Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

Lincoln Nebraska State Journal from Lincoln, Nebraska • Page 4

Location:
Lincoln, Nebraska
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

4-A LINCOLN SUNDAY JOURNAL AND STAR December 19, 1913 Mere Mention Drivers 'of bread delivery trucks will meet with federal representatives at 1:30 Sunday afternoon at chamber of commerce to discuss transportation problems. Victor Wendelin is in charge of arrangements. Burlington band members met for an informal dinner and social time in observance of the Christmas season Saturday night at the Lincoln. With the pressure of wartime activities no formal program will be held this year. Members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints held their annual Christmas dance at the Y.

M. C. A. Saturday night, under the auspices of the Mutual Improvement association. About 50 attended.

the committee in charge was headed G. Peterson and Lt. and Mra. G. W.

Simper. The annual Christmas party for officials and employes of the war manpower commission and the unemployment compensation department, was held at the Lincoln Saturday night with approximately 100 in attendance. Following the dinner, pictures from the war zones were shown. Lincoln Army Air Base personnel presented several features. Music and dancing concluded the program.

Urge soldiers be represented WASHINGTON. (UP). Twenty- five representatives assailing the senate's rejection" of the Lucas- Green soldier vote bill as "a slap in the face" to the members of the armed forces, urged Saturday that the house eliminate the injustice in "conscription without representation." The representatives made their views known in a statement issued as congress prepared to recess for the Christmas holidays with no recommendation forthcoming from the house elections committee on the soldier vote question. A coalition of southern democrats and republicans joined in the senate to substitute for the Green- Lucas measure a recommendation that state legislatures enact "appropriate machinery" to permit service men and xvomen to participate in the 1944 election. Opponents of the original bill charged that states' rights would be violated if the federal government, as the measure proposed, assumed authority over balloting.

Strike (Continued from Page 1-A.) Truman resolution which would legalize the agreement they reached last August with the railroads for an eight cents an hour wage increase. Vinson refused to approve that agreement on grounds it would be an out-and-out violation of the little steel formula and would go far toward breaking down the administration's stabilization program, House Vote Monday. The house interstate commerce committee decided on Friday to not vote on the Truman resolution until ilonday, apparently in the belief that Mr. Roosevelt would intervene in the interim. Officials of the non-operating brotherhoods were racing against time in their effort to force house action on the Truman resolution, however, inasmuch as congress is expected to adjourn Tuesday or Wednesday until after the holidays.

"Even if the house committee should approve the resolution on Monday, it appeared unlikely that the democratic house leadership-- is opposed to the resolution --would allow it to be brought up on the floor before adjournment. At Cleveland, Alvaney Johnston, head of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, said he would attend the meeting, accompanied by D. B. Robertson, president of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen; H. W.

Fraser, president of the Order of Railway Conductors; A. F. Whitney, president of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, and T. C. Cashen, president of the Switchmen's Union of North America, Sets up strict rule to prevent any news leaks WASHINGTON.

UP). President loosevelt, taking stern measures a prevent leaks of important war nformation, Saturday directed the and navy secretaries and the lirector of the office of war in- ormation to refuse to issue in advance, for release to the public at a future hour, any news having a security value. "The American people," he said a memorandum, "want promptly all the news which can be told afely, and they are entitled to have it without the interposition if artificial barriers." The text of his memorandum: "You are fully aware, I know, jf the regrettable confusions which have arisen recently over he issuance of official news re- ating to the war, particularly in with the 'conferences at 2airo and Teheran. "We may all be proud that American newspapers, news agen- ies and broadcasters kept the aith and observed the release dates which had been fixed by in- agreement. It is most disappointing that such loyalty hould have teen penalized by allures elsewhere.

To Prevent Recurrence. "I see no point in prolonging controversy over what is passed; he important thing is that we take decisive action to prevent a recurrence. To that end, your department and all other branches jf the government will be guided the following: "First, no information having a security value in connection with Jie war will be issued in advance, or release to the public at some iuture hour. Secondly, all such information OTll be given out instead at the earliest moment consistent with ional security, for immediate mWication and broadcast. "The people want iromptly all thexnews which can told safely, and they are entitled to have it without the interposition of artificial barriers." Country club entered H.

A. Terpy, custodian at the Lincoln Country club reported to police Saturday that someone had broken into the basement bar room and taken 48 pennies from the cash register and a quantity of gum from a machine in the room. Entrance was gained by breaking a window pane and unlatching the window from the outside. The place was littered with burned paper, which it was learned later, had been used for a light. James Colley, Negro, was picked up for questioning and admitted having broken into the building, police said.

Statistics AUTO ACCIDENTS. Saturday. 2:44 p. 4Sth and oil truck and bicycle, one injury. TOBACCO AX HAKLETS LOW PRICES CIGARETTES CARTON 200 P-h i 1 1 Morris, Pall Mall, ields, Camels.

Ralcighs, Old Golds, Lucky i Spuds, Kools, Viceroyi. 2 for 250 $1.25 Save on Fresh Tobacco VELVET, Lb 65e RALEIGH, Lb 65e P. ALBERT, MODEL, Lb 72c DILLS BEST, 65c U. LEADER, 14 ox. 55c DRUG CO, Events of the Christmas pronram by Lincoln high choir, Lincoln hiKll school, 3 p.

m. Christmas slngfest, St Paul Methodist, 8 p. m. Bread truck drivers, chamber of commerce, 1:30 p. m.

Associated Townsend club, Y. M. C. 2:30 p. m.

Monday. 64th Wing party, Lincoln, 7 p. m. Westminster foundation, Y. M.

C. noon. Lincoln Music Teachers association, Y. M. C.

2:30 p. m. First Congregational church Christmas party. Y. M.

C. 8 m. 8. A. chamber of commerce, noon.

Tuesday. Lincoln board of education, 2215 Randolph, 8:30 a. m. Y's Men's club, Y. M.

C. .6 p. m. American Legion party, Lincoln theater, 10 a. m.

Rotary, Lincoln, noon. Junior division, chamber of commerce, noon. Wednesday. Hiram club ladies' night, Y. M.

C. 6:15 p. m. KFAB-KFOR Christmas party, 6:30 p. m.

Junior Leaders club, Y. K. C. 6 p. m.

Directors, chamber of commerce, noon. Realtors, chamber of commerce, noon. Thursday. Lions Christmas party, Varsity theater, 11 a. luncheon at chamber of commerce, noon.

Optimists Christmas party, Lincoln, noon. Co-operatives, chamber of commerce, noon. Ivre club, Lincoln, 3:30 p. m. Friday.

Air Base midnight mass. Emerson Chautauqua group, Y. M. C. 9 a.

m. Townsend club No. 3, Y. M. C.

7:30 p. m. Cosmopolitan, University club, noon. Klwanis, chamber of commerce, noon. Ballot (Continued from Page 1-A.) braska.

The letter to the jost commanders asserted that the laws are not corrected by a special session "we must realize we are saying to hose in the armed forces and aux- liary services, such as the Red Cross and others, 'You shall not have the privilege of Cullingham told the post commanders "I have urged Governor Griswold to call a special session of the legislature for the sole and only purpose of making it possible 'or our absent voters to cast their vote. He does not seem to be so nclmed and therefore the matter now squarely up to the Nebraska legislature." Asks Consideration. The letter urged the commanders to call the matter to the attrition of post members "for immediate consideration and action if they so desire." Cullingham is a member of American Legion post No. 1 in Dmaha. Governor Griswold said after a conference with Cullingham ear- ier this week that he did not plan call a special session, but added he wanted to study the present further.

"I have been advised by Marion A. Shaw, department commander of the American Legion, that the governor is having a study made of the election laws having in mind the calling of a special session, but doubts the advisability of taking any action until congress has acted or failed to act," Cullingham declared. Enable Soldier Vote. "However, I have pointed out congress cannot change the Nebraska election laws nor alter qualifications of the voter in ihe various states and also that if a special session is held in the near future we can enable the soldier to vote at the primary as well as the general election, and that the amendments to our laws can be made in such a manner as to enable the secretary of state and election officials to take advantage of any measures congress may adopt to expedite their handling of ballots for the benefit of the soldier." Needed changes to facilitate voting for service men and women and auxiliary as outlined by Cullingham were: Outlines Needed Changes. Eliminate printed form requirements for application for bajlot so that a postal card or letter is sufficient; requirement that voter cannot apply prior to 30 days before election should be eliminated or extended to at least 90 days before election; canvassing boards should be allowed to meet as late as 20 or 30 days after elections; ballots should be accepted up until 20 or 30 days after election to allow receipt of ballots from the "72 war fronts;" The last day for filing candidates' names should be advanced to 60 days prior to election in order that the secretary of state can certify candidates' names to election officials so that ballots may be printed at least 45 days before elections; Registration forms should be made acceptable if received with the ballot; required use of slow, registered mail should be eliminated.

'Headless hero decorated LONDON. (INS). America's highest military decoration, the congressional medal of honor, was awarded Saturday to the hero of the unbelievable saga of World war known to countless newspaper and magazine readers as story of the headless pilot." Recipient of the award is 2nd Lt John C. "Red" Morgan, 29 year old, six-foot- two pilot from Arnarillo, and New York City. According to the citation, Morgan displayed "conspicuous gallantry above and beyond the call of duty while participating in a bombing mission over enemy occupied territory of continental Europe on July 28." The story behind the brief citation is one of the strangest of the story involving a crippled bomber whose chief pilot's head was blown off, and of a wounded youth dropped into the enemy's hands to save Kis life.

Takes Over Controls. Morgan, a co-pilot, took over a battered Flying Fortress after a 20 millimeter shell from a nazi Folke-Wulf blew off the head of the ship's pilot enroute to Germany. With half of his gunners unconscious from lack of oxygen, Morgan fought his way 'thru swarms Of German fighters all the way to and from the important target. Over Germany, Morgan's top turret gunner, S. Sgt.

Tyre C. Weaver, of Riverview, was critically wounded and in danger of bleeding to death from loss of an arm. Morgan ordered the dying gunner to be dropped by parachute. Recently word was received that Weaver is alive and recovering a German prison camp. How Nebraskans in congress voted WASHINGTON.

(JP). Here is low Nebraska members of con- were recorded as voting in roll calls taken during the week ended Dec. 16: In the house: On motion to discharge ImnkinR committee from further consideration of leg- slation to increase price of petroleum, adopted 247 to 71--for motion: Buffett, Miller and Stefan. On motion to recommit bill to increase price of petroleum to banking committee for further study, rejected 206 to 129 (bills massed later by standing vote)--for moIon: Buffett. Against motion: Curtis, Miller and Stefan.

On motion to concur with senate or 59,907,890 appropriation in deficiency appropriations bill to complete work on 31 airports, adopted 192 to 129--for motion; Curtis, Miller and Stefan. Against motion: Buffett. On motion to insist on house disagreement to $2,800,000 item put in deficiency appropriation bill by senate for water conservation and utility projects, adopted 223 to 75--for motion: Buffctt. Against motion: Curtis, Miller and Stefan. On motion to Insist on house disagreement with senate provision in deficiency appropriation bill to require surplus war and navy department funds to be returned to treasury instead of beinB impounded by budget bureau, adopted 283 to 18--for motion: Buffett, Curtis, and Stefan.

Unrecorded: Miller. There were no roll calls in the senate during that period. Report peak of flu is reached By United Press. Schools remained closed and output of war plants continued to curtailed because of the spread of influenza thru the nation this past week, but health authorities ndicated generally that the disease has reached its peak. Colder weather and Christmas lolidays will tend to bring about an abatement, doctors reported.

Dr. Morris E. Fishbein, editor of the Journal of the American Medical association, warned persons to avoid crowded transportation lines during the holiday season. Respiratory diseases are spread easily on trains, buses and street carst he said. The disease, had about run its course in.

the north central region, where it was most severe, reports indicated, but was spread- ng westward and south. Los Angeles and San Francisco had sharp ncreases. Of Texas' -254 counties, all but 17 reported cases. Reach Peak in Michigan. The peak has been reached in one of the most seriously stricken states, doctors indicated.

Almost 25 percent of the jersons in the upper peninsula were ill last week, 15 to 20 percent in the rest of the state. Warren, with 60,000 population, had 40 percent ill at one time. In New York City, Health Commissioner E. L. Stebbins said absenteeism because 'of respiratory diseases had increased this veek, with Monday the worst day, nit he was unable to estimate if the peak had been reached.

i a Washington, D. Philadelphia, Indianapolis and Minneapolis, where the disease was increasing, with 8 to 10 percent of the population stricken. Many college and universities advanced the dates of their Christmas holidays as a result of the ugh incidence of the disease. Schools in suburbs of large cities closed in several states. Two die as live iliell explodes NEW TORK.

UP). A live 55 mil- imeter shell which they threw on a bonfire in a Brooklyn vacant ot Saturday killed two boys and injured four others, three seriously, as shrapnel sprayed out from the resulting explosion. Police said the boys found the shell in the lot, which is near the arsenal of the Brooklyn army base, and not realizing it was unexploded, threw it on the fire they had built. The explosion shattered windows for a distance of 70 feet. The dead were Frank Gully, 9, and Hugh McKinney, 4, whose head was blown off.

Injured and reported in "very serious condition" at Norwegian lospital in Brooklyn were Jack Pinko, 8, and Robert Edenson, 7. Thomas Anderson, 12, was re- jorted in serious condition. John Conroy, 5, injured slightly, was taken to Harbor hospital. Police said one boy, examining the shell thought Be saw a 1915 manufacturer's date on it, leading the youths to believe the shell was harmless. Britain flu toll at new high LONDON.

(UP). The toll in Britain's influenza epidemic officially was revealed Saturday to have reached a new high with 1,274 deaths this week, but there were indications that the epidemic had passed its crest. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY. CLASS SO- WANTED--Combination rnc.it and grocery man. Apply Bradficld Grocery.

CLASS SO-- WANTED--Nlprt man for Nlte and Daj garacc 6-3321 or 2-7300. CrASS 7 RHINKSTONE 3-814S. pin. Reward. 3-6131 or CLASS 05-S ROOM furnlslwl VHIItlo: paid.

Prefer employed people. 3-3'J37. Cliurcliill (Continued from Page 1-A.) ture is subsiding and the pneumonia resolving." The bulletin was signed by Lord Moran, Churchill's personal physician, Brig. D. Evan Bedford, consulting physician, and Lt.

Col. Robert J. V. Pulvertaft, director of pathology with the British forces in the middle east. Medical authorities explained that the phrase "pneumonia resolving" meant that the infection of the prime minister's lungs was loosening and that the inflammation was subsiding.

The "irregularity of pulse" was taken to indicate some heart strain, which was attributed to Churchill's age, 69, the rigors of his lengthy mission to Cairo and Teheran, or perhaps the effect of drugs being given him. Sources here were not alarmed concerning the heart action, however. Champion at Fuel Perfectly Sized tot Furnace, stovf Lump $8.10 Nut $8.05 Order Now While Supply Is Available PEOPLES COAL CO. We Give S. H.

Green SUmpt Italy (Continued from Page 1-A.) nto the outskirts of Orsogna itself and engaged picked troops of the Third German parachute division in the fiercest fighting as hey stormed the town, 20 miles nland from Ortona which in turn ies 11 miles southeast of the big port of Pescara. Lt Gen. Mark W. Clark's Fifth army was pressing a grinding hree pronged assault against the lardest resistance yet encoun- ered in the Italian campaign in an endeavor to break thru to Cassino, valley gateway to Rome 70 miles northwest. The offensive, biting gradually deeper into the bristling western section of the German winter line, lammered without letup along an 18-mile chain of mountains shielding the Liri river valley and the ancient Via Cassilina.

Grim Combat at San Pietro. Focal point of the push at present was San Pietro, seven miles southeast of Cassino and one mile north of the old Roman road. The grimmest sort of close-quarter raged for the fourth day Saturday around that village--an area which the Germans had converted into a vpritable hedgehog of rock-hewn gun nests and piU- soxes encircled with a maze uf barbed wire entanglements. Charging continually with bayonets unsheathed and their grenades hurtling thru the air, the Yanks overwhelmed one enemy position after another as they fought their way up 600-foot slopes and edged into the outskirts of San Pietro from three sides--the north, south and southwest. The Americans thus closed In relentlessly in an effort to block off the sole remaining escape hatch for the Germans fighting around San Pietro.

Finer Flavor and Holiday Happiness in Your SUNDAY DINNER in the attractive JAVA ROOM Bring the Family Sunday Dinner A Complete Meal INCLUDING Baked Sugar Cured Ham With Candied Sweet Potatoes Srrcrd from 12 to 2:30 M. and from 5:30 to P. M. HOTEL LINCOLN Russian author describes witnesses at atrocity trial Indian famine takes babies, too! A young Hindu mother covers the body of her baby, which just died of starvation. The homeless woman, herself facing the same fate, awaits the corpse removers in a Calcutta street.

(Acme telephoto.) In the following dispactb, written exclusively for the TJnltea Press, Ilya Ehrenburg, vridely-known Russian author und correspondent, describes four witnesses at tbe Kharkov atrocity trials. BY ILYA EHRENBURG. KHARKOV. (UP). These are four nazis--four nazis sitting under the Kleig lights of a courtroom--three as prisoners charged With their war crimes, the fourth as a witness.

They are only ordinary nazis, typical, standard Hitlerites. That is the awful thing. There is nothing special here, no psychological obscurities, nothing pathological. Just four representatives telling about a state system whose purpose is to annihilate other nations. There are the four: Captain Langheld" is a precise German.

Before the war he served in the city administration of Frankfort-On-Main. In appearance he could be a saloonkeeper or a trader in bras- siers. When he shows with what kind of club he flogged the women of Kharkov, he seems to be praising goods at the counter. He has slain in the same precise, businesslike manner with which he would count sausages. When he is questioned, he says "if you please." He wears three medals and says he received them "for the eastern campaign." This man has tortured unfortunate people unspeakably; he has shot war prisoners; he has slain peasant women.

'Liked He liked order in everything. On one occasion he was to turn over six women to the commandant to be shot but he had clubbed them and one had died. "I turned over only five," he testified with a cough of self- deprecation. Of course, he condemns Hitler now and he wonders why nobody is interested in his political beliefs, only the women he killed. S.

S. Lt. Hans Ritz is only 24 but he is prematurely bald. He studied international law, but tortured innocent people, fabricated false accusations and light-heartedly peasant women. He is a musician and "adores pastorales." One day he went to see the place near Taganrog where Inhabitants were shot.

He went on invitation of Lieutenant Jakoby "to prove that you are a man and a soldier." He did want to prove he was a man. He nurses his tiny moustache as he tells that. He seized a tommygun and shot down women. Then he became interested in the "gas cars" and sought to familiarize himself with this achievement of German science. He states refinedly that" many inhabitants of Warsaw were evacuated in gas cars." Hans Ritz condemns Hitler, too Corporal Retzlaw is doltish but he knew how to make his career.

At the beginning of the war he was in France, drank much wine and toured the bawdy houses. Then his friends began going to the eastern front. The corporal wanted something better so he got himself enrolled in a special battalion for the secret field police (GFP). Aspiring executioners were lectured on how to arrest, search, interrogate, execute. One professor lectured on the necessity of exterminating the soviet people because they were hampering ihe new order.

The fourth German speaks with authority. Georg Heiniscn was a major general and commissar of the Melitopol district. He is squat and thickset. He thinks like the fuehrer and even talks like 'him in a dull, spasmodic bark. Heinisch explained the significance of the gas wagons "The civilian population had to be liquidated wholesale shootings would have been disorderly." He is a German and adores "ordnung." The gas cars saved the situation and Heinisch testified that both Adolf Hitler and Heinrich Himmler of the ges- tapo approved this invention.

Heinisch spoke with admiration of the murder cars and special huts where the doomed are killed by gases and of the latest technical a furnace in which 200 corpses can be incin- eratetl simultaneously. U.S. will gobble tip England says Goebbels By United Tress. Nazi Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels, attempting to revive his old theme of divide and conquer, says in the current issue of Das Reich that President Roosevelt unlike Woodrow Wilson, "will not let the British out-maneuver him and that the British empire will crumble with the U. S.

and soviet Russia gobbling up the pieces. According to a Berlin broadcast of the article titled "The Phony Colossus," recorded in New York by the United Press, even England itself will be "inherited later on" by the U. S. Sam O'Neal is bead national press club WASHINGTON. UP).

Sam A. O'Neal of the Chicago Sun, Saturday night was elected president of the National Press club. Other officers: Vice president, Edward Jamieson, Houston, Chronicle; secretary, John C. O'Brien Philadelphia Inquirer; treasurer, George W. Coombs, Baltimore Sun, and financial secretary, James J.

Butler, editor and publisher. New members of the board or governors are Warren B. Francis, Los Angeles Times; J. Lacey Reynolds Nashville Tennesseean; Jack Stinnett, Associated Press; Joseph H. Short, Baltimore Sun.

'Censor Willkie button request' WASHINGTON. (INS). Republican National Committee Chair man Harrison E. Spangler Satur day protested to Navy Secretary Knox over the censoring of a lettei from a marine in the southwes 1 Pacific who had asked his mother for 500 Willkie buttons. Spangler asserted in his letter protest that the deleted portion was a "political reference," and pointed out that the OWI has dis tributed thousands of badges bearing the picture of President Roosevelt "which have a singular simi larity to political campaign but tons." The marine, Pvt.

Edward Myerson, after receiving the buttons had written his mother why he wanted them, but his reasons were deleted from the letter by a navj censor. Spangler suggested to Knox, in order to keep the navy free of any charge of aiding new deal propaganda within our armed forces that steps be taken to make public the censored portion of Myerson's letter. "If necessary," Spangler said, "I ask that you inquire directly from him what he sought to tell his mother. She obviously is willing and anxious that it be made public inasmuch as she has given the remainder Of his letter to the cut in gas in midwest area DES MOINES, la. (UP).

Col. Uryan Houston, national deputy office of price administrator in charge of rationing, predicted here Saturday that a 15 percent reduction is coming in middlewest- ern gas allotments. He hinted that sweeping revisions would be made in the non- highway gasoline control system. If revision of the non-highway gasoline plan fails to take up the 15 percent reduction in gasoline consumption, he said, other measures would have to be taken. He hinted also that non- highway coupons may be eliminated in the midwest in favor of a certificate plan of farm gasoline control.

"The midwest is the worst area of all in gasoline leakage," he declared, explaining that principal sources of black market gasoline are coupons, taxicab coupons and "outright bootlegging." "I don't think the people here in the middlewest really recognize the gasoline shortage," the OPA official said. Recapture Criswell afier jail escape COUNCIL BLUFFS, la. UP). Eugene Criswell, sought by Council Bluffs police since his escape from the Pottawattamie county jail several months ago, is in custody at Paxton, local authorities said Saturday. Criswell, who was serving as a irusty after being sentenced to a year on a breaking and entering charge, walked away with Albert Stevens, also a trusty.

Stevens las not been recaptured. Eilwiu Children hurt hi truck, bicycle mishap Edwin Chlldress, 14. son of Mr. and Mrs. M.

A. Chlldress, 3305 P. suffered badly bruised legs was shaken up when his bicycle was hit by an oil truck driven by Oscar Boldt of Bennet, Saturday afternoon at 48th and O. Edwin was riding east on and had stopped for the light. Start- I ing up as the light changed, the truck going in the same direction pulled up beside him, and accord( ing to the boy's report, crowded him over and caught a wheel on I the bicycle, throwing him to the pavement.

Edwin said he turned 1 south to avoid being hit but was I unable to do so. He was taken to Dr. M. H. Horn's office for treatment and then removed to Bryan Memorial hospital for X-rays to determine whether any i bones were broken.

The examma- tion revealed no fractures, and he was sent home late Saturday af ter- Nacliiie Beeman, 16, dies here Saturday Nadine Mae Beeman, 16, resident of Lincoln all her life, died Saturday. Her home was at 500 So. 10th. She attended Lincoln high school. Surviving- are her mother, Mrs.

Ida Beeman; father, Walter brother, Donald, in the navy and grandmother, Mrs. Mary Anderson, Litchfield. i Open Evenings Until 9 P. M. CHRISTMAS CARDS FOB Sweethearts-Sons Mothers Daughters Neighbors Friends Fathers Sisters Brothers Wives Husbands Sportsmen Conventional Humorous i Also a very large choice of Boxed Assortments ft 24-Hour Set vice Until Christmas fj PERSONALIZED A I The DeLuxe Gift for 1943 Goldenrod Stationery 215 North 14th Street With or without epaulettes.

A A SHIRTS gifts that work overtime for home front fighters Burton's Irish Poplin woven in the U. S. A. Made of fine cotton sanforized shrunk form fit union made in heavy a light weight cotton. Or a Jayson heavy weave oxford gray.

Sizes 14-18. IRISH POPLIN Jayson and Yale form fit gray shirts. They're regulation in color and in every a i Exceptionally fine quality, exceptionally fine tailoring and exceptionally fine value. Sizes 14-18. TWILL OR CHINO I Say "Merry Christmas" with gifts from NEBRASKA JEWELRY 1408 St.

OR MEN'S Wrist Watches IN PINK OR YELLOW GOLD Beautiful modern style cases in a nice selection of distinctive designs. A S29 75 splendid value at up MEN'S Wrist Watches Waterproof shockproof, nonmagnetic, sweep second S37 50 --a real man's TM Lockets A splendid personal gift for "HEE." We have a fine selection of truly beautiful -old flUcd or sterliiiB lockets for List minute shoppers. $3.95 (0 $25 Rings --for men or women. TMs- tinctive designs with heavy solid gold mountings op Bill Folds --including the a Amity Line. a dif- $1..

$10 (Also few ilppered Bill Folds) MEN'S EXPANSION Watch Bands in white, yellow pink A happy thought for last minote Clearance of Dresser Sets Eleven gorgeously designed pieces (one mirror backed) in beautiful cases. An ideal Grift for "HER." Reduced to clear OPEN EVENINGS TH.l/ CHRISTMAS Nebraska Jewelry Co. 1408 "0" St. Opposite Consumers Power St, Light Bidp. Also Yale and Jayson Poplin Grays at 2.75 and 2.95.

WELLS FROST CO. 128-132 No. 10th Street "Give War Savings Bonds." Time! COLA NEWSPAPER! NEWSPAPER!.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About Lincoln Nebraska State Journal Archive

Pages Available:
379,736
Years Available:
1867-1951