The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, October 15, 1917, Page PAGE 4, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    PAGE 4.
MONDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1917.
PLATTSMOUTH SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL.
Cbc plattsmouth lournal
PnUIHBS IEMI-WEEKLT AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA.
mtT4 at PoBtefflc at Plattsmoutb, Neb., as aecoad-clasa mall matter.
R. A. BATES, Publisher
rraacKirnoX' pkicki hm pm tkak ix adtamch
Old Winter's coming.
:o:-
The north wind begins cool.
roc-
Indian summer is on the way.
Who's to blame for the advance in
prices?
:o:-
Your sore spots are never as sore
as you make them.
Some of the worst tyrants in this
world are invalids.
-:o:
There are those who have to live,
and they have to eat to live.
:o:-
Of course you are going to lend a
hand, but be sure it isn't empty.
:o:
What has become of the woman
who looked for a man under the
bed?
:o:
Ever so often a man runs aero?.-?
a cantaloupe that tastes like a Cor
man carp.
-:o:
Very few men seem to be broken
down by the responsibility of great
wealth.
-:o:-
The man who enjoys his home us
ually marries a woman who insists
on gadding.
:o:-
The man who is endured for the
sake of children is so conceited he
probably doesn't suspect it.
:o:-
This is a queer world in which
a young widow is usually a whole
lot older than an old maid.
-:o:
We have been trying to figure
out the end of uncertainty. We fail
ed completely. There isn't any end.
Canned patriotism, if kept in stor
age too long, may lose all of .it?
value for sustenance. Better open it
up.
Down in Tennessee they seem to
have the courage of their convic
tions. They hung two lawyers down
there not long ago, and are after the
third one.
Speeders are getting it in the neck
pretty bad these days. But gener
ally speaking, not any more than
they deserve. They know the law,
and it is their duty to abide by it.
:o:
The difficulty is not so much with
our patriotism as with the arousing
of it to a complete realization of the
dangers which confront America in
this world war.
-:o:-
If you are fair and honest, decent
and courteous, it makes no differ
ence what kind of business you may
be enegaged in, you can't help but
have the respect of the community,
and then the chances are ten to
one that you will no doubt succeed
oitiiKit of iii:aiu;
and N'otif-e of Petition for Setttemen
of Account. J
In tin? County Court of Cass coun
.ty. Nebraska.
State of Nebraska, ('ass County ss
To all persons interested in the Ks
tate of Jaeoli Iiayles. Deceased:
Meeker praying a final settlement and
allowance oi ms account, niea in tni
.rmrt f.ri I lip itli .lnv rif Clft i I . r- 101
and for distribution of the residue in
1:1s narins. 11 is iiereoy ordered that you
ami an persons interesieu in said mat
ter may, and do, appear at the county
coun 10 ue nem in anu ior saiu coun
ty on the 29th day of October, A. 1.
11(17, at 10 o'clock a. m., to show cause
if any there be. why the prayer of thf
petitioner should not be granted, ant
that notice of the pendency of said pe
tition and the hearing thereof be Riv
en to all persons interested in said mat
ter by publishing a copy .of this or-
1 4- r- in tit flu t c riwi t i t i Fun fn 1
semi-weekly newspaper printed in fr-aid
county, ior inree successive weeks prio
to said day of hearing;.
In witness whereof, I have hereun
to set my hand and the seal of sab
Court, tli is 4 til day of October, A. D
1&17.
ALLEN J. UKEHO.V,
(Seal) oS-Cw- County Judge.
FOE, SALE.
S room dwelling, with barn and
sheds. Located on lots 10, 11, 12,
Townsends Add. on north Eighth St
A bargain if taken at oiu-'e. H. F
Goos, Plattsmouth, Nebr. 10-S-tfwkly
Don't be a slacker.
rot-
Freezing weather early this fall.
-:o:
A stingy man is no use on earth
:o:
Nothing suits Teddy now, it seems,
-:o:-
The people must have cheaper
coal.
Some people are too easy to forget
their best friends.
:o:
One by one the nations of the
world break with Germany.
-:o:-
Why is it that the man with the
rheumatism can tell when a storm is
brewing?
:o:-
A man who will talk about you
behind your back will hit j'ou when
you are down.
:o:
Too old to fight? Well, try shuck
ing corn as a method of showing
your patriotism.
:o:-
Every newspaper makes mistakes
occasionally and the Journal is no
exception to the rule.
:c:
"God likes to have a little fun,"
says Dilly Sunday. Maybe that's
why some people are permitted to
live.'
:o:-
Experts say that the war will "be
won in the air." But this does not
mean that the war will be won by
lot air.
An expensive and handsome lodge
pin cuts but mighty little mustard
as a rule, unless it is worn by the
right kind of a person.
:o:
The possible elevation -of Edgar
Howard to the office of Governor
seems to be worrying some people
unnecessarily. And why?
-:o:
What is needed at this time is.
not a revival meeting, but a revival
of the old fashioned sorghum mill.
Something must be done to save our
cane crop.
:o:
Let the federal authorities make
the paper manufacturers come down
to a reasonable price on their print
paper. And then most of publish
ers can buy a Liberty bond.
"We are probably beginning the
last year of this gigantic war of na
tions," affirms the German Foreign
Minister Kuehlman. And we be
lieve he ought to know.
The rich man always insists on
having everything that is coming to
him. That'3 the reason he is rich.
The poor man willingly gives it to
him, that's one reason why he's
poor.
Much talk is indulged in by those
who don't like the idea of sending
the boys plenty of smoking tobacco,
but while a great many of these par
ticular people die from indigestion
by over eating, did you ever hear of
a person passing in his chips from
smoking too much nasty tobacco?
The trouble with Colonel Roose
velt is simply that his advice ha3
been turned down and the advice of
experienced soldiers taken. The
lieutenant colonel who escaped ig
nominiou3 defeat solely because i
distance, has labored under the de
lusion that he would be a perfectly
good understudy for Mars if only
given a chance. Fortunately for
the soldiers they have not been re
quired to give their training, their
health and their comfort into the
keeping of an amateur soldier, whose
military service is brief and whose
military record is mostly bluff.
WASHING THEIR HANDS.
Mr. Bentley, boyhood crony of La
Follette, publicly severs old ties by
writing the senator: "As long as
j-ou, in war, fight our commander
in-chief, you fight me. You are my
enemy 'and I am yours." Every
where iri Washington statesmen for
merly mixed up with pacifists and
pro-Germans frantically protest their
innocence. Each of a dozen organ
izations, vaguely pointed out as hav
ing nibbled at Count von Bern-
torff's $50,000, is still bawling,
"G'way! 'Tain't me!" All of which
would be funny if it were not so
bulging with seriousness and if the
moral were not so spirited and so
direct namely: "Never touch anti-
Americanism no, not with a ten
foot pole!"
The climate has changed radically
since America entered the war. Ours
is no longer a temperate zone. Be
fore long it will be torrid. People
in any way smirched by former as
sociation with spies or with traitors
)ig or little should fumigate them
selves while there is time. People
still unsmirched should sedulously
avoid all danger of getting smirched.
Dodge disloyalists as you would the
plague. Rather than incur suspic
ion stay home nights with the
shades up and the electricity turn
ed on, for the present odium, is noth-
ng to what will come when tlie
casualty lists reveal disloyalists not
only as the nuisances they arc now,
but possibly as accomplices in muid
er. Chicago Tribune.
-:o:-
HAS GOT ENOUGH.
Hon. George W. Norris sends us
a nice letter and a few copies of
speeches in which he evidently wish
es to impress us with the fact that
he fought hard to assess the taxes
for this war, on capital. There is
only one way Norris can ever get
an audience with us again, and that
would be to hog tie us and make us
listen to him. Instead of rising to
the level of a statesman la3t winter
when his actions meant so much, he
chose to play on the emotions of
individuals at home, and by his ac
tions endeared himself to every ene
my of this country. All that he
may do in all or the years that
stretch ahead of us will never wijpe
that blot from his record. He can
not talk loud enough or long enough
to make reparation for that wrong,
and for that reason we have no fur
ther use for George W. Norris. That
doesn't mean that he could not bo
re-elected senator from Nebraska
again, lie knew the sentiments oi
his constituents when he adopted
the course he did last winter and
being a demagogue he figured that
with conditions remaining as they
were he could harvest a bigger batch
of votes the Australian syste,m of
voting in his mind to oppose the
war than he could to follow the
dictates of common decency and up
hold the hands of his president.
Fear of what the consequences might
be to them personally is what keep-J
the mouths of a whole lot of people
shut. And if they can reward a
champion of their treasonable
thoughts through the secret ballot,
when the time comes they may be
expected to' do it. The fire under
this wonderful "melting pot," of
which we like to rhapsodize, has
burned low.Clarks- Enterprise.
A DEMOCRATIC PRIVILEGE.
One of the rights guaranteed to
an offender in the United States is
trial by a' jury of his peers, and
"peers" means citizens of this coun
try. It is comforting to know that any
charges tiiat may be preferred
against members of the I. W. W.,
disloyal pacifists and others who
may try to be un-American must be
weighed before a jury.
It is better thus, for it is not only
a guaranty of approximate justice
to the accused, but is also somewhat
more certain of satisfactory results
than would be a trial to a court.
For judges are susceptible to the
lure of politics. Individual officials
too often think of the effect an ofli-
cial act may have with reference to
the getting or alienation of votes
than does a collective body of citi
zens like a jury.
And we have been remiss as citi
zens and loyalists. By not assur
ing the upright judge of the uni
versal support of upright people we
have permitted judges to be intim
idated by the corrupt and criminal
classes.
Any judge who would sturdily in
stst upon the punishment of a dis
loyal person nowadays would be
courting, and would probably re
ceive, the hostiel opposition of the
disloyal classes, and loyal citizens
would permit themselves to be divid
ed by partisanism or factionalism.
affording the criminal classes power
to punish a judge who had the
temerity to impose punishment upon
them.
In other words those whose im
pulses are upright do not stand to
gether at critical moments as a
force with which to defeat those
whose impulses and acts are wrong
ful.
That is why a jury seems more
apt to rebuke disloyalty than an in
dividual judge might be. It is de
mocracy on both sides. Lincoln
Star.
:o:-
GEEMANY'S IDEA OF
FREEDOM OF THE SEAS
Ever since the war started, the
Germans, parroted by the Austrians,
ir.ve been prating over that totally
ogus issue, freedom of the seas.
In their replies to the pope's last
peace note they dwelt upon it with
he usual crafty insistence.
Sober-thinking people of Iowa
have been puzzled. So far as they
could figure, there had bfen noth-
ng but freedom of the seas before
his gigantic war.
Nobody ever heard the seas were
anything else than free very much
freer than life in Germany aud Aus-
ria. ro one even attempted to de
prive the Teuton empires of the
freedom of the seas.
German ' ships plied in every
ocean, competing with British and
merican goods in every market.
The kaiser went steadily ahead with
a big war navy. England did not
even erect a tariff wall against
'Made-in-Germany" goods.
There was nothing the Germans
could legitimately ask for that was
not freely accorded them every
where in the world. The one thing
that excited their wrath and fear
was the continuing might of the
British navy. They also did not
like to see our own navy keeping
abreast of the times. But they
knew that neither of these navies
was a mewiace to any legitimate Ger
man aspiration.
England, an island country, was
forced to maintain supremacy at sea
or jarvo the moment an enemy de
clared war. The United States, for
the protection of her costs and the
maintenance of the Monroe Doc
trine, was also bound to have a
considerable navy.
And it was precisely these things
that irked the Prussian war masters.
They knew a British navy stood be
tween them and their hopes to
bring England to her knees. They
knew our American navy, if prop
erly developed, would stand between
them and their greedy designs up
on South and Central America.
They do not want to be thus balk
ed in the future. Thoy want, if
possible, to trap the allies into some
kind of disarmament scheme that
would mean an inferior navy for
England and a similar one for
America. Then Germany could
pursue her evil and sinister plans
unhindered. The Pan-German week
ly organ "Das Groessre Deutsch
land" (The Greater Germany) drops
the mask by printing an article by
Winand Engel which it approves. In
this Engcl says:
"German policy is forced to make
secure for itself by all conceivable
means domination over the world
sea. I deliberately use the expres
sion 'domination over the world sea.'
and not. the expression 'freedom of
the seas' which is so common to-
-WANT
EOS
?!
mm
mi
Car Load of Live Poultry
to be delivered at poultry car near
Burlington freight depot in Platts
mouth, Nebr., on Thursday Oct. 18th,
ONE DAY ONLY, for which we will
pay in cash :
Hens, per lb Jgc
Springs, per lb 18c
Ducks, full feathered 15c
Geese, full feathered -r-14c
Old Cox 12c
Cow Hides, per lb 17c
Large horse hides. -5.00 Each
Remember the Fate. We will be on
hand RAIN OR SHINE and take all
poultry offered for sale.
17. E. KEENEY
day. The latter expression is either
dishonest or stupid. The Eea is free
for us only if we dominate it."
There is the truth about the Ger
man canting phrases in a nutshell.
When the German and the American
kaisers unctuously reply to the pope
that they desire the freedom of the
seas, they are either dishonest or
stupid. In the present instance,
they are plainly dishonest. They
are lying once more, just as they
have lied so often during the course
of this war.
They want German domination of
the seas, not freedom of the seas.
And when they gain domination
of tlie seas, they will have all but
conquered the world. Remember
hat. Des Moines News.
:o;
Brinjj your welding1 to us. Platts
mouth Garage. Tel. 394.
FOR SALE.
Reo, the fifth five passenger tour-
ng car in first class condition. Tele
phone 583. 10-9-tfd&w
G0 HAVE A LOOK!
Vallery and Cromwell leave
Plattsmouth ' every Saturday night
at 7:45 for Keith, Perkins and Chase
counties.
They have tlie good level black
soil that is raising all kinds of
small grain, corn and alfalfa.
Nobody has any lower prices and
better soils. Ask those who have
been out. 17-swtf
SOUTH EASTERN NEBRASKA.
We have some cnoice 80. 120, 160.
240, and 320 tracts or land near
Sterling, Adams, Tecumseh, Elk
Creek. Cook, Burr, Douglass, Vesta,
Crab Orchard, Filley and Lewiston,
Nebraska. Prices very reasonable
and terms good. Call or write.
MOCKENHAUPT & CURTAIN,
Sterling, Nebrasak.
Obey the Law. Order your Osgood
ens. Plattsmouth Garage. All sizes.
For Sale
Barred Plymouth Rock cockerels
for sale during the month of Octo
ber for $1.50 each. Mrs. William
Troop, Nehawka, Nebr. Phone Mur
ray exchange.
ATTENTION COMPANY.
First class Ford car to trade for
horse, cow and oats. Call 3S5-J,
Plattsmouth, Neb. 10-3-tfd
Call Plattsmouth Garage for serv
ice. Tel. 394, also livery. J. E Mason,
Prop.
For Sale Young horses, especial
ly one 5 month old mare colt, Ger
man coach. A beauty. R. D. Dalton,
Phone 127-W. 10-12-3td2twkly
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy the
Most Reliable.
After many years' experience in
the use of it and other cough medi-
nes, there are many who prefer
Chamberlain's to any other. Mrs.
. C. Kirstein, Greenville, Ills.,
rites, "Chamberlain'B Cough Reme
w
dy has been used in my mother's
heme and mine for years, and we
ways found it a rjulclc cure for
colds and bronchia Itroubles. Wc
find it to be the most reliable cough
medicine we have used."
The Nehawka Mills
are now Rolling and Manufacturing the
"Litter Bill" F
Letter Roll" Flour needs
For on the top shelf it now is roosting.
The best cooks wherever you go
Use this famous flour, you know.
They just set their yeast and go. to bed,
For they know on the morrow they will have good
Bread.
J. M.
C. D. ST. JOHN, Prop.
JOE MALCOLM, Head Miller.
For Sale by All Dealers
AUTICLKS OK I.COHPOKATIOX.
Wo, tlie undersigned, hereby asso
ciate ourselves together for the pur
pose of forming a corporation- under
tlie laws of the State of Nebraska, and
do adopt the following Articles of In
corporation: Article 1. The name by which this
corporation shall be known is FARM
KKS STATU HANK.
Article II. The principal place of
business cf this corporation shall be
at Plattsmouth, County of Cass, State
of Nebraska.
Article III. Tlie object for which
this corporation is formed is to carry
on a Commercial Hanking business un
der the laws of the state of Nebraska,
Article IV. The authorized capital
stock of this corporation shall be Fif
ty Thousand Dollars, of which at least
Fifty Thousand Dollars shall have
been paid in at the time of commence
ment of business, which shall be Is
sued in shares of the par value of
One Hundred (100) Dollars each. No
transfer of the stock of tills corpora
tion shall be operative until entered
on the bonks of the corporation.
Article V. The indebtedness of this
corporatioT shall at no time exceed
the amount of its paid in capital and
surplus except for deposits.
Article VI. Tills corporation shall
begin business on the 22nd day of
September. 1517, or as soon thereaf
ter as authorized by the State Bank
ing Hoard of tlie State of Nebraska,
and shall terminate, on tiie 22nd day
of September, 1&37.
Article VII. Tlie affairs of this cor
poration shall be under the control
and management of a board of direc
tors, consisting of not less than three
nr more than seven shareholders,
whose term of office shall be for a
period of one year, or until their suc
cessors are elected ami qualified, not
less than a majority of whom shall be
residents of the county in which the
bank is located, or counties immedia
tely adjacent thereto. It shall be the
duty of t!;e Hoard of Directors to elect
from their number a president and
secretary, and select a vice-president
and cashier, and they may also select
an assistant cashier and such other
clerks and assistants as the business
of the corporation may require. The
term of tlie o..cers of this corporation
shall be one year, or until their suc
cessors ate elected and qualified. The
board of directors may adopt such by
laws for tlie regulation and manasre-
ment of the affairs and business of the
corporation as it may deem proper.
Article III. Tlie regular annual
meeting of the stockholders of this
corporation shall be held on the 2nd
Wednesday of January each year, at
which meeting: the Hoard of Directors
above provided for shall be elected. A
majority of tlie shares of the stock of
the corporation at any regular or spec
lal meeting., shall constitute a quorum
for the transaction of business.
Article IX. Until the regular meet
ing of the stockholders of the corpo
ration, trie following named persons
shall constitute the Hoard of Direc
tors: A. .7. Seha fer. T. M. Patterson, E.
I'. I,utz. Mark White and L. G. Todd.
Article X Each stockholder shall at
any regular or special meeting be en
titled to one vote, either in person or
by proxy, for eacli share of stock held.
Article AI. lliese articles of incor
poration may be amended at any reg
ular or special meeting called for that
purpose by a two-thirds vote of all
the stock.
Witness our hands this 8th day of
September, 1917.
A. J. SCIl AFEK,
T. M. PATTERSON,
E. 1 LUTZ,
' MARK WHITE,
Li. G. TODD.
State of Nebraska)
Cass County ) ss:
hffnrp tbA linilprcto-nnfl a Ynt n rw I'tiK
' : i . v -. u . . .... uw
lie in and for said county and state,
personally appeared A. J. Schafer, T.
M. 1'flttPisnn. K. P T.ut Murk WhHo
and I. G. Todd, to me known to be
the identical persons whose names are
affixed to tlie foregoing Articles of In
corporation, and each for himself ac-
1 ....... I. ..-l.l t, . . . 4n 1 ! .
ir-nit-o i o- miuc iu ue ins volun
tary act and deed.
oaVC .SOme choice 80, 130, 160, 240
rlnr.' 'an.d near st'ns. Adams,
bD.rchard' Fley and Lowiston
Call or write
cltenhaupf
STERLING,
no boosting,
In Witness Whereof, I have here
unto set my hand and notarial seal
this S tli day of September, 1917, at
I'lattsmouth. Nebraska.
JACK M. PATTERSON.
(Seal) Notary Public.
XOT1CK TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska)
Cass County ) ss:
' In the County Court.
In the matter of the Estate of Velos
to V. Eeonard, Deceased.
To tlie Creditors of said Estate:
You are hereby notified, that I will
sit at tlie County Court room in Platts
mouth, in said county, on the 31st dav
of October, 1917, and the-- 31st day of
January, 1918. at 9 o'clock a. m., to re
ceive and examine all claims against
said Estate, with a view to their ad
justment and allowance. The time
limited for the presentation of claims
against said Estate is three months
from tlie 31st day of October, A. D.,
1917, and tlie time limited for payment
of debts is one year from said 31st
dav of October, 1917.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said County Court this 27th day of
September, 1917.
ALLEN J. BEESON.
(Seal) ol-4 w. County Judge.
ORDER OP HEARING
on petition for Appointment of Admin
istratrix. Tlie State of Nebraska, Cass coun
ty, ss:
In i he Cou at y Court
In the matter or the estate of Blanche
Marsh, deceased:
On reading and filing the petition of
Elizabeth Schwab praying that admin
istration of said Estate may be grant
ed to Elizabeth Schwab as Adminis
tratrix, Ordered. Thai: November 3rd, A. D.,
1917. at 10 o'clock a. m. is assigned for
hearing said petition, when all nersons
interested in said matter mav appear
at a County Court to be held in and
for said County, and show cause whv
the prayer of petitioner should not be
granted: and that notice of the pen
dency of said petition and the hearin?
thereof be given to all persons inter
ested in said matter -by publishing a
copy of this order in the Plattsmouth
Journal, a semi-weekly newspaper
printed in snid county, for three suc
cessive weeks prior to said day of
hearing.
Dated October 12. 1917.
ALLEN J. BEESON.
ol3-sw3w. County Judge.
ORDER OF HEARING
on Petition fnr A t-i t-w- I r rt 4 ,1
. -- - ..kkv.iiiiiicUI Ul rfVUIIiiil-
istrator or Administratrix.
The State of NehrasVa ro- r-r.
ty ss :
Iu the Con 11 tr Court
I? V.,e l?tter o tne Estate of Eliza
beth b . I.nmiinHi: riixi.oiaj.
t ?n r,e,?dir and fing the petition of
John Edmunds praying that ad
ministration of said Estate may be
granted to him as Administrator:
Ordered That October 31. A. D. 1917.
at 10 o clock a. m.. is assigned for
hearing said petition, when all persons
interested in said matter may appear
at a County Court to be held in and
for said County and show cause why
the prayer of petitioner should not be
c ran ted nnrl h, i
i . . "wuic ui ine pen-
nTorCinfiiaLlJPtt"Lon,?nd the hearing
. rf,c" l" atl persons inter
ested in said matter bv publishing a.
copy of this order in the Plattsmouth
Journal. a com i ..
. , , . ... i -ccni v newspaper
printed in said County, for three buc-
hearins. ' Prlr l SaM day of
Dated October 8, 1917.
AI.T.l'W t T)rr-f.rt.
c a. rawt.s ;v
Attorney: v,uuvy -uoge.
FARM FOR SALE.
The northwest quarter of Sec. 18,
11, 12 four miles north of Weeping
Water. Price $200. per acre. In
quire of J. p. Falter or T. II. Pollock,
Plattsmouth, Nebr. 10-2-2td4tw
& Curtain
J
NEDRAOKA
.
(
r.
i
ft