The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, June 26, 1924, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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    THURSDAY, JUNE 26, 1924.
VA01 Foum
PLATTSMOUTH SEMI - WEEKLY JOURNAL
WHAT IS BIG BUSINESS ?
JUNE WEDDINGS
Cbc plattetnouth "Journal
PUBLISHED SEMI - WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH. NEBRASKA
Batcred at Postufflce. Platte mouth. Neb., a coBd-claa nail m'te
BATES, Publi.he
SUBSCRIPTION PSICE $200 PES YIJLh JN W'.'AACE
THAT IT MAY BE
WELL WITH THEE '
H-I-M-I-M I I I 'I I 'I f
LINES TO KEZtIEIuBER
Obey my voice, and I will be your .J.
God and ye shall be my people; and A,
walk ye in all the ways that 1 have
commanded you, that it may be well $.
with you.
-Jeremiah will, 23.
;o:-
A boy is just a lawyer of curiosity
surrounding an appetite.
-iOt-
Wc all love to preach of peace un
til we Ipse our tempers.
-:o:
The democratic presidential list in
brief: McAdoo. Ralston et al.
:o:
A jazz band is a group of citizens
who are paid for playing static.
0:0
Distance may lend enchantment,
but not when there is a flat tire.
0:0
Five children in a flivver and one
dog in a limousine is about the way
it runs.
:o:-
Snme folks want to stay married,
but many others just want to get
married.
:oi-
The old for which Mr. Coolidge
took chlorine gas wasn't in his feet.
No, sir.
The farmer's present problem is
to make two prices grow where one
grew before.
0:0
The dollar bill has no eagles on
it. but we notice it continues to "fly"
just the same.
0:0
An.erica has been accepting "mine
run" immigrants and congress wants
us to use a screen.
OfO-
An undesirable alien is one who
critisizes the country as harshly as
good Americans do.
-to;
Also, the stage is being set for the
annual return engagement of the de
lectable current jelly.
0:0
As a failure prohibition stands
side by side with matrimony, the U.
S. A. and human life.
0:0
Chickens often come home to roost
after you think they've been away
long enough to die of old age.
:o:
McAdoo supporters having now
secured a slogan, may consider the
major part of their task accomplish
ed. 0:0
In their zeal for nationalization
of mines, the Socialists evidently
for nationaliza-
Gire me good proofs of
what you have alleged.
Shakespeare.
: o:
A third party may be necessary.
No two platforms could be long enuf
to contain all the grouches.
-0:0-
Coolidge has signed a bill to pro
tect the Alaska salmon so boarders
will have something to eat for years
and years.
-0:0-
Our position simply is that a wom
an who doesn't keep her hair up is
as untidy as a man who doesn't keep
his socks up.
0:0
New York chorus girl says she
has tried suicide only twice. But
she should be careful. It is a dan
gerous habit.
:o:
An ingenious young woman writes
as' follows: "I am enguged to a very
nice boy who thinks the world of
me, and so do I."
:o:-
Los Angeles scientists played jazz
on a saxophone in the zoo, and the
baboon up and danced. That classi
fies a lot of things.
:o:
overlook the need
tion of minds.
:o:
Now that France is said to be
menaced by the American potato
hug. we should send over some Paris
Green.
:o:
One of the saddest sights of nature
is a Smart Aleck of 18 trying to give
the impression that he is a hard
boiled egg.
:o:
The case is desperate. If some
body doesn't care for the poor Ger
mans quickly, the rich Germans may
have it to do.
: o :
Roll your own versos. Here's the
makin': Freeze. sneeze, knees,
wheeze, trees, breeze, lees, honey
suckle and columbine.
:o:
Communism is dead today. It nev
er had much vitality. Lenine and his
brother dreamers killed it. And labor
has buried it for good.
:o:
'"Why do so many organizations
vote to support the ISth amcnd
raent?' We thought the constitu
tional air.. i:iiment.s were already law.
:o:
A Missouri editor says he has eat
in about a dozen cans of corn syrup
the past few months and it hasn't
done his corns a bit of good. He
might try a half-pint of back-allry
corn juice. If fortunate in getting
hoid of the right brand, corns and
socks both will come off.
:o:
A reieiit report shows there are
approximately fifty-two thousand
post offices in the I'nited States, or
one to every fifty-eight square miles.
In mo3t foreign countries there is a
post office to every two or three !
square miles. According to the de
partment of agriculture the differ
ence is due to the fact that nearly
one-third of the pjBOSle in this coun
try live on farms.
Many a public man swells might
ily at the thought that his country
is calling him until he finds out
what the country is calling him.
: o :
A seer says there will he no world
peace until 1945. Probably he fig
ures Henry Cabot Lodge will be too
old to obstruct it by that time.
o : o
Of course we don't like to Bee n
young girl smoking cigarettes, but
vre used to know an old girl who
smoked a pipe and nobody oared.
0:0
South Dakota is now selling gaso
line for IS cents a gallon, and it re
mains to be seen how many tourists
will prefer the Northern route this
summer.
The United States contains only 6
per cent of the world s population.
Hut the United States converts into
forms for human use one-half of the
world's basic materials coai, iron,
! copper and oil.
I In 17S2, when the close of the
I revolution made a nation of us, the
j estimated wealth of the whole world
was set at J 100,000,000,000. That
j was after forty centuries of accum
ulated effort.
Iii the 140 years in which the
I'nited States has been a nation, our
wealth alone has reached the stag
gering sum of $::oo,ooo,ooo,ooo.
America with its 6 per cent of the
world s population, uses 50 per cent
of all the print paper i:i the world.
What a tremendous stpry that fact
a'one tells.
In twenty years our p jul:i'i..i has
increased 40 per cent Our factory
volume production has inore than
doubled.
In 1906 there was one automobile
to every eleven persons.
Twenty years ago there was one
telephone to each ninety persons
Today there is one telephone to ev
ery eight persons. We produce and
use approximately b( per cent of the
world's automobile supply.
We produce 54 per cent of the
world's iron and G'J per cent of its
cotton. What doe.; all this mean?
It spells victory in the marts of
the world.
But do these figures spell ultimate
victory in the long run of civiliza
tion? A comporatively small number of
men are in command of these agen
cies of production. A comparatively
small group is responsible for this in
dustrial supremacy. .Without the
brains and ingenuity of this group
such material progress would have
been unthinkable.
And now, if the world is to be ad
ministered for the greatest good of
all, this group must feel its respon
sibility in administration of the
ihings it has created.
This industrial group must regard
itself as the true aristocracy of good
will.
:o:
AMBITION
No. there's nothing in the new
child labor amendment to keep Susie
from helping her mother with the
dishes or Johnnie from hoeing the
potatoes.
:o:
What a fine thing for the Ameri
can politics that this is not Uruguay.
Down there each candidate for of
fice is obliged to submit to an intel
ligence test.
-:o:
Missouri was so sure th y could
have Governor Hyde nominated for
vice president that they went back
home badly discouraged. Let Nebras
ka be warned.
;o:
The religious bodies recently dis
turbed by theological disputes have
been making the largest gains in
membership. Difference of opinion
are not wholly bad.
-rot-
Sixty thousand people from the
British hies have booked their pas
sage to this country under the new
immigration law. The harder you
make it, the more eager they are.
: o:-
Mr. A. S. Crotfleld came all the
way from the Philippine Islands to
attend the republican convention.
Evidently Mr. Crossfleld hopes to be
reappointed to whatever office he is
DOW holding.
:o:
Spanning unruly children is really
the best kind of discipline, some of
our educators and moralists are now
declaring. This is merely a return
to normalcy, as laid down in the :
Bible by Solomon, who said that "he
that spareth the rod hateth his son."
:o:
Congrcs.-men are complaining over)
', ti'j unpopularity of that body. The:
public doe:; not expect so much busi
ness eiciency of a legislature as it
does of a business corporation, but i
it expects more than it gets. That
is why it changes the personnel of
Congress so frequently.
Well Digging and Cleaning
We are prepared to sink
wells, clean wells or do
any kind of well work
J. W. Hobson & Son
Throughout the ages, sages, poets
and pietists have decried ambition
by which "sin the angels fell" and
rhapsodized over the virtue of con
tentment. It was ambition whit h
caused the fall of Lucii'er, we are
told. The assassination of Caesar,
the banishment of Napoleon, the col
lapse and exile of the Hohenzollerns
and the Hapsburgs, and a thousand
other instances are all examples of
"ambition which overlaps itself."
Ambition has brought countless
woes upon the world and to those
who are imbued with it. for the real
ly ambitious man, as Milton says,
would rather "reign in hell than
serve in heaven," is never happy,
even when he does not actually come
to grief, because the really ambitious
man is never satisfied. There is al
ways a further ambition to the sat
isfied, unless. like Alexander, he
conquers the whole world and then
he weeps because he has no more
worlds to conquer.
And yet within proper limits am
bition is one of the worthiest and
most useful traits of human nature.
Without ambition humanity would
still be in the caveman era. With
out ambition man becomes little more
than the beasts of the field. With
out ambition the world would be
without learning, or luxury or in
telligencewithout even the hope
of a heaven.
The seeming paradox is simply
one of degree. It is the excess of
ambition, not the trait itself, which
leads to sorrow and disaster. A reas
onable ambition which pays due re
gard to the rights of others is as
commendable as the other is to be
condemned. Life holds few joys great
er than the fruition of a laudable
ambition. The dang r always is that
the creditable ambition may o'erlap
itself and become contemptible.
:o:
The French people nave 50,000
million dollars invested in foreign
countries, nc;t counting Russian loans
which have vanished in smoke. Their
income from these sources is 250 mil
lion a y;-r. That's a return of five
per cent, which should enlighten
suckers who think they can get
something for nothing. A French
man's wisdom in investments
amount:; to genius.
:o:
Some forms of wealth are beyond
price. In the liquor collection thai
was left by the late J. P. Morgan
are bottles of Napoleon's brandy and
a cognac made in 1795. Even a pro
hibitionist might be tempted to
sneak a drink from such a treasure.
In our large cities are plenty of gun
men who would commit murder for
one bottle of the 1703 cognac.
It is curious how an idea once im
planted firmly in the heads of hu
manity and a custom derived there
from persists for centuries after con
ditions have changed and the reason
' for them has disappeared.
For many generations June has
1 en considered the appropriate
month for o range blossoms and brid
al veils, yet the unsentimental would
imagine that no season of the year
could be less suitable for a honey
moon than that most disagreeable
one when enervating heat and hu
imidity, nettle rash and mosquitos.
and all sorts of discomforts make
the temper touchy and life more or
less a misery. Under the fiery sun,
illusions evaporate and love with
ers. Doubtless it all started in the long
ago when humanity hibernated more
or less in the winter, and there was
little chance of courting or petting
parties before the family fire. It was
doubtless those days of which the
poet speaks in words so oft and so
tiresomely quoted, "In the spring, a
young mans fancy lightly turns to
thoughts of love."
But for the very reason that we
have so often heard the couplet, man
kind characteristically considers it
must be true; whereas, the fact is,
::..:e is no period of the year when
a modern young mau's fancy is so
distracted from any thoughts of love
by thoughts of fishing, boating, base
ball, golf and roaming. And if the
young man should go-a-courting in
the spring, like the birds and the
beasts, it is not often that the bride
could have the trousseau ready by
June.
In reality the young man turns
his thoughts to love more often and
mote naturally after the baseball
season and the sports of summer are
over; when the parlor sofa is invit
ing; when hte winter dances begin
and the theatres are in full blast.
The same may be said of his turtle
dove.
Without wishing to discourage
any belated June nuptials already
dated, we say, away with all the
obsolete nonsense. November is the
proper month for lightly turning to
thoughts of love, and midwinter
should be Hymen's own season. Mat
rimony in its trying early stages is
so much more easily endured then
than in the dog days.
0:0
DO GO ONE !
clean oil
and Protective Lubrication
make motoring less expensive
ljPl1 is a mistake to krT dumping fresh oil into 1irl' crank"
case ' 11 ""finitely. 1 V to five hundred miles replace used
oil quart by quart. But after five hundred miles you actually
save money by flushing out the old oil and refilling with fresh Polarine.
ere are the reasons
condition of oil
in Cra.nkca.3e
after 5QOmilcs
Gasoline dilutes the
crank-case oil everv
J
lime you use the choke
and as long as the mo
tor is running. Road
dust is drawn in at
every stroke of the
piston.
After five hundred miles of operation
your motor oil contains hard dirt
particles and is so heavily diluted
with irasoline and condensed water
c
that it can't give protective lubrica
tion. It is gradually becoming a grind
ing solution.
To avoid wearing out your motor and
paying big repair bills, drain and
flush the crank-case every-five hundred
miles. Keep clean oil of the right
body on every bearing surface. Then
you will have protective lubrication.
You'll actually h many times the
cost of extra oil you use and get more
power and mileage from gasoline.
Consult the Polarine Chart. Use the
grade recommended for your car.
Buy oil where you see this sign five
grades to suit every type and make
of car tight, medium, medium heavy,
special heavy and extra heavy.
STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEBRASKA
Pip L,.tMM,M KWIMHUgia
A prominent New York society
girl, scheduled! to be married July
1, next. 'Wouldn't think of being
married without her dogs being pres
ent." Four of them will occupy a
pew at the forthcoming function.
it will be interesting to watch
these canine guests when the pipe
organ opens up to the plaintive tune
f "Here Comes the Bride." Sad
melodies have a tendency to inspire
melancholy imaginings in the souls
of dog.-: if they have souls as Lu
ther Iiurbank assures us they have.
Under such prompting they are I
apt to lift their shining noses to the'
SUFFERS A SEVERE ACCIDENT.
From Moml.-.y's lally
Last Saturday evening about 9
o'clock while P. A. McCrary of this
city was returning home from Omaha
he was very badly injured when the
car he was driving was overturned on
the highway north of the Platte
river and caught Mr. McCrary in the
wreck. The car was damaged more
or less as it rolled into the ditch
and Mr. McCrary was pinned in the
car and' suffered an injury to his
back but the full extent of his injury
has not as yet been determined. The
injured man was taken back to Oma
ha by passersby and taken to the
hospital where he was given treat
ment and made as comfortable as
possible in the condition that he was
in from the effects of the wreck. He
was brought on home yesterday and
is recovering slowly from the shock
and effects of the accident and still
is very stiff and sore as the result of
his experience.
or less, according to Govern
ment survey.
The same being levied upon and
taken as the property of Jacob P.
Falter. Mary Falter, Frank E. Val
lory, Waterloo Creamery Company
and Herbert S. Daniel. Trustee in
Bankruptcy of the Waterloo Cream
ery Company, Bankrupt, defendants,
to satisfy a judgment of said court
recovered by The Penn Mutual Life
Insurance Company, plaintiff against
said defendants,
Plattsmouth, Nebraska, June 11th,
A. D. 1924.
E. P. STEWART.
Sheriff Cass County,
Nebraska.
Til t SMine being levied upon and tak
en ns the property of E. G. Dovey &
Son et al, defendants, to satisfy tsev
'ral Judgments of said court rocover
d by Frank E. Schlnter r.s adminis
trator of the state of Jane- A. Dovey,
' deceased, Hulse Pros. & Daniels
Company, John Lee Webster, Chal
; fin Incorporated, a corporation and
Byron O. Burbank, plaintiffs against
said defendants.
Plattsmouth, Nebraska. Mav 2G.
A. I). 1924.
E. P. STEWART.
SheriiT, Cass County,
Nebraska.
A healthy man is a king in his
own right: an unhealthy man an
unhappy slave. For impure blood
.1 1 1 . . i;, ...... r?ti v.l.w.tr rtliirl
high heavens and howl .mournfully. 1 Bitters. On the market 35 years.
!5 a bottle.
They may decide that sitting
quietly in a church pew is much too
sedate a thing for dogs to do, and
proceed thereupon to play hob with
the bride's finery. Dog3 do these
things in a spirit of play. They don't
know any better.
On the other hand, the poor cre
atures quite likely will have a full
er appr'-ciation of the solemnity of
the occasion than some of the human
beings who will be present.
it will not be surprising if the
ceremony "goes to the dogs" and
those- in attendance lead a "dog's
life."
Doggone! '
:o:-
In making movies 25 cents out of
eacb ?1 goes to actors, says a writer
in the Wall Street Journal. He finds,
by analysing movie makers books,
that 10 cents is spent for scenarios
and stories lor every 25 cents paid
to actors. Either the actor's salaries
are magnified tremendously by the
press agents, or writing for the pic
tures is more profitable than is gen
erally known in the writing business.
:o:-
FOR OVER 40 YEARS
HA 1,13 CATAHKH MEDICINE has
been use-d successfully in the treatment
of Catnrrh.
HACL'S CATARRH MEDICINE con
sist"; of an Ointtivnt which Quickly
Roll"v s by local application, and the
Internal Mcdloine. a Tonic, whi"h a''ts
through the Blood on the Mucous Sur
faces, thus reducing the inflammation.
Sold by all druggists.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo. Ohio.
-:o:-
Harsn physics react, weaken the
bowels, will le-id to ehkOJUls constipa
tion. Doaa'8 Regulets operate eas
ily. 30c a box at all stores.
In a year we have sold Canada
(101 million dollars worth of goods
and bought from her 431 millions.
T!. balance in our favor isn't as
important as the fact that trade be
tween the two countries is increas
ing steadily. Twelve per cent a
year is the gain. And Canada is one
o ibf very few countries where we
ere l warq of getting cur money. It's
no accomplishment to sell to an evi
dent dcadbeat.
SHERIFF'S SALE
State of Nebraska. County of Cass,
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska, Cass coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of
Catherine Meisinger, deceased.
To the creditors of said estate:
You are hereby notified, that I
Will sit at the County Court room in
Plattsmouth in said county, on the
1 loth day of July, A. D. 1924 and on !
the loth day of October, A. D. 1924,;
at 10 o'c lock a. in. of each day, to j
receive and examine all claims
against said estate, with a view to ;
their adjustment and allowance. The
time limited for the presentation of
claims against said estate is three
months from the loth day of July,
A. D. 1924, and the time limited for
as. 1 payment of dents is one year trom
By virtue of an Order of Sale is- said loth dav of July. 1924.
sued by James Robertson. Clerk or Witness my hand and the seal of'
the District Court, within and for said County Court this 7th day of 1
Cass county, Nebraska, and to me ui- June, 1924.
rectcd, I will, on the 19th day of
July. A. D. 1924. at 10 o'clocK a. m. 1
of said day, at the south front door;
of the court house, in Plattsmouth.
Nebraska, in said county, sail at
DUblic auction to the highest bidder
for cash the following described real
.state, to-wit:
Lots numbered one ( 1 ) , two
(2), three (3) and four (4 ex
cept railroad right-of-way of the
C. D. & Q. Railroad company,
and except that part of Lot num
bered two (2) lying south of the
said railroad right-of-way; al
so that part of the southwest
quarter of the northwest quar
ter (SWU NW4) described as
follows: Commencing at the
northwest corner of the south
west quarter of the north. west
quarter (SWK NW'4) thence
running east 666 feet, thence
south 411 feet thence north
west 666 feet, parallel with Hie
north line of tl e C. B. & Q. R
R. Co. right-of-way to a point
2S9 feet south of the place of
beginning, thence north 2S9
feet to the said place of
from said parcel that portion
thereof conveyed to the Chicago,
Lurlington & Qtiincy Railrcao
Company by Jh. Peter Keil and
wife by deed dated October 7 r M .
189 7. and recorded October
13th, 1S97. in Book 32, at pase
343 of the Deed Records at Cass
County, Nebraska; also that part
of the northeast quarter of the
southeast quarter (NEVi SEVi )
tying north of the right-of-way
of the C. B. & Q. R. R. Co.. all
the above described lands being
in Section thirty-six (36),
Tow.nship thirteen (13), North,
Range twelve (12)-; also ail that
part of Government lot number
ed six (6) in Section thirty
one (31), Township thirteen
(13), North. Range thirteen
(13) emit of the Sixth P. VL,
lying north of the right-of-way
of the C. B. & Q R R. Co.. con
taining in all 172 acres, aiore
ALLEN J. BEESON,
(Seal) jl2-4w County Judge.
SHERIFF'S SALE
State of Nebrarka, County of Cass,
ss.
Py virtue of an Order of Sale is
sued by James Robertson, clerk of
the District Court within and for Cass
county, Nebraska, and to me direct
ed, I will on the 5th day of July, A.
I). 1924, at 10 o'clock a. m. of said
day at South front door of Court
House in Plattsmouth. Nebraska, in
said county, sell at public auction to
the highest bidder for cash the fol
lowing described real estate, to-wit:
An undivided one-third part
of Section Two (2) in Town
ship Twelve (12), Range Twelve
(12). east of the sixth P. M. in
Cass county, Nebraska, and an
undivided one-third part of the
south half of Block Ten (10) in
the City of Plattsmouth, Cass
county, Nebraska
NOTICE OF SPIT
In the District Court of Cass
county. Nebraska.
Nicholas Oil Corporation, a Cor
poration, tb. J. E. Maaon, Defend
ant. To the defendant J. E. Mason, you
are hereby notified that the Nich
olas Oil Corporation, a corporation,
as plaintiff, filed a petition and com
menced an action in the District
Court of Cass county, Nebraska, on
the 2fith day of May. 1924. tcainii
you, the object, purpose and prayer
of which is to obtain a judgment
against you for the sum of $64.65
and interest at seven per cent from
the 23rd day of January, 192S, and
costs of this action.
You are further notified that you
are required to answer said petition
on or before Monday, the 14th day
of July. 1924. or the allegations
therein contained will be taken as
true and judgment will be rendered
in favor of plaintiff and against you
according to the prayer of snid pe
tition. Dated this 2Cth day of May, A
D. 1924.
NICHOLAS OIL CORPORATION,
A Corporation, Plaintiff.
j2-' w.
Aiitomobils Fainting!
Firat-Class Work
Guaranteed!
Prices Reasonable
Mirror Replating and
Sign Work!
A. F. KNOFLICEK,
Phone 592- W, Plattsmouth
State Farmers'
James Walsh, President
Insurance Co.
J. F. McArdle, Sec'j
Insures Farm Property and City Dwellings
Offers the best policy and contract for less money. Best
and cheapest inurance company doing business in Ne
braska. Pays the loss promptly. 7,200 members. Organ
ized in 1895. Insurance in force, $67,000,000. Call or
write TODAY tomorrow may be TOO LATE
CALL OX OR WRITE
L. L. DiENSTBIER
2613 Harney Street Omaha, Nebraska