THTTRSDAY. MAECH 18. 1928. PIATTSMOUTH SEMI-WEEKLY JOUENAL PAGE THREE XZhc plattsmouth Journal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEEXY AT PLATTS2I0UTH. NEBRASKA Ka tared at Postofflce. Plattsmouth. Neb., a aaooad-claM mail matter R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCKIPTIOS PEICE $2.00 THE LORD IS MY STRENGTH I will love Thee, O Lord, my strength. The Lord is ray rock, and ray fortress, and my deliverer; my Cod, my strength in whom I trust. realms 2S.1-2. :o: Food will keep longer if you put a lock on the refrigerator. : o : It begins to seem that Ma will never, never desert Mr. Fergurson. :o: He who scoffs at the crooked man . had best hold himself pretty straight. n I We have tried year after year and we find it is going to take us a long time to get rich. -:o:- To keep finger prints and dirty; marks off the wall paper have it all pasted on the ceiling. :o: English opera singers eat onions, which explains why they enact those tragedies so naturally. :o: Better sit in your old comfortable chair all you can before spring clean ing comes and gets it. : o : About the only thanks you ever got for handing out advice is a good cussing for it not working. :o: When a man grabs your hand and pumps it up and down he is trying to get something out of you. :o: A scientist says bow-legs are a sign of courage. They certainly are if their owner wears a-short skirt. J :o: I 1 . V. 1 -.l. - league iiupes teem iu mie, -uaiu- berlain 6ees disaster ahead, as all na tions refuse to make concessions. :o: We just happened to see the lawn mower in the basement the other day and it made our back start aching. :o: The committee on tariff that Dawes names is blow to Democrats. What else could you expect with a vice-president all one-sided? :o: The man who was too polite to grab a vacant seat on the street car when a lady had her eye on it, now tries to beat her to a parking place. :o: The exchange editor of the Wichi ta Eagle finds that the "Home from Florida" items are increasing in number in all the Nebraska papers these days. :o: A scientific note says that only two per cent of the men on earth can sing. That didn't use to discourage the old-fashioned Sweet Adeline whiskey quartet, however. :o: Regardless of the fact that there . 13 no one on the force but himself, $ the town marshal always feels bet-,5" tor anrt hir'cer uhoti t is rpfprrpfl to as the Chief of Police. throw a uoiiar aDay? Official tests show that some separators in use on farms today, are wasting $25 a month in butterfat a dollar for every working day. How much is your sep arator wasting? You can't see it Test itl Replace it with a New Model Beatrice and save the waste! Pntm tho NEW MODEL On Your Farm ' Balance in small monthly payments. Use while you pay. Famous Double Angle Discs make Beatrice bowl the closest skimmer in the world bar none. Finest construction throughout. Easi est to turn. Easiest to .wash. Discs washed clean, sterilized and dried in less than 2 minutes with the Beatrice Wonder Washer. Geo. W. Olsen PEE YEAE I?I ADVANCE ever uouy- seems surpnseu wutn a i politician plays politics. :o: I The faster you try to wait the. longer it seems to take you. :o: These days no woman looks old, but the rr.an who doesn't look is. :o:- Man many learn to fly like a bird, but he'll never learn to sit on a barb ed wire fence. :o: The chief grounds for a famous di- voice hied recently is that they nave been married since 1925. :o: Get out the Christmas gifts and polish them up. You'll need them for wedding presents soon. :o: Mexicans are again murdering Americans. Why don't Americans be loyal and stay home to get murdered? :o: It wasn't modesty that kept the previous generation from showing its knees. It must have been lack of soap, then. :o: Man is such a cantankerous crit ter that all you'd have to do with religion would be to bootleg it and people would be wild to get it. :o: One out of every five families in America has a radio set. and radio dealers are busy and will have the 'other four families supplied I few months. in a certain chewing gum is bein pushed as a wonderful fat reducer, An advertisement of its says "Fat rolls off while you chew!" Hanged jj wp believe it. :o: A scientist says it requires no en ergy to produce human speech, and we had suspected as much in most cases except those of some children between the ages of 4 and 7. :o: A doctor says folks have a sixth sense if they would only cultivate it. They will have to if the automobile industry keeps the same pace it has been going the past few years. :o: . The Association Opposed to Blue Laws has received a $100,000 dona tion to be used in purchasing prop erty in Washington on which it is planned to erect a building to be used as headquarters in figthing reform movements. r-r Dr. John A. Griffin t Dentist Office Hours: 9-12; 1-5. Sundays and evenings by appointment only. PHONE 229 Soennichsen Building away Come in and tee this wonderful machine today! Backed by Beatrice Creamery Company' etrongett guarantee. Plattsmouth, Nebr. M. W. A. BLDG. SUCCESS AFTER FORTY Now and then one reads those sparkling "stories in which are set forth tales of boyhood success that make one wonder. Some young man in his twenties has made a million; someone else has reached a high sta tion before he is 35. Has the world changed, shutting out the man who has turned 40? Well, follow those "boy wonders" and usually you find they are not such howling successes after all. Sel dom do they live up to the advertis ing. They haven't done nearly so much as has been recorded, or, after the first big jump, they never jump again. Many of them later in life have rather a hard time of it. Then go more extensively into the records and you wi'l find, today as in past decades, that real success us ually conies after forty. The period up to that time is necessarily one of preparation and getting a foothold. At 40 the man who has looked to his health and him mental training is at the heighth of his power. Whatever position he has gained he is able to J hold and to use as a point from which to advance. His family is founded, his business connections are made, the foundation U laid for success. At that time he has the experience and confidence to carry him through. Nor does there appear to be much to the assertion that a man gets no new ideas after reaching 40. There are too many cases to disprove that. MacCauly said that of the really good books, nineteen-twentieths of them were written by men who had reach ed this middle point in life. Lew Wallance did not complete Ben Hur until he was past 50. William de Morgan did1 not become a novelist un til he was in his sixties. A reporter whose name has become a tradition on the London Times did not write a line until he was fifty. The really great lawyers, doctors and financiers are past 40. The world has not changed; the old rules for success still hold. It is best, as a general proposition, to look on the period up to 40 as pre paratory; getting as much experience and power as you can, and climbing as high as you can in connection with this preparation; but reserving your; strength for the real race after the half-mile point is turned. :o: LUCY STONE LEAGUERS The Lucy Stone League, which is an organization advocating that women retain their maiden names after marriage, has been the subject nf miirli rontroversv latplv. I Most men can't tney retuse to take tneir nusuanu s names, but are willing to take every thing else he has Their slogan is "A Lucy Stone earners .no uoss. One man said that when he pro- posed he asked for a wife and they gave him a Lucy Stone. Two of the most inconspicuous ( pear lieforP me in the District Court figures in history are the husbands room in the courthouse in the City of Lucv Stone and Lvdia Pinkham. of Plattsmouth. Nebraska, on the Lucv probably kept her own name'24th day of April. 1926. at ten o'clock ,'a. ni., to show cause why a license because her husbands was lifiuult(Shou( Eot be granted to said ad to pronounce. Although it couldn't micistrator to sell the above describ possibly have been harder than ed real estate of said deceased to pay Stone. The girls claim that they don't want to lose their individuality. In other words, they advocate "the free dom of the shes." Many of them insist not only on keeping their own individuality, but that of their husbands also. Their, husbands become merely a violet by J NOTICE TO CREDITORS a Lucy Stoner. The only thing that; The state of Nebraska, Cass coun- makes a Lucy Stone more indignant ty. ss. than to have some man suggest thatj In the County Court. she change her name is to have no In the matter of the estate of Lu . . . . . , ... fcinda Brittain. deceased. man suggest that she do it. ,.,., - . , . . 00 To the creditors of said estate: It isn't so much that she wants to You are hereby notified that I get married as that she at least wants the opportunity of refusing to. -:o: SOME DAY , The Fields Museaum. at Chicago, issues a detailed report on the dis- coveries made by its expedition to . . Kish. m Mespotamia, where a ceme- tary several thousand years old was excavated. It prints pictures of the pottery, weapons and ornaments found in the graves. To most of us they are in teresting only because they are so imperfect, so crude. We marvel that people could have lived with such makeshift things. But we don't realize that a couple of thousand years from now when soma historical society issues a report on the civilization of America in the j twentiesth century, people of that' future time are going to find our fin- Jest machines and most cunningly de vised instruments just as crude as the clay pots and the copper hairpins of the old Mespotamiang are to us. :o:- Heavy, impure blood makes a mud dy, pimply complexion, headaches, nausea, indigestion. Thin blood makes you weak, pale and sickly. For cure blood, sound digestion, use Burdock Blood Bitters. $1.25 at all! stores. J Look fr&2gSSK it on the ':? dealer's FCV counter bfePYZ f WKH$ More for your money ,0 and Peppermint Chewing Sweet for any money G13 The government announces that only four months remain in which war veterans may convert and re instate the war risk insurance they took cut during the World War. Any ex-service man is good health may re instate his policy, no matter how long ago it lapsed, but this offer ! holds good only for four more months. Since the terms offered are extremely liberal, an ex-service man who hasn't attended to this matter 'yet will act at once, if he is wise. -:o: Studies in the monkey language are said to be discouraging because monkeys do not make any remarks worth listening to, in which respect they are like a lot of people. :o: For baby's croup, Willie's daily , cuts and bruises, mother's sore throat, Grandma's lameness Dr. Thomas Eclectic Oil the household remedy 30c and COc ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the Matter of the Estate of Mary E. Thompson, deceased. The above cause came on for hear ing unon the Detition of Frank A. cioidt. administrator cf the estate of Mary E. Thompson, deceased, pray- lIlS for a license to sell Lots four, .South Park Addition to the City of plattsmouth ent amount of the same to bring the (sum of $500.00 for the payment of 'debts allowed against said estate and there not being sufficient personal property to pay said debts and ex penses It is therefore ordered that all persons interested in saiu estate ap debts and expenses of said estate and ithat this order be published in the : Plattsmouth Journal for four success ive weeks preceding said time. Datnl this 11th day of March, A. D. 1926. JAMES T. BEGLEY, Judre of the District mlo - 4w Court. will sit at the County Court room in I Plattsmouth in said county, on the j i-ui tiay 01 ipru, a. d. lyze, and on the 13th dav of .Tulv A n inR 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 l,'m.e Iimite.d for the presentation of claims against said estate is three months frora the 12th day o April A. D. 1926, and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 12th day of April. 1926. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court, this Sth day of March, 192C. A. II. DUXBURY, (Seal) mll-4w County Judge. Truck and Transfer l -1 - n - E Call Phone 342-W or see me at the Vallery Sales Pavilion, Plattsmouth. Wade Porter ggf'Live Stock Hauling a Specialty the best Jail would not be so confining if there wasn't a rule against the pris oners having saws. 1 LEGAL NOTICE To Max Preis, Non-Sesident De- fendant: Notice is hereby given that pur suant to an order of attachment is sued by A. H. Duxbury. County Judge within and for the County of Cass. Nebraska, in an action pending before said County Judge wherein August G. Bach is plaintiff and Max Preis defendant to recover the sum of $51.80, a writ of garnishment in on a commercial banking business aid of attachment was issued and ; under the laws of the State of Ne levied upon money in the possesion braska. of W. G. Kieck, as garnishee, and Article 4 The authorized capital that said case was continued for trial stock of this corporation shall be to the 12th day of April, 1926, at 9 o'clock a. mS-3w m. AUGUST G.' BACH, Plaintiff. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Charles H. Sheldon, 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 29th dav of March, A. D. 1926, and on the 29th day of June, A. D. 1926, 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 29th day of March, A. D. 1926, and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 29th day of March, 1926. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court, this 26th day of February, 1926. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) ml-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 George E. Nichols, deceased. On reading and filing the petition of Harold G. Nichols praying that administration of said estate may be granted to N. D. Talcott, as Admin istrator; Ordered, that April 6th, A. D. 1926. at ten 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 petitioner should not be granted; and that notice of the pendency of said peti tion and the hearing thereof be given to all persons interested in said mat ter 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 oT hearing. Dated March Sth. 1926. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) mll-3w County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING And Notice on Petition for Set tlement of Account. In the County Court of C2ss coun ty, Nebraska. ' State of Nebraska, Cass county, ss. To all persons interested in the estate of William Klaurens, deceased: On reading the petition of Joseph H. Lidgett, administrator, praying a final settlement and allowance of his account filed in this court on the 2nd day of March, 1926, and for assign ment and distribution of said estate and the discharge of said administra tor; 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 coun ty, on the 12th day of March A. D. 1926, at 9 o'clock a. m., to show cause, ii any mere De, wny me prayer of the petitioner should not be granted, and that notice of the pendency of said petition and the hearing thereof be given to all sons interested in said matter by pub- 1 lishing a copy of this order in the.grave. E. A. Landon, H. B. Schroeder, Plattsmouth Journal, a semi-weekly ,ira e. Atkinson. H. F. Atkinson, newspaper printed in said county, ; for one week prior to said day of nearing. In witness whereof, I have here unto set my hand and the seal 01 said court, this 2nd day of March, A. D. 1926. " A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal)m31w County Judge. NOTICE OF ADMINIS TRATOR'S SALE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the application of A. C. Ault, administrator of the es tate of Edward P. McBride, deceased, for license to sell real estate to pay debts; Notice i3 hereby given that in pur suance of an order and license issued by Honorable James T. Begley, Judge of the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska, on the 2nd day of March. A. D. 1926 to me, A. O. Ault, administrator, I will on the 29th day of March, A. D. 1926, at the hour of ten o'clock in the forenoon on the premises in the Village of Cedar(fen(jant: I 1- Once rumttr Vohracl! ftfTW I Offeri for sale at publio auction to the I tin, uaoo wuui;, ... . I est bidder for cash the following-sued described :eal estate, to-wit: Lot Five (5), in Block Six (6) in the Village of Cedar Creek, Cass county, Nebraska, subject to all liens and encum brances. Said offer for sale will remain open for a period cf one (1) hour. Dated this 5th day of March, A. D. 1926. A. O. AULT, Administrator of the Estate of Edward P. McBride, m8-3w Deceased. ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION We, the undersigned, hereby asso ciate ourselves together for the pur pose of forming a corporation under the laws of the State of Nebraska, and do adopt the following Articles of Incorporation: Articles 1 The name by which this corporation shall be known is Greenwood State Bank. Article 2 The principal place of business of this corporation shall be t Greenwood, County of Cass, State of Nebraska. Article 3 The object for which this corporation is formed is to carry i Twenty-Five Thousand (25,000) Dol- lars, of which at least Twenty-Five Thousand (23,000) Dollars shall have been paid in at time of commence ment of business, which shall be issued in shares of the par value of One Hundred (100) Dollars each. No transfer of the stock of this corpora tion shall be operative until entered on the books of the corporation. Article 5 The indebtedness of this corporation shall at no time exceed the amount of its paid in capital and surplus, except for deposits. Article 6 This corporation shall begin business on the 1st day of January, 1926, or as soon thereafter as authorized by the State Banking Board of the State of Nebraska, and shall terminate on the 31st day of December, 1965. Article 7 The affairs of this cor poration shall be under the control and management of a board of direc tors consisting of not less than three nor more than five shareholders, whose term of office shall be for a period of one year, or until their suc cessors are elected and qualified, not less than a majority of whom shall be residents of the county in which the bank is located or counties im mediately adjacent thereto. It shall be the duty of the board of directors to elect from their number a presi dent and secretary, and select a vice president and cashier, and they may also select an assistant cashier and such other clerks and assistants as the business of the corporation may require. The term of office of the officers of this corporation shall be one year, or until their successors are elected and qualified. The board of directors may adopt such bylaws for the regulation and management of the affairs and business of the cor poration as it may deem proper. Article S The regular annual meeting of the stockholders of this corporation shall be held on the second Monday of January each year, at which meeting the board of direc tors above provided fcr shall be elect ed. A majority of the shares of the stock of the corporation at any regu lar or special meeting, shall consti tute a quorum for the transaction of business. Article 9 Until the regular meet ing of the stockholders of the corpora tion, the following named persons shall constitute the board of direc tors: H. K. Frantz, J. C. Deuser, Jr., P. L. Hall, Jr., E. A. Landon and A. E. Leesley. Article 10 Each stockholder shall at any regular or special meeting be entitled to one vote, either in person or by proxy for each share of stock held. Article 11 These articles cf in corporation may be amended at any regular or special meeting called for that purpose by a two-thirds vote of all the stock. Witness our hands this 30th day of December, 1925. H. K. FRANTZ. P. L. HALL. JR., P. J. COSGRAVE, E. A. LANDON. H. B. SCHROEDER. IRA E. ATKINSON, H. F. ATKINSON. HELENA B. HALL, O. W. EVERETT, A. E. LEESLEY. J. C. DEUSER, JR. State of Nebraska "I V ss. County of Cass J On this 30th day of December, 1925, before the undersigned, a not ary public in and for said county and per-jState nersonallv aDneared H. K. J. Cos- Frantz. P. L. Hall. Jr.. P Helena B. Hall. O. W. Everett. A. E. Leesley and J. C. Deuser. Jr., to me known to be the identical persons re affixed to the fore-j of incornoration. and wnose names a going articles each for himself acknowledged the!JopePh Doyle. Mrs. Clarence Doyle, same to be his voluntary act and deed. In Witness Whereof, I have here unto set my hand and notarial seal this 30th day of December, 1925, at Greenwood, Nebraska. E. O. MILLER. Notary Public. I. H. K. Frantz. President of the Greenwood State Bank, of Greenwood, notified that the above named plain Nebraska, do hereby certify that the filfd a petition and commenced within and foregoing is a true and ai action in the District Court of correct copy of the original articles Cass county, Nebraska, on the 19th of incorporation of said bank. Witness my hand this 2Sth dav of December, 1925. II. FRANTZ, President. LEGAL NOTICE To Max Preis, Non-Resident De- 'Kntioe ict hcrpliv c Ivpn th.nt ntir high-'suant to an order of attachment is- by A. H. Duxbury, County Judge within and for the County of rass xvhrnsira in an nation nenrt- ing before said County Judge, where- tifr against you and each of you. in Fred G. Egenberger is plaintiff according to the prayer of said peti and Max Preis defendant, to recover, . , ' . the sum of $49.80, a writ of garnish-1 ated this 19th day of February, ment in aid of attachment was issued ! 19Z6- jand levied upon money in the pos- 'session of u. G. Kieck, as garnishee. land that said case was continued for ! trial to the 12th day of April, 1926, at 9 o'clock a. m. FRED G. EGENBERGER. jm8 - 3w Plaintiff. NOTICE OF LIQUIDATION The First National Bank, located at Greenwood, in the State of Ne braska, is closing its afTairs. All note holders and other creditors of the as sociation are hereby notified to pre sent the notes and other claims for payment to the Greenwood State Bank of Greenwood, Nebraska, which has assumed all the debts and lia bilities of the First National Bank under an agreement of merger be tween them. Dated December 31. 1925. II. K. FRANTZ. f4-9w. President. NOTICE TO CREDITORS State of Nebraska, Cass county, ss. In County Court. In the matter of the estate of Robert L. Burr, deceased. Notice is hereby giv n to the credi tors of said deceased that hearingn will be held upon claims filed against said estate, before me. County Judge of Cass county, NebrasUi, at the County Court room in Piattsmouth, in said eounty. on the 29th clay of March. 1926, and on the 30th day of June, 1926, at 10 o'clock a. m., each day, for examination, adjust ment and allowance. All claims must be filed in said court on or before said last hour of hearing. Witness my hand and seal of said County Court, at Plattsmouth, Ne braska, this 20th day of February, 1926. A. II. DUXBURY, (Seal) ml-4w County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING On Petition for Appointment of Administratrix. The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Maria Lau, formerly Maria Pflugs haupt, deceased. On the reading and filing of the petition of Meta Shafer praying that administration of said estate may be granted to her as administratrix; Ordered. That March 29th. A. D. 1926. at 10 o'clock a. in., is assigned for hearing taid 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 petitioner should not be granted; and that notice of the pendency of said peti tion and hearing thereof be given to all persons interested in said mat ter by publishing a copy of this order in the Plattsmouth Journal, a stmi weekly newspaper printed in said county, for three successive weeks, prior to said day of hearing. Dated March 3rd. 1926. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal)m3-3w County Judge. NOTICE OF SUIT TO QUIET TITLE. In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. P. Balser, Plaintiff, vs. Shepherd Duke et al. Defendants. To the defendants Shepherd Duke, Levina Duke, his wife; John S. Duke, Elbert T. Duke. Ellen Cooper, Hattie Cooper and Maggie I. Bennett, and all persons interested in the estate of Shepherd Duke, deceased; John Tal lon, Nicholas Tallon, Catherine Tal lon and Mary Ann Tallon, and all persons interested in the estate of John Tallon, deceased; Nicholas Tal lon. Catharine Tallon. his wife; John Tallon and Anna Tallon. and all per sons interested in the estate of Nich olas Tallon. deceased; Catharine Freeny, John Freeny,, her husband, Rosana Freeny, John Freeny. Jr.. 'Mary Ann Freeny, James Freeny, 'Patrick Freeny, Mary Tallon. Kate Tallon and Ellen Tallon, and all per sons interested in the estate of Cath arine Tallon, deceased; Mary Ann Doyle, widow, Clarence Doyle, John Doyle, Joseph Doyle, Mrs. Clarence Doyle, first and real name unknown, wife of Clarence Doyle, Mrs. John Doyle, first and real name unknown, wife of John Doyle, Mrs. Joseph Doyle, first and real name unknown, wife of Joseph Doyle; Shepherd Duke, Levina Duke, John S. Duke, Elbert T. Duke, Ellen Cooper, Hattie Coop er, Maggie I. Bennett, John Tallon, Nicholas Tallon, Catharine Tallon, Catherine Tallon. wife of Nicholas Tallon, John Tallon, Anna Tallon, Catharine Freeny, John Freeny her husband, Rosana Freeny, John Freeny Jr., Mary Ann Freeny, Jamc3 Freeny, Patrick Freeny, Mary Tallon, Kate Tallon, Ellen Tallon, Mary Ann Doyle, Clarence Doyle. John Doyle, .Mrs. John Doyle, Airs. Joseph Doyle, whose first names are unknown, each deceased, and their heirs and legatees whose names and whereabouts are to plaintiff unknown; and all persons having or claiming any interest in Lot eight (8) of Block five (5) of the City of Plattsmouth, Cass county, Ne braska, real names unknown: o" and each of you are hereby a.y of February, 1926, the object and prayer of which is to obtain a decree of court quieting the title fn and to Lot eight (8) of Block five (5) of the City of Plattsmouth. Cass ; county, Nebraska, as against you 'and each of you, and such other and j further relief as may be just and ' equitable. ! You and each of you are required to answer said petition on or before AIonlay. the 5tn day of April. 1926, ,r ine aiiesauons 01 piainun s pen- llou Je irue- ana a ae" cn?e will be entered in favor of plain A. i !At . Plaintiff. J. A. CAPWELL. His Attorney. f22-4w Advertise your want in the Jour nal for results.