FLAETSIIQffTH SE3S1 - TCZHIrY JOSBHAL THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1927. TIOZ TTTO Nehawka Department! Prepared in the Interests of the People of Nehawka and Surrounding Vicinity Especially for the Journal Readers. Richard Dix In "The Quarter Rack at Xehawka Auditorium. Feb- ruary 15th. and 16th. The Farmers Grain Co.. by its raanaper. shipped a car of corn last Saturday and another on Monday. Henry Sturm v; c-a.U-tt o tiatts mouth on last Friday vhere he had rome business matters to look alter for a short time. x Georce I. Lloyd living near ray, was rteitinjr and also looking after some business matters in Ne hawka on Monday of tbis week. C. F. Hitt w.is a vis-.tor in Platts mouth on lat Friday where he had some business mutters to look after as well as Tisrtirijr with friends. On Mond.v of this weeK. I M. Stone moved into the residence prop ertv of G. A. Murdoch, where they will make their home for the present. The bovs and girls teams of the TCthawka schools will so to Mur dock on Thursday of this week to try i&suea with the teams of that school.' Walter J. Wunderlich an Harry Swanson. they representing the Fed eral Land Bank were looking after Always Dependable The Crosley Radio V7e also sell the Radiola. Come and Lear them and let us tell you about their superior reception qual ity. A demonstration will convince. Light and Power for Work Kohler of Kohler Electric Plants. Ask ns for information about them. THE LUNDBERG GARAGE Nehawka - Nebraska For Your Stock Per Ton Per Cwt. Tankage $80.00 $4.00 Shorts 38.00 1.90 Bran 32.00 1.60 Oil Meal 3.50 Chick Scratch 2.50 Laying Mash V 2.50 Cotton Seed Meal 2.50 . Alfalfa Meal 2.25 We grind ear corn as well shelled. 1 5c per 1 00 DOUnds. Manhattan Oils Fhe Nehawka Mills NEHAWKA, NEBR. k W wtwm, AH a For Undergarments! Inexpensive, dainty and servicable are gar ments made from our offerings of Lingerie Fabrics. These materials are sheer, but firmly woven, and all launder excellently. You will enjoy workingon them. A bit of handwork makes them so pretty, and so easy to do, when you use a McCali Trans fer pattern. We sell D. M. C. Embroidery FIoos and Crochet Thread. Also Nuns Boiloroof Embroidery Floss. F P ESTABLISHED 1888 Telephone No. 14 NcHawka, Nebr. Where Customers Feel ftt Home I some business matters In Plattsmouth on both last Tiaay ana oaiuraay. The children of Mrs. Enno Ahrens are sick with the whooping cough but are improving at this time. Mrs. Henry Stum entertained the lllue Bird country club at her home last Saturday afternoon. All of the members and several visitors were present and a very pleasant after- Mur-'noon was spent by all. John Lehnart who made his home a few miles east of Avoca, was a visitor in Nehawka on last Monday and was looking after some business1 matters and visiting with some of his friends james &ione auu wue euiei wiu on last fraiuraay evening ai a caru party in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Glen Wells who were departing for their new home in Kansas City. A most pleasant evening was had. There was a farmers meeting at the home of Merritt Pollard on last Saturday, where a demonstration In ln (lIn Z cZ had. and the instruction was ex - emplified by two men from the state. university. Charles Chappell and Ben Martin went coon hunting Friday of last week, and hunted most assiduously, and just as the sun was peeking over the hills near the store quarry site east of Nehawka they returned, but nary, a coon. The wolf hunt which was planned for last week was not pulled off on account of the prevailing fog and the muddy weather. Those interest ed will plan another hunt in the near future but just when it is not known as yet. Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Chrigwelsser were visiting last Saturday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Camp bell, and while the ladies visited Messrs. Chrisweisser and Campbell attended the sale of W. A. Fight, which was held near Mynard. 1 Clarence Hanson and wife enter tained last Friday evening in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Glen Wells, who are soon to leave for Kansas City to make their home and also had for the guests Mr. and Mrs. Wessell and where all enjoyed the evening most pleasantly. Thomas Mason and his sister Miss Ella Mason, were visiting in Omaha on last Sunday, they driving over to the big city in their car. While there they also visited other friends among whom was Emma Bursick, who is feel ing quite poorly and they had a nice visit with her. Last Saturday at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Bray. Mrs. Glen Ruthlege underwent an opera tion for relief from appendicitis, and is reported to be getting along nice ly since the operation. The many friends of Mrs. Ruthlege are hoping that the patient may soon be well again Glen Wells who has been asso ciated with ?. M. Stone for some I time nast in the handling: of the hoes othI thpir cnlo npppntprt an nffpr rf employment at Kansas City, and de- partea for his home on last Satur day, stopping in Nebraska City for a short visit with friends before pro ceeding to his destination. Play 500 Friday. The young people of Nehawka met last Friday evening at the home of SHELKI j Mr. and Mrs.: Albert Anderson and -wue anu wnere an enjoyeu ioe eve ning most pleasantly. They were en tertained by- Mr. and Mrs. Anderson who they pronounce and the very; best of entertainers. They were en- tertained by playing the game of Five Hundred. Attend Funeral. Mr. and Mrs. Z. W. Shrader were in attendance at the funeral" of the late Mrs. L. C. W. Murray, which was held at the Eight Mile church north of Nehawka, and where the interment was was also made. Mrs. I Murrov who wn a fnrmprlv Mia TJo- . beoca wiles, was born in Andrew M Fphrnarv lsr 1S51. She was united' in marriage to Li. C. W. ATnrrav on oPT,r icrq Tn hlpsm this union there were fifteen chil- dren born eleven of whom are now .. . n ni- th roppnr rajt !Urs making her home wlthjPloma. he enlisted in the 1st North heP-daughter. Mrs. Frank Spangler ! Carolina regiment, the Fayetteville where she answered the call to the . ,Qcf nifrht ,t ' r, i at about eleven o clock. Mrs, Mur ray was one or the best or women and will be missed greatly by who know her. all . Play Basketball at Avoca. Two basketball teams of the Ne hawka school, journeyed over to Avoca on last Friday where they en - f,aged the two teams of that hust- ling village, in a contest for supre- macy in the basketball fields of this portion of the county. The result being Avoca girls 31 and Nehawka girls 16. In the case of the boys the results were Avoca boys 29 and hawka 23 Making Substantial Improvements Louis Ross, living a few miles south of Nehawka, is at this time making some worth while improve ments at thier home. Mr. Rosa is having a furnace placed in the house with water connected in the house and seebers and tourists to view the won making the place entirely modern ders of thg great R,Q Grande vaney with the single exception of the mat-'one of the most interesting spots in ter of lighting. However he is having tne south and one that ,8 fast belng the house wired for electric lights. . thickly populated by the homeseekers which will be installed later. Par ties from Nebraska City are doing the work. Entertain Mr. and Mrs. Peters. Dr. and Mrs. Kintner entertained last Monday evening. at their home in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Tim Peters who will leave in a short time for their new home near Topeka, Kan sas. The evening was spent in play ing cards, Mrs. John.. Hansen was awarded the big prize while John Stephens easily walked away with the so called Booby prize. The guests dispensed at a late hour proclaiming the Dr. and his wife royal entertainers and wishing Mr. and Mrs. Peters good luck in their new home. Hold Safety First Meeting for Employees Nebraska Gas & Electric Co. Discuss With Their Employes Methods of Safety. From Wednesday's Dally In the advancement of the practice of being better safe than sorry the Nebraska Ga3 & Electric Co. held a meeting of the employes of their com- j pany in this city on Monday evening that was attended by some forty oft the persons who are engaged in the' work of producing and distributing rK , vv. ,,,,wl .,,,, thp electricity and eas in this sec- of February 7th, attracted hundreds tion iof buvers ,rom 8,1 over tne west- The meeting was addressed by E. C. N "J" ' Ntorth Hill of Lincoln, safety, engineer or e,Das,fa1 boun v? ta r"D Da the company and who gave in his re- a- Minnesota Missouri Kansas marks many of the ways in which ae- Colorado, Wyoming. Utah. Idaho and cidents occur in this line of work.jVf . . . . -.. iripana nf aniHin MHt. nnH nf I n the stocks of merchandise as- protecting the workmen and those sembldd for this occasion every coun connected with the service of the light try ? the world was represented, and power company through the meas- and the Exhibits were marvellously ures of safety first i (interesting to visiting merchants. There were present a large number! 7116 "Byrne and Hammer Merchan ef the men engaged in the erecting e Fair" is an event of lajge im of the new super-power station here portance for which their buyers have at Plattsmouth and who heard with Deen planning for many months, interest the plea of Mr. Hill for more At the end of the year, when the and better efforts to reduce the num- leading mills were taking Inventory, ber of accidents in the service. From buyers representing the Byrne and the remarks of the speaker a great Hammer Dry Goods Company, of deal of good was derived by those at- Omaha, were on the ground to make icuuiiiK me iiit""e LiiiK stud ine iuca received there will be nut into Drac- tical effect. At the conclusion of the talks the members of the party were regailed with coffee and sandwiches, prepared electrically and also smokes for the members of the party that aided in tne completion of a most pleasant evening for all of the members of the party. EXTENSION OF CORN BOREE. QTTATIAT'TTTWV "PUfYPnct'Tt Washington, Feb. 9. The federal horticultural board, after a hearing Tuesday on extension of the Europ- jean corn corer quarantine, announc- known infested areas In Rode ialar.rt. Cnnn.tin an,,ta v.v JL I New Jersey to the present quaran tined areas. The spring campaign against the border will be determined upon by the International - European . Corn Border committee at a conference here Wednesday. , - All the newj in the Journal. 86th Birthday is Celebrated by Maj. Steadman Sole Confederate Veteran Now Serv ing as Member of Congress; Frome North Carolina. From Wednesday's Dally Representative Charles M. Stead- man, of North Carolina, sole surviv- ing Confederate veteran In congress. celebrated his eighty-sixth birthday last Saturday, Elected to the Sixty-second con gress from the Fifth congressional district of North Carolina in 1911, he has served continuously in tl5c house from that district. At the No vemeber election last year, he was re elected, therefore, following the ex piration of his present tern) In March the Major will return for another two-year term. I The North Carolina State society Rave a Banquet m nts nonar at me Hotel Hamilton on Saturday evenirfg. namuion an Saturday evening. Steadman was a major in the Mr. Confederate army at the close of the (Civil War. Before receiving ris dl- inuepenueni iagnt iniantry, iai?r joining a batalion of Chatham, of which he was made major. He was wounded three times in the battle of the Wilderness, finally surrendering at Appomattox. Major Steadman was elected Lieu tenant Governor of North Carolina 'in 1884, later, however, he was de feated for governor of the state by a i small majority. But in his congres- ; gi(mal raveg he' d some of thr . . ,.0,-,iri ; The flfth congressfonal dlstrict of Norh Carolina ig the third largest in , population ,n tne United States, congressman Steadman was born t Pittsbor0f N c.( on January 29, Ne-jnj, RETURNS FROM TEXAS From Wednesdays Daily Frank E. Vallery, the well known real estate hustler of this city has just returned from Harlingen, Texas, where he conducted a party of land from the northland Mr. Vallery was accompanied by rom thirty-two on the party and in cluding Glen Boedeker of the Murray State bank, Fred Nutzmann, well known Nehawka financier and Mr. and Mrs. S. P. Metz of Springfield, who will be well remembered here as I the contractor in charge of the work on the highway between this city and the Platte river.. The party visited the entire length of this fine stretch of valley land and had the opportunity of meeting a large number of the old time friends who are now located in that section of the country and enjoying the stay in the sunny south to the limit. They al?o visited the towns of MoAllen. lHarlengen and also at Brownville, the capital city of the valley district. The trip was not complete without a dash over the Rio Grande to see the sights of the Mexican cities located within a few miles of the border and where the members of the party had the opportunity of comparing Ameri can and Mexican methods. A Great Showing of Merchandise Byrne and Hammer Merchandise Fair Hakes the Consumer's Dol lar Bay More. (From Omaha Trade Exhibit) , The "Byrne and Hammer Merchan dise Fair" which was held the week ioi xja Merchandise Fair. A limited nmmber of merchants! joined with them in this merchandis Ing event and their communities will find a rare buying opportunity when the goods are put on sale for the ten - day period starting Friday,. Feb. 18th. i (Ed. Note The H. M. Soennicbsen Co., of Plattsmouth is one of the con cerns mentioned above as having se curea a snare or these gooa3, wnicn VV11A UiiGl lilt? lb JtFh savings starting the 18th of this month. Watch for their sales an nouncement in an early issue of the Journal). Mrs- M L- Buttery departed this afterpoon for Pender. ' . JSebrasKa, where she was called 'by tfae, very serious iUnss of her little grandson, Qt Mr and. Mrs. Elwood. Buttery, Everybody reads the Journal Want Ads and yonr message plaeed there will get results, ' Guesswork lubricating costs motorists millions for repairs every year. The right grade of Polarine gives friction no chance to use up your motor. Consult the Polarine Chart. Six grades Polarine Light, Medium, Heavy, Special Heavy, Extra Heavy and Polarine "F" winter, for Fords. STANDARD LOCAL. MEWS Dr. Heineman, Dentist, Hotel Main Bldg., Phone 527. From Monday's Daily Mrs. F. L. Adams was among those going to Omaha today to spend a few hours attending to some matters of business. Robert Hunter of Hitchcock. South Dakota, arrived here this morning for a short visit with his old friends in this city and vicinity. Hon. Charles L. Yochum and fam iry of Lincoln were here for the week end at the home of his daughter, Mrs. F. G. Coryell and family. Carl Meisinger returned this morn ing to Havelock after a visit here over Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. H. Meisinger and the many friends. Mike Hoffart of Plainvlew, for many years a well known resident of Cass county is here for a visit of a short, time with the old time friends and with Mrs. Christina Hummel, who has been very poorly for some time but is now somewhat better. Mr. and Mrs. A, Carlson of Sheri dan, Wyoming, who have stopped here for a visit at the nome of Mr. and Mrs. Dave Wallengren while en route to their home from a visit in Omaha and Wahoo where they will spend a short time before going on west. Mrs. Carlson is a sister of Mr. Wallengren. Herbert Swanson, manager for thr past two years of the Plattsmouth baseball club, who has been enjoy ing an auto tour through Texas, Oklahoma and Arkansas, came in yes terday and will make a short visit here with the friends before making bis definite plans for the coming year. Mr. bwanson may decide to locate in Washington or at Tolodo, Ohio, where he has excellent offers. From Tuesday's Ually Fred T. Ramge was in Omaha to- i day where he was called to look after some matters of business and visiting i with friends. Mrs. Allie Meisinger was among tne visitors in Omaha today where she was called to look after some matters of business. Mrs. John M. Meisinger was among the visitors ni Omaha today where she snent the day there with her. daughter,. Miss Marie at the hospital where she Is recovering from an op eration for appendicitis. Frank J. Davis of Broken Bow, Ne braska, was here over last evening and today visiting at the home of his brother, Searl Davia and family and enroute home will stop at Lincoln for a visit with Hon Troy X Davis at the legislature, Mrs. Roy James of Malvern, Iowa, is here for a visit with her brother, Ward Whelan and her aunt. Miss Emma DeHart, and is accompanied by -two of the children. Ths James family is soon to Jocat on a farm near YHl8Ca Iowa- MJ9 Grace Besjon IC?s Auf dies is here to enjoy a visit at the home of her parents, Mr. ant Mrs. Allen Jar protective lubrication OIL COMPANY OF NEBRASKA "A ?ebrasa Institution" J. Reeson and with the many old time friends of this city. Miss Beeson has been engaged as a nurse at Los Angelea for the past two years. From Wednesday's Dally- Virgel Perry departed this morning for Omaha where he will spend the day at the hospital with Mrs. Perry were she is recuperating from the effects of her recent illness. Walter Beaver of Boulder, Colo rado, and Ray Beaver of Scottsbluff, Nebraska, are here to enjoy a visit with their mother, Mrs. George Perry and other relatives and friends for a short time. Mrs. W. H. Rainey was a visitor in Omaha today where she will spend a few hours with Mr. Rainey at the hospital where he is taking a course of treatment and showing steady but slow improvement. K. T. Kone, formerly with the Ne raska Gas & Electric Co., in this city, was here last evening looking after some matters of business and depart ed this morning for Lincoln where he has his headquarters and will go from there out into the state to look after ouiue company wont. I a. w. Neihart, Rev. George ciark,' pastor of the Christian church, and George Blessing, publisher of the: Leaded-Echo, were down from Elm-j matters of business. Mr. Neihart still "7Z'f l "l martH.trui Advertise yonr wants in the Jour nal Want Ad Dept. for results. Sale of Horses, Mules and Brood Sous At my farm, five miles west and two miles north of Murray, Neb., on Wednesday, February 16th . In this offering I have eighteen head of extra good mules, two to four years old, all broke and weighing from 1100 to 1300 pounds. A few head of extra good farm horses. Fifty head of pure bred Duroc gilts to farrow in April. Sale Starts at 1 0 O'clock Lunch .Served at Efoon TERMS OF SALE! ' All sums of $10.00 and under, cash. On sums over $10.00 a credit of six months will be given, purchaser to give bank able note bearing interest at the -rate of eight per cent per annum from date of sale. No property to be removed from the premises until settled for. H. F.GANSEKIER; Owner Rex Youhs. Auctioneer. W. G. Boedeker, Clerk 4 - Blank hooks at the Journal office. ..Morrow's" Quality -HATCHERY!- 215 Chicago Avenue, Plattsmouth, Neb. "Try Qualify Chicks ihey are Betters" White &. Barred Rock 14 Buff &. White Orpington 1 5 White Wyandottes 15 S. C. Rd. Reds 14 White & Brown Leghorn 13 Anconas 14 Light Brahma 18 Light Breeds assorted for . hroilerS" 10 t - - Heavy Breeds assorted tor forilerS 11 Terms 25 per cent with order, 5 days before date of shipment. Custom hatching $3.35 per tray. We havea ca pacity of 12096 eggs and set every Tuesday. Visitors Always Welcome! Sale!