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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 2, 1926)
VJ L THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER" 2, 1926. PAGE TUBES i i i J plat tsmoutb lournal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT atared at PoatoClca. Plattsmouth. R. A. BATES, Publisher SUCSIPTI03 PRICE (2.00 No Dawes plans for France. :o: . Labor Day one week from today. :o: Procrastination is one thief never stopped. .... I - :o:' ' ' ! Your brakes won't stop the car be hind you. . :o: Kansas City robbers pulled a man's gold toothi Moral shut upl" :o: Every delegate chosen to the Grand Island convention should attend. :o: Crowds of people were turned away from the big show in Omaha Friday. :o: All roads may lead to Illinois, but not all Illinois roads lead to the sen ate. :o : To prove that fat men are usually generous they are always tipping the poales. :o: Just because it comes to us on the air. it is not necessarily always ethereal music. :o: : Most of us have an idea that heaven is a place where there is enough good luck to go around. :o: : .'. The statement that Detroit is the wettest spot in the United States may strike New York as a direct insult. :o:- The gang which smuggled a car of beer ;into Detroit labeled "wash ing powder" expected to clean up with suds. :o:- The Democratic State Convention meets in Grand Island Thursday, Sep tember 2nd. Don't forget the date if you are a delegate. : :o: Protests on grounds of moral tur pitude have been made against the en try of Krishnamurti into this country. That should help the sale of any books he may write. -O. The injunction against police inter- Tre,Wr rn TT Kmtiut an a l'000 volt,centage has on our own manufactur- adelphia having failed, the National Wlr . onmmoT,A tn hv v m , leainie team might contend that it is not baseball. :o:- The man who gave President Cool-, idge the cherry pie was fined for speeding in New Jersey. There are ,iT,o rr, v with' in that state. :o: - Never was a woman more honored ln New York City than "Trudy" Ed- erle was last Friday on her return to America. Well, she is an American ' girl and deserves great honor from the American people. j :o: I A Philadelhia man who choked a girl to death, then cut up the body and hid the pieces in different places has been held guilty of second degree ,,rrtr A first decree murder in Philadelphia must be a rather grue- :o:- Senator Butler of Massachusetts charges the Democrats are attempting. to undermine public confidence in the "llue UttJ3 luc UUU. uu iacturea 310 pairs ior every pair im- "ow iu gei uacn a iener you wisn- Edith and Helen parley, itum saaa Republican party. It's a mean trick. take tis Sunday afternoon nap with- ported. We exported eight pairs for you had not written, but the safest non. Anrt it ia a mVRterv -wher the Dpttio- crats learned it. unless it was from .... ine nepuuiiiauB. :o: As dead issues, prohibition, the World Court and the League of Na- tions are three of the livest corpses we nave seen in many a aay. ine customary procedure seems to be to declare them dead issues and then use up the campaign proving it. Watch Elimination! Good HealtK Depends Upon Good Elimination. RETENTION of bodily waste in the blood is called a "toxic con dition." This often gives rise to a dull, languid feeling and, sometimes, toxic backaches and headaches. That the kidneys are not functioning prop erly is often shown by burning or scanty passage of secretions. Thou sands have learned to assist their kidneys by drinking plenty of pure water and the occasional use of a stimulant diuretic 50,000 users give Doan'a signed endorsement. Ask your neighbor I DOAN'S PILLS 60c Stimulant Dior tic to the Kidney Fartcr-M3ba-i CeUfe C-em., Buffalo, If. T. PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA Neb, mm ooaa-ola mail matter PER YEAR 15 ADVAXCX I Maybe if the politicians fall out the Nebraska. Trpasurv will ret its . -:o:- A million years from now some scientist may dig up our best specimen and make people mad by calling him a man. . It is said that Mellon and Mussolini mentioned the Italian debt settle-, ment, "but in a purely historiral fash ion." All settled? :o: We know a lot of , men, who claim that they work because they like it. but they'd quit darned quick if you stopped the revenue. :o: London women have adopted mice as pets, and one can't blame theall theological and acclesiastical is- gentlemen with full baggy trousers BUes are dwarfted by tne fundamental for being a little nervous. principle laid down by the mission o: . , I that the loyalty to the state comes be- The franc can't get much lower, . w . ... . ilA , -' - , fore loyalty to any religious mstitu- writer. What makes him think so? The mark never did stop. o in Missouri, and in a little while "Old; King Corn" and all his men will , be upon. the fields again. :o: The . only thing we cannot figure out about a prize fight, after reading what the proposed contenders have to say of each other is, why two such amateurs are ever allowed in the ring. :o: Saddle horses surviving where there are no roads fit for horses, and auto-( mobiles selling where there are no roads fit for automobiles reflect the indomitable will of the American peo ple. -:o:- An electric device which looks like a wrist watch and which will knock :r: i i i ii iiii ii-r w nil fii. ii i mil in i ii. lug electro-cutie. -.D. I "Ma" and "Don" an issue in Texas old contentions, Christ Himself urged again in. run off election last Satur-'a11 men to 'sive unto Caesar the day. Of course "Ma" was sit down 1 tnins that are Caesar's and unto God upon again pretty hard but still she , the thin that are God'8" is grumbling.. He did not set one thing before . p". j the other, but saw the great vision of How complacently do we view the amity and independence, religion bul ripening corn! The first is being cut ' warking the state through loyal citi- 200.000 in 1911 moved to South 1'!5,1'z" or Per pain - Amer'ica and ha8 now returned and'braced ln the9e lmPorts are a large I volume of cheap leather moccasins IAnd yet a man like Ponzi gets more publicity. :o:- The Bolsheviks believe that Tec-i ognition will come sooner if Ameri- cans are permitted to see Russia as it is. Our understanding is that the State Department objects to Russia, not as it is. but as it isn't. :o: Oxford undergraduates visiting In the United States - complain that; American girls make up dreadfully. , It's Just different, boys when you . Set used to il' 11 iH taste Just as :o: The Atchison Globe finds some sat- isfaction In modern life- In tnese gas- uui utiug awtthcucu vy a crou ui noisy youngr ope on the porch :o: we ioresee tne doom 01 tne direct 1 : -. x .. m pnmary. oilier Biaies, envious ui Illinois and Pennsylvania, will have nonp of ho nonvean Hrhp a rtvlrr AnQ those tw are nQt at fill comfortable since the investigation. :o: A press dispatch says that "hirh temperatures in Washington have re sulted in a slowing down of govern- ment business to a minimum." This' .... , , . , should be as close to nhnnlutp 7.pra ! in activity as man, a naturally an imate creature, can get. Every morning I take off my hat'at home 85 wel1 as In tne competitive to the Beauty of the World," is the,foreln marketa- due to the genius of sentiment carved over the fireplace of I an Indiana artist. The true apprecia-! tion of loveliness. As a rule, the in dividual who doesn't take off his hat till morning never sees the beauty of the world. . ' :o:- Suppose somebody should prove that the Old Testament is not in-!er spired and is not any part of God's word. Would it really benefit any- body? Would, the world be any bet-J ter off? Could the discovery or. revela-J tion be ranked as a contribution to human happiness and welfare? Wouldn't it be better to expend the same energy and effort along 'some line of service, to humanity. CHURCH AND STATE The report of the thirty-two Prot estant pastors comprising the good will mission which has been investi gating the current struggle between the Mexican government and churches lays down some fundamental truths, j apart from the facts which they pre sent, which are irrefutable. The Protestant church authorities 'have announced that) they cheerfully ! will acknowledge the supremacy of the Mexican . government. Independ ently of this announcement the good will mission declares that when the Catholic church extends a similar I recognition, the difficulty will be far ! nn tho wnv tnwnrfl RttlPTTint The mission members declare that re- Ports of riots and killings have been grossly exaggerated. W e believe that when the churches of Mexico, like the churches of the T7nftif1 Static " rioMaraa tba Tn aci-T report, accept the fundamental prin ciple that each individual owes a greater civic loyalty to the state than to the church, then religious ques tions in Mexico will be settled and the church will then prosper in its own right." The church authorities complain that the Mexican constitution denies the iTine origin of the church. But t ion. as a matter of good citizenship. That is going deep into the soil in which are the roots of old abuses and zenanip ana tne state protecting an men in the indulgence of their own religious beliefs, both working inde pendently and harmoniously each in its own sphere, for the welfare of the ; world here and hereafter. -:o:- AMERICA'S SHOE SUPREMACY The importation of boots and shoes to this country from Europe increased 63 per cent during the first six) months of 1926, over that of the cor- responding period of 1925. j This is one of the commodities, in tms land or aonoramiiy mgn tarins 1 . ' ' . . T i 11 wmcn emer iree oi amy. j.i is wen, therefore, to analvze what bearing tnis Jarge increase in importation per- There were 570,000 pairs of leath-j er boots and shoes imported the first mnntVi nf 1 Q 9 ft The value was and children's shoes, which pulls down the average price. Great Brit- aln sent us one-eighth the total aL lltc u-iU P" Pair, wnne Austria s cneap con- signments averaged only $1.10 per Pair. Czechoslovakia and Austria, however, rose from one-half per cent lK the total importations in 1925 L LW total, respectively, in 1926. j Plainly, though, a million-odd pairs of imported duty-free shoes for 1926 will make a barely perceptible scratch . on our vast production, for in 1925 the United States produced 323.553,- 055 pairs of boots and shoes We ex- ported 8,888,000 pairs, valued at 2.21 per paid. Therefore, we manu-l every pair imported, ana we sola our, exported shoes at 40 cents a pair less I than we paid for our imported ones. It is an interesting side light that 21 boot and snoe factories in St. LoUl8 aione there are 87 factories in : the so-called St. Louis district manufactured in 1924, 53,019,094 pairs of boots and shoes. It is evident from the above figures that America's duty-free boot and' shoe industry is not threatened by, . " , , . . J the tremendous disparity in labor cost 1 in favor of every country abroad, and I particularly in Southern Europe. W lasari nnrl will cnntinno tn lonrl American organization methods, sup Ported to the full limit by mass pro duction machinery. :o: The Secretary of Agriculture likens the uproar in Iowa to the running of a small pack of wolves, which will be . . l sure to make whatever it is howl loud than ever, -:o:- Officials investigating boxes labeled "Material for Stew" found that they;' contained alcohol. You can't even get ' away with it by labeling the stuff correctly. :o.- They bob their hair because it's useless. But they won't bob ears. The Program At The Nebraska State Fair A Marvellous One Never in the history of the Ne braska State Fair has such a Mar vellous program of entertainment and sports been arranged as will greet the three hundred thousand people who will go through the gates at Lincoln this year. The World's Best Auto Racers have entered and as an additional thrill, the Fastest Woman Driver in this country is among the number. The best field of Horses ever as sembled on a Nebraska track will contest for big purses. The pro gram of Attractions in front of the grand stand will positively outclass anything the State Fair has offered. Not one of them can be seen at a county fair. They are all from the Eastern circuit and play only the great fairs of the country. They are the best the world affords. The Greatest Bands and the Best Singers of the country are under contract. The Night Show in itself is a $10,000 attraction, and added to this is a Gorgeous $5,000 Fireworks Pro duction that will delight and thrill you every night. The Loud Speaker System carries every word and musical note from the platform to every part of the great amphitheater. The Nebraska State Fair is one of the big ones of this nation. Its Wonderful Ex hibits, its Educational Features, and its Thrilling Program are keeping pace with the advance ment of Nebraska. Thousands will take advantage of the Free Camp Grounds. It takes several days to see the Nebraska State Fair in all its entirety, but it's a trip worth while. Let's go. At Lincoln Sept. 5-10 E. E. PUBCEIX. Pre. CEO. JACKSON. See'y. THE APATHETIC DRY VOTE Declaring that in the past, 50 per, cent of the dry vote has refrained careful marketing. In other words. . (the men and women who have been from registering or voting. Mrs. EllaJ the project four yearg nave A. Boole, national president of the come interested in their chickens be Wo men's Christian Temperance Union 'cause the figures have Bhown them sounded the call to action in Chicago ! the other day. Mrs. Boole has launched a cam - paign to get out every available dry -vote at the fall election to defeat efforts of wets to modify the Volstead i u act. T 'li ; - ' - - . I T r . V. A ,J nmt Villi x. uic ui y vulc umj uuico wui mtu,. the congressional -elections this fall, should reveal how the country stands on the Volstead act as it operates at' .. present. present. it is i lu, needs. A national referendum few, months ago went wet. At that time it cia.mea Dy lBe ur,, uai lue voting Stnst fd rai participating in the voting because it didn't mean anything. But these elections will mean something very definite. " 'J candidates tor tne senate ana nouse oi whQ nag been home ror the 8ummer representatives. The organization is vacation from her studies at Smith ignoring, however, referendums in college. several states where they are being The flfw ?hat d W held because they propos action 11;; and w" " v"v vt The congressional elections are left to tell the story. Baring the personal equation which each candidate brings into the fray, the test should be a pretty fair Indicator. The results will be watched eagerly by the wets and drys alike. :o: The latest issue of the Postal Guide ruie sini remains not 10 man 11 in tne first place. :o:- Seasoned oak posts for sale. 7 and 8 foot .long, large. -Sam Gilmour, al 9-1 wd-w Saturday Night PHILPOT'S HALL ;WeepinT Water, Nebr. Good Music Come Have a Good Time. W. H. HOMAN, Mgr. - C .4. J Dr. John A. Gnmn f Dentist Office Hours: 9-12; 1-6. Sundays and evenings by appointment only. PHONE 229 Soensichsen Building r i M"I"I-."I"l--!-M-:-Z-I-I-I-I- FARM BUREAU MOTES Copy for this Department furnished by County Agent -9 9 T J J 1T1 1T1 - J" A'i I i i I A A - A 1 I t I Girls Clothing Clubs. Mrs. L. E. Eidenmiller, leader of the clothing club at Alvo. has had her achievement day. Miss Muriel Cole of Weeping Water has had her achievement day also, Miss Marjorie and Charlotte Joyce judged for her. Mrs. Elmer Johnson, Mrs. Lloyd Schneider, and Mrs. Paul Borne meir have sent in the girls names who will show exhibits at the State Fair. State Pair. Remember to see the Boys Girls exhibits at the State Fair. and Good Farms Have Alfalfa and Clover The best farms in Cass county grow about twice as many acres of alfalfa and sweet clover as the poor est farms, according to a farm busi ness report of records kept by farm ers for the agricultural college at Lincoln. Almost one-fifth of the farming acreage on the best farms is In legumes all the time, indicating that the most progressive farmers are using legumes in crops rotations. The use of legumes was one of the reasons the five best farmers had labor incomes four times as gerat as the five poorest farmers. The five best farmers paid interest on their investment, figured out good wages for the help of their families, had their house rent for nothing and most of their living from the farm, and then had $1,054 left for their managerial ability. These farmers know the value of alfalfa and sweet clover. They are keeping up their acreage of alfalfa by getting their ground ready now for fall seeding. Results from. Record Flocks. Poultry flock owners who have been in the University Record Flock project for the past four years have made a steady improvement in the management of their flocks. While they have only increased the number of hens in their flocks from 114 to 131, they have increased the profits from their flocks from $275 to $209 per year. The increase has been due to higher egg production and to more they were making a profit froin them. I f m " 7 iJf-' Z thm 11 the j a&ricuitural college poultrymen as to . f eeding, housing, breeding. Tearing, etc., and have earned their increased Profits by using tnese Detter l ine univvretij' xvctuiu x iuvh yuj.. I is open to any flock owner having " . . . , r,n mnro ntsnnarn nrea rnicKens. There are no charges connected with the project. The new year starts November 1, but flock owners may enroll anytime. Application can be 'made to county extension agents and ito the agricultural college at Lin- coin. L. R. SNIPES, Co. Exten. Agent. ENTERTAINS FOR NIECE Tuesday's Dally . Last evening the Misses Mia and Barbara Gering were nosiesses ai a of their nIece Miss Ursula herold, with the brignt ana cnarming guesis of the evening made the event one the ; greatest cnarm. h retertlinTd at a th.atrp at the Parmele where the &a witnssed the performance of "Men of Steel. Those attending tne event were Misses Alice louise wescoii, wr- Helen Itaismith. Fremont, Helen Clement, H0ME GROWN PEACHES Home Grown Peaches for sale. En- Qire cf Albert Young. Phone 1803, Murray, Neb. a23-8tw The dictators in Europe now pre vent kings from doing any wrong or anything else. ORDER OF HEARING on Petition for Appointment of Administrator. The State of Nebraska, Cass County, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Louis Kroehler, deceased. On reading and filing the petition j of George Kroehler. et al. praying that administration of said estate may be granted to Andrew Kroehler, as ad ministrator Ordered. That September 21st A. D. 1026. at 10 o'clock a. m.. Is assigned for hearing said petition,, when all persons interested in 6aid matter may appear at a County Court to be held in and for said county, and show cause why the prayer, of peti tioner should not be granted; and that notice of the pen dency of said petition and the hearing thereof be given to all persons. In terested ln said matter by publishing a copy of this order in The Platts mouth Journal, a semi-weekly news paper printed in said county, for three- successive weeks, prior to said day 'of hearing. Dated August 30th. 1926. A. H. DUXBURY, ( Seal )a3 0-3 w County Judge. MARRIED AT COURT HOtTSE From Monday ally- On Saturday -afternoon at the court house ' occurred the marriage of Miss Lila M. Mallory of Murray and George Ray Meyer of Table Rock. Nebraska. The marriage lines were read by County Judge A, H. Dux bury in his usual impressive man ner and the ceremony was witnessed by Mrs. Emma Mallory and Otos Mal lory, parents of the bride. After the ceremony the members of the bridal party returned to the! home. IF ARM FOR SALE The Dovey section. Will sell In one piece or will divide to suit purchaser. See or write O. H. ALLEN, Omaha, Nebr. 2220 Howard Street. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. By virtue of an Order of Sale issued by Golda Noble Beal, Clerk of the District Court within and for Cass county, Nebraska, and to me directed, I will on the 18th day of September, A. D. 1926, at 10 o'clock a. m. of said day at the south front door of the court house, in Plattsmouth, Ne braska, ln said county, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the following real estate, to wit: Lot 14, Block 49. in the City of Plattsmouth, as surveyed, platted and recorded, Cass coun ty, Nebraska the same being levied upon and taken as the property of Austin S. Ghrist, Carrie E. Ghrist, James O. Epperson, Gertrude Epperson and Omaha Association of Credit Men, a corporation, defendants, to satisfy a Judgment of said court recovered by The Standard Savings and Loan As sociation, of Omaha, Nebraska, plain tiff against said defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, August 13, A. D. 1926. E. P. STEWART, Sheriff of Cass County, Nebraska. al6-5w ORDER OF HEARING And Notice of Probate of Will. In the County Court of Cass County, State of Nebraska, County of Cass.'e 5 " Drdfrf SalI?luedT,by 1 Golda Noble Beal, Clerk of the Dis- ss. t v v. a n in. .u.U6 1U"U' ifDiCiln8Tay DSth at,l ?e,1?LtrY .5 filed in this court on the 14th day of the last will and testament of the said deceased, may be proved and al lowed, and recorded as the last wllliNyswaner; 'JegBl Gayman. Wllllam aim lesiamem ui mary -eunaua. u-. Matthews; Charles Matthews; Ray ceased; that said instrument be ad-'Booth; jya E .Booth; Donald Booth; mitted to probate, and the adminis-j 0 Booth, first and real name un tratimrof said estate .be. granted to known; Ethel Dague; H. F. Watson, W. E. Jenkins as executor 1fir8t and real name unknown; C. M. It is hereby ordered that you, and.-watson, first and real name un all persons interested in said mat- )nown; George E. Watson; Annie ter, may, and do, appear at the Bonnell; Flora Wilson; Zella Dalby; County Court to be held in and for Mary Bradbury; James Luce; Wil said county, on the 13th day of Ham. Luce; Eva Ingraham; George September, A. D., 1926 at ten o'clock King; Howard King: Grace Lively; a. m., to show cause, if any there be, .'Jennie King; Mary I.' Bullis; Farm why the prayer of the petitioner ers State Bank, Wabash, Nebraska, a should not be granted, and that -banking corporation; John Doe, notice oT the pendency of said peti-' whose real name is Ed Bauers; and tion and that the hearing thereof be Mary Doe, whose real name is Elsie given to all persons interested in said Bauers, are defendants, I will at ten matter by publishing a copy of thi3 o'clock a. m., on the third day of order in The Plattsmouth Journal, September, A. D. 1926, at the South a semi-weekly newspaper printed in front door of the Cass county court said county, for three successive house, in the City of Plattsmouth, weeks prior to said day of -hearing. .Cass county, Nebraska, offer for sale Witness my hand, and seal of said, at public auction, the following de- court, this 17th day of August A. D., 1926. A. H. DUXBURY, County Judge. (Seal) ; a23-3w LEGAL NOTICE In the District Court of Cass coun. ty, Nebraska. Fred Lugsch, Plaintiff, vs. John J. Worley et al. Defendants. To the defendants, John J. Worley, trustee for Plattsmouth Town Com pany; Plattsmouth Ferry Company; Mrs. John J. Worley, real name un known, wife of John J. Worley; Cal vin C. Green; Mrs. Calvin C. Green, his wife, real name unknown; Me linda Green; Green, her hus band, real name unknown; W. F. Enders and Mrs. W. F. Enders, his wife, real names unknown; the heirs, devisees, legatees, personal represen tatives and all other persons inter ested in the respective estates of John J. Worley, Mrs. John J. Worley, Cal vin C. Green, Mrs. Calvin C. Green, Melinda Green, Green, W. F. Enders and Mrs. W. F. Enders, each deceased, real names unknown, and all other persons having or claiming any interest In Lot 4, in Block 41, in the City of Plattsmouth, Cass coun ty. Nebraska. You and each of you are hereby notified that on the 4th dav of Aue-iand ust. 1926, plaintiff filed a petition and commenced an action in the Dis trict Court of Cass county, Nebraska, the object, purpose and prayer ( of which is to obtain a decree of Court quieting plaintiff's title to the fore going described premises and to en Join each, and all of you from having or claiming to have any right, title, j estate, lien or interest, either legal or equitable in or to said real estate in the southeast quarter of the south or any part thereof and to enjoin you i east quarter (SE4 SE), Lot 5 ln and each ot you from in any manner j the southwest quarter of the south interfering with plaintiff's possession , east quarter (SW SE), and Lot or enjoyment of said premises, and; three (3) In the southeast quarter for equitable relieL lof the southwest quarter (SEV This notice is riven ln pursuance of an Order of Court. You and each of you are further notified that you are required- to answer said petition on or before Monday, the 4 th day of October, 1926, or the allegations contained in said petition will be taken as true and a decree rendered granting the prayer of plaintiff here in. FRED LUGSCH, Plaintiff. CHAS. E. MARTIN, a2S-4w Atty. for Plaintiff. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass Coun ty, as. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Harry S. Barthold. deceased. To the creditor of said estate: Tou are hereby notified. That I win sit at the . County Court Room in Plattsmouth ln said county, on the 2nd day of September, A. D. 1826, and the 3rd day of December. A. D. 1926. at 10 o'clock a. m. of each day to receive and examine all claims against said estate, with a view to their adjustment and allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claims against said estate is three months from the 2nd day of Septem ber A. D. 1926, and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 2nd day of September 1926. Witness my hand and the seal of said county court, this 9th day of August, 1926. A. II. DUXBURY, (Seal)a9-4w County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING on Petition for Appointment of Administratrix. The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. I In the County Court. I In the matter of the estate of Pat rick J. Flynn, deceased. J On reading and filing the petition of Catherine T. Flynn praying that I administration of said estate may be 'granted to Catherine T. Flynn, as I Administratrix; Ordered, that September 7th, A. D. ,1926, at 10 o'clock a. m., is assigned tor hearing said petition, when all persons interested in said matter may appear at a County Court to be held in and for said county, and show cause why the prayer of the petition er 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 matter by publishing a copy of this j order in the Plattsmouth Journal, a ,semi-weeKiy newspaper printed in said county, for three successive weeks, prior to said day of bearing. Dated August 12th, 1926. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) al6-3w County Judge. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE Notice Is hereby given, that by Urict Court of the Second Judicial Lincoln Safe Deposit Company, a cor- poration of Lincoln, Lancaster coun- ty. Nebraska, is plaintiff and David Tighe; Marguriet Tighe, also writ- Oliver M. Wise; Elizabeth Wise; Jen nie Holbert; Frank Matthews; Alice 6cribed lands and tenements, to-wlt: The east half of the northwest quarter (E NW) of Section twenty-nine (29), Township eleven (11) North, Range eleven (11) East, in Cass county, Ne braska; also The north half of the south east quarter (N SE ) and Lots seven (7) and eight (8), in the southeast quarter of the southeast quarter (SEU SEU ). Lot five (5), in the southwest quarter of the southeast quarter (SW SE) and Lot three (3) ln the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter (SE14 SW ), all in Section twenty-nine (29), Township eleven (11) North, Range eleven (11) East, in Cass county, Nebraska; also The east half of the northwest quarter (E NW) or Section twenty-nine (29), Township eleven (11) North, Range eleven (11) East, in Cass county, Ne braska; also The west half of the west half of the northeast quarter (W W NE4 ) of Section twenty nine (29), Township eleven (11) North, Range eleven (11) East, in Cass county, Nebraska. Please take notice that said parcels ;f land will first be offered separately afterward offered for sale as a whole, the sale being either by par cel or whole as shall bring the moBt return. Said sale Is subject to any unpaid taxes or tax sales outstanding and not included in the decree ln said cause of action. It is also subject to the lease of Ed Bauers on the north half of the southeast quarter (NH i SE ) , Lots seven (7) and eight (8), an in section twenty-nine (29). Township eleven (11) North, Range- eleven (11) East, ln Cass county, Nebraska; Likewise subject to confirmation by the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska. Given under my hand this 3 let day :of July, A. D. 1926. E. P. STEWART, Sheriff Cass County, Nebraska. a2-r Bead Journal Want Adi.