3 MONDAY, APEH 9, 1928. P-LiTTSMOUTH SEMI WTESIY JQTTS3TAX PAGE THREE X r w i The plattsmouth lournal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBEASKA jtr4 t Poacofflc. Plattsmouth, Nh. a oosd-claa mtll cutur i R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCEIPTIOIJ PEICE $2.00 Politics is a dead issue in Chicago. 7 :o: It is always a relief to the trees when spring comes. :o: It's a poor hotel chef who can't carve a name for himself. :o: There is more than one kind of diligence. Just now crime seems ahead. :o: A politician never forgets his place if he is appointed to a good position. - :o: Cupid is the manager of a two ring circus the engagement and wedding ring. :o: Early to bed and early to rise, and you won't get trimmed by the night club guys. . :o: A woman may not be able to drive a nail, but at driving a bargain she is in her glory. -:o:-its mature has its compensations. People wait until spring before they tell us that spinach is a tonic. :o:- I We are beginning to explain some of the favorite sons on the well- known theory that charity begins . i -:o: Calling a movie actress dumb is grounds for divorce in Hollywood, even if her husband has not been in any of the pictures. :o: It looks as if Hoover was as good a fighter as he is administrator of his official duties, quite a few think so since his invasion of Ohio. :o: One western congressman had the nerve to vote to admit a Democratic contestant from another state. He is undergoing a process of trounc ing. :o:- Gov. Smith turns down a propos ition to debate with McAdoo. He says long distance discussions are unpro fitable. What good would it do any how? -:o: Let those who doubt that prohibi tion is a live issue just listen to the dispute concerning which was the wetter assemblage, the Republican banquet at Okmulge or the Demo cratic banquet at Pawhuska, Okla homa. Our Repair Garage is kept constantly busy because mo torists recognize it as the best and most reliable repair shop for every kind of damage a car can possibly sustain. And, bein practical men of long and varied experience, alt our repair work is excellently and thor oughly done, without unnecessary de lay and at reasonable charge. Frady's Garage Phone 58 PER YEAB EH AD VAN CI Ghost-writing: Biography. :o: Being busy is often synonymous with being happy. :o: Your mis-takes may contribute to the wisdom of others. :o: The novelty of a great many radio speeches is the loud speaker. :o: The unexpected happens about as often as the expected fails to. :o: Don t pick out for your friend a man whose dog won't follow him. :o: The modern sheik is very often the living image of an unpaid tailor bill. :o: Common sense is a good thing in its way, but it has broken few re cords. :o: Thouen we want to love our neighbors we wish Indiana would do a little better. :o: . National prosperity has its ebbs and flows. Prudent ones will not be washed ashore. -:o:- The words of a weak woman often carry more strength than the muscles of a strong man. :o:- Briand and Kellogg are still in correspondence, hoping as a result later to be in correspondence. :o: Once upon a time, a still, discov ered somewhere, was not the source of supply for some large city. :o: Their decision on insanity pleas afford something for a test of the mental competency of various juries. :o: Then again there are times when we wonder for what el.e besides Andrew Mellon, Alexander Hamilton is famous. :o: In a number of places they are seeking dry candidates, but in the old days it was hard to find one who was not dry. :o: The application of tlie immigra tion quota to the other countries of this hemisphere is liable to lead to our losing a lot of trade and good will. :o: That New York state child who asked the government to please send him a navy would probably be high ly discontented at getting a mere naval program. :o: Williamsburg, the colonial capital of Virginia is spending $2,000 000 to restore its Revolutionary as pect. A couple of other cities we know of would spend that much to get rid of theirs. :o: Tips to income tax payers are mostly for those paying the federal tax. Our legislature has given tips to the patrons of the state tax that don't sit well. But that is the way it is and we might as vtll look pleasant :o: ' But the cry of "radicals" is an ill omen. The word "radical" is a bad word. It is a cuttlefish's cloud of ink. It can be depended on to befog almost any issue. Yell it ofen enough and loudly and you will rocn have the public discounting everything your adversary says. :o: If Mr. Hughes is ashamed to mal:e the keynote speech for the Republi cans at the Kansas City convention, why not get Mayor Thomas of J f ferson City? Mayor Thomas thin!:s Senator Borah, who is trying to fi:.d $160,000 worth of virtue in the Re publican party, is a nuisance, and 1 e ought to make a ripsnorting speech in defense of party rascality. BEAUTY IN OPEN SPACES Now that the census bureau popu lation estimates for 1928 are out, we may expect state and civic boosters to begin calling attention to" them. Florida is already pointing out that half a million more people live there now than in 1920; states like Mich igan, which gained 900,000. and Call fornia, which gained a full million. will probably do likewise. There is one state that probably will maintain a dignified silence. No estimate was made for Nevada; that state showed a decline in population between 1910 and 1920, and the cen sus bureau tentatively gives it its 1920 figure 77,407. So Nevada probably won't eay much about the bureau's figures. Yet, to our mond, these figures give that state an excellent talking point. Consider the situation for a mo ment. Our national population has gone up 10,000,000 since 1920. In this century we have seen the "open ppaces" contracting steadily, year by year. Texas, once a synonmy for a vast, thinly-populated area, now has upwards of 5,000,000 inhabitants. The rolling hills of Okolahoma are filling up. In the mid-western in dustrial areas cites like Detroit, To ledo. Indianapolis and Buffalo are constantly extending their borders Millions of men and women do not know what it is to see an unfenced field. nrr,,-,! nil tha n-nvth aH Pv- pansion. Nevada remains Nevada of the past century. Its 110,000 square miles of territory support fewer peo ple than live in a city like Canton; O It is larger than all the New England states put together with a population of less than one-sixth of Rhode Is land's alone. It is, we might say. an oasis of emptiness in a land of crowds. zThe time is not far distant when the average American will come to appreciate openness of this kind at its true worth. When that day comes, Nevada will be host every summer to hordes of automobile tourists. This will be good for Nevada, and it will ho rn fnr th tmiriats For Nevada, oraise Heaven, is still one of those states where you can drive all day without seeing a house ji c& Lire a xiiv-: ji a Lun u. a i still has the marvelous, refreshing openness of the old weet. Its air is as clear and sharp as though the world were newly-made its rolling sage brush plains are framed by back- grounds of distant, haze-wreathed mountains Th mntnHsta ha tioth- ing to do all day long but soak him self in freedom and beauty. So we repeat, Nevada's boosters ought to begin quoting the census figures. A decline in population would be a fatal blow to the pride of some states, but not to Nevada. A good part of that state's magni ficence is the sparseness of its popu lation. THE HORSE REMAINS So quickly does modern society adapt itself to progress that the con-land cern Universally expressed a few years ago over the fate of the horses J has, for the most part, vanished. Wejprices, etc., etc., is in a position to have accepted it as inevitable that J elect its own prosecutor and its own Dobbin must go. have shed a hasty tear, and have easily forgotten the loss in admiration over the line of a states Senators from Illinois, Mr. the democratic nomination for presi new car. But some vague, deep-root- J Deneen, finds It politically expedient dent Ve enjoyed our short visit. ed, sentiment in almost every human assurances that the horse is holding I his own; though we seldom see him, we do enjoy hearing now and then that Dobbin, as a tribe, is flourishing, An investigator has just recorded I his equestrian findings in McClure'sjed all that. It filled the coffers of magazine, and the substance of Ills J message is that sixteen million, two j ers the audacity and power of capital hundred and seventy-nine thousand I ists. That is what is the matter horses still win their keep in the United States, a figure far from dis heartening in a motorized age. He supports this central fact with num erous statistics. There are more than fifteen million horses on farms alone, it was discovered, first-class saddle horses having increased in five years from one to five hundred in number. fThe horse population has shifted j somewhat, and includes now more aristocrats than formerly, because of polo and riding clubs, but it is still a substantial population, as far from extinction as ever. Though the figure is not given, many thousands of i horses are retained throughout the country, no doubt, for the task of pulling stranded automobiles out of bogs. :o: Now that railway consolidations are open to them all, slowness is the word in taking advantage. One trou ble is, that in these interests of all are protected. This sort of thing takes the edge off the deals. :o: . A lawyer,, seeking a divorce in Chicago, eat on the witness stand, asked himself questioifs, and then answered them. At last, a case without objections. DD ' MisHpautDis Eeally Ufrrasfc Tkew Wives? Herbert: (to Betty, his wife) I'm sorry, but you'Ii have to stop going to Guido Petri's studio. His affairs with women are the talk of the town. Betty: That's silly. No matter what Guido's relations with other women may be, he is a perfect gentleman with me. I shall continue my studies with him. Weeks pass. Guido Petti and Betty are in the studio alone. Guido: (drawing her to him) So beautiful you are. Soon we shall go abroad just you and I. Betty: But my husband Guido: Bah! What does he know of your desires? So young you are so lovely Suddenly he clasps her in his arms kiss ing her with a fierce passion she is power less to resist. Unheard by either, the door opens someone Partial One Thrill Too Many When a Girl Doesn't Know Was It Ail Mr Fault? The Serpent in the House When Society Sins What Every Woman fears! And several other stories May TEroii Stow At All Newsstands only 25 C WHAT IS WRONG WITH CHICAGO ? There is nothing mysterious about the plight of Chicago. It is to a de the plight of every big American I city. It is symptomatic of our na tional naivete that within a few days before the latest outbreak in Chicago the ministers of that afflicted city joined together in prayer to God that the city be saved. God is not going to save Chicago. He is not going to save any of us from our own folly. The ministers of Chicago have had as much to do with the condition in that city as any oth- r w.umuhb. xur, I t a v ,, -v.. i rv. would be snocsea u tLey were torn im3- DUl wnai are ia"8- Tne masters everywhere, togeth I er wnu iuf B'i ."uita ueiiuuuu- ations, have given us pronation I mi a. i av.. 1 n . r V... lw imr ll"UKJl ui of the hands of the State and tbe I finrornmont nTrl turn it n vor to i he wor?t element in every commun- Ity- For relation ad "cense. which could be controlled by the au- morltieB. tney gave us bootlegging, moonshining and great under ground traffic wnicn lias sued all tne Dig cities of America with gangs using bombs, sub-machine guns, saw- ed-off shotguns and automobiles. The liquor industry in Chicago is a great industry. It will rank high among the big industries of the city. It handles immense sums of money, and its riches have given the under world sinews of war and political strength which is never possessed un til the ministers and the church people unwittingly delivered this great power into its hands. The un derworld, which needs protection in I the conduct of this vast business, which does not want the state I Interfering with Its own methods of adjusting disputes as to territory. Judges. What must one think of'are gone and Senator Reed now in its power when one of the United I , of y t iSiUD and booming for to leave his seat in the Senate and,and he promised to visit USf if pos. ated "Diamond Joe"? Before prohibition the underworld Jin Chicago and every other big city (sustained itself upon potty crimes and slender resources. Prohibition chang- the underworld and gave its lead Feel Miserable This Spring? To Be Well Your Kidneys Must Function Properly. SPRING find you tired, nervous and decreased? Are you stiff and achy, subject to nagging backache, drowsy headaches and dizzy spells? Are kidney excretions too frequent, scantv or burning in passaze? Too often this indicates sluggish kidneys and shouldn't be neglected. Doan's Pilh, a stimulant diuretic, increase the secretion of the kidneys and thus aid in the elimination of waste imnurities. Doan's are endorsed everywhere. Ask your neighharl DOAN'S p,&s A STIMULANT DIURETIC ."X KIDNEYS RstCTMi!ani Co. Mfg Ot.-.xlurrla.MY starts to enter then retreats, closing the door softly. Two hours later Herbert bitterly accuses his wife. Betty: Stop, Herbert! You don't know what you are saying. I swear to you Herbert: (flinging lier aside) I'm through with you. 1 should have killed you as you lay in your lover "s arms. Take what you want and get out: What happens to Betty after she is driven from home by her husband completes one of the most pathetic dramas ever enacted in real life. Don't miss "First in a Woman's Heart," in May True Story Magazine. Tune in on the True Story Hour broadcast every Friday night over WOR and the Colum bia chain. o P. M. Eastern StandardTime. Contents Out Nowt with Chicago. It is also what is the matter with St. Louis, New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Detroit, Cleve land and every other big city in America. Every one of them, when it comes time to decide who are to be in power In the community, will repeat to some degree the spectacle of Chicago. REMUS, CRIME AND THE COURTS A Remus semester. He shot and killed his wife last October. He was tried in December and acquitted on the grounds of insanity. Ke was com mitted to an asylum. He is now pro nounced sane by the Third District Court of Appeals atj Lima, O. The pace that kills. In 122 Amer ican cities last year the homicidal rate was 10.4 per 100,000 population. In 31 of our cities which kept re cords back in 1901 the homicidal rate that year was 4.9. Our slay ers have more than doubled the num ber of their victims. When a man kills his wife and gets off with the nominal punishment of three months in an insane asylum killers? is not that likely to encourage other Is there any relationship between the mockery of justice as witnessed in the Remus case and the growth of murderous crime? Those questions are submitted to all courts of the land. :o: For the first time in seven years we visited Omaha last evening to visit our very esteemed and noble friend. Senator Jim Reed of Missouri, whom we have not had the pleasure of meeting for many years. It was indeed a cheerful greeting. A fine moment, and good to look at our dear friend, and sent our mind back thirty-five years ago when Jim was first elected mayor of Kansas City, and Missouri had elected Senator Vest by 55,000 majority. But those times sible during the campaign. We met many friends, among them was for mer Governor Bryan, Art Mullen, Senator Hitchcock and numerous others. We were accompanied on the trip by my son R. A. Bates, wife, and Lew Langhorst. :o: Simplification of the law and pro cedure should mean greater assurance for the meting out of real Justice through the elimination of the maze of technicalities and what not through which every litigation under the present system must wind its de-i vious and lengthy way. :o: "Arcadia" Convalescence and ma ternity Home. Choice of doctors. Phone 19 3-W. Box 114. m8-tfw NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass Coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Eva Barbara Lushinsky, 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 20th day of April, 1928, and on the 21st day of July, 1928 at ten o'clock a. m., of each day to receive and examine all claims against said estate, with a view to their adjust ment and allowance. The time lim ited for the presentation of claims against said estate is three months from the 20th day of April A. D. 1928 and-the time limited for pay ment of debts is one year from said 20th day of April 1928. Witness my hand and the seal of 4said county court this 16th day of March 1928. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) County Judge. NOTICE. TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the Estate of David C. Morgan, 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 24th day of April. A. D. 1928, and on the 25th day of July. A. D. 1923, at the hour of ten o'clock a. m., of each day, to receive and examine all claims against said estate, with a view to their adjustment and allow ance. The time limited for presenta tion of claims against said estate is three months from the 24th day of April, A. D. 1928, and the time lim ited for payment of. debts is one year from said 24th day of April, 1928. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 23rd day of March, 1928. A. II. DUXBURY, (Seal) m2C-4w County Judge. 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 estate of Catherine Wiles, deceased: On reading the petition of Jessie Hall praying that the instrument filed in this court on the 19th day o March. 1928. and purporting to be the last will and testament of the said deceased, may be proved and al lowed and recorded as the last will and testament of Catherine Wiles deceased; that said instrument be ad mitted to probate and the adminietra tion of said estate be granted Loren Wiles, as Executor; to It is hereby ordered that you, and all persons interested in said matter, may, and do, appear at the County Court to be held in and for said county, on the 20th day of April A. D. 192S, at ten o'clock, a. m.. to show cause, if any there be, why th prayer of the petitioner should not be granted, and that notice of the pen dency of said petition and that the hearing thereof be given to all per sons interested in said matter by pub lishing a copy of this order in th Plattsmouth Journal, a semi-weekly newspaper printed in said county for three successive weeks prior to said day of hearing. Witness my hand, and the seal of said court, this 19th day of March A. D. 1928. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) m26-3w County Judge NOTICE OF INCORPORATION Notice is hereby given that th undersigned have associated them selves as a corporation under the law of the State of Nebraska. The name of said corporation is Oreapolis Grain Company, of Oreapolis, Nebraska The principal place of the annual meeting of the stockholders of said corporation shall be at the Taylor school house In District No. 37 Plattsmouth precinct, Cas3 county Nebraska, and the usual place of transacting its business shall be in the elevator of said Company at Ore apolis, Nebraska. The nature of the business to be transacted by Eaid cor poration, shall be the buying and selling of grain and farm products and said corporation may purchase such real and personal property as may be necessary to carry on its said business. The authorized capital stock of said corporation is $4,500.00 in shares of the par value of $100.00 each, subscribed and paid for at the organization of said Company. Said corporation shall commence business on March 20, 1928, and shall term! nate on March 20, 1978. The high est amount of indebtedness or liabil ity to which said corporation shall at any time subject itself shall not be more than $3,000.00. The business of said corporation shall be conduct ed by a Board of Directors not ex ceeding six in number, to be elected by the stockholders at their annual meeting. The officers of said corpo ration shall be' a President, Vice President, Secretary and Treasurer, who are to be chosen by the Board of Directors and shall hold their of fices for the period of one year. The Board of Directors may also employ a manager and such other employees as may be necessary to operate such business. J. F. STANDER, JOSEPH BIERL. WALLACE WARNER, ELMER TRITSCH HENRY F. NOLTING, HENRY BORN. 'W. H. COFFELT, . RUSSELL V. STANDER HUGH I. STANDER, T. E. TODD, F. W. NOLTING. FRED G. NOLTING. FRED TRITSCH. WALTER TRITSCH, LEONARD BORN, PHILIP KEHNE, LESTER W. EISINGER, JOHN RUTHERFORD, C. L. MAYABB, O. C. RHOADES, HERMAN GRAHAM, FRED H. RUTHERFORD, JOHN P. KAFFENBERGER, LOUIE SCHIESSL, FRED TSCHIRREN. W. H. MEISINGER, MAX VALLERY. JOHN MICIN, C. C. KOKE, FRED BUECHLER, HERMAN WEISS, FRITZ KEHNE. ED H. TRITSCH. WILLIAM HUNTER, M. L. STANDER. GEO. STANDER, ' MIKE VETESNIK. E. J. LUTZ. JOHN W. ELLIOTT, EARL P. BECKER, DAVID RUTHERFORD, PLATTS. STATE BANK by Frank A. Cloidt. Cashier GEORGE BORN, KATHERINE NOLTINrl, T. 11. TOLLOCK. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass Coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate ot William Gilmour, tit-ceased. I To the creditors of said estate: You are hereby notified, that I will sit at the County Court Room in Plattsmouth, in said county, oa the 20th day ot April. 1928. and the 21st day of July, 1928, at 10 o'clock a. m., of each day to receive and ex amine all claims against said estate, with a view to their adjustment and allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claims against paid estate is three months from the 20th day of April A. I). 1S2S. and the time limited for payment of debts Is one year from said 20th day of April 1928. Witness my hand and the seal of said county court this lfth day of March 1928. A. II. DUXBURY. (Seal) Couuty Judge. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska. County of Cass, ss. By virtue of an execution Issued by the Clerk of the District Court, within and for Cass County, Nebras ka, and to me directed, I will on the 14th day of April A. D. 1928. at 10:00 o'clock a. m. of said day at the south front door of the court house in the City of Plattsmouth, Nebraska, In said County, st-11 at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the following described real estate to-wit: An undivided two-thirds ( ) interest in and to the Went Ninety-four (94) feet of Lots Eight (8) and Nine (9); the West Ninety-four (94) feet of the South Half (S) of Lot Ten (10), and the Eatt Twenty four (24) feet of the North Half (N ) of Lot Ten (10). all in Block Thirty-one (31), Orig inal Town, in the City of Platts mouth, Cass County, Nebraska. The same being levied upon and taken as the property of John Cory, defendant, to satisfy a Judgment of said Court recovered by J. F. Bloom & Company, a corporation, plaintiff, against said defendant. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, March Z, A. D. 1928. BERT REED. Sheriff Cass County, m8-5w Nebraska. SIDZRIFFS SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. By virtue of aa Order issued by Golda Noble Beal, Clerk of the Dis trict Court within and for Cabs coun ty, Nebraska, and to me directed, I will on the 16th day of April, A. D. 1928, at 10 o'clock a. m. of said day at the Bouth front door of the court house, in Plattsmouth, in said coun ty, sell at public aucticn to the high est bidder for cash the following de scribed real estate, to-wit: Lots seven (7) and eight (8), in Block forty-five (46), in Young and Hays addition to the City of Plattsmouth, Cass coun ty, Nebraska The same being levied upon and taken as the property of Catherine T. Flynn; Allison Flynn; and Dam Ian Flynn, Catherine Flynn and Pa tricia Flynn, minors, and Catherine T. Flynn, natural guardian of Dam ian Flynn, Catherine Flynn and Pa tricia Flynn, minors: Henry A. Schneider: Mary Schneider, his wife; John Bauer and Emma Bauer, hia wife; Louis B. Egenberger and Anna Egenberger, his wife; Louis Born and Elizabeth Born, his wife; John Wolff and Ella J. Wolff, his wife; August G. Bach and Agnes Bach, his wife, defendants, to satisfy a judg ment of said Court recovered by The Plattsmouth Loan and Building As sociation, plaintiff against said de fendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, March 12, A. D. 1928. BERT REED. Sheriff Cans County, Nebraska. ml2-5w LEGAL NOTIC& In the District Court of Cass Coun ty. Nebraska. Gertrude S. Wolph. Plaintiff. vs. NOTICE- John Robertson, et al Defendants. To John Robertson If living. If de ceased, his unknown heirs, devlseec. legatees, personal representatives and all other psrsons interested in his estate; Mrs. John Robertson, wifo of John Robertson, real name unknown; Mrs. Moses Pollard, wife of Moses Pollard deceased, real name un known; All persons having or claiming any interest in or title to tbe Northeast Quarter of Section Twenty-five (25) in Township Ten (10) North. Range Twelve (12) East of the Sixth Prin cipal Meridian, in CasB County, Ne braska; You and each of you are hereby notified that on the 15th day of March. A. D. 1928. the plaintiff in the foregoing entitled action filed petition in the Dijtrict Court of Cass County, Nebraska, wherein you and each of you are uade parties defend ant, for the purpose of obtaining a decree from said Court quieting the title in plaintiff to the following de scribed real estate to-wit: The Northeast Quarter of Sec tion Twenty-five (25) in Town ship Ten (10) North. Range Twelve (12) East of the Sixth Principal Meridian, in Cass County, Nebraska and to exclude you and each of you from having or claiming any rUht. title or Interest in and to eaid real estate. You are required to answer the petition of plaintiff on or before Mon day the 30th day of April A. D. 1928. GERTRUDE I WOLPH. Plaintiff. C A. BAWLS. . Attoraey. ml 9-4 w V