PAGE FOUB PLATTSMOUTH - EEM- :y joxtkrae THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1924. Che plattsmouth lournal - '- ' PUBLISHED SEia-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH,' UTTBTIASKA Kb tared at PoatoSIc. Plattsmouttu Nab., u MoeB4oltai -mall matter R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PEICE $2.00 FEB YEAS IN ADVANCE THE ANGER OF THE LORD Mine anger was kindled against the shepherds, and I punished the froats: for the Lord of hosts hath vis ited his r.ock. the house of Judah, and hath made them as a goodly horse in the battle. Out of him came forth the earner, out of him the nail, out of him the battle bow. ; out of him every oppressor together Zechariah x, 3 and 4. -:o: The only sensation left for "Wales to spring is to go to work. :o: The chief objection to a new sten ographer is words fail her. :o: The price of raw sugar is up, per haps due to some raw deal. - o:o Five were shot at an election In Louisiana, instead of Mexico. :o: DATJGHERTY'S DESPERATION -t--t In a final effort to cast doubt and -'MlVCOe flF UhSR Rfl NTY win o v-r uyuu i u v icKiuhivuo va, aaa Brookhart-Wheeler committee re garding his personal and official l.?. character and associations, Harry M. I JI2J'I I J I !! I Daugherty may have involved him- Ph. Meisinger Ph Meisinger,- whose real name is George Phillip Meisinger, was born self more deeply In the mire of dis repute than he was before. The first near tne city of Pekin. Illinois, on expression of Gaston B. Means since I a farm where he grew to manhood the publication of his alleged repu-1 and where he gained his education diation of his testimony on the wit- The date of the birth or the young ,.,.. . , man was December 22, three days uuss sianu ueiore me senate commit- before Christmas in the year 1854 tee is that he still adheres to his There he went to school and obtained sworn testimony and that his "re- I the rudiments of an education in the miHoT. inr.ico,i in n id or frnm district school, and the remainder by ... . . T . t- i I the study and observation or a busy l,JUS"c' l" """" LUU life. The brothers and rather, Mr signed. wa3 not given under oath. George Meisinger having come to Means admits significantly that Nebraska before this young man, had tt,0 etntmcnt wna ".iTirlor wr. BeCUreU lantlS, OUl, WUeil fU -lUeiSlUg . . . . . . . , . , I er came when twenty-one years of 14,11 "i.""!--", iie uuu he had the land broken out but not explain, but left to "the full with no buildings thereon in 1875 story yet to come." The fact that he On this 160 acres Mr. Meisinger "sticks to" his sworn testimony, of wo.ed hard an,d wa3 .enabIed to course, amounts to a full repudia- build a house and otherwise improve the farm until it is one of the best Two can live on love and kisses if love has a job. rot- Still waters run deep, but they are full of snags. :o: In a few years airships will cease to be considered hardships. :o: A pair of beautiful eyes are all right, but need looking into. o:o Some people don't marry for fear it won't last and others for fear it will last. :o: Nero's baths have been discovered but that ever interesting fiddle still is' shrouded in mystery. :o-: The old newless Monday is a great day for newspapers now, with their lists of killed and injured. :o:- Reports from various indicate that picnic ants have stored away food for about a million years. :o: Which will be the more potent in the presidential campaign the old sap bucket or the old oil can? o:o Three-fourths of our explosives are used in mining operations, we read, and the 'Other fourth in elec tions. :o: A writer says in ten years there will be no servant maid in America. He talks as if he knew where some are now. Lack of feed has hit the cattle bus , iness, also the human business. :o: More sad words of tongue and pen, 'Darned old school's started again." -:o: You can't tell from how a politi cian stands which way he will jump :o: Isn't it about time two Chicago murderers were asking for a pardon :o: The harvest moon seems to govern not only the tied, but also the un tied. :o: Every man is entitled to a living wage, but this doesn't seem to ap ply to women. -:o:- We have looked everywhere and can't find a single war veteran buy ing bootleg and airplanes with his federal bonus. :o: It will be considerably more diffi cult to deport Firpo now, since he pocketed the money made in the fight with Wills. :o: Governor "Al" Smith was renomi nated amidst a great demonstration lasting 15 minutes. Every delegate voted for him. The enthusiasm was unbounded. o:o The republican party, after living for some years on a level with Fall, Daugherty and Forbes, ought not to mind the little mud John W. Davis will throw at it. :o: The humors of the campaign are about equally divided. Somebody is trying to organize the deaf-mute vote for Coolidge, while Davis has been made an honorary member of the Boy Scouts. Recently Abe Martin wondered what wa3 worse than to catch your wife Kitting in your favorite barber chair. It occurrs to us that being required to shave her neck Sunday morning is worse. :o: There is more money in running a cafeteria than in running a book store, says the bishop of Grand Rap ids. And the bootlegger is more prosperous than the coporteur, but that doesn't prove anything. -:o: London Bridge is really falling down too heavy a traffic strain. One of the piers is sinking. It will be repaired. This famous old bridge wa3 originally built 748 years ago. Can you imagine any modern bridge last that long? It's the same with roads. Highways, paved by the Ro mans 2,000 years ago, today have stretches as good as new: Our gen eration build3 for the moment. In the Good Roads movement why not more attention to endurance and less to mileage? :o: The 100 million pounds of high explosives ordered by the national government is the largest single or der for "powder" ever placed. Even in war time there was no such buy ing in one order. This enormous amount .of explosives will be used for highway construction, agricul tural purposes, etc. It starts you thinking, how much could have been accomplished in the way of progress "If the explosives and human energy wasted in the war has been turned to construction. All that we are afraid of is that the Prince of Wales will think Long Island is America. :o: Another nice thing about riding in the ark was that nobody had to look out for trade signal. o:o It was a mem trick making those world fliers go to banquets after the other hardships were over. :o: And some crook stole $100,000 from a New York oil man who may have worked so hard for it. :o: Some people in this country are called upon to die unusual deaths; others lie at grade crossings. :o: Everywhere you hear arguments over parking limits while you find just parking at all is the limit. -:c:- Radio is becoming popular in Rus sia and it doesn't matter, but many a whisker will get hung in the wires. :o: The polo trot is said to be the new fall dance, but we don't know if they run neck and neck or nose and ncse. o:o Also, some seem to think the ship of state is a hot-air ship. Any way, it is sometimes all up in the air. :o: Fourteen Indian nations held a dance in Mexico; tame, no doubt, when compared with a debutante's dance. -o:o- And if civil war in China goes on to another year it may kill as many people as there are homicides in this country. The sure way to ,banish all our national ills in a lump is to live in the paradise of one of Mr. Coolidge's speeches. h :o: The chief reason why city chick ens are more expensive than coun try chickens is to be found in the dressing. tion of his repudiation. The nature Df farms jn the rich county of Cass He was united in- marriage to Miss Elizabeth Lutz on the second day of February in 1SS4. This marriage was blessed with four children, they of the "certain circumstances is not hard to surmise, since he is un der prison sentence. If it shall be shown that coercive or fraudulent being Mrs. Edward Tritsch, living a methods were used In obtaining his j few miles west of Plattsmouth where signature the accusations against I they have a fine farm; Mrs. William gs2 head of cattle on exhibition. Mr. j win coatman, or the poultry dept., reports as ioiiows: 245 cnicKens, iu i geese, 10 ducks, and 7 puppies on show. The Pig clubs of the county exhibited only 10 pigs due to many reasons. On Friday the judging teams of the pig clubs staged a cont est. The Alvo team under the leadership of Mr. W. G. Hoffman won first place. Weeping Water second, Cedar Creek third and Eagle fourth. High man was Geo. Kitzel, Alvo, second Elmer Hoffman Alvo and third Mynard Tritsch, Cedar Creek. Two of the Girls Clothing clubs put on demonstrations during the fair. The K. K. A. Clothing Club of Weeping Water won first ond the Eldeen Clothing club of Louisville, second. The booths on Health & Hygiene and Food & Nutrition were in charge of the different clubs in the county, who have been taking the work the past year. This is somthing new and these ladies are to be complimented on the way they conducted the booths and the different phases of the work which were brought out by the post ers and exhibits. A demonstration on bandages was put on by the Home Health ladies. Three different clubs were represented in this demonstra tio.n. It takes the united efforts of every one to put a county fair across successfully and that was what hap pened this year. r- l a. - .'11 1, --.r-. J n a I x iiiot. 11, t iiu n mi ti i uokuiiu uie. UBUS"eU uv m latuei mak,n lhei home npar tne farm on Uian weaKencu. I which she was horn: Walter Meisiner It is as Mr. Daugherty states to er, who died some four years ago; Mr. Davij: No court has passed on iueisinger, wno is rarming me c 4i ,-7 .- home place, and has been with tbte the vahdity of the evidence given fatner ymakin& the farm pay during oeiore ir.e w neeier committee, uuu i tne recent years court rules were not observed in ad-1 Ph Meisinger has worked Ion mittinsr testimony. But even if all and hard to make the farm pay a testimony were expunged from the "J.1. de Bi f well as the fat ones, and has done record, why did not Mr. Daugherty so he having arrived at a period of testify before the committee when I life when he considers he has done eivpn an onnortunit v? On this rtoint his share of hard work and will in he assumes an attitude of superior a short time move to Plattsmouth to make his hoinp. nnd the snn. Csirl. rignteousness ana gives sen re- continUe to farm the Dlace. pect" as the reason for not speak ing tor himself nc-lore a committee that had covered itself with such in famy." If all the testimony were incom- At Chattam Hill Virginia, on the seventh day of August 184S, Robert A. Young first saw the light of day He lived with his parents in that old historic state until he was about Detent why is M. S. Daughertv. his nineteen years ot age.when the ram brother, appealing from a lower ". learning of the i great west, and of Nebraska, the. land of promise, l-ouii io uie uuneu iatt-a j-i concluded to leave" the old home and court to prevent the senate commit- J its associations in the east and try tee from examining records in the the advice of Horace Greeley and come west to make their home and Daugherty bank to verify testimony unfavorable to the ex-attorney gen eral? -:o:- Mr. Coolidge speaks of the opposi tion to himself as if it were entire- fortune. They traveled to Cincin atti, where they with others took an old style river craft, came down the Ohio river to the Mississippi, then up that river past St. Louis, and then up the Missouri river past Kansas City to Plattsmouth. The trip con- iy made up by people proposing to d twenty-three days, they arriv rob property owners, yet the admin- ing in Plattsmouth on the fifth day istration of which he i3 the head has I of April 1867, and they were then made something of a business of rob- in the west with all of Its possibil- , . 11 V . -I -i I 1 I ltD, UC UlU UUt V. A L, 1. KJ J l IV It uoauuiv..v "-""'u sold , but were willing to work. millions. I Mr. Yotinsr first accented a iob with ;o: I Levi Goodsell Todd, where he worked The days have passed when the I for three years. Mr. Todd was a cat mother used to take her little son to le raiser and dairyman, and it was . , . , , . . , . . with the cows that Mr. Young the barber shop for a hair shingle. worked the most of the time. He She leaves the son at home and gets tQen rented a farm of W. W. Wiley, the shingle herself. I which he farmed and In IS73 pur chased the farm which he now has and began farming for himself. On March 4th 1879, at Three Groves, which is between Murray and Union and long before either town The State of Nebraska, Cass coun-1 was thought of, but near the farm ORDER OF HEARING on Petition for Appointment of Administratrix ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Frederick A. Neumann, deceased. of L. G. Todd, Mr. Young was united in marriage to Miss Ida M. Shryder. Four children blessed this union, they being Earnest Young now a -:o:- Savings deposits are increasing in the United States, perhaps be cause you must pay some down on the auto. :o:- Frobably certain people would go in for a whirlwind campaign, but the Teapot Dome episode hasn't blown over yet. o:o Frost has not cut much of a fig ure. Yet, there is no telling how soon it may. 01:1 Jack has been very kind to us so far. :o: Of course a man isn't as good a shopper as a woman, but he can go shopping for a hat without coming home with a headache. :o: Calvin's reconciled to sending the ZR-3 to the North Pole. We gotta have some territory guaranteed to keep like the slogan Bays. :o: The difference between Ramsey MacDonald. British premier, and many Americans has been that the Americans could not afford automo biles, either, but they had them, ju3t the fiarae. -o:o- La Follette is certainly giving more worry to the republicans than he is to the democrats. The reports to the Literary Digest show that not one sixth of the vote comes from democrats. And each report indi cates an increased republican vote going to La Follette. On reading and filing the petition thriving business man of Weepin of Catherine Neumann praying that I Water, where he is engaged in he administration of said estate may be I hardware and furnishing business granted to Mollie Neumann as Ad- Madge, who died at the age of six ministratrix; I years; Harry loung, who was acci Ordered, that October 22. A. D. I dentally shot by himself while hunt 1924, at ten o'clock a. m. is assigned ing some 23 years ago, at the age of for hearing said petition, when all 14 years; Mrs. Janet Neat Munkers, persons interested in said matter may who makes her home at Casper v Io appear at a County Court to be held I Mr. Young has lived here for the n and for said county, and show I past 59 years, and he has seen the cause why the prayer of petitioner J rough as well as the other side of should not be granted; and that pioneer life, has experienced one of notice of the pendency of said peti- the worst of hail storms, in 188.$ tion and the hearing thereof be given I when he was caught out in it and to all persons interested in said save for what little his wagon af matter by publishing a copy of this I orded, no protection. He has worked order in the Plattsmouth Journal, I hard both summer and winter, and a semi-weekly newspaper printed in I now at the age of 76 years, still said county, for three successive I does more work than many younger weeks, prior to said day of hearing. Dated September 30, 1924. ALLEN J. BEESON, (Seal)" o2-3w. County Judge. men and with a good spirit, and ever willing to meet any one half way in any proposition which will benefit man. tsssssc FARM BUREAU NOTES CKIR0PHAQ7QR Copy for this Department furnished by County Agent 4 aTaaSiA amImZa a Ask Fly Patients! "THEY GET WELL" Phone No. 3. Schmidtman Building Standard Bred Single .'GRYBSKY Plattsmouth Phone 3604 Mynard, Fourth Annual Fair. The Cass County Fair was a decided success in every way. On Wednesday 78 babies were judged and the following were champions: Maryln Loretta Wilcox, Plattsmouth, and David Justin Ward, Avoca. Mrs. J. W. Carter had charge of this depart ment and she deserves the credit for the success of the baby show. Mrs. Emily Olive, superintendent EZSB3 of the Fancy Work, had 225 entries judged. Mrs. L. R. Snipes also re ported 225 entries in tne Domestic Science Dept. In the Girls Clothing Club Dept., the superintendent, Miss Jessie Baldwin, reported 85 entries. Rev. Evans had 164 entries in the Fine Arts Dept., and Supt. Schagool reported 25 school districts entered exhibits, mounted on cards with a total of 872 entries. There were also 7 school floats in the parade. The following won : First, Fairview School; Second, Second Laurel Hill; Third, Grand Parie. There were 132 plates of fruit ex hibited under the care or I. N. Hunt er. Mr. Troy Davis reponea j.tz entries in Farm Crops, or which 19 were yellow corn. The Supe. of the Hogs had 1SS hogs on exhibition. , Mr. E.E. Day said there were 11 Mxa1-.iaL-a mules. 11 horses and 6 sheep in his wriuon.u A . , "..j o. uepi LOUISVILLE WINS GAME The score of the From Monday's Daily Despite the fact that the weather conditions were more favorable for football than for the great national pastime of baseball, the Louisville team yesterday afternoon staged one of the last games of the season on their diamond and had as their op ponents a team representing Mur dock but which was in reality a group of players from all sections of the country and which gave the Louisville lads a merry chase for the honors of the day. game was 0 to o. The Louisville team were not play ing tneir usual helding game and several bobbles-on the part of the in field caused the visitors to profit therefrom in checking up runs, but they were not alone as the Murdock team caused victory to slip through their hands in the costly errors made on the infield. Hoffman, of Ashland, was the hurler for Murdock and after the first inning was ef fective and made a good showing, but lacked support. Rudolph Meising er, well known amateur player of near Cedar Creek, was on the hill for Louisville and Ike Jones did the re ceiving and both played a very strong game. Koop of Louisville and Klauschie of Plattsmouth did the umpiring and both escaped from the game with their lives and the good will of the players which is a real record for an umpire. RAIN OR SHINE! Q ii Labile SaS -OF-Registered and Grade rsev ttSe w3 and Spotted Poland-China Hogs! Sale will be held in the V. P. Sheldon Red Barn in the south pait of Nehawka, Nebraska Je 1 It is said unless a woman has bob bed hair it takes a pile driver to fit her with one of the new hats. The trouble with getting some body to help you speel a word is they look as if you were so ignorant. STATEMENT OF OWNERSHIP Management. Circulation, 11 c. Re quired by the Act of Con KTCm of Auk 24, 1912. Of THE PLATTSMOUTH JOURNAL, published daily and semi-weekly at I'luttsmoutli. Nebraska, for October 1 94. State of Nebraska County of Ca.s Before me, a Notary Public, in and for the state and county aforesaid, personally appeared 11. A. Bates, who, havinpr been duly sworn according to law, apposes and fays that he is the publisher of the riattsmouth Journal. nd that the following Is. to the best of his knowledge and belief, a true tatement of the ownership, manage ment (and if a daily paper, the circu- atlon), etc., or the aforesaid publica- ion for the date shown in the above caption, required by the Act of August 4. 1912, embodied in Section 443. Pos tal Laws and liegrulations, printed on he reverse or this form, to-wtt: 1 That the names and addresses of the publisher, editor, managing editor and business managers are: Publisher Ii. A. Bates. Plattsmouth. Nebraska. Kditor M. A. Bates, Plattsmouth, Nebraska. Managing Kditor R. A Bates, of Plattsmouth, Nebraska. Business Manager ii. A. Bates, of Plattsmouth, Nebraska. 2 That the owners are (Give names nd addresses of individual owners or. f a corporation, give its name and the names and addresses of stockholders owning or holding 1 per cent or more f the total amount of stock): Sole Owner Ii. A. Bates, Platts mouth. Nebraska. 3 That the known bondholders. mortgagees, and other security hold- rs owning or holding 1 per cent or more of total amount of bonds, mort gages, or other securities are: (If there are none, so state) Mergenthaler Linotype Co., .New York City. 4 That the two paragraphs next above, eiving the names of the ow ners, stockholders, and security hold- rs, if any, contain not only the list f stockholders and security holders as tliey appear upon the books of the company, but also. In cases where the tockholder or security noiuer appears non the books of the company as a rustee or in any other fiduciary rela tion. the name of the person or corpo ration for whom such trustee is act- ng, is given; also that the said two paragraphs contain statements em- rac nir affiant s full Knowledge ana hpllff as to the circumstances and con itions under which stockholders ana ecurity holders who do not appear pon ine hooks oi me cumpmij as rustees, hold stock and securities in capacity other than that of a bona tide owner: and that this affiant has o reason to believe that any other nerson. association, or corporation has anv interest direct or indirect in said stock, bonds, or other securities than as stated by him. 5 That the average number of cop ies, of each issue of this publication sold or distributed, through the mails or otherwise,' to paid subscribers dur ing the six months preceding the date shown above is 935. (This information required -for daily publications only). :Bemi-weekly circulation, 2,200. (.Signed) Ii. A. BATES. , Publisher. Commencing at 1:00 P. M. 40 Head of Govc, Bulls and Calves! 5 cows to be fresh before sale day; 7 cows to be fresh soon after sale; 9 coming 2-year old heifers, pasture bred between August I and September 1; 5 heifers coming yearlings, all open; 5 heifers ranging from 3 to 6 months of age; 2 matured bulls, 4 and 5 years old; 3 good bull calves. 24 Head of Spoiled Poland Hogs! These gilts are from Best of All's offspring by Pickett's Marvel 92133. Best of All 63374 and four of her gilts and Duke Lassie 192250 are all tried sows and produce large litters. All bred to Nebraska's Spotted Giant 93795. The two boars Pickett's Marvel 92133 and Nebraska's Spotted Giant 98795 are among the bnst boars of the breeed. Cattle are in Perfect Health and Tuberculin Tested. Hogs Have Received Double Immune Treatment. This will be your best opportunity to secure the best strain of milch cattle and Spotted Poland Ch'nas to be offered in this part of the state this season. The cattle are our own raising as are most of the hogs. Come and look them over before the sale. '3r Rex Young, Auct. tone k Son Bank of Union, Clerk ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE In the District Court of Caes coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the estate of John W. Yardley, Deceased. Now on this 3rd day of Septem ORDER OF HEARING on Petition for Appointment of -' Administrators The State of Nebraska, Cas3 coun ty, S3. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of A us her, A. D. 1924, it being one of the ; ust y. panska, deceased. On reading and filing the petition days of the regular May, A. D. 1924 I term of this court, this cause came on for hearing upon the petition of Alma Yardley, Administratrix of the estate of John V. 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 $3,100.00) and secure the same by giving a first mortgage on ine soutnwest 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 obligations. 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 a judgment and order should not be issued by the Court authorizing said administrat 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 Plattsmouth Journal. Dated this 3rd day of September, A. D. 1924. x JAMES T. BEGLEY, Judge of the District Court. s3-4w. Sworn to nd subscribed before me this 30th day of September. 1924. THOMAS WALLING, fSeall Xotarv Public. Mr. Bert Jameson reported 27 My commission expires March 21, 1925. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Hen ry Kuhnhenn, deceased. m 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 justment and allowance. The time limited for the presentation 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. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court, this 11th day of September, 1924. . ALLEN J. BEESON, (Seal) sl5-4w-sw County Judge. of Daniel J. Panska praying that ad ministration of said estate may Qi -granted to Daniel J. Panska and Henry Guthmann, as Administrat ors; Ordered, that October 22, A. D. 1924. at ten o'clock a. m. is assign ed for hearing said petition, when all persons interested in said matter may appear at a County Court to be held in and for said county, and show cause why the prayer of peti tioner 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 Jour nal, a semi-weekly newspaper print ed in said county, for three success ive weeks, prior to said day of hear i n pi" Dated September 22, 1924. ALLEN J. BEESON, (Seal) s25-3w County Judge. Sometimes talk is cheap. Some times it isn't. Often a little of ft costs a man a lot of money. soafr Autos! Any Make or Any Work and Guarantee Absolute Satisfaction IVERSON GARAGE Roy Long. Pearl Street. Debt is a bottomless sea Carlyle. Automobile Painlingi First-Class Work Guaranteed! Prices Reasonable Mirror Replating and Sign Work! A.T. KNOFLICEK, Phone 592-W, Plattsmouth