The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, July 03, 1924, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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    F0TT1
PLATTSMOUTH
- WEEKLY JOUHNAI
THTIESDAY, JULY 3, 1924.
Temper control is everything: or
DIVINE RIGHT NOT OUBS
' nothing-1
Cbc plattsmouth lournal
PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA
Entered at Poatufflca, fiitumnuth. Neb.. a ood-c4aa ciSl matter
R . A. BATES, Publisher
-:o:-
Everybody is coming to Platts-
SUBSCPJPTION PRICE $200 PER YEAH Hi VJtfCE
3
J
mouth on the Fourth.
:o:
Some people get to be groucneB
from talking to themselves.
:o:
An optimist is a man who takes
blankets to a summer resort.
o:
HOLDEST THY PEACE
For if thou altogether holdest thy
peace at this time, then shall there
arise enlargement and deliverance
from another place; and who know-
eth whether thou art not come unto
the kingdom for such a time as this.
Esther v, 14.
:o:
What is home without a garage?
:o:
How long will the public be damn
ed v.ithout protest?
o:o
When a diplomatist lays his cards
on the table, count 'em.
:o.
The poor we have with us entire;
they can't afford an operation.
:o:
The quickest way to disperse a
crowd is to take up a collection.
:o:
Longest day of the year is gone,
and summer is still hardly started.
o:o
A good sport is a man who gives
his straw hat 50 yards start before
giving chase.
:o:
Spring is the season when you
take off the heavy ones and pay the
doctor $18.50.
:o:
One good way to make the neigh
bor mow his lawn is try to take a
nap in the afternoon.
A lot of men spend their lives i President.
trying to live up to the promises
LINES TO REMEMBER
4
Do not in an instant what
an age cannot recompense.
I-
The world is so fuh
Of such highly priced things,
I think we should all
Have the income of kings.
:o:
In Oklahoma 305
were born last year,
had two governors.
:o:-
sets of twins
The state also
There is nothing so new about this
death-ray idea. We have had the
glaring headlight for quit" a while
and it has been a most effective
result producer.
:o:
"Won by Nose" is the appropriate
title of a June serial. And then
some fool Plattsmouth batchelor had
the gall to ask why women powder
their noses so often in June.
o:o
One good feature of liquor was
that it made people generous and
spread good fellowship. No substl-
they made to
light.
a lady in the moon-
:o:-
A married man has more bills to
pay than a single one, but the mar
ried man's creditors are usually more
sympathetic.
tuto has been found. Otherwise boot
leggers might not be so busy.
o:o
They ought to know better than to
try to nominate a senator for vice
He knows what it is
like to be the only man in the sen
ate who must always listen instead
of talk.
Your clothes will last much long
er if you watch company pack.
:o:
Often when a man stands on his
dignity it might just as well be a
banana peel.
: o :
Straw hats are beginning to feel
as natural now as overcoats did a
few months ago.
:o: -
Girls swimming in fancy ear-rings
are liable to come up with a fish
flopping on one.
:o:
It is easv to Ret a boy to take a
bath. Just buy a hose and let him
water the lawn.
o: o
You can never judge you" neigh
bors by what you see hanging on
their clothesline.
:o:
Anybody who would rather be
right than president can usually have
his way about it.
:o:
Maybe her fingernails show nail
rouge and maybe she has been can
ning strawberries.
:o: :
Everything is in readiness for a
great, grand and good time in the
old town on the Fourth.
:o:
And yet the Christian martyrs
didn't have much on the man who
stands in front of a beauty parlor
and waits for his wife.
:o:
The former crown prince of Ger
many is now selling threshing raa-fto all comers
chines. The one operated by his
father didn't prove a success.
:o:
This country spends more than
f3o.000.000 a year for pencils. Most
of this is probably due to the wear
and tear of figuring out tax returns.
:o:
Geologists now claim they are sat
isfied the earth is billions instead of
millions of years old. Well, if the
geologists are satisfied, let it go at
that.
o:o
A lot of congressmen have stood
behind the president in such a way
that he probably will never let them
get behind him again, even for a moment.
:o:-
Election day is November 4 four
months away. This gives the women
voters plenty of time to decide what
they are going to wear when they
vote.
:o:
The mass of the people are willing
to be led by the churches to peace
for all, but not to a peace that re
fuses to defend honor or repel the
invader.
: o:
"New York is painted up for the
Democratic convention," we read. Be
tween the lines it may mean rouged
or liquored, but at any rate it's
painted red.
:o:
The press stands are plentifully
sprinkled with correspondents from
all over the world. After seeing us
at war they were curious to see us
at peace. Up to this time the differ
ence has not been noticeable.
:o:
Both party conventions by unani
mous and repeated agreement of po
litical writers have been hectic and
the prediction is freely made that
the campaign ahead will be hectic.
With a hectic summer already well
advanced, and an autumn sure to be
hectic by contagion, the country is
fairly well set for its most hectic
year.
0:0
The shops have opened up again,
and the local prosperity outlook is
rood The Masonic Home and other
improvements under way are giving
employment to a goodly number who
do not follow shop avocations, and
with a small paving program being
considered to further augment it,
the next few months should be busy (
ones for everybody. As Wescott's !
Sons advertise, let s turn our backs i
upon the past and look to the future
It holds much worth while.
Why, They're Marrying Girls
They've Painted," Is a caption over
a story on a magazine artist's wed
ding. But many a man's wife did
her own hand painting before the
wedding bells tuned in.
k:
Lit up by moonshine, a Chicago
man draws his 1125 savings from
he bank, stations himself on a cor
ner and begins handing out $1 bills
He gets rid of $65,
when they take him away iu the
patrol wagon.
:o:
Fifty years ago nobody ever got
a wrong number. Nobody ever got an
electric light bill. Nobody ever had
a flat tire. Nobody cussed static. No
body had heard of Hi Johnson, Bob
La Follette, the farm bloc, the Ger
man crown prince, Mah Jong and
jazz.
:o:
Senator Joe Robinson of Arkansas
knocked down a surgeon in a fistic
difficulty over courtesy in rolt. In
Denver a half-shot golf in ,tructor
was actually shot by an advertising
man. The next news disp; tch ex
pected is that of a golf widow killing
her husband.
::
RUSSIAN DEBTS
The Moscow government was im
mensely pleased when the new Brit
ish government announced its readi
ness to rec6gnize Russia. Now, Mob
cow is no longer pleased. For Pre
mier MacDonald has emphasized one
little point the Soviet leaders over
looked that recognition will be con
ditioned on the Soviet recognizing
the country's foreign debts. This in
cludes the debts incurred before the
Soviet came into power.
It is the same old question, and
the same old obstacle to receiving
Soviet Russia into the sisterhood of
states. A Russian national debt,
argues Great Britain, is a Russian
national debt, no matter what par
ticular Russian government incur
red the debt and spent the money.
If this principle were not insisted
on, any country might repudiate its
debts eirery time a new party came
into power.
France, which is Russia's chief
creditor, has taken this position all
along, wherefore the Soviet has hated
France particularly. The United
States has insisted on it, too, as a
mutter of common international
honesty, and sticking for the prin
ciple rather than for self-interest,
because Russia does not owe this
country much.
Weil Digging and Cleaning
We are prepared to sink
wells, clean wells oi do
any kind of well work
J. W. Hobson & Son
The new safe and sane Fourth of
July isn't half as exciting as the old
unsafe and insane Fourth.
o:o
Tire expensive thing about a vaca-
;! :i is geUing fired because the firm
learns it can do without you.
:o:
These are the days the boss gets
mad when he finds things went along
nicely while he was off fishing.
:o:
Fireworks will not be scarce on
the Fourth of July, but bootleg cus
tomers always see more than usual.
o:o
Cows used to get scared and run
when they saw an auto, but now
they get scared when they see a
horse.
o:o
Mint is growing wild in the woods
and the julep is growing a little
wilder, but neither grows as wild as
the people.
o:o
"Autos," says a professor, "are
making people lose use of their legs.'
But we would say they develop pe
destrian legs like bullfrogs.
: o . ;
For the Democrats this is a year
of possibilities of the most important
character. They enter the contest
with a republican house divided
against itself.
o:o
MONEY BAINB0WS
Here's something that looks like
a sure sign that the slowing down
of business is only going to be tem
porary. Now, the iron and steel industry
has been hit harder than any other
basic line of work. Mills and fur
naces have been operating in fact,
on half-time.
On the other hand, shipments of
iron ore down the Great Lakes, bound
for the steel mills eventually, con
tinued on a big scale during May.
The total for the month was nearly
6,600,000 tons. And that was al
most as much as in May of last year.
From the opening of Great Lakes
navigation this spring, up to the
first of June, iron ore shipments
were over half a million tons ahead
of the corresponding period of 1923.
All this plainly means that, the
iron and steel leaders expect the
slackening of business to last only
for a shart tibe. Ore is not mined
and shipped on a scale like this un
less buyers are reasonably sure of
orders that will enable them to get
their money out of the ore they
have bought, without waiting any
length of time.
Producers don't buy raw mater
ials in large lots if they think a long
stretch of dull business is ahead.
Steel leaders with few exceptions
say they see no reason for current
dull times, and they expect early re
covery.
Another rainbow in the iron and
steel industry is this:
Mill and furnace production drop
ped from capacity of full-time op
erations to half-time in sixty davs.
By all past experience, such a swift
drop means that the reaction will be
an equally fast recovery to full-time
work. The time to worry is when
business gradually slumps for months
after months, slowly going to pieces.
Such a condition is apt to last a long
time.
It's a great deal like the weather.
A cyclone comes quickly but is over
and gone soon.' The storm that brews
for a long time is the storm that lingers.
There is perhaps nothing new in
the disagreement among specialists
I attending the American Medical as
sociation as to the matter ot prac
ticing euthanasia in the .cases of In
curable patients, especially those af
flicted with cancer. One physician
advocated the practice. Another, ex
plaining mat cue term means "easy
death," took exception to the idea,
and stoutly maintained that there
existed no moral right to sanction
such a course.
"If we should act upon the sug
gestion," he said, "having arrogated
unto ourselves the divine right to ex
tinguisn mat uniauionaoie some
thing called 'life' and should find to
morrow that cancer is curable, we
could not recall those whom we, in
our assumed knowledge, have killed;
for killing it is and nothing more."
Without attempting to enter into
the science of the matter, we do not
hesitate to line up on the side of the
physician who opposed any such
practice which might tend to has
ten death for any one afflicted with
any disease whatever. That is some
thing without our province as hu
pnan beings. The time and the man
ner of death rests with the Creator
and not the creature.
It is sometimes hard to under
stand why the re Is such suffering in
the world. Frequently the ones who
are longest in pain are those whose
lives have been pure and unselfish
It is beyond comprehension why they
should suffer as we know they some
times do. Often death is a relief to
that one who is afflicted, and to
those, even the members of the fam
ily, who are unable to do anything
to ease the pain.
Yet. it is too serious a responsi
billty even for a physician to assume
to hasten that end by the applica
tion of certain methods.
l ne tspeciansi advocating suen a
practice is probably conscientious
about it. He may think that use of
such a power would be a service to
humanity. But even from a strictly
human standpoint, such a license
would be a dangerous one. Who could
foresee the extent to which it might
be carried by those over confident of
their own knowledge? And even the
best of specialists in any line make
mistakes now and then, to say noth
ing of those of lesser ability.
But the one outstanding argument
against such a proposal is that there
is more than the human standpoint
to consider. There is one alone who
creates life and in His power it
rests. Surely it is not for us to as
sume "the divine right," as the phy
sician opposing the suggestion term
ed it, "to extinguish that unfathon-
fife."
able something called
:o:-
MANY YEARS AGO
21
Protective Lubrication
"with clean oil is real economu
V01
W dili
J
are not saving money whon you pour clean oil
into a crank-case containing dirty oil heavily
diluted with easoline. You are hurrvine vour motor to
the junk pile. Strong language. But consider these facts.
No matter how carefully piston rings are
fitted, or how finely the carburetor is ad
justed, gasoline vapors leak past the
piston rings. Besides this, oil is contam
inated by hard particles of road dust
drawn in through the carburetor and the
breather tubes. After 500 miles of opera
tion, crank-case oil is becoming a grind
ing solution. With such oil rapid wear
and loss of power are certain.
Adjust the carburetor carefully. Use the
choke sparingly. Replace worn piston
rings. Flush out all old oil and refill with
Polarine after every 500 miles of operation!
Always use the grade of Polarine best
suited to your motor.
This assures protective lubrication and
operating economy. You gain many times
the cost of the additional oil in greater
power and bigger mileage from gasoline,
and in smaller repair bills. y
Look for this sign. Consult the Polarine
Chart. Buy the grade recommended a
grade to suit every car light, medium , me
dium heavy, special heavy and extra heavy.
Give your motor protective lubrication.
STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEBRASKA
V catcT
polarine
Through the kind invitation of
Manager C. J. Theleen of the light j
plant we were permitted to enjoy a
very pleasant trip to Murray Sunday
afternoon. While our visit was very
brief through the pleasant little city,
it was sufficient to note that Murray
had improved considerable since our
last visit. Although it was early in
the evening, people were already
gathering at the beach to enjoy the
evening's sport. As a bathing resort
Murray is becoming noted far and
near.
ORDER OF HEARING AND NO
TICE OF PROBATE OF WILL
In the County Court of Cass coun
ty, Nebraska.
State of Nebraska, County of Cass,
ss.
To all persons interested in the
estate of Adam Fornoff, Sr., deceased:
On reading the petition of Adam
B. Fornoff and Philip Fornoff pray
"Forty cents a day was considered
satisfactory pay for a long day's
work when I was a young fellow,
reminisces Warner Bailey of Con
cord. N. H. He's an old timer
painted the first sewing machine
made by its inventor, Elias Howe. I ing that the instrument filed in this
Having mastered the painter's trade, court on the 24th day of June. 1924,
Bailey worked for 38 cents a day. Iand Purporting to be the last will
However
Hp paid only 50 cents a week for
board.
The more we make, the more we
have to pay. Our gain comes in a
steadily advancing standard of liv
ing. We buy and use 1,000 times
as many things as when Bailey was
young.
o:o
Storms continue to rage over the
country almost conti.iuoritly ami a
g;e;it u-ul of property is destroyed.
While i.undrcds perish. Could It be
pc.s'ble that He who rules the unt
cersi could be sending such punish
ment upon the evil communities
or could you blame Him? Let the
evil try to mend their ways and see
what effect that would have upon
the country. The laws of God say
the wicked shall be punished. Mend
your ways, and be happy.
-:o:
if daughter
A
uon i worry it daughter comes
home from swimming looking pale.
The water has iust washed off the
rouge. That s all.
:o:
It must be nice to be running for
vne president and know you won't
be noticed for the next four years
if you win.
tand testament of the said deceased
jmay be proved and allowed, and re-
curueu us ine last win anu testa
ment of Adam Fornoff, Sr., deceased;
that said instrument be admitted to
probate and the administration of
said estate be granted to Adam B.
Fornoff and Jacob Fornoff, as execu
tors: It is hereby ordered that you, and
all persons interested in said matter,
may, and do, appear at the County
Court to be held in and for said
county, on the 26th day of July, A.
D. 1924, at ten o'clock a. m., to
show cause, if any there be, why
the prayer of the petitioner should
not be granted, and that notice of
the pendency of said petition and
that the hearing thereof be given to
all persons interested in said matter
by publishing 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.
Witness my hand, and seal of said
court, this 24th day of June, A. D.
1924.
ALLEN J. BEESON.
(Seal) j26-3w. County Judge.
LEGAL NOTICE
To
Bearline. real name un
known; John Doe. real name un
known, and John Vte Company, a
corporation, real name unknown,
Defendants:
You and each of you are hereby
notified that on the 14th day of
May, A. D. 1924, Henry Klemme
filed his petition in the County Court
of Cass county, Nebraska, against
you and each of vou, the object and
prayer of which petition is to recov
er damages against you and each of
you, in the sum of Five Hundred
Dollars ($500.00) and costs of suit
for damages to plaintiff's car on or
about May 6, 1924.
You are required to answer said
petition on or before the 11th day
of August, A. D. 1924.
HENRY KLEMME.
j30-4w. Plaintiff.
north line of the C. B. & Q. R
R. Co. right-of-way to a point
289 feet south of the place of
beginning, thence north 289
feet to the said place of
beginning, excepting however
from said parcel that portion
thereof conveyed to the Chicago.
Burlington & Quincy Railroad
Company by Jh. Peter Keil and
wife by deed dated October 7th,
1897, and recorded October
13th, 1S97, in Book 32. at page
34 6 of the Deed Records of Cass
County, Nebraska; also that part
of the northeast quarter of the;
southeast quarter (NE'i SE4 )
lying 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),
Township 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) east of the Sixth P. ML,
lying north of the right-of-way
of the C. B. & Q. R. R. Co., con
taining in all 172 acres, more
or less, according to Govern
ment survey, all in Cass coun
ty, Nebraska
The same being levied upon and
taken as the property of Jacob P.
Falter, Mary Falter, Frank E. Val
lery, 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.
! pavment of debts is one year from
(said 10th day of July, 1924.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said County Court this 7th day of
June, 1924.
ALLEN J. BEESON,
(Seal) jl2-4w County Judge.
SHERIFF'S SALE
SHERIFF'S SALE
State of Nebraska, County of Cass,
ss.
By 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 di
rected, I will, on the 19th day of
July. A. D. 1924, at 10 o'clock a. m.
of said day, at the south front door
of the court house, in Plattsmouth.
Nebraska, in said county, sail at
public auction to the highest bidder
for cash the following described real
estate, to-wit:
Lots numbered one (1), two
(2). three (3) and four (4) ex
cept railroad right-of-way of the
C. B. & Q. Railroad company,
and except that part of pot 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 (SW4 NW) described as
follows: Commencing at the
northwest corner of the south
west quarter of the northwest
quarter (SW NW,4) thence
running east 666 feet, thence
south 411 feet thence north
west 666 feet, parallel with the
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebrasxa, 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
10th day of July. A. D. 1924 and on
i lie 10th day of October, A. D. 1924,
at 10 o'clock a. m. of each day, to
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 10th day of July,
A. D. 1924, and the time limited fori
State ot Nohruska, County of Csb,
ss.
By 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.
D. 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 Plattsmputh, Cass
county, Nebraska
The same being levied upon and tak
en as the property of E. O. Dover
Son et al, defendant, to satisfy mr
eral judgments of said court recover
ed by Frank E. Schlater as adminis
trator of the estate of Jane A. Dovsy,
deceased, Hulse Bros. & Daniels
Company, John Lee Webster, Ohal
fin Incorporated, a corporation and
Byron G. Burbank, plaintiffs against
said defendants.
Plattsmouth, Nebraska, May 26,
A. D. 1924.
E. P. 8TB WART,
Sheriff, Can County,
Nebraska.
Automobile Painting!
First-Class Work
Guaranteed!
Prices Reasonable
Mirror Replating and
Sign Work!
A. F. KNOFLICEK,
Phone 592-W, Plattsmouth
State Farmers' Insurance Co.
James Walsh, President J. F. McArdle, Sec'j
Insures Farm Property and 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
ized in 1895. Insurance in force, $67,000,000. Call or
write TODAY tomorrow may be TOO LATE.
CALL ON OR WRITE
L. L. DIENSTBIER
2615 Harney Street Omaha, Nebraska
i