The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, June 19, 1919, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUX.
Cbc plattsmoutb journal
PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA
Rntered at rostofflce. Plattsraouth. Neb., as second-class mail matter
R. A. BATES, Publisher
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE
WILL PROFIT SHAR
ING STOP STRIKES?
AS 0FINI0NS SHIFT.
Life's a quaint,
rcrsistcnt quiz.
One says " 'Tat n't."
And one says " "I k:."
Changes vast
Through time we tec.
Till at last
They'll all agree.
Kvery biz
This sign may paint:
This year's " 'Tis"
Is last ye ir's " 'Tain't."
Washington Star.
:o:
riattsnioutb needs more modern
residence properties for rent. IaTh
start a building drive.
:o:
Frederick William. formerly
known under the extinct title of
crown prince, denies a report that
he is going into the pottery busi
ness. "I know nothing about the
pottery business," ho says. It i j
rather unfortunate for him that
ignorance of the last business he
was engaged in didn't keep him out
of it.
The war has taught men to take
greater care in the consideration of
merchandise values than they did
in the easy days before the war. In
a rand Avenue store yesterday a
prosperous looking man made the
clerk try three straw hats on him
before he would make a choice.
:o:
The wailing protest from the
Austrian delegation over the hard
ness of the terms imposed by the
Peace Conference serves to remind
that Austria is still waiting in the
anteroom. It is so easy to forget
Austria most of us imagined she
had gone home highly pleased.
While the war went on we cheer
ed ourselves with the assurance
that everything would be lovely as
sH)ii as Germany hollered 'nutf.
Then we began postponing the
millennium until the peace treaty
is signed. The treaty is likely to
be signed some day and then what
can we look forward to for relief
from all our ills?
-:o:-
:o:
Secretary Baker di.- closes that
Marshal JofTre believed in 1917 that
i million men was the greatest
number America would succeed in
putting in the battle line. Kecall
ing mine of the things Secretary
Maker believed in lit 17 it is possible
to bHieve that Marshal JofTre may
have got that estimate from the
secretary himself.
: :o:
1.000 lbs. Swifts Prrmiura Hams
at Soennichsen's. Spceial prices
while they last.
FINE FARM LAND
FOR SALE
100 acres known as the Kiinzman
farm. Well improved, lays good. a!tl
Is only 1 mile ;ouih of C lar Creek.
Price $250 per acre, on very easy
terni-s.
Two good 10 acre tracts quite
well improved, only two and three.
miles from IotiisvilIe. Price $1'J0
and 5200 per acre.
40 acres, joins Louisville. 32 acres
tillable; lf acres now in alfalfa.
Price $150 per acre; $500 cash. $500
more on March 1st; ten years to pay
the balance, $200 payable each year.
A snap for some one.
190 acres Improved, rented for '
of crop. $1.00 per acre for pasture
Only 2 ' 2 miles cast of Louisville.
Price $140. Very easy terms.
200 acres, neat improvements;
close to Springfield. Oood stuff.
Price $250. Terms.
Two 80 acre tracts, improved, clo-e
by. Price $225, $250. Alio 110
acres at $190.
61.1 acres, 4 Vs miles to Meiia, S
to Gretna. Improved, liu acres or
corn land that will yield CO bushel
per acre; 25 acres of choice hay that
you have to cut twice each year.
125 acres of hilly pasture, balance
of about 285 acres in level blue grasi
and clover pasture, also some timber
in pasture. Part of this pasture is
Feparated by a small stream, though
all well fenced. Stream is from four
to six inches deep. Present tenant is
raising 115 bead of cattle and could
put in an extra hundred head. Can
be rented for three years at $3,000
each year. Price $60,000. Any kind
of terms to suit purchaser.
97 and 154 acres improved, close
in, South Omaha and Ralston. Price
$325 and $350. Terms.
Write, Phone or Come
and See
FRANK GRAHAM
Phone 91 Springfield, Ncbr.
t s I also have a fine list of
farms for 6ale in Johnson county.
priced from $125 up to $175, on easy-
terms. F. G.
The Allied reply to the Cerman
counter proposals is believed to be
Hearing completion, and while its
contents are. of course, unknown, it
is intimated, from sources usually
reliable, that, as n general proposi
tion, and vith no pretense of text
ual exactitude, the broad tenor of
the note will prove to be, speaking
diplomatically, in the direction of
a categorical No.
:o:
A dispatch says it rained fis'i on
the streets of Laurence, Kas.. Mon
day morning. The report is hacked
up by a university professor. who
said it was quite possible. A Kansas
City man who has lived and fished
around that vicinity says, however,
that be would believe it rained
"pitchforks and nigger babies" in
liwrence much quicker than it ev
er rained fish.
:o:
Coro'oti Hell of Pleasant IH1I has
some very interesting family heir
looms in the shape of ;i collection of
old coins which he brought with
him from Kngland. Some date
back as far as the Fifteenth Cen
tury. One coin, an English nennv.
is dated 1779 and has the head of
George III on it. It weighs about
two ounces, is an inch and a half
in diameter and very roughly coined.
:o:
"Sunday afternoon a group of
town boys were swimming and bat
ing in the second channel when
they noticed a snake swimming
along almost wholly above the
water, several feet from the bank.
They pulled near to scare it. but
the snake started to coil on the top
of the water and then one of the
boys noticed the rattles on its tail
and killed it. When they pulled it
out of the water they found it had
four rattles and a button. None of
our old timers remember having
heard of a rattler on the water this
way."
:o:
"From Chateau Thierry it is only
abotit forty miles to Paris," W. Y.
Morgan reminds us in a letter to
the Hutchinson News. "We had a
late lunch at Chateau Thierry,
drove for a couple of hours and
were in Paris for supper. So it la
worthy of note that the Germans
came mighty near to their boast
that they would eat dinner in Pari3. '
and in fact only lacked a couple of
hours of having that pleasure. All
the people of Paris who could leave
had done so, and the government
was packed up and ready to move
the second time, but the American
re-inforcements prevented the Ger
man dinner party and saved the
French capital- and the future of the
world."
Perhaps the most commonly pro
posed remedy for labor troubles is
the suggestion that labor be taken
into partnership with capital by be
ing put on a profit-sharing basis.
The argument ts plausible and at
tractive that if the employe of an
industrial concern is to receive a
dividend out of the product In some
proportion to his wages and length
of service, he will consider very
seriously the demands of agitator?
that he quit his job and forfeit his
prospects for a share of the profits.
Upon first presenratlon. the logic
of this argument seems wholly
sound and irrefutable. The only ob
jection raised to it turns on the
point that the workers are not re
quired also to share In the losses.
Hut if profit sharing would operate
successfully to prevent strikes and
labor difficulties, it might offset this
disadvantage.
With so much expected from the
profit-sharing idea, it is disappoint
ing to find that it does not always
prove to be a stabilizing element. A
statement by the Willis-Overland
companv, whose automobile factory
In Toledo was a center ; of strike
turbulence last month, sets forth
the fact, which has not been de
nied, that a quarterly 50-50 profit
sharing plan for all employes with
six months continuous service, had
rWn inaugurated, under which a
half a million dollars had been dis
tributed, amounting to from S to 11
per cent of the wages, which had
also been rapidly increased and were
equal to or better than those of
other establishments, and yet a dis
pute over the arrangement of the
hours per week brought on a strike,
throwing into idleness nearly 7.000
men and women. In this case at
least, profit-sharing has not proved
the panacea as against labor
troubles nor served to give immun
ity from strikes.
The proiiicm of industrial peace
is broader ami deeper and more
complicated than ever and not to
be solved by adjustment of a f ingle
factor. Exchange.
PLATTSMOUTH SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL
WRITES FROM
PORTUGAL TO
HIS SISTER
THURSDAY. JUNK II). 1010.
-:o:
Husincss is not as good as it
might be were people not afraid
that while they are downtown
hopping someone will move' into
their house.
n . . - .
1
The southeast Indiana man who
filled his hunting companion full of
fine shot by mistaking him for a
squirrel, must have been shooting
in self-defense.
AT LISBON. CYRIL JANDA TELLS
OF EXPERIENCES AS
A SAILOR.
HAD PNEUMONIA TWO WEEKS
:o:-
The sanity experts are going to
do their best to make the Fourth of
July indistinguishable from Sunday
again this year, but let's fool them.
Let's hang out more flags than we
ever did before.
:o:
It appears that most of the fam
ous veiled beauties in the serglios of
Turkey have turned out to be very
homely. Now our dull Occidental
minds are beginning to understand
why they were kept veiled so long.
:o:
Gelatine Travers has figured out
that if he had not thoughtfully pro
vided himself with a peace garden,
he would have made it through
this spring without borrowing a
cent. But with the tools and seeds
and paying tho huckster extra to
slip, the vegetables into the Travers
garden before the neighbors are up.
expenses have been as high, if not
higher, than they were a year ago.
INVESTMENTS
Public Service Corporation
Paying
Can be had in amounts of
$100
PAUL FITZGERALD,
Investment Securities
First National Bank BId'g,
Omaha, Neb.
Spent Some Time In Azores, Gives
Vivid Description Of the
Islands And Feople.
Tmm Tuesday's Dally.
The following letter received from
Jyril Janda, who is serving as a
sailor on the U. S. S. Rochester:
Lisbon, Portugal, May 23
Dear Sister and Ed:
I have a few minutes to spare so
I will drop you a line tp tell you a
little about our life. I have been
laid up wi,th pneumonia for the last
two weeks. I lost 26 pounds, but
feel much, better now. I hope you
are all well.
We are at present at Lisbon,
rortugal. We were at Pont a Del-
gada, that's the largest town iu tho
Azores Islands. Wo were there less
than four days. Our first day was
spent coaling ship.
It is a quaint little town of about
25,000 inhabitants. The houses
are all of stone and colored green.
yellow and pink, so that they look
quite picturesque, espucially at a
distance. But the most beautiful
sights there, wero the flower gard
ens. The islands have the vegeta
tion you would havo iu southern
California.
Ponta Delgada has been the base
for some of our smaller ships dur
ing the war. so they were quite used
to the American (Gob) sailor. You
cannot go ashore withour bavins a
rowd of kids and even grown-ups
following and hollowing, Americianc
give me money, penny, cigarette,
papa.
We left there Monday morning.
and made the trip to Lisbon in fifty
hours. We were staming at IS
knots an hour, that's pretty good
speed for this old tub, as we call
Tho weather was perfect, warm
sunshine during the day and full
moon at night.
Lisbon, the capital of Portugal is
a very beautiful place. There are
several other ships here, also the
whole Portugese navy which consists
of about eight ships the size of our
destroyers. In home waters the
Rochester does not attract much at
tention because there are usually
much larger ships around. Put
here we are the biggest thing In
the water, and the object of every
body's interest on the shore. It is
nice to bo king pin for once. Then
our being a flagship has brought
many official visitors, and for the
first few days the guard and salut
ing batteries were kept busy doing
the honors.
All the boys that have been
ashore here hate to think of going
back to New York. There is only
one thing we cannot get use to and
that is their money for one dollar
in American we get 1040 resis in
Portugese money, so its rather hard
to keep track or. Everything is
very cheap here. You can go into
the best restaurants here and get an
eight course meal which will take
you at least two hours to eat it for
70 cents in our money. They have
all drinks imaginable here and all
saloons are open to us. A quart of
champaign here costs $1.20, in the
states it costs about $13.00, so you
can see the difference.
The population of Lisbon if
about 400,000. A hundred and fif
ty years ago, there was an earth
quake here that destroyed the larg
est and most beautiful part of the
city. Some of the old sections still
remain, the streets are very nar
row, steep and crooked. But in the
newer part of the city they have
fine streets and avenues, a number
of imposing buildings and fine
churches.
I was also in the king's palace
where they have all the kings in
their caskets from the year 1300,
and one can look upon them under
rtugal has
been a republic for about eight
years, though they have not stopped
revolting yet. Evidences of bom
bardments and bullet holes from the
last revolution can still be seen.
The people in Lisbon have been
very nice and cordial to thp ' Amer
icans. We do not "sawe" their
j lingo and they cannot understand
us but we get along first rate with
our motions and hand talk. It's a
joke to see a bunch of sailors try
to make them understand some
thing. They are happy easy going people
Mi v WMr7
TOP
SMOOTHEST 2$
SMOKING
TOBA
"TIME given the right chance
puts character in a man's face,
horse-sense under his haty and mel
low fren'liness into his tobacco.
sr
4 Z
Time is a big factor in giving
Velvet Tobacco its mildness and
"character."
Velvet ages for two whole years in
wooden hogsheads. During this
long period the choice Burlcy leaves
take on a kindly quality of cool
ness, a rich fra
grance, a "taste" that
appeals to pipe
smokers old and
young.
Don't hurry, but just
walk into the next store
and lay down a dime
and a nickel and say
"VELVET" the tobac
co that isn't harsh but
is friendly.
J!"
4' -
15c S
rfjfc
KoII a VELVET Cigarette
and never work, spend their time
hunting and fishing.
The town is most alive at iiij;lit.
because of the lij;ht savins it does
not set dark until 10:00 o'clock.
Their .supper hour is from '.) to 10.
Their business places do not op.Mi
until almost noon.
Sunday afternoon we went to see
a bull fisht, and it is certainly an
exciting" game, one man was killed.
nd another narrow escaped.
We are going to wait here for
the Trans-Atlantic lliglit, nun
proceed to Plymouth, England. I
have no idea how lcng we win sia
there.
Well, Sis I'll have to close. This i.s
much more than I intended to write
ut when it is .something i uteres! -
I cannot stop. 1 con m wrue
live times this much but I'll have to
close for this time, with lots of love
to all. I remain, as ever.
Your brother,
CYRIL.
! in. iv, '. .ii'i ;ir at tin- Conntv
Court ti ! In M in ji t I"r s:ml
iutity. ii tin' iay of Juno .. I .
;it iiiii- i'ilxk :i. m, t' s)iv
(.iii-i'. if siny there l. why the prayer
!" tin' p l it iom-r slioiilil not t' Ki";)iit
il. Mini tl.;it iiutiio of tin- MilMicy of
sniil petition arul that tlx1 hearing
tlo roof ho ulvoii to all persons inter
ested hi sai.l matter hy publishing a
eopy of this order in tiie i Ma t tsmoiit h
Journal, a lojral semi-weekly news
paper piinteil fn sahl county, for three
sneeessivo weeks prior to said day of
hea rinse.
Witness my hand and seal of said
eonrl, tiiis J'.'th dav of .May A. It.
1019.
ai.u:x J. t:kksx.
Con ii t v J ud :ee.
lv l'LOUK.NCli WUITi:.
(.Seal) j.'-::w. Clerk.
Another thing that doesn't seem
to bo increasing the League of Na
tions' popularity in this country is
Germany's very evident eagerness to
get in.
-:o:-
Sabscribe for the Journal.
W. A. ROBERTSON,
Lawyer.
J. EaEt of Riley Ilotj!. .J.
J Coatca Clock,
J Second Floor.
in;
MITM K T riJKIIITOH
The state of Nebraska. Cass eo-in-
I n the Con n 1 y Court.
J" C o mac., of the estate of Her-
an Kind:.-. 1 'oo.asod.
T.i the Creditors f said l-.stato.
I. :, are hereby notihed. That will
, .,, c,e Comtv Court room m
UVin said eoun.V. on t he 1 ..til '''
juiv. r-r an-1 "
t ..1. .. in a c nt'K a. "
riH.nst said estate with a View O
heir adjustment, and aliouar.ro. 1 1 1
'"""-J, H:C tate-'iriour
l. 1!T.. ilt.d In. l"o ,
.v.nent of debts ts o; e...
id 1ith ilav oi .lune. ui.i.
Witness mv hand and the sea of
.id County Court, this loth 'lay of
June. 1919. ' , T 7... T v.
(Seal) U
County Jud're.
oicii:u or UKAiuxi
...! -oliee of I'rol.iilr of V ill
In the County Court of Cass ccun-
State"of "xehraskn. County of Cass.
i m; ,n I:.ke. lie:"-
lames . e itieK, i.c.r.."V
jailor tinn
n rea.iiti mi-
.. ,- i n cr Ilia I lie
t
(1
Jeli
of Marie
i nst ru t ion t
ipor 111,11 -.V, -,.. ,.f
tiled in this -court on .
10 I. Uho I"" 1 "" ' , .,id
will and testamen of tb
eased, may be provea h ... .
M
la
deceased, t.ia , oe g y
and recorded as t ne ia. i ,ertns
lament of sa .tan -. . (1mjttod
: that .MH tn " '.tr3tion of
to protete. iir.a - - - EdTrTl
&";V-".rniArrVuh the w.ll
annexed: ord.red that you and
ail"per-OBTlnter..ted in said matter,
What are YOU doin
r
li- s;-i l mM
If you are foolin it away
00IT IT. Our Bank, is
a safe place for it
YOU WORK HARD FOR YOUR MONEY AND YOU AND YOUR
FAMILY SHOULD GET THE BENEFIT OF IT. IF YOU SPEND IT.
IT IS GONE FOREVER; IT IS SOMEONE ELSE'S MONEY.
WHEN YOU PUT IT IN OUR BANK IT IS STILL YOUR MONEY.
ANDIT IS SAFE FROM FIRE, BURGLARS OR YOUR OWM TEMP
TATION TO SPEND IT.
PUT YOUR MONEY IN OUR BANK AND PROTECT YOUR OLD
AGE. WE PAY H INTEREST ON TIME CERTIFICATES.
Farmers State Ban!,
PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA