The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, April 26, 1928, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6

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    THURSDAY, APEIL 26, IS22.
PAGE STZ.
PIArrSMOOTH ftT!yi - WEEKLY JOURNAL
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SUGAR
Still selling 10 Lbs. for
65c
P-G SOAP
37c
Everyday price, 10 bars
GUAKER OATS Large size pkg. for $ 24
JELLO All flavors, per pkg 08
SWANS DOWN CAKE FLOUR Per pkg .34
IIEBY PEACHES Heavy syrup. No. 22 size can .25
L2EBY PINEAPPLE No. 2 12 size can .29
LIEBY FRUIT SALAD No. 1 size can .26
a
Carnation
' MILK
29c
Tall Cans
3 for
Ripe, Yellow
BANANAS
Pilce. per
pound
8c
Fruits and Vegetables
Our Vegetable and Fruit Department is always stocked
icith everything cn the market. Do your shopping here.
a
a
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Spinach
Asparagus
Carrotts
Beets
Turnips
Strawberries
Tomatoes
Lemons
Soup Bunches
Radishes
Lettuce
Pie Plant
Oranges
Grape Fruit
Fancy New Potatoes
mm
a
a
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A MERICAN LEGIO ftj:
DANCE j
Plattsmouth, Neb.-Saturday Night!
Earn Yard Twins Orchestra !
FREE I.r.vni 5 CENTS j
1
BIRTHDAY DINNER i
Hansen. Miss Gwendolyn Hansen,
Dale Hensen. Miles Altman, Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Campbell. Mr. and Mrs.
Valentine Gobelman, Mrs. Wiley, Mr.
and Mrs. Kidwcll,
George Toman. Mrs.
The next dinner
home of Mr. and Mrs
on May 27th.
Mr. and Mrs.
S. A. Bailey,
will be at the
John Hendricks
The i;:et.i!.crs of the Lfwisfnn Ail
gave th-ir monthly birthday dinner
S.mday at the home of Mr. ami Mrs.
Jarvi' Lan-aMer. The diniur was
siv-n in honor of Mrs. Getrg- Park.
Mrs. Jarvis Ian.-asti-r and Mis.
..-ori:- Toman.
Th- regular dinner was served at
tn after which the following pro
tram was given:
Hyniiis hy t!ie ladies; violin selec
tions ly Mil-s Altman; piano selec
tions by Mrs. Allen Vernon and Mrs.
p.-rn Ib ndricks; voi al s-le."tions by
.Mi- Mary Parks; vocal and whi.st
hrs m-1 by Mre. George Toman.
Th- din-r was an nnnsiial siic-
t-!s. The folio ing members and
:ri-rnl v. -r- prt-s-ni :
Mr. and Mr. Cirto- Parks. Carl
a:.I Mary P;irks. Mrs. Earl Lancas
ter. Mi- Nt-v.i l'.masii'r. Mr. and
Mr. John Toman, daughter. Dorothy
und son. Arthur: Milton. John and
David Ton. an; Mr. and Mrs. Perry
N'i" 1: Is and son. Robert: Mrs. Hathu
. Mr. ami Mrs. William Wehr-lt-tn.
Mr. and Mrs. W. Cook and son,
MK iKirothy Wthrbein. Miss Theresa
Ifcoiut. Anderson Lloyd. Mr. and Mrs.
Jjri- l.iiHti-r. daughter. Murjorie
atnl xn. Harold; Mr. and Mrs. John
Hetdrbks ami son. Vi-rn; Charles
Livingston. ,!r. ami Mrs. Allen Ver
non am! son. P.illy; Miss Margaret
Moore. Mr. and Mrs. Ancky. James
lli-Mtiflciw, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
GAVE FINE DANCE
Saturday evening Mr. and - Mrs.
John Hendricks gave a dance at
Maplecroft, their country home. The
evening wan spent in darning both
tiie modern and old-fashioned dances,
th.o music being furnished by Mr. ami
Mis. Jarvis Lancaster and Earl Lan
caster. A twelve o'clock lunch was
served to the guests. Those present
were:
Misses Geneva and Emma McNatt,
Julian McNatt. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Campbell, pon Alhertes and daughter,
Josephine; Mr. and Mrs. William
Wehrbein and daughter, Dorothy;
Anderson Lloyd, Mr. and Mrs. F. L.
Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. Jarvis Lan
caster, son. Harold and daughter.
Dorothy: Charles Livingston. Mr.
a-id Mrs. John Hendricks and son.
Vent: Mr. and Mrs. Allen Vernon,
Miss Margaret Moore, L. C. Hose her
daughter, Irene and son. James; Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Lancaster and daugh
ters, Neva and Bertha: David. Milton
and John Toman; Mr. and Mrs.
George Toman. Mr. and Mrs. Perry
Nickles. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Camp
bell. Mrs. S. A. Hailing. Mr. and Mrs.
F. Heil and daughter. Ruth; Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph llaiiey, Mr. and Mrs. A.
Haney. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Fitch. Mr.
and Mrs. Richard K. leverage. Mr.
and Mrs. John T. Pecker. Miss Bessie
Rover. Earl Mrasek, John Pearsley.
Earnest Shepley. Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Wheeler, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Campbell
and daughter. Dorothy; Misses Helen
and Theresa Donat.
Needless to say. a very pleasant
time was had by all.
Must you start anew
to save for a home?
Keep That insurance
in Force!
For Every Known Kind
of Insurance
SEE
Searl S. Davis
MYNARD U. B. CHURCH
Sunday school, at 10 a. m. Sermon,
11a. m. There will be special mu
sic. All come, for you are welcome.
The Ladies' Aid will hold its regu
lar monthly meeting in the church
basement, with Mesdames S. A. Wiles,
Fred Spangler. Ruel Sack and How
ard Wiles as hostesses, on Tlmruilav
May jrd. Topic. "Prominent Moth
ers of Our Country." Leader. Mrs.
W. T. Richardson.
All members are requested to see
that their magazines and papers are
in. on or before Thursday.
G. B. WEAVER,
Pastor.
Fares Loczs
Inxwrtna -
Investment
Real Estate
CARD OF THANKS
"We take th is Wav of PTnrpftain rr
our sincere thanks to our friends and
neighbors for the many acts of kind
ness which were rendered during all
our sickness.
Also for the services rendered at
the time of the death and burial of
our mother and grandmother. Mrs
Lucy McVey. We thank you for the
beautiful floral offerings and are very
grateful to the Mynard Red Cross for
their helpfulness. Your kindness will
always be remembered by us. Mr.
and Mrs. Jake Smith; Mr. and Mrs
Floyd Fulton.
Every day Prices Consistent Savings S)
on all your purchases at Black & White.
a
a
Write of Life
inFarOffPhilip-
pine islands
Mr. and Mrs. Irving Wiltse Write
Interestingly of Conditions m
the Far Off Islands.
r-' nn.i Mrs Irvinsr Wiltse. who
:ire now located at Manila.. P. I
where Mr. Wiltse is engaged in Boy
Scout work, write to friends here
very interestingly of the conditions
and the country in which they have
been stationed for the past two years
and which will be of interest in this
riiv. where Mr. Wiltse was engaged
as teacher in the Commercial depart
ment of the High school:
Manila. P. I.
Dear Friends:
It's always well to begin early to
practice New Yenr's resolutions. Our
i.no ; itiMt vim have resolved as we
have to keen up our interests with
.or friends via nen. miner. P. O. and
j steamship.
i We trust that you have had an en
iu'vable Holiday season, which is just
Have yon anything to buy or Mil !
Try a Journal Want Ad.
J dosing. Of course you win always
i fnroko the ancient history in our
letters. You will be thinking about
rroiinit-hnsr dav. Abe Lincoln and
Valentines day when you get this.
Christmas in P. I. is certainly nov
,.i in fact so much so. that no spirit
seemed present as compared with the
. sMsnn in I'. S. A. It is strange in-
ideed to experience Christmas with
J grass and trees green, sun flaming
hot and the day so summerisn mat
one doesn't care to take a walk, un
less it be in the shade.
Our vacation from December 17 to
31 was spent in seeing some of the
provincial life and in helping out
at two Epworth League institutes.
We. with Lois and Orville Davis, a
fine young missionary couple, travel
ed about 1.2o0 kilometers (750 miles)
thru barrios, by rice fields, eocoanut
groves, across rivers by bamboo bal
sas (rafts) and many kilometers along
the ocean. We saw the farmers, men,
women and children, too, harvesting
rice cutting a stalk or two at a
time, binding it into handfuls. then
into bunches, which are left in the
sun for a few days to dry completely.
Then comes the threshing, usually
done by laying a huge woven mat
affair on the ground around a center
pole to which are tied horses or eara
baos. The animals are driven round
and round, thus tramping out the
rice grains. There are threshing ma
chines in some places, but we didn't
see any. The great number of na
tives in the provinces merely exist
working to eat to live. The children,
however, usually seem happy and
laugh and call out "Americano" when
we drove by.
There is no more depressing sight
than an old skeleton of a brown
woman, ragged and haggard, strug
gling to keep the earthly life a short
time longer by working in the field
or selling in the market. But there
is no more beautiful sight than a
eocoanut grove silhouetted against an
evening sky all scarlet and gold and
purple. The eocoanut palms seem to
me like so many guarding sentinels.
I saw for my first time the Filipino
boys "shinny" right up one of those
towering, smoolh-trunked palms and
knock down some eocoanut a for us
while we were picking up pretty sea
shells. We saw and took pictures of
old look-out towers at three different
points along the shore. The Spanish!
used them to watch for the Moro
(Mohammedans) pirates that looted
the shores.
We saw a pottery factory a long,
crude, grass-covered shed, under
which the men took just wet clay
and sand and soon fashioned big
earthen water jars or pots. I now;
realize more the meaning of youth
being the clay and God. the Potter,
working his people, the potter's wheel
to mould the clay. At another place
a man makes the best bows and ar
rows (for archery) in the world, out
of "Palma brava" wood, one of the
strongest and most pliable woods in
the world, grown only in the Zam
bales Mountains in the Philippines.
In Baliwag province we saw many
natives weaving the Baliwag hats,
which are the highest priced straw
hats made anyplace. Many of the
better ones sell up to 75.00 Pesos
($37.r0) each, according to quality.
Many a hat requires as long as six
or eight weeks' work to make it.
One other item of Filipino life in
teresting to me was the experience
we had of dining with them. We
Americans ate with them in the dor-
mitory dining room at Vigan Insti-i
tute. Of course, we were with E. L. '
delegates and most of them are a
bit higher type than tha average, but
at that Irving and I helped sing pep
songs instead of eating their rice,
vegetable stew and "bagoon" sauce
(a sauce made out of tiny picketed,
or rather deteriorated fish). Some
missionaries have learned to eat na
tive food, 'tis a blessing of course.
But we would starve first. Our group
dil this in order to help increase
their social abilities of conversing, '
singing pep songs, etc.
At the two E. L. Institutes at Lin
gayen and Vigan both on the shores
of the China sea Irving conducted
training classes in Scoutmaster lead
ership and I did some accompanying
and singing. Christmas dinner and
the day were spent with Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Moore in Vigan. They are old
.Nebraska Wesleyan friends. It is de-(
lightful to be in their home. '
Three days were spent up in Ba
guio in the mountains. The tempera
ture is extremely different there in
the evening we had the doors and
the windows of the cottage closed,
heavier clothes on and eat by the
fireplace. We slept under four army
blankets. We shivered, but I liked
it.fi My cheeks got a few roses on
.them again. During the day it was
quite warm. I played my first game
of golf. The humidity in the at
mosphere is what makes it seem
colder. Irving inspected and in
structed in Scouting as well as en
joyed a bit of vacation.
It is good to be back to our hum
ble home, sweet home again. You see.
this was rny first time to be away
from my own home. Since New
Years is a legal holiday and came
on Sunday, the schools had an addi
tional day vacation yesterday, Janu
ary 2. Work began today and I have
again begun to think in terms of les
son plans, hundreds of minds under
brown faces, themes galore, books and
a routine schedule. Our school will
be out March "24th.
You no doubt are enjoying the zest
of icy winds and snow and some
times you wish there were none, but
human nature is perverse now that
to see or feel any frost or snow is out
of the question for us. we would like
to feel the tingle of it. Instead of
snowdrifts, in our back yard are
banana trees bearing fruit, a poin
setta plant, a royal palm and many
other pretty plants. And, oh, yes, our
Russian neighbor's chickens scratch
ing in the sandy dust in their pen.
Mr. and Mrs. I. F. Wiltse.
FAIRVIEW PRESENTS PLAY
The young people of the Fairview
community club under the direction
of Miss Elizabeth Tritsch and Miss
Leola Heil, presented a very clever
home talent play, "Deacon Dubs," at
the school house last week and which
reflected the greatest credit on all
those, who took part in the produc
tion or aided in its successful stag
ing. A number of clever musical se
lections were also given by other
young people of the community that
the large audience appreciated to the
fullest extent.
On this Friday evening the Fair
view young people will give their
play at the Pleasant View school in
SO, which has one of the
date rural school build
state, that will make an
for the entertainment,
doubtless be a very large
district No.
most up to
ings in the
ideal place
There will
number attending and are large
school school to be able to accom
modate a great many of the patrons
who wish to see this clever play.
d&w
MYNARD COMMUNITY CLUB
The Mynard community dug will
hold its regular monthly meeting on
Friday evening. April 27th at 8:15
at the community building at My
nard. A god program is planned.
Everybody welcome. a2a-3td-ltw.
There is only one way you can
protect your property against Wind
storm and Tornado by insuring it.
See J. P. Falter for rates. Phone 2 8.
a2:!-2w daw
Asks $10,000
for Loss of Kis
Wif e's Affection
Andy Francis Asks This Sum of Wil
liam T. Sacks, Well Known
Resident of County.
the
the
From Wednesday's Daily
This morning an action was filed
in the office of the clerk of the dis
trict court by Attorney D. W. Liv
ingston of Nebraska City, in which
Andy Francis is the plaintiff and
William T. Sacks of Eagle, in the defendant.
The charge filed is that of
alienation of the affections of
wife of the plaintiff, Mr. Francis,
which the petition of the plaintiff
claims was due to the influence of the
defendant. Mr. Sacks.
It i alleged in the petition filed
in the district court that on July 31,
192G, and several occasions there
after the defendant, Mr. Sacks, met
and had asociation with the wife of
the plaintiff, that by reason of the in
fluence of the defendant over the
wife, Mrs. Mabel Francis, that her
affection for her husband
Etroycd and therefore the
asks the sum of $10,000 in
of Mr. Sacks.
The case is one of the most sen
sational in its nature that has been
filed in many months in the court
and the action will be one that will
draw the large audiences.
was de
plaintitl damages
GIVES INTERESTING TALK
Lose anything? Advertise for it!
Thomas Walling Company
Abstracts of Title
Phone .124-
Plattsmouth
From Tuesday's Tily
This noon at the luncheon of the
Rotary club N. C. Abbott, one of
the prominent members of the Ne
braska City club, was present and
gave a very interesting historic
sketch to the members of the local
club relative to the early settlement
of the state and covering the names
of several of the counties of the state
and the pioneer statesmen in whose
honor the counties were named and
which Cass county, named for Gen
eral Lewis Cass of Michigan, Douglas
county, named for Senator Stephen
A. Douglas, one of the authors of the
Kansas-Nebraska bill. Burt and Cum
ing counties, named for two of the
earliest territorial governors of the
state as was Richardson county,
which bears the name of one of the
early territorial secretaries.
Mr. Abbott is one of the great his
torians of the state and his address
this noon was a real treat to the Ro
tarians and gave them an intimate
knowledge of the history of the state
and a clear understanding of some of
the men that had made Nebraska a
state by theic services and sacrifices.
I J , ( J I
Ml X
For sheer, luxurious beauty we know of nothing to
compare with the Cheney Cravats for Spring. They
arrived this week from New York hundreds of
them. And the richness of their colors and the
uniqueness of their designs, each of which has a
story, simply makes your collar flap its wings for one.
To see these Cheney Cravats is to want them. For
they are styled to go with every suit, shirt and com
plexion in the country.
You'll want to make your selection this week, too,
while there are many to choose from.
and your new Spring suit is here.
KILLS LARGE WOLF
From Wednesdays Oailv
Yesterday Denzil Oldham,
the young farmers residing
miles northwest of this city
town and brought with him
one of
a few
was in
a fine
specimen of the wolf family that he scalp of the animal yesterday and
secured at the Oldham farm. The i was given the bounty provided by
large wolf was making his way ac-jthe state for ridding the community
ross a field at the farm and headed of the troublesome wolf.
tor tne pen wnere a numoer oi sneep
were kept and tne caretui aim or
Denzil ended the life of the wolf.
The young marksman brought in the
Mastadon Everbearing strawber
ries at Bestor & Swatek.
a23-l wd-2tw
"HP"
nU'liJornMi-ti J iiii-iit i dmm i
!....
A Money Saving Event in
Attractive Summer
Dresses of Surprisingly Clever
Style and Color
Sizes 16 to 2036 to 50
A wonderful lot of dresses in every wray worthy of street
and afternoon wear. They are in the prettiest of new
spring and summer wash fabrics, and made in the most
attractive, youthful, summery styles. All new colors are
shown. There are new style features, particularly the
dainty, new organdy trim and puff sleeve. You will be
delighted with them.
Come early while the size range
is complete.
'The Shop of Personal Service'
Telephone 61 Plattsmouth, Neb.