JICN3AY. JULY 26, 1926. PLATTSMOTJTH SE25I - WTZXLY JOTOITAI PAGZTHEXS Che platterrtou tb lourmal PUBLISHED SISH-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOTJTH. KEBIIAS2A EAtavod at PoatoXIc. Plat t mouth. Neb. mm comd-clM ms.ll matter SUBSC2IPTIC2I PUCE 2.00 PE00F BY WISDOM All this have I proved by -wisdom: I said, I will be wise; but it was far from me. That which is far off, and exceeding de p, who can find it out? Eei lesiasties 7:23-24. :o: Big brains grew and small ones swell. :o: No indictment against the woman evangelist. :o: God Almighty treated a smile and! little man puts on a long face. :o: It takes a promoter to unload a bad thing on to a "good thing." :o: Eve never trunted about the num ber of men who had proposed to her. -:o:- I the bravest are the tenderest the steer that provided our dinner wasjthan having a lawyer do it a coward. -:o: Some people in this town we can better get along without. Who? Why the knockers, of course. :o: Apparently all prime look alike to the French can fall under any of them :o: mimsters franc. It A preacher is no better than any other man, when he commits murder, and should be likewise punished. j :o: I When grandma was a young girli rhe used her hands these days she' uses her feet, either to dance or drive a car. j :o: j Correct this sentence: "Let's movej into a cheaper neighborhood," said the wife, "regardless of what our friends think. :o:- When a man finds that he can no longer etop a woman's argument with a kiss, he begins to suspect that she's going to be reasonable."' :o: If the band concerts are for the bencfit of the whole people, why not' have them oa the courthouse lawn : 0: A French typist produced ninety-; four worda a minute for an hour. But ir.at prooaory man t mvoive asting, the boss hew to spell it or getting into; an argument with hira about the punctuation. sue or n iture A Public Auction of Extra Good Furniture, nearly all new, will be held at the Vallery Sales Pavillion in Piattsmouth, Nebr., on Saturday Evening, July 31 at 7:15 P.M. If ever ihere was a time to buy real Furniture at your own price, come to this sale, as all must be sold and v.ill be sold to you if you have the best bid on it. This Sale Consists as Follows 1 Duofold with mattress. 2 Rockers. 1 Library Table, good as new. 1 Real good Dining Room Table and 6 Good Chairs to match. 1 Buffet. 1 Dresser. 1 Commode. 2 Full siize Beds, each with Mattress and real good Springs. 1 Gas Stove, nearly new. 1 Kitchen Table with porcelain top. 1 Cupboard. 1 Congoleum Rug, 9x12. 1 Axminster Rug, 9x12, used very little. Several smaller Rugs. 1 Bridge Lamp, brand new. Many other small articles that are usefitd in the home will be sold. C. H. BOYNTOW Owner of the Above REX YOUNG, Auctioneer. BATES, Publisher PEE TEAS ES ADVAXCS A gentleman never regrets it. :o: Pretty fair salesday yesterday for a starter. :o: Man is oftentimes a pris.oner locked up in his own ignorance. :o: - There are two causes of cussedness: (1) poverty, and (2) prosperity. :o: Poor old France is having a hard time of it. She is badly oat of kilter. :o: Buildin a monument to a great: mind is like placing a lantern in the sun. -:o:- When a man gets up in the world a good reputation often comes in handy ss a parachute. :o: Education Defends Modern College' Youth Headline. Still, that's better -:o:- J Every woman wants love as a it steady diet but a man regards merelv as life's little seasoning. -:o: The leading business men of Platts- mouth are trying fcard enougn to induce people to buy in this city. ! :c: ' Senator t ole Biease says so-cauea education has ruined ma.ny a good farm hand." the senate. So has an election to Now comes the season when lovely woman kicks up an awful row if she can't have a few clothes and the fewer the better. i :o: j How the Coolidge advocates must chuckle over those advertisments which set forth that "success depends entirely upon personality." ' :o: w. . i. : r . n .-. ; .. l n 11 IS SO UlUvii t-usiti ti a fcii i i" find a man who would be willing to. "leave home " for her, than it is to! find one who will stay hone for her :o: People who have believed in a mil- lennium will be gratified to learn that th'e railroads are announcing sum- mrr rates to the East for the first time in years. O . The Italian ship on which Tonzi : was arrcsieci was caneu i.ue on. "3 Ycbis. but those who try to find it in their Italian dictionaries aren't roing to do very well. (da In some parts of France the coun try people, upon the approach of a thunder storm, adorn their hats with pprays of hawthorn leaves to protect them from lightning. :o: The men who went around the world in 28 days found ariplane serv ice worse in the United States than in any other country they traversed. The first shall be last. :o:-, J. L. Garvin, the British editor, says that fifty years hence the United States will have 500.000,000 people. Maybe we had better add more teeth to our immigration laws. :o:- Is it not a poor policy to bankrupt the country to keep highly paid graft- ters in office under the pretense of, enforcing the law. The people are not; in for it, but the grafters are. :o: A Milwaukee man with a broken neck went into a drug store and asked for medicine. But Mnwaukee drug - gists have no mdeicine that is good ! i l i I mi uiuiven neeKs not now, anyway. i -:o:- Opie Read says the objection to most orators is that they continue to j talk after the truth gives out. The objection to many of them is that they havn't any truth on hand when they begin to talk. If the old fellow who rang the Liberty Bell could have foreseen that ithe amusement street at the Ses- quicentennial would be called the "Gladway," he would probably have refused to ring a tap. :o: fcrenator Borah plans to speak in every state in the union, in opposi - tion to American entry into the world ourt. Then if he has anv limp lif over, he'll probably go and speak to th? worl(J court abQut n tQQ Yes it is all right for Will Hays to Stop the movies from twitting the cry law, out it s luciry tie s not tne czar of vaudeville, or all our come dians would have to start selling in rurance or go back to barbering. -:o: When a man asks a girl to change her name, somehow he mentions all the other things he expects her to change with it hair cut. her meal hours, her doctor, her lawyer, her : politics and her taste in colors and jQjjf.j :o:- I co;iif I'iiuuiuaira aiu uoiiig hiusi ul their electioneering here in Platts- mnnti, That isn't -nin- in them . anything. Get out and see the farm-jyou crs and their woes. They are the ones that are going to do the talking and j voting this year. TVin t-nnnp fo!lrtv n-hr, line n lriR'pn d" hnut br,akfast down in t(nvn am armchair lunch and eats a delicatessen dinner out of paper bags when he gets home in the eve- : ning. nine times out of ten has mar - rr.'Kl ...., IT--l r- - 4ried some fool girl because she was a good dancer. -:o:- DAV7ES A1TD THE FILLIBUSTEH Vice President Dawes will continue his crusade against the Senate rules this summer he is expected to make a good many speeches assailing rule 22 1 . ... . . . and the senate habit of talking about anything it pleases, as long as it pleases and whenever it pleases. And eleventh-hour, one-man filibuster which held up senate action on cer tain phases of the primary fund inves tigation before adjournment has giv en him a fresh text. The vice presi dent was scrupulously careful to en force the very rule which he has at tacked. He gave the senate a heavy dose of its own cherished medicine. He made little headway with his cru sade in the first session. At no time was he able to dramatize his fight. Nobody was much interested in it. Then the senate, in its closing, plas-ed directly into his hands. The queru-; lous-voiced Cameron of Arizona, with his little eleventh-hour and fifty-i ninth minute filibuster, has given the! Dawes campaign a new lease on life. ;o: LAWLESS LAWYERS ; All persons of every class are under legal and moral duty to obey the law w ithout reference to their conceptions of whether the law be wise or un wise. ; If any one class of persons be under .special obligation in this respect it is the lawyers themselves. A lawyer who wittingly violates any law is un- worthy of his. profession, j The supreme court of Kansas re j cently disbarred a lawyer because he jwas found guilty of having intoxicat . ing liquor in his possession and its judgment was just and proper, j The attention of the bench and bar of this state is called to the decision i mentioned. In all proper cases it'f j should be followed. Disbarment pro-jT ,ceedings should be prosecuted when ai. ( lawyer wittingly violates any law. If j our lawyers will not observe the lawj! little can be expected of the average icitizen. When It Gomes to expert auto repair work we con sider ourselves fully competent to un- dertake the most intricate job. There is no part of your car, regardless of make, that we cannot replace or re- r r plant is equipped with modern ma chinrey and our mechanics are com- , peter.t and quick. We Ere gle.d to give estimates on any kind of a job. I Frady's Garage Phone 58 IF COMPETITORS ANNOY A few words to the business man more particularly the storekeeper confronted with the fact of unexpect ed competition: Accept this as a challenge. Don't shrivel under it. But neither waste energy and lose neighborhood good will by inveighing against and de- : nuncing the competitor as an inter- loper who is not to be trusted, Just as tmlv a all the world loves a lover, so does all the world hate and suspect a knocker. The more adjectives you use in des j cribing the newcomer who has in- - V;.iU.l vrmr Urritnrv flip mnrp cnrelv you will urive traue away. Take him for granted. To all inquisitive questioners make the smiling response. "I guess there' is room for both of us." Then hustle to hold the ground won in the past. Take stock of 3-our gods. Take Ktock of yourself. You may have lapsed storekeep- ers, like evervbody else, are liable to, i apPe into easy going wavs. You may have let your stock become low Errade. and your service low grade likewise. i?.fCn onv i-.nrOT. t ti-ffi. ir, har. ' .. , '.. ns are mn rt.au uargHim.. " Lave lined yourself with the sub- t 5titutors. get out of their ranks: forih with. Do some window dressing. And do some soul dressing. Awake ,if need be, to the importance of making good cn everything you say. When you haven't what is asked for, admit it frankly. Don't hope toj were on tner way tQ Kansas to spend get by with something that will give .their two weeks' vacation. ,tlje purchaser scant satisfaction un- I . ! less he or she knows that you are sell ing the best yon have. And make it a point to stock up ; with the articles that reallv are want ed. The margin of profit may be less, j I lit that will be more than compensat ed by growth of business. In a word, make eonnetition a rtim- . . , . uius instead of a grievance. That is the sensible course for you to follow the only course if you are not to be driven to the wall. "Which holds true in every occupa tion, from storekeeping to the meet ing of the most intellectual or aes thetic needs of man. :o: Robbers cracked a safe in Miami, Fla., and secured $3.4 5. The dis patch failed to say whether it was a bank or a real estate office. JL! RESIDENT X KANSAS OTXMO- here the Hospitality of the old South meets the (jnerostiy of the neuAVest in theeavt of cAmerica 450 ROOMS WITH BATH (3XOAND UP Dr. John A. r.rifFiu ?i Dentist Office Hours: 9-12; 1-5. Sundays and evenings by appointment only. PHONE 22 Soennichsen Building 4 J 4. 4 J.) J. J. J i zz2$ 4 , 4 i. i 0RIGIN OF B0EBED HAIR Origin of bobbed hair is now defi- nitely laid to the Revoluationarv war. .-,. T Discovery by Captain L. C. Baird an army officer, of dusty old Contin ental army records stored for years in the Schuylkill arsenal at Philadelphia chows America's first shinele was: worn by the American doughboy and ( plea for their estates. There appears j6tn jay OI August, 1926. and the not by the American flapper. to be a general approval of any ar-.i7th day of November, 192G, at 9 Bobbing the hair was even made a I rangement that will Fhield Wilhelm o'c lock a. m.. of each day, to re matter of general orders for the sold-'from the necessity of trying to earn ' ( t!y,e and examine all claims against . i ,. . - x said estate, with a view to their ad- ler oi l o, trie ancient documents indicate. One such decree, issued at West Point, is oddly at variance with the present-day West Point traditions which frown on anything but the 'trimmest of hair-cuts. "As the head dress of a soldier is one of the first and necessary orna , ments." it reads, "the captain com 1 mands the N. C. officers and privates nf fret ri'dmcnt in nnvp ttipir tiair' - , 'T 7. l" i ., 'cut behind not to exceed seVen inches, long and close to the head. n r-. 0,1 the second regiment to have their hair tied behind in a bob cut close to the head, the hair of the whole to be .deceased; that said instrument be ad n,,t th fnn r,f th hPrt Bhnrt andlmitted to Probate, and the adminis brushed back. The officers command ing companies will see that this order is carried into effect as soon as possi ble." This.may be n shocking bit of news to the erstwhile Mrs. Vernon Castle, who has been generally credited with originating the boyish bob, but facts are facts, and this is a bit of historj that canot be contradicted. PROGRESSIVE CANDIDATES Like Atlee Pomerene in Ohio, form er Senator, John F. Nugent is to try a comeback in Idaho. Both these Dem ocrats went down in the Harding landslide of 1920. If Nugent is re turned to the senate there will be less point to the trick question one Hears in Washington: "Who is the other senator from Idaho?" Nugent of late months has been performing a valuable service on flie Federal Trade Commision in helping his fellow minority member, Huston Thompson, to turn the light on the methods of the reactionary majority. If this record is a criterion Nugent's election over Frank R- Gooding, who is Borah's present colleague, would measurably strengthen the progressive group in the senate. :o:- ATJTO ACCIDENT ! Friday afternoon, a car, driven by Mr. Hvatt, who was accompanied by his W1:fe and little daughter, upset about a mile north of town, and Mr. Hyatt was badly cut about the face by flying glass, and narrowly escaped serious injury to his eyes. Mrs. Hyatt had her collar bone broken and was more or less bruised, while the little girl escaped injury. Mr. Hyatt, who is a railroad man. 1 livire- nt Vnrf.ilk. and the family. After receiving first aid here, the o - YI-1 C? -T-Crl i S Vl O T1'. ?1 Trt PQ 7fl P" emergencv repairs made and they re turned to Omaha to have repairs made to their car, and declared their inten- ' . r F 7- , . . ? a. - r fun An UUI1 Ul pri'l rrui lis un lu iau?as, termined not to let their vacation be interfered with. publican. -Weeping Water Re- TOB SALE The Sophia Schafer farm, four miles west and five miles north of Murray. See F. G. Egenberger. Piattsmouth. Business stationery, programs and all kinds of job printing at the Jour nal office. NOTICE OF HEARING on Petition for Determination of Heirship. Estate No. of Caroline Tartsch, deceased, in the county court of Cass county, Nebraska. The State of Nebraska, to all per sons interested in said estate, credi tors and heirs take notice, mat George Tartsch, who is one of the heirs of said deceased and Interested in such, has filed his petition alleg ing that Caroline Tartsch died in testate in riattsmouth. Nebraska, on or about April 25th, 1915, being a resident and inhabitant of Piatts mouth, Cass county, Nebraska, and the owner of the following described real estate, to-wit: An undivided one-half of Lots eight (S), nine (9) and ten (10) in Block forty-seven (47) in the i said C'ty of Piattsmouth, Cass county. Nebraska leaving as her fcole and only heirs at law the following named persons, to-wit: August Tartsch, her husband; Dorothy Thornburg, a daughter; Henry H. Tartsch, a son; Delia Tartsch, a daughter, and George Tartsch, a son That said decedent died intestate; that no application for administra tion has been made and the estate of said decedent has not been adminis tered in the State of Nebraska, and i;tnai tne court determine wao are 4 the heirs of sai3 deceased, their de- t'gree of kinship and the right of de- scent in the real property of which the deceased died seized, which has been set for hearing on the 20th day of August, A. D. 1926, at 10 oclock a. m. Dajed at Piattsmouth, - Nebraska, this 15th day of July, A. D. 1926. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) County Judge. FARM FOR SALE The Dovey section. Will sell in one ' ' Piece or will divide to suit purchaser, See or write Q H ALLEN - J Omaha. Nebr. Omaha, Nebr, 2220 Howard Street. I The Iloherzollerns had to make a a iimiih as a painter or a poet. 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 es tate of Harry S. Barthold, deceased: On reading the petition of Ralph , , ! n.... -x.- iAl u. .nfe 1 , ment filed in this court on the 9th day of July, 1926. and purporting f'to be the last will and testament of the Raul rleeeased. mav be Droved and aliowed and recorded as the last will and testament of Harry S. Barthold, tration of said estate be granted to Alta Halter and Murl Wheeler, as Executrixes; It is hereby ordered that you, and all persons interested in said matter, wt -i -I 1 r r. a t ti n -f iitii vr C(jurt tQ be h(?Id jn and for Ba,d county, on the 2nd day of August, A. D. 1926, at ten o'clock a. m., to show cause, if any there be why the . I prayer or tne petitioner suouiu nui 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 Piattsmouth 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 9th day of July, A. D. 1926. A. II. DUXBURY. (Seal) jl2-3w County Judge. NOTICE OF HEARING on Petition for Determination of Heirship. Estate No. of August Tartsch, deceased, in the County Court of Cass county, Nebraska. The State of Nebraska, to all per sons interested in said estate, credi tors and heirs take notice, that George Tartsch, who is one of the heirs of said deceased, and interested in such, has filed his petition al leging that August Tartsch died in testate in Piattsmouth, Nebraska, on or about March 17, 1918, being a resident and inhabitant of Piatts mouth, Cass county. Nebraska, and the owner of the following described real estate, to-wit: An undivided four-sixths or two-thirds interest in and to Lots eight (S), nine (9) and ten (10), in Block forty-seven in the City of Piattsmouth, Cass county, Nebraska leaving as his sole and only heirs at law the following named p3rsons, to-wit: Dorothy Thornburg, a daugh ter; Henry H. Tartsch, a sou; Delia Tartsch, a daughter, and George Tartsch, a son That said decedent died intestate; that no application for administra tion has been made and the estate of said decedent has not been adminis tered in the State of Nebraska, and that the Court determine who are the heirs of said deceased, their degree of kinship and the right of descent in the real property of which the deceased died seized, which has been set for hearing on the 20th day of August. A. D. 1926, at 10 o'clock a. m. Dated at Piattsmouth, Nebraska, this 15th day of July, A. D. 1926. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) County Judge. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In Re: Application of Frank A. Cloidt, Administrator of the estate of Charles H. Sheldon, deceased, for license to sell real estate to pay debts. Nov, on this 10th day of July, A. D. 1926, comes Frank A. Cloidt, ad ministrator of the estate of Charles H. Sheldon, deceased, and presents his petition for a license to sell the real estate of the deceased to pay debts; and it appearing from said pe tition that there is insufficient amount of money in the hands of the administrator to pay the claims pre sented and allowed by the County Court; and the expense of said ad ministration, and that it is necessary to sell the whole of said real estate of said deceased for the payment of claims and the costs of administra tion; It is therefore ordered and adjudg ed that all persons interested in the estate of Charles H. Sheldon, deceas ed, appear before me, James T. Beg ley, Judge of the District Court, at the office of the Clerk of the District Court in the court house in the City of Piattsmouth, in Cass county, Ne braska, on the 30th day of August, 1926, at the hour of ten o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any there be, why such license should not'taxes Paid thereunder for the years be e-ranted to Frank A. Cloidt. Ad- 1921. 1922. 1923, 1924 tzd 1925 ministrator of said estate, to sell all and for equitable relief. of the real estate of said deceased.! This notice is given pursuant to so as to pay claims presented and al-.an order of the Court. lowed with costs of administration. It is further ordered that notice be. given to all persons Interested by the publication of this Order to Show, Cause for four successive weeks in i the Piattsmouth Journal, a legal newspaper published and of general circulation in said County of Cass, Nebraska. By the Court. JAMES T, BEGEY, jl2-4w District Judge. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cas. coun- ty. ss. In the County Court. ln tne matler of the estate of I Henry C. Long, deceased. To the creditors of said estate: You are hereby notiifieid. that I pinftetmnnl h in Raid eolintv. nn th iustment and allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claims against said estate is three months from the ICth day of August. A. D. 1926, and the time limited for pay ment of debts is one year from said ICth day of August. 1926. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court, this 12th day of Julv, 192C. A. H. DUX BURY. (Seal) jl9-4w County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING on Petition for Appointment of Administrator. The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Ma hala Hendricks, deceased. On reading and filing the petition of John Hendricks praying that ad ministration of said estate may be granted to Glen Boedc-ker, as Admin istrator; Ordered, that August 10th. A. D. 1926, 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 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 Baid matter bj- publishing a copy of this order in the Piattsmouth Journal, a semi weekly newspaper rrinted in said county, for three successive weeks prior to said day of hearing. Dated at Piattsmouth, Nebraska, July 13, 1926. A. 11. DUXBURY. (Seal) jl9-3w County Judge. NOTICE OF REFEREE SALE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. Frank Albin. Earl Albin, Alfreda Albin, Edith Buhrman, Fred Buhr roan, Ada Beckner, Roscoe 1$. I3e k ner, James B. Nickles and Lillie Nickles, Plaintiffs, vs. Lee Nickles, Charles Nickles, Jose Nickles, George Nickles, Gertrude Nickles. Amanda Wurdman, John Wurdman. Fannie Crosser and Etta M. Nickles, Defend ants. Notice is hereby given that under and by virtue of a decree of the Dis trict Court of Cass county, Nebras ka, entered in the above entitled cause on the 29th day oZ June. 1926, and an Order of Sale entered by said court on the 6th day of July. 1926. the undersigned, sole referee, will sell at public auction on the 16th day of August, 1926. at ten o'clock a. m. of said day, at the south front door of the courthouse in the City of Piattsmouth, Cass county. Nebraska, to the highest bidder for cash, the following described property, to-wit: The west half (W4) of the southeast quarter (SEU) and the south half (SVi ) of the southwest quarter (SW'4 ) of the northeast quarter (NEVi) of and in Section thirty-six (26) and the southwest quarter (SW1,; ) of and in Section thirty six (36), all in Township eleven (11), North of Range thirteen 13). east of the 6th P. M., in said Cass county. Said sale will remain open for one hour. Fifteen per cent (15) of bid cash at time of sale and balance on confirmation and delivery of deed. Dated this 10th day of July, A. D. 1926. D. O. DWYER. jl2-4w Referee. LEGAL NOTICE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. Byron Golding. riaintiff, vs. F. IL VanDoren, real name unknown, et al. Defendants. To the Defendants F. IL VanDoren, real name unknown; Mrs. F. 11. Van Doren, real name unknown; Charles M. Baldwin and Mrs. Charles M. Baldwin, real name unknown; the unknown heirs, devisees, legatees, personal representatives and all other persons interested in the respective estates of F. H. VanDoren, deceased, real name unknown; Mrs. F. H. Van Doren, deceased, real name unknown; Charles M. Baldwin, deceased, and Mrs. Charles M. Baldwin, deceased, real name unknown, real names un known: You and each of you are hereby notified that on the 26th day of June. 1926, plaintiff filed his suit in the District Court of Cass county. Nebraska, the object and purpose of which is to foreclose Tax Sale Cer tificate Number 5279, on Lot 9 in the NEU of the SW of Section 16, Township 12 North of Range 9, East of the 6th P. M., in Cass county, Ne braska, issued by the County Treas urer of Cass county, Nebraska, on November 8, 1921. and subsequent are nereoy required to answer said petition on or before Monday, the 16th day of August. 1926. In failing so to do, your default will be entered therein and judgment taken upon piainiin s petition. BYRON GOLDING, Plaintiff. By A. L. TIDD, HIa Attorney. - j5-4w All the sevs in the Journal.