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BAND CONCERT THURSDAY NIGHT Program at Lincoln Park at 8 m. -Plan Feature NumbersKing Director. The second concert by the Hast ings municipal band will be presented at Lincoln Park in the south part of the city, Thursday evening. at o'alock Two features will be the "Rio Rita" selection, Ziegfeld's Radio Picture screen operetta, which will include many familiar tunes, such as, 'You're Always in my Dreams,' "Rio Rita." "The Kinkajou,' etc. The other feature will be "An Operatic Nightmare.' A story amusing and interesting The story will be printed on the programs that are to be distributed among the James King, the director of the band, plans to make the final concert of the season an request" program. and welcomes any person to get in touch with him and tell him of favorite selections to be repeated at the final concert. select ed from the seven previous con certs. The program for Thursday night's concert follows: March, "National Emblem" Bagley Overture to "Raymond" Amb Thomas Popular, "Stormy Weather' Koehler and Arlen Comic Desecration, "An Operatic Nightmare" Arndt Arrangement by Zameenik Gavotte, "Intermezzo" De Luca Intermission March, "Chicago World's Fair of 1933 Mader Selection from Ziegfeld's "Rio Rita' Tierney A Plantation Patrol "Ole South" Zamecnik Waltzes from "The Skater's Waltz" Waulteufel Popular Waltz. "Waltzing in Dream" Bing Crosby, Washington and Young March, "Sabre and Spurs" Sousa "Star Spangled Banner." ASKS BRIEFS IN BANK CASE After hearing evidence in the case of the State Bank of Bladen against Mrs. Addie Munson and Paul L. Munson regarding the bank's foreclosure sale of the Munson farm land to satisfy $5,000 mortgage debt, Judge Blackledge today withheld decision and gave attorneys ten days to file briefs and ten days for answers. L. Ashmore of Omaha, former cashier of the Bladen bank: Mrs Addie Munson, and A. Frazier, farmer from near Bladen, were called to the witness stand in the Mrs Munson, through her at torney. Bernard McNeny, had filed R motion to set aside the sale of the land, on account of her homestead rights. The bank's receiver, represented by P. E. Boslaugh, sought to show that Mrs. Munson had not lived on the farm since her husband's death in 1919, that Ceorge Munson was resident of Hastings and at the farm only temporarily at the time of his death and that the place had been rented to the son, Paul.