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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 27, 1922)
PIATTSJIOUTH SEMI -WEEKLY JOURNAL MONDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1922. PAGE FOUR r XZhz plattsmoutb 3ournal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA Entered at Poxtoffice, Plattsmeuth. Neb., a econd-oIass mall matter R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 Let not your bead be bald on both sides. :o: Rats weighing three pounds have been known. :o:- Health hint: Look out for women with fur coats. Marriage by declaration is still legal in Scotland. :o: You can't fool the people with a bill board on the street. o- Currency has to be pretty elastic to go around the family. :o: If you are right you don't have to get right with anybody. :o: One good thing about poetry la that being a poet is such sweet sor row. -:o: Few funny. men we ever met are really The great majority are mere ly jokes. rot- One good conference may not de serve another exactly, but it seems to necessitate it. :o: One trouble with man is that he talks too much in public and too lit tle in private. :o: .Robinson Crusoe was about the only person who never talked about his neighbors. :o: It would be easier to beat all swords into plows than all swords men into plowmen. :o:- Some people have to brag about their ancestors because they have no dependents to speak of. -:o:- There might be more feminists ex cept for the fact that most men hate to get their own breakfast. :o: , ' "Hughes is the foremost American national figure," says Margot As- " i quith. ident. But Hughes is not the pres- Fattie Arbuckle is getting some what of a rest since the Taylor mur der. Fattie sure has had a time of it. And not over yet. :o:- Unquestionably there are a num ber of things this'country needs, but whether another political party is one of them seems open to some doubt. o:o Peavey, the negro servant at Tay lor's home, saj-s that a woman killed the director and he knows who. Out with it, Peavey, let no guilty man or woman escape. :o: Chicago man has just got out a beautiful book entitled, "The Modesty of the Present-Day Woman." But, when the would-be reader opens the book, he finds the pages all blank. What can be the meaning of this? c "It don't take a man long to bag his pants at the knees, and to mak 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 E3H la: A OPPOSITE 16b JOURNAL OFflCE PER YEAR IN ADVANCE , . Bleeding pine does not injure the wood of the tree. A Boston professor has completed a motion Dicture film text on geom- tirj. . It is against the law to serve frogs' legs in Wisconsin April. in and " - :o: It seems like a paradox, but when business is slow, a fellow can't keep! ahead. I :o: I America spends a billion a year for the movies and schools. a like amount for -o:o- Tn the ancient Roman baths at n o nn htho ,n. I Protect the birds. The dove brings peace and the stork brings tax ex- emptions. ;q: l Arcniiueues, w uu uiscuvcieu iuci Talk is governed by the law of principle of the fulcrum, said he'for strained relations between their c,,nni Hmar, Ti,f- whv tlvL..i., tu v. , ,.! country and the United States? Why ' J .. ....... " " is so cheap. o:o- The expression. "We're in the same boat," was first used by a Chi nese writer. o: A fortune awaits the man who will invent a graceful way to open a bot tle of milk sealed with a pasteboard cap. :o: Another approach toward normalcy is a well known 5-cent cigar which bas reduced its price from 8 cents to 6 cents. I Among those who most devoutly I wished Judge Landis would jump one! way or the other were Senator Dial and Babe Ruth. Condolences are hereby extended to Mr. Ruth. :o: There is always a person in the community that the editor cannot please. There is also always a per- son in the community the editor does ! not wish tQ please They are the same person. An Oklahoma newspaper has been sued for $300 for omitting a mer-j chant's advertisement, the copy ing been lost in the office. What, then, should be coining to merchants I who omit their own advertisements? I o:o I If you are one of those talkative people who do not believe a man can earn a minion uonars in a onei iiie-0 wine. . your opinion ul me beggar in Buenos Ayres who left one and a half million dollars? Can't a I man beg a million in a lifetime, either? :o: One reformer says cigarette smok- ing is bad for girls, but worse for I working girls than for girls who have money and leisure to go to Florida or California and recuperate. That's a weak kneed reformer. Mr. Edison says there is ho recuperation from the effect of a cigarette. o:o The bonus is all right, but con gress seems to have a hard time of fixing upon a plan of paying the boys. This should be an easy matter in this great United States of America with plenty of everything, and where some of those who fought to save the hides of millionaires, are suffering for the necessaries of life. -:o: Woodrow Wilson is growing more popular every day. The old saying that "You can't keep a good man down," certainly holds good with our noble ex-president. The people cheer him on the streets and when he at tends the theatres or is shown on the screen, the people rise up to cheer and greet him. They realize he has (proved a great man. o:o One of the Hollywood queens re- i ports that one night recently she I dreamed Taylor was killed ' "by a blonde woman with a hook nose." Important as movie . queen's dreams undoubtedly are, too much faith should not be placed in this theory. It's the dreams people dream when they are awake that matter, not those they dream while asleep. :o: If Will Hayes were to get shot and killed tomorrow night, by the next morning it would be discovered that he had at one time or other been engaged to Ruth Roland, Agnes Ay- ers, Pauline Frederick, Nazimova, Foil Negri and six or eight of Mack Sennet's beach combers, and that he once owned a farm . near some un heard of town In each state in this our loved country. NOTHING IMPOSSIBLE rvulrt vou keen a Are burning utt - der water? It has Jut been done, . , - 50 feet under the surface of New! York harbor. Near Staten Island, a 36-inch steel! water pipe "on the floor of the ocean was smashed by a dredge. It had to be cut away. Divers came up out of the muddy depths and reported that the water immodiatPiv extinguished their steel cutting acetylene torches. But an "underwater fire chisel" I has been developed by a company that el was brought into play. As it burns, it generates a gas which forces back the water on an siues, leaving an I . ii l i r i nnon tr nniinw kiihi'i iur luh iidiue. I This is Rriontifie maelfi. I if the inventor had lived 500 years ki. orhihttinn wnniH tinva made' le"t " . even kings kneel to him in superstit- ious terror sUDDOSe you were in the hands of v ct, onri thov'of Japanese leavine California it is tniri von "We'll snare vour life if vou tao bun it burning.' Your answer would probably be. It can't be done" even though I. J J J uur " ue'":uucu - xec 11 can oe none, as iu me ue Island, an electric spark starting the flame, Learn from this that nothing is impossible. -icuum luuve l lie cauu li SUUiC Wly fot him a fulcrum, a long enough lever and something away from the earth to stand on. Nothing was impossible to Archim edes. Yet, if he'd been asked to weigh the earth, he probably would have said it couldn't be done unless he had a big enough pair of scales and a star to rest them on. Modern scientists, with a delicate mechanist which measures the at- tractive power of lead and other ele ments, nave aiscoverea mat me earn is about six times ' as heavy as an equivalent bulk of water. Thus the earth has been accurately weighed found to tip the scales at 6,000 billions of tons. Such staggering achievements as these enumerated should Inspire all troubled and discouraged people. All pr0blems can be solved. The solution Ig founu" Dy the one who never gives i, v, ,v, rnr.,MD n roonir. the Jhaktom. defeat. -:o:- LOST About your income tax: Uncle hav-jsam will not allow claims for de- preclation In the actual value of land, a home or property such as an auto, used for pleasure. But if buildings, auto or other de viceg are used ag productive tools of busi depreciation can be written Only depreciation recognized by in t collector is that which re- Ug from wear and tear of property by its use in trade, business, pro fession or vocation. The home of a family is denied I f Via r.rlm rrm nri wr rn tK a Vnma ft O s 61 TC" , " Dusiness. inac may noi sausiy your ethics. But it is the law. o:o IDLE The railroads report they have 2,283,908 freight cars on their lines, of which 646,672 are idle. There are two reasons for this idleness. The first is seasonal. Freight al ways moves lightly in January. The second reason is that freight rates are so high that they are pro hibitive for a normal movement of business. Henry Ford seems to be the only railroad man who gets the idea. The solution of the railroad prob lem is in big volume of business at low individual profits. :o: LUNGARDIA is "without a rival" in ordinary or deep-seated Coughs and Colds, difficult breathing, and for the relief of whooping cough. The wonderful results following its use will astonish you and make you its life-long friend. Your money back, if you have ever used its equal. Danger lurks where there is a cough or cold. Safe for all ages. 60c and 11.20 per bottle. Manufactured by Lungardia Co., Dallas, Texas. For sale by Weyrich & Hadraba WOMEN Can You Use Some EXTRA MONEY If you want to earn some extra mon ey in your SPARE TIME, show your friends and neighbors a new and handy household article, wanted In every home. NO MONEY REQUIRED. I must have a representative in each town and community. Write me TO DAY, NOW before you forget it. A post card will do. IYIIGG M. K. OLGON, Plattsmoutb - -:- Nebraska IS IT "BACK TO JAPAN" l Recently many American news . . . . papers earned a brier item, which If -true, deserves more prominence than It received It is a Los Angeles dispatch tell ing of the departure from this coun try of several hundred Japanese wo i men nl children, many of the lal ter American born, on the steamer Anyo Maru. A host of fishing boats following the steamer, carried i crowds u other Japanese who waved .ana snoutea rarewells. bimiiar departures, it is now re during the .last six months. Nearly ...U6 . I r-ot TTlflnv .Inunosii hiflv a'nmon J isj. . . . . .. , .... ,, , vmiureu, an doubu iur me un eat. i No explanation apparently has oeen asked or given concerning this hback to Japan movement, if it 'tnat. Yet if tbere is a definite tide of great significance. Are the Japanese iving up the economic struggle in this country? Are they homesick? Are they acting upon a plan of the Japanese govern ment to colonize 1n some other part of the world, Siberia, perhaps? Is this movement evidence of racial pride which will not ipermit the Ja panese to &tay where their welcome has been so scant as in our west and southwest? Are they voluntarily do ing their part to remove all causes are the women and children the ones to go? Will the Japanese men follow latar? An endless number of queries must inevitably arise. The correct answer to them might be big news. USELESS TO ARGUE Enough oil stock has been sold in Nebraska during the past three years to pay oft the state debt and leave a balance sufficient to run the state government for at least a year. If any folks hereabouts have garn ered dividends on investments of this character, it is not a matter of record. Up to this time we have fail ed to find a single oil millionaire in our midst. s However, the folks who expect to get rich out of trifling investments in oil stocks at least have a gorgeous period of golden dreams. Most of us plod along and lose our money in divers and sundry ways without even that recompense. We do not even get the rude awakening that comes to those who have bought pipe dreams. And, after all, it isn't worth while to advise or argue with people who buy oil stocks. If they were not making investments in gaudily litho graphed certificates in oil companies, they would probably be buying cor ner lots on the moon or country es tates in Mars. PREMONITION In Omaha, Earl Mynster, 21 years old, startled his father by telling him that he had seen every part of an operation performed on him for ap pendicitis. He described accurately, to sur geons, details of the operation that took place 30 minutes after ether made him unconscious. Now he is dead and physic experts are discussing the case. Did his spirit leave his body on the operating table, watch the operation, then return? Some think that's what happens during sleep, the spirit wanderingjn dreamland. :o:- What a lucky bunch we are that the record-breaking earthquake oc curred in the middle of the PaciQc ocean instead of the middle of the Mississippi valley, but we'll go right on pitying ourselves because the steak is tough or we have to go to the dentist. :o:- With the arrival of a bit more warmish weather considerable base ball propaganda is beginning to per colate into ordinary conversation. -:o:- IMPORTANT LAND SALE On Wednesday, March 1, 1922, at 1:30, two miles vest and one-naif mile north of Alvo, seven miles southeast of Greenwood. Cass coun ty, a well-improved 80 acres will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder. The terms are great, and in clude $1,000 cash payment on day of sale, $2,000 in thirty days, balance to run three and five years in equal payments at 6; a flr&t mortgage of $8,000 now on the place will be carried eiht years if desired. Lib erty "bonds will be accepted at 100 in part payment at this sale. Free lunch served on the farm at noon. For infonna.tion write Purbaugh & Forke, 188 No. 14 St.. Lincoln. Phone B2362, or A. G. Wolfenbarg er, owner, 815 Security Mutual. Phone Bl 596. ld-2w . FOR SALE Pure'bred Buff Orphington hens and pullets. Tw-4t MRS. J. H. BROWN. ' Read tie Journal want-adt. SECURING BRANCH OF STATE EXTEN SION WORK HERE Representative Here to Secure Sign ers for Special Salesmanship Course of University. The work of the extension depart ment of the college of business ad ministration of the state university will be given in this city in the near future as a canvass of the business houses of the city has resulted in a large number of signers for the ser- D v,. D,..e. .cauita... .n. that are given by Trof. Ivey of the, siaie university . A . . This course will consist of one lec ture a week for seven weeks and will be held on Tuesday evening of each week at the public library auditor ium, i Those who heard the address of ' Prof. Ivey at the Hotel Wagner on Tuesday night can fully realize the value that this Feries of lectures will, be to the merchants and clerks of the city in the way of fitting theiu for better handling the needs of their customers and an intelligent under-. standing or-tne vaiue or tueir re spective lines of goods. n, , . . . . . , The Ad club committee, Messrs Waldeniar Soennichsen, E. A. Wurl and John Hatt. who secured Mr. vey for his talk here certainly did; a great deal toward stimulating a' real interest in merchandising. WABASH HAPPENINGS twwwwwww. Mr. S. A. Jackman autoed to Avoca Fridav afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Earls autoed to Lincoln Saturday. Mr. L. R. Stanley autoed to Lin coln Friday forenoon. William and Harry Dehmng auto ed to Lincoln Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Gerheling and familv autoed to Lincoln Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Roper, of Lin coln took dinner at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Lake. Word was received here Sunday that Mr. and Mrs. Fioyd Cols and family are at Weeping Water. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Laucr and fam ily spent Friday evening at the home tf Mr. and Mrs. Albert Denning. Mr. H. P. Denning and sons. V il- lam and iiarry, i-.mii anu ueorge Bauer autoed to Lincoln Saturday. Mr. H. H. Squires was a passenger to Omaha Friday morning. He went up to Fee his new dau?hter-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Jenkins spent Sunday at the home of Mrs. Jenkins' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ira Bosworth. Mr. and Mrs. C. II. Gerbelmg spent Sunday afternoon at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Gerbeling and family. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Jones and two sons spent Thursday at the home of Mrs. Jones' parents. Mr. and Mrs. Ira Bosworth. Mrs. Lawton is on the sick list. ler foii. Homer, cf Murdock, came over Friday evening and stayed a day or so. Mrs. Guy Capp and daughter re turned to their home at Havelock on Sunday after a week's visit with rel- tives here. -Miss Iva Jenkins. Mr. Howard Jenkins and Mr Burkett Reed of Havelock were guests cf Bernice Col bert Snnday. Mrs. Gut Capp and daughter find Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Ohm took dinner at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ira Bosworth. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Griffith and family spent Sunday at the home of Mrs. Griffith's parents, Mr. and Mrs. D R Mitchell. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Pool, of Lin coln spent Saturday and Sunday at the home of Mr. Pool's brother, Al bert and family. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Gibson and family spent Sunday at the home of Mrs. Gibson's sister and family, Mr. nd Mrs. S. A. Jackman. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Colbert, Mr. nd Mrs. Floyd Cole and family spent Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Jackman. The friends and neighbors of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Little gave tlem a farewell party last Friday evening. There were about seventy-five pres ent. The evening was spent in music and games. At a late hour light refreshments wore served, af ter which all departed wishing Mr. and Mrs. Little success in their new home. Everybody hates to see them leave. The sad news was received here Monday morning that Mrs. Herman Emme, of Davey, Nebraska, passed away at the hospital in Lincoln on Sunday morning. Her body was at he Roberts undertaking parlors un til Wednesday morning, when it was taken to Fairfax, South Dakota, for burial. She leaves a husband and three children, one son, Henry, and two daughters.5 Edna and Helen; also a number of relatives and friends. Her husband and children accompan ied her body to Fairfax. She will be greatly missed, not only in her home, but also among her friends. BRING GOOD PRICE At the James Terryberry & Son hog sale, Auctioneer W. R. Young realized a good price on the hogs of fered. In thirty-seven head of Pol and China pigs that went through the sale ring, an average of $51 per head was secured. This is considered a very good price at the present (time. How Would You Like to See What Irvin Nerkood (Pa.) Saw? 'One customer told me that after using me large package of Rat-Snap, he got FORTY-EIGHT dead rats. How many more dead he couldn't see. he doesn't know. Remember rats breed fast and de. tuoy -toUar' worth of property. " 35c, 65c. $1.25. Sold and guaranteed by Bestor & Swatek Weyrich & Had raba F. G. Fricke & Co. f ALV0 DEPARTMENT, Mrs. C. F. Rosenow is very sick since Monday night. Mr. and Mrs.-Charles Godbey were in Lincoln Saturday. Miss Blanche Moore was down from Lincoln spending the week-end with her folks. Miss Carmen Muir of Lincoln vis- jitcd over Sunday with her parents, I Dr. and Mrs. L. Muir. i Mr. and .Mrs. Fred Prouty were Sunday guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Godbey. . Alra . . . i'.l. Il4. iJ 1 H IIV I L yd Uickerson came Idown from Lincoln Saturday, return ing home Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Strain, of . Eetliany, were Sunday evening guests of their aunt, Mrs. D. A. Vincent. Noah Peterson and John Ralston. South Omaha commission men visited George P. Foreman Saturday after noon. P. D. Van Cleave has returned to lii? home at Lodi. after spending a few days at the George P. Foreman home. The Ladies Aid society presented ; J. A. Shaffer with a lovely boquet of! VV.'V,.P I. 111. tlllH,..Wlit) II U t. 11 11 Ik-til. ,lwia(o, b . - Micc a T"r v w," -"' - - - , HIT ! 39Q Ssfs of Harness (o Oil a! 00 PER SET OATNIAN hardware Company, Alvo Nebr. Lumber, Grain and Coal! Our prices for grain are always the highest. I own and operate my own elevator. The highest prices for grain is always paid by the Independent Elevator. I am your friend, J ALVO ANDREWS OFFERS IEW BONUS PLAN IN THE HOUSE Nebraska Representative Would Have Government Collect an Old Debt from Twenty-Six States. Washington, Feb. 23. Represen tative Andrews, republican, Nebras ka, came forward today with a pro posal to finance a bonus partly thru the collection from twenty-six states of $28,101,644.91 loaned them by the federal government eighty-six years ago. He introduced a bill to direct the treasury department to call for a refund of the principal with interest at 4 per cent from the date of the loans. This would yield a total of $124,000,000, Mr. Andrews estimat ed. The balance needed for meeting a soldiers' bonus could he inct thru conversion of tbe British debt into marketable securities, he said. Explaining the existence of the fund he proposed should be collected from the states, Mr. Andrews said that in 1836, with a surplus of funds on hand and no place to store them congress enacted legislation trans ferring the fund to states on the basis of population, with the stipu lation that it was to remain with the states "until congress directs other wise." Congress has authority, Mr. Andrews contends, to require re payment. The amounts loaned the states, whiGh. in each instance, if repaid with 4 per cent interest would total more than four times the principal, follow: Maine and Maryland, $955, 83S each; Alabama, New Hampshire and Vermont, $699,036 each; Massa chusetts, $1,338,173; Connecticut and New Jersey, $764,670 each; Mis sissippi, Missouri and Rhode Island, $382,335 each; New York, $4,014, 520; Pennsylvania, $2,867,614; Vir ginia, $2,198,427; South Carolina and Georgia. $1,051,422; Louisiana and Illinois, $477,919 each; Kentuc ky, North Carolina and Tennessee, $1,433,757 each; Ohio, $2,007,260; Indiana, $860,254; Arkansas, Dela ware and Michipan, $288,751 each. In an open letter today to Chair man Fordney, Representative Ansor ?e, republican. New York, suggested "selective, bonus" for the sick, the wounded and the needy. "There are many ex-soldif5rs," Mr. Ansorge said, "who do not need the' bonus and do not want it, and in the presfnt condition of our finance we --should not force it upon them. Some method should be provided to divert: ka, where she has been coaching a high school play. Oris Foreman and Albert Fore man of Valparaiso were down Sat urday night and Sunday N visiting their parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. P. Foreman. Mrs. Arville Linen and son, Clyde, and granddaughter, Arvilla Johnson of University Place visited recently at the home of Mrs, Linch's brother, G. P. Foreman. The la grippe has invaded this lo cality in the last few weeks and a number of homes have had one or more members suffering from It. All seem to be recovering nicely. Mrs. Ida Harry, of Urbana, III., who has spent the past five weeks with her brother, John Elliott, left Tuesday for her home. Mrs. Harry had also visited in Minnesota and North Dakota. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Armstrong and children have returned to Cass coun ty from Holstein, where they spent the past two years and are visiting relatives until their household goods arrive and they will then reside near Eagle. Among those visiting Sunday af ternoon at the J. A. Shaffer home were Mr. and Mrs. John Campbell and Fred Weaver, of South Bend; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Schafer, of Mur dock, and Mr. James Hammond, of JJncoln. Mrs. Henry Clapp, Sr., of Elm wood, father of H .L. Clapp, passed away at her home in Elmwood last Friday night of heart trouble from which she had suffered for some years. The funeral was held Monday afternoon at Elmwood. Mrs. H. A. Bailey was called to Brooks, Iowa, recently where she at tended the funeral of her sister, Mrs. Isaac Harlow, who died unexpectedly, having suffered with erysipelas less than two weeks. Mrs. Bailey has the sympathy of all in her sorrow. A number of friends and relatives gathered at the home of Grandpa Hanson at Greenwood last Wednes day evening to celebrate his birthday. They played games and at a late hour an oyster supper was served. Among those going from Alvo were his daughter, Mrs. C. G. Anderson, Mr. Anderson and family,, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Klyver, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Klyver and children and Grandpa. Klyver. Grandpa enjoyed the party greatly. NEBRASKA that portion of the bonus to hospitali zation and rehabilitation of the sick and wounded, thereby increasing ap propriations for that purpose. "Perhaps 50 per cent of our ex soldiers fall within this category." The plan calls for use of the old draft board3 for registering on the bonus. CREATES SOME EXCITEMENT From Friday's Dally. This morning the pinochle players who daily carry on their contests at the popular establishment of Edward Donat. gathered at the usual hour to start in on the pleasures of the card game and lo and behold the doors. of the soft drink parlor were closed and a glance through the windows failed to reveal any signs of life. This created not a little worry for Ed had never failed to open his place in the last ninety-nine years and It was feared that he might have been taken sick. A number of the play ers came to the Journal office for consultation and advice and a hurry up message to the Donat home dis closed that Ed was busy butchering and Mr. 'Hallas who assists at the soft drink parlor had been taken sick and had to go home and the result was a few hours delay in opening up but. everything is lovely now and the patrons back in their accustomed places. SUPREME JUDGE DAY FILES FOR RE-ELECTION Lincoln, Feb. 23. Supreme Judge George A. Day of Omaha filed today for re-election to the supreme court from the Becojid supreme court dis trict, which includes Douglas county. Under the new law supreme judges are elected from districts instead of from the state at large. Judge Day was appointed in 1920 to fill out the unexpired term of Judge S. H Sede wick. who died. 6 Harry L. Cook, a member of the state railway commission, filed for ie-eiecuon on me republican ticket. RESIDENCE PROPERTY SOLD rorn Thurfday'8 Dally. ivT-XiV3 morninS Attorney Charles E. Martin, referee in the settlement of 2f- nfeny M' MM" estate, held a sa e of the residence property of Mr Miller, which is situated in the Sel: ond ward, at the court house. There was some brisk bidding and the prop- Gorydern Y &t 12,025 to Jol- Lose anything? Find anythinffl Try a Journal want-ad.