TuOIfDAY. AUGUST 9, 192G. PLATTSMOUTH SEM . WIECLt JOtTE&iS PAGET: he plattsmouth lournal FCELISHED SESC-WEEKLY AT Eatrd at Potofflc. Plattsmoutb, R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCEIPTIOS PUCE $2.00 PEE YEAR EN AD VAN CI THE LAWS AND STATUTES THE LORD OF The law of the Lord is perfect, converting the soul: the testimony of the Lord is sure, making wise the sim ple. The statutes of the Lord are right, rejoicing the heart; the com mandment of the Lord is pure, en lightening the eyes. Wore to be de tirt'd are they than gold, yea, than much fine gold; sweeter also than honey and the honeycomb. Psalms 19:7-10. :o: In France. t!i the cabinets seem to be takiiig French leave. :o: Only a fool v.olf would hang around the door of a starving man. :o: Alas! Rich relatives are usually dis-; tant relatives or close relatives. :o: Maybe men don't kiss their wives more because rouge is expencive. -:o: Washington's dope probe should; take in the Congressional Record. :o: Harritd Chicago bandits got only $33,000, missing a case of booze. :o: Many a man who says he doesn't, i-hew tobacco smokes nickel cigars. :o: I There are almost as many people car.-ed out of office as there are sworn in. Americans have no mandate terri- tory. Thry do rieht at home. all of their killing The captains jmu kings depart, butidjde which lighter's hug did more the generals seem to stick around to start something. -:o: When two women talk the subject of tleir conversation is often con- EpiCMOiisly absent. :o: American tourists purchase 30 per cent of the liquor sold in Montreal and Quebec, Canada. :o: There are thousands of millionaire Dootieggers wno ciun t nae me ynvc of a pair of shoes before prohibition. ro: Looks like Harry Hawes. senator cn the democratic ticket, in Missouri, and Williams on the republican ticket. . . i i - i i , 1 Aj. Gene Tuney has applied for a lincense to fight Jack Dempsey. But that will give him no license to lick him. -:o: The nomination for sheriff seems to be the great struggle in Cass coun ty. Who he will be is still in the dark. :o: McKir.ley rpent $350,000 in his un- successful campaign, which probably , brings him down to his last ten or fifteen million. :o: . . -u.- ine criminal cuuu ui v-uaagu presided over by one Judge Lynch.' There is lots of business up there for a Judge of that name. How is Your Engine Performing? That knocking that comes when you try to climb a grade on high is a sign of excessive carbon. The remedy is to have us remove the head, clean the cylinders and grind the valves. The operation will give your car new power and result in a saving of gas. Our charge for doing the job will be most reasonable. See us about it today. Frady's Garage Phone 58 ii ii PLATTSMOUTH, NEEEASXA Neb. u itooid-dtu mall matter For wealth the farmer needs no longer hanker. If he wUl tell his troubles to the banker; The only thing the farmer needs is money To make his farm a land of milk and honey. :o: A new cigar is to be named "Ford," so perhaps it backfires. :o: Golf seems to make a man healthy so he can play more golf. :o: Make your will before going swim ming while you are too hot. o: Never leave a grindstone exposed, where mosquitoes can use it. :o:- Evervthing is being blamed for tb,e i ii 1 1 to . I i crime wave except criminals. .0. Matrimony is the peak of Rickard's I long career as a fight promoter :o: Going without stockings isn't ex- pensive enough to become a fad. j :o: 1 Thirteen hanged in Turkey, reminds us that Thanksgiving is coming. :o: Someone coins away for the week- end stole 35 dresses in Milwaukee. o A man will blame his son for eny- thing except Laving such parents. :o: People seldom regret an experience cr tv, cnri, i-ro they merely regret the sore place. :o: ' a Sr ixj-.-.s man bit his wife, but m,ybe she made him lead a do3's life. So often the referee has only to damairt. ' . . . . Every' nian and woman should vote f"""" at the primary, but then they won't, any more, and 10 years from now by a long shot. j wo sha11 not know so definitely as we :o: ! do today a great many other things American women didn't have nerves that are not so. when they could get relief by spank- In 191S the Prime Minister of Great ing the children. :o: A doctor tells us he is treating a patient for heart trouble, so is afraid to send him a bill. ' i :o: . There is not enough attention paid to the primaries. If there was, we would perhaps have better officers. :o: It's like threading a needle with a camel for a poor man to enter the senate from Illinois or Pennsylvania. :o Now that the primaries are enaing . - Iscme new use will have to be discover- for tbe back emis of automobiles, A LONESOME JOB The presidency has a curious iso- lation. The one man who can summon everybody is often the lonlies. man in the whole lana. i o a Doisterou&iy &u-, cial being the strain would be killing. Coolidge is not a boisterously so- v.:t, n;H Wnchhurn uoi uc-"b. nm. , Child In the Saturday Evening Post. Lonliness afflicted Harding, it afflict- ed Wilson tragically, and it wore ten settiements which did not settle misjudged and mishandled interven- Lincoln saie ueposu company, a cor down Taffs nerves. Once a man steps anything for very long. j tion in Tacna-Arica. but the same un- 1! Dad into the White House he becomes in The fundamental reason why these imaginative convictions that all man- F. Tighe; Ma'rguriet Tighe, also writ some degree a person who must g,.eat international war debts cannot ' kind is to be measured by the moral ten Marguerite Tighe; S. Matthews; suspect those who approach him. ! be regarded as ordinary debts is that ideas of. let us say. the senate of the .liTT J. Wise; Elizabeth Wise; Jen How could it be otherwise? They they are dead. They do not represent United States has shown itself 'in JyB"if :Jef T GaymanWiUiam come so often wanting something capital invested in a living enterprise their dealings with other Latin-Amer- Matthews;' Charles Matthews; Ray wanting office, wanting to flatter, ,vhjcu Droduccs as it goes along the ican problems. In this spirit they Booth; Boyd E. Booth; Donald Booth; (wanting to hoodwink, wanting to in- portune. wanting to make impressions deeper than the truth. The old fre-- debt is productive for the debtor, but small respect for the liberties of Bmall Watson, first and real name un dom of easy human intercourse hs these international debts are like bills nations in the Caribbean. known; George E. Watson; Annie gone; the air takes on the Chill of un- submitted to pay for tne damage done They have utterly denied the an- onne": F?T& W"8011: Zf" Pf naturalness, watchfulness, a settled on a party by one's grandfather. ' cienl American tradition of asylum Luce; Eva Ingaham; George and timid and fabricated relationship. The payment seems to the debtor like for political refugees, and in their King; Howard King; Grace Lively; If the president picks new warm a pure losg and when u is paid by, handling of conspicuous cases like Jennie King; Mary L Bullis; Farm friends, these friends are called Whi'e one natjon to anotber it Eeems nke that of the Karolyis they have invited &te WtS.n' 1" House pets. Immediately there is ct- tribute by the conquered to the con-' universal derision. In respect to ofealTame is Ed Bauers; ld tributed to them strange powers of queror Money borrowed to build a Europe they have pursued a self-des- Mary Doe, whose real name is Elsie influence; they are beseiged by favir ranroad earns money to pav for itself ! tructive and self-contradictory pro- Bauers, are defendants, I will at ten seekers; they are branded by the f But money borrowed to fight a war! gram; they are demanding huge debt 2'c?5i 1 "J nMB Stheuth vious as having wormed their way in- produces nothing, and if it has to be payments, and they insist on the froPnt door' of th"e Cass county court 10 pcnermeni. :o:- A Frenchman has invented the see ing telephone, which we hope will be suppressed. What chances has a man calling up his wife and telling her why he will not be home for dinner If she can see his fact? :o: We are in favor of the majority rule in the Democratic National Con vention. Democracy has always favor ed the majority rule. :o: FAEM FOE SALT. The Dovey section. Will sell in one piece or will divide to suit purchaser, ings of the great-grandsons of the men Eucharistic Congress, said with ex See or write ALLEN who directed the war. Is it conceiv- quisite inappropriateness that Ameri-J Omaha Nebr. able tuat for tne rest of tnis century ca is accused of undue attention to' 2220 Howard Street. " (this thing will go on? Does anybody material things, because "in that dl-J I . i AMERICA'S MORAL ISOLATION (From The St. Louis Post- In the last six year; the role of the' Dispatch.) United States has been transformed frnm that nf n sairinr into that of a ... i. scapegoat. We can, if we like, take . , , ., , n cvnirnl viotx- nf this rnllnnsp OI , . , .4,i, future in any such fashion as this, American popularity and say with ' . , . To us the war was a great event. But Senator Borah that we were flattered . -i&ort t- x.- a i,nninr'alrea(3y there is a generation out In ! for favors, and that we were denounc , . . 'edge of it. In a few years those of us ed in 1926 because Europe would like. , ., , , . , . , . . . 1 who lived through the war will seem iu vteicii uu lis ucuis. mis is me tac-j- j explanation and the most flattering to our own vanity. But it. is not the ex planation which will yield the most wisdom, for it is a half-truth. It is fiinrlitriontilK' fi c m 5 cl fo A 5 ti tr oe t Ti . . , tt - .ilthe preposterous idea that from now current theory abroad that the United . . , States has taken advantage of the weakness of Europe to set up an eCO- , . ... , There will never be a solution of the problems of the war while men insist on looking for shining heroes and black villains. We are dealing here with history, not with melo- rama, and jn the historic world notb- . . . , o iing is so childish as hatred and self - I i ,... 5 . i. : Sr. , uuu"us ia B" uc . . , . about the motives of nations, their, guilt or innocence. This habit of mind' . . . . . . ... can be laid only to controversies hke that between Mr. Churchill and Mr. .Mellon, to stupid invective like that' emitted by Lord Rothermere and Sena 1 tor Borah. The problem is to find a pane an( honorable cburse for the future and to leave to the historians and ultimately to God the question of who has behaved .the worst in a time when events were too great for the iiitiuu anu iu, y of the people. The only men who are dead sure about the history of the world since (1914 are the men who do not know !.anything about it. Those who have studied the known facts longest and . , .v. , i . m0st carefullv are the least readv to . . . , ,. , h7 praise and blame. For they know how . . . .,..,, mixed were the motives, how blindlj tfae decisions were laken how con.( ' fused and complicated the circumstan ces, len years ago we Knew ior cer tain that on a particular day at a particular hour at Potsdam the World 11".. wlnnvu-..! " T " Ar nr IrYintv Britain thought Germany couia pay 'the whole cost of the war. In 1919 he . nmii v fnr n thr ' property destroyed, and or pensions, in 1923 he announced that he would ,be satisfied to collect from Germany,""" uu",c' lul """'" and Britain's allies enough to repay the United States. From 191S to 1923 one French Prime Minister after an- other thought the French army could' collect enough money from Germany to pay all the French debts.. From iq?n tn mR the President and Con-' . . . n r V.rt 1 'ti i t .. (.nvne. tllAMIThr - - - -hey could collect the whole foreign debt of Europe. Slowly but surely these beautiful theories have wither- ed Each time a beautiful theory died a less beautiful but more proc- t, , thforv waa rrfatpd to take its piace But this process the world got to the Dawes plan and the debt settle-. men tg Tney are still ralher beauti.jiuai pan oi tne ona ful and not wnoiiy practical. It is Toward the Latin j question of time, and a little . , more experience, wnen tney win pasa into history along with the Versailles, tne London, the Spa and other forgot-, interest and the principal to repay the money which was loaned. An ordinary naid it becomes a dead morteaes tain- erimposed upon all the living credits of a nation. The United States has engaged it self to collect for the next two gen- erations the sum of $400,000,000 a( exports. They abstain from participa year on a dead debt. Most of the vet-( tion in the organization of peace, and erans of the war will be gone. Their every time they make a speech they children born after the war, knowing ooze with good advice to Europe. They no more of its reality than an Amer-'are ican college Doy Knows or tne civil i War, will be elderly men, their chil- dren, in turn, will be approaching middle age, and still the huge pay- ments wil go on. The last instalments will be paid in part out of the earn- really think he lives in a world where' such things are possible? Let us not deceive ourselves. Mr. Coolidge and Mr" Mellon and Mr nor an ana .air., eaiawin ana Ji. 1 Briand and the Other gentlemen who have made these arrangements will not Dia posterity or mortgage tne i not bid posterity or mortgage the i the world which has almost no knowl- like reminiscent old bores to the i young people, who will have many better things to do than hash over the rights and wrongs of 1914-1918. Yet here we are deluding ourselves with I ments are going to be bothered with carrying out what to them will be perfectly meaningless settlements. Al- H J . . ready Mr. Mellon and Mr. Churchill can't quite remember what the money The next generation I certainly, our own if it is wise, will c, f- tr ftm foro nf tVio sniUnco int hpr , , , ..... w a land animosity, that these settlements this position, the Borahs, the Reeds, , , . v. . -j entail- To tin, rnct Vio noct'lat thp thoHoornts a Tifl t n 1 1 mifl srlOrtSlEnt- i . cn i . i. -i""" . I h,irvthp 1- W fnret let us forgive, let us have peace. , , , . . . .Shis ,1 Knio non V. t A morfl T 2,1J7 LU 11 W L 11 1 V V- 1. 11 1 1 1 1 V .1111. . .. sj uii iCpaiu " I . 1 ..t x 1 A repiy l we art as payers wuo uo not iiite to pay taxes peace ui iuia cuuutij iui run.n u any better than Mr. Borah does. There phantom debt collection will ever re are much more important matters pay it. than taxes. The international posi-, They misrepresent the best of which tion of the United States is much America is capable. They appeal to more important. In the last 10 years our meanest, not our best, instinct, destiny has brought this nation to For six years the spirit that made a place of unexpected power in the America an ideal for mankind has world. That new position creates problems which were undreamed of in that age when Mr. Borah and Mr. j tight-lipped, mean and evasive "ash- wnole the being. either by par Johnson acquired what knowledge ion, have tried to teach this great peo- j eel or whole as shall bring the most tViP-v have nf human nffairs. It is a' nloe to ienore its dutv to mankind return: ,,i,. .0c ""'-' - wnetner tne men wno conauct our ai- . fairs can find enough wisdom in themselves to meet the unprecedented responsibilities which our wealth, our 1 power, our size and historic circum- stances have thrust upon them. Thus far, to speak plainly, they have sacrificed the larger interests of. this country to the clamorous exped-' iency of the moment. Look back at the record of the last six years, a rec- ord in which, we hasten to add, the ' Democrats have had a hand alongj with the Republicans. Congress and the administration. between them, have acted as if they "believed it was of no Importance whatever whether we won or lost the friendship of other nations. They i v.ot r relations with Japan are delicate and difficult, yet in a fit of temper tney produced the exclusion act to ex- elude 146 Japanese, and thus care- lessly hurt and roiled a proud and sensitive people. There is honor in statesmanship which takes risks for r N,, yr.r.cn Vi,, n !iMiit r frifiit SUIXITT UU1 UUSU. LfUl LU 1 iC Ul L a r-i Vt nation nen tnere noinmg to ue sainea is unpdruonaoie. iue nave ceased to cultivate the friendship of China, and toward Russia, the third Power of the Western Pacific, their attitude has been utterly scornful. It 's almost as if they had determined to &et rid of a11 Possible friends in nations of this continent they have shown what may v, a -v. j.. . uc umuiucu muunaici) aa a. idn. w ' interest in their sensibilities. This was shown most clearly in the utterly have treated the Monroe Doctrine as a one-sided doctrine, and have shown hfe-liARt nnssfhlp tariff tn Vn nut goods that could be sold to make pay ments. Yet they hope at the same time to flood the European markets with American farm and industrial not even uniformly courteous, be- cause they thinK brusqueness is strength, and they have not yet learn-1 ed to state their case without setting' people's teeth on edge. This tactlees-i ness reached what is perhaps its cli-j max when Coolidge, addressing the rection we have been more successful1 than others." A president who can boast of our economic success in a letter to the Eucharlstic Congress is ODViOUSiy wunoui tne equipment iu understand the imponderable factors in international affairs international affairs. It may be possible to ignore these imponderables for a while. We are ,-. fairly safe, we are strong; Europe is - distracted and dependent upon our fl- nancial resources. But it is not pos- Bible for a great world power, such as . the United States has become, to practice an ill-tempered, crude, high- protectionist nationalism and not reap the consequences sooner or later. Six years have elapsed since, under the guidance of Henry Cabot Lodge, we embarked on this course. And in that, . . . j . I selves a moral union of the European world. Not only in the countries that owe us money, but in the neutral . countries aB well, the moral isolation; of the United States has reached a; point which it is no longer possible to ignore. Tho mon U'hn nro drlvinsr US into -" ' " ed men. the Coolidees. the Mellons. the Hoovers, who are allowing them- , ,j. I , . j o Villi o a ya hatvun thom nntnp an in- uuiv.u, " V v u - O - - ------ J - J , .V. r nn 4Ka 11 til Tl auu been smothered under a blanket or complacency. These men, in their r,H ,n r,r-r 5to cv,,MOT-Q miiivl - , at tne corruption oi us own puuui-ai 1 life.. , ,. . . . 1 Their time ought nearly to be over. .There is another America besides the America which has been presented to the world in these six years of cor - ruption, complacency and cowardice. There is an America which can be generous and can be wise and can protect its interests and guard its future on the basis of principle-and with a long view of the facta :o: BARNYARD TWINS TO BE SALARIED RADIO PLAYERS Walter Stohlman of this city and Ray Denham of Cedar Creek, have been elected staff (or salaried) mem- bers of the Mono Motor Oil (KOIL) ,5 i i ijifr, t-o . will broadcast every Monday nig:ht from 10 to X1 o'clock for the Crosley Radio corporation of Isew .J- CroBely Df New York was &t KQIL Mondanight and listened to the Twins and was delighted with their performance, and had them nlsppd nil thp rpsnilar p.tafT Tne rroslev radio enmoration is one of . - Jn hQyg get quite a kick out of being the only salaried broadcasters at this station. If you want to hear something good, tune in on KOIL between : 10 land I 11 L,,,.SaT, NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE Notice is hereby given, that by ir"e Tf n rder of Sale Issued by ooiua iouie ueai. v-ieriL oi tue uia- trjct Court of the Second Judicial District of Nebraska, within and for Cass county, in an action wherein J- O. Both' f l "d. Hp0 WasoS" JJftU,1 jfaY unknown- C M Vimna In the fMtv nf Plattsmouth. Cass county, Nebraska, offer for sale at public auction, the following de scribed lands and tenements, to-wit: The east half of the northwest quarter (E NW) of Section twenty-nine (29). Township eleven (11) North, Range eleven (11) East, in Cass county, Ne braska; also The north half of the south east quarter (N SEV4 ) and Lots seven (7) and eight (8), in the southeast quarter of the southeast quarter (SEV SE4). Lot five (5), in the southwest quarter of the southeast quarter (SW SE ) and Lot three (8) in the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter (SE SW), all in Section twenty-nine (29), Township eleven (11) North, Range eleven (11) East, in Cass county, Nebraska; also The east half of the northwest Now is the Time For Thrifty folk-" to be getting: their winter blankets. A great many of our customers avail themselves of this opportunity to get their needs in the bedding line at substantial savings and with the comfortable assurance that when the cold weather gets here they will be ready for it. Plaid blanket, cotton, size 64x76. One of Nashua's best. Each. $1. Nashua's fine part wool blankets, large size. Blue, pink, grey, tan plaids bound edges. Pair, $4.45. 3-lb. quilted Cotton Batt, pure white, per roll 95c 3-lb. Cotton Batt, per roll 89c Outing Flannel, yard wide, light, fancy or dark, yd. 19c 10 yards for 9.79 Children's School Hose, per pair 19c ciJH.M.SoennicksenCkx "The Store of Big Vahei" quarter (E NW) of Section twenty-nine (29), Township eleven (11) North, Range eleven (11) East, in Cass county, Ne braska; also The west half of the west halt of the northeast quarter (W W NE'4 ) of Section twenty nine (29), Township eleven (11) North, Range eleven (11) East, in Cass county, Nebraska. Please take notice that said parcels I 0 1nn C.-wr,l V .A n I ""C1 Yu " Said sale is subject to any unpaid taxes or tax sales outstanding and not included in the decree in said cause of action. It is also subject to the lease of Ed Bauers on the north half of the southeast quarter (N SE U ). Lots seven (7) and eight (8), In the southeast quarter of the south- jeast quarter (SE4 SE4), Lot 5 in the southwest quarter of the south east quarter (SW4 SEVi), and Lot three (3) in the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter (SE4 SWV4). all in Section twenty-nine (29), Township eleven (11) North, Range eleven (11) East, in Cass county, Nebraska; Likewise subject to confirmation by the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska. Given under my hand this Slst day of July, A. D. 1926. E. P. STEWART, Sheriff Cass County, Nebraska. a2-? NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Howell R. Knowles, 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 3rd day of September, A. D. 1926, and 4th day of December, A. D. 1926, at ten 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 3rd day of Septem ber, A. D. 1926, and the time limit ed for payment of debts is one year from said 3rd day of September, 1926. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court, this 2nd day of August. 1926. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) a2-4w County Judge. .NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Case Coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of John Coleman, 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 31st day of August, 1926, and on the 2nd day of December, 1926, at 10 o'clock a. m. of each of said days, to receive 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 31st day of AugUBt A. D. 1926, and the time limited for pay ment of debts is one year from said 31st day of August, 1926. Witness my hand the seal of said County Court, this 28 th day of July. 1926. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) a2-4w County Judge. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Henry C. Long, deceased. To the creditors of said estate You are hereby notiifleid. that I ; will sit at the County Court room in Plattsmouth In said county, on the 16th day of August, 1926, and the 17th day of November, 1926, at 9 o'clock a. m., of each day, to re ceive and examine s.11 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 16 th day of August, A. D. 1926, and the time limited for pay- Large size cotton blanket, 72x80. Plain grey or tan. PaJr, $2.39. Part wool crib blankets for the baby. Size 34x40. Each, 89C Baby Buntitg blankets. Each 95f. 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 July, 1926. A. II. DUXBURY. (Seal) jl9-4w County Judge. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cas coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Mary J. Taylor, 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 23rd day of August 1926 and the 24th day of November 1926 at 10 a. m. of each of aaid days, to receive and examine all claims against said estate, with a view to their adjust ment and allowance. The time limit ed for the presentation of claims against said estate is three months from the 23rd day of August. A. D. 1926. and the time limited for pay ment of debts is one years from said 23rd day of August 1926. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court, this 22nd day of July, 1926. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) County Judge. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE Notice Is hereby given that by virtue of two judgments entered In the District Court of Cass County, Nebraska, one In favor of August Q. Bach egeinst Michael Prels and Loulaa Pre is in sum of $216.30, and one In favor of Hehry M. Soennlchaen against Michael Preis and Louisa Prels In sum of $221.75, and the orders of sale of aaid court In said actions, I will on the 30th day of August, 1926, at. ten o'clock a. m. of Bald day at the south door of the Court House in Plattsmouth, In said Cass County, Nebraska, sell the fol lowing described real estate,- towlt; Lots 1 and 2 in Block 171 in the City of Plattsmouth, Ne braska, at public auction to the highest bid der for cash to aatlafy said judgment, the amount due thereon in the ag gregate being the sum of $438.05, and $97.27 costs and accruing costs. Dated July 22nd 1926. - E. P. STEWART Sheriff of Cass County Nebraska. By W. C. SCHAUS, Deputy. ALLEN J. BEESON. Attorney for Plaintiff. USE 7TARTIY ALFALFA SEED As in other years the farmer who .intends to sow alfalfa this fall has two big problems to contend with. The first is that of getting a good seed bed; the second that of getting hardy aeed. Early plowing followed by har rowing and packing will make the good, seed bed. Hardy seed can be ob tained from a local source or from the north and west where the winters are more severe. Seed produced In western Nebraska is probably the best seed that any Nebraska farmer ran buy for the money If he has to go outside his own local community to get it. Farmers organizations in that section are getting ready to sell seed co-operatively and as Individuals. Tests made at the Nebraska Experi ment Station for the past six years have shown that alfalfa seed produced in southern United States. Peru, Spain. Italy, Africa and other mild climates will grow Into plants that , will not stand the average Nebraska winter. Observations for the last two J seasons also have shown that seed or unknown origin has produced al falfa that winter-killed badly. EE CLEANED SEEDS Northern, Native Alfalfa 99crn pue. $10 to $15 per bu., Dakota No. 12, $16.50. Timothy $5, Rye, $1.50, Sweet Clover, $6.75 to $7.50. Blue Grass $5.75. Samples mailed. Clover seed wanted. John Bros. Neb. City. FOB SALE The Sophia, Sehafer farm, four miles west and five miles north of Murray. See T. G. Egcnberger, Plattsmouth. All local new is in the Journal.