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Kossuth County Advance from Algona, Iowa • Page 2

Location:
Algona, Iowa
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE TWO 2 Eggs doz. AP ESTABLISHED 01859 26c WHERE ECONOMY RULES Iowa State Brand Butter, lh. 26 Hershey's Baking CHOCOLATE, lb. cake 11c Tissue SEMINOLE, 4 rolls 25c No. WET 1 full SHRIMP, can 10c 10c Smoking TOBACCO, 8c.

Sultana Red BEANS. 2 16-oz. cans 9c Encore Macaroni, Spaghetti, or Noodles, pkg. 5c Ball Mason JARS, quart, doz. 75c Soap LIFE BUOF, 4 cakes 25 Rinso, 2 small pkgs.

16c Large Package 21c Sunnyfield. OATS, 2 48-oz. pkgs. .......23 Iona COCOA, 9 2-1b. pkgs.

35 Red Sour Pitted Water Pack CHERRIES, No. 10 can 45 Del Monte Crosby No, CORN, 9 can 12c Saltana TUNA FISH, 2 7-oz. CADS 27. Hamilton Sauer KRAUT, 2 No. 9 cans 17c Soap, IVORY, med.

cake 5c CRISCO, 20c, 2 OXYDOL, small pkgs. 17 Saltana Peanut BUTTER, 9 lh. jar 23c Sultana Kidney 3 BEANS, cans 16c Encore Canned SPAGHETTI 4 cans. Ann Page PRESERVES, lb. jar 17c Wilson Vienna SAUSAGE, 3 cans Cat Rite Wax PAPER, 2 rolls 13c Ib.

CAn COCOMALT, 39c Heinz Rice FLAKES, 2 pkgs. 21c Uneeda Bakers No. 93 PRETZELETTES, 11c SAE 30 or 40 PENN-RAD MOTOR OIL, 2 gal, CAD $1.25 Plus Federal Tax 8c Size PINEAPPLE, $6, doz, $1.69 LEMONS, Size 800, 37 BANANAS. lbs. 24c NEW POTATOES, California White Rose, 8 Ibe.

25c 48 Food Stores W. H. Ricklefs Republican Candidate for Sheriff of suth County Wm. Ricklefs, candidate for sheriff on the republican ticket, is making a whirlwind campaign for that office during the last days of the primary campaign and from reports received from various sectons of the county, will be nominated at the June primary by a tremendous majority over his opponent of Irvington. Mr.

Ricklefs is well known over the county as a man who, it nominated and elected, will make the couaty one of the best sheriffs the county ummends ever him had. The Topic recto the voters of the of the younger members of the recounty as a splendid representative fitted publican party and is especially for the position he desires. He will be fair and above board and treat all of the people of the county alike regardless of party affiliations, should be be nominated and elected. KOSSUTH COUNTY ADVANCE, ALGONA, IOWA Mary Fairbanks, Burt Girl, Is Married Sunday Livermore Defeats St. Joe 16-11 in Slugging Match St.

Joe, May 29-In 4 which saw the new Oldsmobile 8 last week. lead no less than five times, Livermore rallied Graders Are Improving Road- score five runs in the eighth inning and defeat St. Joe Sunday afternoon, 16-11. Both teams hit hard and often, and with costly errors on both sides ran up bight scores. Steve Baker, Livermore, left the box in the fourth inning, and Lefty Cayou finished the game.

Though he was hit hard, his mates managed to pull him pitched through. A. good Klein ball for and 0. Wagner St. Joe, but were given poor support in the field.

E. Thul, St. Joe, connected Tom home run. Berryhill, Becker, umpired. and the Rev.

George Theobald Next Sunday Cardinals will play St. Benedict on the St. Joe Diamond, Kittenball Game Played SundayAnother kittenball game was played Sunday afternoon near the Champlin Oil station between McNeil's Champlin kittenball team Becker's St. Joe Phillips 66 boys. The game ended 12-6 in favthe Champlin team, the battery for which was L.

Hansen and R. Metzeznz while Frank Bormann and L. Becker bottled for the Phillips 66 team. The umpire was Laurence Decker. Humboldt Gravelers at WorkA Humboldt crew moved county graveling into the local pit last week is graveling roads near Bode and Lu Verne.

The men have no machinery, except trucks, as the work is being done for the relief of unemployed. It is understood there are six men to fill truck and six crews of men worka ing in six hour shifts from 6 to 12 and 12 to 6 a. m. p. m.

Mrs. Raymond Metzen ShoweredMrs. Raymond Metzen ored at a shower at was hon-! Mrs. Wm. last Thursday.

furnished entertainment, and Bunco the Ganwere, low won by Mrs. Ruth by Mrs. Wm. Boldridge. Twenty were present.

Algonians Move to Farmhave The Marthin McGuires, Algona, moved to their farm northwest of S. Joe. They have had considerable repairing and remodedling done. They purchased a John McGuire, contractor, and his grading crew moved into this neghborhood recently and are straghtening and grading a secondary road a mile east and a half mile north of St. Joe.

Dance Honors Two BirthdaysA dance was given Hobarton last week Tuesday evening honoring the birthday anniversaries of Prosper Friders Joe Music was Everett) Bowman and his Arrows. Boy is Hit by BallDuring the ball game here Sunday afternoon the 10-year-old son of Henry Tillson, Livermore, was struck by a ball and rendered unconscious for a time. Chicken is Pox, Measles ReportedIt reported that there are a few cases of chicken and German measles in the neighborhood. Parochial School is ClosedThe St. Joe parochial school closed Monday for the summer vacation.

Other St. Joe. Jimmie, son of Mr. and Mrs. N.

the Fort Dodge Mercy Bormann, was brought home from Friday, and Stella Bormann, hospital R. is caring for him. Wilbert Metzen, his Mrs. Wm. Metzen, and mother, Mrs.

Vern Barker Mr. and spent last Thursday afternoon at Fort Dodge. The James Beckers Monday from 8 visit with relatives returned at Claremont and Hospital Patient Brought Owatonna, Home- Minn. The Anton Beckers and the Philip Fourages spent evening Benedict. at Joe Klemme's, near St.

Sunday Matt Ziemet, the ta ages, Lost the John Reilings went and Philip Fourfish. Island last Thursday to with The Jobn Reilings relatives spent Sunday mond Schaller did the at Carroll, and Raychores. commencement number from here attended Cecelia's exercises at St. Mr. and Mrs.

academy Sunday night. Madelia, returned from visits at New Ulm John Kirsch have and Currie, Minn, By Narrow Squeak Lotts Creekers Defeat Lakota Lotts Creek, May 29-The Lotts Creek ball team played Lakota here Sunday, and won, 5 to 4. It looked tough for the Lotts Creekers till the ninth inning, the score being then 4-3 in favor of their but in the Jast of opninth ponents, the Elmer Pijahn came to with two men on bases bat, and two outs, which and brought popped out a two-bagger home both men on bases, The battery for Lakota was Lotts and Montgomery; for Johnson Creek, Gross and dahl. Gross threw 12 Next Sunday the locals strikeouts. Fenton here.

will play won two Creek has now Lotts games and lost two. Attends Shower at Algonamiscellaneous Richard Potratz. attended a Mrs. H. E.

shower Friday Norman's, Algona, in at law, honor of Mrs. Norman's sister-inbe married Norman, who 'is to Gertrude son, June 3 to Martin SwanAlgona. Reisner Baby Is ChristenedNoah Reisners were guests of the Herman Sunday Fairville, and attended services Haacks, the Fairville Lutheran at loris Mae, infant Dechurch. Haacks, was christened. of the daughter Three Franklin Lotts Creekers Sickand Mra, Arthur Dean, Infant son of Mr.

Saturday, and Lyle Rusch, Allen, WAR sick of Mr. and Mrs. Merrill infant bertson, Culson and Mra. E. Fiene sick.

are also Girl Breaks Collar Edward Kucker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lucille, Bonebroke 8 collar bone last week while teeter-tottering Wednesday evening home. at their Wendell Rusch Has Birthday- Wendell Rusch had party at home of his birthday a Mr. and Mrs.

Arthur parents, day, Rusch Monlittle folks attended. Cleaning Bee for ChurchA cleaning bee will Friday be held this manuel morning at the ImLutheran church. All the church are asked womto help. Other Lotts Creek. The William E.

Fiene, Wetzels, the Rev. Mrs, Carl Zumach, Ada, Mr. Mr. and daughter Herman Reisner, and Mrs. Potratzes attended and the Richard tival at the a mission fesan church Sunday, Trinity LutherMr.

and Mrs. John Pertl companied to Iowa Mr. and Mrs. Adolt Kohlwes visit relatives. City The Saturday home their son Martin, Pertis brought student.

university Mr. and Mrs. Ernst Mrs. Max Bast and her Thiel and Arlene visited last week daughter day evening at Richard WednesMrs. Albert Kressin Potratz's.

daughter Mathilda left and her visit relatives at Saturday to They returned Monday. Northwood, Minn. Tommy Schmidt gave a cently at the home of his party reMr. and Mrs. Robert Schmidt.

parents, Mrs. Mary Sunday at her Mittag, daughter Fenton, visited man Hintz's. Mrs. Hercritical The Tom Shellar condition, baby is still in Rich Point News Rich Point The Irvington Aid will at the church annex this afternoon entertain at a miscellaneous shower in honor of Ruby Koepke, will be of Lu married Verne. BOOn to Wilfred Coleman, Many from this vicinity attended a benefit dance given by the Irvington baseball club last week ball Wednesday evening at the I.

0. 0. F. in Algona. Mrs.

Frank Kajewski spent sever, eral Mrs. days Peter week with her Mr. and Andrews, Algona. mothMrs. J.

F. Black and daughter Mary attended the Union township school day held at the Good Hope church Friday. FlorBlacks, another daughter of the ion this has been teaching in Unyear. Frank Capesius and his to Mildred visit drove to Dubuque Sunday daughter his son, Edmund, a student at Columbia college. Edmund will come home the latter part week of next to spend his summer tion with his parents.

vacaMr. and Mrs. J. A. guests at a surprise party for their Johnson were daughter, Mrs.

Irving Urch, of Alling. The affair was held in honor evengona, last week Wednesday of Mrs. Urch's birthday. Mrs. Eva Gardner returned the early week to the home of her daughter, Mrs.

Mrs. spent last week in Raney. AlHugh gona, closing her home there, and will now make an extended visit with the Raneys. Ruth, oldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Paul Black, was taken to the Ruth Kossuth hospital Friday morning. is suffering with a badly infected throat. Mre. John McGuire received word THURSDAY, MAY 31,1 BECOMES WIFE OF YOUNG MAN FROM KANAWHA Burt, May 29-Mary, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

G. U. Fairbanks, was married Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock at her home here to Alvin Rasmussen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Diebler, Wedding Kanawha.

Lohengrin's March was played by Margaret Belshelm, Fort Dodge, and to its strains the bridesmaid, Wilma Slaughter, and the bride descended, the stairs Erickson, and were Kanawha, met best man, and the bridegroom. The couple took their places under a beautiful arch, and the Rev. C. B. Mitchell' performed a ring ceremony.

The bride wore light green silk crepe and carried a bouquet of calla lilles and asparagus ferns tied with long streamers silver ribbon. The bridesmaid wore rosecolored silk crepe. Following the ceremony a twocourse luncheon in which color scheme of green and white was used, was served by girl friends of the bride. The newlyweds left for Des Moines amid a shower of rice and old shoes in a car decorated with numerous signs to indicate will Deere at Pomeroy they newly, married. They after June 15.

Besides local relatives the tollowing out-of-town guests were present: Mr. and Mrs. Diebler, son Lyle, Kanawha, the groom's parents and brother; Della and Leonard Rasmussen, Des Moines, sister and brother of the Mrs. Bertha Sheaham and Leona bridegroom; Sheaham, Mason City; Mr. and Mrs.

Albert Skelly, Corwith; Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Fairbanks tor Wallace, Algona; Margaret Froh, Lena Bradley, Marjorie Heflin, Luella Becker, Florence Christen, Grace Quingley, Velva and Margaret Belsheim, Hay, all of Fort Dodge, where Mrs.

Rasmussen had been employed in the fice telephone offor several years, Boy Scouts at Iowa Lakeand S. J. Donald Fardal Weir, Condit Bowie, Supt. Boy Scouts to Iowa Lake last accompanied 20 Thursday and camped until Tuesday. The boys were Laurence Wallace Hawcott, Wendell Chipman, Ringsdorf, Russell Patterson, Carroll and Perry Owen, Ronald Ortman, Ralph Bristow, Willard Glenn Schwietert, Donald Hammerstrom, Roland Graham, Clarence Riddle, Lavrenz, Gordon and Robert Giddings, Robert Gray, Paul Gray, Paul Arend, Smith, and Wilfred Woltz, Ralph Charles Hanna.

Visit Boy Scout CampA number of people visited the Boy Scouts at Iowa Lake Sunday, among them Mr. and Mrs. and Ringsdorf, the C. L. Holdings, Mr.

Mrs. C. B. Chipman, Maude Hanna, son Hugh, Mrs. Mrs.

G. Mrs. McDonald, two daughters, Mr. and G. C.

Giddings, Mrs. Matilda Ward, Max Nellie Ward, Richard ChipG. man, P. Schrader, Mr. and Mrs.

Hawcott, and Willis Vogel. Richmanna Away for WeekThe Rev. and Mrs. L. daughter Margaret, and Richmann, Lorraine Kollasch are at Readlyn for week with Mr.

Richmann's relatives, Mr. Richmann was to preach at Denver, Iowa, Sunday, but was not sure he would be able to do 80. He his has been having trouble with feet and planned to stop at the. have them Lutheran hospital 'to Hampton treated. Herman Patz Visits Grandsonand Herman Putz, daughter Mildred, granddaughter Zelma Putz, visIted Sunday at the Ranney Putz home, Truman, Minn.

Mrs. M. Dexter, who bad spent two weeks A. there, returned home with them. A son was born to Mr.

May i2 and Mrs. Putz care for and Mrs. Dexter helped him and Mrs. Putz. Help Fred Repair Lavrenz Fire Damagecrew returned Saturday' from and his carpenter Adams, where they had been day's Monday they donated 8 working.

Martin work to help rebuild the destroyed Griese station and home, will be here by fire Saturday. They till after Decoration day. Miser Smiths to World's FairThe K. J. Smiths deft Sunday for.

Tama, where they left their BOD Richard, Mr. and Mrs. Smith the other two children and going on to Chicago to visit relatives and tend the world's fair. Mr. Smith atwas also to attend an insurance meeting.

Irene Aten I. S. T. C. Graduate Rachel Ethel Mae Aten accompanied grandfather Clapsaddle and the latter's as far As Cedar Falla last Thursday to visit her sister C.

Irene, graduate. who is a this year's I. S. T. Ball Team Defeats VisitorsJunior baseball team from Cambridge played Burt's last year's Junior League team Saturday afternoon, and Burt won, 4-0.

Shower for Mary FairbanksMrs. Luther Fairbanks was hostess banks at a shower for Mary FairFriday, and 30 guests nttended. Other Burt News. E. W.

Schmitt, Franklin, two children, who had and spent three weeks with Mr. Schmitt's mother and sister, Mrs. Louise Schmitt and Mrs. Ed Thaves, left last week Wednesday for visits with relatives at Garner and Sac City. The F.

0. and 0. G. Stows, J. G.

Sewicks, and J. D. Grahams attended a family dinner at J. T. Graham's, near Algona, Sunday.

The H. D. Grahams and the Housours were also there. Raymond Mr. and Mrs.

Lloyd Schenck went to Minneapolis last week and brought home Lloyd's mother, Mrs. Sadie Schenck, Saturday to visit her sons bere, at Titonka, gona. and Al- OPERETTA IS PRESENTED BY 5TH GRADERS Many Pupils in Cast of Entertainment Monday Night. Directed by Grace M. Miller, music director, and the teachers, Misses Granzow and Hullerman, fifth grade pupils presented a twoact operetta, The Smiling Sixpence, the high school auditorium Monday evening.

No Admission Charge. Admission free. The Bryant school orchestra and the band furnished music. The story presented a little girl, Molly (Mary Jane Neville), who has climbed a mountain to find out whether it is as near heaven as it looks. There her token, "The Smiling Sixpence," keeps her out of trouble when she meets "The Old Man of the Mountain" and his wicked little henchmen, and eventually she finds her dear old grandfather, of whom she has beard much.

Many Pupils in Cast. In the cast in various groups! were many children, as follows: Wayne Bjustrom, Russell Thorpe, Dale Webster, Don McCorkle, Ross Coleman, Arest Maharas, Viola Cook, Maxine Brundage, Neva Ellsworth, Donald Clapsaddle, Robert Wray, Francis McVay, Bobby Adams, Avada Bingaman, Melva Adams, Maxine Nordstrom, Donna Hill, Cleanor Dorothy Norman, Margaret Miller, La Barre, Loretta Johnson, Jeanette Sterling, Anita Thompson, Miriam Zeigler, Barbara Pool, Harriet Keith, Vivian Gorman, Inez Harris, Doris Jane Brown. Sorensen, Betty Geering, Dorothy Dean Lowe, Elmer Lattimer, Robert Amunson, Dick Cook, Cecil Blanchard, Donald Pritchett, Jim- mie Tibbetts, Durland Shumway, Betty Hanson, Michael, Vivian Brown, Crapser, Viola Helen Bentner, Betty Nelll. Mabaras, Ethel McThree Are Stage Managers. Jean Nielsen, Jane Moe, Phyllis Sandberg, Kathryn Nielson, Kathby ryn Hagg, Betty Lou Towne, Bob-, Rickard, Bernice Rickard, Burnadette Gunder, Donald Margaret Shaddick, Raymond Orton, DeReaper, Eugene Minard, Bernice vine, Firman Laing.

ald King, Doris Boren, DonDorothy Raymond Neitzel, Bilsborough, Charles Bilsborough, Patricia McEnroe, Andrew 01- son, Miller, Coleman. Robert Devine, Floyd Minard, Merlon Bernard Mettile were Baker, and agers. stage man- HUMBOLDT IS ACCUSED OF FRACTURE OF CODE The town of Humboldt decided to extend sewer recently hire the work done under mains and supervision its own without letting a conboard of the same time the tract. About road graveling bids and decided all supervisors rejected do the work in the to A week same way. celved or 80 AgO the mayor notice by letter and the retice county from engineer received verbal nothe divisional code thority at Des Molnes that it the aued the same would in the way proposjobs were done "contracts" be considered tees and and the code authority paid.

wages would have to be The acknowledge mayor refused by letter to and told the the code authority that were the town to observe Independent Humboldt code would requirements the sewer extensions cost $5000 more than under about present the What WAs done plans. not notice to the county was reported. Good Hope Mr. and Mrs. A.

M. went to Boone Decoration Gustafson: Mrs Scott, the for, day. return with them. latter's mother, may, and Mrs, Rutledge, son of Mr. and Edward field, is spending the Rutledge, summer of Gold- vaLorin and cation a with sister the Kenneth Rutledge's, of Edward is at Chas.

Rutledges, Mrs. W. I. Dodds, who home from the hospital has been is slowly recovering, and ten days, return to normal health a gradual ed. is expectGood The Rev, and Mrs A.

Hope, and the H. Wood, C. B. Mitchell, Rev. and Mrs.

ner and and Misses Warthe spent last week Whitney, all of Burt, tie and Swan lakes. Wednesday at Tutbad all been The big 0009 arrived. caught before they The Altrurian class of Good will Sunday school the F. J. Hope meet with next Sunday Bournes for covered following church ner.

All a dish dinselves with desiring this to associate themcome. class will be wel- KRESENSKY VERSE WINS PRAISES OF DUBUQUE EDITOR A recent Issue of the Dubuque Telegraph-Herald published a long editorial on national poetry week and in to it the made Rev. the Raymond following refer- Kreence sensky: "The poems of Raymond Kresensky, formerly pastor of the Presbyterian church at Bellevue, now in Algona, Iowa, most frequently find space in these columns. Mr. Kresensky, who writes for hundreds of magazines and papers, has a faculty for seeing all the little things so many persons miss, all the diminutive figures, for instance, on a Dresden cup, all the turns and twists on a bit of oldfashioned Dutch lace, all the wrinkles on an antique face.

"Each of his poems is a pattern, and many of them are exquisitely done. His genre is concerned with the simple, the quaint, the antique, the common, the normal. He exno freaks, no suppressed persons, no neurotics, no abnormals. He writes in nature, but he doesn't make nature supreme. Man is his chief interest, man and life.

Characters in his poems are frequently old men and old women, little girls, mothers. He is the poet of Spring, rather than of Fall and his verse, as a result, looks forward hopefully, rather than backward sadly, "The wiles of dancing lady fail to intrigue him; the smiles of kindly, old German mother call out his muse." NO. 5 SCHOOL, UNION, ENDS WITH A PICNIC Sixty pupils, parents neighbors, and friends had a last day No, 5 Union school picnic at the Am" brose A. Call state After given baseball in a short program park, Sunday. was Aline's the cabin: A play, Kind Act, a reading Kitty's Weight, by Patricia Mittag, and another play, Sitting up for Husband to Come Home given pils.

by ten Attendance diplomas were given students who had perfect attendance all year: Joyce and Charles Mittag, Dorothy Lee Ralph Gisch, Letty and Howard Sarchett, Taylor, Esther and Milton Will, and William Kohl. The other eight children had marks, average but in had absences. The high no tardy grades, conduct, and citizenship were read by the teachMary Gisch, Miss Gisch was taken prise after the program by when sur-her linen pupils presented her with an aftof her luncheon set in appreciation work with them, Granddaughter of Algona Couple to Study for Doctor Jane Carlson, Swea child of Mr. and Mrs. W.

E. CarlCity, son, plans to begin a medical course at Iowa five-year tember. City in SepShe was graduated last high Thursday school, night from the Swea City in sharing second honors scholarship during the fouryear course with another She is the granddaughter pupil. of Mrs. kota, Charles "Lawho lives with the also the granddaughter of Carlsons; Mrs.

John Carlson, Mr. and Algona. Her father Fenton is State and in of the The elder Lakota banks. Mrs. Carlson and her Adah, Ellen, the nurse, and daughters, graduation clerk, attended the city exercises.

Burt Mrs. Claude Pugsley her daughter, Dorothy came for who went with her Friday to the Bahling, Pugsley home at Elgin for an extended visit. Mrs. Donald Weir and her two therville visited relatives at Eschildren with last week while Mr. was the Boy Scouts Weir Lake.

at Iowa Aliens The Clifford Holdings visited and G. C. at the 'Elmer home at Lakota Sunday, Kienitz Allen remained for further and Mrs. The O. G.

Stows, 8 visit. the week-end with Decorah, spent ents, Mr. and Mrs. F. 0.

Stow's parMr. Druggist F. L. Pratt is out Stow. after having been confined again, home by sickness two to his J.

F. Vogel, Mrs. weeks. roll, and Mrs. Bertha Wallace George CarMason City visitors were Lois, Joe, and Melvin Friday.

spent the week-end Graham August Strom's, Algona at their uncle Lols Lavrenz mastoid operation submitted Saturday to a Lewis Larsen home. at the H. W. Trainer, and Merwyn Holding M. M.

Spirit Lake Sunday. at moved Wanda Mann had Saturday tonsils her ers office. at the Doctor PetEmil week-end Christiansen relatives spent the Falls. at Cedar Mr. and Mrs.

parents of a daughter, Earl Shipler are day. born SunMrs. C. F. Mann home by sickness.

is confined to CO Candidates for Re-Election E. J. BUTLER County Auditor KOSSUTH COUNTY May I continue to serve you? ONLY IN PICTURES, THAT NEVER GROW CAn you keep the ness of child-hood. ficeting loveliIt's time for of your child. another photograph Children under six can contest for big cash Join our L.

I. WAY, ALGONA Photographer Phone 181 SLOWING UP Next birthday I am 70 that 1934 is my last year in business. 80 that means years old, I did not make much of this world and I am not going to be I came into a fuss when ing out. fussy about goI began business in with stock of $535.00. This Algona nearly 40 years ago humble start without blow or bluster.

surely Today 1 very was a stock of $25,000.00 and own my own I carry everything paid for. store room, I am not advertising a below what the average store sale, for my prices are My competitors are all calls sale prices. believe I have an in the good fellows. I do not competition is concerned Neville's bunch, Shoe but as far as had any, and has no competition Store never. by itself, run on different principles today.

than It is a store age store. Our one thought has the averstandard shoes to the people in been to get good way. Our sales have Increased the from least expensive $100,000 a year. $24,000.00 to It takes snap, energy, es on good shoes to run a store personality, and low pricbasis. on the small profit Twenty years from now stores run in this fashion.

The you will find lota of will be small profit stores, stores of the future Already the city stores run on a volume allows are headed that basis. half prices for any way, Kansas turned. Fitted shoes they will remerchandise Returned goods are loss not take back at and trouble, and a hardly to the merchant all, in time find they can not sell on small ever fit for resale, They loss on returned goods. profit and absorb the allow a clerk to bait find they can They also put in a a day selling not supercilious female a pair of $2.98 some this out twenty years slippers. I found ago.

When it takes more clerk hire sell a pair of shoes than the and overhead to amounts to we try to get rid profit on the shoes When a family gets into the of that customer. erything they buy, returning eyhabit of where else. we ask that family to trade someWe feel it is unfair to charge our good customers. I these losses up to org that never a solid line of customhave out of what go anywhere else except when they want. very proud of we are ular customers.

Their friendship my rega great deal to and loyalty mean thank for being able to They live the ones I have to me. I am now selling shoes and support my family. When you to the fourth generation. spend a dollar at Neville's I you get a dollar's worth and see to it ille's it is square deal, more. At Neta little The cards are all on the no favors, and a free field.

table face up. Jimmie Neville The Shoe Man Algona, SAVE-by getting morE IVE POWER per gallon engineers just as accurately as "more Live Power per The amount of keen, responsive propelling power delivered by gasoline is the only true measure of its dollar-and-cents value. On that count, Standard you a full Red Crown Superfuel gives money's worth, plus. We know that. It has been established by tests of many gasolines.

A new car with a aigh compression engine requires Supertuelh responsiveness to perform at its best. And, if you have an older model which has begun to slow Standard Red Crown Superfuel is prescribed. up, of vigor in Chances are there is still plenty the motor. The will bring it oul extra Live Power in Superfuel get a May we suggest that you in tankful? Make Superfuel prove, your engine, what has been said here about its economy and performance, Judge it critically -fairly. 00 CA Copr.

1934, Standard Stations a and All Standard Oil Distributors of Atlas Tires Dealers. in DARD RED SURE REVEL "More Live Power per dol describes this important advance by Standard's zelining UP ican Tre led ADI count firs pre admi The WE GR 800 A ch sire etyle Bette Ful al Sunday of the death of a Mr. Hopkins, of Mason uncle, an Hopkins is a former resident City. Mr. gona, Funeral services were of Althe first of the hold M.

E. Blanchard week. Raney sheared and Hugh The work sheep last week. Plum was done by Gardner Creek, Rich Point WAS well in the Algona high represented classes this spring. school Irene graduatpesius member of the Caat St.

Cecelia's academy. class tion exercises Graduaacademy Sunday were held at the Anne Jenkins, Geigel, Birdie Ruth Schulz Black, Ronald evening, George Raney were members of and Buena at the Aigona high school. the class cises were held for Exerthe high school this class at Tuesday evening. Leo Wegman Called Iowa's Will Rogers cratic a Palo Alto demoReporting week Wednesday at Emmetsburg last powwow crat said night, the Demostate that Leo J. Will Rogers treasurer, made a hit with a Wegman, state and national manner affairs, of discussing parison with the noted the comwill strike oldtime humorist quaintances of Mr.

Wegman Kossuth as not aclance, foundation, for in without voice, and expression there appearsome general likeness. 18 Cigaret Offender Fined. mach, who runs the Quick Shop was fined $25 and costs day for selling cigarettes to ors. ZuLunch Frimin-.

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About Kossuth County Advance Archive

Pages Available:
45,761
Years Available:
1893-1976