ri HOinUY. SIPTEIiIEIP. 38. PLansinouTH .PAGE TET2 i ! Cbe plattsmoutb lournal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA trJ at PoBtuffice. Plattsmoutb. Neb- as aecoad-daaa mall matter R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PEICE $2.00 LOVE COVERETH ALL SINS Hatred stirreth up strifes: but love covereth all sins. Proverbs 10:12. :o: No frost as yet. :o:- The fanners are feeding their stock new corn. :o:- Hunt the bright things. Suppose flies ate as much as cows? :o: Civilization has much to answer for and no question asked. :o: Two things that should never be forced are love and singing. :o: Being in love can take up almost as much time as regular loafing. :o: Many fish would starve if it wasn't for the man who tries to catch them. -:o:- Sometimes the family skeleton is not in the closet but in the evening dress. :o: Another fine thing about travel is that it teaches you to appreciate home. -:o: Time to lay in the coal. The rail roads have begun to advertise Flor ida rates. :o:- Few girls have the keen percep tion to differentiate between sympa thy and love. :o:- If we profited by our mistakes we soon would have enough of them to make us rich. -:o:- A flapper's idea of putting your best foot foremost is to put it forward to step on the gas. :o: Merchandising is like holding a girl's hand, but advertising like pop ping the question. :o: Good checker players head the pe destrians' longevity because they know which way to Jump. , -:o: Wisconsin may believe in the La Follette fairy tales, but it refuses to fall for the Coolidge myth. : o : Modern girla are accomplished in Jhe use of the needle. They know how to put it in the phonograph. :o: The Literary Digest explains how the coal strikes the public. We ex plain how it strikes the pocketbook. :o: Bad news from Florida. A man had a mania for shooting mules. Maybe he thought they were jazz bands. :o: Bob La Follette, Jr., led the field for United States senator in Wiscon sin. The office seems to be a family heritage. :o: The difference between the re search department of the Federal Council of Churches and the paid prohibition leaders is the difference between honesty and hypocrisy. :o: Convicts in Great Britain number about 20 per cent of the figures of 1875. In the United States they number about 300 per cent more than a half century ago. Can it be possible that nearly all the British criminals have succeeded in losing themselves in America? FRANK E. VALLERY'S OPENING OF SALES PAVILLION Saturday, October 3d PLATTSMOUTH, NEB. Location: South 5th Street. One-half Block from Main Street. Everything sold, from needles to a farm. You will find at this sale farm equipment, live stock and merchandise. Reasonable commission will be charged for sales. Anyone Vanting to list may see Frank E. Vallery or call W. R. Young. Phone No. 314. WATCH FOR COMPLETE LIST PEB YEAR IN ADVANCE Navy heads fight new air program. -:o:- Even the man who is deaf to rea son can hear money talk. :o: Among the things which run in all families are stockings. we uon t tnink that there is any cause to complain of the heat today. -:o: Another movie actress wants a di vorce and custody of her reputation. :o: And now an American has beaten King George at billiards. They just can't stop us. :o: The nearest approach to perpetual motion is a schoolboy wearing out his shoes. :o: You can't eat your cake and have it, too, but if you don't eat it the cake gets stale. :o: Married men Fpend about half their time explaining to their wives how this or that happened. :o: Everybody on a political machine wants to blow the horn. And io body wants to buy the gas. :o: The knock in the motor is heard more distinctly when it is idling. This is also true of mortals. :o: You can't tell what's in a boy by looking at him. Philadelphia doctors got an iron bolt out of one. :o: About $20,000,000 in alimony is paid yearly in this country. Better run home and kiss your wife. :o: The only trouble with the harvest moon is you see so many autos park ed by the road fixing punctures. :o: This cold spell is a warning for the people to use less gas and use their extra money in preparing for winter. :o: The hardest thing in the world is working in a bank and counting so much money and getting so little of It. "United we stand, divided we fall." This should be taken as real by every citizen of Plattsmouth that is in fa vor of peace and prosperity. :o: There are higher things in life for a woman than a pretty complexion. A pretty hat is a little higher. :o: Our hearts go out to the Philip pines and we Americans would be glad to share our freedom with them if we had any. :o: The farmer's purchasing power now exceeds pre-war strength, ac cording to experts. To cope with this situation a well known mail or der house announces the issue of a 1,100 page catalogue. :o: : Another national crisis has been averted. Attorney General Sargent has settled the lengthy dispute as to the relative rank of rear admirals and major generals, so you can go ahead now and sleep nights. :o: At 70 years of age Eugene Debs says he is entirely discouraged with the outlook for world harmony. Well, several of its worst discords have been caused by the sour notes Gene himself contribtued. "CROSS CROSSINGS CAUTIOUSLY" The country-wide safety campaign conducted by the American Railway Association Safety Section is slowly bearing fruit, months of 192 For the first five 3 the Committee on the Prevention of Highway Crossing Accidents finds that there were 771 deaths from accidents at crossings, compared with 799 for the same pe riod in 1924, and 2.19S injuries as compared with 2,356. The safety campaign has made use of Careful Crossing posters, with the warning to "Cross Crossings Cautiously," postcards and stickers and pamphlets illustrating the terrible effects of lack of caution. It is intended to wind up the campaign with addresses at meeting of various clubs, and the press is asked to aid by publicity. The news item tell'ng that eight lives were snuffed out last Sunday, due to carelessness on the part of automobile drivers at railway cross ings, is one of many in the past few months, showing that the automo bile traveling public has not yet realized the danger and must be fur ther educated. The railroads are doing their part. They point out that, with regard to railroad travel, there were but 149 fatalities in the year 1924 among the 931,000,000 persons carried, or one fatality to ev ery 6,314,000 persons carried safely. But, with approximately 18,000, 000 automobiles using the public highways today, we have the appall ing record of 19,000 fatalities and 450,000 injuries per year, a large percentage of which occur at rail way crossings. And the number of automobiles is constantly increasing. This is as bad as if the country were engaged in an endless war. And it is unnecessary. Automobile drivers will have to learn not only to cross crossings carefully, but to "stop, look and listen" before attempting to cross. The memorandum of the Railway Safety Committee concludes that "those who will not voluntarily be cautious should be driven from the highway." That refers, of course. to those who escape with their lives and uncrippled. But who is to tell the number of these? Those who don't escape are effectually driven from the highway. The cemetery is their goal. "CROSS CROSSINGS CAUTIOUS LY." The fool-killer is watching for you. :o: YOUNGER 4C0LLEGE HEADS The election of a president by a university or college is not common place, and whne htree large Ameri can universities choose new presi dents within a few weeks of each other it is an event of more than passing moment. And the event as sumes added significance from the fact that all three of these univer sity heads are under 50 years of age and two are under 40. Those here referred to are Glenn Frank, elected president of the Wis consin university; Dr. Clarence C. Little, president-elect of Michigan university, and Dr. Max Mason, new- president of the University of Chi cago. The former is 4S years old. Dr. Little is 37 and Dr. Mason is 38. These men are not the first to be made presidents of educational in stitutions before they have passed the half-century mark, although they belong to a minority. If there is a trend toward placing younger men in the administrative offices of the institutions of higher learning it has only recently gained momentum. There may have been a time when none acquired leadership in the fields of education, thought and science until well past the two store and ten mark. If there was, it is no more. None will doubt the leadership of the i presidents of the Universities of Michigan, Wisconsin and Chicago and all are still in the splendid prime of life. Perhaps those in control of Ameri can educational institutions have Just made the discovery that men still in the full vigor of life are best qualified to administer education to young men and women. :o: RETURN OF REV. PF0UTZ We are overjoyed to learn that our dear friend. Rev. F. E. Pfoutz, has been returned to this charge as pas tor of the First Methodist church. This, for the third time, in many re spects, is out of the ordinary. The church is to be congratulated and the Journal is proud to note the fact. Brother Pfoutz is a gentleman of no ordinary ability but is a fine talker and an incessant worker for the great cause of Christianity, and all our people, irrespective of sect cr creed, extend the right hand of fel lowship to one of the noblest serv ants of the people that ever stood In any pulpit. To say the least, he is a gentleman and a scholar, and we are proud to call him our dear friend. A local temperance worker blames the press for the failure of prohibi tion, probably meaning the wine press. THE FRENCH DEBT A Parisian paper ridicules Cail laux's plan to pay the French debt to the United States and hints that it , may result in hostile demonstrations against American tourists. If France would work half as hard trying to pay the debt as trying to get out of paying it, a large portion of it would have been paid by this time. And if France cloesn t want our tourists to spend their good money there, it certainly won't cause any serious international situation if they have to spend it at home. :o: A New York man brings suit on Henry Ford for infringing on his patent. He did not patent a Ford plant, it seems, but he discovered o invented the weekly payment plan He makes Methuselah look like cake eater. Rough, rude men were arriving with trucks to take away the old family sewing machine be cause of a lapsed weekly payment before either this Aew Yorker or Henry Ford were thought of. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass ss. By virtue of an Order of Sale is sued by Golda Noble Beal, Clerk of the District Court within and for Cass county. Nebraska, and to me di rected, I will on the 17th day of Oc tober, A. D., 1925, at 10 o'clock a m., of said day, at the south front door of the court house in Platts mouth, Nebraska, in said county, sell at public auction to the highest bid der for cash the following real es tate to-wit: East half of Lots 15 and 16, in Block 3, Stadelman's Addition to the City of Plattsmouth, Cass county, Nebraska The same being levied upon and taken as the property of Charles C Schermerhorn, defendant, to satisfy a judgment of said Court recovered by The Livingston Loan & Building Association, plaintiff against said defendant. Plattsmouth. Nebraska, September 5th, A. D. 1925. E. P STEWART. (Seal) Sheriff Cass County, Nebraska. A. L. TIDD, Plaintiff's Attorney. SHERIFFS SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass ss. By virtue of an Order of Sale is sued by Golda Noble Beal, Clerk of the District Court within and for Cass county. Nebraska, and to me di rected, I will on the 17th day of Oc tober, A. D. 1925, at 10 o'clock a m. of said day at the south front door of the court house in Platts mouth, Nebraska, in said county, sell at public auction to the highest bid der for cash the following real es tate, to-wit: Lots 9 and 10. in Block 9, in South Park Addition to the City of Plattsmouth. in Cass county, Nebraska The same being levied upon and taken as the property of William E. Gravett et al, defendants, to satisfy a judgment of said Court recovered bv The Livingston Loan & Buildin Association: plaintiff against said defendants. Plattsmouth. Nebraska, September 5th, A. D. 1925. E. P STEWART, (Seal) Sheriff Cass County, Nebraska. A. L. TIDD, Plaintiff's Attorney. NOTICE OF SUIT TO QUIET TITLE In the District Court of Cass County, Nebraska August Wendt, Plaintiff vs. Fritz Otte et al. Defendants To the Defendants: Frite Otte; Mary Otte; the heirs, devisees, lega tees, personal representatives and all other persons interested in the es tates of Fritz Otte and Mary Otte, each deceased, real names unknown: and all persons having or claiming any interest in and to the west half (W1) of the southwest quarter (SW'iJ) of Section thirteen (13), Township eleven (11), N.. Range ten (10) east of the 6th P. M., in Cass county, Nebraska, real names unknown : You and each of you are hereby notified that August Wendt. as Plain tiff, filed a petition and commenced an action in the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska, on the 12th day of September, 1925, against you and each of you, the object, purpose and prayer of which is to obtain a decree of court quieting the title to the west half (WY2) of the south west quarter (SWi) of Section thirteen (13), Township eleven (11), N., Range ten (10), east of the 6th P. M., in Cass county, Nebraska, as against you and each of you; to have decreed paid and released a mortgage given to the Omaha Loan and Trust Company on said property dated Feb ruary 2S, 18S7, and recorded in Book "X" of the mortgage records of said county, at page 473; and for such other relief as may be just and equit able. You and each of you are further notified that you are required to an swer said petition on or before Mon day, the 26th day of October, 1925, or the allegations therein contained will be taken as true and a decree rendered in favor of plaintiff and against you and each of you, accord ing to the prayer of said petition. Dated this 12th day of September, 'A. D. 1925. AUGUST WENDT, Plaintiff. CARL D. GANZ, ' sl4-4w His Attorney. Remember Stambaugh's pure bred Duroc sale Friday, Oct. 9th, at Rich field, Nebraska, five miles southwest of Papillion. s24-2tw ORDER OF HEARING AND NO TICE OF PROBATE OF WILL In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. To all persons interested in the estate of Philomena Neff, deceased: On reading the petition of Amelia Fitzpatrick praying that the instru ment filed in this court on the 11th day of September, 1925, and pur porting to be the last will and testa ment of the said deceased, may be proved and allowed, and recorded as the last will and testament of Philo mena Neff, dec-eased; that said in strument be admitted to probate, and the administration of said estate be granted to Rae F. Patterson, as Administrator, with will annexed; It is hereby ordered that you, and all persons interested in said matter, may, and do, appear at the County Court to be held in and for said county, on the 12th day of October, A. D. 1925, at 10 o'clock a. m., to show cause, if any there be, why the prayer of the petitioner should not be granted, and that notice of the pendency of said petition and that the hearing thereof be given to all persons interested in said matter by publishing a copy 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 seal of said court, this 14th day of September, A. D. 1925. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) s21-3w County Judge. NOTICE OF SALE To E. B. Breck, and all persons In terested: You are hereby notified that by virtue of a chattel mortgage, dated February 16, 1925, and filed for record in the office of the Clerk of Cass county, Nebraska, March 2, 1925, at 4:20 o'clock p. m., mort gagor bein?f E. B. Breck and the mortgagee W. M. Barclay, the amount due thereon is $332.12. Said mort gage covers the following described property, to-wit: All dishes, hotel ware, tables, chairs, counter, two stoves, cash register, electric beater, gas pie oven and miscellaneous articles for restaurant use, and located in the building on the west half of Lot 9, Block 29, Plattsmouth, Nebraska. You are further notified that by virtue of a lease entered into by said E. B. Breck and W. M. Barclay on the 16th day of February, 1925, and default of said Breck in complying with the terms thereof, there is due said Barclay thereon $110.00; and also for a gas and light bill from said mortgagor to Nebraska Gas and Electric Company, of Plattsmouth, for wHich said Barclay stood good for and had to pay, in connection with said mortgage and lease, of $34.96, together with costs and at torney fees for this proceeding of $25.00, totaling $502.08. I will offer said chattels for sale to the highest bidder for cash on the 5th day of October, 1925, at 11 o'clock a.-m., on said west half Lot 9, Block 29, Plattsmouth, Nebraska, to satisfy said mortgage, lease, light bill, costs and attorney fees. W. M. BARCLAY, Mortgagee and Lessor. sl4-3w NOTICE In the District Court of Cass County, Nebraska. The Livingston Loan and Building Association, Plaintiff vs. Edward L. Bashus et al. Defendants To the Defendants, Edwin S. Ruff- ner; John w. Runner; syivira ti. Smith; Elmer L. Smith; Mrs. Elmer L. Smith, real name unknown; War ren M. Smith; Mrs. Warren M. Smith, real name unknown; Myrtle B. Pratt; Pratt, real name unknown; Lois McGinnis and McGinnis, real name unknown; Thomas Hallo- well; John Reuland and Lena Reu- land, and the Anselmo B. Smith In vestment Company, the heirs, lega tees, devisees, personal representa tives and all other persons interested in the estate of William W. Gullion, deceased real names unknown, and all persons having or claiming any interest in Lots 15, 16 and 17 in the NW of the SWM of Section 7, Township 12, North of Range 14, in the City of Plattsmouth, in Cass coun ty, Nebraska, real names unknown: You and each of you are hereby notified that the plaintiff, The Liv ingston Loan and Building Associa tion, filed its petition in the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska, on June 22, 1925, against you and each of you, the object and prayer of which is to obtain a decree of Court quieting title in it in and to the fol lowing described real estate, to-wit: Lots 15, 16 and 17, in the NWi of the SWU of Section 7, Township 12, North of Range 14, in the City of Plattsmouth, in Cass county, Nebraska and against you and each of you, 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, October 19, 1925, or the allega tions of plaintiff's petition will be taken as true and a decree will be rendered in favor of plaintiff and against you and each of you, accord ing to the prayer of said petition. Dated this 3rd day of September, D. 1925. THE LIVINGSTON LOAN AND BUILDING ASSOCIATION, Plaintiff. By A. L. TIDD, Attorney for Plaintiff. 87-4 w ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION Know All Men by These Presents: That we, the undersigned, hereby as sociate ourselves together for the purpose of forming a corporation under the laws of the State of Ne braska as hereinafter set forth. ARTICLE 1 Corporation Name: The name of said corporation shall be the Peters Grain Company. ARTICLE 2 Place of Business: The home of said company shall be in the town of Greenwood, Cass county, Nebraska, with the privilege of establishing places of business and necessary of fices wherever the Board of Directors may designate, and that the Board of Directors may hold their meetings in any town or place suitable and convenient, and may be resolution hold the annual meeting of the stock holders in any other town or city of the State of Nebraska. ARTICLE 3 Capital Stock, Corporate Life, Debts: The authorized capital stork of said corporation shall be the sum of Fifteen Thousand Dollars ($15, 000.00), which shall be divided into shares of the par value of One Hun dred Dollars ($100.00) per share, and fully paid, and be non-assessable; Said company shall be author ized to commence business on or be fore September 1, 1925, or at a time when shares to the amount of Ten Thousand Dollars ($i0,000.00) have been subscribed, and continue for the period of fifty (50) years unless sooner dissolved. All shares unissued may be sold and disposed of as the Board of Directors may designate. The debts of said corporation shall not at any time exceed two-thirds of its capital stock. ARTICLE 4 Business Objects: The business and purpose of the corporation is to own and operate grain elevators and to own and hold such real estate as may be necessary for the purposes of said company, and also the operation of lumber and material supply yards, the purchase and sale of lumber, and such building materials as said Board of Directors may deem wise and ex pedient to handle, also may purchase and vend farm machinery ami fuel supplies, and all of such business aforesaid may be carried on in the connection with the operation of any such grain elevator, and also to do each and every thing necessary, suit able or proper for the accomplishment of any of the purposes, or the attain ment of any one or more of the ob jects herein enumerated, or which shall at any time appear conducive to or expedient for the protection or benefit of said corporation and to borrow money, execute their note with written evidence of security to carry out the object and purpose of this corporation. ARTICLE 5 Officers, Board of Directors: The affairs of this corporation shall be under the control of the Board of Directors, which Board shall consist of at least three and not more than five. A majority of said board shall be stockholders of the company. The officers shall be a President, Vice President, Secretary and Treas urer. Any two of these offices may be held by one and the same person. Said officers need not be stockholders of the corporation. The right to em ploy any manager or managers of any elevator, yard or establishment shall be vested in the Board of Directors. ARTICLE 6 Duties of Officers: The duties of the Board of Directors and various officers shall be those usually per formed, and as may be provided in the by-laws. ARTICLE 7 Annual Meeting: The annual meet ing of said corporation shall be held on the nrsi Jionaay or August or each year where designated in the notice. Ten days notice shall be mailed each stockholder prior to said meeting. Special meetings may be called by the President or Board of Directors on giving five days notice in writing. i ne stocKnoiuers may waive the written notice by having waiver entered in the minute book. The Board of Directors shall hold such business meetings as they may determine and all adjournments shall be subject to the call of the Presi dent. On his refusal to act, the Secretary may call such meeting. ARTICLE 8 Powers. Seal: This corporation may adopt such seal as Board of Di rectors may designate, and may have and enjoy all lawful powers and au thority granted by law and as here in provided. ARTICLE 9 Dissolution: This corporation may be dissolved on majority vote of the Board of Directors at any regular meeting or any special meeting call ed for that purpose or at any regular or special meeting of the stockhold ers on a vote of the majority shares. ARTICLE 10 Amendments: These articles may be amended at any meeting of the stockholders or at any regular or special meeting of the Board of Di rectors by a majority vote of all shares or of the members of safd board. ARTICLE 11 Present Officers: Until the first annual meeting to be held September 1, 1925, the following shall be the officers: 1 Members Board of Direc tors: O. F. Peters, F. P. Liles and J. Rex Peters. 2 Officers: O. F. Peters, President; J. Rex Peters, Vice President and Treasurer; F. P. Liles, Secretary. ARTICLE 12 Shares Subscribed: The amount of i i, ,..i.i'u i ! rthnrf aa aa fniinw- scribed as as follows: Shares O. F. Peters J. Rex Peters F. P. Liles Amount $ In witness whereof, we hereto affix our signatures this day of Septem ber, 1925. O. F. PETERS .1. REX PETERS F. P. LILES. State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. Before me, N. W. Elmelund. a Notary Public in ami for said Coun ty and State, personally appeared O. F. Peters and J. Rex Peters, known to me to be the persons sighing tin foregoing as incorporators an 1 ac knowledged they executed the sunn; for purposes mentioned. Witness my hand and seal thi 12th day of September. 1925. N. W. ELM EH 'Nil. (Seal) Notary Public. My commission expires June 2, 1930. State of Nebraska, County of Doug las, ss. Before me, A. P. Murfagh, a Notary Public in and for said County ami State, personally appeared F. P. Liles, known to nie to be the person sign ing the foregoing as incorporator and acknowledged he executed th. same for the purposes mentioned. Witness my hand and seal this ICtli dav of September. 192 5. A. P. Ml'UTAGII. (Seal) Notary Public. My commission expires July 10, 19 31. Know All Men by These Presents: That we. O. F. Peters, President, and F. P. Liles. Secretary, hereby ce rtify that at a duly called meeting of all incorporators held on the day of September, 1925, the above and foregoing Articles ef Incorporation were duly adopted by all voting in the affirmative and none in the nega tive, arul that the same now consti tute the Articles of Incorporation ef said company. Witness our hands this day of September, 1925. O. F. PETERS. President. LILES. Secretary. Attest F. P (Seal) NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Henriette N. Halmes, 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 13th day of October. A. I). 1925. and on the 13th day of January, A. I). 1926, at ten o'clock a. m., of each day to receive and examine all e laims 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 13th day of October. A. D.. 1925. and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 13lh day of October, 1925. Witness my hand anil the seal of said County Court, this 15th day of September, 1925. A. II. DUXBURY, (Seal) s21-4w County Judge. NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ESTATK In the District Court of the Coun ty of Cass. Nebraska. In the Matter of the Application W. G. Boedeker, administrator of the; estate of William S. Schwab, de ceased, for license to sell real estate. To all persons interested: Notice is hereby given that pur suant to license given by th" Dis trict Court of Cass County. Nebras ka, to the undersigned administrator of the estate of William S. Schwab, deceased, entered in said Court on the ISth day of July. 1925. the undersigned will sell at public sale to the highest bidder for cash, the following described real estate be longing to the estate of William S. Schwab, deceased, to-wit: The northwest ejuarter of sec tion 33, township 11, range 14, East of the 6th P. M., in Cass County, Nebraska, subject to the Indebtedness thereon; also lots 1 to 6 inclusive in block 2, lots 1 to 7 inclusive and lot 12 in block 3, lots 1 to 12 inclusive, in block 4, and lots 1 to 1 2 in clusive in block 5. all in O'Neills Addition to the City of Plattsmouth. Cass County. Ne braska, subject to the mortgages thereon. Said sale will be hold at the south door of the Cass County Court House in the City of Plattsmouth. Cass County, Nebraska, in the County in which said lands are located, at 10 o'clock a. m.. on the 12th day of October, 1925; said sale will re main open one hour. Dated this 19th day of September, 1925. W. B. BOEDEKER Administrator of the Estate of Wiliam S. Schwab, Deceased. W. A. ROBERTSON Attorney. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Wil liam H. Newell, 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 Octo ber 26, 1925, and on January 27, 1926, at 10 o'clock a. rn., 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 26th day of Octobe r, A. D. 1925, and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from "1 2bth day of October. 192... Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court, this 2Sth day of 'September, 1925. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) s28-4w County Judge. An ad in the Journal is worth two on a billboard. I 1 1