city to fete 'four wayne 100 year boys to go lady …newspapers.cityofwayne.org/nebraska...

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ESTABLISHED 1884 City To Fete 100 Year Old Lady Monday Mrs, Jane Rogers Will Be Honored on Birthday Monday July 22 i ,I: 1,1 ,·:1,1 o , ,d ; '\ "", I, " " . , , " , . WAYNE, WAYNE COUNTY, NEBRASKA,. THURSDAY, JULy 18,193:> F ' f, ., ',", ' . ':" .. "., " ,,' " I 'Four Wayne INTRO,DUCING ,'i'" ;Q,ESt:!;x. TS No Regular Concert Friday Eve Says Reed Boys To Go J. T. Anderson' Of Wed!1elnlay's Races D W ' T J b New W: S. T. C.Head ' ue to the fact the ayne mum- First Race cipal band is playing for three 0 am oree" Purse $75 Five Furlongs days at the racing meet this week First-Praipie King, owned 'by thete will not be a concert Friday Sioux City stables. evening at Bressler park, it was '1'0 Attend National Scout. Second-My Model, owned by H, announced early this week by Ford Zibell. C, Reed, dlrecfor of the band, Get Together at Capitol Third-Bessie Banquet, nwned Regular programs' will be re· on Augu t 15 31 by 0, Hall, sumed, next week, Mr, Reed 5aid, ' ' S . , Second Race Pony Fans Place. Bets More Than $3,000 in Tuesday's Races of To live one hundred years and to Watehlnext week',s Nebraska Dem9· Purse $75 Five Furlongs "That Mr, and Mis, Wayne Citizen live them courageously and happily crat for the band's program, 1 Four Wayne boy scouts have reg- First-Polly Dear, owned by' W. "nd all the'little citizens' here as well , th t b M J R 'istered for the national j"mboree at E, Ball. as persoll5 coming from a distance lS e se Y l'S. ane ogers, I Washington, D.C., from August 15 to Second-Time Will" Tell, owned a,re interested in seeing good horse W111 celebrate her on; hundredth -- -- --- September 1. Those planning to at- by Culwell & Brown. and betting on them was borthday Monday, July 22, 'C S S tend are Tom Cavanaugh, Wayne Third-Dr, Twink, owned by E, shown late Tuesday afternoon when Mrs,.. faces the world Ops ay cram Ray Larson, Jr" and Guthrie, ' the Wayne horse racing as- and In answer to the que.;;bon Jimmy Kmg1ston. Several other boys Third,...Race opened, its· first three--da,y; If she IS glad that she h&3 lived a To Racing Touts have signified that they may attend, Purse $80 5% Furlongs tit h W hundred years an.s,vers smilingly, The J'amboree is in celebration of Firnt-Finger \Vave, owned by ued ate ayne "Why shouldn't I be glad? I've had I ___ ,all' groun S a p. ro. bl I b h h the twenty-fifth anniversary of Earl W, Fouts, Moi'e than' 1,200 hundred persons, Wayne Officers Put Bee On W S1Z0nd-p'NiCk J, owned by Mrs. of 't"hodm represented dap," Crew of Pickp··ockets·, ' nap, ! 81 a nueslons at en ed' the open- S} ha:-; not wo.rried about the de- a camp set up to accommodate 30,- Third-Honey-All, owned by ,V. mg Bets amounting to , He 'h Smooth Guys 000 scouts and leaders from every E. Ball. wcre made at the pari-mutuel A:" -she exprc:-;::.;es it .she' as part of the \vorld. Besides registrants Fourth Race windows and of thiR amount $232 pa:-:.'-{·d thmugh depressi()HS before." from the Unitf'd-- Stab's mOl'e than Purse $75 Five Furlongs was turned over the association to Altlwugh. :-h(' i:::; a. republican Showing a certain bunch of I twenty lldiwn, I)f EUl'ope have ac- First:.---Bald Eagle, owned by L. defray expenses of the meet <ldmlres: Roosevelt race track followers who scemmglyl cepted the inVItatIOn extended to F. Fairchild. All ather money pet at the :win .. : I !:'pI!e the fact he 16 a democrat. find time to bath show the gullible them and WIll send a representative Second-Bud ·Smith, owned by dows was redistributed among", (,randmother Rogers read,s a great how to make easy money on the troop, Above is a photograph of J, T, H. E, VanBuskirk, betters, Small were the winnings.o!. d€al, followmg closely world, events ponies' and pick their pockets the Nebraska boys will leave Omaha Anderson of Kearney who WaS elect- Third-Esther Wheel, owned by any one and consequently t,he,' m papeTS to whlch way to go. home, ,\Vayne county and and Lincoln.on August Vj by special ed last w,;ek by the state no;mal W. H. 'Vanscoy. losses were small too. W. E. Ball of, subscTI.be.o;. If:. also an ra. 10 \ city peace officeTs shl)ved the whole tram for ChIcago where they will board to fIll the vacany of preSIdent Fifth' Race Decatur had the heaviest winning .. fan" (licplaymg a taste III ch90s111g I kit and bOlKlle of them into a car tour the CIty, SW1m at Lmcoln park,l of Wayne State Teachers college Purse $90 Seven Furlongs string, r>f horses Tuesday with three programs whIch any young per50n I and ordered them to scram from lunch at the F,eld museum and visit made by the resiguation ill Dr, U, S, Claiming at $500 and one second in the twilight would be WlOe th follow. Revi:> Mr. i whence they came early Wednesday I many other places of interest. Anderson has been dean of men First-Arrow Heart, owned by Rrogram of six races. Br,oWT! of , rna a and _ a am-I morning. I ,They will leave C, hica,go in the, eve- . - Sioux City stables. . 'I In the first race for which a pu-e ro'ch are among her favorItes D t t t at' Kearney State Teachers conege ... d b . . .. Wayne racing officials looked seri- mng so as to arnve m e r01 a Second-Miss luontez, owne Y of $75 was paid, Norma Clark, ownt;d Mrs, has, always been, 9US when they told of how a bunch of nine o'clock the next morning, At De· for the last five years, He is 51 years R. Hoskin. qy R, C, Gilmore was first. Little healthy, part of whICh 1S probably i touts tried to conduct the local racing troit they will make an inspection old, married and has two children, Third-cBrooksie, owned by W. Bank, owned by R. B. McCroosen due to her careful and eat- i meet as they saw fit by going about tour ill mot9r plants, swim at Belle He will move to Wayne and a5sume E. Ball. placed secnnd and Dad's Pet, owiled ' mg, Her eyeSIght IS remarkably good, I giving bum tips to betters and picking Isle ,:,nd take a slghtseemg tour of his duties here shortly before the Sixth Race qy B. J, Sheldon was third. A $2 enabhng her to enJoy the eclIpse l&3t their pockebs while holding their in- the CIty, opening ,of the autumn term, Mr. PUNe $100 I Mile 70 Yards ticket on Norma. Clark paid $3.40. Monday mght and to read WIdely, I terest, Leaving Detroit they will go to Anderson receiVed his A, B. degree First-Blessefield, owned by W, 'l'here were six entries in this event Just years aglO, 03he toured There were six of them but one Niagara arriving here at Ne'Qraska---Wesleyan university in E. Ball. SInd the time was 1.71.1 for six .fur-- Iowa, ",,,bng places where she had I remains in the county jail on a bread day August 18, The entIre Second-McLeay, owned by W. langs, formerly IlVed, She has, con-I and water diet with court costs of ?elegatlOn wlll atte!,d churCh, from the Univer5ity of Southern H, Vanscoy, Three, owned by W, E, Ball, .wori flJ1ed to her wheel chan SInce she I more than five dollars to pay when mg to theIr respective denommatIons, California in 1933. Third-Empress Mother, owned the second race and a purse ot. ,75 fell and broke her hip four years he decides to say nuff, This individu· following which a special tour will by H, Wells. ",as paid. Flying Cloud, owned by B. ago,. 1 al went by the name of W. be ma?e of wc;mder spots. K:irby, placed second and Ju,nior Mrs, Rogers was born in New! Sheriff James H. Pile brought h,m returnmg to thplr tram m order to Wayne 4-H Clubs Seth, owned by Mrs, W, T, Hess, York. Her father owned a little st9re in to see County Judge J, M, Cherry leave for West Point at 5 p. m, was third, Thjl time in this race ,'WIIS' at W""t Farms, a village then twelve I early Wednesday morning" Johnson At West Po!nt, the scouts ",-it,1 in- A t' t M ' t 1 :03.9 for five furlongs. : mile<; from the New York city halLlcouldn'tbe mterestedm paymg a fme speet the Umted States mlhtaryl C lye a ee Norfolk Lawy" er Joe Krieger, owned by Mrs. J." While still a child, Mrs, Rogers movec:l'I' for intoxication even though he had academy ,in morning in order to reach ___ ,Morin, was something of a surprise with her family to Fordham, N, y, money-hence the staff of life and Weehawken, N, J,. early and take P sses Su'nday in the third race when he won 'in" There she attended Fardham uni- i Adam's ale was decided until he sees an excursion for a trip doW1l the I Ten Wayne Members,. Go a '1 :10,9 in an eve\1t of'five IInd"Ql)e- versity where she met the man who the advantage of freedom, Hudson past Ell,s Island, Statue ill To Club Camp At half furlongs. BQney All, own'ld later became her husband. He 'was I That Wayne races will be conduct- Liberty' and Governor's Island then I ' , 'W.E; ,Ball was second"Jlll1l cilidy's teaching in th" university, They: ed as clean as possible has been the' up the East River &.nd completing an , Crystall:.a1te Funeral 'Services For FJ:ank Lindy, owned by Perry Reed, ,was were married in 1854 and four I aim of local officials, Even though entire circuit of lIanhattan Island, ' -' -- A W Ii rf lk third. A purse of' $80 was up on this years later they moved to Wheat- i they had to giye these hoodlums a fill They ,will have dinne! in Battery./ Wayne county had a good attend· amEn', 0 0, eYeIlt. . land, Iowa, which town was of gas to get rod of them, they at least Park m New York (Aty., ,ance and made a good showing at the Are Tuesday Theile were eight entries in H,e named, she says, not because of I feel that Gome 0f the hce have been After dTfiner, the delegatIon wdl i 4-H club camp at. lake, July fourth race, for ,which there WA3, an the marvelnus wheat fields surround· exterminated, take the subway to the N, B. C'I 8 to 10 $80 purse, BleSG!lfield, owned by 'W. ing it but for president Buchanan's I' Other,s having designs upon chane· studios where they will attend an N, I Jo Martin, Viole,t Wade, Frank A, Warner, well known Nor- E. Ball won In 1:17, True Book, home tOWI' of Wheatland, Pa, es of takmg Wayne race fans a, B, C. and tour plant, Marian Frahm, Leona Mer er , Betty folk attorney, died Sunday evening owned by John Miller was second'and When she was 39, her husband rode m,',ght well beware of the httle I After th,s ,pro!?"am they WIll entram Gray, Muriel Sydow, Dorotl'! Baird, in the sanitarium at Norfolk follow- Dr, Louis Hammen owned by the died leaving her with ::;ix children all mIlItIa was proven after the I for Atlantic Ctty. ,Kenneth Baird Gean Baird and ing a lingering illneb'G thought to be Derby stables was third. of she .educated. Three of her; first day didn't take long to mm,ter. The day at Atlantic City will be II Dorothea Bartlett attended frop1 due to amoebic dysentery which it is In the fifth race for which there children, Mr-s. J. G. Mines of Wayne, I spent l)n the beacJ:t and at the board \VaYHe c')unty and the group ""as in believed he clJntracted while he and was a pUl"<Se of $90, with whom she has lived since 1925, I St e Worth I walk shops, Late In the afternoon of' charge of Mrs, Anne Mrs, Warner were attending the owned by H, Nellor, won the six lur- Mrs, Clara Dunham of Wessington,' ress s I August 20, they wil! leave for Wa,h· \ Instruction in super;isj'm was fur- world's fair in Chicago in 1933, longs in 1 :16,2. Finger Wave, o.wned Springs,. S, D" and H. S., Rug, ers of! Of L d B k mgton where the Jamboree site IS: nished by Ralph Copenila"er, C, E. Mr, Warner was a leader not only by Earl W, Fouts woo second and O till I an an I located R t M M N 1 \" d A' L' Sweetest Thing, owned by W. J. Hill:-;bor0, regon, are S l\'lng. I I·'. i . oscnqUIs, r5 .. alY .... e son, ; n,?e- in local an state merlcan eglOn Jenkinson, was-third. A two dollar One of Mrs, Rogers' early child·. The next ten days w,1I be spent In: Ime Touchen and 0, b, Bare o. LIn' activities but in the national legion ticket on LeKaronga paid $11.20; hood recollections is that of Edgar: where speCial I c?ln. Mr. Jones, ,extenSIC',:1 as well. He was also prominently The sixh race was one of the Allen Poe, the famous poet, who lived, A, S, Goss Speaks At Farm I tOUl'" of the capitol and .other gIst from Washmgto',. 11, C" also identified in activities of the demo- sportiest these eyes have yet 5een, f01" a time at Fordham. Mrs. Roge!'s: P' , t W t P . t I sI?·hts and. vanOU'3 camping Mr. Bare Wlt:h nature cratic party in this part o.f the state. Six good horses were entered in; this remember:-; that he sat directly In I, lcnlC a es Oln WJll be enjoyed by the boys. Fnday mstIuctlOn. . Besl'des his widow, he is survived P II D I ' h 'II Of th h d d I b event for a purse of $100, a year, front of her in church. She say" on Sunday evemng, August 30,. e WI. e one un re ('ne c u r:n em - by his father, E. C. Warner of War- owned by W. E. Ball, woo first to he was: a very handsome man WIth I I leave fQr home arnv1l1g m LIneol!l bers .present at the camp Bonme Jo nerville, and one sister, Mrs. Marilla 1 d d dark brown eyes which immediately! --- t or September 1. Martlll was f)Pt' of -tile four W. Dale of Norfolk. cover the mi es an seventy s, ',mpl'ess·ed one, HI's home I'n Fordham I Sl)eaking before a farm audience I ------ best carnpern. ,Mun€l Sydow, llad one doing it in 1 :49.7. Empress MOi"uer . f th Itt II t t th Funeral services were conducted owned by H, W, We1l5, WR&" second only a short distance froz:t where! of 8-')00 picnickers at the p' L d . 0 e arges mse.c co ec JOlI:,; a e Tuesday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the and Elizabeth .S, owned by DoOn she Jived, She recalls that In <Ile county faIrgrounds at West Pomt,· loneer a y , camp. First Presbyterian church by the Thomsen, wa.< third, A two dollar end of the hou5e was a gorgeous1y I Sunday, A. S. Goss. Washington, I ' n' S d I, E, very one came. .well sun Rev, D, A, Dickey. Burial was made t' k t P II D 'd 't wn pa inted picture of a raven, I, C, land bank comnussloner, termed t, he I les un ay,' bUlned,and well s,alos, tIC,\ WIth a,very IC e on a year pal ISO er d t d t . h d V in Hill cem_etery at N or- $8 60 It is hoped that all of Mrs. Rogers'; Federal Land system somet.hmg I goo . an I 1::; ope. ,ayne folk. Russell Bartels, Wayne attorney;, . entered in the first race h·ld e and other relatives will be "worth preservmg and worth flght- (COUllty WIll have even II lalge r rep- tt d d th vi e Tuesday were: Dad's Pet,' Ethel the celebration planne.d' ing for," , , Mrs. Mrury Tillson Buried, resentation a en e e ser c s, T, Belle Lee, Norma Clark, NebrasJ<a on her birthday not only by the faml' II Mr, Goss was, the prInCIpal speak- I Wednesday at Winside I Queen, and Little Hank, Participants . ly but by the cIty of Wayne, er at a farmers poemc sponsored by I ' MISS Grace Rocke a 1d M, J.. Flack Leo Joseph Draws 30 in the second race were Arehaist, The Wayne band will glVe a con- i 16 natIOnal farm loan, as'3ociations, Ce,metery I will be in Wayne on 'Vednest!ay, Au· Days for Money Theft Junior Seth, Bonnie Lee, Jim Wing, cert for her and varIOUS addresses I and two productIOn credlt aSSOCIatlOns I ___ I gust 7 for. 4-H chjo J. S. Miller, Corsican, Flying Wlll be presented, Grandmother Rog-, of northeast Nebraska to, c 7 1ebrate! Mrs, Mary Tillson, pioneer busi. day, On th,s day 4·H dub WIll ---, and Three, Eligibles w!,re,Baby Faee pn; WIll be at home to be· I the growth of the aSSOCIatIOn at 1 ness of two days, Mrs, Tillson was 78 have or mare tean,l, gWlllg dem· Leo Jnsepp. plea'!ed guIlty MiS'S Nobody. and , tween the hours of seven and ,:une on I Dodge, Neb" to a $10,000,000 mst!· I home Sunday evenmg, July 14, 1925, I o!,strahons and cllgh explar,a· ul',day mornmg In JustIce D. p, MIII- Horses takIng part m the thIrd the afternoon and in the evemng be-I tutlOn, the larg€'3t m the Umted I of a heart attack following an ill. I lIon 9f some partIcula' ph.'e ,f theIr er (, court to theft of $33 fr?m A, L. race were: Honey All, Colonel Lee, tween the h0Ml's of seven and nine I States, • • I n€'3S of wo days. Mrs, Tillson was 78 club work, M' , .' !,!urton, was sen,te!,ced to thlrty days Joe Krieger, Lindy, Gold Monday. All of her friends are m-I As land bank commiSSIoner, Mr' l years, 6 months and 10 da S olrl Mr. Flack and . IS, \\1.1 m the county Jall B;nd. ordered to Sauce, Panout, The FIrst, J. Selby and vlted t.o drop in for a Vi<Slt at these I GOSti I)perations of the I Funeral serV1ces were held -\v ednes- these .teams ll1, hell' make two fold restItuti0t:t., Burton, e1igibles B. B. and San hour8 and to wlo.::.h her happy returns I nation's twelve Federal Land banks d He t th 'I k f I rlemonstratIOl1S and C)c 1 rrtlOn'3 wlll be who IS employed at LOUie!=i Motor Flo CompetItIOn In the fourth race ()f thE> day. ' : and has charge of the (/commiso;;lOner" I of made of team'3 to gJ\e company,. had .hung up B pair of I of Nick J, Dr. L?uis fund from which flrst and s;econd chard In charge. Jean Boyd rendered bons at the county falr.( I In WhICh Was--a----w:m 1et c?n-I men, Sugar Bowl, Blessefleld, Ml<::S Fig1 res In Aocident I mOrtgage" 0tIl farm land are made I a vocal selcct1011. Interment follo,"eu --- 'I tammg t,he money. On dlscovermg I Coral, Mona, True Book and Adolia. drIven by A. E Pten- through the land banks. I In Pleasant VIew cemetery. Pallb€ar- I A. 4-H club judging .5'clv)t11 for m- I hm loss, Burtan reported the matter I A. . . . tlce of \Vmslde and vIctor K-eIL.trup Pl'ecpdlT1g Mr Goss on the }wf)-I el:-; were Henry Trautwem, Dr. T. c.:tructIon in live stock and cOf)king to County Shenff JaI1)ef\ H. Pile, who! Fifth race parbclpants were: Le- ()f \Vavne figured In a colhsiOn at l glam was n P Hogan. preSIdent of ( 1\cdy Helman Fleer Dave Leary was held at tlw fall' gro.unds :tlrested .Joseph . .Joseph had been em-I Kalonga, Ml1to.n Moore, McLea.y F, Fl1,,,t Sherman streets late Sun- ihf' Fed€ral Land bank of Omaha. G. A Jay "-'llson, C. :8' 111 \Vayne on Wedm.""duy, .flJly 17. Motor compa Q ;- He: BJily Goldc"!l' Sweetest Heart, da\ aftf'rnoon Keli::,t1 ill1 W::l,.',> dl''IV-:vI1 Hogan -:tre-"sed the lmportance Bensh00f and Needham Classes in hogs, oe"'f ('attie, dUll v I \\as su:-,pe( ted o.f the theft wh n. he Marvel, Prmce Peacoc.k and mg ea"t on Fil-st street and Prrntlce of reo;pol1'"lblllty on thtt part of Na- 1 1 Mary Rosa Walker born (attle and horses were furnuihed for dlimppearpd at about the time I \""Iave. Hasty Dude was ehgtble. v.a" drlv,ng bouth on Sherman when i tIonal L0an rnem-i January 4, i857 at Harbor;:' Creek, the am mal husbandry and In-, the money was mIssed. who Horses taking part in the sixth race the a(Clrient occured Prentlce was bers . Pa. At the age of nme years she "'tIuction m animal hu",handry iudg- was on parole from a thl1'ty day I were: Empress Mother, Polly Di:ar, taken to a local hospItal where he IS I 'The <.;oundness of the entire land II moved WIth her parents to Kansas mg Were .given by l\V. fOl- sentence Impo.tied In c')urt Elizabeth S, Belle Mystery, now from mInor 1 bank system depends the s:ound- where she resided until 1879. She was man, extension .animal husbandman I s?me tIme ago for jumpIng a board let and Boiling. --- and shock. Kellstrup was umnJured' l ness of the local aS6o,clatlOn. And the umted in marriage to Joseph Wilham flom the exten510n .. .,cr'lce at Lm-I bl}1. HIS pa'role was revoked and For the greater part the Wayno Prentice's car was somewhat dam-j soundness of associatil)n. depends THIson at Capioma, Kas., on January' coIn.. .. tWIll ""crve that a.s soon as e racing is being manned by -ner-- aged, ,on the responslblhty of the mdlVl(h, i 23 1879. I Mrs, JessIe Green ga.ve Instructl"RS completes the one lust gwen, sons living m Wayne or Wayne coun- "::============== 'I al members who are ,ti,e borrowers,'" Mr and'Mr5 Tills9n moved to Ill. to the girls i11 baked foods judging I ty, The judges are Gus Anderson and Mr Hogan said, , i lllOlS 'where resided untIl 18&4, as well at.< considerable instruction" Newberry Gets Year Henry Langenberg ,of Hoskins, WaI- I Other speakers mcluded Allen G, In that year they moved to NorthSIde: I.. lace Ring ill. WakefIeld, Charles Mey- I Burke of Bancroft, fonnel' Gpeaker I where Mr, was engaged in: Ley-Arm.wong I Far of Robbenes er, Paul Baler and Walfo!d Carlson Tn THE CITIZENRY OF WAYNE: of the Nebraska house of I the lumber business. Mr. Tillson died R. W. Ley announced the engage-I --- ! of Schulthles, m?u.nt.. I tIveR, and Gerald E. Lyo!,s, geD;e:t: al i twelve years ago and Mrs. TiJI"on: ment and approaching marriage of I Verne and Wilson Newberry. who. l ed on hIG. bea.utlfu) white !lding of the Farm CredIt AdmlnIs- wa, the last of the North,ide ,ett. his daughter, MarjOl'le, to RIchard confessed last Wednesday evening to horse wearong a umform acts, In I of 9maha, Judge Fred A, lIeN, I Armstrong, 30n of Mr, and Mrs, I County Sheriff James H. 10 a I capacity of escort to the startrng l!ne I Wnght, assIstant general counsel, of I Mrs, Tillson was in business in Harry Armstrong of Lincoln, TheTsenes of breakJinS'; were <;entenced \ and starter:s-helpero Races are bemg the was 11?aster of. Winside for -the past thirly-siv years. I wedding wil take place August 23 at Thursday morning to a year in the started by. C. W .. Tague and as'-sist- anmversary, I 11ereby proclaim that The kt POlnt mUnICIpal band She ll1')vl'd here when the village OI I the Ley hO'me in Wayne. I r.,tate reformatory at Lincoln. Wil- ants of Klrkman, Iowa. \ ... a" a feature of the program. Games I Northside was the pres€nt MloSS Ley attended Stephens col- son Newberry was paroled to E. E. are familiar with the horse racmg Day, and that thel men and women \ an_d. thA were site of Winside and operates a r€'"".:i- I lege at Columbia Mo. for one ycar.) Gailey on gal)d behavior due to the I game and get the horses awa.y to an o.f Wayne city, by! 4lisplaying flags I erYlse Y h ame son, 1!rt taurant for tn years prior to, ope rat- . She was gradua'ted fram the Um- I fact that he had been involved in but even' start. - I and by courteSIes, pay 'ci°¥lnt y of t A f fIve I ing the Commercla1 hotel up untl- vel",ity of Nebraska whe,e she joined one of the escapades, . A more colorf\,1 appearance is add- 'I fItting tribute to "4e who has Jived : b 'M";, the tin: e of death, I Alph,,; Pi sOl'onty, She has" Places by Verne I to the meet when Ford C. I h d II d H It M.' d M 0 y F' 1 She IS survlVed by tb.ree daughtpI s, been In relIef work for the past one .Jhclude IWmbl'echt's soft drIng pa1'- of the, Wayne mumc!pal I gracIOUS y, ie, n d I ogun 0 tln 1's, tto,' Ml'O, Muhel Holcomb, Eureka, Calif", and one half years in Lincoln, lor, Trautwein's I/lest market, both 'I b;ind, cal!s.- en,trles for each race to I ha5 attained an alo1'll rare Y equa CRabe and thell 10 chlldl'en, who llve M,s, E"ther Miller of Alliance and I Mr, Armstrong attended the Uni. I of which are at Winside, Craven's stal'tml;l' hne with a '!>ugle. The bv her fellowmen.1 near Wlsner. Mrs. Florence'Reinbrecht of Wimddp, versity of Nebraska and' is now em- hardware and Jacques cleaner and in thel: natty new and I MARTIN1L. I folks from 27 N"ehraska one son, Clarence of Sioux City, eJev-l ployed as accountant at Cut Bank'i the Wayne public library. It was pohshed instruments geant- Mayor of Wayne. .countle-5; and f!vp other states attend- en. gI andchlldren and a ho"t of Mont., with the Tarrant Oil com-lone of the library r"lbberies that ll[Lg In a sun !-_________ "-__ -'-', ed the gathermg. fnendR: ...... I pany _ \ s ... CJl Newberry took part. 1 (Contmued on SIX) II.' I

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ESTABLISHED 1884

City To Fete 100 Year Old Lady Monday

Mrs, Jane Rogers Will Be Honored on Birthday

Monday July 22

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WAYNE, WAYNE COUNTY, NEBRASKA,. THURSDAY, JULy 18,193:> F ' • f, ., ',", ' . ':" .. "., " ,,' " I

'Four Wayne INTRO,DUCING

,'i'"

;Q,ESt:!;x.TS No Regular Concert Friday Eve Says Reed Boys To Go J. T. Anderson' Of Wed!1elnlay's Races

D W ' T J b New W: S. T. C.Head ' ue to the fact the ayne mum- First Race cipal band is playing for three 0 am oree" Purse $75 Five Furlongs days at the racing meet this week First-Praipie King, owned 'by thete will not be a concert Friday Sioux City stables. evening at Bressler park, it was '1'0 Attend National Scout. Second-My Model, owned by H, announced early this week by Ford Zibell. C, Reed, dlrecfor of the band, Get Together at Capitol Third-Bessie Banquet, nwned

Regular programs' will be re· on Augu t 15 31 by 0, Hall, sumed, next week, Mr, Reed 5aid, ' ' S . , Second Race

Pony Fans Place. Bets More Than $3,000 in

Tuesday's Races

of

To live one hundred years and to Watehlnext week',s Nebraska Dem9· Purse $75 Five Furlongs "That Mr, and Mis, Wayne Citizen live them courageously and happily crat for the band's program, 1 Four Wayne boy scouts have reg- First-Polly Dear, owned by' W. "nd all the'little citizens' here as well , th t b M J R 'istered for the national j"mboree at E, Ball. as persoll5 coming from a distance lS e ~ecord se Y l'S. ane ogers, I Washington, D.C., from August 15 to Second-Time Will" Tell, owned a,re interested in seeing good horse ~ho W111 celebrate her on; hundredth ---~~~--- -- ~ ----- September 1. Those planning to at- by Culwell & Brown. r~ces and betting on them was borthday Monday, July 22, 'C S S tend are Tom Cavanaugh, Wayne Third-Dr, Twink, owned by E, shown late Tuesday afternoon when

Mrs, .. R9~ers faces the world Che~r_11 Ops ay cram M~Master, Ray Larson, Jr" and Guthrie, ' the Wayne conn~y horse racing as-~ully and In answer to the que.;;bon Jimmy Kmg1ston. Several other boys Third,...Race soci~tion opened, its· first three--da,y; If she IS glad that she h&3 lived a To Racing Touts have signified that they may attend, Purse $80 5% Furlongs tit h W hundred years an.s,vers smilingly, The J'amboree is in celebration of Firnt-Finger \Vave, owned by ~a.n-mu ued prto~am ate ayne "Why shouldn't I be glad? I've had I ___ ,all' groun S a ~ p. ro.

bl I b h h the twenty-fifth anniversary of Earl W, Fouts, Moi'e than' 1,200 hundred persons, ~~n t~~l~ :~~.';;~mb~;'~d ~~ ~?ha;~~ Wayne Officers Put Bee On ~~O~~il~gi~''t~~ec~;i~~d,,~~~~~iJ;n~:~ W S1Z0nd-p'NiCk J, owned by Mrs. ~ig.Id't ~un,dr?d of 't"hodm represented dap," Crew of Pickp··ockets·, ' nap, ! 81 a nueslons at en ed' the open-

S} ha:-; not wo.rried about the de- a camp set up to accommodate 30,- Third-Honey-All, owned by ,V. mg program~ Bets amounting to , He 'h Smooth Guys 000 scouts and leaders from every E. Ball. $3,2~0 wcre made at the pari-mutuel

prE'~'_;lOJ)' A:" -she exprc:-;::.;es it .she' as part of the \vorld. Besides registrants Fourth Race windows and of thiR amount $232 pa:-:.'-{·d thmugh depressi()HS before." from the Unitf'd-- Stab's mOl'e than Purse $75 Five Furlongs was turned over ~o the association to Altlwugh. :-h(' i:::; a. ~launc_h republican Showing a certain bunch of du~ky I twenty lldiwn, I)f EUl'ope have ac- First:.---Bald Eagle, owned by L. defray expenses of the meet • .:;:h~ <ldmlres: Pre~ldent· Roosevelt de~ race track followers who scemmglyl cepted the inVItatIOn extended to F. Fairchild. All ather money pet at the :win .. : I !:'pI!e the fact he 16 a democrat. find time to bath show the gullible them and WIll send a representative Second-Bud ·Smith, owned by dows was redistributed among", ~he

(,randmother Rogers read,s a great how to make easy money on the troop, Above is a photograph of J, T, H. E, VanBuskirk, betters, Small were the winnings.o!. d€al, followmg closely world, events ponies' and pick their pockets the Nebraska boys will leave Omaha Anderson of Kearney who WaS elect- Third-Esther Wheel, owned by any one bette~ and consequently t,he,' m thE'.numer0u~ papeTS to whlch d~e"1 way to go. home, ,\Vayne county and and Lincoln.on August Vj by special ed last w,;ek by the state no;mal W. H. 'Vanscoy. losses were small too. W. E. Ball of, subscTI.be.o;. S~e If:. also an ~rdent ra. 10 \ city peace officeTs shl)ved the whole tram for ChIcago where they will board to fIll the vacany of preSIdent Fifth' Race Decatur had the heaviest winning .. fan" (licplaymg a taste III ch90s111g I kit and bOlKlle of them into a car tour the CIty, SW1m at Lmcoln park,l of Wayne State Teachers college Purse $90 Seven Furlongs string, r>f horses Tuesday with three programs whIch any young per50n I and ordered them to scram from lunch at the F,eld museum and visit made by the resiguation ill Dr, U, S, Claiming at $500 ~irsts and one second in the twilight would be WlOe th follow. Jrh~ Revi:> Mr. i whence they came early Wednesday I many other places of interest. Co.M~: Anderson has been dean of men First-Arrow Heart, owned by Rrogram of six races. Br,oWT! of , rna a and _ a ~er am-I morning. I ,They will leave C, hica, go in the, eve- . - Sioux City stables. . 'I In the first race for which a pu-e ro'ch are among her favorItes D t t t at' Kearney State Teachers conege ... d b .~ . . .. Wayne racing officials looked seri- mng so as to arnve m e r01 a Second-Miss luontez, owne Y of $75 was paid, Norma Clark, ownt;d

Mrs, ~ogers has, always been, 9US when they told of how a bunch of nine o'clock the next morning, At De· for the last five years, He is 51 years R. Hoskin. qy R, C, Gilmore was first. Little healthy, part of whICh 1S probably i touts tried to conduct the local racing troit they will make an inspection old, married and has two children, Third-cBrooksie, owned by W. Bank, owned by R. B. McCroosen due to her careful and m~derate eat- i meet as they saw fit by going about tour ill mot9r plants, swim at Belle He will move to Wayne and a5sume E. Ball. placed secnnd and Dad's Pet, owiled ' mg, Her eyeSIght IS remarkably good, I giving bum tips to betters and picking Isle ,:,nd take a slghtseemg tour of his duties here shortly before the Sixth Race qy B. J, Sheldon was third. A $2 enabhng her to enJoy the eclIpse l&3t their pockebs while holding their in- the CIty, opening ,of the autumn term, Mr. PUNe $100 I Mile 70 Yards ticket on Norma. Clark paid $3.40. Monday mght and to read WIdely, I terest, Leaving Detroit they will go to Anderson receiVed his A, B. degree First-Blessefield, owned by W, 'l'here were six entries in this event

Just ~i~~ years aglO, 03he toured There were six of them but one Niagara ~alls, arriving here S~- at Ne'Qraska---Wesleyan university in E. Ball. SInd the time was 1.71.1 for six .fur--Iowa, ",,,bng places where she had I remains in the county jail on a bread day m~rmng! August 18, The entIre !~l~e~~~sr.: ~' f;~~ a~d ~~i;~,siir. Second-McLeay, owned by W. langs, formerly IlVed, She has, be~n con-I and water diet with court costs of ?elegatlOn wlll atte!,d churCh, ac~ord- from the Univer5ity of Southern H, Vanscoy, Three, owned by W, E, Ball, .wori flJ1ed to her wheel chan SInce she I more than five dollars to pay when mg to theIr respective denommatIons, California in 1933. Third-Empress Mother, owned the second race and a purse ot. ,75 fell and broke her hip four years he decides to say nuff, This individu· following which a special tour will by H, Wells. ",as paid. Flying Cloud, owned by B. ago,. 1 al went by the name of W. Johns~n. be ma?e of Nia~ara's. wc;mder spots. K:irby, placed second and Ju,nior

Mrs, Rogers was born in New! Sheriff James H. Pile brought h,m returnmg to thplr tram m order to Wayne 4-H Clubs Seth, owned by Mrs, W, T, Hess, York. Her father owned a little st9re in to see County Judge J, M, Cherry leave for West Point at 5 p. m, • was third, Thjl time in this race ,'WIIS' at W""t Farms, a village then twelve I early Wednesday morning" Johnson At West Po!nt, the scouts ",-it,1 in- A t' t M ' t 1 :03.9 for five furlongs. : mile<; from the New York city halLlcouldn'tbe mterestedm paymg a fme speet the Umted States mlhtaryl C lye a ee Norfolk Lawy" er Joe Krieger, owned by Mrs. J." While still a child, Mrs, Rogers movec:l'I' for intoxication even though he had academy ,in morning in order to reach ___ ,Morin, was something of a surprise with her family to Fordham, N, y, money-hence the staff of life and Weehawken, N, J,. early and take P sses Su'nday in the third race when he won 'in" There she attended Fardham uni- i Adam's ale was decided until he sees an excursion boa~ for a trip doW1l the I Ten Wayne Members,. Go a '1 :10,9 in an eve\1t of'five IInd"Ql)e-versity where she met the man who the advantage of freedom, Hudson past Ell,s Island, Statue ill To Club Camp At half furlongs. BQney All, own'ld b~ later became her husband. He 'was I That Wayne races will be conduct- Liberty' and Governor's Island then I ' , 'W.E; ,Ball was second"Jlll1l cilidy's teaching in th" university, They: ed as clean as possible has been the' up the East River &.nd completing an , Crystall:.a1te Funeral 'Services For FJ:ank Lindy, owned by Perry Reed, ,was were married in 1854 and four I aim of local officials, Even though entire circuit of lIanhattan Island, ' -' -- A W Ii rf lk third. A purse of' $80 was up on this years later they moved to Wheat- i they had to giye these hoodlums a fill They ,will have dinne! in Battery./ Wayne county had a good attend· • amEn', 0 0, eYeIlt. . land, Iowa, which town was of gas to get rod of them, they at least Park m New York (Aty., ,ance and made a good showing at the Are Tuesday Theile were eight entries in H,e named, she says, not because of I feel that Gome 0f the hce have been After dTfiner, the delegatIon wdl i 4-H club camp at. Cry~tal lake, July fourth race, for ,which there WA3, an the marvelnus wheat fields surround· exterminated, take the subway to the N, B. C'I 8 to 10 $80 purse, BleSG!lfield, owned by 'W. ing it but for president Buchanan's I' Other,s having designs upon chane· studios where they will attend an N, I Bonni~ Jo Martin, Viole,t Wade, Frank A, Warner, well known Nor- E. Ball won In 1:17, True Book, home tOWI' of Wheatland, Pa, es of takmg Wayne race fans ,:~r a, B, C. p~ogram and tour ~he plant, Marian Frahm, Leona Merer, Betty folk attorney, died Sunday evening owned by John Miller was second'and

When she was 39, her husband rode m,',ght well beware of the httle I After th,s ,pro!?"am they WIll entram Gray, Muriel Sydow, Dorotl'! Baird, in the sanitarium at Norfolk follow- Dr, Louis Hammen owned by the died leaving her with ::;ix children all mIlItIa wh1(~h was proven after the I for Atlantic Ctty. ,Kenneth Baird Gean Baird and ing a lingering illneb'G thought to be Derby stables was third. of ~hom she .educated. Three of her; first day didn't take long to mm,ter. The day at Atlantic City will be II Dorothea Bartlett attended frop1 due to amoebic dysentery which it is In the fifth race for which there children, Mr-s. J. G. Mines of Wayne, I spent l)n the beacJ:t and at the board \VaYHe c')unty and the group ""as in believed he clJntracted while he and was a pUl"<Se of $90, LeKar~nga;· with whom she has lived since 1925, I St e Worth I walk shops, Late In the afternoon of' charge of Mrs, Anne Walter~, Mrs, Warner were attending the owned by H, Nellor, won the six lur-Mrs, Clara Dunham of Wessington,' ress s I August 20, they wil! leave for Wa,h· \ Instruction in super;isj'm was fur- world's fair in Chicago in 1933, longs in 1 :16,2. Finger Wave, o.wned Springs,. S, D" and H. S., Rug, ers of! Of L d B k mgton where the Jamboree site IS: nished by Ralph Copenila"er, C, E. Mr, Warner was a leader not only by Earl W, Fouts woo second and

O till I an an I located R t M M N 1 \" d A' L' Sweetest Thing, owned by W. J. Hill:-;bor0, regon, are S l\'lng. I I·'. i . oscnqUIs, r5 .. alY .... e son, ; n,?e- in local an state merlcan eglOn Jenkinson, was-third. A two dollar One of Mrs, Rogers' early child·. The next ten days w,1I be spent In: Ime Touchen and 0, b, Bare o. LIn' activities but in the national legion ticket on LeKaronga paid $11.20;

hood recollections is that of Edgar: "Vashm~on where speCial prograJrn~, I c?ln. Mr. Jones, ,extenSIC',:1 en~om()lo- as well. He was also prominently The sixh race was one of the Allen Poe, the famous poet, who lived, A, S, Goss Speaks At Farm I tOUl'" of the capitol and .other ~eal'by; gIst from Washmgto',. 11, C" also identified in activities of the demo- sportiest these eyes have yet 5een, f01" a time at Fordham. Mrs. Roge!'s: P' , t W t P . t I sI?·hts and. vanOU'3 camping acttv~bes: ~ssl~ted. Mr. Bare Wlt:h nature ~turly cratic party in this part o.f the state. Six good horses were entered in; this remember:-; that he sat directly In I, lcnlC a es Oln WJll be enjoyed by the boys. Fnday mstIuctlOn. . Besl'des his widow, he is survived P II D

I ' h 'II Of th h d d I b event for a purse of $100, a year, front of her in church. She say" tl~at on Sunday evemng, August 30,. ~ e ~C?ut~ WI. e one un re ('ne c u r:nem- by his father, E. C. Warner of War- owned by W. E. Ball, woo first to he was: a very handsome man WIth I I leave fQr home arnv1l1g m LIneol!l bers .present at the camp Bonme Jo nerville, and one sister, Mrs. Marilla 1 d d dark brown eyes which immediately! --- t or Omab~ September 1. Martlll was ch9se~ f)Pt' of -tile four W. Dale of Norfolk. cover the mi es an seventy y~t s, ',mpl'ess·ed one, HI's home I'n Fordham I Sl)eaking before a farm audience I ------ best carnpern. ,Mun€l Sydow, llad one doing it in 1 :49.7. Empress MOi"uer

. f th Itt II t t th Funeral services were conducted owned by H, W, We1l5, WR&" second wa~ only a short distance froz:t where! of 8-')00 picnickers at the Cu~ng p' L d . 0 e arges mse.c co ec JOlI:,; a e Tuesday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the and Elizabeth .S, owned by DoOn she Jived, She recalls that In <Ile county faIrgrounds at West Pomt,· loneer a y , camp. First Presbyterian church by the Thomsen, wa.< third, A two dollar end of the hou5e was a gorgeous1y I Sunday, A. S. Goss. o~ Washington, D· I' n' S d I, E, very one came. ~~me- .well sun Rev, D, A, Dickey. Burial was made t' k t P II D 'd 't wn painted picture of a raven, I, C, land bank comnussloner, termed t, he I les un ay,' bUlned,and well s,alos, tIC,\ WIth a,very IC e on a year pal ISO er

d t d t . h d V in ~r03pect Hill cem_etery at N or- $8 60 It is hoped that all of Mrs. Rogers'; Federal Land b~nk system somet.hmg I goo . Im~ an I 1::; ope. ,ayne folk. Russell Bartels, Wayne attorney;, . Ho~ses entered in the first race

h·ld e and other relatives will be "worth preservmg and worth flght- (COUllty WIll have even II lalger rep- tt d d th vi e Tuesday were: Dad's Pet,' Ethel ~b;e ~nattend the celebration planne.d' ing for," ~ , , Mrs. Mrury Tillson Buried, resentation nex~, a en e e ser c s, T, Belle Lee, Norma Clark, NebrasJ<a on her birthday not only by the faml' II Mr, Goss was, the prInCIpal speak- I Wednesday at Winside I Queen, and Little Hank, Participants . ly but by the cIty of Wayne, er at a farmers poemc sponsored by I ' MISS Grace Rocke a 1d M, J.. Flack Leo Joseph Draws 30 in the second race were Arehaist,

The Wayne band will glVe a con- i 16 natIOnal farm loan, as'3ociations, Ce,metery I will be in Wayne on 'Vednest!ay, Au· Days for Money Theft Junior Seth, Bonnie Lee, Jim Wing, cert for her and varIOUS addresses I and two productIOn credlt aSSOCIatlOns I ___ I gust 7 for. 4-H chjo demonstI:~~tIOn J. S. Miller, Corsican, Flying Cl~ud Wlll be presented, Grandmother Rog-, of northeast Nebraska to, c71ebrate! Mrs, Mary Tillson, pioneer busi. day, On th,s day ea~h 4·H dub WIll ---, and Three, Eligibles w!,re,Baby Faee pn; WIll be at home to friend~ be· I the growth of the aSSOCIatIOn at 1 ness of two days, Mrs, Tillson was 78 have o~e or mare tean,l, gWlllg dem· Leo Jnsepp. w~o plea'!ed guIlty S~t- MiS'S Nobody. and Hesl~atlOn. , tween the hours of seven and ,:une on I Dodge, Neb" to a $10,000,000 mst!· I home Sunday evenmg, July 14, 1925, I o!,strahons and ~ tho~ cllgh explar,a· ul',day mornmg In JustIce D. p, MIII- Horses takIng part m the thIrd the afternoon and in the evemng be-I tutlOn, the larg€'3t m the Umted I of a heart attack following an ill. I lIon 9f some partIcula' ph.'e ,f theIr er (, court to theft of $33 fr?m A, L. race were: Honey All, Colonel Lee, tween the h0Ml's of seven and nine I States, • • I n€'3S of wo days. Mrs, Tillson was 78 club work, M' , .' !,!urton, was sen,te!,ced to thlrty days Joe Krieger, Cindy'~ Lindy, Gold Monday. All of her friends are m-I As land bank commiSSIoner, Mr'

l years, 6 months and 10 da S olrl Mr. Flack and . IS, Rock~ \\1.1 a~- m the county Jall B;nd. ordered to Sauce, Panout, The FIrst, J. Selby and

vlted t.o drop in for a Vi<Slt at these I GOSti ~upervIses I)perations of the I Funeral serV1ces were held -\v ednes- ~Ist these .teams ll1, ~~nl:()VJ ~g) hell' make two fold restItuti0t:t., Burton, e1igibles wer~. Col~ne~ B. B. and San hour8 and to wlo.::.h her happy returns I nation's twelve Federal Land banks d He t th 'I k f I rlemonstratIOl1S and C)c

1rrtlOn'3 wlll be who IS employed at LOUie!=i Motor Flo CompetItIOn In the fourth race ()f thE> day. ' : and has charge of the (/commiso;;lOner" I t~: haotn;·n.:~ ~r. ~e:,I;~nosc of r~~'~ made of team'3 to gJ\e ~h~m(l!1stra-: company,. had .hung up B pair of I con~isted of Nick J, Dr. L?uis Ha~~

fund from which flrst and s;econd chard In charge. Jean Boyd rendered bons at the county falr.( I trou~ers In WhICh Was--a----w:m1et c?n-I men, Sugar Bowl, Blessefleld, Ml<::S

Fig1 res In Aocident I mOrtgage" 0tIl farm land are made I a vocal selcct1011. Interment follo,"eu --- 'I tammg t,he money. On dlscovermg I Coral, Mona, True Book and Adolia. Automob~les drIven by A. E Pten- through the land banks. I In Pleasant VIew cemetery. Pallb€ar- I A. 4-H club judging .5'clv)t11 for m- I hm loss, Burtan reported the matter I A. . . .

tlce of \Vmslde and vIctor K-eIL.trup Pl'ecpdlT1g Mr Goss on the }wf)-I el:-; were Henry Trautwem, Dr. T. c.:tructIon in live stock and cOf)king to County Shenff JaI1)ef\ H. Pile, who! Fifth race parbclpants were: Le­()f \Vavne figured In a colhsiOn at l glam was n P Hogan. preSIdent of ( 1\cdy Helman Fleer Dave Leary ~udgmg was held at tlw fall' gro.unds :tlrested .Joseph . .Joseph had been em-I Kalonga, Ml1to.n Moore, McLea.y F, Fl1,,,t ~nd Sherman streets late Sun- ihf' Fed€ral Land bank of Omaha. G. A M~tt(>lstadt, Jay "-'llson, C. :8' 111 \Vayne on Wedm.""duy, .flJly 17. J)~oyed ~t ~,)ll1et-:-; Motor compaQ;- He: BJily Goldc"!l' Sweetest Heart, ~jttle da\ aftf'rnoon Keli::,t1 ill1 W::l,.',> dl''IV-:vI1 Hogan -:tre-"sed the lmportance Bensh00f and ~Charles Needham Classes in hogs, oe"'f ('attie, dUll v I \\as su:-,pe( ted o.f the theft wh n. he Marvel, Prmce Peacoc.k and ~11:1ger mg ea"t on Fil-st street and Prrntlce of reo;pol1'"lblllty on thtt part of Na- 11 Mary Rosa Walker wa'~ born (attle and horses were furnuihed for dlimppearpd at about the ~ame time I \""Iave. Hasty Dude was ehgtble. v.a" drlv,ng bouth on Sherman when i tIonal Fal~m L0an a,>~ociation rnem-i January 4, i857 at Harbor;:' Creek, the am mal husbandry cla~es. and In-, the money was mIssed. Jo~eph, who Horses taking part in the sixth race the a(Clrient occured Prentlce was bers . Pa. At the age of nme years she "'tIuction m animal hu",handry iudg- was on parole from a thl1'ty day I were: Empress Mother, Polly Di:ar, taken to a local hospItal where he IS I 'The <.;oundness of the entire land II moved WIth her parents to Kansas mg Were .given by l\V. \ValV~r fOl- sentence Impo.tied In co~nty c')urt Elizabeth S, Belle Mystery, Wrlst~ now recoverin~ from mInor ~nJUl'les 1 bank system depends ~p0"!l the s:ound- where she resided until 1879. She was man, extension .animal husbandman I s?me tIme ago for jumpIng a board let and Boiling. ---and shock. Kellstrup was umnJured' l ness of the local aS6o,clatlOn. And the umted in marriage to Joseph Wilham flom the exten510n .. .,cr'lce at Lm-I bl}1. HIS pa'role was revoked and ~e For the greater part the Wayno Prentice's car was somewhat dam-j soundness of t?~ associatil)n. depends THIson at Capioma, Kas., on January' coIn.. .. tWIll ""crve that R~n~nc~ a.s soon as e racing mee~ is being manned by -ner--aged, ,on the responslblhty of the mdlVl(h, i 23 1879. I Mrs, JessIe Green ga.ve Instructl"RS completes the one lust gwen, sons living m Wayne or Wayne coun-"::============== 'I al members who are ,ti,e borrowers,'" Mr and'Mr5 Tills9n moved to Ill. to the girls i11 baked foods judging I ty, The judges are Gus Anderson and ~ Mr Hogan said, , illlOlS 'where th~y resided untIl 18&4, as well at.< considerable instruction" Newberry Gets Year Henry Langenberg ,of Hoskins, WaI-

I Other speakers mcluded Allen G, In that year they moved to NorthSIde: I.. lace Ring ill. WakefIeld, Charles Mey-

I Burke of Bancroft, fonnel' Gpeaker I where Mr, Ti1~son was engaged in: Ley-Arm.wong I Far Se~les of Robbenes er, Paul Baler and Walfo!d Carlson

Tn THE CITIZENRY OF WAYNE:

of the Nebraska house of represe~a- I the lumber business. Mr. Tillson died R. W. Ley announced the engage-I --- ! of W8yn~. Warre~ Schulthles, m?u.nt.. I tIveR, and Gerald E. Lyo!,s, geD;e:t:al i twelve years ago and Mrs. TiJI"on: ment and approaching marriage of I Verne and Wilson Newberry. who. l ed on hIG. bea.utlfu) white !lding

d~~'~~~~fyS'th~rsT;:;t"y_!~d~ c~unsel of the Farm CredIt AdmlnIs- wa, the last of the North,ide ,ett. his daughter, MarjOl'le, to RIchard confessed last Wednesday evening to horse wearong a umform acts, In ~he I tIa~lon of 9maha, Judge Fred A, lIeN, I Armstrong, 30n of Mr, and Mrs, I County Sheriff James H. ~tle 10 a I capacity of escort to the startrng l!ne

~~:r~:~:!u:,,~r~~dnr~d1~ia~~~ey, I Wnght, assIstant general counsel, of I Mrs, Tillson was in business in Harry Armstrong of Lincoln, TheTsenes of breakJinS'; were <;entenced \ and starter:s-helpero Races are bemg the FC~ was 11?aster of. ~eremol1les. Winside for -the past thirly-siv years. I wedding wil take place August 23 at Thursday morning to a year in the started by. C. W .. Tague and as'-sist­

anmversary, I 11ereby proclaim that The kt POlnt mUnICIpal band She ll1')vl'd here when the village OI I the Ley hO'me in Wayne. I r.,tate reformatory at Lincoln. Wil- ants of Klrkman, Iowa. Th~se ~en (f~~atdre~~b~a:dm~~el.as~~ge;'~ \ ... a" a feature of the program. Games I Northside was moved~to the pres€nt MloSS Ley attended Stephens col- son Newberry was paroled to E. E. are familiar with the horse racmg Day, and that thel men and women \ an_d. r~ce~ fo~ thA c~~ldr~~ were ~up- site of Winside and operates a r€'"".:i- I lege at Columbia Mo. for one ycar.) Gailey on gal)d behavior due to the I game and get the horses awa.y to an o.f Wayne city, by! 4lisplaying flags I erYlse Y h • ame son, 1!rt taurant for tn years prior to, ope rat- . She was gradua'ted fram the Um- I fact that he had been involved in but even' start. - I and by indi~iduaL, courteSIes, pay 'ci°¥lnt

y ~gen~ of t~ek~mah, t A f fIve I ing the Commercla1 hotel up untl- vel",ity of Nebraska whe,e she joined one of the escapades, . A more colorf\,1 appearance is add- 'I

fItting tribute to "4e who has Jived : f~miry P~;::enrwas :wa~d~ds b 'M";, the tin:e of ~er death, I Alph,,; Omi~ron Pi sOl'onty, She has" Places eJ~tered by Verne ~ewberry I e~, to the meet when Ford C. !~!",d, I h d II d H It M.' d M 0 y F' 1 She IS survlVed by tb.ree daughtpI s, been In relIef work for the past one .Jhclude IWmbl'echt's soft drIng pa1'- d~Iector of the, Wayne mumc!pal I

gracIOUS y, ~s i:f~ve ie, n d I ogun 0 ~', tln 1's, tto,' Ml'O, Muhel Holcomb, Eureka, Calif", and one half years in Lincoln, lor, Trautwein's I/lest market, both 'I b;ind, cal!s.- en,trles for each race to I ha5 attained an alo1'll rare Y equa CRabe and thell 10 chlldl'en, who llve M,s, E"ther Miller of Alliance and I Mr, Armstrong attended the Uni. I of which are at Winside, Craven's t~e stal'tml;l' hne with a '!>ugle. The bv her fellowmen.1 near Wlsner. Mrs. Florence'Reinbrecht of Wimddp, versity of Nebraska and' is now em- hardware and Jacques cleaner and b!p.~d in thel: natty new ,~tllfo] and I

MARTIN1L. RrNG~, I Fa~m folks from 27 N"ehraska one son, Clarence of Sioux City, eJev-l ployed as accountant at Cut Bank'i the Wayne public library. It was inl~rlg~tIY pohshed instruments geant-Mayor of Wayne. .countle-5; and f!vp other states attend- en. gI andchlldren and a ho"t of Mont., with the Tarrant Oil com-lone of the library r"lbberies that ~Vll- ll[Lg In a la~e aft~rn.oon sun .pla~ ~

!-_________ "-__ -'-', ed the gathermg. fnendR: ...... I pany _ \ s ... CJl Newberry took part. 1 (Contmued on ~age SIX)

II.' I

t~~==~~~~~~~~~~I~"~BaI>Y:;:~K;'caes=~~~'§Th~' e~hoo:!t:eSseII~¥se~Md§~1 !;&p~,~, ~.~Sl:x~~~' ':!::~of~tJie~~eCOkiJIa'=-:' ==e:;I:Ub:r=An::=eeZ=Iy~':IDOI'Bl~~IISE~b.,.=~Ida8t=7:was=~tor=" ~nhicle::±:. ~"=hed~u1~I!S.~~!!!!:!!===~eetioDs:=· =~m::ust=~be~,~ti~Ied.7.OD~. tIUD:;:· ,~d&te:~.!11 "" WIlfSIDE '\ two-e_ luncheon at tables air :responded tG roll ..u with "TIllie giV<01 at tile golf coarse S~,. in The COwItr BQard will meet .~ a 'WItness my hand and Mal thLi

tractively deco:>rated with, bouquets Savers' In Cooking.~ Baking powder honor of Mrs. Eimer Henry of. Board of-:SquallzatiO'l1 on July 23, i2th cl3y of July, A. D. 19S1i. By Mrs. O. M. D .. """porl of garden flowers. Next meeting will biscuits were judged as follow.: Dod&'e City,' Kas. About eight ladies 1935,. to eouider any complaint.. in (SEAL), Bartha Borrea,

. 'be Wednesday, AUgust' 14, with Mrs. Maryan'lla 'Reinbreclll:J,/firat; Mae were .pr'll"!nt. ' ret ........ tG such assessment. All ob- July 18, . 193i , Clerk. : , . . Wm. Fleer and Mrs. Lena Bojens. Juracek, seeond, aDdlt'uth Seiunode, Mr. and Mrs. Homer Erickson and """"""'''''''''''''''';'''''!!!!!!I_ .. "",,,,,,,!!!!!!!!!!!!,,,,,,,,,,,~el;;'·'''';''''''''''''''''_''''_~'' "'_""_~'I"""""""_"'_"'_""_"_"'-"'~"'''''':::S';''''''I' . Wm. McKmley, Clarence paVIa and I Mrs. Lena Parker of Colfax, Wis., third. At tile close of the afternoon children left, SlII1day for their h .......

JIm Selde':t fi~"t1sc:.;eiaf.t last left laM Thursday for Yutlln after the hosteSS 'served. in Califotnia.' ' Thursday near I a week's visit with her father, John 'I The W<lIlUln's F<>reign MlsSlonary' Marvt, ·n. Nuerber~ and Mr. ,and StantQn. . Dimm.~l, and her brother, F. J. Dim- society '!net Friday afternOon for their Mrs. Bob Nuernberger of Linca\n

Mr .. and Mrs. G: A. Mittelst,p(\t I mel. Mi-s. Parker will visit her sister,1 regular meeting with Mrs. George visited in the home of their parants were dinner guests m the J. M. Std-

I M.s. Wm. Fuscher, at Yutan. <, Lewis as hostess. Thirteen members Saturday and Sunday;

h~n home at Wayne on FrIday eve- Mrs. Iver Anderson and daughters, and the followin guest:' were pres- Mrs. Waite, r CarIBon ~terta. ined at nmg. W Miss Iva and Mi5s Bonnie, of near ent: Mrs. W. B. LewiS, Mrs. Ben an afternOOl1 luncheon m hon'>r of

Mn; .. Lena p",ker of C~>lfax, IS., , Hoskins visited in the Mrs. El:lck Lewis, Mrs. G. M. Golder and MI s Mrs. Elmer, Henry of DOdge City, J?hn Dimmel and r. J. Dlmmel w~re I Stamm home loot Tuesday. Norma Wolff. Mrs. Henry Ulrich Kas., on Thursday. There were eight dInner guests last Tuesday evemng 1 Mrs. Carl Mittelstadt returned to led the devotionals and Mrs. George I guests. of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Krueger. I her ho,lne it! Norfolk last Thursday Gabelr was program leader. The ~ub- Mr. and Mrs. Henry Nuernberger

Mrs .. Henry Loebaack aud ~ugh. after a short visit in the home of ieet of the program was "Burma's and Eldon returned from Los Ango;­!,""s, ShIrley and A;nn Noreen, VIsIted her daughter, Mrs, T, H. HilL Riches." Mrs. Mae Huffaker gave an les, Calif., on Saturday evening where ,m. the Mrs. Paubne Rehmus home I Miss Dorothea Mittelstadt, assi;- impen;onation of a Burmese girl'l they I atten<!ed, the grad~tio!, .exer­Fn~y. " ,tant superintendent at a dietician' "Dorothy," and Mrs. Walter Gaebler cis~s of theIr daughter, MI~s M~ldred

MISS .Goldie Nlelsen of NOlfolk hospital ,in .Philadelphia, visited in read a leaflet, "The Great Father, Nuernberger from the UmverSlty of visited m the Nels Jurgensen home the home of her uncle G, A, Mittel-, White Brother, and the Book." Mrs. I Southern California. TheY spent last week. . I stadt last Monday ev~ning. A. H. Carrer gave the "Biography of about a month visiting with Mrs.

Mrs, Jo~n LoebGack wa~ 10 Nor- j Robert Siman of Norfnlk vi'3ited Adoniram Judson." Mrs. Ivor Morris Nuernberger's sister. folk ,>n FrIday afternoon. , the past week in the home of his I was in charge of tbe mystery box. Mr, and Mrs, Wm. Yunger and

Mr, and. Mrs, Cha:les MIsfeldt; grandparents, Mr, and Mrs. H: S. Miss Norma Wolff and Miss Alice two children and Mrs. Clara Berry drove to Ll.ncoln on F,lday t.o attend Siman. ' I Wylie entertained with a pleasing I and son, John, returned 'Friday to

',,'" !' concert gIven by pU!?lls t:>)<ing mu": I Herman Podoll was a business -;i"- piano duet. It ,was d~cided to !>nld the t~e.ir .home in Minneapolis after a IC courses '!t the Unlvers:ty of. Ne itor in Wayne last Monday morn-I annual thlmk offennE meeting on VISIt m the home of Mr. and Mrs. braska. TheIr dau!lhter, MI5S Shirley ing. I Sunday, August 4. Mrs. Morti. was T. C. Jensen. A group of neighbors

-'-BeRs, who has co:nPleted a four-week } F. W. Weible and son; Waldr .. m, I appointed in charge of the Little enjoyed a picnic 6upper in the Jen~ ~our~e, accompame~ them ~ome. .." j were business viRito,rs in Sioux CitY.;., Light Bearers. At the close of the sen home Wednesday, evening in hon-

MlSS Irene KO!,I", was lD NorfOlk I last Monday, I meeting the hostess served. Next or of the guests. i

,last ,Wednesday afternoon, . Howard Kahler transacted bmi'l meeting will be Friday, August 2'1 Mrs. Ernest Bahde and daugbter, M",<: Ellen Berry ,~eturned to. her I ness in Wayne last Wednesday morn· with Mrs. E. D. Clason as hostess and Bonnell, ,returned Sunday f~om a

home lD. W,,:yne last Monday after a ing, ' I Mrs, Wa1ter Gaebler as program week's VISIt WIth Mrs. Bahde s par­;short VISlt lD the Adolph Rohlffl The Roy Reed American Legion, leader. ents, Mr, and Mrs" C. J. Erxleben, home.. ~ : Post met last Tuesday evening for I The' first free outdoor movies of near Altona.

Mrs, F, E. BrIght and Mm. C. Ie.: th.eir regular business meeting with I the season were held in the Winside I The S. O. S. club held a picnic at B~~~h:of we~e In Wayne last Wed-. nine membern preR.~nt. Plans _were' par~ last. Wednesday evening. These the golf, course Sunday. Abop.t f~rty

;nesda} mornmg. I made for a COnCeSSIl)n at the annual i mOVIes Wlll be shown each Wednes- attended. Mr. and Mrs. Edolf ErIck-T~e ~ons ()~ He:m~n lO~7e m~t ~l~i : old settlers picnic. Magnus Petersen day evening for the .remainder of son and family of Sholes ~ere ')ut

Tuesda~ evenmg III th? asonlc,.a I wu::; named in charge of Frank I the season. The lo.cal business house:; I of town guests. ,fo:!" th~lr regular .~u!Jmess I~eetm~ I Krause ,wa::> name? chairman 01 ,the 'j have furnished benches for seating The an.nual p,icnic of the What-So-~/lth eIght. memberi:i. present. FO,1low I pUl'chasmg commIttee. Roy WItte of the large crowds. Ever SOCIety Wlll be held Thursda.y l11g the busI!le3s seSSIOn the n~!Oalndel'l and F, J. Dimmel were named aR the ~ The Winside school board met last I afternoon at the home of the presi­of t~e evemng was spent sl)cmlly. committee in charge of a junior Le-I Monday evening in the school house I dent, Mrs. Harry Conner. Member.g

M1ss FI?rence Schellenb~rg wa~ In ~ gion baseban gamr- tr) held' that day. for their ~irst ~eeting of the year. I are asked to bring something for Wayne last Tuesday mOl"nmg, I Plans wGre also made for one or more I The follOWIng offlCel'3 were elected by, lunch. .

Mr~: ~allace" Brub.a~~r w:as ~. Nor- wl'Mtling matche-s in the Bruse pa- acclamation: president, Fred Witt- r C,larence Henrickson wen~ t') folk YisItor.last 7hurs~ay aft;ln~()n.! vilion a,t Hoskins and .Jean Boyd \vas lel'; secretary, Fred Trampe; treas- Ewmg on Sunday. Mr? HenrIckson·

. Johncyelnon .ar;d ,BIlly Pr~~cerl ~.({ 1 appo. inted to secure the nece~sarv m-j urer, Bert Hornby. Robert Johnson II Beverly. Ann. and Jamce returned S.H~UX ,lty are. €.n]oymg an ex eM f:! I formatir,n from the stat€' bo.xmg ('om· 1 was elected as board member to serve home Wlth hIm Monday. ';8It '~nth: thell' grandmother, 1"'''" mis~]on. I for a term 'Jf one year, filling the M.r. and Mrs .. Ralph Peterson and Etta Perrm. , ,I Monte Davenport, Jr., and Ray· v;3.cancy left by the resignation of J famIly of Aureha, I?wa, .spent Sun~ ,~ss Dolores Pohlma,n of S{'~ton I mond Graef were in Wayne la"t' Charle .. Misfeldt. Mrs. Art Herscheid: day at the E. S, KIernan home. I

VJ~lted th~ past week m the rank Tue!;day and Wednesday. I and Mrs. W. F. Most were appointed 'I Prof. J. R. Johnson went to Lin­BrGnzrs~i home'f W ' 't d ,I Mrs, Ed Finley and son, James, of I as purchasing committee by the presi. coin on Saturday. Mrs. Johnson and th' . af ei:. 0 akne;,s~r"!l1n I Sargent arrived last Tuesday to vis: i d~nt. Mr, Wittler and M~., Johnson children who ha~~ been, spen~ing the I e h:me

d 0 IS son, ' ... a er'l it with Mrs. Fmley's p~rent.<;, Mr'l WIll serve as the grounds committee. ~ week there returned WIth hIm Sun-

asih ?p .art .. L th L d~ A'd' and Mrs. Burt Prince, and with her Mr, and Mrs. Clarence Witte and: day. met fn th.mc~urch ~rl~rs ra;:s wed-I sister, Mrs,. Paul Wills, '_ family and Mr. a,nd JI;lrs. ~ilIiam I The ball game ~unday between,

d fte ~th M F k MISS Elaine SmIth of Norfolk 15 Loebsack and famIly VISIted m the I WI'sner and WakefIeld on the local ~ro ay_ a ki rn~QIlM W1 W H'S. A '.Jr.~i spending the summer months visit- Henry Loebsack home Friday eve- diamond resulted in a score of 9 to 7 lc~~:~:stes~~s. T!:":nty~tw~ m~mb~~~ I ing in ~he Sam Plrich 1,1~me. . I ning. The o~casion was. Mrs. Henry in fav')r of Wisner. A large crowd and the fol1owing vjSitol'S were pres- I MY<:c.. H. E: Slman VIslted 1n the I Looosacks bIrthday anmversary. attended. ent: Mrs. George Wittler, Mrs, Irv.lllr. V, L, Slman home at Norfolk I Ed Carlson motored to S~uart on I Alvin Henry of Stockton, Calif., . Ul' h M J h W er f last Thursday. I FrIday and was accompamed home and Victor Henry of Omaha came. Sat­k"fkers~1fxe: CaUf., M.?. J::: MiU~r ' Miss .Shirley Belle Witte spent last, by Mrs. C~rlson, who has been stay·! urday ~vening for a short visit with

d daughte R th Mr. J hn Wa ., week vIsIting m the h(/m~ of her, mg ~t theIr ranch near St,;,art. their father, C. A. Henry and other an D I .r'p hl' s f 0 St t g uncle and aunt, Mr, and Mr<. Fran!, I MISS Charlotte and Gottfrled Press relatives . ' , ncr, 0 ares 0 man 0 an Iln, I Bright. . of Detroit are enjoying the summer' . . lI'!rs. C. ,E. Bellshoof, Mrs. M. ~. H!'I., Wm. Hornby transacted busIness, months visiting in the Wm. Kant ' -----~-pm, Mrs. He~n Bronzynskl, M~ .. in Wayne last Thursday morning., I home. M',et W,th Mrs. Anna Ko:p Anna BronZ)'l)Sk', Mrs. Anna Ander-I Alfred Hart of Blair enjoyed ]"st Mrs. Harry Granquist and son, The Baptist Missionary society :nS f"S:d Fe~dida~ aKJ'l'A M'i'h?l- week visiting in the home of his aunt, I' Gilbert Harris of near Wayne and met Thursday afternoo(l with Mrs.

ade npell er an. rs. I' . I e

l -, Mrs. George Gabler. ,their house gi,est, Miss Lena Nie- Anna Kopp. Mrs. Walte~ Bressler

s~ ~< ana welo.competed for. ~Iel Mrs' Charles M,isfeldt was in· man of Omah "ted 'th It', had charge of the devotIOnals and dlstnct cl)nference of the Trmltv . I a, VISl WI re a n es <

L th L to be h ld h A'- Wa~e last ThuMday afternoon. in Winside last Thursday eveuing. M;s .. M. C, Powel"3. reported on the u er Mgue e el"~ t~ Mlss ShIrley Loebsack was an ov- Graver C. ·Francis, who has been nusslon work as ~ven at the NOf-

l':,"t Z::' F ':i ~dwi~.~h!/n 'th e I .rnight guest of l\1iss Mae Juracok i critically ill in an 0l1l"ha hospital, thern Baptist meeting held at .Colo-v' l d' t' .. s'!" elt., Tm~ll WI .. ~'in tihe Anton Juracke home last

l is reported slightly improved, rado Sprmgs, Cnlo. About fIfteen

Goc~ uMI n'"f PhI eep, I Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Ge9ige Gabler visit- members were pre5ent. Mrs, Wm. reme. ss 0 Ores 0 man 83Jlg, Sup't and Mrs. C. A, Jon"" reo ed in the Holgar Hansen home at Watson will entertain August 8 at

PINNA[Lf. turned to their home in B~l.den I",st, Neligh On Sunday, 7 :aO p. m with Mrs. Carlos Martin, Thursday ~fter a short VI,Slt WIth I James Miller and Wayne Wendt, Mrs. WaIte: BreBOSler and Mr~. O. B. Mr~. Jones parents, Mr. and Mrs. who are enrolled in the CCC camp Haas ass1stmg her.·,:1he meeting WIll J. P, DQuthitt. at Ponca, spoot the week·end hei'e be in charge of the W. W. G.

COLORADO (.O~\..S

, ~~tt

The Busy Bee Sewing club and he with relatives. Merry Mixers Cooking club met last M;l'. a~~ M:t:s. William Kant and Thursday afternoon in the ,Jack famIly VISIted In the E. H. Dangberg Reinbrecht lIome for their postpl1ned home Friday evening. t'>~-.- WADliE meeting-- with Mi'Ss Maryanna Rein- Violin Boock was in Wayne Satur~ brccht as hostess, One guest, Miss '" day morning.

Carhart Lbr. Co. Theo Witte, was present. Eight mE;m--: Miss Norma Wolff was in Wayne bel'S of the sewing club responded to Thursday morning of loot week.

Wa}nt, Nelbraska Phone 147

roll call with liThe Most Interesting I' F. J. Dirnmel WB.s a business visit­Incident In Making A Laundry Bag." or in Omaha last Thursday. Following the business meeting the I George Nielsen left Fridav for members worked on their laundry New York City after a week's visit

.'",,,,,,,.,., .... ,,-"'---......... ..

THE KNOT-HOLE No, 17 Wayne, Nebraska, Thursday. July 18, 1935 • VoL IV

i Yf}u've hea~d of the 1 Just siX weeks ago Hitler's motorized optician'. daughter?1 we unloaded a car 'of army will travel 80 Two gl~.s and sho shingles bought "t tho miles per hour in the makes a spectacle of 1 low price. There are next war. This will be herself, __ ' _ I 0T'hlloY."'ell f'wwhoof twhealnl1tleitto' slightly fa.teJ' than the

'" last one, which moved You'v(!" heard 0 fl take advantage of the 80 miles in four years.

Certain-T'eed paint too, I"w pl'ices will do well --but we feol until nil to purchase NOW for The terrific heat of hav(~ tried it we mU!'it I when the next car ar- the sun does a great contil1lle to mention itl rives prices will havo deal of harm to auto-in these columns, I to be higher beeau'le mobile finishes this

. -- we ha"e· had to pay time of year. A coat of We presume 'dream.! more for them. Certain~teed wax will

ing would come under i -- preserve and protect , the blanket' code. 'I "What do you thin:, the varnish. i -- of a ma]l who will con- --i ,L~rge, size "~,ife. st;1~;\r deceive hi" SO-rod spools d f

time posh, sharpened WIft, barbed wire, hog pat-, for driving, only 28c'1' "I think ho'~ a won- tern, $3,00; cattle pat· I 'W"e Ivan you the dl'iv- del'." tern $2.7.1. ! er. ----i -- I We,have ,built-well' A "\Vashington citi-

Prof. Huntcmer:i stcp.ladders for heuvy- zen receIi-ly hired a

in the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jorgen Nielsen. Mr. NieJ..:;en will make a short visit with friends in Sioux City and at Lake Okoboji en­route home.

Mis-s M!!rgaret Gabler was in \Vayne on Friday afternoon. I

C. C, Paulk visited with Mrs., Paulk in a Wayne \lQspital Thurs· I day and Friday afternoon" ,~~ I::1.st I week.

Mi,~s Ann Noreen Loeb~;a('k was a dill11Crr guest in the A. C. Gavier home on Sunday.

Mrs, Kate Press of Sioux City woo a supper guest and visited m'ernight Friday in the E. H. Dangberg home,

Miss Ruby Reed "ras in W a,yne on Saturday morning.

Mrs. Chris Lautenb0ugh and daughter, Miss Alma, wel'e Sioux City visitors on Friday.

Mr. and Mr •. Wallace Brubaker visited with the latter's parens, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Reese, of Wayne on Suftday,

Mr. and MrR. ·John Brugger of 'Wayne visited in the Wilson Miller home Saturday evening.

Ann Noreen Loebsack visited I)ver­night Saturday in the A, C, Gabler home.

BOARD OF EQUALIZATION NO­TICE AS TO MOTOR VEHICLE

ASSESSMENT

Notice is hereby given that in conformity with a law passed by the State 'Legislature with the emergency clause, all motor vehicle MHessments have been transferred from personal assessment gcheduJes to separate mo-

"Thi~ is the stadium." I weight people. Pr.kes! man to commit a mur-Visitor: Finel Now $1.11;, $1.50, $1.70, I der for $10,00, That'"

take us tlJ.rough tho I -- . what comes of "bolish· curriculum, they saj' We. offer all the oak 1 ing ('odes a.nd putting i"OU have a ~fine rme, fHx)ring for a room I the ('mph~ycr 011 his here." ilOX12 for $8,g.~, Ca!!' hOllOI',

Mr. and Mrs. StevE> Krmpotic- and family of Omaha arrived Saturday for a' short visit in the Harry Gran­qui'3t and \Vtn. \Vitte homf'..o.;,

Miss Maryanna Reinbrecht enter-I tained the following young guests at a slumber party Friday evening: Mis~ Marian Rew and Miss B",t f­

Ann Haskins, both of Sioux City, -- at our office and see' --The hay rack busi- a representatiVE: .sam· For po qu~ck job of

ness: is good, So is the I ple of, the fInIshod woodwork hnng the oM repair business. Ask floor. It s a beauty. pllrts to CI:\r1.

CaR __ In ord:--that you Why doesn't soone· may not get on~ put bod)'. write a popular over on y<>u, be sure song about the Dionne the insulation board quintuplets? Something you b11y' is RED TOP. like "Fjfty Baby Fin­Price nc per foot. gers mId Fifty Baby

Certain-t!led f I '" 0 I' wal: poli~hes eaSler, wears IOI)~r. and cov­ere more Bu\'face. Price 39c per pound,

========::>::==\ ~c:s:~dOll:~~UiM~~~

I the Misses Ruth Render, Theo Witte, Harriet Simms and Betty \Vitte.

I Mr. imd MI"3. Ed Carlson and Mr. ! and Mrs, Etsel Wilson motored to

Omaha on Sunday ,to attend the rural mail carrier's convention being held there.

Mr. and Mrs. Art Brune and daughter, Betty, of Sioux City are ,spending their vacation visiting in the Wm. Bru,ne home.

I. Anan Francis of Sioux City ar­rived Sunday evening for a visit of

.' ".i That'~ what they tell usfWe are sure You'll , like the~ too.

, ,

They're Hqme Made! It'~ all Kaine Coo~ing at the Gem

Draught alld Bo~t1ed Beer Too

GEM CAFE Come in and Eat With J~ck and Joe

with this AUTOMATIC

GAS WATER HEATER Is tho Woman in Your House work­In, her fiD, ... , to the bon. to i.t a1on, witbout Mod.rn Hot Wat.r $ervieel You can put an end to that NOW, anil do it INEXPENSIVELY I Sim­ply inltall 'an Automatic Gao Water H.atel'-"&nd lUt tlie tank-and.tea­k.ttle burden frolll h.r ohould.t'i.1 Natural Gaa plus one of our n.w Automatic Gal Wat.r H.at.... in­lur.. • plentiful luppl,. of I.,stant Hot Wat.r at .low co.t. Can our of­fice and let us tell you' more about it.

Ask about our Special RENTAL P1.AN I

Peoples ?lo1:ivt.afGas Co. Your D.al.r Offers You Equaily

Favon!bl. Valu •• , .

WHY AMERICA PREFERS BUDWEISER

1. It's distinctive taste and delightful laag have made itAmerica's first choice for three gen-:ratlons.

2. Its quality has madc it the Biggest selling bottled beer in history and built the largest brewery in tho world. 3. Brewed by the sallle' forlllula sinGe 1876-always uniform. -everywhere. 4. Not artificially carbonated-BUDWEISER is twice ferlllented for natura! carhonation and sparkle.

5. Brewed frolll tbe crealll of the barley crop and the choicest selection of dOIllestic and itnported Bohemian hops. . 6. One brewery that Illa'kes its own Malt­Anheuser-Busch never buys it frolll ~utsidesourceso 7. Pioneers in pasteurization of "ottled bee~ every bottle sterilized. ;. L AN H E USE R - BUS C B • ~ T. L 0 UTS-

Visitors invited ~ insp8C~ our plah.t I If • indefinite length in Winside.

"What makes I you 1"",'.-;. h Seven:' Or, "Go to think there'.,a.._iwom_ ~r art Sleep, My Babies, tile an in the ,ij~" L, um' b· er' CO. Whole Darn Bunch 0f UNo man ,would atay You." , up there' !th:llt· hong _ I I' alene, and lie out, every WnYJ\c, Nebr, ,This lllm,eu','r will be WAKEFIELD I night" Ph()rt~ 147 continued next wcek B M . I H .• 'I' I~I it I.. . , ' .. ..~ ttl'!, a!l8~n !

Bud~eiser . '!He4 ;"r. Lu'm1Jer For Less" ,,~ ". Ii"'" I . Miss 'I.I,,:~u~ S~rber of Wayne vis...! ,T ;':1..,,_ -~:,i.L,Lti:,~,I.I:id!,I:: :,11 i ited':with'Mlft.iel Hanson over the I

~~ __ ~~~~~~~~ ____ ~~ ____ .. ____ .. ~ __ .. ______ .. __ ':'week~nd, 1

nl~'lil!!!II.lli Ii ". 'I' i I: : ~ ! 11: , ' I' 'I ' , I: " "':,111:1

I", '" "

1<1 N G 0 F BOor T LED B EEilt " STANDARD BEVERAGE CQRP., No:t;folk, NebraSka, DIstJ;ibU:tors

,- !. ~.

-

)

J Lotal and PersoDali;iit~~~:E;i~:~::::it~~1~~as in Miss Mabel Johnson of S~nton Teacher Placements; ~. _ : day with her parents; Dr. 'a.M Mrs.1 business Moolday. :visiting this ,wee\< with Ml"s. T. ' I

W J "Uncl~ Billy" Patte s n . I R. C. Richards of NeWcaStle: ,Mr. and Mrs. Earl Reed of Cunningham. Miss Johns?n has been Profb· li:. N'f ~rke ofSt t~e .,lac~·1

m h .' d r 0 IS I The Rev. H. A. Teckhaus went t~ visited in Wayne on Friday associated with the Beechnut Pack.' ment ureau 0 ayne a e eac'j uwc Flmp~o,:,e. I Lincoln on Tuesday to attend ani Mr and Mrs E B v./.."g ing company in New York City for ers colle~announces the placement

. . RobmsoD attended a Chevr<>- . 'tte '-' th . .. .~. . of eight teachers I e ee m!, a. 0 0 on rl "y. synod. tao sentative. ' Wilma Tolles, po~t J!;raduate, willi

J t m t· t N rf Ik F 'd I executIVe comm1 e meeting w. e from a three weeks' trlP m the past year as educatiol\al repr ... , • ,

_~~e;sler BaI bel' Shop ~10 Douglas I '. Mrs. Gretchen Goede of Ben-i Mis;; Marg\.ret Schemel spent ' teach the third an4. fourth grades I D \. d MUS C 1ft F ' I nmgton spent ten days vacation with week-end in Lincoln visiting Cullen Says Prospects I at Hornick, Iowa. 11====r::::j==~==::;~'ii:!!::"':i:,i'

d ri an I rSt 'ti o.nn the BI 't I her parents, the Rev. and Mrs. H. A. ' motller ' Mildred Denman '32, who has been ;" mhs or a s lor vaca Wl In e ac I Teckhaus. I Or T B Heckert Dental Office Good For Annual Races teaching at Uehli~g, will teach de· I

B. 'J. Hoyle of Wakefield spent the A::rl~ B;~:;:e IIf: !illd~lte;~r ~h~: ":d W ' , -:-- : pattmental work in the junior high' week-end with Ius ~lster 'Mrs Leota ge. ' . , . I nllW atrul eDce, 120 . 8tb St. Pau~mg m hIS hotel room_ for a at North Bend. 1 Senter. -,. I ]}::l't'b. ba;ne a!b':~~~':, w:,t'!Ing. Donald Suna spent the bri~f siesta aw'!-y from tne dlit:i~s Wylie Candor, 'A. B. '29, has J>een

Miss Mary GleaMn of Ponca VIS' Mr and gMrs F H PrIce ~nd in Omaha with the Ervin Ehlers I r~IC\ occupy 'J:rlln jror ~ali until elected principal of the high school Ited her sister, Mrs. C. O. Mitchell" daughters Amy a~d 'Frances of fanlily. ate 0 8F t~ve~t 'k . t ~ en, sec· at Elk1lorn. last week. I Newman, Grove visited with the Wato_1 Mr~. Harold C~rr of ~earney is ~~ion :ons:n~ ~o ~S~y ~a~~ Charlehe. Brown, A. Bo. '3=>, will

Mr. and Mrs. K. N. Parke and ren Prices and Miss MariWl Price I spendIng a week WIth her SIster, Mrs. d t D t rte teach Enghsh and speech at Osmond. family droge to the state park at, Sunday. They spent the afternoon atl D. P. Miller. ;~:di~g~th: W~';n~r~ac!~P~n/:;:'; Mildred Kehl, A. B .. '))2, has been Ponca on unday. I the state park at Ponca Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Strahan and 'l;>'\'1' f ki th h I elected to teach the third and fourth

Mrs. L. '!3. Carter and M1SS Mary Fred Lutt drove to Lin~oln on SUtl-! family spent Sunday afternoon at ::~s~n~~~i'se~en~a ng e races ere grades at Osmond. . I of SIOUX CIty called Thursday at the day to visit his sister, Miss Gertrude I Crys.ta1 lake. ,! Harlow Baker, A. B. '33, WIll A, T. Cavanaugh hwne. I Lutt, who is attending summer M,ss Leona Hageman came. last You ha,:e a lot of "lovers o.f ~ coach and teach matheD,atics and

Mr. and Mrs. J. Q. Owen and school at the University of Nebraska. Saturday to spend the week, m the horseflesh In Wayne, he saId .. It science at Lynch. daughters, Eleanor and Constance, Miss Arina Lutt who has been visit- Carl Sund hame. I dates back to the days 00' trotting ,.' 1 spent Sunday at Lake Okiboji.. ing Mis<; Lutt for several days re-, Mrs. Addie Boileau of Henderson rac.es and the desire.to see horses in an~~~hL~:i~ie~~e !~N.:~c~':i':1

Ford C. Reed, and MISS Manrmne I' turned hwne with him. I came Tuesday to make an extended action ca;lDot be satisfied short of a I G teh H t' A B '34 '11 and Vivienne Becker ~Ieav~ for Idaho Mr. and Mrs. S. J. IckIer and :visit with Mrs. Effie Lund. ~ racm&: program and you have, teaci.

e th:nsev:;:J,ngs, de' at' Ma:U~

today for a ten day vac~tion. _ Willis, Miss Vera lauch of Creigh.j Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Cunningham 'I a mghty mce s~t-up here for ,such gra , . Mrs. J ason G?~S~ of .Bndgeport and ton and Miss FI/lrence Benkey of 'were Friday evening dinner guests an. ~~ent to be Il)ade an annua, af· V· S L_ I Clo

daughter are Vlsltmg In the home of Humphr~y, who are attending school' at the M. H. Surber home at Pen-' fall'. , . acat'?" c,~o ~o. se . her parent;;, Mr. and IIlrs. Cylde J liere, went to Humphrey Sunday tol der. Mr . .cullen c?~nte,!- upon .the co· The vacation :SIble school. bemg, Oman. . , :visit Miss Benkey's mother, an old Mxo. Chas. Hammer 00' Council operation and SPirIt WI~ whIch ~he hel~ at the Baptist church WIn close

The Rev. and Mm. W. F. Dlerkmg school friend of Mrs. IckIer. Bluffs Iowa i vi itin~ this k·. Wayne county hOll'seracmg aSSOCla· Fr,day. The school has been In ses-returned Saturday night from a Hot weather stuff _ Ice Cream the E' A Surber sand E EWe."·1 m tion decided from the first to make sion for two weeks and a, very sue-week's wedding trip through Mfchi- Freezer 2 qt 85c _ 8" Electric homes' . . :. 81 ey the local meet a success. Commenting cessfnl program has been carried out. gan. Fan, $i.49 ~'10", $4.65 _ Ring I' . . upon the track here he said it was in The child"!'n will give a dem0!lstra.

IIlr. and Mrs. G. A. Renard and Sprinkler 63c _ Spike Sprinkler M;rs. Dora Be~s)loof. returned from good condition but could stand con- tion of their work Sunday evemng a' daughters were Sunday dinner guests 10c _ Garden Hose Braided 50: a f,ve w~s' VlSlt WIth lr daugh· 'siderable improvement which he was 8 o'clock at th~ Baptist chureh. All in the W. E. Mininier home at NOIl'- $2.89 _ All Rubber' Hose, 25-; 96c. ter, Mrs. m. Mason, 0 aurel on sure it would )lave in time to come. children wlto have at~nded should ~ folk. I Gamble Stor~s.-Adv. Sun~ay.. He was espCClally pleas,ed by ,the present Sunday e'fenmg. Those .• m

Mr. an~ ~rs. Edw .. Seymour spent L. W. JCraGvil left Monday morn- . MISS Charlotte ZeIgler and her coU· m!,nner with which the local c~m- charge are Mrs. M. C. Po",:ers, pru;" Sunday VlS1tmg relatives at Marcus, ing for l.ll'g Stone lake where he. will sm, Ina Heerndon of Carr.oll, dr",!,e mlttee combatted a tout problem ';-V!l1ch clpal, Mrs. L. Vf. KrataVlI, Dons Iowa. Lyle remamed for a week's, spend four days fishing. Mrs. Fay to Huron, S. D., on a busmess trlP pro1!1ised to make trouble had ,It not Howarth, GenevIeve Craig, Mrs. .. isit. I Whealton and smaH daughter se- last week. been nipped in the bud in its early Harold !?ots"n, Amy Pearl Barn ... ,

FraJ?~lyn Langemack of Emerson, companied him as far as Sioux Falls Miss Helen Swanson returned Sun- stages. Grace ChIchester and Margaret Wade. w~o VlSlted for a week at the C. O. where she will visit for a time at the) day from Boulder, Colo., where she He said horsemen were plea~d with . 1

MItchell horne, returned to Emel"30n I homes of friends and relatives. I spent two weeks visiting the Loren conditions here and many of them, Bi.,.th. -Reccwd Monday. D. p, Miller drove to Columbus Andrews. looked forward to a return next year, A daughter, Eleanor Theodosia

Dr,I1~~s Ii Fly Spray , KiJIS):Ji~' i~ the Stable ...... Protecll COWl 'in tbe· Pasture

! ! :

Dr. Hess Fly Spray. is both.a fly killer and ,,;. fly repeUer. For many years Dr. Hess Fly Chase;r has ~n 'the outetand~ ing preparation for prOitectiog cows and 9ther· animals from flies. But our . Research Farm has for years ooen making ex­tended experiment<! for it<! bet­terment.

, The 'product has now been .im,­. proved. The qu8lity of fly kill· ~ mg has ~n added. Ta prQo 'I perly de$lgnate' this improved 'produet, nOw lloth a protectoi;. ; a!lel a killer, it is given the new name 00' Dr. Hess Fly Spray.

. Cows ~ fly time are much in : the open, always exposed to at­tack. Therefore. the Illost wid...

'Iy beneficial u~ of such p:re. paration· Is that of protector, Ilr fly reJHlllent. For this use, Dr., Hess Fly Spray retains aU its OId·time effIciency.

Get it at

Fo~tDer's '~eed Mill Phone 289w Miss Florence Hal: ?f Sholes, who 1 Sunday where he spent the dar at I' Mrs. O. O. Hamer and daughter, . I was bor/! Th.ursday; July 11, to Mr:

viU~k Mth~~nYS~I~~'ka~aailiITh_~M~~~~T~~I~m~a~~o~f~~M~i~n~n~~~~~h~~~'~~M.i~'~n~n~.~~H~O~W~~~~~u~r~W~b~s~c~n~.p~ti~O~n~d~a~te~!~~~a~n~d~M~r~s~'~~~U~S~S~cl~I~L~i~k~es~OO'~W~~~S~i~~~.~~§§§§§§§§~~§§§r wee ., returned to her home ast wee 'who has been visiting the Carr,; r.:;inc(l , ~ Tuesday, , 'the Fourth returned home with him. I --

Leroy Owen of Los A n~les., Cahf., Mrs. Carr returned with them and •

~~~h=~M~~~T~n~'wm~~~ba~~M=~ITI' ~---~----------------------------------------------------­]a~t wepk WIth hlS mother, Mrs. L. is Mrs. Miller's sister-in...}aw. M. Owen. Mrs. Harrietta Ankney and

Mr. and Mrs. A, K. Bolton of D~s daughtel", Misses Jean and Merideth, I Moines, I?wa, c~me SUr'day to V1S1t of Cheyenne, Wyo., spent Thur$.day I a week WIth theIr daughter, Mrs, S, afternoon and night at the R. E. Jud- I W. Rash.. son home, leaving Friday aftern00n I

Mr. and MroS. v\lIIbur Spahr and for Omaha and Hancock, Iowa, to ViS-j Mrs. Harvey Haas and ~arl attend~d it friends and relatives. They will re­the fu~eral of Mrs. DaVld Herner In turn to Cheyenne in about ten day.s. WakefIeld Sunday. . Mr. and Mrs. Donald Simpson,

Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Oman and Mrs, stopped Saturday evening at the F.! Jason Gorst and daughteI"' of BrIdge- 81 Morgan home for supper on their port were Sunday supper guests at return from their wedding trip to I Harvey Neelys. the Minnesota lake region. MroS. simp-I

Mr. and Mrs .. L. \V. ~oe, George lSon was Miss Mary Jane Morgan. F.o~ner and M~ss HarrIet F·artner, I Mr. and Mrs. Simpson visite~ Fergus vlSlted Sunday In the E, H, Mosely Falls and Detroit Lake, Mmn., for I home· at Belden. . several days. At Granite Falls they I

Tom and Catharme Cavanaugh, visited relatives and at Faulkton S. Peggy and ~im Morris, Josephine Ler D.) they called on Mr. Simps~'s and Catharme Berry drove to Cryst..'ll , grandfather. Saturday afternoon tlwy lake to swim Sunday. 1

Yes, Ma'am,' a Blackstone-. Ele~tric I ~"-.--'-~~--- -_ .. _._._ .. - ~~

J roner and Blackstone ElectJ"l(, ", ash- I mg Machine, both for only $69.!10., Gamble Storeo,-Adv, I

Miss Ruby ~hoades, who i-s taking nurses training at the St. Vincent I

11()Spital in Sioux City, is spending tel1 ~ days with relatives here. I

Mr. and Mm, Arnold Weigel and I d,lUghter of Neligh and Mr. and Mrs. Will Korff and so!" Ralph, of I Obert visited Sunday WIth Mrs. AI'I vina Korff.

Mrs. V, C, Ankney of Dalton and I Mr, and Mrs. H. R. Bewire of Laur'l "I had supper with Mr, and Mr~. J. G. M.iller and attended the races af-I t€rward Tuesday.

Dr, and Mrs. A. D, Lewi6 and Jolm , Alden spent Sunday' at West Point II

at Dr. Stollers. A number of other chiropractors from northeast Nebras­k a were als") there. !

Dr, and Mrs. T, T, Jones, Mr, and I Mrs. Eph Beckenhauer, Don, Joel ~j nd Mae, and Miss DQrothy Swanson I ,,,,ere Sunday dinner guests jn the I

Ralph Beckenhauer home. Miss Doris Judson left Friday eve­

ning from Columbus for the west C()8.r3t where she will visit relatives ·in Los Angeles. She will also visit San Francisco. and Cheyenne.

Mr. and Mrs, Harold HW~ and Virginia came Friday fo~ a. ",:isit !'It the Rollie Ley home. Vlrglma Wlll remain here for a week while her parents visit at Park Rapids, Minn.

Mr. and Mrs. Phil Briggs and family drove to Beatrice last week where Mrs. Briggs and the children will visit the home of Mrs. Briggs' parents. Mr. Briggs went on to Oma­ha on business.

Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Larson, Miss LaVerne and Ray, Jr., called. Sun­day afternoon at the Geo. Larson I home in HQIller. From Homer, they went . to Crystal lake where they I spent 'the remainder of the aftemoon f;WlmmIng.

. --I"

For Sanitation USE

Rite-Way Disinfectant

"

Guaranteed by manufacturer nev­er to have an insect in your build/< ings for at least. a year after spraying with RITE-WAY.

Entirely wipes out MITES, LICE, BED BUGS and INSECTS.

SOC pel!' gallon Bring Yom Containers

Wayne Crain and Co.I:'~d.

I

A Lightning­Change Artist

A can of corn, before it is opened, appearR to he a com·

fortable-Iooking cylindrical tin cont.ainer with an appdizing·look· iog label depicting and describing its contents, as it stand::; smugly on your pantry shelf. But the moment it's opened a can of corn hecomes a lightning-chang - artist of many varied possibilities. It may uecome, according to your taste, a cak-e, a casserole, a chow­der, a fritter, an umelet, a pud· ding, a salad, a sc.allop, a soup. a stutnng, or, in combination with beans, a succotash.

Of course you probably like corn just as it comes trom the can, but you may want to vary o'ccasionally from that. It you do, stir into the contents of a No. 2 can ot corn two (~ggs. two table· spoons of flour, a teaspoon of bak­ing powder, a dash of cayenne and half a teaspoon of salt. Pour in a buttered baking dish, dot with butter and bake, and you'll have an entirely different dish.

Here Are So,¥ Role. HoW does canDed corn become

a cake? Well, here's a recipe lor Corn Cak.es: Beat two eggs well,

add hall a cup ollsour milk, one­fourth teaspoon soda and a cup of canned corn. Sift together ODe cup fionr. one-half teaspoon salt and two teaspoons baking powder. and add. Add one tablespoon melted butter, and try in small cakes on a bot griddle. Se!'>'e wltb pork sausage and gravy or with maple syrup.

Corn's lightning-change to a casserole- is accomplished in the following

('orr. and Mushroom CasscroZ~:

Saute two tablespoons sliced on· icJn~ h.nd the slieed mushrooms from a 4-ounce CaD in one table-­spoon butter lor several mlnutei!, Add the cooteots ot a No, 2 call creamy corn, thre&tourths. eoil grated cheese, three-lourt.ha cup cblll sauce and salt alld Pepper, Q. nd turn intp a but~r:~, ~~. ~:: i~o~ ~~:i't~5 -:.er:;-Senee .tL-

A NEW LINE OF $ ENGRAVED

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Stationery .00 for

100 Sheets 100 Envelops

to Match

Oth.er· En_graved M~tter for Those Wllo . Discriminate!

See Us for All. I(inds of Job Printing ,

Qnd Engraving

Nebraska Democrat Office at 109 W. Third Phone 145

,J0MN,~ .. DA \>;IDflON! Editor IU)d Publisher

Enloered as ~';;ond' c1ass-'matter in 1884 at the pnst­otfioe at WaY1'e, Nebr'L under the act of March 8; 1879.- '" - ...

Subscription Rates One Y Qar ............................................................. _.. $l.~O Six Months ................................................................ .75

SenatorNonis Is 74 At seventy-four, Senator George W. Norris

successfully retainG his place as Nebraska's m')st distinguished citizen. He is spry and lively, walks to work each morning, and reads without the aid of eyeglasses.

Although Senator Norris is the fourth oldest man in the upper house, he .is able to withstand the rig'>rs of filii buster as produced by H;uey the I Long Winded. After sitting t!trough one of. these sessions ulttil six o'clock the next; morning, Nebraska's ~nd old man reported three hours later at his Offjee for a hard day's w?rk.

Senator Norris has an enviable record' of ser­vice in his thirty-tjlree years at the nation's capi­tal. He has gone where the going was tough08t agairn;t almost. unsurmountable ')dds simply becaUSe he felt in' his own heart that he ww.; right in his c~nvictions, all for the purpose of a greater deme>­cracy.

He voted against our entering the Warld war i'l 1917 and at the age. ?f seventy-four observes, "My vote didn't aocomplish anything, but if war had been defeated by my vote it would ha"e been a wonderful accomplishment. The evil of war is still mth us. One hundred years from now we'll still be paying the penalty."

Senator Norris is confident at seventy~ff}ur

we are headed for a b~tter democracy. He i'S confi­dent the future will bring this about and believes the two things Imost necessary to accomplish this are holding company legislation and taxing of great wealth.

Conunenting on thiE. the senator says, ,4We can never have a real democracy and a real civilization as long as hruding. companies dOl!linate, not oniy in the electric field but in every .,ther. Likewise we can't have permanent prosper.ity unless we tax huge inheritances." .

The senator at seventy-four sees a ray of hope though. He sees a turn for the better coming. Thls is encouraging inasmuch as the senator hM lang shown himself t'l ~ a seer whose prophesies have materialized even when those considered most shrewd shook their head~ in doubt and, commented that it was sad but the senator was getting old,

Look,ingahead, a bit on his birthday anniversa­ry, the senator.--said, "This holding company fight we are In nOW would nOt ha"e been possible ten years ago. If we lose now, we'll will later. It's some­thing 'so absolutely right that it must win and one of the big helps is that we have Roosevelt."

If Senator Nnrris' career should come to a close tomorrow, his rfame wOl1ld go down in history as one of the greatest .tatemen and humanitarians in the history of this cQuntry. But the senator at sev­enty-tour feels that 'he yet has thingB to do. He wants to press forward toward his' ideals. It would indeed be g\'eat if oome of we youngsters were as deeply engrossed with thoughts as to where we are going.

Hitting sOme of the, Mgh spots, we find that Nebraska's most 'distinguished citizen has ever sought to develop natural l'ooources. The Tennessee "alley authority is nil example of this. The senator stood at the brink,.QLtlLl!$e ,.sP1!t1lem .streams and saw .dle waters passing by his feet. Being a Beer, he pictUl'ed in hi~ mind the harnessing. of these streams, the erection of power plants, the turbines of which these (..;tream.g would turn.

He could see electric IighIB illuminating the homes, meals being cooked with Hwhite coal," the wheels of ,industrial planlB being turned by a my­sterious but powerful hand. He felt that it was the country's place to develop this dynamic area be­cause ms experiences. with private companies had made him feel that they could not bl' trusted with control of such a vital area,

He fought incessantly for the abolition of the costly and inefficient lame duck session of our gov­erning bodies and thus effected a vast saving to the natia:h. He fostered and succeeded in br~nging about the passage of n bill to ban the use of injunctions in labor disputes and in the last campaign he put his vacation period to good use by successfully selling to the voters of his home state th~ honor of becoming the fil"<)t to a,iopt the efficient and g'raft· eliminating unicameral legislative system of govern­ment,~when many C!f the wise ones again shook their

neawsanct·com1""fie1ttedtnatme "old"\hari-wasillpPlng-: -Senator Norris is a most v~iunble public ser­

vant to his Nebraska pea,ple. He loves them and has deep feeling for them ill their prohlems. His constituenlB are his employers and he knows it. He feels that he is vested with a trust, not to serve onC' special interes~, one county or state, but to be of service to the nation us a whole.

He is sincere in (~vel'ythjng he does. He is t.'l Americ.llcns the .brrnnd o1d man from Nebraska, com­parable to Vavid Llayd GeorgI) of England, Too few of the peol,]e dwelling within this state realize the magnitude of this man or of his rating among citizens through0v-t the nation.

Nebraska mu~t groom another ttrian to follow in his footsteps. :It's··· .. big order and OIle which will probably not be fulfilled for some time. At seventy­:four after thirty-t,hJl1le -yeIIl's:ofhardwork for a man

to realiu his lJI~~t ~e,nllj;ioq'ffl ~q,Pt'tq,l.the work, .... , "il ~li.torNi\~~IIJjj~I1)i~tr lleltil~. IUs program

'must be carried (in and Nebraska should 'furruGh th,e man to do the work but until that man is dis~

: cavered. we 'Wisl! }"'",)u many "~ppy returns of ~ • ! ··'Ii 1·:·~YI±j:~~~·~!t~I',", .. !:'.I'~11.i"'7\'dl.' ' _.

li'~:I'll::!I"!C liFI' ': hi i'I')'i ",. i .. " :I,'i 1'1:1111;11'1+:1 'Iii ',ll, , " 'klll'.I.I" .. I.:, ii'" .. t.· ,'.i: .. 1'1 I "",:!'.,.',I,',. 'I,', l"I"I.il,I' *.:t·, hi;l,I,~·,\llr,li!·I!,I("':' ,I,!),I!". ,;/!;., ,. '1;l~I'llli)~1

i ~The Bystander ';1 L~~.~_ .. _ .. ~~~~.~.:._ ... ,~_._.J

w. had a fiRe time visiting at the fltrm home of one of my friends the other . evening. After a nice cool drive over the ro·lIing 'countryside of ·n:nth­east Nebraska we came to a stop on the lawn mid­way between the farm house and windmill.

They were gla<;i t;Q see u~, strange. as it may seem and ,Were genuin~ry interested in lml)wing just what we were doing and how we were makmg it.

t don't believe there's anything that· makes a fellow feel better than to be allowed to exploit him­self with a lot of WOO-ds which are really b?resome to "his courteous l,istener-s. But we were genuine.1y interested in knowing how things were goil."lg ·on the farm to?

This part of' Nebraska is beautiful now. Corn is growing by leaps. and bounds, small grain is turning and J:tere and there one sees tractor or horse drawn grain binders gathering the shea'i~s and tying them in neat bundles which sturdy perspir­ing sons ?f the soil stand up, in neat shocks, seem­ingly interested only in getting to the next olle. ~There's something romantic abOut farllling.

Agrians who really have fanning in their blood can be hailed out, burned out and ha"e their im­provements wrecked and stacked all over t;t,e place by a tornado and come back for IMre. The kiddi~ have the spirit too. I very well ·remember lilY fh'St pair of ')veralls and when the day came I could wear rubber boots just like my dad'8.

The great diffieulty was that the boota were not big enough to suit me. I liked to wade, prefer­ably in that black sticky mud such as one finds over in the richest portion of Iowa.

But every day one ,sees them growing up !n the husiness they first have an oppnrtunity to know about. We saw them-kiddies riding on the broad backs of draft h,)l'Ses- dra)Ving a two row cultiva­tor. Without a doubt they had brought their daddy a cold jug of water from the well and hll-d asked him if they might make a few rounds with him perched on the backs of those ponderous faithful beasts that are gentle enough to understand chil­dren.

A mare with her foal plucking mouthsfu, of sweet clover shies as we pass and makes us ner­VOU6 for a moment wondering where she might go. We hope she will not jump into the path of the l'apid"ly mov.ing automobile.

Meadows are pretty n'lw. Haystacks here and there with sweep tracks leading up to their sides Bhow sigus of much toil. But that roughage will come in mighty handy when cooler days are with us once more.

Cows peacefully graze in belly deep grasses and now and then a big cock pheasant zooms fro~ his hiding place to hedge hop over the terrain.

Farm folk are most hospitable, They are proud of their clean well kept gardens and like to sho,,: you about their dairy barns and orchards. Cherries are ripe now and we paused a few moments be­neath a heavily loaded and gnarled tree to pick and,.. eat our fiUs.

They are full of sympathy too. "It was too bad about that stratosphere balloon bursting," af­ter the army and geographic society had made such an effort for a successful exploratio~ ascension in­to the upper regions. They feel that such a trip is hardly worthwhile but they like a square deal an-a do not like to) 'See anyone's hopes shattered after a valiant effort has been made to- accomplish sometlling.

They are 'more conversant with the facts of the case than are we. They read their morning papers thoroughly when they come in from the field for their noonday repast, and the radio brings them a lot of facts we have not as yet heard.

They're skillful at handiwork too. Rainy days, a set of good tool-s and some odds and ends of lumber left from the last visit of the carpenter furnisH .. the incentive for ingenuous young fellows to build model airplanes and playhouse furniture for the wee ones,

Gorgeous locks of taffy colored hair, tied with a white ribbon, deep blue eyes and u plump clean face cause one to fall in love with a bit of human­ity aged two and one half.

"Hello honey," you tell her and ~he answers "heUI) honey:' She'-s proud of a new pair of sox she tells us, "came in the mail box." and wants us to see a new pair of white sandals !-ihe calls her "go by" shOO3,

Parrot like she rE>peats thing-s we who are a hit older say, and laughs merrily when she has mastered one of the harder onBS, "CoIl,le back, boys" she telk;; us when we leave.

H wa.s interesting for us to find the true atti~ tudf' of a great number of farmers regarding the triple A program,

"They'rc for it," a yaung farrue}: tells me. ,jI know," he adds, Hbecause I'm working on contracts all the time, Those who didn't sign up last year felt pretty blue about it but they came in this year."

.Anothe.t"_-fru~e.l~l.g....us---h-c_ d.ge~w -what­he'JA... have dOlW had it. no.t been for his crop reduc­tion ch('d\.~, aft.er being hailed (Jut and burned out a year ago.

"Y0S ~ir, they're the finest folk on earth. They tell you that they have little time to go anywhere, (>yen to church, t.his time of year and hope the miHi::;tel' i:-:: nut offended. They a~1< us tf) return again_ \\I ill we? \V e1l , we hope we don't make a nuisance of ourselves calling upon them.

-:-

y (lU whf.l huw' llol'ne with me long enough to follow the bystand.cr ~incc it.s beginning a week ago may recall that sotmewherc along the Ii.ne I a~ked for contributions. Barhara came through but I am holding her offering for next week. Then there's a contribution. from a certain 1eft handed fellow named Herman' from over toward Altona. Evi­dently ~l-illn Itald them' if they didn't like the way r wrote the C'llumn tihey -shl>uld do it them­sel"es, they took me at my word .. Next week I'll turn the "I:hole thing over to contributors and let them go to towp just as· they darn pleas~. Don't forget, rlli.~·.~~ ~0U:.' "Ad~os y hasta.manana:' El Sr. Sta.'nashi{is" N~-r-riskY. I ' •

i,"

.tI~= J=t=~velX: Twenty-twO new books' IIave ~n Haircut. 26eilt 6io ~oudas. ,Ad". Wiendt cJrove to. ~ Frida,. ~ter-

reooj"ed at the Wayne publie library P. L. M. arch.WBB in Le Mare, Iawa.~ They,~. urM,<! to Way~e. S.~-this week, se"enteen cl "';hi~h areM da" ~ . . ~y' j . I , for childreD. i . ~iss"J:"pliii)e~keris spending' ,i~. Te~ted,Clalle. Fitted'~

To the adult section hav~ been her wcj1tion in Des Moines. I ? - _. '; W N h 9' added "One Hundred and One ~'a- Mrs. R. R. Larson and Ra.y, Jr., 1 Dr, .1;", J. opel,: ayo. e, e r. ... moos Poems~' compiled. by Roy J. t F'd . S' C'ty I ,I . , Cook. In this valuable little book arc spen n ay In lqUX 1 • 1 ' Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Ingham' enter-p':Iems by Longfellow, Lowell, Whitti- JIlrs. R. R. Lars?" and son, Ray, ta!ined J. C. Eorlxis at dinner Thura-er, Bryant, Poe, Browning', Words- Jr., spent Monday m ~~a~,~.. day Mr ForbeS Ileft for his honie

. . Mrs. D. B. Huffman IS ",sIting her . . ., .' Th da it . W?rt!" Shelley, .Keats, :nIley, FIeld, son B. Huffman at Wakefield this I atAlhambra'cCahf., urs, y a er-KIplIng, <Ma~ef1E~ld,., Mlllay, Sand"': we~k. 1 '-. ' •• - I JJ:oon. ~ '. '. ·i _ _~ I _\' - __ -

. burg,. Masters, Frost anA a Mrs. C. E. Barrett and daughter, liMEN WANTED for. Rawleigh score ~f othe", Great War wr,ters·1 Lois, .were guests Sunday in the R'I Rbutes in east Kn'>X, northeast. Ai1~-. There IS also a. prose supple,,?,~nt I K. Kirkman home.' " . lObe and Dakota counties. Wnte to­wher.e on~ can fmd such .electwns Charles Illgham '>f Norfolk spent: dIy. Rawleigh Co., Dept. N:BG-376-, a~ Lmcoln s, Gettys~urg address, Pat- Thursday with' his parents, Dr. and SB, Fr<leport, III.-Adv. July 8-25. I rIck Henry 6 oration, and the De- Mil'S C T Ingham . '1 I· , Ii' 'II c1aration of Independence . .., ,Mr. and .Mrs. Earl Merc ant W1

"Artists in Music of'Today" oy A,;,old L!,ge left Sunday for al

go to Omaha Sunday to meet Mr. Helen L Kaufman ...and Ella B week ~ vac.R?On. at ~voca, Iowa, where Merchant's sister, Mrs. Elmer Hause, H I' taO b' f k tab v. he W111 VISIt relati"es,' I ot: Davenport Iowa who will visit '. ans ocn ms rIe s e .es of Mr. and Mrs. P. L. Mabbott and :'<1 • , . ' flft); great m~n and women m the Miss Helen visited Mr. and Mrs. Lyle ~: .. . mUSIc world today, such as Wal~er Mabbott at AHEm Sunday.. IMlss. y~rgIrua Mesnard, .who has D",,?,rosch, M~ry Gard,en, F,rltz The Wm. Kuglers left Tuesday for ~nD' Vlslting for j;he past fIve weeks KreIsler, SergeI Rachmamnoff, E.nl: a few days visit' at the Arthur Chi- l~ the R. '!!'. Jacobs h=e.left Satur-Mtin~humann-Hemk and YehudI chester h(jffie at Fullerton. ~m~g for her home at Puk-

'::'K t" by C ... W II • th Mr. and Ml'S. R. L. McClurt\ of ,. a!,oo arve .. , , e s. 16 e South Sioux City visited Sunday in -:=============~ narration. of the .author s .,. Jourll~y the L. B. McClure h')me, i

.fr')m Lemngr"'! to Moun.t Arar~t. m Mrs. Merle Jorgemen of Omaha s~arch of Noah s ,,:rk. It IS a _strlkll~g came Sunday to spend se"eral weeks pIcture of commUnIsm and the RUSSIa in the J. C. Johnson home. of ,,~y- , B k f N be" b Miss Margaret Larson is visiting u ~~o s. 00 0 urn rs Y her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. L.

Cheno dIsclOSeS the. secreIB ')f the I G. Larson at lJakeVlew, Iowa. occult. It s~sses the Importanc.: . of Shave is. at 610 Douglas.-Adv, numbers, names, d~tes, .colors,. CItIes, Mr. and Mrs .. H. M. James and·

R. H.Loder, M. D: . Ahen\-BJIIs.

(Fcmner offices of Dr. Paal SlmaD.) Otfke !Ire, II to 111M P. II, Dail,

7 to 9:30 P_ H. WecL I: Sat. ~ ., .P!iomtm.eat.

Phon-offtee 188.-11es. 185, and other such thmgs m tellIng a two children visited the H. W. Hen-

f01U';ft to the library f~om the sel home at HintoIr,Io":",, SundlllY. '=============== author is the volume of "poetry, "As Dr. L. F. Perry, Deatitt, PhoDe SS. O,:,ce I Passed This W .. y" by A. G. Mrs. Cbss. Johnson, will leave Fri-MIller, day for ten days vacation in the

"Sunbonnet Babies A-B-C Book" Black Hills and the Minnesota lake by Eulalie Osgood Grover, "The Real region. , Mother Goose," Four Little Kittens" Mrs. Cbas. Schoenman '>f Haward­and "Four Little Bunnies" by Harry' en and Miss Jeanette visited from W.hittier Frees, "Little Black Sam- Friday I until Sunday in the P. L.

. .. MARTIN L. RINGER

writes every kiud of Insutance

except life. Special attention to FARM aod AUTOMOBlLE

00 ,. "Who Am I" and "What Am I" March :flome. Insurance, t";o riddle books by Lily Lee Doot- Donnie and Dewayne Buckley of , Real Eetute Farm Loun. son, are books which will appeal es- Norfolk came. Thursday for a pecially to very small folks. visit in the Chas. Jo!ulson home. They ... --------------.

Other booJro added t') th'e children's I will leave Friday. department are "The World We Live CLEARANCE SALE ON GAR-In and H"w It Came To Be" and its DEN HOSE - 25 ft. All Rubber, lOR. E. H. DOT SON ,equel, "These United States and i 96c - 50 ft. Braided, $2.89. Gamble Howe They Came To Be," by Ger-I Stores.-Adv: Eyesight trude Hartman. These two volumes Mis6es Grace and Frances Kiker are a pictured outline of the pre>- returned Saturday from an extended 1 Spec;alist gress of ma.n from the earliest days visit with relatives at Broken Bowl

r to the present tilIne. , and Grand Island. WAYNE, _ NEBRASKA

"Brave Tales of Real Dogs" by I Miss Mary W":Y of Clarion, Iowa, ~==~=~========~ Eleano,r Fairchild Pease is a note. and E. J. Wa-'j of Waterbury camel worthy collection of dog-stories, alII S:;turday evenmg. and. spent ,sunday of which are true and many fam'lus'l Wlth the Floyd Kingston famIly. Some have never appeared before--in, Mrs. L. W. Jamieson drove to' print. They portray real heroism and Sioux City on Monday to mcet her I great faithfulness in our animal mother, Mrs. Bertha Whitman, of r friends. Des Moines, who will visit here;, •

"Pinocchio" by C .. Collodi, beauti- Fred Blair took Prof. Clifford I

Refresh Yourself at Our COOL

Fountain fully illustrated, is a story every Bair to Fremont Sunday where Mr. 1 child should know. /' Bair took the train to Chicago where

"Children of Other Lands" by he will study for the next six weeks. I Watty Paper, "The Man Without a Dr. and Mrs. J. C. Johnson '_nd, F h LO Ad Country and Other Patriotic Stories" I family took their dinn~r to Likuwanta : res Ime e edIted by John M. Foote, "Professor I beach at Crystal lake Sunday where I Peckman's Adventures in a Drop of I they spent the afternoon swimming. Water" by Geo. MaICOlm-Smith'l Mr. and Mrs. Bert Rector of Sioux the "Thorndike-Century Junior Dic~ City came Saturday evening to ac­tionary" by E. L. Thorndike, and company Mrs, FI<>rence Helleberg I "Everyday GOOd Manners for Boys and children to Columhus Sunday and Girls" by Ernestine Louie B<ldt where they visited Mr. Rector's and I will prove both of interest and educa- Mrs. HeJJeberg's parents. tion to children of all ages, Dr. R. W. Casper. Dentist,

Mr. and Mrs. C. A. McMaster V]s- Ground floor Berry huilding_ En-I

\~~es Si~n~~h~~ Monday with rei 110- trance on uorth side.--adv.

1:1,..

tOe Wayne Drug Co.

R. E. Chittick, Jr.

lIelll Iti"ltCOlllpl'eSSiOJl .lIIotors ..' .

.ANaD«.Ellf'& .-tlJJ~~ICA"'LNG~M_OrOR FUElS

., ,', ., I.", i\I.' ,1',,'1: ,I'.!,I!

I s.r~H~clcS . ~ ~1I1 ~'-~ spent Sawn!ay and lihmday in the 'E.~PIilGI1h_ , '-....;,._-,..-,.. __ ..... ____ -= ReJ,1.fives ,came to the Alfie Vteeht ,~'

Mr. and 14>:", John Lorenzen spent home :SUl\day ,evelling hli!l~ ,Mr" Sunday evening in:' the Henry Han- Vteeht on. his birthday. The evening sen home. wa<3 spent socially followed by re-

Miss, Mary Hicks is spending , ~~e:~. Mrs. Herman 'Brudig;"n i wee~ with her sister, Mr.s. RoY, Day, and Lois ,of Winside and, Charlie I 'I B~ Fn,'ode-V,oBB

M.ss Ruby Dunklau ,'s ass.stmg Baker of, Belden were Sunday din-Mrs. Kruse th.s week w.th her hou,:,,-, ner guests ~n the Rudolph Longe 1'1 ,~ " , " 'I

p.cking .chernes and was_ mlured so Mr. ,and Mrs. Rudy Longe visited ' ere Sunday gUests w.0r~. Mrs. K:u~e f~lI last :ve;k wh.le ' hl)me. t Mr. and Mrs.

she has to use crutches to get, in Pender Saturday evening. Misses leteher holtW 'It around. _ " ! Maevis and Norma Lampe returned Roggenbach vis~ Rpy .Fletcher's birthday anlnivers~r.i.,

14,1'. and Mrs .. Henry H.ansen and to spend a few days in the Longe ited with Mr. and Mrs, Will Thies I Miss Delores :(,angenberg fam.ly called Fl'lday evemng at the home. and Hellry Thies to help Henry eele- ing this w~e~ i'1 the Chas, Augu~t Krus~ h~e. 141', ,and Mrs. Albert Longe, Mr. brate his birthday anniversary last ~ome at Wmslde. '" . Cyrr'l and J"mnue.Hanse~, who were and Mrs. Frank LOonge and daugh- week Sunday. , I , Mr. and Mrs, ;Ernest Kollath Il1ld, III last week, are .mprovlng. tern, Misses Hulda and Esther, Mrs. 'Miss Verdene ~hies, 3-year old I s?n,s of. near St;anto.n were S1lnda,y

Mr. and M~s, Otto. Sahs and SO!!S I Gus Longe, Mr. and Mrs. Rudy daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Otto Thies, 'fiSltor.s In the P~te B~umels home. ha.d Sunday d;nner WIth Mrs. ~Inllle Longe, Walter Longe, Maevis and of Pilger, was bitten by R pet dog last I , Mr. and Mrs. Iver Anderson and M.ller, who bves near W.akef.eld. Norma Lampe had picnic dinner and Sunday evening. Two stitches were I <laughters and ~us Anderson .~

Mrs:, Jo!>n Bush and ch.ldren, Joy supper in the Raymond Larsen hoone required to close the W'>und inflict- it~rned ~ome T~esday after ~ VI'!!t an? JlIDlllle, Mrs. B~ach Hulbert and Sunday, the occasion of Mrs. Lar- ed on her. lip and chin. Mr. Thies w'1;I> theIr ~~n IIl'd other relatives In ch~ldren, Mrs. DaVld Hamer and sen's birthday. disposed of the' dog immediately. I ?hlcago. " , , ., ., Miss Morse were Thursday callers at Ela,ine Nau had h,er tOonsils 1'<>- I, The Hoskins Cardinals, a gIrls' klt-the Irve Reed home. moved last week. t<;nbllll team, d~eated' the- - Can'lIIl

Mr. and Mrs. John Dunklau and I The Wayne County Farmers Union ,.!iris. by", score of ~2 to 9 a!' tile children called Sunday afternoon at' Sholes picnic committee will meet next Mon- Ii""klns d.amond Friday evenmg. the August Kruse home. day,night at the city hall at Wayi'le. ',Mr. and Mrs" Will. Ruhlow and

Mr. and Mrs. Chris Jensen and Mrs. Htm'f'Y J. Lemen The picnic is planned for SundaY'llhllY. and John Ruhlow spent Sun-daughters, Dorothy and Wilma, spent September 1, at till> fair grounds. clay m the H"'lry. Beerbohm, lr~" Sunday afternoon in the P~te Christ- Mr. and Mrs. Ambrose W,inkelbau- Wilma Pfleuger visited in the Fred ~ome at, W~tPObIt., ' " ,,', w""" hOll)e. Dorothy and Wilma re- er of Sioux City, Mr. end Ilrs. John Frevert home SQDday. ' E .. elyn PI~ker(l1g of Yankton ~ mained at the Chnste1lBeI1 home t<> Varnish, V,incent end Sylvester Wink- - Ernest Brundieek ailed on W, E. p.;nal~ Wlil'l\in~ were Sunday ~s-spend a week with their cOll!!ins. elbauer of Randolph were Sunday A 7\. Tatz·o-2ltn l Instz·tutz·on Roggenbach Wednesday, l~ In the. Ed,Brumels home. "

Mrs. Adelph Dorman and Mrs. Au- dinner guests in the Nick Sau.er 1 V ~ ,"'" " George Renpick atten!ied tl)e na- "Eve!)'11 l'i~ke~"g ,o!"Xl\i)lIj;Qn -!!!tJM"" gust Dorman and children spent Sun- home. tional track meet last week Thwrsday Sunday t!>r ,a visit In the AlplU>~.,

"hester in Wayne. Wayne Sunday evening where Mr.. Ileclally baked beans. as a Miss F;lsie Stuthmann has infeetion Mr.. Wm, Bl'1'eckne~, Mrs. IreJ1e Mr, and Mrs. Goo, Hoffman and Spahr entered a hospital for medical vegetable which reaches Its apo. Lim. Be.ns in her right arm from the .ting of an Bosler and M~., Minme Brueckner

, day afternoon with Mrs. E. L. Chi- Mr. and Mrs. Ray SpahL-went to WE alwllYs think 01 beans, .ape- ., at Lincoln. _ Wurdln~ hOrne.1 , ' ,

daughters, Frieda and Marie, spent treatment. tbeosis in New England and which insect. ~pent Sunday m ,the Mrs. Mary "Till-Sunday evening in the Irve Reed Mrs. Wm. Gramkau, Irene Boetger, would probably speak, if it had a llalienne f ~. Misses Lena and Meta Reuter were ~on home a~ WiMlde •. home. Mrs. Augusta Feddern and son, Milo, voice, with a Yankee twang. As supper guests in the Henry Reuter ',' Mrs. Irene Bos!er lef,t lrl~dal ~

th!'~~h':.n'k~sh~:ee s~d'a;.aIled at d~y~fi~i":~, ~~.:ct':t:n v~,,!~~ a few ~B~::foifisp~~:~I:te~~~~~~:~ frf~~ee~o~~ :~~;:~t 0iat~a~~d ~:~ h~d t'cl:tof Pilger caned on W, ~~:i~ ~f '(;!n~o,NH~~ C:n!Rahc\~ , Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Paulsen fr0m Mrs, A. G. Carlson was an over- ~ E. Roggenbach Wednesda:t; morning, ruSO goo, sts of 'l'r,s. arry, Y lOt •• ", H bb d d' ts S d iron but with bean enougll to chopped onion, one green pepper, ~ rfjlk.

u ar were mner gues un ay night guest in the home of Mrs. Iva anSWer your wants in several cut in rings, anll t \VO cups diced Win Rpggenbach and enry War~ MO. M L d R boi "" "I"

in the John Bush home. Fredrickson of Randolph. tongnes. TheR(> jneJllili~ tile Latin celery, and salltf) all gently until relman called on Htmry Brundieck " r. and .:~. 'd_r'hnar oS' lP.da~qi" Mrs. John B'lsh and daughter, Joy, Ivor Jones and Don Root "spent languages spoken in Mexico, Italy brown, Add the liquid fr011l a No. Tuesday evening. _ 4!ld son of ",:"n wp were 1P' ,Y"

and Mrs. J. J. Paulsen, calIed at the the week-end with home folks. and Spain. There :lre nnt many 2, ('an lima beans, and simmer Mr. and Mrs. Henry Brundieck dInner guests ~n the Ed S~elle~~":i W111 Keiper harne Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Jennie Jones of North Platte bette!" berJ.n dish(>s, for iIi.~tance, until C'f'lery and green pepper are and Misses Ern-estine .and F,rieda and home.

I

and Mr. and Mrs. John Jenkins of than these tender. Th('n add two ('ups canned Arnold were supper guests in the Mr. and Mrs. Venus R~low, ana. -1--- Wmside visited Thursday with Mrs. tomato ]lulp and the beans, and Henry Reuter home Sunday. family spent Tuesday in the ClIn,'& , South Wakefl'eld I Jenme Jones here. The two Mrs. Jones' I ~ beat well. POUT in center of plat· Mrs. E. J. Moede caUed on Mrs. Anderson home at Pierce. , '

I I are sis1Jers-'in-law. I ter and surround with boiled spa- W. E. Roggenbach Wednesday after- Walter Gutzman returned home B'JI Mrs. Rudy C. Longe Mr. and Mrs. Han'Y Madsen and I ~ Mexicdrl ghetti. (You will use about a noon. G f C Saturday after a business trip ,to

week-end in the Martin Madsen -,.. 3aked Beans ~e;~~!llei~~Si~ with quince jelly. 1umbus are the parents of twin Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Classen and

I

famIly of Slifer, Iowa, spent the -on-"lft""-'" quartr;r of a lwckagp.) SE'iVe as Mr. and ·Mrs. eorge Bock 0 ~ ... York.

The following enjoyed ice cream home. Mr. and Mm. Everett Robins I, daughters, born June 28. Mrs. Bock Dick Mrs Caroline Fenske of 'Lin- ' and cake in the Frank Longe home of near Hartington were guests In w:'s formerly Ellen Geseh of near coIn: Emil' Johnson of Montgomery" Wednesday evening, the occasion of the Madsen home Sunday. Fry sixlef'n rashers of bacon. Spanish Ptlger and Altona. ., Mo., were Sunday dinner gueste: in' Mrs. Longe's sixtieth birthday: Mr. The Pleasant Hour club had their and remove to platter to kecp hot. Mr, and Mr~: Carl.Sch.erme.e~ and the Fred Fenske home, Mrs. Fenske and Mrs. Raymond Larsen, Mr. and annual picnic in the J. L. Beaton Pour off all llllt auout six tahle- Lima Beans sons a~d Ross RobblDS- were dinner staYed for a longer v-isit.' Mrs. Albert Longe, Mr. and Mrs. pasture last Thursday. spoons of the [at. Add two diced guoots In the Fred Von Seggern home S oed d Gus Longe, Mr. and Mrs. August Mr. and Mrs. Al Sauser and family onions, and Raute them tilt golden Sunday.' " Mr. and Mrs,~ Gus chr er ", a1\ " Biermann and children, Mr. and of Randolph called in the S. A. Hal1 brown. Add the contents of two Dicp two long slices bacon, chop M,I\S. Car] Schienneier called in Mr. and Mrs. Clal'~ee Schr~er Mrs. Rudy Longe, Arnold lUlly and· home Thursday evening. No. 2 cans baked beans anrl·-two ~~~ S~~~~l ~t~i~:: ~~:n~l ~~~el~h::~ the Henry Brundieck hdme last week Lere ~UlltaYh guests

t Iii jhj h ,~c:! i

Albert Beck. Mrs. Ella Robins visited friends in teaspoons chill puwder. Heat and tbe drained lima beans from a Tuesday evening" agesc u e orne a an 0 p , The St. Paul's Lutheran Aid met Sholes Thursday and Friday. Mrs. thoroughly. Add salt to taste, if No.2 can. "season to taste witb Mr. and Mrs. Henry Reuter, Cal- The Rev. and lIf:rn. H. Gerke and

with Mrs. Richard Utecht Thursday Mildred Kenney returned to Wayne desired. Serve the bacon on top. s~ll an<l peppel' and pour iLt" a vil1.and Marlin and Edwin Daum vis-I daughter of Bancroft spent Monda,: afternoon. After a social afternoon for a viist in the Robins home. I Serves eight. buttere,1 baking <li,h. Add enougb ited last Thursday evening in the in the R. G, Rohrke home. the hostess served. ' John Alberson of Pender transact-- I Or, if you prefer to eat your bflan liquor to mohiteq (about half Henry Brundieck, home. I Mr. and ,Mrs. Frank Miller and

Miss Frances,;Baker is visiting this ed business in Sholes last MOnday.) beans in Jtalian fashipD, with a n. C'~P), and p!a('c in a hot oven Mr. and ~rs. Fred Von Segpe'" family and He!ll'ly' Clinch o~ Wayne w~ek in the ~ill Longe ~om€ and Mr. and Mrs. Nick Hansen . and little spaghetti, .trY tltese untIl br0wn on top. Serves six.· and children and Mr. and Mrs. Ray were Sunday dInner guests m the R. M.ss Darlene In the B.ll Baker I family of Winside visited Wednes- Falke called in the Car! Schiermeiel' G. Rohrke home, home d . ·th M d 14 M I home last Tuesday evemng, . Alfred Utecht of Winside was a,

. ay evenmg W1 r. an rs. ar- I Winside accompanied the Winside in the Art Longe home M ~ B d' k d M d Sunday dinner guests ~in the Paul Mr. and Mrs. F. B.. Utecht were I tin Madsen. Chris Hansen, who spent pe"ple ~ Sholes for an extended vis- Mr. and Mrs. Albert 'KilIion were rs. nry, run .• ec an r. an "iller home. .

Sunday supper guests 1n the Elwood a few days III the Hansen home 1n I it here. Wednesday dinner. guests in tht; I ,Mrs. Car ~chiermeI~r called on Mrs. J.,.1.

137(~4KJN(J EfrGS

FOR BREAI{FAST . HAS i,t fiver oc('urr(ld to you that and cook "pry>' AIO\vly- until a ~ the FJ'pnch word dejeUnf'f is goldfm hrown on thp bottom and a C'ombination of thE' words "jeun- the mixtuTf' i~ well pnfT8d up. ner"-to fast-anil - "de" which Then set skillet in thp oven for a means as a prefIX "un", so, minute or two to dry of! the top. whether you "bre~-fast" or "un- Fold over like a half moon and fast" you're doing; pretty much ~erve at once. the same thing? But a French Bu~ these two meth?~S ar~ not omelet is Quite .. 8:, different thing t!le only way of varymg omelet~ from a pUffy ()melet, although you ,)JoY a long shot. You ('.an ,ma.ke have~to break eggs to make both. vegetabJ~ o~el~ts, ~)m(;:dds. wItll _ Hefe'"SUie -- ""IJl1I"CB.ronf alfa TIlfnat<1 ~-a!)N~. aspa;r=-

Method jor Making P~nch ~gus ome~f't~, ('hee::w omfllf'tf', figb Om.rie!: Beal four eggs stightly. omelets, Jdly omelRt.tf.rnushroorn just enongh to mix the yellow omelets and maDy more. Here and white. Add one:h_aJl ie.asIHW"Q are a .. ~Ol-!''p'le made by the method~ ~aIt, a few f.!rains p~ppcr rlnd four deSCrIbed ahove. 1ahle-spoons milk. wa..ter or neam·1 Try These Omelets }lUl a small amount of baller Jll a hClt skillet anrl shake art"lunu till . Asparo!1us e Omrlct: Malte a It·s well greased on hottom and French omelet of fonf eggR, 0!1e­sides. pour. "in coo,>" mixture, re- haIr tf!aspoon salt, Ii ~ew grams duC"e heal and ('o~k VE'ry slowly pepp~r an(~ four' tah[e,J\10llll;,; unl1l ('reamy, ('onstantly lifting cream, addJDg. tW() ti.l.!Jl{'d!lO(~{j'3 (hp (~o()k('d portion al lll(; Aides gl"<I!et/ (',ll'?eSe Just br'f()rp pOUI·lIlg with a knife ·or spatula to alloW iuto ;:,tllll t. Cut tpe all,green the unr.ookeu mixture to run out asparagUA from a lOn-ounce can and c~ok. "\Vhen creamy a11 in half,inch piecAs, heat, drain off through, roll or fold over like a l.uy JiquL" i:..dd Oll{ tahle~,p~on half-moon...a.ruL . .s.en'1LJiL,~e.. bi.lttf'r, ~l' aSPoo~.l('n~on JIlJce

1 ------ 1Ill-rr-one-teIGl~:ppe{! paJ's-ley; Another Way and reheat. Spread o-veJ" omelet

And here's the way to make a just hefore rolding; S@rves fop.l" puffy omelet~ with exactly the liberally. . same ingredients: Cheese atld Spi.nach Omelet:

Beat four ·egg yolks until thick "Make a puffy omelet of fout eggs, and 1emdn cdlored. Add one-halt one-half teaspoon.saIt, a tew grains teaspoon salt, a ... few grains pepper. pepper, four ta,blespoons cream and {our tit,bL:er,poons" milK" w,ate,r ,an, d one·thlrd cup grated c!)eese, or cream. Heat egg whites until folding In the grated cheese with Btiff and',f91,\i,lr~0'tb~,,*olks, .Put', the beaten egi whIte., Heat one a small ~ntOtri1t o~ butter fp: a hot, cup canned spinach,.dr~lll, aea60Q skillet and ;!'~ake ar~u'nd ti~I tt~sl to taste with butter, s~t an~ ~~P­weJI grea:s~d"oh 'bottoml aDd sides., per and spread on the 'j)melet ju~t POlU' III ~ matUre. rM.uce heat before told1.nc. Serves, tive.o

"II

Helge Landberg and Bill Mattingl" Rollie LOonge home. ,----..:....------..:....----'-.-------------went to Sidney last Tuesday to work The Frank Longe and Rudolph Kay

I in the harvest fields. families spent· Thursday evening in

Joseph Mattingly of Wayne trans, the Rollie Longe home.

I acted business here last Wednesday. Marvin Killion and Ruth Roberlis I called Friday evening in the Rollie

1

---------------

1

. L01W.e~om;~skirk was a Thursday

I EAST of WAYNE evening supper guest in the Wallace

l1y Mrs. Ed Lar80n Rtng home. The Rev. and Mrs. Guy B. Dunning

were Thursday dinner guests in the Wallace Ring home. The Oscar Bloomqulst fa!rrrlly apent

Sunday in the David Nimrod home. The Ed Larsen and Henry Nelson

families were Sunday dinner guests in the Ollie Nelson home.

Mr. and Mrs. Russell Johnson and family and Bob and Willis Nelson

I 'pent Friday with Mm. N. E. Lar-

I sen.

Mr. and Mrs. Ray Agler enter­tained the Rev, and Mrs, G. B. Dunning Wednesday.

. N. E. WINSIDE By Ella C. Mann

Mr .. and Mrs. Pete Lundgren spent ,Friday evening in the Ed Larsen I home. Mrs. Sophia Davis and daughter,

About twenty ladies spent Tuesday Betty, were in Norfolk Friday afer~ afternoon in the Henry Nelson home noon. helping Mrs. Nelson celebrate her Mi'3s Ella Mann visited with Mrti. birthday., Jack Mann Thursday,

Mrs. Gust Holm and family and Mi-ss Loretta and Clarence Hoe-Mrs. L. Ring were ThuI"Sday din- man and Edward Brandt were Sun­ner guests in the Lawrence Ring (hlaomYev. i$ii?rs in, the Fred Wacker home and Mrs. E. Hypse and Mar-garet, Mrs. Luther Bard and Mrs. Clarence Davis went to Creston c. Bard and Betty were aftf-rnoon Saturday' to visit in....the-.!.ver. SaI-

I callers. roth home for a few days. Miss Mari-Mr. and M·rs. Herman Kay and a.n Davis, who has- been visiting there

Mrs. Pete Erickson were Sunday din- for .the past week, will return home ner guests· in the Orville Erick.son with him. 1 home. Mr. and Mr-s. Rufus Mann and son, I

Mr. and Mrs. Wes Rubeck and Grant Eugen€, vi-sited Sunday eve­family and Mr. and Mr-s. Joe Dal- ning with Mr. and Mrs. J. 1:. Mann gren and family were Sunday eve- and family. -ning visitors in the L. Ring homp. Mr. and Mrs. William Wittler and

The Luther and Clarence Bard and family were dinner guests Sunday of Jim Ring farmilies spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Gehner. Mrs. Lenis· Ring. Guests Sunday in the Peter Christ-

eora Haylund spent a few dayH in ensen home were Mr. and Mrs. Chris the Ezra Beckenhauer home. Jensen, Mr. and Mrs. ~E}ter Iversen

Mr. and Mrs. Ed Sandahl and and family, ' family were Sunday dinner guests in George Nielsen. of Ne~ York City ,the John Fredrickson home. left for SIOUX C.ty F"<day to v ••• t

Mr. and Mrs. Rollie Longe spent :.t few days with friends before re­-8tmtlay--evening-ffi-the Ed Sandah+ -t~..hmne. ---------home. Mrs. Hugo Fischer and daughter,

Mr. and MrB. August Longe slH~n 6 Ruby, visited Saturday evening with I Sunday evening in the Ed L;1.I',"rm Mrs. Sophia, Davis.

t home. Frederick Ni~~mann w.as a .~est)~

I Mr. and-·Mrs. Paul SundeTI--·spent the Herman MeieroeJrKs home at

Sunday in the Donald Milliken home,. Pfmder from Wednesday* untH Sat­Mr. and Mre. C. Agler spent Sun- urday evening.

I day evening in the Carl Sundell ·Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Mann viRitt;t).1 ! home. '.. ' with Mr. and Mrs. Jack Mann Wed-I

I France'~ ~eJ~n spent Monday in ne.;day afternoon. . I the C. Pearson home. Mrs. Oscar Hoemann and famllsr

1 Mr, and Mrs. Carl Andersen ant] visited in the" !'red \Vacker home on I

I family with other relatives had a .Thursday evemng. I picnic at Crystal lake Sunday. Mis:; Esther, ~ielsen has been. a.

I The S.ltUdY clup had a picnic u.t ~est of her sls~r, Mrs~ Aage NJel-1

Bressler park in Wayne Sunday. ,en, at Royal fill the pa,t week, , Charhe NeJ?ol) and daughter, Mar­

Dorothy Sundell had, an a~pendec' garet and Alice went to Sioux City ~my last week In a SIOUX C.ty hOK- Monday. '

!, Pltal. . I Clarence Wagner and 'Miss Edna

Sunday afternoon In the Swan Nel-' Mrs. Sophia Davis. -

\

Mr. and Mrs. P.aul Oleson called Davis were dinner guests ~undr\

sen home. . I Mr. and Mrs. Edward Niemann Mrs. Paul Oleson and Lavern spent and sons visited Thursd~y evening

Thursday afternoon in the C. Pear- with Mr, and Mrs. Vernon Keeney son home. ,: at Norfolk.

Mrs. Ed Larson e,ntertained La-I Mr, and ,Mrs. HQbert McClary and Porte' Community,dub Wedneaday, children ¥isited Sunday atternoon' Eij:hteen memb.m and three visitors with Mr. and 14rs. J. lj'. Mann. w.ere present. ! Mr. and Mrs. Harold Nel!Y.m of

.Joan Bubeck spe.nt the past week Norfolk are ~ & week'lS vaca-. ,

, . ~.

Canned Foods Met All T~sts' Prof)ed LiJe.aver. on Voyage "all!ng vessels that British ships

Around Ihe World were called 'liine Juicers' because Y_WBIe~~~~,~W~.-__ __

HOW the crew of the "Seth serve Ume juice to the crew to I

Parker" fared on an exclusive ward off this disease. diet ot canned foods for more "But even if we bad not had than seven week!;, and ate them t.he loganberry and tomato juice. all around the world to Samoa, we would not have fearea scurvy, -has bAen vividly told hy CQ.ptain as we bad a plentiful supply ot Constantin Flink, the Rhip's navi- canned spinach, beans, carrots. gating o~cer. The "Seth Parker" peas and other vegetables which Is the famous four-master whieh are equally good preventatives. aaJIed last year under the com- We a1so had Buch meats as canned mand ._ot PhillIps Lord who ere- corned beef and frankfurters, and ated the radio character after such fish as canned 'clam cl10wder whIch it was named, and codfish cakes. These latter

The ship's voyage tool{ it foods were luxuries because you through the furnace heat of the can't ca.tch fish at- sea. you know .. equator and the freezing cold except once in a long wh:lIe a 01 the NortlI Atlantic In mid· stray dolphin. winter, but the canned toads it And Then Mostly Canned carrted stood up through all Foods

-"Chang'es -ur-----temperature and UAt the Galapagos Islands we proved Illesavers throughout the caught a big haul-two tons--ot trip, fresh fish, but we couldn't get

Seven Weeks. Without Fresh much there in -. ---.ooa the way 01 A

"We expected," said Flink, wbo fa~~e~~r ;re:.t~~ _.has been on sailing ships for over fruit We got a III. ~

thirty years, "tp sail the seven 1 a r g e supply .!III \. \.::ZZ::jt hundred miles of wild lem- 1;

i~omth;~a~a~l: ~as~ a~f\n tt~! ~J~ . 1 pag09 Islanus way --.Of fruit.

in abo uta and for fresh week, but like m(;j!at we killed --the Ancient wo wild bulls. Mariner, we "It really wasn't until we were becalmed reached the Marquesas about a in the dol- month later that. we cou1d ·get a' drums, and, It plentiful supply of fresb ,foods, so

1t,:~vas well into for nearly thTee months the' chief the ninth week before we reached p~x:t of our diet consisted of.

~:e~:l~~~~'Of ~!:~~!e a.l~r~\ ~~~' ~~d~~~ f~~~S. u::"d tt.,9 ~! k::J tresh tood .was exhausted, and we Bome- things which are not usu~ had to rely eXclUBIVe,lY on our all; canned put up in tins" to 'P~, canned sUllplle.. sor 0 them lit sea tbrough all the

"Fortunately we had brought va ying tellweratures, Shredcl~ along Borne canned l~ganber~y wh~t, for jn8~,iice. '" A.~d we, ,ha~ joJce and canoed tomato JuJce. powdered milk and maIted milk There was n~ver a ,8~P.""o!1:.r;nOJ;l&' J¥J jwel~ ,!lB .e~a~or~4 .~,.t.-"~"'''''' our crew of that dre8.d Bcourge .• fAa, a. m~te~ of fact. we I!RI~' of the seas, 8CUrvy. which waR slsted.' largely on 'caD~ed fooda ... --,,\ lSI Ille <>kl. 4a;j>. ot~r ,~ ... ~ .,~ ..

-~

L

~SI~E "",ll ~~~j,~~, .~'Mi.l~~:l~:i.t!f"i~· ~~H~, i!,;~::~~~,~t,~~Ifnn:~ .=:."'~,~lIp,,¥.!'! Purse T~!;;On,ea, re~~= :~~Pyards'sixz~e~lteglstrau, ~ dtlrr llpf,~::::pt:a~,P=~O:~da,Y" By Mrs; 0,', M. ~O/IJ, enpo1't, i R.obert Johannsen bome Sunday eve-, cr",\m an? a large b.rthcjay cake, 1. 1Jl~ra Vote . 0 e~ econ . erm ""If tournament' ,to be' staged at

, 'mng. , .: cov~,,:d ,w.th ,75, candles, brought" by 2., EJ!zabeth:·S. , . _ -_-- . th~ Wayne CountJ,y elub .on August ...... '"------,. . .;; '-'-'-,.-'--'-'-..;,..-.:..,.....;...;·1 Mrs. O. M. Davenport ~nd sen, the PlO c\!'dreasen an? Anion Peder- . 3 •. M.6s MOt;'tez ABout 6Jl new 6tudents regt.tered 4!have been "circulated and posted in .

Mr. and Mrs. H~ry Gray of Larry, visited in the Lex Mitehell and, sen fam.hes, was enJoyed by the 4. P,?Uy Dear 1 Saturday and Monday f'lr the sec- c1l'b houses throughout northe8'3t Ne-Meadow Grove an\l Mr, and Mrs. I Louis Jensen homes at Sioux City' guests. Among the guests,..-were ~r'l 5. M.lto'! Moore ond term of sl1'mmer school at the braska. Plans for the tournament are George Nelson of Randolph visited in on Sunday. Carl Jensen accompanied and M",. Clyde Pei'rhfPand famdy 6. P~ungmg Sun W~yne State Teachers college. De- in~omplete at this time but a good the H. F. Miller hom~ on Sunqay. ,them home for an indefinite Vi"t. i Of. Randolph, Mr: and Mrs .. Rasmus 7. Vl1;tue sp.te th~ fact that 300 ~undr~d sh.- full day of golf is pro'mised. R. K.

D d M B M MI' ' ! Mr. and Mrs. Gurney Benshoof and N •• lsen and fallUly of Hoskms, Mr. 8. It s Keen dents w.thdrew, the regtstratlOn .s i,'rkman and D H Larson are in tend~d a;hurchs~ r';;ce; at \V~~ ~~ I Mrs. H. D. Addis'" of Wayne wore I and. Mrs. Walrac~ Cadwallader and Eligibles-Empress Mother, Sky about the same as that for the sec- c arge. ''-Sunda ""'rnin ~ yn ,An Sioux City on Monday. ! famdy of Carroll, Mr. and Mrs. Har- Rocket, Belle Lee and Java Ho ond summer term la.st year. . .

y g. . . Miss Gertrude Bayes returned old ,Druhner o~ Omaha, Mr. and >Eligible horses are those which Several faculty members left at the Injured Sunday .Mr. and Mrs. ,Merle Pa~lk vISlted home Sunday evening fr'll" Wavno i Mrs,. Jepp Ch-;15tensen and Mrs., may take laces of horses which ma close of the first term. Prof. Clifford I 1 six ear old

w.th Mr.. Paulk s parents, Mr. and where "he had made a sHort Vl>lt 'n Lama Jensen and son, Arthur, of I b 'tfid» b f t h t' y Bair went to Chicago where he will I Colleen. Rogge, y d t Mrs. Charles C;;ry of Pilger, on the ho~e of her sister, Mrs. Jem.Ie RodIltlY, ~Iowa, Mr. and Mrs. Pi') An- S· w~h ?wn. e dor:,,:c~dc t ~me. study for a time He also plans to d ughter .of Paul Ro!!,ge, .. un erwen Monday. ISh f I dreasen and daught.er, Agnes, Mr. cra .me.~ es ..... a a a.,., h' .' P . I an operabon for per.tombr at .tbe

M' M .' R d M' B tt ' crump. , d M A to Ped d d him. on day of races at Wayne. Horses' VlS.t .s parents m ennsylvl!ina. Dr. I Wayne hospital Wednesday mormng. ISS a.nan ew an . ISS e: Y I I. F. GaebJer spent last wec]{-(>TIrt an rs. n n .ersen an aug -1 are entered in ev~nts by means of J1'Kathryn Huganir will study at the! Sh .. d h'I I . . -th _

Ann HaskIl'l:, "?oth of SIOUX. C~ty, viSIting with relatives in 'WinsidP-: : ;er, Ve~<;l, of JIoskms, Olaf Hansen I drawing among horsemen. Withdraw- University of Pennsylvania at Phila-I a e was InJure w Ie p aymg In e were Sunda~ dmner guests m .he I Mrs. J. G. Neely. Mrs. Viola M.!l-I and Chns EI~ardt. . "als can be made onlf accompanied delphia and will do SQIlle writing. p rk Sunday. Clarence w.tte .home. Mls.8 Betty er and son, Richa·rd, Mrs. 1. F. Gaoo· Orgretta N.elsen of Hoskm~ and with a verterinarian's certificate Mies Lettie Scott will visit an aunt . ---.----WItte accompamed them ~,,?,e Sun'ller, and M,iss Margaret Schemel. of i, C~roline Pernn 0.£ Randolph are vis- Eligibles are allowed to . compeU; I in Virginia, Miss Jessie Stephens will (Arch.e M. S(~~t~!,e)der, Nebr.) day evemng for a sho~. V'Slt: ,Wayne VISited last week-end With 1.t1ng thell grandparents, Mr. and only in the order of drawing for each visit her home ,in Delaware Ohio y, F Mrs. GCora h Brodd vg.te! m the i relatives in Lincoln. The Winside I Mrs. J. C. Andersen, tl1is week. !!vent. 'Rules drawn up by the state Miss Vera Elefson will vi;it relu: NOTICE OF:HEARING r~nk ';t~ oml ':t' u1lr, people visited with Mrs. Neely's! ' racing commision limit the num- tives in Colorado and the west coast, ,Estate of David Herner, deceased,

K r. aO'ty rM n rew d 1 eisw ~ I aunt, Mrs. Nell Miller. . Pari-Mutuel Race' ber of contestants on a half miles and Miss Olive Huse will be in i b~ing Case No. 1725;1n the County andasas f' , , h" frr!v~t '!~h III' M!ss Betty Alln H~sklns ~nd Miss: Here Dm ..... s ""'ft_y track to eight entries. Wayne. I C~urt of Wayne County, Nebraska.

nes y ?r a S or VISl WI. ~. Manan Hew, of SIOUX CIty, and /. ',. .w.a.u St d ts "ta' d t' t f th . 'T th· 'ed" h' l' te Anderson s mother, Mrs. Obne An·, Miss Ruth Render were dinner uwts (Continued from page 1) . u en Ou me es 11na es 0 etr ,.0 elf cr .tors, e~rs, ega <:s, demon Walter Anderson who had.' th S H R h S tg u I f.rst term grades Tuesday and Wed- deVlsees and all persons mterested m enjoyed a short visit i~ K~nsas City,! m Mr~. Ii:er';'anewBe.:'t'::fe~nan: f:m~~, . Boo:'l'owed Editorials ., nesday at the office. said ~state:

(accompanied them home. I were Sunday dinner guests In the H. I tw.~n races. • I~o:u and each of you are hereby G. 'W. Cooper received :-vord. on C. Kleensan home at Hoskins. I. All appearances lead one to I?e- ". . Lutheran HospItal notif.ed ~at on the 17th ~ay of July.

Monday of the death of h.s 816ter'l Mm. A . T~ Chapin and Mrs. V. C., !.eve' that the Wayne. r!lees are ~e" (Attlcin, M,nn., Republu;an). Mm. Keith Cartwright, medical 1.~~5, ~ell.e M. Puckett ftled her pe-Mrs. Mary E. Hall, at her home ,n McCain Ittended church services at mg conductd on a legttimats . bast.... Of late we have heard mnumer- patient was admitted July 10 and titions m the County Court of Wayne Sioux City. , I Wayne on Sunday morning I Most of the winners thus far have able times how it is wise always to dismiss~ July 14. County, Nebraska, alleging that one

M;;rk Stringer of ~ltyne visited in, Miss Gladys Mettlen visited in the, been f,,:vorites that have wo~ consis- invest in bo'!d.--especlally gnv~r~- Mrs. Ray Rosacke. of Carroll, David Herner died ')n. the l~th day of the Mrs. A. T. Chapm home ~n sun-I Martin E. Olson home at Dixon on I te;"tly m other races. Pan·mutuel ment honds-;-mstead of land. Invar.- thraugh a caesarean operation, gave August, 19~1, that sa.d DaVl. d Hern<:. day. Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Mettl<n wmdows are !,~erated by Wayne men ably ~at phtlosaphy or theory of ec- birth to a seven and one-half pound was at the da~ of hill death a re~l-

Mr. and Mrs. Fred Trampe and I' of Sioux City also visited there. I under ~upe1'V1s.on of Secretary Ceo.· onom.cs tends to make :us mad as a baby girl Tuesday morning. I dent of the slIld co, unty of Wayne 11)

daughter, Norma, and Walter Shoe- Hjalmer Nelson was in NorfQlk N. Ronm. hatter. It may prove Jrughty remlln- A E P t' 'd t ti t the State of Nebraska, that he left maker of ~~rry, O~la., enjoyed last! Monday afternoon. . I Fir.t Race erative and safe to lucky i;"divid~ls with a 'fra~:~r!~e, a='a:~ ri~a ;n s !' last will and. 1:estament wh~ch said week-end Vls.ting mth Mr. ,md Mrs. I Mr. and Mrs. Herman Fleer and Purse $75 5 Furlongi', Neb. Foals for. the present--hut !'ar!'.ed to .ts admitted 'Sunda ana: dismissed Tue~- .'.'strument petitio'.'er h.as this day; Wm. Sehoos of Calumet, Iowa. Mr •.• daughter Miss Adeline and Mi-s 1 Prairie King ultimate end, where Wlll .t land us? d y ftled for probate 11) sa.d court, ana Trampe and Mrs. SchOOS are si~ters.! Norma Wolff attended the farmer~' 2: Tol11,lllY Lee A~ure?ly, it ~s the beginning. of soci- ay. that no appliea~ionh":s . heretofore WaIter'Shoermaker, wh~had Vlsited, meeting at Wcst Point on Sunday. 3 Bessie Banquet ahsm, .f noth.ng else. There .s some- Clara Vahlcamp had an appendec- been made for .ts adlntss.on to pro-two weeks in the hmne of his aunt, I The Methodist Ladies Aid met in 4: My MOdel thing inherently Jacking in the per- tomy Monday. ha~ in a!'y.county in. this ~tate; that Mrs: Tra?"l"" ,,:mai~ed, at Ponca for the church parlors last Tuesday af. 5. Star Bright BOO. who d?"s not. yearn. to ea~n .a, M~s. Ray Spahr, who undel'Went sa.d .DaV1~ He!",er ~ed ee.sed of .an an mdef.mte Vlsit ,n the Ed Less ternoon. Following the regular busi-I 6. Lekarooga ?trtp of SOli of h.s own, eyen If .t a .nnnor operation Monday, was dis- esta~ of mhentanc<; m th,: followmg home.. pess meeting a delicious two-course 1 7. San Flo IS. only the part of. the c.ty block m.ssed Tuesday. descnbed real esta~, to-Wlt:

Mrs. H. I?. Add.son ~nd son,. ~ohn" luncheon was served by Mrs. A. E. Second Race . w,tth a lawn and garde,! patch that Dorothy June Green, who under- The Southeast Quarter (SE %) of Wayne Vls.ted overmght Friday 1111 Fowler and Mrs. Harold j\nderson. Purse $75 5 Furlongs 3-Year Olds 'h1S h?use stands 0;". Beh.'!d .that mo- went an appendect8iny July 6, was and the South Half of the N»rth-the Gurney Bensh'JOf home. ." Mr. and Mrs. Charles Roberts of 1. Polly Dear ttve .s. th~, e~se'.'tial patrtotism that dismissed Saturday. east Q~arter. (S 'h of NE %) . Be1;tY and Kenneth Heseman VlS', Norfolk visitsd In the Dave Leary 2. Time Will Ten underhes" th.s. 1S my ,!wn, my na- Miss Celestine Heck, a nUMe at the of Sect!on Nmeteen . (19), m .ted In the Frank Gray home on I home on Monday. I 3. J. Selby ttve land. It ,. somet~mg that can Lutheran hospital, underwent .. ton- Townsh.p Twe~tY-f.v:e (25), Mon~y. ., The Eastern Star lodge met Mon- 4. Baby Face really be loved-n?t I.'ke, a paper I sillectomy Saturday and left for her North, Range Five .(5), East

M.ss Betty Ann Has~ms a'.'d M~ss i daS' evening in the Masonic hall for 5. Mise Nobody .. ' hond that has no mtrms.c value at I' her hom. e at Pierce Sunday. of the 6th P. M. m Wayne Manan. Rew,.hoth of SlOUX C:,ty, v'~'1 their regular meeting. Follawing the 6. Dr. Twink all. - Mrs. Austin Erxleben's condition County, N~braska.. . . lte,d ~th frtends. and rel.atives in businf,."-ss session refreshments wer.e I 7. Miss Mikioi .. is much improved. That petitioner 18 mterested In Wms.de from Fnday un~.1 Sunday. served by Mr. and Mrs. Walter 8. Sweetest Heart (K,!nBas Clt1/ T'mes ) Mrs. Anna Jelinek is improved. said re~l estate as the daughter and

Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Neely and I Gaebler and Mrs. A. T. Chaplll. Third Race The h~av.~st demand for farm ma- Mrs. C. C. Paulk remains about the ')n.ly he .. of Mary E. Hern,;r, to whom son, Jack, and Mr. ,!nd Mr •. Jeanl Purse $80 5th Furlongs chmery m five years .s reported by. same. sald real estate was deVlsed under Boy~ were Wayne v .... itors Sunday I Carroll Claiming for Three Year aIds the farm implement. trade. 0, rdersl Jacqueline and Finley Helleberg the terms of said last ~Il and testa-evemng. __ 1_ . 1 Joe Kl'ieger for tractors are lar In advance of had tonsillectomies Tuesday. ment, and of whIch sald r€al estate

Mr. and Mrs. Jake Koemgshoil and . 2' Ad r A delivery. The demand for binders has I the said Mary E. Herner likewi.e "')n, Bertt Mr. an~. Ml-s. John Helms I J. C. Andersen was sUrJ~rtsed Sun- 3' Ho~~a All exceeded all expectaticms. W H' tal \lied seised. and d~ughter,. Adehne, Mrs. Herman ~y when r<:lattves and fr~ends came 4: Junio~ Seth Farm machinery wears out and. ayne OSpl . That petitioner prays that an or-Beuthlen, M.ss Anna and Jolm m to help h.m celebrate h.s seventy- .> Fin r Wave must be replaced. The low prices for I qale McGee. of. Norfolk, medlCal l der of said court be made and en-

. .'_. '.,1;-- 6' Dr geLouis Hamman farm products, with the accompany-' pattent, was d •. sm.ssed J~ly 10. . tered, fixing a time and place for 7' Beile iee ing lack of purchasing power on the I Mr~ .. C,!-rl ~"~or'd surgteal patient, hearing on said petition, and nofiCe 8' Nick J part of farmers has built up a de-I was. .~~.sse on ay. . thereof given as by law requirea.

. Fourth Race cided deficien~y in agricultu~al equip- a~~~fn:a~ o~i~':ru°s~e~a~~d:u.'gtcal proceeding>o h":d f?r the admission to Purse $75 Five Furlongs 3-year olds ment of all kinds. Old machmery has p Nor';' C y' c diti y. . _ proba~ of sa.d mstrument. as t~e

1. Missiour Dude been repaired, farmers have borrrow- roved. an apse s an on IS 1m last WIll ~nd te~tame~t of saId D3:V1d 2 Bald Eagle ed from each other and worried along p EI E hte k d t Herner, d.spensmg w.th the appomt· 3' Bud Smith with breakdowns and delays until re- . mer c. n amp un erwen. a ment of an Executrix or Xdministra-4: Real Choice placements have become necessary. I nn~iIe~~era:~ggen Wedn~~dayy:::~rm~fi trix W!th the :will an.nexed, barring

fGiOver Farm St6rcs 5. Esther Wheel I In addition heavy rain6 in May and I d ht of P ul R .. all cla.ms agamst sa.d estate and

Rich, creamy, wholesome. Gives zest to your Salads! Pt. jar 6. Glorious Sweep June have delayed farm work and I e::t~d e,:;, for p~ritoJ~eWed~:s(I';; tha~ .the ~T shad II ~u~~her dicree

• 7. Rudy Sir forced purchases of tractors and! . ass1gn, a~ escen a e rea pro-

19 I 8. The First binders whe~e a normal season would I morntng. perty. wh.ch ~he deceased owned at

O EI 'bl H IF' . . ., the tIme of hIS death In accordance 11(1 e e ~n . have made th.s actt?n unnecessary. Thuve3 Enter BUlnne •• House. 'th th te f 'd' '11

FIfth Race Fortunately, the bUYIng can now be I . WI e. rIns. I) Sal WI. . Purse $90 Seven Furlings Claiming done more easily than before. I ThIeves ent~red the Wayne drug . ~ hearmg WIll be had on said p,e-

SALAD DRESSING

Grape Nuts Package

Root· Beer T & T Extract, package

Crisco For Summer Cooking, I-pound can ..................... .

Coffee RED CUP, lb.

Take Your Yeast Dai,ll/ in

Yeasties Yeast hidden in a DeliClJous New Cereal! ...... .

Ice Te.a Green Cup Ice Teaspoon with Half Pound ...

160 90

230 180 140 350

Fruit Cocktail 17 C Clover Farm Tree Ripened Fruits, Sliced, No.1 Tall Can

D · Z· M Jar OmlDO IDe a50B Caps Dozen " ....... . ._-.............. -.......... -............... .

Sandwich Spread Clover Farm. A Ta~ty .~elicious Spread. Pint jar

Soap Chips Clover Farm, large package ......... .

Oxydol Medhun Package.

P .. & G.Naptha 3 bars for ....................................................................... .

230 19c l7e 220 13c

~!!~~! ....................................................................... 190· ~~~It~ b~oap . 19c. -. ................................................................. .

T~i\'~:Ti~~ue . .~. 19,0 ~dale •. oft:~1Uboa&edTinne, 4 large :roDs ............ =.

I I, nq!l! i, !! .

'. ,i i S.:D~!'''~:...:, e Owner Fr,.·,,,,.,"',,,"C'I' ", .. ' !~g" ,I . •.

- ueuvery " Phone 855 ,"

at $500 Three Year Olds ..... , store and Brlgg-s Motor company I titlon at the county court room In 1 'T B 'k The lmproved fmanclal condIbons I early Sunday relieving both places said county on the 2nd day of Au-2' D~~~s .ret of farmers, due to 7/)..cent wh~at, $91 of merchandi~e. The Wayne drug, gust, 1935, at 2 O'clock, P. M. 3' A H t hogs and $10 tp $11 cattle, .s fur-I .tore was the heaviest loser as mer-I Dated this 17th day of July 1935 4' B;~~;;'.ie ear t~er reflected in reI?orts that ColleC-I' chandise vlllued at $75 was missing (SEAL( J .. M. C~ERRY •. G: Has Dude l.tions have been s~ti5factory, espeCl- there. This included narcotics, foun- I Tuly 19 .... 25, Aug 1 County Judge

City I L laHy· on all new busmess transacted. tain pens, razor blades and cigarettes. I ~. S~;: Bo~i' I . A wheel and tire and small quantity (Archie M. Smith, Attorney, Pender, 8: Miss Montez EIghty Attend Luther 'of change from the. cash register Nebr.) I Eligibles~UItra Vote and Indian Lea Meet "Sundayi were taken at the Brtggs Motor com- NOTICE OF PETITION

Lore I gue pany. Entrance to hoth places was I Estate of MallY E. Herner, de-. Sixth Race -= i gained through windows, it is said,; ceased, being Case No. 1726, in the

Purse $100 1 Mile 70 yds 3-Year Olds AhoJ!t SO yaung people ir')m the . County Court of Wayne. County, No--1. Blessefield I Emerson, Winside and Wayne Luther Forme.- Wayne Stud, n' D... braska. 2. Java Ho leagues attended a pre-eonvention Mrs .. AI~rt M,!"key .of Lau~el, The. State of 1:'ebra~ka, To aU per-3. Boiling rally at Our Redeemers Evangelical' who ~.ed In a SlO~x City hosp.~1 son~ mterested .~ .sa.d Estate, t~ke 4. Empress Moher Lutheran church here last Sunday. I fol!owmg an !,per~tlOn for append.- nobce, that a. Pet.tton has bee~ f.Ied 5 It' K be 4' I k CltiS, was buned m Lau..,1 Monday for the appomtment of Nelhe M.

. s ~.n .The program gan at 0 c oc i last week. Mrs. Mackey, nee Esther Puckett, .... Administratrix of said 6. McLeay ,. W1t~ a scavenger hunt, followed by: I C. Ebmeier, was graduated from Estate, which has been set for hear-

FilJ'st Race per was served at SlX-t~lrty by. tile 1927. Her widower, one son, her par- o'clock, P. M., in the County court Thursday s Race Program soctal games ')n the c~urch.lawn. S1!P"" Wayne State Teachet;l! college ,in ling. on August 2nd, 1935, at twQ.

PUMe $75 5 Furlong>o Wayne Luther- leagne gtrls, aSSlsted ents, three brothers and three sisters room at Wayne, Nebraska. Three Year Olds b~ Mrs. Lester Vath, Mrs. Oscar survive her. Two of her sisters, Dated July 17th, 1935. !

1. Miss Mikoi L •. edtke, Mm .. Walter Lerner and Misses Ruth and Lena Edmeier, also! (SEAL) J. M. CHEaRY, 2. Pan out M.ss Marguen~ Vollerers. After. sup- attended school here. ' July 18-25 Aug 1 County Judge. a. J. S. Miller per, a commumty smg was ~nJoyed 4 San Flo by all. The program closed Wlth de-5' Salve votionals at eight o'clock. The les-6: Helen 1'. son on the life ')f St. Paul .was lead 7. Baby Face by Mrs. H. A. Teckhaus. Five mem-S. Bonnie Lee bers of the. Wayne Luther le~gu~,

Second Race Misses EIVlra Schroeder, Minnie Purse $75 4'h Furlongs Denkinger, Marguerite Sund, Alta Two and Three Year Old Maidens Blaker and Ruby Dunklau, presented

1 Polly Show a skit, entitled the "Luther Leag'" 2: Little Marvel I Revue." A paper on !he. Last ~uP-8. Always True per by Leonardo de VlnCI '!las g'lven II

4. Johnny Nomark by Helen Vath. Misses Soph.e Damme 5. Lady' R. I and Helen. Vath pres~nted som~ 6. MillYR. speclal mUSIC:. H?go 'Velchert, Jr., 7. Loup River IOf Emerson, presIdent f)f the Luther I Eligible,s--COJ"sicon, Tommy Lee Le.ague SYTI?? addressed the group

and Sugar Bowl. brIefly, clOSIng the program. ~hio-d Race ,The Rev. and Mrs. Wm. Most ac·,

Purse $80 5 Furlongs companied tHe Winside leagne a11'i i . Three Year aids . the Rev. and Mrs. HUgo. Weich,'rt II

1. Star Bright and family of Bmerson accompanied 2. Gateway t,he Emerson" group here. . 0.

3. Miss Nobo.cW The Luther league convention WIll! 4. Esther Wheel be held at Winoside on August 7 and I

..li..Time.WillTcll -18. ~

~: ~~ijr~a~l~g , . I Twel;e Wayne Studelits-- I ... 8. Nebraska Queen R' d U' 't 1 Eligibk's-Reed's Choice, Missouri I egIstere at mversl y

Dude, Dr. Louis Hamman and My II . ---Model. Of the thirteen students from

Fourth Race Wayne caunty attend, ing the Uni-P-ur-se- --$80· -6=B-u.r~ versity oL.N ebraska _ during its sum-I

Nebraska Foaled Three Years olUs I mer sessWns, twelve are rrolfi~ ~e and up, . city Qf Wayne and one from Win-

1. Cindy'6 Lindy side. Gayle B. Childs, A. J. Foy 2. LeKaronga Cross, Frederick G. Dale, Robert S. 3. Bud Sm,ith Gibb, Leonard F. Good, Lawell H'

I 4. Colonel B. B. Henney, Howard D. MeEaehen, An-5. Norma Clark na M. Geisler, Gertrude J. Lutt, 6. Glori'lUs Sweep Gertrude E. McEachen, and Helen 7. Sweetest Heart Ray are registered in the graduate

Fili'" Race -~ .oeoRege. -as is Harold W . .Jensen of Purse $90 Seven Eighths of a mile I Winside. Miss Elizabeth A. Klaner

Four Year Olds and Up is enrolled as a junior in the college 1. Indian Lore I of arts and sciences. 2. True Book W.ith more than 2,000 students 3. J. Selby registered in its summer sessions, the 4. !?ad's Pet University of Nebraska has its larg-5. nfOOksie est attendance since 1932. Of these, 6. Belle Mystery 726 are in the graduate college. -. 7. Voltina 8. Col';;'e] Lee Eligibl~Boling and Billie Lolden

o8..,(li. RGC<I ~o.teI, Stratton ne:rb.lr

Edna Davis spent the week-end in Blancoe, Iowa, where they attended a :family picnic and Visi~ with the Will navis lamU7' '

Dinner for

T TTEP.E was a good !':almon ('atch this yeaF-, -and--salmon is ODe or the best fish you ever

ate. Under these circumstances you can be both economical and an epicure by serving salmon as oftf'n as. possible. The fo]Jowing dinner, for instance, costs only 25 cents per person. but tastes as if it bad cost a lot ttlore.

Salmon Loaf i:'1 Bread C!l!fe 45(/ CTl'umed PotcltoelJ 18¢

But{ered Pea.~ 184 Sliced Cucum bers, OnionlJ and

RadiIJhe& 2.~¢ Pineapple Mar_hmallolD

Cream S9¢ Demi.Taue 5;

Salmon Loaf In Bread Ca,.:

~tth ~h:d:~s~ !~::l f!t~ebr!a~. and seoop out the center. leaving a bollow oblong ease. BrUSh out-

Bide of case with two ta:J,e'.;poons elte.d_ butter. f'lahe tl" ("1'1-

tents of om! tall ca-n- Falmun-. a jlt-~--' two beaten eggs, one· half tea~po'ln salt. one-elt;hth tea~pool! pell:/'-:' and four tablespoons cream. ..1.(1.1 one-half cup crUI:l~s (frnm """.)Cf'i

of loaf). Add three tableslJouw,; melted butter, and pour this rrdx-ture into the bread case. Cnver the top with a .few r.1ore'''T11:r: ... frorn- center or' loaf. slig!ll," h,! -teredo Bake in !'low-·:;~.; d.· gree~ven for ahout for,'·" minutes. Serve in -8lices. Ser' six.

Pinea·pple Marsnmaf{01e Crea' Cut sixteen marshmallows lQ

quarters with scissors. Brin~ one, cup canned crushed Hawaiian. pineapple.to boiling anu pour ()n~:­m,arshmalJows. stJrTing until they are mel~ed. Cool.· Beat one ClQ cre3:m and told in. line in dp~"""'~t glasse~ !lnd chill. _ Serves su .•

.. ~

~~GAiwM 1Vilblll' F. Dierld1llr, IIbii8ter

The Church is a great hospltlal f"'" sinners whose head physician is J e­sus Christ. The church is not a. pre.­tentious rest sanitarium for the laxation of saints.

Morning worship at 11 a. m. Church sch'.>Ol at .9 :45 a. m. Chris~a!l Endeavor: College, 6.30

p. m., high school, 6 :30 p. m. "To all who mourn and need

fort-to all who are and rest-to all wh'J are want friendshi_to all who'are Iy and want companionshi_to who pray and to all who do not­to all who sin and need a Savious, and whosoever will-this Church opens wide its doors, and in the name of Jesus our LOO'd says--

SHERIFF'S SALE

N'artII, ltaNt'e Three '(3); . of the 6th 1'. Ill.. ill "qae Cc!unq., Nebraska, ,

to Atlsfy the liens and encumbrances therein set forth, and to satisfy the sum of $38.67 coats and the In· creased and accruing eosts, all as provided by said order and, deoree. I Said real estate will he sold sub­

j oct to a first mortgage in the amount of ,20,000.00, and accruing thereon from and after 1, 1934, which first mortgage awned and held by The Equitable Life AsSUrance Society of the United States.

Dated at W .. yne, Nebraska, this 10th day of July, 1935.

JAMES H. PILE, Sheriff

Wayne County, Nebraska. July 11-18-25 Aug. 1-8

By virtue of an Order of Sale, to SHERIFF'S SALE me directed, issued by the Clerk of By virtue of an Order of Sale, the District Court of Wayne County, me directed, issued by the Clerk of Nebraska, upon a decree rendered the District Court of Wayne County, therein at the September 1934 tenn Nebraska, upon decree rendered thereof, in an action pending in said therein at the September, 1984, term CQurt wherein Metropolitan Life In- thereof, in an action pending in said surance Company, a corporation was Co.urt wherein The Connecticut Mu­plaintiff and Arthur E. Stringer,' et tual Life Insurance Company, a cor· aI., _re defendants, I will, on the poration was plaintiff and William 12th day of Augu~t, 1935, at 1~ A. VanKirk, et al., were defendanw, o'clock a. m., at the door of the office I will, on the 12th day of Augu;;t, of tlfo Clerk of said Court, in the 1935, at 10 o'clock a. m., at the door court house in Wayne, in said coun· of the office of the Clerk of said ty, sell to the highest bidder for cash, Court, in the court house in Wayne, the following described real estate, in said county, sell to the highest to-wit: bidder for cash, the following des-

The West Half of the Southwest cribed real estate, to-wit: Quarter of Section sixteen (IG), The Southwest Quarter (SW~) Township twenty-six (26), North, of Section f,ive (5), Township twen­Range Two (2» East of the 6th P. ty"'Seven (27), North, Range One M., Wayne County, Nebraska, to (1), East of the 6th P. M., Wayne .satisfy the aforesaid decree, the I County, Nebraska, to sati-sfy the a­amonnt due thereon being $4,248.2;,) I foresaid decree, the amount due with interest, and costs and accru.ing! thereon being $11,867.77 with inter-costs. I e""t and co:;;t<; and accruing costs.

Dated at Wayne, Nebraska this jl Dated at Wayne, Nebraska this 10th day of July, 1935. ·10th day of July, 1935.

JAMES H. PILE, I JAMES H. PILE. Sheriff. II County Sheriff.

July 11-18-25, Aug 1-8 July 11-18-25 Aug. 1-8 I

NOnCE OF SHERIFF'S SALE I BOARD OF EQUALIZATION IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF Wayne, Nebraska,

WAYNE COUNTY, NEBRASKA .. I July 9, 1935 By Vlrtue of an .ord~r of sale 15- I Board ()f Equalization met as per

sued out of the Dlstnct Court ?f I adjournment. All Imembers pres~nt. Wayne County, Nebraska, .and In No further busin€'3s completed. pursuance of a decree of saId Court Whereupon Bl)ard adjourned to in all. action therein pending, inJ

I July 23, 1935. rlexed 2t Appearance Docket~ 12 at I Bertha Bel res, ClerK. Page 237, being Case Number 4476, wherein The Equitable Life Assur-

I COMMISSIONERS PROCEEDlN(;S

ance Soc1ety of the Umted States, a corporation, is plaintiff and Adotph Wayne, Nebraska, Meyer, et aI., are defendant., I will july 9! 1935. at 10 o'clock A M. on Monday the i Board met as per adJournmen~. All 12th day of Au~t, 1935, at the meIl";bers present. . _ South front door of the Wayne coun-I ~lnutes of meetmg held June 20, ty Court House in the City of Wayne 19.,0, read and approved. , Wayne County Nebraska sell at Comes now J. M. Cherry, County public auction 'to the highest bidder I Judge, ~nd or.ders the payment. of for cash the following described pro-' Mother,s PenSIOns tQ the followlllg: pert to- ·t. To Mrs. Mmme Krause for Ferne ~e &:uti. Half of the North- Pip,Pitt $30.00 per month. for, a,

east Quarter (S Ii. NE ~ ), also per10d of SlX months begmmng • ~ly the Southeast Quarter (SE%), 1, 1935, for the support of her. m!ll-all in Section Fifteen (15), in or ch1ldren: Cha:lotte Mary P1Plutt, Township Twenty-fleven (27) ~:~~l Fp4,;~~ P1PP1tt, and Kathryn

SALMON is smart

,.

Tku Good Fish Is (;ood Form, Nutritiou.s and

Inexp€1I.!ive

To Augu;;ta Sellin at $10.00 per month for a period <Xf six months be­ginning July 1, 1935, for the sU11pcrt I)f her minor child: Lloyd SeUin.

To Mrs. Jennie Jones at $10.00 per month for a period of six months be­ginning July 1, 1935, for the suppon of her minor child: Ermlyn E. Jones.

To Marietta Morri. at $20.0J per

I month for a period of six months be­

. ginning July 1, 1935, for the sup­I port of her minor childrQn: Rosaline Margaret Morr:ls and Edwin Gladen Morris.

To DaISY Plppitt at $2'~.OO per month for a period of ~lX monthH he. g1l1mng August 1, 190G, for the sup­port of her minor children; Ahee Eugenia Pi ppI tt and Ramona Rose Pippitt.

I Report Qf J. J. Steele, County ! Trea::;urer, showmg amount af fees 'I receIved by him for the quarter end~

ing June ~iO, 19:~5J amounting to the <:::iUIn of $1.95. was exammed and on motion duly approved.

Rep'Jrt of Bertha Berres, County Clerk, tihowmg amount of fees re~ ceved by her for the quarter ending June 30, 19."3-5, amountmg to the sum of $598.95, and the payment of the srurne tnto the county treasury, as shown by receipt hereto attached, waii examined and 011 motion duly ap­p-rG¥ed,- .and Board finds that she

1 1 1 1 .................... c .... . 1 Suppl. Agreement to cor·

i-eet R. E. Mtg. ~"-",, 1 Lease Agreement ......... , United States' Treasury Bonds

-- ' \" 1946-48 3% due 6-15-48 - 10 1296 Instruments .................. $ 598.95\ $1000.00 each, 2 for $11,000.00

Report flIf J. M. Cherry, County totaling $30,000.00 with Dec. Judge, showfng amount of fees reo 1935 and subsequent' c<>upons cei1'ed by him for the quarter ending ed, being No. -.23873 1 M June 30, 1935, amounting to 'the sum 2337-8 10 M. of $4~0.40, and the payment of the I Warrant bearing claim No. . same.,llto the county treasury, was drawn in fav()r of L. W.­exanllned and <>n motion duly ap-/ Hardware draWn on County Road 2250 P'RVed'rt f PIE S II Co ty Fund, First District,. is hereby can., ~~ Sup~:Shtnrin ::ount Of

e$61.91 asunthe: celled. I • 2253 balance in tie Institute Fund at the I The funds of. '!h!' county a!,d 1ts close of business on July II, 1935, i n~merous sUb-di~Sl<>IIS of which the was examined and on 'In<>tion duly ap- ! ~ounty t~rough lW connty trea",!rer 1889 proved 'f 1S custod1an are found to be deposlted

• . .in the banks of the:'county at the Report ot James I,f. P.lle, S.herlff, close of business for June 1935, as 2254

showmg of fllflS. recelved by hlm for follows: (Th;. does not include .the 2255 the qm>;rter endmg March 31, 1935,! funds invested ,in liberty bonds or 12256 amounting to the sum of $1?1.75 and I the funds on hand in the office of 2257 the payment of the same ~nto the I' the county treasurer.) 2258 county .treasury, ,WAS e:xammed and State National Bank. 2259 on motlOn' duly approved. W $23 5

On motion Joint Custody Receipt' U. s.ynNati~~~i .. ·B~~k~ .. ··...... ,65.94 ~~:~

IN9um35be'~thJOth.30F3~, daN ted . JulneB

24k,j Omaha ................................ 30,862.47

Wl e lrst atIona an, First National Bank,

Creosote Material Agency, unloading lumber Winter Oil Co., gasoline, oil and repair ........................... _ Winter Oil Co., gasoline and oil I .............................................. .. W. F. Machine Works, washer arid labor ............................... .

~[~~~:~;;~i}l~f~::~~:::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:~~~~~~ Automobile or M otc'r V""iels Fund

Road Dragging Diet. No. I-Erxleben -~----________ I Omaha- ................................ 39,193.19 2262 Van Supper Service, Diesel fuel ........................................ ' ........... .

The following claims are on motion audited and allowed and wailfants 'Jrdered drawn on the respective funds as herein shown. Warrants,." be ready and available on Saturdl'Y, July 20, 1935.

...................... _. .. ...... General Fund .. 1034 Oomaha Printing Co., supplies fcxr Co. Clerk 1782 Costs in Case of State YS. John Ulrich:

J. H. Pile, Co. Sheriff, -sheriff's costs ......... _ .. J. III. Cherry, Co. Judge, County Court c')Sts ....................... . D. K. Sevy, witness fees, claim $~.10t examined and rejected.

79.80

3.32 5.50

Anna Kopp, witness fee" claimed $2.50, examined and rejected. Myrtl~ Sevy, witness fees, claimed $2.50, examined and rejected . MaUrice Kopp, witness fees, claimed $2.10, examined and rejected. J. H. Pile, witness fees, claimed $2.10, examined and rejected. Arlline Ulrich, witne,s fees, claimed $2.10, examined and rejected Bennie Ulrich, witness .fees, claimed $2.10, examined and rejected. Walter Ulrich, witness fees, claimed $2.10, examine~ and rejected. John Ulrich, witness fe€s, claimed $2.10, examined and rejected. Eva Ulrich, witness fees, claimed $2.10, examined and rejected.

217,1 Costs in Case of State YS. Eva Lou P"ince: D. P. Miller, Justice of Peace, court costs. 8.70 George Bornhoft, constable'G costs . ...... 3.40 J. H. Pile, Co. Sheriff, sheriff's COStR 7.82 J. C. Carhart, jury fee and mileage. .......................... 2.05 Henry Lage, jury fee and mileage 2.05 H~. E. Fisher, jury fee and mileage .. .. ................................ 2.05 C huck, jury fee and mileage ......... ...................................... 2.05 W. . Canning, jury fee and mileage. 2.05 T. A. Lally, jury fee and mileage ....................................... 0 ..... _.. 2.05 Dr. G. J. Hess, witness fees and mileage, daimed $2.05, examined and rejected. .. Dexter JO!I1es, witness fee3 & mileage, claimed $3.20, examined and rejected. _ Mrs. Dexter Jones, Witness fees and mileage, cla.imed $3.2l), examined and rejected. Max Ash, witness fees and mileage, claimed $3.20, examined and rejected. .. .. Mrs. Max Ash, witness fees and mileage, claimed $3.29, exaJrnined"' and rejected. Hilma Johnson, witness fees and mileage, claimed $3.20, examined and rejected. Clarance Johnson, witness fees and mileage, claimed $3.aO, examined and rejected. Artie Fisher, witness fees and milcal!<', claimed $3.20, examined and rejected. Mrs. Artie Fisher, witness fees and mileage, claimed $3.20, examined and rejected. . Ivar Prince, witness fees and mileage, claimed $~.20, examined and rejected. Cris Hansen, witness fees and mileage, claimed $3.20, examined and rejected. Mrs. Gus Hanks, witness fers and mileage, claimed $3.20, examined and rej acted. -Ida Hanks, witness fees and mileage, .claimed $3.20, examined and rejected. Emil Hanks, witness fees and mileage, claimed $3.20, examined and rejected.

2175 Carroll News, printing .. 2176 Wayne Herald, printing ....... .. .................. .. 2177 Milburn & Scott Co., supplieR for Co. Supt .... .. 2178 Norfolk TypeWJ;iter Co., suppli", for Co. Treas. 75c;

Ca. Clerk $2.50, 'Total . ........ .. .. ........... , .. o.o .... c ... " ..

2179 State Journal Printing Co., supplies for Co. Clerk 2180 Huse Publishing Co., supplies for Ca. Clerk. 2181 Hammond & Stephens Co., supplies for Co. Supt ... 2182 K-B Printing Co., supplies for Co. Supt. 2183 Theobald Lbr. Co., lumber for co. jail, .. " .............. . 2184 Fred Ellis, hauling trash from co. jail for May and June .... 2185 O. S, Robert6, plumbing at jail and courthouse

13.41 24.55 96.57

3.25 8.80 1.45

24.32 36.69 1.83 2.00 7.77

2263 I;eslie S~nney. maintaining road and cash advanced for tire repaIr .................................................. : .....................•.................

2264 2265 2266 2267 2268 2269 2270 2271 2272 2273 2274 2275 2276 2277 2278 2279 2280 2281 2282 2283 2284 2285 2286 2287 2288 2289 2290 2291 ~292 2293 2294 2295 2296 2297 2298 2299

'2298 2300 2301 2302 2303 2304 2305 2306 2::;')7 231.1"8 2:300 ~':10 2:nl 2312 2313 .2314 .2315 2316 2317 2318 2319 2320 2321 2322 2323 2324 2325 2326 2327

Harvey N. Larsen, road dragging ............................ , ................ . Adolph H. Claussen, road dragging .................. c ........................ . Herman f. Vahlkamp, road dragging ...................................... ..

~t~~;1·~j:.-~-~::~~~~~~~~.

!.viWi. =:~~~, r~~ ~=~~ :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Edwin Longe, )'oad dragging ....................................................... . Willie C. Kay, road dragging .................................................. ..

~~ i'~:C~~t:r~:~~i·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

~:f.:#~~~~~Jt~ftt;:::~~·~::~::~~\~~:: .. ·~~L~~:·.·=:~.~.;::~ L. P. Keeney, ro.ad dragging ....................................................... .

Road Dragging Dist. No. 2-Rethwisch

~~lJ~~;~:~!t~;··~~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Walter Tietgen, dragging roads ._ .......................................... ..

~dmD~~~~~~;,:~~~d!O~~~ .. :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::.:.::::::::: R. Irwin Jonoo, dr~ging roads " ........................................ ' .... . John Gettman, draggmg roads .................................................. .. Chas. Thun, dragging roads ..................................................... _. !\ugust Lorenzen, dragging roads .............................................. . Art Koepke, dragging roads ...... " ............................................. . Tritchard Br"s., dragging ro.ads ............................................. .. W . H. Waguer, dragging roads .... " ........................................ .. Edw ones, dragging roads ';: ..................................... . Alfred ie, dragging roadf/ .................................................. ..

~i&l~o~:~g.~~~!:fr~~gi':d~.,;d~··:::::::.::::::::::::::::· ... ::::::'.:::::::::::::': Ray Rosacker, dragging roads ................................................. . Luther Anderson, dragging roads .............................................. . Rees L. Richards, dragging roads .............................................. .. Henry Arp, dragging roads ." ........ " .................................. . E. O. Richards, dragging roads ........................... .. L. ,J. Richards, dragging road" ............................................... .. C, B. Wattier, dragging roads ........ .. ...................... .. Rayman Clark, dragging roads Arnold Mau, dragging roads E. W. Stoltenberg, dragging roads Glen Frink, dragging roads. Sweigard Bros., dragging roads ...... .

Road Dragging Dist. No. 3-Koctl 2186 Martin L. Ringer, in-surance premiums on policies No. F. W. 1278 - Courthou,e, No. F. W. 1279 - Co. Jail 558.24 22!J9 L, P. Keeney, road dragging ....... " .... .

60.00' 2328 Nieman Oil Co., gusoline and oil .............. _ .............................. . 2187 L. E. Panabaker, f;ala~·y as Co. janitor for June ...... . 2188 Burr R. Davis, salary as co. Atty. for 2nd quarter, clerk

hire and office expense .... .............. .... . ............... . 2189 Frank Erxleben, long distance phone calls <and postage

Jan. 1st to July l·,t 2190 Frank Erxleben, commissioner .."ervices for June 2191 David Koch, commissioner sen'lces for June ......... . 2192 G. C. Francis, board for poor June 1 to June 15 2193 P. J. Church, 'lnilk for poor . .. .. .. 2194 Safeway Store, June groceries for poor ...................... . 2195 Silverberg's Store, June grocenes for poor ....... . 2196 Weible's Store, June work relief groc ...................................... . 2197 Robens C-a1;h Store,)une1ind-Jul~ for poor .. -... ,~ ..

2329 David C. Leonhart, maintaining ...... . 395.00 2aaO Wasson Service, magneto repair and phone calJ ................... .

2331 Victor Kniesche, dragging roads ............................................. .. 10.12 2:332 Hans C. Car.tenB, dragging roads' 86.50 233;] Harold Andersen, dragging roads ..................... " .................... .. 89.80 2334 Robert Graef, dragging roads .................. .

9.00 2;]30 Carl Lambrecht, dragging roads ......................... .. 2.38 2336 Adolf Perske, dr»gging roads ............ .. .................................... .

21.95 2337 Louie W. Kahl, dragging roads .............. " .............................. .. 3.00 23:18 Walter A. Carpenter, dragging roads .................. " ....... " ...... .

46.01 23:39 Chas. Siecke, dragging roads ............ .. ................. . 64.00 2339 Earl Wade, dragging roads ......... .. .................. ..

SALMON is being served more often tban ever hf'forp. not

only bl'cau _~ it is smart but hp­cau"sf' it rofl1pares favorahly In nutritiouR qualities with meat. You ('an safely serve salm.on AS

thf' main dish of a meal. as it pro­l"ides an adequate protein. In tar t. ('anDed salmon contains more protein than round beef. roast veal or roast lamb. It can also be counted upon as a fuel or en· ergy producing food. as it con· tains a high percentage of tat

earned fees as follows: 45 Deeds . $ 48.75 2198 J. J. Ahern Grocery, April grocerioo for poor .

116.00 2199 Fitch's Grocery, June and July groceries for poor ... 51.00 i 2200 Orr & Orr Grocery, ,June and July groceries for poor.

130.00 2201 Clover Farm Store, May and June groceries for poor 21.75' 2202 Hill's Food Store, May and June groceries for poor

7.33 2341 H. R. Weich, dragging roads" ............................. .. 77 .08 2342 Reuben PuIs, dragging roads ....... .. ..................... ..

Calcium, that indispensable bone and teeth builder, is a1&o found in significant quantities in canned salmon. In fact. it con· talns much more ca1elum than whole lmlk. It is also an excel· lent ~ource ()f phosphorous which is likewi~e needed for building bone" and teeth Fina.lly It con· tains a gE'nerous amount of iodine and some Vilanl1n A-; and ts an­unusually good !lource of vitami1l. D and of the pellagra·preventj.ve vitamin G.

Salmon Secrets But, with all these good nutri­

tious qualities, salmon would not be smart l! housewives :bad llot learned how to uH:tke p-art-y di-shoa with it. Here 1. one or their .secrets which they are willing to share with you:

58 Mortga~ 52 Release.

520 Chattel Mortgages 86 Certificates

119 Contracts 72 Assiguments Chattel

Mortga~ 3 A".ig"nments R. E. Mtgs.

23 Assignments of Contracts 6 Ext<>nsi()ns of Mtgs. ..

is r~~gn~:St~S Farm Le'ases

4 Bills of Sale 25 Reports

!j Lis Pendell·" 12 Affldavlb

1 Mechanic's Lien ~ 3 Notarial Commiso3ions

2 Probate~ 3 Transcripts Will anQ

Probates 3 Will. & Probates 2 Final Decrees 2 Transcripts 1 Assignment of Rents 1 Marginal Release Me-

chanic~ l.ien .......... . 1 Cert. at Cancellati011

10 Landlords Waiver ........ . 146 Prom. & Auth. Ex<>cute

Crop Mtgs. . .. ".". 4 Rehabilitation Leases 1 Crop Mtg. Agreement .. _

29.75 1' 2203 Mrs. Clarence Spinden, fuel for work relief 2204 Bert Lewis, June rent for poor.

18.1)0 220G Carrie Madsen, June rent for poor 3.15! 2206 J. J. Ahern, June rent for FERA office 5.75' 2207 Mrs, Sydow, June rent for pMr 7.95' 2208' Mrs. Liedsky, June rent for poor

10.25 2209 Frank Werer, June rent for poor. i 2210 M. I. Swihart, June rent for }Joor

1.25 2211 0 B. HasoS, June rent fl)l' poor 2.00' ::'212 Mr<.;. H:l.ttig, June rf'nt for poor .......... . 6.9f) 12;n:~ Mrs. Mary Tillson, June room rent for poor 2.&0! 2214 1>1'. Texley" prof. sp..xvices {t)1' poor

12.5;) I 221f) Dr. R. H. Loder, M. n., pro.f :"pJ"\'ices for poor. ~ .. 70'lo), 122221

167

Pl'. Geo. J. Hess, prof. services for p00r u vVayne Hospital, hosp. care for poor 6.60 2218 Kirkman's IJrug Co., dru&" for po<:>r J't FERA nume ..

i 2219 Wayne Drug Co., lead arsenic for FERA office ".'.' ... 22.75 2229 Wm. S. Conant, ca'3h advanced for stamps far work division 15.&91 office .... "... .. ..... - .................. ..

1 05 2221 Mrs. Esther Th')mpson, cash advanced for stamps for 14.73 I reHer omce·~....... ........... . ......... " ............................ ..

1.2U 2222 Wa'yne Book Store, typewriter rental for June for relief offic~ 12223 Council Oak Store, June and July groceries for poor

. ~5122M The Wayne Creamery, milk ~or poor f?r June_ ....................... .

.0,3 2225 U. & 1. Store, June work rellef groeenes for poor .............. .. 2.50

1

2226 . Wm. F. Wright, rent for poor for two months -...................... . 9.227 Fitch Groeery, Fphr. grcrerie-c; for poor ...................................•

36,50 2228 J. J. Steele, Co. Treas., postage for June ....... " ...................... . 1.00 2229 L. W. McNat:t Hdwe., hardware ............. , ................................ ..

3.00 'Bridg_ Fund

14.0~ 12343 Otto Stender, dragging roads .. , ............................ . 25.8812344 Fred Bruns, dragging roads ..... "" ........................... .. 22,26 2345 Otto Kant, dragging roads ....... , ...... : ..... ..

3.00' 2.346 Will,e Suehl, dragging roads 5.0012347 M. C. Jordan, dragging roads ..... .. ............. _ ........... . 3.50 2848 C. E. Nelson, dragging roads ..... .. ........................... ..

35.0~ 12349 Aug. Meierhenry, dragging roads 5.00' 2350 Richard Miller, dragging roads 6.00 i 2351 Clifford Johnson, dragging roads ...... 2.00 ',2352 Raynmnd Granquj ,t, dragging roads .6.00 2353 John Gettman, dragging roads' 5.0012354 Frank Lind,my, dragging road •. 5.00, Road Dis!. Funds 7.00 I Road Hist· No. 13 1.00,2355 Village of SholeR, road f"l1d ...... 9.00 i Road Disk-N<r.-2'l

26.00,23G6 Walter Tietgen, road work. 10.00 I Road Dist. No. 43

2.50 23'57 Byron C. Ruth road work .90 ' Road Dist. No. 49 i 2359 Herman Assenheimer, operating tractor ..................... .

5.00 I 2360 Don Porter, operatin1to~adgst. No. 50 ............... : ........... ..

6.'.)0 '1359_ f!erm"n Assenheimer, operating traetor .................................. .. 3~:~ 12360 Don Porter, operatin~!da~t.'·N~: .. ~52·-::.:: .... : ...... c: .............. .

J:ig'1 2248 Central Garage, gaSOI~ ·Diet. N~" '53 ............................... . 14.00 2248 Central Garage, gasoline _ ................... . 10.37 2361 Herman Assenhelmer, operating tractor ... ............. . ......... .

6.35 Road Dist. No. 63 81.60 2363 Louie Me1erhenry, road work. ..... ........................ .

18.00 !!'rO ~,

30.00 21..45 3.00

24.66" 2.00

62.60

44.00 lS.00 44.00

·44.00 --.69.67 .

19.80

31S.30 65.02 60.65 6.60 1.60

86.80 36.SOt 14;'70

33.00

48.75 19.60

9.60 UO

18.20 7.'11) 7.80 S.40

'16.40 5.00

16.80 16.20

5.00 15.0j)

5,00 10.60 14.(}'.l

8.00 12.60 9.00 4.50 6.30 6.00

13.60 6.60

10.80 S.70

16.00 17.60 7.80

12.30 10.00

2.QO 9.60

13.S0 6,00 4.00

2,50 2/)1)

,.)6.00 4.50 5.00 8.00 6.00 2.25

26.00 _;l.00 11.60 Hi.50 17,50

.13.50 19.50 16.50

5.50 n.()I) 16.50 1M!) 10.00 13.50 13.00 44.00

6.00 6.10

17.00 15.00 11.50

3.2> 54.20_ 26.20 J8.62 5.00

26.00 4.00 4.00

H.()~ 1a.50 11.00 19.00 17.50 20,00

3.60--11.00 1!l00

8.75. 6.50

20.00 7.50

16.00 '6.60 5.59 9.0\1 11.00 6;Oa-3.00

75.00

8/)0

11.10

4.00 4.00

20.00 20.00

51.85

54.49 ,18.80 18.80

Ralmon Ramekin.8~ Mix genUy the contents of a. 151,4·ounce can salmon with one and a half cups white sance. Slice two hard· cooked eggs and, use them to line Jndividual buttel"qd molds PonT salmon mixture ·lnto the middle. Cover with three.-,£ourths or a cup or cboppe<l, sl/-lI'ld peanuts, a.nd set in a ]Ian of ,Mt water. Bake until hot and tll'l nut;; are crisp. :~:s r~e.~ fl'O~ the rawe~ns.

12 Rehsh. C. S. Contract 1 Trnns. Will &: Decree 6 Agreements

• 25\2230 Henry 'Rethwisch, eommissioner services- for June

2.55 2281 F.' H. Medelman, bridge work 1.50 12232 F. H. Medelman, bridge work

12.0() 12362 Don Porter, operating grader . ... . ................................... .

69 77 Laid Over Claim.. . 44:65 The following claims are o~ f~le with the county clerk But have not

135.38 heen pas.<;cd on or allowed at thls tIme:

,I:

1 Cert. copy chat. mtg. 2 Power of Attorney 2 Cen. c'.)py PO\wer of Atty 1 Taking acknowledgement

, 1 Certificate and receipt 1 Release ])efel'll1ent

Agl'€OO\en t 2 Artisan's Lien " ..... 1 Margi'nal rc1ea;;e 4 Leases

.50 ?2~,~ F. H. Medelman, bridge work

.fiO 12234 F. H. Medelman, bridge work . . . .. loGO Un 'lnplo]}1IIn" Relief Fu ·,d .2~ 223f) Bredemeyer's Grocery, May and June grocerie5 for poor ...

1,(},) , 2236 Howell Rees Estate, June rent for poor. ,. 122"7, AT.drew .Tohn,on, June rent for poor. " .... " ... " ....................... ..

1.25 22:18 Mrs. Neva Hansen, board for poor June 15 to July 1 ........... . .50 2239 C&ntral Gal'age, k&1'OOene for poor ..... , .................................. .. . 25' 2240 Walter McAuliffe, foreman and timekeeper on FERA ...... ..

1;Of) 2241 c. E. HurJbe~. dragging and cultivating potatoes .............. ..

64.52 General Claims . fa 29-No. 409 for $2".00, No. 1451 for $20.10. 1933-No. 1197 for $91.50,

95.00 No, 1199 ror $2.5.00. 1934-No. 748 for $11.88, No. 1062 for $5/)0, No. 3'1'93 6.00 I for $127.00. 19.3r,-No. 641 for $12:32, No. ]033 for $142.4.0, No. 1035 for 5.10 $32.00, No. 1606 for $1.65, No. I60'/' for $212.00, No. 1609 for $47,29, No. 9.01) 11783 for $44.02, No. 2038 for $18.59, No. 2039 :&or $33.28, No. 2173 fo,..

.85 $252.50, No. 2364 for $46.92, No. 2365 ftn' $85.00. ~ 20.00 I Whereupon Board adjourned to Ju1y 23, 1935 . 14.00 Bertha Berres, Clerk.

',';1

y.;i<"g jo~' ti;i,te The Young Peoples'

F;rida.y evening with Charl~te Zeigler when the book of Ephesiang waij completed under the leadership of Mrs. L; W. Kra,!l!JIiI:ta '. The next meeting, will '1M! FridJlY' with Mrs. E, B.Young when Win. G»ldsmith of

Pic'';c Supper Plainview will bave charge of the Legicm AU$iliary Meef .• 'Eunice' Glaze, Miss Margar· lesson. The Legion Auxiliary met

et J ackson~ Miss Hazel, Ray and j evening far a regular busine€s Carhart and Mrs. J. T: Bro3sler, Earl Pt-ouse, all of .Allen; Mr. !,nd'i Pionic Mcmday . ing with Mrs. C. E. Wilson, 1!trs. C. Jr., will entertaill memlM!rs of the Mrs., Glenn Allen, MISS Isobel KI'!g. An eight.thirty pic,!i. ,supper Mon. R. Chinn and Mrs. W. R. Hickman Came9 and·;,Nu·'Fu clubs at a nine, sto,! an(i Mr.s. ,Edna Isom and MISS I day e,<ening at the Country club, fol. assisted the 'hostess. It was decided ,,'clock breakfast at the h,ome of I Cella h~.d plcmc ~"pper at Bre .. le. I lowing golf, was enjoyed by seven to send a box of -clothing and house· Mrs. W. P. Main in honor of Mrs. park F!1day evenmg. couples. Those attenmng were Dr. hold goods to 'the flood victims of Ne· Geo. Anderson Of Aurora, TIl. . -. ~-- and Mrs. L. F. Perry, Mr. and Mrs. braska. Mrs. C. A. Orr and, Mrs. A.

Picnic supper' in hoo?r of Mr. Picnic at Crystal Lake I W. R. Wiltse, Mr. and Mrs., D. P. L. Jacobsen_ are in."harge of coHect-and Mrs. Geo. B. Anderson. and I Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Perkins and Miller, Mr. and Mrs. C. C. i St1rtz, ing the goods. Delegates for the

. . preaching~eerviee 'at 11. a .. m. . !

Choir practice will 1M! July 20 at 8 p. m.' • . -

Y.ou 'are cordially invited to ~nd :,I)~r services.

Hoskin8 Evang.li<;al Ch~·.h . Rev. F. C. Ebinger, Pastor

Sunday school. meets at 10 a. m. Morning worship at lj1"a. m. The E. L. C. E. 'IlleeliS at 7 :30 p.

m., _. .. . Sunday. evening preaching service

at 8 p. m.' The W. M. 'S. meets Thursday filr

their monthly meeting at the hom~ of MM: AIlM!rt Meierhenry. The Mission band picnic will be herd at the same time and place. Mr. and Mrs. Larry Brown is family and Mr. and Mrs. Cliff John-Mr. J. R. Reynolds, Mr. and convention at Beatrice, August 25 to

planned by 1l1emj>ers of the' young' son drove to' Crystal lake Sunday af·' Mrs. R. K. Kirkman and Mr. _and 27, were elected. Mrs. C. A. Orr, Mrs. married set. Mrs. H;. D. Addis~m ternoon. MiSB Lucille Arne .. ; Irven I Mrs. Don Lareon. A. L. Jacobse~, Mrs. A. Ir. Swan, and Mro; T. C. yunnmgham are m Erxleben and R. G. Fuelberth, who --- Mrs. C. E. WIlson- an~ Mrs. L. W.

Bible School Enrl)llment Lwrg. , ". Married Mcmday The daily vacation Bible school, ',' Henry E. ~oltz of Dakota City and

whi~h has been meeting for th" past I J;.?retta .PaulIne Matne¥ of SQuth two weeks at the Baptist church an. SIOUX 91ty were, marrIed Monda)" nounces a total enrollment of 84' all:) ~uly 15, the Rev. F. C. Mills officiat­&.n average attendance of 57. Next lhg;

charge of arrangements. 1 flew to the lake joined them for pic.: Celebrate Birthdays _, McNatt were chosen WIth Mrs W. D. Friday ,nie supper. ! Miss Isobel Simpson, c,>llege stu. Hall, M'I-•. McMullen, Mrs. H. C.

.The You~g P.<>ples Bible cIa.. ___ dent staying with Mrs. Edna Isom, Capsey, Mrs. F. C. Dale and Mrs. WIll meet WIth Mrs. E. B. Young.! Wit"l,. Mrs L W Kratavil I whose birthday was Saturday Miss I' G. A. Renard as alternates. Plans The looson mil be i~ c~arge of j Mrs L' W Kratavil entertained I Ruth Wheeler of Allen, whose' birth. were also made for a food sale in Wm. GoldsmIth of Plamvlew. I h n:bl' S'd C' lTd f.' day was Monday last week and Mrs.) the near futu!e. Mrs .. A. L. Jacob·

Sunday evening at 8, the children will . _ give a demonstration to their parent'3 Read the advertisements·

Monday ,t e I e tu y Irc e !les ay a I Edna I.om whose birthday' was Wed_l.en was appomted chaIrman. Noxt Grandmother Rogers will cele-' tern,oon. Rose Assenhelme: had I nesday, entertained Thursda at the meeting will be ~ twilight meeting

brate her 'one hundredth birthday I ChaIg.e of. the lesson on DaVld. Th. e II h M' C th . Y B I August :b honol'mg the gold star and friends of the work that tJley -::-:-:-2--.:-:-:--::-=:--:::-=======~ have accomplished. :"

. next m~etIng WIll be Tuesday WIth ,som orne > 168 a -, anne !Jnes I mf>thers anmversary. !IMrs. Ddra Benshoof. Mrs. Emil Lud~ I and Mr. and Mr5. Ray Ponemery and' ,

Tuesday .' h f hI! Mrs. Anton Burges of Allen. lvIro'l '. The Bible Study Circle will meet! e,s WIll have c arge 0 t e eSR9n. Ponermery's birthday was olso Church 'Notices

WIth Mrs. Dor.all

l'IeMhoohf. I Mrs'j W'th M 0 G N Is I Thul'sd,\y. Mrs. Isom served ice cream Altona Trinity Luth""an Church EmIl Luders WI have t e e&30n. t 1"8... e on and cake' IRE J M d P t

The Country club will meet wit!> Members of the 500 club and two I' . --- I Germ:~' se;"';~es "a"t 10 :-::t

Mrs. M. C. ,Powers has 6crved as principal for the school and My". L. W. Kratavil, Miss Doris Howarth. Miss Genevieve Craig, lVIr'~. H. Thompson, Miss Amy Bard, Miss Grace Chichef.ter and ~iss ~argan~t Wade as teachers.

Mesdames Henr~ Ley, Walter Prl' guests, Mrs. Fu.cher. and Mu. John Chavari Rev. and Mrs. Dierking I The Young Peoples' monthl t. ess and R. K. KIrkman as hostess· Kay met FrIday WIth Mrs. O. G.! . F' ., y mee es. ' Nels'on. Mrs. L. W. McNatt won high About fift~ young people met mg nday evemng. Cullen's Mother Follows

.... hurRdall (July 25) score prize and Mr::.. Ed Miller, low j Tuesday evemng a~ the Presbytenan i . --- . • R. R. club will meet with Mrs. sCore. Mr5. Nelson served refresh· churc~ to charvarl Rev. and. Mrs. I Method,.t qho:rch Notes Races at Age of EIghty

J H Nichols, ments. The next meeting will be held Dlerkmg. After. successfully kIdnap· I Rev. F. C. MIlls. Pastor ---St Paul Lutheran A,d will meet. July 26 With Mrs. Bastian. I pmg the brIde and groom and takmg I Church Gchool 10 a. m. "Just to see that he goes straight" BaptIst Ladies Aid win meet with ___ I them on a nd.e through the country,) Worship and sermon, HA Place of I is an excuse given by Mrs. Mary A.

Mro: M. C P()WerSi, hostess. Co~ ntl;" Club I the group adJt)urned to the. church I Springs," 11 a. m. I Cullen 80 years old o;f Omaha for C0untry club dinner 1n charg-€ Th Yc t I b t T sd I parlors where Ice cream and cake I Epworth League at 7 p. m. accompanY1ng her s~n J A C~llen

of Dr. and Mrs. R. W. Ca!';per, Mr. I e oun 1 y (' U me ue~ ay were 'served and a gift was presented I --- . 'I secretar of the Nebr~'3k~ state rac~ and Mr~. C. M Craven, Mr. and With Me:s;dame~ H H. Hahn, A A.! to Mr. and Mrs. Dierkil?g. Miss Eliza Baptist Church in com~issll)n throu hout the arI~ Mrs. \Vrn. Beckenha~el' ann Mr.: iitll~h~sP~:t;!.~e~"rJnN;~~g:n;a~· t~~ I ~h!h a~:~t:~~~~s:was In charge of I M. C. Powers. Pastor m~tuel racing' circuit~ in Nebr~Ska. 1

and Mrs. J G. DaVIdson diversion and Mrs T I Fnest won I g ___ Sunday school at 10 a. m. Mornmg Mrs. Cullen IS an ard~nt race fan. I

. --, -. ------ I hlgh li'core. Next Tuesday Mrs. Hen-" . worship and sermon at 11 R. m. f She has followed the pomes for years Rd"l,ail Mel,lmp 1M'" It P', d M St. Pa I Lutheran A,d ! Young people8' meeting at 7 p m and her traveLs extend aver the en·

Th Rebekah lodge held a regular ry ,ey I rs vva er ness an rs. Ab t 25 b f th S PI' . I S k .f! . :lo • '! R. K. Kirkman will serve a'~ hostesses. ou, .mem ers 0 e t. au! Daily vacation Bible scho')l pro- tIre na~lOn. .he is spr~, ta es ~n in-,

~eeti~g FrIday evemng. Next meet- I ___ Lutheran AId, Mrs. A. Hesper; Mr:-;., gram at 8 p. m. I terest In natlOnal affalI"3 and 103 de- i !fig Will be July 26. i . W. H. Brune, MM. Fred Wittler and I ___ i voted to her granddaughter, Patsy

I A.t'end Rac·>l..I:l Mrs. Herman Fleer, all of WInsIde,: Hoskins Trinity Lutheran Chu.,,·ch Cullen, 12 years old, who IS alsl) a

Denne. of HO"HJ" Following the races Tuesday eve- Miss Vera lauch, college student from I Rev. 1. P. Frey, Pastor racing fan. Mrs. Cullen attended the' , Degree o~ Honor lodge met lastl ning, Dr. and Mrs; L. F. Perry, Mr. Creighton, and nu:nerous other gu,:::sh:. Sunday school at 10 a. m. full progr-am at Om~ha and from:

1hul'sday WIth Mr~. L. E. P~nab~kerl and Mrs .. W. R Wtltse! Mr. and Mrs. from Wayne enjoyed .a progrnm! Service in the English language at ~here went to th" MadIson races, com.! for a regular busmess meetmg. rhe n. P. MIller and their guest, Mr5. Thurnday afternoon. lvIlSS Marcella 10 :45 a. m. mg from there dIrect to Wayne. From next mee-ting will be August.8. I H. H. Carr of Columbus, Mr.'and Mrs. B~ugge~ opened t~e program with I The Ladies Aid ~oeiety met Thurs- hete she will leave with Mr. <2ull~n I

_ Don Larson. Mr. and Mrs. C. C.l thil'ee plano .selectlol!s, She ~as fOl-1 day afternoon 'with Mrs. Art Behmer on a to,?r of the western CIrcUIt'

j Picnic Sunday Stirtz, Mr. and Mrs. O. E. S~ratton I lowed by MISS Ma~ly.n MeIer,' as hostess. Patsy WIll go along too.

Harmony club and their families and Mr. and lvIl"3. R. K. Klrloman also played. Then WIllIs IckIer spoke'

Safeguu;d Your Personal appearance by bringing your ba.uty problems to us.

Shampoo and Finger Wave 50c & 75c

Marcels 50c & 75c Wet Waves 25c Facials 75c & $1.00 Manicures 50c

Permanents $250 to $6.00

picnicked Sunday evening in East had supper together. o~ educati~n. The progra,!, closed i St. Paul Lutheran Church Library Board ReC11'ganizes ! park. Each family brought a covered: --- WIth two plano solos by MISS lauch. I W. C. Heidenreich. Pasto, The public library board met Tues· F h BPI dish luncheon and the time was spent' p' . S d Mrs. Otto Fleer and Mrs. S. J. ICk-

1

S d hIt 10 'I day evening for reorganization. Dr.1 rene eauty ar or II

U'mc • un ay ler hootess served .. , un ay se 00 a a. m. - 1 d . I socia y. ! Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Wright and " __ . _. Morning warship at 11 a. m. ! R. Vf· Casper .was re-e ecte pre.sl· i S N' I B 'Id'

. --- , family, Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Ellis and I , ' Ladies Aid Society will meet Thurs· I dent! D. P. MIller was chos~n Vlce tate atJona U1. 109 Meet F'1'Id/vu ~ family and Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Pet.' F or Mrs. Nelscm ., ! day afternoon of next week. prooldent and Mrs. E. S. Blal!, sec'j Joe Smolsky

About 20 mem":"rs attended he ersen and family drove to Crystal 1 . In honor ~f Mrs. Maude Nelson G, After next Sunday, the pastor willi ;:eta~ry=. :A:n:n:u:a:l:r:e:p:o:rts=w=e:re=gI:v:e~n:.:::=:==========:~ Gl'!",e Luthern Aid at the chapel i lake Sunday for a picnic supper. Mr. b'rt~day anmversary, her. aunt, Mrs. j be away for three Sundays. The Sun· _ e,-FrIday. Mm. AdolpnMeyer was hos-. Petersello went on to Sioux City where LottIe Panabaker entertam~d tweh·e· day school will be held at the usual tess. The next meetlng will be Au·, he got h1s two sons and Roy Coryell, guests Tuesday af~e.~.oon. lh. aft~r'l hour on these Sundays. gust 9. I who spent the past week at Camp noon was spent vlsltmg and a gIft ---

--- Kellogg there was presented to Mrs. Nels~n by Our Redeemer'S Evangelical Meet at Winllide I' .___ Mr~. Maude Ellis ,in IM!half of the Luther"n Church

The E. O. F. met Friday with' ladIeS present. Mrs. Panabaker serv, - R HAT kh P Mrs. Percy Cadwallader of Winside' At Countr1l Cl>,b ed a de~icious luncheon .. Guests pres· ev... ec aus, asu>r The afternoon was spent socially.! Dr. and Mrs. L. F. Perry, Mr. and ent beSIdes Mrs. Nelson weI'e Mrs. Sunday school at 10 a. m. Next meeting will be July 26 with MI". W. R. Wiltse, Mr. and Mrs. O. Mrs. 'CliI'l'ence Powers. IE. , Stratton, Mr. and MM. D. P.

; --- Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Don Larson, With M"8. Al Deitschlor Mr. and Mrs. R. K. Kirkman, Mr.

The R. R. club n)Qt last Thursday and Mrs. C. C. Stirt. and Mr. and with Mrs. Al Deitschler. Following Mrs. D. L. Strickland picnicked Fri· a social aftel'nQmI the noste8s served. I day evening after playing golf. Af· The next meeting will he held with ter supper thev all attended tho dance Mrs. J. H. Nichols on July 25. I at the Regis ballroom.

Orr & Orr Phone 5 Grocers Phone 5

"A SAFE PLACE TO SAVE"

As Time Goes On the many c.ustomers of this store become even more steadfat3t cus­tomers and every week more people are joining their ranks for the sake of both finer quality and greater, sounder economy.

bags.

59c

FANCY PEABERRY

COFFEE 3 pound bag

47c '100 "."~.!!~ '" -' I -_._------ ,---_._----

IGraham Crackers 2 pounds Johnson's ·Graham Crackers

21c

BROWN SUGAR

pound bag

13c

MACARONI, SPAGHETTI, g'()od q\lalit~· 2 poulld box ...... 19c

OHEE'SR· Full Cl'eam cheese wrapped in tinfoil. Will ReB Friday t"nd Satur~ day for 26c Il pound or for 5 pounds loaf $1.23. With harvest and threshing season c~ming this will be a fine buy.

GINGER ALE, LIME RICDY

Large bottles, eacla 11e each

Plus 3c Bllittle Oharge

ROBB·ROSS

FRUTE·GEL All flavors

6 pkgs, 28c

FRESH.FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Jumho Vine Ril)ened Cantaloupes, each ..... Hc Jmnbo Houey Ball Melons , .. , ... , ........ 121-20 Geoigta Elberta Peaches, doz .............. 17c Cabbage, ,ltome, grown, pound 20

-. -" l~~f~~~OtS FOR CANNING The anpri~Qli expeciM the (irot Qf this week Vl'er~. l"t~ in being ShifPCd"W(; CuBy e"X,m, ,ect,',tllen1 to lIl'l'ive the last of thi~ week. You' :lll'~i' n:. i~'tln rntO,E. CONSIDERING QttAtITY If'

"i I ~ I.l\! :. ,j II,:,"!" ~II--:i". I

The I

Party Vegetable WH.IJ;N~~VEn Wt~ wante(l to im­

pre::,!"; lJur ,7:u(CsL, II .~L l:.e ~plCllci()r cf nul' "'f" ~s ;.1 "'r hOll~,(' W(' i-"H":~ll,'- \'If'''''''rl ~~_

paJ'agu~. 'flut.t Wa::! a loug tune ago, but asparagus has never cea:SiJd to be a party vegetable. And, as 'is f1llitf' ap9r0!1r~(ltro. people have never (!eased to de­vise tasty new party dresses for it. The latest one~ are very at­traetive. You should see, or rather taste

:1"11JOn",us l1T1a Shrimp Cock­tail: Line two cocktail glasses with lettuce leaves. Cut the tips from a ran of asparag llS (reserv· ing f'italk!'l for cream ing or soup t.he next day) and arran~e with (~r.J;;ht ('unned shrimps in the let-' tuee-lined glusses. Combine two tablespoons mayonnaiOle with two tablespoons chill S<1\1('(' , and ponr 0",1;'1', t5erve very l'uld. Serves two.

In Regal Garb

A:marn!7us a IfL J~in(]: Heat the U:'iparag-Il~ in one square ('an in 11:8 own liquor. pouring orr one· t.hird ('l1p liquor to use in white sauce. Ma,ke this white sauce ot two tablespoons butter, two table­spoons flour. one-hal! cup water. one-third cup asparagus liquor. one·half cup evaporated milk and salt ana pepper. Add two table­spoon~ shredded pImiento. Saute two tablespoons shredded green p~pper and the contents ot a two­ounce can mushrooms in one tablespoon butter. and a.dd. LaY asparagus on lIot buttered' toast. und pour sauce over. Serves tour.

And here's an asparag.us recipe which you can serve to six poopl. for about half a dollar in which this vegetable appears in tbe best Parisian style:

Asparng'Us Salad Parisienne: Drain and chill the asparaguS tips frop.l a 1S-ounce can; then arrange on one~ha1f bunch' of crisp romaine. 'Finely chop half the conif!ut.:: or II !}.vUI1CO call pimi­ento, and add with two table­spoons. clil,lCrs tp one·third CUP :~-'r(1nGr~ d.ressing:. Pour over the,

. !Salad ~nd serve very cold. Serves at"!!:.·

Vary Your

APPLE PIE, apricot pie. berry pies, chot!olate . .»ie, cherry pie,

lemon pie. peach pie, pumpkin pie. rhubarb pie! 0 Dh, 1sn't there a new pie particularly appropri· ate for the summer months which will vary from all these good old s.tandbys? 'Yes. there is. Pine­apple pie.

Pineapple grows i!l a land where it is perpetual summer and looms large in the tropical diat which is €'aten there. No need to tell you .. that it's" delicious, but what we can tell you is the 'way to make a fino pineapple pie. So, here goes:

With Another Tropical Fruit

~ PilleGpple Ball4na Meri_

l"ie: Mix one-balt cup sugar -and . one-fourth cup cornstarch, add

syrup presse" trom tbe, contents ot a No.2, can crushed HawalialL pineapple,- and cook until clear

I· and thick. stirring constantly.

-Add one tablespoon butter. Then add two sUghtIy beaten egg yolks, cook again in double" boiler until thick. and cool. Add the drained pineapple and. two-thirds cup banana pulp. and pour into baked pie shell. Cover with merin~e

-roM.\; by b~atillg two egg wbltes alld then beating in one-third cup confectioner's sugar. Bake f.n oven-300 degrees-on·t11 a ~o1deu. broWn. about fifteen minlltes.. Makes oae lares pie:·

THiS "PACE CONTRIBUTED BY

Hiscox Funeral Home Phoue 1~9w ARMAND HISCOX

to be used in advertising churcb .. lodlle or pr.anization socials. sales •. etc .. witliout one cent of cost 10 the orllanization. Just call The Democrat office (Pbone 145) and ask to use the

Hiscox space.

OLD CLOTHES WANTED Anyone having any old clothes,

bedding, or other household furnish­ings they would care to send to the Nebraska flood area are asked to get in touch with Mrs. C. A, Orr or Mrs. A. L. Jacobsen.

Impro,ed Homes Need No Longer Be Too Costly

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With the proper planning and selection of materials and workmen you'll be amazed at how much you can ac­cctrnpli~h in remodeling and revamping that home fo. a small' amount of money. The difference in home ap­pearances here is not an _exaggeratioJl but an actual fact once you know about our methods of operation and sales ideas.

MAKE SURE that you do not overlook any opportunities to enjoy-a finer, more pleasant and more comfortable home hy em· ploying our new home improvement policies in _co-opera. tion with

U. S. GOVERNMENT REGULATIONS

W right Lumber Co. Phone 79

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