-4 THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 9, 1933. PLATTSMOUTH STMT - WEEKLY JOURNAL PAGE THRTB 3 4 f- i i I ft" i ITEMS. Air. and Mrs. H. W. Griffin and the family were enjoying a visit on last Sunday at the home of Mr. Griffin's parents, E. M. Griffin, -wife and daughter of Plattsmouth. W. H. Porter and his pal, the lit tle son of Ralph Pear3ley, were over to Nehawka on last Monday where they were looking after some business matters for a short time. Municipal Judge C. L. Graves ot Plattsmouth, was a business visitor in Union one day last week and while here also took occasion to visit with his many friends in and about Union. Rev. W. A. Taylor was taken with a very severe illness one day last week and on Friday was compelled to go to bed and has not been al lowed by his family physician to leave the house. Rev. B. N. Kunkel and wife were enjoying a very pleasant visit last week with a number of their rela tives, visiting a son in Weeping Wa ter, one in Lincoln and other rela tives at other points. A son came to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert L. Burbee last week and which is making the home a very happy one, both the fond mother and the proud father rjoicing, and the little one is assuring much future joy for the home. Many of the Masons "of Union were over to Nehawka on last Monday evening where they were attending the Masonic school which was being given by Raymond Cook, a member of the grand lodge and which was en- Joyed by all present. where they were guests for the day at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Alwin of that place and where they were guests at a birthday party in honor of Maude Bunch of Omaha and Mr. W. A. Wells of Plattsmouth. A very pleasant time was had and many were the good wishes extended to the people who were celebrating the passing of their natal day. Give Family Dinner Sunday. At the home of Mr. and Mrs. Mel vin Todd on last Sunday were gath ered a large number of the rela tives and friends where they cele brated the passing of the birthday of the mother of Mrs. Melvin Todd, Mrs. Richard Schnott of Nebraska City. The occasion was one of much pleas ure and many and sincere were the congratulations to the guest of honor. There were there for the occasion the guest of honor and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Schnott and daugh ter, Helen and son, ftichard, of Ne braska City; Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Grassmuch and Mrs. Kafaryn Chris tian of Lincoln; Mr. M. Lohrberg of Lincoln; Dorothy Todd of Murray; Earl Borcherding of Dunbar. A most enjoyable time was had by all. Mrs. Elizabeth Flamme Dies. Mrs. Elizabeth Flamme was born on December Srd, 1849 in Macklen berg, Germany and when she was thirteen years of age came to Amer ica with her parents, locating in the state of New York and remained there until she was twenty years of age when she came to Nebraska to make her home and located near tho town of Nehawka where she had resided during the remainder of her life. She was the mother of some thirteen County Commissioner E. B. Chap- children, all of whom have preceded man recently moved to the house; har in death with the exception of formerly occupied by Clifton B. Smith who has moved to Nebraska City. Charles Atterbery moved into the place vacated by the county com missioner and wife. Francis Chase and family of Lin coln and John Case and wife of South Omaha were guests for the day on last Sunday at the home of Frank Bauer and sister. Miss Anna Bauer where all enjoyed a very pleasant visit and a sumptuous dinner. Bud Fitch who has been in the hospital at Omaha for some weeks and where he also underwent an op eration for the restoration of his health, is reported as showing good improvement in the hospital and is expecting to be, able. to return heme in a short time. Junior Gillespie, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dean Gillespie, was spending a few days at the home of hi3 uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mr3. L- W. Ruge of Nebraska City. The aunt and uncle brought him home last Sunday even ing as well as visiting for a short time at the Gillespie home. three, they being Mesdames S. A. Naffinger, Otoe; John Group of Louisville; Earl Cox of Nehawka. Early in life she united with the Lutheran church and had been a con sistent member during her entire life. She passed away on October 30th at her home in Nehawka, where she had been given the very best of care and medical attention. The funeral was held from the heme on Tuesday, November 1st, the Rev. W. A. Taylor delivering the fun eral oration, the interment being at the beautiful Mt. Pleasant cemetery and directed by the Hobson Funeral Home of Weeping Water. Says Business Better. George Trunkenbolz of Lincoln, was a visitor in Union on last Mon-. day and was calling on "his manager of the Union filling station, Mr. Claude Lane, and as well visiting with some of the business men of Union. Mr. Trunkenbolz reports that business is looking up and he is ex pecting more increase in business dur ing the coming few months ahead. Celebrates 75th Anniversary. Mont RobD and daughter, Miss Augusta, were over to Nebraska City on last Sunday where they were in attendance at the birthday party of the St. Mary's Episcopal church, when they were holding a special meeting and giving a birthday party for the church, the 75th birthday anniver sary of its organization in Nebraska City. Were Guess at Murray. Mr. and Mrs. D. Ray Frans were host and hostess to Dr. and Mrs. G. H. Gilmore and their son, John, of Lincoln where they enjoyed a very pleasant visit and all drove over to Murray where they were dinner guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. O. A. Davis of that place. Enjoyed Birthday Party. Mr. and Mrs. Phillip F. Rihn were over to Plattsmouth on last Sunday Basketball Games to Be. Last week the two basketball teams of Union, the school team and the town team, played a lively game of basketball, the score 29 to 27 in fa vor of the school team. There will be a game between the Nehawka team and the Union team this com ing Friday. 'Gents, the Winnah!7 .. .. j . ii) Henry .Clive, one of the judges, holds aloft the hand of Constance Allen in token of her victory in the contest to select the most beautiful artist model in the Southland. Con test was a feature of the Seven Arts Ral Masque held in Los Angele' Mexican quarter recently. Methodist Episcopal Church Notes B. N. Kunkel, Pastor UNION Church school at 10:00 a. m. Lee Taris, superintendent. Preaching services at 11 "a. m. Epworth League, 7:00 p. m. Preaching service at 7:30 p. m. Please notice, the services are a half hour earlier at night. WYOMING Church school at 10:00 a. m. Dor othy Keyes, superintendent. The next preaching service will be Sunday morning, November 19th. Communion service; ' The Otoe county church school con vention will be held at the Wyoming church, Friday, November 10th all day and in the evening. COTTONWOOD LUMBER Save on your lumber costs. Cotton wood lumber for all uses. L. D. Hiatt, "Basket Factory." tf-sw DEAD ANIMALS WANTED Call The South Omaha Rendering Works. Tel. MArket 4626. F. Cramer, R. F. D. No. 3, South Omaha. tf-w Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Smetana and little daughter, of Sedalia, Missouri, are here to spend a few days visit ing at the home of their paretns, Mr. and Mrs. Alois Smetana and family. A World's Largest 4-H Club Baby Beef Show! Many Other Thrills and Features at Sixth Annual SAT. : to :fri. NOV. 11-17 OMAHA GEN. ADM. (Autos Free) MATS. Sun., Wed. and Frl. . 2 P. M. 50c REDUCED RAIL RATES Bm th Great Car Lot Show and tha Union Stock Yard. Omaha Well Known Louisville People are Wedded Miss Esther Sundstrom Becomes the Bride of Yosta Davis at Pretty Home Wedding Saturday. The home of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Sundstrom at Louisville was the scene of a very pretty home wedding on Saturday afternoon when their daughter. Miss Esther, was married to Mr. Yosta Davis, one of the well known and popular young men of that city. The wedding was very quiet and witnessed by only the immediate fam ily and a few friends from Omaha. The marriage lines were read by Rev. E. E. Carter, pastor of the Methodist church. The bride and groom were attend ed by Miss Viola Davis, sister of the groom, and Mr. Clemens Sundstrom, brother of the bride. Miss Sundstrom wore as her wed ding gown a costume of blue triple sheer crepe with accessories to match and carrying an arm bouquet of Ophelia roses. The home was arranged with the decorations cf the fall flowers which were placed throughout the rooms. Following the wedding refresh ments were served by the mother of the bride and later in the afternoon the young people departed for Om aha where they were guests of friends and on their return to Louisville will be at heme to the friends in their residence that is awaiting their com ing. The bride is one of the popular young ladies of Louisville where she w&3 born and reared- to womanhood and has been an active figure In the social life of that community. The groom is also- a resident of Louisville since boyhood and at the present time is in the employ of the Lyman-Richey Co. at their Louisville plant. He is a young man held in the highest esteem by a large circle of friends. Those from out of the city to at tend the wedding were Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Curtis of Omaha, the former president of the Lyman-Richey Co., and Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Burke. High School Shows a Good Attendance Bccord for the First Quarter Shows less Than Two Per Cent Ab sent from School. M0ENING SCENES BUSY Early morning hours in the main section of the city are busy ones as the forces of workmen are gathering to move to their several jobs of labor and from 5:30 on their are many groups preparing to go to the points where they are to labor. The road work on No. 24 has a number engaged from this city and this group of necessity i3 required to be up much earlier than others for the drive of some thirty miles to their work. The men engaged in the river work also are out early and hurrying to the scene of action along the river south east of this city and which requires a drive of several miles for the greater part of the working force. The force from the sand and gravel pits that comprise the night shift, also are returning at the time the other workmen are going out so that the early hours are busy ones "down town." Attendance records of the high school for the first quarter show a fine record in regularity of attend ance during the first nine weeks. There is a close correlation between repeated absence and failing work. Absence from school is oftimes nec essary on account of illness or other unavoidable reasons for which the ex cuse regulations of the school make provision. In addition to checking the causes for absence from day to day, a consistent effort is made to see that the student makes up the work missed during the absence. With a large number coming to P. H. S. from the country and another large group who live a sonsiderable dis tance from the school building here in town, weather conditions natur ally affect the absence record. Any heavy rainstorms in the early fall and spring or cold waves and snow storm3, will have an immediate re action in the daily attendance. Epi demics of colds or other contagious disease will show up immediately up on the school records. However, despite the normal fluc tuations in the daily attendance it is interesting to note that the daily ab sence at Plattsmouth high school is less than 2 out of a student body this year of 310. This quarter, a very large number had perfect attendance including 56 of the Seniors, 41 of the Juniors, 46 of the Sopho mores and 63 of the Freshmen. Of those who were absent, 8S missed only a half day; 9 were absent only one day and 3 were absent more than one day. The list of perfect at tendance is as follows: SENIORS Thvra Eaumeari, Lois Bestor, Frank Bierl, Marion Fricke, Frances Griffin. Thomas Grosshan?. Mary Ann Hadraba. Alice Hiatt, Wni. Highfield. Wayne Iliner. Kathryn Hough. Paul Jahri?. Wm. Jensen. Martha Kaffen- berger. Edwin Kalina, Gerald Keil, Ellen Kelly, John Kelly, Fred Knieke, Virginia Leesley, Lucille Meisinger, Anna M. McCarty, Dorothy McCarty. Earney Newton, James Robertson, Lilian Sedlak, Barbara . Spangler, Ruby Sutton, . David Taylor, Jesse Tavlor, Marion Taylor. Oliver Tay lor. Januita Wclshimer, Wm. Wool- cott, Margaret Yelick. JUNIORS Louise Bakke Jane Boedeker, Am old Buechler, Mildred Cacy, Edna Carlburg. Donald Cotner, William Crouch, Naomi Day, Loi3 Giles, Carl Hula, Henry Kaffenberger, Louis Kief, Frank Lepert, Robert Long, Jo seph Loveless, Helen Messersmith, John Nottelmann, Leonard Peterson, Everett Petet, Lydia Pitz, Richard Rea, Florence Rhoades, John Rishel, Wm. Ruffner, Ernest Seitz, Wilma Vernon, Dorothy Zitka. SOPHOMORES Helen Albert, Eugene Ault. Sophia Eierl, Rosemary Cloidt, Charles Dow, Harvey Eggeling, Marjorie Fitch, Wilma Frederich, Mary A. Gradoville, Dorothy A. Kalmes, Arnold Hansen, Ira Harris, Joe Hendrix, Glen Kohrell. Thelma Kohrell, Rita Libershal, Floyd McCarty, Eugene Nolte, Viva Palmer, Leona Price, Anna M. Rea, Eetty Rhoades, Louise Rishel, Wave Smith, Hugh Stander, Pearl Sutton, Almee J. Thomas, Alberta Timmas, Arthur Warga, Grace Wiles, Marion Wiles, Jane Wohlfarth. FRESHMEN Vlasta Adam, Evelyn Akeson, Theresa Altschaffl, Cathryn Anthes, Charles Bennett, Edna Black, John Brink, Reba Capps, Wm. Carey, Eve lyn Christy, John Cloidt, Lauretta Coffelt, Norma Curtis, Mildred Engel kemeier, Wm. Evers, Harriet Goos, Jacquelyn Grassman, Mary A. High field, Patricia Hiskett, George Hob scheidt, Alvin Johnson, Waunitta Johnson, Elva Johnson, Virginia Kaf fenberger, Betty Kalina, Gerold Kehne, Mildred Knoflicek, Helen J. Kopp, Donald Leesley, Doris Leesley, Nadean Lewis, George Mark, Evelyn Meisinger, Marion Meisinger, Frank Nelson, Ruth Newland, John O'Don nell, Richard Otterstein, Robert Pat ton, Edna Mae Petersen, Virginia Petet, Earl Pittman, Margaret Rabb, Raymond Rhoades, June Rice, Rachel Robertson, Wm. Rosencrans, Ella Mae Ruffner, Max Seitz, Delia Solomon, Herbert Stander, Rose Mary Stander, John Stoll, Maude Stones, Buddie Stull, Susie Stoll, Vernon Taplett, Robert Taylor, Keith Taylor, Vivian Terryberry, Marjoie Tidball, Robert Vallery, Albert Vice, Charles Warner, Margaet Will, Florence Wooster, Richard Yelick, Barbara Zitka. For lumber sawing see L. D. Hiatt, "Basket Factory." tf-BW ENJOYS FOOTBALL GAME Miss Maxine Cloidt, who is attend ing the University of Nebraska, wa3 among the students attending the Missouri-Nebraska game on last Sat urday at Columbia, Missouri. The game was played in a pouring rain and all of the spectators were soaked before the close of the game. Miss Cloidt also enjoyed a visit with many old friends as she was for two years a student at the Stephens college, one of the best known finishing schools in the west and which is located at Columbia. H1MCY-DINKY of PLATTSMOUTH is really your surest aid in reducing the family's winter food costs V7 ILARO Light or Dark SYRUP 10-lb.can 47C 54b. can - 25 Silver Bar Peaches. Apricots, Pears or Royal Anne Cherries -fl fijc In Syrup NQ. 24 can - a-Q' iiiy 1 Ad for Plattsmouth, Fri., Sat, Nov 10-11 Campbell's or Van Camp PORK & BEANS Medium Can - - - - 5 First Prize Narrow Grain CORN 4 for 27c No. 2 Cans KAMO Brand CATS Quick or Regular Le:e. Pksr. - - 13' LETTUCE, head 6c ranr; C risp Calif., I'. . Grade No. 1 GRAPES, 129 7c V. S. Gradr o. 1 California Hcl Emperor GRAPE FRUIT, med. size . 5c Sweet. Julov. Klacut Quality. C for 23c. CRANBERRIES, 2 lbs 25c I-'uucy IarK Krd ( npt Codn POTATOES ,,b: - $1.23 lS-tb. pecfe . . 23c CABBAGE, fey. Wis., lb.... 3c CELERY, well blchd, st. . 7c J TT1T TO FANCV JONATHAN Oil UELICIOIS PICNIC HAMS, lb 5c Choice Iran Shul!rr from otitic: pork, tradrr anil rriinoiKlcnl. I K. ttritcht niioul 5 !. rarh, BEEF ROAST (Shoulder) . 10c Choice corn f cil qtinlitv, X'. S. Iu., fur oven tr port roast PORK ROAST, lb 10c Choice lean cut, very little bone, e to carve. ROUND STEAK (Beef) lb. 15c Onr rcculnr choice corn fcl Ileef, Drlirlona Sl stle cr i-'lnin frlral. PORK SAUSAGE (Links). 12 12 l-lli. Olio nTappnl rk:c. Armour' pure I'orW. A reel trrnt for breakfa or any meal. PORK STEAK, 2 lbs 23c Choice lenn rul of lloHten Uutt. I)cllciou bn-adnl or lain fried. BACON, Hinhy-Dinhy, l-Ib . 17c Olophanp wrapped pkac. llinky-Dlnky brand awam )ou Hnmt finality Mtmar cured Hickory annoked flat or. King I'ntk llunhrl Uatkrt . $1.69 5 lbs. . .25c MINNESOTA IlEO OI.OIIE RED ONIONS 98c . 29c 3 lbs. . 10c ZC-lh, liOK Best-of-All Margarine llb 11 (foe Carton - LL jf Casco Creamery BUTTER solids ChOr Mb. Carton, ttti Q..tyt-r-d, Ste 1 h. New Deal Brand TOMATOES New Pack Kellogg's CORN FLAKES Small Pkg. '-7ic 2,ge.l9C CALUMET Baking Powder Ofl)c 1-lb. Can - - 3-cz. cake Chocolate FREE! A different cereal of whole grains of Wheat, Rye, with Flax. . . . Delicious and wholesome. Used in Porridge and Baking. PKG. . . 2Qg Fine Granulated SUGAR 100-lb. Bag, $4.93 10-lb. Cloth Bag 51' Ci CHIPSO FLAKES' Iks?1 TISc P. & G. 1 SOAP jp 10 Bars 25 JgJ'-g P CAMAY, SOAP 4 ,19c iiamam: swti- ( n . ; 19, 1TB ( McLtOW BtCHKt ' Mb. Baar Dwaries Breakfast FOOD Lg.Pkg. 23' For All Brand Peaches, Sliced or Half, No. 10 "Gal." can 39 Del Monte Crushed Pineapple, No. 10 "Gal." can 450 Howdy Brand Peas, No. 2 can 12 y2 Macaroni or Spaghetti, 2 lbs. for 19 1 Kelloss's Whole Wheat Biscuits, pkg -He Grape-Nuts Flakes or Pest Bran Flakes, 2 pkgs 190 Santa Clara Prunes, small size, 2 lbs., 150; 4 lbs 29 Seedless Raisins, 2-lb. bag, 150 ; 4-lb. bag 270 Choice California Apricots, 1 lb., 150 ; 2 lbs -29c Dates, New Crop Hallo wee, 2 lbs 25c Figs, Black or White, for cooking, 2 lbs 250 Santa Clara Prunes, med. size, 3 lbs., 290 ; large size, 2 lbs 250 "All Purpose Grind" Delicious 3- Can -'-CPU Skinner's MACARONI or SPAGHETTI 3 pkgs. - HQC Sunkist BISCUIT FLOUR BUTTER-NUT Caladl IUirecciiniG 1000 ISLAND op RELISH ?AF.Anr 29c i-lb. 150 Green Japan or Orange Pekoe imOWX LABEL Einky Dinky Guaranteed FLOUR 5 lbs., 25; 10, 49 $1.69 24 lbs., 930; 48 lbs... 1 Crown Jewell, 48 lbs.. .$1.49 TlOI31gSOfi?l9S Chocolate Flavored 1-lb. Can 29' V7El5tC EtimiC Granulated aa For Waahiar Silk. AVooIenai 4 f UOap Sm.Pkg. iJC Med., 17C Lge.W VIGO Dog Food The Ideal Ration for Dogs, Puppies - and Cats fl T c 2 Cans .llSr OMAR Vondcr FLOUR lb: 98c Sb:5lD9 Soft as Down 3 Ig. rolls 19c Water Crepe White as Snow, . : : -7 .: