The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, April 07, 1938, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    THURSDAY, APRIL 7, 1933.
PIATTSMOTTTH SEMI - WTIKIY JCUENAI
PAGE THP.EE
SOCIAL
1 1
From Monday Dally
Visits Relatives Here
Mrs. Ernest Kieck, of Cedar
Rapids, Iowa, was here over the week
end as a guest of Mrs. Lora Kieck
and family and with a number of
old friends. She departed Sunday
for Springfield where she will visit
with Mrs. William Kieck and Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Kieck for a few days
before returning home.
From Tuesaay's Daily
Entertains at Dinner
Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Janda en
tertained on Sunday a group of the
relatives and close friends at their
pleasant home on west Pearl street,
;he occasion being for the members
of the iiimily from out of ihe city.
The delightful dinner was much en
joyed and the time spent in visiting
with each other. The guests were
Mr. and Mrs. James Ptaeek and
(iauehter, Gertrude of Chicago, Mr.
and Mrs. Oscar Adolphson and son.
C.ilvin. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ptaeek.
ol" O.n.iha, Allan Mc-Clan aha n,
and Mrs. Tim Kahoutek, Mr.
Mrs. Theodore Yelick. Mr. and
Jan da and daughter, Miss l:u:h.
CAGJ
of Omaha
and Mrs.
and Mrs.
From Monday's Dally
Rev. Lowe will speak Wednesday
evening at the Christian church in
Murray.
Mr. and Mrs. Art Pearley of Union
were visiting in Plattsmouth Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. L. Fried
were visiting with Mr.
V. F. Kelley yesterday.
Mrs. James Jenkins
Betty Harrows of Murray were in
Plattsmouth Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Cramer spent
yesterday with Mrs. Cramer's par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Otto Sprieck at
Louisville.
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar L. Peterson
and daughter of Lincoln were
yesterday visiting with L. II. Peter
son and family.
Mrs. George O. Dovey of Peoria,
Illinois, who has been here visiting
with her lather, Charles C. Parmele
has departed for her home.
Pollock Parmele and family of Lin
coln were here yesterday visiting
Uncle of Platts
mouth Lady in
Russian Prison
Albert Melville Troyer, Uncle by Mar
riage of Mrs. P. T. Heineman,
Eeing- Held in Russia.
and began his work at Sukhum,
Abkhazia, in southern Russia on the
Black Sea.
The Trovers were furnished an
unusually elaborate apartment in
which to live and everything went
well until the summer of linZG when
Lizhava, chief of the citrus fruit
commission notified Troyer the gov
ernment had decided to release all
foreign consutlants as rapidly as possible.
OMAHA, April Z (UP) The On- i royer, not wjmuhj; to iose me
f.n!tf if fiic- TfiftViJ t ,f v t nr.. i rr tint
aha World-Herald in a coiivrighted 11 ulLi "L " . '
nci-ecfi to annlv tor c-it izenshin wlm h
article touay stated it has learned ..,
was hi a men " jm'
that Albert Melville Trover, 71, grad- while i,er husband was in the local
uate of the University of Nebraska jail at RUkhum, Mrs. Troyer brought j
and an expert in the growing of nim .ieaii clothing and food every!
citrus fruits has become the victim day but Ehe vas not permitted to see!
of a Russian Soviet sabotage and is nim Lizhava and other officials of!
serving 10 years in a Russian prison. the citrus fruit commission were ar-j
These facts were revealed by Mrs. I ,.(st(,l about the :;am time. Mrs.l
wno returned lrom nussia in;Trovt,r COuld not learn what had
RETURN FROM CALIFORNIA
Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Todd and Mr.
and Mrs. C. R. Todd have returned
home from their winter spent in
California where Mr. and Mrs. T. E.
Todd have property interests and Mr.
and Mrs. C. R. Todd enjoyed visits
with their children.
They were eight days on the road
and found some severe weather with
blizzards in New Mexico and Arizona.
They also stopped at Denver with
relatives and at Fort Morgan, Colo
rado, with friends, also at Kearney
with the T. J. Todd family.
This was the fourteenth trip of
he,'ei Troyer
i
From Wednesday's Daily
Tuesday Evening Club
Mrs. Guy Long entertained the
Tuesday Evening club last night.
Mrs. Ray Herring won first prize and
Mrs. Raj Bryant won second.
Ur Jwith Charles C. Parmele who is show
and i considerable improve ment.
Mrs. Miss Jeau Hayes of Westside, Iow a
I was here visiting with her parents.
Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Hayes over the
week-end, on her spring vacation.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Manacek of
Omaha were here Sunday where they
spent the day at the home of Mrs.
R. A. Bates and enjoyed the pleasant
spring day in a short motoring trip.
Needlecraft Club
The Needlecraft club met last night
with Miss Wilma Pickard. A de
licious lunch was very attractively
arranged, carrying out the theme of
Easter.
D. D. Entertains
Last evening the D. D. club made
an excursion to the home of Miss
Kathryn Grosshans, where a well
prepared uinner and a pleasant eve
ning awaited them.
The members held an old fashioned
square dance in the "sale barn" lo
cated on the Grosshans estate. The
music was furnished by the "Barn
yard Quartette."
Mrs. Grosshans' old r. "Snow
White and "Tier seven dwarfs" pro
vided a good laugh for the members.
On arrival the city members of
the club were initiated into the coun
try, life and continued to be one of
the farmyard folks until Mr. Gross
hans' only big, red steer rang the
curfew bell.
Janet Westover and Pat Cloidt
provided transportation to and from
the Grosshans estate.
DIES AT PORTLAND, OREGON
The announcement has been re
ceived here by L. O. Minor of the
death Monday at Portland, Oregon,
of his uncle. John L. Minor, S4, a
former resident of Plattsmouth.
Mr. Minor was a brother of the
late P. C. Minor, making his home
here in the early nireties when he
was employed as storekeeper for the
Burlington railroad at the local
shops.
After leaving here some forty
years ago Mr. Minor located on the
Pacific coast and has made his home
in Portland for a great many years.
He is survived by the widow and
two children. Davis and Florence
Minor, all living at Portland.
VISITS COUNTRY SCHOOLS
From Tuesday's Daily-
County Superintendent Miss Aipna From Monday's Dally-
C. Peterson departed this morning Mrs. L. S. Devoe went to Nebraska
fur n Hn nut in the ronntv to visit pitv this afternoon to attend the
the rural schools. She is making the woman's club convention held there,
schools along the cast section of the J she will attend a dinner tonight and
county in the territory adjoining the intends to stay through the.conven
MisDouri river. I tion.
From Tuesday's Daily
John Bauer was attending to busi
ness in Omaha yesterday.
Leo Fiala of Spencer, Nebraska
is here visiting his sister Helen.
Frank Parkening was in Omaha
yesterday attending to business mat
ters. Miss Dora Fricke spent Sunday
with her siter, Mrs. Maude Fricke in
Lincoln.
Miss Verna Leonard spent Sunday
with her sister, Mrs. J. E. Hurley
and family in Lincoln.
Aultcn Roland, of Lincoln, was
here Monday to enjoy a short visit
with relatives and friends for a few j
hours.
Mr. and Mrs. Ludwig Hallas and
children. Ellen Louise and Mary Lou.
of Shelton, Nebraska are here visit
ing Mrs. E. L. McCarty.
Judge C. S. Wortman of South
Bond, was in the city today to attend
to some matters of business for a
Tow hours at the court house.
James Ptaeek, who was called here
from Chicago by the death of his
mother. Mrs. Mike Warga. was at
Lincoln Sunday to visit relatives
there and looking after some business.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry D. Royal of,
Lincoln were in the city Sunday to(
visit with Judge C. L. Graves, father;
of Mrs. RoyaJ, for a few hours as
well as meeting the old friends.
February and who is devoting
her energies toward seeking her bus-1
band's release.
Mrs. Troyer was in Plattsmouth
with her niece. Mrs. P. T. Heineman,
two weeks ago.
Her battle, however, is compli
cated by the fact that Troyer, given
choice between leaving his experi
mental work in Russia or renouncing
his American citizenship, chose the
latter course in June, 1937.
A few days after he had become
a Russian citizen he was arrested on
a "counter revolution" charge and
Mrs. Troyer lias not seen him since.
Mrs. Troyer is the daughter of
the late John A. Dempster, wealthy
Beatrice, Nebraska manufacturer.
She is now with a sister, Mrs. S. A.
Christenson in Sioux Falls, South
Dakota.
Mrs. Troyer is positive that her
husband had no knowledge of sabot
age plot intended to disrupt experi
mental work in citrus fruits in south
ern Russia. Until shortly before his
arrest, she said Troyer had always
been treated with great consider
ation. Troyer came to Nebraska from Illi
nois in the 90's and took three years
of university work.
The couple was married in 1912
and went to live at Fairhope, Ala
bama where Troyer secured a farm
for his research work in hybrodiz
ation. He suffered financial reverses
and in 1924 after his crops had been
frozen for two consecutive years he
received a visit from a Russian citrus
fruit commission. He was offered
double the salary of most consult
ants and finally accepted the offer
11 of happened to them. Lizhava's
SIK-
sen-
cessor told her"Troyer had been
tenced to 10 years imprisonment.
ASSIGN CASES FOR TRIAL
April
zier vs.
April
Newton
April
Judge W. W. Wilson has made the
assignment of cases for trial at the
forthcoming April term of the (lis
triot court, which opens on Monday.
April 11th when the jury will be
tailed:
11, 10:30 a. m. If. A. Cro
Leonard J. McLaughlin.
12-13, 9:00 a. m. Madge
vs. Chas. Ayres. et al.
14. 9:00 a. m. Erna Meier-
dierks vs. W m. E. N orris, et al.
Apr. IS. 19, 20. 9:00 a. m.. Fay
McClintock vs. Michael Hausladen, et
al.
April 21. 9:00 a. m.. Glen A.
Daniels vs. Hubert Cappen.
April 25. 2C, 9:00 a. m.. Dick
Baker, special administrator vs. Al
Fleming, et al.
April 27, 9:00 a. m. Henry Heine
man vs. Matthew Thimgan.
April 2S-29, 9:0 a. in. John Rob
bins. Jr., vs. Schellberg Sand &
Gravel Co.
May 3, 4. 5, 9:00 a. m. Marjorie
Twiss vs. Lincoln Telephone and
Telegraph Co. "
May G. 9:00 a. m.. Paul Pickering
vs. L. R. Upton, et al.
May 9. 9:00 a. m. Walter Lovell
vs. C. E. Weideman.
Heel of the Docket
James Holy vs. Tene J. Janda.
et al.
John H. Busche, et al vs. Wm. H.
Meisinger.
Mae C. Bushnell vs. R. A. Beatty,
et al.
Rubber Stamps, prompt deliv
ery, lowest prices. All sizes at the
Journal office.
RIVER VIEW CLUB
The Riverview club met at tne
home of Mrs. Robert 1'atterson on
March 15, with a good attendance.
The club elected officers for the en
suing year. The' leaders gave the
loQcnn on "Fitting Garments," which
was followed with great interest.;
Eight members were present and scv-j
eral visitors. j
A delicious lunch was served. The,
next meeting will be at the home of
Mrs. Frank Hull on April 12th.
ATTENDS CLUB CONVENTION
i 1 li
Is
SPECIAL
for EASTER
Your Choice of One Free
Facial, Eyebrow Arch or Manicure
With Every
$2.50-$3.50 or $5.00 PERMAHEHT
Including Shampoo and Finger Wave
This Offer Good Only Till Easter
PHONE 137 FOR APPOINTMENTS
Holly wood Beauty Salon
2nd Floor Bates Book Store Buliding
For a reasonable down payment you can have
as much DeKalb Quality Hybrid Seed Corn as
you can plant the kind of hybrids which
averaged 8 bushels more per acre than the high
est open-pollinated in the Nebraska State Corn
Yield Tests.
You make a small down payment when
you get your corn. THE BALANCE IS PAY
ABLE NEXT FALL when you harvest your
BIGGER CORN CROP
You can pay with either corn or cash
There are no strings to this offer. Honestly, it
is a golden opportunity to make more money
this year. See me today for complete informa
tion. You can't afford not to investigate this
unusual offer.
Good Only As Long As My Special Shipment Lasts
MURRAY, NEBR.
Z Miles South On Rock Road
the Todd family to the west coast
and they have had a very delightful
time among the old friends on the
coast.
Three days before they left Cali
fornia their home was crowded with
friends and acquaintances to bid
them farewell on their start east
ward to Nebraska, and on the day
- - - - . . . . 1. , ; .. . 1 . , ......... . 1 1 , . . - li- j , i'ii
entertained at the Walter Thomas 1
home at a dinne r party in their j
honor. )
Mr. Todd reports that the flood i
damage is being cleared up, altho it i
is still in evidence. !
Mr. and Mrs. Todd are harry
be home and to see their little grand
daughter, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Todd.
Mrs. Todd's health improved a
great deal during the stay on the
west coast and which is pleasant
news to the many friends.
Phone news items to No. 6.
CWN A NEW
TRACTOR
NO DOWN PAYMENT, See
ROSEN-NOVAK AUTO CO.
Plattmouth Ph. 230 O-K Garage
Compare Quality!
Compare Price!
- - and then you'll know why
more and more food buyers
are changing tO Hinky-Dinky! Ad for Plattsmouth Friday, Sat., April 8 and 9
Old Pals Alaska
SALMON
Mb. Can
Blue Bay Natural
SARDINES. 1-lb. can .
Sc
Hershey's
or Baker's
COCOA
Mb. Can
lie
True American
MATCHES fc
25c
Carton G Boxes. . . .
Diamond MATCHES
Carton of 6 boxes. .
IVmlrr, Juii-y I". S. ir(lel lierf SlioulIr Cut.
li ! , I. c 11 11.
ARMOUR'S PURE STAR BRAND
IN BULK
1 .Kin 1 1-11.1 iu.
Lb
Juicy V. S. ;rilel Ilecf Slumliler CiiIm.
I'rfslily ; round llerf ( ul
Fane
3 lbs
Kraut 3,Hcsy w,scons,n Bu,k 10c
Lib., 5g
I.cnu Mini Mraty
BeeS Hearts . . 3C
Ion nu. Tender
Minced Luncheon or
Ring Bologna
Sel el
H I UN. . .
2SC
IS 2 Lb. Loaf. 4i5C
Krnft merit-mi or llrick.
Fillets o Fish or
Whiting Fisfaifc.2c
Headless
Dressed
2V'2-lb. bundle 39c.. Pcy, fresh, tender green Calif.
New Ftaes .39c
New crop Texas Triumphs. Large, clean and smooth.
Fresh, full Red Texas.
Tender Calif. Chula g-f
Vista, well bleached JfC
Extra large 0
w size, Doz. L
sssraBB
Large, 20 1 doz. Jcy. Calif. Sunkist Seedless Navels
Calif. Green Top
S Lge. Bchs., 2 iovSJC
aEBaEQaS yenoripLrL&C
Fancy California Snowball
Fey. Fresh Calif.
1-lb. bundle
II
U. S. No. 1 Louisiana
9c
lt Porto Eican. 4 lbs.ilVC
GffajSDeSffunSt!; 6 for 25c
Sweet juicy Texas Marsh Seedless, extra large size.
Del Monte Sliced or Half
PEACHES Qi
No. 2V2 Cans IL
Del Monte Sliced
PEARS
No. 2V2 Can
19
Del Monte Pure
Tomato Juice
Giant
46-oz. Can
19c
Del Monto Cream Style, Co.
Gent, or Golden Bantam
corn 9 for
No. 2 Cans
Del Monte
Fruit Cocktail
No. 2V2
Can
Del Monte Whole Unpeeled
APRICOTS
No. 2V2 Can
25
9 tVI W
18c
TOMATOES
GREEN BEANS,
CORN, PEAS,
SPINACH, KIDNEY
or RED BEANS,
LIMA BEANS, or
PUMPKIN
Standard Quality
4 for 2!
"All-Purpose"
3-lb. can . . . .
Spry Shortening
Shredded Wheat SSWKTl
CoSEee
Royal Flour
Blatter
Sunrise. Sweet. Mild
3 lbs., 45c; 1 lb
48-lb.
Sack
CASCO, Solids, lb., 31c
HINKY-DINKY, 1-lb. carton
...52c
for.SSC
....15c
135
...30c
Margeritte, Sunlight carbtonc,a2tofSr29c
Cracliers &ZnSS&, 15c
Burch Pure
Fig Bars
Freshly baked. Lb..
10
c
Santa Clara
PRUNES
Small Size 6 lbs.
25c; 25-lb. Eox
Golden Hallowii Bulk
2-lb. Bag-
89c
Ik
15'
Dust Mops
Complete with
Handles JfhC
9Sc value
Champion High Test
LYE 9JC
4 Hegnlar Cans
Big 4
SOAP QC
IP Reg. Bars 11 &
T7t 3 Sliced White
24-oz. Loaf
IOC
Jell Butter-Nut, assorted flavors, 4 Pkgs 1QC
rrSfrlo COCOA HARDWATER TOILET SOAP f7n
&&rlL7S Regular Bars, 4 for lLjQ
IVOry Soa9 Guest Bars, 4 for 19C
Pillsfeiary's Floor if-'fe 93?..S1.79
Pi!!sfeurys Pancalie Flomr
1-Ib. Pkg., IOC; 3Y2-b. Bag 25C
I jlll-lpi
CHEESE WLA
Six Tasty Varieties 4Cn
!2-lb. Pkg
Land o' Lakes Salad 9a
Dressing, Pt, 19; Qt..3i
a
1?
RENNET POWDER fZt
Rea. Pkns., 2 for 63-
TABLETS, 2 Pkgs 25c
Wax Rite
Self-Polishing
Liquid Wax
Pint Can
39
1 TI5V'
I
Viking
Be?. Bolls
6 for 23c
RED CROSS
TOWELS
Reg. Eolls3 for
"7