I it i t THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1923. PLATTSMOUTH SEMI -WEEKLY JOURNAL PAGE FOUB r Cbe plattsmouth lournal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA Eatered at Poatoftlce. Plattsmouth. Neb., aa second-class mall matter R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 THE LAE0R OF LOVE For God is not unrighteous to for get your work and labor cf love, which ye have showed toward His, name. Hebrews vi, 10. :o: He is not want who has no desires. :o: The ice man is putting on his over coat. :o: They who make the best use of their time have none to spare. Dignities and honors set off merit as good dress does a good figure. :o: There are autos in Bermuda. It is the last stand of the fast dying out pedestrian. :o: Europe owes us a debt of gratitude, thinks Lloyd George add, other debts. And we might :o: Jack Demnsev. according to re- mil Lr- lids i CLUscvi inn , utv . iin.vi , the world's series. :o: Eggs and bacon smell better than poems of Berton Braley. add, they eat bettftr. :o: Also, we Coolidge has been married 17 years. We refuse to say this is why he Is noted for silence. :o: Bocze got "75 Philadelphians in eight months. Sometimes it gets them in eight hours here. :o: A Chicago boxer reads Shake speare. Homer. Milton and Dumas. Well, Dumas carries a wallop. :o: A Pittsburg woman's club mem ber advises wives to teach husbands to cock. The women are coming out into the open as to their airm3 and projects, now. :o: A Qerman diplomat is trying to recover the ?3.60 bond he put up with a Virginia constable. If he get3 it, he will probably go back home and buy an estate with it. :o: The unimportant news reaches us that 20 cents will now buy 100,000,- 000 German marks. In spite of which we shall save our 20 cents for a movie, and be that much ahead. :o: They have now been exhumed in France relics of a race of men who lived 8,000 years ago and were but slightly superior to the animals. It is thought they were the inventors of jazz. : o : Lloyd George has a contract to write stuff for I6.S2 a word. If he wants to escape the charge of profi teering, he should refrain from writ ing more would get him a living wage say about three words a day. :o: Now come3 a physician predicting that electrical vibrations will become a substitute for food in the not very distant future. Shall we then have to pass laws against taking an extra high-powered jolt just before dinner. :o: In the old days when a. guy got drunk it was not often that he was unable to navigate home under his! own power, even though he charted a somewhat erratic course. Nowa days two drinks of moonshine liquor will make a fellow unable to go home in less than a week. :o: Freshmen classes in Harvard p.nd Yale are virtually limited to 85 members each before exceeding the capacity of the institution. Many western colleges and universities are much larger, even if not as old or famous. Harvard is now on its 2S8th year, while Yale is bearing up un der the weight of 223 years. They have shed a lot of luster on the land and did much to start the nation off as a country of trained and liberal minds. In various states the campaign continues, to prevent the scientific doctrine of evolution'in the schools, on the ground that evolution is con trary to the Bible. On the other hand, in 10 states the Bible is not permitted to be read in the public schools, says William R. Hood, spe cialist in school legislation. Six states require a daily Bible reading in school. Six other states permit it. In 19 states and the District of Columbia, the law is silent on the subject. In other states the law is silent but courts have ruled in favor of the Bible. ii PER YEAR IN ADVANCE A THOUGHT FOR TODAY .J. Try to live so that others J are glad when they see you coming. The trees are beginning to show their bare limbs. :o: They who cannot do as they would must do as they cau. o:o " He who goes too hastily along of ten stumbles on a fair road. Attention to little things renders it impossible to do anything great. :o: The rank is but the guinea stamp, a man's a man for a' that. Burns. . :o: The cold chilly winds of December are almost nere. Are you reaay ior . . . v . :o:- The coal man has broad grin, and it is increasing as the cold weather comes on. -:o: Allies have not won the peact.. ac cording to Lloyd George. Nobody has, according to us. :o: If the world's supply of gasoline ever runs out, who is going to push the wheel chairs Tor the people who have forgotten how to walk. :o: The Federal Trade commission finds that coal is handled too many times before reaching the consumer to know that the profits are so wide ly distributed. :o: Cuba's new sugar crop is reported as a record breaker. Simultaneously the price of sugar goes up again. It takei a trust to sneer at the "law3" of demand and supply. :o: Mr. Edison says it takes seven to forty years to get a new idea accept ed by industry. In politics, how ever, old ideas under new names go over very successfully. :o: "Grover Bergdoll shows the char acteristic indecision of his kind," re marks the Detroit Free Press. That's impossible, surely he's the only one 'of his kind, thank heaven! o:o- : Some New Yorker is around sug gesting that husbands be tattooed for the protection of their wives. There doesn't seem to be any sense in it maybe he means vaccinated. :o: There's a Maryland man who boasts of the proud record of not hav ing missed Sunday school once in twenty-five years. Aren't there any golf links in his neighborhood? :o: Mr., McAdoo's candidacy for the democratic nomination for the presi dency is to be brought out into the open, it is announced. Isn't that a little risky, with the frosts just com ing on? :o: Many millions fewer buttons are I being made now than formerly, ac- j cording to the latest statistics of the business. No doubt. Wives aren't replacing them the way they did in the old days. :o:- We saw a farmer driving to town the other day on a load of corn and he was sitting on the left hand side of the wagon. Guess he is used to driving a car and just naturally sits over on the left hand side. :o: v Of course if Governor Walton of Oklahoma means to let the flood go by without turning it into political ammunition against his enemies, it's no affair of ours. But he can't say he wasn't reminded of it. :o: More than two million laws and ordinances are in effect in the Unit ed States, claims Harding, former governor of Iowa. He thinks ' our worst national habits are enactment of law and going in debt. Which says a lot in a very few words. It's worth thinking over. :o: The prohibitionists are looking rcr a candidate for president now, and may nominate Henry Ford. Which reminds us that although the objec tive of the prohibition party .was reached when the eighteenth amend ment was adopted, the party organi- zation was continued. A political j'oi ij mics iw ouuai iucic u iiu lea- son for its existence. HOUSE MAY CHOOSE PRESIDENT Speaking of politics, it needs to be borne in mind that there is a possi bility of the coming congress being called upon to choose a president of the United States. Of course, the voters have the first call on that du ty and, in other conditions, would 'perform the function in November, 1923, and their decision would be 'final. But suppose and it is not a 'violent supposition at all, seeing the way things are drifting at this writ ing that there is an independent candidate in the field. Let's call him Henry Ford, for nistance. And sup pose that whoever the independent or third party candidate is, he should poll a heavy vote, so mat no canai- i date would have a clear majority i over all. In that event the house of repre sentatives would be called upon to select the president of the United States. Each of the 4S states of the Union would have one vote. The rep resentatives in congress from the states would meet in caucus and by a majority ballot would decide whether the one vote of the state j would be cast for the democratic, the republican or the independent can !irlnte. It is reauired that a maior- Jlw f oil tha ctntoa chall ho hkcps. sary to choose. Now it falls out that the several state delegations in the house are so! constituted politically that a clear majority-of democratic or republican state delegations is not obtainable. Here is the situation: There are 22 state delegations in which the repub- licans have the majority, and thej state unit would go to the republican j candidate. There are 20 delegations where the democrats are in the ma-I . - six states where the delegations are evenly divided. You see, there is not a majority of 4S states existent. The six states where the delegations are evenly divided would probably stand pat in a deadlock. If this deadlock should continue untl March 4, the vice president shall become president. The candidate for the vice presidency, who had polled the greatest number of electoral votes becomes vice president, provid ed he has a majority of the electoral college. If he does not have such a majority then the senate must elect a vice president from the two lead ing candidates for vice president and he then becomes president. Can't you see with that close divi sion in the senate, with the presence of so many radicals among the re publicans and conservatives among the democrats, the thing is full of possibilities all this in case there ie a third party ticket in the field in 1924. :o: ITINERANT MOUNTAINS Earthquakes, the scientists assure us, are of no more frequent occur ence now than at any other period in the recent history of an eternally changing planet. Man's line of com munication are improving and we hear more about them; that is all. Better news facilities have done more than acquainted and amazed laity with the frequence and contin uity of earth tremors; however, they have turned scientific attention to the subject to such an extent that the world will probably learn more in the next ten years about the caus es and workings of seismic move ments than it ever has known before. A theory of sea leakage, a sugges tion that the waters of the ocean pouring through a fissure at the bot tom of the Pacific caused terrific in terior explosions - which rocked the earth's crust, was put forward by one student who sought thereby to ex plain the shocks that dazed Japan. A professor who went to South Amer ica to study the results of Chile's ex periences of a year ago, brings back a different view. Wandering moun: tain ranges, stretching their tethers as far as they may, snap suddenly back toward their original positions with a jolt that wrecks cities and towns. The very backbone of our continent is creeping northward and eastward, this scientist. It is no mere manifestation of a restless era. for the movement has steadily went on for ages and may be expected to for ages more. And while it pro gresses man must build with caution if he builds in the mountain's path, and occasionally run for his life. Meantime the problem Is attacked in the usual manner of science. There will be theories measured up and tested and rejected until finally one is found that seems to apply. Engi neers will take up where the theor ists leave off, and man may yet boast let U3 hope, that though the earth may shudder and quake, a calamity like that of a few weeks back can never be repeated. :o: Dr. Lorenz says that the wife should be eight years younger than the husband. That's all right, ex- cepi in cdtHS v. uere me yoUH2T man ( decides to marry when he's twenty. NO other tire has the sliplessgrip of the famous Gcod year Ail-Weather Tread. Its high, thick, sharp-edged blocks grip hard, hold fast, and hang on. The result is a stead', sure, safe pace in any traffic or in any going, with a car and tire per formance perfectly matched for eco nomical efficiency. A Goodyear Sere ice Station Dealer c melt end recom mend the new Good year Cords tcith the beveled All Weather Tread and beck them u it lb it h standard Goodyear Service PLATTSMOUTH MOTOR CO. ! A. 0. Alllt CedftT Cieek ua.ac-- ,1'"1'aJ I w. ilicharason juynaro. union aiuo vaj uuuu VS T, "DflUV TTTnriT7 Tinn c t n -"" ""ijuxv OJUjXd Lioyd oom round not f,at ree(g JReversible. Good condition. Call 525. I A IT Tlii-rTiiiT-v onl M-; r ,,. jto Omaha this afternoon where they spent a few hours looking after some matters of business and also attend ing "The Covered Wagon" at the Brandeis theatre. Many ills come from impure blood. Can't have pure blood with faulty digestion, Jazy liver, and sluggish bowels. Burdock Blood Bitters is recommended for strengthening the stomach, bowels and liver and puri fying the blood. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State cf Nebraska, Cass coun ty, 69. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Fred P. Hepse, deceased. To the creditors of said estate: 'You arei hereby notified that I will Fit at -t'je County Court room in Plattsmouth in said county, on No vember 24th, 1923, and February 25th, 1924, at 10 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 the pre sentation of claims against said es tate is three months from the 24th day of November, A. D. 1923. and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 24th day of November, 1923. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court, this 22nd day of October, 1923. ALLEN J. BEESON. (Seal) o25-4w. Counts' Judge. ORDER OF HEARING cn Petition for Appointment of Administrator. The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Ben jamin O. Tucker, deceased. On reading and filing the petition of Edna 9. Tucker praying that ad ministration of said estate may be granted to Marion N. Tucker, as Administrator; Ordered, that November 21st, A. D. 1923, at ten o'clock a. m., is as signed for hearing said petition, when all persons interested in said matter may appear at a County Court to he held in and for said coun ty, and show cause why the prayer of petitioner should not be granted; and that notice of the pendency of said petition and the hearing there of be given to all persons interested 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. Dated October 22. 1923. ALLEN J. BEESON, (Seal) o25-3w. County Judge. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. By virtue of an Order of Sale issued bv James M. Robertson, Clerk of the District Court within and for Ca?s county, Nebraska, and to me direct ed, I will on the 26th day of No vember, A. D. 1923. at 10 o'clock a. m. of said day at the south door of the court house, in Plattsmouth, in said county, soil at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the fol lowing property, to-wit: Lots 9 and 10, in Block 61, in the City of Plattsmouth, Cass county. Nebraska The same being levied upon and teken as the property of Frank Fore man, Swenson Brothers Company, Edwards Manufacturing Company, a corporation, Greene's Ice Cream Foc tory, defendants, to satisfy , a judg ment of raid court recovered by By ron Golding, plaintiff against said defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, October 24, A. D. 1923. C. D. QUINTON. Sheriff Cass County, Nebraska. A. L. TIDD. Att'y for Plaintiff. i The Lawrence Journal-World tun- tn fnr u-iar, infnrm'.tinn boars L. . r ,. . V1.J. j that Governor Walton has prohibited oaseoau in UKianoma. me reason, : the Journal-World brazenly an-:dency of said petition and the hear Lmincpa. i whcp thp ratrhpra wear S thereof be given to all persons S , NOTICE v iii'i c-its, tuwaru xieiisiey, tuu ivi- ed in Cass county, on the 5th day of October, 1922. of the crime of for - gery. has made application to the 'Board of Pardons for a parole, and the Board of Pardons, pursuant to the 13th clay otKoyrlT.tor hearing on said application, all per sons interested are hereby notified that they may appear at the state penitentiary at Lincoln, Nebraska, on said day and hour and show cause, if any there be, why said application should, or should not be granted. CHARLES W. POOL, Sec'y, Board of Pardons. N. T. HARMON, Chief St. Probation Officer ol8-2T. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska. Cass coun-;Mrs. Charles E. Pennewell, real name ty, rs. unknown; Jacob L. McMichael; Mrs. In the County Court. Jacob L. McMichael, real name un- In the matter of the estate of An- known; Ambrose M. Beebe; Mrs. Am ton Nitka, deceased jbrcse M. Beebe, real name unknown; To the 'creditors of said estate: ,C. S. Acheson; Charles S. Acheson; You are hereby notified that I will Tiny Carolina Acherson; the un fit at the Countv Court room in known heirs, devisees, legatees, per PlaUsmouth in said county, on the sonal representatives and all other 20th dav of November. A. D. 1923. persons interested in the several es and on the 20th dav of February, A. fates of C. S. Acheson; Charles S. D. 1924. at 10 o'clock a. m. of each Acheson and Daniel H. Wheeler, each day. to receive and examine all claims deceased, real names unknown; and against said estate, with a view to the heirs, devisees, legatees, personal their adjustment and allowance. The representatives and all other Persons time limited for the presentation of interested in the several estates of P. claims aeainst said estate is three Y. Moss, real name unknown; Ma- mcnths from the 20th day of No- vember. A. D. 1923. and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 20th day of November, 1823. Witness mv hand and the seal of raid County Court, this 17th day of October, 1923. ALLEN J. BEESON. (Seal) o22-4v. County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING and Notice on Petition for Set tlement of Account In the County Court of Casts coun - ty, Nebraska. State of Nebraska, Cass county, ss. To all persoP3 interested in the estate of Conrad H. Vallery, deceas ed: On reading the petition of Walter E. Bailing praying a final settlement and allowance of his account filed in: as against you and each of you and this court on the 25th dry of Sep-; by such decree to wholly exclude you tember, lDDS, and for the stttlement j and each of you from all estate, right, of the administration and trustee pro-j title, claim or interest therein and ceedings now pending in said estate! to have the title to said premises for and for fnal discharge of the ad-lever freed from the apparent claims ministration and trustee; jof the defendants and quieted in It is hereby ordered that you and i plaintiffs and for equitable relief. all persons interested in said matter! You are required to answer said may, ana do, appear at tne county uoun to ve neiu in una uir saiu county, on the 30th day of October, A. D. 1923, at ten o'clock a. ra., to show cause, if any there be, why the! praver cf the petitioner should not be granted, and that notice of tha pendency of said petition and the hearing thereof be given to all per- crtn a intpr!tH til Ql irl mnttdr V publishing a copy of this order in,ol-4w the Plattsmouth Journal, a semi weekly newspaper printed in said county, for one week prior to said day of hearing. In witness whereof. I have here- unto set mv hand and the seal of (Nebraska, on the 26th day of Sep said Court, this 19th day of October, tember, 1923, in an action pending A. D. 1923 ALLEN J. BEESON, (Seal) o22-lw. County Judge. LEGAL NOTICE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. David Z. Mummert. plaintiff, vs. Anna Brounko; Lucius J. Buckley and wife, Mrs. Lucius J. Buckley, real name unknown; the heirs, devi sees, legatees, personal representa tives and all other persons interest ed in the respective estates of Lucius J. Buckley, deceased, and Mrs. Lucius J. Buckley, deceased, real names un known, et al. defendants. To the defendants Lucius J. Buck ley and wife, Mrs. Lucius J. Buck ley, real name unknown; the heirs. devisees; legatees, personal represen tatives, and all other persons inter ested in the respective estates of Lucius J. Buckley, deceased, and Mrs. Lucius J. Buckley, deceased, real names unknown You and each of you are hereby i notified that on the 1st day cf No vember, 1922, the plaintiff filed his suit in the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska, the object and prayer of which is to foreclose a certain tax sale certificate, and sub sequent taxps paid thereunder, own ed and held by him on Lots 10, 11 and 12, in Block 1, in Stadelmann's Addition to the City of Plattsmouth, in Cass county, Nebraska, "and for equitable relief. This notice is given pursuant to an order of said Court. You are required to answer said petition on or before Monday, the 3rd day of December, 1923, or your default will be entered therein and judgment taken upon plaintiff's peti tion against you. and each of you. DAVID Z. MUMMERT. Plaintiff. By A. L. TIDD, o22-4w. His Attorney. ORDER OF HEARING on Petition for Appointment of Administrator The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Mary Forsyth Wall, deceased. - On reading and filing the petition of William Wall praying that admin istration of said estate may be grant ed to Jesse Lee Wall, as Adminis trator; Ordered that the 2nd day of No vember, A. D. 1923. at ten o'clock a. m.. is assigned for hearing sail peti tion, 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 rayer Qf petitioner 8nouId not be granted; and that notice of the pen- interested in said matter by publish ing a copy of this order in the Platts mouth Journal, a semi-weekly news paper printed in said county, for : jay Q hearing Dated thi3 10"th d of 0ctoberf A. jD 1923. ALLEN J. BEESON, (Seal) oll-3w. County Judge. 0F SUIT T0 QUIET TITLE. In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. Carrie I. Leyda et al l Plaintiffs App. Dock. 2 vs. Page 4 Plattsmouth Ferry Co. No. 7488 et al. Defendants To the Defendants: Plattsmouth , Ferry Company, a corporation; P. Y. Moss, real name unknown; Matilda !rrtcwl Tnhn Tlrv T? DOl'H T"Pn 1 J a TT1 f 1111- I known; Chas. E. Permwell; Chas. E. Pennewell; Charles E. Pennewell; tilda Reeid; Chas. E. Permwell; Chaa. y '4 matter of the Application of E. P7jp Jacob L. McMcihael and Ambrose A. standley Irene Standley, Mabel Beebe. each deceased, real names un- verna Stendley. al'. known, and all persow having or Stondte T J" eg claiming any interest in Lots 3, 7ttate S. in Block 98. in the City of, l an(1 fllin the neMtion. Plattsmouth, in Cass county, Nebras ka, real names unknown: You and each of you are hereby notified that on the first day of jtober. 1923, the plaintiffs in the fore- I uiUk I'liLiLicu cause wjcu i n I turn in the District Court of Cass j county, Nebraska, wherein you and ;each of you are made parties defend- 'ant, for the purpose of obtaining a decree from said court quieting the ' record title in plaintiffs to the fol- lowing described real estate, to-wit: Lots three, (3) seven (7 and eight (S) in Block ninety-eight, (9S) in the City of Plattsmouth, in Cass county, Nebraska, petition on or oeiore me .n Ud l , oi .uveuiuei, xso, ui jum will be entered in said cause and a decree granted as prayed for In said petition Date: October 1st. 1923. CARRIE I. LEYDA. By JOHN M. LEYDA, Her Attorney. JOHN M. LEYDA, For Self. NOTICE OF SALE Notice is hereby given that pursu ant to an Order of Sale issued to me by the District Court of Cass county, in said court in which Charles M. McQuin and Lydia A. McQuin, hus band and wife, are plaintiffs and Del la E. Anderson, a single woman, and Thomas J. McQuin and Adelia Mc Quin, husband and wife, are defend ants, I will on Saturday, the 3rd day of November, A. D. 1923, at ten (10) o'clock in the forenoon of said day, at the south front door of the court house of Cass county, Nebraska, of fer for sale, at public vendue to the highest bidder, the following describ-! ed real estate situated in the County of Cass, and State of Nebraska, to wit: All that part of the northwest quarter (NW) of Section thirty-one. (31) in Township ten (10) North of Range fourteen, (14) East of the 6th Principal Meridian, Cass county, Nebras ka that lies south of the Weep ing Water Creek The terms of said sale being one tenth cash on the day of sale and the balance of the purchase price on the day said sale is confirmed by the Dis- trict Court of Cass county, Nebraska. Said sale will remain open for one hour. AUBREY H. DUXBURY. Referee. A. G. COLE, Att'y. s27-sw til n3 ORDER OF HEARING on Petition for Appointment of Administrator The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Glenn R. Atchison, deceased. On reading and filing the petition of Gladys Atchi3on praying that ad ministration of said estate may be granted to John Gerry Stark, as Ad ministrator; , Ordered, that October 29th, A. D. 1923, at 10 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 the 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 Journal, a weekly newspaper printed in said county, for three successive weeks prior to said day of hearing. Dated October 4th, 1923. ALLEN J. BEESON, (Seal) oS-3w. County Judge. NOTICE OF HEARING on Petition for Determination of Heirship rwoa -Kn nf Basil S. Ramse deceased. In the County Court ol Cass county, Nebraska. The State of Nebraska, To all per sons interested in said estate, credi tors and heirs take notice, that Wm. C. Ramsey, who is one of tha heirs of said deceased, and Interested In such, has filed his petition alleging that Basil S. Ramsey died intestate in Plattsmouth, Nebraska, on or about July 22nd, 1921. being a reai dent and inhabitant of Plattsmout. Cass county, Nebraska, and the o'1 er of the following described real es tate, to-wit: Lots seven (7) and eight, (8) in Block twenty-two, (22) In Young & Hay's Addition to the City of Plattsmouth, Cass coun tv. Nebraska leaving as his sole and only heirs at law the following named persons, to-wit: Libbie C. Ramsey, widow, ana Wm. C. Ramsey, son; that said decedent died Intestate; that no annlication for administra tion has been made and the estate of said decedent has not been adminis tered in the State of Nebraska, and that the Court determine who are the heirs of said deceased, their degree of kinship and the right of descent In the real property of which the de ceased died seized, which has been set for hearing on the 6th day of November, A. D. 1923, at 10 o'clock a. m. Dated at Plattsmouth, Nebraska, this 5th day of October, A. D. 1923. ALLEN J. BEESON, (Seal) o8-3w. County Judge. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE In the District Court of Cass ooun- duly verified of Bertha L. Standley, guardian of Hubert Standley, Irene : st .,,. Mnhri Rtanrfifv and Verna Oo-jstandIeVj all minor8 f0r nCenG to 8eJ1 the flowing described real es- up. tate: An undivided eight-twenty-sevenths (827) interest in and to the east half (E) of the southwest quarter (SW) of Section thirty, (30) in Township ten (10) North of Range nine, (9) east of the 6th Principal Meridian, in Cass county, Ne braska - , for the purpose of raising funds for. the education, maintenance and pay- 7 ment of debts of said minors, and It ' appearing from said petition that said real estate consists of eighty (80) acres; that the improvements on said land consist of a dwelling house, barn and other out buildings usually found on a farm; that it takes a great part of the rent to keep said property In repair; that said minors do not have sufficient personal property to pro- Hnpfi sufficient income to maintain and educate them, and that It Is necessary and would be beneficial fo said wards that said real eetat should be sold; It is therefore ordered that th4 next of kin of said minors and all persons interested in said estates ap pear before me at chambers in the court house in the. City of Platts mouth, Cass county, Nebraska, on the 12th day of November, A. D. 1928, at ten o'clock a. m., to show cause, if any there be, why license should not be granted to said Bertha L. Stand ley, guardian, to sell said real estate for the purpose above set forth. It is further ordered that a copy of this order be published once each week for three successive weeks In the Plattsmouth Journal, a news paper circulating in said county of Cass, Nebraska. Dated at chambers in said Cass county, Nebraska, this 6th day of Oc tober, A. D. 1923. JAMES T. BEGLEY, Judge of the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska. o8-3w. ORDER OF HEARING on Petition for Determination of Heirship. Estate No. of Kate L. Atchison, deceased, in the County Court of Cass county, Nebraska. The State of Nebraska, To all per sons interested in said estate, credi tors and heirs take notice, that Wil liam Atchison, who is one of the heirs of said deceased, and interest ed in such, has filed his petition al leging that Kate L. Atchison died intestate In Cass county, Nebraska, on or about January 28th, 1917, be ing a resident and inhabitant of Cass county, Nebraska, and the own er of the following described real es tate, to-wit: An undivided one-half intereat in and to the northwest quar ter (NW4) of Section nineteen, (19) Township ten, (10) Range ten, (10) east of the 6th P. M., in Cas3 county, Nebraska leaving as her sole and only heirs at law the following named persons, to-witr William Atchison, widower, and William L. Atchison,. Ella F. Atchison and Glenn R. At- i chison; that said decedent died Intestate; that no application for administra tion has been made and the estate of said decedent has not been adminis tered in the State of Nebraska, and that the Court determine who are the heirs of said deceased, their de gree of kinship and the right of de scent in the real property of which the deceased died seized, which has been set for hearing on the 5th day of November, A. D. 1923, at 10 o'clock; a. m , Dated at Plattsmouth; Nebraska this 4th day of October, A. D. 1923 ' ' ALLEN J. BEESQN, (Seal) o8-3w. County Judge People are funny. The name "Cabot" seems peculiarly sacred, and yet we know a single 300 hitUr Of that name. 1 Si, 1