The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, March 17, 1932, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    THimSDAY. MAECH 17, 1922.
FLATTSXIOUTO ESH-OTESLT J0IJI2IAL
PAGE TZZSO
TThe (Plattsmouth Journal
PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, ITESEASKA
Entered at Postoffice, Plattsmouth, Neb., as second-class mail matter
R. A. BATES,
SUBSCRIPTION PBICE $2.00 A YEAR IN FIRST POSTAL ZONE
Subscribers living in Second Postal Zone, $2.50 per year. Beyond
600 miles, 3.00 per year. Kate to Canada and foreign countries.
13.50 per year. All subscriptions are payable strictly in advance.
If only emergency taxes would end
when the emergency does.
:o:
Cold feet will cause frozen cts
quicker than anything else.
:o:
Happy Warrior Al Smith has cre
ated a lot of unhappy worriers.
:o:
If; Wall Street can get rid of the
bear, it may get rid of the wolf.
:o:
Mr. Dreiser is slipping. His latest
book falls a little short of 500 pages.
THIS patented coastructics. eves extra
protection against punctures and blowouts
and stronger bond between tread and cord
body. Every Firestone Tire also has tie extra
strength, and safety of Gum-Dipped Cords
end Tough, Thick, Long-Wearing N on -Skid
Tread. Firestone give these Extra Values at no
more cost because they save millions annually
in buying, manufacturing and distributing.
Firestone concentrate all their world-wide
resources in build
ing only complete
lines of quality
tires, tubes, batter
ies, brake lining.
COMPARE CONSTRUCTION, QUALITY and PHICC
4.40-21
! EACH
J I When
I J Bought
1 J Pairs
If . II
BATTERIES
Exclusive construction features give
Bore power ior all requirements and
longer life. Replace yaur old bat
tery today.
JOS
up
(with your old battery)
Flreatoo. Tira. Tubes Firestone Spark Fluy
Firestone Batteries Firestone AbFi-b
Firestone Brake Iinfn Firestone Radiator Hose
Listen to the VOICE OF FIRESTONE" every Monday night over
1 Ferd Dales snC Ccrvicc
A'D BAKKE Murray
TMUNKENBOLZ OIL CO.. .Union
&VTHEWS GARAGE-Greenwood
DETRICK MOTOR CO..Lovule
KiRGENSON'S FT-Srj Statn.Avoca
Publisher
In times like these a lot of our
close friends are getting closer.
:o:
As a last desperate effort, they
might try a law forbidding pros
perity. :o::
Trade doesn't appear to follow the
flag if it's Chinese trade and the
Japanese flag.
:o:
There is no harm in believing only
half you hear, providing you believe
the right half.
spark plugs and accessories lor sale througn
Firestone Service Dealers and Service Stores.
Each line o! Firestone Tires designated by
tread design and name is built with quality
and construction that excel that of special
brand mail order tires sold at the same prices.
Drive in today and let us show yon the
Extra Values in Firestone Tires. See cross
sections and make your own comparisons
with special brand mail order tires. Now is
the time to equip
OLDF1ELD TYPE
Caah Fries
Each
Cash FHm
far Pair
bimm
4.40-21
4.50-20
4.50-21
4.73-19
5.00-19
5.00-20
5.25-18
5.25-21.
5.50-18
84.79
5.35
5.43
6.33
6.65
6.75
7.53
8.15
8.35
8.43
10.65
10.05
& 9.30
10.33
XO.54
12.32
12.93
13.10
14.60
1582
16.20
16.46
20,66
21.04
6.50
5.50-19
6.00-18H.D.
6.00-19H.D.
7.50
9.00
'All Other Sizes at Proportionately Low
6
scientific
BRAKE SERVICE
UU J m VVHMI J VW atVJf aVH
Don'c take chances. Have your
brakes adjusted today.
BRAKE ADJUSTING
6
J sndup X
Sa
HANSON MOTOR CX.. .Nsbawba
ALVO GARAGE. Alro
RAY GAMLIN. ...... . . .IJhsdsdx
ASHLEY O. AULT. . .Cct Crcclx
COLE MOTOR CO.-Vcrp'a Vciar
Governor Roosevelt advocates State
control of liquor. He might try hav
ing his State control it first.
:o:
Never again call the Chinese yei
low. They don't take it in fearful
silence when racketeers rob them.
:o:
When a French Premier wants a
vote of confidence, he says: "Nobody
should pay debts except Germans."
:o:
The proposed tax on motor car oils
and greases will have the usual ef
fect first the motorist will squawk.
and then his car will squeak.
:o:
If New Year resolutions were as
easy to keep as they are to make,
maybe some of us, like Elijah of old,
would go up in a pillar of smoke.
:o:
The trouble with new styles for
women is that they soon become so
popular that they become unpopu
lar. :o:
The new command from Captain
Hoover, of the Ship of State, is for
al! hands to stand by to repel hoarders.
i '8W1 SDBAIB)-
your car and save
money ior prices
were never so low.
Drive in today!
Tira
6.00-20H.D.
blO.93
5.00-22H.D.
7.00-20 H.D.
11.60
14-65
TRUCK AND BUS TIRES
30x5 H.D
32x6 H.D
$15.45
329.9
S3.53
36.3
14.C3
16.33
2345
-C3.C3
61.65
51C3
73.63
3.14
31.63
51.63
700
&tx7 H.D
6.00-20H.D.
- 20H.D.
- 20H.D.
- 20B.D.
9.75-20H.D.
Price
lUt?00lTOOO
SPARK PLUGS
Put pep in lazy
motors. Power
sealed, double
tested the spark
plugs of improved
Far AAos9at T
FORDS
CQ3
Ps OtW Cm
7GC
lf tiH ior i
Wfcaal Sarvfaa
fgnhinti Servios
Car WaaUng
icroa
Tire RspslHag
N.aC Nationwide Network
So this is the civilization the
doughboys died to Bare.
: -o: ,
Why dread inflation, it it is the
opposite of what we have now?
-:o:
Think what public life would be
if the "emanc ipation of women
hadn't purified it.
, :o:
A writer with a nify choice of
words speaks of the Soviet Five-Year
Plan as "promising."
:o:
If Mary's little lamb should try to
keep up with her at present, it cer
tainly would feel sheepish.
: ;
Anottter advantage of storing up
treasure in heaven is that only one
person's folly can lose it for you.
-:o:-
Japan again asserts that she is in
favor of disarmament. Maybe she ts
merely trying to disarm the Chinese.
:o:-. : -
We don't know whether what Ja
pan gets from the war will be as
much as she expects, but it will be
different. .
-:o: -
Each time the world Powers warn
Japan to get out of Shanghai the
Japanese pass the warning along to
the Chinese.
:o:
The politician doesn't have spch
a happy time of it. When he isn't
busy figuring what he's going to get
out of it, he's figuring how he's go
ing to get out of it.
'-:o:- '
The Retail Clothiers' Association
announces that trousers will not be
creased in 1932, so there you are,
buddie. We're all drest up to go
out and didn't know it. -
:o:
A CRESCENDO IN PIANO SAIE3
One stops to listen nowadays be
fore the house in which a piano is
being well played. Around that
house there gathers an atmosphere of
other, more graceful times; Perhaps
not for the strains of a golden voice
would one have : paused here. No,
nor hardly for the strains of a Bee
thoven symphony. It is a paradox of
the times that the majesty of a great
orchestra transmitted hundreds of
miles from the concert hall to the
home might not even retard a pass
er's steps but a fragment of one
hu-nble performer's effort can stay
them. . . . - ,
For the home-played piano is one
of the better things of eur yester
daysor so it seems. Phonograph
and radio ' appear to have monopol
ized living-room entertainment. At
auy rate; it is to these mediums of
music that the decline of the parlor
piano is attributed. 'The young
folks won't bother . to learn how to
play "when1 they can: get. such good
in usie " by just . turning . a. knob." . ' So
it I is believed - that: pianos. , if they
serve at all, must-stand and .wait.
Arid since the J business decline has
turned -detention, to less expensive
ornaments, many a'.pianQ .maker .has
become .convinced that his, business
is but- of tune with Ithe times. v
Hasn't it occurred to anyone that
the radio should'. have ."been used fuj.'
a. better .purpose" thin merely, to keep
the '"ivories", from getting soiled un
der - young fingers .' Shouldn't so
much muslc,r so ably played, have
inspired" the-youngsters to try their
hand at making, some of their own?
When the best a boy or ' girl ever
heard was the wheeze of a parlor
organ or the loose, dut-of-Joint rasp
ing and plucking of a tottering
piano, there-was not much incentive
to make the ' sounds " locally known
as music. All -this should be differ
ent' how.
One piano manufacturer,' perhaps
sensing the anomalous nature of the
piano's : fall from favor, has turned
to turning the . tide. This firm, by
synchronizing itself with the right
product, the right ' price and the
right dealers, has put a host of new
pianos where they ought to be. Sales
in six months beginning last July
have been increased 245 per cent
over 130 figures on an expensive
line. Now you can't sell pianos, es
pecially in these : times, ' to people
who do not want them. '-
Of 'course, a piano built to sell for
400 should not be regarded as a
Stradlvarius of its family, though it
might be a reasonably good one. A
higher-priced - piano should . prove a
better investment in the long run.
But the fact -that -any piano can be
sold in Increasing volume nowadays
should do much -to correct the im
pression : that the - instrument - of
Chopin,' Liszt, Rubinstein, Paderew
ski, is no longer the instrument of
the people. The" experience of one
company should offer a hint to oth
ers', - even in the high-priced field.
PeThaps the right product at the
"right" price would increase the pro
duction of some of the finest pianos
sufficiently to make them available
to easy zasro-homes. sad ' at the
Cn - .tbsi .'a stttle msnufactur-
(kHmmt? fMhmiKr Glim
Get Iowa's Finest Chicks
Wonderful chance to eet itirtid with um at
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krunom natfiiiTii:. .w igr efut.
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, Tliuradaya. tiet bit, tree book.
U&" i
. s7reJ
FRANKLIN IIATCIIERY A
Mr. N. OUa. mvm Dapt. Oowicll
BOYCOTT AS A WEAPON
The more we think about these
spontaneous boycotts, the more we
are inclined to think that they are
the most terrible" weapon yet de
vised. The Indian boycott against
English cotton has laid waste whole
sections of Lancashire and brought
hundreds of thousand of Englishmen
to the point of starvation.
The Chinese boycott against Ja
pan has brought about such terrible
unemployment in the little Japanese
empire that her government, in des
peration, has run amuck. Govern
ments usually run amuck when they
are faced by a boycott because boy
cotts cannot be controlled by gov
ernment action. The only way the
English or the Japanese can stop the
boycott against their goods is to kill
off every Indian and every China
man. And then the last state would
be worse than the first.
A group of American women, on
their own initiative, have undertak
en to boycott Japanese silk. They
have announced that Mrs. Hoover's
recent appearance at a public func
tion "led the way" for their dem
onstration. Poor Mrs. Hoover can do noth
ing about it. The whole army and
navy of the United States can do
nothing about it. The Japanese
might possibly be driven by an ex
tension of the idea to declare war on
us, but In reality even that would
accomplish nothing. Japan could be
ruined and all governments would
have to stand helplessly by and watch
the ruination proceed.
What fascinates and terrifies us
at the moment is the speed with
which diverse peoples are learning
the potency of this weapon. Accord
ing to another story the Chinese
merchants of this city have agreed
to boycott Japanese goods. We are
told you can no longer buy Japan
ese 6andals in Chinese shops here.
What can the Japanese government
do about that? What can the Amer
ican government do? Baltimore
Evening" Sun.
:o:
WELL, CAN YOU IMAGINE IT?
With 'the comforting reflection
that things might be worse, a writer
in the New York Nation quotes the
British economist, John Maynard
Keynes, to . the effect that "there is
no I'Hlural or inevitable period of
time during which a depression can
Inst, although the longest one known
to history is that which occurred
during; the Middle AgeB. It lasted
eight hundred years."
- We have known only an expand
ing -world, and we have got used to
taking it. for granted that each suc
cessive year would find the mechan
ics of life better than they were the
year before.
Everything gets bigger and bet
ter as a matter of course. When we
move into a new apartment, it is
more convenient than the one we
left; when we buy a new car, it Is
faster and easier to drive than the
ol done we discarded.
But things can go down-hill as
well as up, and there have been na
tions which have got used to a grad
ual simplification of life; which have
seen great buildings, -not torn down
to make room for greater ones, but
gradually abandoned, one after an
other , which have frankly recog
nized the impossibility of maintain
ing the machinery which their fore
fathers had set up.
The aqueducts of Rome were nev
er rebuilt after Belisarius destroy
ed them, and from that day forward
most Romans went unbathed.
Can we imagine similar catas-
trophies overtaking us, and can we
Imagine ourselves in a similar frame
of mind? .
Can we Imagine taking it for
granted that when our electric re
frigerator breaks down we shall have
to go back to . an icebox, that the
road over which we drive will not be
repaired, but will get worse and
worse until it is impassable at last?
Can we imagine horse-drawn ve
hicles gradually replacing taxicabs,
and a day when the Bronx subway
will cease to run because it has no
passengers?
:o:
Friends of Al Smith report that
he has outgrown his brown derby,
but what the. other aspirants want
to know is whether he has outgrown
his old running pants.
Save Money!
tl itkM hinorf Mmn in
nut h nuaiin. hunt
our punv-bred. iarin-ranse
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by enr Mr.
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Tnrer breeds sllchtjy hlclter A
few rery rhuice Grade AAA. up to
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aluiidny.' and
Send NOW 1
Bluff, la.
"Will you be strubbling along in
the same old job and at the same old
salary this time next year?" asks
a thrilling circular issued by a cor
respondence school. To this, a col
umnist in a neighboring town bakes
haste to reply, "Ye gods, we hope
so.
:o:
At Los Angeles clouds are photo
graphed daily and stored for future
use in pictures. The fog-effects in
films are provided by the subtitle
writers.
:o:
Scientists now saw the world will
last a trillion years. That ought to
give us time enough, at all events,
to get around the corner.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The state of Nebraska, Cass Coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of
William G. Rauth, 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
1st day of April, A. D. 1932, and
on the 2nd day of July. A. D. 1932.
at ten o'clock in the forenoon 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 the pre
sentation of claims against said es
tate is three months from the 1st
day of April. A. D. 1932, and the
time limited for payment of debts is
one year from said 1st day of April,
1932.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said County Court this 4th day of
March, 1932.
A. H. DUXBURY.
(Seal) m7-3w County Judge.
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE
OF LAND
Notice is hereby given that under
authority of an Order of Sale Issued
by the Clerk of the District Court of
Cass county, Nebraska, in an action
pending in said court in which Vin
cent W. Straub Is plaintiff and Frank
A. Cox and Louisa M. Cox are defend
ants, commanding me to sell the real
estate hereinafter described in satis
faction of the amount adjudged by
the decree of said Court entered June
13, 1931. to be due plaintiff in the
rum cf $7,222.57. with interest and
costs, as in Eaid decree provided, I,
the undersigned Sheriff of Cass coun
ty. Nebraska, will, on April 18, 1932,
at 11:00 o'clock a. m.. at the south
front door of the court house in the
City of Plattsmouth, in Cass county,
Nebraska, effer for sale at public
vendue the following described real
estate. to-v.-it:
South 75.40 acres of the north- .
west quarter of Section 2, in .
Township 10. North of Range
12. East of the 6th P. M., in Cass
county, Nebraska
and will 6ell the same to the highest
bidder for cash.
ED W. THIMGAN,
Sheriff of Cass County,
Nebraska.
Wm. H. Pitzer.
Attorney.
ml7-5w
REFEREE'S SALE
Notice is hereby given that by
virtue of judgment in partition en
tered on the 20th day of February,
1932. confirming shares in the case
of Humphrey Murphy, plaintiff, vs.
Joseph P. Murphy, Margaret Mur
phy, Edward W. Murphy, Agnes
Murphy, Bradford J. Murphy, Mar
garet Murphy, Catherine Wonder,
Charles J. Wonder, and Ershal Mur
phy, then pending in the District
Court of Cass county, Nebraska,
wherein the undersigned was ap
pointed referee to partition the land
involved in said action; upon re
port of the referee that physical par
tition of the land could not be made
without great prejudice to the par
ties it wa3 thereupon ordered and
adjudged by the court that said land
be sold and the proceeds thereof be
divided into shares between the
parties as theretofore determined.
Pursuant to said Judgment of the
court, the undersigned referee will.
on the 31st day of March, 1932, at
ten o'clock a. m., of said day at the
south front door of the court house in
Plattsmouth, In Baid county, sell the
said real estate, to-wit:
The SE and the N of the
NE of Sec. 20. Twp. 11,
North Range 12, east of the 6th
P. M., in Cass county, Nebras
ka at public auction to the highest bid
der for cash, ten per cent of the
bid to be paid at the time of the sale
and the balance of the purchase
money to be paid upon confirmation
of sale and making deed by referee.
Said sale will be made subject to a
mortgage in the sum of $1842.12,
with interest from Jan. 1, 1932 at
per cent, to the Lincoln Joint
Stock Land Bank on the NH of the
NE of Sec. 20, Twp. 11, North
Range 12.
Dated this 26th' day of February,
1932
J. A. CAPWELL.
Referee.
D. O. DWYER.
W. L. DWYER.
Attorneys. f29-4w
SHERIFF'S SALE
State of Nebraska. County of Cass,
ss.
By virtue of an Order of Sale issued
by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk of the Dis
trict Court, within and for Cass
County, Nebraska, and to me direct
ed. I will on the 9th day of April,
A. D. 1952, at 10 o'clock a. m. of
said day at the South front door of
court house in Plattsmouth. Nebras
ka, in said County, sell at public
auction to the highest bidder for
cash the following real estate tc
wit: ' West half W of the
southwest quarter SW'H) of
Section twenty (20) in Town
ship twelve (12) north; Range
twelve (12) East of the sixth
principal meridian in Cass Coun
ty, Nebraska;
The same to be levied upon and
taken as the property of James Tig
ner and Mary Tigner. defendants, to
satisfy a judgment of said court re
covered by Charles Johnson, plain
tiff, against said defendants.
Plattsmouth, Nebraska, March 7,
A. D. 1982.
ED W. THIMGAN.
Sheriff Cass County, Nebraska
m7-6w
SHERIFF'S SALE
State of Nebraska, County of Cass,
89.
By virtue of an Order of Sale, is
sued by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk of the
District Court within and for Cass
County, Nebraska, and to me di
rected. I will on the 2nd day of
April A. D. 1932, 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 bidder
for cash the following described
real estate, to-wit.
The north eighty-seven (87)
feet of Lots one (1). two (2).
three (3) and four (4). Block
four (4), in the Original Town
of Plattsmouth, Cass County.
Nebraska, as Surveyed, platted
and recorded, together with all
the appurtenance thereunto be
longing, subject to the lien of
Occidental Building and Loan
Association;
The same being levied upon and
taken as the property of Edith Mar
tin, defendant, to satisfy a judgment
of said Court recovered by Becker
Roofing Co.. defendant and cross
petitioner, against Eaid defendant.
Plattsmouth, Nebraska. March 1,
A. D. 1932.
ED W. THIMGAN.
Sheriff Cass County, Nebraska
m3-5 w
ORDER OF HEARING AND NO
TICE OF PP.OBATjS OF WILL
In the County Court of Cass coun
ty, Nebraska.
State of Nebraska, Cass county, ss.
To all persons interested In the es
tate of Rudolph H. Ramsel, deceased.
On reading the petition of Tillie
Ramsel praying that the instrument
filed in this court on the 7th day of
March. 1922. 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 Rudolph H. Ram
sel, deceased; that said instrument
be admitted to probate and the ad
ministration of said estate be grant
ed to Tillie Ramsel. as Executrix;
It is hereby ordered that j'ou, 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 Sth day of April.. A.
D. 1932, at ten o'clock a. m., to show
cause, if any there be, why the pray
er of the petitioner should be grant
ed, and that notice of the pendency
of said petition and that the hearing
thereof be given to all persons inter
ested in said matter by publishing a
copy of this Order in the Plattsmouth
Journal, . a semi-weekly newspaper
printed in said county, for three suc
cessive weeks prior to said day of
hearing.
Witness my hand, and the seal of
said court, this 7th day of March. A.
D. 1932.
A. H. DUXBURY.
(Seal) ml4-3w County Judge.
NOTICE OF HEARING
on Petition for Determination of
Heirship
Estate of Stephen Osborn. deceas
ed, in the County Court of Cass coun
ty, Nebraska.
The State of Nebraska, To all per
sons Interested in eaid estate, credi
tors and heirs take notice, that Wal
lace J. McClelland has filed his peti
tion alleging that Stephen Osborn
died intestate in -Cass county, Ne
braska, on or about August 10, 1S79.
being a resident and inhabitant of
Cass county, Nebraska, and died
seized of the following described real
estate, to-wit:
South half of southeast quar
ter (Shi SEVi) of Section four
teen (14), Township twelve
(12), N. Range nine (9), east
of the 6th P. M., in Cass coun
ty, Nebraska
leaving as his sole and only heirs at
law the following named persons, to
wit: Elizabeth J. Osborn, widow;
Jessie Osborn; Stephen Osborn,
Jr.; William Osborn; Harry Os
born; John Osborn; Eddie Os
born; Martin Osborn; Comfort
Bryson and Mary Abel, child
ren; That the interest of the petitioner
herein in the above described real
estate is that of a subsequent pur
chaser, and praying for a determina
tion of the time of the death of said
Stephen Osborn and of his heirs, the
degree of kinship and the right of
descent of the real property belonging
to the said deceased, in the State of
Nebraska.
It is ordered that the same stand
for hearing the 25th day of March,
A. D. 1932, before the court at the
hour of 10 o'clock a. m., at the court
house in Plattsmouth, Nebraska.
Dated at Plattsmouth, Nebraska,
this 24th day of February. A. D.
1932.
A- H. DUXBURY.
(Seal) f29Sw County Judge.