The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, September 19, 1932, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    MOHDAY. SEPT. 19, 1832.
PLATTSHOUTH SEZII-WEEEL7 JOUBHAI
PAGE TERES
TThe Plattsmouth Journal
PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSHOUTH, NEBRASKA
Entered at Postoffice, Plattsmouth, Neb., as second-class mail matter
R. A. BATES, Publisher
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 A TEAR IN FIRST POSTAL ZONE
Subscribers living: In Second Postal Zone, J2.50 per year. Beyond
COO miles. 34U) per year. Rate to Canada and foreign countries,
$3.60 per year. All subscriptions are payable strictly in advance.
To all appearances Mr. Borah's
third party is the first person.
:o:
Some people are never satisfied un
til they find something that makes
them dissatisfied.
:o:
The Atchison Globe tells of a wom
an who dreamed she was in an awful
fix. She had sixty hats and no mir
ror. :o:
A woman writer regards sliced
bread as being the greatest contri
bution of science since the perman- i
cnt wave.
:o:
With aviation records changing so
rapidly, some flier really should try
fo ra record of having held some re
cord the longest.
:o:
Kansas has progressed to the point
as a state where a men in his fifties
can be elected president of an old
settlers' association.
:o:
The ex-kaiser emerges briefly from
obscurity to remark that "the battle
will remain the shining example of
valor." But a quick skedaddle over
the border has helped to preserve
more than one valiant soul to a green
old age.
Lk Aft
ovoryono
oIgo docso
Left Uo Mali
LD HAT
ILDC1E MELnJ
in Stylo and Fi
Our new "Factory Finish" Process brings back
all the original snap and beauty scientifically
cleans and renews your old hat by actual factory
methods. Makes old hats like new!
HEeeitrie "Factory Finish" CSIaft Equipmsnft
New scientific principle give ac- ScltiC feet iOH GllOrOnftOOd
taal "Factory Finith" results.
Cleans and reshapes any hat. OT UO 1132 JOD!
SPECIAL FOR m DAYS
LADIES HATS
Csgs!sr 50c JoZ far .
Don't smash your radio. The po
litical campaigns will be over in a
few weeks.
:o:
!The papers tell of a 2-year-old
who plays golf. We know several
who took up the game before they
learned to count.
:o:
Who remembers when the head of
the house used to visit nearby straw-
stacks each year to fill bedticks for
the family beds?
:o:
Whoever coaches at Columbia uni
versity will have to earn his money,
the Lawrence Journal believs. The
university has 70,000 living alumni
:o:
Some day. somewhere, it is our
confident prediction, the White Shirts
will rise up in wrath to tell the
Black Shirts, Brown Shirts, Red and
various other sihrts just where they
get off.
:o:
Senator Moses is an able man but
he is a poor claimer he only guesses
22 majority for Hoover in the elec
toral college. Jim Farley of the Dem
ocrats claims all the states but five
which he says are doubtful on the
theory that It is a good plan to claim
a plenty while you are claiming.
mm
y
Your
D3Gca'o
DHatJOooo
Resular 75c JcD
LADIES'
FELT
HATS
Carefully cleaned,
re-styled and fac
tory finished
just like new
. . Special
Send in Your Cap
IFWe are now prepared to CLEAR and
BLOCK Caps. Look like new; cost small!
Cleaned csd
166
We don't know why it should
please a woman to have people say
she "just doesn't eat enough to keep
a bird alive," but it invariably does
:o:
Th old-fashioned mother who used
to hide her purse in her hose now
ias a granddaughter jjwho cannot
even hide a chigger bite in the same
place.
:o:
People who have had their teeth,
tonsils and appendix out will make
it pretty tough on the next special
ist, as he has just about run out of
guesses.
:o:
English Is spoken by 160 million
people and is understood by 60 mil
lion more. This does not include
those who try to talk In a home where
radio is running at full blast.
:o:
Old Subscriber comes in with the
moral he has drawn from reading
the extended life of Paul Bern as
it appeared thus far: It's all right to
go around doing good, if you don't
overdo it.
:o:
A Moscow report says that the
women of Russia now enjoy com
plete equality with men," and one
wonders how long the women of that
backward region will continue to put
up with such conditions.
:o:
A news item says fairy tale3 are
no longer read to children in the Chi
cago schools. The only fair tales told
in Chicago now are those the city
tells its school teachers about when
they're going to get their salaries.
:o:
Governor Roosevelt made his
speech in Topeka the other day
within a stone's throw, according
to news observers, of Vice-President
Curtis's home. Mr. Curtis was not
at home, however, so the governor
threw stones at the White House.
-
'THE MAGIC OF A NAME
"What's in a name?" may have
been of little moment to Juliet, but
to the Oklahomans it is all-important
when that name happens to be
Will Rogers, their "most useful citi
zen" (vide the legislative record) as
well as court jester in three contin
ents. The question has been posed
afresh by the fact that another Will
Rogers, a rural school-teacher, has
rolled up a huge vote in an election
in the Sooner State, on the Btrength,
so his capable feminine opponent in
timates, of a' last-minute rechristen
ing from William C. Rogers.
Such name affection as exists in
the United States gives rise to one of
those pleasant little tit-for-tat jokes
that smooth away the corners of
transatlantic strangeness. The Am
erican chuckles whenever he reads in
the English newspapers the quali
fications of an Englishman about to
be given a remove to a higher
berth in his profession. The point
that is bound to be singled out,
whether the appointee be a bishop,
a judge or a collector of internal rev-
enue, is that he rowed (for his 'Var
sity), climbed a mountain (for his
own pleasure), obtained the Windy-
gate prize for poetry, or did some
thine eauallv irrelevant. But the
Englishman can make his riposte,
accompanied by a similar chortle, any
time he glances over the wedding an
nouncements in the American news
papers. If they are relatively name
less, both parties will stretch their
family trees in quest of a real name
until they touch collateral branches
even unto the fourth and fifth gen
erations.
Now in the monarchies names are
of such little significance that the
first thing a man is asked to do when
he meets the ultimate in national
approbation is to shed it and don a
new one. And he is generally very
happy to oblige. Watch a Smith in
Drocess of translation. One of the
most distinguished of that family in
England woke up one day as Lord
Birkenhead and apparently did not
fppl anv different. But think 01
"Al" Smith of the United States go
ing to Ireland to find a mellifluously
sounding village by which he should
henceforth be called! It'B all in the
name in the" 13. S. A.
Hence the agitation which the
Oklahoma incident has again pro
voked that good old possessors of
good old American names might be
allowed to copyright .thgm. They are
held to be as valuable pieces of prop
erty as trade marks. Originally the
movement must have etarted when
one Kabotsky years ago tried, in
Boston, to change his name to Cabot,
and succeeded. The indignation
spread much farther than the limits
of the land of the cod. It rippled
over the gabled roofs of colonial
mansions from Salem to Charleston
and even found an echo, out West.
But so far Will Rogers has ap
parently not taken any action over
the controversy in Oklahoma save to
add another quip to his voluminous
quiver. Only the unfortunate de
feated candidate saying with Ju
liet, " Tis but thy name that is my
enemy" has been aroused.
:o:
AN END TO BLEASEISM?
What voters of South Carolina
have saved themselves from in their
refusal to send Cole Blease to the
senate may not be entirely clear to
people in the rest of the country. But
many of those in the state directly
effected could explain it in a single
word. It is "Bleaseism." Bleaseism
means just about as much demagog
ism as could well be bound up and
carted about by any one man in
search of public office. It has afflict
ed the state, off and on, for the
greater part of a generation, becom
ing most pronounced as its sponsor
assumed the governorship, more
than twenty years ago, and continu
ing, after a period of intermission,
as he served one term in the United
States senate. Repudiated two years
ago, and now again this year as the
people vote decisively to return Sen
ator E. D. Smith to the post in
Washington, it would seem that
Bleaseism is done for in the state.
It has never got very far outside
of it.) Yet there can be no certainty
in the matter, as it is recalled that
at every election in more than forty
years Blease either has ben a candi
date or an officeholdr. Yet there can
be hope; and this time it has a fair
ly solid basis.
:o:
An editor says holiday accidents
on Labor day took 200 lives, for
which the motor car was chiefly re
sponsible. Our objection to that
statement is that it was not the car.
but the driver, who was mainly re
sponsible. The modern motor car is
a pretty efficient beast of burden;
drive him as h should be driven and
he will take pretty good care of you.
:o:-
Danoe Wed. nlte. . Lea Ion Clda.
Vagabonds. Qenta, Z3, Ladles, 10. 1
NO LONGER THE ORACLE
According to those who want to
give us four. more j-ears of the kind
of national administration we have
had since Harding went into office
11 years ago, nobody must question
anything Mr. Hoover now says. The
results of the policy of those 11 years
are fanners in bankruptcy, trade
channels choked, heartbreaking un
employment, and millions of the
people's savings wiped out by a
gigantic stock market swindle which
was furthered by the policies of
those national administrations. Mr.
Hoover's administration has been a
groping around in indecision, accom
panied by reassuring prophecies to
the American people which didn't
pan out.
The thing that got under the hide
of the Hoover boosters was the Jour
nal's refusal to throw its hat into
the air and hurrah when Mr. Hoo
ver prophesied the other day that
he was "convinced that we have
overcome the major financial crisis.'
'The Journal expressed the hope that
Mr. Hoover was right this time, even
though he had missed his guess with
similar prophecies so many times in
the past. It would be easy, the Jour
nal said, to go back and list the
many times, but it refrained from
doing so. However, since the ques
tion has been raised, we list below
some of the prophecies made by Mr.
Hoover, beginning with the stock
market crash on October 24, 1929.
Among them are these:
October 25, 1929". The funda
mental business of the country is
on a sound and prosperous basis."
November 21, 1929. "There is no
reason why business should not be
carried on as usual."
December 3, 1529. "The sudden
threat of unemployment . . . created
unwarranted pessimism and fear. We
have re-established confidence. A
very large degree of industrial un
employment has been prevented."
January 21. 1930. "The tide of
employment has changed in the right
direction."
March 7, 1930. "All the evidences
indicate that the worst effects of the
crash upon employment will have
been passed during the next 60 days."
May 1, 1930. "We have now pass
ed the worst."
October 2, 1930. "The depression
is but a temporary halt in the pros
perity of a great people. The income
of a large part of our people has not
been reduced."
December 2, 1930. "We hav al
ready weathered the worst cf the
storm."
It's time in this country that we
throw away the crying towel and
look facts in the face. To millions
Mr. Hoover no longer is the'oracle
and miracle man he was pictured
for campaign purposes in 1928. Yet
"what is needed now is a restora
tion of faith and confidence," say
the hidebound party organs. Con
fidence in whom? Mr. Hoover?
Mr. Hoover, sincere as he may be,
forfeited a good many people's con
fidence when he gave in to Mr
Grundy's threat on the floor of the
senate. When Mr. Hoover showed
Eigns of hesitating over Mr. Grun
dy's demand that the barriers
against trade be raised higher, the
spokesman for the tariff beneficiaries
declared that his crowd had contri
buted heavily to Mr. Hoover's cam
paign and expected something in re
turn. And the Grundys got it.
Who wants to continue that Eys-
Uem? Who wants to go back to the
paper fortunes or tne bubble market,
after the last three years of suffer
ing? Who wants to go through the
same old cycle again, up and down,
with months upon months of human
THE
EOTDED
is just right for a
light weight Sweater!
Here s every kind :
Boys' PulI-Overs
Sleeveless
51
Worsted Coats
51 to 53
Wide Assortment of
Styles and Colors
tBuy the Boy a SWEATER end
a pair of those new CORD PARTS.
misery? Yet there is no sign at
Washington that this isn't what
those who advise Mr. Hoover want
to get started again. There appar
ently is no recognition at Washing
ton that although we pour public
moneys out like rain water, the vital
need for any better condition that
will be permanent is a change in the
discredited "lift-yourself by - your-
own-bootstraps" policy that began
with Harding and continued until
the smashup. "Faith and confidence"
will be restored when there is a
change at Washington. Milwaukee
Journal.
:o:
CAN HELP MOST OF
KEEPING HANDS OFF
There were and are thousands of
grass fed steers on the western
ranges. There was and is a huge
amount of corn on Illinois farms in
tended to be used in fattening
range cattle for the market. The
railroads have facilities more than
ample for moving the western cat
tle to the feeding lots of the corn
belt, but until recently the normal
flow of feeders to the cast has been
interrupted for lack of credit.
A number of stock yards officials,
sensing the Fituation, provided some
of the needed credit. Every one in
volved in these transactions is bene
fited. The ranchers will get a bet
ter price for their animals. The corn
belt farmers will get a better price
for their corn. The railroads will
increase their revenue and the pack
ers will get the kind of beef animal
that their market demands. In short,
business Judgment operating on a
business problem has proved of wide
spread value. Once more the eco
nomic axiom that a transaction gen
erally ben fits bothe buyer and seller
has been proved correct and once
more the economic fallacy that in a
trade one party i3 always the loser
has been refuted.
But now that business judgment
has shown the way, a cry is being
raised to have the government take
the movement in hand. It seems in
credible, but it happens to be true.
A government which has done all it
can through the farm board to bring
ruin to agriculture can be expected
to ruin ranchers and corn growers
alike if it ever gets its hands on this
project. A government which has
been in the business cf lending
money to stock raisers for years and
lacked the wit to meet this obvious
need is -going to fail again, with dis
astrous results for farmers and tax
payers alike, if its accomplished blun
derers are placed in command. If,
with all its pay rollers, statisticians.
stock yards regulators, and phony
co-operatives of cattle men, it never
did the farmers anything but injury
what possible reason can there be to
suppose that it now will do anything
but injury?
Private enterprise has seen a need
and met it. The government will
perform its maxmium service to all
concerned and particularly to the
farmers if it keeps its clumsy hands
out of tho business. Chicago Tri
bune, Rep.
:o:
The passing cf the livery barn
probably took as much Joy out of the
life of the farmers as any one thing.
at least more than was compensated
by the coming of the automobile.
Time wa3 when it was nearly every
farmer's secret ambition to sell off
the old farm, move to town and run
a livery stable. It appealed to him as
an ideal occupation.
:o:
One of the "important" events dis
covered in the recent eclipse of the
sun was that the radio waves were
not bent back toward the earth eo
quickly as they were when the sun
was shining brightly. Now that it
has been discovered, what's to be
done about it?
:o:
If you want to sell anything,
try a Journal Want-Ad. The cost
Is small.
SHERIFF'S SALE
State of Nebraska, County of Cass,
ss.
By virtue of an Order of Sale
issued by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk of the
District Court within and for Cass
county, Nebraska, and to me direct
ed, I will on the 15th day of October,
A. D. 1922, at 10 o'clock a. m. of
said day at the south front door of
the court house in PlattBmouth, in
said county, sell at public auction
to the highest bidder for cash the
following real estate to-wlt:
Lot 5 in Block 10 in the City
of Plattsmouth, Cass county,
Nebraska; and Lot 6 in Block
10 in the City of Plattsmouth,
Cass county, Nebraska
The same being levied upon and
taken as the property of Alma R.
Waterman. Ida W. Wagner, The
Standard Savings & Loan Association
of Omaha, Nebraska, Verna Levings
and Frank M. Levings, her husband,
defendants, to satisfy a judgment of
said Court recovered by Paul H. Gil-
Ian, plaintiff against said defendants.
Plattsmouth. Nebraska, September
12th, A. D. 1932.
ED W. THIMGAN,
Sheriff Cass County,
Nebraska.
slS-5w
Lumber Sewing
Commercial sawing from
your own logs lumber cut
to your specifications.
We have ready cut dimen
sion lumber and sheeting for
sale at low prices.
NEBRASKA BASKET FACT0SY
Industrially Plattsmouth ranks
as high as any town of like size in
the state. Three new enterprises
located here within past year.
NOTICE OF CHATTEL.
MORTGAGE SALE
Notice is hereby given that under
and by virtue of a chattel mortgage
dated March 3, 1932, recorded in the
office of the County Clerk of Cass
county, Nebraska, given by C D.
Keesee, to Plattsmouth State Bank,
on which there is due $378.00. the
following property, to-wit: Two black
horses, smooth mouth, weight 1600
lbs. each; five Holstein and Jersey
cows, all giving milk; one truck wag
on and hay rack; one 2-section har
row; one hay rake; one log chain;
one lC-inch walking breaking plow;
ore cross-cut saw; one scythe and
ore box of Junk will be offered for
sale at public sale on October 7, 1932,
at 10 o'clock a. m., at the W. A. Gal
loway residence in the south half of
Section 32, Township 13. Range 13,
east of the 6th P. M., In Cass county,
Nebraska.
PLATTSMOUTH STATE
BANK, Mortgagee.
S15-22-29 bw
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed bids will be received at the
office of the Department of Public
Works in the State House at Lin
coln. Nebraska, on September 29.
1932. until 9:00 o'clock A. M.. and
at that time publicly opened and read
for Sand Gravel Surfacing and In
cidental work on the Louisville
Weeping Water Project No. C44J,
State Road.
The proposed work consists of
constructing 3.5 miles of Graveled
road.
The approximate quantities are:
47,000 Sq. Yd3. Sand Gravel Sur
face Course.
The minimum wage paid to all
unskilled labor employed on this
work shall be thirty (30) cents per
hour.
The minimum wage paid to all
skilled labor employed on this work
shall be fifty (50) cents per hour.
Plans and tpecifications for the
wcvrk may be seen and information
secured at the office of the County
Clerk at Plattsmouth. Nebraska, or
at the office of the Department of
Public Works at Lincoln, Nebraska.
The successful bidder will be re
quired to furnish bond in an amount
equal to 100 per cent of his contract.
As an evidence of good faith in
submitting a proposal for this work.
the bidder must file, with his pro
posal, a certified check made pay
able to the Department of Public
Works and in amount not less than
One Hundred ($100) Dollars.
The right Is reserved to waive atl
technicalities and reject any or all
bids.
DEPARTMENT OF PUB
LIC WORKS,
R. L. Cochran,
State Engineer.
Ceo. R. Sayles.
County Clerk, Cass County.
NOTICE OF REFEREE'S SALE
Pursuant to an order of the Dis
trict Court of Saunders county, Ne
braska, made and entered on the 12th
day of September, 1932, In an action
pending therein, in which Nora Fol-
Bon and husband, Guy Folsom; Mar
gie Gilbert, a widow, are plaintiffs,
and David Wagner and wife Abbie
Wagner; Edward Wagner and wife
Sarah Wagner; Harry F. Wagner and
wife Anna Wagner; William Wagner
and 'wire Rose Wagner; Josie Nich
ols and husband James Nichols;
Amanda Morgan and husband Morris
Morgan: Jesse Wagner and wife Ned
die Wagner; Addle B. Gilbert and
husband John Gilbert; Emma Graves
and husband Hod Graves; Nancy
Graves and husband Wallace Graves;
Frank G. Arnold and wife Effie D.
Arnold, are defendants, ordering and
directing the undersigned referee in
said cause to sell the following de
scribed real estate, to-wit:
The south half (S) of Lot
two (2). in the northwest quar
ter (NW) of the northwest
quarter (NV). Section seven
(7). Township twelve (12)
Range ten (10), Cass county,
Nebraska, containing five (5)
acres ;
And the north half (N4) of
Lot three (3). in the northwest
quarter (NW) of the north
west quarter ( NW ) of Section
seven (7), Township twelve
(12), Range ten (10). Cass
county, Nebraska, containing
five (5.) acres:
And. all of Lot five (5). In the
southwest quarter (SW4) of
the northwest quarter (NWi )
of Section seven (7), Township
twelve (12), Range ten (10),
Cass county, Nebraska, contain
ing ten (10.) acres;
And the west half (WH) of
the southwest quarter (SWVi)
of Section seven (7), Township
twelve (12), Range ten (10),
Cass county, Nebraska, contain
ing sixty and 28100 (60.28)
acres.
Notice Is hereby given that on the
17th day of October, 1932. at the hour
of 3 o'clock p. m.. at the Wagner
Farm, one mile east and one-half
mile south of the post office in Ash
land, Nebraska, the undersigned
Referee will sell the above described
real estate at public sale, to the high
est bidder, for cash. Said sale to be
held open one hour.
Dated this 13th day of September,
A. D. 1932.
fJOE MAYS.
J. C. Bryant, Referee.
Attorney. i.
815-22-29-OG-13