MONDAY, MARCH 24, pagi pom PLATTSMOUTH JOURNAL Che plattsmouth lournal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLACKPSMWfTH. NBBRASKA Watered t PostofTlce. Plattsmouth. N"b.. aa ecod-claps mal! matter R . SUBSCRIPTION PE1CE $2.C0 AT THE PASTING OF THE WAYh -l-l-l-l H4H !!! 'I HWf The King of Babylon stood at the parting of the way. at the head of the two ways. Ezekiel 21:21. :o: The cup that cheers is now a bot- tie. 1 o:- Money ganda. puts the pro in propa- -0:0- After 40 years. "Turn the rascal out!" is again good. Mr. Daugherty insists he hasn't done anything trouble. That's the main -:o: A waiter shot a customer in Paris, perhaps because he asked for a sec ond slug of butter. Some men's relisrion makes you wonder if they didn't get hold of some sjrt of off brand. :o: The whisky barrel may have been taken out of politics but the good ! old pork barrel is with us yet. :o: Hints to housewives: Anything can b made to boil over quickly un pretending you have to answer the telephone. -o:rv A Chicago violin maker annoum o he Is running for president, maybe on the platform that our government lacks harmony. i .n. Clothes do aot niake the man but they may break him if he falls into th hands of a profiteer when he has to buy some. :o: Choice home-grown strawberri- -will soon bo arriving from Texas. Tou can tell them every time the bottom of the box i somewhere near the middle. :o: Why a man who went into the democratic convention for the third time for mayor, and because he was not nominated, should come out and run independent, is more than we ran understand. :o: Omaha cattlemen created some tir In Houston and other Texas cities. Omaha business men create a stir wherever they go. Omaha is certainly one of the most important cities on the map. : o : When it comes to success tfero is yet a question as ti. wketl tl well formed or the well informed girl gets the job. No question as to which one holds a job after getting It. But then the well formed girl can always get another job; so why worry ? :o: Mary Garden is ill with lumbago. Mary is reaching that afternoon pe riod of life when the joints and mus cles begin to twinge and squeak and we'd advise her to get a good boiling out at Hot Springs, or else get a cop per band around her ankle and a raw Irish potato in her pocket, if any. :o: Senator Caraway knows why the president does not dismiss Mr. Daugherty from the cabinet. It's be cause the attorney general is such a helpful political asset to Mr. Cool idge. There's no concealing anything from Senator Caraway and the White House ought not to try it any more. The other morning, after it snow ed all night, a police officer was seen by several passing by. phoveling snow off the sidewalk around the city hall. And four tramps inside where they had been placed the night before, to shield them from the storm. As such incidents come fre quently, why not let these visitors pay for their keep by doing the work. They do it in other towns. Let them put in at least a half day on the streets before leaving for other scenes. :o: Tho speaker of the NSW York house of representatives declares we have too much government. Well, how can we progress without more government, more taxeaters. more interference with the lives and bus in ss of citizens? We must have a government with millions of noses prying into every individual's af-! forced the national government is fairs, or we'll be reactionary. More J remorseless when it comes to col than 1,000 bil's introduced in the looting its revenue.' And properly congress at this sts?ion show that'o. But what a pity, government is our lawmakers are determined to give us e xtra large doses of govern-j ant. SSS :f they kill off all the pa - liATEb, Publisher PEE YEAE EN ADVANCE J. LINES TO REMEMBER When faith is lost, when honor dies, the man is dead. Whittier. ... .2. : o : - So this is normalcy! :o: Bomy bill passes house by a large majority. Good! -:o: The girl of today is more inter- ested in bonds than bon bons. :e: At least bald headed men don't need to fear hair raising stories. Fall in line, boys, for a clean ad ministration of city government. Fat persons are happy because they have the bulge on slender peo ple. :o: Now Mellon and Weeks are to have an inning before the Investigating committee. :o: Omaha is to make a drive for a new Union station. Let the good work go on. Put none but good men on guard and the taxpayers' interests will be looked after. ' " ' Campaigning by radio is a great thing for the campaigner. It elim- inates the heckling. : o : - The poop!" will vote for John Sat- tler for mayor because he has been tried and not found wanting. :o: Often when the wolf comes around !o the door he finds the fam ily out driving in an automobile. :o: If lichee brought happiness, boot leggers and many other such people would laugh themselves to death. :o: McAdoo is the only man for presi dent that can wield the solid rail road votes and will do it, if nominat ed. o: o A qualified man should be elected to the offlce of city clerk. John Cloldt is certainly the man for the place. We want a city government that can boost Plattsmouth, and the tax payers will be to blame if we don't get it. :o: Japanese now claim they rriginat- ed baseball. If our jingoes : re look ing for popular cause or war witn Japan here it is. : o : The old man figures that the game of continually impressing his im portance on his fellow men isn't worth the trouble. : o : Prophet who says the world will come to an end in 1926 is kind enuf not to interfere with the coming presidential campaign. o o Good, competent men to run the city government, with no grafting is all the people want, and they are de termined to have it. -o:o- The third party is not counting on any help from Norris. Of course not. He has been whipped back into the republican line where he always be longed. :o: Indian chiefs in their dealings with the United States government use the finger and thumb print and it wouldn't be a bad idea if this were also enforced in regard to lots of white men who deal with the gov ernment. :o:- Everybody likes women except women. They are nice to look at and some of them are very handy around the house. But when sum mer conies they have their pictures painted in bathing suits for maga zine covers. And buying magazines just for the covers is too expensive. o : People who pay income tax late or who are caught dodging, quickly learn that while local or state laws may at times be weak and laxly en- .t ot always as prompt and rigid in enforcing all other laws and protect ing the weak as it is at protecting! FALSE ECONOMY The extravagance of the program of forced economy which congress has imposed upon the war depart ! rr.ent since the close of the war is ' finally apparent. Army posts are in I 'a state of unrepair with no funds available to provide for their niain jtenance and upkeep. Appropriations allowed for food are so scanty that ! the enlisted forces are dissatisfied ias the reduction of the percentage of re-enlistments attests. Charges for electric lighting in the barracks ' at Governor's island have to be borne I by privates and officers alike. In ' fact it appears from reports made by army officials in the army posts that the zeal of congress for a good show ing on the side of public expenses has lowered the morale of the army at a cost many tunes over and above the comparatively small additional sum which would have been requir ed to assure proper maintenance of army posts and to provide good, wholesome food and comfortable quarters for those in the service. It was but a few months ago that General Pershing called the atten tion of the country to the small per centage of re-enlistments and de clared that the problem of maintain ing an adequate system of national defenses on an enlistment basis was becoming more and more serious. In his annual report to the secretary of war he recommended that the en listed strength of the army be in creased to 150,000. asserting that the present strength is inadequate. But at the same time a policy of forced economy threatens to drive many of the enlisted men now in the service out. Dissatisfaction among those remaining lowers morale and leaves the nation with a defense or ganization which is Inefficient and which even on the side of numbers falls short of our needs. In lf22 the secretary of war made it clear that the appropriation avail able for the maintenance of army plant and equipment was so inade quate as to render necessary heavy expense of replacement and repairs at a not remote date. That time MMM to he at hand already unless congress is willing to gamble for an other year on a pceiy maintained army plant and an improperly pro visioned personnel. It to be hopd that the former Berries men now in congress will b able to impress upon the minds of their colleagues there that army life under the most favorable conditions is uninteresting and unattractive enoueh. and that it if poor economy to save at the expense of army mo rale and efficiency. : o RATES AND PRICES Every once in a while you hear a at-headed chump rear upon his hind legs and declare that the cost of liv ing is being put to a sky-high figure because of existing freight rates. When you hear a statement of that sort you can promptly class the man who utters it as wholly ignor ant of existing business and econom ic conditions. The cost of shipping a suit of clothes weighing six pounds, a good average weight, a distance ot 30 miles is a fraction over five cettts just the price of a bottle of pop plu the war tax. A hat. most any style or size. weighing about one-half pound adds about eight hard earned mills in traveling 300 miles to the cost of your outfit whether it is a $10 dress affair or a $2 slouch. A pair of shoes weighing two and one-half pound s made in Boston j out in Iowa a frac- costs the farmer tion over four cents freight, but most of the shoes worn in the central west don't travel so far. Coffee costs exactly 6.9 mills per pound from New York to Ottuniwa. a distance of about 1.300 miles; and if you want sugar in, the transpor tation cost from New York to the same point is 6.8 mills, or just one mill less than the cost of" coffee. Ham and eggs from Omaha to Chi capo brought the railroad exactly 1.08 cents a dozen for the eggs and a fraction less than a third of a cent for the ham alive, f. o. b. hog, Chi cago. If the politicians cut the railroad rates squarely in half, the price of a suit of etothes would come four miles, a cup of one-fiftieth of C.f mills without sugar in it a cup of tea one two-hundredths of one and a half cents. If you buy two suits of clothes a year you would have five cents, less than a half cent on two four cents on two pairs of shoes, a total of nine and a half cents a year to loan at seven per cent in terest. :o: 1 The Oklahoma senate has endorsed J William Jennings Bryan for the democratic nominatipn for president The New York convention might go farther and fare worse, and probably AMERICANS VIEW MUSIC Musical America, interviewing a distinguished mudician from abroad, finds that the foreigner i6 impressed with the way in which Americans look upon musicians. According to this observer it is considered effem inate for a man to be able to play the piano or almost any instrument. Music is regarded, perhaps not gen erally, but by a large class, as some thing that should be studied by the daughters of well to do families and paraded as a drawing room accom plishment. The youth who sings or plays or shows a liking for good music is said by this critic to be the jest of his college mtaes and regard ed as probably deficient in many at tributes. That the foreign critic is probably too severe is certain: yet there are indications that America does not take music seriously. Artists, who appear in public in this country are very largely bearing names that in dicate everything but native origin. There are a few American singers and instrumentalists among the groups of great artists but only a few. That many artists find Amer ica a pleasant place to live and re main here, almost always is admit ted. But the native artists who have risen to the very apex of fame could be counted on the fingers. And the names usually suggest the re moval of a single generation from some other country. It is high time that America un derstood music more liberally. It i -worthy of consideration not only as a fine art, but as a business, a pro fession, an industry. Music is ad mitted to be a necessity grudging ly in some quarters. Slowly it has been conceded that music fills a place in the economic program that cannot be overlooked or substituted. Music has come to be demanded, in the hotels, at the seashore and in the mountain. Music has found a pla e outside the home circle, where it was and i.s n.ost enjoyed. It is needed wherever there is reason to rejoice, and its solace is found acceptable in great sorrow. America will some day learn that the youth who finds pleasure in "the concord of sweet sounds," may be just as manly and re blooded as the one who i.s deaf to all sounds but I football signals. The girls should be Uncouraced to studv mmrirv and if possible to study it as they would French which is taught in public school. Music will be found a uni versal language and make friends for them anywhere. -o:o- IS THE FARMER FOOLED? May wheat closed in the Chicago market March 3 at $1,11 Y2 a bush el. It was announced on March 6 that President Coolidge would in crease the wheat tariff by 12 cents a bushel under the flexible provi sions of the Fordney-Mc-Cumber tar iff act for the purpose of enabling the American farmer to get a higher price for his wheat than he had been getting under an import tariff of 30 cents a bushel. May wheat closed that day at 1.11 3-8. The president issued the order on March 7 and on March 8 the close in Chicago was $1.11 On Monday, March 10. May wheat went down to a closing of $1.09 7-8. On March 12 there was a further slump to $1.06 7-8. The next day it touched the low point of last wobL- t1 fir. "CO on1 tn Sot. urday March 15, it rallied to a clos- ing price of $1.06. 1-4. Total net loss to date following the president's proclamation, 5 1-4 cents a bushel, insteari of a Kain of 12 cents. or any- ,LinR at alK Was the farmer fooled? Is he be ing fooled any longer? The way to help such a farmer is to improve demand in the world's markets and to improve that demand is to help Europe got on its feet and increase the buying power of these markets through lower tariffs on im ports therefrom, which would also increase the buying power at home of the farmer's product. :o: GOOD ADVICE Do you remember the first time you left home? You were going away to school, or to college, or perhaps to the great er adventure of your first job in a distant city. Whatever it was, some where among the goodbyes someone (probably it was your mother) said earnestly for the tenth time "and be sure and go to church." That's a long time ago. of WBW'L,rMM,4 ( l t't f'l'l fr aim since tnen you ve learneu many things. Learned to stand on your icri cl i hi tvj; juui unu vaj. Learned other ways of spending Sunday morning than inside God's house, too. But you haven't learned a better way, no matter how many others you've found. None of them will send you away feeling a little cleaner sad a little stronger, a little tie closer to your God, like going to church will. Be sure to go to church. It's old advice but it's just as good now as it i ever was. You'll never outgrow it. whether you heard it forty years ago or only laat week. Try it Sunday and see. : o : NATIONAL DRINK BILLS Lloyd George, supporting a bill in the British parliament for local op tion elections in Wales every three years, takes occasion to say that the British people are now spending $1, 750,000,000 a year too much for liquor. He adds that prohibition is neces sary for Britain and if it hopes to compete with America, that the peo- pie of this country are so well satis fied with their experiment, despite Its minor failures, that they would not return to old conditions. This is perhaps the best word that American prohibition has had abroad. Disinterested observers sug gest that Lloyd is right. The American drink bill was said in the old days, to be about ?2,000, 000,000 a year. Even with all the bootlegging, it is certainly less than half that much now. There is a huge direct saving, which goes into na tional prosperity. There Is a greater indirect benefit, resulting from the increased efficiency and tjhrift of so ber people, which the public is only beginning to appreciate. A time may come when no nation can hope to compete with its rivals 1 unless it is sober. WHAT IS REED'S GAME William Gibbs McAdoo, in hi. scathing denunciation of Senator James A. Reed, charges openly that the Missouri politician is a candi date for the democratic nomination for president purely for trading pur poses. This statement expresser.. perhaps, the conviction of a major- ity of Americans who know Reed's career and have followed the trend of recent events. But from whom is 'he Missourian a stalking horse? It la significant that, since Reed nnrounced his candidacy, the Hearst newspaper-; have carried several very laudatory articles concerning his ui'dic career. Thev have pointed to ... . . the Missouri senator as an outstand- ing man of clear brain and clean hands in this time of stupidity and corruption in high places. Reed has been held up to the people of the "ountry as a sort of Moses to lead the children of Israel out of the wil derness. If Reed is the man of keen per ception thu.t has been ascribed to him. he must know that the party which far repudiated him in 19 20 as to deny him a seat in the San Fran- cisco convention will not in 1924 en- bert. deceased, and presents his peti- presentation oi claims against said es trust him with the national leader- tion for a license to sell the real es- tate is three months from the 7th ship. The partv has not changed fatf 0 the deceased, to pay debts day of April A. D. 1924. and the . , r an" allowances, and it appearing time limited for payment of debts is materially in four years; neither has from j,; petition that there is no one year from said 7th day of April, Reed. The relation between them re-j personal estate in the hands of the 1924. mains in statuesque . . t. . In view of all the tacts, the charge oi ftir. hcaqoo not oniy is signin-, cant but convincing. Reed must be a stalking horse for somebody. Can it be for William Randolph Hearst? Th le interest the Hearst newspapers ince in the Missouri senator indi- ev cates that the publisher mifjht be the real candidate lurking in the back ground. :o: The Pneumonia Month montIl and usually gives a high rate of mortality for the disease. After a I n iml ! o wi nror tlio oi'ciom ico .n,.oh of it MMt.nM nn,i nor,, pie grow careless. When every cold. 1 no matter how slight, Is given prompt and intelligent attention, there is much loss danger of pneumonia. It - should be borne in mind tliat pneu ruonia is a germ disease and breeds i in the throat. Chamberlain's Cough ! H.txlv i r,n PvnpMr.r.qnt nnrl rloans i out the germ ladened mucus and not only cures a cold but prevents its re-L suiting in pneumonia. It is pleasant! to take. Children take it willingly. HAY FOR SALE i Good prairie hay for sale. Call 2515 Murray. ml7-2tw T MRS, T. G. M'CARTY Hemstitching and Picot Edging N. 4th Street, Plattsmouth hone ioo-j .j. 4 jjj Q LEOPOLD " T Osteopathic Physician Eyes Tested and Glasses Fitted Union Block Phone 208 Plattsmouth, Nebr. , "What Honey h! Honey is probably the most wonderful food in the form . ot sweet known to man. It is the nectar of the flowers modiftea bu slightly by the bees. It comes to you direct from the flowers oi m and vale, untouched by human hands, and flavored, in fact, Dy delicate perfume of the flowers from which it was gathered. You will enjoy using it, both on the table and in your cook ing. Honey contains the most vital body-building materials, in fact, the caloric contents of a pound of honey exceeds that oi every other food but dates. For that reason, honey is especially valuable for the children as it not only satisfies their natural onS" ing for sweets, but furnishes one of the best of energy-giving foods for their bodies. You Will Find WARGA'S Pure Honey for Sale at the Following Stores Plattsmouth A. G. Bach H. M. Soennichsen Hatt's Market E. A. Wurl B. J. Halstead Lorenz Bros. Water C. H. Gibson Ambler Bros. Johnson Bros. Meier Drug Co. In Case Your Local Dealer Doe? Not Handle My Honey, Order Direct from Me. James E. Warga Plattsmouth -:- -:- -:- Nebraska FOR SALE Purebred White Rock eggs for hatching. Phone 3713. Mrs. C. L. Mayabb, Plattsmouth, Neb. ml0-3wks ,sw NOTICE TO CREDITORS The state of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the county court. In the matter of the estate of J. II. E. Egenberger, deceased. To the creditors of said estate: You are are herebv notified, that I will sit at the county court room in Plattsmouth in said county, on the frgt day of July, 1924, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon, to receive and ex- amine all claims against said estate, orlfth view tn tlirir ;id i;i?t ment and allowant.e. The time limited for the presentation of claims against said estate is three months from the 31st day of March, A. D. 1924. and the timje limited for payments of debts is six months from said 31st day of July. 1924. Witness my hand and the seal of said county court, this 2sth day of Februarv 19 4 1 ALLEN J BEESON County Judge, W. G. Kieck. attorney for estate. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, NebrasKa. In the matter of the application of Hans Sievers, Administrator of the estate of Helene Hilbert, deceased, for license to sell real estate to pay debts. Now. on this 23rd day of Febru- ary, 1924, comes Hans Sievers, admin- istrator of the estate of Helene Hil- ;.hmiiiiiibu4iui iu pa me aniiauc-e Administrator to pav made by the county court for the Pupport of enry Hilbert. the sur- viving nusDancl or the deceased,! which is a debt against said estate as provided by Section 1222 of the; Compiled Statutes of 1922. and the expense of said administration, and that it is necessary to sell the whole or some part of the real estate of said deceased for the payment ofj.L sucn allowance or ueDt and tne costs of administration; It is therefore ordered and ad judg- ed that all persons interested in th? estate of said Helene Hilbert, deceas- ed, appear before me, James T. Beg- lair Tiw'i'o rf Vi a frrnv n the office of the Clerk of the District Court in the court house in the City! of P'attsmouth. in Cass county, Ne- braska, on the 12th day of April J,924; at the hour of 10 o clock in t ie forenoon, to show cause if any there be ivhy such license should not be. gfante,d to, H'ln Supers Admin- i istrator of said estate, to sell so much of the real estate of the said deceased '""-v m V a-v sucn ai" lowance or debt- together With COStS of administration. "J" further ordered that notice to iu m iremuns lutereBiea oy the publication of this Order to Show Cause for four successive weeks in the Plattsmouth Journal, a legal newspaper published and of general circulation in said County of Cass. By order of the Court. JAMES T. BEGLEY, Judge of the District Court f25-4w. State Farmers' James Walsh, President I - X I " Off Fa"? PrPfrtX City Dwellings Offers the best policy and contract for less money. Best and cheapest insurance company doing business in Ne braska. Pays the loss promptly. 7,200 members. Organ- wTODAY SUTCe " frce' 67'0.000. gHr vvrue 1 UUAY tomorrow may be TOO LATE. CALL ON OR WRITE L. L. DIENSTBIER 2615 Harney Street n-L a. . . 9 Weeping Nehawka J. Sutphen J. Opp Sheldon's Store Union L. G. Todd Co. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The state of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the county court. In the matter of the estate of Frank J. Lillie deceased. To the creditors of said estate: You are hereby notified, that I will sit at the county court room in I Plattsmouth in said county, on April 1, J924, and on July 1, 1924, at 10 o'clock a. m. each day to receive and examine all claims against said es 'tate, with a view to their adjustment and allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claims against said estate is three months from the 1st day of April, A. D. 1924. and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 1st day of April, 1924. Witness my hand and the seal of said county court, this 25th day of February, 1924. ALLEN J. BEESON, Scal ru3-4wkssw County Judge, NOTICE TO CREDITORS The state of Nebraska, Cass coun- ; ty, ss. I In the county court. In the matter of the estate of Ada i R. Bestor, deceased. To the creditors of said estate: You are hereby notified, that I will sit at the county court room in Plattsmouth in satd county, on the Til day of April, 1924, and the 7tb I day of July. 1924, at Ten o'clock in the forenoon to receive and ex- amine all claims against said estate, with a view to their adjustment and allowance. The time limited for the wmiess my nana ana the seal of said county court, this 29th dav February. 1924 7 (Seal) ALLEN J. BEESON, County Judge. I AJafc T..uTJ-T-t.,T.lr..T..T..T1.T. t 35 years Experience Offics Coatee Block a jL j jt, j, .T V ' OR. G. . MARSHALL Dentist l,I,'I,,I"I,,l"I,,I"I"W"W-i'Wp Automobile Painting! First-Class Work Guaranteed! Prices Reasonable Mirror Replating and Sign Work! A. F. KNQFLICEK, Phone 592-W, Plattsmouth Insurance Co. J. F. McArdle, Sec'y i 1 i , mmmmmmw J ) vmaiia, inenraska ticnts in doing so. its own interests. will. ' friendlier to your fellow man, a lit- I