MONDAY, JANUARY 12, i925. r3j 4t Mattaatoatb, ft Ai D ATE&, Publisher fc- tftey Ft3C2 $2.00 THE CHEERFUL GIVER He which soweth sparingly shall Hap also sparingly; ah3' he which Ibweth bountifully shall reap also bountifully. Every man according a hi burposeth In his heart, so let aim give; for God loveth a cheerful frirer.U Corinthians 4:6-7. ii :o: The only old flam we long for to day ia summer. -:o:- The original ill wind which blew Ko good was a draft. -:o:- ' Christmas neckties are very sel dom the ties that bind. :o: The leglalure will get down to real business heit Monday. :o:- Tod hevef can tell when prieu konia or a'.imony will get you. :o: Whefo you start doesn't matter aalf so much-as where you stop. :o:- The fewer laws passed this win ter Ihe better the people will like it. :o: One febeck .that can always be hashed Is a check on your living ex penses. ; ; :o: - A bad thing about steam heat is frou can't throw everything into the radiator. :o: ' Every drinker thinks he can drive k car while drunk. He can, too, not counting accidents. :dt- : It doesn't take, a hit mote time td amount td something in the world than it does to amount to nothing. -:o:- It's funny how Some people won't discuss religion until they get old and then won't discuss anything lse. :o:- Be consistent. Six months from low you'll be kicking about' the heat hen it is hot. Kobody Is more In consistent than a kicker. - :o: All we wish Is that these radio guys would find their Sally. You can't turn k -dial without someone wondering what's become of her. :o: Attorney General Stone has been given a soft position, that of mem ber of the supreme court. However, the grafters are glad of the change. :o: Asked whether she had remarried, a Hollywood film star refuses to an swer. Maybe she didn't have her not hock with her and wasn't quite certain, offhand. :o: Which is the luckiest day on which to get maricd. is a question asked in a newspaper article. Well, the consensu ii, we believe, that they are all about alike. : , . - .' Santa Claus brought the ex-kaiser a lot of hew (clothes for Christmas this year. He sure needed them, be cause he has a lot of uniforms that he 11 no longer entitled to wear. - -:o: - -- There are laws on Nebraska stat ute hooks thai are Useless. This leg islature will do a good job by repeal ing them all. Some lawyers go back t6 ages for technical points in cases. f t ' -:o; Americans, says Gfahd Duchess' Cyril to a Paris reporter, are con spicuous for thelf common sense. After that, the Paris papers can point with bride td the tact that 3(5. OOd Americans choose td live in Paris. -:o:- The postofflce delivers 112 letters; A hipment ot gpeciiUy packed tce a fr-eaf for .every man. woman and cream ha9 beeh from MoQtreM child, striking An average. Ke4tly to dh ts8kimd. We'fa going to look one and a halt million letters an p XhQ iof bot do kiilong fcourfe drbpped Into the nation' : the ,,0, tribes, now. mail boxed. Every day except Suh-j ,0. days and holidays rural barriers Despite the fact that North Cafo iotef 4 million miles df roads. The nna fcaB a " r etf fesehtatlve in the feostdmcd has ft Ffrarly payroll of; 441 million dollars.. It 13 the" larg est business organization in the trtrldi ii the United States postofflce. ' HeaHy 16 million American trsmea art engaged tA business, hut nly 40.000 of them afe bosses" .owners, managers, omcers, foremen and veraeefs. fHls ii the estimate by the bureau ot Vocational tnfof matldni" itlyfce only 10,000 r bosses in narae. - But thousands bt others afe bosses In ffect power behind the throne. A private secre tary frequently knows more about a business and more Vital to it than her employer. If all the secretaries struck, thefe'd be a mighty exodus from golf. 1 A PLATTSSOTJTII, BE3&AS2A Nalk, ooai-iaa taail fatikttef PER YEAH tS ADYASOB Winter March. is on the road to settle :o:- It will soon bo Governor McMut len in fact. ; -o: these are ticklish limes for those wearing heavy, scratchy Underwear. :o:- Another Russian doesn't believe In grapes. tor- leader says he heaven. Sour Missouri will soon skin its Hyde a relief that the people will he glad of. :o: The golf sports are looking for ward to a fine time next spring and summer. -:o:- Chafley Bryan will feodn get k k catlon. He has been a hard worker, and needs it. :o: France owes us 4 billions. Won't that be a snap for government graft ers when we get it? , :o: A Seattle burglar stole J18 and got caught, showing 13 was an un lucky number for him. y -:o:- The happiest ones are those who are busiest, so this may be why the bootleggers are grinning. :o: Canada is making as much maca roni as itaiy. You know macaroni. It's spaghetti's big brother. :o: People .without buttons on their clothes may be amused to learn a laundry burned in Pittsburg. :o: Cocoa was first introduced to Eng land qnly 400 years ago, and we'll bet the two were glad to meet. - - ; -;o: ' . Diamonds are a disagreeable odor when reduced to powder, so never reduce your diamond to powder. ' ":o; ; Be careful when rembvinj your tight shoes in a movie. You may forget to put them on before leav ing. io: "Td the victor belongs the Bpoils!" Wonder If Governor McMullen will adopt It? We will see what we shall see. :o:- Washing the head with soap and water removes dandruff a lot quicker than letting the finger nails grow long. : :o:; Parent Eskimos never punish their children, perhaps Ju6t because being an Eskimo is runishment enough. : :o: New resolutions are rbout like new laws. They have to he made right along because the bid ones are broken. -;6i There are but three bits of archi tecture distinctly American the co lonial house, the skyscraper and the filling station. -:o:- Odvernor Bryan's name will go down lh history as one of the great est and most efficient governors Ne braska ever had :o:- Some say the flu this year is not severe; while others say It Is worse than ever. Probably depends on how you Rave- It. : : :6: : A woman member 6f the legisla ture will fight fttle against smoking In the 16wef house. Maybe she smokes herseir cigarettes. Some women do, you know. i . - - League of Nations, South Carolina will be more notorious In the nexti congress. Cole Blease will be senator. -:o:- . An awful fumpus Is being raised 6ver the fact that Trinity college Is to get le.oOo.utd.cash fof changing Its name. When at least halt a dozen New Yofic and London chofus girts have received twice that-amount Mr making a iikd tonCessiod. Sir Richard Lodge can recite the history of this wofld from a time an tedatlng.by seVefftl milliohS of yeafs the birth of Adam, it occurs td us thate might call In brother blirer and collaborate on the history of the next world over the same period. SPEEDING UP JUSTICE Rules and recommendations pro- mulgatea by Chief Justice Taft of the United States supreme court will unquestionably be of real benefit to the country and aid in the admlms- tratlon of justice with promptness, j "The law's delay" has been held as among the many excuses or apolo gies for the wave of crime and dis content and the lack of law enforce ment and disrespect for law in the past few years. The chief Justice proposes to do away with at least one of the arguments and instructs tho6e presiding over the united States courts in the various state courts to Speed up their work and listen no longer to specious protests of unreasonable demands fof delay. While those not particularly in terested may not have more than passing thought in a detail brought forw&fd by the high authority men tioned, all who are in any Way con nected of concerned with coUft mat ters know that it has been ihe cus- torn for years to ailow postpone - raenia 01 impui mut attorneys on each side "agree that It IS not convenient or necessary 10 bring a case berore tne court at tne time set by the Judge. Chief Justice Taft say9 that this must be discon tinued. He also suggests to the fed eral Judges that they hot accept any and exefy excuse offered by attor neys desiring postponements, and that the plea of "other arrange ments" should have no weight. To the laity these particular ref erences will suggest the idea that 'the law's delay" is a matter with the lawyers, and not of equity or Justice. It is certain that this is exactly the case in very many In stances. Too much It has become the idea prevalent that the settle- of n mtt ftpfl mor with thP ,A . . attorneys than the equitv-in the Con- tention. It is a bad impression very bad, indeed. JTo remove this r.ist trrowlnsr Rpntiment from the public mind the legal fraternity can . well endorse Mr. Taf t's decisions and i rules in such matters as indicated Justice is assured all the people In the settlement of their disputes and . ustice 13 none the less demanded in the trial ,and sentences of those ac cused of violation of criminal laws. It was never intended or desired that i 'speed ' Should usurp the place , or caution Of tend to the miscarriage of j ustice, but delays without sufficient reasort afe '.bad for the body politic. It should never be in the public mind that a case may be brought into court and -indefinitely continued at the pleasure or convenience of coun sel. Chief justice Taft proposes to disabuse the public mind where such an idea mav nave necome nxea t.. - r , and with all speed consistent with thoroughness. :o: FIFTEEN TO THIRTY-FIVE From fifteen to thirty-five miles ah hour constitutes the range of reasonable, safe and convenient driv-' for boiling it down and making it ing. according to the national safety Into both soft and hard soap. To conference recently called by SecriV, tary Hoover at Washington. The, conference urges local communities ' hot td set Speed iimits at less than' fifteen miles; It would have a speed above thirty-five deemed prima facie evidence of reckless driving. An even more striking "recommen dation of the conference Is In rela tion to intoxicated driverB. It sug gests that a drunken of careless driv er" hot Otily he punished by fine or mpfisorimeht, of both, as at pres ent, but that he be deprived of the right to operate a car for periods long enough to impress upon the of fender the seriousness of his delta quehcy. These are not new suggestions. but the general adoption might mean much to the safety and com- Tnrt nf nrivprs nun neripftt rlatlB AlikP. f .. They are In line with Intelligent thnvn n th nhiot est mntrir traffic and Its Inching complica- j tions. It Is cominjr to be recognized more and mofe" that within reasonable limits the speed at which one drives Is of slight significance in itself. How fast one may drive with safety depends on no many other circum- stances, density, of traffic, character r tv.n . a ..!,.. T,inA mnA mc iwnu, wuuuwuo itn a ,,. the condition of ones own machine that to attempt to eliminate dan- gers by limiting speed ia at best a roundabout method. Emphasis Is Standard Bred Single Comb - PUMmtfufH Phone 3604- Mynard, Nebraska nntir ftftt f.ft father than on speed, in driving, it Is ho longer the popular pastime it was once fof village councils to Blow down traffic to a Bhall's rice In the mistaken be ijef that they were performing a public Bervfco thereby, The whole motor traffic problem though in Its beginning a quarter-1 century oid Btlll has the world guess ing. Some things about It are weli fixed, but there is much still to be learned. -:o: TRIBUTES ALONG THE WAY Recalling the funeral cortege which sped from west to east with . the body of President Harding, the i nation reads of bared head9 in towns and cities along the route traversed by the car which carried all that is mortal of Samuel Gompers away from the setting sun to Its final ha ven of rest In the Empire State. More than a veteran labor leaden Samuel Gompers was a veteran AmpHrnn TTIa loot n-nfft nrnr1iii j ,ng neafly three-quaftefs of a ceh; tury spent in the march of American pr6grepg blended feimply as an epi t h for . thoueh vigorous h5tih d t, or .,afta . Vftf once forgot the foundation principles of his country and the necessity that they should survive Unimpaired by minor disagreements. Decisive action and unfaltering, ever alert allegiance td the cause of labor served to bring Gompers to the place where he stood at the time of his death. That he made his mark In the world Is amply shown evert outside the circles of those for whom he labored to make that mark. -:o:- SOFT SOAP FOR DOUGHBOYS I II T I . . - . i 1 "lu any ana sre me worm. - From a board or by word of mouth rrom eloquent recruiting officers this ' magic slogan has led stalwart youths to halt for knowledge. The life of a soldier Is full of 7!!" A""8!- ?t"e 5,aJ" here and then, presto, along comes an order and you have been trans ferred to sunny shored out Honolulu wav- whf yd" ta? ea your pine Rtretph beneath a nalm watchinc maidens in grass dresses dance so beautifully. Again comes an order, and away to Alaska. Panama, or some ln trim eat uniform you are the admiration of all who look upon you. It's a great life, so they say, until ZL1, SST i u iui oLLiriiico aic auB.v& i- something which is not beautiful and inspiring which doesn't even smell good, and goes by the crude and homely title of "Soap." s Orders ffora Major General Hines, received at Fort Crook and Fort Omaha, give instructions that soldi ers must devote part of their time to manufacture of soap so the army may economize on bills for that The soldiers will not be restricted to any kind of soap. Besides soap for general cleaning purposes, there may be hard soap for the first ! sergeant and soft soap for the re- "uiUn, : sergeant save tne fat tnat comea on the meat juiy i 1925. This will assure that kitchen staffs get busy and put the soap pot on to boil. It has been suggested that if the army funs out of fat, some of the remains of delicacies from distant. picturesque stations, and perhaps even a quanity of striking posters of . the same might be boiled in the "Soft soap" kettle. World-Herald. HELP FOR OLD FOLKS Old Age Should be Happy Not a i Time of Sickness and c r r angering. r hno-trt frt fcuffer at Too many people begin to suffer at middle age with constant hackMhe. nrlnorv Ilia afrirl rn Plim a 1 1 rtAinS. find ' , " , " ,.ii v. ace9 Weak kidneys are usually the -u i . x j n negiecieu, tuc ger of hardened arteries, dropsy, gra- vei or Bfiehfa disease. Help your Wth a Wltttalant diuretic before kidney disease gets a firm hold. Use Doan's Pills. Thou- j Sands of old folks recommend Doan's. j Hef is Plattsmoutn prooi: w. W. Mann. Marble street, says: "A cold settled on my kidneys and Ida bliiiriittntia n-fcaaarl inn frPPlv And wert BcaidIilg too. My back gave out fnornihes When I attempted to get up and I had to get out of bed on mv hands and knees. My bacK was - w .11 1 so iame ana sun, i wum Biraighten and every jnove I made 8ent 8narp pang through my back. Doan's Pills from Weyrlch & Had- raba's drug store rid me ot tne trouble. granted to Marie H. Nord, as Admin- You and each or you are hereby Mr. Mann ia only one of many istratrix; notified that Fannie R. Dickson as iPlattsmouth people who have grate- Ordered, that January 26th, A. D. plaintiff, filed a petition and com fully endorsed Doan's pills. If your 1926, at ten o'clock a. in. Is assigned menced an action in the District back aches if youf kidneys bother for hearing said petition, When all Court of Cass county, Nebraska, On you, don't simply ask for a kidney Persons Interested In said matter the 5th day of January, 1925, agaih remedy ask distinctly for DOAN'8 may appear at a County Court to be st you and each of you, object, pur PILLS, the same that Mfr Mann had heid n and for feaid county, and pose and prayer of which Is to obtain the remedy backed by. home testi-jBhow cause Why the prayer of the a decree of court quieting the title mony. 60 cents at all dealers. Fos- petitioner should not be granted; td Fractional Lots one (l),.two (2), ter-Milburn Co.i Mfrs., Buffalo, N.Fand that hotice of the pendency of nine (9) and ten ' (10), and all of Y "When Your Back is Lame Re- said tjetition and the hearing thereof Lots three (3). four (4) and five (5. member the Name." :o; f The hew county, omclals are now in, notwithstanding it was a hard effort for the old ones to vacate. Success to the new county officials, and may the old ones rest in peace and happiness. FROM GROCER BOY TO GOVERNORSHIP Adam McMullen. Began in Ranks Natural Leaning Toward Poli tics Shown Early in Life. Wymore, Neb., Jan. 7. Adam McMullen,""who started a real poor boy and succeeded in climbing the ladder of fame and finance, has suc cessfully demonstrated beyond any reasonable doubt that democracy and equallity are the birthrights of the American people nowadays as they were in the days of Abraham Lincoln. Born in New York state in 1873, he moved with his parents to Ne- braska in 1884 when they took up their residence at Wymore. The town was only three years old at that time. It was a railroad div vision point and this fact may have Influenced the elder McMullen ln making the selection since he had been a locomotive engineer and re tained a soft spot in his heart for anything connected with the rail roads. Governor McMullen's parents were born in Scotland. From 188 4 to 1890 the father and the oldest brothers operated a grocery known as "The Palace Grocery situated on the main street of the village in the block where the Markle theater now stands The governor was the official "coun ter Jumper." Besides assisting in his father's store he was also employed for two years as a printer's "devil" on the staff Of the Wymore Weekly Arbor State, a local publication. edited by the late Colonel J. R. Dodds. He graduated from high school at the age of sixteen. The other ten members of the graduating class were: Levi Scott, now of Irving. Kas.; Myrtle Southwick-Kier, now deceased; Laura Southwick, Nestor, Cal.; Florence Mitchell-Fenton, Raw lins, Wyo.; Elizabeth Haynes-Uavi- son, Fairmont; Elsie Brownell-Horn. Omaha; Dollie Kness-Brown, Cozad; Zilda Wilner, San Francisco; Mer rimen Reed. Holmesville, and Park Lyons. Seattle. This was the second class grad uated from the Wymore high schools which were then under the superin- tendency of R. G. Woodworth. now of Oberlin, Ohio. It was as students In the Wymore schools that Mr. McMul len and Miss Cora Greenwood, who later became Mrs. McMullen, beeame acquainted. A short time later the youthful McMullen came to Lincoln where he entered the University of Ne braska. He worked hts way thru the university by part time work on The Lincoln Call. A natural leaning toward politics was exhibited early in his life. He ca3t his" first presidential vote in 1S9 6 for McKinley. Several years of his eafly life wt-Te spent as a law Student in Washington. D. C, where he worked at various times as a clem in tne war aeparimeni. he acted as private secretary to Sen ator Dietrich for a time returning to Wymore in 1904. He served several terms on the board of education, one of them as president. He was elected mayor of Wymore in 1915 and has always taken an active part in civic affairs. He served a term as senator from the sixteenth district, Gage and Pawnee counties, and a term as state repre sentative from the Thirty-eight dis trict. He was master of the Wymore Masonic lodge in 1907. He practiced law in Wymore for several years, his office beiDg in a room at the front of the second story of the First National bank building, in the business center of the city. The building has been re modeled in recent years. Mr. McMullen owns and controls considerable reality in Wymore and vicinity. When he was a boy he lived with his parents in a small cottage which still tands on North Ninth street in Wymore, and which is still owned by the McMullens. The father, now ninety-three years old, lives with the governor. There were four brothers and two sisters. Two brothers now reside in Chi cago. The others including the mother, are dead. Mrs. McMullen's girlhood was spent in a spacious home on North Ninth street, removed but a block from the McMullen property. Mrs. . a.. Greenwood, mother of Mrs. McMullen, still owns it and lives in -it) and Mrs Bridenthal, Bister of Mrs. McMullen, owns and , re6iaence to the nort f n Greenwood home in the ... same block. Mrs. McMullen was a gtudenj. of the Wymore gchools and was graduated from an eastern girl's finlsbInK BchooL and studied in A ti.. . Mullens6are members of the EpIsMl ; - church at Beatrice, and Mrs. McMuI-j len teaches a Sunday school class in thA church ORDER OF HEARINO on Petition for Appointment of Administratrix. The State of Nebraska, Cass coun-jten ty.f gg rn thi Prmntv Pnnrt . 7 ... . in the matter or tne estate ot 1'eter M. Nord, deceased. 0n reading and filing the petition ef Walfred A. Nord, praying that Administration of said estate may be be eiven to all persons Interested in said matter by publishing a cbpy of this Order in the Plattsmouth Jour- nal, a semi-weekly newspaper printed in said county, ror tnree successive weeks, prior to said day of hearing. Dated January 3. 1925. ALLEN J. BEESON. . (Seal) j5-3w County Judge., Slip away from January to Florida, Cuba, Texas or the Gulf Coast, where June temperatures invite you to out door play beneath the palms. Attractive Winter Fares Go one route and return another, stopping off where you wish along the way. Comfortable, modern, reliable BUR LINGTON trains make convenient connections at Chicago, St. Louis and Kansas City with best trough trains via all routes South. Let me help you plan your winter trip. A lot of people speaking their minds haven't any. NOTICE OF SUIT TO QUIET TITLE. In the District Court of the Coun ty of Cass, Nebraska. Fannie R. Dickson, Plaintiff, vs. D. Remick & Co. et al, Defendants. To the defendants D. Remick & Co.; David Remick; Mrs. David Rem ick, real name unknown; Charles Hendrie; Mrs. Charles 'Hendrie, real name unknown; Margaret Inhelder, widow; J. V. Hardy, real name un known; Mrs. J. V. Hardy, real name unknown; John J. Worley; Mf3. John J. Worley, real name unknown; Plattsmouth Ferry Company, a cor poration; Frank Stadter; Mrs. Frank Stadter, real name unknown; John t"r. XT t; mour; Mrs. John W. Seymour, real, name unknown; Mathuse Donelly & Co.; Matthews Donelly & Co.; Abijah ' Harris; Mrs. Abijah Harris, real ' T , Jlllf name unknown: C. R. Coolidge.. real J lXl'" name unknown; Mrs. C. It. Coolidge.: "f,?' Hn -Sm f ??n8r . real name unknown; Charles R. Cool- JnA8tf"S ?! BAailteSt,atA mayAe idge; Mrs. Charles R. Coolidge, real : ntcd lo Monte A. Streight as Ad name unknown; Eliza Coolidge, wid- mi5? r'. . T 0.tw . ow; Mary Elizabeth Burke also 0?det,rted1' ft .:Tan"arL 2 6Ah: A1- ?' knmvn as Marv E. Burke: the heirs. ick; Mrs. David Remick. real name unknown: Charles Hendrie; Mrs. Charles Hendrie. real name un- known; Margaret Inhelder, widow; J. V. Hardy, real name unknown; Mrs. J. V. Hardy, real name un known; John J. Worley; Mrs. John J. Worley, real name unknown; Frank Stadter; Mrs. Fran Stadter, real name unknown; John W. Sey more; Mrs. John W. Seymore, real name unknown; John W. Seymour; Mrs. John W. Seymour, real name unknown; Abijah Harris; Mrs. Abl jah Harris, real name unknown; C. R. Coolidge, real name unknown; Mrs. C. R. Coolidge, real name un known; Charles R. Coolidge; Mrs. Charles R. Coolidge, real name un known; Eliza Coolidge, widow; Mary Elizabeth Burke, also known as Mary E. Burke; Wheatley Mickelwait; Henry P. Coolidge, also known as H. P. Coolidge; Henry P. Cooledge, also known as H. P. Cooledge; D. H. Wheeler, real name unknown; E. H. Eaton, whose real name was Emer son H. Eaton, and Frank Eaton, each deceased, real names unknown; the Co': Plattsmouth Ferry Company, corpr,aTtio": Mahuse donelly & Co- and Matthews Donelly & Co., real names unknown; Fred Eaton and Mrs. Fred Eaton, real name un known, and all persons having or claiming any interest in Eractional Lots one (1), two (2), nine (9) and (10), and all of Lots three (3). lour Ki) ana live an in. ciock fifty-seven (57), and the north half K 1 - T nta o0,r T s,-,V, (91 vz "i " and nine (9). in Block eighty-nine (89), all in the City of Plattsmouth, Cass county, Nebraska, real names uniinown. all in Block fiftv-seven (57). and the north half of Lots seven (7), eight (8) and nine (9), In Block eighty-nine (89), all in the City of Plattsmouth, Cass county, Nebraska, as against you and each of you, and (or such other relief as may be just and equitable. You and each of you are further devisees, legatees, personal represen- n huh, wnen an tatives and all other persons inter- .Persons interested in said matter may u ? r.o,.?-i T7or. appear at a County Court to be held R. V. CLEMENT, Ticket Agent notified that you are required to an swer said petition on or before Monday, the 23rd day of February, 1925, or the allegations of plaintiff's petition will be taken as. true and a decree will be rendered in favor of plaintiff and agatnst you and each of you according to the prayer of said petition. Dated this 5th day of January, A. D. 1925. FANNIE R. DICKSON, Plaintiff. W. A. ROBERTSON, Attorney for Plaintiff. J12-4w. ORDER OF HEARINO on Petition for Appointment t( Administrator The State of Nebraska, Cass cdun- tfc Coun, Court h!Xrnf JVUVT t.tS1 f n,., is assiga- l" auu touniy. ana snow c,aus? ;h? .the Pyer of petitioner should not be granted: and that no tice of the pendency of said petition and the heafing thereof be given to all persons interested ln said matter by publishing a copy of this order in the Plattsmouth Journal, a eeml weckly newspaper printed in said county, for three successive weeks, prior to said day of hearing. Dated December 29th, 1924. ALLEN J. BEEPON, (Seal) jo-3w. County Judge. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the mattef of the estate of Wil liam Nickles, deceased. To the creditors of said estate: Youf are hereby notified, that I will sit at the County court room in Plattsmouth in said county, on the 24th day of January, 1925, and on the 25th day of April, 1925, at the hour of ten o'clock a. in. on each of said days, 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 January, A D. 1925, and h time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 24th day of January 1925. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court, this 20th day of December, 1924. o . ALLEN J. BEESON, (Seal) d22-4w County Judge. Automobile Painting! First-Class Work Guaranteed! Prices Reasonable Mirror Replating and Sign Work! A F. KI10FLICEK, Phone 592-W. Platt.mouth on tor n no 1 n rr f A t a