S KM I-WEEKLY BMamnMCM JOURNAL. 'ui'im wi'M THURSDAY, OCTOEER 17, 1913. page rotra. FLATTSMOUTH Che plattstnoistb journal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA Entered at I'os toff ice, flattsmouth, Ntb., as second-class mall matter R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 Our fathers wielded well The sword of Hunker Hill; 'Tis up to us to et The sword of Junker Dill. :o:- Duv or be bought. -:o:- Do a bond man or a bondman. -:o:- All Hunsdom love a lond iduch- cr. :o:- Und the war with a ;crap of pa per a Liberty bond. -:o: If you can't d.mvle a Hun bn a baxonet, gas him with a bond. :o: The Yanks who are now "Sotne- w lu re in France" will toon be every- here in Germany. :o: I.ib.rfv bonds can say "right" in t w em v-t wo laii".iia;;-'. In Ccrnu-.n they .-ay "defeat". :o: Woull you rather be bossed by ur wife than by the kaiser? Well, then, buy Liberty bonds. :o: The d cj' r ymi dip into the fam ily seek for Liberty bends the hard er you sii; k it to the kaiser. :o: If you have a third Liberty bond in the home, listen clrv-ely and you will hear it trying for a little sis ter. ;o: .Mr. McAdoo's plea not to tax br.i'Tis will 1 read with a f t 1 i i. ir of p r enal exemption by l'.'O mil lion people. N'earing predicts nttrtht r war y f- tt r this one. Tin re certainly :e! 1 be if he and his kind could have tluir way. : o : Ilavinir charged almost ev ryh eiy (Kf with 1he r"M ibilty of it. the Kai.-er -hoi:ll now put the war in l:i wife's name. :o: Ir.tre is still an occasional spur-i ions check handed in. therefore' i' is not proper to count your checks until they are cashed. The piiek st way to tic! into CI omo in tin draft is U let your local board catch you v i 1 1 to them about :-..;uet hiug in yeur ones! ionioi ir. . ; f ; Th- f ;'rin; n soldier:, are :o bo y Mealing cainU ;'i ks m (amoral i that 1 1 1 1 1 . s tlifv 1 er.t) their ears rocked thy won't hear the prdvr tj ret reat. . ;o: The kaiser says he; is disposed to be forpivinc: and generous tte.vard tJermany's enemies. lie no idea v-t, though, how generous he j; eo- : o: - It floen't make :.o much diflei (iico whether the kai.-er has abdir catd or I'ot sin'e we know General Lud' ti'lorfl and the German army in France have. :o: There is probably no truih in lb'? rumor that the I lohenzollern dynas ty has abdicated. lint when it. does die ft will die-nasty in the eyes, of the civilized world. :o. Don't forfiet that Hon. John Murtry made an excellent record in the last legislature, and that he is a candidate for re-election. A trood Man and deserves your support. $100 Reward, 5 ICO Tb readers of this rap'r will be M-as'-rl to h am tl at th-re is at least one dreaded disease th::t jr.ifnce ha3 ;v:n able ta cure in all its suiges and fiat 1"? catarrh. Catarrh Wint? Rreatty lr"uenepd hy constitu'ionil con-jltionM v.-: .. e.-- vr. -. tent t1"'" r'-'rr O.-.e r :;-r.Jf..,y ,ri2 that It t ,','f-,- .'' "f t".-;ri'-'--ia;.-. j Ciff ".:;',- Ar CO.- To!.i.io n ri ii I'lir.ioM' r-OJire.s r-jnstit.utionai ir':io...K..L. mo a ra,,rrh M'dieine la taken letornally and Acta thru the lUnri on the Sl'i. oun Si:t fCres rf the Fyf.-n iher-hy d;-trcy nr; r.ntieie dtrr.i.-ta by b.n'.T.r.r e: the r on--. t , -ji i ;e-'-is'i:T; liatlHC la Coir? its PER YEAR IN ADVANCE Xo Haggling. On to Ucrlin. -:o:- l"v( rybody buy bondi?. :o: Fight or have you money do it. :o: Haily the Umpires are becoming more central. :o: The more hond.i you buy the few er boys will die. :o: Kud i he war with a scrap of pa per a Liberty bond. :o: The real rulers of Germany are the American bond slackers. :o: Your bond is an American forpet- me-net on the tomb of the Kai.-er. :o: The President's reply Max vas in substance, are you?" :o: to Priiic "Whoinell Y.o!i Alibi is bjlting for t!ie Ger mai.:. but they are running lor t hemsel vc-i. :: lVn't step in the r.iidi!" of ymir Liberty bond negotPat io'n to fall; over the new developments; in the Dalkans. .Marshal Foch isn't. :o: Speaking about the Turks siir- rendering. reminds us that Turkish bath is called a Turkih bath be cause the Turk never took a bath in his life. ;o: Somebody says, it would take the American forces in France Pl'iy-eio-days to p;:: s a given point. Ilow cvi r, it didn't take "em that Ions to pa.-s Chateau Tl:i rry. :o: .M.-'tchrs appear to be scarce in Filmland. An advoriiser in a Lon don paper says he would like to hear from any man who contem plates striking one in his n ighbor liood with a view to sharing tho tame. :o: ('ha I'.nci'V Iiepew says: "I am con vinced that victory will not come until the allies fight, on Grjnau soil. We must get into tJi-rmany so that tie' j;. opb- there will b' mad to know that we mean bm i n,''ss." Allot lo r rey-nii we'll lie elad v. Ip-n j pe;o e eome-- is the hope that when military operations ; -e the -peri at th next de;-k will leave of a k i"" us bow to sp;ll "mannver." Aii'! then, maybe, there won't be any more wars for a year or so. :o: The German editor who said the Yanks couldn't stand before "cur German troops, train d from child hood to fprht itiir." probably has. con cluded by this time that, the German boy's military training should be be 7,nn five or fix years earlier in lite. :o: There won't be any ii"v :h';e style; until after the war. Ordinar ily, the news that we could pet th-same- old comfortable last aiiin would be pood news, but. just now it looks to many of us as thou:.'h we were not tei et any new shoe;; of anj- style until after the war. :o: J. P. F.aKer, oi Dunbar, accom panied by Hon. W. I!. Panning, democratic candidate for Lieutenant-Governor were pleasant, callers on the editor Friday evening. .Mr. Laker is the democratic nominee for senator from Otoe and Cass count jes. Mr. Ilaker is a most pleasant H'-nt Io nian, and will fill the position ad mirably. He is a farmer and one of the best citizens of Otoe county. Many ills come from impure blood. Can't, have pure blood with faulty digestion, lazy liver, and sluggish bowels. Purdoek Mood Hitters .is recommended for strengthening stomach, bowels and liver and purifying- the' blood. THE AMERICAN "D0UGIIGIRLS., The poster showing Miss America reporting to Uncle Sam for duty is net a feat of fancy. It is a state ment of fact. For exmirle, the motor corps a;3 on a 24-hour tour of duty last week and met all de mands. If our soldiers are to be praised for their manly qualities. the voting women also ought lo ne praised for their spirit, ot service, ; and it is to be noted that the con ditions of service impose no special sacrifice of feminine iiualities. Who call doubt that their uniforms ma'.ie them even more attractive? That it is the girls and the uniforms. rather than either the girls cr the uniforms, appears from the less sat isfactory combination of the two in private employ! lent. Or perhaps if may be said that the uniformed women who work for wage-: are Uss glorified in the eyes of beholders, than the women who work in the national cause. Whatever the ex planation, the private uniforms pro duce no such e lect of trimness and ellicieiicy as are the easy result of the national service uniforms. Only a few years ago the uni form could rot have done that for them. Then the feminine ideal wa- somewhat lackadaisical. Now thy reflect another feminine ideal. They are robust young women, of the ath letic type, and the product of out door exercise. Tie' war i- sure to confirm this culture of health and sircr;1h by young people of both exes'. Those who come out oi th' i wvr s.ile ;tiu soinm xv 1 1 1 if mi i;:.-. in both body and character, and set the standard and pattern for of the next generation at ba New York Time-. : i ; all TURKEY IS THROUGH. It did not take the news from Washington and abroad to notify the world ll:;..t Turkey was through. The war lias He.-r been popular there. It was e.itered upon without the consent of the Turkish cabinet by a virtual seizure of poAer by two energetic cabinet member.-. Talaat and Fnver. A i t i their con nivance the i v. o (.JerinaU cruisers that had escaped to Con-taut ineph early in the war bombard".) (hp. : ;:tol force! the issue. They were bettii: f.n the militir success of Germany to .uive Turk y an "advantat-e over hr ancient ene my, Russia. 'i'hey foolishly believ ed thev could use German v ami the;; cli'iiti-s her. Talaat r .M'.ri a i ! as j- to Ambassad it!;aa. Pu' within a short time thvy V':'e re' dneed to ;i condition of a. ahi -e. with Girman oP:cors in charee c!" the arte.y, th ; posloflici and the eon n t rv. Now everythin:': is ehane.ed. With German aid irtually cut o!V, v. i:l Allenhy capturing a whole Turk'eli army at one blow, with a iar:-.v tlie no re success. hare of their count rv lo-i, thor.s of th" disaster have course. In Oriental eyes would have vindicated them but failure means their ruin. The only thins left for TurV.ey i. to accept ttie best, terms, she can e.et, surrender Constantinople to an international commissi em, abandon Palestine and Mesopotamia. to tie Priti h, surrender Armenia. and pos: ribly the Giofk reacoast of Asia Minor and retire t(j Anatolia, where she will bo ir prived of power to prolong I h--1 1 a.-'f dy cf tu iental nil" over subject peoples. THE PKESS :N ES SENTIAL INDU3T21Y In view ot the fact that i.e'.vs paoers and periodicals have lost som : emiloyes, who have suv,ht urei.tcr immutiity i'n,:,i military service in more essential war indust ries, it. is well to ask just how eissential thi press is to winning the war. The War Industries board put:; newspaper:-; and periodical in class 4 in the. priority Hot. which furnishes the basis for industrial exemption from the tlraft. Induct riea grouped in class 1 are of exceptional import ance in connection with the prose cution of ie war. Those grouped in 2, ?, and 4 will have precedence over all industries not appearing in the priority list, but the board says distinctly that "as between these three classes however, there Khali be no complete cr absolute prefer ence." This means that newspapers and periodicals arc practically on the same footing as the industries and plants of classes 2 and I) in demonstrating the essential quality of their product. What service has, the press already rendered in this war? The national publications broke down so effectu ally all sectional barriers that wh'-n the' time came tc declare war upon Germany it was the act ot a unittd nation. Newspapers anil periodicals have been the rr.ost powerful single force in pop:ilari;:ine; support of the Liberty loans, and Secretary Me Ado has ti'stifed to the major pari they have thus played in supply ins, the sine ws of ; war. They have so educated the puelic mind on th; is sues of war and the iluly of every iti.en in a democracy that the draft has nut with r.o opposition. Fad the- liew.-papers, during the tivil war, ",iveti the same support to this principle, there would have b"cn no draft riots then. The tai. the press in preparing the public fi r t hi' j;n. at loans yet to come i t re-mendous. and its mission oi' education in the ch'-';' mov.'hs ot the war and in the ;. n-pa ra t ie.i fo -t!e;if" is as si'.rnifivant and esseritiai as that whieh has already accomplished.- Leslie's. ; o : FCCII THE MASTER. Tin- e!::t ion v. it Ii v h !l i A! Ped worb! se.-; th" ui'i'l.in;; out o the reat battle plan in France i n-.jv collided with more of under siaiidin.. Periitps we can nevev bam to see the battle as Markka" Foch st es it, but we e'an ;;t lea - appreciate tha iie does se" it all ii e.ii sweep o; i. -: :!, ;is a chc play cr sC'S the I'oa: 1 under his eye-. This i.n't the Mr! of b.iitb' ii .'.;. it h a it lae.aiu!. r can station him -el" ;ii a 'aill ami observe tlie moe cuts lhnniuii a ' li. Id class. 'IT; a ""t of thin.; may do for th- 1 ais es and the historical painter, ba Marshal Fech probably prefers . n.-'p and the 'jiiel of his b"ad m iarters. Tliis ba! tie. or the j eri" of battles that u n make up th' v hole military niovenn-nt ue.;i' w a y, extends, over liuneJred.s id" snile; Nobody can see very much of it V ,t time, but one man can s-e it a! on a map if he knows how to read it T' at is. what it means to be : 1'ech. IP- know.- hti.v. lie- md oai; knows what bis own armies are do in.;, as recorded hourly on the map but be iniet know what the em tu; b- do'mjr. More than that, he mu --: know what the enemy is .noinir P d before he Ioe- i. P sounds liilii cult, if not impossible. Well. an. it is diMieolt, if not impossible, for n ost men, includirs-; all known Ger nie.n generals, to be a Foch. Foch holds his va-.t armies a; Napoleon was said to hold his nr tillcry. like- a pi !d in his baud. 11 turns thetu this way :.nd that, upon lb" mii'iny's Hanks eu- front, am' wherever he turns them he com mauds the- situation at that (point . The enemy may writhe and turn he cannot escape the contact. Thi :-. the process by which the , Ion German line l as been broken ant dissolved and the German nrmb" l ;rne;d into db organized ami fb:ein?: .masses. We may well look and wonder, for the spectacle has never before been seen in war. When the German xvas preponder ant in the vv est, operating with the advantage of interior lines and with every facility of lateral railway eommunication behind his lines, he never even attempted to deliver such a series oZ shocks at such widely separated point:; as. Foch has deliv ered since the middle of July. The German military mind is not the type capable of that brilliance. It is a Blower mind and without the French resiliency to "spring aftain and thrust." V.o have seen the French rapier wielded by Foch de scribe flashes of lire around the wildly swims German bludgeon of Hindeubur.'T. K. C. Star. -:o:- Statioi,eiy at Journal oSce. 2 IX DISTRICT C0UHT. .1 v. : ,!;;'. 1 :.i:v. Th'. wa-; .mani' d a oiverce in i ! ; .'t e ',. rt I ,day, to .M r.s. n 'ei!i- i let h. ri n--.' on. freuu heT form- r hit: band It. 1 let heri n .Ton, on the around:; of non-'up5iorl, and the :ive:i the custody oi" miner ehild "rancis I P t lu ri:'.utc;u. Tlie ii'a'tt'r of the cum tin:; of the 'H!o in Win. Ch: i .te'iVr ;n, to some "ls in th.e village of F ;-h.! .a b-in:T heart!. A. G. Wolfeniierer of Fin- (dn. and J. .M. l.eyda of thi. c:y p p a r i n -A r e .-. p e c t i v e I y . . lit-W :e-e Was i'.ied with t!:'1 !erh i:i wheih l-'r .1 Marshall of near I'a'-'le brings suit for daman's to tile extent tf ?."i.niHi.0!i pain t two trothtrs, Gtor.-u; and 1 -.:. n Kamm, v h ) by the way are bred he rs-in-Iuw t) him. for injuries, which he al- mOPOStD CONSTZIUIiG.'JAL AUlNOMcNT Tho following rreposed a:nenein:9Tit to th'j constitution cf the State of Nebraska, as hereinafter srt forth In fall, 13 submitted to tho electors of th Stito of Nebiaska io bo'vr.ted upoa at he general election to bo held Tuesday, November Llh, A. D. 1913: A JOINT RESOLUTION to am eri Section one tl) i-f Article seven (7t of tho ConstituG-jii cf the t'tatu of Nebraska. Be It Resolved by the Legislature of tha Stato of Nebraska: Section 1. That .t'-" .-tlon Or.e of Ar ticle Seven of the Con: t rtution e:f th-) State of Nebraska luj and the sama hereby 13 airended by striking out tle followlnK words: "Second. Persons of foreign birth who shall havo declared their iiuen tlon to become citizens cemfarmahly to the laws of the United State?, in tho subject of naturalization, at leant thirty days prior to an election." And Inserting in the ilscc of the words so stricken, tho following words: "Second. Tersons of foreign birth who shall have become citizens of the United States by naturalization or otherwise conformably to the laws of tho United States, at least thirty day. prior to an election. ! Sec. 2. That at tho general elec tion nineteen hundred and eishtecir (191S) there shall bo submitted to the' electors of the state for their approval or rejection the foregoing proposed amendment to the constitution relat ing to the right of suffrage. At sucn election, on tho Lallot of each elector voting for or against said proposed amendment, shall be written or printed the words: "For proposed amend ment to the constitution relating ta the right of suffrage.." and "Against said proposed amendment to the con stitution relating to the right o! suffrage." Sec 3. I such amendment shall bo approved by a majority of all electors voting at sucn election, said imendment Fhall constitute Section One (1) Article Seven (7) of the Coa Btitution ot the State of Nebraska. Approved, April 0, 1'alS. K-IITH NEVILLE, Attest: Governor. CHARLES W, POOL gotictary of Suto. KZZitseKvrr-f,' ,;'o; yjjg; in? ed Grown Gasoline in the JLl. tank defies cold. When you open the throttle the car springs to life when you want speed it's there. Every drop of Red Grown does its bit .every ..gallon is packed with utmost power and mileage. It vaporizes at low temperatures, burns cleanly, and doesn't clog the carburetor. Red Crown Gasoline is the same every where straight-distilled and all gas. Look for the Red Crown Sign. It's your guide to full engine power. s a cold-proof lubricant b.OigPlIie that keeps cylinders clean and compression STANDARD OIL COMPANY (NH1IKASKA) OMAHA r?ii!i .SVsifiiaKliM I. ,-.'.'S he received at their hands, without provocation, on Nor. 4th, 1ft 17. When they assaulted lim, i-.'at :t::d hiched him. in a manner which has permanently injured him. Attorney A. G. Wol fen herder of Lincoln was a visitor in this city this morning,' coming to look after VOTE FOR T7 Y p23 P NEBRASKA'S WAR GOVERNOR BECAUSE 1. Every pledge made to the people has been fully and faithfully redeemed. 2. lie has ,i;iven whole hearted support to the Federal Government, and his experience is an asset in the prosecu tion of the war. 3. He has mailt it possible for Nebraska's heroic sons in the service to exercise the right of franchise, and has protected their property rights in their absence from the State. 4. He will exert every effort to protect the people of Nebraska from organized profiteering. 5. He has vigorously opposed all thing3 calculated to embarrass the Government in the prosecution of the war. 6. His administration has been clean, honest and businesslike, free from graft, favoritism and ostentation. 7. The General Fund levy for 1018 has been reduced to three mills, and the amount raised in taxes for the Gen eral Fund, will be the least raised in thirty years. 8. Hundreds of thousands of dollars were saved to the farmers through the embargo placed upon seed corn in 1017. The price per bushel in Nebraska ranged from $3.00 to $5.00, while in Iowa and surrounding states, the prices reaped by seed speculators ranged from $500 to $12.00. 9. He appointed a committee of prominent stock feeders to confer with the Federal Food Administration, and a market for heavy beef cattle was created, averting disaster to the stock feeding industry of Nebraska. 10. The State Hail Insurance law has been adminis tered in an efficient and businesslike manner, and all losses sustained by policy holders during the past season will be paid in full. No other State sellirig hail insurance has ever paid 100 per cent of its losses. 11. The Seed Analysis Branch of the Pure Food De partment has, during Governor Neville's administration, made more than 5,000 seed tests, without cost to the farm ers of Nebraska. 12. Being advised that there was a shortage of hog cholera serum and virus, and that Nebraska hog raisers were experiencing difficulty in securing prompt delivery of the product, Governor Neville recommended to the Regents of the State University, that the state serum plant be re opened. The Regents acted favorably upon the Governor's recommendation, and immediately directed the reopening of the plant. 13. Prohibition has been energetically enforced throughout the State. There have been 4,527 prosecutions and fines have been assessed aggregating $125,000.00. 14. He was born and reared in Nebraska, and under stands the needs cf the people. 15. It is unwise to change horses in the middle of a stream. t ' Nebraska has excelled all other states in many phases of war work endeavor. The re-election of Nebraska's war governor will mean a continuation of effective co-operation ki this work. tight. mi y yuu u GASOUNE tZMCSMU Ott CQKMJTT an 3.13 n eg n a some business matters at tlie court house. Win. Christoferson of Kaple wa,s a visitor in this city this morning having .some matters to look after in the district court. Read the Journal Ads It Pays. 3 J 5 f