The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, April 08, 1929, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    MONDAY. APRIL S. 1929.
PLATTSMOUTE SEMI - WEEKLY JOUENAL
PAGE THEE2
'WE STILL MAZE WAE,"
MISSOURI PACmC AND AVIATION
Che plattsmouti 3ournal
rUBIISHED SLII-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMCUTTi, NESEASEA
Katr4 t Pottoflc. Flattaxaouth. Nab. & caad-daia BaU mutt?
A. BATES, Publisher
When Stonewall Jackson's body lay j
in state in the capitol at Richmond,
Va.. in the spring of lSfc'3, a hag
! gard Confederate ofiicer, fresh from
the bitter struggle of Chancellors
! ville, paused before the casket and
remarked:
"If today you meet with Caesar,
'tell him we still make war."
j That old quotation comes to mind
once more as the French republic
; gives final honors to the body of
Ferdinand Foch Foch who com
manded more soldiers than any man
i who ever lived, and who brought to
ja victorious close the most terrible
If the wish is father to the thought The efforts of some people to look jVrar the earth ever witnessed,
the thought must be sunny. pleasant are positively painful. ! The warrior has always had the
:o: 'headlined position on the pages of
Some pretty hard storms struck ; history. From the time of Alexander
9UESC2IPTI0H PRICE $2.00 FEB YEAS EH ADVAFCS
What's the good of being
nobody knows it?
:o:
rood if
The proper time to do a thing
when it should be done.
:o:
Michigan and
tinued north.
Wisconsin,' and
But few things that are worth hav
ing are to be had for the asking.
:o:
It is easier to talk about ruling
mankind with love than it is to do it. With the advent of spring the
:o: i farmer can. at least, fuel in the t!es
-:o:-
Tourists in Cuba spent more than one form of re-leaf.
525.000,000 during the winter sea
eon. :o:
Few women know how to grow old
gracefully and even then they elo
not want to.
:o:
After
con- down to the present, the list e;f men
who have we.n honor and fame has
contained a constant percentage of
fghters. Methods of combat and
I schools ejf strategy have charged.
I The- Macedonian phalanx has evolv-
-: o : -
Add this to your list of similes:
"As unnecessary as a murder mystery
serial in a Chicago newspaper."
: o :
Henry Ford says his e-n!y formula
for success is "work." The most
a cuple have been married original recipe we've seen to date.
two weeks the neighbors lose all in
terest in them.
-:o:
Hoover is starting out with
usual presidential experiences,
eluding a revolution in Mexico.
: o :
t
led in long centuries ef warfare-, into
I the infantry platoon with bayonets
, and hand grenades. But the old prin-
i . .
jtiple remains unchanged. Men have
always been willing to be killed er
mangled at the order of their leader.
Xever yet has the program been
interrupted. Men have devised e lab-
Nobody told Governor Huey L(.iir; orate new ways of killing one an-
to "Beware of the Ides of March! " j other; Hannibal, for instance, with
his war e lephants would nave appre
ciated the modern tank, which serves
much the same purpo.se. But they
have not yet cctne close to finding a
new wav of settling their di.Te-rence-s.
ji
:o:-
tnVln this respect he is more fortunate
ir-- than Caesar.
Students at the
University e-f Mis-
How about bringing Mr. Einstein yissipii are planning to publish a
en-er to this country and putting him j umal in Latin. Let us hope t h. y ; Var is s,ni ti. accepted method, and
to work on the parking probl-m? j will also be taught to write good! the soldier still has plenty of m-
:o: English
Not many of us ever expected
New
-:o:-
Elinor Glynn and Calvin Coedidge- to
be Leadliners for the same magazine.
:o:
The bottom of Hake Superior,
which is 11S0 feet below the surface
in some places, is rS9 below the sea
level.
:o:
A Greek in Kansas City had his
name changeel from Loannis Papa
hrones to John Apestolop. Quite an
advantage.
-:o:-
Cotton produced in the United
bales annually.
,"00 pounds.
Each ba'.e weighs
-:n:-
war becomes imminent as
President Chiang Kai-shek threatens
to use revolutionary methods on hos
tile factions in Wuhan cities of Han
kow, Wuchang and Hanyang.
:o:
Jugoslavia has come forward with
another attempt to regulate the dress
and general habits of her girls who
are trying to dress and act like the
.rest ef the girls in the world.
j
i Oklahoma impeached a couple oi
Governors and now the- chief justice
of the Supreme Court i- in for it.
Couldn't pome kind of job be arrang
ed out there for Snator Heflin?
ploymeiit.
The parsing of Foch brings this
fact home- somehow. When he was
hurling his masses of Fi e nch. British
and American soldiers at the- Ger
man lines in that last great onVnive,
and men were- dying ly the i-core-s
of thousands to bring the war te an
end. there was
world; a hope
struggle might,
about a better
- n
rr-1 . f . , I,,.... t
i:ie lusuf oi anpiai.e ,,une-v ino,, j A rnjversitv of ChicaSO student
can't last long. In the end all of the Reveals a scjentific system of wash
young couples will discover they ,ng. d?hfis in haf thp tJmp jt US(.(, t()
have to come down to forth iust the 1akp Xqw maybe fath(.r can gt,t tfct.
FaTT1'- :job done in time to see a show.
:o:
:o:-
Quite a few pe-ople are said to be j
disappointed over Mr. Cev-Iidge's cr
ticbs. Alter all those costumes he
wore in Dakota you can't blame peo
ple for expecting some wild west
stories. I
:o: I
By nature we are far from pessi
mistic, but please don't ask us to
have faith in the so-called lily white
Republican party. Butter can't have
the- smell of clover if there are onions
in the ice box.
:o:
Dinners and other entertainments
to distingi'ished visitors cost the
British government ?rC.r;4r last year,
the visit of the King of Egypt call
for an expenditure of Iraq. $4.0r5.
:o:
the
the
I President Hoover has se-nt
i White House horses back to
i quartermaster and closed the White
! House stables. Further evidence of
an economically stable government?
i :o:
Einstein says only about a dozen
men in the world could probably un-
When the extra session of Congress ,erstand his new gravitation theory,
but we don't know about that. A lft
of us have mastered the income-tax
blank.
:o:
convenes. Senator Jim Watson wm
be seated at Daniel Webster's old
csk. Old and incongruous little
things like that happen in the Sen
ate almost every day.
: o :
A preacher in an interview says
The completed Boulder Dam will
store enough water to cover the state
of Ohio to a depth ef one foot. It
he likes reporters. Which inspires ajill hold all the water the Colorado
pessimist of that tribe to rise and rjVer can send down in a year and a
remark that it seems as though they ( half. The estimated cost of this dam
can mane good with everyone except i js $125,000,000.
those on speaking terms with Mr.
Brad street.
:o:
Chorus girls fled in scanty attire
from r. fire in a New York theatrical
boarding house. A group of talented
-:o:-
a great hope in the
that this frightful
in some way, bring
day, in which the
ree-essity for war and destruction
could be ave.ided. Out of this war
it was felt, could be made to grow
a new order that would be wiser
and less bIoedy
That hope is not so strong n:v.
It is not Foeh's fault. H was given
the job e)f bringing the old war to
an end, so that victory could be
made the foundation for a ne w era.
He did his part masrnifn ntly. His
irqi m iun.ias "q s.t:.wit! i.s ouiri
select circle eif strategists that in
cludes such soldiers as Napob-on and
Ie-e.
But after his job was f lushed, the
rest of us slipped up. We let the
idealism and high resolves of war
time cioze eut ef us, and dropped back
into acceptance of the edd ways. So
now, 10 years after the war, we find
ourselves little nearer an enduring
peace than we were before.
It would be pleasant to be able to
say that Foch will prove to have been
the last of the great generals. But
we can't be that optimistic. As Fech
coes to his grave, we can do little
but quote the Confederate officer:
"If today you meet with Caesar,
tell him we still make war."
:o:
POCH'S FAMOUS DISPATCH
ounces
for
25c
than a pound and a ball
for a quarter
rice
for over
v
GUARANTEED PURE
3Mions of pounds used
by the uovemment
AMBASSADOR HERBICK
One ef the most inspiring stories
that cluster about the name of the
late Marshal Foch is the story of
the famous dispatch he sent Joffre
during the first battle of the Marne.
You remember it. of course "My
In England a bride led a dog to
the altar, and held it there in lesh
while the wedding ceremony was be- j M 1 is Riving way and my right is
ing performed. The stipulation of 1 ' real in-
"love me, love my dog," perhaps hnd
fleas kept their heads and let their been agreed to by the g:oom, bu1. it
trainer pack them safely into a was cruel to spoil his wedding day
valise. A flea in scanty attire by reminding him of the dog's life
wouldn't be noticed in the street, he is to lead.
anyway. I :o:
:o: A symposium on a question w'.'ch
A press dispatch from Washington vexes the world Bishop McCor .ell
says President Hoove r is well pleased . thinks another great war will i es
over the appointment of Henry J. Jtroy our civilization; Major G.T'ral
Allen, of Kansas, as United States O'Ryan thinks law must be substi ut-
Senator to succeed Vice-President ed
Curt!-, fiom which we are fenced to1 trusts
conclude tliat the Piesid
to please.
lit is
for war; Primo tie Rivera !is-
disarmament; Mme. Schvim-
easy mer thinks America has shown ..ow
pace can be achieved.
I shall attack with my
center.
It is otie of those things that thrill
even the most jaded. It picture's, per
fectly, the dash and the courage of
the supreme soldier.
But now, it develops, Foch never
wrote it! The whole thing, it seems,
is an invention, the product of seme
gifted French journalist's brain.
Really, though, it doesn't matter.
The dispatch tells precisely what
Foch did. and th- circumstances un
der which he did it; whether he put
the wends together er not is of small
consequence.
:o:
IN 25 YEAES
In a single-motor land plane, two
Spanish aviatens, Jiminez and Igles
ias, made a flight fremi Seville in
Spain tej Bahia in Brazil ever the
South Atlantic ocean. It took them
forty-three and a half hours to lly
tome 4100 miles, and to make the
seventh crossing of the South Atlan
tic by air. A brilliant feat and yet
two years of transcontinental avia
tion have dulled our sense of aston
ishment at its performnace. That we
should regard this crossing with
comparative complacence shows how
far aviation has come in a quarter
of a century since Wilbur and Or
ville Wright held their fantastic ex
periments at Kitty Hawk, N. J.
Myron T. Herrick was almost CO
before he really found himself. He-
was, et course, a citizen ot ceus.e-
quenee when President Taft, in 1911',
appointed him Ambassador to France-.
He was a "caret1 r man" in what we
like to regard as the characteristic
sclmol ef American suece-rs. Born e.n
a tarm he had taught school in ms
youth, studied law, moved to Cleve
land, won the favorable opinion of
that citv's financiers, quit the law
for banking, accumulated a fortune,
got into politics under the pre-ceptor-ship
of Mark Hanna, was ele-i-ted
Governor of Ohio, was defeate-d as a
candidate to succeed himself, and his
public life had presumably tnded.
He was comparatively unknown,
in a natiemal sense, when Mr. Taft
belatedly honored Lim with an ap
pointment te a post which, in the
nature of things political, would be
briefly held. Mr. Wilson assumed
the presidency on March 4, 191", and
while Mr. Bryan, as Secretary cf
State, was finding minor places in the
diplomatic service for "deserving
Democrats," Mr. Herrick continued
in Paris pending the selection of a
qualified successor. He was there in
that fateful summer of 1914, when,
as he said later in a speech in St.
Louis, "It seemed as if God had for
gotten the world." His decision to
remain in Paris when the diplomatic
corps as a whole- was leaving the ap
pal ently doomed city captured the
imagination of France, and Mr. Her
rick of Ohio, awoke to find himself
Herrick of the United States.
He has never lost that stature.
With the return of the Rpublican
party to power in 1921 he resumed
his ambassadorship, by appointment
of Mr. Harding, with the unquali
fied approval of American public
opinion, while French sentiment wel
comed him home with acclaim and
fervor.
How competently he stepped into
the dramatic occasion of Lindbergh's
happiest of happy landings at Le
Bourget, his heispitality to, and par
ental guidance of the "wonderful
boy," who unlike Wordsworth's
Ohatterton, did not "perish in his
youth," is among the cherished
memories of that deathless legend.
Diplomacy, thank heaven, is no
longer the dark profession of showy
elegance, in which master practition
ers of duplicity Juggle with the des
tiny and very lives of peoples. The
diplomat? must, as ever, be an ur
bane, polished and astute gentleman,
supplanted the talent for intrigue.
Ceitainly Mr. Herrick won his place
in history as a eliplomat, and his
success in that profession is meas
ured,, we believe, by the esteem and
affection of the nation to which he
was accredited. St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
:o:-
A bill was introduced in the leg
islature last week which would make
all farmers college graduates. L. R.
Bagby, editor of the Craig Leader,
wishes they would pass a bill to make
all editors quit editing newspapers
and go to work in some bank where
there is money.
:o:
TEACT0E FOE SALE
The first Amreican railroad to add
the airplane to its passenger equip
ment, the Missouri Pacific, is launch
ed upon a development, the end of
which we can no more than foresee at
this time than the development of
railroad transportation could have-1!
been foreseen when George Stephen
son was operating the Rocket be
tween Manchester and Liverpool.
Other American railroads, to be
sure, are connecting with privately
owned air lines; but the design of
the Missouri Pacific is to make air
service to the Southwest its own. It
is not toej much to assume that the
time is not far distant when one
may fly in a Missouri Pacific plane
part of the way from St. Louis to
the City of Mexico. Aviation in
America is young. There is nothing
here comparable to the Luft-Hanse or
any of the other great airlines of
Europe. It is supposed that this is
so because of the magnificent dis
tances in America.
What the Missouri Pacific has in
mind immediately, of course, is re
ducing by plane the tedium of travel
between remote parts of the Seiuth-
west and the big Northeastern cities.
Texas, for example, is for the most
part about as far from St. Louis in
time as is New York. Planes cemld
reduce the time between San An
tonio or Hosuotn and St. Louis by
from 1-3 to 1-2. This would
bring most Texas points within ap
proximately 3G er 40 hemrs of New-
York as against the present approxi
mate e.f 4S to f4.
The night-and-day alternating
modes of travel, that is, taking planes
by day and trains by night, assumes
much greater possibilities over
greater distances such as those en
the Missouri Pacific system than it
does in the aEstern United States.
:o:
GOVEENTNG OKLAHOMA
Oklahoma has ousted its second
Governor in six years, and people in
adjacent states must be begin ing to
wemder just what there is about the
atmosphere of Oklahoma's state cap
ited building that makes it hard for
a Governor te stay in it.
Johnson fedlows Walton into re
tirement, after an impeachment trial
that was, tt say the least, hardly
edifying. One cannot help thinking
that if the Oklahoma voters were to
demand a little metre plain speaking
during the campaign they could dis
cover the character and qualifications
of a candidate earlier and save them
selves considerable trouble.
However, there is this to remem
ber; edher states than Oklahoma have
had highly incompetent Governors,
and have put up with them. Okla
homa at least does not hesitate in
getting rid of hers when she finds
them out.
:o:
IT SEEMS LNCEEDABLE
That all American business men
mav carry revolvers.
That all American clergymen carry
flasks of whisky.
That all American girls chew gum
incessantly.
That on all American telephones
you can get the right number the
first time.
That all American policemen are
burly and beefy and crooked.
That all American newspaper re
porters wear straw hats perched on
the back of their heads.
That every American household
possesses an icebox.
That every American boy wears a
peak cap and is freckled
But it is so, if we are to believe
the American movies.
:o:
ME. HYDE AND TEE FAEM
We would not for the world dis
parage the career of Mr. Hyde as sec
retary of Agriculture. He is a com
paratively young man, and for all we
know he may become in time the
peer of Dean Mumford of the Mis
souri Agricultural College.
But he is hardly that now. Nor is
he, as the New York Herald-Tribune
says, "a real farmer." The Herald
Tribune seems to think a real farmer
is one who supported Lowden for
the presidential nomination and
wanted the McNary-Haugen bill to
become a law. All we can say about
that is that neither qualification is
part of the curriculum where Dean
Mumford presides.
" ZC1
r-r -tret
r
VFE and srowth for chicks : :
this sign points tbat out to you. It
directs you to Purina Chick Startena.
The new feeding discoveries that
come to you in Startena this: year will
give better livability and 15 to 20
greater growth than ever before.
There's Iocs of buttermilk in Start
ena. Chicks like it and grow on it.
The cod-liver oil in Startena takes the
place of sunshine and keeps chicks
from getting leg weakness.
And there's alfalfa leaf meal, gran
ulated meat, wheat middlings, wheat
bran, wheat germ, corn meal, bone
meal, linseed meal, calcium c arbonate
and salt in Startena.
Everything
there . . that
chicks need.
Order your
Purina Chick
Startena today
an
JXJ
rs1
y i
Mynard, Nebr.
MOLTE
H, M. Soennichsen
Plattsmouth
E. Lancaster
Murray
ORDER OF HEARING
em Petition for Appedntment of
Administrator
The State of Nebraska. Cass coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of
Henry Bartek, deceased.
On reading and filing the petition
of Paul Bartek, praying that admin
istration of said estate may be grant
ed to Frank A. Cloidt, as Adminis
trator; Ordered, that April 26th. A. D.
1929, at ten o'clock a. m., is assign
ed for hearing said petition, when
all persons interested in said matter
may appear at a County Court to be
held in and for said county, and
show cause why the prayer of peti
tioner should not be granted; and
that notice of the pendency of said
petition and the hearing thereof be
given to all persons interested in
said matter by publishing a copy of
this order in the Plattsmouth Jour
nal, a semi-weekly newspaper print
ed in said county, for three success
ive weeks prior to said day of hear
ing.
Dated March 2 7th, 1929.
A. H. DUX BURY,
i (Seal) al-3w County Judge
Well, if worst comes to worst,
and your neighbor won't keep his
chickens at home, and his dog tears
up the yard, and he glares at you
every time he passes, yem can always
get a job as a prohibition agent and
shoot him down.
:o:
BUILDING TOE SALE
2CX.16 church on Granite street.
Over 7000 feet very good lumbrr,
mostly white pine, full diminsion.
m21-3tsw. EMIL WEYRICH.
Phone yotir news to No. 6.
ORDER OF HEARING AND NO
TICE OF PROBATE OF WILL
ORDER OF HEARING
on Petition for Appointment of
Administratrix
NOTICE
The State of Nebraska, Cass coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of Jo
seph Fetzer. deceased.
On reading and filing the petition
of Charlotte Fetzer Patterson, pray
ing that Administration of said es
tate may be granted to Charlotte
Fetzer Patterson, as Administratrix;
Ordered, that April 26th. A. D.
1929, at ten o'clock a. m. is assigned
for hearing said petition, when all
persons interested in said matter
may appear at a County Court to be
held in and for said county, and
show cause why the prayer of peti
tioner should not be granted; and
that notice of the pendency of said
petition and the hearing thereof be
given to all persons interested in
said matter by publishing a copy of
this order in the Plattsmouth Jour
nal, a semi-weekly newspaper print
ed in said county, for three success
ive weeks prior to said day of hear
ing.
Dated March 30th, 1929.
A. H. DUXBURY,
(Seal) al-3w County Judge
In the County Court of Cass coun
ty. Nebraska.
State of Nebraska, County of Cass,
ss.
To all persons interested in the
estate of Lorina Creely. deceased:
On reading the petition of Emm-;tt
I. Ellis praying that the instrument
filed in this court, on the 27th day
of March, 1929, and purporting to
be the last will and testament of the
- , , , , , ,
1 saia deceased, may oe proved arid ii
! lowed and recorded as the last will
j and testament ef Lerina Creely, de
ceased; tnat saiu instrument ne .a
mitted to probate and the adminis
tration of said estate be granted to
Emmett I. Ellis, as Executor;
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 26th day of April,
A. D. 1929, at ten o'clock a. m., to
show cause, if any there be, why the
prayer of the petitioner should not
be granted, and that notice of the
pendency of said petition and that
the hearing thereof be given to all
persons interested in said matter by
publishing a copy ef this Order In
the 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 27th day of March,
A. D. 1929.
A. H. DUXBURY.
i (Seal) al-3w County Judge.
i .
SHERIFF'S SALE
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
One 15-30 Hart-Parr Tractor, in
A-l condition. Thone 3221.
FRED BEVERAGE.
Murray, Nebr.
m23-2d, 3sw
To Rosie Brown, non-resident de
fendant: You are hereby notified that on
the 1st day of December, 1928. Vir-j
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
j'ou on the ground that you have
wilfully abandoned the plaintiff with- ;
out good cause, for the term of two '
years last past. You are required to
answer said petition on or before
Monday, the 6th day of May. 1929. j
ml 8-2 w
VIRGIL BROWN,
By Plaintiff.
W. G. KIECK,
His Attorney.
The State of Nebraska, Cass coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of David
G. Babbington, deceased. k
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
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. DUXBURY.
(Seal) ml8-4w County Judge.
State of Nebraska, County of Cass,
ss.
By virtue of an Order of Stile
issued by Golda Noble Beal, Clerk of
the District Court within and ior
Cass ceiunty, Nebraska, and to ma
directed, I will on the 20th day of
April. A. D. 1929, at 10 o'clock a.
m. of said day, at the south frcnt
door of the court house in the City
of Plattsmouth, in $;aid county, sell
at public auction to the highest bid
der for cash, the following real e?s
tate, to-wit:
Lots 7, 8, 9, 10. in Block 33,
and Lots 5 and 6, in Block 63,
in the City of Plattsmouth. and
Lots 7. 8, 9. 10, 11 and 12. in
Blcck 6, in Duke-B Addition to
the City of Plattsmouth. Cass
county, Nebraska
The same being levied upon and
taken as the property of Airs.
Sampson, first and real name un
known, et al, defendants, to sath.fy
a judgment of said Court recovered
by Louis Ackerman, plaintiff against
said defendants.
Plattsmouth, Nebraska, March 15,
A. D. 1929.
BERT REED
Rheri:I Cass County,
Nebraska