Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (May 28, 1934)
PXATTSOTJTH SEJII . WEEKLY J0TT2I7AL IIONBAT, MAY 23. 1324. PAGE SIX ay ft DEIEGATES TO CO?TFE?.ENCE IVfnrdook, Xeb. Delegate to the serieral conference were elected Fri day at a meeting of the ffty-sixth inn nil cor.vrstion rf the X-braska I.anrrp!:',a church. The .-'at" cou rt will continue thru Lindny. The s-l-cf.vl to go to the gen err-.l cmfrr .nee at Akron, O., Oct 4, :r. C. Jannen of Jfa.inc?. 1-3. A. Jr-fk-cn of I-incr'lr', K. P. :;II'?t of 1 Krar:;y. i'- HilJicr of Milford. K. H. j J-VihJ of itavf-nra. and O. rlul-hm of! I.:r.ro!rl. A!frMt"s "re .j. .a. rf I'siating. J. Rnncio of Dawson.! r.r.d A. K. S-'ehwp.b of Orchard :br ;.ior i::g.- me-tir.g. Ira Mc - 3 (X t T MiKV V 1: v Ivanhoc Sliced or Half PEACHES No. 2y2 Cans, Dozen, $1.74 )&C Ea, 15c; 2 for & O Simmer Isle 3rcke:i Slice PINEAPPLE Xo. 2 Tan, 2 for 49 3 for BEEF ROAST (Shoulder Cut), lb 12c BEEF STEAK, Graded U. S. Choice, lb 20c PORK CHOPS, center cuts only, lb HVzC HAMBURGER, fresh ground, 100 pure, lb 7Y2c FRANKFURT5, Armour's, large juicy, lb LUNCHEON MEAT, Morrell's vacuum cooked, lb. SUMMER SAUSAGE, Swift's assorted, lb CHEESE, fancy No. 1 American Cream, !b STRAWBERRIES, fancy large Missouri, quart box. .10c ritoxe l"lti. I'lnvr-il inrel, Hrl rm 1'. S. firniff o. 1 1'itr TnMr r rnpriln.-. I'rr fftf of -I lT, $U.t9 CANTALOUPES, 36 size 10c each; 3 for 23c t.trn lar-c f'nliforrln 'lit lflir-nel Pink f-7tf. Pnll Klnt-or ORANGES, 176 size, doz., 33c; 216 size, doz.. .... .29c Fnnpy f'nlifirnin Sweet .lntey 'n1encl:i. GRAPE FRUIT, 126 size, rioriftn Mnrili er'lr. Thin kii. full of jnlre. APPLES, extra fancy Washington Winesaps, 4 lbs.. .25c InrsT- lf very fine Fatinir pple. GREEN BEANS, fresh, tender, round, stringless, lb.. . .5c CUCUMBERS, Texas dark green. 3 for 10c CAEBAGE, so'id new Mississippi, lb 3c NEW POTATOES, U. S. grade No. 1, 10 lbs 25c I'eiJ Tri nm p!H mimt h nn' ( Imn. TOMATOES, firm, red ripe, 2-'fb. basket 25c CARROTS, fancy green tops, large bunch 4c Evergreen Brand Green Beans or Cloerdalo 2forlgc Del Monte Frcit Salad, 17o. 1 tail can, 18t ; Ho. can 29 .Vactiias Valley Brand Blaeberries. No. 2 can 17 Curtis Ripe Olives (Standard size), 5-cz. can, 10 ; 3 for 25 ?nrerior Brar.d S'eet Pickles, qrart jar 25 Ricardo Staffed Olives, 3V-oz. jar, 13t; 6-oz. jar 2.1t AttuCvlt'z Corn Beef, 12-cz. c?n 176 So-Tastee Soda or Oyster CRACKERS op Certified 2 b 1ft Grahamscaddy IVC Hinky-Dinky COFFEE Casco Creamery Bntter 3-!b., 626 lib. Can. Solids, 1-lb. Carton 21c Onnreref7, Armccr's Sliced Pried Beef. 5-cz. gks3, 23ti ; 21-oz. glass. v7:'Hapoint Oysters, 1-lb. tall can Emerald Isle Early Jane Peas, No. 303 can Fancy Pink Salmon, 1-lb. tall can Roberts Milk, 6 small or 3 tall cans Golden Glov Mastaid, quart jar el Moaite "Ortho Cut" fE 2-lb Can EJUTTER-NUT Fruit Pectan Tor maklnq Jellies or Preserves -1' 2'?-oz. Pkg. Mountain 2-lb. Can Bride, r,n furlough from mi?ionary, work in Afr'ea, aid missionary work i j there v. a very encouraging despite j depleted budgets. During the after I noon Bishop M. T. Maze of Harri ; burp-. Pa., addressed a memorial ; service, and paid tribute to Mrs. Ira j r.fcliridc. who died in the mission ir,'J, r-.0 I frinn n-it'-lin tills nacf VHT. Rfv. C. H. Stauffarher of Cleveland, general .missionary -secretary of th Kvangelical church, spoke at the service Friday night. Letterheads, eveTopes and all ra off;ce Painting v i'apf-nrg. F R. Oohel-m2D-tfw jman. lJ? ... is going to be an important factor Decoration Day ... so be sure of quality and economy by pur chasing it here! Ad for Tues., and till Noon Wed. SUPERIOR DIX.L or SOUR PICKLES 14' Quart Jar - 10c 25c 15c 15c :! 1 1 le, 'J, At.., Ti-tC . .nr 5c each ; 6 for 25c Schoiert's Famous Peanut Butter 1-lb Jar 15c Zc fresh. Flnffy Marshmallows l ib. Cello Bat? -Jjrr.bo Candy Orange Slices, lb. 15c -10c Win Yon Salad Dressing Pint, 156 or Qnart CtDC 26c 27 f b 136 .23 lot 12c 176 126 55c uan - Hinky-Dinky FLOUR 5 lbs., 25: 10, 49 $1-59. 24 lbs., 936; 48 lbs. I Grown 63c 1-lb. Can Honor Roll of High School for Fourth Quarter Fine Shewing IvTade by Students in Various Classes of the Platts month High School. Seniors T!iyra Daumsart, Lois H?tor, El--anor Black. Alicf Hiatt, Wayne Hiner. Martha Kaffenhf-r-?pr, p;dw-in Kalina. Ellen Kflly, Anna Mareraret MCarty, Dorothy McCarthy. jp.mps Rcberton, ?fary Anne Rofncrans. Lillian Pe'Ilak, Iorothy r'ifrnoneit, 'Mararot Tay-; lor. John lOHy. j j!iniors Usio Carry, Naomij Day, Icis Oil1?. IyOis .Mead. John j Nottelmann, Vir?rinia Trivly. j Sophomores Kathryn Arm-, ptrontr, Itoamary C'loirlt, Shfiia Covert. Stephen Davis. CharIesj Dew, June Geit, Viva Palmer, Alberta Timma?, Arthur W'arga, Grare W'il'-s. PVehr.ifn Kveyn Christy, Jac quejyn Gracsman, .fary Jane Mark, t Kvelyn Meiirtrer, Edr.a Mae Peter-s'-n. Raehel Itcbertson. Kl!a Mae Ruffner, Max Sfitz. Robert Taylor,! Knih Taylor, .Mary Katherine ( Indieates those on the honor roll for the second semester. Others only for the fourth quarter. Flovers are Torn from Clyde Barrow Grave ! Scnthvest's Jlost Ffared Outlaw Is' Buried in Dallas Bonnie Park er FuneTal Sunday. j Dallas. Tex. Clyde Champion Rar i i-Q-.v until thrre days aero the most ; f ared killer in the southwest was , buried at sunset on a chalky West , Dallas hillsid" near his boyhood : home. Souvenir hunters snatched roses, ' jrladioli and peonies from the mound of earth as Barrow' motli'T was led waillnsr from the crave. "Clyde. o!i Clyde," she cried. "Xobody but a ; mother can know how hard it is to ! lcav? you." '. Far across the city, in a funeral parlor, the nhot torn body of Clyde's ; gun woman. Ronnie Parker, was ready for transfer to the home of ! her mother, Mrs. Emma Parker, ' awaiting private funeral services . Sunday. Bonnie had predicted their deaths , in the ballad of "Bonnie and Clyde" ; she composed as they dashed from ' hideout to hideout in half a dozen states, fieein? from officer who i souerht them for a dozen killings and robb'ri--s whos number remains un- counted. Officers aruns blazed from , ambush as the pair roared at 85 miles . an hour over a highway near Arcadia, La., Wednesday, and the Ion? hunt i was at an end. For two days and nights, crowds had fought for a chance to fil? thru j the chambers in the funeral home !here for a last look at the West Dallas l man, only 24, whose name in five years had come to send a streak of ! terror across the middlewest. ! Rev. Clifford Andrews, Penecostal i ! minister, intoned from Job as he ! sought to console weeping relatives and friends at the funeral home. "I have not had th privilege of 'knowing this young Barrow," he told them, "but I love him. Raymond Hamilton (Clyde's partner in crime for several years) once said to me, when I visited him in jail; 'A lot of people don't know Clyde and Bon nie, but I have sen them kneel flown and pray.' " The mother of Bonnie Parker, wife of a Texas convict, Roy Thorton, who t fled with Clyde from state to state and died with a machine gun across her lap. ptood and looked at Barrow's face, but said nothing. The press of th? crowd was such at the cemetery that an aunt and a young woman cousin of the dead outlaw fainted. "Even fn the worst of us there is good." Mr. Andrews prayed as the body was lowered info the grave, "and in the best of us is something Of course, some ac cidents can not be prevented, but you can be relieved of all worry and expense if ycu carry complete automobile insurance with this agency. Searl St. Davis OFF lfF, 2"I PMKin Platts. Stat Bank Bldg. PLATTSMOUTH W U cannot. critfe!z others fov.' Ironically, Raymond HamUron, w ho -.vas cfflivered from the E?.?t l.nni prison farm last January in a raid 11.. 1 !.- To. v.-i-n- i-f.nt iofIr ihoro tn r-hrn WCCJ. C.IIT U. few !ours heforh ii old time lender i was buried. He is unir a c.f 362 yaar for a variety 01 crime? "iCr BOY SHOT IN NECK Omaha. Joe Tifti. 0. of Oman?..; was wounded vl-Isi-htlv late Piiday when struck in the neck by a stray bullet. Police arretted John Rir-3. 1 X . Omaha, and booked him for invrti Kation in connection with the shooting-. Ri--s told police he had b'n shooting rats at a fr'd mill which the Hefti hoy was pa.-f-i v.hoM struck by tlie bulW. Drouth Survey of Every Farm Starts at Once Federal Funds to 2e Used to Help Care for Subsistence Stock, Not Entire Herd. A statewide survey of every Ne braska farm to (!rmin'' drouth re lief n'-'-fli ha? Vcrun and D. A. White, rural rehabilitation director. ?aid !in hopvI to hav - the survey com pi te by ilie middle of nxt week so purch? ef feed and sed for foratro for needy farmers could bejrSn at once. Federal R'li-f Administrator Ilaynes said he v.-asi pr-pare-d to spend . sno.ooo rf hi; balance on hand immediately rn the drouth pro because of the a .finance given by Harry I,. Ten-kin, in char; ; iain him e of the federal relief program. Haynfs said he v. as as--ur d of $32.- 000 for forag- see,) ;i!d JlSt.OOO for! feed durinsr .Inn" 'after a conference i with Hopkius :-:e strength of i:s-j formation from w. M. Rrckaw. strte! AAA a-hni ii'-tra-or, that aid wou'd; be nf- led .'or farmers in fr :m 10 to ! : couu t i s I ! U-e Of the dl OUt !l ' damage. The survey to determine needs is being undvrtaKen under Brokaw's direction thru county agricultural i'.-Tepts. L. A. White i:;id it was plan ned to ue vo;n'iteer helpers in every s'-nooi nistii't to get thA miormation qui; kly. Farmers will be asked to sign blanks teKlrg what livestock and poultry they' fi'av-? on hand, how much feed, whether they can get thru on their owr resources and if f.ct, what feed wi whether they will be n - eded and j 11 any of their j H.iynes, who returned Friday from meetings in Kansas City wh-'ra he conferred with 1! pkin, said it should be kept cl':ir that this pro eiam was only a re'ief program. Any purchases of cattle, he said, will be made by the agricultural adjustment ing1 sorghum originally developed in "This money," M said, "assigned' , . . Kansas City, tr.ey are interested m co us is given aoi i- iaKe tare ii those farmers who ar? on relief orj would be fe,rced onto relief if theyij are not given neip :n Keeping ineir S.lCCit, "We are not supposed," h added L. V 'i. V 1 HiVrT s!Ttta Kll!? only the farmer's subsistence sto'-k, that is, his work stock and a few cows, pigs and cMc!-:ens." Ilaynes said he had requested $893,000 for Nebraska for June. The granting in full of his requests for 3.276,000 for the drouth reli'f pro gram leaves action . till to be taken on the requested $".17,000 for other phases of the relief program in this state, the chief items of which are $50,000 asked for rural rehabilita tion. Haynes srid action on these June reque-sts will r'd be taken until Hopkins returns to Washington next week. Kir. fWercnanx, are you tfolnt, your sharo to speed tho return of prosperity fn Cass county? fldver tlslnp will brlnq you business that Is now going to distant cities. HOW MUCH would It Cost to replace all your household goods and personal effects? Could You Do It? Good Insurance will pay the loss if Fire or Wind destroys your property. Be Safe Insure to be Sure vith Duxbury & Davis Phone 56 Plattsmouth ! j vr-q : tT ! J- S3 V SALE OF 1 : f. -. -5 ri ' ' 4 . i h .a J1 ; S j h 1 ?1 V i t7 r-'.. w t &4 Drouth In creases Sorghum rv A irarmers oi axaxe wnte to ooiicgci of Agriculture for Ad vice on i xci.ige uiop uuuunr. "fe "V - .S it-veen now and June Id ?afely. fcw V great increase in sorghum a ere- j art says. If no rain falls immc-diate- all over Nebraska is seen by P. H. ' y there should be no hurry about Stewart, fxtension agronomist at i tho college of agriculture. Dack of i j rainfall in mot sections is causing! s rer-ord interest in the "drouth reFist- ! ; f,- Crops. j Farmers from all over the country j I2r writing and calling the agronomy'; d-.pr lure trr.ent at th college of agr-I.ul- ?11 as agricultural agents over the state, for information re - garding cultural practices cf botn the grain and forage sorghums. El- ton Lux. extension editor at the ecl- Io. this week on his return ling at the rate of 3 to 10 pounds per from fiov.th central counties that ajacre. For the south part of the state. great deal of interest wa. being mani- fested i; th" sorghums, farmers are askin: Many methods cf planting the sorghums, Since most farmers are planning on putting in some atlas sorgo, a for- MEMORIAL DAY Wednesday, May 30 Open till Noon mm For Sports and Dress-Up Wear . Two-Tone Oxfords Bbano $3.45 You'll like the cozy, modern lines of this fdioe. Well made, too. White and black, IJrown and IJiege. 1 . 1, ..mil - " : ' 1 l-if' rli-ilnfl- iifii 'Mii i.ii-rii,r -Qi-m - - - --- 11 n in . in i. i in 1 mi- 11 -11 - -1 I 11 Mjnijjijr i4ir i'J I J II i Pastel Colors White - Navy Every Hat In Our Stock At Om Low Price NNICHSEN' arc j the rate of planting. Bla TourThl 'for Ihten; or planters bore t about 12 holes, each three-eighths inches in diameter and Leveled out : from below are being recommended! to eastern N-braska farmers For en- , ,i!apro or roeider purposes, u znrr.im ; i'r. le planted at th rate of 12 to is' pounds to trie ae:re. For hay purpoces. t j, btst to y-e -0 lhe ar,re to 100 pound.-; to ! Atlas can be planted anytime be- -getting the crop into the ground. ' sf.d i". available for 2 or .1 cents a pound from seed houses, but there is j-.orie in tho hands of farmers. At:.".-: fnrji ;s nr.r t!ve fin'v SOT-' g'mm crop to be planted this yc-ar. for hundreds of farmers ere planning on . . putting in some grain sorghums.' ; Tests out-state last year showed the . best varieties will make as high as j 4.1 bushels to the acre. Plat-s with i three-sixteenths inch holes j lister are ordinarily used f: w-.st to McCook pink kafir is being j recemmended. The western black about; hull variety is recommended for that i part cf the state, north of the south-j ! ern tier of counties as it is earlier' than pink kafir. It 13 not likely, how- j turned out. indicating a hurr.::-i ever, to mature in northern or west-j search by th:- kidnapers :or any vri-.i-ern Nebraska. i ables. Uppers are of White or Suntan Duck and have natural crepe rubber soles for Misses and Women. A most unusual value at this low price 98c Special Straps, Pumps and Ties High and Cuban Heels Values up to $4.85 Now, and while they last $1.98 SOENNIGHSEWS 9 1 i il"T7 Crepes - Straws 7iV Black - Tan 5 Abducted the Wrong Man: Slain to Silence Him Texas Dairyman Is iLe Zidnarii:? Intenis.-i a Neighbor Mexi.a. Tt-X. A ti.e naors K.aefi jonn. l.. rr. a r. . v'.en abducted liiirs irs-ead neigthcr, inter.iir-l i; t .vas oiivanced by y.lis veSt: :rat-d the slavir.?. ! A resv aar. :he daw afti-r said: "Your old zr safe. us. we got the wrr:r. ? rr.r.." Aiicma Iirei -est -izcr J.--v 11: ' rtr. walthv Grce---c'.c hv.t-r-sr2-. : c-d. ponce tr.e--,r:z(-' Ltorr-.s .- tint Ta' r.ded victim of t'.- 's.iCr.zzrr. .- expressed beil;- 'he- ct:u::;r for hei" .! killed Adams to -ir."3 h:. -t- plant-iter '.earning of tluir ir.prc-ttaL'.e , rai3Take. The body of Adoir.o '. found in a tank about a rz.il- so'ttl: . Groesbeck his hem-. A b::ilct gag in the mouth, and aTrTt i: ed tightly about the throat. pockets of his clothing had Real Values! in Summer Whites of Normandy Fabric !i Or Oxfords 01 Pumps BsJ Cocl summer Whites that are styled right priced for your convenience. ! . i Whites are Sure in Fashion This Summer 'A splendid selection of patterns in various heel heights. Marvelous values at prices ranging from S2.98 to $4,85 Z3 1 1