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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 19, 1926)
THUBSHAY. AUGUST 19. 1926. PLATTSIIOUTE 5XMI-wXXSX! PAGE nnyrn Cbc plattsmouth journal PTTBIISEED SEMI-WEEKLY AT Btar.4 at PototMc. Plattamouth. BATES, Publisher SUBSCBIPTIOB PEICE (2.00 Omaha to be a stop In the new air route. Good! :o: "Why not name that new Coolidge dance the "Kobby Horse Buck?" :o: The Missouri banker may soon be as notorious as the Missouri mule is famous. :o: . That Dempsey-Wills-New York Boxing Commission row is also a mov ing picture very moving! :o: Peeev Joyce has decided not to marry anyone at present, .which cer tainly can be classed as news. -:o: Wonder what became of the old- fashioned man who wore a cabbage leaf in his hat to keep his head cool. :o: Pennsylvania has her primaries, California has her earthquakes, and Missouri has had her State banks. :o: A mtcher is a vessel that s al ways full of water when you upset it and always empty when you need water. One of life's hardest jobs is to keep up tne eninusiasm over suiufiuins , as long as you have to keep up the( payments. -:o:- Owing to forest fires a lot of Cali fornia towns that most Californians did not know they had, have received . press mention. A six-foot python was seen in the Loop district of Chicago the other day. That's what Chicago gets for be ing wide open. :o:- A New York cabaret closed by police is looking for a purchaser. They probably want to eell out padlock, stock and barrel. :o: Clemenceau's note was not a billet-doux. Since we feel in the humor. neither was it due, nor sh on Id" private-; citizens do such things. -:o: There is still an aristocratic inclin ation in German thought which de mands that the League of Nations be made as exclusive as possible. :o: A modern version of the Psalms is announced by the University of Chi-; cago, "And I said in my haste. All men are Florida real-estate agents.' "j TWO CROPS A YEAR ( IN LORIDALE A 300-DAY growing season, on the sun kissed uplands of Floridale, in West Florida, allows of two crops of many products from the same land. f ' AN even climate cooled by Gulf breezes, year around pasturage and pure water are ideal conditions for the develop ment of a new dairy center of the country and for the commercial pro duction of poultry on a large scale. Fruits " and berries, too, are profitable crops. Farmers here are happy and prosperous. THIS development is not a part of the Florida speculation . boom. Learn the facts from farmers who have come from many Middle Western states. ' j yfrtte today for an illustrated booklet about Floridale, Frank C Riker Company 26 South Main Street Council Bluffs, Iowa PLATTSM 0 UTH. NEBRASKA Nb mm Mcokft-olasa mall m&tur PER YEAR H9 AD VAN CI J Save your save all. self-respect and you -:o:- Truth and the swatted fly when crushed to earth will rise again. :o: Blushing, a judge has ruled, is not a sign of guilt. More like a sign of innocence. One thing Americans seem to have in common is a desire to acquire culture in six easy lessons. :o: A vial of cosmetics was found in King Tut's tomb. The old boy must have been a motion picture actor, :o: Probably the sharpest line of de- markation between the wets and the drys is drawn at the bathing beaches. :o: France is reported rallying to Clem-j enceau's debt repudiation program. . tnese was started, flying operations in Observe how that doesn't restore the the United States were more extensive franc I tnan tne average person would im-( ;o: j agine. The Aircraft Yearbook for Ornamental suspenders are the lat- 1926, soon to be issued, contains re est London fad. What we headline ports from operators of planes in writers would describe as a daring hold-up." -:o:- revenaii irauiuB a iuuiuis cuxi. Headline. If ours ever starts soaring we're going to take part in that fev- erish trading. :o: I Radio bedtime stories are usually; broadcast about 7 o'clock in the even- ing, fully eight hours before the chil dren get home. :o: The electric fan was introduced in to the homes of the rich in 1895. Electric fans now number 2,600,000 in American homes. :o:- Unted States shies from break with! Mexico and will keep hands off reli gious war, is Secretary Kellogg's an swer to K. of C. protest. :o: Secretary Mellon says the war debt settlements are matters of the past.' How "matters of the past" when col-J lections are to run for 60 vears into, the future? :o:- Sir Oliver Lodge is safe in pre-: I dieting that wonderful advances will soon be made in science. But he would not be safe in asserting that our weather bureau prophets would ever, be able to foretell the coming of a thunderstorm during a drough. AIR TRAFFIC RELIABILITY The official report showing that the air mail through Kansas City has operated with an efficiency of 97 per cent In the three months since it was established is evidence of the increas ing dependability of air transporta tion. The record on this particular line seems to justify its move to car ry passengers at an early date. De velopment of this branch of air traf fic has awaited demonstrations that flying could be made reasonably safe and could maintain schedules com- transportation. It is becoming more and more evident that the condition is being met and that a material ex pansion of air traffic of all kinds is not far away. The transcontinental air mail line for several years has maintained a performance record of high efficiency. In the first six months after night fly- jng was attempted, unusual and un- forseen difficulties were encountered. But at that, more than three-fourths of the flights were comnleted on gcnedule ti and aft the iod of experimentation had passed effi ciency mounted close to 100 per cent. With limited exceptions, it has been rrv, held well above 90 per cent number of branches of air mail have been put into operation in recent months, but last year, before any forty-one states. The nearly seven hundred planes used made more than 258,000 flights in the year and cov erea m0re tnan 514 million miles. ered more than 5 1 million miles. They carried more than two hundred thousand passengers and 112 tons of freight and mall. This operation lareelv was without supervision, either of pilots or planes.! M fc f jtgrew out of individual en-! . .i, . ... terprise, and was without the aid of adequate capital and facilities. These are conditions that do not apply on the recentl established air mail lines; and from many if not all of hes4 may be expected records of efficiency similar to those made by the trans-i continental and the southwest lines Through operation of the division of civil aviation in the department of commerce there also is the promise of aid of various kinds that will pro mote the expansion, safety and re- liability of commercial air traffic Kansas City Star. :o SIGNALING IN MOTORING Ajthough it may be that the sys --. iiuuuii ib ilia j itj liiai Lite; cj a- . - , tem of hand signals devised by the'tney a e American Automobile Association is ot all thnt it chnnid hP thP ne-ita- tion for adoption should be encour- . . . . aged, primarily because it represents lorwara step towara uniiornni.j The continued growth of automobile; traffic emphasizes the importance of hand signals that are uniform. The electric signals with which many cars ,are now factory equipped, and which 'operate on the brakes have helped somewhat to relieve the situation, but i the hand in manv instances continues . i. - w lt v. liic uie ii-uf .uuuug iu course oi a moving automoDiie yet "sbout the premises. We have feared employment is woeiuny aenuent m information that mav prevent acci-1 dents. rr-u- 1 to inaicaue a stop, to indicate a Dae. up" and not infrequently by .a Vi nn o-Vi loo tn n-rr, tiV. ncitn o fa- mark to his companion. The American Automobile j Asso- ciation urges three simple hand sig nals: left turn, the arm horizontally extended- a richt turn the arm ex- extenaea, a rignt turn, tne arm ex I tcn11 iinumH nhnv lmrirnTital I I stop, arm extended downward below; horizontal. It is the contention of the association that if motorists eerier- J ally would observe the signals as out- lined, it would make for safety and' contribute also to expedite traffic. Of 1 j course, there is no sure preventive for I accidents, but if it were possible al ways to foretell what the other fel low is going to do it would unques tionably lessen the chances of many avoidable acidenta. :o: FINANCE IN THE ADmONDACKS A dispatch from the Coolldge camp in the Adirondacks says that the president has "reduced the expendi tures of the government to $3,270, 000,000" by lopping $100,000,000 off the budget estimate for 1928. A lit tle farther on we read that the $3, 270,000,000 represents an increase of $55,000,000 over the appropriations for the current year. ah tnat s a gooa aeai as 11 a man said he had reduced his expenditures by persuading his wife to pay only $38.99 for a hat, instead of $40, to pAnlafiA o hot Vi Q f itAct t J7 A V- J mm u.b vuut V w :o: Some men frankly own up when they've been stung by a bad invest- ' mpTit- while others moan thnt th J country's going to the dogs. CHEAP BRIDGE TOLL CARS - TRUCKS 10 Cents 10 Discount on Toll Coupon Books T.H. Pollock Bridge THE SADDEST FOLLY We are inclined to believe a man may make too great a sacrifice to show his devotion to his wife. This New Jersey man, whose wife is suing him for divorce, makes a point in his fence that he had his bow legs . f. i . straightened to please nis Detter nan. He seemed to tnint tms narasnip should have won undying affection' for him. Not so. At least, not necessarily so. Tnere may De strengm or wean:--will be set up outsiae m a tent, sev ness in concessions to a wife's whims, eral extension exhibits, formerly put It all depends. In this case there had;P m booths, will be set up outside. r 'on1 9 flnrir nf npTiR will DG noiiseu uc"""' , j cessiuny cover me dows in m Neither can a woman any more, for M . tn at mauer- mereiore, naving myfarmer who has raised a litter of 14 ried Harris with full knowledge of his physical defects she would have re- epected him more if he had stood pat that is, as pat as his bow legs would have Permitted Even if she c naa aarea mm xo nave nis legs uruu sne wouia nave nopea ne wouia not ue 6uch a fool. Having ben fool enough to try to please her in this manner,' never quite forgave him ferred him bowed and strong rathe tnan straignt ana weas. inai is, 11 j we uruiersianu leniiiiiue psjtiiuiugj ... , wnicn we ao not. 1 The point is that it is folly to try to achieve perfection to please the women .especially if Nature has In- , ... terposea i.onnu Vuc. foy ghowing birdg. He should first know there isn't any such thing. acquaint himself with the standards They may rail a bit at his imperfec- Gf his breed and also the disqualifi tions. but thev do not emect him to cations. Often times he may save the . vi, v shouldered, or even his legs because :o:- THE LAZY CHILD .aiany parents win De giaa to ieam that a convention of school teachers has declared the chief vice of the modern high school pupils is laziness ' There is satisfaction in knowing that the disposition of one's child to avoid. work is mereiy a normal tendency and not an indication he will be ut- terly WOrthless when he does grow up.' Mo t ,,, ,o vr, 0v : i.t uui (Jiiiiuitu umuuw ui lueir laiiuic to turn a hand to assist in anything thev were more trifling than the t. j U ,- L"c . . ana xae spaae. But if most school children are lazy, mo,- t nQ.gi . .... - . . ' - - cheered by this information teachers have given us. tne -:o:- a nii . .i, . a- j of $150, 000 was discovered among ' , T . . prisoners in ieavcnwonn eaerai nrisonera in T.pavpnwnrth tTnnu. vet up to now there has been no popular AarnaT, ' 1 Saturday Night PHILPOTS HALL Weeping Water, Nebr. r mm f iiooa music come nave a Good Time. W. H. HOMAN, Mgr. Dr. John A. Griffin Dentist .g. ju - 4 f I OSice Hours: 9-12; 1-6. Sundays and evenings by appointment only. PHONE 229 Soennichsen Building 4- t r "I FARM BUREAU NOTES Copy for this Department J furnisbed by County Agent -I!-I"I"M"I-I-I"I-I-I"I-I"I"l--r- Silos to Hold Winter Feed Pit and trench silos are being dug by many farmers in the dry section of the state to take care of the emer gency in their feed problem. The ag ricultural college at Lincoln and its county extension agents are helping with plans and suggestions- about building silos. Ensilage made of corn with few ears on it is practically as good feed for stock cattle as heavily eared corn, according to tests made at the agri cultural college and by other cattle men. While the immature corn be ing put into the silo by the farmers of these sections will not be as good feed as if it were more mature, it will still be worth cutting for winter feed this year when alfalfa hay or lin seed oil meal may be available as a j protein feed to use with this ensil jage. A pound of cottonseed meal 'per day will supplement the ensilage land carry stock cattle thru the win ter in good shape. Nebraska's Greatest Exhibit The agricultural extension build- ng at the state fair is just naturally going to spill over on au siaes mis de-lyear. The boys and girls will be there with almost 500 baby beeves and dairy calves, about 350 pigs, ana more chickens, corn, dresses, jars of fruit, loaves or Droaa ana Doys ana girls themselves than have ever come iiogeiner in competition iu uruiaoia ' hofnro Tho ffllvPR will kTO to the Coliseum to show, the hog show ring there during the lair unaer gooa practical conditions wnicn can De cop- led on any farm. Hog lot sanitation 'n ha ammnnpfl hv rinv onuntv mes to weieh more than a ton this year He bring in the pigs, show the type of movable equipment he mem in ana De mere uimacii. iu now ne aia 11 ana wnaL ne lumltB "L rlfin P-rnnnrt and clean eauiDment vnp-c tor nogs. - Show Poultry at Fairs ine poultry raiser uu . 1 - 4 M t A 4hA r- r t n ofl -m ; that" in nis hock at nome is uui a ood poultryman in the opinion of tnose puouc nyiiucu ycyji .-i- hmKira -who boost for county and . , . . state fairs and other competition that builds up the standards and aims to- ward perfection of the various breeds of poultry. That poultry raiser should take a few of his "good ones" to the fairs. 'Any poultry raiser can learn Jentrv fee and the cost of taking r Via crirvnr Ann n nm ( srfl.in II fae can see a disqUalification. Groom- liTic- th feathers, lees and feet will helD the appearance or tne iowi Washing white birds will make them whiter. The Agricultural College at Lincoln and its county extension , . . nfnrmatinii HKtrll La toll luiuiou iMii aDOUt exhibiting poultry and fitting it for competition. R. SNIPES. Co. Ext. Agent. SLUGGERS WIN BATTLE From Monday Daily Yesterday afternoon the local Tinhemian Sluereers added to their strine of victories when they ad , . . v,o ministered defeat to the team tnat :; "esented the Weeping Water base -ban enthusiasts and as the Weeping Water neonle enioy their Sunday snorts at Manley the game was staged in the latter place and attended by nuite a laree number of the fans ipg result of the game when the last out was checked up was 14 to 7 in favor of the locals and was a troTTlO ronlftft with a STBSit deal Of t.tlnn. nn tVia nort nT in Iflf.R IS. 1U the hitting department George Sed- iillliug V I. v ilacek featured for the Sluggers witn ' a triole. a double and two singles out of five trips to the bat, while Ray Krisky and Louis Svoboda also were h?t nnt of their w Dub ro.w- journey to the plate. Ivmis Svoboda and Frank Grado ville did the hurling for the Sluggers and Gradoville especially was effective against their opponents. ' FOE SALE The Sophia Schafer farm, four 'miles west and fire miles north of Murray. See F. G. Egenberger. Plattsmouth. Advertising: pays! Try it! NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass Coun- ; VVhe County Court. In the matter of the estate of Harry S. Barthold, 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 2nd day of September, A. D. 1926, and the 3rd day of December, A. D. 192, at 10 o'clock a. m. of 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 2nd day of Septem ber A. D. 1926, and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 2nd day of September 1926. Witness my hand and the seal of said county court, this 9th day. of August, 1926. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal)a9-4w 1 County Judge. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty. s. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Mary Taylor, 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 23rd day of August 1926 and the 24th day of November 1926 at 10 a. m. of each or said cays, to receive and examine all claims against said estate, with a view to their adjust ment and allowance. The time limit ed for the presentation of claims against said estate is three months from the 23rd day of August, A. D. 1926, and the time limited for pay ment of debts is one years from said 23rd day of August 1926. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court, this 22nd day of July, 1926. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) County Judge. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass Coun ty, ss. In the County Court In the matter of the estate of John Coleman, 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 31st day of August, 1926, and on the 2nd day of December, 1926, at 10 o'clock a. m. of each of said days, to receive and examine all claims against said estate, with a view to their ad- justment and allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claims against said estate is three months from the 31st day of August A. D. 1926, and the time limited for pay ment of debts is one year from said 31st day ofl August. 1926. Witness my hand the seal of said County Court, this 28th day of July, 1926. H. DUXBURY, County Judge. (Seal) a2-4w ORDER OF HEARING on Petition for Appointment of Administrator. The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Anna F. Fihkle, decease. On reading and filing the petition of Frank A. Finkle, Leo L. Finkle and John N. Finkle, praying that ad ministration of said estate may be granted to Frank A. Finkle as Ad ministrator; Ordered, that September 4th, A. D. 1926, at 9 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 the petition ers should not be granted; and that notice of the pendency of said peti tion and the hearing thereof be given to all persons interested In said mat ter 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 6ald day of hearing. Dated August 5th. 1926. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) a9-3w ' County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING on Petition for Appointment of Administratrix. The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Pat rick J. Flynn, deceased. On reading and filing the petition of Catherine T. Flynn praying that administration of said estate may be'scrjDed lands and tenements, to-wit granted to Catherine T. Flynn, as Administratrix; Ordered, that September 7th, 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 the petition er should not be granted; and that notice of the pendency of said peti tion and the hearing thereof 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 August 12th, 1926. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) al6-Sw County Judge. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. By virtue of an Order of Sale issued by Golda Noble Beal, Clerk of the District Court within and for Cass county, Nebraska, and to me directed. I will on the 18th day of September, A. D. 1926, at 10 o'clock a. m. of' said day at the south front door of tne court nouBe, in riattsmoutn, we-'an(j afterward offered for sale as a braska, In said county, sell at public whole, the sale being either by par auction to the highest bidder for cej or -whole as shall bring the most casn tne roiiowing reai estate, 10- wit: Lot 14, Block 49, in the City of Plattsmouth, as surveyed, platted and recorded, Cass coun ty, Nebraska the same being levied upon and half of the southeast quarter (NH taken as the property of Austin S. SE ), Lots seven (7) and eight (8), Ghrist, Carrie EL Ghrist, James O. in the southeast quarter of the south Epperson, Gertrude Epperson and east quarter (SE SE), Lot 5 in Omaha Association of Credit Men, a the southwest quarter of the south corporation, defendants, to satisfy a east quarter (SWVi SE4). and Lot Judgment of said court recovered by three (3) In the southeast quarter The Standard Savings and Loan As- of the southwest quarter (SEU sociation, of Omaha, Nebraska, plain- SW ), All In Section twenty-nine tiff against said defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, August 13, A. D. 1926. E. P. STEWART, Sheriff of Cass County, Nebraska. al6-5w . . ,. 1 At mrrr a Advertise yom waais m me want Ad column lor quick results. NOTICE TO CREDIT0R3 The State of Nebraska. Cass coun ty. 88. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Howell R. Knowles, 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 3rd day of September, A. D. 1&26. and 4th day of December, A. D. 1926, at ten o'clock a. m., of each day. to receive end 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 3rd day of Septem ber, A. D. 1926, and the time limit ed for payment of debts Is one year from said 3rd day of September, 1926. 1 Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court, this 2nd day of I August, 1926. ! A. H. DUXBURY. l(Seal) a2-4w County Judge. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE Notice is hereby given that by virtue of two Judgments entered in ' the District Court of Cass County, (Nebraska, one In favor of August G. Bach against Michael Preis and Louisa Preis in sum of $216.30. and one in favor of Henry M. Soen-nichsen against Michael Preis and Louisa ' preis in sum of $221.75, and the orders of sale of said court in said actions, I will on the 30th day of August, 1926, at ten o'clock a. m. of said day at the south door of the Court House in Plattsmouth, in said , Cass County, Nebraska, sell the fol- lowing described real estate, towlt Lots 1 and 2 in Block 171 In the City of Plattsmouth, Ne braska, at public auction to the highest bid- tier for cash to satisfy said Judgment, the amount due thereon in the ag gregate being the sum of $438.05, and $97.27 costs and accruing costs. Dated July 22nd 1926. E. P. STEWART Sheriff of Cass County Nebraska, By W. C. SCHAUS. Deputy. ALLEN J. BEESON. Attorney for Plaintiff. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE Notice Is hereby given, that by virtue of an Order of Sale issued by Golda Noble Beal. Clerk of the Dis trict Court of the Second Judicial District of Nebraska, within and for Cass county, in an action wherein Lincoln Safe Deposit Company, a cor poration of Lincoln. Lancaster coun ty, Nebraska, is plaintiff and David F. Tighe; Marguriet Tighe, also writ ten Marguerite Tighe; S. Matthews; Oliver M. Wise; Elizabeth Wise; Jen nie Holbert; Frank Matthews; Alice Nyswaner; Jessie Cayman; William Matthewo; Charles Matthews; Ray Booth; Boyd E. Booth; Donald Booth; J. O. Booth, first and real name un known; Ethel Dague; H. F. Watson, first and real name unknown; C. M. Watson, first and real name un known; George E. Watson; Annie Bonnell; Flora Wilson; Zella Dalby; Mary Bradbury; James Luce; Wil liam Luce; Eva Ingrabam; George King; Howard King; Grace Lively; Jennie King; Mary I. Bullis; Farm ers State Bank, Wabash, Nebraska, a banking corporation; John Doe, whose real name is Ed Bauers; and Mary Doe, whose real name is ElBie Bauers, are defendants, I will at ten o'clock a. m., on the third day of September, A. D. 1926, at Ihe South front door of the Cass county court house, in the City of Plattsmouth, Cass county, Nebraska, offer for sale at public auction, the following de- The east half of the northwest quarter (E NW) of Section twenty-nine (29), Township eleven (11) North Range eleven (11) East, in Cass county, Ne braska; also The north half of the south east quarter (N SE) and Lots seven (7) and eight (8), in the southeast quarter of the southeast quarter (SEVi SEVi ). Lot five (5), in the southwest quarter of the southeast quarter (SW SEU ) and Lot three (3) in the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter (SEVi SW4 ). all in Section twenty-nine (29), Township eleven (11) North, Range eleven (11) East, in Cass county, Nebraska; also The east half of the northwest quarter (E NW) of Section twenty-pine (29), Township eleven (11) North, Range eleven (11) East, in Cass county, Ne braska; also The west half of the west half of the northeast quarter (W W NE ) of Section twenty nine (29), Township eleven (11) North, Range eleven (11) East. In Cass county, Nebraska. Please take notice that said parcels o ian(j wm grst be offered separately. .return. Said sale is subject to any unpaid taxes or tax sales outstanding and not included in the decree in said cause of action. It is also subject to the lease of Ed Bauers on the north (29), Township eleven (11) North. Range eleven (11) Eaet. In Cass county, Nebraska; Likewise subject to confirmation by the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska. 1 Given under my hand this 31st day I Tnlii A T IDtC E. P. STEWART, CKavIW u mm frMltltv I - Nebraska. tJl-r