The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, January 09, 1919, Page PAGE 5, Image 5

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    THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1919.
1-LATTSMOUTII SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL.
PAGE 5.
i
Murray Department
Prepared in the Interest of the People of Murray and Surrounding Vicinity Especially lor the Journal Readers
If try of the reader of the
Journal knor- of any social
event or item of Interest In
this trinity, and will mail
same to this oflice. it will ar
Xear under this head inc. We
want all news items Editor
Cfxr3
1 n n flf
Do You Want to
e a Success?
The autobiography of every
successful man invariably tells
how he earned and saved his
first dollar.
There's no telling what the
morrow will bring forth. It is
the man with the ready cash
that is prepared for a business
opportunity.
Isn't it a fact that cash in
the bank gingers you up?
Dcesn't it give you confidence?
See us about an account.
Four per rem interest cn time deposits.
Our deposits are protected by the State- Graranty Law.
filliRRAY STATE BANK
All business transactions held in strict confidence
Your Personal Dank.
!.'-; - - A
I. !
Win. Pi
-year-old red heifer. H.
: n c r
set
-a:, y
Sab
ot
- 1 1: ,
rred Plymouth Ii;ck
!. re!.-. arid $2.i each. Mrs.
Tr v... M ur-ay ph'.ne.
Mr. and .Mr-, Ph:!:p Schufer ere-
For Salt- i.r Kent.
i-oliaue residence in
J. V. F.-'r-ie-r.
(ii'iirii1 Jenkins of
My seven
Murray.
room
Mrs.
Kosalie. Nel
is visiting at ilie hone cf his moth
er and his many friends in Murray.
Otto Puis. V. II. Puis and G. M.
Minford autoed 1 1 Plat tsn. out h Wcd-:.e.-day
afternoon, where th'-y spent
i i' u a nu
se-a- friend;-.
v.-edi.
Otto Si I. a
' l.is.-ijlf:
; 3 V 'ii'cv
h.-kii;:r aft -.-r m
hi inn : .1 r.-.-y
v. in i- i,.-:d
T ll . Ot!.'s
. ::f! !) i ;i
raiii kn
-d.
1 rao in;: w it !i eouut v
Mi Wedne.-da v of tl.i
r was ii run i n:r alt er
matter? in the coun-e-sd.iy
if this week.
tier.- pertaining to
(red k'v. tale, that
! rif 1 iil:ir on .Tj una r"
is k 11 immune-d.
;s some of th- finest
wn to the Duroc-Jersey
Tcr Sale.
!"' i
rthv.es'
of
t:e;
I'i?
f km!, t'.'.rc-' k;!i's
Kttinr'. in llol' C.-u:n-ncrv;
farm land. l(',f
I and 1. 1 1 n in i-.i - -improvements.
See
t. Murray. Net
i a lew liours with fount y t-eat
friend.-.
Harry !'.ater was looking after
some business matters in the city
of Omaha on Monday ol this week.
Nicholas Frederick was an Oma
ha visitor Monday, going on the
early morning train.
Pal reus of tiie Win. H. I'r.ls hard
ware store will in the future he met
and greeted with th" familiar -mil-Wiiich
i- ever in evidence on ll."
countenance of Joe Mras-k who has
ontercd Ihe emjdoy of the above
firiii. Joe is a man of many friends
and Mr. Puis litis been very fortu
nate in securing his services.
For Sale
P.utrhoring barrel:
'trw ! Stock Farm.
tit ( lie Hdhaiu
W. ?u YOUNG
AUCTIONEER
Alv.ays Ready for Sale;
Dstcs far or near.
E.TES r.EASOITAELE
SATISFACTION OH NO PAY!
Telephone 1511
For Sale
.':o hetol of 175 pound hogs,
market price. Oldham Stock
ar tl:e
Farm.
EOAES FOE SALE.
1 turoe-Jersey hoars. old enough
for service, at reasonable prices.
Oldham Stock Farm.
FOE. SALE.
j TtaiHjuct six-hole rantc. practi-
ALL. CALLS cally new, also oil heater, now.
Llnrray Esoiarei Mrs- !- Hiatt.
An unusual offering in children's heavy
flucced shirts and drawers in sizes
24 to 30. They are worth four
times the price. So don't
pass them up
PER
GARMENT
1
JA
aiURRAY,
itiaii
1 uii
NEBRASKA
For Sale Ilarred Kock Cockerels,
?l.aO each. .Mrs. C. F. DeJur.g. -
F.en Dill and son Frank were
transacting business in the city of
Omaha Wednesday, driving up in
their car.
Mrs. Frank Ciol.eiman of Flat tu
rnout h was a visitor at tiie home of
Mr. and Mrs. I.. IV Hiatt Monday
of this week.
James Latta lia. 1 1 11 con lined to
liis home with an attack of influ
enza for the pa.-t lew days. and
though no; tidxaneed enough in
Mrength to auin be out. is on the
way to l.ietid.
.hirvis !.a:ua r-r f n.;ir Fni.:n i
very sick wi'h ini"luen.a. havitiu as
he thought sufficiently regained his
strength a- to In- aid- to '- mi'. ;;:
was taken w ith ii rc laps-. It is the
hope of hh' many friends that he
vv'i'.l soon sh':V." i 1': pro V-illi ! ' ! and
again gain his mri.ia! health.
It is reported that Mr. Win. I "ul
sr. and wife will soon depart for
California to spend the remaining
nan of the winter. This will no
doubt !. ;:n enj.yab!e trip for tloxe
two edd people, who will e:-'-;i, hf
Cold witids (f Ne'";.-k;; and n.i"
the fbw -rs and suns'iin" !" the
Golden State.
I'y --p"cial ir'ilatioT!. !.n:i;.- i'id
and V. C. r.oedeker w-re in attend
ance at a meeting ;:nd hav.-vi"' a'
the Chan ';- (f C-m:ii-r-e jn Oma-
i:a.
.r
d.ra.-ka
Auto dea'.rs. The
:en t ! li'en r port tl:- occasion one
filled with pep ;ts to the bn-iiiess
outlook for the conni'i; season. ;.
well as a rrenera! good time ; nd
many in at t ei'dane-.
The Farm' r rvvaa.r Co . of
Murrn. held their annual inee'.Mig
of the stockholders at th- Tu hall,
in Murray, 'in Monday at'-moon .f
'!!- tt'cii;. 1 ! the sto-h of the
company wa well r j.-...-er.-. .. ; t:d
:,' retrr.lar at:i"tai - i: . was
transacted. iti(ii:din-r th.e elc ;-ien of
o 'h'-e-s for t i:e coming" year, which
w-re a--- follows: C. ! . Si).n::'.er,
Presif!-::?. (',. M. Miniord. iee pre. i
dent. V. !i. Pi:!-. Treasr.rer. .1 K.
Vallery. Henry ( reamer and Ci as.
Troop. ciiree;ors. They l:av nn
as yet decided nn-on ;i manager for
Ihe coining year. A dividend of
ten per cent was declared.
THE CROP THAT
MADE SOUTH
ERN NEBRASKA
JOHN MUETEY. OF ALVO. TELLS
OF THE COMING OF TUR
KEY WHEAT HERE
TOO COLD FOR SOFT WHEAT
And When Harder Variety Was In
troduced It Proved a Boon to
Fanners of Vicinity.
For: y-.-even
leer could be
irairie in the
;-i!ieo!'i. Tha
hom e -t t ea ders
years auo the wild
seen runing on the
river counties east of
! year ( 1 ST 1 ) t he
raised small patches
Thrc
nut or .-al.
aires
Plattsmot:t'n
bungalow, close
f winter wheat in the river counties
c nth of the Platte. That year spring
vheat . 1 he few acres harvested, made
'o !.; 1." bu;duls to the acre. The
:';;!! u !o at made L'5 to ill) bushels.
The preceding winter was very milci
i:;d the soft variety of winter wheat
'htii 1 1 us til ways been a success for
'die soinh t he only variety known
it tiia' timet lived thrciugh the wili
er. Kv.tv homestead-r that could
buy a bushel of winter wheat, paid
: premium of 5 0 cents a bushel over
he price of spring; wheat to get a
"ev bushels of thf winter wheat for
seed. .
Tin- j'-xt winter, the winter of
lsTI-T". it ail winter killed. The
homesteaders then discovered that
inter w heat of the soft variety was
i failure nine years on: of ten anv-.vher-
north of the line sixty miles
s.e.ith of i lie north Kansas line. This
is true today. In central Kansas
about the year 1SS0 they got a new
variety of wheat called "Turkey
wheat, and the farmers tried it.
They paid very little attention to it
there at that time. Central Kansas
was making a success of raising soft
wheat. They were too far south for
winter killing of any kind of wheat,
but they sowed small pieces of the
new Turkey wheat." They could
pasture it. and they said it would
srar.d almost anything. The common
s;i iiiu' among central Kansas farm
ers was: "Turkev wheat is as tough
as rye. Vou can't kill it." It grad
ualiy worked north in Kansas and
then to Nebraska. It has made the
north half of Kansas a good farmin
country. It has made south of the
FhiUe and a small strip north of the
Platte in Nebraska a profitable wheat
growing country. It ripens with few
exceptions before the hot winds come
up from Oklahoma and Kansas. It
has onlv been winter killed once in
the last twenty-eight years, and that
w as two j ears ago w hen the coun
try was covered with a coat of ice
that smothered it out. It is the sur
est and best crop we have, especial
ly in the South Platte country, from
Lincoln to the Colorado line.
As our cultivated lands grow old
one mile southeast of or. and our corn crops are gradually
lays well, new live-room becoming lighter, Turkey wheat con-
fxrai
Farms cr.d Gi!y ?rcpcrf$!
r-OUtli Cd
alfaila ;
ac r-s i' Mio
pia! i -n:oi: ! ; tic res
balance b-;ng farm'-e.
;U acres tiottom lanh. four miles
nerthwe-t of I '!a: : tttir. u: h. adjoin
ing Ore-ape :i. : 1." acres prairie hay.
"us twice- a year; balance- farm
a i i i . ,
Me ae res ;;';, i. jilts ea.-t of Murray;
2Ti acres of alfalfa; i acn-s of lim
othy; h1 acre.-- c f pasture; tecres
of timber land; balanc-e good farm
land; two small orcharls. two wtlls;
two se-ts of improvements. Can give
reasonable prices and terms on above
lam), or might consider some traele.
One seveti-rooiu house in Murrtiv.
Neoraska. in gooel s!iaie. with good
well and outbuildings, contains two
rood lots.
houses m Plattsinouth for
to Ik A: M. shops. ! : inues to hold its own both in yield
Can give good terms, and might con-in 'id iua!ity. We always get the fall
rains to bring it up ill the fall, and
we get the spring rains in the spring
i!;t brings us a fair growth and
brings out the heads. When we have
dder some trade.
Also see me for bargains in Chase,
Perl, ins riol Keih county wheat and
ranch lands.
FKAKE VALLEKY.
Jlurray, 1-Teb.
PyhSip
Sa e
50 Eead
Big Type PcSand-China
Berd Sows si
PacillG Junction,
WEDNESDAY,
January 22, iSH
Send address for catalogue.
Dayis Andsrssn -
Watch for descriptive ad.
. R. YOL'FiO, Auctianeer
a fair growth of straw and the crop
is headed out, we need comparative
! dry weather and sunshine to check
the growth of the straw and develop
ane! mature the berry, and as our
elry weather usually sets in the last
of June, we usually have ideal condi
tions for ripening our winter wheat.
That is the reason that the rich,
moist lands of Illinois are poor wheat
land. The great bulk of wheat the
world over with few exceptions, is
raised in the semi-dry countries.
I Plowing for Turkey -wheat should
be done in July and not later than
August la. Ground plowed four
; inches deep and harrowed dow n in
; hot weather, no matter how cloddy.
! will pulverize in September. It will
' not do so if plow ed in late, cool
i v. eat her. The early plowing yields ?
' to bushels niore to .the acre than
late plowing. This is one item in
! favor of heading wheat with a head
er, as they do in Kansas. It goes im-
! n.xli'itiili' i ii i i f tio ctn-L- 'i n d tilioti
IliC uiuuit 1111 u l UL iti-UVU U1IU i 11 V it
are through heading they can
commence plowing. Ihe small .thr
eshing machine pulled by a small
tractor that our farmers are getting
in Nebraska now so that every two
or three farmers will do their own
threshing as soon as it is in the
Fhcclt may help us to get ihe shocks
off the ground early so that in the
future we can get our plowing done
earlier and increase our yield. j
A peculiar thing about Turkey;
w heat is that in western Nebraska, j
and the west half of Kansas, where j
rainfall is light and no dews, the'
berry is dark in color. In eastern j
Nebraska, where there is more mois
ture in the atmosphere and wheat
stands in the shock waiting for the
threshing machine, it is a yellow
berry. The dark wheat yields one
pound more flour to the bushel and
makes a stronger flour. The govem
men.t recognizes this fact and when
they fixed the price of wheat they
made the price higher on dark Tur
key wheat. Before the government
fixed the price, there was a premium
in all markets of from 3 to 8 cents
a bushel on dark wheat. Some mil
lers, who were wanting to build up
or hold their flour trade would bid
very high for dark wheat. At pres
ent prices one pound more flour
would make about ii cents a bushel
more value.
Our farmers in the south Platte
country should sow two-thirds of
their land in wheat and the balance
one-third corn. etc. This would give
them a chance to some extent to ro
tate iheir crops and yet have the
bulk of their land in the best pay
ing crop.
Turkey wheat lias in the past 25
years saved the south Platte coun
try. It has brought up land to $75
per acre in the western dry belt, and
to ? 2 T 0 an acre in the river counties.
All argument against raising wheat
from 50 miles north of the Platte
river, where it begins to get too cold
and the hard varieties of wheat win
ter kill, to the Kansas line, when
boiled down, simply vanish. They
say binders are high, binders sold
in normal times at around $100. In
war times at $200. A binder lasts
eigV.it years, cuts one thousand acres.
Twenty bushels to the acre binder
costs in war times. 1 cent per bushel.
Twine in war times is a'i cents a
bushel. Threshing normal times,
cent, war times, 3 cents. The total
war time cost 12 li cents per bushel.
Normal times CU cents a bushel.
The entire farm work of raising
wheat commences July 1 at harvest
time. The seeding should be done
by September 20. At that time of
year farmers have no other crops ex
cept alfalfa hay that require their
attention. If they did not raise
wheat, they would have nothing to
do at this time of the year, so the
actual cost of labor to the farmer is
very small.
But we hear the farmers say, "1
wouhl rather raise and feed stock."
Raisincr wheat does not interfere at
all witli raising and fattening stock.
The work comes at a time of the
year when we are not fattening cat
tle. We can buy catle and corn and
feed and make profit on feeding the
same as an eastern Kansas, north
ern Missouri and southern Iowa feed
er does. They buy our corn from
northern Nebraska, the Dakotas and
Minnesota and pay more for their
cattle and corn laid down at the rail
road station than we would have to.
Northern Nebraska, the Dakotas and
Minnesota are gradually raising more
corn. The corn belt is moving north.
Their climate is too cold to feed stock
profitably in winter time.
e can always buy their corn
cheap in the fall and early winter.
fee
Poultry Wanted!
A car load of live poultry to be de
livered at poultry car near Burling
ton Freight Depot, Plattsmouth,
Nebr., on Friday, Jan. 10th, one day
only for which we will pay in cash :
All Young Boosters 20c
Hens 22c
Pullets 22c
Old Roosters 15c
Tom Turkeys, 12 lbs. over 23c
Hen Turkej-s. 8 lbs. over 24c
Ducks F. F. F 20c
Geese F. F. F. 19c
Cow Hides, per pound 14c
Large Horse Hides, each $6.00
Rabbits, (not dressed) per doz. $1.20
Will te on hand rain or shine and
take care of all Poultry offered for
sale. Don't tie poultry.
Yours very truly. i
r . E. ZEENEY. i
HOW ABOUT 7 HAT NEW
Heating Stove
THAT YOU HAVE BEEN PUTTING OFF
TO BUY?
YOU NEED IT RIGHT NOW
and we want to tell you that we have a com
plete line to select from. Come
in and sec them!
Let us tell you how we can save you some
money on all kinds of household furniture.
Murray, Nebraska
the same as other people do. We can
feed all the stock we want to at a
profit and still keep the bulk of our
farm land rasiing big crops of Tur
key winter wheat.
JOHN MFIITFV.
NOTICE.
The annual meeting of "The Cul
lom Farmers Elevator Co.. will be
held at the Becker school hou .
School District No. 41. on Jan.
1919 at one o'clock P. M. for tin
purpose of electing officers for the
coming year and transacting such
other business as may come before
the meeting.
The Board of Directors wi!l also
accept sealed bids for manager un
til the next annual meeting. All
bids to be mailed to the secretary.
J. G. MEI.SINGF.lt. Sec.
9-2tw3td Cedar Creek. Nebr.
For Sale One high-grade Poland
China boar. W. II. Cofielt, Phone
n-j.
FOR SALE.
1 have some good young horse-,
also some- good cows and two Im
ported stallions. All this stock is
sound and for sale at the right
price. A. G. Mast, owner. J-2w-.s
For Siil- - Perkins
Fied Beverage.
Wind
Mdl.
He Knows Whereof He Speaks
kead the Journal Ads It Pp.vs
J. F. Harper. 4 1 '. Navarre- str-'t.
! c. .. e i.ef.nwi Tnvic i- r 11 "7 ft ill -
Oil II .lllll'lliei, 1 ' .vur, i i v .- .
sieUr Foley's Honey ami Tar abso
lutely the b'-.-t couch remdly on i he
market. I know wh-rc ( f 1 sp L.
Your remedy n I s. quick ly and te'e f
couchs, croup. Contains no upij'e;.
is permanent ." Good for ce'di,
F.dd everywhere.
Men's S
kids
and
O
verallsS
Shirts going at $ .90
Broadlang shirts at 1.25
Stifle bib overalls and jumpers 2 25
Blue bib overalls and jumpers 2.50
Finck's Detroit Special overalls and jumpers 2.75
H. E. Lee Unionalls 3.50
The Serviee
fTn Arm. 3a xrnh.
9
ALFRED GANSEFV3ER, Murray, Fieb.
. v a-rSCT E5J
t
KttllB? "1:11! PS ffl
liln M m
mm i
Farm Light
Demonstration frm illifri i i
HJC.K..E, is ineiarm jf-xsav
lighting andWpjjj
you have been wait-
ing lor. it is tne
perfected plant
a single unit
that runs with
OUt vi
bration or
noise and
requiresr-o
special
Ths
perfectly
balance i
e 1 ect ric
unit.
'". IHlfvtrta Unit ruinitariHiKeMr I
AH the Light All ths Po wer You Need
Come and ees it. Compare it, in every way, with
all others. Make us prove to you tvhere it is better,
and mere "complete in fact, the plant you want.
030
MURRAY,
NEBRASKA.