalem area. reation Tuesday by Miss Harriet Elliott, a youth leader from Bloomington, Ind. Miss Elliott also spoke on the subject of values of recreation. She said it Cheyenne county was Nebraska's biggest winter wheat producer last year, Director of Agriculture Ruf us Howard said Tuesday. He said Cheyenne's yield was 4,661,370 bushels, an average of 21 bushels per acre.

The state produced a total of 81,938,000 bushels, an average of 20.5 bushels per acre. He estimated this year's production at 63,000,000 bushels. Burt county wheat made 31.5 bushels per acre to lead the state in per acre production. Nine other top producers besides Cheyenne were: Pfrklns Box Butte. 2.252.W0 Hitchcock 2.482,400 Keith ...2.126,300 Chase 2, 40 Lancaster 2.066.020 Deuel ...2,334.260 Saline ...2.021,340 Kimball .2.274,370 I jfrnfimr tbT or tea Uy vitfc utoflel iiircv c'tS tip BOTTLE CAPS AT YOUR DEALERT0DAY1 Bottled by BOTTLING CO.

Mtk a twtrui as. wiuun Classes -l2H Kind RECORDS VICTOR COLUMBIA DECCA CAPITOL and others A Superior Miuitti Service Won't You Coll Todoy? SCHMQLLER MUELLER Assurance of Sathhcfion ton. He said work would start "immediately." A formal contract must be properly signed by Mayor Miles and Henninger and sent to Washington for final approval PIANO CO. 1212 St 2-6724 Opn Thais. Ere 'til 9:30 P.

M. 1309 St Taken by Death Mrs. Linda Roope, 72, of 1945 a resident of Lincoln since 1903, died Monday night. Her husband, Thomas, died in 1945. dp Mrs.

Roope was born in Lyons, N. living in Sioux City, sum mSSf Airport Lease Approval Certain City council approval of a 99-year lease with the Nebraska national, guard on 29 acres at the municipal airport appeared certain Tuesday. Brig. Gen. Guy N.

Henninger told the council a contract for construction of an $83,000 guard motor vehicle storage building has been approved in Washing- where she was married in 1900, in St. Paul, and in To-peka, before coming to Lincoln. She was a member of First Baptist church. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. J.

B. Harley of Lincoln; four grandchildren, and one great grandchild. 0 Council Okays Eastmont Plan A proposal of property owners in Eastmont addition that 30 feet from the extended center of street be dedicated for street purposes in the Cotner blvd. area will be approved by the city council. The city planning commission has asked for 50 feet, so that this and future plats abutting on street would permit a width of 100 feet.

The commission says street will, become the principal approach to Veterans' hospital as the city expands to the east, and envisions a 100-foot width from the capitol to the hospital. Mayor Clarence G. Miles said the city itself has no prior plan and that no ordinance ha's been set up for the proposed future Eastmont addition covers both sides of Cotner blvd. from to and property owners are anxious to get plats approved so that deeds may be sold. PMSi l) Speciaihed RADIO REPAIR llome or Auto 24 HOUR SERVICE FACTORY PERFECT PARTS QUALITY TUBES New RCA-Delco-Admlrsl Radios SIDLES 1400 BUICK 2-7027 It DELIVERED AT YOUR DOOR INCLU0INO KADIO, VHDtHStAT HIAUK DtfUOSTEK, WIND.

IHfflD WASHHS.tACK.Uf UOHTS-AND DYNAKOW OHIVI ON ftOADMASTM MO0US. SPECIAL SERIES New SPECIALS are sow under development and price he announced when production ol thk sent! I returned. Im i HENRY I. JAILOR. ABC N.lwok, Monday moiKf.

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