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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 20, 1933)
MftTTDAY. FEBB. 20,1933. PAGE TWO PLATTSMOUTH ! SEM -WEEKLY JOUHNAL Ihe IPIattsitioufh Journal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA Entered at Postoffice, Plattsmouth. Neb., aa second-class mail matter R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCBIPTION PBICE $2.00 A YEAR IN FIBST POSTAL ZONE Subscribers living in Second Postal Zone, S2.50 per year. Beyond 600 milee, $3.00 per year. Rate to Canada and foreign countries, 13.50 per year. All subscriptions are payable strictly in advance. Congress ought to be good at jig saw puzzles. - It never has anything left over. :o: Contrary to a common and prevail ing opinion, the government has not discontinued printing $10 bills. . :o: The saddest tale yet about the jig sew puzzle disease is that of the fam ily who couldn't have biscuits be cause the maid was doing a puzzle on. the bread board. :o: The R. F. C. will be glad to make loans to the Michigan banks "on ap proved security." That phrase has a strangely familiar sound, perhap3 even to the Michigan banks. :o: New York state is preparing for the repeal of the eighteenth amendment, say dispatches. You can't fool New Yorkars. They knew we had . that eighteenth amendment all the time. :o: Indications are that the mosquitoes at the Rapidan resort which was used Ly President Hoover the last few years will have to seek new fields for rr.tions. Mr. Roosevelt will not use tho camp. :o: Perhaps the wets won't be too greatly cast down by Jcuett Shouse's warning that the fight for repeal is far from won. Most of them feel that their thirst is durable and will not p'ay out on them. :o: As we understand Japan's position, she doesn't want the League of Na tions to worry about her at all. She can defend herself, she believes, from China's, aggression.. In fact, she has virtually promised that the minute she. needs help she'll let us alL.know. Aa cctopus with a tentacle spread of forty-four feet was found dead on the Oregon coast the other day, but no. one can imagine what is delaying the appearance of some local hero with a thrilling story telling how he killed tho monster in a hand to hand fight. " :o:- Every Sunday the Germans get out and riot, membars of certain politi cal factions killing members of other factions in great numbers. This is probably due to the scarcity of motor cars in Germany, and probably why the German Sunday casualties usually fall so far below our own. :o: Twenty-six 'Republican diplomats will be ushered back into private life when Roosevelt becomes President, a story from Washington reports. How ever, their diplomatic training may serve them well. There never was a time when diplomacy in private life paid bigger dividends than right now. HAPPY little girl, just bursting with pep, and she has never tasted a "Ionic f . Every child's stomach, liver, and bowels need stimulating at times, but give children something you know all about. Follow the advice of that famous family physician who gave the world Syrup Pepsin. Stimulate the body's i Hal organs. Dr. Caldwell's prescription of pure pepsin, active senna, and fresh herbs is a mild stimulant that keeps the system from getting sluggish. : If your youngsters don't do well at school, don't play as haraoTeat as well as other children do. begin this evening ' with- Dr. Caldwell's ' Diet Didn't Do This! .-I -WwV:--' ' The more you listen, the more kick you get out of the theory that man is superior because he has the power of speech. . - :o: One of the surest ways to keep from growing old, is to tinker with a motor car with the engine running in a closed garage. :o: If the horse and buggy come back, it won't seem natural for years and years unless they put a self-starter somewhere on the buggy. :o: Talk about hard luck. A young man in Topeka married a steno grapher who was making 20 a week and the next day she lost her job. :o: In case the jigsaw craze begins to pall on ycu and you wish for some thing on which to exercise your in genuity, we suggest you try and find and remove all the pins from a new .shirt. :o: Senator Huey Long called his bro ther, Earl Long, a liar the other day. Doesn't this manner of dragging in your relatives for the same consider ation as that received by constituents smack a bit of nepotism? :o: Uncla Sam is expecting about 200 million dollars annually from a beer income. But he must take into con sideration that since prohibition the nation has worked up a fairly good whisky appetite. :o: 7 One Michigan man who probably is not much affected by. the bank holiday is the one who trapped thirty- four skunks in one day last week. He probably wouldn't have been ad mitted to any of the banks for a while anyway. ' ' ' . . "As it is commonly assumed that we lose our shirt in any internation al parley, where did the notion spring from that we are a race' of great poker players?" inquires the Detroit News. Well, we are at least popular poker players. We always pay off. :o: The girl at Lynn, Mass., who an nounces that she will marry any man who will support her parents and her ten brothers and sisters must be sort of mixed up. What she wants to marry is the Rockefeller Founda tion. :o: Peggy Joyce says that when you get right down to the question, Am erican husbands are the best provid ers. We Americans should feel pretty good over this, because when Peggy speaks of some things, it doesn't mean anthing, but when she speaks of hus bands, she i3 speaking with real au thority. Syrup Pepsin. This gentle stimulant Will soon richt things! The hmvali o . . will move with better regularity and thoroughness. There won't be so many sick spells or colds. You'll find it just as wonderful for adults, too, in larger spoonfuls I Get some Syrup Pepsin; protect your household from those bilious days, frequent headaches,-and that sluggish state of half-bealtb. that means the bowels need stimulating. Keep this preparation in the home tor use instead of. harsh c-athartics that cause chronic constipation if taken too often. You can always - get Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsiii at any drug store; they have it all ready in Dig bottles.' LOBBYING IS NO 'JOB FOE OFFICE H0LDEBS Veteran members of the forty-fifth general assembly can still remember the -wave of ' indignation that swept over Iowa during a previous session, when a former Justice of the state supreme court Invaded the house and senate chambers to lobby for legisla tion then under consideration. His conduct was the subject of open denunciation in the senate, where one senator risked and es tablished his political reputation by charging that a, jurist was urging en actment of laws upon which he would later have to decide a question of constitutionality. Probably no such spectacle will again be witnessed in an Iowa legis lateure. But a related form of un desirable Influence is strongly man ifest. No one will deny the right, or even the obligation, of public officials to counsel with the legislature upon nicasuYes affecting the departments over which they preside. It is rea sonable that the presidents of state educational institutions should make known the need3 and the limitations of their parts of the state's business. It i3 wholly acceptable that boards of supervisors be heard upon the feas ibility of legislation touching coun ty government. The legislature should have facts. Cut it is less defensible that there should inevitably be a concert of op position from public officials intrust ed with the expenditure of tax money, wherever the proposal is made for a reduction of the amount to be spent. Public spending is a primary factor of public administra tion. It is properly closely circum scribed " by statute, and tho enact ment of these statutes is entrusted to the legislature. Maintenance of a constant lobby of public- administrative officials at the elbow of the legislature, duriVig hour3 and days and weeks when those same officials are being paid to perform administrative and not legislative services, closely approxi mates the conduct of that judge whose performance was a scandal. Des Moines Register. :o: NOW FOK SHREDDED COTTON! What might easily havefc.been a tragedy dwindled. Jo,, Ujq. compara tively minor importance "ofah inter esting chemical study when a diet of spinach, coarse vegetables arid shred ded, cotton succeeded in removing a small open pocket knifa from the digestive tract of a 5-year-old Los Angeles boy. The danger, we take it, is over for the boy, but not fcr all the millions of people in this great country who read cf hi3 experience and rcjoica at its satisfactory cul mination. Our danger is that a great, altru istic move will now be launched in behalf of shredded cotton as a regu lar part of the national diet. It took the diet people a good many years to put spinach over, but If you think they haven't finally done it, look about you. Not only is spinach served up at every possible gastron omic occasion, such as banquets, din ner parties, home snacks, buffet cup pers and in cafes, restaurants and food shoppes, but millions of people actually ak for it. Not seeing it, they actually frown and want to know whefe it is. A few short years ago most of these people would have asked for strichnine, cyanide or boiled hemlock before spinach. To have so much as suggested spinach would have been to lose your friend, your customer or sven your life. Thus have the spin ach people weakened the national di gestive morale and reduced what was once an appetite for tho finer tid bits of life to a weak and wiened thing that forgets tho name of bon bons. Tha national appetite today probably would cat spinach with sugar and cream on it if somebody should begin boosting it and it might be an improvement at that. So look out for the shredded cot tonists. They will be pointing out how shredded cotton not only takes knife blades out of the stomach but put3 iron, brass, copper and tinware in. If you should bo so naive as to ask the need for copper and brns3 and tinware in the stomach they will cite, they will demonstrate, they will prove that all those things not only are advisable but well-nigh indispen sable, which, obviously, makes spin ach and shredded cotton and, In time maybe, steel filings and walnut hulls indispensable, ou may not be lieve; them, just as you may not have believed them about the spinach, but you eat your spinach, don't you? World-Herald. - :o: The weathar department promises a gradual 'lessening of the cold. The bulletin is reassuring. People will not go around fearing they may be overtaken any minute by sunstroke. A GOLDEN PARADOX ' OF THE DEPRESSION A striking development of the past two years has been the great in crease in the world's supply of mone tary gold. Whereas, in the decade after 1920, the annual additions to the world's monetary gold were in the neighborhood of 225 million dol lars, in the past two years these ad ditions have been at the rate of about 500 million dollars a year. In part, this has been due' to increased pro duction, resulting both from new mines in Canada and from the great er profit in the operation of old mines as the purchasing power of gold in creased. Facts much more important in ex plaining this amazing phenomenon lie in the changes in the industrial consumption of gold, and in develop ments in England and India. For many years, nearly half of the world's gold production either has gone into industrial uses or has been drawn to India, where it went into hoards. Almost' from time immemor ial, India has been'a heavy purchaser of gold, and it is estimated that in the past half-century about two and a half billion dollars disappeared in her hoards. It was generally believed that this hoarded gold was forever lost to monetary" use. In 1930, the gold delegation oh the League of Na tions, in making Its estimates on the future gold supply of the world, as sumed that India would take an nually from SO million dollars to 100 million dollars cf gold, and that at least an equal amount would go into industrial use3. " But the events of the past two years have completely upset the pre dictions of the experts. The depres sion reduced greatly the industrial use cf gold. In England, the high price of gold, in terms of sterling, following" the suspension of the gold standard, led to a considerable sale of geld to th3 bank&by the public. Ac cording to a recent report of the de puty master of the royal mint, this domestic "gold rush" produced about 70 million dollars in a little over a year. India, belying the idea that the East never changes, suddenly shifted from a buyer to a seller of gold, after England's departure from the gold standard. In less than a year, accord ing to the same' British report, India disgorged from her hoard3 nearly 300 million dollars of gold, a larger ill part of..whiKcbrwnt .to.;EngIanX, The depression has. produced many para doxes, but few are -stranger than this picture of record additions to the monetary gold of the world at a time when the general complaint is of a shortage of money. St. Louis Post Dispatch. :o: THE ATTACK ON ROOSEVELT : The country has been" profoundly shocked over the attempt on the life or the President-elect. There i3 im mense relief that he escaped, pride over the gallantry with which Mr. Roosevelt conducted himself, and sympathy for the other victims of the assassin's bullets. At the same time comes a feeling of almost helpless resentment against the fanatic who did the shooting. Society never has found ways to as sure complete protection for its pub lic men from subnormal men who happen to be possessed of a murder ous instinct. Only last year the nvpnfih nrsRirlot. Paul Doumer. a man of fine character, was killed by a half-crazed Rdssian named Gourgu- Ioff. who had no coherent explan- atfrm for his nrt. Mussolini had a narrow escape from an unbalanced Englishwoman a few years ago. In the United States. Lincoln wa3 the victim of a theatrical fanatic; Garfield of a. disanoointcd office- reeker of low grade mentality; Mc Kinley of a moronic blacksmith v.-ho had been inflamed by speeches of an- .-irrfci?t. Thfvrin Roosevelt was wounded in tho Progressive campaign by a man of the same mental type who did not know why he shot. In a population of 120 million persons there are bcund to be many subnormal men ' and women. Occa sionally one of them run3 wild and .1 atta a man conspicuous in mo p' becomes his target. - The Miami incident is a warning to the secret service, which is charged with the protection of the President, tr rpfJnnhlo its rreeautionS. After tho assassination of President Mc- Kinley thero was a reorganization of this service with a view to giving Presidents more- security. Tho at tempt on the life cf the rresiaent- tlect is notice that still greater pre cautions must be 'taken.-The ration vill look to the secret service to ex pand it3 cordon of safety about both tho President and the President-elect. : ' :o:- ' . " . n asswood ( Lf ri ) Logs wonted. Nebraska Basket Factory. Phono No. .:-.' . : Everything- Vr school-most complete lino in Cass county at Sates Book Store GETTING TOO FAR ' AWAY FR01I NATURE Nature never changes. Since the dawn of time her processes have gone relentlessly on, in season and out of season, from one age to another. She always runs true to form. She "speaks a various language," a3 Bry ant remarked, but she always speaks truthfully. . It is only the artificial things, the man-made things that get out of kel ter and refuse to work. Civilizations fail and cultures fall into decay be cause mortal minds are Incapable of perpetuating what they have devised. Money, for instance, is an artificial thing. It was invented originally for his convenience to be used as a meas ure of value. The monetary system as we know it is considered an im provement over cruder forms. The wampum of the Indian, however, served as efficiently a3 geld, silver and paper and coonskins once were a measure of value "among the pio neer traders. - It is not too much to believe that the whole monetary system is passing into a period of reconstructive change. It i3 not too much to believe that an entirely new system cf moas-f uring values may he evolved along with a new system for, the payment of merchandise accounts and the re ward for labor. The laws of nature are inexorable. Mankind moves en through the cycles of birth, life and death as always. The sun shines and the rain pours, summer follows winter and night fol lows day. Nature Loldi tho answer to all things. But when man ccmes to deal with the devices of his own geniu3, he runs into trouble. The machines he has evolved multiply and plague him. Smart and greedy men get a ccrner on his money. The governments he crcate3 lo-e their rcnee of direction and legislate him into bankruptcy and involvo hira i:i silly wars. And so it goes. There ia so much artificiality in Twentieth century culture that the whole social scheme ha3 become top heavy with it and has been thrown cut cf balance. Man's problem today "3 to get him self back in attune with nature and nature's laws. Because cf nil own limitations and the restraining in fluences he has placed upon himself, ho has a difficult road to -follow. Sioux City Tribune, .w'. ' SCHOOL TEACHER GOOD 1 T SPORT m DEPRESSION At the risk cf being -.hought hope lessly old-fashioned, ' wo should like to speak a good v.ord for tho school teacher. Time was when it was no heresy to cuggD3t . that the school teacher was vcrtky of her hire, that she played an extremely vital part in the upbuilding of ccciety, and that she was a conscientious, hard-working and altogether admirable public servant. Today, however, it seems to be the fashion to be lasu gallant. There is scarcsly a week that the Public Pulse docs not boat with the righteou3 wrath of some contributor who harbors very definite cuzpicion3 that the teacher is a shiftless, selfish, grasping individual. The teacher, we are told, whines when hsr salary is cut. She gives grudgingly of her time, consp:rc3 unceasingly against the taxpayer rnd lias no ether inter sst, to ram it up, than to held a job which osmoono cine should have and do a -minimum of work for a maxi' mum of compensation. That tho school teacher, in com mon with no:t human beings, does not relish having her salary cut we freely concede. That she frequently looks with longing on the pre-de-pression ?ys cf fat school budgets and sighs fcr their r:iurn we alro admit. But that she has not accept ed her present lot r.s gracefully as the rest cf tncl that she has not, in the last a-.aly.7i3, been a thorough ly good sport about it, wc refuse to concede. Ars -a- matter of fact we should ray that the school teachers, as a class have complained about as poccd to raal:3 ta boot of it in ovcr crowdej clacj rco-n. With less pay and mora wcr!:. ar.tl carrying on un der the handicap! of a shortened rchool year, t'.'r;' Lavo accepted the dictates cf deprs-.nlon about as phil osophical!, all hlnrri considered, as one miglit roascnr.bly expect them to. To ccna:mn tl3 tcacher3 aa a group ci;.-ply tecauce come of them are married, and because all cf them are fairly secure in their joba does not seem to uj entirely fair. We re fuse to believe, with lt3 critics, that the teaching .profession has turned away, almost oyernigui, uum high idealism which was once rup- posed to characterize it. We refuse to belleva that the profession Has not adapted itself, with good srace and in : accordinca with it3 highest standards and traditions, to a situ ation which hr.3 demanded sacrifice of evcrysna. The , teacher of Chi cagowho have stayed loyally at their posts while one payless payday after another passed, are simply a case in point. We have not the slightest doubt that the teachers of Minnea polis, faced with a parallel emerg ency, would do the same. And we suspect, from the evidence at hand in Minneapolis, that there is no more unselfish, diligent and loyal group of public servants than that which 13 helping to shape, in our public schools, the destinies of youth. If it is old-fashioned to say so we must confess, in this particular instance, that we are glad to be so far behind the times. Minneapolis Tribune. :o: Advertising will keep tho wheels of business turning, even In "de pression times." Don't overlook that fact, Kir. Merchant. NOTICE TO CREDITORS State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. In the County Court. Fee Book 9, page 341. In the matter of the estate of Lew is H. Young, 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 17th day of March, 1933, and on the 19th day of June, 1933, at the hour of ten o'clock a. m. of each day, to examine all claims against said es tate, with a view to their adjustment and allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claim3 against said estate is three months from the 17th day of March, A. D., 1933, and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 17th day of March, 1933. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 17th day of February, 1933. A. II. DUXBURY, (Seal) f20-3w County Judge. NOTICE TO CREDITORS . State cf Nebraska, County of Cass, 3. In the County Court. Fee Book 9, page 339. In the matter cf the estate of Sarah E. Ycung, 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 17th day of March, A. D. 1933, and on the 19th day cf June, A. D. 1933, at ten o'clock a. m. of each day to examine all claims against said es tate, with a view to their adjustment and allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claims against aid estate i3 three months from the 17th day of March, A. D. 1933, and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 17th day of March, 1933. Witness my haid and the seal of said' County Court this 1-1 th day. of February, 1933. ; A. II. DUXBURY, (Seal)-f20-3w County Judge SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass ss. ' By virtue of an Order of Sale is sued by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk of the District Court within, and for Cass County, Nebraska, and to me direct ed. I will on the 20th day o March A. D. 1933, at 10 o'clock a. m. of said day at the south front door of the court house in said county, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the following real estate, to wit: The west half (W), except school grounds in the northwest corner, of Section twenty-two (22), Township ten (10), north. Range twelve (12), east of the Sixth Principal Meridian, in the County of Cass, State of Ne braska, containing in all three hundred and twenty (320) acres more or less, according to gov 'crnment survey: The same being levied upon and taken as the property of Jerome G St. John, et al., defendants, to satisfy a judgment of said court recovered by Bankers Life Insurance Company a corporation, is plaintiff against said defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, February 15th, A. D. 1933. H. SYLVESTER, Sheriff Cass County, Nebraska. flC-5w. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE Notice is hereby given that pur suant to an order of sale issued by tho Clerk of the District Court of Cass County, Nebraska, and accord ing to the provisions of a decree en tered by said court on the 30th day of April, 1932, in an p.ction pending in said court wherein Lantie Mae Frost is plaintiff and Tetge Meyers, et al., are defendants, commanding me to sell In the manner provided by law the real estate bercinafter de scribed, to eatisfy the liens fixed and determined by the terni3 of said de cree in an aggregate amount of $2, 9G5.90, with interest from the date of said decree and costs of such pro ceedings as in said decree provided, I will on Monday, March 20, 1933, at 10 o'clock a. ra., at the south front door of the court house In Platts mouth, Cass County, Nebraska, offer for sale at public auction and will sell to the highest bidder cash the following described real estate, to- wit: The scuth half of Section 17, and the northwest quarter of Section 20, all in Township 12, ' Range 9, east of the 6tli p. m., , in Cass County, Nebraska, subject to a first mortgage in favor of the Conservative Mortgage Com pany at Lincoln, Nebraska. - Dated this 14th day of February. 1333. ...... II. SYLVESTER, T ' Sheriff of Cass County, flC-Sw Lumber Sawing Commercial sawing from your ovn logs lumber cut to your specifications. We have ready cut dimen sion lumber and sheeting for sale at low prices. NEBRASKA BASKET FACTORY NOTICE TO CREDITORS State of Nebraska, County of Cass, cs Fee Book 9, page 338. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of John M. Kirker, 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 10th day of March, 1933, and on the 12th day of June, 1933, at the hour of ten o'clock a. m., of each day, to 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 10th day of March, A. D. 1933, and the time limited for payment of debts is cne year from said 10th day of March, 1933. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 10th day of February, 1933. A. II. DUXBURY, (Seal) fl3-3w , County Judge. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, SS. By virtue of an "Alias" Order of Sale issued by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk of the District Court within and for Cass county, Nebraska, and to me directed, I vill on the 18th day of March, A. D. 1933, at 10 o'clock a. m. 01 sam day at me souin ironi door of tho court house In said coun ty, sell at public auction to the high est bidder for cash th3 following real estate to-wit: The north eighty-seven (S7) feet of Lot3 one (1), two (2), three (2), and four (4), in Block four (4) in the original town of Plattsmouth, Cass, County, Ne braska, a3 surveyed, platted and recorded The same being levied upon and taken as the property of William A. Wells, and Flora M. Wells. Edith Martin, and the Becker Roofing Company, defendants, to satisfy a Judgment of said court recovered by the Occidental Building Loan Asso ciation, plaintiff, against said defend ants. Plattsmouth. Nebraska, February 7th, A. D. 1933. II. SYLVESTER. Sheriff, Cas3 County, Nebraska. fl3-5w ORDER OF HEARING arid Notice on Petition for Settle-"l-.i,-..,' fc.rmen4"Ot'Acootmtf.tM . In the County Court of Cas3 coun ty, Nebraska. State of Nebraska, Cass county, ss. Fee Book 9, at page 44. To all persons Interested In the es tate of Marshall W. Smith, deceased: On reading the petition of L. B. Egenberger, Administrator, praying a final settlement and allowance of his account filed in this Court on the 8th day of February, 1933. and for assign ment of estate and discharge cf Ad ministrator; 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 10th day cf March, A. D. 1933, at ten o'clock a. m.. to'show cause, if any there be, why the pray er of the petitioner should not be granted, and that notice of the pen dency of said petition and the hear ing thereof be given to all persons in terested in 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 weeks prior to said day of hearing. In witness whereof, I have here unto set my hand and the seal of said Court this 8th day of February, A. D. 1933. A. II. DUXBURY, (Seal) fl3-3w County Judge. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter, of the guardianship cf Gertie Beckner, insane. Now on this 11th day of February. 1933, this cause came oa for hearing upon the petition of Searl S. Davis. s guardian cf Gertie Beckner. in sane, praying for a license to sell said ward's interest in the following de scribe! real estate, to-wit: The west 3 7A acres of the west half of the southwest quar ter of Section 17, and the east 74 acres in the east half of the southeast quarter of Section 18. nil in Township 11, North of Range 13. East of the 6th P. M., in Cass county, Nebraska for the purpose cf paying debts and expenses of administering said estate, and the support of said ward. It is therefore ordered that all ner- interested in paid estate appear before me at the District Court room n tne court house at Plattsmouth. fn Cass county. Nebraska, on the 18th day of March, 1933, at the hour of u o c lock a. tn.y to show cause, if ny. why a license should . not h granted to said guardian to sell said insane person's interest In the above des-ribed real estate for the purpose of paying debts, expenses of adminis tration and support of said ward - It Is Further Ordered, that a copy of this order to show cause be pub lished in the Plattsmouth Journal, a newspaper in general circulation in Cass county, Nebraska, for a period of thrca successive weeks prior to the tate cf hearing. . . JAMES T. BEG LEY, ... , ' - " Judge of the Dbtrict fl3-3w Court. A. 1 . , Get your Ccncol Supplies at the Bates Book Store whero Quality la high and prices lew. ,