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The Beatrice Daily Express from Beatrice, Nebraska • 3

Location:
Beatrice, Nebraska
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1 i imr JUNE 21 1917 THE BEATRICE DAILY EXPRESS TUESDAY EVENING PADS Baseball Classified Ads Employe of State Loses Her Job On Liberty Bond Test made by State Chemist Frisbie In sixteen different drinks now on the market in this state Mr Frisbie failed to find one which contained more than 40 qr 1 per cent of alcohol The5 law allows beverages to be sold which contain not more than urn'-liidi of per cente State Chemist Frisbie still has samples of twenty-four other drinks to test from the collection of forty made by the food inspectors Results of all of the tests will le placed in the hands of (tie attorney gen end and a duplicate report filed with the governor Governor Neville has the promise of federal authorities that after July when the Ree amendment cn-acted by congress goes into effect the United States government will have agents in Nebraska to detect end prosecute persons especially an foists who transport liquor ipto this state White House and back again without unfurling their banners Jnst after 4:30 however when employes began to pour out of the nearby deparments a squad of women each carrying a furled banner Started in single file to march in front of the White House from east to west When they reached the pud of the block dheyurned and started back still with the banners furled Banners Thrown to Breeze Beaching the middle of the block immediately in front of the White House Itself at a signal every banner was thrown to the breeze and the women stood silent as close to the Iron pickets of the fence as possible The police arrested most of them and took them in automobiles Jo police headquarters The women were all released on personal onds after appearing as headquarter giving their names ages and occupations No time was set for a hearing on the formal charge of blocking traffic Tjeie wqre nineteen women in the parade Fourteen were arrested lhdudtng Misss Mabel Vernon of Nevada Berta Crone of San Francisco and Mrs Alei Shields of Texas MARKETS South Omaha June 26 Cattle Receipts 4800 market steady 10c lower steers $1050 to 1385 cows and heifers $6 to 1150 Stockers and feeders $7 -to 11 calves $10 to 1450 Hogs Receipts 13200 market weak 10c lower bulk of sales $4493 to 1 2 ep 1 54 Famished By VANDERSUCE-LYNDS CO Paddock Bldg Joe Glandon Manager Chicago Receipts Today WANTIB work on farm Man to Phone 3702 -To buy 100 tons alfalfa hay Will pay rrrii rice Burroughs WANTED To exchange Hupmobilo roadster for 5 passenger car Phone 872M MISCELLANEOUS BOARlT AND rooms at Shady Nook 1001 Ella street FALSE TEETH We pay as high as $2250 per set for old false teeth no matter if broken also gold (Towns brldgewbrk Mail to Berner's False Teeth specialty 22 Third street Troy and receive cash by return -mail rOlSALl FOR SALE Tomato cabbage and sweet potato plants 413 South Fifth St Chas Carpenter FOR SALE Two all modem bungalows at bargain prices on paved streetB A Green Son FOR SALE Ten first class Gage county farm ranging In price from $75 to $125 per acre A Green Son BARGAINS in oity lots good locations A Green Son FOR ADE-J st" batik with a load of mules and mares all well broke aged from 4 to 7 years Good stuff For sale or trade Koox old Burroughs barn 318 Market street COR 8ALE-v-At a bargain A fine residence property in part of city Price $2400 easy terms See 0 Fulton FOR Good TrnTw I iTg)ot7 earner Seventh and Ames Inquire of Lenhart FOR SALE Tonttto-: 5c a 'dozen Rock 411 South Sixth St Phone 323X TORRENT FOR RENT Furnished room modem house 117 North Eighth FOR Three furnished rooms In modern house 813 Ella Phone 238W Notice of Ktnsl Settlement ana Assignment of Estate In the county court Oage county Nebraska In ro estate of Horace Oreen deoeased To the legatees devisees heirs at law and all persons Interested In the estate of Horace Green deceased You are hereby notified thit Krnest LeRoy Green has filed Ills ion In said court praying a final settlement and allowance of his accounts as ex ecutOT of the estate of said de eased and the discharge from his trust as such executor a decree of heirship and a decree distributing and assigning the residue of said estate an 1 that said matter has been set for hearing the 26th day of June 1917 at 9 a when before said court nil persons Interested may appear and show cause If any there he why the prayer of the petitioner should not be gi anted Witness my hand and the sal of said court this Slst day of May 1917 A S) County Judge ltinnker Kidd attorneys jtwl NO EXCUSE FOR ANY WASTE Uneaten Cereal and Stale Bread May Be Used to Advantage by Home-Wife Say Experts Do you That every bit of uneaten cereal can be used to thicken soups stews or gravies? That stale bread can be used ns the basis for many attractive meat dishes hot breads und desserts? That every ounce of skim milk or whole milk contains valuable nourishment? Government food experts are asking these questions of all housewives Use every drop of milk to drink or to add nourishment to cereals soups sauces and other foods they urge If you do not want milk to sour keep It cool clean and covered continually Remember too that sour milk buttermilk and sour cream are valuable In cookery so do not waste any Sour milk and buttermilk can be used with soda In making hot breads or sour milk can be turned easily Into cottage cheese cream cheese or clabber Sour erenin Is a good shortening In making cakes and cookies and useful for salad dressing and gravies for meat First State Saving Ek in First National Banking Rooms Interest Paid qm Savings Automobile mid Carriage Painting Plow and Disc Sharpening General Repair Work GUDTNER 4th and Market BOURNE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Probate Law and Settlement of Estate a Specialty Office over Omaha Store Suffer With Rupture Heflin of Fremont will be at (lie Burwootl hotel Wednesday and Thursday only with his Sure FH truss for rupture Hemember this truss lias nmnipuluting pad which holds the rupture at all times with -ease ami comfort No leg straps or iti hber hands to contend with Many people of Beatrice ami vicinity are wearing this truss with satisfaction What we have done for them we can do for you HEFLIN RAILROAD TIME TABLE UBLIKOTOV SOUTH Leaves No Passenger (dally except Sunday) to Wymore St Joseph Kansas City St Louts and Southeastern points Oklahoma and Texas No 86 Passenger (Sally except Sunday) to Wymore Concordia Denver and points west California coast points No 96 Freight (dally except Sunday) to Dewitt Edgar and Intermediate points No 91 Passenger (dally except Sunday) to Wymore (from Lincoln) No Passenger (Sunday only) to Wymore and east St Joseph arid Kansas City etc' to No Freight (dally except Denver and points westll46pm Sunday) to Blue Springs and Wymore No Freight- (Monde? and Wednesday only) Blue Rprtngd and Wxmem ISlSlpm No 1M -Freight Tuesday Thuri-day and Friday only) to Blue Springs and Wymore No Passenger( dally except Sunday) to Tecumseh Nebraska City Red Oak and Intermediate points No Freight (Monday Wd-- nesday and Friday only) to Tecumseh Nebraska City and Intermediate points No 118 Freight (Tuesday Thursday and Saturday only) from Nebraska iClty Tecumseh ar- -3 rives No 97 Passenger (dally except Sunday) Superior and lnterma- rilate points NORTH No Passenger (dally except Sunday) to Lincoln Omaha and Intermediate points No Passenger (dally except Sunday) to Lincoln Omaha Chicago and East: to Sioux City and Intermediate points No 90 Passenger (dally) to Lincoln Omaha Chicago and east to Denver and points west: California Dead wood and Black Hills north Pacific PnnHt No Freight (daliy except Saturday) to Dewitt and Crete Intermedia to oolnts tmxon FAcmo NORTH No 46 Passenger Beatrice to Lincoln and Omaha leave No 41 Passenger Lincoln to Beatrice arrive No 602 Motor Beatrice to Lincoln leave No Motor Lincoln and west to Beatrice arrive No 604 Motor Beatrice to Lincoln and the west leave No Passenger Omaha and Lincoln to Beatrice arrive No 42 Passenger Beatrice to Lincoln leave No Local freight from the north arrive No Motor Lincoln and west to Beatrice arrive No 74 Xooal freight for the north leave SOUTH No Passenger Beatrice to Manhattan Kansas City and Denver leave No Motor Manhattan and west to Beatrice arrive 11 No Motor Beatrice to Man- hattan and the west leave No 125 Passenger Denver Kansas City and Manhattan to Beatrice arrive No Local freight for the south leave No Local freight from the south arrive BOOK IS LAMP EAST Leave No Passenger (dallv except Sunday) Pawnee Sabetha St Joe and east No Passenger (dally) Pawnee Rahetha Horton St Joe Topeka Kansas City No Freight (dally except Sunday) Tlorton and Intermediate points No 998 Freight (Monday Wednesday Friday) Horton and Intermediate points WEST Mo 05 Passenger (dally) Fmlr-miry Belljevllle Phllltpsburg Colorado Springs Denver Intermediate points and Nelson line No 853 Passenger Falrbury and intermediate points No 87 Freight (dally except Sunday) Falrbury and Intermediate I June A a sequel to the ajforts of jSfato to little all at fofwL invest in Lwrty liondjwf wWlfr tcwlayf loft the aRlever more to return T1Ljyi At iifhe time the soBfilowf Wore working the stale house f6Up he sale of 11 bonds two or three clerks in the office refused to invest When the matter waic called to attention of Mr Srnilh he told tfie clerks he believefl it the duty of every man and woman drawing money from tip' state to invest in the bonds and that refusal to do so would indicate that their jobs were vacant or words to that The clerks hereupon invest-ejf inVthe bonds Protest From Waterman The matter coming to the attention of II Watcrtnan of Beaver Crossing father of one of the women clerks who did not at first invest in Ihe bonds arid he sent a letTer which was published in a Lincoln paper questioning the attitude of the aduitor When the young woman appeared at the office today Mr Smith callthl her tri the private office and told her he considered by the attitude beiy father liad taken TTiat he did she should he connected With the department longer He told her he would give her credit for a week's vacation which she would he entitled to for the time she had worked Clerk Leaves Office Mss Waterman immediately left the offire Waterman in his letter attack-fPVlfic loyalty of the auditor staling that if he was as patriotic as he professed ho should offer services to his eounfry the state auditor is over the ihiWtfwy -afid is ni TrtpJ)led'in one'leg so that ould not bo accepted jn the event cif his offer for services is no feeling about the matter on mv said Auditor Smith afterward did not suppose her father would want her to work in the office after whip he said in his letter She is a yiry competent young woman andnier'work'in ihe office was well If she had remained in the office showvould have been entitled to the annual vacation so I gave her one week off with pay and told her sin need not report for duty after that The place will not he filled until the expiration of Ihe week" Miss Waterman's father was" ft veteran of the civil war ami was postmaster at his home Beaver Crossing for several years and was a newspaper publisher He lost th postoffice appointment during Con gressmap term Jos Wilson Passes Away Sunday Evening pph Wilson an old Gage Ufjty resident died at 3 o'clock Sunday afternoon at his home twelve miles northeast of Beatrice lie had been an invalid for abollt fifteen vejirs TJie deceased was fifty-two years of age and is survived by five brothers Leandor of Gage county with whom he resided a portion of the time Alexander of Colorado Thomas of Canynnville Oregon of Goldfield Colo find A of Clay Ceiffer Kans Mr Wilson was well known in the county and has resided north east of Beatrice all his life He vyas a son of the Mr and Mrs John Wilson who located in Gage county in 1859 serves were held this 'afternoon at 2 o'dw'Lfrom the home of Leandor Wilson-: Interment will i be hi the Dunkanl cemetery north east of Pick roll- ir- 1 1 Suffrage Banners Cause The Arrest 7 Of Fourteen Women JjWI shlitgtQn June 25lMoft jhaji ft (zen suffragists today by the police when they late marched in front of the White House lined up against tiie feaei end unfurled suffrage banners A Mnowd of bund-uls watched th1 ar- but tt was no disorder was the fourth deinonstra- day The other times the women shed quietly past the Mrs Earl Kinney Dies At Home In Wymore Vicinity jp -i Mrs Earl Kinney well known in tfie Wymore vicinity died Sunday evening at her home four miles west of Wymore Tuberculosis was given as the enuse of death i -Tfie deceased was thirty years of arid 'is survived by her husband and two children a son four years of age and a daughter six years old She also leaves her mother Mrs Elizabeth Conover Mr Kinney has been associated with his fathefy A Kinney in the Wolf Valley Stock farm near Wymore for a number of years f'finoral servicas were field -this afternoon at Methodist church at Blue Springs conducted by Bov Williams of Omaha form ('fly pastor of the Zion church south of Wymore British Ship Sends Shell Into Magazine An Atlantic Port June Offi-rprs of a British teamer which arrived here today reported having sunk an attacking German submarine The British vessel sent a shell into the magazine causing an explosion which parted the un-(derwater boat about amidships Each end sank separately The British steamer was uninjured The submarine was five miles distant and rupning away after having attacked the Britisher nearly 400 miles off the const of Ireland Fraternal Orders Boost Fund Men To Subscribe The Elks and Masons boosted the Bed Cross fund last evening Beatrice lodge No 26 A A giving $100 and the gave a like amount Employes of the Union Pncific are raising a subscription The canvas had not vet been completed yesterday hut $100 had already been subscribed Crab Orchard Young Men Plead Guilty To Burglary Charge Tecumseh Neb June 25 Sheriff Holmes and Deputy mans v-rissey with the assistance of bloodhounds early this morning captured five young men from the Crab Orchard neighborhood who had broken into the cellar of Peter Kruger a farmer and stolen half a gallon of wpliky and fifteen bottles of beer Thfc men are Jesse With ids Russell Richardson Joseph Craney Verne Griffin and Bernard Mahler They were taken before County Judge James Livingstone in the county court today and each pleaded 'guilty to the charge of burglary District court Is in session here and I (he men will be taken before the district Judge for sentence Express want ads bring results RESULTS Western League Sioux City 4 Omaha 1 Dos Moines 14: Lincoln 3 St Joseph 5 Denver 7 Joplin 14 Wichita 8 American League Detroit-Chicago rain St Louis 6 Cleveland f) Philadelphia 0-5 New York 1-7 Washington 4-3 Boston 0-4 National League Boston 2-2 Brooklyn 3-4 New York 0 Philadelphia 2 CincinnatiSt Louis played Saturday American Association Louisville 2 Kansas 5 Toledo-St Paul rain Ted Riddell Wins lour Letters lir State Athletics The sports editor of the Omaha Daily News has the following to sqy of a Beatrice boy and former member of the Beatrice higji school football team who was awarded letters ih fouror the sports at the state university: who win their in four major sports in a single year are a rarity in college athletics Nevertheless this honor belongs to The odore Riddell a Beatrice (Neb) hoy who has just rounded out his second year in Cornhusker athletics and his junior year in the University of Nebraska at Lincoln Beatrice husky played end on Ihe Cornhusker football eleven of 1916 No sooner was the gridiron season over than reported for basketball practice and qualified as a regular member of the Comhusk-er floor quintet Spring sports were next on the athletic curriculum and wore the mask and windbad ns one of the catchers for the baseball team Then came track sports in which the Beatrice athlete captured his fourth monogram as a weight heaver and member of the half-mile relay team athletes as Bender West-over Ualligan Chamberlain and Rutherford have been famous in Cornhusker circles but an investigation of the records at the University of Nebraska has disclosed that Riddel) is the first athlete in Cornhusker annals to win his monogram in four major sports in a single college year was a busy athlete even when he was at Beatrice high when he was star performer on the football and basket ball squads Entering the state university he made the team the first year he was eligible for intercollegiate athletics and played at end on the famous Cornhusker football tenm of the learn which according to Nebraska adherents had the punch to win from any other college aggregation in America" Nebraska Near Beer Within Provision Of Prohibition Law Lincoln Nehr June All of the alleged "near boar" drinks and substitutes for beer which are being sold jn this state and samples of Which were recently secured by inspectors of the food commission under Governor directions for purpose of analysis come within tile provisions of Ihe prohibition law according to announcement Kansas City Receipts Today Week Ago Year Ago Wheat 40 38 55 '-A rjfi 48 Oats 9 6' 4' Kansas-City Futures open high 1 low dloae wneat Jiy I I Bep 1 1 9 2 1 90 Jiy 1189 Sen 145jl45142142145 Chicago Futures open high low close Wheat Jly 210 Sep 186 Corn Jly 157 Sep 148 Oats Jly 62 63 Sep 53 I 53 I I I 209 209 (210 183184 1 1 35 I I I 1 1 5 4 4 1 1 5 5 15 7 1 1 4 5 145148 I 1 I 62 62 62 52 52 53 Chicago Provisions open jhigh low jcloseyBday Pork July 39503950390039203995 Seijt 39J003975 Lard July 21672170213021352175 Sept j2140j2140j21 10(21 1021 50 Ribs 1 I II July 2185218521 55(21 55(2190 Sept (2170(21 70 1 2 1 52 (21 4 8 1 2 1 8 2 Local Grain Market Furnished by Black Bros Wheat $245 Cbrn 160 Oats 60 Cash Poultry and Produce Furnished by the Beatrice Cold Storage Co Cream 37 Hens 16r Cocks 10c Broilers 25c Turkeys first grade 16c Ducks per pound 9o Geese per pound 9c Butter 30c Eggs per dozen No 1 25c Produce in Exchange By Beatrice Merchant Butter per pound 35 to 37c Eggs 27c Ntlco of Final Settlement and Assignment of estate In Ihe county court tiage county Nebraska in re estate of John Stromer deceased To the legatees devisees heirs at law and all persons Interested In the estate of John Stromer deceased You are hereby notified that A Spencer has filed his petition In said court praying a final settlement and allowance of his accounts ns executor of the estate of said deceased and the discharge from his trust as such executor a decree of hehshlp and a decree distributing and assigning the residue of said estate and that said matler has been set: for hearing th 10th day of July 1917 nt 9 a when before said court all persons Interested tuny appear and Show cause If any thero he why the prayer of the petitioner should not be granted Witness mv hand and the senl of said court this 16th day of June 1917 (L 8) 1 A County Tudee Hazlett Jack Attorneys JlSwX The Dally Express dellrered your door 10c per week to Express want adl bring result The Geologists' Clock The fossil shells of the early invertebrates are always of great Importance to geologists for they Indicate the period In which the rock belts that contain them were In other words the age of the rock Every fossUlIferous rock bed contains characteristic forms or groups of forms that determine the period in which it was nmd or sand The economic importance of geology has been repeatedly shown In the earlier exploitation of anthracite coal thousands of dollars were wasted searching for coal beds In New York until the geologist of the state showed that the beds tn state could contain coal since the fossils showed that they be- anv tJiere he why the prnver of th ppHtidher should not he granted longed to the Devonian age uhenas witness mv hand and the sent of said the Pennsylvanian anthracite coal court this 22nd dav of jun 1917 beds are of the Carboniferous age a (Tj 1 A' Jnrt much later period Sackett Brewster Attorneys J25w3 points 1 NO Freight (Sunday Wednesday Friday) Falrbury and Intermediate points Notice of Piral Settipient and Assignment of Estate Tn the county court Gage county Nebraska In re estate of Samuel Eceles deceased To the heirs at law and aU Brsons interested In the estate of ffitwtpsl Ec- if deceased JSC You are hereby notified that Tic Lang has (lied his petition In said court praying a final settlement and allow-nnrp of his accounts as administrator of the estate of said deceased and the discharge from his trust as such administrator a decree of heirshio and a decree distributing and assigning residue of said estate and that said matter has beep sot for hearing the 17th dav of July 1917 at 9 o'clock a when before said court all persons Iti- forested rnov appear and show cause (t.

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About The Beatrice Daily Express Archive

Pages Available:
53,788
Years Available:
1884-1924