The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, December 17, 1925, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    THTESHAT, DECEMBER 17, 1925.
FLATTSJCOUTH SEMI-WEEKLY JOUBNA1
PAGE THE EE
PUBLIC INDIFFERENCE
OFFICIALLY DRY'
J
Cbe plattsmoutb lournal
PCBLXSEED SEX3-WEEXLY AT PLATTSJdOUTH, BEBBASXA
at Poatojrio. Plattamouth,
R. A
SUBSCEXPTIOIi I'EICE $2.00
MIRACLES BY PAUL
And God wrought special miracles'
bv the hand3 of Paul; so that from1
his body were brought unto the sick
handkerchiefs or aprons, anu me ais-
ease departed from them.
Acts 19:11-12.
:o:-
Nebraskan leads fight on tax bill.
-:o:
It lookB like a hard winter for the
ice man.
:o:
About all a rolling stone gathers
is more speed.
:o:
Love and poetry are seldom hamp
ered by facts.
:o:
It's a long rain that has no turn-!
ing into snow.
:o:
Do your income tax worrying early
and avoid the rush.
:o:
When you break silence the least
said is the easiest mended.
:o:
Sympathy is great stuff, unless it
makes you want more of it.
-:o:
"The River Route" has the back
ing of the president, so they say.
:o:
One way to convince a girl that
men are not angels is to let her marry
one.
:o:
The Rising Young Business Woman
rolls down her stockings and goes to
work.
:o:
Chief Justice Morrissey will be a
candidate to succeed himself next
election.
Nothing tickles a girl more than
having a date with a man who has a
mustache.
-:o:
The first time a girl Is engaged she
Imagines that she is as important as
the heroine in a novel.
:o:
You can't blame a spinster for be
ing particular; if she handn't been
particular she wouldn't be one.
:o:
"Kermit Roosevelt Kills Ibex with
36-Inch Horns" says a newspaper
headline. His father used a big stick.
:o:
Many of those who complain of ,wnere tne j0ga won't bite them, if
the high prices don't stop to think, sjje coud.
this Is the country they are raised
In.
:o:
The principal danger just now of insUring French women against be
printing so much about Red Grange coming "old maids."
and Irving Berlin and others who ;o: .
make so much money is that congress jf Shakespeare were alive today
is in session again and may vote it-
eelf another salary increase.
1"iH-'I -I-M-lMfr -fr-I"!-!"! ! -l I
T
LtT. John A. Viriifin : '
Dentist
4-
A
f
Office Hours: 9-12; 1-6.
Sundays and evenings
by appointment only.
4. PHONE 229
! Soenaiehsen Building
At Christmas
no other remembrance
approaches a Photograph
they are the most
economical of gifts!
aw
Make Your Appointment
Today
The Werner Studio
l A mild
oth HTf
I iimUMJnimi iw cCTpid for tra
MiMtnimiii j 1 TnrtrJfnT IiimhixmI
FREE BOOK em Kactai Dianan. witb uaw mod
who Kmv I
tiy
DR. E. B. TARRY SANATORIUM. 340
Nab. m omd-oi mall matter
BATES. Publisher
PEE YEAE EN AD V ASCI
A profit is often without honor in
its home Tillage.
-:o:-
A plumber's pipe dream is a dream
of a broken pipe.
:o:-
Only thing worse than being both
ered is being ignored.
o:-
Father always learns what hi9
j Chrismas present cost.
:o:
If you want to pick a flaw with
! humanity begin at home.
.
.Never put off until tomorrow the
:o:
enemy you can whip today.
:o:-
The way to sure insomnia is to get
a job as a night watchman.
:o:
Let the big folks give the little
folks a chance this Christmas. .
:o:
Trade should increase from now
on until Christmas, and no doubt
will.
:o:
Running into debt may be a pleas
ure but running into one's creditors
isn't.
-:o:-
At one gulp a pelican at St. James
park, London, swallowed a live
pigeon.
:o:
womans silence signifies more
than man's because it is much less
frequent.
:o:
It takes a genius to compel himself
to like the disagreeable tasks he has
to perform.
:o:
Occasionally one meets a man
whose mind is so weak that it can't
even wander.
:o:
Forget the good you have done to
pthers and the evil they have done to
you if you would be happy.
:o:
The silent fisherman is the most
successful. Girls should remember
this when angling for husbands.
:o:
Any poor person can become a
thief, but in order to break into the
kleptomaniac class you must have
money,
-:o:
Ma" Ferguson is still very bitter
foes. She would put them all
at
-:o:-
Enterprisir.g American promoters
have launched a scheme in Paris for
ne would be looked upon as a re-Ms
markable man." Lecture. Sure, he
j would be voer 300 years old.
-:o:-
That Pittsburgh man who hanged
himself after his wife beat him play-
ine ctiecker9 had not learDed now to
tnk hacK nis last move wnen uc
found it wa3 wrong.
Only a few years ago the movies
were in infant industry, and recently
improved content and behavior in
dicate they are already pretty well
throught their wild oats period.
i)Hi of 1 1 11111 rit thatoucs P&em. Flatnla and
n 1 , 1 1 1
1 1 TimfTi in aaert tun wuwit aever n-
icml otwimtkm. No cUnnhra, t-thr or other cenaiml
Ld mL EXAMINATION FREE. A car
ml 1111 mnni j In lii riTl nnt-1 mrrrl Writs tor
taatiiMBiai of rhrwt ndm of prominent poopie
Ptw Trust Bide.
Omlia. Nebr.
There is no more striking example
of public indifference to needed lawj
revision than the majority of the
country's building codes. j4
The inconsistency and obsolescence
of these would be humorous if the,
result were not eo serious.
The buildings consumed by fire .
last year would line both sides of a 4
street more than a thousand miles
long. The cost of last year's fires in
this country was more than $54,- Ji.
000,000 every man, woman and J.
child in this country is contribut- ?
ing to this total for the meager and
unsatisfactory "protection" that it
affords.
In addition to the cold dollars i
represented bv the millions paid out
in insurance, we have the added mil-
lions of loss not covered by insur-
ance, so it is safe to say fire in this
country is costing us more than a
billion dollars a year.
Much of this sheer waste could
have been prevented if our building
codes were up to date. There are
codes that compel firesafe construe- t
y
tion for places of detention, yet per
mit fire-trap school buildings, theat-
res, hotels and other structures hous-
ing large numbers of people and who
can say that firesafe homes are not
just as necessary as firesafe schools?
Such construction is not necessary
for the afety of the individual, but j
for the safety of the community. And
in this case, the community is the
nation. j?
We are interested in a good build
ing code for our own city, and are .,
equally interested in a good code for z
every other city, because no matter,
where the fire, we pay our share of i
the loss. j,
We may not be able immediately!
to legislate firetraps out of exist-j
ence, but if the test of other com
munities stands we can, through a
modern building code, legislate into t
existence buildings that won't burn.
:o:-
HOPEFUL REAL ESTATE
Over and over as one goes from'1""1 a"u V u'u,e lJ
(Lincoln Sunday evening,
city to city or state to state, or mere-, Mr and Mrs John KUrell an3
ly rambles about the edge of his own son Clyde, were visiting relatives
home town one is impressed afresh
with the magnitude of the American
real estate game. There is such a
tremendous amount of real estate forj Mr Perry Kuhn returned to his
sale. So many allotments laid out. So home in South Bend after spending
many new ones being opened. So ( the summer at the farm of his uncle
many" building lots offered, not to: near .AJbin' Xeb" wh,ere he assist-
A. ;ed with the farm work,
mention larger tracts. Mr Fred Weaver and son, Judd,
It isn't merely in Florida, that is! drove to Omaha Wednesday,
only the most conspicuous example.) Mr. Joe Knecht drove to Omaha
There is a real estate boom nearly , Wednesday returning Thursday af
every where. And while it waxes or , teo- streighti w G Carnicle
wanes in particular localities, on the,Mvrtle Connor and Iva Fidler corn
whole it keeps growing. Building lots prised a party that attended Bran
continue to multiply. jdies theatre in Omaha Sunday even
Surely there are staked out already ' nL . ,.
" . , . . I When it comes to real fishir.g
enough urban and suburban lots inCarl Hoffmeister. of Arickaree, Colo,
this country to provide building and j formerly of South Bend, can pat
living sites for two or three times the them all on skids. Carl is spending
present population of the United a few days at the home of his moth
Ct,toll WKo tt ,er Mrs. Anna Hoffmeister, here in
States. When ill it end? ! South Bend renewing old acqUaint:
Nobody has to answer that ques- ances and visiting scenes of his boy
tion. Few want to answer it. The hood days and while out strolling
real estate game, though visibly along the river bank Monday after
overdone in many places, on the whole noon he found a large cat fish that
, . had been stranded in shallow water.
a good thing.
Most of the properties offered for
pale represent actual values which
the American, public has been slow in
appreciating. When prices and sales
are merely speculative there is still
this to say for the real estate indus- largest fish taken out of the river
trv that it alwavs rests on substan- here in a number of years.and is
tial ground " proof that there is still a number of
, the large ones left. It was of bluish
If one must speculate, better specu- co,or anfl officially known as the
late in land, however dubious its great Mississippi cat fish.
value, than in "blue sky." For the Mr. and Mrs. Heneger and family
land is what it professes to be. "real and Mrs- Alex Mitchell, of near
estate." "realty." It will always be ??ePins at!r' SpeDt SUDday &t tht?
, . , . Ed Rau home,
there. It is something, the owner Mr and Mrs. Robert Long and
can see, feel, stand on, come back to. sons. Jack and Sam. and Willard
It is a place where the owners fam- Sturzenegger spent Sunday at the
ily tree may strike root and grow. i Ernest Sturzenegger home near
There is something to be said, too.! rga- Henry stander and Mrs. B.
even for the over-development of real q. Mooney were in Omaha Wernes
estate. It is a sign of health, of life, day to do some Christmas shopping
of growth. It expresses faith in the ad to see Mrs- Stander's doctor.
K r. v , ,n Mrs. Alex Michell is spending this
toin, the state, the country, in civil- week wth her sister Mrs. 5John
ization. The town not fringed with Campbell.
subdivisions is dead. 1 Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Roeber and
:o: I sons, Kenneth and Leonard, were
THE GALLOPING GHOST
For the sum of $40,000 Red Grange
has given his name for advertising
purpose to numerous articles of com
merce, inese articles are now to be
poured like an avalanche upon the,
ultimate consumer. That poor,
nighted soul is to live every day in
an orgy of Red Grangeism, from the
time he swallows his Red Grange
Porridge in the morning until he
dons hia Red Grange Pajamas at
night. As a consequence some go
getting psychiatrist will soon dis-
cpver a new disease Red Grange
psychosis. And in the next presiden
tial race there is sure to be a Red
Grange plank in the platform of each
party. The red-head has begun to
haunt our waking and sleeping hours.
Galloping ghost? We'll say so!
:o:
Buy your Christmas goods as early
as you can and you will better your
self In goods and quality, than if you
wait until the day before Christmas.
t W. REX YOUNG
PLATTSMOUTH,
NEBRASKA
General Auctioneering
Also Pure Bred Sales
.5.1
X
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.
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.
Thorn psen. Imperial; Philip
Born, Plattsmoutb.; 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. 314.
t
SOUTH BEND
(.
Jeannette McNamara , Eunice
I rr 1 .3 fi 1 l A
at Syracuse over the week end.
Conrad Reinke was delivering;
wheat to the Weaver elevator this
wppk
bv a sudden drop in the river. After
quite a tussle he succeeded in drag
ging the monster fish out on land,
later taking it up to E. Sturzeneg
ger's store where it was officially
weighed, topping the scales at ex
actly 35 1-2 pounds. This is the
i Wednesday evening visitors at the
Henry Stander home.
Mrs. Dale Cox is laid up with a
lame arm and is suffering consid
erably from it. Ashland 'Gazette.
For a mild, easy action of the
bowels, try Doan's Regulets, a mod-
be-!ern laxative. 30c at all stores.
Truck and Transfer
l -1 - n - E
Call Phone 342-W
or see me at the Vallery Sales
Pavilion, Plattsmonth
Wade Porter
3tfLive Stock Hauling a Specialty.
Lincoln C. Andrews has Just ex
plained what prohibition meant to
him before he was appointed Assist
ant Secretary of the Treasury and
charged with the task of enforcing
the dry laws.
"I would go Into the club," he
says, "and tell Pat, the attendant, to
get a bottle of scotch. I did not then
realize, as I do now, that I was fat
tening the organized bootleg indus
try." '
In plain words, prohibition meant
nothing to Gen. Andrews until he
was made our dry generalissimo. His
personal habits were the same after
prohibition a9 before. When he
wanted a drink he got it. And that
is what 95 out of every 100 men in
the country in Gen. Andrews" cir
cumstances have done and are do
ing. Prohibition has imposed no de
nial or hardship on them. It has
simply raised the price of drink and
lowered the quality.
The 95 will go on doing that very
thing, like Gen. Andrews, they had
no notion before Andrews was made
dry chief that they were violating
any law that they ought to respect,
or committing any crime, or doing
anything unbecoming good citizens.
And they don't now. And neither
would Gen. Andrews except for his
job. He sees the whole situation
now from the standpoint of an offi
cial charged with the enforcement of
a law that as a citizen he believed
to be-wrongful and nonenforceable.
:q:
We always have a lot of respect
for a man's knowledge and w-isdom
until he begins to talk.
-:o:
Heavy, impure blood makes a mud
dy, pimply complexion, headaches,
nausea, indigestion. Thin blood makes
you weak, pale and sickly. For pure
blood, sound digestion, use Burdock
Blood Bitters. $1.25 at all stores.
LEGAL NOTICE
In the District Court of Cass, coun
ty, Nebraska.
August G. Bach, Plaintiff, vs.
Michael Preis and Louisa Preis, De
fendants. To the defendants Michael Preis
and Louisa Preis:
You and each of you are hereby
notified that August G. Bach, the
plaintiff, filed his petition in the
District Court of Cass county, Ne
braska, on the 25th day of Novem
ber, 1925, against you, the said Mich
ael Preis and Louisa Preis, defend
ants, setting forth therein, that the
plaintiff sold " and delivered to said
defendants certain goods, wares and
merchandise, all of which merchan
dise were necessaries of life for the
support and maintenance of said de
fendants and their family, and there
is now due plaintiff from defendants
for said merchandise the sum of
I1S4.10. and interest thereon at 7
per cent per annum from November
7th. 1922, and in order to collect the
same, plaintiff has commenced a suit
in attachment and levied upon your
real estate in the City of Plattsmouth,
Nebraska.
You are hereby notified to apt ear
and answer said petition on or be
fore the 18th day of January. 126,
according to law and the rules of
said court, or judgment will be en
tered against you by default, and
your real estate sold to satisfy the
same.
AUGUST G. BACH.
By Plaintiff.
ALLEN J. BEESON,
d7-4w His Attorney.
NOTICE OF SALE
In the District Court of Cass coun
ty, Nebraska.
In the matter of the guardianship
of John Warga, mentally incompe
tent. ,
Notice is hereby given that in pur
suance of an order of James T. Beg-
ley. Judge of the District Court of
Cass county. Nebraska, made on the
Sth day of December, A. D. 1925, for
the sale of the real estate hereinafter
described, there will be sold at the
south front door of the court house,
in Plattsmouth, Cass county, Nebras
ka, on the 4th day of January, A.
D. 1926, at ten o'clock in the fore
noon, at public vendue to the high
est bidder for cash, the following de
scribed real estate, to-wit:
Commencing at a point thirty
rods north of the center of Sec
tion thirteen (13), in Township
twelve (12) North. Range thir
teen (13), east of the Sixth
Principal Meridian, in Cass coun
ty, Nebraska, running thence
west along the south line of Lot
thirteen (13) five chains and fif
teen links, thence south three
chains and eighty-seven links,
or to the north line of Pearl
street, thence east along the line
of said street five chains and fif
teen links to the west line of
Maiden Lane, thence north three
chains and ninety links to the
place of beginning, except the
right-of-way of the Missouri Pa
cific Railway Company across
the northwest corner thereof;
also known as Lot one (1), in
the southeast quarter (SE4) of
the northwest quarter (NW4)
of Section thirteen (13), Town
ship twelve (12), North, Range
thirteen (13), east of the Sixth
Principal Meridian, in Cass
county, Nebraska.
Said sale will remain open ONE
HOUR.
Dated this 14th day of December,
A. D. 1925.
JAMES WARGA,
Guardian of John Warga,
Mentally Incompetent.
C. A. BAWLS.
Attorney.
dl4-3w
Qjj
i(K
and
25 Christmas
fill Boxed and Rsady
for Flailing or Sale!
These cards are taken from our regular high-grade
line and prepared for the mailing to out-of-town cus
tomers and the early buyers
Send in your order now, enclosing your
Check or money order, or call at the
Bates Book and Stationery Store
The Big Gift Shop, where you will find the big
Christmas Line of Gift Good!
ORDER OF HEARING
and Notice on Petition for Set
tlement of Account.
In the County Court of Cass coun
ty, Nebraska.
State of Nebraska. Cass county, ss.
To all persons interested in the es
tate of Kenny Goodman, deceased:
On reading the petition of George
W. Goodman, Administrator, praying
a final settlement and allowance of
his account filed in this Court on the
14th day of December, 1925, and for
his discharge as such administrator;
It i3 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 29th day of Decem
ber, A. D. 1925, at 9 o'clock a. m., to
show cause, if any there be, why the
prayer of the petitioner should not
be granted, and that notice of the
pendency of said petition and the
hearing thereof be given to all per
sons interested in said matter by pub
lishing a copy of this order in the
Plattsmouth Journal, a semi-weekly
newspaper printed in said county,
for one week prior to sail day of
hearing.
In witness whereof, I have here
unto set my hand and the seal of
said Court, this 14th day of Decem
ber, A. D. 1925.
A. H. DUXBURY.
(Seal) dl4-lw County Judge.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska, Cas3 coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of
Thoma3 Walling, deceased.
To the creditors of said estate:
You are hereby notified, that I
will sit at the County Court room in
Plattsmouth in said county, on Janu
ary 11. 1926. and April 12, 1926, at
10 o'clock a. m.. each day, to receive
and examine all claims against said
estate with a view to their adjust
ment and allowance. The time lim
ited for the presentation of claims
against said estate is three months
from the 11th day of January, A. D.
1926. and the time limited for pay
ment of debts is one year from said
11th day of January, 1926.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said County Court, this 7th day of
December, 1925.
A. H. DUXBURY.
(Seal) dl4-4w County Judge.
ORDER OF HEARING
on Petition for Appointment of
Administrator.
The State of Nebraska, Cass coun
tyt ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of
Christina Barr, deceased.
On reading and filing the petition
of Earl V. Barr, Mary Etta Long
and George M. Barr praying that ad
ministration of said estate may be
granted to John Long as Adminis
trator; Ordered, that Monday, January
4th, A. D. 1926. at 10 o'clock a. m.,
is assigned for hearing said petition,
when all persons interested in said
matter may appear at a County Court
to be held in and for said county,
and show cause why the prayer of
petitioners should not be granted:
and that notice of the pendency of
said petition and the hearing there
of be given to all persons interested
in said matter by publishing a copy
of this order in the Plattsmouth
Journal, a semi-weekly newspaper
printed in said county, for three
successive weeks, prior to said day
of hearing.
Dated December 10, 1925.
A. H. DUXBURY.
(Seal) dl4-3w County Judge.
For baby's croup, Willie's daily
cuts and bruises, mother's sore
throat, Grandma's lameness Dr.
Thomas' Eclectic Oil the household
remedy. 30c and 60c.
TGndcstTHoughts
all GoodliDishcs
tor unnstmas anauic
NcvAfear
s
Cards for $1.00
NOTICE OF SUIT
In the District Court of Cass
County. Nebraska
Fred II. Vincent,
Plaintiff
vs.
Alfred Thompson et al
Defendants
App. Dock.
o
Page 303
To the Defendants: Alfred Thomp
son; Joseph McCreary; Doris Amyx;
Fred Amyx; Raleigh Aniyx: Cora
Barnett; Cecil Harnett; Myrtle Car
ter; John Carter; Blanche S:een-
Ison; Bert Stevenson; Mary Ann Wat
son; John A. Horninc; Anna liritt;
the Unknown Heirs, Devisees, Lega
tees. Personal Representatives and
all other Persons interested in the
several estates of Jonathan Adams,
deceased; Mary Ann S. Britten, form
erly Mary Ann S. Adams, ck-ceased ;
Eveline Swindell, deceased; Susan E.
Brookhart, deceased; Susan E. Shopp.
deceased; Robert R. Livingston. d
ceased; Alfred Thompson. decea-"-d.
and Joseph McCreary, dc cased. r al
names unknown: and fll ether per
sons having nr claiming any inter
est in or to Lots 1. 2. 3, 4, 5. fi. 7.
11. 12. 13 and 14. in I;lock 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 his
petition in the District Court of Cass
county, Nebraska, wherein you ;nd
others are made parties defend int.
for the purpose of obtaining a dei re
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 t'
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
estate, right, title, claim or interest
! therein or to any part thereof, and
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. If 26, or your default ill
be entered in said cause and a Dccr
granted as prayed for in Plaintiff'
petition.
Dated: December 2nd. 1925.
FRED H. VINCENT.
By Plaintiff.
JOHN M. LEYDA.
d3-4w His Attorney.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska, Cass coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of Fritt
Heinrich, Deceased.
To the creditors of said estate:
You are hereby notified, that I
will sit at the County Court room in
Plattsmouth in said county, on the
21st day or December. A. D. 1925.
and the 23rd day of March, A. D.
1926, at the hour of ten o'clock a.
m., of each 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 against said
estate is three months from the 21st
clay 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) n22-4w County Judge.