The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, November 11, 1926, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    l QX , : ' :
THtrsDA"?. somrETB 11, isae.
THE WET EEVOLT
Volstead ism was given a crushing
YOUE INTERESTS
f
1
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t
Che plattsmouth journal
PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, BESEASK&
Batarari at Poeioflric. Plattmoutn. Nb aa Hcoi4-elui msll matter
R. A. BATES, Publisher
SUBSCEIPTIOH FEICE $2.00 FEB TEAS IN AD VAN CI
I T
SUBSCfitFIlua I tUM Z-UU
'
- -
A grafter by any other name, would
still be a thief.
. :o:
It doesn't take a very bright woman
to dazzle the average man.
:o:
Some men are so busy beginning
things that they have no time to fin
ish anything.
:o:
As soon as the average girl acquires
two or three stick pins she begins to
talk about her jewels.
o: I
He is a mean man who will delib-J
crately talk in his sleep fcr the pur-,
pose of keeping hi tired wife awake. (
:o: ' I :o:
Mr. Hawes gave Missouri good Only after a public favorite has
roads and went to the United States become a "has-been" does he begin
senate on them, which seems fair to realize the emptiness of applause.
enough. j :o:
-n: ' Reflecting on the results in Mas
Nevada. New York, "Wyoming and sachusetts, we conclude that the
several other serious-minded stater President needs someone to stand by
voted wet Tuesday. Now let them him.
try and get a drink.
-:o: .
In nine months the export of iy convinced by this time a 100-cent
British manufacture has slumped by dictator is a pretty fair accident in
more than 2,600 million dolars as a surance policy.
result of the industrial setback caused , :0;
by the coal strike. j Yodeling i3 a lost art in Switzer-
:o: 1 land, we learn. But when a thing has
A scientist places the Themical outlived its usefulness, is it then a
value of a man at 9S cents, but we "lost art?" We doubt if yodeling is,
saw a fellow election day who was was. or could be an art.
worth more than that for the alcohol, :0:
alone, that he contained. 1 Another pathetic scene is that of
:o-
Aimee McPherson's defense is that
she has a perfect right to tell fibs.
The Indiana State Supreme Court has
ruled that the truth is no defense.
Aimee's defense may be allowed tc
stand.
:o:
One woman scratched no and voted
yes on tne so-called pronioition
amendment the other day, to show
her ardent support of . .prohibition
How many other3 do you suppose did wall. He takes himself off, but list
thn nmf fhtrif? . leslv. if molested, with no trace of
:o: i
We do not know whether the pres- scarcely tempt him now, for hi3 hold
ence of the queen had anything to do on life is tremulous. Frost has bowed
Tith Tuesday's results or not, but, the dahlias and the year is drooping
anyhow, if we were national chair- toward the snows. There is no refuge
man of the democratic party we'd give that will save him; he is utterly alone
Marie a free ride on the donkey, ca- in a universe of unfriendly beings
parisoned in Rumanian royal colors, heings who once his own kind out-
:or numbered and often outwitted. Why,
Robert F. Wagner, the new senator his armies only a month ago seemed
from New York, is described as an- unconquerable!
other immigrant boy who has carved So when the enormous ice-oceans
his way upward through many diffi- flowed slowly down from the Pole,
culties. What is meant by difficul- bringing an age of Winter, man per
ties? He was an immigrant, wasn't haps found himself alone in a ter
he? Aren't they always supposed to rible, uncomprehended autumn. Tht
rise high and go far? told killed his kind; stronger crea-
:o: tures meet it better; a new solitude
A Cincinnati ornithologist says come to him as in vast pursuit the ice
that a sfaro rrn-ar rtrrK5Pf! In woman's
clothing is more effective for scar-
in- v;Ac f.nn o-oo o -k tioTi nno
. . , , i. . .
not ass;sm a reason.
Fasv! birds
know that when a man visits a grape
arbor he is too busy picking grapes
to bother about birds.
26 AA
WOMEN ABHOR
H DIRTY WALLS and
Becau.se NO soot or
n smoke or dirt from the basement
U can ever oet into -qoxxt room
SfromaTEIK STEEL FURNACE, D
the has been known for
u
jj years as the CLEAN furnace.
D
0
0
Q
1
o
0
ZET US SHOW YOU
HOW and WHY
Jess Warga Hardware
Telephone 400
" i
rxo Ui aUVAAUJ, j
i . i . , I
Famous last lines:
spend so much!"
"How did we
:o:
A jealous man apears almost as
foolish as a Jealous woman.
:0:
A young widow with a fortune is
often fortunate if she remains a
widow.
:o:
Tne American hot dog has invaded
England, w onuer now iipnng s
next poem will read.
:o:-
If every man were taken at his
own valuation there wouldn't be half
enough halos to go around
mug iciur uumauuei is piuuau-
T7. . . 1 1 i.
a club woman reading a paper on
the preparation of foods the same
afternoon her husband has an ap
pointment with the stomach special
ist. :o:
THE LAST FLY
He appears from nowhere for a
little while at noon, pathetically en-
autumn sunshine
joying the feeble
that . falls upon; the window sill
his old sly agility, and even sweets
rrpnt on Ahnvp his northern home
prtssed glaciers five thousand feet
floe t.nndinoac anri rrir! hmnHoii
... . , ,
threat. Man may have felt like No-
vember's last fly, but somehow he
survived
years.
a winter of full 500,000
D
D
0
o
B
n
c
a
D
0
a
D
a
1!
a
D
HANGING!
--1 1
D
D
0
0
o
Q
o
0
ID
blow in Tuesday's election. For the
first time since prohibition went into
enect. tne people in widely separatea
parts of the United States have been in nig jJfe
able to record themselves directly on He says iIere j am wjth time
that issue. This was made possible tQ think and nothing to think about."
by the referenda on the liquor ques- He wag one of the legion wh0Be in
tion in New York, Illinois, Wisconsin, terests are few.
California, Colorado, .Nevada Montana
and Missouri.
e York, besides returning a wet
governor to Albany and sending a wet
senator to Washington, rolled up a
majority cf more tha a million votes
against prohibition. In Illinois a pro-
Posal to modify tne Volstead act won
. b-v a landslide in Chicago and received
enormous favor in downstate Illinois,
which was thought to be safely dry.
Montana, in the banner dry area,
I went wet. Colorado, supposed to be
onq of the dryest of states, defeated a
wet proposal by a small majority. Cal-
ifornia. which supplies wine grapes to
the nation, went wet. So did Wiscon-
sin. Nevada went decisively wet.
proposition No. 4 won overwhelm-
ingly in St. Louis, but was beaten in
the state. It was not .however, a fair
test of Missouri sentiment on the issue
of Volsteadism. since it was confined
to a proposal to repeal all the state
dry laws. A fairer test was had in the
successful candidacy of Hawes, who
stands for modification of the Volstead
act.
Besides scoring these direct hits,
antiprohibition sentiment triumphed
in many contests where the issue was
a factor, if not the dominant note of
the campaign. It won in Pennsylvan-
ia, where Vare. despite the primary Qf the things you are really interest
scandals, won on a platform promis- p(j .
ing the return of the 5-cent glass of 3 What do vou talk about?
beer. It won in Maryland, where the Tbp papers reporting a recent visit
wet Tydings beat the wavering, wob- tf MussoIini by tne Italian poet,
bling W eller. D'annununzio, paid the two spent
The drys have for consolation Ohio, their timp talking of art. Qne of the
where prohibition was submergrer as reQUirements of a iader is a wide
an issue. In the whole country there
was not one outstanding, clear-cut
dry victory, while the political map is
dotted with the successes of the wets.
The net result is a reeling defeat
i-Ai on i
for olsteadism and all that it stands
for, spying and snooping into the lives
of private citizens, official lawless
ness, the rape of the Bill of Rights,
bootleg wars, poison liquor, the in
crease of drinking among the young.
the increase of crime, the graft and
corruntion of the drv aeents the cle-
moralizing enect 01 law ana oruer ami
the lessening of respect for public
of respect for public
autnorit5
Proiesx against tnese conamous
is what the wet victories mean. The
people are not voting for the return
of saloons and drunkenness,
against vicious sumptuary law.
but
Take note it was the voice of the
people that was heard in Tuesday's
election, not the voice of stuffed shirts
at Washington who have been dry
oecause mey mougnt political sue-
cess lay that way; nor was it the
voice of propagandists. It represents
a spontaneous popular revolt against
an intolerable law.
:o:
SOMEHOW WE LIVE
"The common human life is a
tissue OI expectations mat are ne er
realized and anticipations that are
never fulfilled, of toil for unsatisfying
rnd nnd rmrsiifn-- amcietie'? of out-
... , m
rageous, tormenting uesires, ot tever
i , .
uuu ur diiu repeuiam-e,
m'iaise ana aeatn.
This cheerful little of the thing
called life comes from H. G. Wells.
Philosophers, poets, the leaders of
'
all time have told us loudly and vi
orously that life is not worth its salt.
the power to blow it up, or the thistle
down upon which it floated
j-"-
somehow, we kept on living and some-
how, too. we have bepr on enjoying
this "tissue
of expectations
never
realized."
It is not too much to expect that,
even knowing how this business of
holding a job. paying the meat bill
and owning a radio is merely a "toil
for unsatisfying ends," we will be
mighty glad for a fling at it.
:o:
THE PATHWAY TO HEALTH
Tremendous strides have been made
since 1907, when an active campaign
was begun against tuberculosis in this
country. The death rate from the
dreaded white plague has been cut 55
per cent, and that means an annual
saving in the year of 1926 of 100,000
lives.
It is a triumph to medicine. It is
more than that; it is triumph to
neighborly influence and example. In
the old town hall, the friendly meet
ing place, wherever friends gathered,
the campaign has been carried on.
If we are to escape the fates of
Chinese, Mayans. Aztecs, and Incas
we must live as neighbors. The fun-
damentals of health are habits and
customs and the circle in which we
move is more elevated than any of its
members. Disease is an incident that
proves the power of many elean and
In "The Loom of the Fool." a re-
cent novel one of the characters finds j
himself in tne hospital shut away.
f his DusjneSs for the first time;
The man who becomes Interested'
in only one or two things plays a trag-
ic part when they are taken away. A
,versatilitv of interests contributes
mucu t0 happin.es9 and satisfaction in
Hfe In middle age it is one of the
t aidg to keeping young.
The itty Lady Bessington once
gaid ..Friemis are the thermometers
hy wnich we may judge the temper-.
at'ure o our fortunes." J
jiere are four thermometers by
wbich to judge the temperature of,
your flourishing and many, or ailing!
and few Try lnem out. j
1. How do you read the news
papers? Where do you begin? Do you turn
first to the sport page? The financial
page? The editorial page? When you
finish there, what do you read next?
F deveral (iavs note what you read
and wh.,t you &kip when VDU read
tne paper It n sive you an idel
ot the variety or ni-.r .owr.t r.3 of your
interests. j
2. What kind of questions do you.
ask?
Not whether you ask questions ,
when you meet people for the first
time. Do all your questions relate to
a few subjects or are they of a wide
variety? Your qutstions give a record
range of interests and the ability to
discuss a diversity of subjects. The
subjects on which you feel capable of
holding up your end of the conver
sation, are the ones you are rnter-
ested in. Do you talk of a wide range
of things or is vour concersation con-
fined to cne or two subjects'
, . . . ." .
4. What are your friends interest-
ed in?
Your friends usuallv mirror an en-
larged reflection cf your own inter-
. c- . , ,,
finH thv n iT,tprPstPd in
find they are all interested in the
the
V1, .
thlnes or are different srouns
represented? Are thev all baseball
f?ns or do Fr)me co51ect rare books?
Are thy al interested in the theatre,
. ,.-,. rrnrrter-intr? Note the
interests of your friends to know the
range of your own interests.
If these thermometers record a
narrow range it pay to aUempt
to eriiare it
For eing interested in many
thingB helps to bring what Dn Eliot
railed "the durable . satisfaction of
jjfe
i
:o:-
EIG TIME COMING
If Col. Frank L. Smith is going to
repeat in defense of a seat in the
senate the charges he hurled at Mr.
Coolidge last week, there is a big
u coming.
The colonel warned Mr. Coolidge
to keeP nis bands off the Illinois sen
atonal race
reminding him that
-
rothinrr was dnnp in tht Tllinnia nrl.
-
. , , . .
republican president Is elected. The
crlonel asks:
When the nrecident of the United
StatPB is a candidate for re-election,
does he resign because of Steel Trust.
the sugar interests, the national wool
. trusts and nthpr hie-finnnfiai onH in
.
.1 . i : 2A . -i . . , .
' ,uie,meo in lue
Ptctive tariff, contribute to the
campaiS11 fund or the republican
partv?
Having delivered himself of that
B uimsen oi tnai
Saturday Night
PHILPOTS
HALL
Veepi!lg AV&ter, Nebl".
Good Music Come Have
a Good Time.
W. H. HOMAN, Mgr.
1 Dr. John A. Griffin "f
.
4
Dentist
4
1-
j.
j.
4
4.1
f.
A.
Office Hours: 9-12; 1-5.
Sundays and evenings
by appointment only.
PHONE 229
Soennichsen Building
I-H"I"I-I-I-M"I"I I M-
candor the colonel contin-
ued:
You know the president has arbi
trary power to lower or raise the
present tariff rates 10 per cent if he
thinks the economic conditions war-
rant Kiioh notion Does anvone say
rfnt f,u actlon" ef anne SJ
amazin
lDai 11 ine Proieciea mieresu. give much they n not Btart at all in '
to tLe rePublican campaign fund be- lhe gpring or they will come along!
cause they believe in the tariff the.very slowly and probably die before'
-dent bQund tQ t them mid-summer. If the soil is dry around j
. . the roots now, water them thorough-1
RPeciaI raTors ir tnat or reruse tneir ,y anfl theQ mulch them with straw
contribuions?
iiie cuiuuei auEfters iuai uaiegui-
i r nr-
. . . .
. ... '.. ...
nobody does think president is biased
nooou aues mm, prebmeui 1 UJu
- l"1"t,'
his tongue in his cheek. He knows
that Mr. Coolidge has abundantly
, . . ...
the Tariff Commission and the Federal
Trade Board that this is precisely
what happens. Is it any wonder that
euch a broadside at Mr. Coolidge
created a political sensation? Is it at
all surprising that the country looks
forward eagerly to the time when Col.
Icai ."e
defense or his seat?
What is to become of a house so
divided against Itself as that? Are
honest men finally to get theirs.
:o:
WHY NOT?
In the unlikely event that Mars has
V,oV;to-nt cqt-o Prnf Prnot thpv
must move from north to south with
. the season, have hides that will pro-
tect them from low temperatures and
that can be shed when the sun is
without drinkine
muuu water uuu urBttlue
rarinea air.
Prof. Frost asks nothing of the
Martians which is not done by the
yey best people on this planet. No
doubt the Martians have summer and
winter furs, liquids that they prefer
4r vntor a ti H mnvo n-ith tbo ficaonnfl
, 'C V v
from northen to southern resorts. For
B" we kuuw meix wudis iudj ue iauu-
ecapea use our own uorai uanies ana
have genuine imported gondelas on
" "
tilt III.
:o:
4
mini uuiiLiu iiuilw
Copy for this Department
furnished by County Agent
4
J"'
t t T . T t .T. 9 T
T i . 1 11 . i 4 . . 1 l F jr
10 Per Cent Bonus on Hogs
Farmers please take notice! The 10
per cent bonus still remains good on
hogs, so please call for them at your
bank. They should have a supply.
j oa wall ham tho
V 'Va r...CLrha ,v0r h,
extra 10 cents wnen me pacner Duyb
your hogs
Corn Husking Contest,
The corn husking contest was won
by H. P. Johnson of Nehawka. He
shucked 1.654 or 22 bushel in 1 hour
and 22 minutes. He will represent
us at the state contest to be held 2
miles north of Valley on Nov. 12.
There were 7 contestants, and we
wish to thank them all as well as the
judges, the gleaners, and Mr. Luke
Wiles on whose place the contest was
neia, anu eveijuue eio uu ucicu
to make this contest a success.
nome Jbconomics meeting
The next meeting of the Woman fl
Club will be new in weepmgr water,
Any trouble starting your car these
mornings? Better use Red Crown
STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF
f'A Nebraska Institution"
place. They will meet in Elmwood on
Nov. 17.
Young: Trees Need Moisture.
Youne trees. esDeciallv everereens.
need pienty of moisture before win-
ter sets in. There is constant evapor-
ation 01 moisture rrom tne tops aur-
j th winter. If tney dry ut too
or strawy manure. The mulch should
uui uc pui tiuac iu me nc uui um
about a foot to crevent the mice from
' worklnsr on the bark. This Drotection
worklnsr on the bark. This Drotection
wm fe fa pround from freezinglwas found not to have money
vnny u& mai wuicn is uuinuifueui
so that the roots may supply mois
for the tops later in the fall. In
addition the mulch will keep the soil
from being dried out by the winds.
Everybody reads the Journal Want
Ads and youa' ne3Sflee placed there
will get results.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska, Cass Coun-
u, ss
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of Henry
Lambert, deceased.
You are hereby notified. That I will
sit at the County Court Room in
Plattsmouth in said county, on the
i) n j jj . - i -.noc ,i r.
OO f -K-nirh 1 OOC O n H rTl
tha 3rd day of February 1927 at
te .clock a m of each day, to' re-
or,H x-orn4r.o oil ololmo q trninat
said estate, with a view to their ad-
llZl
limitpri" for the nresentation of claims
a&ainst said estate is three months
from the 22nd day of November A.
D. 1926, and the time limited for
javment of debts is one year from
6aid 22nd day of November 1926. '
Witness my hand and the seal of
said county court, this 25th day of
October 1926. T1TTVRTTT?V
(geal) ' (fnty judge.
SHERIFF'S SALE
State of Nebraska, County of Cass.
s8
gy virtue of an order of sale issued
Dy uoiaa ioDie ueai, cierK oi iiie
District Court within and for Cass
County, Nebraska, and to me direct-
. -ja T -n-fll V. Oftth A ttt Vnirani.
ber A. D., 1926, at 10 o'clock a. m.
of said day at the South front door of
the Court House, in the City of Platts-
mouth, Cass County, Nebraska In
J said county, sell at public auction to
the highest bidder for cash the fol-
lowing described real estate, to-wit:
Lot nine (9) in the Northeast
Lot nine (9) in the Northeast
quarter (NE4,) of the south
west quarter (SW4) of section
sixteen (16), township twelve
(12), North of Range Nine (9).
East of the 6th P. M., in Cass
County, Nebraska, containing
(10) acres more -or less.
o""" "tiug icnru uwu
taken tfaA property of F. H. 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, real
name unknown, and John Doe, real
name unknown, defendants, to satisfy
a judgment of said Court recovered
-by Byron Golding, plaintiff, against
Bal(1 defendants.
: Plattsmouth. Nebraska, October
Jl6th A. D. 1926.
j e. p. stewart.
Sheriff, Cass Coimty,
rseDrasita.
NEBRASKA
CHICAGO BOUNDS UP ATTACKEES
Chicago, Nov. 8. Six suspects
were in custody Sunday nicht as a
result of a concerted police drive
early Sunday on the north sid in an
effort to capture two holdup nit n who
nave prayea on uuesconcu wuuieu iur
Several weeks, one known a "the
Cat" and the other as "the Panther."
"The Cat" earned his soubriquet
from his stealthy manner of approach
and attack, while "the Panther"
gained his because of his fury when
he failed to find money on his vic-
: tims. "The Panther" is blamed by the
numc km on.a n. "
rum.
15-year-old high school girl.
! who v
! who was severely beaten when she
Journal Wast Ads bring results.
NOTICD TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska, Cass Coun-
ty, ss
In the County Court
; In the matter of the estate of Glenn
; Perry, deceased.
To the creditors of said estate:
J You are hereby notified, that I
will sit at the county Court Room in
Plattsmouth in said county, on No
vember 15. 192C. and February 16.
.1927. at 10 o'clock a. m., each day.
to receive and examine all claims
against said Estate, with a view to
their adjustment and a Hojan e The
- . X"
"V eff sla , r.h
months from the 15th di
tate is three
"lUUtUa LIU 1,1 lilt "" wi 1W"'U
.1 .. Vwom
uuu iuc nmc nmncu
'"W"1 of ,d!?t9 isKT To"111
M1U A-JL" ,u":""'"
Witness my hand and the seal of
said County Court, this 11th day of
October. 1926.
A. H. DUXP.URY.
County Judge.
(Seal)ol8-4w
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE
In, the matter of the application or
Wm. Hunter, administrator of the
"I'ff 'C Ja
debts.
Now on thin 3rd day of October,
11926, comes Wm. Hunter, adminis-
trator of the estate of Cecilia I). Jah-
rig. deceased, and presents his peti-
tion for licenge tQ Bel, the r(,al pptate
of the deceased, to pay the claims
niea ana aiioweu against emu ramie;
it appearing from said petition that
there is an insufficient amount of
.j-t-c s n o 1 nynrxmr it in V k nohHo if tho
administrator to pay the claims pre-
sented and allowed by the County
Court, the expense of administration
and that it is necessary to sell the
whole of said real estate of said de-
ceased for the payment of claims and
costs of administration
j It is therefore, considered, ordered
ana adjudged that ail persons inter-
ested in the estate of Cecilia I). Jab-
rig, deceased, appear before me. Jamep
T. Begley, Judge of the District
Court, at the office of the Clerk of
the District Court at the Court House
in the City of Plattsmouth. Case
v.uuui, .uru.aonn, uu tuc iiu
December, 1926, at the hour of ten
o'clock in the forenoon to show cause,
if any there be, why such license
should not be granted to Wm. Hunter.
administrator of said estate, to sell
all of said real estate of said de-
ceased so as to pay claims presented
and allowed with the costs of ad-
ministration and the costs of thlp
proceedings
It Is therefore further considered.
ordered and adjudged that notice be
given to all persons interested by
publication of this Order to Show
Cause for four successive weeks in
ine fiattsmoutn journal, a icgai
newspaper published and of general
circulation in said County of Care,
Nebraska.
try tb Court.
james t. tiii.
friendly nands.
14.
on Nov. 16, at the usual time and By W. C. Se&aus, Deputy.
Diitrlet Judge.