The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, March 21, 1929, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 1929,
PLATTSMOUTH SEMI - WETXTY JOURNAL
PAGE THREE
Cbe plattsmoutb lournal
PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, KEBBASXLA
BmUrW at Poatofflc. Pl.ttmouth. a o4-ci. mtll raa.tt
R. A. BATES, Publisher
SUSSCMPTICB PEICI $2.00 PEE YEAB EN ADVAKCI
Big Etill3 found near Bellevue.
:o:
Child marriages are frequent in
Persia.
:o:
Floods in South and middle west
cut off traffic.
: o :
Work ha just be-n started on the
J65.000.000 docks at Southampton,
England.
-:o:
When five bees come buzzing
around your head they ere supposed
to bring good luck.
:o: I
Women of America are now using)
less foreign perfumery and toilet'
water preparations than a year ago. j
-:o:
Swiss rauroads have been follow-
ing an intensive electrification plan, j
in oruer to oe maepenuent oi ioreign i
1
. - . - . f i- I
coal.
j
:o. j
The big nations won't let the lit-
tie nations fight any more. There
have to be some exclusive privileges
for the big fellows. the medical schools in the United
:o: (States required even a high school
Astronomers now are advancing ' education for admission.
the theory that the moon is composed j :o:
of a porua material. Maybe it's Swiss i Isn't it almost time for the letters
cheese instead of green. f rom-the-people columns of the news-
:o: Ipapers to settle seriously again the
T ) -. . . V . .J 11 A f . . 1 1 . 1 I
1 rmiu .1 i ..i v i re l a uu e r-r-.i ir r i
in the Bernese Oberland, the Jung
frau JocJ Hotel it is claimed, is the
highest hostelry in Europe.
:o:
In the 12 months ended September.
192S. 36 per cent of Canada's exports
went to the United Kingdom and 37
per cent to the United States.
:o:
Since real general conditions be
came general in this part of the
country, there has been a correspond
ing increase in the number of traffic
accidents.
:o:
Dispatches report the finding ofi
the tomb of one of Solomon's wives.
Slime day excavators are going to
find a woman who was not Solomon's
wife and that will be news.
:o:
Norwegian whalers are now oper
ating floating factories on large
steamers which move outside the
three-mile limit, thereby dispensing
with whale-oil refineries ashore.
:o:
After an Algerian wedding the
bridegroom enters his home back
ward, holding a daggar in his hand
and the bride follows, touching the
blade with the tip of her fingers.
:o:
Spring is surely here, for the boys
have begun playing marbles in the
street end. judging by the amount
of time they devote to the game, they
are making up for lost time they lose
during the winter.
:o:
The coming national census will
cost $19,000,000. And few proud and
becoming towns, viewing the actual
returns, as compared with estimates
put out by their chambers of com
merce, will feel that they have got
their money's worth
"As there is
I will seek
Vi7 jtt
8 ury ' Erne
w 1 en
From the aurora borealis in the north, to the
passing of the equinox on the south; from the
primeaval chaos on the east to the day of judg
ment on the west no better hat will you find
for Five Dollars.
Engineers', Shopmen's and Bridgemen's Special Long gauntlet
Gloves five pair for a Dollar any time what do yon think of that ?
1
"Fate will find a
:o:-
way." Virgil.
Florida possesses more than "0,000
lakes.
:o:
Daniel Boone is buried at Frank
fort, Kentucky.
:o:
England Welcomes American Jazz
Bands Headline. But not all of
them, unfortunately.
-:o:-
The total solar eclipse of January
24, 1925, occurred but 5 seconds later
than the time predicted by the as-
tronomers.
:o:
This might be termed the season
when country buses coming into the
city look as if they had swum the
jjjg Muddy,
-:o:
rr.1 T ' : . .1 1 1 . . . .. : . . . i
i .ie um nmirs 11 houieuiuiK i
1
more than the land of the free and
.
me uuuif ui me uruve. 11 is u para
ujse f0r millionaires.
Before 190 less tha none-fourth of :
question of daylight saving?
:o:
According to George Bernard
Shaw, "the professions, speaking
quite roughly, at the present timeinshts. The onlv difference is that it
iarp all humbu - Yes. that is speak-
ing quite roughly.
:o:-
The suggestion has been offered
that a department . of aviation be
created in the President's cabinet,
and that Col. Chas. Lindbergh be
named as its first incumbent.
:o:
Figures recently compiled show
that between the end of 1921 and
the spring of 1927, 1,300,000 work
ers had to be imported into France
to supply urgent industrial needs.
:o:
A beauty specialist classifies
blondes as Nordics, Anglo. Celtic, and
Titian. We search in vain for re
cognition of strawberry and chem
ical in the galaxy of shadings by
gentlemen preferred.
:o:
Under the will of a wealthy manu
facturer of Sydney, N. S. W., who
died recently, $400,000 was left for
the erection of horse troughs, on each
of which is to be inscribed the names
of the doner and his wife.
American combined reaping and
threshing machines, which were re
cently introduced into Germany and
were the first of that type of ma-
ciune eei heeu mere, nae uu nu .
great favor in that country.
' . . . T r . . -. . J 1
-:o:
A tobacco company publicity de-1
partment issues the announcement j
that tuberculosis has been decreas
Ing in the last 28 years, during which i
1 .... 1 . 1 . 1 T T ..... .
nsainimuhing inc.easeu. navr
you noticed, too. how the days are
getting longer.
.
Tson
no better
no further."
Lone Jack.
CHIEF JUSTICE CALLED DOWN
We are living in a new gener
ation, which is frank, unafraid of
taboos, and prompt to criticize. Even
the chief justice of the United States
supreme court, an august personage
formidable of title if not of mien, is
not sacred when he makes a mistake.
If he asks the new President of the
United States to pledge hmiself to
preserve, maintain and defend the
Constitution instead of to preserve,
protect and defend it, he may expect
to be called down. Helen Terwill
inger, who is 13 years old, knows her
Constitution, and she caught the
error. In reply, Chief Justice Taft
could offer no extenuation except the
defect of an old man's memory.
If the younger generation will
only learn to obey the Constitution,
which it knows so well, many of the
problems we are now meeting will
be solved. And we believe there is
a growing respect for the Constitu
tion among the young because of the
extensive and intensive study of it by
the great school body of the country
in relation to the annual oratorical
contests.
AT THE RINGSIDE
Sports writers have made much of
the fact the that Shaikey-Stribling
fight drew a soeietv crowd. Million-
. , . , . , . , . .
irim -.Of ! T. tl ti i. n- cnniol 1 i. Mure m u .
I , . ,
iiiess men, and public officials were
present at the ringside, and this was
presented as something new in the
Pugilistic world.
As a matter of fact, it isn't any
thing new at all except, perhaps
for the presence of women. Prize
fighting, for many years, was a sport
or whatever you want to call it
nourished by rich and socially prom
inant young bloods of England's best
families, kept the game alive thru
a long period. They put up the
purses and made the thing profitable.
Society has always patronized
is doin& it openly now, and to a great-
, er-extent than ever before.
:o:
AND SASSAFRAS TEA
Signs of spring:
Robins,
Jelly hats.
Golf sticks.
Dandelions,
Marble players.
Garden forks.
First lettuce,
Washing windows.
Beating rugs,
Airing bedding.
Check this list and see how many
signs have arrived.
:o:
A German astrologer confirms our
long-standing impression of astrolog
ers, namely, that they are the sort of
! balmy persons who would be better
off in heaven than here en earth.
:o:
More than a half million foreign
jbirds were imported during 192S. a
j figure never before attained, accord
ling to the Biological Survey of the
United States Department of Agri
culture.
:o:-
The question has been raised in
Washington as to whether the radio
js a pubHc utilitv, That is a matt(.r
thej- will have to settle themselws,
but there are times when we are
r . . .1 I. . . .1 : . . :r - -. . I :
is a private nuisance.
:o:
Qn tbp ( retirementt after
jeighteen coiorful years. Senator Reed
j of Missouri advises young men not
! to go into public life if they expect
to make money. "There is no fi
nancial reward," he remarks, "for
honest public service."
:o:
The boot and shoe industry is
knocking insistently at the door of
the ways and means committee of
the house of representatives. It is
demanding protection against the
ever-increasing competition of foreign-made
boots and shoes.
-:o:-
For a whole generation, now, there
has been talk of the decline of ora
tory. The great orators of the legal
profession, of legislative bodies, of
campaign rallies, and of the pulpit
are of the past, we are told. The old
time power of human speech over
juries and senates, church congrega
tions and political gatherings exists
no more.
j
! Oberlin College in Ohio the other
day unveiled a tablet in honor of a
boy who worked his way through col
lege and died leaving $12,000,000
and a name that will endure. He
was Charles Martin Hall, who in a
woodshed laboratory in Oberlin in
vented the process of making alum
inum. He was then only twenty
two years old.
:o:
FOR SALE
Irish Cobbler seed potatoes from
northern grown stock. Also one
Mandy Lee Incubator. Emil Koukal.
Phone 3113. m21-3tw
REFERENDUM ON WAR
Following up the Kellogg Pact
against war, Representative Hamil
ton Fish, jr., has introduced a re
solution into the congress the effect
of which would be to require a ref
erendum to be submitted to the peo
ple before any war could be waged
save in defense of the United States.
Such proposals as this are usually
condemned on two distinct courts.
By those of a pacific inclination, they
are condemned as too weak, allowing
anything to be put over on the peo
ple as "defensive war." By those of
a jingoistic slant, they are condemn
ed as a danger to the policy of self
defense and protection of national in
terests. However, the proposal of Mr. Fish
is more properly to be criticized on
back into the mysteries of how wars
a totally dkerent basis. Delving
back into the myseries of how wars
start, we find that a period must al
ways be allowed, before any major
war, in which to prepare the minds
of masses of people for any govern
mental action. A provision for a ref
erendum, while naturally founded on
the theory that people as a whole
are opposed to war, is nevertheless
apt to give an excellent opening for
such a period of propaganda.
Anyone who considers the pitch to
which people are aroused, emotion
ally, by a presidential election, will
not fail to realize that a referendum
on war merely would give the jingo
ists their opportunity to arouse hat
reds and fears where none need exist
for any sound reason. No, the way
to peace is not by majority vote on
war. The way to peace is more near
ly through the election of honest and
far-sighted men to public office men
who realize at the outset that war
is bad and will shape policies in such
a way as to avoid hostilities. Cin
cinnati Enquirer.
:o:
A PULPIT DICTATOR
Bills are pending in the legislatures
of several states providing for mo
tion picture censorship boards, and
as usual bitter fights characteristic
of legislation of this nature are be
ing waged.
Enlightened public thought is em
phatically opposed to laws of this
character, and where the censorship
idea has been tested it has been an
ignoble failure.
Nevertheless, so-called moral forces
are persistently at work striving to
enthrone censorship for the theatres,
and the next step, of course, will be
to force censorship for the press.
Finally will come a board of cen
sorship for the pulpit, and, judging
from the texts of sermons preached
by some of the clergy it does seem
that there at least ought to be a
national pulpit director, clothed with
powers similar to those exercised by
Will Hayes in the realm of movie
dom. A Portland. Oregon paper a few
days since printed a list of the ser
mon topics announced by some of
the pastors for their Sunday dis
courses. Here it is:
"Dancing with the Devil."
"The Lure of the Movies."
"What Is Mayor Baker Do
ing?" "Portland, the Paradise of
Prostitutes."
"Give Aimee a Chance."
"Ruined by Rum?"
"Sitting on the Lid."
Satan in Chinatown."
"Pickled in Gin and Sin."
Is there or is there not exactly the
same appeal in such announcements
as these, for attention and attend
ance as that which characterizes
titles of motion picture plys to which
very violent exception has been taken
by some of our church organizations
the country over? Of course not all
pastors resort to such appeals, but
neither do all pictures play produc
ers. -:o:-
OUR MASS PRODUCTION
An English business man. return
ing to his native shores after a visit
to the United States, expressed him
self thus about our system of masB
production and installment buying:
"The people (of the United States)
are spending their earnings in ad
vance and must go on earning. But
should the demand either at home or
abroad fall off and employers begin
to discharge men, what would hap
pen? Installments would be lactnng,
and goods in various stages of wear
and tear would lose much more than
the fraction of one per cent they are
losing in that way now."
There is no question but that our
present economic system is geared to
high speed. If it should suddenly be
slowed down the consequences, un
dubitably, would be serious. Whether
they would be as bad as this Eng
lishman believes may be an open
question; the matter, at all events,
is one that deserves serious Btudy by
the most competent minds in the
country.
:o:-
Read the Journal Want-Ads.
HOOVER EVADES THE SENATE.
The flare-up in the Senate over the
retention of Mr. Mellon as secretary
of the treasury without his name be
ing submitted for confirmation or re
jection, recalls a lively incident of
Andrew Johnson's administration,
an echo of which has recently come
from the Supreme Court. When
Johnson succeeded to the presidency,
he became involved in a controversy
with the Senate concerning the ten
ure of office of a presidential ap-
pomiee. i ne enaie iut.iM.eu uui
and when the President made an ap
pointment "by and with the advice
and consent of the Senate," he had
no right to remove the official thus
appointed except with the consent of
the Senate. A year or so ago the Su
preme Court wrote the last chapter in
that issue, deciding that the right to
dismiss is inherent in the executive
power.
The Senate, or certain Senators,
now make the point that no cabinet
officer can hold over from one admin
istration to another without having
his nomination resubmitted and re
confirmed. Happily, the controversy
surrounding Mr. Mellon is not en
veloped in the passion and bitterness
that marked the difference between
the Senate and President Johnson,
and there seems to be no likelihood
that much will come of the present
issue. Mr. Mellon probably will con
tinue to serve in the treasury port
folio until he quits of his own ac
cord. But the Senate has ever been jeal
ous of its prerogatives. In the Mellon
case, some Senators feel that Presi
dent Hoover has sought, and has, in
fact, achieved by indirection that
which might have been accomplish
ed only with difficulty had he pur
sued the usual course. It is their
contention that, according to custom
and practice, the heads of the execu
tive departments of the government
(cabinet officers) must be nomin
ated on every quadriennial March
4th, except in instances where the
President succeeds himself. No new
comer in the White House has ever,
until now, failed to send to the Sen
ate a complete list of his official fam
ily, upon assuming office, and that
course, it is argued, should have been
followed by Mr. Hoover. The same
reasoning applies to Secretary Davis,
of the department of labor, he, too,
being a hold-over from the Coolidge
administration.
In witholding the names of Messrs.
Mellon and Davis. President Hoover
cleverly averted a fight in the Sen
ate over the secretary of the treas
ury, to whom, admittedly, many Sen
ators are opposed.
:o:
A NEW SAHARA
Word comes from Washington that
the Hoover administration is going
to launch a determined campaign to
deprive the national capital of the
distinction of being one of the wet
test spots in the United States.
Just how they are going to do
it is not explained, but the report
hath it that the first objective will
be to deprive members of Congress
of their liquor supplies; that the
regularly organized bootleggers
routes in the Senate and the House
office buildings will be broken up,
and the battle will then shift to
other official circles.
Startling if true. No longer will
the pretty little red cherry peer cov
ly from the bottom of a baccardi
cocktail. Never again will the wick
ed mountain dew, dropping in the
silver globules from the rim of a
frosted glass gleam on Senatorial
vests after they have imbibed the
pre-dinner cocktail. Never again will
the stuffed olive, loafing lazily in
the amber depths of a martini, wink
a lascivious pimento eye at the an
chovy coiled voluptiously on top of
the toast and cavler appetizer.
Cracked ice is to be banished from
the drawing rooms on 16th street,
Dupont Circle and Colorado Road,
yea. even unto Cleveland Heights and !
c.nevy cuanp. u lunger win iuc;
clinking highball soothe the fever
ish larynx of the Congresshan who
for more than a decade has always
kept a bottle of Maryland rye and a
supply of ginger ale in the right hand
drawer of his imposing mahogany
desk.
Yes, Washington is to be con
verted into a Sahara, but, somehow
or other, we don't believe it.
:o:
Evolution is gaining ground in
Arkansas. Prohibition is to be thank-
ed for it. Prohibition of the teach- and examine all claims against said pendency of said petition and that
t it- - irb,ne. estate, with a view to their adjust-, the hearing thereof be given to all
ing of evolution, that is. Arkansas. pnt allowance The time,im. persons interested in said matter by
having recently passed a law to that Ited for tne presentation of claims publishing a copy of this order in
effect, which put evolution in the 'against said estate is three months tbe Plattsmouth Journal, a nemi
bootleg class. The bootleggers, as al-! from the 29th day of March. A. O. j weekly newspaper printed in said
waT, j,rp Hoine- the rest
ways, are aoing tne rest. I
A group of men in the middle west j
J V . .1 ii .1..
have organized what they call the!8aid County Court this 23rd day of
"Century-ana-a-Hair duo. It is tne
aim of each member to guard his
health sa carefully that he will reach
an age of 150 years.
An Old Fashioned
tjTl fj
III I 7 J
f ! I IS7i I I It 1 f V (
J S.J L L l XI tV3Vn Q
Q
EVERY SATURDAY NITE
. .
Given by the Murray
r fii i
Uancing WIUD
r- n a j
tJCCellent music. A good time
"iassureci. Uood order. Lorn
have a good time Sat. night.
Murray Dancing Club
Ben Noell, Mgr.
A FAMOUS WIDOW
It, is encouraging to read that Con
gress finally decided to vote an an
nuity of $5000 to Mrs. Leonard Wood.
For at times certain of our noble
statesmen were demanding, in the
interest of company economy, that
this pension be cut to $1S00 a year.
Nothing more shameful and cheap
could be done; the congressmen who
advocated these deduction stand re
vealed as men of remarkable small
statute.
General Wood served his country
well. At a time when government
expenditures are numbered in hun
dred dollar lumps, to try to save a
few thousand dollars on the pension
to the widow of this man would have
been penny-pinching of the most dis
graceful kind. It is hard to have any
patience whatever . with the master
minds that suggested it. Fortunate
ly, Congress as a whole refused to
make the reduction.
NOTICE
To Rosie Brown, non-resident de
fendant: You are hereby notified that on
the 1st day of December, 192S. Vir
gil Brown filed a petition against you
in the District Court of Cass county.
Nebraska, the object and prayer of
which are to obtain a divorce from
you on the ground that you have
wilfully abandoned the plaintiff with
out good cause, for the term of two
years last past. You are required to
answer said petition on or before
Monday, the Cth day of May. 1929.
VIRGIL BROWN,
By Plaintiff.
W. G. KIECK.
ml 8-3 w His Attorney.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska, Cass coun
ty. 68.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of
Samuel G. Latta, 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 day of March. 1929. and on the
1st day of July, 1929, at ten o'clock
in the forenoon of each day, to re
ceive and examine all claims against
said estate, with a view to their ad
justment and allowance. The time
limited for the presentation of claims
against said estate is three months
from the 29th day of March, A. D.
1929, and the time limited for pay
ment of debts is one year from said
29th day of March, 1929.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said County Court this 18th day of
February. 1929
A. H. DUXBURY.
County Judge.
(Seal) f25-4w
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska, Cass coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of David
G. Babbington, 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
19th day of April. 1929. and the
20th day of July. 1929. at 10 o'clock
a. m. of each flay, to receive and ex
amine 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 19th
day of April. A. D. 1929 and the time
limited for payment of debts is one
year from said 19th day of April,
1929.
Witness my hand and the seal of
!,i r-,. .vi. -!,, f
id County Court this 13th day of
March 1929
said
ji nuXBURY
(Seal) ml8-4w
County Judge.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska, Cass coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of Fritz
Kehne. 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. 1929. and on the
1st day of July, 1929, at 10 o'clock !
in the forenoon of each dav to receive '
time iimiteu lur yajr-
jv. - v - ,
IliiCUl Ul UCUID AD vsuc icai liUUl If lu
i
witness my hand and the seal of
. , . V, . . .A
,r eDruary, i
A. H. DUXBURY,
(Seal) County Judge.)
C. E. MARTIN, j
f25-4w Attorney.
SHERIFF'S SALE
State of Nebraska, County of Cass,
ss.
By virtue of an Order of
issued by Golda Noble Beal, Cle
the District Court within and
Cass county. Nebraska, and to
Sale
rk of
for
Cass county. Nebraska, and to me
directed, l wm on tne :utn day oi
April. A. D. 192, at 10 o'clock a.
- day. at tl.e south front
door of the court house in the City
of Plattsiuouth. in said county, sell
at public auction to the highest bid-
lder for asn the following real es-
!tate, lo-wit:
Lots 7, S, 9. lO. in Block 23.
and Lots 5 and C. in Block 3.
in the City of Plattsmoutb. and
Lots 7. S, 9, 10, 11 and 12. in
Block (i, in Dukes Addition to
the City of Plattsmoutb, Capfi
county, Nebraska
The same being levied upon end
taken as the property of Mrs.
Sampson, first and real name un
known, tt al, defendants, to satisfy
ja judgment of said Court re-ove-ed
by Louis Ackerrnan, plaintiff against
. said defendants.
j Plattsixiouth, Nebraska, March 15,
'A. D. 1929.
BERT REED
Sheriff CaBs County,
Nebraska
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 2flrd day of
March, A. D. 1929, at 10 o'clock a.
m. of said day. at the south front
door of the Court House in said coun
ty, sell at public auction to the high
est bidder for cash the following de
scribed real estate:
A square lot out of the north
west corner of the west half of
the northwest quarter of Section
23. Township 11, Range 13. East
of the th P. M.. in Cass coun
ty, Nebraska, and more particu
larly described as follows: Com
mencing at the northwest cor
ner of the northwest quarter of
said Section 23. running thence
south 147.58 feet, thence run
ning east 147. 5S feet, thence
running north 147.58 fee",
thence running west 147.58 feet
to the place of beginning, in
the County of Cass. Nebraska
The same being levied upon and tak
en as the property of Frank E. Val
lery et al. Defendants, to satisfy a
judgment of said Court recovered by
Jennie A. Smith, Plaintiff against
said Defendants.
Plattsmouth. Nebraska, February
16, A. D. 1929.
BERT REED,
Sheriff Cass County,
Nebraska.
fl8-?
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 persons interested in the
eBtate of John Koukal. deceased :
On reading the petition of Frank
A. Cloidt, Administrator, prayirg a
final settlement and allowance ol his
account filed in this Court on the
ISth day of March, 1929, and for
final settlemtnt of said estate and
for his discharge as said Adminis
trator; 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 29th day of March,
A. D. 1929, at ten o'clock a. in., 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 the
hearing thereof be given to all per
sons interested in said matter by
publishing a copy of this order in
the Plattsmouth Journal, a semi
weekly newspaper printed in said
county, for one week prior to said
day of hearing.
In witness whereof. I have here
unto bet my hand and the seal of
said Court, this ISth day of March,
A. D. 1929.
A. II. DITXBUR V,
(Seal) ml8-lw County Judge.
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,
S3.
To all persons interested in the
estate' of John Rich, deceased:
On reading the petition of Eliza
beth Heigl praying that the instru-
i . , . .. ,non .,
day of March. 1929. and purporting
, .,
to be the last will and testament of
the said deceased, may be proved and
allowed and recorded as the last will
and testament of John Rich, deceas
ed; that said instrument be admitted
to probate and the administration of
said estate be granted to Mrs. Mary
Stolcpart or any other person the
court may direct, as Executor;
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 29th day of March,
A. D. 1929, at ten o'clock a. m., to
show cause, if any there be, why the
prayer oi me petitioner snouici not
be granted, and that notice of the
. - -
nr nr to said dav of hearinc
-
Witness my hand and the seal of
court, this 2nd day of M.irch,
Tl 1G9Q
A- D- 1929.
A. H. DUXBURY.
County Judge.
ioe.ii m-ow
Z
Large size maps of Cass connty on
sale at Journal of ice, 50c e&cli.