TSfcRSDAY. XAKCH 0. 1935. Che plattsmouth lournal PTTRT.I.iffl&D SEMI -WEEKLY AT BLATTSMOUTH. NEBRASKA atsred at FoautOlc. JUattamoutn. Neb u hcuio-cImi madi raatur R. A. B A TEfS SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 JACOB BLESSETH PHAROAH Joseph brought in Jacob his fath er, and set him before Pharoah. And Jacob blessed Pharoah. Genesis 47:7-10. :o: No invention, we believe, has caused as much talk as the radio. :o: Pretty Bimple to do without some thing until your neighbor gets one. :o: The lamer a lame duck is. the faster he can run down to see the president. : o : A government expert has figured that a dollar bill lasts seven months. Can he prove it? :o: "Widow Contests Husband's Will" headline. Ah, if they would only all wait until they are widows. :o: An inquiry has just been launched as to the whereabouts of the gentle man who used to crack his knuckles. :o: Many a man congratulates him self that he has reached the top when he is merely laid on the shelf. :o: Could anything be more displeas ing to a leader of the third party than wheat selling above $2 a bushel? :o: Modern daughters do not tell their mothers a lot of things, but, then, these modern mothers know enough anyhow. :o: We don't know just what it is that we made the world free for, but the situation looks free-for-all. very much like a -:o:- A little learning is a dangerous thing and leads you often to put down the wrong words in cross word puzzles. o: What a difference in the speed of a man's car when he is bragging about It to a friend or lying about it to a Judge. :o: Some reformers would make the ieclaration of independence read: "Life, liberty and the pursuit of oth er people's happiness." :o: Since the cross-word puzzle craze broke loose, it's a wise husband who knows which newspaper to use in lighting the kitchen fire. :o: Anyway. California can't claim to J be a "Silent Cal," for she is the loudest state in the Union when it comes to praising herself. :o: The man who does his best will get some credit, of course, but he will receive stil more blame than praise because his best isn't still bet ter. . :o: Having discovered how easy it is to borrow money from us, perhaps the nations of Europe will hereafter see the folly of fighting to take it away from each other. :o: Senator Borah insists the public welfare demands an extra session of congress after March 4. No sugges tion is yet forthcoming as to what demanded the present session. :o: The wasp waist is gone forever, says the dean of women at a western co-educational school. Well, it's gone but It's a brave prophet who can predict that any feminine style will never come back. :o: The legislature of Connecticut was upon the point of putting an an nual tax of $1 on torn cats and $10 on tabbies when someone informed it that a pair of rats, if left uncatted, would in three years produce 539,- 000,000 descendants. Naturally, the . proposed tax was not ratified : Those schools which talk of tak ing football out of the curriculum are making a grave mistake. When all the places are won on the debate and essay teams by the girls, there must be something like football to give the boys a chance to represent their schools in competition with other Institutions. i :o: Last week was a bad week for celebrities. King George had the flu. Senator Stanley had a rib brok- ; torist to feel "sore" on account of be en in an auto accident. Senator Mc- ing arrested for not having a 1925 Corthiek was found dead in bed, license tag on his car. Ample no Oloria Swanson was operated upon 1 tice and time has been given to com- for peritonitis, Doris Kenyon had her appeadix taken out and we were not feeling particularly well, itkr. , Publisher PER YEAR EN ADVANCE Our appetite for real winter isn't as keen as it was last August. :o: In Herrin, we understand, they put a gun in every girl's hope chest. :o: Almost all boudoir caps are at tractive unless somebody has them on. -o:o- Bachelors should what they miss at time. :o:- be taxed for house cleaning Fewer marriages would be, if all young women looked like the printed figures. :o: In these times, in many homes the hand that rocks the cradle makes the Hi ing. :o: It is hard for married men to un derstand how a milliner can go bankrupt. :o: Busy people don't get into mis chief, but that does not apply to busybodies. -:o: It is estimated that 87 per cent of those who pity themselves haven't much else to do. - : o : Usually that half that has not been told about most people is not the better half. :o: Nightcaps are said to be coming in again. Not the kind you are thinking of, however. :o: Many fur coats being sold this winter were worn by bunnies and pussy cats last season. :o: That one pretty good way to dis cover a man's ability to really do something is to tell him he can't. :o: "Politicians won the war," asserts Lloyd George. Maybe but they sent substitutes to do the actual fighting. : o : Some of the European nobility boasting of their coat of arms, have not but one pair of pants to go with it. :o: Quite a few young men are fol lowing in Edison's steps when it comes to sleep but not when it comes to work. :o: Secretary Wilbur says that officers of the navy are free to express their views. In fact, he thinks some are altogether too free. :o: A doctor has discovered people have a sixth sense. Then that ex plains why so few husbands get away with their lies. :o: Marcus Aurelius, Shakespeare and Browning have been succeeded bv the funny page, the sport sheet and the cross-word puzzle section. -:o: The flapper may travel a pretty fast gait, but she has the satisfac tion of knowing that she will never suffer from a mental breakdown. -:c:- King Alfonso has dropped his suit against Blasco Ibanez, and the latter will have to cast about for some oth er method of getting free publicity. :o: Henry Ford, having purchased an antique stagecoach, now invests in an ancient nansom cat). He must he gathering a family tree for Lizzie :o: Attorney uenerai btone is now a supreme Judge. The grafters were afraid of him as attorney generj.1 and Coolidge had to put him whe he is. :o: Admiration for the Apostle Paul actuated Mrs. Longworth in naming her daughter, Paulina. What wis the matter with Nixola, since she was Nick's? The most vital subject the great empire of the middlewest and south west ever has faced Is a mammoth railroad merger threatened, and yet no river transportation. :o: With another income tax reduc tion in prospect the American peo ple are bound to save a lot of money Just as soon as they cut out food, clothing and riding in Pullmans. There is no occasion for any mo ply with the law. The punishment therefore, has been deserved. The arresting officers are only doing their sworn duty. OUR STANDARDIZATION The most striking thing about America is its uniformity. Travel across the country, from side to side and from corner to cor ner, and you find people speaking the same language, wearing the same clothes, having the same manners, ideas, prejudices and education. A grammar school graduate, or a high school graduate, in one part of the country has studied about the same things, and about the same amount of them, as in any other part of the country. Everybody has seen the same movies, read the same magazines and the same news in the newspapers taking the same news service and syndicating the same features. We are the nearest the world ever saw, on any such scale, to a stand ardized people. The world over, there is nowhere else so great a space where the peo ple even speak all the' same lan guage. Now comes an Austrian professor, and complains in a book that our movies, bobbed hair and jazz are standardizing Europe, also. Which may not be so terrific a thing, after all, if, with this uni formity, which shocks the artistic. we may include American peace ana efficiency. :o: SPRING AND THINGS Have you heard about spring? It will be here soon, dashing toward us at the rate of 24 hours per day. Spring is the marrying season. That's very simple. A man feels so lazy he needs a wife to make him work. Flowers and golfers grow wild every spring. Spring fishing is better than golf- ; ing. You can't go to sleep by a golf ball waiting for it to bite. A fisherman stretcnes nis arms , phould be used to make a sood floor telling all about his trip, while a J for the farrowing pn? Clay build golfer stretches his imagination. ing tile laid flat on a thin layer of The one good thing about adding Sind and covered with a thin coat of . , . (cement J.. -inch to .-mch thick, up a golf score is the same system . make8 tnp neariy Weal floor. The will save you money on your income , ajr Space in the tile provides warmth tax. ! and the concrete surface makes for We never see a scarecrow in a j ease of cleaning. A special tile need ... . ... . , 1 not be used for this purpose. Any corn field but that we think he is n , hn1,,,iTl Hla will fill fhp standing out there telling a fish tale. Spring is the time of gardens. Some get vegetables out of their gar dens. Some get chickens. In staring your garden, make it small enough for your wife to do all the work later on in the season. You can combine golfing and gar-I Wju come down no doubt of it. dening by using a midiron for a hoe. ; Economists agree that one of the Gardening, golfing and fiishinsi industry's biggest problems is reduc are like faith, hope and charity, ex- tion of distribution cost. You get cept you have faith and hope and.an idea of tne magnitude of the need charity. problem when you learn that the Perhaps the wildest of the wild spring flowers are the bathing girls. : creased eight times as fast from 1910 Swimming is better than golfing. . to 1920, directly concerned in pro You can take as muny strokes as you ! duction. please. 'isning is Detter man paruenmg. much waste in our distribution sys After you get your bait dug up. you tem too many "links in the chain don't have to watch the place. and an excessive number of chains." The really dangerous thing about 1 Some of these wastes are business spring is every other place in the booms and their reactions; season world seems better than where you aJ variations in production; lack of are. The sad thing about spring is the more rest you get the more restless you become. BUILDING SLUMPS Latest figures would indicate a need for revision of the old theory that the war was entirely respons ible for the building shortage. Steady increase each year since 1919 in construction totals Is evidence that the normal standard of build - ing activity, which before the wari hnnn .1 .M-. - nai-l as UUVUl VV 1A L uiniuu uuiiaio cili&iuu, - ly, has been raised permanently. Continued population drift from farms to cities is no doubt partly ac- nmiTitnhlo fitv nnnnlntinn tnn w ard of housine. Projects for construction work filed last year represent an expendi ture of three and a half millions, a slight increase over the year preced ing and only a fraction of 1923's in crease over 1922. Indications, therefore, are that the peak has been reached and that 1925 will witness a slight slump. :o: TrTrxr strurnrvTC bCHOOLb Increase in high school attendance during recent years has made sec ondary education one of our biggest problems. High school enrollment It is hereby ordered that you and is increasing seven times as fast as a persons interested in said matter ... . . . 1 may, and do, appear at the County the nation s po pulation. ! Court to be held in and for said coun- To meet it the bureau of educa-' ty, on the 10th day of March. A. D. tion of the interior department is 1925, at ten o'clock a. m., to show planning a permanent organization ' cause, if any there be, why the pray on a co-operative basis to assist as er f the SSSLSrSJT granted, and that notice of the pen research agency and clearing house. dency of said petition and the hear Perhaps it will be able to find why ing thereof be given to all persons in the cost of education is so much j terested in said matter by publishing higher in small high schools than in a cPy Tof thif order .in the, Platts . ' , .. mouth Journal, a semi-weekly news- large ones. Often the cost per pupil nanar riTltori in Kai(1 rnnntv for nnt is five time: greater in small schools. giving the same opportunities, as in ; the larger ones. i :o: j The country roads have over sub j scribed their mud quota. FlgfTIOTJTH in-' T..T -T-.T.-.T,.T. ', i'h'iiTiiTiiTi .T..T.T. 'i t U A 1 FARM BUREAU HATES Gopy for this Depastment furnished by Counv Agent Seed Lawn Now Sow plenty of good lawn mixture, rake the yard twice and then roll it. This should almost insure a good lawn. Treat Oats For Smut Write or phone the Farm Bureau office and we will send you a card telling how to treat oats for smut. Pruning Time There is no better time than the present if you have not already pruned your young orchard or grape vines. Culling It is getting too late to success fully cull hens now. You can tell a poor hen but she will soon lay a few eggs and you have kept this long, when feed was more expensive than at any time. If you need to sell a few hens, sell the fat ones. A Clean, Warm Bed on a Cold Night If you ever laid on a bed half un covered all through a cold night then you know how a young pig feels when he tries to sleep in a farrowing pen which is poorly bedded and which has a cold concrete floor. A dirt floor may be warm enough but there is a serious objection to its use and the same objection applies to a board floor. It is next to impossible to thoroughly clean a board floor and the only way to be sure that a dirt floor is not alive with round worms' eggs and germs of filth diseases is to remove the surface layer, haul it away and replace it with fresh, clean earth. In following out a system of hog lot sanitation to prevent dam age to young pigs by round worm or filth diseases, it is necessary to thor oughly clean the farrowing pen with shovel and broom and then flush the floors and side walls with boiling lye water. A concrete floor is easy to clean but is cold. Dirt floors are warm hut hard to clean. What. then. ; bill well. Approximately 73 of the 6x12" size tile is needed for a 6x6' farrowing pen. WHERE WE WASTE If someone can solve our distribu- i tion problem the high cost of living ) workers engaged in distribution in- Herbert Hoover says there's too 1 proper standards; portation. inadequate trans :o:- The president's economy is ap proved by 9S per cent of the people. none of whom imitate It. :o: Prize fighters h ad a hard life. Kid ; MeCov mav be sent to the pen. and i Jack Dempsey is married. March is coming in like a lion; now will it go out like a lamb? We ; can tell you after the 31st. ve-t Furone would like to see Uncle . J Sam in the collection business, but 1 only so far as Germany is concerned. :o:- It is already the east against the west, and enough so that the west 1 and the south should stand together , for their rihts ORDER OF HEARING and Notice on Petition for Set tlement of Account. In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. State of Nebraska, Cass county, ss. To all nersons interested in the estate of Adam Fornoff, Sr., deceased: t On reading the petition of Adam ' B. Fornoff and Jacob Fornoff, execu- i tors, praying a final settlement and I allowance of their account filed in this Court on the 28th day of Febru ary, 1925, and for the closing of the estate proceedings and discharge of the executors week prior to said day of hearing. ' r r . In witness whereof, I have here unto set my hand and the seal of said Court, this 28th day of Febru-' ary, A. D. 1925. i (Seal) m2-lw H. DUXBURY, County Jude. will be on Yec, March is here, and Old Win ter is hanging on. :o: Centralizing power still goes on. The west wants to look out. It never seems to occur to Europe that debts may be settled in a simple way by paying them. io; In the consolidation of railroads, river navigation will become more imperative than ever. ORDER OF HEARING AND NO TICE OF PROBATE OF WILL In the County Court of Cass coun ty, AehrasKa. State of Nebraska. County or eass, ss. To all persons interested in the es tate of David J. hitman, deceased: On readine the petition of Harriet Yes, the gasoline tax pretty soon. :o: I Pitman nraying that the instru-'port ment filed in this court on the 25th day of February, 1925, and purport- ine to be the last will and testament of the said deceased, may he proved and allowed, and recorded as the last will and testament of David J. Pit man, deceased; mat saiu iiiniumrui be admitted to probate, and the ad ministration of said estate be grant ed to Orin A. Davis, as Executor; It is herebv ordered that you, and all persons interested in said matter. may, and do, appear at the County Court to be held in and for 8aidty xebraka county, on the 2Sth day of March, A. D. 1925. at 10 o'clock a. m., to show cause, if any there be, why the prayer of the petitioner enouiu uuiirpdzcd. Minors, and Jatntt Monaon, be granted, and that notice of the pendency of said petition and tnai the hearing thereof be given to all nersons 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 successive weeKs prior to said day of hearing. Witness my hand, and seat or 6aio court, this 2Sth day of February, A. D. 1925. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) County Judge. ALLEN J. BEESON, m2-3w. Attorney. NOTICE OF SVIT TO QUIET TITLE In the District Court of the Coun ty of Cass, Nebraska. William A. Oliver and Frank E. Vallery, Plaintiffs, vs. Paul Nuckolls et al, Defendants. To the defendants Paul Nuckolls; Mrs. Paul Nuckolls, real name un known; Rupert Nuckolls, Mrs. Ru pert Nuckolls, real name unknown; Bruce Johnson Nuckolls; Mrs. Bruce Johnson Nuckolls, real name un known; Mary Ann Garrison; the heirs, devisees, legatees, personal rep reseatatives and all other persons in terested in the estates of Paul Nuck olls; Mrs. Paul Nuckolls, real name unknown; Rupert Nuckolls; Mrs. Rupert Nuckolls, real name un known; Bruce Johnson Nuckolls; Mrs. Bruce Johnson Nuckolls, real name unknown; Mary Ann Garrison; Stephen F. Nuckolls, and Robert Carnes, whose real name was Robert Karnes, each deceased, real names unknown; all persons having or claiming any interest in and to Lot seven (7) and the west half (W ) of Lot eight (8), in Block forty (40), in the City of Plattsmouth, Cass county, Nebraska, real names un known : You and each of you are hereby notified that William A. Oliver and Frank E. Vallery. as plaintiffs, filed a petition and commenced an ac tion in the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska, this 25th day of February, 192 5, against you and each of you, the object. nurDose and prayer of which is to obtain a decree of Court quieting the title to Lot seven (7) and the west half (W) of Lot eight (8), in Block forty (40), in the City of Plattsmouth, Cass coun ty, Nebraska, as against you and each of you and for such other and further relief as may be just and equitable. You and each of you are further notified that you are required to an swer said petition on or before Mon day, the 13th day of April, 1925, or the allegations of plaintiffs petition will be taken as true and a decree will be rendered in favor of plain tiffs and against you and each of you, according to the prayer of said petition. Dated this 25th day of February, A. D. 1925. WILLIAM A. OLIVER and FRANK E. VALLERY, Plaintiffs. W. A. Robertson, Attorney for Plaintiffs. NOTICE In the District Court of Caae coun ty, Nebraska. Sarah Renner, Plaintiff, va Mary Ann Holten et al. Defendants. To the Defendants: Mary Ann Holten, and all persons having or claiming any interest in Lots num bered 16, 17 and 18, all in Block numbered 27, all in the Village of Eagle, Cass county, Nebraska, as the same are shown on the published and recorded plat thereof, real names unknown: You and each of you are hereby notified that the plaintiff. Sarah Renner filed her petition in the Dis trict Court of Cass county. Nebras ka, on the 21st day of February, 1925, against you and each of you, the object and prayer of which is to obtain a decree of Court quieting the title in her in and to the follow ing described real estate, to-wlt: Lots 16, 17 and 18, all in Block 27 in the Village of Eagle, in Cass county, Nebraska and for such other and further re lief as may be just and equitable. You and each of you are further notified that you are required to an-! 'swer said petition on or before Mon - day, the 6th day of April, 1926, or th aJJagjatioBS o lain tiff DUtion will be taken as true and your de fault will be entered and a decree will be rendered in favor of the plaintiff and against you and each of you according to the prayer of said petition. Dated this 21st day of February, A. D 1925. SARAH RENNER, Plaintiff. By A. L. Tidd. Attorney for Plaintiff. LEGAL NOTICE In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the estate of J. Henry Meisinger, deceased, and the 'Trusteeship of Adam Meisinger in said estate. To all persons interested: You are hereby notified that there has been filed in this court the re port of Adam Meisinger, as trustee of Phillip Meisinger, together with his petition, praying therein tnat said report be allowed and approved; That a hearing be had on said re and petition before this court on the 7th day of March, 1925, at 9 o'clock a. m., and that on objec tions tnereto. 11 any, must oe iueu im or before said clay and hour of hearing Witness my hand and the seal of the County Court of said county, this 21st dav of February. 1925. A. H. DCXBURY, (Seal) County Judge. NOTICE OF REFEREE'S SALE jn the District Court of Cass coun- Xrmjj c. Monson, formerly Irene r ;npi plaintiff, vs. Violet M. Ben- fffn RuBsell M. Bengen, Helen G. Defendant. aTotioa is hereby that Ky virtue of an Order entered on the 20th day of February, 1925, by the Hon. James T. Begley, Judge of the District Court of Cass county, Ne braska, I, the undersigned, C. A. Rawls, sole referee in said cause, ap pointed by the Order of said court, will on the 28th day of March, 1925, at the hour of ten o'clock a. m. of said day. at the south front door of the court house in the City of Platts mouth, Cass county, Nebraska, offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash, subject to a mortgage of $8,000.00, the following described real estate, to-wit: The southeast quarter (SE ) of Section three (3), Township eleven (11) North, in Range thirteen (13) east of the Sixth Principal Meridian in Cass county, Nebraska. Said offer for sale will remain open for one hour for bids. Dated February 20, 1925. C. A. RAWLS, Referee. Ctas. E. Martin, Attorney. f23-5w NOTICE OF REFEREE'S SALE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. Samuel Gullion, Plaintiff, vs. Ger aldine Chandler et al. Defendants. Notice is hereby given that under and by virtue of a decree of the Dis trict Court of Cass county, Nebraska, entered in the above entitled cause on the 21st day of February, 1925, and an order of sale entered by said Court on the 21st day of February. 1U25, the undersigned sole referee will, on the 28th day of March, 1925, ar. 2 o'clock p. m., at the north front door of the First National Bank in the Village of Greenwood, Cass coun ty, Nebraska, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, that is to say. ten per cent on the day of sale aad balance when said sale shall be confirmed by the Court, the follow ing described real estate, to-wit: The west ninety (90) acres of the northeast quarter (NEi ) of Section thirty-four (34) In Township twelve (12), North, Range nine (9), east of the 6th P. M., in Cass county, Nebras ka. Said sale will be held open for one hour. An abstract showing market able title will be furnished. Dated this 21st day of February, A, D. 1925. J. A. CAPWELL, Sole Referee. Carl D. Gana, Attorney. f23-5w NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Peter M. Nord, 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 25th day of March A. D., 1925. and on the 25th day of June. A. D.. 1925, at ten o'clock a. m., of each day, to receive and examine 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 25th day of March, A. D. 1925, and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 25th day of March, 1925. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court, this 18th day of February, 1925. (Seal) A. H. DUXBURY. fl9-4w County Judge. 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 Rob ert B. Windham, deceased. On reading and filing the petition of Robert B. Windham, Jr., praying ' that administration of said estate may bs granted to Samuel C. Wind- ham, as Administrator; - Ordered, that March 7th, A. D. 1821, at 10 o'clock a. m. is assigned tor has ring said petition, whan all mJMufi 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 petitioner should not be granteG and that no tice 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 Btmi weekly newspaper printed in taid county, for three successive weeks, prior to said day of hearing. DabsM rahroary 1 1, 19th. a. rynxBrmY. fl6-3ir Ctenaey NOTICE TO CREDITORS Th? State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, SK. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate ot Caroline Johnson, deceased. To the creditors of said estate: You are hereby notified, that I will sit Jit the County Court room in Plattsmouth in said county, on March 16, 1925, and June 17. 1925. at 9 o'clock a. m. of each day, to receive and examine all claims against said estate, with a view to their adjust ment and allowance. The time lim ited for the presentation of claims against said estate is three months from the 16th day of March. A. D. 1925. and the time limited for pay ment of debts is one year from said 16th day of March. 1925. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court, this 7th day of February, 1925. A. H. DUXBURY. Seal fl2-4w County Judge. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. By virtue of an Order of Sale issu ed by Clarence L. Beal, Clerk of the District Court within and for Cass county, Nebraska, and to me directed, I will on the 7th day of March, A. D. 1925, at ten o'clock a. m. of said day at the south front door of the court house in the City of Platts mouth, in said county, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the following described real es tate, to-wit: Lot numbered five (5), In Block thirty-three. (S3) in the City of Plattsmouth, in Cass county, Nebraska, according to the published and recorded plat thereof The same being levied upon and taken as the property of John W. Falter, Catherine D. Falter, Hardy E. Nott. Harding B. Nott, Otto Stro berger, May Stroberger, Elmer H. Meisinger, Bestor & Swstek, a co partnership; R. A. Reed, real name unknown; Mrs. R. A. Reed, real name unknown; A. R. Rine, real name un known; Mrs. A. R. Rine, real name unknown, and all persons having or claiming any interest in or to Lot five (6), in Block thirty-three (33). in the City of Plattsmouth, Cass county, Nebraska, real names un known, Defenanti, to satisfy a Decree and Judgment of said Court recover ed by The Plattsmouth Loan and Building Association, Plaintiff again st said Defendants. Flaatsmouth, Mebrasera. Jaauary SIM. A. D. l2e. H. P. 8TWWAJIT, iff Oaas u LsraA r mi NOTICE, ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE. In the matter of the estate of Mary B. Harrison, deceased. Notice is hereby given that In pur suance of the provisions contained in the last will and testament of Mary B. Harrison, deceased, and an order of the Honorable A. H. Duxbury, County Judge in and for said coun ty, made on the 14th day of Febru ary, 1925, for the sale of the real estate hereinafter described, there will be sold at public vendue to the highest bidder for cash at the south door of the Court House in the City of Plattsmouth, in said county, on the 7th day of March, 1925, at 11 o'clock a. m., the following described real estate: The south half of Lots 7 and 8. in Block 11, Townsend's Ad dition to the City of Platts mouth. Nebraska. Ssid sale will remain open one hour. Dated this 14th day of February, A. D, 1925. PI1TLLIP F. HARRISON, Administrator De Bonis Non. of the Estate of Mary B. Har rison. Deceased. ALLBN J. BEESON, tteravy tor Brtate. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, 83. By virtue of an Order of Sale issu ed by Clarence L. Beal, Clerk of the District Court, within and for Cisa county, Nebraska, and to me direct ed, I will on the 7th day of March. A. D. 1925, at ten o'clock a. ni., of said day, at the south front door of the court house in the City of Platts mouth, in said county, sell at public suction to the highest bidder for cash the following described real estate, to-wit: Lots five (5) and six (6), in Block nine (9), in Young & Hays' Addition to the City of Plattsmouth, Nebraska, accord ing to the published and record ed plat thereof The same being levied upon and taken as the property of Jacob P. Falter, Mary Falter, Philip Fornoff, Merchants National Bank of Omaha, Nebraska, a corporation, Isabel Wiles, Teresa Hempel, Rosina Tim- mis et al, Defendants, to satisfy a Decree and Judgment of said Court recovered by The Plattsmouth Loan and Building Association, Plaintiff against said Defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, January 31st, A. D. 1925. E. P. STEWART, Sheriff Cass County, Nebraska. JOHN M. LEYDA, tor MAinttff.