PAGE FOU. PLATTSMOUTH SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL MONDAY, JUL? 14, .19 Cbe plattsmoutb journal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUIH, NEBRASKA Entered t rostoffice. riaUtsmouth, Neb., as second-class mall matter R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE Safttv First" is still the motto of the Hohenzollern family. :o: Xo tribunal can try the kaiser half so much as he has tried the rest of the world. :o: "What will a clain-hake he with out leer?" somebody wails. Maybe it will be a clam-bake. :o. r Interest on W. S. S. is compound ed quarterly; and when this is done for any individual, poverty is con founded daily. :o: If we ever get rich enough to own an automobile, we are going to back it up against one of Penrose's speeches, and run it by hot air to t-ave gasoline. :o: The Christian Advocate says Car negie's gift of a million to Vander bilt University is an insult to the church. We're willing to be insult ed that way any old time. :p: Yes. it is a cold world, if you want to !M)k at it that way. but it may Ik? warm enough lor you in the next world. There is always some tiling to look forward to. :o: Hilly Sunday says that if the Lord would send him to hell he would depopulate it. Guess that's riuht. If wc were there and saw Hilly coming we'd certainly have if p '.sible. :o: An agricultural paper asks if th-re is any way to prevent bees There are no good reasons for bad roads and no poor reasons for good ones and yet there are more bad roads than good. :o: : Our neighbor got a new machine, Just the other day; Me says it uses gasoline, And not alfalfa hay. :o: Information comes from Mexico that "the attitude of Gen. Villa to ward the United States was one of American Industry not done th A. P. of Itself any compensating good. Negroes constitute one-seventh of American industrial workers. The new policy Is, to say the least, a triumph for democracy. It is also calculated to help the blacks along the very lines where they most need development the learning of trades, and participation in the higher living standards and educa tional opportunities that come with membership in the trade unions. It will help to lift them out of poverty and will make better citizens cf them. And indirectly, the Federa tion of Labor may gain proportion ately in power and prestige. The negro will certainly contri bute one asset on which the Fed eration today lays much stress. He is a loyal American, and can be de pended on to do his part in keeping bolshevism and anarchism out of sincere friendship.',' though Villa's sensitive soul was hurt by the ac tion of the American troops who drove him out of Juarez. God de liver uncle ham from his greaser friends! -:o:- VOLUBLE VOLTAGE CHOP-SUEYED -:o: o wonder congress refuses to mitigate the country's complaint that his constituents have been de prived of their constitutional right to representation. A community that elects a man like IJerger prob ably deserves to be represented by a man like Berger. -:o:- fmm stinging while you are robbing the hive. Certainly. Let the hired man do it, while you take a walk of about 'steen miles. :o: No Joh!iny boy ;it the wheel of a new rod rnr and a 10-eent cigar stuck in th corner of his mouth is going to consider it a crime to M'latter the landscape with some jay pedestrian, caught in the ret of alking. :o: An agricultural exchange says that the farmer who is attending to his work find- plenty to do at this tinm of the year. The same might well be raid of every man who at tends to bis own business, and at any time of the year. :o: Kvery time we have a little lire experience in the city of Platts tnouth we are compelled to show up ourselves in the way of poor tire fighting equipment. During the fire of last Monday evening we heard a stranger in the city make this re mark, "What kind of a town is this, without a fire engine of some sort. Many towns a great deal smaller than this are equipped with up-to-date engines." Our insurance racs would no doubt be greatly re duced with better equipment against fire loss. There is r cause for the present, excess rates that the old line companies have imposed upon the city of Plattsmouth, and it is about time we were finding out the cause. If modern fire equipment will do it let us get busy. INVESTMENTS Public Service Corporation Paying 7 Can be had in amounts of $100 PAUL FITZGERALD, Investment Securities First National Bnk Bid's, Omaha, Neb. HOW WILL SHE VOTE? According to Mr. McAdoo. women will wield a powerful influence over the political destinies of the future. He goes further, and asserts that women will not adhere to party lines ul.cn great issues are at stake, but v.Ul vote boldly for the thing which is for the public good, without reference to the party promulgating it. All is not literature that litters. Procrastination and prosperity don't mix. Lord blest both our eagle and our stork. 57 varieties are a denied sight too many. If you know it all you know too much. We are all willing Jones should pay the freight. Put plenty of powder behind your projectile. A round steak makes quite square meal. "With 700 wives. how could Solomon be wise? Europe is crucifying Christ all over again. :o: LATIN, GREEK AND ENGLISH. county agent or agricultural bureau. Stables should be kept clean and manure piles sprayed with fly erad- icators to keep the flies from breed ing. If in addition to this, bossy is sprayed frequently herself, she will repay these attentions to her com fort by as steady a flow of milk as is her habit when flies are few. Another precaution against the fly nuisance is the screening of stables as carefully as houses. Of course it would be impossible to keep the fly pest down to as small numbers in the stable" as in the house, for manifest reasons, but screening, cleanliness and spraying will do much toward it. :o: ; THE ATTIC PHILOSOPHER. Next Time Buy 1 1 T r I L 1 L 41 CORD TIRES Tims Co ft-tirat flab) A man whose children will short- s Iy enter high school has been doing a little investigating as to their If this should prove true it will probable studies. He himself has be the very thing which the great founders of the suffrage movement hoped to see. In renuation of his theory comes the information that the women in at I ast one state are being organ ized by their leaders along distinct party lines. State, county, town and ward have their leaders and po litical meetings. Party propaganda is to be extended as widely as pos sible, and along the same lines as those followed by the men. This is what the politician. hoped to see. If the hope of winding the woman vote leads to higher ideals, better measures in each of the great parties, this party division will be a good thing. If it sinmlv broad ens the old style party politics by the addition of thousands of women who vote for measures not because of their soundness but because of the party which introduces them, politics will stay exactly where they were before the first woman voted. Mr, McAdoo's view is the ideal one. Whether it is accurate time alone can tell. :o: NEGRO UNIONS. Political equality on the part of the negro in the United States, as everybody knows, has never been fully realized. In theory the negro has been the political equal of the white man. In practice he has seldom exercised his nominal rights in the south, and has not fully realized them in the north. This is a situation which right or wrong is not likely to be altered very rapid ly. There is too much prejudice to overcome on one side, and too much ignomnce on the other. It is different with industrial equality. It may be only a differ ence of degree; but certain it is that the negro finds it easier to make his way in industry than in politics, and easier to win tolerance and justice. The American Federation of La bor h? now recognized this situa tion by formally admitting colored workers to its ranks. Heretofore the col. r line nag been drawn pretty tightly by that organization. It has held hack the progress of the negro rac. nr.'. in all probability it has some knowledge of Latin and Greek, and believes them, Latin par ticularly, to be of great use in the development and understanding of a good Knglish vocabulary, and he is a little alarmed at the proposed banishment of these two studies from many high school and college courses. Just by way of experiment, he made up a list of common words, to be submitted to pupils for definition, as he says, "not the nomenclature of botany, of faunal-naturalism or anatomy, but ordinary words, one story above the street." He persuaded the teachers in his home high school to try these words on pupils who had had training purely in English, and also those who had received some instruction in the classical languages. The re sult was illuminating. The students of English revealed a knowledge of their native tongue so inaccurate as to be appalling, while studnets of Latin and Greek had little or no trouble in defining the same words correctly. Later the same lists were tried in ' widely separated districts of this country, and in each case the result was the same, the classical stud ents displaying the better know ledge of English. The results of his findings are published in the July Atlantic mag azine, and a perusal of the article should furnish both amusement and food for meditation. Xo matter what one's busfness in life may be, a good vocabulary is a good asset. If the best way to se cure a flexible and comprehensive knowledge of English is to learn some Greek and Latin, it may be well to think it over a little befor condemning these studies as a fu tile waste of time. :o: i SPRAY THE COW. The lowering of the milk supply in fly time is an evil from which the farmer or dairy man need suffer very little if he will spray his cows as faithfully as he does his growiug plants and fruit trees. There are many preparations suit- Alexander Graham Bell has beat en tne weather man. lie placed a big refrigerator filled with ice and salt, in his attic and led the cold air down through an asbestos cov ered pipe into a room below. He keeps the doors of this room closed and the windows opened from the top a little to permit the exit of the warm air. The result has been a tempera ture of 6; degrees , in this room when the mercury outside register ed 100. It is a very simple solution of a very old difficulty. Only two or three things stand in the way of everybody's doing it. The first of these is the only one necessary to mention. That is the cost of ice. Ice is already so high that few of us can contemplate putting it in tht atHe nnri even if we Hid install I sultant demand wou-.i give a new the ice-box per directions we would j stimulus to cattle-raiso;: have to sweat so Davine for the ice I It would be well now if the de- that all the good of the low temper- I partment of agriculture would per ature would be lost. I form a similar service with legard It would be much simpler if some to other commodities. Surely beef scientifically inclined person would is not the only thing for which the invent some nills such as Alice-in- I producer gets less, without any ... Wonderland took. which would I corresponding benefit to the con make people small enough so they I sumer. could creep into the family ice-box I :o: along with the milk and butter, or better still if some way could be found to lower the price of ice, so that anyone who feels the heat could afford an extra cake to sit on while he earned his daily bread. :o: PROFITEERING BUTCHERS. Big, clean-cut in appearance, they giv an excess mileage even for Cord Tires. TOUGH, WEAR-RESISTING TREADS L F. T Plattsmouth, Nebraska. FILMS THAT BIND. Modern pictures are to help North and South America to be come better acquainted. An all- American film organization with headquarters in Washington, D. C, recently gave rts purpose as that of a film clearing house, facilitating Everv housewife has lone: been I the distribution of pictures illus- convinced that she was paying toojtrating the commercial and indus much for her meat. It was difficult. I trial activities of Central and South however, to nlace the blame. Everv-I America. It Is going to make a body concerned cattle-raiser, pack-1 special effort to put its information . . . I. .. . . . .. cr, Independent wholesaler and re- into the school and colleges or ;sortn i tailer was busy "passing the I America. ouck to somenouy eise. ine m-1 North Americans need to learn a i partment of agriculture now seems (jeal more about the peoples in to have settled the question. After I tne continent to the south of them. ... ... a careful investigation, it announc- i The niedium of the motion picture es that prices are not justified, and can not serve as a complete educa that the packer is partly to blame tional course. There will have to for the high price of beef particu ne much studving besides of lan- IN THE COUNTY COURT. From Thursday's Dally. This morning in the county court was heard the - petition of Mr. James E. Greuber and Mrs. Fern E. Greuber husband and wife, asking that adoption of Noble Eugene Ho- man, be granted to them. The child who is but 17 months of age, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Wm, Homan of near Murray. The h ing was had and the adoption lowed, the boy becoming the adc ed son of Mr. and Mrs. Greuber Don't forget us when you w meat or groceries for harvest, can take care of you, just call ph No. 4 and we will have your or up. HATT & SON If You ever Eicpect larly. but the retail dealer is most to blame. Packers have been paying lately about one-fourth less for beef on guages and customs on the part of individuals. But the pictures will serve as a stimulus. arousuiK in terest and developing sympathetic the hoof than they paid on March J understanding of our Pan-American 1, and have reduced their selling I frjends. prices. They seem to e maKing a 0f course, the immediate purpose little more profit than formerly. oack of ni0st of this educational But the retailers have not lowered work js commercial. It is intended their rates in accordance with the to open (ne eyes of the United wholesale rates. Paying about 25 I states, business man to the best per cent less for this meat, the re- methods of securing South America's tail dealer has hardly lowered his tra(je. Inevitably) however, it is selling prices as much as 10 per 0jnR to create clearer appreciation cent. For . some cuts he has not of tllG neonle themselves, and so de- lowered them at all. I velon the possibilities for real This is not true of every meat frienjship into that mutual good- dealer ,of course. Many have dealt wiu wuich foresighted people have fairly with the public, giving the b(en urging for so long. consumer the benefit of the whole- ,:0: - sale reductions. But the average g-H-HH-S-S 'H "V'l-Z-l' retailer has been turning into exor bitant profit for himself this drop in co.st which ought to have gone to his customers. The department has made these facts public in order that the con sumers may themselves take a hand in remedying the situation. If ev ery purchaser knows the facts, and demands -to know exactly why her butcher is charging the same rates he.charf-ed last spring, or anywhere near the same, retail prlci s may soon reach their proper level. This would have a wholesome ef fect on the whole meat -niustry. v.oi:i 1 .be W. A. ROBERTSON, Lawyer. East of Riley Hota!. Coates Elock. ' ' Second Floor. 1 You must put Money in toe Bank; let it stay there and always add to it THE FIRST STEP IS: COME INTO OUR BANK AND OPEN ACCOOUNT. THE SECOND STEP IS: TO REGULARLY ADD AS MUCH I YOU CAN TO IT. THE THIRD STEP IS: TO KEEPTHIS UP FOR A YEAR THE YOU WILL NEVER QUIT. YOU WILL HAVE FOUND THE PEACE AND COMFORT WHIC COMES TO THE MAN WITH MONEY. YOU WILL RECEIVE 3 1-2 J6 PER CENT INTEREST OK A SA INGS ACCOUNT. Fanners State Bank PLATTSMOUTH. NEBRASKA Fancy box paper at this office. able for these sprays, and formulas People who need meat for them can be obtained from any able to buy more of U, and the re- C A STO R I A For Infants and Children !n Uss for Over 30 Years Iras If o Always bear the I HAVE THE GENUINE horoboo CM Seal FOR THRASHING! TELEPHONE 138