The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, September 08, 1921, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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PLATTSMOTJTH . SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1921.
PAGE FQTTE
-ammipbe.
HI y foci!
Cbc plattsmouth journal
PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOTJTH, NEBRASKA . :
Entered at Fostoffiee. Plattsmouth. Neb., as aecond-claas mail matter
COMBINED
K
9
J
R. A. BATES, Publisher
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE
WILL EXHIBIT AT
Plattsmouth, Neb., Friday, September 16th
A comprehensive ensemble of the world's best ppHormers and finest trained animals including
llany hot-headed people have cold
To brew or not to brew? That is
a raisin(g) question. 'j
.05-
Fat people, are always trying to
change their1 'weights.
The Methodist church, in the Uni
ted States has a membership of
neatly 4,500,000. '
' :o:
Some fanners threaten to burn
their corn because of low prices.
Others will drink it.
:o:
Ninety-five per cent of the world's
output of diamonds is controlled by
one South African syndicate.
:o:
In England it is unlawful to play
billiards in a public place on Sun
day, Chriscruas day or Good Friday.
. :o:
Plattsmouth enjoyed two Sundays
Xhis week. All the principle business
houses were closed Sunday and Mon
day. o:o
Schools days are here, and it is a
pleasure to see the girls and boys
wending their way up high school
hill.
:o:
It is true that prices of many ar
SODD
and Wild West
iMaertag
I ,, H,imflycaBanJULJL wil aww&.i-mTKMvret&it.Mr'ce yac.:v. -'. - 1 '. -i .
-. i
feet.
o-
Russia today is the devil's play
ground. :o:
The way of the transgressor is
crowded
:o:
The fruits of political victories
are plums.
:o:
There is a lesson in Bolshevism
for all of us.
-:o:-
Everybcdy enjoys the vacation
the bos lakes.
:o:
"The ling can do no wrong" un
less someone has an acre.
Hollan'l has what is known as
the Anti revolutionary party.
:o:
Walking isn't as good an exercise
as rid'ng in second-hand cars.
o:o
Some f iris faces are their fortunes
because that's what they cost.
:o:
Two preachers' cars smashed in
Chicago. Holy roller meetings!
o:o
Now they get ther palm read to
find where to get their nose red.
:o:
A pessimist is a man with a big
stock of petticoats on his shelves.
o:o
New song hit: "The Moonshine's
Right in My Old Kentucky Home."
:o:
It must have been the undertak
ers lobby that put over home brew.
:o:
Coal prices are only awaiting
the zero hour before going over the
top.
:o:
The n.ystery is, how can Congress
tell whether it is on a vacation or
not
-:o:-
The trouble is, there's more un
employed money than unemployed
men.
:b:
Striking New York bakers have
stopped loafing and gone back to
work.
:o:
John Howard Payne wrote "Home,
Sweet Home" before rents were
raised.
:o:
With Guatemala's new porcelain
money it will be easy to break a
dollar.
-:o:-
Boston has an epidemic of fleas.
The litt.e animals wanted a taste of
culture.
:o:
Human existence is a continual
struggle between the forces of life
and death.
:o:
It is base slander to say that a
man never washes the dishes until
the day before his wife returns
from the country. He never washes
them at all.
c
"It don't take a man long to
bag hi3 pants at the knees,
and to make a finely tailored
suit look thoroughly disrepu
table that's the man of it,"
avers Dainty Dorthy.
But she goes on to explain
that the man who is making
use of our cleaning, steaming
and pressing services is keep
ing his clothes in much more
presentable condition than
when 'he got acquainted with
us. And it doesn't cost much,
either.
Goods Called for and Delivered
Ifob
"JOURNAL OFFICE
:o:-
Motor car rnafcers employed 325,
000 workers last year.
-o:o-
They once -went. home to mother;
now they go to court.
Formal dances once meant full
dress; now halfdressed.
:o;
The poker playing husband's in
come tax is a new dress.
:o:-
People who Jump at conclusions
scare the best ones away.
: o:
One way to get a kick is by mix
ing business and pleasure.
:o:
It is uo trouble to sleep these cool
nights and we are all glad.
:o:
Boys look forward to long trous
ers; girls to short dresses.
:o:
Many wemen worth looking at
are not worth listening to.
:o:
Scrapping the League evidently
has to be only "him books."
:o:
Detroit'3 motor production in 1919
was valued at 1880,000,000.
:o:
Men who marry regular dreams
find dreams go by contraries.
:o:
Maybe the tariff can't please all
because it has too many duties.
:o:
They run for office before election;
afterward they run away from it.
;o: L.
The best thing about paying com
pliments is it leaves one due you.
; :o:
The Minei' war in West Virginia
seems to declared off for the present.
:o:
A judge suggests longer court
ships; we suggest longer marriages.
:o: :
If some men didn't have troubles
they couldn't carry on a conversation.
:o:
When a man tells his wife he loves
her she wonders where he wants to
so.
:o:
Ancient kings couldn't sign their
names; modern ones might as well
not.
Immigration shows foreign rela
tions want to become domestic rela
tions. -tor-
Mexico is divided into 28 states,
the federal district and two terri
tories. :o:-
Only 55 per cent of the Indians
under federal supervision can spenk
English.
-o:c
The British dropped salt in the
Irish peace dove's eye instead of on
its tail.
:o:-
Ford will make leather out of pow
der. Don't be surprised if your steak
blows up.
-:o:-
Bergdoll is in Switzerland, where
his reputation will be used in mak
ing cheese.
The first circus day in five or six
years will isit Plattsmouth Friday
September lfth.
A scientist says short men live
the longest. We claim long men
live thi longest.
-o.-o-
Taxes are still high, but the "war
quality' matches are gradually be
ing demobilized.
-:o:
The bottle blowers' strike doesn't
interest umpires as much as when
bottle throwers strike.
The hop crepor 1921 is estima
ted at 32,6oo7o6o bushels with
five gallons to the bushel.
1 :oi . '
When daughter comes to the door
with red hands, she has been wash
ing hj.- face, not the dishes.
:o: . .
Collars promise to follow candy
downward in price, but there is a
good deal of the alphabet left.
:o:
Old Jack Frost is holding out pret
ty well. Maybe he couldn't hurt any
thing now even if he felt so dis
posed. o:o
Life insurance as a business, per
hapH suffers less in hard times suvch
as we hav passed thru than aayi
other business.
ticles have reached the pre-war level,
but it is also sadly true that the
dear old-bank-account beat them to
it.
:o:
Some day we'lll get back to skirts
just short enough to avoid the side-'
walk and long enough to avoid com-j
ment, writes one paragrapher. Avoid ;
comment about a skirt? It can't be
done.
:o:
THAT "SWINDLE TRUST"
Ponzi, dusting the books in his
penitentiary library, must have a
rapid pulse as he ponders the frenzied-finance
operations of the "Swin
dle Trust," now being exposed by
more than 100 secret service agents.
Ponii was a piker.
His "50 per cent in 90 days" lur
ed only $10,000,000.
But the operations of the nation
wide "Swindle Trust" according to J
astonished secret service heads, in
volve in the neighborhood of $100,
000,000. Most of the big swindles of the
past have been based on the mathe
matical system of progression
what gamblers call "doubling the
bet."
A $1,000 dupe is paid out of $2,
000 from a second dupe. A $3,000
sucker enables the swindler to pay
off the $2,000 victim. And so on.
The Wheel finally gets so big
that its operators can't turn it.
When it stops, the crash comes.
And the swindlers rarely are
shrewd enough to casli in and van
ish before the blow-up. -'
"The bang on, saying, "Don't quit
now. Lets give it Just one more
turn."
That's human nature.
. Cassie Chadwick kept her swin
dle wheel going eight years.
The South Seas Bubble, formed
to wipe out England's national debt
in 1711, by exploiting trade to the
South Seas, lasted nine years. Then
its stock was quoted at $1,000
and the manipulators sold out and
let others hold the bag.
The Tulia Mania in Holland, 300
years ago, set people so crazy that
they paid as high as $2,800 for a
single bulb. This swindle blew up
within three years.
The Mississippi Bubble, greatest
in history, exploded after three
years, when its stock reached SO
times its par value of $20,000,000.
In all the history of swindling,
there's only one giant operator that
got away with it for a long time
Mme. Hunbert, who borrowed $14,
000,000 in Paris and kept the wheel
moving for 20 years.
Frenzied finance is a bubble.
And bubbles always burst.
OltDKH OK IIKAKINU
ou I'cdtiun fur A p point m nit of
AdmlnUt rator.
TIip State of Nebraska, Cass coun
ty. tH.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of George
Grelie, decm.sed.
On reading anil fillnic the petition
of William C. Greoe. prayinff that ad
ministration of said estate may he
granted to Fred Drucker as adminis
trator; Ordered, That September 21. A. I).
1921. at 9 o'clock a. m., is assigned for
hearing said petition, when all per
form interested in said matter may ap
pear at a County Court to he held in
and for said county, and show cause
why the prayer of petitioner should
not le granted; and that notice of
the pendency of said petition and the
liearinK thereof be given to all per
sons interested In said mater lry pub
I (siting a copy of this order In the
Plattsmouth Journal, a semi-weekly
newspaper printed in said county for
three successive weeks prior to said
day of hearing.
Dated this Ii5t li day of August, A.
Vt 1921.
ALLKN J. BEESOX.
(ScXil) County Judge.
CIIAS. E. MAUTIN,
a2H-"v Attorney.
HOGS
on the Installment Plan!
Three pure bred Duroc pigs for
$65. A boar and two gilts, not re
lated, witn pedigrees. 1U down ana
$10 a month. Older gilts on the
same plan. ' For particulars PTite,'
- ,-
phone or call on
Albert Youn g,
MUBEAY
NEBRASKA
. 1 1
The Famous Davenport "Family' of Riders!
A herd of performing elephants; a host of clowns; the world's greatest Japanese wonder troupe,
a whole school of educated, knowing Shetland ponies.
Two Performances, at 2 and 8 p. m. Grand Free Street Parade at Noon.
YOUNG PEOPLE ARE
JOINED IN WEDLOCK
Miss Florence Rummell of this City
and Harry B. Hall of Beaver
City, are Married
Last Saturday evening at the
Presbyterian Manse in this city oc
curred the marriage of Miss Florence
Rummell of this city and Mr. Harry
B. Hall of Beaver City, Nebraska.
The wedding was quite simple,
the bridal party being attended by
Misses Marie Black and Mable Itum
mell, as bridesmaids and Messrs Guy
F. Heil and John W. Rummell as
groomsmen. The marriage lines were
read by the Rev, II. G. McClusky in
his usual manner.
The bride wore a costume of white
crepe de chine and carried a bouquet
of white roses. The attendants car
ried shower bouquets of pink roses.
The groom and his attendants were
garbed in the customary dark suits.
- Following the ceremony the bridal
party motored to the home of the
bride's parents where they enjoyed
a most delightful wedding dinner
which was attended by only the im
mediate relatives of the contracting
parties.
The bride is a daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. William Rummell, promin
ent residents of Plattsmouth pre
cinct, and is a graduate of the Platts
mouth high school in the class of
1912 and since graduation has been
teaching in the schools of the county.
The groom is assistant cashier of the
bank of Beaver City and a very prom
inent resident of that city and held
in the -very highest esteem by those
who know him.
Mr. and Mrs. Hall will make their
future home in Beaver City where
the groom has a home awaiting the
coming of the bride.
"Kansas has its own Reno," says
a headline, referring to the divorce
record at Wichita in Sedgwick coun
ty. Reno county is close by and
close in the race with the divorce
lawyers at Hutchinson doing their
best. .
:o:
The trouble is mainly that in this
nnnntrv ina! nntf. the Droducer and
j j j - ,
the coasuincr are the same person,
The consumer is toid to produce.")
and there's nothing else for him to!
io.
-:o:-
Office supplies oi ail kinds han
died at the Journal of ice.
Y . f ' - & r JLt - "(-1
" h t- f;-v It- S- .!
CASS CO. FARM t
BUREAU NOTES ?
T j
Soil Meeting
The meetings which were held in
the schoolhouses along the river were
a success. Many soil problems such
as washing and terracing were work
ed out. Just east of Union Mr. Ban
ning has terraced a hillside. This
is the form of terracing we are do
ing. Organization
A meeting will be hold in each
precinct during September and Oc
tober to organize the precinct and
make out a program of work. The
Farm Bureau will try to secure films
and use the moving pictures at each
meeting.
Dress Form
A very interesting meeting was
held at the Ray Wiles home Monday'
afternoon. Twenty-two ladies were
present and all helped to make thej
meeting a success. Three dress forms j
were completed.
House Furnishing
The ladies of Maple Grove com
munity near Nehawka spent the af
ternoon at the home of Mrs. Louis
Ross and had an interesting discus
sion on Home Furnishing and the
Convenient Kitchen.. Several of the
members gave interesting readings
ns to essentials of a well planned
kitchen. Mrs. Ross is project lead
er. After the meeting the hostess
kindly showed us her new home.
Dainty refreshments were served.
County Fair Week
Thursday afternoon the ladies of;
Murdock and community held a:
meeting on Standards to work for in
household exhibits at the forthcom-'
ing county fair. About twenty-five
women and young ladies exhibited
products and more than fifty ladies:
attended the meeting.
Seed Corn Time
Remember the first t,wo weeks in
' Scot ember is the time to pick seed
corn
IDA M. WILKINS,
Co. Home Agent.
L. R. SNIPES.
Co. Agr. Agent.
If it's in the stationery line, call .
at the Journal oSce. I
Extra Specials!
Genuine VALDURA Asphalt Black Paint
Per Gallon, $1.25
There is nothing to equal this paint for Bridges, Tanks, Silos,
Agricultural Implements, Damp Proofing, Boat Bottoms, Wood
Preservation, Smoke Stacks, Cloth and Paper and Acid Resistance.
In fact, a liberal use of this paint is not only conducive to making
muscle, but is actually cheaper than going to the movies.
Genuine RED CEDAR Barn and Shed Poles S
5-inch tops, free from bark and straight as the proverbial
arrow. Will measure about 12 to 15 inches across the butt. This
is an exceptionally fine line of poles and we tender our sincere
apologies for such ridiculously LOW TRICES.
10- foot length, each $1.10
12-foot length, each 1.30
11- foot length, each 1.60
16-foot length, each 2.00
ft ;--Just a few left of Tennessee Red Cedar Posts. Extra No. 1,
Split, 6y2 feet long, at each, 38c.
CYPRESS PICKETS, lxl1 "x4'
We have about 500 of these pickets left and while they last
we will price them at each, 6 cents.
NO. 1 SPRUCE SHIPLAP, 8 inch
Fine stock, all lengths. Twin sister to the old reliable white pine.
Price, per 1000 feet $37.00
Less than 1000 feet, per 1000 40.09
0
AThought for the Day
J t
The reason people who mind their own business succeed, is
because they have so little competition.
Cedar Creek Lumber Co.
Cedar Creek, Nebraska
Chloroform. Ether or other general anaeathetla
OMd. A cure guaranteed In eTery case accepted for treatment, and no money to ba
paid until cured. Write for book on Re-,taJ Dleeasea. with names and testimonial
of more than 1 oO prominent pcor who hare been permanently cured.
1S- L. S. TAJBOiY, tMiruvUM-ium, retara Trvt Bldr. Be Bldx.). O ALA HA. 2TOL
& Ue. K. S Johnston, Uadlesvt Dtractac. -
Fistula Pay
Cured
A mild yatm of treatment that eurea PI 1m,
Flatula and other Rectal Dteeaaea In a abort
time, without a aevere eurricai operation. Na
l! i
(
if
r
I .