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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 9, 1929)
MONDAY. DEC. 9. 1929. PLATT5M0TJTH SEMI - WEZZIY JOUENAL PAGE THSES I Che plattsmoutb lournal i PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA Entered at Postofiiee, I'lattsmouth, Neb., as second-class mail matter R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 A YEAR IN FIRST POSTAL ZONE Subscribers living: in Second Postal Zone, $2.50 per year. Beyond b"i ') miles, 3.00 per year. Hate to Canada and foreign countries, per year. All subscriptions are payable strictly in advance. Santa Claus likes good boys and girl.s :o: Tariff work occupies the senate on part time. :o: If you would flatter a married man. tell him he doesn't look it. : o : It is usually the man who lacks horse sense that feels his oats. :o: Some of those movies are "100 per cent talkie" and not much else. :o: Snow should be removed from side walk as soon as possible after fall ing. :o: An orator is a person who makes a platitude seem important by yell ing it. :o: Some women's chief aim in life seems to be to attract, contract, and detract. :o: Some people don't believe in Christmas gilts. They seem to be hu man, too. :o: France lias a bumper wine pro duct icn this year. We can look on. that is all. :o: If Congress gets cooled off after the holidays we may doing some good. : o : hear of them American machinery is being used in construction of the Great Cei.tral highway in Cuba. :o: John 11. Carroll, the chief lobby ist a smart fellow. We knew him down in Missouri. :o: Nobody was killed in the recent Wall Street crash, but Santa Claus was badly crippled. :o: It will be a better winter If more alcohol is put in the radiators and less in the drivers. :o: The good little boy will fare better than the bad one. So if you have been had, better get good fast. : o : A in ther way to get eye strain is try to see the added length most of the girls you pass have given their skirts. :o: Alas! If the longest purse can hire the best athletes, the smaller college won't be able to offer anything except an education. :o: The Christmas trade lias opened pretty fairly, and we predict it will increase day by day, notice the big rush the day before Christmas. : o : Probably there is a bicycle pump in tbe studio of the photographer who advertised in an Eastern paper: "We Will Enlarge Your Baby for f 2." :o: It's just about as silly to hand Old Man Winter his hat and urge him to be gone as it is to stand at the foot of the stairs and yell at a wife to step on it. :o: There may be a lot of wives who look upon their husbands as big dis appointments, hut you'll find mighty few of them who really would he willing to change places with the old maids if they had the chance. Same Price for over 38 years 25 ounces USE LESS than of h?!i priced brands MILLIONS OF POCMCS USED BY OUE COVEEKKEN'i If a man is afraid to think for him self he should get married. :o: When the chronic kicker does gain his point it is likely to be blunt. :o: It isn't difficult to retain friends if you don't put them to the test. :o: Just go out into the woods if you don't believe that squirrels carry guns. :o: About the first of January the! blowing in Congress will be swift again. :o: Things go by contraries these days. For instance, a grass widow is never verdant. -:o: All good boys should love their mothers and Santa will forget those who don't. :o: Christmas comes but once a year and the only season when neighbois become more friendly. :o: Eventually the only way we will be able to drive on a main highway will be by appointment. :o: It's going to seem strange to the feminine hosiery to be used as the First National Bank again. :o: Keyserling says the Americans lack a sense of humor; still a great many of them laugh at his ideas. :o: Sunday has become that day in which you either get bawled out by the preacher or the traffic cop. :o: It is reported that there is little opposition to the Mellon tax cut plan. Would you call that big news? . :o: The Prince of Wales has taken up crocheting, but he's much too genial a fellow to make a crochety king. :o: Money doesn't mean everything in this world, but somehow everything in this world seems to mean money. :o: Nobody shows more optimism than a homely girl who sits down in front of a mirror with a hex of rouge and lipstick. :o: Chile plans to spend $1,000,000 in building eight tuberculosis hospitals with a total of 1,4 00 bods and branches. :o: We wonder if the politicians who are hammering at the chain banks can suggest a remedy or legislation that will stop it. :o: There are no objections to the government ceding to the states pub lic lands within their limits, but there is to mineral deposits. :o: The less girls wear the more at tention they get. but the male looks most attractive when it's almost im possible to see him for clothes. :o: After a long slumber Greece is waking up and is to modernize thru out. Those searching for the medi eval will have to look elsewhere. :o: Mexico is getting a tighter hold on the labor question, with fresh re strictions against alien labor. It wants no more of it than can be helped. :o: William Green has again -?n chosen president of the Labor F- d eration. Like the late Samuel Coirp ers. labor knows a good man whon it sees him. :o: You never can tell, the girl who went into hysterics while looking at the pictures in the old family albv.m may soon be dressing to look like that herself. to:- A Smithsonian scientist says that the human race Is still in its in fancy, but since the Smithsonian is close to the halls of Congress he may be prejudiced. :o: The fashions may change quite a bit. but even at that we doubt if they'll be able to get as much on some of the girls as the neighbor hood gossip has been able to. :o: Life is funny, and old-fashioned spick-and-span housekeeper could feel just as devilish leaving the dishes in the sink to wash in the morning as a frail now can puffing her first fag. CONGRESS AGADT! . Congress convenes in regular ses sion again with the, prospect of pro longed and stormy filibustei ing by factions, blocs and hybrid coalitions. There is unfinished business from the special session, most important being tariff for the relief of agriculture. And there are many important sub jects directly concerning the welfare of all the people, notabiy income tax reduction. How much may be done by C n gress depends on the will of the Sen ators and Representatives. As was evident in the special session, it may be set down as certain that schemes to embarrass the Administration will be put to the front on every oppor tunity. A new House of Representa tives is to be chosen next November and several senatorial chairs are to be refilled To many members ct Congress these elections are more im portant than any subject the Presi dent will present for urgent consid eration in his message on the state of the Union. No one can forecast whet Con gress will do with certainty of the realization of the forecast. Even on the proposal of the Administration for a reduction of the Federal tax schedules, which would seem to be a matter for early and unanimous agreement, it cannot be said with certainty that Congress will not. in the Senate or the House or in both, waste a lot of time with debate of more or less political character. Of such is the composition of the Congress of the United States. It con tains men who ought to command positions of leadership, men of good good judgment and broad common sense, who vision wisely the need of the country. But they are hedged about with cliques of small creatures whose visions do not extend beyond the boundaries of their particuiai states or congressional districts, and whose minds are centered on their personal interests and political moor- ings, and who are always ready to which you did if you bought only a form blocs to prevent the prompt do- 'single Christmas seal. And if you ing of what superior wisdom sug-j realized the seriousness of the situ gests. It is mediocrity seeking tojation and. bought the seals generally, dominate legislation and which so i your share was just that much great dominatingly exhibited ite!f in tlie er. Senate during the special session. j What the national campaign has On what extent these blocs figure accomplished in its first 25 years tan in the regular session will depend be duplicated in even a shorter time, the amount of god for the country I but only if the war against the d5 at large that is accomplished. The ease is carried on without a halt and outlook is not encouraging at the without laxity on the part cf the sup opening of the session. The animrs- porting public. f ities of the special session still are i The road to health is a long one, turbulent. Cincinnati Enquirer. jlongand uncertain unless the patient :o: 'has rest and an untroubled mind and WOMEN AS POLITICIANS When the Connecticut League of Women Voters met the other dav in Hartford it consumed a large part of j its time trying to make up its mind j whether to pass a resolution against long skirts. In the end. although many members seem ad to be in favor of it. they voted the resolution down. And surely tins is revealing as to the distance which women will have to go before they become a foimid able in politics. Men, when they gather to discuss political questions, occupy themselves j with Strang things, heaven knows; things so strange that you wonder sometimes whether the proponents of them are quite all right in the head. But they have never yet, si far as one can recall, devoted any part of the debate to pleated trousers, belted coats or soft collars. Strange though the subject of their d:scusion may be, they do manage in some curious way to be important. They may be slimy with venality, but they mean something to somebody. And when women, politically as sembled, can seriously discuss a reso lution having to do with the length of skirts, they lay themselves open j in cncni.'rn tbnt if t.-- i nil they have to worry about, then, pol itically and collectively speaking they haven't much on their minds. :o: SUNDIAL INSCRIPTION Senseless with beauty pressing like a flame Around me in this sunlit garden close Blue of the larkspur, yellow of the rose, White lillies holier than any name What can I be that I have earned a place Where tulips ring their gold cathed ral bell. Where poppies lean upon the air and tell Their scarlet secrets with an up turned face? What right have I to know the touch of things Intangible as wind and shadows' wings. Things that can never know there is an hour, A day, a year, only eternity; Oh, what am I to stand here patiently And count awaythe heartbeats of a flower? Daniel Whitehead Ilicky in Harp er's Monthly Magazine for October, 1929. :o: What this country needs is a ncn- leaking suit case for Congressmen. CHRISTMAS SEALS The annual t-ale of Christmas seals, under auspices of the Nebraska Anti- Tuberculosis Association, is in pro-! gress. ! Many thousands of peals have been ; sent out from headquarters, and it is hoped and believed they will be in j general use during the holiday sea- I son. Twenty-five years ago tuberculosis; was claiming 200 lives in eacli 100.- j 000 annually; today its toll has bten i cut to less than half that figure.! Within a short time civilization r.ny ! expect to eliminate the scourge en- j tirely. When the situation was regarded j as hopeless at the beginning of the : century, it has now been firmly es- ( tablished that tuberculosis is cur- i abie. But the fight is only half won. ; Tuberculosis still leads all other dis- j cases as a cause of death among peo- j pie in the prime of life. j Three years ago it caused 91.3GS j deaths in the registration area and of those victims 5C.74G were boys at'd girls, young men and women more women under "0 than nun of the sa:u2 age period. But whatever the age or sex, a death from tuber culosis is a needless death, for proof is both abundant and positive that tuberculosis can be cured. They are being cured by the hundreds each at the Tuberculosis Sanitarium. When the National Tuberculosis Association was formed 25 years ago. the tuberculosis death rate was 200 per 100,000 inhabitants. What a tak what an opportunity the new association faced. Gallantly it went to work, gallantly it has kept at its job, until today the death rate is con siderably less than half what it was 25 years ago. And this means a savink of approximately 130.000 lives productive lives a year. Perhaps you helped to save some of these lives. You most certainly did if you co-operated with the Na tional Tuberculosis Association, ! 'good food. These must frequently 'if not unusually he provided for - through sources outside the patient's family. Hence the necessity for larg er sums of money. There are over S00.000 tuberculosis cases in the country today. Hence the need for an ever increasing army cf seal pro ducers. :o: W. TI FARMER A EAD EGG ?! If Senator Brookhart of Iowa was correct when, in his Boston speech, he declared that "prohibition is the reatest benefit the farmer has re Ir-oivnil ciiifp tl-e wir " tien. s;idtv but firmly, vo shall have to revise our opinion of the farmer. It has been our cherished convic tion that by and large the farmer was a good man, faithful, indus trious, scrupulous, honest, generous in his judgment in short, about as chaste as they make 'em in this erring vale. The speakeasy, the night club, the cabaret, the dansant and all the glittering haunts of evil that beckon the urbanites practically never saw the tiller cf the soil. For him the green forests were his fair ways, the shade of the old apple tree iliis nineteenth hole If now and then he paused to loaf ard invite his soul in the glory of auroral horizons, it was but a temporary indulgence. Cer tainly the gossips never painted the farmer as an idling, improvident lily. The farmer, it is agreed has poc keted some jingling dividends from prohibition. Economically, the eigh teenth amendment has been for him a terrible flop. In that way, then, has it advantaged l.im. There is but one answer. Morally he has been re trieved. If Mr. Brookhart is right, we are obliged to conclude that, be fore prohibition, the farmer was a gay blade, cutting a wide swath thru the pastoral night life, a wastrel, if you please, squandering his sugstance in riotous living. With all respect for Senator Brook hart we refuse to believe that the farmer cf the old days was a wild oat sower, a patron of the fleshpots, a bad egg. To the contrary, we shall continue to believe that the farmer was an upstanding, two-fisted citi zen before prohibition broke him flat. :o: The other fellows job always looks easier because you are not trying to do his work and the other woman's husband looks easier to love because your wife is not living with him. GAMER'S aneiy at Plattsmouth is Prepared for the Holiday Shoppers All New Goods at Lowest Prices Fall Line o Toys Cars. Dump Trucks, Sleds, Wagons. Games. Erector Sets, Dolls, Dishes, and a hundred other items. Bring- the kiddies here and let them see the many fine things we have secured for cur first Christmas season's business in Plattsmouth.- It Pays to Trade at Gainer's LET HCI LEARN A TRADE A veteran desk lieutenant of police in a large city was talking with a group of newspaper men early one morning, after "business" had slack ened a bit. "Do you know," he mused, "after all the year I have spent as a cop, I don't believe I have seen a dozen normal young men who knew some trade thoughly ever, even accused of crime. It's the young drifters, the hangers-around the cor ner, the 'drug store cowboys' as they call 'em, that gets into trouble. The steady young feller who plugs thru an apprenticeship and learns his trade, is hardly ever a stick-up man, a thug, or anything like that." The Danbury News says: "And the old lieutenant has the right of it. There's a steady disci pline about the serving of an appren ticeship in a trade that makes for charcter. The craftsman has a pride, a self-reliance, a confidence in him self that is sobering influence. The drifter, the boy who works here a while, there a couple of months, who slides around, loafing a good deal, gambling a good deal, handing around the back rooms of pool par lors and speakeasies, getting pretty near the crime-line many times, and feeling that it is clave r to 'put one over' on the police, he is the poten tial gunman, the candidate for high dishonors as a burglar, stickup man. or other unlovely calling. "The man with the trade is gen erally better off financially than the man in what are called the 'white collar jobs' too." :o: NO WAR WITHOUT ARMS Representative Porter's attempt to get Congress to empower the presi- 'dent to declare an embargo on the shipment of arms to any warring na tion is the culmination of 20 years' labor to the same end. Congress in 1922 authorized the president to forbid the shipment of arms to South and Central American countries and to China. He has acted under this authorization in keeping American arms out of Mexico. Mr. Porter wants this authority to ex tend to the shipment of arms to any nation engaged in war. If the Porter resolution should be passed, it would be the duty of the president to decide whether a bellig erent nation should be permitted to buy amunitions of war from Amer ican manufacturers. As the nations agreeing to the Kellogg treaty have abandoned war as an instrument of national policy, some such arrange ment as that proposed by Mr. Porter is an inevitable step in the direc tion of international peace. :o: All the knowledge in the world is not stored in Chicago. For illustra tion. a correspondent of the Chicago Tribune suggests enactment in Illi nois or a law prohibiting tipping as prevails in the Southern states. Our anti-tipping law, more honored in the breach than the observance, be cause a farce that it was repealed several years ago. INDIAN LANDS Thousands of acres on the Cheyenne and I'ine Kide Indian Reservations In South Dakota can be bought at low prices on favorable terms of payment. Sales are held frequently by the U. S. Government Superintendents in charge of these Res ervations. Lists of the lands offered, with minimum prices thereon, are available. These lands are suitable either for agri culture or for grazing. Wheat, com, other grains, alfalfa, sweet clover, small fruits and vegetables are successfully grown. .Many tracts are available for leasing. STATE LANDS The Rural Credits Board of South Da kota offers for sale Improved and unim proved lands In many parts of that state. Prices and terms of purchase arc favorable to the buyer. These INDIAN and STATE lands offer splendid locations to men desiring well located, practical and profitable farm or ranch homes, as well as opportunity for safe and sound Investment with likely Increases in values within & reasonable time. Write for full Information reeaidlntr these lands, the localities in which they are situated and how to acquire them. Toll me what you want. Ask questions prompt and accurate answers. Homeseek ers' fre.. Tt. AV. Reynolds, Commission er. The Milwaukee Road, S30-V Union Station, Chicago. SOUTH BEND Ashland Gazette Mr. Joe Knecht drove to On na Tuesday. Mr. William Richards was an Omaha visitor Saturday. Mrs. Chas. Brown and son, Virgil, spent Sunday evening at the Glenn Armstrong home. Mr. and Mrs. Orville Richards and Joyce spent Saturdav with Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Haswell. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Haswell and family spent Thanksgiving at the John Sweeney home. Mr. and Mrs. John Scheel. Jr., spent Thursday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Kitrell. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Long and son. Jack, spent Friday evening at the Henry Stander home, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Haswell and family spent Wednesday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Haswell. The E. S. Critchfield family of Omaha were Thanksgiving dav guests at the Geo. Vogel home. Mr. and Mrs. Vyrle Livers and son Kenneth, were dinner guests Thanks giving at the F. T. Graham home. Miss Maude McCaulley of Omaha spent two days of last week with her grandmother. Mrs. Iloffmeister. Mr. P.-nn Weaver and Miss Ella Raberge of Mitchell. S. D.. spent the week end at the Fred Weaver home. Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Brooks and family of Lincoln spent a week ago Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Dill. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Gakemeier and family and Mr. William Barker spent Sunday at the John. Kupke home. Mr. Fred Weaver and sons, Judd and Glenn were dinner guests Thanksgiving at the Bert Moorey home. Miss Mary MeOinness who teaches school at Jansen spent Thanksgiving at the hame of her father, Mr. Lem McGinness. Mr. and Mrs. Martin Zaar and son, Harry, spent Sunday afternoon with Mrs. Zaar's sister, Mrs. Annie Leddy of Louisville. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Long and sons were Thanksgiving dinner guests of their father and grand mother, Harry and Mrs. Viola Long. Mrs. Virgil Besack attended a shower Friday afternoon at the Perry Glover home near Springfield given in honor of Miss Jessie Nichol son. The Glenn Armstrong family drove to Alvo Thanksgiving day and were guests at Mr. Armstrong's par ents' home, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Arm strong. Mrs. Annie Kraft and son. William of near Louisville and Mrs. Alice Bornman of Grand Island spent Sun day evening with Mr. and Mrs. George Bornman. Mr. and Mrs. John Sweeney and son, Donald, spent Sunday at the William Richards home. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Haswell and family were also afternoon visitors. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Franz and family of Memphis and Mr. and Mrs. Will Carey and daughter, Phyillis Jean of Mynard spent Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mrs. William Oliver, Sr. Miss Beatrice Besack of Omaha, and Harold Besack of Lincoln spent Thanksgiving at the home of their parents. Mr. and Mrs. lrgil Besack. Flyod Erickson of Louisville was also a dinner guest. Mr. Fred Weaver and sons, Judd and Benn and Miss Ella Raberge were Sunday dinner guests at the R. M. Davis home and were supper guests at the Charles Campbell home in the evening. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Armstrong and family spent Thanksgiving at the home of Mr. Armstrong's par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Armstrong at Alvo. This was a family reunion and 26 were present. Mrs. Homer Carnicle, Mrs. Clyde Haswell, Ruth, Hazel and Mary Car nicle and Dallas Livers were Thanks giving dinner guests at the Jacob Carnicle home. Miss Ruth remained until Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Carnicle re ceived word last Friday -that their son, William, who has been sick with typhoid fever for some time at St. Charles, Mo., is now suffering with pneumonia on his right lung, but is getting along as well as could be ex pected. "ODE TO A PF.ETZEL Oh. bent and salt-tried pretzel. What Joy thou bringest me; Thou makest my mouth water Oh, pretzel! I love thee! Couldst thou pursue the straight way Instead of the crooked path? Oh. pretzel! Change thy habits Or fear the aftermath. Thy heads seem bent in sorrow; It should be bent in shame. But pretzel! Still I love thee; I love thee all the same. Thy brown and tanned beauty Fills me with longing for I'd love to clasp thy sweetness Between my teeth once more. But pretzel! Thou art hunted, Ah, many would, I fear. Catch you between their molars Erase that salty tear. Wallace Bacon in the Detroit Free Press. :o: Dr. Edward Martin of Philadel phia in a late address at Chicago be fore a clinic convention, took the same position as have some others, in the profession, that the use of liquor by the older people was beneficial. This will not go food with the Anti- Saloon league and our guardians. :o: Your ad in the Journal will be read, and they sure do get results. SHEHIFF'S SALE Slate of y.i braska, County of Cass, By virtu of an Order of Sale is sued by Gchl '. Noble Real, Clerk of the District Court, within and for Cass county, Nebraska, and to me directed, I will on the 2Mb. day of December A. D. 1929. at 10 o'clock a. m. of said day at the south front door of the court house, in the city of Plattsmouth, N-bra.ka. in said county, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the follow ing real estate to-wit: The Southwest Quarter (SW'i) of Section (S) Township Eleven (11), Range Thirteen (13). East of the Cth P. M. Cass County, Nebraska The same being levied and taken as the property cf G-orge W. Rhoden and Mary E. Rhoden. defendants, to satisfy a judgment of said Court re covered by Conservative Mortgage Company, a corporation, plaintiff against said defendants. Plattrinouth. Nebraska, November 21st A. D. 19 2 9. BERT REED, Sheriff Cass County, Nebra.-ka. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE By virtue cf a special order cf sale cn exe-ution cf judgment issued by Golda Noble Heal. Clerk cf th District Ccrrt of Cass county, Ne braska, upon a decree entered in said court in favor of I). O. Dwyir as Intervener of the case of Emma E. Ronne vs. Charks Emory Ronne, wherein the said D. O. Dwyer was decreed a lien upon an undivided one-seventh of the Southwest Quar ter and the South half of the North west Quarter of See. 9. Tp. 11 Range 12, in Cass county, Nebraska: tha pursuant to sid writ. I will, on the 23rd. day of December. 1929. at ten o'clock a. in., of said day, sell said leal estate at the south front door of the court houe in the city of Plattsmouth in said Cass county, Ne braska, at auction to the highest bidder for cash, to satisfy said lien, the amount due thereon being $250.00 with seven per cent inter est from the 4th day of February, 19 27. and costs of suit, in the sum of ?23. S3 and also accruing costs. Dated this 19th day of November, 1929. BERT REED. Sheriff of Cass County, Nebraska n21-4ws. NOTICE OF REFEREE'S SALE In the District Court of Cass County, Nebraska Evelyn B. Stamp. 1 Plaintiff vs. Charles E. - NOTICE Taylor, et al. Defendants Notice is hereby given that under and by virtue of a decree and order of the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska, entered in the above entitled cause on the 21st day of No vember, 1929, the undersigned ref eree will, on the 2Sth day of De cember, 1929. at 10:00 o'clock a. m., at the south front door of the court house, in tbe City of Plattsmouth, Nebraska, sell at public auction to the highest bidder, the following de scribed real estate, to-wit: The southeast Quarter (SEU) of the northeast quarter (XEU ) and the northeast quarter (XEU) of the southeast quar ter. (SEU). of Section six (6), Township eleven (11), Range fourteen (14), in Cass county, Nebraska upon the following terms: 10 of bid in cash on day of sale, balance upon confirmation of sale and deliv ery of referee's deed. Said sale will be held open one hour. Dated this 23rd day of November, 1929. J. A. CAPWELL. Referee. D. .O. DWYER, Attorney. n25-iw NOTICE OF HEARING on Petition for Determination of Heirship. Estate of Lois Kiger, deceased, In the County Court of Cass county, Nebraska. The State of Nebraska, To all per sons interested in said estate, credi tors and heirs take notice, that T. A. Kiger has filed his petition alleging that Lois Kiger died intestate in Sterling, Nebraska, on or about May 18th. 1924, being a resident and in habitant of Cass county. Nebraska, and died seized of the following de scribed real estate, to-wit: An undivided fourth interest in Lots 14, 1G, 22 and 23 in the northeast quarter of the north west quarter (XEU XVi) of Section nineteen (19), Town ship twelve (12) North, Range fourteen (14), east of the Cth P. M., in Cass county, Nebras ka leaving as her sole and only heirs at law the following named persons, to-wit: T. A. Kiger. father. That the interest of the petitioner herein in the above described real estate is fee simple title as sole heir at law of said deceased, and praying for a determination of the time of the death of said Lois Kiger, and of her heirs, the degree of kinship and the right of descent of the real prop erty belonging to the said deceased, in the State of Nebraska. It is ordered that the same stand for hearing the 27th day of Decem ber, A. D.. 1929, before the County Court at Plattsmouth, Nebraska, at the hour of 10 o'clock a. m. Dated at Plattsmouth, Nebraska, this 26th day of November, A. D. 1929. A. II. DUX BURY. (Seal) d2-3w County Judge. Phone your news to the Journal.