The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, September 11, 1913, Page PAGE 4, Image 4
PAQE 4. PLATTSMOUTH SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1913 The Plattsmouth Journal Published Semi-Weekly W. A. HA.TICSS, ! Entered at the Postoffice at Plattsmouth, Nebraska as second-cla33 matter - St. 50 PER YEAR , . 4- 2- THOUGHT FOR TODAY. 4. i The souse of humor is I tio J- oil f life's engine. W illi- J out. it the machinery creaks i- ami frroans. No lol is so $ had, mi aspect of things so J fri rti. hut it relaxes he fore J- a hearty laugh. (1. S. Mirriam. 4 -:o: If Huerta isn't careful he is point' to get hurta. :o: The farmer with half a corn crop at double prices is likely to be aLle to worry along. -:o: We are not forgetting that big wheat yield. It was sufficient in itself to put us all across. :o: Aiiansas has had four governors- ihis year. It is all some stalls can do to worry along with one. :o: xWIl, we can get along with out a fall festival, as long as we are to hae two big German days 0-kt"r 17 and 18. :o: Ti; man who fails to cut up his corn and take care of the fodder will be the loser of several nice, juicy steaks next spring.. :o: Th season is open for geese, duck, grouse and prairie chick ens. But where are the geese, duets, grouse, etc? r- :o. If eongress remains in ses sion until Thanksgiving day President Wilson should he re quired to provide the turkey. :o : Th- American peope do not wan; war with Mexico, and they are ..onimending President Wil son for his policy of neutrality. :o: If this dry spell keeps up much long' r the farmers of Cass county will nave to haul water for their stock. The Missouri still has plenty. :o: Governor Morehead was bitten by a rabid dog down in Richard son ounty the other day. Hut nothing very serious resulted, we are pleased to learn. :o : The firs! big benefit of the strained relations falls to Mexico. She is going to slop playing our ragtime music. Now, wouldn't that -ork you? :o: The people in general are very lired of this long, dry hot spell. Hut according to weather reports they will have to grin and bear it for a few days longor. :o; Life is made up of what people do, not what is said of them. "Honor and fame from no condi tion rise, act well your part there all honor lies." :o: What a sickening automobile fatality record is going to stare the American people in the face when the 1913 statistics are coin. pleted! It will astound the en tire world. :o: All parties are willing to con cede that President Wilson is made up of the right kind of ma terial. He proposes to do his best for the people of the coun try. :o: Hon. George W. Berge has many warm friends throughout the state who want him to run for governor next year. Mr. Berge was always strong with the people of Nebraska. at Plattsmouth, Neb. PnbllHer IN ADVANCE - What fools these mortals be! A man in Pittsburg wants a di vorce ' because his wife has been silent for ten years. Some men don't know when they are well off. :o: You can't get the people to go to Garfield park lo any great ex tent. This has been fully dem onstrated at the band concerts. IoubIe the number go to the High school grounds that go to the pa rk. :o: Mr. Hryan is filling some of his dates (n the chautauqua circuit, but we don't hear very much howling over the fact. Maybe they can see where they made fools of themselves, and thought it best to draw in their horns. :o: A wail goes up by some people outside the state about the drouth in Nebraska. They had better come and get a got id square meal ami note that the grand slate is better off than two-thirds of the state? in the union. :o: The complaint among some Nebraska farmers over a reduced larifT on Canada wheat, as pro posed under the reciprocity act, has disappeared entirelv. even 1 though there is under the pro-j posed Wilson-Underwood tariff hill a still greater reduction on farm products. :o: Mrs. Parkhurst has wisely de cided to take a vacation tf ninety days for rest and recuperation, ami also to give parliament an opportunity to catch its breath. This is good for the old lady, but parliament will feel better if she continues her vacation through the winter. :o: II is reported that Mrs. Wil liam R. Hearst is the owner of large and valuable mining prop erties in Old Mexico. The Hearst papers in this country favor war with Mexico. There is a reason. Every American who has mining or railroad interests in Mexico are in favor of war. There's where the shoe pinches. You are glad that school ha commenced, because it gets the children out of your way at home. Is that the only'feason you are glad? If it is. then you do not have a proper conception of the future of your children. You should be glad that your children have an opportunity to secure an education that will make them better men and women. :o: The bankers demand one re serve bank and lower reserves. Well, that isn't any more than what we expected they would want, and besides they want to issue all the treasury certificates themselves. If congress ever ac cedes to all these demands there will be a lot of stay-at-homes af ter the election next year. Mark that! :o: Authorities in the drug busi ness estimate the number of soda fountains in the United States at not less than 75,000, and they are said to represent an investment of $50,000,000. The annual receipts of these supplies of soft drinks may total $500, 000,000. :o: Some smart people are predict ing 1 corn before the robin's nest again. Does that mean 10 cent hog9? If it does then there will be a whole lot of people who can't afford meat. We're going to buy a bacon rind so we can smell and lick it occasionally and not forget the great American hog. Many in Washington believe that war with Mexico is inevitable. Hut the most of these have inter ests and don't care how many are killetl to save these interests. Will any of them assist in the lighting? Not on your life! -:o: You can always afford to tell the truth because it is right. You may sometimes make an enemy by doing it, but you will gain friends in the end. We'd rather have the good will of one man for telling the truth than to have the professed friendship of a dozen men through subterfuge and de ceit. :o: Some people are like som newspapers aways knocking to attract attention. Not to notice them hurts them infinitely worse than to dignify them with recognition. They remind us of the ostrich. When it is pursued and closely pressed it will hide its head in the sand to avoid de tection, foi getting that the big gest part of it is visible. :o: So far the recall clause in the commission form of government has proved a failure in many cit ies that have adopted it. It soun ded plausible at first even allur ing. The citizens would be boss and should be! If a mayor did not meet the popular will it ap peared to be only just and right thai he should be subject to dis missal. And ct its operation so far cannot be said to be success, ful. The system is open to spile work 011 the part of those who become vexed at the official for some cause or another. The com mission form of government bills fair to be short lived. While the republicans of Nebraska are looking around for a candidate for governor they should cast their optics in the di rection of Cage ciuut ami hunt up Hon. han. Killan. Here is a gentleman ami scholar who is loved by all who know him. lie is honest and conscientious, and while a member of the legisla ture he made himself very popu lar by his genuine fairness in ev erythinir. Dan Killan is a self made man. ami worked his way through the state university ami finally arose to prominence as one of the leaders of his par ty in the state. :o : It is rumored that Hon. John A. Maguire will not be a candid ate for re-election to congress. The Journal does not speak ad visedly on the matter, but we do not believe there is any founda tion for the rumor. Certainly Mr. Mauuire has done his duty and the people of the First con gressional district are well pleased with his services. It may be that Mr. Maguire is tired of serving the people in congress, but no 1 any means are the people tired of him. His election for three terms in succession would certainly denote that he is "the right man in the right place." :o: Many a soldier who bravely stood at his post during our civ il war is covered with badges. We would not take one from him, he meri'is them; but many an "ordinary" woman has stood at her post of duty for thirty years, or even half a century, fighting with sickness, poverty and dis couragement and with true Spar tan courage kept the wolf from the door and saved the lives of a large family of children. The man who saves one life receives a prize for bravery, his picture appears in the metropolitan pa pers, and he wears a medal which says to the world that he was brave. And he was. But the wo man who has saved the lives of many is given no badge, and sel dom a word of commendation. These "ordinary" women may not receive a Carnegie badge for bravery, but "He who marks the sparrow's fall" will certainly reserve a jeweled crown for Ihem in heaven. In speaking of the Maine's spe cial congressional election the Slate Journal savs: "11 would he an anti-democratic landslide if the democratic candidate fail ed to win with this divided oppo sition. The old lime normal re publican majority in the district was :j,50u." After saying the re publican majority was normally y.Gnn. ami that the latter carried the district by TOO majority, a democratic candidate is expected. This is surely consistency with a big C. m the part of the State Journal. :o :- THE ART OF VENEERING. Many things are done well that are not worth doing. It don't pay to he a hyprocriie, yet a lot of people spend a lifetime trying to convince their friends ami neigh bors that they are something dif ferent from what they really are. Veneering is an art that is very generally practiced, ami so pro ficient do people become that it is difficult for one to distinguish between the genuine -and the spurius. A mahogany table may have grown upon a pine stump in North Carolina, and but for its veneer it would be doing service as a barnyard gate or standing guard over the winter's supply of coal. The veneer fools the folks who buy and they pay mahogany prices for an armful of southern pine. II looks good to mother ami t I he whole family, hut w hen it is subjected to everyday wear ami tear it sheds its coat of veneer ami reveals il southern ancestry. It is the inside that tells tio- (rue story. It i the works that fix the alue of the watch, not the polished face and gilded hands that tell onh the ime of ilay. Only for appearance sake, it matters not whether the outside i of iron . or gold, or whether polished or in the rou'-'h. ftut it millers a whole lot about the material ami skill that have been nci on the in side. The Veneer appeals In one's pride am vanity, and pride and vanity demand that the outside be well done, however eheap may be the inside. Itenee there are many things done well that are not worth the doing', and many thing's that are worth doing that are never done at all. The out side is made to shine while the inside is allowed to rus. Take off the veneer ami there would nothing remain except the kindly and worthless pine. The best dressed man in town may not have taken a bath for more than a month. You can't always tell about these things. You can only see the veneer. The X-ray skirt may cover some mighty crooked shin bones. You can't always tell Mm are sometimes left to guess the rest. Dress is used largely for veneering purposes to put a mahogany finish on a cheap pine hotly. Men and wom en like to pretend to be what they really ought to be. They spend their time and "money and their best efforts in putting on the veneer in polishing the surface that the world is allowed to see. And this is one of the devil's best tricks. The smile that meets you on the street may only be the veneer that conceals a pair of hoofs and horns. And this smile may have another side it may be turned to hateful frowns and angry scowls for folks at home. You can't always tell which the veneer and which the solid oak which is the sham and which is the smile that never conies off. It takes the wear and tear of home life to bring out the real stuff that is in a man or woman. The veneer is never worn behind closed doors. Home folks know whether you are made of pine knots or whether you are clear mahogany through and through. It were better for you to shape and polish the real stuff that is in you, than to attempt to live a lie, to veneer your faults and weaknesses and imagine that the world will not find out. Make the best of what you have and let it go at that. The baseball season is about over, ami then conies foot ball. :o: There seemed lo be plenty of room tin the state fair grounds this year. :o:- The I arid" will come to a focus some time this week. Then we will know about it. :o: Relafies cannot hold jobs in state institutions. Those who are in must gel out. :o: It is good to see Omaha and Lincoln dwell together in harmony even for a short time only. -:o: The coal trust is preparing now to get in its work generally as the cool winter months ap pear. :o: Io not forget the Nehavvka pic nic t'riday, September 19. Let's semi down a big delegation from Plattsmouth. :o: Leslie M. Shaw, after getting all the honors tie could in fowa has located in Philadelphia. Iowa 'is too small for him. :o: 1 Never go on a note for the fel low who's always fretting about the tariff question, unless you actually mean to pay it for him when it is due. :o: U- kind to your neighbor lend him your paper every day; you may n'-etl his name on your note, some day. to make it worth any thing at the bank. :o: Judtre J. S. McCarty of Auburn is the latest candidate for gov ernor on the democratic ticket John McCarty js a lawyer, living in Auburn, and is a mighty good man. :o: The governors, in session at Colorado Springs recently, an nounced their convictions that smaller legislatures are desirable. Amonjr 1 1,-people there is an im pression, more or less defined, that a smaller amount of legisla tion is ( be preferreil. :o: Six young women of Salem, O., raised oln.ono for a hospital by publicly selling kisses at $1 each. A ma ivied woman,, seeking to aid the project, sold hand-shakes at 25 cents each. We take it that the young women needed a hospi tal when they raised the money for one. :o: Reports from Lincoln would indicate ttiat the capital city is inflicted with a bum police force. It is claimed while some people are allowed t do as they please, 1 others are arrested ami abused for the least offense. This should be remedied, but the people com plain that the present city ad ministration have henchmen on the police force, whom it dare not discharge. A fine way of doing business ! :o: Eleven hundred pupils of the Plattsmouth public schools begin their year's work next Monday morning under pleasant auspices, save for oppressive weather con ditions. We are proud of our public schools, their teachers and management. There is no sub ject which comes nearer to the heart of the public than its schools. The school teacher bears a more intimate and re sponsible relationship to the child than the physician or min ister of the church. The grow ing mind is stimulated and in spired or stunted and ruined by the teacher. Legislation, civic reform, votes for women, eugenics, and the purification of public morals are all subjects of minor importance compared with education in the public schools. Our teachers are entitled to the close co-operation of parents and public, civic organizations and the press. A city is criticized for its policies in other matters; it is tried and convicted on malad ministration of its public schools. When the weather is sizzling and simmering- and the deil seems to be blowing his breath m your face, pity the idle; pity lho-e who have nothing to do but thin:, of the heat. :o: Men who hae spent a hot sum mer sighing for the backbone of winter, probably will devote tie long winter evenings to kicking about the coal bill. It seems .i hard to satisfv evervbotlv. :o:- Mr. Br.van, in a speech at Maine the other day, extolled President Wilson as the best prepared man who has ever entered the White House. Ami the people of these United Stales agree with him. :o: Last month was the hottest August except in 181 and 1900. The mean temperature last month was IKf. and August in the two years named was one degree warmer. In weather "unprece dented" is a big word. ;o: - For purposes of taxation th-? incomes have been divided into amounts ranging from 5.0no to S 100.000. There will be a great struggle on the part of the high er to get into the lower class jfica f ion. :o: There's a nice little sfirl in this community who needs some real good friendly advice;, and should that fail to affect hrr she should be locked up in the care of her mother every night, after 7 o'clock, until she is made to ee. the point. :o : The English press declares Liud's mission to have been a failure. This is no new thing coming from that source, as they have been in the habit of making such remarks ever since the earlv pioneers cleaned them out of this country. Lind has put the pro position up to them squarely and retired. Now let them make the best of if, and "damned be he who crosses t lie water with any ulterior motives." :o : President Huerta is in a box. He can't hold on and he can'l let go. All stories about his trying to bluff the United States proe to be false. John Lind as com missioner is trying to straighten out matters with him. butjust how this is to be done remains to be seen. It is no joke to, bv- pres ident of the Mexican republic in this day and age, but the- policy of this country ought to be plain, that is to let the two. contending parties fight it out between them. :o: The Mason, Iowa. Journal, in discussing- the cigarette, says; The cigarette smoking boy is dull, listless, legarthic, lazy, im pudent and careless. He is invar iably untruthful, dishonest and untrustworthy. He is a lout and an undesirable. It is impossible to break him of the habit by coaxing, threats, bribes or kind ness. He is a slave to it and it ruins him. If you don't believe this, just ask us about it and we'll produce the proof. :o : The governor of Minnesota has issued a proclamation setting aside a whole week as seed corn week. Ihiring that week he ad vises every farmer to drop all other work and devote his time and that of his hired men to the selection of seed for next year's corn crop. Having selected it ac cording to the directions piven him by the experts of the College of Agriculture, the farmer is then to cure and store it according to further directions, to prevent de terioration during the winter and loss of vitality. What Gov. Ma jor undertook to do for the roads of Missouri by setting asid? special days for work upon them, the governor of Minnesota is try ing to do for the corn crop. Which will accomplish the most actual cash good for the farmers is a question, though the corn seed proposition the more readily lends itself to figures. 71