PAGE FOUR. PLATTSMOUTH SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1913. 0e plattsmoutb journal PUBUBHED EXI-WEKKLT AT PLATTSMOUTH, RKBKASKA. Batrd at Poitoflce at Flattsmouth. Neb., aa cod-clas mall matter. R. A. BATES, Publisher ICBSCKIPTIOX PRICK 91X9 A little springy again. :o: Pleasant weather now. . :o: But don't count much upon it to morrow. :o: Numerous farmers report the wheat in good condition. :o: Don't eat anything but save it all. This is just as sensible advice as some papers are printing. :o: "Eat bananas; win the war" is a new slogan. Someone may yet start this for a slogan: "Cse common sense and win the war." :o: u..,,,.,,,,,,,! l,-, tiimis:imls of A V I A lillililiv'.i - - - true friends in Nebraska who arc boosting him for 1'nited States sen ator. Well. Boss is able to fill the bill in every way. :o: A German spy, arrested while try ing to set tire to a navy magazine at Norfolk. Va.. is being held for trial. Every hour he is thus ludd, is just sixty minutes too long. :o: It is a dangerous thing to say Ioitivciy that the submarine men ace is under control, as any woman who has conducted a campaign against bedbugs can testify. :o: Brar.il is anxiously watching to see v hi ther the 1'nited Slates classif.es coffee as a mces-ity or a iu,n-esson- tial. And Brazil isn't any more anxious about it than a great many Americans are, either. :o: Prof. K. A. Boss of the University f Wisconsin reports after his visit to Russia that tlie country is far from down ar.d out and could keep on lighting if it should get interested in the war. It might be supposed that German invasion would give it a slight interest. :o: A pair of socks lasts a week in the trenches, which is just five days longer than a pair will last over the hills and down the dales of I'latts mouth. But then, of course, the soldier tales hotter carp of his toenail-; than the average town man does. vo:- It has been a long time since work on the new school building was com menced, but there has been some cause for this delay the scarcity of help and bad weather. One thing certain it will be ready for occu pancy by school time, next Septem ber. :o: Mutt and Jeff has come and gone, and they made enough fun for the big crowd present Saturday night to last for the next six months anyhow. It was a great benefit to ye scribe in that direction, and we gained sev eral pounds in weight also. "Laugh and crow fat." :o: HUNDRED PER CENTERS ONLY. This is no time for political slates. The people of Nebraska don't care a tinker's dam whether a man is Hitch cock or anti-IIitchcock, Bryan or an ti-Bryan, bull moose or old line re publican, democrat or republican or independent. What they want to knew i, "Is he 100 per cent Amer ican and is ho big enough for the position to which ho rspires?" Ord Quiz. How's This? W offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Medicine. Hall's Catarrh Medicine has been taken tiv catarrh i--unrers for the past thirty- five yeara. and Raa become known as the moet reliable remedy lor catarrn. liau a Catarrh Medicine acts thru the Blood on the Mucous surfaces. expelling the Pol ron from the Blood rnd healing the dis- k m 1 nort ions. tfir vcu Iiav taken Hall's Catarrh Meoirine for a short time you will see a rreat Improvement in your jreneral ru alth. Start taV.in? Hall's Catarrh Mcdi vi" tit once and sit rir! of catarrh. Senu roet'.mn'als. tree. K J CHEST.T - CO-JTolcdo. OhlC. Sold ty ell Ln-usrvisls. .ic. PKK TEAR ADTANCK .Maybe we will spring:. have an early Butter in Berlin is reported strong; at $2.25 per pound. :o: The wolf is not yet at the door of the American home, but this prof iteering hog is. :o: No man likes to admit that he is too old for anything except well, will not say it. :o: Here's a motto to hang in your hen house: "An egg a day will keep the hatchet aWTly." :o: Veterans of former wars kept no cuaries, cnner, mu lew iorgoc any- thing when they got back home. :o:- One good thing about Camp Cody says Will Maupin the boys will get plenty of sand in their "craws." :o: The memory of the "Father of our County," was properly celebrated in Flattsmouth on his brithday, Feb ruary 22. :o: "Xo Change in Laundry Strike" says a headline, reminding us very unpleasantly that neither is there a single change remaining in our col lar box. :o: The day when the airplane shall succeed the motor car as a means of locomotion probably will find many communities stijl talking about building hard surfaced roads. :o: riattsmouth girls should note this: black-eyed man is always jealous of his wife, a grey-eyed one the most faithful, a brown-eved one the best provider and a blue-eyed one always hen pecked. :o: An Eastern judge has ruled that it is no violation of the law for a par ent to kidnap his own child. There also is no law against parents sup porting their own children, however widely some opinions differ on this point. :o:- The Bolshevist leaders, having spilled the beans all over the side walk and then kicked them about in a frenzy, are calling on the people to get down and pick them up. What would be their dismay should some Bonaparte appear on the scene with a vacuum cleaner? When a stranger approaches you to invest in any stock proposition it is the time for you to know who you are dealing with. Several of the farmers of Cass county have been "taken in" on such propositions. And the Journal warns farmers again to beware of strangers. . The fact that Mr. Ford waited through three years of war to raise thp price of his cars, and then rais ed it only $90, causes one to wonder how many dealers in other articles were really kidding the public when they begun three years ago to double their prices "on account of the war." -:o:- STANDING BY THE PRESIDENT. Whenever President Wilson calls to mind the protestations of certain senators that they are actuated only by the highest considerations of patriotism and friendship, he is jus tified in quoting the familiar old strain: "It was all right to dissemble your love, but why did you kick me down stairs?" Pugilists in the prize ring always shake hands before they begin the delightful task of trying to pound each other to a pulp, but even pugilists refrain from taking a poke at one another while shaking hands. We commend the pubilistic code of ethics to a few of the senators' in Washington. York Democrat. WHERE DO THEY GET THE DOPE? Referring to hc anounccmeut that the army is to be subjected by the war department to a complete reorganization, "owing to the dis satisfaction that has sprung up over the country, caused by the investiga tion of the war department," a rural Nebraska paper says: "This plan ought to result in putting big men in leadership, who will make no mistakes." Is that so? There is no such ani mal as a big man "who will make no mistakes." The creator never block ed out the frame-work of such a crit ter. Yet that is the ostensible urge of all who have been kicking on the ad ministration. They seemed to pro ceed upon the theory that there are men who are immune from mistakes in the conduct of wars. If we can assume that these noisy critics are men of sense and reason, we may not be beguiled into a belief that they believe it. They know that to err is human. They know that 'no war has ever been conducted without mistakes, and that none ever will be. Senator Borah was right when he publicly said that it would have tak en divine powers to have made few er mistakes than have been made by our government in tins war. Lin coln Star. :o: HARD ON THE INNOCENTS. Anybody who is brazen enough. foolish enough and lawless enough to attempt to violate the Reed amendment as well as the Nebraska statute regarding the importation of firewater is entitled to his just de serts. There can be no argument on that score. What is more, anybody who will attempt to say that Governor Neville is not doing all in his power to es tablish a complete and blistering drouth in his state, is slightly more peculiar than the party who essays to foil him. The guilty are suffering daily, which is entirely proper as long as the present liquor laws exist. The city and federal courts are daily re galed with he hearings of "bocze" cases, which indicates a most right eous spirit among our public repre sentatives. But in this connection, as is usual, the innocent are often humiliated along with the guilty, which is possibly inevitable. The "Old Dog Tray" story applies splendidly to this case, although a rabid prohibitionist coming up from Kansas City cannot very well pick and choose his train-companions. Fntil Director General McAdoo sees fit to operate strictly "clearwater" passenger trains between the" wick ed western Missouri metropolis and Omaha, the "dry" traveler is likely to sleep in the next berth to that of a besotted sinner who has a half-pint flask of distilled damnation wrapped up in a pair of pajamas. And upon reaching the Omaha depot, when Governor Neville's li quor sleuths, aided and abetted by city and county morals squads, greet every alighting passenger to heft, shake and even open his or her hant luggage, the innocent are required to stand for it along with the benighted felon who is trapped. It is not pleasant to have a total stranger snatch your grip from your hand; worry it as a terrier does a rat, open it and ploy through its con tents but prohibition is prohibition. and the one black sheep thus brand ed, is sufficient excuse for the ninety-and-nine who were proven white. Travel is disagreeable these days especially from the south. World- Herald. GOVERNMENT IN PEACE AND WAR A letter has been received from a man who says he is "American born and has lived in Nebraska for twen ty years in peace and quiet," In which he says that he is "opposed to overthrowing the principles of this government and establishing a dic tatorship just because we are at war." If he will do some thinking on the principles of government for a few minutes he will see that there thas Deen no overthrowing of princi i pies uuu iut) toverumeui i vuuuuci ed upon the same principles in peace and in war. IC a band of robbers should invade his neighborhood, the sheriff, a civil officer, just as the president is, would have pQwer to call out a posse and instantly apply conscription to supply the force. If any one were caught in conveying informations to the robbers that would in any way give them aid or comfort, he would be put in jeopardy of life and liberty. If any man re fused to serve on the posse he could be arrested and tried for his disobed ience, and if his refusal endangered the posse, he would be Instantly shot without form or ceremony. In any great catasthrope, like the burning of a city, there comes into existence automatically a dictatorship which is lodged in the fire department. The chief of that department becomes a dictator. He can blow up buildings and drive the population from a sec tion of the city. The police exercise the same authority. If they saw an incendiary setting fire to buildings they would shoot htm on the spot, without any form or trial. The same thing would occur if a plague invaded a city. The board of health would take charge, deprive men of their liberty, invade their homes, confine them In pest houses and do anything else that the pub lic welfare required. There is no difference in the principles of gov ernment in times of peace or war, and without these powers being vested in government, no govern ment could exist. The powers are vested by constitutional grants and legislative cts, representing the will of the people, and exercised within those bounds as circumstances re quire. World-Herald. :o:- TESTING AMERICA'S MORALE. The Germans are a well disciplin ed people. Since childhood they have had discipline and their obligation to the state drilled into them. This discipline will sustain their morale in the face of the interchange of peace talk. The German govern ment can make its overtures with out weakening the army's effective ness. The American people must substi tute a voluntary devotion to their country and their cause, for the unquestioning discipline of the ene my. The one thing for this coun try to determine is that it will not permit any vain hopes of an incon clusive peace held out by Germany to turn it aside from its duty to con vince the German people by a mili tary decision that the policy of ag gression and international immor ality does not pay. K. C. Star. NATURALIZED HUNS IMMUNE. We have no disposition to mini- raize the importance of the action of the government in ordering the reg istration of all alien enemies. This should have been done at the time we entered the war. But we greatly fear that even this move will not put a stop to the machinations of the enemy in this country, from the fact that his readiest tools are not aliens, but citizens of this country. The alien is an easy person to watch, but the traitorious citizen sometimes baffles the best efforts of the police. And humiliating as it is to admit it. we have a number of these. Some of them would doubtless balk at ac tual sedition, yet every day of their lives they are aiding the cause of the Hun. They kick and knock and find fault of every act of our govern ment, and if they were men of weight their pessimistic influence would be disastrous. Happily for the country, however, the great major ity of our people are loyal, and ihey soon place these gently where they i belong outside the pale. Geneva Times. -:o:- IGNORING RED TAPE. Red tape has its use, though of late the country has been hearing more about abus6s that attend its employment. The grand jury in ses sion in Lincoln has brought charges against two members of the Lancas ter county board for neglect of duty, permitting the paymnet of over charges and of duplicate claims and other failures in discharge of duty. It is asserted that one of the men declared in the presence of county officers that the keeping of certain records as required by law was "foolishness," and it is possible that he finds himself facing indictments more because of a disregard of cer tain requirements of law and custom than from actual dishonesty. The official who wants to walk in the narrow way will find as a rule that strict observance of legal forms will be the safest, it not the speediest mode of progress. Laws and book keeping are intended as much for the protection of the innocent as for guards against the crooked. York New Teller. :o:- The grafters must get out. :o:- General Pershing came from Mis souri. General Pershing also issued the order against swearing at army mules. It is very hard for many people to reconcile these two facts concerning one man. :o: BEEN HITCHED 15 YEARS l-Yom Tuesday's Daily. Yesterday rolled past as all dates do, notwithstanding the matter of their importance. Well, yesterday marked the passing of the fifteenth milestone of the married life of Wal ter and his wife. George W. Olson just fifteen years ago yesterday was united in marriage and when we oh served that Mr. Olson was looking particularly happy, we said, "Well?" "Oh, he said we were married just fifteen years ago today." Well, we just wished him and his good wife one hundred and fifteen more years of wedded bliss. CORPORAL LOGAN COVERT NOW From Tuesday's Daily. Mrs. Hettie Covert has just receiv ed a letter from her son, Logan Co vert, who is in Honolulu in the Hawaiian Islands. He states that he is well and likes the life fine. He has just been promoted to the posi tion of corporal and likes the posi tion well. He remembers the old time friends and would like to hear from them. FARMS FOR SALE 4 2 - acres, all in cultivation, 2 '2 miles south of Plattsmouth. Might take some trade. Will make good terms. 46 Vs acres adjoining the city on the north. All under cultivation, no improvements. 102 acres in the city limits, im proved. Good terms can be given on all of the above lands. CLYDE II. FULLER. Phone 340-W or No. 11. PERCHER0N STALLIONS FOP. SALE AT PUBLIC AUCTION As I have sold my Livery barn in Union. I will sell on March 2d, 1918. at public auction in Union, Neb., my pure bred Perchcron Stallions. There horses are both good ones and guaranteed to be excellent breeders. Will also sell some good work hors es and mules, some choice heifers and bred gilts. Good train connec tions from north and west. GEO. A. STITES. Union, Neb. INCUBATOR PRICE $1.00 OFF. 100 Egg Old Trusty 110.50, 100 egg Sure Hatch $16.75. 120 egg Successful of Des Moines $15.00, Rayo and X-Ray, all at Factory prices, delivered your town. Cut this out and we willallow $1.00 off. Ask for catalogs, stating which make. Johnson Bros., Nebr. City. The Journal delivered at your aoor for only 10 cents a week. They Let Him Sleep Soundly "Since taking Foley Kidney Pills I btMeve 1 am entirely cured and I Bleep aoundly all night. H- T. Taktf'Wo of Foley Kidney Pills with a frlaes of pure water after each meal and at bedtime. A quick and easy way to put a atop to your get tinsr up time after time during the niarlit. . . Foley Kidney Pills alao stop pain in . back and aides, headaches, stom ach troubles, disturbed heart action, stiff and aching Joints, and rheumatic pains due to kidney and bladder ail ments. Gainesville, Oa.. It. Tt. No. 3. Mr. H. T. atraynge says: ''For ten years I've been unable to sleep all night without getting up. Sometimes only a few minutes after going to bed I'd have to get up, and I tried everything I heard of for the trouble. Last year j tried Foley Kidney Pills and after taking one bottl I believe I am en tirely cured ami I elecp soundly all night." "SOLD EVERYWHERE.' i .'irgiggi Net Contorts 15 Fluid Drachm ki f-iMiiT.-.l PER CENT. ' AVcclab!crrcparaticriforAs sJniJn liny iheleod by Rc ula- tinOthcSteinadis nr.-i Bcvvtsof c ; Thereby Pi-ojr.otinS Dteestc ! neither Opiu m.Mcrpiiin no: i Miner.-;!. Xot Xahcot'.v jPi irpfuh Stat Alx S.-nnf Jixhr"r Si"s y-ti'Tf Sr.".i ,Y.vi -Sac' I insIipaiicnaMlDtfrrtij23. and FovrisMess and j Loss or M;-;' rest fiiS GnNTAVT COMPANY. Exact Copy cf W rapper LAID TO REST HERE YESTERDAY AFTERNOON FORMER CITIZEN OF THIS PLACE BURIED AT CEMETERY WEST OF TOWN. From Monday's Iai!y. Yesterday the funeral cortege ar rived from Lincoln, bearing the mortal remains of Mrs. Frank Green, of Lincoln, who passed away there some days since of tuberculosis. Mrs. Green was known by a lare circle of admiring friends, who loved her for her high qualities of char acter. The Benevolent and Protec tive Order of Elks, had charge of the service and with Kev. Father Leete conducted the services. The pall bearers were all of the order, and were: Henry F. Goos, George Tartsch, Win. Schmidt mann, J. S. Livingston, Matthew Gering and T. S. Clifford Those from out of town to attend were, a sister of Mrs. Green, from Lincoln, C. V. Green and wife of University Place, Miss Madeline Green and Miss Clara Green, also from there, George Prentiss and wife of Lincoln and Harry Green of Have- lock. jr-!i.: .-.' 3 rv:v '.' ' -- : i I ! It - 1 - HAVE Yy GOT ?. r 1 5 e? PEOPLE DO GET SICK. THERE IS PLENTY OF WORK FOR THE DOCTOR ALWAYS. SUFFOSE YOU GOT SICK AND COULDN'T EARN ANY MONEY, BUT HAD TO SPEND MORE. WHAT WOULD YOU DO? YOU'D WORRY YOURSELF MORE SICK. YOU WOULD FRET FOR THOSE YOU LOVE. BUT IF YOU HAD A NICE SUM OF MONEY.'IN THE BANK YOU COULD REST EASY KNOWING THAT THOSE DEPENDENT UPON YOU WERE WELL CARED FOR. WE PAY H PER CENT ON TIME DEPOSITS, AND 3 PER CENT ON XMAS SAVINGS CLUB. COME TO OUR BANK. ITanxiers' State Batik :the new bank, safety deposit boxes 50 cents per year. if! p W$- nifi "Fox Infants and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always g t ,i J (if .Dears me m a . ff lit signature J: Of t 5 IP f 9 d i.i ;r f ft H Si IV ? sa aw the ;::;TyR co:;p.r.T. r rv: yorr ci Y PURCHASED A HOME HEKE. From Tl. :. i . sday's Loe rennett has just consumated li e purchasing of a homo in this city making the trade with A. J. Trility ! tiie property being what was for merly known as the Carlson property and was formerly occupied by Gust Carlson who moved to Havelock some time since. Mr. A. S. Dennett a brother of Lee Dennett will live in the property, having moved there, yesterday. Mr. Lee Dennett will depart in a few days for Clarks, South Dakota, where he has formerly lived and will there enter the army. Constant Sufferer Finds Relief. "I have been a constant sufferer from kidney trouble and ivas down sick in bed," writes C. F. Reynolds, 412 Ilerrick St., Elmira, N. Y. "I commenced taking Foley Kidney Pills. In a few days I was up out of bed." Recommended for rheumatic pain?, backache, biliousness, sore muscles, stiff joints, "tired out" feel ing. Sold everywhere. Feel languid, weak run down? Headache? Stomach "off?" A good remedv is Durdoek Blood Hitters. Ask your druggist. Price For Sale A number or white Brahma. Cockerels. Mrs. C. E. Heeb ner, Nehawka. f BAN K? iJ r.-'j i-- u 0 o I