The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, March 19, 1931, Page PAGE FIVE, Image 5

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    THURSDAY. MARCH 19. 1931.
PLATTSMOUTH SEMI - WEEKLY JOURNAL
PAGE FIVE
WEEPING WATER
Misses Verna Binger and Maybelle
Turk were visiting in Omaha for the
day also looking after some shopping
on Wednesday of. this week.
Sheriff Ben Reed was a business
visitor in Weeping Water on last
Tuesday, driving over to serve some
legal papers and while here was visit
ing with his many friends here.
Tony Sudduth who last year pur
chased the property one mile east
and a half mile south of Weeping
Water moved to the place and is a
real citizen of Weeping Water at this
time.
L. R. Lane, better known as Dick
Lane has been feeling quite poorly
for the past two weeks with repeated
attacks of intestinal flu. but is re
ported as being some better at this
time.
C. H. Gibson and Andrew 'Olsen
were called to Plattsmouth on last
Saturday where they were looking
after some business matters and also
seme legal questions at the court
house.
Humphrey Murphey of Los An
geles has been enjoying a visit here
with his brother and other members
of the family as well as his many
other friends in and around Weeping
Water.
The Friendly Ladies were meeting
and looking after the business which
the order had to look after regard
ing the organization and work and
also sure enjoyed a ery pleasant and
friendly gathering.
James McCartney and wife from
near Waverly were visiting for the
day on last Tuesday at the home of
their son Doc McCartney and wife of
Weeping Water and also meeting
many friends in the city.
Ralph Binger who returned home
from the hospital at Lincoln last
week where he underwent an oper
ation for appendicitis is getting along
nicely and will in a short time be
able to resume his studies in the state
university.
The Weeping Water Woman's club
met on Tuesday afternoon of this
week at the home of their fellow
member. Mrs. Andrew Olson and pre
sented a most worth while program,
discussed many questions of public
interest, and also planned for future
work.
Westley W. Davis and J. S. Wil
liams were over to Nebraska City on
last Thursday where they were meet
ing with the representatives from
the many cities and where they were
considering an equal occupation tax
to advocated by all the towns in this
portion of the country.
John S. Williams was puzzled be
cause the sun did not melt the snow
and ice from the the street in front
of the bakery so he gt out and chop
ped the ice from the pavement and
scooted it arcund the corner where
the sun could get at it. John said
he wanted to get it cleared away so
there would be a place for the next
snow.
Buys Home in Weeping; Water.
W. D. Baker end the good wife
have purchased what is known as the
McNurlin place, and have been busy
for the past number of days in get
ting it in readiness for occupancy,
the entire interior being refir.ished
with painting and papering and as
the place had stood for a long time
it was much of a task to get it in
shape for living. However when they
shall have got'en the place entirely
refinished they sure will have a fine
home. Ed Heneger, the painter and
decorator is doing the work, which
says it will be the best.
Held Caucus Monday Night.
The Business Temperance caucus
held their meeting on last Monday
night and nominated candidate for
both the councilme and the board of
education, they being for councilmen
Spencer J. Marshall, and Dr. A. O.
Specht while the nominations for
the board of education were Mogens
Johnson and Carl E. Day.
To Have No. 1 Graveled.
On Monday of this week County
Commissioner Fred H. Gorder of
Weeping Water was called to Lincoln
to look after some business matters,
and after having completed the busi
ness calling him there called at the
office of the state engineer, and in
conversation was told that the entire
road Nebraska Highway No. 1 which
Is Here
Paint, small cans :tO and 25c
Paint Brushes 5c to Z5C
Mop Sticks, each 15C
Brooms, high grade, each 59c
Felt Base Rugs
8x12 Pabco Bugs, each S5.50
6x9 Pabco Bags, each 3-95
Er.-.ail Bugs tOc to 89c
SEE THE NEW
Sky Rover Midget
RADIO
tin 18 inches hiph. 16 inches wide
and 83,4 inches deep. 5-tube, with a
genuine Utah dynamic speaker. Has
shielded triple screen grid circuit:
110-vclt 60-cycle. All ready with
:s to hook onto your light socket.
The Price is 'Only
98
Weeping Water
Variety Store
Elmer Michelsen, Owner
Weeping Water, Neb.
$45
f
THE FUNERAL
HOME
Modern conditions and stand
ards of living have called into
being an entirely new kind of
Institution for meeting a uni
versal human need The Fun
eral Home.
Planned for the specific pur
pose which it serves, it offers
greater efficiency and greater
convenience than was possible
in the past.
We are proud to be able to
ofier the communities which we
serve the use of such an estab
lishment. Hotoson Funeral
Home
WEEPING WATER, NEBR.
has not been provided for, would be
graded, drained and graveled this
. This road extends from a mile
east of Murray to two miles south of
Elmwood, and has a number of miles
graveled and with the remainder be-
ing cared for the road will be a good
one, and while it is delayed, it will
come when it will do the entire coun
ty much good.
Wantr to Be Councilman.
George Metcalf announced the fact
to us that he would like to be
member of the Weeping Water coun-
cil and said that he would run on any
ticket that he might be asked to.
That is all.
For Sale or Trade.
One 1930, 300-egg incubator, $25.
Good brood sow, and a heifer calf.
Write or phone 18'0, Lawrence Col
bert. Weeping Water, Nebr. ltw
Says Business Is Good.
Frank Baldwin who has been at
the shop early and late always ready
for any job that comes his way for
the past more than forty years, and
one of the people who has struck
many hard blows for the town of his
choice. Weeping Water, and is ever
ready to defend her against all com
ers, speaking of business early this
week said: Business is good, and get
ting better, which is the very best
wav to state the situation and
courage all other lines.
Business Is Better.
Ole Olsen who has durinc the forty
years which he has lived in and about 1
Weeping Water been interested In
stone and the stone business received
a letter from Minnesota asking for !
prices and what he could do in the
line of loading and shipping stone
for points to the north. This looks
iike business was picking up and for
which all should be pleased.
Entertained Their Husbands.
The Jolly Mixers entertained at the
1 m j it T 17" 1
liome oi -mi. aiiu jus. . j.
on luesuaj oi iuis ween, unu liau
their special guests their husbands.
nere tney enjoyeu tne eenmir erj
pleasantly with games and social con
versation as well as providing an ex
cellent supper.
Attended Funeral at Plattsmouth
Mr. and Mrs. Frank K. ood
ceived the sad news of the death of
their friend. Miss Dora McNurlin,
who had been in a hospital at L.incoin "B"t e possioie iu sei ve nei. one
for some time. Mr. and Mrs. Wood leaves to mourn her departure five
were over to Plattsmouth on Wednes- daughters, Mesdames A. H. Tomlin
dav of this week to attend the funeral !son, W. L. Kunnicutt, Lydia A. Davis
of their friend.
. . . ;?sebr., and Albert Ozbun of Paton,
Not as Dangerous as Appeared. Ia . Mr Elliott Qzbun of Waukee,
While one of the residents from the ;Ia ; Mrs Belle Barton having pre
southwestern portion of town was ceded the mother to the other world
coming down town, he was frighten- seVeral vears ago as also did her hus
ed by the smoke pouring out of the band Arthur Barton
home of one of his near neighbors, The world has lost a woman, a
and stopping, rushed back, to see. friend to all who needed a friend,
He found that the neighbor had made :and Vacancv in tho hearts of her
a den in the basement of his home
and was sitting there quietly smok
ing his old dudeen, and had fallen
asleep, and the bowl of the pipe hav
ing taken fire. But as there seemed
no danger, he went on down town
and did not turn in the fire alarm.
NOW IS THE TIME
TO BUY FARM LAND'
SAYS E. A. BURNETT
"This is the time to buy rather
than sell land." says Chencellor E. A.
Burnett of the University of Nebras
ka, director of the Federal Land bank
of Omaha and former dean of the
state agricultural college.
"Present values are below normal
and will surely improve when our
period of readjustment is completed
and we begin the upgrade in indus
try which will surely carry agricul
ture with it. We can confidently look
to 1931 as a year which will very
largely restore normal agricultural
prices and improve the condition of
our farming communities."
"For 30 years there has been a
steady growth in farm values except
for very short intervals of depres
sion. There is no reason io believe
that the present depression will be
different from those former periods.
Stocks of goods and material have
ben reduced to the lowest possible
basis. Whenever the increase in mar
ket dmand comes, it will set factories
to work, and absorb the idle labor
which has been the chief cause of
depression during the past year."
ACHIEVEMENT PROGRAM
At Mynard Community hall on Fri
day evening at 8:00. Playlet, "Wheels
vs. Heels," will be featured . Every
one who is interested In extension
club projects is invited to come and
be entertained by the Mynard Home
makers' Project club.
HAMPSHIRE BRED GILTS
I have some fifteen extra fine bred
'gilts, to farrow in May, offered at
i .00 over Omaha top prices.
mlB-tfW-atd. HARRY M. KNABE.
Life Story of
Pioneer Woman
of Great West
Mrs. Elvira Elliott Ozbun Member of
Sturdy Race of Quaker Pio
neers cf Iowa.
Elvira Elliott was born in Jay
county, Indiana, Sept. 27th, 1837,
where she grew to womanhood, unit
ing with tho Friends church when
a girl, and ever maintaining a love
for the Saviour and for the church,
a devoted follower of the lowly Naz
arine. and which was manifested bv
her daily life, through the over 93
year:-. She was united in marriage
to Joseph Ozbun on Oct. 9th. 1856,
they coming to Iowa to make their
home the following year. She passed
away as the morning was dawning,
at the home of her daughter, Mrs. A.
H. Tomlinson, Monday, March 2nd,
and as the day was ushered in, her
soul returned to its Maker, a sheaf
well filled during her early life with
good deeds for her fellowmen no
one knew her but to reverence and
love her. To this union was born
eight children, six daughters and two
sons, they being Mrs. Marley E.
! i- n Knoaa 1 oy.8n-
. .. D "
a.Z"'"? . 2
- laiiauiuuiu, vii . , iuia. i.i.-it i'ii.r ui
Milton, Iowa and Messrs. Albert N.
Ozbun of Paton, Iowa and Elliott E.
Ozbun of "Waukee. Iowa, and with
36 grandchildren and 55 great grand
children and one great-great grand
child. For sixty years Mrs. Ozbun and
husband made their home near and
in Salem, the husband passing on
before, on Sept. 29th, 1910. Since
that time Grandmother Ozbun has
made her home with her children, a
time with one again a season with
another; during the past year she has
made her home with her two daugh-
ters Mis. Rhoda Thomlinson and Mrs
Lydia A. Davis of Indianola. Iowa
For the past few months she has
been confined to her bed, and was
cared for by her daughters Mesdames
A. H. Tomlinson, Lydia Davis and
Elsie Dille, assisted by Mr. A. H.
1 omniison a nu w, nunincuii. w no
en-!"ursed the beloved mother with ten-
jder care. They were assisted by the
i other children who made it thus pos-
sible fo7 t?BBe to devote their time
On Tuesday of last week at the
home where she had with the most
faithful fortitude awaited the call of
. 1. -..-.-.,,.. 1 1 : . i.
nit- .-Miiuui i.Diiir luinif to uv nil
the loved ones who had passed on be
lore, a iunerai service was neiu. tne
funeral oration being delivered by caretj
ithe Rev. Jones, pastor of the Friends The saoe8- Gf any school, how
, church ol Indianola. and on Wednes- ' ia ,iotorr.inp,l rhioflv hv a
, day another service was held at the
II - -- L. ol T 13 S.
i iioiiie cumin in oaiein. iua, wiiicii
was conducted bv the Rev. Stanlev.
the interment being in the Friends
. . .
cemetery anu nesine mat oi tne nus-
oanu. wnom naa uvea, loved ar.a la
bored together for the more than
sixty years there their bodies await
, . , ..
the quickening spirit, to again join
the spirits which have done so much
that the world might be better.
All who have been fortunate in
knowing this tenderest of women.
re-jeie pieasea to nonor ner, an very
solicitous during her illness to know
; how she was. and to render whatever
of Indianola; Elsie Dille of Milton,
Iowa; Clara Briggs of Plattsmouth,
a vacancy in
relatives and friends has been cre
ated, but heaven has been enriched
by her going home.
Mrs. Ozbun endeavored to make
her life conform to the following
whirh is expressed in a poem bv Van
Dyke:
"Let me live my life from year
to year,
With forward face and unre-
luctant soul,
Not hurrying to nor turning
from the goal
Nor mourning for the things
which disappear
In the dim past nor holding
back in fear.
From what the future veils, but
with a whole
And happy heart which pavs its
toll.
And travels on with cheer.
So let the way be up the hill
or down,
My journey will be joy,
Still seeking what is sought
by every boy:
New friendships, high endeavor
and a crown,
Trusting that in the final quest.
The last turn of the road will
be the best."
INQUIRERS GET TO WORK
New York Samuel Seaburg, ap
pointed commissioner by Governor
Roosevelt to hear the City clubs's
charges of incompetency against dis
trict Attorney Crain, formally took
up his new duties with the organ
ization of the staff which will con
duct the hearings. Judge Seabury's
chief legal aide, John Kirkland
Clark, appointed as his assistant Ja
cob Gould Schurman. jr., son of the
former ambassador to Germany. Mr.
Schurman has been for the past six
months a member of the legal staff
in the appellate division's investiga-
tion into the magistrates' courts.
It became known that during the
week-end from March 7 to 9 some-
body searched the hies of the bureau
of securities where documents con
taining references to stock sales ac
tivities of the late Vivian Gordon
are kept. The Gordon papers, how
ever, were in a safe. Nothing was
taken from the files.
-BRING US-
Your Poultry
PRICES TOR
Friday and Saturd'y
March 20th and 21st
Hens, per lb l&C
Leghorn Hens, lb. . . ISc
Stags, per lb 12c
Roosters, per lb. . . . 8c
Ducks, per lb &6c
Geese, per lb 8c
JLiSTfifS. per uOZen. . . C
Notice the price cn Ducks and Leg
horn Hens. Bring- them in. Also
Bring Us Your Cream
Golden Valley
Creamery
WHO IS WHO DJ CASS COUNTY
SCHOOL LEADERSHIP TRAINING
According to the present indica
tions we anticipate that the outstand
ing religious project of the year for
Cass county will be the Leadership
Training School to be held this spring
in Murdock.
In considering Who's Who in this
project, recognition and credit must
be given first of all to th Cass
County Ministers and Laymen League
who have placed themselves whole
heartedly back of the s hool and are
its enthusiastic sponsors.
The definite responsibility of gen
eral supervision and promotion has
been placed
In the hands of "Tiie
Board of Administration." of which
i Rev. It. Binkham of Weepin
Water
is th chairman Other commit i es
are: Finence, Leo Kikli. chairman;
and publicity with Rev. Knosp os
chairman.
Rev. Knosp has alo been chosen
as the registrar, and will have charge
of the registering for the
111 t" k C3
various
The supervision of the school it- seed per acre and covering it witn
self is placed in the hands of the out disturbing the 1&30 plants to any
dean. This office has been assigned extent.
to H. A. Norenbersr of t'alahan. In
n -coili tod KchnolR tho Hean must
i
llnVo tlio ntinrrvi-:i of ttio Tn ! orn i T 1. ,n-
...... " i i' - -
al Council of Religious Education.
tv, ;c ,nnrriv,.i tlnii hn so
.h (lhonrto.i ronm, im tho n:irt of
I " ' . ,
iutiiriontK ntiH loni-liois We
trust
l, , i, . n
u. ,v2 ,v, ,ntv
: Uir siuuj v r. v i ii iuv
i ...i. . ,..
a larire trronn who a: iieeniv
cerned with the spread of the Gospel
;of Ch,.ist alld the building up of His
li.inrT.nm
niiiu"....
j The teachers mive been chosen
jwith care aud each one must have
the approval of the international In
t s .,,.,iii,i cr-hori
We are glad to announce that the
f0uowjng teachers have already been
!secured. Mr-S E Warner of Lincoln;
J R Klein of Elmwood- Rev Noren-
horp irnntnek anil Mr .Tohn C
White of Lincoln ( Secretary of the
Nebraska State Council of Religious
Education. )
(Next week: The subjects
to be
considered in the School.
H. A. N'ORENBERG.
FORMER POLICEMEN SLAIN
Wintergarden, Fla. Two former
policemen were killed in a gun bat
tle with the chief of police and a
patrolman here under circumstances
that were unexplained. Terrill Hobbs
and George Brown, the former a
patrolman at one time and the latter
the town's chief of police for a while
prior to last October, died almost in
stantly in the exchange of shots with
G. S. Brazell, who succeeded Brown,
and Patrolman J. W. Burkes. Bra
zell was slightly wounded.
Brazell said Hobbs and Brown
were creating a disturbance and the
firing started when he and Hobbs
went to investigate. He quoted them
as saying "We are going to have it
out." He refused to say anything
further until a coroner's inquest is
held.
NOTICE OF MEETING
Pleasant Ridge Community club
will hold their regular meeting on
next Friday night. All menihei-s
please be present.
Furniture
Rugs, Pias&os, Stoves
at Special Prices
One small apartment size piano;
practically new Schiller piano and
bench: one $35 piano: mahogany
spinnet desk ; 5-pc. large size mahog
any gate leg table and chair set ; two
electric washers; dining room set;
small writing table, three magazine
racks ; one walnut davenport table ;
three davenport beds; one duofold;
two all-over-enamel kitchen ranges,
like new; three oil stoves; two gas
ranges ; 3-piece mahogany bed room
suite ; one Princess dresser : one cliif-
, 77" - ,
springs and mattresses: one sectional
1 bookcase ; one 5-piece Dreaktast set
Many Articles Not Mentioned
Christ Furniture Co.
118-122 So. 6th Phone 645
Plattsmouth, Nebr.
r
I
T
r
I
Cass County Farm
Bureau Notes
Copy furnished from Office
of County Agent Wainscott
T
4
V
Advises Clover be Plow
ed When 10 Inches High
Sweet clover should be plowed un
der in eastern Nebraska and in sub
irrigated or irrigated sections after
a!l the buds start and the clover
six to ten inches high, P. H. Stew
art, extension agronomist at the agri
cultural college, advises farmers.
Men who have studied the soil condi
tions estimate that plowing the clover
under at the height mentioned re-
i turns trom to to 80 per cent as
niucn nitrogen to the soil as tearing
the stand of sweet clover for a full
two ear period.
Allowing tne Clover to start Deiore
plowing it under is better than plow-
fanners haveVunT When Proofs
are come up to bother the other crop
all summer. Leaving the stand ol
clover longer and letting it get up
knee high takes too much moisture
out of the soil which ought to be
available to the corn crop, Stewart
says.
One of the best practices which
eastern Nebraska farmers have fol
lowed in recent years in the ten acre
corn yield contest has been to plow
under the clover, shallow disk or
pack the land, then list the corn
with a hard ground lister, running it
below the depth of plowing to make
it scour and to avoid trouble with
rotting clover.
In handling the dead stalks of two
year old sweet clover this spring.
Stewart suggests one of two methods.
Disking down the stalks and plowing
them under will add some humus to
the soil, but the farmer is taking
chances with cut worms whose eggs
may have wintered on the clover
stalks. Burning the stubble in the
;f:iH or nearly spring gets rid of most
,of the cut worm eggs. Farmers say
ttney have to replant corn quite often
on nelds wnere sweet cover staiKs
were turned under while nearby
fields that were burned off well seem
to have no cut worms in them.
Farmers wtio started a sweet clover
field last year and got only a fair
stand can thicken it up this spring
bv seeding eight to ten pounds ot
"FEEDERS DAY Anril 17. ColieSS
r w
f A ! 1 T 1 TUTT1,
xillii-uiLUic. liiiiiu::.. u.m a. uui
n,
Time to Join Now.
Six hundred boys azid girls of Cass
countv are members of some 4-H
i -
I club is a goal which the county ex-
I : . .....
itonsinn amnic M-itii tho i-o-nnorst ion
I of tho nnronts' lrw-al leaders and all
- x- '
inr.,toH lwn- -.rot i-iri hrino to
Ireach this spring. The total numner
!of 4-H'ers in Cass county last year
-aa ESI and there was a laree sum-
I
ber of the voting folks eager to enter
: the ranks of 4-H clubs this year. A
jgood many cards have been leturned
tn tho office, bearine the sienatures
i of boys and girls who specified their
interest in certain projects such
cooKing, ciotning. garueuuif;. Keep-
well, poultry, swine, baby beet, dairy
I call, sheen. Kills room anu mecnan-
lies. These cards had previously been
: mailed to all the boys and girls in
the county between the ages of ten
and twenty years, in a letter which
also contained a circular on 4-H
clubs.
Two hundred and fifteen boys and
girls are already active in 4-H clubs
and more are joining the ranks daily.
Why not be among the first and get
the better start? Send in your card
if you have one. and if you did not
receive one, send your name and ad
dress together with the names of
other boys and girls who might be in
terested. The following are some of the lubs
which are organized and meeting
regularly:
I'p-N-Cum-N Swine club. Weep
ing Water S. Ray Smith, leader.
Happy Hustlers Swine club, Mur
ray. Mrs. John Hobscheidt. leader.
Poverty Point Pig club. Louisville.
Herbert Stander. leader.
Weeping Water Dairy calf. S. Ray
Smith, leader. This club won many
honors last year and are out to win
again this year.
Master Feeders Baby Beef club.
Paul Wolph, Avoca. leader.
Practical Poultry Producers club,
Eagle. Jamse Wall, leader.
The Everlay Poultry club, of which
James Wall is also leader, is organ
ized for second year work in the
poultry project and is the first club
in t,he county to go on with second
year work in the poultry project.
Four rope clubs in the county with
a membership of fifty-two, are going
strong. Two of these clubs are com
posed of Boy Scouts who are finding
the project most worthwhile.
Miss Clara Weyrich of Plattsmouth
is local leader of two clothing clubs.
The Handy Helpers and Sewing Su
sans, with forty-seven members, who
have nearly finished their project
and will soon be entitled to Certi
ficates of Achievement and a Gold
Seal for their club charter. The
Fairview Health club has been very
active, and its five members under
the leadership of Miss Mary Cupwell
have completed most of their work.
A cooking club with fifteen mem
bers has recently been organized by
Mrs. Wainscott and they are looking
forward to a pleasant and profitable
year.
Equipment Testing Circle.
"Consider Before You Buy" is the
slogan of a testing circle organized
in the Rivt-rview club, south of
Plattsmouth. The aim of the testing
circle is to assist homemakers in the
selection of equipment before pur
chasing. At the organization meeting, var
ious equipment was assigned to each
of the eleven women, and the pur
pose and use of each artcile was ex
plained. Each woman will use her
BRUG
Scrubwomen
One hot day, when the business depression was worst, I visited two
of the largest corporations :n the world.
I talked with the treasurer of one and with the chairman of the
is i ii nance committee of the other
whoso make-up sentimental ity plays very liule part.
The' had lKen looking at red figures until their eye-halls burned.
They were entirely unwilling to predict when their industries would im
prove. But each of them utered the same fervent exclamation:
"If we only can pull through without having to
cut wages."
When you stop to think abouu, it, that is an astonishing phenomenon.
IwentV-five Vfars Hro men in similnr nrtuitirmu vr.nlrl hive vrtirl i m -
nw.diately: "Business is off ten per
Tiu same son of m
I Amnrmmltm mmm hm rnttinrr or
I it XOT to cu
I ... .
cm ijuui ild in ructronui is. i Hai is progress:
History has a curious way of upsetting contemporary judgments.
Many of the events which seem important to men and women while t h y
are living, prove insignificant in
little things later loom large.
Who was king of Spain in
recall that in 16CG an apple fell and hit Isaac Newton.
What was Warren Harding? Who were Calvin Coolidge and Herbert
Hoover? Some future school-boy may be puzzled by those inquiries.
But unless I am very much mistaken every future history book wQj
lay emphasis on two developments which have taken place under our
very eyes.
They will tel! that a boy named Lindbergh flew across the Atlantic
ocean. And that a man named Ford announced that he would p:iy all
workers, even scrubwomen, a minimum of five dollars a day.
The idea that high wages makes prosperity, that the key to good
business lies not in the safe deposit boxes of millionaires, hut is carried in
the pocket of every worker this is something entirely new.
It holds the hope of the future. Wliatever else may have to be
discarded, American business must not surrender that American idea'
piece of equipment a week, keeping
account of the uses she makes of it
and comparing it with the articles
she had been using for the same
purpose. At the end of a week the
articles are passed on to someone else;ure of attending home talent plays
within the circle and each woman given by the Mynard Commi:
again tests out the piece which she: Club will be pleased to learn that
'receives. At the end of eleven weeks
the articles will be returned and a
j summarization made aE to the value
: of each piece.
The Kroehler and Warga Hard-
ware stores, of Plattsmouth, each con-
tnouted pieces of equipment to De
used in tne testing circle.
Master Feeders Organize.
Thirteen boys and girls met
at
1 he Farm Bureau Office. Fridav even-
! -
inr- rinri nr("i n i yoil tho 7:i!or Koof -
-o
ers 4-H Baby Beef club. I'ul Wolph
of Avoca is again the leader of the
club. The thirteen members are
feeding twenty 20 baby beeves.
The following is a list of the club
. ... " . -' v . . v . - . "
; are feeding: Vincent Rehmeier. two
Herefords; Glen Heneger. two Gallo-
ways; James Schafer, one Galloway;
Wm. Brandt, one Galloway; uscr.r
i Brandti ()IH? Galloway
Arnold Stohl-
man, two Heretords; Ellsworth stoni
man, two Herefords; Orland Stohl
;nan. two Angus and Shorthorn;
Frances Rehmeier. two Shorthorns;
John Jochini. one Hereford; Clifford
Norris. one Galloway; Merton Norris.
one uauoway: atuzora cnmin, two
j Angus.
Tfte neXf
club meeting will be
held at the Farm Bureau office Fri
day evening. April 10th. D. D.
Wainscott. Cass Co. Extension Agent;
Jessie H. Baldwin, Ass't Co. Exten
sion Agent.
Notice of District Caucus.
For nominating of candidates
for
school board:
The legal voters of School District
C-7, Cass county, Nebraska, are here
by notified that a caucus will be held
at the school house on March 20tb.
lftHl. at 8:00 o'clock p. m. for nom
inating candidates and the (4) re
ceiving the highest number of votes
shall be placed upon a separate print
ed ballot, as provided by law at the
regular village election to be held
on the first Tuesday in April, 1931.
Order bv the district board the
10th day of March, 1PH1.
AUGUST RUGE.
ml6-2tw Secretary.
Large map of Cass county on sale
at Journal office. 50c each.
8COSOCCOOOOSO:5PCOaOOCOOOOOOOCC
House Cleaning
HI
We have many calls for "Hack-a-round" suits, where
style isn't important. These suits will just fill the bill.
Philip
and these are men. I may tell yon in
cent; slash wages twenty per mt'
hh r, nauuto ihot ,-,
mm ..... v?.,. tht t,. .
makes the current deprsion differ-
the eyes of the ages. And some
16CC? I do not remember. But
very
1 do
MYNARD COMMUNITY
CLUB TO GIVE PLAY
To those who have had th" p -
j t hey are now rehearsing a play to be
given Thursday ,-.nd Friday evening,
March 26 and 27, at their b
Mynard. The sponsors of this nlav
present it to the public with every
confidence that the audience will be
delighted with a play combining the
uest elements ot comcuy with the ac
tion and movement of pure farce It
has a merry fast-moving plot full of
dramatic complications and ab-urd
'situations that will keen thi audi n -
in a roar of laughter. Thru It al!
runs a thread of mystery whit fa is
not cleared up until the final cur
tain. The cast has been selected among
the most versatile and talented young
. jktkjik: 01 . :i ir oiuiin uiiitj. iiii jtic -
The
is under the direction of Raymond
c. Cook, which, with his wide c i
ience along these lines, is assurance
that it will be a comnlete succe ;s uv.'l
that he win give the audience a : oa-
ern interpretation of a hilarious
farce-comedy.
The cast includes Richard Living
ston as the newly married and inebri
ated college professor. Sherman Cole
as his nit-wit negro servant; J;.net
Vallery as his charming first v Ife.
Frances Livingston as the der. lire
second wife. Vivian Livingston as the
crafty hut coy mother-in-law who
gets away with more marriag.
"Madam Queene." Jean Spar.srler.
the dashing college boy. M; :y i'.lcn
Vallery. the attractive college re
porter and Royal Smith the bUMWU
old country doctor.
Musical and other specialities w::!
also be given between acts.
Tho cast, with their director, arc
working hard to give the public two
evenings of high class entertainment
and they feel certain that no one will
feel disappointed.
Journal Want Ads get results
-..T..-..
v
v
Thomas Walling Company
Abstracts of Title
Phone 324 - Plattsmouth
DIGHT now is the time when
house cleaning is in order,
and we are cleaning our cloth
ing cabinets of forty-thr.
men's suits. Sizes 35 to 42.
Starting right now!
Single and double breast
ed models, wide pant legs
and some not so wide
Worsteds, cashmeres and
tweeds.
O
I
1
dTuorwif
750 f 050 U
-4