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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 20, 1919)
MONDAY, JANUARY 20.1913. PAGE FOUR. PLATTSMOUTH SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL H I! i! II I ! i i i '4 i f 1 11 i - 1 1- Che plattsmoutb lournar PtJBLISHEfc SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMDUTH, NEBRASKA Entered at Postoffice, PlAttsmouth, Keb ma second-class mail matter R.. Av BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 PER - YEAR IN ADVANCE The roads! -:o:- What about the roads? -:o:- Now is the time to agitate. :o: - And get ready for 6pring work. -:o: Februarv 9 has been named- aa Health Sunday. It will be regard ed as very bad form to contract the flu on that date. -:o:- A warning' nas been issued in London not to be too hasty in demobilization. Tliat's the way we view the matter. :o:- We are glad to learn- that the Sultan- of Sulu disclaims being re sponsible" for the defeat' of Colonel John II. Moreheadl -:o:- Once there was an' eccentric' vil lager who did not care whether his thermometer went lower than any body else's or not. Strange isn't it? :o: ' Whctt the baseball season' opens next .spring it will require" pretty closfe reading of the sport page to teil the captains from the corporals and privates on the various teams. -:o:- A German newspaper" declared. "The generosity of the Americans is spoiling our children." Let us hope that the generosity of the Ameri cans at ther peace conference will not spoil the German government and people. :o: Many who could not agree on . Colonel Roosevelt while- ho lived cannot agree now- on his estate. Some Kansas headlines last Satur day read: "Colonel Roosevelt Died Rich." Othen said: "Roosevelt Left Only Million." 1 1 :o: Airplanes will be common in another year and good ones will perhaps be bought for $2,000. And as is the case with the motor car, the man wht has nerve enough to run one will also have sufficient nerve to borrow the money to buy it. -:ot- The movement to allow American soldiers to bring" home their gas masks meets with our' entire" ap proval and suggest that a lucrative business could be done by renting them each winter to folks who in sist on coughing arfd sneezing in public with the exhaus's uncover ed. -:o:- The republican legislature) refuses to even have one chairman of a committee that is even tainted with democracy. And we believe they are right about it. The house is overwhelmingly republican and thed. there is not enough favors to go round any way. Keep them all together. :o: Tho Kermon at a Kansas Congre gational Church Sunday morning was on the topic. "Remainders." Emphasis was given on the virtue of eliminating waste and of using up leftovers. When the ministers finished the service he went to' the vestry for his coat and' hat, and found that someone had taken them, leaving old wo'rhout garment in their place. The minister is now putting' his Sunday sermon' into practice. Catarrh Cannot Be Curfcd with LOCAIr APPLICATIONS, as they rmai-Vt- h t nf tlm dlsea.Be. Catarrh a local 4iseMi great' in; In order to cure 11 yiu i'it-. u Internal remedy Hall's Catarrh Medi cine is taken internally and scU thro the blood or the inucoua surfaces of th avstem. Hall's Cat.-rrtr VledHSne wet prescribed by one or M.c best physician la this countrr for years. It Is com cosed of some of the .-t' in: combined with soma of th hect l.ioo TMirtfiL-s Tb' perfect -.nnii-.tJon the lhWn l :U!1V -irr. results in cauM.-l' ""'i- t . 'fta-J 1 teatl-.'orif.l. '-" ... . . ,- .- V J. CHKNKV f. '- l-t'-K- Ail inrt"' Let them fight' their own battles in Germany now. :o:- How do those Bolsheviki pull their shirts off' over their whiskers? -:o:- The Lord knows by spring the road work will need attention bad enough". :o: Ode of the principal acts of the peace conference should be to kick the Turk out of Constantionple. - -?d; . When a public official can't live on a" salary of $12,000 a year it is time for' him to "step" right down and' out" and go to farming. Neither the United States or Great Britain are liable to take part In the trouble between Poland and Germany. Let 'em fight alone awhile. -:o:- "Our idea of an impatient man," says the- St. Joseph Gazette, "is one who gets discouraged after following perfectly- good rabbit tracks only ten mlleB." :o: The kaiser i said to have aged ten years-since he'fled to Holland two' months ago. It is much too fast. Somebody' ought to put an end to it. s :o: Authorities at Washington claim there will be plenty of coal during the winter and that there is no necessity" for uneasiness If you have the" money to pay for what you buy. : :o: At the rate our Nebraska boy? are returning from "over there" it worft" be" long till we can all meet with thclm and have a genuine "home-coming time" here in Platts-mouth,- such as our noble boys dc Ecrve. :o: Dynasties rise and fall, dictator ships, republis, anarchies, empires come and go, but the fundamentals of life remain the same. If a three- year-old kid doesn't get a spankin every week he isn't possible to live with. :o: Were you one of thote innocent souls who thought the day the ar mistice1 was signed would mark the end of profiteering? It seems now as-if the profiteers enjoyed the cele bration on November II even more than the rest of us did. -:o:- Gus' Ilyers plans for suppressing bootlegging will cut the mustard and don't j'ou forget. Gus is a nervy official and he will go right after them. The local officials just as well' keep' out of the way when tho state gets after the evil-doers. - " ' :o: ' Terhaps if Senator J. Hamilton Lewis is appointed Attorney Gen eral he will not care to follow up those Conspiracy! charges he has beert- making" so' blithely against everybody who- disagreed with hi3 political views on the Senate floor. -:o: Of course we never voted for Col. Roosevelt, but there is no telling what We might have done had ho lived and we were alive at the next prsidential election. His American Ism was true-blue, and that is what we admire in a man above every thing else. -:o:- Senator Tanner- is a man after our own heart, when it comes to speaking out in meeting. He was alone in opposing the ratification of' the "bone dry" amendment in the state senate. He said he was not a prohibitionist and didn't pro pose to deceive his constituents in the way he voted, which perhaps some of his fellow members did. John Tanner is no hypocrite, that's one thing certain. AN ABUNDANCE OF COAL. The fear of a coal shortage, no matter how coid the weather nn-y become; is entirely banished. The last report from Washington is that a survey by the National Coal asso ciation reveals" that bituminous coal produced during' 19 IS aggregated 587,500,000 tons, an increase of ap proximately 36,000,000 tons over 1917. This; it is claimed, clears up all doubts as to whether a coal shortage will occur this winter. Anthracite was- shut off from the west nearly two years ago and the population is interested only in the bituminous variety. Many people who thought that they could not get along without anthracite, have found almost smokeless varieties of bituminous that they like better and win ueer gu-uai-n.-iu The trouble Is that the price has been very high, but with a surplu? on hand it is bound to come down, 1 not this winter, but some time.-- World-Herald. -pi- THE RIGHTS OF IRELAND. The complete victory by Sinn j Fein in Ireland is partly a mani- , A , ,. .. . . Jf . festation of . radicalism but it is ' . , - , niuch more an overwhelming rush of Irish opinion into the form moulded by the allied doctrines cf self-determination. That doctrine opened the door, as nothing before had ever done, to the main conten- j tion of most Irishmen. Before the , war, it is true, the nationalists wore j villlng to- accept "home rtile."' a ; much modified seir-governnient that bore only a faint resemblance to self-domination. But home rule got- its death-blow when President Wilson adoDted and preached self- determination. If that were sauce j for the goose, the Irish said, it should be sauce for the gand?r. T im position of 'the nationalists, hang ing on to the advocacy of a grudg- ing concession like home rule, be- j came obviously untenable, and entirely new set of much haye boon i elected on the basis of I'residen' Wilson's principle. Docs this prin- ciple of self-determination apply to Ireland? It is not easy to see on what honest ground it can be d?-j nied. The existence of an Ulst - . minority is no more a reason for ( denying self-determination to the Irish than the existence of German minorities in the new central Euro- j pean republics is a reason for tak- Ing away the latter's self-dctcrmi nation. What minorities must hav. is a guaranty, not a veto. The dit!: culty of guaranteeing Ulster pro- j vides no adequate excuse for re fusing to apply self-determination to Ireland. New Republic. :o: THEY CALLED HIM "TEDDY' They called him "Teddy" cvir body did. That tells the story. In the application of that name to the honored dead there is a revelation ! of the true character of the man. "Teddy" was more than a nick- 4.. . name. L.ike the wen Known jiar.-e Henry" and "Uncle Joe," it was ex- nrsccivo rT ninrp than in pre croorl 1 will or kindly regard it signiher" genuine affection. Men who do nyt have in them that winch wins ccn fidenco and inspires afTection do not create in others the habit" o! speaking of them or to them in terms like these. Not since the black shadow death fell upon tho land in 1861. and Lincoln was struck down by th? assassin, has tho death of any American brought to so many hearts in all parts of the country in ull the walks of life the sharp pang cf grief and a sense or personal a; well as national loss. He had his faults, of course, ai:d those who admired and loved him j,nowledgfe vf a)Tairs over lierc, the )y y w. Iiloomonkamp, and in Un most suffered most on account of )0gU3 liero Jg so. $0 have a pretty, ion by E. W. Kecdy. them. bur. faults and all. he war: more. nearly the popular hero of tho American nation than any c'fce; - man of his time. They called him "Teddy" every- body did, because he belonged to everybody. His whole life was giv - en to . the public service, and not less truly during the last ten yea rn of private life than when be wa3 filling first one place of usefulness OR STUBBORN COUGHS MB COLD Dr. Kin3 New Discover? has a fifty year record boliind it It built Its reputation on Its produc tion of pssitiva results, cn its surcncE-: in rtlisvir. t'-io throat irr't-tion cl cIJj, coIi23 fjr-ppc and bronchial "Dr. En; New Discovery? Why, p wouldn't use anything chel" '1 t'jt tho gcnercJ natlon-vido esteem in vliich thiz well-known remedy is l.zli. Its cctica ij promnt, its tacts pl3a.t, itg relief crctlfylirj. Half a century of ccld cr.3 ccurj-i cfcsckin?. Sold by drurcrlrts everywhere. Dot7o!3 Cut of Kilter? That's natura c-.!!insr for reTr. Assist her in h?r dai.'y duties with Dr. Mine's NcvLilc Fi!b. Kot a pumt:72 f , C-, 1 k. . , :t,r WnJrX -i . ccce, Du. a m:lu, elective, ccrroctjve, nxativs that tea 3 the Lowell ir.to cctic-a and chases "blues." ;anil then another, according to , where he seemed to be most need- ed ,Ie moved up or down in ofn; ; rvice and back to municipal. a.J 1 the call of duty might dictate, and was great in all. But all the while the people call ed him "Todd; ." And "Teddy" he ! will mm i 1 11 in m ?i I , ' grateful and admiring and af'eciicn-! , ; ate people till the last of his gf !i- th' , country whither he has gone. And even after that generations yet tn.ment at Lntey Bros.. Butte, Mont., 1 come shall catch frcm the page;? of history anl romance something of the spirit which he imparted to the ' t i til n in - litill lii 1 1 o ii'l n.infin ue to call him "Teddy. -Minne- apolis Tribune. -:ot- BOGUS HEROES. There have been a lot of hof-n heroes in America since the arm began dispatching men brck to th? States for sickness, wounds, train - ing and other reasons. Every sold - ier who has gone back has been a hero until proved otherwise, nr.'! the temptation not to prove them- : tvlves otherwise has been too m-.ieh lor some. r There is the case of the air vice mechanic who went back with heart trouble. His hor.i tov.-n newspaper printed his "diary," which recounted several stirrir..-: H.clits over the German line-, a!! imaginary. Thi nearest lio h:::l been to the front was Insoudun. There is the case cf t";c- erean; who lectured on the Ijattle of Can- i . . , 'nearer home, r-:.t ;rot no bcneiu tignv for the fourth Lioerty Loan.- , i Iroin that trer.tment either. A little nd sold a lot of bonds, too. un MIW,liIc Rp() ! ffU jt comlns OII pretty : ho was found to have ppent all bis had atrain. My appetite left me. stay in France, barring travelnvT lt ime. at LcMans. And there is the ca?e. iii.it to I show how hard it was not to no : i i hero, of the major who returned 'and. inerelv ohevinr military regu-! i ; I hit ions, refused to le interviewed, i ; As far as he had got toward gun f; re UHU llll 1 1 . . ' . i 1 . i. ........ 13 - - at Langres. "Modestly declines to! ppt.ak of his part in Chateau Thierry fighting," was the secoml line ,,f the heading over the story about. him in the next mornng's paper, j The fault was the newspaper's, nrtjtj10 .stiffness began to leave my tho m.i'nr's i joints, and now I never 'suffer a bit To date, in the eyes of the penm? back home, every soldier who r.is been in Europe has . undergone the horrors of the front. Private John- nie Jones, whose srealest hnrdsbip I in this war was tuns at y:..o, w:t:: pictured in his home ournal an' ca pt ioncd- "John Jones of this city, now battling for freedom in t'.;o trenches." It is going to be hard i , , rit- ti r' to convince the home folks that ol . T, i the 2 million Americans in ranco. , half of them, through no fault of their own, of course never got un- : i:i Greenwood by E. F". Smith, in der fire." ! Weening Vv'ator by Meier Drug Co., . iin Elm wood by L. A. Tyson, in Mur But. once the idea is around, and , Jjy n y McDonaId, in Louis once we get back with our first band vi, f2 , jiakc3 Pharmacy, in Eagle J thorny traii. stars and Stripes, France. , . J It ioeics ijke a joke for Preside it Wikon" over in Europe arguing for ' disarmament and world peace, and . his secretary of the navy over in the United States demanding the j greatest navy in the world Whi: ; i horn of the dilemma will the great peace conference grab? Judging from comparing his case with certaiu oiherj, Victor Borer's mistake evidently v.-a a not so mut-ii in being pro-German, but. in brag ging about it during the progress of his own trial. The educators who complain that America tpends . mre for chewing ! gum than it does for school books 1 . . should retire ana put Furac more 'attractive flavoring in their school 1 books. iroizny arretted Lcninc, it is j raid, becau.-e I.onine favored mod 1 lerntmn in a decree that angered 1 'Trotr.ky. I.oJihie, it. is believed ' favored sparing their I n ,1 all their enemies ha j ir friend:; ;.fUi tl leen killed. : lrotzKy, cl course, con lit not agre , 10 1111s wiinout violating his ra-ii- ! cal conscience. mm SALESMAN SPrvlT iHlflyEO Burton Saffered Twenty Years B. fere Finding- t!ie Right Medicine. In speaking of the marvelous way in which Tanlac has relieved him of a long-standing ease of rheumatism. p. K. Flirt'-., head salesman in the v.holor-ale fruit and vcgeipble depart- living at ft"2 South Montana street. recently sai.l It. is simply astonishing that jut-.' a few bottles of Tanlac should fix me up i:; !S!,cnt almost every ; in the last twen.ty dollar I earned years trying to . get relief from that awful rhcuma- 1 1 im." j Before coining to Butte. Mr. Bur iton lived for ten years in Spokane, .Washington, where he was salesman for the Imperial Trading company, cf that city. ' "I 'eil yen what." he continued. ;"1 ,!!,ve nxo 'hrouh all stages of ! ritcumat ism. and tlu agonies I have had to endure t imply cannot be de scribed. The trouble first came on ,nc about twenty years ago. My shoulders, knees and ankles gave me the most v.-crry and ached so at times that I hrrdly had any use for myudf. About three years ago it got so had that I ".as In id up in bod for .six long montbs. and when I up again I hr.d to go about on cruf-!r!!-.-:- fir thrc? ?nonth?, and till ro cov.tly I never did get it out of niy : j-.y: t c r.i . alihough I have spent hun Ired.' of dollars in trying to get straightened out. I went to Hot 'Springs. Arkansas, but without re 'swlt and then I tried the mud baths nothing tasted right, 1 was consu (nated and suffered from awful head aches 'every few days. The pain in t ,-,;!!u hardlv sle"t and - I would wake up six or seven times during the ni'ht racked with pain. Why, at the time I starled taking Tanlac, I couldn't raise my arms as high as mv shoulders to save my lif? -. 1 -.- t f- ri!tf ru- rf'i !? i: :j i J IV - v'i- without somebody helping me, and jy knees were so stiff and hurt .so jbad I could hardly walk. 1 Affrt T-r-iil ? r milfoil rllltillt i fry jt l mit finh;;i0(, Inv first uol'.le before I of pain or .inconvenience. t V oitd bottle gave me a whacking big a0TX;fi0i thct constipation is releiv-' ; C( aiui j nevtr have a headache. I sleep uc a lev; all night, and am ; lucky if I wake up in time for break fast before going to work. : - " Iv am triad to endorse Tanlac ami :onJ i;Or0 niv experience with this j ..vi)derfr.l medicine will help iome- one else who may bo goin through what I did." Tar.lac it sold in riattsmouth by '. G. Fricke li. Co., in Alvo by Alvo ( Jn Avoca ,jy Q E Copc3f c.,Iti, p.end by K. Sturzcnegger, Chamberlain's Tablets. When you are troubled -with in digestion or constipation, take Chamberlain's Tablets. They trengthen the stomach and enable it to perform i'.s functions natural ly. Indigestion is usually accom panied by constipation and Nis ag gravated by it. Chamberlain's- Tab lets cause a gentle movement of the j bowels, relieving the constipated condition. Children Cry WNVSV !"?r as Ii3 Eis-.fi Ycu Have Always Bought, and raich has been n UQ for over th;rt7 years, has borne the signature cf and h?.s been made tinder his per-j47--- 5t:per-is-:on rince its infancy. 5-VVy; f6CC&4& jlow no one to deceive ycu in tbls. ATI Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good arc but Experiments that trifle with and. endanger the heakh of Infarxtr. and ChiMrca rporience acirct Exprir7cnt. What is CASTOR! A Car.toria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Its age is its yuaraniee. For more thaa thirty years it has t:eea in. constant ute for the relief of Constipation, Matulency Wir.i Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Fevcrishness arising therefrom, and by regulating the. Stomach and Ucwe's, aids ta; assiiilation of Food; giving healthy and ar.;urai sleep. Thz Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. GEKUSNE CASTOR 1 A ALWAYS JO Bears the is m km 0 t h ssr.d You Have Always- Bought LEGAL NOTICE. Tn tlie IHstrlct Court of the Countv or -;iss. N'ohraska. C-i!iiiIcs C. l'armeh-. l'laiiitirt . -vs- laooh 1'. Valtr: Marv Falter: O. f)l.son. (ir.st rtal name unknown: Mrs. O. I'. Olson. 1'r.st real rianie inknxv. n, wife of . I. Olson: J. Kintr. lirst real name unknown: Mrs. .1. X. Kiiur. tirst rt-al nam.r unknown, wjfe of J. X. Kins; W. F. Wins low, tirst real namo nn- ;nown; i;n-enee A. Atkinson; Kr- n.st ;. Sln-1 Iciiliaripr: Texas Klo l!-anl f'onipanv. a Corporation. ind Fred Vasner. Defendants. -o(ic of Suit fo t h dcfoiidanf s, . 1. Olson, first r al name unknown ; Mrs. O. P.01son, first roal name unknown, wife of O. I'. Olson: J. X. Kin?r. tirst real name unknown: Mrs. J. X. Kinr, first real name unknown, wife of 1. X. Kini?; Texas Kio Grande Company, a Corpo- aiion: You and each of you are herehy noti fied that the plaintiff has tiled his mended petition in the above entitled a-tion in the District Court of Cass county. Xehraska, to foreclose a mort sapre Blven by Jacob F. 'Falter and wit'e, Xi;iry Falter, to Charles F. lavis, nssii;n ! hr sail diaries F. ,Havis to Leonard W. Sciieibel and hssipned ly said I.eonarTl . Scheibel to the plain tiff. wlii-li said mortsrajre Is dated August '26, 191", end was recorded in the office of the l;esi-ster of Deeds of Cass, countv, Nebraska, "n Ausiist "'., l'JIZ, at 10.01 a. tn., in l.onk :;y of niurlKHSis, at jasre r.17 thereof, con veyingr lots It and 12 in block 27 in the City of I'lattsmouth, Cass county, Nebraska, to secure 'one promissory note for the sum of Jiri.OOO.no dated AuRust 6, 191.!. ami becoming 'ue Scit'iii!ur 1, 1 : 1 S. with interest at per cent per i;nnuni from September 1, l!i:!. annually as evidenced by live in terest notes therewith of even date and which principal note draws inter est at 10 ncr cent per annum after due until paid and that the Interest note of $!00. (M thereon, due September 1, IHls, with interest at 10 per cent after maturity lias not been paid, and that said principal note and said interest note are lonn past due and by .the terms of said mortjrase. the whole amount is due and payable: that the favts fo'- the year 1 1 7 in the sum of $!)0.7i became delinquent on the 1st tlav (' May, lTUK, and remain unpaid anil that the plaintiff asks judgment on said principal note and interei nolo and said mortease and to fore close the equity of redemption against all the parties therein.' You and each or you are required to wnswer said petition on or before Mon day, the 10th day of February, 1'Jly, or j 'Bon S . - jeWV Mihm LIFE OME - - - . THAT SMALL CHANGE THAT MELTS AWAY in vrm . POCKET EVEfU DAY WOULD SOON SkVa N rr m SUM IF PUTIN OUR BANK. NICl. LIT1L'.- WHY NOT CUT LOOSE FROM YOUR EXTRAVAr Anrco o., BANK YOUR MONEY? DO YOU KNOW that vS'?5 AN! MORE WORK AND BETTER WORK WhSJ Vn.TSi WILL 1,0 WILL EARN MORE MONEY? HfcN Y0U D. AND YCU OUR BANK IS A SAFE PLACE TO PUT YOUR MONL'Y YOU WILL RECEIVE 3 1-2 PER CPkt im-tWJ MONLY ACCOUNTS, 0R , PER WmffiSi? . & armers Pl n-r-t-o . -Per Fletcher's art D i WM "1 W -f?3 tf A I rf ti K-l taw Signature cf M .Years default against you and each of you will be duly entered therein. Dated this 2Vth day of December, 1918. cn A1-.L.KS c. rAi:.M::r.i:. riuintirr. W. A. Ilobertson, .His Altorn-:y. d30-Jtw m:; i, otici:. TO TIIK CKKDlToltS AND IlKlliS AND ALL (ITIIKI! I 'K l?S IXS IVTKIi KSTKD IX TIIK KSTATK F IU';T 'N KKIttl. DKCK.ASKD. AND TO TIIF. CKIODITOUS AND HKICS AND ALL oTIIKii I'KKSOXS INTKIIKST IX TDK KSTATi; lF CllA.KLIJS K KIJ II, DLCKASKD. You are iierehy notified that on the 10th ilav of I cetulier 1'JD'. S irali Klizabetli Kerr, tiled her petition iu tlie County Court of Cass County, Ne braska; the object and prayer of which are for the judjre of said county to fix a time and place of he.-.r-in the. allocations of tbe etitiin, and to determine wlio all tbe l.-irs of liurton I'. Kerr, are, and who all the heirs of Charles Kerr, are, and to find that both Burton C. Kerr and ciiarles Kerr, uic-d intestate in Cass Countv, N'ebr.. nnd to enter its order barring .-11 claims a.:;';i.-.t the c. tutc of I'.uilon C Kerr, ami against the estate .,f Ciiarles Kerr, and said petition ai lepins: that Mtrrit S. Kerr, now i t i--mariied with Lottie Kerr, who re sides in Houston, Texas; Alice Kc. r, now inter-ma iried with T;ny V.. ." , liew.v. residing in I'lattsmouth, Ne braska: Klh'.abcth Kerr. vv int -r-mar-ried with Jam's Kishel, re-biinj-at Olenwood, Iowa; and .Inlia M. K r-, single, residing in I'lattsmouth. Xf -hraska. toi;eth-i- witli your petiti'Ui er, constitute the onlv heirs nt law ef riurtoii c. K'-rr. an1 that the peti tioner Sarah Kli.abeth Kerr. ,is th. only h"ir at law of the dieeased Ci.ai-Ies Kerr. You are further notified that a hearing upon the allesetio-is and prayer of raid petition will he hail j. t the office of the Countv Judfe in the Court House at I'lattsmouth, Ca Countv. Nebraska, on the 22i:d day of January 1!1!, at the hour of ten o'clock A. M. and nil objections said petition must be on file on or be fore said tim, or the praver thci,.,if will lie allowed and decree entered accord in s'y. Cy the Court. . LLK.N .1. r.rCFoN' 2:i-3wks. Jan. 20. County Ju-iso. EWES TOR SALE. I have some ewes for Fa'.e. whicli will have-lambs about the f'.rst of March. Cull J. J. Johnson, phone ! 3Ii2.". 1 2-1 wlr-iLll ! JGUE Wit IJtafSE 9". . . Stat . . oivi-jii i H, NEBRASKA