The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, July 12, 1920, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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PLATTSMOUTH SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL
PAUE FOUR
13be plattsmoutb lournal
riJBLISIIED SZNil-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA
Knificii at l':-t office, I 'la t tfinou t li. Neb., as second-class mail matter
R. A. BATES, Publisher
SUESCEIITION TRICE $2.00 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE
Frov speech simply is myin;r what
Thi please to a lollow you can lic'.i. :
:o: " :
The niok may eventually inherit j
the earth. lut tii chances are that j
viirn they d- there will he very Jit- ;
tie demand for real estate. ' '
:o:
As nearly as we tan 0,7.ire it :'.lt. :
a . riv.il candidate will, beat Sam
C ; ;ii 1 :: a!; ut th Mine yenr that
tii.- rcpiiMiiMiis write a platform
that will break the solid south.
A" man may lay down the law to
his wife, hut he always accepts her
amendments.
:o:
The two national conventions
have ended, hut the price of gass
remains unchanged.
:o:
Never strike a man. when he's
down unless you are sure he will
never ho able to fiet up again.
:o:
Always speak well of "yourself.
Your friends will attend to the oth
er side of It.
:o:
Girls should take extreme care of
their skins these days, as that's
about all some of them seem to have
left to wear.
:o:
Twenty years ago the people ran
out on the street to see a motor car
. . 1 ili a
x en hv ana toaav mey run uui ui
j ! streets to keep from being run over
! I by 'cm.
:o:
is, possible to mall a baby by
X
i
i
!
i
r
mm
E2
rn
-, dress
Jbetter
mm
mm
A
O M 11 women
have learnel
that there ate two
ways to tre for
clothis. They are
learning to take
care of them .
1 t is juitc a mannerly '.litnjr to take
caief.f your tl jtlies investment and
j.ioi' .-! it up to tin; limit. Having
your clothes can-fully dry cleaned
.vill improve their" wear and help to
prolong the life of their stj INh lines-
(Jetting acquainted with otir work
in an- tt inr in touch with a :eai
raoriey stivin .-ervice.
Goods Called for and Delivered
US
1 1)
I Iff-
ESEESDEEEEEI
i(6
JOURNAL OfFICE
The men who started wearing ov
i eralls as a fad a few weeks ago have
I done nothing thus far to wear 'em
out. .
:c.
Hurry up and take your vacation
the chiggers are hungry here is
your chance to feed starving mil
lions. :o:
"The wets have hit a stone wall,"
announcc3 Mr. Bryan. Sounds like
a blind tiger. Go around to the
side door, IJill and knock two louds
and two softs.
:o:-
This i.s also the season of the year
the down-trodden burglars are
forced to do a good deal of robbing
' in the daytime, owing to the short
ness of the nights.
:o:
; The old timers who stole water
melons forty years ago does not have
: much trouble with hsi- conscience
. w hen he considers the present price
of that lucsious fruit.
:o:
In order perhaps, to give a fair
test to the old superstition that 13
, is an unlucky number, Chicago has
j convicted thirteen men of murder
and sentenced them to hang.
! :o:
A friends of ours requests us to
; say thit if the lady who stuck her
i gum on a seat at the Moreland the
ater the other night will call to sen
bim she mav have the gum. If the which the rcncii press is noun a ic
gum won 1 corne on sne can aiso
It
parcel post. The danger lies in the
fact that the child is liable to be
full rrnwn when it arrives t us
c- - - - '
destination.
:o:
Eastern scientists are turning
their attention to the subject of bow
to make good coffee, but the attitude
of many women is that if the scien
tist will bend their energies toward
the provision of sugar, they'll at
tend to the coffee.
:o:
A St. Louis man would restore
the proper farm population balance
by permitting cider and light wines
to be made on farms. A good many
things are being made on farms
now, nearly all of them craved at
some time or other by city folks,
but it hasn't stopped the rush to the
cities.
to:
PAPER. '
History is repeating itself in the
paper industry "also. Immediately
after the Napoleonic wars, a great
shortage arose in the supply of linen
rags from which the best paper ot
that period was made. An investi
gator of the subject or the papei
shortage has fallen upon an inter
esting paragraph in Balzac's novel.
"David and Eve." David was
printer in a provincial French city.
He found his business interfered
with seriously by the shortage ot
paper, which he explained a fol
lows: Today it is a pressing questior.
and for this reason, since the down
fall of the empire; calico has comi
more and more into use because it is
so much cheaper than linen. At
the present moment paper Is made o'
a mixture 01 nemp ana unen rags.
Haw material is dear, and this nat
urally retards the great advance
have the pants.
rs is . ( 1 . ?v rs s-fs.
CtTP vyV 1 V J JSyV vy VyV
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4&
PRODOGTS 0
CRAFTSMANSHIP!
Tcople speak easily of craftsmen and crafts
manship; but every good mechanic is not a
craftsman.
Craftsmanship is the individual creation of
useful things in a beautiful way.
To attain craftsmanship one must know the
relation of parts to the whole; must have a .com
plete conception; must be able to image forth an
idea, end must be so skilled as to reach close to
perfection.
Duslerhoff Interior Decorating
and Practical Painting
is the product of craftsmanship; USEFUL, indi
vidual created in a beautiful way costly but
not expensive.
' Let us serve you with our experience and
ideas.
Max Dusterhoff,
Interior Decorating
Practical Painting
Wood Finishing
Wall Hanging
MURDOCK, NEBIL
1
1
make. Now you cannot increase the
output of linen rags. ' A given -population
gives a pretty constant re
sult, and it only increases with the
birth rate. To make any percepti
ble difference in the population for
the purpose it would take a quarter
of a century and a great revolution
in habits of living and if the supply
of linen rags is not enough to meet
one-half or one-third the demand
some cheaper material than linen
rags must be found for cheap paper.
The Ango'uleme paper-makers were
the last to use pure linen rags, so
that the proportion of cotton in the
wood pulp has increased to a fright
ful exte.nt of late years.
The old linen paper was of excel
lent mmlitv Tt wnt ranahlp if RiirN
viving immersion in water for a con
siderable period without injury.
When the new cotton rag and wood
pulp fiber made its appearance there
was great complaint. Just as there
has been in recent years because
the wood pulp paper now so univer
sally used will last even in the best
bound volumes only a few gnera
tions. The problem of quality has
not been solved - in the hundred
years that have intervened since this
crisis was reached. But quantity
production has been secured, thanks
to the utilization of the spruce for
ests. The next step is likely to be
the manufacture of paper from new
material. . Bamboo is a promising
contender, and a giant tree, known
as the baobab which exists in vast
quantities in- East Africa, may also
be called upon. This tree sometimes
reaches a diameter of thirty feet. It
has a pithy wood too soft for ordin
ary use, but capable ot exploitation
by the paper makers. Until the in
dustry adjusts itself, however, the
entire publishing business must, be
placed on an entirely new basis. The
cost of books and magazines and
commercial printing has gone up
permanently so far as the ' present
generation is concerned, at least.
:o:
DEMOCRATS DID WELL
the democrats In national con
vention Tiave done well. . They
have turned away from temptation.
They have remained consistent
They bave shown the courage to- go
to defeat for the right as they, con
ceive it. They have- nobly shown
fear of dishonesty. They have held
fast to vital things. They have
marched to the music of the time
They have filled their own ranks
with enthusiasts. They will make a
good fight. They have kept th
faith and deserve well whether they
win or lose this election. They had
reason to believe they could win the
election by a "wet" plank, a plank
which would merely demand the
modification of the Volstead law.
William Allen White; great prohibi
tionist, great republican and great
reporter said in one of his letters
from the convention that with such
a plank they could carry every At
lantic coast state except Pennsylvan
ia, New Hampshire and Maine.' This
Is not overstated, it would give
more votes than necessary for a vic
tory. Still this convention stood
against it and resisted the eloquence
of Bourke Cockran. On the Irish
question and the labor question the
convention also showed that it had
character and high courage. They
have accomplished great things, and
tried to do other things, chief
among them being to enlist this na
tion in the league of nations to pre
vent future wars. These are the
four big vote getters of the campaign
and . the party expression on them
is altogether creditable to a democ
racy on trial. ,
The enduring power of this ad
ministration is shown in every im
portant plank in the platform. ThU
Is more than can be said of the pow
er of any other democratic adminis
tration since Jackson's. It ha.s been
better than the Jackson adminis
tration. It wielded more power
safely. Jackson left the country.the
heritage of a panic,, the most severe
in its history. This administration
eaves the country . bomb proof
igainst panics.
William Jennings Bryan, the
peerless" boy leader of the past.
was present intending to no good,
but his counsel would have been
ruinous to tbe party. It would I'avc
been a renunciation of party charac
ter. It would have , stultified the
party record. It would have maite
the party as foolish as it was ir,
1S96, when he captivated it with
words and led it to defeat, disgrace
ful defeat. This alludes to his anti-
league attempts which were tanta
mount to repudiation of the party
record.
Mr. Cryan .would have run away
from the league of nations i.sue. lie
would have, -thereby, introduced
toubt again as to the wisdom of the
eadership of his party and its rit'l
fulness to govern. lie would havo
gnored the morality and the Chris-
ianity of the league issue. lie would
have put a premium upon a selEsl.
course for the nation and bid .he
levil take the hindermost. ,Rut he
lid not control. The league of na-
ions is bound to be the vote moving
ssue of the coming campajgn. 1 r.e
nobality of that issue will lift up tbr
iemocratic party again even though
f shall fail to win this election. Th"i
iquor question the labor question
that may appeal to voters is ephe
meral and ignoble by comparison
with that of the establishment of a
league of nations headed by a great
nation dedicated to peace on earth
and good will to men. Sioux City
Tribune.
:o: :
FOE. SALE
Second hand binder, in good run
ning order. Priced right. Inquire
it Howard Graves, one mile south
of Plattsmouth. JlO-Gsw
i 1 1 i rl i I s i i I
W. A. ROBERTSON,
Lawyer. 4
Eflt ot Riley Hotel.
Coatea Elock,
Second Floor.
.4. 4.4wj-w-t.
R
An Electrical
Work Room
mwfmw
ovory Jrajrm''
Delco-Light enables you
to have an electrically
equipped work-room by
furnishing complete 'elec
tric service. Bright electric
lights for working in the
evenings after chores. The
electric power for operating
lathes, drills, grinders and
sharpeners.
Write for Catalog
ISY ROSENTHAL, Dealer
PHONE WALNUT 399
Omaha, Nebraska
Read this challenge
by the Edison Laboratories, and come in to hear i
the phonograph which stands behind it.1 '
An Invitation x
to Talking-Machine
Manufacturers
"We are informed that the rep
resentatives of one or more talking-machine
manufacturers have
stateel, on several occasions, that
they are able to distinguish be-,
tween a singer's voice, or instru
mentalist's performance, and the
New Edison's RE-CREATION of
such voice or performance."
"We hereby invite responsible
representatives of any reputable
talking-machine- manufacturer to
permit themselves to be blind
folded, and to listen to such a
comparison, in the presence of
Jud of their own choosing, in
dicating tc the judges when
they think they are listening to
the artist, and when to the New
Edison. There is only one con
dition attached, and that is that
the representatives of the talking-machine
company, and the
judges selected ' by them, shall
sign a written statement, setting
forth, in full detail, the results of
the test.
"The test will be made with an
Official Laboratory Model, taken
from stock, suchas can be bought
in any Edison dealer store."
(signed)
THOMAS A. EDISON, Inc.
IS
We have it in our store the. Official Laboratory
Model specified in the challenge. - .t
Read the "Invitation to Talking-Machine Manu
facturers." It's printed here, just as the Edison
Laboratories sent it out.
2 NEW EDISON,
"Th0 Pktntgriph with m Siul"
The Official Laboratory Model has proved its
Realism in 4000 Comparison Tests, made before
3,500,000 people all over the United States and
Canada. For instance, in Los Angeles recently,
an audience of 1,500 people was unable to tell
the difference between the living voice of Miss
Marie Morrisey, world-famous contralto, and its.
' Re-Creation by the New Edison.
There's a way for you to test the wonderful
Realism claimed for the Official Laboratory
Model in this sweeping challenge. We give Mr.
Edison's Realism Test Come in and let us .give
it to yoii.
The price of the new Edison has advanced less
than 15 since August 1, 1914. Mr. Edison
has absorbed the bulk of the increased cost
of material, skilled labor, and taxes. He is de
termined to keep the New Edison within the
reach of everyone. ' But conditions may force .
a price-advance. Buy your New Edison nowl
Our Budget Plan makes it easy. It is system
applied to spending. Ask about it.
WEYRICH & HADRABA
ALVO SCHOOL MEETING NOTICE
There will he a special meetins
of the legal voters of school district
No. 102, of Cass County, Nebraska,
held at the school house, on Friday
right, July 23d at 8:00 p. in., for
the purpose of voting on the follow
ing proposition.
Shall a levy of fifty mills on the
one dollar be made for general school
purpos?s in said district.
Dated this 29th day of June. 1920.
tf-w. K. 31. COATJIAN, Sec'y.
xrriri: to kkimtohs
Tin" State of .Nohraska, Cass court"-
ty, ss.
In tl:o county ourt.
In tlio tuuttt-r of the estate f Oliver
.1 utie.s tiilson. ileeeaseu.
To the creditors of said estate:
You me lieivhv r.ot if.eit. That I will
it at the County Court room in 1'latts-
niouth, in said county, on tlie 2fith ia.v
of Jnlv, A. 1. lH-'O mid on tlie L'Slh
day of "October, -. O. at 10 o'clock
a. m. each day, to receive and exam
ine all claims "rilnst said estate, with
n view to i neir no nisiiiienc ami allow
ance. The time limited for the pre
sentation of claims nurainst said estate
is three month from the "Jbth clay ot
.Inly. A. 1. 13'JO, and the time limited
lor payment of debts is one year liom
said f.lh day of July, j flirt.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said t'ountv Court this 24tli day of
June. HCO.
AL1.EX J. w-rrcsox.
(Heal) County Judge.
to rii:iiToit
Nebraska, Cass coun-
Miriii!
The Stale .of
I v, N.
In the County Court.
In the mat let- of the'estalc of Mary
J. John:, on, deceased.
To the ei editors of said estate:
Vmi an- hereby notified. That I will
sit at the County Court room in I'latts
niotith In said county on August 0th,
lr.: rt. and November !th. lO-'O.. at 9
n loi'k a. m. each day. to receive and
examine all claim against said estate.
tvili a view to their adjustment and
:llivance. The time limited for the
presentation of claims anainst said
estate in four months from the tith
day of July, A. 1 . ltt-rt, and the. time
limited for payment of debts is one
year from said Htli day of July. 19J0
Witness my hand and the seal of
said County Court, this ttth, day of
July, 1920. ALLEN j BKESOX.
(Seal) County Judge.
should not be granted to Benjamin P.
lidudman, administrator, to sell so
much of the above described real es
tate of said deceased as shall be
necessary to pay said debts, and ex
penses. It is further ordered that a copy of
this order be served upon all persons
interested in said estate- by causing
the same to be published oncft each
week for four successive weeks in the
Ciattsmouth Journal. a newspaper
printed and published in said county
of Cass, and State of Nebraska.
l-ated this lflth day of June, 1320.
JAMES T. H EG LEY,
Judge of the District Court.
CHAS. E. MARTIN,
jil-Jw Attorney for Petitioner.
I-KGAL XOTtCE
In the District Court of Cass coun
tv. Nebraska.
William Nickles, riaintilT. vs. Ber
nard G. Wiley; Albert It. Eikenbaiy;
the Southwest quarter of Sec. 36, Twp.
11. X. llpe. 13. E., in Cass courity, Ne
braska, and alt persons claiming any
interest of any kind in said real es
tate or any part thereof: the follow
ing named " persons and a,lso their un
known heirs, devisees and. personal
representatives of each of them, to-
wit: Claibourne K. Davis: Claybourne
K. Davis: Clarbourne V. Davis; Frank
&r Kidgeway. Defendants.
The above named defendants and
each of them are hereby notified that
on 'the 1st-dav of June. 1920, plaintiff
filed his suit in the District Court of
Cass county, Nebraska, the object and
purpose of which are to quiet and con
firm plaintiffs title in and to the
Southwest quarter of Section Town
ship 11, liange 13, east of the th I.
M., In Cass 'county, Nebraska, and to
enioln each and all of said defendants
from having or claiming to bave any
right, title, lien or interest, either le
gal or equitable in or to said real es
tate or any part thereof and to en
ioin said defendants and in any man
ner from interfering' with plaintiffs
possession and enjoyment of the said
premises and for general equitable re
lief. This notice is given you pur
suant to the order of said Court.
You are reqnired to answer said pe
tition on or beore Monday the 19th
day of Julv, 192(, or your -default will
be entered therein and Judgment
entered as praved for In the petition.
WILLIAM NICKLES,
, Plaintiff.
By D. O. DWTER,
j3-4w. His Attorney.
Bank.
inline
r
imnc.H to snow caisk
In the District Court of Cass coun
ty, Nebraska. "
'in the matter of the estate or Mae
E. Goodman, deceased.
This cause came on ror bearing upon
the petition of Benjamin l- Ooodman,
administrator of the estate of Mae E.
Goodman, deceased, prayins-for lw;ense
to sell an undivided-one-half interest
in Lots nine (9). ten (10), eleven (11)
and twelve (12). in Block one hundred
ten (11D in the City of riattsmouth.
Cass county. Nebraska, or sufficient
amount of the same to brintr the sum
of $S2.26 for the payment of debts
allowed agrainsi said estate. ; and al
lowances and costsr of administration,
for the reason that there is not suffi
cient amount of personal property -Jin
the possession of Benjamin F. Good
mn miMstrator. belonging to said
to rmv said debts, allowances
it ls'th'ercforc ordered that all per-
before "rn at chambers in the city o!
riattsmouth. in- said county, on the
nt Ai.troRf. A. D. -1920. at the
nour ot ten o'clock a. m.. to .how
cause if any there-by, why a license
fx (
lipil Jfft
ro-i-
THERE WAS A TIME WHEN THE HTH OF JULY MEANT
BLOWING UP YOUR MONEY IN GUNPOWDER AND OCCASION
ALLY LOSING AN EYE OR HAND.
TODAY WE HAVE "SAFE ATD SANE" CELEBRATIONS. WE
SAVE MONEY AND LIVES AND HAVE A BETTER TIME. x
INSTEAD OF "BLOWING" YOUR MONEY, PUT IT IN THE
BANK FOR SOME LUXURIES OR COMFORTS IN YOUR OLD AGE.
PUT YOUR MONEY IN OUR BANK.
YOU WILL RECEIVE Hf INTEREST ON TIME. DEPOSITS.
Farmers State Ban!
. PLATTSMOUTH. NEBRASKA