THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1928. PAGE FOUR PLATTSMOUTH SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL Union D Prepared Exclusively for The Journal. rtmmemt Glass Cloth at Frans Bros Lum ber Co. Herman C. Ross was a visitor at Tleasant Hill last Sunday where he went for the day for a visit with friends and also was their guest for dinner. Edward L. Dowler of Weeping Water was looking after some busi ness matters in Union last Monday afternoon having driven over from his home in his auto. Ward Clark of Plattsnoouth, one of the very best of barbers was a visitor in Union last Monday after noon and was visiting with his friends in Union during the day. James F. Wilson, constable for Liberty precinct, was a visitor in Plrttt.smouth last Saturday called Union and was staying with the fam ily, Mr. Hardin;? and the two boys, while here. She with the smallest son, returned to Bethany where some of the children are attending school. Rev. W. A. Taylor, W. B. Banning, W. G. Cheney and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Frans Frans were over to Nehawka Just Bring the Discs to look after some business matters on last Sunday where they went to and also was visiting with friends as assist in the proper celebration of well Washington's birthday, which was John R. Stino of Plattsmouth, who held at the Nebraska auditorium on was not working on Washington's last Sunday morning, hirthdav. was a visitor in Union, be- Charles Uysart and wife, who have jing the guest of his mother and two been in Omaha for some time, where brothers, R. D. Stine and W. L. Stine ,Mr. Dysart has) been having treat of Union. ment for a fracture of one of his I W. E. Moore was a visitor in arms, which became a very matter, i Omaha on last Thursday where he was but which is at this time getting called to look after some business aiong niceiy ana it is nopeu, win soon matters for a short time. He was ac- be entirely well again, companied by Mrs. Moore, they mak- Joseph Lindsay who has been visit ing the trip in their car. ing in the west for the past few Sixteen yards of Glass cloth for months having been visiting with $5.00 at Frans Lumber Co. ' his son Fred Lindsay, who is ai Mr and Mrs. George Walch of Stockton, Calif., during the cold Omaha were visiting last Sunday with weather returned home during the the lattcr's father, JMr. Eugene Aus- fore part of this week, and reports ting who is slowly convalescing from ' a very pleasant winter in the west, his recent illness, and who is hop-J Lee Farris was a visitor in Platts ing soon to be entirely well again. I mouth last Monday morning where Paul Applegate was hauling lumber he went to accompany Mr. and Mrs. for the construction of a house on,C. F. Harris, who were over to the p rami west 01 uniuu. cinu win.-- - -- -- -- We have means of sharpening your discs without the frames. Just bring the discs them selves and you can do this in your car, and get them ready for the Spring work for Win ter is hurrying away. Remember, we carry a full line of Rock Island Darm lUaCnmery. eej;;,, commence on the con-the tonsils of their two sons, Fulton OU1' tWO rOWerS and tVO Utruction of the edifice, as he desires and Donald, removed they lads hav UUI LWU dllU lVto live in it as soon as it can be , mg been having much trouble with row cultivators, vv e can save you some money. Bruce WoKe Union - Nebraska completed. Messrs. and Mesdames A. W. Propst and E. W. LaRue were look ing after some business matters and were visiting with friends in Omaha on last Friday, they all driving over to the big city in the car of Mr. and Mrs. LaRue. Mrs. W. A. Harding of Bethany, was a visitor for over Sunday in Farming Machinery! We have our new line of Farming Machin ery on display now for your inspection come and see. We will save you money. Fine line grass and clover seed. A fine line of Congolium Rugs and the latest in blue enamel Quick Meal Ranges. UNION NEBRASKA mattery Ohargedl Have purchased the latest equipment in Battery Charg er. . When you need your Radio or Car Battery charged call and give us a trial. Soon will be garden time. Have Ferry's, Northup-King Co, and Gurney seeds for sale. Also onion and cab bage plants in season, and Everything Else in Hardware L. UFTS3 9 UNION NEBRASKA 'their throats for some time. Clarence Clarke of near Auburn will farm the place of J. D. Cross, the coming season and was in Union last Monday looking after some busi ness and making purchases of hay for his feeding when the farming season begins. Mr. Clarke returned home and will endeavor to move to the new homo during the coming week. J. II. Ruhmrin, who lived south of Union held a sale last Monday and a large number of the citizens of Union and elsewhere were in attend ance, the sale was conducted by Col. Rex Young, the celebrated auction eer and the prices realized were very satisfacotry to both the owner and the people who made purchases as well as to the auctioneer. Little Florence McCarthey, daugh ter of Mr. ?nd Mrs. F. II. McCarthey, is very ill at their home with an at tack of pneumonia. The best medical attention and all that can be had in the line of nursing is being given to the little one. The last reports from the bedside of the liltle patient is that she was some better, which news was received with much joy by her many friends. Everett Armstrong, ho has been making his home near the river east of Union for some time because of illness was taken to a hospital in Omaha some time ago, where he is being treated for the malady and is considered in a very grave condi tion. It was found necessary to place one of his legs in a plaster cast which he had fractured when he accidently fell a short time ago. Glass Cloth for chicken houses and hotbeds, 35c per yd, at Frans Bros Lumbzer Co. Mrs. Ellis Daniels of Pipestone. Minn., is visiting in Union and is the guest of her sister, Mrs. C. F. Har ris, being a visitor here for a number of days. Mrs. Daniels was also visit ing and looking after some business matters at Beatrice for a number of days. She has a farm near Beatrice and was looking after her interests there. Mrs. Daniels has two son3 who are farming near Pipestone and she says the' are doing nicely there. mm iiHarriira usiness is oca: J! There is a reason. We are here to serve the public with the best goods at the lowest possible prices, when good service and the very best goods are required. Also the highest prices for your produce. Groceries, work clothes and in fact any thing the farm demands. Come see the savings which our store will afford you. km Las On the Corner Union, Nebraska aaanasos SOBS That is just what all stock should have, that they may eat, grow, produce flesh and milk. Fly Salt will do this. Besides being salt, equal to any, the animal who eat it will be positively free from flies in the sum- This salt is recommended by ail large concerns. mer. Listen in and see what Henry Fields has to say about it - he is telling the good features of it over the radio. I have the contract of this territory and will deliver this excellent salt which does all claimed for it and more, at your station for $3.00 per hundred pounds, which will supply twenty-five head of cattle for one month. D. G. LaRue, Phone 4028 Union. Nebraska Milk 8 Cents Per Quart. For Sale Milk Sc a quart at the house. John Lidgett. fll-3ts P-T Meeting March 4th. The next meeting of the P. T. A. will be held March 4th at the Union school building. The program will be furnished entirely by parents, teachers and patrons. There will be a question box, thru which it is hoped many problems of teachers and parents may be discuss ed. There will also be a debate and musical selections. The fathers, no Attebery Garage This is the Garage known for its Service. Best work always. Full line of Accessories and Supplies carried in stock. Service Our Watchword Charles Attebery Union, Nebr. See Our Low Prices ! Wq are selling groceries and all things to eat at prices that will save you ; money. Let us prove it. Cane Sugar, the very best $7.00 Beet Sugar, extra fine '. 6.75 25 lbs. of Corn Sugar for 1.00 ! We Will Save You Money I oa Your Eats I Stine's Grocery Union -:- Nebraska Honey Dew Pig Meal 28 PROTEIN Equal to Mother's Milk New Method of Raising Hogs and Pigs Successfully REMEMBER THIS THE MOST CRITICAL TIME IN A PIG'S LIFE IS WEANING TIME. If you take little pigs from mother's milk and put them on coarse feed all of a sud den without a substitute for mother's milk, you invite trouble. You must have a Pig Meal high in available, digestible protein anil as near mother's milk as possible. Honey Dew Pig Meal is the highest quality of all. HONEY DEW DOES IT. Corn and oats exclusively are not a proper feed for little pigs at wean ing time, as the little pigs at this time are not old enough to handle coarse, unbalanced feeds like corn and oats. How the pig starts at weaning time means either success or failure. Pigs wean themselves on HONEY DEW PIG 3IEAL without setbacks or bowel trouble. $ -fa r -job-V V J TIk's Ave litter brothers wen?l tiiem Si'lu on ll.mey Kcir I'm Mini. I'ii Ixlow taluu cut of the same litur. bee tho difference. F - 4 1 3 V? " I -v Ov ..A 1 J Tbli r'i?f tojpcJ en corn !"! nMs. Kesults a runt tn frr his l:rine liic lx.il !l( cf l!.e buiii.b ut the start. if Shoat Scale Test Producing Pork at 4c per Pound Scale test on 90 pigs owned by Elmore Nauman, Mound City, Mo., weighed an average of 41 lbs. per head at start. The 90 head of pigs fed a period of 41 days on HONEY DEW PIG MEAL and nothing else except water. At the end of 41 days' feed, the nigs weighed an average of SO lbs., making a net gain of 39 lbs. of pork per head in 41 days. Each pig only consumed 41 lbs. of HONEY DEW PIG MEAL and water, produc ing pork for less than 4 cents a pound. Hew to Handle Brood Sows with Pigs Feed the sow HONEY DEW PIG MEAL as a slop while she is nursing her pigs. Ey so doing you will in crease the milk flow and the sow will not fall off in fat. In short, feed the pigs by feeding the sow while the pigs are nursing. We recommend lor c 250 to 300 lb. sow. one pound of HONEY DEW PIG MEAL and 3 ears of corn and nothing else except water. Little pigs will wean them selves while running with the sows. After pigs reach 4 weeks of age, place HONEY DEW PIG MEAL in dry form in self-feeders with plenty of fresh water near the feeder. Fix a place where they can run in and out as they please to the feeder contain ing the HONEY DEW PIG MEAL. They will wean themselves in eight weeks. No set-backs or bowel trouble. Fattening Hogs Fed Honey Dew Pig Meal as a balancer, will save half your home grown feed, with larger gains. Write for 12-page book of scale tests. Dealers and salesmen wanted. WESTERN STATES FARMERS'. EXCHANGE 4514 W. Fillmore St. Chicago, Illinois FOR SALE BY Chas, G, McCarthy - Union, Neb. E. J. Wilson - South Bend, Neb. doubt assisted by the serve refreshments. ladies, will ed the patient is ascribed the remark able recovery. The many friends of Mrs. Davis are well pleased with her condition and are hoping for a com plete recovery in a short time. Celelrate Birthday. On Wednesday of this week Jamea Irwin, who has lived for the past twenty years southeast of Union near the mouth of the Weeping Water river, celebrated his 89th birthday very quietly with the wife, the chil dren all having been long since mar ried and living to themselves. Mr. Irwin was born in Canada on Feb ruary 24th 1937, and when 17 years old came to the United States and settled in "Iowa where he remained for some four years and when he was I just twenty-one years of age came j to Nebraska and settled on what is now known as the John N. Larsh , farm, where he lived from the spring of 185S until he moved to where he is living at this time, making sixty-, seven' years in Nebraska and all of; that time in Cass county. j Uncle James and the good wife are still making their home on the farm, j For some twenty years he conducted ! a blacksmith shop and also looked ULU'l Hie midlia JL liic Ld! Ill da rn and as the work on the farm became more intense and laborious he stop-1 ped the work in the shop and looked after the frrm alone. At Nebraska j City in 1S7S he was united in mar-j riage with Miss Anna Everett, andj from this union some ten children were born, eight of whom are still j living at this time, two having pre coeded this aged pioneer anil wife to; the other yorld. At this time both j Mr. and Mrs. Irwin are enjoying re- i markably good health for their ad vanced years. j---" mm it-- 11 r TTLji-"iiMt5:ni'cj, " S ffi Euli3l(ijirBEC35, The Kind of Food a Person Eats will Add or Subtract to or from the Average Life. So why take a chance cn eating inferior food when you can buy the very best at almost the same figure you would pay for a cheapened article. There are dozens and dozens of varieties of canned fruits and vegetables, and dozens and dozens of prices, but the price for the very cheapest is not far distant from the very best. The difference may add health and happiness to your family be sides giving you pleasure every time you sit down at your dining room table. Our Grocery Department strives to keep prices down, but never at the sacrifice of quality. It is highly important to us that we do not contribute to your ill health by selling you canned goods or groceries of any sort that we would not ourselves use at home. GIVEN PLEASANT SURPRISE From Tuesday's Tnny Last evening the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. II. Graves at 10th and Gran ite streets was the scene of a very i pleasant party of young people, the' occasion being a birthday surprise arranged in honor of Miss Louise Kummell. i The home was very prettily ar- ranged with the patriotic decorations of "Washington's birthday and whoso brightness and attractiveness proved a cnarming note of the evening. The event being tho birthday of Miss Kummell she was remembered by the friends with a large number of attractive gifts that she wiil i3 treasure as remembrances of the friends and the pleasant anniversary M that they had prepared for her. The time was spent in games of various kinds and in which there were several prizes offered. Jop Graves. Ralph Hyde, Miss Rummell and Clyde Graves were the most successful and received suitable prizes for their skill in the contests. At a suitable hour in the evening dainty refreshments were served by Mrs. J. IT. Graves who was assisted by Misses Wilma Pickard and Ona Graves in serving. At a late hour the members of the party departed for their homes wishing Miss Louise many more such pleasant occasions. Here are Some Special Prices on Quality Groceries SUGAR Best granulated, 15 pounds for $ 1.00 FLOUR Victor brand, per 48-lb. sack 2.60 FLOUR Little Hatchet, per 48-lb. sack 2.50 CORN Solid pack, No. 2 size cans, 2 for 25 PEAS Standard pack, 2 cans for 25 PEAS Farm House brand, No. 2 size, 2 for 35 SAUER KRAUT Large size cans, each. . . 10 HOMINY Large size cans, each 10 TOMATOES Hand pack, No. 3 size, per can . . . .15 TOMATOES Hand pack, No. 2 size, 2 cans for . .25 BEANS Yellow cut, No. 2 size, 3 cans for 44 BEANS Green cut, No. 2 size, 3 cans for 44 TOMATO SOUP Snider's. Per can 10 SALMON Alaska red, I -lb. tall can for 39 SALMON Pink, Mb. tall cans, 2 for .35 PEACHES Gallon cans, each 65 APRICOTS Gallon cans, each 75 CHERRIES Red pitted, gallon cans, each 1.25 CANNED FRUITS Peaches, Kosetlale- Loganberries Apricots, Rosedale Packed in Syrup Special Price 4 cans for 95c DODGE AGENCY A real buy for the money. Have a look befor buying. Vallery & Wetenkamp. Residence phone 50S. Office phone 23. Plattsmouth. Neb. 2td-ltw ALFALFA HAY F0S SALE Ten tons of good alfalfa hay at $15 per ton in stack. Farmers State Bank, Plattsmouth. f22-2sw ; PRUNES Santa Clara, fancy, med., 2 lbs 25 PRUNES Santa Clara, fancy, large, 2 lbs 35 RAISINS Thompson's seedless, 2 lbs. for 25 RAISINS Puffed, seeded, 2 lbs. for 25 SOAP P & G white naptha, 10 bars for 42 SOAP Sunny Monday, 10 bars for 39 LEWIS LYE 2 cans for 25 DUTCH CLEANSER 3 cans for 25 LIGHT HOUSE CLEANSER 4 cans for 25 ADVO JELL All flavors. 3 pkgs. for 25 APPLE BUTTER Large size jar for 35 DILL PICKLES Very fancy, large jar for 25 JIFFY JELL Per package 05 Full line school sup plies at the Bates Book Store. Lowest prices. I ! PUBLIC AUCTION I will offer for sale at Public Auc tion on the John Ilallstrom farm, just south of Plattrmouth, beginning at 1:00 o'clock sharp, on COFFEE! COFFEE! COFFEE! Buy your Coffee where it is always fresh. Roasted daily and blended by experts. ANKOLA BLEND Per pound $ .60 MASTER BLEND Per lb., 50c; 3 lbs. for 1.45 PEABERRY Santos, a good mild coffee, lb 45 OUR SPECIAL Per pound 39 Saturday, Febr. 27 UT the following described property, to-'s wit: Six Head of Horses One black mare, ten years old. weight 1300: one hav horse, eisrhti years old, weight 1450; one bay mare, jg smooth mouth, weight 1200; one bay mare, seven years old, weight j 14 70; one span coach horses, 6 and; 7 years old, weight 2350. One Milk Cow Will be fresh soon. Farm Machinery, Etc. One Jenny Lind . cultivator: one Avery cultivator; one P & O cultiva-! tor; one John Deere riding cultiva-i tor; one John Deere walking plow, j 16-inch; two Moline sulky plows, 16- nicii, one jonn Deere lister; one fa a n on jfQt n n fj ' .Tn Tl n T)opro rnrn liTnntAn r r Wart Aii j. i a. rt4.i""'"" iiamti . uiic vu- A1 Parenw paimi. - mu zelman corn elevator; one 3-section members are always cordially wcl- harrow. one Monitor press drill; one ' wiuia vuiiul , UliU uuuu Don't Is It Lent Now? anyone offer Jane Robb, Deere disc; one Budlons- disc- one McCormick mower: one Deerintr mower; one hand corn sheller: one! James any candy or ice-cream for two one hay rack and wagon; one hay i months, at least. Miss Jorn, Mr. Fos- rake; one side delivery rake; one' ter, Grandpa Robb, Mr. Todd and ( Keystone hay loader; one hay sweep; others, please take notice. These one l-h. p. gas engine; two setsj young ladies are Campfire girls and'l-inch harness; two sets 1-inch' are trying to earn honors in camp- harness; one saw frame and Curtlss' fire work. They also cannot eat be-, blade; one bob sled and other articles tween meals and are walking fifteen ,too numerous to mention, miles a month. Terms of Sale All sums of $10 and under, cash. I Mrs. Mary Davis Better. j On sums over $io a credit of six' Mrs. Mary Davis, who has been so months will .be , given, purchaser giv-j seriously ill for some time with a ing bankable note bearing eight per very acute attack or pneumonia, is cent interest from date. No property reported as being much better at this to be removed from the premises un- time, and haa been able to dispense til settled for. with the very excellent nurse, Mrs.; q 1 U Lena Barton, of south of "Union, who; J- naCKenDerg has given; 'the very best of 'care to Owner. the patient. With the cooperation of REX YOUNG. Auctioneer. Dr. Arthur Klntner, who has attend- FARMERS STATE BANK, Clerk. 9x12 Axminster rug, $15; large genuine leather uphol stered davenport bed, $75 value for $35; two large rockers to match, $9.50 each; library table, $14.50; two single beds, like new, $6.50 each; French walnut bed and dresser to match, both for $45; Edison phonograph with 10 records, $25; child's crib, like new, $6.50; one quarter sawed oak dining room table, $19.50; one $75 quarter sawed oak china cabinet, new, $35; one $45 walnut buffet with mirror, $29.50; one $45 refrigerator, $20; one $450 piano, $150, terms on part or discount for cash ; one white enamel trimmed $ 1 95 Alcozar com bination gas and coal range, just like new, $75; one small 6-hole range, extra good condition, $20; one $45 cream separator, $20; one good roll top writing desk, $20; two 4-section bookcases, like new, $22.50 each. Bowls, Pans, Dishes, 60 ft. Garden Hose and many other articles at money-saving prices at Gtirist & Christ Phone 645 South Sixth Street Plattsmouth.