PAGE S3. ?LATTSMOUTH SEKI-WEEZLY JOURNAL THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4. 1919. . - Murray Department Prepared in the Interest of the People of Murray nd Surrounding: Vicinity Especially for the Journal Readen I: my of the rdt?rs of the Journal knor of in; social event or item of Interest In this vicinity. ad will mail m to this office, it will ap pear under tb1 heading. We want all new8ltiEi Kditob VI! DOCTORS REMAKE I WOUNDED MEW I Red Cross Worker Tells of Mar- l turn ft & v -J r t I iniiaaa itr n i i i - -t Checks A Convenience A checking account at your command enables you to pay bills without leaving your home to send remittances anywhere with the least effort on your part. And every check when can celled and returned to you at the end of each month is an unquestionable receipt. fs. Unen an ac count with us NOW. m Safety Honesty CourtesyService Four pr eeut interest on time deposits. Our deposits are protected by the State Guaranty Law. H9URRAY STATE All business transactions held in strict confidence Your Personal Bank. NOTK'K - Mis-i tr.-.elvr cf voice. i;;rr term. Mi: :r.i i venmg. A! is- lUircho and Lois Scot ten rre .spending the week with rela tives i:i Missouri. A. I.. Laker ;ui1 Lee Kniss went to Lincoln Tuesday afternoon to at t r 'I The stPte fair. Miss Mae Loughrirtge was visit ing with Plattsmouth friends Wed nesday of this week. Kay l-'rans of Fnion. was in Murray for a fe.w hours last Sun day evening, a guest at tho Sans home. John Whitemnn. Jr.. was visiting for a few hours Tuesday with Mur ray friends, driving up from his home near N'thawka. Philip Tritsch. who was looking :it'ter some business matters in the western part of the state, returned home last Sunday evening. Vv G. Hoedckcr. F. S. Tutt and Fn-nk Vallery made a trip to Chase fount y last Saturday evening, re turning the middle of the week. John Hansen and wife and moth er, Mrs. George Hansen were in Murray Tuesday, returning home from a trip to t!i' county feat. Dr. Gilmore. Mrs. Gilmore. Helen and John, and Mrs. J. A. Walker drove to IMattsniouth Monday after noon to sco the aeroplanes at the Labor day celebration. Mae li"ghridge, j Warren Wiley was a IMattsniouth Opening for iuui- j visitor last Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Hrendel were in f'lattsmouth last Saturday. Mr. ami Mrs. Philip Keil were in riattsmouth last haturoay. '. Mrs. Will Seyboldt were i iiors lp.st Saturday Mr:;. Levi Itusterholtz and family wort Plattsmouth visitors Monday afternoon. Mrs. II. Puis and children were visiting; with friends near Avoca last Sunday. Fred Condon and Frank Vallery were Omaha visitors Monday. Philip Hild was visiting with -Murray friends and relatives Tuesday. Will Spoier and family motored to James Karhart and wife were J Omaha last Friday to attend the big visiting with Plattsmouth friends and relatives Monday. NOTICE Miss Ogla Miuford, teacher of piano. Now enrolling pupils for summer term. I'ncle George Shrader in company with Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Creamer . Plattsmouth Monday. were Plattsmouth visitors on Labor The little daughter of Mr circus. Jos. Deitl and family have been entertaining relatives from Omaha the past week. Murray was pretty well represent ed at the Labor day picnic in and Mrs. Arthur Hansen has been sick for the past few days. The suppers at the library will soon begin, and everyone will be asked to help on some one or more occasions during the winter. Mr. and Mrs. II. ( Long and j daughter. Miss Gertrude, entertain I ed Mr. and Mrs. O. A. Davis, Miss ! Etta. George and Lee Nickels at din ner last Sunday. There were quite a number from W W 1'irrv from Or-.no Cal.l""' was it. Murray Wednesday shaking "-"etinff at the Young cemetery last hands with some of his old time , Saturday, and some excellent work ' ....... - . i i 1. .. . . . f I aULUIIlIlllSIll'II III I I1C MUJ IJl ' cleaning up, hut it will require an- other day to put the grounds in tho , proper condition. John Young and family arrived in Murray last Sun day. Mrs. Henry W'ulf, from near Avoca. was visiting with Mr. and .Mrs. Fred Hild for a few (Jays this week. Albert Young accompanied by his father and mother. Mr. and Mrs. 1. A. Young, attended the state fair Tuesday. Floyd Swallow, of Lincoln, was a Murray visitor last Friday and Saturday, a guest of Miss Mae Loughridge. C;:-s county friends. Dr. H. F. P.rendel went to Omaha Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Frank i Moore, where Mrs. Moore was plac ill ill the, hfKiiif.tl fop t rcn t men f fur Mr. and Mrs a few weeks. i Dr. Ih rt Young, who has been ; ,Jav evening and will spend the week here since the serious illness of his ! visiting at the homes of their par little niece. Sarah Elizabeth Wiley. I Ir- " Mrs. L. II. Young and departed Tuesday for his home in Mr- Chas. Koedekcr, also with oth- Oklahor.ia. going via Lincoln, where er friends and relatives in and near i Murray. They will also take in the and I state fair at Lincoln. The Murrav Lyceum Course will he will attend the state fair. Mr. and Mrs. Karle ("ole daughter, of Urule, Nebraska, ar rived in Murray last Sunday morn- S(,(1 n'-f'fi attention, and the sale of ing. and were met at the station i 1 ickets will demand the appointment by C. D. Spangh r. at whose home j of a rustling committee. Make up they will vis-it for a short time. j vwnr mind that yourself and the .Mr. and Mrs. John Farris autoed j members of your family will attend down to Syracuse last Sunday to'''? numbers this fall. This will attend a family reunion of the 1 lighten the burden of the ticket family of Mrs. Farris. Her father i0,U rs- T,u' "i tickets will be just arrived from Virginia and athe life nn1 access of the winter's nephew from overseas duty. The . course. occasion was a very pleasant one' Miss Pauline Oldham for all. Gustavo Kirhoff. front Hans bought the j farm belonging to Font Wilson last lausas. i Sa? tirday. This land was formerly II.-? ht . G(od was bwking ;ifter some business matters in the county seat Wednesday. J. W. Edmunds, who has been making a visit with his daughter. Mr. Homer . Miller, at Phnnvk'w, returned borne last Sunday. He bought a f.ne residence property in that city, that will be occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Miller. J. W. IJerger and Mr. Burkett tried their luck at fishing down at the "Hig Muddy" last Saturday ev ening. They were blessed with the usual luck, and returned with the usual good fish stories to tell of how they just missed a big one. The chicken dinner given at the Christian church last Sunday was sure a grand success in every par ticular. The sermons both morning and afternoon were greatly enjoyed as well as the many filled baskets that made tip the noonday meal, and the gathering was quite large. Mr. and Mrs. James Brown and daughters. Leora and Catherine, Mrs. J. W. Berger and daughter. Mrs. E. Steiner and Mildred. Mrs. Zetta Trimpey and Chas. Bowdish made up a pleasure seeking party that departed Monday via the auto route, for a week at Lake Okohoji. Iowa. Bed Spreads! I his is just another offering of high-grade spreads; bought at mill prices, which we pass on to our customers, at a saving of the middle-man profits. This is the second iot in the past few weeks. The first lot went out quickly, so act at once if you wont a real bargain. Look at the size and weight: plairi hern spreads, size 80x90, weight 3 pounds. .$2.95 Scalloped, cut corner spread, 80x90, wt. 3 pounds. . 3.25 You couldn't make a qui't foi that money. Emit . Tuiti, MURRAY, NEBRASKA was here last Saturday visiting with friends and relatives. He was al-o spending a few diys at the Engcl kemeier home in Plattsmouth. He goes from here t Plainview for a few days visit with his brother be fore returning home. Chester Shrader entertained a number of his young friends at the home of his grandparents. Mr. anil Mrs. Long. last Saturday evening. The young folks had a most enjoy able tin-. and at the usual hour Mrs. Long served them with excel lent refreshments. Dr. Gilmore. Mrs. Gilmore. sons Walker and John, and daughter Helen, who have been out in the western part of the state for the past two weeks. looking after their wheat crop returned home last Sat urday. Walker will attend the state university this winter. Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Puis and fam ily are expected to arrive home the latter part of the present week. They have been at Pekin. Illinois, for tho past few days. and will pro"bably make a short stay in Ot tumwa on the way home, in which city Mrs. Puis has a number of rela tives. Dr. J. F. Brendel, Mrs. Brendel and little Richard. Mrs. H. V. Brendel. and Mrs L. D. Hiatt and little Alice Louise, departed in an auto Tuesday afternoon for Lincoln, where they will attend the state fair for a few days, and will visit with the parents of Mrs. J. F. Brendel while in the city. Sylvester Venard, of Bakersfield. California, has been in Cass county for tho past few days visiting with friends and relatives. He came to Murray Tuesday for a few days vi:it with his nephew, Koy How ard. Mr. Venard expects to remain in this part of the country up un til cold weather, when he will make for his home in Sunny California. He will spend most of bis visit with his daughter, Mrs. Albert Weten kamp. near RIynard. Little Sarah Elizabeth Wiley, who has boon so seriously ill for the past few Weeks, and receiving treat ment ii t the St. Joseph hospital in Omaha, &uffcring from infantile paralysis, was able to return home Tuesday and is feeling greatly im proved, i he physicians pronounce her out of danger at the present time. Her aunt, Mrs. Ona Lawton. who was nursing her, and remained at tlio hospiial duriirg the entire time, returned horn with her. This will be good news to the many frieniid of the little !ndy who were locking forward to this announcement. owned by Itobt. Good, and lays three miles eat of Murray. It will make r.n excellent stock farm for Miss Oldham. It has plenty of good pas ture land wit It running water, and has very good improvements. Miss Oldham lias been very successful for the past number of vears in the stock business, and the new posses sion will permit her to make great er advancement in the line stock line. :o: THE WISE CHINAMAN The Englishman says. "How dc you no : the Lgyptian greets you. "Do you sweat copiously?" but tho wisest is the Chinaman, whose greet ing is. "Is your stomach in goo order. Uood stomach means per fect health and therefore such a salutation reveals a just sense of life. And if you suffer from stom ach disorders, constipation, indiges tion, headaches, insomnia, nervous ness, etc.. Trincr's American Elixir of Hitter Wine is just what you need. This remedy cleans the intestines, aids digestion and sharpens appe tite. It is both efficient and pala table. You can get it at your drug gist's. And you will get there also Trincr's Liniment, the most depen dabie remedy for rheumatic and neuralgic pains, lumbago, sprains swellings, etc. Joseph Triner Com pany, 1333-43 S. Ashland Ave., Chi cago, Illinois. vels of Reconstruction Surgery. EASY TO GIVE MAN HEW FACE Soldiers Brought to Hospital In Franca With Countenances Merely Blurs Sent Away With Nor- mat Visa get. New York. Miss Eva Hnmmond of the American Tied Cross-, who returned recently from Europe after nearly five years' service with the Billed armies, and who wears decorations of the Brit ish and French governments, told of the wonderful results achieved in re ronstrnetlve surgery by the surgeons of the American and allied armies. Miss Tlnmmond, whose home Is In San Francisco, was attached to the staff of the American Red Cross hospital In Neullly, France. "It Is stirrrisinsr hoxrmany things can be done to a man hy a shell nnd leave him still llvlnpr,' Miss nammond said. "And the things that can be done to make It worth while for hfm to go on living are even more surpris ing. "Dental surgery is one profession that hns gone ahend from the Im fierns of the war in leaps and bounds. The marvels that the doctors of den tistry performed were not entirely un known before the war. but they were in the theoretical stage. There was ' no chance to put these theories into practice, except in widely isolated cases. The war proved that those theories were sound ami practicable; it afforded them n moan of develop ment. There is nothing impossible In dental surgery now." Make New Faces. T have seen men come into that hos pital of ours with bloody blurs where THE W. H. PULS will always carry a complete line of Hardware, Paints. Oils, Farm Implements, Tractors, GASOLINE ENGINES and REPAIRS! We do all kinds of tin work, heating and plumbing, and will also save you money on furniture orders. Come in and get our prices on anything in our line. We will treat you right and save you money. W. C0. P MURRAY yLss Phone No. 24 NEBRASKA MAJ. GEO. N. PUGSLEY BACK FROM WAR tubes and kept alive. I have seen their remaining bits of skin stretched over the raw places, which filled with new tfl.-i.-l. . . . J . ........ I, i T ...nt.nrnt .nil ur,. ,.iu. ............. f France as ganitary officer of the 39th finally they have gone out Into the ! . . , , There was rejoicing at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Taylor Fri day evening, when Maj. Pugsley ar rived from New York city where he landed on the 17th. He came direct to Plattsmouth as Mrs. Pugs ley and son George have been spend ing the summer months at the home of Mrs. Pugsley's parents. Maj. Pugsley's career began sev eral years ago when he joined the rational guards and was fent down to Texas on account of the border trouble and after serving seven months he returned home and when this country declared war on Ger many he enlisted in the medical to active service soon afterwards and after spending several months at train ing camps he was sent over to Maj. Pugsley will go to ( amp Dodge Sept. 12 for his discharge completing two years of service in the world war after which he will return to Omaha and again r his practice as a physician surgeon. utile and PLATFORM DANCE. At Cedar Creek, Saturday even ing. Sept. Cth. Jazz limbic by Ah land orchestra. A good time fcr all. Come out. 4-ltdltw Barn and Stock for Sale For Sale, Livery barn, stock, auto and dray line. Call on D. C. Rhodcn. (his Kopp and wife and Mr. and those going to Lincoln this morning, where they will spend the day at the state fair and while there tn Joy a visit with friends. Mrs. Lester Darkus and little child who have been here visiting with relatives and friends for some time, departed this morning for Havelock, for a short visit, and from there will go to their home at Graybull, Wyoming. W. R. YOUNG AUCTIONEER Always Ready for Sale Dates far or near. RATES REASONABLE SATISFACTION OR HO PAT I REVERSES ALL. CALLS Telephone 1511 world with new faces. "There wvs one man. I remember, who eatne in to us with bis entire face gone nothing left but one eye. We fed him through a tube, built him a metal jaw, fitted with teeth, and made him look like a human being again, ex cept that he had no nose only two nostrils. We found him a false nose and a pair of spectacles attached, hid ing the scarred flesh around his miss ing eye, and making him look so much like another man that one would not have glanced at him a second time to note his defnity. "Another man came to us with the greater part of his face intact, but with no nose. It had been shot off completely, leaving his flesh flat from chin to forehead. We made him nose to fit him. From the place where his nose had joined to his forehead there nun" a little wlsn of skin. This was pulled down, stretched every day, and kept dry and healthy by an anti septic powder. Finally it grew to the correct lenzth for a nose. Then we opened his wrist and grafted a piece of bone to the place where his nose should have been, binding arm ami face together until the operation was completed. Then we adjusted the skin which filled out with healthy flesh, and there was a new nose!" Easy to Give Man New Face. A man whose face had ben hang' Ing down from below his eyes, Miss nammond says, was a simple case. His face was sewn back in place. "I met him on the street in Paris.' she savs. "just two days lefore I sail ed, and his face looked just as usual, except for a slight scar which ran along under his eyes and ncross his nose. In time it will almost disap pear. A man who had been the victim of a freak shell which had tipped out every one of his teeth, leaving him otherwise unharmed, was supplied with new gums and a complete set of iinner and lower false teeth. I have even seen a man with his brain bulg Ing down over his eye from a jagged cut In his skull. The brain has been carefnlly pressed back in place, and the head fitted with a metal plate. This operation leaves the patient per fectly norma! so far as his mental con dition is concerned. He is, however. unable to go about much ia the hot sun, as Strong neac mens niui. ouu he cannot drink because it Irritates the brain." Sometimes, Miss Hammond said, a patient would be brought into the hos pital with his leg smashed to pieces. Instead of making 'a. hurried amputa tion, every effort was made to save the injured limb. It was put into a frame, and in a short time the smashed bones would take a position, knit, and begin to grow together, while the splin tered bits would gradually work their way out of the leg through the flesh. Adopt No-Hat Custom. London. Among English women the custom of going without hats Is rapid ly- spreading. Lady Khonaaa, miss Mary McArtbur and other famous wotn trinri the no-hat brigade' when speaking on public platforms, division and later was made surgeon of the oth replacement depot and after the armistice was signed he was made surgeon of the 3rd mili tary district. Maj. Pugsley had the opportunity of visiting in Paris and London and also visited relatives in Scotland whom he had never seen. Maj. Pugsley says when speaking of the destruction wrought by the Germans it is too terrible to think about especially that pa,rt of France which included a oc-ction of the Hidenburg line that hardly changed its position in four years he says the destruction is beyond description. LIEERTY U. B. CHURCH Opportunity will he given for bap tism by sprinkling; also for recep tion of members into the church. Any desiring to unite with the church either by letter or on profes sion of faith will be welcomed. Sunday school at 10::J0. Preaching service at 11:15. All are invited and a good attendance of the mem bership is desired, as the pastor ha ; a very important mutter he wishes to present. John Schutz. formerly of this lo cality, but who lor the past several years has been located near Imperii-!, came ;n ?. ray for a shmt visit with relatives and old friends. Mr. Schutz was in Omaha, securing repairs for his farm machinery and took advantage of the occasion to visit the old home. Stationery at the Journal eiFn BUY YOUR FALL AND WINTER EARLY AND SAVE MONEY! We have a large assortment of all kinds of shoes from which to choose your needs at prices far below prices you will have to pay in sixty days as you know shoes are advancing every day. We have a large as sortment of school shoes in all sizes. Also men's and boys' rubber boots. HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR ALL FARM PRODUCTS! The 4 ALF GANSEMER, Proprietor 9 B"B vara 0 m m rcn iiku imi p Peckley. W. Va. Miners digging coal 13 in a mine of the East Gulf Coal com- pany unearthed the body of a petrified : man. The fossil is a perfect specimen, s Murray Exe'tange' human bodj. -fillER DRUG CO.- Will Always Carry a Complete Line of DRUGS, PAINTS, OILS AND VARNISHES WALL PAPER AND SUNDRIES TOILET ARTICLES AND CIGARS If It's in the Drug Line We will Look alter Your Wants at All Times TELEPHONE 110. 2 is a u n w u n N M M i n ri ti N n U rt N rlWIIDHIBUUWiiBliH