PAGE EIGHT PLATTSMOUTH SEMI - WBBKLY JOURNAL XQKDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 196. 1) e 0 SPECIALS! Bulk Raisins, seedless, per lb 11c 50-60 size Prunes, 2 lbs. for 25c 40-50 size Prunes, 2 lbs. for 32c Corn Syrup, Vz gal., 28c, gallon 45c White Syrup, Vi gal., 37c, gallon 49c Large size can Spinach .20c 3 lbs. Michigan Navy Beans 25c 1-lb. can Red Salmon for 30c Lipton's coffee, per lb 60c 3 pounds for 1.75 KRE-ME-KUT PRODUCTS Macaroni, Noodles, Spaghetti, 3 pkgs. .23c FLOUR SPECIALS 48-lb. sack Little Hatchet Flour $2.15 48-lb. sack A. G. B. Flour 2.35 This is our own brand of Flour. Money returned if you are not satisfied. Emily Colvin Drew Had Part in State History i. fit Main Strest Stcre, 236 South Park Store, 118 Plattsmouth, Nebraska ir rat mam PRESENTED WITH JEWEL FOE QUARTER CENTURY SERVICE John r.usche was given a twenty five year membership jewel Monday night by Louisville lodge No. 1S4, In dependent Order of Odd Fellows. Mr. Eusche was made an Odd Fellow by Platte lodge No. 7 at Plattsmouth in May, 1000. After moving to the farm near Louisville he transferred his Pioneer Woman Lived Through the . Most Stirring Events of the Pioneer Days. In the passing of Mrs. Emily Col vin Drew of Omaha, one of the pio neer residents of the state, there has been taken from the stage of life a figure that has lived through the most stirring days of early Nebraska history as the following sketch of the stirring events of an early day gives and in which Mrs. Drew play ed a striking part: Drew. Mrs. Emily Colvin, 14,0 North 33rd street, Omaha was a real pioneer of the state of Nebraska crossing the Missouri river at Plattsmouth on a ferry in April, 1857 in a covered wagon, residing in and about Plattsmouth until -4he fall of 1S9 6, when she removed to Omaha where she has resided since that time. Her brothers, John Colvin, George W. Colvin and William Colvin, home steaded the land now occupied by the town of Arapahoe in Furnas county, and her father and brother Silas II. Colvin homesteading the land upon which the town of McCook is now located, they opening up the first store at McCook. and her hus band, the late Alva Drew for a num ber of years transported freight be tween Plattsmouth and Denver in wagons pulled by oxen and horses. Later, he assisted A. B. Smith, en gineer, lay out most of the town.' along the main line of the Burling ton between Lincoln and Denver. Mrs. Drew was born en October 6th, 1S45, at Columbus, Ohio, came to Knoxville, Iowa, in a covered wa gon, and then a few years later with ZSSTESJ&ZTEZit her parents and three sisters and five i i I-.. brothers came to the Missouri river, . . A . , , , which they crossed in the spring of membership to the local lodge. ls5? at plat,sm0uth. Her father. A twenty-five year jewel is con- lvmi,m innt,H nf wbat is sidered a great prize as it is necessary that a member always be in good standing in the order for that period of time and that he has never been dropped for non-payment of dues. now known as Eight Mile Grove in Cass county, about eight miles south west of Plattsmouth. She was edu cated and later taught school in Cass f- fco filial v , iromiub ioux , ... uue i ments in Courier. all respects. Louisville Farm Loans made at lowest obtain able rates. We have a few good Farms near Platts mouth listed wiih us worth the money. erra she walked three miles tr school, boarded around among the scholars, built her own fires, took i care of the school house, and re HCG CALLING DEM0NSTRA- ceived the sum of ten dollars per TI0N BARGAIN WEDNESDAY month for her work. On September 14th, 1865, married ! Fred Patzel, world champion hog Alva Drew, and five boys and onr j caller, who is appearing at the Amer- little girl were born to them, but ican Legion carnival in Plattsmouth oniy two of the children are now this week, will give hog calling dem- living, Gerald M. Drew and Clyde W. onstrations on the streets during the Drew, both of Omaha. Mr. Drew afternoon Bargain Wednesday. Mr. passed away at Plattsmouth In 1883. Patzol has a clear, clarion voice that 1883. carries best in the open and this op- 0ne or the first tragedies in her portunity of hearing him as he would western life she recalls was the death call the real swine in the open lot is of her brother-in-law. Barton Ken one worth while. The Bargain Wed- nedy who fcad married her oldest nesday offerings are most timely and sIster and gone we3t to the Rocky should attract large numbers to town mountains in search of gold, and who that day, to say nothing of the op- s murdere3. presumably by In portumty of hearing Patzel. dian.s. According to reports received in Cass county, he left Denver with it Call us or See us about the above. T. II. Pollock Plattsmouth, Neb. CANNON GROWS WEAKER Dcnvilie, 111.. Nov. 11. Although there is no apparent outward change , in the condition of Uncle Joe Can jnon, veteran congressman, he is daily becoming weaker, according to his physician. Dr. C. E. Wilkinson today. two white men and went up into the mountains prospecting for gold; one of the men returned with the word that one evening he had left 'thf camp to hunt for a little time, after he had been gone, for a few minutes he heard some shots and went up on top of the mountain and looked down tipon the camp and saw that Indian? were In the camp scalping one of the Call No. 6 job printing. T lers lamination! The next teachers' examination will be held Saturday, November 20, 1926. Afternoon Public School Music Drawing English Composition General Geography Theory and Art Mental Arithmetic" Physiology and Hygiene I Even so, Dr. Wilkinson said, his eart 13 still quite regular, and he . , ' nv,f, may live for some months to come. Re c2rried the word back to Denver. and a searching party went out and with JOur crder foi found the graves, the bodies of Bar- l ton Kennedy and the other white i man having been buried by prospec- - j tors and the spade of Barton Ken nedy with his initials "J. B. K." cut iin the same, stuck upon the grave. I This widowed sister with her two (small children came back to the fath ler's home to live. She recalls the two young boys that were brought to her father's ! house at Eight Mile Grove one Sun day morning, and after she had got ten breakfast and dinner for them they started on in the afternoon for Plattsmouth in charge of a posse of m m.ii....1. .... m Vvl i nircl Oracle Elementary School Certificate for plattsmouth . but when they Subjects will be given at Louisville, Weeping, r!nS Wnfpr Jmrl P1f)ttc:rnrmtV) ler man and a stranger in that part Y dtci cuiu JTlclLLbillUUUl. !f the country were hanged to some 1 cottonwood trees. These two boys lived with their mother at Mullin 3 ranch in the western part of the ; county, and had been to Plattsmouth ! where they met a companionable friend and the three drank until they were drunk, and on their. way out from Plattsmouth they stole some horses, saddles and bridles. When .out from Plattsmouth about ten or ; twelve miles at what is known as the ' Shoup place they stopped for the j night, and there they became mixed WKmcl", Tn,-,.,... - in a drunken brawl. Mrs. urews ....ta.jf father and brother went over and of Study. took the leader and brought him to j Bookkeeping Colvin ranch where he stayed all I night; the other two boys went on Second Grade High School Certificate Sub- mother's house, where they were t found early the next morning by the I posses organized at Plattsmouth. :They were brought back to the Col vin ranch where they ate their breakfast and dinner cooked by Mrs. Drew. 1 Mrs. Drew was just a girl and beg ged the men from Plattsmouth not to harm the boys, which they prom ised to do; when the two you,ng boys learned that they were to be hanged. they wrote a note to their mother and asked Mr. Colvin, Mrs. Drew's father to take same to her which he Forenoon Agriculture and Geography of -"elra?ka. Arithmetic. Reading Civil Government Orthography Grammar Penmanship American History jects will be given at county seat only. Afternoon Algebra Geometry Chemistry General Science Educational Psychology English Literature Foreno on with handkerchiefs. Some of the well known residents of Plattsmouth never cared to discuss this affair. She states that generally the In dians around Plattsmouth did not bother them any, but she recalls one scare that they had in the fall of 11864; a man on horseback went through the country west of Platts mouth advising the residents that the Indians were coming and causing trouble; scores of homesteaders came into Plattsmouth in a hurry during the night but there was no serious trouble.' There was an Indian burial ground at Plattsmouth, and many interesting relics have been taken from some of the graves. Nebraska responded nobly with men in the early days of the Civil war. Company "A," 1st Nebraska ' Volunteers was recruited at Platts mouth, and for a time the boys were encamped at Plattsmouth, and Mrs. Drew remembered passing back and forth through their camp on her way to school. Her brother, John Colvin. went with his company and saw ac tive service until he became sick; he' lay for weeks in southern hospitals, j such as they were, and his folks did not know for months whether he was dead or alive, until finally he was sent home to rest up; he later, re-enlisted and went west with a ; company of calvary. Dr. Robert R. i Livingston who raised Company "A" was sent home a Colonel .it the close ; of the Civil war, and again took up ' the practice of medicine at Platts-! mouth and subsequently became very well known as general surgeon for the Burlington railroad on it's lines , west of the Missouri river. i Alva Drew, her husband, freighted ; between Plattsmouth and Denver,! 18C1 to 1S65, the freight coming up the Missouri river on steam boat from St. Louis and St. Joe to Platts mouth, and he hauling it with ox teams to Denver, four yoke of oxen to be hitched to each wagon. It used to take six or seven weeks to make the trip to Denver. At times the In dians were bad. and they had a num ber of scares during their trips. In the spring of 1SG5, her hus band rent the train back in charge of his partner, a man by the name of Badger, and they had considerable stock with them. At Pium Creek. Nebraska, which was a stake sta tion about thirty-five miles west of old Fort Kearney they were sur prised by a band of Sioux Indians ; and 49 head of stock driven away. ; Most of this stock belonged to Mr. t Drew and his Bartner, and some of they were bringing them back to ( Plattsmouth. A man by the name of William Connor owned some of this! stock which was taken. No one was . hurt, but the men were pretty badly jig scared. Subsequently a claim wa? presented to congress for $4,655.00 the value of the stock taken, and it was allowed, but the bill failed or final passage. (See H. R. Ex. 125, 49 cong., 1st session.) J. C. Gilmore'of Haigler, Colorado, now deceased, subsequently writing in regard to this affair stated: The Plum Creek I mention in my letter is a small stream run ning into the Platte river about thirty-five miles west of Fort Kearney on the south side of the river. There was a stage sta tion and ranch at that place at that time; there were other ranches above and below this, but I do not remember the names of any of them except the ranch Plum Creek. His name was Thomas French. He was post master at that time. The Indians were Sioux, and they were, I think, a part of "Old-man-afraid-of-his-horse" band, or a part of "Red Cloud's" band. I do not know for certain. I think they eMne from the south when they maxle the attack on your fath er's cattle. I think it whs some time in April or the fore part of May. 1S65. but cannot recollect. William Wetenkamp of Platts mouth may recollect something about the affair. Plum Creek is in Nebraska. I think there is a station on the Union Pacific on the north side of the Platte river opposite old Plum Creek. I have not been able to think of any more of the names of the men that were with your father. Emory Hull will be glad to tell all about it if he is living, for I think the 3S Botany Physics Trigonometry General History Sociology American Literature Nebraska High School Manual. did- After the hanging and the bod- ies were cut uuwn, a Droiner 01 airs. ' Drew, John Colvin insisted that the ... faces of . the men . be covered before burial, and he climbed down into4 the craves and covered their faces TO 50 "Super-! for Bargain Wednesday Member ilfh, ! You cannot ignore them. Every sin gle item is a red hot bargain. Read and see then come and prove. 1 Boys' dark stripe chambry work shirts, sizes 1212 to 14. 55c. 2 Boys' fast color 220 blue denim bib over alls, full cut. 8 8c. 3 Eoys' plain white madras dress waists in regular sizes. 55c. 4 Boys' new nobby Lumber Jacks. Two pock ets, rib bottom. Ages 6 to 12. $2.89. 5 Youths' Lumber Jacks Bright woodsmen plaids. 12 to I412. $2.89. 6 Eoys' nobby Overcoats. Freize or Chinchilla Double Breasted, 4-pocket. 2 tt 8. $4.89. 7 Youths' stylish Overcoats. Mannish models. Ages 9 to 18. $7.95. 8 Eoys' wool faced Coat Sweater Good and heavy, serviceable. 28 to 34. $2.29. 9 Boys' school Stockings, heavy double rib; double knee, 6 to 11. 23c. 10 Boys' Dress Sox, just like dad's. Assorted colors. 24c. 11 Boys' lisle and silk web garters, padless. Assorted colors. 15c. 12 Boys' fast color guaranteed Kaynee waists. Selected patterns. 89c. 13 Boys' Knicker Suits Good wool materials. Ages 6 to 17. $4.95. 14 Little fellows' Wool Suits Jacket and pants. Ages 21j to 5. $3.35. 15 Eoys' Longie Suits just like dad's. Good, wool materials. $6.S5. 16 Boys' new Fall Caps, with or without fur bands. 89c. 17 Boys' sheep lined Coats four pockets, belt, beaver collar. Very warm. $5.89. 18 Eoys' Flannel Shirts Olive brown, good weight. 98c. 19 Boys' jersey gauntlet Gloves Fleece lined, extra good. 25c. 20 Boys' all leather Kitts Fleece lined, with elastic wrist. 49c. 21 Boys' leather Belts Genuine leather, best buckle. 29c. 22 Boys' knit Ties Four-in-hands. Carefully made. 23c. 23 Boys' nobby Tweed Hat3 Stitched brim, fancy band. 93c. 24 Boys' winter Bompers Blue, tan or stripe. Ages 3 to 8. 98c. n 2i Men's fast color Blue Denim Bib Overalls. $1 per pair. 23 lien's fast color Blue Denim Overall Jack ets at only $1.29. 27 Bovs' Lonaie Odd Pants ieatedr B argams Call for them by number! Bib Winter $1.29. 28 Men's Shirts and Drawers . ribbed or fleeced. Very warm. 98c. 29 Men's Ecru Union Suits. 3C Men's winter Flannel Shirts, gray or brown, at $1.89 each. 31 Men's Winter Overcoats Ulster style, big collar. $15. 32 Men's extra heavy Bockford sox, seamless. 5 pair for $1. 33 Men's fine gauge seamless dress sox. Three colors. 7 pair for $1. 34 Men's heavy home knit wool sox. Extra good. 47c. 35 Men's genuine Paris garters. Satin pad. 24c pair. 33 Men's heavy all wool ccat sweaters, blue or brown. $4.95. 37 Men's gray worsted stripe dress trousers. $3.35 per pair. 38 Men's 36-inch length sheep lined coat. Beaver collar. $9.88. 3D Men's wool rib union suits very soft and warm. $2.95. 40 Men's all leather vests, 30-inch length. Leather cuff. $8.95. 41 Men's winter caps, golf or Brighton shapes. 98c each. 12 Men's genuine Saranac buckskin gloves, gauntlet style. $1.55. 43 Men's heavy fleece lined union suits, with double cuffs. $1.45. 44 Men's latest style silk and wool four-in-hands. 63c. 45 Youths' all wool coat sweaters. Best of colors. $3.95. 46 Men's odd dress coats. Dark colors. All sizes. $6.65. 47 Men's fine rib corduroy work pants. Best pockets. $4.15. 48 Men's flannel gowns. Full cut and well made. $1.39. 49 Men's $20 "Bill" Suits all wool. Guar- anteed. $20. New colors and patterns 6 to 16 at $2.19. EAUGAIN PB.ICES ARE CASH! u 50 Men's "Bill" coats, finest $20 Over- The low One Price. And No Monkey Business price gar ment sold. ST0BE OPEN TILL 9:00 occurrence made a pretty strong impression on his mind, for the Reds came near getting him. Respectfully, (Signed) J. C. GILM.ORE. Peter Sarpy was a familiar tigure handles 26,000 cubic feet of the! The work on the new auxiliary gas. The new auxiliary plant will unit at the gas plant is being rushed receive the heated gas as it comes by a force of workmen and the large from the gas producing machines concrete base on which the steel cis it will lm molpd in this auxiliary tern that will contain the gas is to tank and then pumped into the main rest is already complete and the steel upon the streets of Plattsmouth, and i tank, thereby adding to the purity of construction work is now on in full Mrs. Drew recalls the little Indian half-breed child that stayed with him, and used to attend their school. She says he was a strange looking man, and that the children used to be afraid of him. The history of the state of Ne braska is not complete that does not mention Plattsmouth and Cass coun ty and the names of some of the old pioneers that helped to build our great commonwealth, such at General Robert R. Livingston, Thomas Tan- I na, Peter Sarpy, Samuel Maxwell, T. M. Marquette, Manoah R. Reese, J. C. Gilmore and Isaac Pollard, as well rs others whose names we do not just, now recall. the gas and eliminating many of the blast. features that were hard to overcome where the heated gas was pumped direct to the main tank and the re sult will be a much better and high er grade of gas than is now supplied to the patrons of the company. The United Light & Power com pany since securing the plant have made many improvements and their electric lines are due for even a greater improvement with the erec tion of the large power sub-station in the south part of the city at a cost of $85,000, and with the untir ing efforts of Manager F. I. Rea to supply his patrons with the very best of service in both gas and electricity, DOUBTFUL OF EAKLY MERGER Seattle, Wash., Nov. Nov. 11. Ar thurs Curtiss James of New York city, largest stockholder in the Great Northern railway, arrived here today with Ralph Budd of St. Paul, presi dent of the line, and said that nothing had happened to justify any uelu-i that a merger of the Great Northern with the Northern Pacific and the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy rail ways would be concluded soon. WAITRESS WANTED New Improve ments Made at the Gas Plant the company deserves a very large patronage as they maintain the best person. service mat mis ciiy nas engoyeu ia r . many years. Journal Want Ads bring results. Waitress at Walton cafe. Apply in nl2-ltw ALPHA C. PETERSON, Co. Supt. of Schools. You may be the next. INSURE Searl S. Farm Loans Insurance with Davis Investments ' Real Estate Large Auxiliary Tank for Use in Im proving Quality of Gas is Being Installed. Prom Ppti'rday's Daiiv The Nebraska Gas & Electric com pany, owned by the United Light and Power company is installing an addi tion to their gas plant in this city which will cost in the' neighborhood of $10,000 when fully installed and will also result in a great improve ment of the quality of the gas that is served to the patrons of the com pany here and make this plant one of the best gas producing plants in the state. The company is having erected a large cistern or gas container cap able of holding 3,000 cubic feet of gas and- which will be a source of supply for th main container that -Crosly Had as Made in 8 different models ranging in price from $9.75 to $90.00. Sold on easy pay ment plan and reception guaranteed. Bestor & Swatek The WINCHESTER Store Telephone No. 151 Plattsmouth, Nebr. i