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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 2, 1933)
MONDAY. JANUARY 2, 1933. PLATTSMOUTH SEMI -WEEKLY JOUEKAX PAGE FIVE ALL Our Work is Guaranteed! QUICKLY and ECONOMICALLY That's the way we do things. You'll marvel at the low cost of cur expert service. We use crly those parts in your car that are guaranteed by the makers. Drive in and let us give you an estimate cn putting- your car in A-i condition ready fcr a hard winter's diiving. No obligation and remember the jcb is fully guaranteed. A HAPPY NEW YEAS R. V. Bryant O K GARAGE, Phone 76 Thursday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Buell did not meet, due to the illness of the little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Buell, who was down with the flu. Every care is being given the little patient, and it is the hope of all that she may soon be re stored to health. Out Again, but Weak L. Neitzel, who has been kept to his home on account of illness, being confined to his bed for a long time, is able to be up and was down to the store one day last week, but is still tco weak to make his daily visits to the store, and is remaining close to his own fireside most of the time. Manley News Items Ead a Merry Christmas John Ost bloom was well pleased on : Christmas day, when he was able to I ave the entire family with him and to enjoy their company and also a i very fine day and dinner. There were ! there for the occasion Mr. and Mrs. John Crane is working away on his inventory, getting the same about completed with the ending of the year. Arnold Harms was visiting in Lin coln the latter part of the week, be ing a guest of his two sisters, who re side there. A. B. Hill has purchased one of the new Chevrolet Six cars which have just come onto the market, being the new 1933 model. The Manley schools are to re-open this week r.nd the boys and girls as well as the teachers are hard at work again with their studies. Wm. Otte. who has been very sick with a serious attack of the flu still remains very poorly and everything is being done to effect a cure. George Rau was looking after the Harms store during the time that Mr. Tnnioe RlfiVin and fnmilv. Mr. and , . . . Harms was called to Sterling to at- Mrs. Je-se Eacliemeier. Mr. and Mrs. Lennie Lau and his two sons, DeVoe Miionnnv lit Archer Ostbloom, family. and the latter's Enjoyed New Year in Omaha Arthur J. Tool and wife, with their son, Douglass, were enjoying the be- j ginning of tne year 1V6S at me H. V.". Tool has been wrestling with the flu during the greater portion of heme of their daughter, Mrs. George last week, but is now feeling much Work and family, in Omaha. This is better. right wa5" to begin the year, with Henry A. Tool and Carl D. Ganz sociability and joy. and we are hop were in Lincoln cn last Wednesday, j Ing that Mr. Tool and family will where they were looking after some ; enjoy the whole year through. business matters. Robert Crawford was in Platts mouth last Monday, where he was r. , v , . have been snendin the nasi month in : as veil as visit Ith friends Ptettsmoutn as gucstg at the home of , steadily, " HI probabU be some as .11 MTtai tin with fr.ends. j time before she is entirely well. joeena w. uustin was busy last - - Ttmrsday making a motor out of two WBni to Louisville, where they visit ed for a short time at the home of their daughter, Mrs. Claude Twiss and family, and from there went to ; Enjoyed Splendid Sew Years ;.:,! Mr. Albeit Bauer.;, who tend tne tunerai cr a cousin. Albert Griffis has been having a siege of the flu and while he was very sick for a time is now feeling some better and gaining with every day. Mr. and Mrs. Anton Auerswald en joyed a visit from the daughter of Mrs. Auerswald, Miss Ella, who has been spending her vacation in Man ley. A. Stein kamp, who has xbeen sick for nearly a month, while somewhat improved, is still far from well, but entertains hopes that he will soon be back in his usual good health. Mrs. C. E. Mockenhaupt. who has been so sick for so long, is reported ! as being some better and is gaining old one?, thus getting the best parts from both and convening them into a very good running engine. Stephen P. Leis is employed at the farm of Chris Kupke. where he is fin ishing up the corn picking as well as looking after some other farm work. Steve is one of the very best of farm ers and workers in this community. Miss Eleanor Sjroy. who is teach- j ing at Bingham, was home for the mid-winter vacation and departed last week to resume her work there. She was well pleased to be able to get home and see the folks and her many friends at this time. Weeping Water, where they have vis ited since. On New Years day they all enjoyed a family reunion after which ir. Baucrs was expecting to return to Murdoch, while Mrs. Bauers will Miss Dorothea Meisinger. who has been employed in Omaha as a sales lady, returned to Manley a:id was spending her vacation with the par ents, Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Meisinger. Teddy Harms received the sad news of the deat of a cousin at Ster ling, and departed for there Thursday morning to attend the funeral, being Hay for the rest of the week, when ! accompanied by Bud Griffis, who went she, too, will return home. Omaha Mill Head is Killed in Car last week with the croup, which was lf fCCK PiS3T Ill6rC of such intensity that it appeared as ; along for company. The Altar society of St. Patrick's church held a very pleasant meeting on last Thursday afternoon. The lad ies visited, worked and ate and had a general good time. They met with Mrs. C. E. Mockenhaupt. Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Meisinger. who have been at the home of their son. Carl Meisinger, where they assisted in gathering the bountiful corn crop. South of Fort Crook Was Driving to Plnttsmcuth. forded without resorting to an opera tion. The doctor worked with the patient until nearly midnight, when j th( memhrane winch had forbed be- ! J: , a t. Chauncey Abbott jr.. president of1 ithe Omaha Mills Co.. was killed in- purchased a very fine quarter of beef Reports from the bedside of Mrs. 6:45 P- Thuray , which he left hanging out to cool un- E. A. Friend, residing a short dis- when he l0St Cnlr01 f ?1 r , - mile south of Fort Crook, the car take the meat in it was gone and no sitiing over the postoffice in the Berg man building. Harry Hawes. of the Farm- I ers elevator, in the ccmrse of business that she is still very low. She is being nursed by her daughter, Mrs. Eddie Craig, who is changing off with an other nurse in order to give her con stant attention. The many friends cf this excellent woman are hoping she may soon be able to be up and around again. Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Gillespie have been clown with the flu since their return home from a Christmas trip The plunging over an embankment rolling CO feet into a creek. Mr. Abbott was driving alone car was traveling south. An Interstate bus was approach ing from the south, and the two ve hicles v.ere separated by a distance iof about 409 yards when the driver j saw Abbott's car swerve from the road. C. R. Guyton, lGlC1 Vinton St.. and; trace oi it could be found. While Mr. Hawes has his suspicions, he has not expiessed them. that took them to Fairmont, where ,uma:,a, un.er i cue- uu,, biia udi they visited at the home of, Mrs. Gil-ihe s ; yard5 soutn of the bridSe I Mie s brother. Wm. McN'amara and'wfeen he Eaw Abbott's car "creep off family, and to Tobias en route home, of tlie west Eide of the road- then where they stopped for a short visit suddenly disappear into a ditch." a: the heme of Dr. and Mrs. A. C. ! Henry C. Jasper, 1610 Locust Ave.. ptn,v. -',r m. o-o tuno- oinir Omaha, who was following the bus, fairly well. Ri-k tr. Their Work The sc holars and teachers of the j3yf On did. Mnrdock schools are back at their j Abbott w work again this week, after a very said he raw the Abbott car from a hill s-.outh of the bridge. He gave the Etics ac-cunt or tne acciuent mat on his way to see a customer in Plattsmouth when the enjoyable Christmas vacation and are accident occurred, it was stated at c tcrting the second half of the school his home. He is survived by y. . r with v'gor and determination to make the most , of it. S5ckness Prevents Heeting The Ladies Aid of the Murdock church, which was to have met last 1933 THEEE ycr are FGLS" ! Three hundred AITD sisty-Hvie FESFECTLY geed days, 17.3C mcdeL And V.7E hope they're MIGHTY happy ones FOE you! hi;; wife, Helen; a con, Chauncey 3d, and two daugh ters, Helen, 10, and Frances, 8. The creek at the Fcene of the ac cident is about 75 feet wide. The auio In leaving the highway, cut off a mailbox post, jumped a 25-foot ditch parallel with the read, and landed on its top which was torn off. Ths chassis rolled 30 feet farther, before becoming embedded in the bank. EAUK HOLDUP LOOT FOTJMIl Emerson Dowler Dies Emerson Dowler, who has been very sick at the home of his daughter in Omaha for the past several weeks, died la:-t Wednesday evening. His son, Oscar Dowler. departed immediately for the metropolis to make arrange ments for the funeral which was held the latter part of the week, with in terment at Oakwood cemetery in Weeping Water. The funeral was in charge of the Hobson Funeral Home, of Weeping Water. Obituary of this splendid pioneer citizen of Cass coun ty will appear in our Weeping Water department Thursday. Had Pleasant Party Lawrence Wiseman and wife enter tained at a Five Hundred card party last Wednesday night and a very fine time was reported by all. Ha;py New Year The Journal is pleased to extend its best wishes for a Happy New Year to all readers of the Manley depart ment and a hope that the forthcom ing year will see a marked change in conditions the nation over, particular ly the bringing back of higher prices on farm products, on which basis we must place our hope for general prosperity. BULLET Ul BRAE, LIVES l Grain Valley, Mo.- j 'hour after the Bank -Lzzz than an of Lone Jack, Mo., wac robbed of $780, ite high- way patrolmen arrested two suspects near here as they and a companion fled from a motor car the officers halted. The loot was picked up where it had been dropped in a barnyard. One of the men arrected, who gave his name as Jimmy Young of Port land, Ore., was suffering from a foot 1 wound. Officers were informed he had been injured by accidental dis charge of the sawed off shotgun used in the holdup. The other man gave his name as John Blankcnbaker of' Butler, Mo. Ashland, 0. Irvin Weygr.ndt, sev-enty-nine year old farmer, has lived for nineteen days with a bullet in his brain and appeared to have a chance to recover. "He may surprise us," a doctor said, as he explained the chance for recovery was enhanced BOmewhat by the fact the bullet was lodged in the frontal lobe of the brain. Weygandt's age is against him, however. I Pay rclis build cities and every new industry secured adds just thct much more. That's why Plattsmouth welcomes going con cerns and goes out in search of them. OUR January Clearance is NOW ON HI Our January Clearance starts Saturday, December 31st and continues until our entire stock of high grade Women's and Misses' COATS and DRESSES are disposed of. Below we list the sizes, former selling price and our Clearance price of all remaining Coats in our stock. The Ladies Toggery January Clearance values are so great that prices comparisons are unnecessary. Come we promise the greatest value sensations you have ever seen. SILK DRESSES SPECIAL SALE VALUES IN. . . . New High Shades Prints ft Dark Colors They'll go two and three to a customer . . . because anyone who sees such values will never be content with one! All the new fashion details are here. Styles for Sunday night, street and afternoon wear! Sizes 14 to 46 Price only, $2.98 98 Tfc Entire Stock of Kelly Don Wool Dresses $ Values to $10.95 In Clearance Sale at ... . Now you can have one of the grand Nelly Don Wool Crepes or Novelty Wools . . . that you've been wanting. And imagine getting it for $5.30. Si-zes from 14 to 44. Nelly Don Jersey Dresses $2-99 'oncn.c in rtnn inH fuin.niora ctvlrc RIliA Green, Brown, Rust and Black. Sizes 14 - 20. Values tO $ CNLY "ONE-OF-A-KIND" MODELS AS DESCRIBED IN THIS CHAET Trimming's and ' Regular Eeduc'd Size Color Material j Price to 2D Blue i Chinchilla $ 5.95 $ 3.95 15 Black Broadcloth 7.95 3.95 SS Black Broadcloth 7.95 3.95 18 ' Black Broadcloth 7.95 3.95 16 Black Light Fur trim 10.00 3.95 36 Tan j Fur trim 10.75 3 95 14 B:ack Black Wolf trim 19.75 j 7.95 40 Black ; Black Wolf trim 16.75 7.95 42 Brown Brown Fox 18.95 ! 9.95 40 ! Tan Bed Fes 15.95 i 7.95 40 : Elack Beaver trim 16.75 j 9.95 18 ! Black : Black Wolf trim j 16.75 ! 9.95 16 ' Black ! Caiacultrini 18.75 i 9.95 42 ! Black ; Wclf trim 10.75 I 5.95 16 1 Brown Beaver trim 16.75 j 9.95 42 ! Black : Elack Wolf 16.75 j 9.95 16 Brown Light Fox trim 16.75 j 9.95 14 i Black Light Fur trim 10.75 ; 5.95 20 ! Black : Pointed Fox 18.75 i 9.95 18 Green ! Giey Wclf trim 18.75 j 9.95 S3 Black , Pointed Fox j 10.75 5.95 36 Erown ! Br. Fox cellar 18.75 j 9.95 16 Brown 1 Sport, no trim 10.75 i 5.95 16 Black Black Fox trim j 18.75 9.95 40 Black ; Black Fox trim I 16.75 ! 9.95 18 Bvown I Spt.. Beaverette 10.75 j 5.95 20 Brown I Spt.. self trim 10.75 j 5.95 50 Elack 1 Black Wolf j 19.75 10.75 42 Brown 1 Beaver, col., cuff ! 19.75 10.75 46 ! Brown ! Beaver, cel., cuff ! 19.75 ! 10.75 ao ' Black 1 Caracul 19-75 j 10.75 44 Black ! Black Wolf 19.75 ! 10.75 46 Black Caracul collar 19.75 j 10.75 14 ! Black I Wclf trim ! 27.50 18.75 16 ! Black ! Opossum trim I 47.50 35.00 20 ! Black ! Fitch trim 27.50 I 16.75 38 j Black ! Opossum 27.50 ! 18.75 46 Black ! Wclf trim 27.50 ! 18.75 48 I Black Wolf trim 27.50 18.75 40 ! Black 1 Black Wolf 65.00 47.50 24A ' Brown Brown Fox 37.50 27.50 42" I Brown ' Brcwn Fox 27.50 18.75 44 ! E.ack ; Fur trim 37.50 27.50 18 i Black i Opcssam 37.50 27.50 16 j Brown I Brown Fox 65.00 47.50 18 i Ercwn Brown Fox 47.50 37.50 22 I Brown i Brown Fox 37.50 27.50 18 ! Black i Opossum 37.50 27.50 16 I Brown ' Spt., Br. Wclf 27.50 18.75 16 Black Wclf trim 27.50 18.75 18 ! Black Wolf trim 37.50 27.50 18 Elack ! Wolf trim 29.75 10.75 16 Black ! Caracul trim 37.50 I 19.75 44 ! Black I Persian Lamb 65.00 1 39.75 Full Fashioned Strictly First Quality Fine Silk Hosiery Chiffon and Service Weight 3 pairs, $l.a6S Munsfngj'Weap Hosiery A REAL QUALITY HOSIERY EVENT Fine, Eheer, Clear Chiffon and Service Weight Hc;iery. Ail the Hew and Correct Sades. All Sizes SV2 to 102 LADIES Shop OS Personal Service Plattsmouth, Nebraska I