f PAGE F0T7B PIMTSMOTJTH SEJH-' LY 70UBUAE THURSDAY. STPTrvpr-R o? nvJ. DRESSING UP Cbc plattsmouth lournal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTS3I0UTH, NEBRASKA Km tared at Pos to trice. Plattsmouth. Neb., m aacoad-claaa mail matter R. A. BATES, Publisher SUESCEIPTION PEICE $2.00 PEB YEAS IS ADVANCE SHALL YE SIN, THEN Sin shall not have dominion over you: for ye are not under the law, but under grace. What then? Shall we Fin, because we are not under the law, but under grace. God for bid. Romans vi, 14 and 15. :o: A pair of dreamy eyes Is liable to cause some black ones. Buttermilk is just sweet milk that has been around too much. :o: Throw yourself at a girl's feet and she will step on your neck. ;o: A noble soul has no other merit than to be a noble soul. Schiller. -o:o- -:c:- Sometimes It looks as If Mr. Cool Idge thinks Jie is still running for vice president. Now that the ladies are short on long hair, fashion decrees they shall long for it. :o:- :o:- An Irish bachelor is dead at the age of 112, which certainly was a long time to be at large. :o: It's a cruel world. When the girls put on evening dresses you can see where their bathing suits stopped. 1 ;o When a girl has a lot of beaux, one of them is always hanging around when she ought to be wash ing dishes. :o: A scientist declares that of all the world's inventions, that of the wag on wheel is the most important. But we hold out in favor of the waste basket. :o: Someone says that Charlie Dawes has a habit of speaking pointblank. If he means by this that Charlie has not made a point yet, we have noticed it too. :o: Anyhow, when the Chinese civil war generals called the battle the other day because of showers and wet grounds, they fought a double header the next day. :o: A New York woman advises the frirls to dance boredom away. We don't know about the boredom part, hut the girls have long since been following the rest of the advice. :o: The Egyptian manuscript of 1700 B. C. being - translated by: Prof, Breasted prove that the people of the time knew far more about anat omy than any one would ever guess from their statury. :o; A Massachusetts man married a pretty waitress. In the following year she purchased two new suits a week 104 in the year. This comes out at the divorce hearing. Appar ently the bride gratified a long sup pressed desire for fine feathers. We sll have some 6uch desire. But few are ever able to gratify the yearning &3 did this ex-waitress. She was Cinderella though only for a year. Now she has the memories and the gowns. These two-inch belts the sheiks are wearing make a nice hold for kicking one in the pants. :o: The proper place for road hogs- and we have a lot of 'em around Plattsmouth is in the pen. :o: Probably the quickest way to get rich is to buy ten thousand bales of cotton low and sell it igh. -o:o- -:o:- Inflated prices have been reduced considerably. There'll be more re duction, by waves or cycles, as the years slip by. The next major move ment or cycle in industry will be de flation of capitalization. Already it is becomirg necessary and unavoid able. Many industries have seen the light and acted. A business that valued itself at -$200,000 In the boom, but worth only $100,000 now. Is not going to be able te earn on the high basis during sharp competition. -o:o- The iron and steel industry with in another fortnight or month will probably have recovered sufficiently from the depression to be producing at a rate of 75 per cent of capacity or full-time operations. But the steel industry over-built during the war booms. Its capacity now is half greater than before the war. This giant industry, wailing because it is operating at 60 per cent of capacity now, is actually producing as much as in 1913. The nation still meas ures by comparing with war-time in stead of peace-time. :o: . . It is said that labor is worthy of !'s hire. We have for some time been watching the movements of Doc Bar.din of the fire department. This part of the city affairs has not amounted to very much until re cently, and now Plattsmouth can boast of ore of the most efficient f re companies of any city of Its size in Nebraska. Doc Sandin has devot ed considerable of his time to make it so and deserves recompence for his valuable services. We don't know what salary he gets, or whether he gets any or not, but we know he de serves a pretty fair ealary, 6ay about $300 per year. He is a practical man in tht busines and ie always on the lookout for debris and stuff that causes fire. Mr. Coolidge cannot expect to es cape unscathed, but nobody has yet charged him with being humorist. o: o When a heavy wind swept thru Georgia recently many people mis took it for a presidential candidate. : o: McAdoo's brother is for La Fol lette, proving Bryan takes better care of his brother than McAdoo does. :o: Another thing, how in creation did the round-the-world-fliers make connection with their fresh laundry, do you suppose? :o: Of course it is none of our bus! ness and It Is now too late to do anything about it., but if the cave man was guilty of dragging his wife by the hair it is a pity she didn't have sense enough to bob It. :o: Massachusetts now forbids the placing of silhouettes of bathing girls on windshields of automobiles, as tending, probably, to distract the attention of the drivers. The aver age driver's eyesight is none too good anyway. :o: It is not discontent that is the primary reason for assaults on our institutions but the causes of the dis content, the existing evils that weak en public confidence in the govern ment. Unless these causes are re moved the discontent will grow and assaults on the Constitution will be come menacing realities. -v. General Pershing has been invited to Join a wild west show and also to be a moving picture actor. Nei ther opportunity offers any new thrill to Black Jack. In France he experienced more thrills than Buff alo Bill ever did and was more of a hero than any screen star has been. It is, therefore, to laugh, and that is Just what Pershing did when he received the offers. o;o "The Cocksure Claim of Victory Has Been Overdone!" is a headline in the Kansas City Star. They have claimed everything in sight so long and deriding the possibility of Cool idge not polling the necessary ma jority in the electoral college over both Davis and La Follette that the republican generally began accepting the newspaper victory as a Novem ber victory actuality. Now they are very uneasy about New York and California. Fall Is coming. One can feel it in the air these mornings, a dash of crispness that has been missing many weeks. It is reflected in a revival of spirits that have sagged under pressure of torpid mis-summer. Things are brightening up a bit; there are school books to buy and numerous little alterations such as are necessary at every change of season. -Nature soon will don new gar ments. For slightly different rea sons humans will do the same. Heav ier clothes and more of them will be forthcoming with the first chilly day or two and after that appearances will be changed. To return to light and flimsy garments only with the coming of summer again next year. It isa good change. New clothes make the people feel better and have more self respect. And -then of course there is no better fun than i buying them. :o: ONE IN A HUNDRED The United States Bureau of Edu cation calls attention to the pros pects of 100 given boys. According to the bureau, here is where they land, educationally: 100 boys in the fifth grade, dwin dle to S3 in the sixth. They shrink to 71 in the seventh. This leaves but MS s f,K. -3 Uni. of Nebr. Me mon al Stad lum Capacity 30,000 See this great football game ILLINOIS vs NEBRASKA AT LINCOLN, OCTOBER 4. 2:00 P.M. NEBRASKA PLAYS ITKL of ILLINOIS UNI. of OKLAHOMA COLGATE I NI. (Hamilton. N. Y.) Uon UflL of KAABXS. lag) Gmm at LINCOLN. Oct. 4 ..Came at Norman. Okla-. Oct. 11 , Grstio nt LINCOLN, Oct. 18 .Gam at La Whence, Kan., Oct. 25 UNI. of MISSOURI Jam at LINCOLN. JCo I NOTHE DAMNUM Game at Soul fwid. lnd.. N,t. 15 KANSAS Af.GII S Game ut Uanhaltan. Ivan., Nov 22 OREGON AG. COL. (Corvallis, Ore.).. Game at LINCOLN (Thanksgiving IMy), Nov. 27 ORDER TICKETS NOW BY MAIL PRICE, all home games 12.00. Box $3.00. Tax Free Send checks to JOHN K. SELLECK. Ur.ixrsity oj N:lraa. Lincoln now to keep "Ma" off the November ballot by injunction or some such process of law. They tried in two 63 to complete the grammar school primaries to keep her out of the gov or eighth grade. Economic conditions are such that only - 34 start the first year in high school 24 finish the year, as sopho mores 18 qualify, then, as juniors 13 secure the coveted high school diploma 7 of these enter the first year of college 5 return and finish year's work 3 are able to qualify for the third year, and but 1 out of the original hundred is graduated from college. There is no way to make college graduates of the entire hundred Some of them couldn't graduate if they stayed in college until they were 75 years of age. But a very much larger percent age of boys should graduate than do "A KINDLY MAN ernor's chair, without success. Her election is inevitable in the normal course of events, o It is not probable that means can be found to keep her name off the ballot. Texas settles her political problem in the summer; to try to reverse the decision by court process looks like bad sports manship. The republican candidate, who It A 1 1 O 1 A . 1. the second J un ui law ai uie state university, proposes to make a vigorous race." The wisest thing for him to do is to withdraw and save wear and tear on his nerves. A re publican has no business livmg in Texas, anyway, to say nothing of his triple-plated audacity in even imag ining that he might be elected to a public office. :o: MAKERS OF CASS COUNTY Charles H. Kirkpatrick W-H-K-H- 4 -:o:- The number of Americans work ing on farms has increased 15 per cent since 1900. But they are grow ing 40 per cent more food. The fig ures are furnished by the expert, Da vid Friday. Scientific agricultural methods, all the way from commer cial fertilizer to tractors, have more than made up the shortage of man power on the farms. The country. of course, is growing and so is the food market. What is over-production of crops "how will be shortage within a few years. :o: An Alabama man fled his home 22 years ago, thinking he had killed a man. All these years he has kept under cover, suffering the tortures of remorse. Recently he learned that the man he shot recovered and lived. His soul paid a price for something he didn't do. This victim of fate's irony involves interesting problems in philosophy. For instance, If a man tries to murder an enemy and his crime is frustrated by his carU ridges being blanks, is his intent as evil as the actual deed The law says not. evea tboufh tie man did every ihivg in his power to accomplish tht killing. 'I car not to eit in the scorner's seat And hurl the cynic's ban; Let me live In the house by the side of the road f And be a friend to man!" And after all, isn't that the best policy? Sooner or later all of us will come to the end of life's highway, our tasks finished, our courses run. And when we are lowered into the final resting place what will our former associates say? Some of us will be lauded for things we did while we were here- for the vast amount of the world's riches we gathered for our abilities to make speeches, for honesty, knack to make friends and what-not. Oth ers of us will be passed over with on ly a few things said about us, a few perhaps because there will be noth ing much to say. But the greatest tribute that can be paid to one who has passed be yond is that he was a "kindly man," an individual who had been a friend, a comforter to 'his fellow man down through the long years of existence. Are you a "kindly man?" Will they say it about you yhen you have passed on? Are you living your life in a manner that not only you btu all who come in touch with "you will be bettered as the years roll by? The world needs more individuads of the kindly type, more people who are ready to lend a helping hand, to say a comforting word, to do a friendly deed in time of suffering and sorrow. Whenever there are more individuals of that type the world will become a better place in which to live and a whole lot of petty quarrels, hypocrisies and jeal ousies will be forgotten and over come. Are you doing your part to make the world better? Start out today to be a "kindly man." :o: A PUZZLED DEAN Trouble in Mexico. Bandits both ering the Americans, We hold Americans wanting to be robbed should give their trade to American bandits. -o:o- The war in China would be of more Interest if we could ever get it straight in our mind which array is trying to take Shanghai and which Is defending it, and generally speak ing, why. o : o- Somethings more to look forward to: There will be a total eclipse of the sun January 24, 1925, taking place nearly three months after the total eclipstf of a lot of political am bitions in November, 1924. :o: The Prince of Wales, it is an nounced, intends to thke a trip around the world, following his pres ent vacation, a year to be devoted to the excursion. The prince can't pos sibly be afflicted with homesickness 'V. v. it V . 'A William B. Rose Judge of Supreme Court for Fifteen Years Candidate for Re-Election Endorsed by the People at the April Primary and Re-Nominated by the Highest Vote as a Reward for Faithful Public Service The Greenwood Gazette says: 'Prominent lawyers, including former chief justice Sullivan, com The republican candidate for gov ernor of Texas doesn't know why he nnminotpri TTf wpnt tn T-lliroDe in June and the party took advant- mentedfavorably in the public age of hi3 absence. Now he must press on juage Kose s recent opm- cross figurative swords with "Ma" ion reforming criminal procedure Ferguson. Even Lloyds, taker of m tne note(J Nichols murder case long chances, would not underwrite f Chevenne ronntv. Murder his election. i . . -.aw---- - - . - . f 3-3 X nluralitv over Warren O. Harding. "WS" we ainipie oiw uucv.i That teiis a long story briefly. No language used in common speech. wonder Mrs. Ferguson's opponent is J without regard to the old tech a bit flustered and is curious to nical lorms thai- riis?rared the know why this thankless task is wished on him. Anyway, it should teach the good professor not to go traipsing off to Europe when there's lightning to be dedged at home. criminal law so long. This ad vance in court procedure indicates what may be expected, if Judge Rose is kept on the supreme bench Some ungallant Texans are trying' where he belongs.' Along about Thanksgiving day in in the year 1845, in Iowa county, Wisconsin, Charles H. Kirkpatrick was born, and where' he went to school during the winter and worked on the farm during the summer un til he was grown up and then after a few years of farming he came west and for one season worked on a farm some sixty or seventy miles north west of Saint Louis, and along fol lowing the civil war, came to Cass county and with a brother S. C. Kirk patrick, entered each eighty acres of land three miles west of the present site of Alvo, and after having re- ' mained on the place for some three years, the brother S. C. Kirkpat rick who had been a soldier in the civil war, returned to the east when he had put in enough time to prove up on his eighty. Mr. C. H. Kirk natrick, the subject of our story, remained and stuck, and purchased other lands until he has now three eighties, on which Mr. Glen Lewis Is and has been farming for a number of years. Mr. Kirkpatrick was unit ed in marriage in l878 to Miss Anna Lytle, who died in 1919. Again in 1921 Mr. Kirkpatrick married this time Mrs. James J Barrett, wh also was a homesteader with her former husband James Barrett, com ing here in 1869, Mr. Barrett having died a number of years ago. The home of Mr. and Mrs. Kirkpatrick was never blessed with any of snrings. and during the married life of Mr. Kirkpatrick with his firs wife they adopted and reared three girls one of whom has died. Mr, Kirkpatrick wns a member of the Local Grange, but of no other society or church. He saw Alvo incorporat ed when the railroad came and saw it grow and has known every body who ever lived here and has done his portion to make Cass county one of the best in the best state in the Union. stalk. Patented protectors made of wood veneer or wire may be secured on the market. Eighteen inch poul try wire with half inch mesh is very satisfactory and has the advantage of serving for several years without being removed. Building paper, ven eer and cornstalks serve equally weli but these should be removed in the spding since they afford shelter for wooly aphis, mealy bug and other injurious insects. Mice will do very little damage where the above precautious are tak en but it is well to remove grass, weeds and rubbish from around the trees so they will not be encouraged to build nests close to the trunks. McAdoo is back from his Euro pean trip and announces his readi ness to take the stump for Davis. California wants him. NOTICE TO CREDITORS PEOTECT Y0US FRUIT TREES As soon as cold weather has de stroyed the green vegetation upon which mice and rabbits feed, they will be looking elsewhere for succu lent food. Young fruit trees are in danger, after these pests have once tasted the juicy bark. One rabbit can girdle a dozen trees in a day un less precautions are taken to prevent it. Rabbits attack trees that are from one two six years old; mice injure trees next spding by bridge grafting cheaper to protect the tree trunks this fall than to try to save girdled trees next spring by bridge grafting is the adviae of horticulture special ists of the U. of N. Agricultural Col lege. Trees may be protected either by painting the trunKs with concentrat ed lime sulphur solution or by plac ing some protector about the trunks Protectors may be made from poul try wire, building paper, or corn ORDER OF HEARING and Notice on Petition for Set tlement of Account In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. State of Nebraska, Cass county, ss. To all -persons interested in the estate of Frank J. Lillie, deceased: On reading the petition of Minnie Lillie praying a final settlement and allowance of her account filed in this Court on the 18th day of September, 1924, and for discharge of Admin istratrix; It is hereby ordered that you and all persons interested in saiu matter may, and do, appear at the County Court to be held in and for said county, on the 29th day of Septem ber, a. u. i'JZ4, at 1U 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 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 one week prior to said day of hearing. In witness whereof, I have here unto set my hand and the Seal of said court, this 20th day of Septemr ber, A. D. 1924. ALLEN J. BEESON. (Seal) s22-lw County Judge.; The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Hen ry Kuhnhenn, 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 Octo ber 14, 1924, and January 14, 1925, at 10 o'clock a. m. each day, to re ceive and examine all claims against said estate, with a view to their ad iustment and allowance. The time limited for the Dresentation of claims against said estate is three months ' from the 14th day of of October, A. D. 1924, and the time limited for payment of debts Is one year from' said 14th day of October, 1924. I Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court, this 11th day of September, 1924. i ALLEN J. BEESON, (Seal) sl5-4w-sw County Judge. rix to mortgage the real estate here inbefore described for the sum of $3,100.00 to pay off mortgages against said real estate and pay debts and expenses of administra tion. It is further ordered that ser vice of this order be made by pub lication thereof for four successive weeks in the Plattemouth Journal. Dated this 3rd day of September, A. D. 1924. JAMES T. BEOLEY, Judge of the District Court. s3-4 w. NOTICE OF SUIT FOR DIVORCE In the District Court ot the Coun ty of Cass. Nebraska. Minnie Evans, Plaintiff, vs. Myron Evans, Defendant. To the defendant Myron Evans: You will take notice that on the 12th day of May, 1924, the plain tiff Minnie Evans filed her petition in the District Court of Cas3 county, Nebraska, the object and prayer of which is to obtain a decree of di vorce from you upan the grounds of desertion and non-support, and to obtain restoration of her former name. You are required to answer said petition on or before Monday, Oc tober 13, 1924, or a decree will be entered in accordance with the prayer of said petition. Dated August 30, 1924. MINNIE EVANS, Plaintiff. - W. A. ROBERTSON, Attorney for Plaintiff. sl-4w. On ORDER OF HEARING Petition for Appointment Administratrix of The state of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Har ry H. Kuhney, ueceasea. On reading and filing the petition bf Pearl Mayfield, praying that ad ministration of said estate may be istratrix: Ordered, that October 2nd, A. D 1924, at 10 o'clock a. m., is assigned for hearing said petition, when all persons inteested in said matter may appear at a county coutr to be held in and -for said county, and show cause why tne payer or petitioner should not be granted; and that no tice of the pendency of said petition and the hearing thereof be given to all persons interested in said matter by publishing a copy of this order in the Plattsmouth Journal, a weekly newspaper printed in said county for three successive weeks, prior to said day of hearing. Dated September 4th, 1924. ALLEN J. BEESON, I County Judge. Well Digging and Gleaning We are prepared to sink wells, clean wells or do any kind of well work J. W. Hobson Son ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the estate of John W. Yardley, Deceased. Now on this 3rd day of Septem ber, A. D. 1924, it being one of the days of the regular May, A. D. 1924 term of this court, this cause came on for hearing upon the petition of Alma Yardley, Administratrix of the estate of John W. Yardley, deceased. praying for judgment and Order of Court authorizing the petitioner as such administratrix of said estate, to negotiate a loan of Thirty-one Hun dred Dollars f 3,100.00) and secure the same by giving a first mortgage on the soutnwesc quarter oi me northwest quarter of Section twen ty-nine. (29) in Township eleven (11) North, Range fourteen (14) East of the Sixth Principal Meridian, in Cass county, Nebraska, for the purpose of paying mortgages already against said real estate and past due, and securing funds for paying debts and expense of administering said estate, there not being personal property with which to meet such bligations. It is therefore ordered that all persons interested in said estate ap pear before me at the District Court room in Plattsmouth, Nebraska, on the ISth day of October. A. D. 1924. to show cause why Judgment and nrHfr Rhnnlrl not be issued bv the Court authorizing said administrat-' Standard Bred Single Comb E. F. GRYBSKY Plattsmouth Phone 3604 Mynard, Nebraska Elspair Autos! Any Make or Any Work and Guarantee Absolute Satisfaction IVERSON GARAGE Pearl Street. Roy Long. Automobile Painting! First-Class Work Guaranteed! Prices Reasonable Mirror Replating and Sign Work! A. F. KNOFLICEK, Phone 592-W, Plattsmouth - r-