The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, December 07, 1925, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    MONDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1925.
FLATTSHOUTH SEMI-WEEKLY JOtTBSTAl
IAQT -TSUa
CONTENTMENT
be flaf temouth lournal
f'UxJLISHED SEM1-WEEZLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA
Ftr"1 at Foatoftlc. Plattamonth. Nab., u cod-elaa mall matter
A. BATES, Publisher
'SUBSCRIPTION PEJCE $2.00 PEE YEA P. EN ADVANCE
WHO SHALL STOP GOD'S HAND
Health is wealth, but wealth isn't
health.
-:o:-
For the Lord of hosts hast purposed,;
and who shall disannul it? and His' Increased earnings bring increased
hand is stretched out, and who shall ' yearnings,
turn it back? I
:o:-
-Isaiah 14:27.
-c:-
A "White" Christmas is what the
I kids would have.
Rows tangle court trial of Col.
Mitchell.
:o:
You can't get a good man or a bad
drunk down.
:o:
-:o:
An optimist is a man who is see
ing signs of spring already.
:o:-
Governor Finchott may end
strike. So he says.
:o:
Burglars who got some jewels in
Terrytown. X. Y., didn't tarry.
:o:
The old man can't work your way
through the school of experience.
Make a face at the world and
! makes a long shot at something,
coal: o:
Omaha keeps on clamoring for
free bridge across the Big Muddy.
:o:
it
Another Bargain Day drawing near
News from London. A geologist
claims the world is only one million
years old.
-:o:
News from Paris. A minister there
has married 3,000 couples. And he is
in time
trinkets.
buy your Christmas, still at large.
-:o:
Germany back in fold "Prodigal"
of European family welcome in Lo
carno signing.
: o :
Some of the army and navy flyerj
are now dropping bombs on their
superior officers.
-:o
-:o:-
Evidentlv the war on "Ma" Fer
guson in Texas, is looming up great;
as time goes on. j
: o
A rich man's son has a hard time.
He has to get his marriages annulled
in the newspapers.
o:
25025
) Saliie f
Plaice j
I lears h
I war prices
pec f
RULES FOR PEDESTRIANS
Journalistic cutups continue to
You can keep the telephone from have their fling at the present-day
- ,.t -,-r, r,a -f HUtiirhinc von bv failine: to Dav the traffic problem. The Daily Journal,
4 J tUU 1C - J 11.1 1C i 11 11 U U I v. - " . - - j
the boys garged in trousers having till for a couple of months. itself has b?en quiity from time to
t ;o: j lime oi indulging in a. nine juiine
. ! We knew a man once who got so irony at the expense of some phase
her cuarters and mad at his neighbor he gave his little of the local situation, but now it is
bov a drum for Christmas.
14-inch bottoms.
The
moon has
halves .ubt that's because she doesn't
get full very often.
:o:
teemed contemporary, the Brooklyn
pedestrians."
Having passed numerous rules to
... t . i i:.
I a acoate as ceia uy rau.o re- Union uhich has gORe to tht pins
Farmers are not the only ones who centiy. w nai a nne d io aigue f formuiatjnr a ;.t Gf "rules tor
make their living from the soil. Con- with someone you can't whip,
sider the laundry. J :o:
-o: I ' , ! regulate the motorists, most of which
Just because you were married in ice eye oi a neeuie. roe ; an iut-uuui
a church is no reason for staying by the time he finds it in the hay-
away from that place now stack.
:o:
I
:o:-
Tinrk and luck en around together. Herbert Hoover is the economic
u (
so much they look alike and one is president of the United States, says
'David Lawrence. And Calvin Coolidge
lis the economical one.
often taken for the other.
:o:
Bad news from New York, A bomb
exploded in a coffee house. Of course
the coffee was to weak to run.
:o:
Another big jewelry theft in Oma- French Cabinet refused to tumble
ha. Bandit3 evidently want to give! -o:
are violated daily, the Union thinks
it is now up to the officials to pass
rules to regulate pedestrians so as to
make travel safe. The following sug
gestions may be of value, the writer
fancies:
"No pedestrian shall cross a street
Our idea of a noteworthy weekj Persons wishing to cross a street
would be one in which the Prince of will notify the policeman on the
Wales did not fall off a horse and the corner who will notify them when
their turn comes.
their sweethearts a Christmas pres
ent.
:o:
It is just as
What has become of the doctor who
"Pedestrians must wear a green
silk ribbon on the right arm and a
made bandages out of petticoats at)red silk ribbon on the Ieft arm to
street acidents? inquires a contem-. enable the policeman to tell which
easy to buy your porary. We are reliably informed that Kid of thp np(iP?trian ; r.p:,r to him.
Christmas presents early as it is to
buy them
think so.
late, if you would only
-:o:-
H. E. Crandall, state examiner for
the doctor is still there.
The move of the anthracite coal
operators and miners to discuss their
differences seems to have come coin-
Country Treasurers, is out for the cidentally with their discovery that
republican
Auditor.
nomination for
-:o:-
i
State, the tmblic had foreotten all about
their differences.
-:o:
Seattle has a searchlight with a
port or starboard.
"Pedestrians must also be provided
with small horns to blow when crass
! ing the street.
j "Pedestrians must carry cards on
I which are written their names, ad
dresses, occupation and their favorite
undertaker.
"While no pedestrian may cross
"Red" Granse received in the
range of 20U miles, mis ougnt to De neighborhood of $20,000 for his nrst " -"- " n.r.c 9 an auiumu-
a great aid to night motorists look-jg;ame of professional football. Those bile sti11 a ear nia suddenly dash
ing for a place to park. persons who think the higher educa-'around a corner, in which case the
-:o: tion doesn t pay Haven t learned tneir ui ficm a-
Fact you ought to know; Jack!footbal, ag lhey 6hould
Dempsey, before he was 30 years old,!
had won the heavweight champion-. There are all kinds of motorists an
sistance to the police.
ship of the world and had retired
from the ring.
:o:
How many battles would Colonel
Mitchell had to have won to have
commanded all the free publicity he
has received since h; laid down his
f.rst barrage on the army and navy?
"I"!'-
I-I I I -I-I'
Dr. John A. Griffin J
read a newspaper while
V
Dentist
Office Hours: 9-12; 1-5.
Sundays and evenings
by appointment only.
PHONE 229
Soennichsen Building
"Old and feeble persons must have
escort of at least four persons
who should be disciplined, but the one when crossing a street.
that should be place in durance vile "Don't cross a street if possible.
for life is he who sounds his horn all no matter how urgent vour business
the time those in front are busy try- may be; telephone, telegraph or
ing to get out of a traffic jam. write.
:o: "Don't
A Virginian shot his brother-in- crossing a strppt
law. mistaking the relative for a .At night pedestrians should carry
possum. That news story really flashlights or miners' lamps attacked
ought to have been illustrated. TI;e to their hats,
man who looks like a 'possum deeervos; -strict observance of
(
j it is believed, will lessen the number
'of accidents, and keen manv homes
Football has a particularly refin d intact."
influence at Northwestern Univc .-
sity. In celebration of their team j1 THERE IT HANGS
victory, students at this instituti nj
attempted to destroy the town's It was missing for a few days, but
policemen. Probably thought th y once again the portrait of that great
didn't fit in with aestheticism or patriot, Albert jB. Fall, .Jooks be-
neignly down from the walls of the
Suppose it were within your power
to confer absolute contentment on
each and every person in America;
would you do it?
Sometimes, when the going is hard
and life offers a few more bumps than
it ordinarvily does, it seems as if
contentment is more desirable of at
tainment than any other condition
possible.
To be content; to be satisfied with
things as they are; to be happy in
one's lot, whatever it may be; to be
able to accept hardship and sorrow
and injustice with philosophic calm
doesn't it almost seem as if it
would be the greatest boon one could
grant ?
And yet there is another quality, J
the direct opposite to all this, which!
has been called "the divine discon-j
tent."
Poets have had it, and artists, and
rebels and liberators and wild proph
ets since time began.
It has been blazoned on the sream
ing banners of all the- great hosts that
have stormed the heights of injustice
and wrong. It has driven men to
Drisons and jrallows. even to mad
houses as witness Nietsche and
Dean Swift and our life is richer
because of it.
The spark of discontent burned in
the breasts of the men who freed
human slaves. It inspired the ragged
throngs that knocked down France's
Bastile, and the frontiersmen who
once tossed a cargo of tea into Bos
ton Harbor. It animated Martin Lu
ther, and Washington, and Garibaldi,
and Bolivar, and the Apostle Jaul,
and Lincoln, and Wilson.
No. The highest boon the human
race can have is not to be content;
not just now.
Rather let us hope that all of ua
can be divinely discontented, at time;
that we can be made so dissatisfied
that we will take no rest from the
farth: that we will never endue that
a lie shall prosper or that a truth
shall fall; that we will not be quiet
so long as any of our number are con
demned to lives of poverty and sor
row. The time will come when we may
all aspire to contentment.
1$ will come, perhaps, when a hun
dred thousand American children no
longer toil their youth away in dreary
factories; when the squalid miles of
tenenments that make mock of our
great cities have given way to clean
decent homes; when places of honor
and power are given to our thinkers
and artists instead of to our ex-ward
heelers, professional athletes and sim
pering screen actors and actresses;
when freedom and truth are words
that command respect, instead of be
ing mere words.
But right now, if it were within
your power to confer absolute con
tentment on each and every person in
America, would you do it?
:o:
An Ideal Investment For
Your Christmas Fund
If you have a Christmas Savings Fund
to apply against the purchase of a Ford
car or otherwise are in a position to
make a down payment at this time of
approximately 25 of the purchase
price, you can get immediate delivery
of a Ford car have it for Christmas
morning.
And what an investment!
With your Ford car will come a new
interest in life for the entire family.
Think of the hours out-of-doors! A
wider circle of friendships!
The Ford Touring Car, with close
fitting curtains that give protection
from any weather, is an exceptional
value. Or, if you prefer a closed car, the
Tudor Sedan is ideal for family use.
See these cars today in the salesroom
of the nearest Authorized Ford Dealer.
And invest your savings right!
' Vt) Detroit, Mich. "
TOURING CAR
(D)
. $260 r
. 520
Runabout
Coupe
Tudor Sedan 580
Tor dor Sedan 660
Clewed car in color.
Demountable rim
and starter extra on
open car.
All price . o. b. Oerrou
COOLIDGE AND CHAPMAN
mim
to get his picture in the papers.
.o:
something of the sort.
President Coolidge has pardoned
Gerald Chapman and thereby lifted a
25-year sentence to the federal pen
itentiary, but Chapman says in effect
that although he is much obliged to
the president for extending clemency,
he believes he will not accept same.
He doesn't want to impose upon the
president's good nature; besides, par
don in Atlanta means a neck break
ing in Connecticut, in the peculiar. r
circumstances of this case.
The president acted promptly to
remove all ofstacles in the way of
Chapman's execution for murder in
Connecticut, it appearing that the
penitentiary sentence had priority
over the death penalty.
The lay public had assumed that
this action by the president practical
lv ended the legal duel; but Chap
man's lawyer has a theory that it is .1.
optional with Chapman whether he I
says he will accept; but we suspect
he is nearer death than he fancies.
We rejoice in the death of no man; .j.
but if any man should die for hia
crimes against society, who is more "j"
deserving of death than Gerald Chap-
man? lie is a professional highway
man and gunman. During all these
The National Industrial Confer
ence Board finds that 122 cents of
every dollar of income goes for taxes.
The percentage, according to our own
experience, depends upon circum
stances. While a fellow is paying his
taxes he will swear that the amount
handed over represents at least 50
percent of his income during the year.
W. REX YOUNG
PLATTSMOUTH,
NEBRASKA
General Auctioneering
Also Pure Bred Sales
Firady arage
Hudson and Essex
MOTOR CARS!
United States Tires!
DEPENDABLE REPAIRING!
Phone 58. PJattsmouth, Neb.
The merchants of Plattsmouth were
never better prepared to meet the
wants of the Holiday shoppers than
they are today. The beauty of the
shop windows denote that fact.
il
years of his maturity he has been at V
Interior Department building at war with society; he is a desperate, X
Washington. You may banish the; dangerous man and has committed..
idea that its temporary removal had i crimes which law says deserve the ex
any other significance than the the'trcme penalty. Others had died for
wall had to be redecorated. Those! murder; why should Chapman es- V
. . . I . - i
suspicious souls who made inquiry cape again?
were Drusquely Informed that there :o:-
is no reason for omitting Fall's pic
ture while his case is still before the
courts. So there it hangs. From pres
ent indications, no doubt it will con
tinue to hang there for the edifica
tion of the multidue until the crack
of doom. Such is the reward for Al-
ibert B. Fall's well-known services to
the republic.
:o:
Let us pay the multiplicand table V
the tribute of saying that it has stood T
the test of time without modification. '
If you have a new idea as authentic
as that on which the multiplication
table is built, then you have discov- j
ered something for which the world Ji.
will honor and reward you. The
great virtue of the multiplication i
table is not in simplicity and conven- v
ient form, but its essential truth. ' ju
. i
:o: .J.
Blowouts are getting costlier day
hv rtav Tiro mnlrera gra raiainir the J
i "J 0
j prices and so are bootleggers.
At present I have the follow
ing sales listed and more yet
to come but not ready to be
advertised. Those that do not
have the exact date set, will
be dated later and appear in
ad when dated. Several of
these sales are Pure Bred.
DECEMBER
10 Edd Smallfoot, Dunbar
14 Swanson & Son, Mead
15 John Pearson, Mead
JANUARY
5 Mr. Greennade. Dunbar
6 Chas. Mutz, Murray
27 Claude Overton, Mead.
FEBRUARY
17 M. Berkey, Grant, Neb.
20 E. T. Sherlock, Wray,
Colorado.
Shafer Bros. Pure Bred Sow
sale, Nehawka; W. R. Su
pernaw, Otoe; John Peter
son, Davey; Delbert Mumm,
Weeping Water; Pete Olson,
Mead; M. B. Chamberlain,
Cedar Creek; Cliff Greer,
Madrid; W. R. Smith, Nebr.
City; Mrs. Mary Shriner,
Nebr. City; Luther Mead,
Union; E. H. Miller, Mur
dock; Frank Blotzer, My
nard; Clyde Fair, Grant; El
mer Kent, Imperial; Chas.
McCartney, Nehawka; Har
ry Abker, Syracuse; M. B.
Thompsen, Imperial; Philip
Born, Plattsmouth; Harry
Nelson, Murray; Lee Nick
les, Murray.
Am selling for some of the
best breeders. Call at my ex
pense. Satisfaction guaran
teed. Telephone No. 311.
4-
Countess Karolyi comes to the fore
in the news once more. Her attor
neys have asked President Coolidge
"to remove from our country the stig
ma of narrowminded bureaucracy and
to make clear once to the world that
in America freedom of speech and
thought exist in fact as well as in
theory." A large request to make of
NOTICE OF SUIT
In the District Court of Cass
County, Nebraska
Fred H.
vs.
Vincent,
Plaintiff
(Alfred Thompson et al
Defendants
App. Dock.
Page 303
organizations.
To the Defendants: Alfred Thompson-
.Trisf'iih Mi frf arv Ikoria Amv
Mr. Coolidge, one mere president ofjrrfd Amyx; Raleigh Amyx; Cora
the United States, that doesn't like ; Barnett; Cecil Harnett; Myrtle Cir
to buck the Ku-Klux-Klan, and allied iter; John Carter: Blanche Steven
son; Bert htevenson; Mary Ann Wat
son; John A. Horning; Anna Iiritt:
the Unknown Heirs, Devisees. Lega
tees, Personal Representatives and
all other Persons interested in the
veral estates of Jonathan Adams,
deceased; Mary Ann S. Britten, form
erly Mary Ann S. Adams, deceased;
Eveline Swindell, deceased; Susan E.
Brooknart. deceased; Susan E. Shopp,
deceased; Robert R. Livingston, de-
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska, Cass coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of
Harriet Jane Davis, deceased.
To the creditors of said estate.
You are hereby notified, that I: ceased; Alfred Thompson, deceased.
will 6it at the County Court room and Joseph McCreary. deceased, real
in Plattsmouth in said county onjnames unknown: and all other per
December 14, 1925, and March 15, .sons having or claiming any inter-
V
1926, at 10 o'clock a. m., each day.
to receive and examine all claims
against said estate, with a view to
their adjustment and allowance. The
time limited for the presentation of
claims against said estate is three
months from the 14th day of De
cember. A. D. 1925, and the time
limited for payment of debts is one
year from said 14th day of Decem
ber, 1925.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said County Court, this 12th day of
November, 1925.
A. H. DUXBURY,
(Seal) nl6-4w County Judge.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska, Cass coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of Fritz
Heinrich. Deceased.
To the creditors of said estate: i estate, right, title, claim or interest
You are hereby notified, that I (therein or to any part thereof, and
est in or to Lots 1, 2. ?., 4. 5. fi. 7,
11. 12. 13 and 14, in Block 2 in
Thompson's Addition to the City of
Plattsmouth, in Cass county, Nebras
ka, real names unknown:
You and each of you are hereby
notified that on the 23rd day of No
vember, 1925. the plaintiff in the
foregoing entitled cause filed Ms
petition in the District Court of Cass
county, Nebraska, wherein you and
others are made parties defendant,
for the purpose of obtaining a decree
from said Court, quieting the record
title in plaintiff to the following de
scribed real estate, to-wit:
Lots 1. 2, 3. 4, 5. 6, 7. 11.
12. 13 and 14. in Block two
(2), in Thompson's Addition to
Plattsmouth, in Cass county,
Nebraska
as against you and each of you and
others and by such decree to wholly
exclude you and each of you from all
will sit at the County Court room in
Plattsmouth in said county, on the
21st day of December, A. D. 192 5,
and the 23rd day of March, A. D.
1926, at the hour of ten o'clock a.
m., or eacn day, to receive and exam
ine all claims against said estate,
with a view to their adjustment and
allowance. The time limited for the
presentation of claims aginst said
estate is three months from the 21st
day of December, A. D. 1925, and the
time limited for payment of debts is
one year from said 21st day of De
cember, 1925.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said County Court, this 19th day of
November, 1925.
A. H. DUXBURY.
(Seal) n23-4w County Judge.,
to have a certain mortgage covering
said premises given by one Oran S.
Thompson and wife to the defendant,
Joseph McCreary, decreed to have
been paid and satisfied and the rec
ord title to said premises forever
freed from the claims of said defend
ants and forever quieted in Plain
tiff. You are required to answer said
petition on or before the ISth day
of January, 1926, or your default will
be entered in said cause and a Decree
granted as prayed for in Plaintiff's
petition.
Dated: December 2nd. 1925.
FRED H. VINCENT.
Ev Plaintiff.
JOHN M. LEYDA.
d3-4w His Attorney.