t MONDAY. NOVEMBER 25, 1918. PLATTSMOUTII SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAC PAGE FOUR. Che plattsmouth journal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEEXY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA Entered at rostoffice, Plattsmouth, Neb., as second-class mail matter R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 Don't burn the leaves. :o: Pretty cold, thank you. :o: Always aid a 'worthy movement. rot United War Work Drive now on. :o: North wind blows snow. :o: -look out for The war is over and autocracy has passed away like superstition. :o: Help set our hoys home by giv ing to the I'nitcl War Work Drive. :o: According to late returns Nebras ka will have a constitutional con vention. :o: Europe is urging the imprison ment of the Kaiser. As well him as :i!iy other prisoner of war. :o: Vi!l. if the kaiser hasn't abdi cated it ouht to be a comparative ly east, matter now to abdicate him. :o: The conquered German must be fed. but we do not need to add cliampaine, truffles and pie to his ration. :o: Thanksgiving turkeys will cost from $4 to $ cr ".) cents a pound. -! -s of us will have to do without turkey yain this year. :o: 7"'" Crete Democrat says the next pr--l'itii t"s rame will with a I. Pershing, commence of course! Maybe he don't want it. There is En discount on General Pershing. :o: The truth of the matter i:, God ha r.ver been with Wilhelm and Wilheim is never going to be with God. It will be an cntrely differ ent lineup. Tij- politicians needn't worry and scheme about issues and programs. A couple of millions of voters now under arms will Kive orders when th'-y get hack hone. :o: I'rau flohenzcMern. it appears, kept triiek of her husband and fol lowed h'i.i in a:i airplane. William ought to know by this time that she is determined i:-ver to desert her Mr. Micawher. :o: It'.; hard to tell which pleases ronie irls more, now that the war i. nvf r the fact their new sweet hearts won't have to go or that their old sweethearts are coming back. :o: Everybody in Taris lurned out and ceelhratcd the recovery of Al-cre-Lorraine by kissing everybody. There is one weak spot in Ameri can history. We have never lost any proviuces to be recovered. :o: Answer to "Seeker:" No, there is nothing to prevent a President leaving the country on a peace mis sion or any other mission. You evi dently are thinking of t hat other unwritten law, which has been ap plied to an ex-President. to: Germany also wants some eco- uomic changes in th: armistice. If there is anything else Germany wants it is to be hoped that she will speak right out. The trouble with Germany always has been her mod esty. Etate of Ohio. City of Toledo, Lucas County, as. Frs.nk J. Cheney makes oath that ha !s ec-ntor partner of the firm of F. JT. Cheney & Cv.. Colr.s tuslnes3 In the City of " To'edo, County and (State aforesaid, and thnt ?aid firm will pay the sum of OXC HUNDRED DOLLARS for each -n.-Ti r. limfort ma end subscribed in my rfese-ice. this 6h.ay of iJccember. Ha:' 3 CaV.rh TIs-Mne Is taken ln trn'ly and c?s ti.ro': the iood on th .Vi..ro.i- S Jrfurrn o? it.3 System. Send SFII - ' " - " " - V J CiaCNCi' CO.. Toledo. O. nnd tverv case Ol ai;irr.i citnnoi oe td beu of HALL'S CATARRH xiVrriXE. FflANIC J. CHENEY. i i;M constipation. PER YEAR IN ADVANCE And every housekeeper is glad. :o: Be careful that the flu don't do you. :o: None but the rich can eat turkey at their Thanksgiving dinner this year. :o: Thirty-two states already have gone over the top in the War Work campaign. :o: Emperor Charles has not formal ly abdicated nor has he renounced his rights. :o: A glorious welcome awaits our boys, and it will be a glad day for everybody. :o: It's awful to be born poor and stay poor during your entire life. But the most of us can't help it. :o: The kaiser may think he did not abdicate. But he is likely to find the German people think he did. :o: Matters are so badly jumbled in Germany, that it will take several months to straighten them oui. -:o:- The crime against Belgium was a crime against the United States. Crime isn't measured by geography :o: There seems little doubt that, with the exception of one or two of the Balkan states, Russia is the ,nSf niitpmt The late German Empire looks just now like Mark Twain's classic "tortoise shell cat having a fit in a platter of stewed tomatoes." :o: Those Pan-Germans wlin nlannprt I a naval fight to "continue until the last ship was sunk" apparently had no illusions as to how the battle would end. :o: The Bolshevist government dis plays a permanent policy consist ing mainly cf murder. It sounds like a bid for the immoral support of the pan-Germans. :o: It is not too late to give to the War Workers. It is going to take much money to get our brave lads home. It is your duty to donate a few dollars. :o: Uncle Sam has bought nearly all the turkeys in sight for the army's Thanksgiving. No one will grudge them to the boys especially while they cost CO cents a pound. :o: Occasionally every'ooay is given a laugh without being charged for it. As, for instance? the other day, when boarding house and hotel dwellers were warned against tak ing the Spanish influenza and were told not to eat too much, especially of rich food. :o: : It was only natural that the clown prince, on his arrival in Hol land, should call first for beer, then for cigarettes, and finally for news from home. His policy lias always been to leave unpleasantness till the last, if it could not be avoided entirely. s : ;o: The German people were pretty strong for the Kaiser as long as the war wa3 going their way. If a mir acle should happen, and they should gain back again what they have been losing, the German people would be strong for the Kaiser and the war lords again. It is when the Kaiser is on the wane that we hear the talk about democratizing Germany. As a whole, they are entitled to about as much consid eration as the Junker classes un less of course, they wish to pur chase more consideration by ditch ing the Kaiser f.nd the Junkers by a revolution a geniune revolution. THE GERMAN MIND. Now comes Dr. Solf, the German Foreign Secretary, to prove that the German mind remains unchanged in defeat. Still it sees life only from the German angle. Appealing to President Wilson, Solf says: We had to accept the conditions, but feel It our duty to draw the President's attention most solemn ly and with all earnestness to the fact that the enforcement of the conditions must produce among the German people feeling contrary to those upon which alone the recon struction of a community of nations can rest, guaranteeing a just and durable peace. When German soldiers were com mitting every crime known to the Decalogue in Belgium, France and Russia, and committing them by or der of the German High Command as parts of a cold calculated system, what regard did Mr. Solf and his as sociates give to the feelings such acts must produce among the Allied peoples? Did he reflect that they must be "feelings contrary to those upon which alone reconstruction of a community of nations can rest, guaranteeing a just and durable peace"? Or did he care? Did Bismarck consider the point when he wrested Alsace-Lorraine from France and extorted the five milliards of "indemnity" for a war which he himself provoked by an act of forgery? Did Bethmann Hollweg think of the effects on "community of nations" or as "guaranteeing a Just and lasting peace" when he tore up the fam ous scrap of paper? Does Solf think there is one set of principles applying to Germany when her sins have overtaken her and another covering the rest of the nations against which she sins? :o: AMERICA AT THE HEAD OF THE TABLE? Of course it is quite within the rights of the President to attend the peace conference if ho so de sires. Under the constitution ho has the initiative in making treaties subject to the limitation that they must have the approval of two tbirds of the Senate. But, irrespective of his right to attend the conference, there will be many Americans who will question his wisdom in doing so. After all, the United States got in only at the end of the great war. While Amer ican troops were the determining factor and while they did magnifi cent work, the burden which they and the country bore was relative ly small compared to that borne by the Allied nations. An engineer officer writes the Outlook from Franco that "General Pershing and many other of the best men under him are doing everyhting they can to keep our people at home from a boastful spirit, and to have a mod est view prevail of what has been accomplished by the American Ar my in France." The number of our dead and wounded, he says, is less than 2 per cent of the total sacri fices made by our allies. While America has a vital inter est in a just settlement at the peace table, it recognizes the fact that the problems involved are far more momentous to France, England and Italy than to the United States. A mistake in the settlement might re sult in ruin for one of them. It would only slightly affect America. They are 'the neighbors of the Cen tral Powers. America has the pro tection of three thousand miles of ocean. Just a the question of the rela tions with Mexico arc far more mo mentous to the United States than to France, ko Is the question of Ger many after the war far more mo mentous to France than to the United States. Under these circumstances tho President's decision to attend the conference will he receivd with mix ed feelings. Undoubtedly, there will be widespread regret. On account of his unique posi tion he will go as head of the state, as well as premier. He will be the ranking figure at the conference. and so America will necessarily be J FOR STUBBORN COUGHS AND COLDS Dr. King's "ftew Discovery nas a fifty year record, behind it m It built its reputation on its produc tion of positive results, on its surenes9 in relieving the throat irritation cl colds, coughs, grippe and bronchial attacks. "Dr. King's New Discovery? Why. my folia wouldn't use anything else!' That's the general nation-wide esteem in which this well-known remedy is fc:Id. Its action 13 prompt. it3 tasto Half a century of cold and cough checking. Sold by druggists everywhere. Bowels Out of Kilter? That's nature calline for ' relief. Assist her in her daily duties with Dr. King's New Life Pills. Not a purgative In the usual dose, but a mud, eflective, corrective, laxative that teases the bowels into action and chases "blues." at the head of the table. We read that the President and Mrs. Wilson and their party will proceed to Pitrnna nn a floof f ho i i laefi i uC toiv;u .tu.plluu sea by the navies of the Allies trans- cending in grandeur any event of an analogous character in history." r ., ... side over the preliminary sessions of the conference, and unquestion ably he will deliver the 'keynote' address." The impression can hardly be avoided that America will thus be seeking an importance in the peace councils beyond that to which she is entitled on the score of perform ance. What effect will be made on France and Encland eaeh nf which r ranee anu rngianu, eacn 01 wnicn has paid for the war with more than a million dead, and four years of agony, to have the United States seem to come forward as arbiter, af- er a fighting campaign lasting vir- Falter and wife Mary Falter, defendants Jin the above entitled cause, upon ans ually four months? I wer duly filed in said cause have made Views at the conference. But it uuionunaie inai sue snouiu De puii r a a i. - . , . in the position of urging them &'s the leader of the alliance. K. C. Star. :o: No more flour substitutes. :o: German efficiency has had a suffi ciency. :o: Were Doctor Solf pleading tor himself instead of Germany and I maybe he is he would Immediate ly come under suspicion of being a very solfish person. :o: While for months the war has hrfn tlii nvorurhfllmtnp innip n conversation, every now and then you bump into a man who prefers; to talk about himself. to: Max ddn't seem to have the eye for a pinch hitter many of these Boche leaguers haven't and Lud- endorff, who hoped to get home, if I still dodeiuc about between bases. opanisn inuuenza is spreauing in Alaska, but it must not be so bad to I have the "flu" in Alaska, especial-1 ly in those parts seven hundred I miles from the nearest drug store. I -:o: I It seems plausible to suppose that I the final disposition and status of Germany' erstwhile colonies may be very largely determined by the people who took them away from her. tor- Feed the Ccrmans? Surely. Give them the same rations in kind, quality and quantity they 'gave to prisoners of war. It won't cost much and will be satisfying to tho rest of tho world. :ot One exception to the rule of sen ioritv in ceneral. is in the case of I Senator Lodge of Massachusetts. It will place him at the head of the! committee on foreign relations. Of n i o Mr r.ndtr is I O.I1 iucii IU dio ocuaici " - the leader the people would select Home." we can refer to the proh f ho nndtinn this time. lem of the woman, shop and fac- :o. , J Although there are etili a few I German aces living but about all the 1 kings and queens and knaves have been discarded from the German pack, Germany hasn't enough ten- spots left to begin paying the in demnities, and now there is con Ridprahla daneer that the whole country will fall Into the hands of the nine-spots. NOTICE OF ADMINIS TRATOR'S SALE In the District Court of Cass Coun ty, Nebraska. In the Matter of the Estate of William A. Edmisten, Deceased. Notice is hereby given that, in pursuance of an order of the lion orable James T. Begley, judge of the District Court of Cas3 County, Nebraska, made on the 7th day of September, 1918, for the sale of the real estate hereinafter describ ed, there will be sold at public ven due to the highest bidder for cash at the front door of the Bank of Un ion, in the Village of Union, in said County, on the 7th day of December, 1918, at 11:00 o'clock A. M., the following described real estate, to- wit: the E of the NEU of Sec 29, Twp. 10, Rge. 14, and 10 acres along the west side of the NW'i of the NWU of Sec. 28, Twp. 10, Rge. 14, all in Cass county, Nebraska; also Lots 2 and 3, in Block 3, in the village of Union, Cass county, Ne- braska. Said sale will remain open one hour- Milieu UUS 1111 U1J ui uvnuuu, Administrator of the Estate of Wil- Ham A. Edmisten, deceased CIIAS. L. GRAVES, A- L- TIDD Attorneys 4-5vks. IN TIIK niSTItlC'T fOrilT OF THIS I'Ot.NTV OP rASS, .NKIIIIASKA. Charles O. I'armele. riaintiff, vs. Jacob I Falter: Mary Falter: O. r. Olson, first real name unknown: Mrs. O. 1. Olson, first real name un known: wife of O. V. Olson; J. N. Kiner; first real name unknown: Mrs. J. N Kins, first real name unknown, wife of .1. X. Kins: W. F. Kinslow. first real name unknown: Clarence: A. Atkinson: Ernest O. ShallenbarK er: Texas Jlio Grande Company, a corporation, and Fred AVagner, Defendants. Notice of Application for Appointment of ItCCCIVtT, I To t,ic defendants, J. X. Kintr, first rea, namft ullknown: Mrs. J. X. King-. first real name unknown, wife of J. X. Kins; O. 1". Olson, first real name unknown: Mrs. O. 1. Olson, first real name unknown, wife of O. P. Olson; W. F. Kinslow, first real name un known: and the Texas Rio Grande Company: You are hereby notified that Jacob I. (application ror tne appointment or James Robertson. Clerk of the District fonrt as receiver to take ch.irjro of i.-Mtlie rents and income from the build- iri'rsi :i ml iiroticrtv i1i;rri bed n lots ... ... . - eleven (11 and twelve 12), in block twenty-seven :!), m the City of Plattsmouth, (Jass county, Nebraska: that K. F. Patterson and .1. M. Roberts are proposed as (sureties for said pro- "ospil receiver, and that CJeorce IZ. Iiovey and Frank Sel-.later are propos ed as sureties for said applicants; that said application for the appointment of paid receiver' will be presented to the Jiultie of the District Court of the Second Judicial District of the fc'tato of Nebraska. In the District Court Room in the court house in the City of l-Mattsmouth, Cass County, Nebraska, on the lCth day of December, 191S, at 3 o clock A. aM. Dated this 31st dav of October. A. ID.. 1918. Of all of which you will take due notice. j a con p. FAiyrnn and MAliY FALTKK, Defendants. a1-I-4w NOTICE OF REFEREE'S SALE. Notice is hereby given that pur suant to an order of sale issued to me by the District Court of Cass County. Nebraska, on the 4th day of November 191S, in an action pending In said court in which Carey L. Stotler, was - plaintiff and Loren B. Stotler, Sarah Irey, Eden Irey, George Stotler, Nettle Stotler, Walter Stotler, Ella Wayant, Clar ence Wayant, Mabel Speakman, Marry Speakman, Mary Pope, Joseph Pope, David Stotler. if living, if de I -S , J - reaseu. nis unxnuwn ueirb. uii-, I legatees, personal representatives I and all other persons interested in ,lis estate; J. F. Clugey, as admin- istrator of the estate of William Stotler, deceased, are defendants, I on the da ff December 1915?. at nno o'clock in the afternoon . ,1o of Sni,th frt l1nnr of the Court House in Plattsmouth, Cass County, Nebraska, offer for sale at public vendue to the highest bid- ter the ioiiowing aescriDea real estate situated in Cass County, State of Nebraska, to wit: The East thirty-five (35) acres of the Northeast Quarter of the South east Quarter of Section nineteen (19) Township ten (10) Range fourteen (14) East 6th P. M. Cass County, Nebraska. The terms of said sale being Five Hundred ($500) Dollars on the day of sale, and the balance of the pur chase price on the day said sale is confirmed by the District Court of Cass County, Nebraska. Said sale will remain open for one hours. CHARLES E. MARTIN, n. A. RAWLS. Referee. Attorney. 4-30t I w "When Johnny Comes Marching tory worker to him and the mar ria2e license clerk. They ought to t,e aj,ie to solve it. Get the GenuinefrVS Children Cry y'SyS R v J" Pi '' ! tT The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been la us-3 for ever thirty years, has borne ths signature of and has been made under his per C&jCCtyVttfa sonal suPervision since it3 infancy. auow no one to deceive you in this. .All Counterfeits, Imitations and . " Just-as-good " are but - Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children Experience agairst Experiment. What Is CASTOR I A Castor: ia a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Saothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Jlorphine nor other narcotic substance. Its ago is its guaran-.ee. Tcr more than thirty years it has teen in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Yind Cclic anu Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising thersfrcm, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. QENUiNE CASTOR I A ALWAYS Bears the Sifmature of le fe For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought rwr cpNTun company. t r LEGAL NOTICi:. In the County Court of Cass Coun ty. Nebraska. Jftatc of Nebraska, Cass County, ss. To Kit.-hard 11. Chriswisser, Andrew Chriswisser, Charles M. f'lnlswisser and Pay t'hriswisser nd all persons interested in th estate of Uoiinett Chrisw isser, deceased. On Keadintr the Petition of Martha Chriswisser pravinu: a final settle ment and allowance of her account iled in this Court on t4ie lsth day of November P'ls, and for distribu tion and assignment of estate. It is hereby ordered that you and all per sons interested in said matter ruay. and do. a-ppear at the County Court to be hold in a n i.l for saiI Countv, on the L'Gth day of November A. 1.. 191s. at id oYloi-iv A. M , to show cause, if any there be, why the prayer of th' petitioner should not be granted, and that notice of the pendeney of said petition and the hearing thereof be Kiven to all person- interested in said matter by publishing a copy o' this order in the Pla tisnioutli Journj' a semi-weekly newspaper printed i' said county, for one week piior t said day of hearing. In Witness Whereof. 1 have here tinto set my band and. the seal of mid Court, tbis ISth day of Novem ber A. 1. PUS.. (.Seal) ALLKN .T. KKKSON. County Jndire Hy Florence White, Clerk SI II HUFF'S sali: By virtue of an Order of Sale is sued by James Robertson, Clerk of tlie District Court within and for Cass county, Nebraska, and to me directed, I will on the PHh day of December, A. 1 ). H1S at I0:0(i o'clock A. M. of said day at the South Door of the Court Houso in said county, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the following proper ty to. wit: Lots 1, 2. and 3 in P.Iock 1. in Pleasant Pill Addition to the City of Plattsmouth. in Cass Countv, Ne- Ttu- s;:ime IteiTiir lovit.il nnon and taken as the property of George W. Wittstruck and Anna I. Castor formerly wife of Goorsre W. Witt- struck. Defendants to satisfy a judg ment of said cuurt recovered by Tho Livinirston Loan Muildincr Associa tion, "I'laintiif against said Defend ants. Plattsmouth. Neb. Nov. 11, A. P J 9 18. C. D. QP1NTON. Sheriff Cats County, Nebraska. A. L. TIDD. Attorney. I.KtiAI. ."NOTICE The State of Nebraska. Cass County, ss. In the County Court. In the Matter of the Estate of John Micfn. Deceased. To the Creditors"; of Sai l Estate: You are hereby notified. That I will sit at the County Court Room in Plattsmouth in said County, on the I'lst ilav of December, 1 M 1 S. ami on the 22nd day of March, P19, at ten o'clock In the forenoon of each day, to receive and examine all claims atrainst said Estate, with a view to their adjustment ind allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claims against said Estate is three months from the 21st day of Decem ber, A. D. PtlS, ami the time limited for payment of debts is One Year from said 21st 1uy of December 101S. WITNESS mv hwnd and the seal of said County Court, this lath day of November, 1918. ALLEN .T. F.EESON. 23-lwks County Judge. Flags at the Journal Office. There Three Books "Go to Southwestern Nebraska." "There's a Farm for You in Colorado." "The Big Horn Basin of Wyoming." Describe sections with low priced lands that grow large and hieh-oriced crops and should appeal equally to investor and home-maker. If vou are searching-for a home where wheat and live stock farmers nourish, where their families enjoy modernized farm life and where Burlington lines afford quick service to every market center, visit SOUTHWESTERN NEBRASKA and NORTHEASTERN COLORADO; see your son or yourself where you aro sure Or, if you prefer irrigated farming, go to the BIG HORN BASIN, OF WYOMING, where every irrigated acre is sure to reach a high price. Take an irrigated homestead in the Deaver projectone of the best projects the gov ernment has developed 20 years to pay for water rfght no interest and uo profit taken. . Let me assist you to aNfull understanding of these ex ceptional investments. Ask for the folders today. S. B. HOWARD, Agricultural Agent, C. B. & Q. R. R. 1004 Farnum Street, Omaha, Nebraska for FSsicher's 1 VOtK CITY. IX THE niSTKKT f'Ot'HT OF CASH tlH.V'lV, - EIIKASKA. In the matter of the Guardianship of Henry Kikenbarry, Mentally Incom petent. Order I 'or llenrinic IVtllloit I "or Sale of Henl ltnte by (inardiuu. Now on this 2nd day of November, A. I.. 101S, this cause came on for hearing on tlie petition of Alice John son, guardian of the person and estate of Henry Kikenbarry, mentally incom petent, prayinjr for license to sell the following described real estate to-wlt: Lot number four (4), in the Northwest Quarter of the Southwest Quarter; also Lot five "i) in the Southwest Quarter of the Southwest Quarter, all in Section Nineteen (19) in Town ship Twelve (12), Kan?e Fourteen (H) in Cass County. Nebraska, con taining twelve and seventy-five liundreths acres, more or less, ac cording to tho survey of said lots, for the purpose of maintaining tho said Henry Kikenbarry. mentally incompe tent, and the cost of this proceeding, there not bcins? sufficient personal property to maintain said ward. IT IS THEREFOR 13 ORDERED that .ill persons interested in the estate of .-aid Henry Kikenbarry, mentally In competent, appear before me at the District Court room in the court house in Plattsmouth, Cass County, Nebras ka, on the 9th day of December. A. D., 113S, at the hour of 10:00 o'clock a, m. of said day, to show cause why a license should not be granted to laid guardian to sell th above described real estate of said Henry Eikenbarry, mentalTy incompetent, or so much as may be ncessary tor his maintain ance. IT IS I'TItTHER ORDERED, that notice to all persons interested in the rstate of Henry Eikenbarry, mentally incompetent, be given by publishing a -oyy of this order for at least three successive weeks in the Plattsmouth lournal, a semi-weekly newspaper printed and in peneral circulation In I Cass County. Nebraska, prior to said date of hearing. IN WITNESS WHEREOF I have hereunto set my hand this 2nd day of November, A. L.. J91S. 11-14-Sw JAMES T. BEGLEY, Judge of the District Court. It is the duty of every one to aid the War Workers in their noble work of raising money to aid our noble boys now in France. There are many things they will need be fore they start for home and it will cost lots of money to get them home. Give and give as liberally as you can. W. A. ROBERTSON, Lawyer. East of Riley Hotel. Coates Elock, Second Flcor. v , these great, fertile prairies and locate to prosper.