_sr. . 1rt.'tratitrrmeto-ttrm, f: Ptt!9utsdurr%iiskiririiir. g iIcrmttyitomtrsiaiiFi'iGi"ri j,,: “upmucnh,loe;.. 'i"' St. may “MM-9 Nam no w. mm, W“ u... :33. ofiiris . o I "ft m I " km 1et-uNetviutiiirr.T%- myanaldmsu --. we-tr' ~...mmmmvsn - 1trteriyrd1rmt...uiaia""ai'ic “headhu'l'hmmmloeu ftAswhommhtn'ttkiiiGiiii'ii"i" !rtte.geteortueiiiGtii"ii'1" 2,t12et'rtggt,r'grutr,t IrPehtrtefortrtntirtite dudes tt2t...not.tueGii,i.hLU,irc2 ". . . DEAD TO LIFE" tsineey Prohibtion. the demand for large quantities of “pint." nttd non- ducript bottled in private homes I... intend at but 200 per cent. m, ale of work pants in Iced clothing stores bu deemed about 250 per cent. SIGNS OP TIRES Frankly, we're rather disappoint. ed It the smallamonnt otuu that beautiful public library auditorium has received. Here is a mulch!“ 1ltTort1mitr for tho Mon at loos! debate societies, public forums, M discussion groups that would result in the building up of may instead of detrimental cum oohU. In" . . We’vegotit. Why not use it? _ LET’S USE IT . . . winter tumeimt." with' . bang, Favorable “that last Sundty brought u doing. of “9'0" you; 1tetrneos,gututi", etc, to the ttttores of good old In. '?fitttatitrNt-oratiGGs"ur"iii; Ravine Drive Sm its 1:11] or! it! '"rrc-c".idstittahttt' "W this: 1g1_rPtt'.trterftftherfimtaitrnts ofNtrh1ei1ttutomcrdGG"i; hm'rm we iiiiii'il tliar,, Local “junk, men" report autumn-1 m" 1e1tth, the demand for E13: tt _ n , '.l'.,tJ,tl't'ne,te. gffgfff letters- ground. SPRING . The local 5mm moon. if you ".--c..= --- --- . - _ A SERIOUSLY . Criticism and opinions up"... d or implied in this column are not to Ite “WW II par-ow indict- ments. lama-h sad -thns. 1"tt1tattetIrrtuttViiGiiiiiii d""'.- to “thought that and Ithpiaiud. The writer through the autumn- ofthe 1rie1standPtufPmi'd and in Ira-pin: with the policy of - min my“ has . ttry_.?fhtt-rore-L"iCrrti; provide __ that check upon m. mt whiehmreoatatttutul hum;- been .ttle togtxMas." The mecca of "What of It" either mud. or an: on “but. WHAT or iT.?-- By Eddy Smith Editorial L9 hat, m'o'é --"....t. upon govern- utionhumrl ’Thoneeeu barman» irtthetttorrtttatns moth}; 'Mth-meoftuMrAtriiiiiii -i.1ittttr_rtsmnttatm_riaGiir. '. pipe into the trriGriCi'iraiiii7oi'i I either side of the stream or in the river bed itself. The Platte river is best described as n "Y" lying on its west tride-or, in the terminology of western teaching, I “new " . lt “mm 1/'UgLt,'t “raw: n _ two dreams, new; a the North ttl,',ut'illt South "l,"tutg 'm"- _ county, Nehru-h, noting the main dunno] which condom on its lay. roundlng_m one. thtatrrtq to new (a in months of the not, at hot) Into the Merl-Iver on the hem of low-o about " all; n. we. a the saga. mi ht the mm. m " n...- ground. Resiglents "eumaGiirG.t supplies of good miter through the suminer, often' by simply (ll-king I in hundreds of places during the dry season, thereby swing weer and tent on the bridges! . 3 Irrigation in the tm, upper tench- " “the Platte: accounts for its eridity throughout most of its main course through centre! southern Nah-uh. But although them a itself in dry, plenty of water is nhnye present a few feet under- and for week residents along the trickle of water. ‘ Ive. talked m the Platte riv- er in central Nebraska in the month (of August, and explbred its myriad: of islands afoot! Aqd in no dan- ger of getting my feit wet, either.- The bed of the stream is composed of dean, white and, on a ttran form.. dation. . Teams and wagons, and even automobiles, cross the dream it! Andy! course " iiiiGFiiirii" an. inch gegpfwlgen theres water in than a tnitir wide in motsGiaiLr. 2LT7 from two to three miles across in tht loyal: reaches of the stream. . Thath the WI? the resident’s of Nebraska describe their ', historic Ptntte River. or coring the river is really more "A mile wide A man’s no bigger than the way he treats his fellowmsn! This standard hes his measure been since time itself began! He’s measured not by tithes or creeds, high sounding thqugh they be; Nor by the cold thath, put aside; nor by his sanctity. Bet, measured not by socisl rank, when’s eharqeter's the test; Nor by his earthly pomp or show, displsying wealth possessed! Rimmed by his Justice, right, his feirness " his play. His squsreness in ell dealings made, his honest, upright way. , These are his measures, ever nest to serve him when them can; For men’s no bigger than the way he treets his fellowmsn. The Measurement Of Man---. thetrrtmeet4ttttrrstiarti; b-armor-ttttto-sei. THIS INTERESTING AMERICA . PRESS VM /'Uettoed the con- Atyyr, â€have: do 1'1'd"fll',l,C' 'et-"-' _ 7 I'amn a e""' "I'M-nu “0'!th tho or. "trf.'detattttiiiif.ii.c . “5"“in them, loan. htatderAt to sputum. an: vio- 1lf,r,',"'"'iuvaGaGiiri.ii"d i'iit,ttt,t,t,(rm-ic) mgr-4mm W," -_- ,...w...u-- v1. "luv, uty "V- " bed,~dot'ted by thouunda’ of is- land: of all sizes, giving Monty and colorful, rugged, rocky hills and variety to it: mm; and by low, hints eirnthptattr pacing in "View as he and: can“! the In, going to rest behind tht and." Backing; The trGeiir" iiTieiiidi"it"i con dragon}; parfonmn of wide. dry riv- The westwud‘drlve of 400 miles or so along the interesting, historic *stream today is a gentle risenver~ using 8 feetto the mile, and the scenery is union: the most impres- sive in the entire United States. The Platte valley, which is from tr, to 20 miles in width, is distinctly marked on both sides of the “arid! stream" by low hills or blues. Our history books describe the long toileome over1tmd"treiurot the, pioneers of the sweet, Mid most of these journeys were up the valley of the Platte. ' Whenever the _ had to be owned by a eavaleader, of pioneers, it we: erotd--mstuuir without so much urgetting the feet of the home and oxen" wet. Even at its "wetteat," though, the Platte is a shallow, safe Itream to ford. ,ï¬__-, ........ unw.’° â€all te clujef east-and-wart highway Across what is'now thersthte of No- Eruka, and even today the Union one“, and even todny the miia Paeitie Railway and the iIJincoln Highway follow ghe_Platte. for miles. The Platte river gave Nebraska its name. The word "Nebraska" is derived from the Otoe (Indian phrase '9e-lirnth-ira," meaning Shallow Water. This name was _itrat mutated by Lieut. John C. Fremont, explorer of the territory in 1824-44, and was adopted when the ., territorial government was formed irt_It.yi8,68. _ _ - 'f Id the early days, the Platte coun- try-meant the territory eta-etching west from Missouri to the Rockies. The Platte valley has always been} ' -14-: - . i "Y." mation of the base of the Math! "K " - 4. Rina: tiiiiaa a..- - u-vuu IUI mu '1 Nebraska divided the remninder brash†it ' of lodges he belong (Indian plied by the number meaning lights in the mm. (m banandng,‘not to my tiresome, bo- foreitco'umuch father." Torin- stanee. government otBetttn have discovered that the VIM tttate. “must 'teeept the in.» bid a! u Comm ftrtn to: the “this“ for Boiilatr Dun. What Pde. Tarrtitt "'rtn thtt." -__ â€"â€"~-' - W. cm WM†(hqtp-vpiBturt"Bitugrnsu, 'tyttiqthHdg. tlgm an“ on: thou?" . _. nmpaper, let m. hunk timing}: that Mi. Hunt'- "Bur Annex-bu" ‘cnmplign is (pin: to get I bit Im- mad-for instance, one of the by- wuya m Cook County. Fnkod pie- tures do not lend authority to the articles they accompany. ' What will we believe about these i Roosians, anyway.' Last Saturday ' the self-styled World's Gram ' Newspaper began a series of arti- cles .purpoated to he the eye-witness accounts of two girls who drove through Red-lend in a flivver. Set- urduy’s issue of the W.G.N. printed a photo of the basics and "heir puddle-jumper, tmre-htotstth rough- ing it amid the. Bolsheviks. Sunday‘s paper carried the second installment of their tale, and with is was print- 'sd_a"vuwtdnrtutmtnnmmGak taken. through the windshield of the flivver (by the gels) during their tour of ‘Russin. The girls found soviet roads “uniformly bad." All very well, but the view of the mud road 4.1m included the View of the atop-of the hood of an automobile that was not a tttin/Gt "EH"; different machine, and who knows, it might have been a dithmmt mud to the And while! rm rgxzinthp 'great' A local man says he worried a good deal over making oat his in- come tax return, until he finally hit upon a simple formula, which he now odors free of charge to any who my be perplexed in the future. He listed as dependents one blond wife, a eeden car, three goldfish, and two children. He then multi- plied his grandfather’a age by six and seven-eighth, subtracting his telephone number. ,_ Next he added the nine of his hat and subtracted the number of hie car. After theae Preliminaries, the rest was easy. [ Deducting $1000 for keeping his wife a blond for the whole year, he divided the remainder by the num- ber of lodges he belonged to, multi- plied by the number'of electric lights in the house, divided by the size of his collar. . V This gave his gross income, which, after dividing by his chest meas- urement, and subtracting his blood pressure. Pt! them Amount, owed - COLUMN RIGHT--. By Joy Orr '.i"ut.ttuh-stmNeot Amiga! Nun 3m}. , at“. at.†a Gbviinitieiii. Features " “I! III Friday-8.1 N ovmnbdr, erly antici Next M