1 MONDAY, APEIL 1, 1929. PLATTSMOUTH SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL PAGE THEEE MR. EOEAH "CHUCKLES' WANTON WASTE OF OUR FORESTS ! t 1 Che plattsmouth Journal PUBLISHED SE1H-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTIL, NEBSAEKA stare t Postoffica. Plattamouth. Nb. as secoad-clasa cia.ll nia,tir R. A ?irESCKIPTI05 PEICE 2.00 Don't run if you want to catch your breath. :o: Mellon holds that sinking of Brit ish vessel was justifiable. :o: People who have the least to say usually have the most to talk about. :o: No man should object to thick poles on his shoes, as the objections will wear away. :o:- Modesty in a woman is like the color in her cheeks decidedly be coming if not put on. :o: As one editor remarks, a new baby is a greater event than a new auto mobile. And there is no deprecia tion. :o: Catch a boy and shake him al most any day now, and if he's nor mal he'll give forth a sound of rattling marbles. :o: Prisoners in a Missouri jail were discovered making liquor. It teems that even in Jail a fellow can't have personal liberty any more. :o: A Federal clerkship, in Washing- j ton or elsewhere, offers little in the way of advancement. It is a modest living, and that's about all. :o: Husbands of the next generation will probably complain: "Why don't you open Borne of those good old tin j cans like mother used to buy?" :o: j A local citizen remarks that when1 you bet on three aces that's gambling ! and something to be condemned, but when you bet on wheat, that's busi- cess. One exceedingly sac reature of thefie spring floods is that it will de- ' lay the fishing season at least two weeks. The cat-fish ought to be biting . right now. -tor- Women now hold 41 per cent of the wealth of the United States, and lor reports that the Amazon and La a statistician predicte they will hold plata two of the greatest rivers of all of It by 2035. If so. it will be a America are really one rivt.r sweet revenge to put men on an al- running two ways. A sort of valve lowance, lu.ii m,tfu -:o:- The McComb Enterprise calls at- tention to the fact that last year the Illinois Central paid $107,000 in taxes in Pike county, and the bus lines, operating in active competi tion contributed only $250 to the public treasury. j :o: The groundhog saw his shadow on Feb. He therefore slept again un- til March 16 One week later the temperature went to 92. forsvthia bloomed and the shadbrush showed white in the somber woods. Yet we maintain a Weather Bureau. :o:- The Port Gibson Reveille says Senator Pat Harrison is "not much force but a pretty clever fellow." Yeah, Pat packs a wallop not much harder than that of a full-grown mule, and when he goes into action all the Republicans take to cover. -:o: Speaker Shanahan of the Illinois House of Representatives was given the Job of appointing a committee of i seven to invesetigate what state leg- islators are on other payrolls. Peo ple who think being speaker of the Illinois House is a pretty nice job teem to be slightly wrong. -:o: The United States has more money j than any other country on earth and enjoys a greater prosperity; yet a useful statesman like the late Sen- ator Oscar Underwood dies with an estate of but $50,000 while an Ar- nold Rothstein gambler, done nur- veyor. and racketeer leaves about $3,000,000. i - BATES , Publisher PEE TEAS US AEVAKCI is ne No matter how tall a man is not above criticism. :o: All women are equally fair- -when the lights are extinguished. :o: Why do they try to prohibit Tom Heflin from making a ppeeeh? Isn't he a good talker? :o: Instead of waiting for his ship to come in a man should charter a tug and go out to meet it. :o: A vine bears three grapes the first of pleasure, the second of drunk enness, and the third cf repentance. Anacharsis. -:o:- This should be a wonderful Easter, judging by the number of Broadway showers that have been laying eggs for the occasion. :o: Well, the more ships John Bull and Uncle Sam build in competition, the more they'll have to help one another in time of trouble. -:o:- Talk about paying political debts with patronage, the appointment of (Arthur M. Hyde as Secretary of Agri- culture, was nothing else but -:o:- President Hoover abandons the ( Mayflower. And what is he trying to ido make Coolidge economy look, like the extravagance of Louis XIV, the well known Bourbon poker? :o: A bottle thrown at Senator Tom Heflin after his speech at Brockton struck and injured a policeman, Mebbe Tom misses his bottle, but this is the first bottle that ever miss- ed Tom. According to figures issued from Washington, Nebraska is far short of her share of persons holding civil service positions in Washington. Ne- braska isn't the only state that is short on this deal. :o:- An explorer in the Brazilian inter- :o:- A little more than ten years ago the nations of. the world finished fighting a war that nearly wrecked all but a few of them a war fought to end war. Today all of them are , preparing for a new war more ener getically than ever before. :o: I The value of the radio in bring- e minions ui pr-isuus into i-uuuai wltb Public ispues and Publ!c mf'n , was fullr demonstrated in the last campaign when $2,000,000 was spent h P"tical Parties for broadcasting j privileges; New York Times consid ers it great debunking influence. :o: Thomas A. Edison has lived for S2 J There are. of course, situations in years. During that long lifetime he, which worry seems inevitable and In has won great distinction. He has. which it seems the right attitude to worked hard and long, and has giv-( ward trouble. We cannot think high en to the world many extremely use-ly of a person who deludes himself ful inventions. There is not a town into imagining that there is nothing in the country that is not a differ- ent place because he has lived, Wealth and honor have come to him as a result. Pol Three separate prizes for non- top flights around the world have '"'en' offered in the last few days. At the same time, a western millionaire of- fers $25,000 to any man who can communicate with any one of the planets in our solar system. A T.lt- iBh statesman, furthermore, predicts that 100 years from now we s:,a!l have such knowledge of obsecure n'.iy-' Rical nroeesses that we can chance the climate of any climate of any part of the world to suit our tastes, '. Senator Borah believes that the; ,Eighteenth amendment was put into the Constitution by unconstitutional methods. He thinks the provision in the amendment, when proposed, giv- ing the States seven years in which to ratify it, was irregular. Had that point been taken to the Supreme Court, the constitutionality of the I amendment might have been serious- ;ly questioned, in his opinion. Tint thP nr.int -a-n npvor raised. and it is now too late to do any J thing about it. and, as the Associated Press reports him, the Senator from, Idaho chuckled as he told how the wets had overlooked their one best bet. Possibly it is funny. But on whom is the joke? Is it on the wets? Or the people as a whole? Or is it on the Constitution? Let us try a hypothetical question on the Senator. Suppose an amend ment were proposed to the Constitu tion carrying an unconstitutional provision similar to the seven-yc-ar ratifying allowance contained in the amendment. Suppose Mr. Borah op posed the proposed amendment. Would he keep silent about it, or would he attack it as an unconstitu tional procedure? Our guess is that as a professing 100 per cent con stitutionalist Mr. Borah would lay on MacDuff. Then why was he quiet as a mouse while the Eighteenth amendment was being illegally incorporated into the organic law? Are we to understand that Mr. Borah is a prohibitionist first, a constitutionalist afterwards? Let the "chuckling" Senator from Idaho laugh that off. St. Louis Post Dispatch. :o: FERDINAND FOCH The World War produced no Na poleonic genius but there can be no question that, in the opinion of the allied nations, Ferdinand Foch em erged the supreme military figure of those reeling years in the competent Judgment of Hilaire Btlloc, it was Foch who stopped the first German drive on Paris by divining the one weak point in the enemy's advance and by a desperate stand succeeded in damning the flood. That grandi loquent decision, "My right wing is shattered, my left is crumbling, my center is demoralized and from here on I take the offensive, it was dismiss ed by Foch as a bobastic myth, but even so, the hyperbole 6erved to in vest a secondary officer with a sym bolic invincibility. Certainly an aging military instructor, esteemed within his profession as the most brilliant tactician, was suddenly transformed by popular dictum into a man of destiny. That popular expectation was fin ally realized. Reputations bloomed and withered in the bloody stale- mate of apparently hopek-ss Flaugh ter and destruction until experience and exhaustion at last demanded that th? armies of the allies be placed under a supreme commander. Foch jrp-'miijeniiy Hmiit iueu me u um imposed in him. -:o:- DAILY LENTEN THOUGHT Worry is a form of distrust. It is an enemy of the soul because it never i makes any situation better. wrong when, perhaps, there is a great deal wrong; and there are people in life who shrink their burden of worry and who take everything easy only by passing on the burden to some- body else. But if we analyze the matter at all, we shall see that there is a great difference between the courage of faith, meeting wrong situations with the purpose of making them right, and the worry that simply weakens one's power of wise and courageous action in great emergencies, Worry never yet solved any diffi- rultv. The darker the niirht of one's! experience the more need there is ofjrecord 38 the low mIleaee of 1919 seeking light and hope and faith:' whereas, worry only lets the gloom of night darken all the windows of the soul. j ! Worry breaks down the spirit while hope and faith builds up and inspires. , It is Just when there is mo6t to! . worry about that one most needs the ' attitude of faith. :o:- J Charles M. Schwab says that last . year he viewed with alarm the wide- j what he feared never materialized. "I think now that perhaps the pub- lie is right," he adds. Mr. Schwab , I was wrong last year in warning the public against expecting a continued irise in the prices of stocks. Should .that add force to his present implied prediction? An item says as high as $50 is be- ing paid for stumps of black walnut trees in a fair state of preservation, and what do you suppose such are wanted for? Not for furniture, but for gun stocks, being the best sort of wood for that purpose. Not only the stump itself is taken out, but also all roots, all utilized in gun manufacture. From this it would seem black walnut plantations would 1 be profitable in a rew years and farmers with land to spare would do well to start right in, for walnut wood is also in demand tor furniture. So is cherry, but it does not ap pear cherry gun stocks are in re quest. It is said wild cherry treeB are preferable for lumber, but these could easily be planted and when mature enough could be utilized. Then there are many stumps of hem lock still in the ground, and no wood is more desirable in paper making than pulp from the hemlock. All this well illustrates how care less, how shockingly reckless we have been with our forests. Billions of feet of lumber have been liter ally wasted, and this is wanton de struction and sheer waste, without taking into account forest fires that send up in smoke many millions of dollars annually. The waste and the fires are both largely preventable, but the great lose goes on year by year, with not very much doing to check it. Tree planting is in progress in some localities, with the government carefully nursing its lCO.O00.00e acres of its forest reservations. Sev eral prominent railroadB are seed ing large areas along their lines, with the government assisting all within its power. Better transportation methods could provide for utilization of a good part of the trees now left to rot on the ground after the lum bermen have taken their straight cuts from the main truck. Then the waste at the sawmills might be made use of instead of being burned as is the custom. All around for many years it has been a shameful story of waste. It is not likely all waste can be prevented, but certainly a great im provement can be made with more tree planting. A third of a tree ought not to be useless waste as good au thority Bays is the case now. That one-third can supply much that can be made use of. :o: EXCUSE THESE TEARS Referrng to President Hoover's failure to name a Southern man for his cabinet. Grover C. Hall, editor of the Montogomery, Ala., Advertiser, says: "It's a ead story, mates, and Just as soon as our sinus trouble Improve a little we're going to enjoy our selves by weeping in a manner al together becoming to us." Grover, old boy, we also have that sinus affliction, and its a darned nuisance, but It haa not restrained us from weeping, whether becoming or unbecoming over the bitter dis illusionment that has befallen the bolting Democrats of the South, es pecially in Tennessee, Virginia North Carolina, Florida, and Texas, who had so fondly believed that Her bert Intended to put at least one Southerner In hie cabinet. As a matter of fact, Grover, we commenced Bhedding large crocodile tears Just as soon aa the new cabinet was announced, and a full realization of the horror dawned upon us. Our lachrymos output up to this time guages a little more than ten gal Ions. This, it must be admitted, is rather high-clas crying. :o: Looking backward a decade we are struck with the changes that have come about in the everyday things of life, particularly in highway trans portation. The American Automobile Association, the world's largest group of car owners, tells us that the aver age day's run of motor tourists is two hundred and thirty-four miles as against one hundred mile ten years ago. The feature of this statement, it seems to us, is not so much today's An Old Fashioned O EVERY SATURDAY NTTE qj b Murray Dancing Club r- 11 . - a i - ExceUent mUMC. A good time assured. UOOd order. U)me have a good time Sat. night, - . , Murray Dancing ClUD Ben Noell. Mcr. ED I on the FARM " The many advantages that a Maytag has over other washers are all advantages that farm homes will appreciate advantages that are available to any farm home because the Maytag gives you your choice of power gasoline or electricity. What farm wife would not appre ciate saving the better part of a day once each week? The Maytag does the average farm washing in an hour or two. only tlie MAYTAG has the Gasoline Multi-Motor. This modem, high-grade engine is made for the Maytag by The Maytag Company the world's largest producers of single cylinder gasoline engines. It is a simple, sturdy, smooth-running, reliable power plant. A thrust of the pedal starts it. It is so compact that it is interchangeable with the electric motor by removing only four bolts. tlorii2 Rftaytag Co., Platlsmouth Elmwood Goodridge & Coatman Weeping Water. . .Moritz Maytag Co. mm RADIO'S FAB FLUNG EXPANSION We are now assured that all plana lor merging the Western Union Tele graph with the radio transmission business are off and the two will be come more competitive than ever. The Radio Corporation of America seem to be only beginning to find itself. Ita new plana are comprehen sive of the whole world business of Intelligent communications. Not com petition with Western Union alone, but also with the American Tele phone and Telegraph. Also with the International Telephone and Tele graph combined with the Mackay cable. This communication development will be carried on for the Radio Cor poration by Its newly formed subsid iary, R. C. A. Communications, Inc. The parent company will confine it self to the manufacturing end of the business. Undreamed of things are etill ahead in the radio field. Great and wonderful as are its develop ments packed into the paat few years, says Chairman Owen D. Young of the Radio Corporation, "the surface f radio's possibilities haa only been scratched." It is well known to automobile travels the less efficient it becomes. And it is also an axiom among high way engineers that the higher the speed limit for a certain high way, the more costly do? that high way become in proportion to those built for lower speed traffic The road must be wider, the pavement muBt be smoother and faultless, and the curves must be banked higher and higher, saving space therefore, in this urge for speed is the airplane, not the high-powered automobile. :o: Palestine still is the land of milk and honey, although the former now flows through very modern cream separators and the latter goes to mar ket by railroad trains and motor buses. While the blood and culture of the Holy Land of the days of the aspect of twentieth century material progress. Still absorbed in the laws of Moees, the people also are absorb ing the principles of water power and bond issues. :o: HATCHING EGGS White Leghorn, good strain. J2.K6 hundred. Mrs. W. H. Kehne, Plattsmoutb. Neb. aa26-2td 2tw UMi would not appreciate the economy of the life-lasting cast-aluminum tub; the saving in clothes by the gentle water washing What farm wife tator; the saving effected by the Remover that evenly dry and the buttons. Iff. - L':hr 4 Fjfc For homrt with dec V4 tricity, in Maytag jjt It aoatlaih With f9 eUetric motor. THE MAYTAG COMPANY, Newton, Iowa Pounded 1893 I'ermunent Northwestern Factory Branch Maj-tat Building ila Washington Ave North. Minneapolis, Minnesota Jtluminum Form Exclusive Residence District at Louisville Oak Heights to Be New Addition to City With Residences Not Less Than $3,500 Vanle A new addition has been joined to the pleasant little city of Louis ville which is designated as Oak Heights and which will be a very exclusive residential section and one that will have the bars up on any residences that cost less than $3,500. The filing of the new addition has been made at the court house and the persons making the filing are Elmer Sundstrom, mayor of Louis ville and WJ 111am VanScoyoc. The new addition to the cement city is located in the southwest part of the city and consists of seven ir regular lots and which are owned by Harvey Koop, Elmer Sundstrom, Vic tor Breeden. Alfred Johnson and William VanScoyoc. The new addition will be exclusive for residential purposes and is locat ed in one of the most attractive sec tions of the city and where with the homes of the type that are planned, will make it a real place of beautiful homes that the property owners de sire to have preserved by making the specification as to the erection of homes. FEEDERS DAY This La inviting you to attend the 17th Annual Feeders Day, Friday. April 19. 1929. College of Agricul ture, Lincoln. Don't miss this. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of David G. Babbington. deceased. To the creditors of said estate: You are hereby notified that I will sit at the County Court room in Plattamouth, in said county, on the 19th day of April. 1929. and the 20th day of July. 1929, 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 said estate is three months from the 19th day of April, A. D. 1929 and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 19th day of April, 1929. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 13th day of March, 1929. A. H. DUXBUSY. (Seal) Dll-4w Couaty Judge. action of the gyra- in time and labor new Roller Water wrings everything spares write or phone Try the Maytag in your own home. it doesn't sell itaelf, don't keep it. Deferred pay ments you'll never miss. Radio Programs IDIA. PltWhti'ih. 1 u-.. Wad.. 10.00 I'.U VCCO. Mmnea;icjiia. Tri., ft:JG i'.M. HEX. J-or. land. Or.. Tea, I0P.M WDAP.I -on V.urtfa. l!oa..i .Of M . KEZA. Lj tor. aipriniuel-!, Tri. , , (, KM. Cl C. "i orcMto. C:n.. 1 Bei 7 .JO KM. Vkr.T. Cu cmeo, TiiM.. V.4.. "ihui.. Frl. S.. :9tt l-.ir KM. t.oi Anr,Ci, W '!.. 1 :OC KM. kFRC.hn IrBrutfeo. lues.. 7 03 KM . KMC:, bl.Louil. Taei.. Thurt.. bat.. 1C.45 A M. tSL. Salt l.aLe ( it.. Moo..; iOF.M rtL2.Ucoef. 1 hurt.. 9.00 KM. Jttntri 4nlstd " Str.ndisfi Xim l in j:iau a.a,r Alri .a" ar-l. is? fi? HOLDING OWN NICELY From Friday's Dally The reports from the Immanuel hospital at Omaha today state that Mrs. W. F. Gillespie, who was forced to undergo an operation for the am putation of the right arm at the 6houlder, on Wednesday night, was doing just as well as could be ex pected. The ordeal haa been a severe one and with the strain that the patient has been through she has Fuffered a great deal but if she la able to hold her pre8?nt rate or prog ress for a forty-eight hour period it is hoped that she may soon be able to show definite improvement and the infection und poison be checked. The Journal Job Department U equipped to turn out anything from calling: cards to sale catalogs. NOTICE To Rosie Brown, non-realdent de fendant: You are hereby notified that on the 1st day of December. 1928, Vir gil Brown filed a petition against you in the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska, the object and prayer of which are to obtain a divorce from you on the ground that you have wilfully abandoned the plaintiff with out good cause, for the term of two years last past. You ars required to answer said petition on or be.Jor Monday, the 6th day of May. 1929. VIRGIL BROWN, By Plaintiff. W. G. KIECK, ml8-3w His Attorney. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass. as. By virtue of an Order of Hale Issued by Golda Noble Deal, Clerk of the District Court within and for Cass county, Nebraska, and to ms directed, I will on the 20th daj' of April. A. D. 1929, at 10 o'clock a. m. of said day. at the south front door of the court house in the City of Plattsmouth, in said county, sell at public auction to the highest bid der for cash, the following real es tate, to-wit: Lots 7. 8, 9. 10, in Block 3.1, and Lots 5 and 6. In Block 63. in the City of Plattsmouth, and Lots 7. 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12, in Block 6. in Dukes Addition to the City of Plattsmouth, Cans county. Nebraska The same being levied upon and taken as the property of Mrs. Sampson, first and real name un known, et al. defendants, to satisfy a Judgment of said Court recovered by Louis Ackerman, plaintiff against said defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, March 15, A. D. 1929. BERT REED Sheriff Cass County, Nebraska i -STtriiLcy. ri?, ( I a. i t ,V, f J