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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 23, 1952)
Imwnx)d tfRS. "RACE PLYECN. Correspondent The second Tuesday of each ivonth is Elmwood work day at ne Veterans" hospital at Lin-1 coin. The committee assisting with needed services this week ! were Mrs. Emmett Cook, Mrs. j Frank Buell and Mrs. Emily Gonzales. Albert Kunz is in Imperial, Nebr., this week looking after farm interests and visiting rela tives. A number of Eastern Star Kensington ladies attended their meeting at Murdock on Wednesday at the home of Mrs. O. B. Lupardus. Driving cars were Miss Liilie Muenchau and Mrs. Ray Parsell. Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Bronn vis ited with their son Boyd and family at Bennett on Sunday. Mrs. Gus Bornemeier is get ting along quite well now after . in Chicago visiting relatives. her serious operation at Bryan hospital. Californians Are Guests Monday guests of Mrs. Laura Sutherland were two of her nieces and their husbands. They were Mr. and Mrs. Chester Barnes of Riverside, Calif., and Mr. and Mrs. DeWitt Venter of Lincoln. Elm wona Mrs. Ruth Davis visited her sister-in-law, Mrs. Sadie Burks at Lincoln on Saturday and Sunday. Two nieces and their families were also seen. Miss Lillie Muenchau started on Sunday for a visit with rela tives in Pennsylvania. Melvin Millers were at York Sunday, Oct. 12 for a visit with their son, Sterling and family. There have been a number of pleasant affairs honoring Miss Eleanor Lindsay of Weeping Water whose marriage to Henry Irons is to be an event of the near future. Henry is now em ployed in th?t city. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Husar spent a few days this month RADIATOR REPAIRING ONE - DAY SERVICE Plattsmouth Motors Washington Ave. Ph. Elmwood Omahans Move To Elmwood Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Nance and sons Gregory and Bradley of Omaha are moving here to live in the former Mrs. Coon Wade place. Gregory has start ed to school in the first grade. Mrs. Nance is the former Clara Lon, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Long. Her sister, Mrs. Di hel of Louisville helped her in ! papering the rooms here. Kiirfwood Mrs. Jackie Harrison Achert ! was the soloist at the Methodist ! church Sunday. She is the ' school music instructor. Bul!erv Only Bruises Through Armored Vest Sgt. Raymond F. Chenette's bullet-proof vest soaked up a burp-gun slug during fighting in Korea and thus only bruised instead of punctured, the sergeant lives to fight another day. Pointing to the bullet hole. Sergeant Chenette said he also took five shrapnel bits out of the vest after taking it off. '"Kr;- w f - IJlLt I r.imwoou VV.S.C.S. Meets I Here Recently j October meeting of the W. S. ! C. S. at the Methodist church ! was held on the tenth. The theme was Prayer and Self De nial. Devotional chairman Mrs. Joy Miller had charge. She was assisted by Mrs. Fred Buell. Mrs. Chas. Marshall conducted de votions. An offering was received for missions. Nehawka By Mrs. F. O. Sand I rn PLATTSMOUTH. NEBRASKA. SETHI -WEEKLY JOURNAt. ! Thursday, October 23, 1952 rfrv:.... PAGE FIVE Mrs. Clarence social chairman. Bucknell was mm the man (Your Greyhound Agent) MORE PEOPLE TRAVEL BY GREYHOUND THAN BY ANY OTHER TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM, About 200 million passengers took intercity trips by Greyhound last year millions more than by any other transportation system. Drop in and see your nearest Greyhound agent he'll explain to you why Grey hound is today's best buy in travel, at these low prices: one One Way TOi Way Oklahoma City 9.55 TO: San Francisco . .33.C9 Los Angeles ....33.60 Seattle, Wash. .32.70 (plus tax Hotel riattsnioutti San Antonio ...18.00 Chicago. Ill 10.05 Miami. Fla 30.80 (plus tax) Phone 3200 GREYHOUND BUS DEPOT Weisheits Are Hosts To Family Mr. and Mrs. Fred Weisheit and family entertained Mrs. Weisheit's mother, sisters and nieces and their families at a wiener roast on Sunday evening at their home. Those present were Mrs. Mary Lau and Ella of Murdock, . Mr. and Mrs. Carl Kupke of Greenwood, Mr. and Mrs. George Kraft of Louisville. Mr. and Mrs. Freeman Hasse of Ashland, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bednav of Omaha. Miss Anna Lau of Plattsmouth, and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Probst of Syra cuse. t,nnwoo5 Past Matrons Elect Officers Thursday, October 16, 25 Past Matrons met at the home of Mrs. Frank Buell for a one o'clock luncheon. Later in the day they had a business meet ing and elected the following officers: Mrs. B. E. Sumner, president; Mrs. Emily Gonzales, vice president; Mrs. Christine Bucknell, treasurer and secre tary. Then followed the initia tion of Past Matron, Mrs. Hazel Hemke. Out of town members were Mrs. Hattie Kupke, Grand Junction, Iowa. Mrs. Edith Jumper, Ashland, Mrs. Hazel Kaczmark, Memphis, Mrs. Edna Neely and Mrs. Pearl bhreve. Lincoln, Mrs. Audrey Stroemer and Mrs. Clara Edwards, Alvo, and Mrs. Pearl Adams, Eagle. Elmwood Inspiration Hour Is Held Saturday A large group of students and friends of College View led in an "Inspiration Hour" and were in attendance at the meeting at the Legion hall on Saturday aft ernoon. Gordon Dormancy lead the singing and the program. He also sang a solo as did a young Mrs. Glen Kuhn Thursday evening supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Carnicle were Mrs. S. F. Mor ris and Mrs. Ronald Hostetter, Karen and Ronnie. Mrs. Gien Thiessen spent from Wednesday until Sunday evening at Fremont with Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lackev and fam ily. Mrs. J. C. Streight was a Thursday overnight guest of Mrs. R. L. Davis and boys at Lincoln. Mr. and Mrs. V. D. Livers spent Friday in Lincoln. lady. There was a children's story interesting to all. a candle lighting eArcise and a flute solo. The talk on - Through the Eyes of Love"' was given by Eld er A. V. Wallace Camphf. Miss Lillie Muenchau went to Ciark'Eushr.ell sp the heme of her brother, Bert Clarkston. Nebr., Muenchau near Eagle on Fri day evening. From there she started on Sunday for a bus trip to Pennsylvania. She has eight cousins and other relatives in that state. Elmwood Hunters Join In Pheasant Search Among the pheasant hunters the latter part of the week were the three Drake brothers. Oli ver. Arthur and John, Keith Drake and Leland Groves. The five joined some friends until : 5?an Y1 the party was 25 or 30 all told. ?.aT-uraa5 Mrs. Roy Chriswisser and Mrs. i James Chriswisser called at the j home of their sister, Mrs. Mabel i Wolfe of Union Thursday aft ernoon. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Chriswisser were dinner guests at the James Chriswisser home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Camp bell, Bennett, Colo., called re cently at the home of Mrs. Em ma Chriswisser. Mrs. Roy Harshman is a pa tient at Brown hospital in Ne braska City. Her daughter, Mrs. Roy Splitt visited her Monday ' afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Splitt and family, Murray, called at the Roy Splitt home Sunday eve ning. E. Stanley of the Farmer's Grain Co., reports some new corn has arrived at the eleva tor and the test is 161 2 to 17. The soy bean harvest is almost completed and the crop yielded very well. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Snavely and Biily, Alvo, called at the home of Wm. Sioli,and Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Joerger Friday eve ning. TCeliawKa Dinner Honors Bergers Guests At Lincoln Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Berger were dinner guests Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Damkroeger in Lincoln. The dinner observed the October birthdays of Miss Alegra Wil kens and Mrs. Damkroeger. Ad ditional guests included Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wilkens. DeWitt; Mrs. Ella Jones, Clatonia; Mr. and Mrs. Larry Owens. Miss Peggy Bartunek, Mrs. Clora Finch of Lincoln. 1 Nehawka ! of Auburn called at the home of j Mr. and Mrs. George Poulos, ; Sr.. Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Byron Warlick j and Mickey of Holdrege were ! week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. ! I. A. Warlick. j Mrs. George Poulos, Jr., and j i Sharon of Auburn were guests Friday night and Saturday of j ! Mrs. George Kime while Mr. ! Poulos and Mr. Kime went pheasant hunting with a group of men. . Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Bryant j and daughter of Peru, former j Nehawka residents, called at the Neil Pierce, Bruce Stone and j Bob Jameson homes Sunday aft ernoon. Dorothy Sand, Peggy Sand, Atchison, Kan., were home for 1 the week end. Dorothy return Capitol News (.Continued from page 4) ary hike was Northwestern Bt-lVs third since 1947. Battling the increase were the Omaha Grain Exchange and the Nebraska Grain and Feed Deal ers Association. Still before the Commission is a similar application by the Lincoln Telephone & Telegraph Company. : ti.-t-nw-iit Girl On Birthday Gladys Nixon was 12 Thurs- t recently from Denver, where Mr and Mrs. Jess Fidler and i tiav- OctobeT 16. Her dinner 1 t Sundav at guests that evening were Mr. ; and Mrs. Allan Hansen ana t Paul, Mr. and Mrs. Ted Scheiss- j ler and daughter. Mr. and Mrs. j Ben at the Jenny home. I m,":r;, rf,suK I Rose Redden and Rosemary, Mr kuh'i were Mr n nri M Hmrv and Mrs- Gene Hicks and Tw'ila Kanu were Mr. ano Mis. Henry o . tt,-, Kuhiman and Kenneth Joyce Cunningham. Grandm other Mr. and Mrs. Emmitt Hicks, Mrs. Jesse Nichols and Jimmy A 1 t r ti . tt: .1... . j w"1'"41 ana dajghter of and Mrs. Neil Redden and son x .1 -1 j . Mrs. R. L. Davis and sons, Miss Christi Nebbia and Mrs. J. C. Streight accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Jess Fidier and girls Saturday evening to Omaha of Plattsmouth. Mrs. Ray G. Nixon's brother, Howard Redden, went to St. Louis to take his physical ex amination for army service. He she worked on the bloodmobile train for the Red Cross for a month in western Kansas and eastern Colorado. Eldon Bates is a surgery pa tient at St. Mary's hospital in Nebraska City. Bruce Jameson is spending his vacation this week during teacher's institute with his cousin, Jimmy Fish at Colum bus. Nebr. Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Pemberton. Peoria, 111., were guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Knabe Sunday and Monday. Walter R. Democrat for GOVERNOR '1 r a M ft -Vi . , 5 . f Will give sound, faithful and impartial "On the Job" service Wills who were married afternoon at Blair, no,- iwtobh ?n nr in hirrf snri i ?dt. jurs. vv uis was me ior- rfiviH fhon, n that Mch hart ; "r Norma Bushnell. a share. They hunted around Shickley and 6ng. Mrs. Leland Groves, Gary and Wanda, and Mrs. Freddie Groves where they attended the re- has been employed at the Ches ception of Mr. and Mrs. Sher- ter Stone farm. Mrs. Dora Richards and girls spent the week end in Spring field with relatives. Elaine and Elinor Fidler at tended the P. F. rally at Lin- drove to Mound City, Mo., on : coin Sunday afternoon and eve Saturday to visit the parents of i ning. 4' Chole rf TWO eabt. fa this Ford F-6! TTip 5-Str Cab or. at alieht extra enst, the o-Siar txiEA ishownj. J i " ""'""-- miMiJ1" 8 Uf is mk rZ 1 the latter, the Miller family. Richard, Arthur and Siegfried i Ortlieb were here from Wabash j for a while on Saturday after- j nocn. Richard is now employ- ; ed by a construction company : in Weeping Water. He formerly : worked for a plumbing and i heating company of Murdock. ; Mr. and Mrs. Emery Brant j visited Amy and Frank Hoff--i man at Piainview a few days this month. They rode up with t Don Hoffman. I EimwooJ j Senior Fellowship ! Meets Thursday ! The senior fellowship group met at the Methodist church parlors on Thursday evening, i Rev. Peterson, the Bible class ! instructor at the school house ' for some weeks, was the speak- er cf the occasion. His sub- 1 ject was Family Relationship. ; Dr. and Mrs. Story were pres- j ent from Lincoln. r::inw.xij 1 Apartment House Being Readied The new apartment house now being arranged by the ownr. Harry Linder, is being rapidly prepared for a nice home. There are three rooms made on the east side and two smaller closet rooms and the vest side is made into a com bination living and dining room. The carpenter is Mr. Wiseman of Greenwood. Now living here are the music teach er. Mrs. Achert and her hus band. Mr. Achert is a teacher Mr. and Mrs. George Sheldon, Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Pollard took a picnic lunch Sunday and en-' joyed an outing at Coryell park ne'ar Brock. Mrs. Walter Power had charge of the depot for three days the first of last week when Mr. "Power was working at Manley. Mrs. Lena Schlichtemeier re turned Sunday from Peterson, Iowa, where she visited her son, Tllic q r H fcsmilv for rn ifplr Tr called on Mr. and Mrs. Don r-n c,hi,,tDn,m0r ch fsmiiv came a week ago to spend the 45 BOARS - 25 GSLTS NEW BLOOD FOR OLD CUSTOMERS DUKOC BOAR and GILT Mr. and Mrs. Larry Carnicle Wayne Saturday Morris and evening. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Ewing were Friday supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Val Ewing and girls. Mrs. Tyler Nunn accompanied Mrs. Craig Molier to Omaha Tuesday. '-. Mr. and Mrs. Pleas Proctor of Ashland called on Mr. and Mrs. Glen Thiessen and Nancy Streight Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lackey of Fremont announce the birth of a son, Bruce Wade, on Oc tober 12. Mrs. Lackey was the former Donna Thiessen. They have two other sens. Mrs. Clyde Haswell called on her mother, Mrs. J. L. Carnicle Saturday morning. Mrs. Tom Carnicle has re turned to her home Sunday after spending several weeks with her family, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh O'Brien at Louisville. Mr. and Mrs. Larry Carnicle and family enjoyed a wiener roast and picnic supper Mon day evening with Mr. and Mrs. Joe Peterson at Linoma Beach. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Parrish and family had Sunday dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Herman Fur rer at Yutan. Mr. and Mrs. Dave Campbell visited with the Roy and Lester Prestcn families at Elmwood Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Merle Swartz of Lincoln called at the J. L. Carnicle home Sunday after day with his mother and she returned home with them. On Sunday she returned to Omaha with Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Rishel and her Robert met her there. Silas Munn, Avoca. called on George Poulos, Sr., Wednesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Bryan and daughter, Peru, Mr. and Mrs. George Poulos and Sharon D.A.R. Has First ! Meeting Recently Mrs. Ralph Keckler, regent, presided at the first meeting of the Jonathan-Cass chapter of the D. A. R. at the home of Mrs. Emily Olive at Weeping Water. J. J. Pollard of -Nehawka gave a paper on "The Story of the D. A. R."' Refreshments were served by Mrs. Olive and 'Mrs. Keckler. mm at the Farm THURSDAY, OCT. 30th at 1 P.M. Write or Phone For Catalog LEONARD C STOEHR Phone 8188 Plattsmouth Bert Powell, Auctioneer 1 ': it :t-;i ! . vt-rt iseim-n t i t i ( a i A i vf-rt i sem n t I'O: it i al vert isoincut There are 612 mechanical coal Avm'ability of eq'iifimppt. an-tmmitf and trim a !!utrati is depentiem on material uppl conditions. - So more wo-tomimieirs 5 Ford F-6 offers only choice of V-8 or Six in its field! 112 horsepower! Power Pilot economy! iHmrcnrGD ins tf v get si! the latest hits OB RECORDS 45 sr 78 rpa ' . .. one bit on this side PROOF that Ford F-6'( run for psnnist par mil! Ti proof's in this book of 3,500 Ford Trjrk onor' on-the-job mnning c. records! See the book today! There's as much as 800 lbs. less dead weight in the Ford F-6 than in the other leading 2-tonners. You can load up to that much more pay load, within the grosa vehicle weight of 16,000 lbs! j , The famous'239 cu. in. Truck V-8 is ribw upped to 106 h.p.! The Big Six is now 112 h,p.! Both with Power Pilot for most power from least gas! See ns today for a liberal deal on a new Ford F-6! M . FORD TRUCKING COSTS LESS F.D.A.F. ...FORD TRUCKS LAST LONGER! Using latest registration data oa 8,069.000 trucks, life insurance experts prove Fo.'i Iru;ks last tonge;l Washington Ave. Dial 2S7 Plattsmouth, Nebt of educational subjects in Whit- cleaning plants in operation at tier junior hi.h at Lincoln. Mrs. j U. S. bituminous coal mines. Harrison, mother of Mrs. Achert ; was here from Alliance for a j visit of a week recently. Wm. Marshall j Dies In California j Wm. A. Marshall, 45, of Ala- ! meda, Calif., passed away Oc- ; tober 1, 1952. He was a resi- ' dent of this county in his early . life, being born near Green- j wood. He lived near Ashland ! and Elmwood later. He is a . son cf Mrs. Bertha Oehlerkinr and a brother of Chas. Marshall, ; both of Elmwood. j I'lmwooii : Two Men Receive ; Fractured Arms i Edward Bornemeier. our his- j torian, had the ill luck to have ; an accident while helping his j son Chester cn the farm with the corn harvest. His riant j arm was broken above the wrist and left leg injured, keeping i him to his bed for a while. Another man having a broken j arm recently is Orlin Burnll. He was pouring water on his tractor when he fell. HitTTlV'uon Three Polio Patients Listed Improved The polio patients at Lincoln General hospital are all reported improving. They are Mrs. Guy Clements. Mrs. Ted Hall and Mrs. Kopc Brunkow Lomax. The little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. i Wm. Brunkow has been there longest. She lives near the hos-4 o t e o QAOAfi.P epoopcBBCtU' pital in Lincoln. ' - "sat m another hit oa this side hits on 52ch record cr.ly mm' Here is the official record FARM PRICES CORN . WHEAT HOGS . EGGS U? Under Republicans (January 1948) $2.45 2.81 26.63 .49 FARM COSTS DOWN DOWN Under Democrats (January 1952) $1.68 bushel 2.20 bushel 17.40 cwt. .41 dozen TRACTOR DISC HARROW CUTTER-BINDER. GRAIN DRILL . "Under Retrjbticani Under PemocraH (1948) (15S2) $1,630 $2,000 196 254 1,160 1,400 245 473 RESTGHE PAQf.l PROSPEHITY. ELECT ROMAN HiUSKA Qcpublican Candidate fc? Congress