Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (July 7, 1924)
MONDAY, JULY 7, 1924. mi Foum PLATTSMOUTH SEMI WEEKLY JOURNAL Che plattemouth journal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH. NEBRASKA Catered at PootaCtce. Pifcttnmouth. Neb. aecoad-ciaM m' matter R SX7BSCBIPTION PUCE $2.00 - Joseph went out over all the land of Egypt, and Joseph was thirty years old. And in the seven plenteous years the earth broucht forth by handfuls. And he gathered up all the food of the seven years, whicli wre in the land of Egypt, and laid up the food in the cities. And the seven years of dearth began to come, according as Joseph had said; and the dearth was in all lands; but in the land of Egypt there was bread. And all countries came into Egypt to Joseph for to buy corn. Genesis xli, 45-57. o:o The only use some people have for their heads is to keep their ears apart. :o: When a mans wife makes him lead a dog's life, be goes to the bow wows. :o: Any Hon. will tell you what is the matter with this country is the op position party. :o: Farmers who failed to take up duck raisiutr this year appear to have made a mistake. o:o Choosinsr picnic weather is simple. Pick the day you want, then post pone it until the following day. :o: The New York convention certain ly has developed some of the darkest horses that ever entered a political race. :o: Mussolini is proving once more that your real revolutionists quits re. (lu;:ng as soon as he gets him self in. I :o: The people are urged to sound the loceta of reform, but more of them seem inclined to sound the saxophone ; with jazz music. :c: Somebody has termed it Hoof and Mouth Disease, we are told, because you hoof it all day and mouth about it all night golf, we mean. :o: The kid who thinks all will be well when his daddy quits spanking him is mistaken, for all the rest of the world will get in its licks then. 0:0 The way the republicans are wor rying ov( r a c andidate for the dem ocrnts makes one wonder what the anxiety really must be to the demo crats. 0:0 There is one thing about transmit ting speeches by radio. If the speak er later gets a hard drubbing for something he has said, he can not ! .... . . ; - - j . - . u 1 . . . k, in, art ui iaiuut cd. :o: Hang your banner on the outer ... 1 1 . . wall, put up your curb line flag-staff mm 1 t ,i, . 1 .1, c. , anl Jet the grand old Stars and . - , . . "i i" .-i-jjv ior an, lor una is me day we celebrate- -July 4th. at Plattsmouth. :o: "Pat Harrass 'em' is the new nam for Senator Pat Harrison of Mississippi, according to the Dallas Texas t Morning News, following the keynote speech at the National democratic convention. :o: Bel f mat. Ireland, claims to possess tbe five- biggest tnings of their kin,i in tli- world. They are the biggest shipyard, iiuen factory, tobacco fac tory, longest rope walk and the wMakey store- with the most storage room. -:oi- Emerson Hough left an estate of $114,000. His books on frontier life enjoyed wide popularity in the east, both in story and movie form. The superstition that the East likes the Wild West stuff is no idle rumor. 0:0 Thr. dollar credit, pected Ibwa club claims credit for corn. Perhaps it deserves but not all of it. It is sus the backward spring, cool weather anil a rainy June have com bined to make a somewhat stronger eltab than the very worthy Iowa or ganization. :o: Human face i3 gradually becom ing longer claims the British scien tist. Sir Arthur Keith. Long, nar row heads with sharp jaws, that's the tcnrter.cy. It's the result of more intense thinking. When a person think.; deeply, mouth tends to purse, cheeks to be pulled in and the chin sags downward. Taking life too eeriously does th same "wearing a long face." BATES, Publisher PEB YEAR IN ADVICE -o:o- If-W-H-H t4WWf T "fr T LINES TO REMEMBER Faith is the continuation of reason. Williom Adams. .t. i f-i-H-W-H-l 4- : o : As a man doesn't think, so isn't he. -:o: A little sense ignorance. will hide a lot of :o: Curiosity is nearly a tiresome a taskmaster as ambition. :o: The matrimonial bark is wrecked by matrimonial barking. :o: Third parties always cause trouble both in matrimony and politics. :o: Religion is free and so is water. but somebody has to pay for the pump. : o: Some experiences of life may be broadening but they are also short- eninS- -0:0- The average man's purse is just a port where pay checks stop for sail ing orders. :o: How times have changed. When Eve discovered she was naked she was ashamed. :o: A man who has to work hard for a living is probably kept out of a lot of mischief. -0:0- The farmer provides the city with .'cod and the city provides the farm er with advice. -0:0- A lot of people pay more atten tion to what they are going to do than to what they actually do. :o:- 'Make the flae stand for some- thtmr" m- t', i..iv FYmrth or!,. and the rest of the year it stands for anything. -:o: imii a. uiau iunus nan a. I preparing to waste his time and the ! other half in wasting it. and all the while complains about no business. f.. .. .. . . . , 1 1 a . 1 rr. o We used to kill a couple of hun dred on the Fourth of July with firecrackers. Then they made it "safe ami sane." Now we knock tlu-m off with motor cars. :o: Public speakers should remember one thiug about radio. II cannot smoothe out mispronunciations and bad grammar as nicely as tl a news- papers can -.0: A man with two or three children from 12 on up doesn't know what ( ... . . . , uuiii 1 1 Liuvn annul veil . aQd hears them quarreling over . . . (whose turn it is to take it out. m : l o r v- it. until ) ..k . . ... . . . . .. Edmund Burke once declared that you can't indict a whole people, but a member of congress recently de clared that "congress is no better nor no worse than the people." : o : Americans rank second as fisher men, taking 89 million dollars worth of sea food out of the ocean in a year. Japan is first, with 89 million. Tne world eats 1,000 million dollars worth of flsh yearly. A tremendous j supply of food is going to waste in the ocean. Future generations will "farm'' the sea as we now intensely farm the land. High price is the brake now. -0:0- Charles Rantz, Jewish wholesale Im.-icry salesman, is opposed to the unit rule. He spent hours shouting Bi an alternate in the Washington delegation in a vain attempt to get recognition from Chairman Walsh during the Ku Klux Klan verbal battle. Rantz has explained to ev- jrbodjr else that he spent $600 to attend the democratic National con vention and under the unit rule he was forced to vote with the Ku Klux Klan. Is his opposition finan cial or racial? Wall Digging and Gleaning We are prepared to sink wells, clean wells or do any kind of well work J. W. Ilobson & Son AN ODE TO GOD Among so many can he care? Can special love be everywhere? A myriad homes, a myriad ways, And God's eye over every place? I asked; my soul bethought of this In just that very place of His Where He hath put and keepeth you God hath no other thing to do! Mrs. A. D. T. Whitney o:o Well, it's all over. -:o:- Wasn't it a grand and gloruios !iay'.' -:o:- Plattsmouth made friends with her "open door" policy. Everything: free : o : No home is complete without a few uncomfortable chairs in which to welcome unwelcome company. :o: Reliable statistics would show that practically 90 per cent of the rich uncles have babies named after them. :o: Night and day are both fairly gnod for sleeping purposes, but the very best time is while the baby is asleep. :o: Did you ever notice that it is not half as far going to the river to fish as it is coming back after you didn't get any? -: o : - A Florida man tried to smoke mos quitos out with a lighted paper and now he has no mosquitos because he has no house. :o: The conventions teach us that ev ery mother's son has a chance to grow up and almost be nominated for vice president. :o: Music is getting so you can't tell whether the neighbors are playing the phonograph, fighting, crying or washing the dishes. :o: Having worked off its physical ex uberance with nonsensical noise, the New York convention has cleared the way for using its brains. ; o: Jud Tunkins says regulating bath ing suits by law is going to be dif ficult until the folks read law books as close as they do fashion maga zines. 0:0 Every kid knows that about half 'lie licRings ne gets are just to re lieve his parent's overwrought nerves and net for anything especially bad he hes done. -:o: A pastor's sermon Sunday was on the text. "How Old Art Thou" and evidently was not selected for its special appeal to the women of his congregation. :o: When the shop strike drug out for months some of our neighboring con temporaries thought it sounded a death note for Plattsmouth. Again, when the score of brass moulders were removed to Havelock they said the shop3 would be moved away piece by piece. The recent vacation lay-off of two weeks again caused them to take renewed worries over our future welfare. Today there are more men at work in the local shops than at any time since the wartime rush. Don't worry, friends, the old town is still on the map and will continue to thrive and grow. FOR OVER 40 YEARS HAIalVS CAT AHFUT MFTDICINB has been used successfully tn the treatment of Catarrh. HALL"e CATARRH MEDICINE con ptFts of an Ointment which Quickly Relic-ves by local application, and ihe Internal Medicine, r. Tonic wlllch a ts MirouRh the Blood en the Mucous Sur aceq. thus reducirar the iiifiamnvttion. PoH bv all '"rrupists J. CbeOWsr Co. Toledo Ohio. Our stand on the marrying ques tion is that a man who can't stay at home should stay single. :c: The doctor who prescribes a sum mer in the mountains for madame, never loses her patronage. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. By virtue of an Execution issued by James Robertson, Clerk of the District Court within and for Cass county, Nebraska, and to me direct ed. I will on the 6th day of August. A. D. 1924, at 10 o'clock a. m. of said day at the south front door of court house, i'lat tsmout li. Nebraska, in said county, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the following property to-wit : and trans script thereof filed Lots seven (7). eight (8) and nine (9), Block seventy-five (75). in the City of Platts mouth. in Cass county, Ne braska The same being levied upon and taken as the property of Max Preis, defendant, to satisfy a judgment of I said court recovered by Hartman i Furniture Company, a corporation, ! plaintiff against said defendant. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, July 7th, A. D. 1924. E. P. STEWART. Sheriff Cass County, Nebraska. CAL AND CHARLEY Now that the tumult and the shouting has died out, and the re publican delegates are all back from Cleveland, it is slowly dawning on the American mind that it is a mighty poor combination the G. O. P. is ofTering us this year Cautious Cal and Cussing Charlie. "You cuss'em, Charlie, I'm a Pur itan." is going to be Coolidge's cam paign slogan. And they do say when Charlie gets into profane action he suggests a city editor round about 12 o'clock at night trying to handle three or Tour big stories at once, while the telephone switchboard operator per sists In connecting him up with all the cheap sports in town who are about to wend their way home from the pool rooms. With the aid of old Helen Maria, Charlie cussed his way to fame. In the national spotlight he is equally conspicuous with Babe Ruth, Jack Dempsey and Gaston B. Means. The republicans could not have found a better man to share with Coolidge the trials and tribulations that are coming to him in his cam paign. When trouble approaches the point at which it is unbearable, Charlie can lift his head toward high heavens, like a lonely wolf on a ride prairie of sorrow, and cuss himself to consolation. Coolidge, laboring under the handicap of having been born a strict New Englander. probably nev er experienced the joy of giving vent to his feelings in wholesome wearing. That is one of the great human things the man has missed. Maybe through contact with Dawes le will begin to taste that joy be fore the campaign is over. 11 ne rio . he win be txtter nueci ior me presidency. It the president is the least bit sensitive, he must have been hor "ibly embarassed as he sat in the White house the other day and lis tened by radio to the nominating speech of President Burton, of the University of Michigan. Burton made f him a ridiculous phenomenon of virtue. Just because a man has to bear up under Mayflower ancestry. and doesn't swear like Charlie Dawes is no reason that he should be hu- millated by being held up as an angel who has never been accorded proper recognition through having assign- d to him a seat in heave.i. As he !icard the mouthings of Dr. Burton, Mr. Coolidge must have looked un astly around to see if he had sprout ed wings. We fancy that, after all, the president would like to feel that he faintly resembled the average man. There are in this country millions of people who will neither steal nor commit murder and whose conduct in all things is so ordered as not to affect adversely the lives of j m m , , , . - - ... their fellow-citizens. Nobody doubts the personal integrity of Mr. Cool-f idc. but it la positively disgusting to have him held up as the unap proachable paragon of Virtue. If tbi. Is his only qualification for the 1 umiii ih jt . r null uuilfl unit j"oii.itf .. .. body with a tew more qualifications. 1 Dr. .Burton also dwelt on the presi-1 dent's Americanism. Just what sort of an intangible thing this Ameri canism is nobody has made quite clear. Offhand, we should think that every man who is an American citi- :i and who is loyal to the flag may lay claim to Americanism. It ought to be common property. If Calvin Coolidge has acquired more than his share of Americanism, to the detri ment of other loyal citizens, he ought to be brought to the bar of justice and made to disgorge. But there is a strong suspicion that Dr. Burton was unjust to Mr. Coolidge. of us have any idea that the presidi nt has cornered the American ization market. Anyway, if they malign the presi denl too much, he can get Charlie to cuss 'em. The decline of the Knights ot Labor has been attributed largely to numerous strikes, most of them sympathy strikes, which were order ed In spite of Powderly's opposition, but whicli failed of their purposes. Today the organization is relatively small in numbers and influence. 0:0 CAUTIOUS GAMBLERS Do you play the market? In one month nearly 14 millions shares of stock change hands on the New York Stock Exchange. A big figure, yes! But it s over 11 million shares less than in the same month. May, of last year and nearly IS million shares less than in May. 1922. The public is in a cautious mood, taking few chances. That's a healthy Condition that will help restore busi ness to normal. When money doesn't BOW into speculation, it does flow in to sure thingu production. -:o: 1 When you slap a man on the back ; and he kicks you in the eye you can easily see he is sunburned. :o: A good harvest Land right now is worth four agents. THE GUIDING FORCE Peculiar experience of a certain fiction writer: He had a rush order from a magazine so he went far in to the Canadian woods to write the story a novelet. Out in the woods, two days from even a village, his typewriter broke down. The fiction writer tried writing with pen and ink. Then he made the curious discovery that he could not get his brain functioning to write unless his fingers were touch ing typewriter keys. This is a not uncommon experience of all writers, including newspaper men. The typewriter for all practical purpose's has become a definite and indispensable part of their bodies. Some writers sit down at the type writer and rattle off several hundred words that go promptly into the waste basket just to start their brains functioning. What would Babe Ruth be in base ball if he didn't have a bat? He is not Babe, the popular Uloi, until ne gets his fingers wrapped around a bat. The bat has become a definite part of his physical expression of himself. The greatest violinist is an ordi nary man unless he has a violin in his hands. rle cannot express him self without his violin, any more than a bricklayer can express him self without bricks or trowel and mortar. The gold beater is a man of phe nomenal skill but the skill is ab sent unless he has his beaters and oth r instruments. The famous creative architect. Louis H. Sullivan once commented that all inventions arc merely an extension of man's fingers. The hovel, for instance, is simply an; extension or elaboration of the c up- ped fineers and palm. A pair of ice . . ... o f mm h man arms. Tlu body of man is a machine for j expressing himself and his function or purpose 111 tins lire. ro are snov els. typewriters and other inventions whicli man has added to assist his body. It makes us wonder whether, when death comes, the Real Self is affected any more than when a shov eler breaks his shovel The force that handles the shovel continues. That force is man's spirit or soul. The same force uses the physical body a3 its machine or tool. Death eliminates the worn out or damaged machine. The guiding force lives on. 0:0 BELIGI0N OF PRESIDENTS With religious prejudice cropping out in the national democratic con vention In New York, the subject of the religion of our presidents is of ' nnrrtf : - lniir, to nil nniMrii-ann 1 " , "line prayer or me pcMinoner anemia whether natives or not. "not be granted, and that notice of Qf ,; i(lents of the United the pendency of said petition and . . . . that the hearing thereof be given to noi aninaieei wun uie cnurcn. 1110111- as Jefferson, so-called liberal, was not a sectarian and was not a mem-i I tier ,,f n v f.rm?iri HaVAVIW hia! l . , 'biographer, Randall, declares that j 1 Jefferson was a believer in Chris-1 tianity. Andrew Johnson was the other president not a church mem ber. His wife was Methodist and Johnson is said to have had Metho dist preference. Eight of the presidents were Epis copalians. They were George Wash- ! ington, James Madison, James Mon- j roe William Henry Harrison, John Tyler, Zachary Taylor, Franklin Pierce and Chester Arthur. Seven were Presbyterians. They were Andrew Jackson, Jas. K. Polk, James Buchanan, Abraham Lincoln, G rover Cleveland, Benjamin Harri son and Woodrow Wilson. The Methodist had four, including Andrew Johnson, the other three be ing General Grant. Rutherford B. Hayes and William McKinley. The Unitarians had four, John Adams. John Quincy Adams, Millard Fillmore and William H. Taft. Two presidents were Reformed Dutch, Martin Van Buren and Theo dore Roosevelt. One, James A. Gar field, was of the Disciples. Warren G. Harding was the only Baptist president. Calvin Coolidge, presi dent and the republican nominee for a second term, is a Congregational ist. : o: MAKE 0E MAR A woman changed her mind at the democratic national convention and by the aid of her half vote helped defeat the anti Klan plank. She was i Miss Marion Colley. of Georgia. She said she changed her vote against ; the plank because they told her she ' would stab McAdoo in the back by voting otherwise. Sunday she want-! ed to change again. It was too late. I But even with steady or changeable women shaping a convention in these days of woman suffrage, we have j nothing new. Back in 1868, when jthe democrats were in convention in 1 Tammany hall in New Vork, the' chance remark of a girl blocked her father's opportunity to be nominat ed. The girl was Miss Kate Chase, the daughter of Salmon P. Chase, of Ohio. Arterwards she was the wife of Senator Sprague of Rhode Island. "It's all a question of whether the democratic party has sense enough to seize its opportunity," she tact lessly said at a hotel in behalf of her father's candidacy. "I fear that when the South seceded the brains of the party went with it. Since then it has rarely missed an oppor tunity to blunder." A cub reporter heard and wrote. The printed words blasted the hopes of her father, who had a strong chance for nomination. Yet, many people wonder if there is not a great deal of truth in the Ohio girl's remark. Blunders have been fre quent in the party. The blunder over the Klan was partially checked by the Georgia girl of changing mind. 0:0 A man who says he is too poor to marry is not in love. LEGAL NOTICE To Bearling, real name un known; John Doe, real name un known, and John Doe Company, a ( corporation, real name unknown, Defendants: You and each of you are hereby notified that on the 14th day of 1 May, A. D. 1924, Henry Klemme filed his petition in the County Court Of Cass county, Nebraska, against you and each of you, the object and prayer of which petition Is to recov er damages against you and each of you, in the sum of Five Hundred Dollars (S500.00) and cots of suit 1 for damages to plaintiff's car on or about .May h, i.4. 1 lou are required 10 answer " , - .,. ,,,, ., j Gf August, A. D. 1924. HENRY KLEMME. M30-4W. Plaintiff. ORDER OF HEARING AND NO TICE OF PROBATE OF WILL In the County Court of Cass COUn- ,iv. ooiuniid. State of Nebraska. County of Cass, fas. To all persons interested in the estate of Adam Fornoff, Sr., deceas ed: On reading the petition of Adam B. Fornoff and Philip Fornoff pray ing that the instrument filed in this court on the 24th day of June, 1924. and purporting to be the last will and testament of the said deceased. may be proved and allowed, and re corded as the last will and testa ment of Adam Fornoff. Sr., deceased; that said instrument be admitted to probate and the administration of said estate be granted to Adam B. Fornoff and Jacob Fornoff, as execu tors; It is hereby ordered that you, and all persons interested in said matter, may. and do, appear at the County Court to be held in and for said county, on the 26th day of July, A. D. 1924. at ten o'clock a. m., to show cause, if any there be. why I m . , .... . , . 1 all nAnwttm interested in srfid matter by publishing a copy of this order in I the Plattsmouth Journal, a senii l weekly newspaper printed in said county, for three successive weeks i prior to paid ciay 01 oeariug. Witness my hand, and seal of said court . this 24th day of June, A. D. 1924. ALLEN J. BEESON,. Seal) j26-3w. County Judge. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. By irtue of an Order of Sale is (sued by James Robertson, Clerk of l the District Court, within and for Cuss county, Nebraska, and to me di rected, I will, on the 19th day of July. A. D. 1924. at 10 o'cloex a. m. of said day, at the south front door of the court house, in Plattsmouth, ; Nebraska, in said county, sail at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the following described real estate, to-wit: Lots numbered one (1), two (2), three (3) and four (4) ex cept railroad right-of-way of the C. B. & Q. Railroad company, and except that part of Iot num bered two (2) lying south of the said railroad right-of-way; al so that part of the southwest quarter of the northwest quar ter (SWy4 NW14) described as follows: Commencing at the northwest corner of the south west quarter of the northwest quarter (SW4 NW'4) thence running east 660 feet, thence south 411 feet thence north west 666 feet, parallel with the State Farmers 9 James Walsh, President Insures Farm Property and City Dwellings Offers the best policy and contract for less money. Best and cheapest insurance company doing business in Ne braska. Pays the loss promptly. 7,200 members. Organ ized in 1895. Insurance in force, $67,000,000. Call or write TODAY tomorrow may be TOO LATE. CALL ON OR WRITE L. L. DIENSTBIER 2615 Harney Street Omaha, Nebraska north line of tie C. 3. & Q. R R. Co. right-of-way to a point 2S9 feet south of the place of beginning, thence north 289 feet to the said place of beginning, excepting however from said parcel that portion thereof conveyed to the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Company by Jh. Peter Keil and wife by deed dated October 7th, 1897, and recorded October l.'Uh, 1897, in Book 32, at page 34fi of the Deed Records of Cass County, Nebraska; also that part of the northeast quarter of thb southeast quarter (NE4 BBK ) lying north of the right-of-way of the C. B. & Q. R. R. Co., all the above described lands being in Section thirty-six (36), Township thirteen (13), North. Range twelve (12); also ail that part of Government lot number ed six (6) in Section thirty one (31), Township thirteen (13), North, Range thirteen (lo) east of the Sixth P. M., lying north of the right-of-way of the C. B. & Q. R. R. Co., con taining in all 172 acres, more or less, according to Govern ment survey, all in Cass coun ty, Nebraska The same being levied npon and taken as the property of Jacob P. Falter. Mary Falter, Frank E. Val lery, Waterloo Creamery Company and Herbert 8. Daniel, Trustee In Bankruptcy of the Waterloo Cream ery Company, Bankrupt, defendants, to satisfy a judgment of said court recovered by The Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company, plaintiff against said defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, June 11th, A. D. 1924. E. P. STEWART, Sheriff Cass County, Nebraska. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebrasaa, Ones coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of i Catherine Molninger, deceased. i,i To the creditors of said estate- Yon re hrp).v nniidi th-,t t I Will sit at the County Court room in Plattsmouth in said county, on the 1 lth day of July, A. D. 1924 and on the 10th day of October. A. D. 1924, at 10 o'clock a. m. of each day, to receive and examine all claims ."'.'linst sniil estate w'th a rtow tn their adjustment snd allowance. The time limited for the nrenenf ntion of claims against said estate is three months from the 10th day of July, A. D. 1924, and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 10th day of July, 1924. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 7th day of June, 1924. ALLEN J. BEESON, (Seal) jl2-4w County Judge. GETS SHOT AT IN OMAHA. Edward Daughterty, 20. 840 South Twenty-eighth street , was shot in the left arm and taken to St. Joseph's hospital at 5 Thursday aft ernoon, when he ran from Officer Antone Potach in Mandan park. Daugherty, together with his fath er. William Daughtery, Denver, Colo.. V. J. Sknned. 1920 South Forty-ninth street. Opal MsCoy. ."26 South Twenty-first avenue. Mable Smith, 1101 Farnam street, and Madge Russel. 3125 Seward street, had been on a swimming party in the river below Mandon n-rk. On their return from the rivel thd crowd became so noisy that nearby residents called police. All were booked on charges of being drunk and disturbing the peace. The young er Daugherty had an additional charge of illegal possession of liq uor placed against him. Potach said he did not fire at Daugherty, explaining that the trig ger of the revolver caught in his pocket when he pulled it to frighten the crowd and stop the youth. The elder Daugherty said he and his son had driven to Omaha from Denver for a visit with a married daughter here. -World Herald. The daugherty family are well known in this city where they re sided for a number of years and where the elder Daugherty was em ployed as a cigar maker a number of years ago. The family have re sided at Denver for several years. Automobile Piintiit! First-Glass Work Guaranteed! Prices Reasonable Mirror Replating and Sign Work! A. F. KN8FLIGEK, Phone 592-W, Plattsmouth Insurance Co. J. F. McArdle, Sec'j