The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, December 15, 1913, Page PAGE 7, Image 7

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    MONDAY, DECEMBER 1B. 113.
PLATTtiaOUTH SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL.
PAUL J.
Xmas
Trees
and Holly
We now have a larger supply of
Christmas ; Trees and Holly
this year than ever before
Place Your Orders Early
H. Mr SOENNIGHSEN
"love. Mourned members of this
- tenderly announced and faded
'away amid the scintillations of
electric lights Iiave "gone to that
undiscovered country from whose
jlourn no traveler returns."
Whel her. them journey I . was
.only one stride across the im-
It'l l IIIIV IH . UCUAlll"-i"l'"
. 1 u ImfhoP
: llf'l l '!! IWO tl"I lllllfS U niitimi
a boundless, unfathonable icean
'stretches between 44jej earuuiy
' i. l .... Him. .t t frw r
"we do not know!
- Whether aTler death they saw
MbIivion until the resurrection
i ...i
morn, we un nm widw ;
lietlier ironi me nanwrafr--ments
of their present -liaWta
lions uiey responu io me uieiu-
ories which, we arouse, or whether
from a veW-sUal - Iforizon v" above
Km.-1 iitiwiinKiil,M to a M'f. TtMllem
'' her-thein. we do not, Juiow l
xi'i...n,i.n .nr.. i.'.o - i.uimtiv
in wmcn trie weary iraveier sleeps
.'alonjr the highway in an eternal
. ret or whether it is but a hiatus
alone: anlendless.iialh.Ve do not.
The-' srtinW hi ihh unsolved
anu perplexing nuerioaioi n-s
which the finite asks of the in-
- unite, me lnierrogaunur pniu i
which the simplest clubland Ike
'profoun.le-t philosopher must
pause alike. As to what is after
death,' the., peasant Ms'as 'wise as
the. sage; -the-.dead- alone have
solved the stupendous, problem of
.immortality. It is .beyond, the
living". For centuries , life ha9
implored death to echo back its
destiny -and through the cor
ridors of ages no answer- comes
"If a inan die, shall - he live
again?"
In reply to the savage incanta
Lions, of the .untutored Pata-
ponian.-we listen to the wail of
the winds, or the voice of thunder
with unfeigned awe, as to the
subtle meditations of the
metaphysician, comes - the same
anVwet; to" this stupendous ques
lion. None, except the tro"bbihg
of a soul and the longing for
life hereafter. .- , .
If this di're r immortality
is to be the splendid realization
of our hopes, then men should
dread;ttulive and not to die. From
the. cavern of the countless dead,
fmin tli lips, of the lining, from
the wails of infancy to the pipin
sounds of age, pagan and Chris
tian, comes the cry of the soul
for immortality.
Plato thou. reasonest well, .
Else whence .this pleashij? hope,
This fond desire, this longing; for
immortality.
hv shrinks the soul hack on
Anil Parties at. destruction 1"
'Tis divinity-that stirs within us;
Divinity, thou dreadful pleasin
thought.
frv.the intense desire for some
thing- after-death langdage has
been improverished in an attempt
to describe the mystery by pagan
and Christian alike, and
singular as it may appear one of
the. most exquisite examples of
this hope comes from a son of the
61
1
111
Will surely" bei accept able NOW
to my patrons who are still not
supplied or can use another of
those remarkable values in
TRIMMED HATS
Worth up to $8.00, at
I have chosen a complete assort
ment all new and desirable; shapes
and styles, and for a few days, I
will sell these at the above prices.
Every women in
Plattsmotith should
see for herself what
trjis great value giv
ing means to herl
EMMA
PEASE
Orient, where, upon. the banks of
the Oanf?es. whose waters are
reddened with the blood of in
fants sacrificed to paganism, he
wrote: . ,
When the world'6 last picture is
painted, and the tubes are all
twisted and dried,
And the oldest colors have faded,
and. the youngest critic has
died,
We shall rest, and, faith, we shall
need it lie down for an aeon
or two, . .
Till the Master of All . Good
Workmen shall set us to work
anew 1 '
And those that were good shall be
happy; they shall sit in a gold
en ehair:
They shall splash at a ten-league
canvas with brushes of com
ets' hair:
They shall find real saints lo
draw from Magdalene, Peter
and Paul:
They shall work for an age tit a
sitting and never be tired al all!
And only the Master shall praise
us and only the Master shall
blame: -
And no one shall work for money,
and no one shall work for
fame: .
But each for the jov of the work
ing, and each in his separate
star.
Shall paint the Thing as he sees
It for the Cod of Things as
They Are!
Kome - time ago on a sombre
sullen Sunday, in the companion
ship of no one, I wandered into a
silent city of the dead in the gold
en west, and there under the
canopy of a leaden sky, without
any sound to disturb the reverie
into which I had fallen, save the
chimes of church bells which
called good men and women to
the altar of worship," I stood uu
covered before a dignifled and
simple piece of granite,.- hewed
from the rocks he loved' so well,
that marks the resting place, the
chamber in which sleeps one of
the masters of English." John
James Ingalls. While thus con
templating this singular am
fascinating personality, my mind
instinctively recalled. his famous
"Opportunitv." his sarcasm and
wit, and while thus lost in con
templation,- I read in modest
bronze upon the boulder his ex
qnisite and apnropriateexpres-
sToiijf T "T
When life's: -fitful fever is ended,
And the wrangle of the market
And the forum have been closed,
(irass heals the scar which our
descent
Into the bosom of the earth has
made,
And the carpet of the infant
Heroines the blanket of the dead
It has been said that' I he man
who can grow two blades of
grass where formerly there grew
but one is a benefactor of man
kind, but what shall be said o
the man who, as in these ex
quisite lines just quoted, says so
much - in consolation of death?
Were they, prompted by an in
kit ion or ambition lo survive dis
solution? Which? Ambition,
that singlar and mystifying nec
romancer of the mind, so long
as it is fed by hope of fame,
bards will burn what Lord Byron
has not inaptly termed the mid
night taper" and acts of chivalry
and heroism will be performed
thai the deeds of the dead may
linger in the memory of the liv
ing. Monuments of marble as
chasle as an icicle that hangs on
Diana's temple will rear their
spotless heights to heaven as an
epilaph to genius. Poems will be
written in the vigils of the night.
shapeless niarble metamorphosed
into living entities that their
creators may live in the niche of
fame, and lives be sacrificed in
senseless wars to immortalize
ambition's child, but I would
rather have a monument to my
memory such as is paid here to
day than all the shafts of marble
at the altar of fame. To know
that some loving hand will plant
a flower upon a grave, or some
sorrow at a -dissolution is the
greatest monument of all. I
have stood under the shadows of
a monument reared to the mem
ory of Burns by his grateful
countrymen and in fancy- heard
the sea moan over his death. . I
have ntood at the grave of Tasso
and dreamed of his Jerusalem
Deliveral, while his resting place
remained unmarked. I have stood
in the gallery at, Dresden, awed
and enthralled with the trans
cendental genius of Raphael, as
his divine creation of the Sistine
Madonna Lurus-her inetrable halo
into the heart. I have leaned up
on the marble balustrade In the
Church' of the Invajides, where
sleeps -the resiles Napoleon; I
have htood upoih the spot where
Caear.fell and have scaled,
walls -of.th-e Colloseum. ani beard
in fancy the protest of its silent
stones against the crimes. of Ro
man brutality; I bave been in the!
tails of the palace o'f a king dec
orated with the blootly trophies
of xi senseless ; war, but of .all
these tributes to greatness, and
genius which the present pays to
the past, none can approximate
in . intensity and feeling that
sentiment which prompts - u
with each coming year to stand
in memory upon the edge of an
unmarked grave and shed a . tear
for -our unforgotlen. dead.
To the undying dead who live
in the memory of affection, I pay
the tribute of this brotherhood,
to their living friends I ofTer the
consolation of lives well spent
and which has made the world
belter for their being in it.
Farewell, a long farewell, and
as you sleep in silent dreamless-
ness in God's holy acre, while the
soft winds sing a requiem and
the weeping heavens shed a tear
upon vour resting place, let it be
said of them and you when (.od s
linger touches your eyelids in
death that you were one "where
even God did seem to set his seal
and give the world assurance of
a man."
Such an epitaph engraved up
on the hearts of loving friends is
the proudest legacy and gentlest
memory that man can leave to
those who follow after him. Sleep
on, sleep on, and with each com
ing of this holy month the
ilowers of unforget fulness will
be placed by loving hands upon
your bier.
Some time ago, while sealed at
a table in a public park, amid its
mvriad of dazzling lights alone, I
listened to the exquisite strains
of the Traumme.rie as its sweet
sounds stole over me, but seem
ingly fell upon thf unwilling ears
of idle men and women who pit
ferred the sound of clinking
glasses to the melody of music
Aroused from the reverie into
which I had fallen, forgetting the
beautiful women who. hung lov-
inglv, amorously and tenderly
upon the arms of their degenerate
companions, I unconsciously
pulled from my pocket a piece of
folded paper, torn, soiled and
lingered, for I had read it often;
it was a few line written by a
friend upon the Equality of Man
in Death.
Only a little longer
And the journey is done, my
friend,
Only a little farther
And the road will have an end
The shadows begin lo lengthen,
The evening soon will close.
And it's ho for the inn of the
sexton
And the inn where we'll all re
pose. The inn has no bridal chamber,
No suites for the famed or
great ;
The guests who go there to
slumber
Are all of the same estate.
The chambers are small and
narrow,
The couches are hard and cold;
And the grinning, lleshless land
lord Is not to be bribed with gold.
A sheet for the proud and
haughty, '
A shroud for the beggar guest;
A sheet for the blooming maiden,
A shroud for us all and rest.
No bells at the dawn of morning,
No rap at the chamber door;
But silence is there and slumber
Forever and evermore.
Then ho for the inn of the sextn.
The inn where we all must
sleep.
When our hands are done with
.toiling
And our eyes bave ceased to
weep.
HOW TO TAKE BOOD
CURE OF YOUR HAIR
I
if nil a
GIFTS
Nothing spoilsyour good looks
so much as homely hair strmu.
dull-Colored, harsh. Nothing adds
to good looks so much as beauti
ful hair soft, silkv. way and
ossy. No matter how beautiful
your hair is now, you can improe
its good looks by usinsr Harmony
Hair Beaulifier. If yvur hair is
boniely and ugly now. Harmony
Hair BeautiRer will make it soft
er, silkier, glossier, more beauti
ful in eery way. It also makes it
easier to put up anil helps it t"
"stay put.' Its rich ro. odor
hides the unpleasant, oily iio'll
of the hair. Harmony Hair
beaut itier is rightly naiiinl; it
beautifies the hair.
Very easy t apply u'tnply
sprinkle a little on your hair each
time before brushing it. It con
tains no oil, and will not change
the color f the hair, nor darken
gray hair.
To keep your hair and scalp
dandrufT-f r e and clean, use Har
mony Shampoo. This pure liquid!
shampoo gies an instantaneous
rich lather that immediately
penetrates to every part of hair
and scalp, insuring a quick and
thorough cleansing. Washed off
just as quickly, the entire opera
tion lakes only a few moment-.
(Contains i oUiing that can harm
the hair; leaves no harshness- or
stickiness just a sweet-pnielling
cleanliness.
Both preparations come in odd
shaped, very ornamental bottles,
with sprinkler fops. Harmony
Hair Beautilier. 1 .no. Harmony
Shampoo, re. Both guaranteed
to satisfy you in every way, or!
your money back. Sold in this
community only at our store '
The Rexall Store one of the
more than 7.000 leading .1rug
stores of Hie United States. Can
ada and Great Britain, which own
the big Harmony laboratories in
Boston, where the many cele
brated Harmony perfumes and
Toilet Preparations are made.
F. G. Fricke & Co., Union Block,
Plaltsmouth, Neb.
COUGHS THAT PREVENT SLEEP
These coughs are "wearing and if
they "hang on," can run one
down physically and lower the
vital resistance lo disease. Mr.
Bob Ferguson, 319 Pine St.,
Green Bay, Wis., writes: "I was
greally troubled with a bad cough
that kept me awake nights. Two
small botlles of Foley's Honey
and Tar Compound completely
cured me." For sale by all drug
gists." '
. You may need an
AUCTIONEER
and we want to inform vou
that dates can be made
at this office for
gol. uri Bira
the Weeping Water Auctioneer
Careful Attention ,to ..Public Sales.
- Rates are Reasonable - - -
are always most
apprieiated
Casseroles, with genuine Guernsey
ware insets.
Serving Dishes.
Electric Coffee Percolators.
Alcohol Coffee Percolators.
Ramelsin Sets and Trays
Community Silverware, (tripple plat
ed) consisting of Desert Spoons,
Table Spoons, Knives and
Forks, Soup Spoons. Childs
Sets. Cold Meat Forks,
Salad Forks, Etc.
Pocket Knives
Embroidery Scissor Sets, fancy cases
Shears in all sizes
Safety Razors
Aluminum Ware
Carving Sets .
Crumb Trays and Brushes in latest
Patterns and Finishing
G. P. EASTWOOD
Plattsmoulh :: Nebraska
Government Inspector Hero.
From Friday's Daily.
I.ee llery of lte, Oak. I-.1.
government iu-pectnr f build
ings for this ;ecliMi. wa in th
city today looking after the gov
ernment building h'-re, and will
se to the driving of th piling
which Hie colli raclor i preparing
to put in to hold the dirt fio,n
settling around the potoilice
boil. ling lure. The .o:k ha
been son-ew hat dlaed owing
the non-arrival of f.onie needed
repairs to the pile drier to !
i,-ed in the work. Li t llo--,- ! . - ; For Saie.
i;ig arr ived Ho-re i- n.. d- .!! !''' , . ; .
Mi.. v..i L vi ill 1i.-ti ii.!i il t .)!' !. t 1
now.
.. .1. A -' ! . V .)
GF.ORGF.TnWN. TLX . I. A ---
Kitnl'io -ays: "For - -r;i1 var-'-J-
pa-t l'o!e'r. Ifon. y arid Tar "..:!-; . .'! i. !. . V .
pound h: n mv h--u-!.:! ' -r.d-...i- -.f f- K .
remedy for all (u-!i. cd.: an. I y : . -lung
troubles. It ha gim per-I 1 ' ' ; ' !
maneut r lief in a i:'.i'il. r ""rl-
cae, of ob-to- iV and y ' " "
,-,d C'liimtt- no t.t.t. ,!,... p,e.;y ' ' "'
fUs substitute. lor s.l'.e by all,
druggist s. j V!Y"V."V.
li. liM nil A fcw
PAMEILE T0EATEE
Q
irniajHMaagiBg
ecembsr 25th, Kmas Mighi
j
30th ANNUAL TOUR 30th
of the
aiiil
a B& & El! IL La V
FAMOUS
ii n
I. t . .
MEW
SINGERS
DANGERS
ESUSIGIfifiS X)
GOMEDIAfiS ?z)k&
JOKES
FACES
SONGS
DANCES
I C C E
e t t t zr;
R I C H T E h A
1 THAN EVE
ana
0
Seats on Sale at Weyrich & Hadraba Drug Store Monday
December 22nd 1913.
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