The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, June 03, 1918, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    MONDAY TUNE 2. 13 IS.
FLATTSMOUTH SEMI-YVTEKLY JOURNAL.
fAGZ TKHZA.
tZhz Plattsmoy tb louvnal
PUBLISHED SETuI-WEEKIY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA
Entered at !' toiTice, Viatt.-mo'ith, Nb., p.s cond-class mail matter
R. A. BATES, Publisher
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE: $1.50 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE
'Y1; n a bit of ?ri!ihine hits you,
Likf the passing of a cloud,
V.'l-f.n a fit of laughter guts you,
Ami your Fpino is ff-ulin prowl.
Don't fores t to up and slir.? it
At ijn" soul t'iut':; fee I'm' bin".
For t!i moment that you 11 in a it,
1 1".-- a liooiiiurans; to you."
Xo paper Decoration day.
:o:-
i: . ry!)0(';y s-iiouM unfurl OM
(;!.;rv.
-:o:-
T:; ')iiyin cf T.i1 riy boni; i-; in
no r: - a donat i-:n.
:o:
K r.o-v tlio niemrry of tho bravo
lxivs v. ho lie in fh.k Hill.
-: o : -
I5;v- l.all in tho eoi:ntry village?
are It.:'' 'vitlx until afor the v.-pr.
-:o:
Rumors to the contrary. Hinilon
btir;; i- ii' t as dead as he would like
to he.
-:o:-
The 1eiei!ione is rot the pl?-" t
carry on ui,s.ip. I let tor use tho hack
yarl foncn.
:o:
Tli" Red Cross drive has heon put
over the np in irood pliape. Xoxt
is tho fall liberty loan drive.
:o:
The American people are united
rn niar.y things and one is the fact
th.it the "tar P paneled Hanner" is
a hard son. 7 to Mnc;-.
:o:
Some in nn never hrag r.hut how
ronsei; r.t inns they are until after
they mr.k" their? and are ready to
retire fr r.i active hu.-:ness.
"A citizen with a large following."
describes a Vestern paper, very in
definitely. That identification might
fit a talkative pro-Cern:an on his veay
out of town.
:o:
About the only tine a hov.i-ng
torn eat really becomes a welcom1
r.uet is wl.en the r.fi'dihc-r.s put on
the "I.on?: y" record ?g".!n for the
fifth time in the evening.
-:o:
Pi-innr.- may lend enchantment,
but not m he;i yri are several miles
from t v:n in the middle of the toad
with a broken down motor car on
your hands tiv.d no help in siekt.
:o:
It is tee closed season against
straw hat-. This is, it will be il
legal to shoot them until ?.ftr Sep
tember 1". vhether the license t ri g
displayed in. a conspicuous place or
not.
-:o:
Xo work lining laid out yet for the
idb rs of :'2 to r.O years of age, it is
assumed t:iat they will continue to
direct thn strategy of t lie war from
the hotel chairs and the dry goods
'mvfs as at present.
Rare comfort comes to the patriotic
heart when it is observed how en
thusiastically Cass cruinty citizens
rallied to the support of the Red
t'ro s drive. Xo county in Xebraska
lias be n more prompt in responding.
:o:
Thf country papers are full of
halt'tone pictures of boy and girl
gra lua t es t he hoys soon to go into
the V, Ids and the tv.rls to go away to
finishing schools although. from
son- of the pictures, it would seem
the girls could just as well go into
the fields and let the boys take the
finishing courses.
Rained enough.
-:o:-
V.'ait for another time.
-:o:-
The roads afe rough.
-:o:-
Everything i3 growing nicely.
:o:-
The wages of sin is publicity.
:o:
Never seen finer grass anvwhere.
-:o:-
And the wlieat crop is simply
lovelv.
-:o:-
riexico and Cuba are going to have
a belligerent side show.
:o:-
Xo waiting for the worm to turn,
the early angler is digging it up.
The boys are still going to the war.
There is nothing oo good for the
.soldier bovs of loval Cass eounty.
A college education does not neces
sarily injure a young man. providing
he is willing to learn something after
he graduates.
:o:
A mnn must have a severe case of
insomnia if he can't sleep these fine
mornings, when it is time to get up
at sh: o'clock, when it is only five.
:o:
In the end, a country true to it
self and determined to claim Clod's
gift to brave men will overmatch a
mere army, however solid its force.
:o:
About all there is to salesmanship
these lays seuns to be the ability to
tell the customer to buy it now, be
cause after June 1 the price will go
up.
:o:
A total eclipse of the sun June S
and a little later on there will be
a total and permanent eclipse of
the person who was so bent on a
rdacc in the sun.
If you are wondering what makes
the short cake and the hindlady wild,
here's tk.3 answer: A Jlinneapolis
firm the ether day bought a car ol
the best strawberries in eastern Xe
braska for a crate.
:o:
It may be merely a coincidence,
but since farm work has been offered
so forcefully to young men of draft
age, we haven't heard much from
the eld boys who were "wishing
thev were under 21."
-:o:-
Calarrhal Deafness Cannot lie Cured
by ;.ioal applications, 38 they cannot reach,
tif diseased portion o the car. There is
only me tvsy to cure catarrhal deafness,
and that is by a ctnstitutional rt-metly.
Catarrhal Deafness is caust'd fcy an in
flat condition cf the mucou3 lining of
Thi- Kcstachir.n Tube. V.'iier, this tube Is
inflirard you have a r"mtlin!X round or Im
pr:iet hearing-, and when it is entirely
clos-vri. Lv-afn-ss is the rt-iux Unlees the
lr.I! lmma-tion can bo reduced and this tube
ro ortd to !s rorrrir.l condition. ht-ariniET
wi!' t destroyed fonv-.r. Many casts of
cVif-Hjs are cts .1 Ly cnarrh. which is
u:i n.ilamed .onJ:t.rn o' i!c mucous sur
fuc 5 llall'a ("M-rrh :.T'i:cin, acts thru
tlj" elooci on thy :.ikcu iui faces cf thtj
e; f m.
' i v-r.i r've ",n.' W-.-p.i r-i!'.rj t".?
81 v. s... ' . ' ' r th:il C:.nnrt
Vf i .11. L. . . ,.,., .in .., viln. in). Cir-
1 w ' "
rroeuet is reported to he very
popular among the French soldiers..
If General C'rowder takes the ball
players for the army, perhaps it will
become the rage over here, "too.
''Rage" probably is the right word.
:o:
Anyhow, says one Kansas City
man, if the boy under 21 have to do
the fight ing and producing too, it
will give them some pretty good
iieas about how the country ought,
to be run when they come back from
Europe to run it.
:o:-
The fellow from the east, who told
the Bee. that Omaha had the prettiest
girls cf any city he ever saw. He
was giving the Ilee a piece of fresh
taffy. Piattsmouth is the town for
the best looking girls in Xebraska
and .no doubt those he saw in Omaha
came direct from this city.
-:o:-
If the object is to keep General
Wood as far as possible from the war,
care should he taken not to move
him much farther west than the Pa
cific Coast. The world is round, you
know, and beyond a certain point the
distance again becomes shorter.
PATRIOTIC DOLLARS.
-:o:
Give according to your ability to
war funds, and continue to give. And
then save your receipts for all you
have given. Persons who withhold
support from the government now
will not hesitate to attack your rec
ord of loyalty after the war if they
see a chance to further their selfish
ends bj- so doing.
All the dollars in the world can
not buy victory. Victory is not pur
chasable it is won. Dollars can
work for victory only in so far as
they are converted into 'aho and
materials. A dollar hoarded is a
slacker; a dollar wasted is a traitor;
a dollar saved is a patriot, douhly so
when loaned to the Government.
A hoarded dollar represents idle
power; a wasted dollar represents
wasted power; a dollar saved rep
resents power saved, labor saved,
materials saved. Loaned to ycur
Government, it represents power, la
bor, and materials in action, on the
firing line, over the top. And nfore
it represents reserve power, energy
stored, purchasing power conserved
for its owner.
:o:-
THE ECONOMY OF VICTORY.
Xo matter v.-If at this war co.-ts the
Government and the people of the
United States in the way of money,
it is going to be much cheaper to
win this war than to lose it.
The commercial and financial loss
es that would follow a German vic
tory are not to be calculated. All
that we spent would be lo-t. indemni
ties beyond calculation would have to
bo paid, and along with these losses
would come a continuing loss in
foreign commerce that would spell
disaster.
With these material losses we
would lose our national liberty and
independence, our power to secure
our international rights, our right to
live in a world ruled by the dictates
of humanity and civilization.
-:o:-
HINDENBURG'S DEATH.
The Germans insist on making the
allies believe that Ihndenhurg is
dead, ft very now and then the re
port comes out from somewhere in
Germany that the mili'ary leader on
the western front will never lead,
another army.
Of course these reports are merely
rumors, and they should be received
as such. Just because a Get man
newspaper says the general is dead
does not make it so. The newspapers
in America as dispensers of news
must report what the Berlin press
says, but the newspapers never fail
to give the source of the informa
tion.
It is probable that the ;auer
would like for the allies, as well as
his own people, to think the mil i
tary chieftain dead. It would giw
him an excuse for failing in his wes
tern front drive. And there is even
a hare possibility that Iliiulenbir g is
dead, though few official circles be
lieve it.
The fact remains, however, thnt as
far as the Ilindenburg who was to
reach Paris on April 1 ks concerned,
he is dead. The much advertised
Prussian general has succumbed.
When he fails to reach a solitary ob
jective in the greatest and most
costlv of all German drivers, he has
passed to another world so far as
the allies are concerned. Lincoln
Star.
:o:
DREAMS COMING TRUE.
There is no doubt that the latest
request for the conserve 'on. of wheat
and flour to be continued until the
1st of August will be complied with
by American families. What they
have done in the last ten months
shows how men and women are bent
on doing all that is within their
power to win the war. It shows a
united people in a way that nothing
else could.
As the true proportions of last
year's wheat crop in this country be
gan to be apparent toward the close
of last summer, the most optimisJic
estimates of supplies available for
export to our allies did not exceed
20,000,000 to 40,000.000 bushels, but
so well has the matter of conserva
tion of supplies and of substitutes
been handled, that now, with returns
often months' exports of wheat and
flour available, we find that the
country actually shipped 110,000,
000 bushels.
The difference between the people
of the United States and the other
belligerent nations is this. Euro
pean nations cut down the consump
tion of wheat because there was no
wheat to be obtained beyond the ra
tion allowed, but America cut down
the ration when it had ?n abundance
of wheat to supply all its own de
mands so that it might be sent to the
rationed people cf other countries far
beyond the sea. There are many
American homes from which wheat
bread has practically disappeared for
months and it will not be restore!
until cur allies also can eat bread
with us. It is "all for each and each
for all," something that has been
dreamed of for many yo:?r-, but never
b e f o r e attaint-d . Wor 1 d-Herabl.
:o:
HELPING REBUILD EUROPE.
There is probably a lot of good
business method behind (he annnnr.e-c-il
plan to put samples of Arterifttn
wood on display in the rooms oi the
Royal Arfhitect ; in London. Ameri
can lumbermen are und' uhtodly !:t
uring on what they will have to de.
when the war end, and the j.ori-a-r.'-nt
exhibit of American bxiihling
material is likvly to be a eon cider
able step in ihrir prrgr:.m.
For England, no ls-5 than war
wasted Rcigium and I'r.ince, f? go
ing to have a lot of buHding to do
when she has time to turn again to
the ways of peate. Th" lack of new
houses is a tiling that is being ft It
pretty keenly on the other side they
will have to build whole cities
houses, factories, sheds and storage
places. The call for material ? like
ly to be heavy long continued.
In the case of England alone The
X.i;i:-ns business organ of tl r
('!; nvcr cf Commerce i f the United
?:atf5, lias compile! f-me interest
ing figures. That magazine says
that England's shortage in houses by
the end of 191 S will amount to about
:teo.e,no. Cning a little further, and
fkrurmg that each, of fh-se Inn'.1?,
when built, will he or. the cottage
pk:n livi..:r rorni. kitchen and three
bedrooms there will be required:
Fix billion brick.-.
Three million doors and frames.
Three hundred million roof tiles.
One hundred and twenty million
slates.
Almost twenty-four million square
feet e;f glass.
Two and a half million windows.
Uive hundred, thousand ton-, of
cement.
:i:x hundred thousand tons Vf
lime.
This b;;t one pert, and peihr.p
a small one. of the building program
which must be faced. America is
going to have some cat ehing-r.n of
her own to do, and she must be pre
pared to help the allies catch tu.. as
well. The fir:;t phase of the war, for
Aie.eriea. is going to consist largely
in battering down, hut when that
"art is over the second phase will he
only started and America can gain
new laurels by helping rehabilitate
the houses cf her friends. Philadel
phia Public Ledger.
'LATTSMOUTM
HAN'S I UGKY ?P
Will Interest Readers c' the Journal.
Thoe having the mist fortune to
suffer from backache, urinary dis
orders, gravel, dropsical swellings,
rheumatic pains, or other kidney
a:v. bladder disorders, will read with
gratification this encouraging state
ment by a Piattsmouth man.
E. M. Buttery, stationary engin
eer. Tenth .St Walnut Sts., Piatts
mouth, says: "Pains caught mo in my
hips so that I could hardly raise n.
shovel of coal. At times, there was
lameness across my loins. I had rea
son to believe that the trouble was
caused by disordered kidneys and I
got Doan's Kidney Pills from the
Cre-cer.t Pharmacy. I got nuick re
lief." (Statement given June 11,
1D0C.)
On February 22, 191 P Mr. Buttery
said: "It has been two years since I
have had any trouble with my kid
neys and I have enjoyed good health
in everj- way. I recommend Doan's
at every opportunity."
Price GOc, at all dealers. Don't
simply ask for a kidney remedy
got Doan's Kidney Pills the same
that Mr. Buttery had. Foster-Mil-burn
Co., rdfgrs., Buffalo, X'. Y.
Henry F. Kropp of X'ehawka pre
cinct was in the city today, coming-to
make his. returns for assessing the
precinct, and says that everything is
looking pretty nice in that portion of
the county.
I A
THE' CALL -TO ; TOUR
calls for Polarine in the motor. When you want speed the
Polarine lubricated cylinder lets the piston slide rapidly up
and down without friction. And if you need power that
same thin film of Polarine seals the gas above the piston J
makes a giant out of your motor.
You can get Polarine wherever you go a thousand miles
from here. It's the safe oil to start with.
Look for the sign it identifies a good dealer and a depend-)
able oil.
Red Crown Gasoline is best for the long run speedy
powerful, economical.
TANDARP OIL COMPANY
(Nebraska)
OMAHA
fi
.
d SftsMgrx
WAR
SAVINGS
STAMPS
Thrift Stamps cost 25 cents
each and draw no interest. You
can buy them from your letter
carrier, either city or rural route
at tiie post office or your bank.
You will be given a card to paste
them on. This costs nothing.
There are spaces for 16 Thrift
St-imps on thi3 card. When your
card is full, take it to your post
ofrice or bank any time, with a
few cents additional and your
card will be exchanged for an
interef t-bearinsf War Savings
Certificate worth $o on Jan. 1,
Tj2Z. This frives you 4 per cent
interest compoi:nied quarterly.
You can buy 2'.' War Savings
Certificates at "-iie time. They
will co.st you t.AO, and their
face value at the time of re
rteir.ption, January 1, 1923. will
War Savin its Certificates may
be registered at any post office
rf the Firm. Second or Third
Cliss.
War Savincrs Certificates may
Y'S converted into cash at the
post office where issued if you
fieid tlie money. Y"ou will pet
interest, too, at about 3 per cent.
STAY the Hand Thai
fould Hoard the Pennie
Guide It to Patriotic avd
Profitable Investment
Ths childish instinct tends usually toward-far?T7.
But to this instinct must be added a purpose in tie
saving. The mere hoarding of coin pleases a chud'c
fancy, but it does not teach the lesson of thn'f.
Teach your child his first lesson of patriotism by
making him a factor in aiding the government, and
his first lesson of investment by placing his money
where it earns interest Thrift Stamps furnish the
government with money for carrying on the war.
They earn 4 per cent interest Replace the penny
bank with a Thrift Stamp Book.
This Advertisement Paid for and Donated by
WesterrcvMachine Works.
C. G. Fricke.
riattsmouth Garage,
Jess F. Warga.
Philip Thierolf.
E. G. TJovey & Sor
Pollcck Auto Co.
F. . J. Richey.
John V,T. Cratill.
F. G. Fricke & Cc.
Bcftcr & Swatek.
C. E. Hartford.
L. E. Egenberger.
Avard & McLean.
Fetzer Shoe Co.
Cass County Monument
. A. Stanfield.
i"irst National Eank.
lorenz Bros.
Peters & Parker.
D. B. Ebersob.
Kroehler Bros.
C. E. Wescott's Sens
Farmer's State Bank.
II. M. Soenniehsen.
Weyrich & Hadraba
Waterman Lumber & Coa. Co
A. G. Each & Co.
"-iy W. Morgan.
,ank..cf Cass County.
Popular Variety Store,
att & Son.
?. S. Chase.
.'lattsmouth Steam Launcr;
vV. E. Ecsencrans.
Fred Wagner. "
Service Garage.
B. A. McElwain.
Fred Muinm.