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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1950)
HE PLATTSWOUTH, NEBRASKA, SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL; PAQS TWO SCRIPTURE: The Book of Ruth. . Lesson fr July 16, 1950 THE ENGLISH language has a word not found in the original languages of th Bible; it is hot in Latin, German or French for that matter. It is the word "home." But homes were not inrented in Eng land or America; the ancient peo ple of the world had homes even If they had no special word for them. The story of Ruth is a bome story, a family tale. It comes from the times of the Judges, which were very rugged times indeei. To tead the Buok of Judges you would think that everything was plots and wars and murder. There" isn't a peaceful story in the book. And then comes the story of Ruth, to remind us that even in those terrible times there were happy people, people who minded their business and worked hard and atayei home and loved one anoth er. The bright spots in today's vast seas cf misery are just what they were in Ruth's time. "A home is a place to go when everything else ha shut up" is not a true proverb. For if that is all it is, It is not a home. It is only a boarding house and" not a very at tractive one at that. To this day, there are fewer di vorces in the country than in the cities, and one big reason for that is that country families have to work together, while city families often have little in common. In th country everybody turns to and does something about the house, everybody helps everybody else; while in the cities where so much is done by machines and houses ere very small, there isn't much a lamily can do together. OUR CHURCHES CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SERVICE Sixth Street and 2nd Are. Sunday School at 9:45 a. m. Morning Service at 11a. m. "Life" is the subject of the Lesson-Sermon which will be read in Christian Science chur ches throughout the world on Sunday, July 16. 1950. The Golden Text is: "The Lord Is my light and my salva tion; whom shall I fear? the Lord is the strength of my life; of whom shall I be afraid?" (Psalms 27: 1 Other Bible cita tions include "Set your affec tion on things above, not on things on the earth. For ye are dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God. When Christ, who is our life, shall appear, then shall ye also appear with him in glory," (Colossians 3:2-4 The Lesson-Serman also in cludes the following passage from the Christian Science text book. "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures" by Mary Baker Eddy. "In Science all being is eternal, spiritual, per fect, harmonious in every ac tion. Let the perfect model be present in your thoughts in stead of its demoralized oppo site. This spiritualization of thought lets in the light, and brings the divine Mind. Life not death, into your consciousness." (Vau,e 407i Wescott's Good Clothes Nothing Else Since 1879 REACH Pi I Si Thursday, July 13, i960 UNITED PRESBYTERIAN cnuitcii Murray, Nebraska Rov P. Morris, Pastor 10:00 feible School with classes for all ages. James Comstock. Superintendent. 11:00 Morning Worship with sermon, "Strange Things in the Life of Jesus." IMMANUEL LUTHERAN CHURCH t Miles Southwest of Louisville Melvin H. Meyer. Pastor (For week of July 10) There will be no services or Sunday School next Sunday. (For week of July 17) Regular services are held at 10:00. Sunday School begins at 9:15. The Walthei- League has a picnic Sunday evening at 6:30. The Young Married People will meet on July 25 at 8:00. CHRIST LUTHERAN CHURCH Plat tsmouth -Louisville Road Rev. A. Lentz, Pastor Sunday, July 16 9:30 Sunday School. 10:30 Services. The Semiannual Congrega tional meeting will be held in connection with the services; the meeting was rained out last Sunday. Sunday, July 23 9:30 Sunday School. 10:30 Services. Sunday evening, ice cream social, chicken supper, com munity sing at the Christ Lu theran Church, serving starts at 5:30 p.m. ST. LUKE'S EPISCOPAL CHURCn Third St. and Avenue A Canon Geo. St. Geo. Tyner, Rector. Sunday Services: Church School, 9:30 ajn. Ed ward Egenberger, Supt. Holy Communion and sermon, 10:30 a.m. Subject, "The Right eousness by Which We Enter the Kingdom of Heaven." We cordially invite you to attend the services at this church. Church School and Parish picnic, Friday, 6:30 p.m. at Gar- lield park. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH Rev. Harold V. Mitchell, Pastor Parsonage 7th and Main Streets 9:45 Sunday school. 11:00 a.m. Worship Service. UNION METHODIST CHURCH Rev. Harold V. Mitchell, Pastor 9:45 a.m.. Morning Worship. 10:30 a.m., Church School. 8 p.m. Wednesday, Youth Fel lowship. FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH George D. Swiney. Pastor Sunday School. 9:45 a. m. Church Service. 11:00 a. m. Junior and Senior Youth Fel lowship. 6:30 p.m. Evening Service, 8:00 p.m. Wednesday evening. 8:00 Reg ular Bible Study and prayer meeting. FIRST LUTHERAN CHURCH Sunday School, 9 ajn. Morning Worship. 10 a.m. You are cordially invited to attend the services of this church. HOLY ROSARY CHURCH Rev. Edward C. Tuchek, Pastor Sixteenth and First Avenue Holv Mass is nffrpri pach Sunday at 8 and at 10 o'clock. V m . . . noiy Mass on weeK days is oi fered at 7:30. The Bfrv Scotifs mpp pverv Monday evening at 7:30 in Ros ary nam. uuos wno are to enter Scouting are asked to contact Mr. Edward Strickland. The Holy Rosary choir meets every Tuesday evening at 7:30. Prospective choir members are asked to interview Mr. Don Cot ner. The Sorrowful Mother Nov rna is conducted every Friday evening at 7:30. This devotion is in its fifth consecutive year at Holy Rosary. Confessions every Saturday evening, vigil of Holy Days and First Friday from 7:30 until 9:00 p. m. FOR . . . RICHER MILK! ' St. lOIIV CATHOLIC Rt. Ret. Monfiifnor Geo. Alius, Pastor. Rev. Father John W. Kelly, Assistant. Sunday masses at 7:30 and 10 a.m. Confessions on Saturday from 5 to 5:30 and from 7:30 to 8:30 p. m. Week day masses 7:00. and 7:30 a.m. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN Seventh Street and Second Ave. Dr. H. G. McClusky, Pastor Sabbath School at 9:45 a.m. Ralph Wehrbein, Supt. jvfornirg Church Worship at 11:00. The sermon. "Working Out Our Salvation." Westminister Fellowship on Wednesday night at 6:45 and 8:00 o'clock. There will be no church ser vice for the next four Sundays. Sabbath School and Youth Fellowship will continue as us ual. EVANGELICAL UNITED BRETHREN Mynard, Nebraska D. V. Herrick. Pastor Robert Cell, Supt. S. S. Sundav School. 10:00 a. m. Worship Service, 11:00 a. m. Youth Fellowship, 7:30 p.m. ST. PAUL'S EVANGELICAL AND REFORMED CHURCH Rev. Earle Conover, Acting- Pastor. Fifth Street and Are. A Parsonage at 714 1st Ave. Sunday School at 9:30 a.m. The circles of the Women's Guild of the church wil meet on Tuesday t July 18th at 8 p.m. as folows: Circle No. 1 with Mrs. Lizzie Stoehr. 824 Avenue E; Circle No. 2, with Mrs. Carl Krflpper at the church parlors; Circle No. 3 with Mrs. Phyllis Karfenberger, zie wasningion. Avenue. tVESLEYAN METHODIST CHURCH Rev. Fred T. Klatt. Pastor 619 South Tenth Street Sunday School, 10 a.m. Morning Worship. II a.m. Young people's service 7:15 p. m. Evangelistic service 8:00 p. m. Special music by Salvation Army Girl's Trio. Midweek prayer hour. Wednes day at 8:00 p. m. Cass County Extension Notes Vacation Milk: City families vacationing in the country this summer who will be buying raw milK irom local larms should understand that milk must be pasteurized to be safe for drinking and that this is easily dene in a double boiler in1 any home kitchen, specialists of the Bureau of Dairy Industry. U. S. Department of Agriculture, advise. The specialists add the assurance that when properly done, pasteurizing does not give milk a cooked or scorched flavor and does not cause loss of im portant nutritive value of the milk. Bottled milk sold by city dairies has been pasteurized for many years, but convenient methods of home pasteurizing are not familiar to all farm housewives. For home pasteurization a thermometer is essential. Hard ware stores, dairy supply com panies or local dairy plants sell the floating dairy thermometers, most convenient for this job. but any thermometer which can be put into the milk may be used. For cfuick pasteurization, pout milk in the upper part of the double boiler, put in the clean thermometer, and when the thermometer registers 160 de grees F., count off 15 seconds and then pour off the hot wa ter in the lower part of the boiler and replace with cold water un til the milk has cooled. Ice in the water hastens the cooling. When cool, pour milk into clean bottles which have been ster ilized in boiling water, cover with metal caps or aluminum foil, and place In the refrigerator. Another process is to heat the milk at 143 degrees F. for 30 minutes, then cool and pour in bottles. The Important point to remember for safety is that all the milk must be heated at not less than the specified tempera ture for the recommended time. Farm families or large families who may want to pasteurize larger quantities of milk can put the raw milk in clean sterile glass canning iars. leaving about three-fourths inch headspace at the top of the jars for expan sion .In heating, then seal the jars and put in a water-bath canner. In standard 7-quart canners 6 quarts of milk may be pasteurized with one quart jar of water which holds the ther mometer. When the thermom eter registers 163 degrees F., hold that temperature for one min ute, then cool the Jars of milk and store in the refrigerator. This in-the-jar pasteurizing Business Suspended Business Interruption insurance helps do for your business what your business would have done for itself, if there had been no interrup tion. Consult this agency about it! Stephen M. Davis Second Floor Plattsmoutu State Rank Bldg. Phone 6111 & i. film H I . H'liliii ''"' t 5 ft 2k -A .Aau..... ARMY NURSES' ATTIRE . . . cerps uniform ( be authorized Calif., at convention of American saves pouring milk into bottles after heating and may be the most convenient method for farm families who have home canners and want to pasteurize as many as six quarts of milk at a time. Vacationing city fam ilies often do not have canning equipment. For them the double-boiler method is the answer. Hemming Ways: Some fine points on putting in hems use ful to women who make their own clothes or alter hems on ready-made garments instead of slipshod hem work rewards the woman who would be well groomed, and thus the garment gives better returns for the time and money spent. For an accurate hemline, here is a suggestion which may be new to many sewers. After marking the hem and turning it up, oin close to the edge of the folded hemline instead of the usual pinning at the top of the hem. Put pins in at right angles to the hemline so you can baste over them and baste close to the fold. After basting, re move pins and press. Two inches is a good width for the hem. With a small trans parent ruler and chalk pencil, it's easy to mark an even line around the hem and then cut along it. For taking in extra width at the top of a hem. we suggest an alternative to hit-and-miss lap ping over the material when putting in the final hemming stitch. Around the raw edge of the hem top. take large loose 1 od nir Look The beauty you see on the surface of this sleek new Chrysler is only a hint of the vafue that lies beneath! When you feel the surge of life that stirs through this entire senf beaufy as it takes off, you'll know there's nothing like it! When you feel its comfort ... as you settle down in the softness of chair height seats, you'll say, 'There's no comparison!" Before you decide on arty i . Mi r " an 1 IHJn.uui.iu IH..1IMIIW....MU mmwn uiu 1)1 Hi Win -.t.-.v:.. .-. m r, J rlVl&Jl' a iar ,h ''rmz I t f ii tm. mnr.l "iVr i i .v.y j )n.. Ti't See it drive it . there's built-in value all the way through! KE - i : M?'$? PrcTiew of the new army nurse January 1, Is held in Coronade, Nurses association. machine stitches about U inch from edge, pull up the lower thread, and gather in the full ness evenly with your fingers. Then shrink in, using a sponge for dampening and a hot iron, for such fabrics as linen and I wool which can be shrunk. For I cottons, silks, and rayons, which I do not shrink, press the fullness flat. When not using binding on the i hem edge, two rows of stitching are better than one to prevent fraying. Seam bind ing is rayon and can't take a hot iron, so is not recommended for fabrics like linen which de mand high heat in pressing. For finishing the hem. try a catch stitch. This running stitch is taken by hand away from instead of towards you.Tt's particularly good looking because the needle picks up the outer fabric only every other stitch. Stitches in between are taken just through the hem. SUMMER OR WINTER Your car needs that extra "pep" found in that famous Phillips "66" Gasoline. Try a tank full of that smooth run ning gasoline found only at the station with the orange and black sign, your local Phillips "66" dealer. Try Phillips once and you'll never switch. Huebner's "66" Station TANK. WAGON SERVICE Phone 212 Plattsmouth Chrysler Driving Advantages: Hid Driv . outomatie gear thifting with ex elujiv car controf! High Compression Spittk Cngine . . . extra power ot alt speeds. Soper finishcf parts for longer life. CWemicoll treorteo' cylinder walls for for greater wear! Wafrproof Ignition System . . . prevents stalling in flood or storm. Futt How Oil filter keeps oif clean. The Beau! New Laundering Tests: New findings can be chalked up on your score columns for soap and modern-day synthetic detergents this time on the washing of woolens surh as blankets, socks, sweaters, and baby clothes. These findings show an advantage in I using synthetic detergents when j laundering wool in hard water.! In hard water tests with wool, j textile chemists of the Bureau of Human Nutrition and Home Economics. U. S. Department of Agriculture, found synthetic detergents got rid of soil more thoroughly than soap. In soft water, soaps and the milder syn thetic detergents were still more effective than soap. Only a re moval was studied in the tests and no effort was made to de termine shrinkage changes in color and strength that may oc cur to the fabric. The new tests, conducted on cotton as well as wool, support other evidence about the effi cleny of synthetic detergents in hard water. Earlier tests have shown that in hard water syn thetic detergents remove more dirt from white cotton fabric than soaps. But in soft water, soap was found to be a better dirt chaser for cotton than the synthetics. The superiority of synthetic detergents in hard water and of soaps in soft water gets added backing from the new cotton re search, which tested a different combination of oil. grease and dirt from that used in the first studies. Since clothing and other fabrics in every household get a wide variety of soil, the use of different soils makes the findings more reliable as a guide in home laundering. The chem ists plan to continue these stud ies with other soil and fabrics. Poison Plant: A weed worth recognizing in order to avoid close acquaintance is poison ivy, plant scientists of the U. S. De partment of Agriculture advise city families going to the coun try for picnics, camping trips or other outings. Because chil dren are some of the chief suf ferers of ivy poisoning with its severe skin inflammation and water blisters, an early nature lesson on this plant is worth any parent's time. One or more kinds of ivy grow in abundance in almost every part of the Unit car, look into Chrysler's value all Chrysler Comfort Advantages: Cfcofr Heigfrf Seats ... no crouching on the floor . . w fenefionejr Dewgrr . . . room for your head, legs, shoulders. Eosy to enter end leave. Cerrier-erm Steering . . . minimizes road shock, wheel Tight. Rubber Body Mountings. . . . Floating Parmer . . . eliminate vibration, help give softest, smoothest rrde m history. ed States. There is common poteen ivy. oak leaf poison ivy and western poison oak. The first step in preventing poisoning is studying pictures ! and general descriptions of the plant and then observing it also of Lynn, ineyre not ie from a safe distance. Generally. ! lated. if you learn to recognize any one form of the plant, others Popsickle Bandit Caught will have a familiar look or' MEMPHIS. Tenn. (UP; Min f amily resemblance which will i utes after a grocery store owner serve as a beware sign. The old : reported a $100 robbery police saying: "Leaves three, let it be," nabbed the culprit. The victim holds good because all forms ! had identified the robber as have three leaflets attached to I "sucking on popsickle. and one stem. Leaves are shiny deep green m summer, turning red dish in the fall. Some are smooth-edged, tapering to a point; some have indented edges, others resemble oak leaves. The plant thrives in deep woods or in drv soil on sunny hill shrub mostly on the ground, or an erect woody shrub. Often it grows in with other vines or shrubs and escapes no tice. For the family's safety lesson on poison ivy the testbook might publication "Poison Ivv. Poison Oak and Poison Sumac" (F. B. 1 1972) which may be had from ' the Government Printing Of fice, Washington, D. C. It is il lustrated, tells how 0 identify and take precautions against the plants, best methods of eradi cating them, and finally, treat ment of poisoning for those un lucky enough to acquire it. Pearl L. Schultz, Home Extension Agent Earley but Late WHEELING, W. Va. U.P. Naomi Earley was 10 years late i out unaiiy got the divorce for which she aoolied in Ma v. 1Q3S Final action was delayed be- f cause she was ill and unable to 1 pay costs when the decree was i entered. ffifel-ll WHILE THE S: FAMILY GATHERS If family members are numerous, in vestigate our large chapel. In tims of bereavement, this added comfort, together with our tactful attention to details, will ease your burden. Caldwell Funeral Home 131 782 Avenue B the way through! Beautiful Chrysler 4 ..A it with Fluid Drive Murdoch, Nebraska Reynolds Meets Reynolds SAUGUS. Mass. (UP) First day he had his driver's license. Edward A. Reynolds, 17. of Lynn was involved in an automobile ; collision with Andrew rteynoiaa. escaping on a bicycle. A classified Ad in The Jour nal costs as little as 35c. LECTRSC COOKING HAS tn eim Phone 4111 - Door Sedan . Today's Style Classic !5 7 ESP itzA M 3m ,ri"&j i i ImKfsilliwS! i f-rsm. i i V17 r-".- j i -sfe e?4,n f ast M z IS convenient I i ceo? eeonomieaf. I r"" " V! The psrfect answer If l to mo'e.-n cooScinj. I I r See Yeer Deofer ft ! M Chrysler Safety Advantages: Safety Rim Wheeft . . . won't throw fires offer blowouts ot normal speeds. Constant Speed Windthield Wiper . . . electrically operated Safe Coord Hydroufic Brakes . . . balanced brake power, smoother stops, fess pedof pres. sure. Cyclebondeef tmings for double the wear full vision . . . wherever you need it.