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Nebraska Daily News-Press from Nebraska City, Nebraska • 4

Location:
Nebraska City, Nebraska
Issue Date:
Page:
4
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i. ntim taTr.nmasEs, rouE Farm Home Blown Away in Tornado Calls Standard Charley MCarthy News-Press Sports Department COURTS County Court Marriage license Issued to: Clyde William Whyman, of Lincoln, Ne-. braska. son of Mr and Mrs Ralph W. Whyman, and Miss Ruth Ann Jelinek, of this city, daughter of Mrs -Alfred Garrean.

The young people 1 were married at St. Mary's Catholic Church, this city, Saturday morning, the Rev Albin Bauer officiating, i Guardianship of Junior Lnfay Besch, Minor: Nomination of Earl Wcndcln, of Burr, Nebraska, as Ills guardian filed by ward. Petition of Gertrude Wendeln requesting that Earl Wcndcln be appointed guardian for said ward also filed. Hearing had and order for such appointment entered upon his furnishing the bond required by. law.

Hansina Nielsen, (also known ns Sine Nielsen), Estate: Bond approved and filed, and John D. Stocker appointed executor. Beal Estate. Transfers W. H.

and Nan Talmadge to Henry Schutte, for cancellation of mortgage part of lots 1, 2 and 3, block 11, Nebraska City. (Tills Is the. Elms Hotel, Tenth and First avenue.) John Ida C. Neeman to Hilda C. Neeman, for $1, love and affection, lots 3 through 9, block 6, Child's addition to Palmyra.

NEA Telephoto of ft away. Three of the Paddock family and two relatives were killed In the terrific blow which struck six farm houses In that This is all that -was left of the Datou Paddock farmstead near Ob-erlin, Kama; after a tornado leveled the dwelling and carried much Pioneer Thinclads Cop County Crown Set Four New Marks; Score More Points Than All Others HOW THEY FINISHED Nebraska Cily .......67 1-2 Douglas 17. Syracuse 11 1-2 Talmagf? 11 1-2 Otoo 6 1-2 Dunbar 6 St. Bernard's 0 Winning or sharing0 every first place but two and setting four new meet records, Nebraska City High s'chool thinclads walked -off with the Otoe. county track and field chamirioiiship on wind-swept Hay- ward park cinders here Friday aft- ernoon.

With unsung, and In some In- stances untried, squadmen coming through with unexpected second, third and fourth places.Jhe Pioneers up -67 1-2 points, more than' the other six schools combined. Although because of pre-meet performances, the records were achieved under conditions far from favorable. Runners had to breast a stiff wind in their drive to the taja, yet three of the new marks events. j. Eugene Red began the record breaking when he stepped mile ill 4:49.6, nearly 12 seconds niKler the mark set by Frederick Albers of Nebraska City last year.

Richard Conley. Nebraska City, clipiM'd 4.7 seconds off Norm tin half mile standard when turned in a 2:10.1. The event were in the track Launch First Sub Produced on Domestic Corporations State Tax Commissioner Frank 1 Brady Saturday furnished County I Clerk -Assessor. Lucian Smith with a list of the 37 domestic corporations was believed by (hi listed as being county. Elev-l virtually ended with the allies seek- en of them' are grain elevators and.lng to inflict the heaviest possible three are telephone companies.

In-1 casualties on the enemy us they eluded In the list was Slices of withdraw northward. Guerilla flghl-Wheat of Nebraska City, which lug probably will continue, It was wasnt, to be found In the current 1 said. corporation record at the court Japanese planes" heavily bombed house. It was incorporated for many Burmese towns and also (it wa, 30 mill's west of Mandalay, to protect llieir west flank from the threat of The Burma campaign, however, British -to bo The Aftermath YOU weigh the evidence and make your own choice. After watching his.

boys run and leap their way to a successful defense of their Otoe county track and field championship, Coach Frank Mueller predicted, "Well finish second or third In the conference. Auburp is the team to beat." A few hours later this reporter talked to Coach Jack Mc-Intire of Auburn. 1 cant see anything but a Nebraska City victory In the conference, he moaned. The Pioneers have too much power In the distances and In the field." AS pre-meet "dope lacks up, Auburn, Pawnee City and neers should be the team the Pio-battllng it out for. the conference title.

Te- cumseh and Falls City are quantities. Tecumseh will go into the conference matter wlthou liminary meet. a pre- AUBURNS past showed plenty of sprints, hurdles and broad jump. Pawnee City Is said to hae a slick quarter-miler. Nebraska City packs its most potent punch in the 880, mile and field events.

Should Pioneer half-mllers duplicate their county meet performance, (here Is a chance they will finish three at Auburn next Saturday. WHEN you see N.CHJS excelling in. the three athletes or sports along about -1948, you can thank three student coaches who this year are laying the groundwork for that future These mentors are Bob Berger, student Leonard Hohman and Morton Porter who have taken over the task of train boys spend a considerable 8 mount of time each week with thelij charges. Development in one year been little short of sensational. Coach Mueller bubbles over with! enthusiasm- when he discussed the results.

NOT in many years have! N.CHJS. track and field, prospects been so brilliant. Don Roser, the wheel horse; Bob Berger and Terry Bad-berg are seniors, but most of the current points getters sue under classmen. Bill Kenner, Jack Oilman are freshmen; Howard Vogel, the county 100-yard champ, and Richard Conley, the half mile king, are sophomores, and Eugene Red Robinson has another year of com- earj i to go. BUY BONDS Girls Stage Day Here Rain Mars Annual Event for Third Straight Year 000, With the amount of paid in Richest Derby Son of Equipoise jjTakes Crown by Long Margin AlsabRuns in Second By JACK GUENTHER LOUISVILLE, Ky.

(UJD-f From out of the thoroughbred heavens into which he ascended a year ago, mighty old Equipoise Saturday sent his last son a great chestnut charg-. er named Shut Out to win the race in which he himself neverjj got a chance to start. I And tills winner of the question mark Kentucky Derby was exclamation mark horse. 3 i It 11 long years an that heart-breaking night of May 15, 1931, that old broke down with a quarter crack in his table beyond the backs tretch here at rambling old Churchill Down, That was the 57th Derby and because' of his injury Ekky was denied his right I to run. But- Saturday, in the' 68th Kentucky classic, his son znade hls destiny good.

3 I He came a winging to do this beauty from Greentree Farm, and he did it with a smashing, flashing finish that left another of the Downs great crowds spellbound. He' came out of the. dust at thehead of the stretch just-a tiny -Mdtrof pink and black silk but he rodred under the wire as big as the midnight ex- press. Jj Shut Out Won this richest of all derbies Saturday by' a margin which left no doubt 2 Vi lengths jof open daylight and dpst. And behind him, showing the heart and the speed which carrie.

dhim to the juvenile crown of 1941, came the million dol-: lar baby from, this five and -fen cent I store, the ragged but running Alsab. I Valdlna Orphan placed third (while With Regards was fourth. First Fiddle trailed fifth and Devil Diver was sixth. Requested broke from the 14th stall and came home in 14th place. The winning time was 204 25.

Shut Out coupled with Devjl Diver in the betting returned $5 AO, $3.40 and $3A0 Alsab paid $6 A0, ard $4.80, Valdlna Orphan, who ran coupled with Hollywood, was $5.20 tar show. -BUY BOYDS- Survey Suggests More Regulations Closed Season on Hens Seen as Aid To Pheasants A strict closed season an Jien pheasants would greatly increase the pheasant population In Nebraska, according to a survey mide by the state game commission. I From questionnaires sent toa representative group of hunters, the commission estimates- that pheasants were killed during 1941 season. Of these were hens. After allowing for normal printer loss and a high' loss to neaja 'because of agricultural work, the com- lal frint mission figures these hens have produced 594,000.

poultsjcir 15 times the number of pheasants rais ed on the gafae farms and co-operative projects, had they been permitted to survive. The report on the survey then concludes that had there strict closed season on year this spring and summer ivould have increased the pheasant population to several millions. In another field in its effort to restore the states game bird population, the commission announced It purchased 864 adult chukar art- 1 stock unknown to the state tax com-; the Indian frontier. Increasing mlssloner. The largest corporation lief that a drive plight soon, tie-v In Otoe county was Otoe Food Prod- velnn inward ucts company, with' $494,500 in cap- American and Ausie planes bnmb ital stock, of which $275,300 15 paid cd tin? airdroine at the Japanese in- Watson Bros, was listed as hav- vasion base of (Jasmalii 011 New ing $150,000 in capital stock, with Britain island but officials paid in.

The smallest listed sized warnings that stronji Ja)anise was Owl Liquors, with $2,500 in cap- ah, sea nnd land lorees are massed ing Nebraska City grade school proved the Pioneers most prolific, dents in the fundamentals lof sport. Thomiiseii was only a few strides behind Conley and Livingston, run- part of Coach Frank ning in- his first meet, was third, long-range program for Allen of Douglas was winning athletics in this Muellers reviving city, the ltal stock all paid In. New Automobiles One new automobile was licensed In County Treasurer C. L. Kellys office last week.

It was a Ford truck, sold to K. Glover and Clyde Spi- dell. Nebraska City, by Wlndle Motor Co. Remittance to State All four men placing in the half mile broke the olcl record. Don Roser.

Nebraska City hoisted the pole vault mark to 10 feet six inches four inches higher than the rccord established by Norbert Es-ser, Nebraska City, and Eddie Ganzel. Dunbar, in 1939. -The Pioneer relay team completed the slaughter of meet marks when -Hardick, Kenner, Gilman and Vogel toured the 880 course in 1:39.8. Summary: Track Events 100 Won by Vogel, Nebraska City; second. Grundman, Talmage; third, Kenner.

Neb. City; Johnston. Douglas. Time :11. 220 Won by Hardick.

Neb. City; Neb. County Treasurer C. L. Kelly rc- believed they were a prelude to a mltted $20,616.30 to the state Satur-: possible enemy stub at the inuin-, day.

-The money was divided as fol-1 land- lows: general fund, high-1 Tokyo radio acknowledged the way maintenance, highway Kinking of Jnpnncr.cr.lilp off soutii-Eupervlsion, Insane, $1,620.09, western Japan by a U'. S. subnia- Justice Department Man Dares S. O. to Argue Case WASHINGTON U.ni- Irving LIU kowltz nf the Just-ire ili'isirtmcnls anti-trust division told the Senate patents committee that-Standard Oil Company vis I.

G. Farbens Charley McCarthy in the chemical field. Furbcn is the big German chemical trust! Litkowitz was recalled by the committee after Standard Oil In prem release branded us untrue statements he made at an earlier session. He asserted (hat Standard dare not argue tlielr case before the committee where facts and figures must he presented nnd where they would have to explain the meaning of many of the documents filed here. in: no 2 NUMBER 2 (Continued from Page One) Ava nnd elsewhere on (lie rivers o( eentrnl Burma.

They also were fighting nt.Mony- tacked Akynb only 75 miles from for a possible drive oil Australia's northeast const, or on llu supply line to America. Most significant development was a special communique saying that airplanes obviously Japanese craft had flown over tin? desolate Aus- two seating Townsville, 011 trallnn northeast coast. The emphasis put on Uh? two planes left, no doubt that General MacArtliur rine. AxLs also staled that Russian vessel- was also sunk In the same -area. The Chinese rejxnted that Che Army reported scattered but hardhitting attacks on German lines frbm Leningrad to the Ukraine with thc greatest pressure centered on the ROUth cnUril1 tor.

Berlin Radl IoSaI successes- in Russia lwclucilng I he repulse of Rus- slan attacks in the Murmansk nrca. eontlnueU liht ral(ls on at and clalhd a hit on a destroyer off NPway Mil 1 tho RAP light raids on the French (( with a raid on a south English airdrome and claimed also to have set a British patrol ship afire. Roy Bassinger Howard Tumbaugh Arnold Betts Albert Cordell James E. Ingram Mary K. Poggemeyer 'Lloyd Adkins Joe Michon Harold Irish John Broers -Jesse Beers Elmer Been Amet Bascom Walt Berry E.

H. Jacobson Claude Weston Edwin Childers PLACE Jim Sweany, Prop. vicinity. Note how trees were stripped bare by the high wind. Inland Waters the club.

Fred Oetgen, who will run the club house agaiii this year, will serve the meal. 1 After the dinner the annual meeting win be held, at which vacancies on the board of directors will be filled and recommendations -as to a new arrangement for dues, ranging from $7.50 upward, will be discussed. The meal Is scheduled for 6:30 oclock. --BUY BONDS Former Burr Man Dies in Lincoln 1 Funeral services were held In Lincoln Friday for Chere R. Hubbard, former resident of the Burr community, who died, suddenly at his home In Lincoln Thursday night, according to word reaching relatives here.

1 Hubbard, who still owned land In the Burr vicinity, Is survived by hls wife. BOND! Kearney First In 3-Way Meet Kearney colleges track and field stars won a triangular meet from Hastings and Ft. Hays, at Kearney Friday. The Antelopes scored ln every event except the mile to pile up 90 points to 38 far Hastings and 35 for Ft. Hays.

for Office DEMOCRATIC TICKET ATTORNEY SHERIFF and old age assistance $200. 115 File Application The county superintendents of flee announced Saturday that to date JaPanrse 1,1 southern lloiian prov-115 persons have signified intentions Ince thc have been siir- of being Irfimunized In cooperation with District 31s health plan on May Russian front the Reil Sunflower, Thistle Rubber is Sought McCOOK, Neb (U.R) A non-professional chemist, Jim Dyke, of McCook, believes he has something" in the way of a synthetic rubber, produced from wild sunflowers and Russian thistles that may solve nations, critical rubber shortage. Dyke, who lost an eye experimenting with the process last year, Isnt sure of what may happen If the sunflowers and thistles weed pests to farmers In most of Nebraska are cultivated and their growth encouraged. He found that eight hills of sunflowers he planted last year, which were watered and failed to show the growth that wild sunflowers did. 1 1 Dyke- also Is cooperating with a chemist In the east In seeking to find, a substitute for.

kapok, used In lifesaving belts. He Is planting an acre of soap weed as a test. BUY BONDS Annual Country Club pinner is Thursday The annual meeting and dinner of Nebraska City Country dub will be served at the club house Thursday night to former members, present members and prospective members with the compliments of 11. 1 Visitors Visitors in County Superintendent Wayne O. Reed's office Saturday In- eluded Lyle Beccard, Lucille Schmitz, Mildred McCan, Syracuse; LaVema Earner, Talmage; Carol Harms, Lucille Harms, Wilma MlUer, Mary! Ann OninHmon Ann Grundman, Barbara Grundman and Pauline Tackett, Nebraska City: Harold Reed and son, Larry, and 1 Abble Brandt, Unadilla.

News-Press Want Ads pay. second, Vogel. City: third. All-gaier, Talmage; fourth, Ruffner, Otoe. Time :25.

440 Won by Ferguson. Douglas; second. Gilman. Neb. City; third, Harrah, Neb.

City: fourth. Sim, Neb. -City; fourth, Sim, Neb. City. Time 5Q 880- Won by Conley.

Neb. City; second. Thompson, Neb. City; third, Livingston. Neb.

City; fourth, Allen, Douglas. Time 2:10.1. IRec-I ord.) I i Mile Won by Robinson, Neb. City; second. Peterson, Dunbar; third, -Kresscn.

Syracuse; Brennen, Douglas. Time 4:49.6. 1 (Record.) 1 880 Relay Won by Nebraska City (Hardick. Kenner. Gilman, -second.

JTalmage: third, Time 1:39.8 (Rerord). Field Events Shot Won by Badberg. Neb. City; second. LnFollette, Syracuse; third.

Zoch. Douglas; fourth, Sim, Nph City. Distance 42 ft. 10 in. urdav Discus Won by LaFollette, second, 'Roser.

Neb. City; third. Kreimer, Talmage; Johnston, Douglas. Distance 130 -ft. in.

High Jump Tie for first between Berger, Neb. City, and Johnston, Douglas; tie for third between Metzger. Way. and LaFollette, Sy- petitlon 50 Play play third the Otoe The bar, Nebraska High The Viola Farmers and gardeners should petition "for more Otoe county girls days In Nebraska City. I For the consecutive year rain! marred annual event, sponsored by the County School Mens club, Sat- 50 high school girls frmn Unadilla, Burr, Syracuse and City had to stage afternoon events 1 Junior and Senior school gyms.

Purple team, captained by Schmidt, Unadilla; won a relay to break a tie at the end of the events to take first place. Red team, captained jby Marie Callaway, Unadilla, was second the Orange team, captained by HOW JIM SWEANYS CUSTOMERS ARE HELPING TO WIN THE WAR ridges from Kentucky and distributed them to game farms scattered 1 atc- pawn "TxUth Street Cops The wnte ws confliKd ta'W- Grade Track Meet porary pens from two to three weeks and given feed typical of the aria in Fourteenth street walked Lewis, Tarklo, 5 ft. 10 In. BUI BON Pa Political Advertisement Political Advertisement AAAAAAaAAAAAaaaaaaaaaai rff fff fff fiftf JJJ racuse: Kreimer. Talmage; Ganzel NEA Telephoto first sub built on inland waters, the USS Feto, plunges off the ways at Manitowoc, Into Lake Michigan.

Completed weeks ahead of schedule the under-seas vessel was', pot In the water sideways, is an innovation in launching this type craft. MaryvilteWin8 Peru Invitational Six. firsts and seven seconds gave Maryville-Teachers first place in a six-team field- at the Peru college invitational meet Friday. They tal- lied 76 points. Aided by George Lewis three firsts a third and a leg in the winning relay combination, Tarklo scored 47 for second.

Peru was third, followed by Midland, Omaha U. and Fairbury J. C. Event winners: 100 Barton, Maryville, 120 hlghs-Trltsch, Maryville, :16.6. 200 lows Hutton, Peru, :26.4.

880 Murphy, Maryville, 2: 05 A. Mile Spltzmesser, Tarklo, 4:49.7. Two MUaSllvy, Maryville, 10:48.7. 220-Tie between Matthews, Omaha, and Overstreet, Maryville, :23.7. 440 Skocpol, Midland, Mile relay, Tarklo.

3:40 Hr. 880 relay Maryville, 1:35. Shot Peterson, Omaha, 40 ft. 1 In. Javelin Lewis, Tarklo, 158 ft.

2 1n. Discus Schottle, Maryville, 140 ft. 4 in. Pole Vault Lewis, Tar-kio, 11 ft. 6 in.

Broad Jump Spangler, Midland, 22 ft. in. High jump 50-d. dash Won by Swixuiey, nth; second, Murphy, Sixth; Rowan, Sixth. 75 -vd.

dash Won by Thiesfelt, Fourteenth; second, Peterson, Second third. Haggard, Second 100-yd. dash Won by Thiesfelt; second, Murphy third. Haggard. by Thiesfelt; TOM! uuui, third, Welsh, Second ave.

Shot Won by Thiesfelt; second, Haggard; third, Hoback. Jump won by. Thiesfelt; second, Hoback, Sixth Swinhey, Fourteenth'; third-, Hoback; land. Sixth street; third. Second ave.

PEI GARAGE Candidates This Political Directory win appear In The News-Press Each Week Until the August Primary. Dunbar: Swain, Neb. City. Height 5 ft. 5 1-2 in.

Broad jump Won by Berger, Neb. City: second. Roser. Neb. City; third, Ruffner, Otoe; fourth.

Distance 18 ft. 2 in Pole vault Won by. Roser, Neb. third City: tie for second and third be-' tween Ruffner. Otoe, and Ganzel, Dunbar; fourth, Seybert, Otoe.

Height 10 ft. 6 in. (Record). Illl BONDS regular The and Wanda The from The which they were to be. released, with the second grade school1 track Then the pens were taken a way land meetof the year at Hayward park the birds 'allowed to go free, Saturday morning, but Sixth street Of great Interest to -mid-state moved from third to second place, anglers Is the announcement (hat Thiesfelt led- Fourteenth street Johnson largest of the- scoring with five first places.

Re-Tri-County series of lakes, will. be suits: open to the public July 1. The lake 25-yd. dash Won by has been stocked with cradple. Sixth street; second.

Joiner, Four-northern pike, perch, bass, catfish Fifty Customers of tlie Ovorl.ind Taveru ium been encouraged to start U. S. AVar Stamp Itooks because we liave "told them we dont want them to tlieir money for beer. The men and women not only have, started (heir War Stamp Books with money saved in Olas '6U Central but tlic books arc left hero until they are filled. Several of the nO men liave traded, tlieit filled.

books for U. fS. War Bonds jit tiie J'ost Office. REPUBLICAN TICKET COUNTY THOMAS E. DUNBAR BERNARD M.

SPENCER COUNTY COMMISSIONER (Second District) CLARENCE PETERSEN We absolutely do not want our customers to spend all of their money for beer in Olas Place. We want them to spend some of it for War Stamps; and Bonds. and bullheads. BUY BONDS- New Vault Mark Warmerdam BERKELEY, Calif. (U-RL-Cotne-llus Warmerdam, Olirmplc club of San tered his own unofficial world but-: door pole vault record Saturday by On Francisco, bet- clearing 15 feet 6 Inches atlthe.

annual Pacific association track pd field meet. i mnywlcm. bat vault was 15 eet 5 inches. COUNTY CARL RYDER The following 50 men wore the first' to lot us help them start their war stanij) books: COUNTY TREASURER Gardner, Nebraska City, teams were composed each of the competing girls brought their own lunches, but had to eat them indoors because of the rain. Nebraska City Junior Chamber of Commerce treated them: to pop at the end of the games.

Contests included dodge ball, volleyball, softball, and soccer baseball. Elinor Soeth, girls physical education director in Nebraska City schools, directed the UY BONDS 1 Hush Wins City Bowling Crown Unheralded Clarence Hush, better known as a softballer than as a pin-toppler, hooked together three hot games for a 621 series to annex the City Singles bowling rhamplrmithtp Friday night. Hush didnt need his handicap, of 45 pins, since his scratch score was higher than Rodeos second place 561. I'-' Morton Hathaway, the defending champion, hit a cold streak hnd finished twelfth with a 490. Bill Kler, member of the winning 'doubles team, had to be content with a 516 and a tie for eighth.

I Scores posted by the field of 16: Hush, 621; Rodeo, 561; Webster, 553; Groves, 550; Brombach, 542; McSwaln, 525; Griffin, 524; Bauer, 522; Meredith, 516; kler, 516; Bab-berg, 505; Hathaway, 490; Overton, DISTRICT COURT JOHN Cm -MILLER Baseball Results SATURDAYS RESULTS American League. Detroit 3. New York 1. St. Louis 10.

Boston 11. Cleveland 12. Washington. 3. Chicago 6, Philadelphia 7.

National League Philadelphia 3. Cincinnati 4. New York 0. Brooklyn 5. Pittsburgh 10.

Boston 1, St. Louis 0. American Association Toledo 5. Milwaukee 12. Indianapolis 7, Minneapolis 6..

Chicago-Kansas City, postponed. Loulsvillfe-St. Paul, postponed, BONDS Auburn Seventh At Beatrice Paced by Richard Miller's record 12 feet Vi inch pole vault, Fairbury High scored 40'i points to win Class A honors at the Southeast Nebraska track meet at Beatrice Friday. Peru Prep piled up 31 points to win Class. from Diller by the slim margin of a half point.

Auburn was seventh in Class A with 9 points. Glenn ran fourth in the 440, Hutton second In the 200 lows. Gritz was third and Reed tied for fourth in the pole vault and the Auburn relay team was second. BUY BOND. C.

L. KELLY REGISTER MRS. NELLIE UERKVITZ COUNTY RAY A. THURMAN CLERK OF 3 apgWORD OF THE Mike Longwell Paul Wirth Mrs. Loebers Chester H.

Morgan Ray Sean Halted McCarty Jim and Ola Wayne Steinhoff Walt Meredith Carl Fltcekam Sam Stitts Tom George Alvin Kinnlson Andy Owens John Hunget John Llngle Wm. Buckholz Everett Bassinger. Frank W. lance Perry Shlneflew Clyde Bweany Earl Been Hubert Adkins James Hoffman Norma Schmidt -Ralph Duff Frank Dallas Adkins Herb Scharp Tom Farrell N. F.

Acker Pons OF DEEDS CLERK CHARLES -GUDE PyiATE (dei-fftl -Verb' -originating from the Definition: To diverge os from a line of direction; to turn aside from the course or way; to part or swerve; digress. To deviate from His plan was to be lost." OLAS 611 Central Avenue NON-POLITICAL We are on hand 24 hours a day to give yon expert wrecker service. Just phfane 12! NEBRASKA LEGISLATURE (STATE SENATE). (Bnmnrt Dlfttrirt Gterr wnd NTP-th- FRANK SORRELL Compliniantsoi WURTELE ii1 1911 CENTRAL COUNTY SUPERINTENDENT HOWARD J. SPICKNALL Novak, 486; Blaker, 482; Teel, 457; 422.

OSCAR I iv -r v-.

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About Nebraska Daily News-Press Archive

Pages Available:
94,524
Years Available:
1886-1944