Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

Nebraska Daily News-Press from Nebraska City, Nebraska • 5

Location:
Nebraska City, Nebraska
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

'Vv t.ipHey V-W fct f'At 'Xatn I V- -ii i 1 I i i THE NEBRASKA DAILY NEWSFRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1933 i-1 FIVE TT SIDE GLANCES By George Clark Mountain Calm is WEDDINGS SOCIETY NEVS 1 I PERSONALS 'i But; Campers in Pennsylvania Forests Are Used To Noise. One-Legged Man is Struck by Vehicle i i Frank Miller, one-legged Knight of the Roud, Is in St. Marys hospital with bruises and sprains uus? talned when he was hit by ah automobile Suturday' night while changing trains here. Miller Mad left one eust-bound train and was trying to catch' his next cur when he was hit. Ho was cp! route from Omaha to St.

Louis. The grny-halred wanderer gave his home as Boston, Mu1, Hu planned to return there; after sending some time visiting SI. Louis. With only a $35 a month pension as his source of income, Miller has spent much time on the rood. I cant work," he said, and lire ixmsion Isnt enough to wrmlt my settling1 down.

So I keep on the road. Kitchen To Fair and Niagara Falls. and Mrs. Calvin Wilhelm and son of Dunbar and Walter Mattel left early Monday morning for Chicago where they will spend several days at the Worlds Fair. From there they-will visit Niagara Fails, returning home in 10 days.

To PeqnoL Mr. and Mrs. Otto Schneider left Monday morning for Pequot, where they will be guests of Mr. and Mrs. Allan Wilson for two weeks.

The Wilsons are spending the summer in their cottage on Lake Pelican. ployment and wage has been steady since March, one metropolitan newspaper The number of factory workers In the" four months ending in July increased 16 'per cenL wage earnings 39 per cent, and working hours 35 per cent. Plans for equalization of forking time rejected, 10,000 mine workers of the Lehigh Navigation Coal company adopted a resolution calling for a strik Thursday. Something else, for General Johnson to Iron Transfer Inheritance tax appraisements in Columbia county today reveal Secretary of the; Treasury William H. Woodln received an estate of $355,300 I from his mother, Mrs.

Mary Woodln, who died ait Blooms-burg several montfis Her son is the only heir. How muclj people like these mountains is shown by the fact that a summer home, whose grandeur will be matched by few places in the United Stapes is being 1 built by Lewis E. New York millionaire, at Eagles Merc. Workmen declare they) have been told cost of- the place be $2,000,000. The ckl Lie! site is a thickly wooded section Just outside Eagles Mere; A miniature WUlman-Osbome.

Word has been received by Nebraska City relatives of the wedding of Miss Theola Wlkman to Howard Craig Osborne, at Lincoln Saturday night, eight oclock, at the home of Rev. j. D. M. Buckner, who performed the ceremony.

Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Sackett were the only attendants.

The; bride was attired in a dress of blue organdy fashioned in colonial style. Mrs. Sackett wore white taffeta. Miss Wlllman is the daughter of Mrs. Myrtle Wlllman.

They lived1 here until several years ago when they moved to Lincoln where she finished her schooling, later wrs a stenographer in the capital. Mr. Osborne, son of Mr. and Mm. William Osborne, is a farmer Uni- verslty of Nebraska Student.

Last year he served on the state board of Control. After a weeks trip to Minnesota and Wisconsin, Mr. and Mm. Osborne will be at home, September at the Blanche apartments, Lincoln. I TURN LOSSES Into profits by.

turning to the classified BY ANN WARY Somewhere In pie Pocono Mountains in Pennsylvania Life in a mountain cabin is primitive and quiet until the -modern age -asserts Itself in. the drone of the airplane motor overhead. Big tri-motored passenger, planed, mail planes' and others pass over our cabin on regular schedule night and day. Today two of them flew side by side going east on this cross-country air lane The fact that! my glances unconsciously roam every time one of these mechanical birds soars over head stamps me as a yokel in these Other campers answer politely but. Indifferently every time I say: There goes another airplane.

i I If the weather man is dishing out torrid weather this week it has failed to penetrate the dense foliage of these eastern Comfortably cool and' a shower every night has been pur portion. -And thats all right1 Iqo, after June and July in i Nebraska. Pennsylvania reports a steady gain in employment under the! National Recovery Act. Therp is an additional Increase of four per cent and pay rolls, eight per cent from June', revised indexes show. The upward movement in factory em Sunday Guests.

Guests of Frank Morse on Sunday were his -daughters, Mrs. John R. Golden. Omaha, and Mrs. Robert ifelly, Lincoln, their husbands, and Jean Frances Morse, his granddaughter, also from Lincoln.

Occasion of. the visit was Mr. Morse's eighty-fourth birthday which he celebrated quietly Monday, August 21. By SISTER MARY (NKA Service Writer) Serve Summer Squash With a Cheese Sauce. Tomorrow's Menu.

BREAKFAST: Orange Juice, cereal, cream, creamed ham on toast, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON Squash scalloped with tomatoes, pumpemlckle, baked peach dumplings, milk, tea. DINNER: Macaroni and liver timbale, creamed onions, head lettuce with Thousand! Island dressing, peach custard, milk, COff6G While the woman; who serves many vegetables can set an abundant, varied and satisfying table at low cost, she must spend much time and thought In its preparation. The possibilities of every vegetable must be studied and carefully worked out. Summer squash an excellent vegetable too often 'overlooked by homemakers.

Fried and mashec seem to be the common ways of cooking this which is consequently criticized as tasteless. On account of its bland flavor, summer squash is especially good cooked In -combinations with other vegetables. Combined with toma- QUIVERING NERVES Yield to Lydiu E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound When ju are just on edge when you can't stand the children's noise when everything Is a burden when you are Irritable and blue try this medicine. 98 out of 100 women report-benefit.

It will give you just the extra energy1 you need. Life wlU worth living again. private lake has been created and landscaped. I Rock spillways have been constructed from the lake, which is several hundred feet wide and a ljLtlel longer. Bobby Jones of Atlanta, wife of thej nations foremost golf star, was an overnight guct at the home of a1 unbury friend, according to the; society notes In the evening paper-.

I And, by tjhe Gaston Means is prisoncrl number 1203 in the new federal penitentiary near Sunbury. Klinger-Leldlgb. Miss Mary Klinger, daughter of Mm. Maude Klinger of Julian, and Xsterj Leidigh, Omaha, were mar4 rled at) Flattsmouth Saturday after-; noon at two oclock. The wedding1 i ceremony took place in the Metho-j dlst parsonage with Rev.

Mr. Troy reading the marriage lines. The! bride wore an ensemble of brown! crepe with matching acces-J sories. I Mias Klinger has taught in the' Otoe county schools for the pest seven yearn. Mr.

Leidigh, life-time resident of Nebraska City until last November, is employed with Swif and Company in Omaha where thq young I couple will make their home! After the wedding Mr. and Mrs. Leidigh went to Julian. They left for Omaha Sunday. Let's not fuss.

dear. Well feed her what your mother says one week apd what my mother says the next." i lias Chicago Position. Elizabeth Thurber Devenney, daughter of Sam Thurber, publisher of the Tecumseh Chieftain for many went to Chicago to attend the fair, writes her parents she has a position with a Chicago magazine in the editorial department. For several years Mrs. Devenney has been focal editor of the Chieftain.

On Vacation. Rev. Rudolph Stolz left Sunday for Carthagena, Ohio, where he will take his retreat at St. Charles Bern-. Inary for five.

days. From there he will go to Huntington, Indiana, to visit his brothers and sisters. He will return to Nebraska City August 30. Bert Letcher, Sol Letcher, Charles Rollins, John Johnson, Albert Fields and Alonzo Adams. Interment was at Wyuka cemetery.

Mrs. Robinson, a resident of Nebraska City for more than 00 years, is survived by four daughters, Mrs. Alfred Newton, Beatrice, Miss Edith Robinson, icawwui City, and Misses Georgia and Rosa Robinson, Ne-. braska City. toes and cheese, it offers a well flavored main dish of food value.

Sauce Heightens Taste Summer squash is cultivated in several varieties. Cymling or patty pan, crook-nedk! and marrow, all appear in market about the same time and are delicately flavored. These squash are very fine fcralned and tender, are seldom peeled and the seeds are not removed. It 1s at this stage of their development that they are rich sources of morning for Chicago, where -they vitamins. they mature and will spend considerable time.

Mr. 1 the skin hardens and seeds toughen, Arnold is on his vacation frdm the telephone office. the skin and seeds must be discarded, as in winter squash. Attend Niece's Wedding. Mr.

and Mm. J. W. Vogt and daughter, Marie, attended the wedding of Mm. Vogts niece, Elma Niermann, at York Sunday night.

Mias Niermann, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Niermann, was married to Roy Heiden at eight oclock in the Evangelical Lutheran church. After a wedding trip they will return to York to live. Flattsmouth Wedding.

Mite Stephanla Kostka, well mowh Plattsmouth and Cass county gii and Olenn H. Madison, Des Moines, Iowa, were married Saturday morning in First Presbyterian church, Plattsmouth. They win live in Des Moines. i Kart J. E.

Maker Rites for Karl J. E. Malzer, Otoe county farmer, who died Saturday at St. Marys hospital, were held at the Bethel Evangelical church Monday afternoon with Rev. George Duensing in charge- Pallbearers were Raymond Gress, Neil Bryan, Fritz Hippe, Paul McMullen, Michael Zelner and Paul Gress.

Interment was at wyuka cemetery. Mr. MalSer had made his home in Otoe county for nearly fifty years coming here from Germany in the late eighties. He Is survived by his -widow, three sons, August, Karl, and Herman Malzer, and a daughter, Miss Anna Malzer at home: Three brothers preside in Germany and a nephew, Paul. Alfred Malzer, Nebraska City, are other surviving relatives.

Spend Day in Lincoln. Miss Eleanor Markel, Miss -Ber-niece Magette, and her guests, Mary Magette and Reta Testennann of Concordia, spent Sunday in Lincoln. Misses Magette and Test-ermann, who have been visiting here for several days, have returned to their home. Funerals 4 A vi i I I i i. i i 'If your family objects to summer squash and regards it as.

tasteless, try steaming it and serving it with a white sauce to which cheese lias been added. Ths dish; Is well adapted to the needs of children as well as adults, Squash salad is unusual. Boil squash until tender. Drain and cool. Reject seeds and cut the' firm part in neat cubes.

Combine with shreds of green pepper and minced onion and serve on a bed of lettuce with French dressing. I Squash Scalloped With Tomatoes Three email summer squash, one medium sized onion 1-2 cup cooking oil, 4 ripe tomatoes, 1-2 cup chopped celery, 1 tablespoon sugar, 1 teaspoon salt, 14 teaspoon pepper, 1 cup grated cheese, I Wash squashes and cut in half inch slices. Fry ini cooking oil In frying pan tender. Put to one side of pan and pour all but 2 tablespoons oil. Add onion thinly sliced and cook until brown.

To. Miss Francis Shanahan of Nebraska City, Miss Mary Roddy, Mrs. -Joseph Banning, Mrs. Nola. Banning, Rachel Taylor and Miss Martha Upton all of Union left Saturday night for a week at the Century of Progress In Chicago.

Nancy Robinson Funeral services for Mrs. Nancy toblnson, who died Friday at the Mune jof. her daughter, Mrs. Alfred Newton at Beatrice, were held Sunday afternoon at the Karstens-Pat- i i li Locates Missing Boy. Lawrence Holten, 14-year-old Peru boy, who left home last Thurs-' day to attend the Sidney, rodeo, and who failed to return home was erson chapel with Rev.

W. S. Met- located at Thurman, with friends, calf of the A. M. E.

church in Sheriff Carl Ryder, who had assisted by Rev. C. O. Brown been asked by the boys parents to of Kansas City. Pallbearers, were find wm Will Visit Parents.

Mr. and B. J. Koelsch and son. Jack, of Lockland, Ohio, are expected In Nebraska City this Wednesday to visit her parents, Mr.

and Mrs, Val Felthauser. I Fred Smith Home. Fred returned from In- dian River, Mich. Monday morning peeled and cut in Sprin- Put a layer of prepared squash in hnMwg dish and cover with; toms- IS where' he has spent the past two weeks. kle with onion, add seasoning and celery and cover with cheese; Continue layer for layer until all is used.

Put in a moderate oven for twenty minutes to; cook tomatoes and melt cheese. Increase heat for ven your POCKETBOOK Visiting Relatives. Dr, F. J. Boyle arid Jimmy DcMaro are lri Springfield, 111, guests of Dr.

Boyles sister and brother. Sue in. few minutes in; order to; brown NEW PATTERNS, MOHAWK WOOL WILTON RUGS An Excellent! Value. I A LAST CHANCE SALE i TO BEAUTIFY YOUR FLOORS at Much lessthan future prices BUY DURING AUGUST; AND SAVE, AS WHOLESALE PRICES ARE ADVANCING STEADILY, i the top. Serve from baking 'dish.

and John Boyle. They expect to return to Nebraska City the end of this week. Mormance Guests. Mr. and Mrs.

Charles Mormance and son of Bloomfield, Indiana, are says yes with silver buttons and cape Sleeves. White hose and black slippers will complete the outfit. Each member is making her own garments dur- ing dally sewing periods in Memor- guests at toe home of Mr. and Mrs. lal Building Drill practioesare Alex Mormance.

They wHl be here a week. REMINGTON a BRAND NEW PORTABLE $347y 8 INFORMALS I -0 9x12 Axminster Rugs i New Patterns 9 I 9x12 Axminster Rugs, in big assortment of qualities. All at special prices. i i to $39.50 At Worlds Fair. Mr.

and Mrs. Henry Meyer and daughter. Dorotoee Meyer, are in Chicago at toe Century of Progress exposition. To Worlds Fair. Dr.

Edward McKinney left Saturday for the Cenhiry of Progress Exposition in Chicago and his Old home in Indiana. He will be gone about ten days. Surprise Party. 1 Friends and relatives of Mrs. W.

J. Uerkvitz gave a surprise party for her Sunday night at her home( in honor of her birthday. Late in the evening refreshments, brought by the guests were served.) Those present were: and Mrs. 'Robert James, Mr. and Mrs.

Mark James, Mr. and Mrs. William Badberg, Mr. and Mrs. Merritt! James, Mr.

and Mrs. Bert Harpster, Mrs. Cora Ab-shlre, and families; Robert Punches Mary Ulbrlck, Joe Zelner, and top honoree and her children. $59.00 to 98.00 9x12 Worsted and Wool Wiltons $48.50 113x12 Axminster Rugs, Seamless. Good Patterns.

Serviceable! quality i I .1. Home from PanL Miss Ruby Gibson has returned from Paul where she has spent toe past week at toe Antone Komma home as the guest of Miss Lorene komma. Omaha Position. Miss Roberta Seyfer. daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Earl Seyfer, Nebraska City, Is now employed in toe office of Gordon Candy Company, wholesalers, of Omaha. 6x9 Worsted Wilton; $45.00 quality at 83x103 and 9x12 American Orientals 1 RUG PADS, 9x12 $65.00 $115.00 $6.75, $7.75 Trio Escapes Injury When Car Overturns $2.98 $3.95 $5.95 to $7.95 DARK COLOR RAG RUGS "V- Very Special 4 Sizes 17c 25c 33c 49c 1 1 1 Worth 50 More 27x54 Ax minster Rugs 36x72 Axminster Rugs 11-3x12 Armstrong Quaker (P1 1 CA Felt Rugs 1 1 DU 11-3x15 Armstrong Quaker (P14 A Felt Rugs At Tebo Home. Mrs. Henry Mclvers, Omaha.

Is a' guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Tebo. 'now you can enjoy the benefits of a typewriter in the home without apologizing to your jTHE New Remington; at $34.75 is an gffirtent type- for every member of the family. For the man-of-the-house for mother for the children for the student for the traveler.

It is the companionable, time-saver helper for all kindsybf home writing. STURDY and compact. Four row keyboard. Built in the same factory, by the same men, and with the care as the famous Remington office mndly, at the new low price Only $34.75. Drop in today and try this new Remington Portable.

There is not the slightest obligation. And if vou desire-terms. i anil i Peter Curtis, Auburn, and Charles Mignery and Vaughn Graham, Julian, had a narrow escape from death or serious injury early Sunday morning when toe car. driven by Curtis went off the highway and down an embankment i at a point seven miles south of Nebraska City on U. The car alighted at the bottom' of toe ditch bottom side up in about two feet of water and mud.

i The three men were able to extricate themselves from the car nrf escaped without injury. The car was south-bound at the time of toe accident. It was not badly damaged. i I CLUBS I New Uniforms. When the American Legion Auxiliary drum and bugle corps goes to Kearney next Monday tor toe state convention each member wui be dressed in blue and white uniforms which will be worn at on times except while on paradewhen the regulation drill uniform win be donned.

-The off parade uniforms win be white skhtL blue double-breasted Jackets trimmed. The Press Printing Go. Local Agents NEBRASKA CITY, -Tyi EOgles use bits of green twigs to decorate toe rim of their nest; when the color fades, fresh twigs are laid on. I n.1 M. P..

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 Nebraska Daily News-Press Archive

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