FLATTSMOUTH SEMI-WEEEXY JOURNAL MONDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1921. PA02 F0T7S Cbe plattsmouth Journal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA Entered at Postofflce. Plattsmouth. Neb., a second-clase mail matter R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 You can't keep a good man down or a bad one up. . - -:o:- Divers who try tq beat trains are Jumping at conclusions. :o: Looks like the world will be de stroyed by the price of fire. :o: When your skirt comes back with buttons eoae there's the rub. :o: Hush, little business, don't cry; you'll be bigger buy an l buy. o:o Men have strong will power, wo men have stronger won't power. o: Coffee is unhealthy. A man has killed his wife with a percolator. :o: Have you noticed the increase in beauty contests since women vote? :o: Fewer movies are being made. F.nt not from the lack of raw material. :o: Hens cackle after laying eggs be cause they know the price we pay. :o: That man who inherited three mattress factories fell into something pretty soft. :o: A rolling stone gather no moss; but a man who keeps his nose too close to it does. :o: Don't censure a man for leaving during church until you learn if he walks in his sleep. -j:c- Just when China's outlook was bright a missionary sails for there with a motorcycle. :o: The man who says saccharine is I the sweetest thing known slept until 10 a. m. o : o nevar Twenty St. Louis society girls have j Kansas farmers say they are go gone wild goose hunting. Our girls i inff to burn corn instead of coal this hunt them at home. . j winter. We are doing the same thing :o: I iQ Nebraska but most of the folks Benjamin Franklin got his start! prefer to get their corn in liquor as a writer knocking the styles we : form before using it for fuel, claim we want back. I :o: :o: Occasionally you see a woman with a face so hard that the rouge she wears looks like rust. to: A diplomat who is willing to , bff seen and not heard is not on'y a gocd diplomat but a prodigy. :o: A trade journal says, "Your honey will vbe worth more next year." Thanks, we will stick to her. :o: Films are being shown in 1,600 theaters in America and some one eats peanuts in the same number. :o: - "How can a man keep his wife's hancjs out of his pockets?" asks a subscriber. You might try holding them tenderly, now and then, just like you used to before marriage. Also, give her a little spending mon ey once in a while, and don't growl about it. c "It don't take a man long to bag his pants r at;; the knees, and to make a' finely tailored suit look thoroughly disrepu table that's th man . of it." avers Dainty Dortby. But she goes on to explain that the man who is making use of our cleaning, steaming and pressing services is keep ing his rtothes in much more presentable condition than when he got acquainted with us. And It doesn't cost much, either. 23 Goods Called for and Delivered EE PHONE 166 W- OPPOSITE , PEE , YEAR IN ADVANCE It must be awful to be too poor to need an operation. -:o:,- Lift and the world will lift you. Lean and down you go. rot- Ex-Emperor Carl had better keep out of America until the New York writers' strike is settled. :o: Russia wants to pay her debts and be recognized; but who could rec ognize a dettless Russia? :o: Mohammedan Sunday comes on Friday, putting them two days ahead of us in their golf. :oi Harding is always coining new words. Someone gave him a 'possum and he calls it an oppossum. :o: You can now buy three German marks for a cent. However, we have plenty of waste paper in this coun try. :o: And in order to make your neigh bors" Thanksgiving day truly happy one, why not return the lawn mow er or ice cream freezer. -:o:- It might be a good idea for Uncle Sam to take all the unfinished bat- jtleships of the allied nations as col lateral for the debt they owe us. :o: The dove of peace may be cooing, but just now we are much more anx ious to hear the gobbling of a Thanksgiving yard. turkey in the back :o:- Scientista say that they are going j to eventually harness the rays of the sun and make them furnish us with vanneu neat, ana it suuuus uucauu;, so to speak. :o:- A burlesque skit entitled "Worry- ing" was presented at the movies the other night. We once knew a man who worried whether his ancestors would have liked him if they had been privileged to know him. :o: A way has been discovered to avert world bankruptcy. It is for the Unit ed States to but there, it doesn't matter what it is the United States' is to do. The point is that it is the United States that must do it. ! ;o: A press dispatch froni Jerusalem says that the mosquitoej are very bad in Palestine. We have searched the Bible from kiwer to kivver, and find nary a mention of mosquitoes. The pest must be an importation. :o: The controversy over the question of what was responsible for Ger many's defeat in the war has brok en out afresh in the German press. Anyway, they are making some pro gress toward the truth over there. It is now admitted that Germany was defeated. :o: A Kentucky rooster named in hon or of President Harding is an accom plished cigarette smoker. Well, they do say that Warren used to be one of the most accomplished poker play ers in Washington, and that he did . not mind taking a drink occasional ly, either. That rooster is true to form. j :o: j Don't you remember, how you used ! to stand around watching the fellow ' with cigarette stains on his fingers, i confident that he would soon drop !dead? And also don't you remember the yarn that saturated embers in 'the bottom of a pipe, if placed on a ; cat's tongue, would cause instant death. j ( i o ' This interest business is a great thing. For Illustration, somebody has j figured out that if China had put a j nickel in the bank when she first i became a nation she would now have $1,734,245,692,237.34. But it is pos sible that China didn't have the nickel, and maybe there were no banks. :o: France's national debt will be equal to $64,000,000,000 by the end of the year. That means she is mort gaged to the extent of 64 per cent of her national wealth. Our national debt is less than a tenth of national wealth. We are six times better off than France. This is consolation when worrying about our "problems." The hero of the next war will be the man who prevents It. :o: There is a destiny that shapes our'aro solidly behind every effort they end, tight-shoe them as we may. ' ;o: Prince of Wales is second cousin to the former crown prince of Ger many. :o: Germany will give France 20,000 swarms of bees. Now. who gets stung? :o: Why complain about thirty-cent corn? It makes just as good whisky as dollar corn. :o: Foch verifies the report that we had soldiers In France and congress may investigate. o.-o- , British miners are objecting to us ing forks in place of shovels. Ours don't get that hungry. :o: When the average man sits down nowadays to count his blessings he don't need an adding machine o:o Egyptians believe even to this day that every man has a ghost, says Professor Reisner of Harvard . :o: As a general rule, it is impossible for a woman to remain well-preserv ed if her husband stays pickled. :o: That anthropologist who says that blondes can never be beautiful ought to see the Jersey calf in our back yard. o:o Uenry Ford says that he no long er cares to bo a United States 'sen ator. That seems to make it about unanimous. :o: New York landlords have added to the rent a $10 charge for elevator service in apartment houses. A hold up for a ride up, so to speak. o:o Young man, when a girl chides you for bringing her a box of candy, and says you should not be so extrav agant, you may well go on and buy a marriage license and hire the preach er. :o: The archbishop of Montreal vig orously denounces present styles in women's dress. We were inclined to admire his bravery until we recalled the fact that he is not a married man. :o: War will not cease antil the causes are removed, - and "the causes are greed, selfishness, human ambition, and the desire for commercial su premacy. Scrapping battleships will not solve the problem. The greatest war in history has just been fought, and there was only one notable na val engagement. ro; Five times as many are killed and injured each year as die from natural causes, says the Aetna Life Insur ance company. It says 23 are acci dentally injured in the United States every minute. That's a total of 12, 000,000 accidental injuries a year, meaning that one in every nine of us is the victim of our own or some one else's carelessness yearly. :o: Honestly, we would like to devote more space to Gerty Farrar's divorce suit against Lou Tellegen, and Fat ty Arbuckle's trial for manslaughter, but so many Interesting things are happening nowadays that we just can't do it. Anyway, the evidence in Fatty's case has already been aired, and as for Gerty and Lou. they are no doubt guilty of all the things they are saying about each other. :o: Roy Haynes, the new prohibition commissioner at Washington thot he was not receiving sufficient credit for his efforts to enforce the Vol stead act, so he hired himself a press agent named Cuneo, whose duty It was to exploit the achievements of Mr. Haynes. As a result, Mr. Haynes was so much in the limelight that it made Commissioner Blair, of the in ternal revenue department, exceed ingly jealous, so he cut Cuneo's name from the payroll. Verily, Verily, pro hibition enforcement is a great game if you don't weaken. . , :o: THEY ALSO OPPOSE WAR. Some cynical newspaper writer during the past weeks has asserted that the chief opposition to the dis armament program would come from munition, powder factories, steel manufacturers, and others engaged in producing the' materials used in war, because of the money loss they would suffer by the establishment of peace among nations. This sophistry was refuted in an address Friday night by Charles M. Schwab before the American Iron and Steel Institutes at which Marshal Foch was present. In conclusion Mr. Schwab said: ' . "Nothing could contribute more to the ultimate and permanent pros perity and happiness of the world than the conclusion of agreements between- the great nations of the world which eliminate war and the cause of war. "And, so, let us say . to the men 'gathered in Washington, let us go lout from this gathering of men of I the steel and iron industry, that we can make which will hasten the com ing of the time when war shall be no more. ii disarmament inflicts a money loss upon us, the American iron and steel industry will accept it willing ly and gladly. We will do bo not in a spirit of mere idealism and self-sacrifice, but in the belief that the greatest permanent, material pros perity would be brought about by the concentration of the energies of mankind upon constructive activi ties; upon means for well-being, and not for. the destruction of civiliza tion." Great manufacturers like the Schwabs and Du Ponts have never relied for their prosperity on one form of Industry. Furthermore, ' they have shown in many ways that they are just 'as patriotic and peace-lov ing as any other class of citizens, and the sentiment expressed in Mr. Schwab's address will find an echo In the mind of every American man ufacturer whose products have here tofore been devoted to the use of war. :o: SUCCESS AND CLOTHES Perhaps you can't afford expensive clothes. But you can afford clean o"nes. You know, you say, that your clothes are not part of you. But other people don't. They look at you in the clothes you wear. They picture you, when they think of you afterward, In those clothes. If the clothes are slovenly, they consider you slovenly. If the clothes are smart, they con sider that you look "the goods." Henry Ford, Thomas Edison and a few other celebrities are not partic ular about their clothes. But those men are made. If they had their lives to live over again, in these modern times, they would probably take a different view. If you look prosperous, people are likely to think you are prosperous. If you dress like a failure, they will consider you a failure, and fail ures get' few chances. Clothes, of course, are not every thing, but they are a great deal. It is not the coat that makes the man, but it Is the coat that gets the man hls-.charge. By and by, when you have "arriv ed" you may be able to indulge a taste for dressing. But you can't at the start . Dress . inexpensively if you like. but in good taste. Avoid shabbiness and avoid flashiness at the same time. The man with the loud checks and the glass jewelry is Just as repellent as the man with dandruff on his coat collar. People drens better and better, in appearance at least, as the years go by. You must look clean and prosper ous if you want to impress people. And if you don't impress people you will never get anywhere. The binding doesn't make the book, but an attractive cover will help sell It. 9 THE FAILURE OF THE TREATY It is a truism to say that "the fail ure of the Versailles conference" is but a phrase. While there is no def inite means of causing everyone to agree that such conference is a suc cess or that It is a failure, the fact remains that the provisions of the Versailles treaty are in active op eration and that document is the charter of the new European order. From the standpoint of J. M. Keynes, an economist, the peace con ference failed. In the mind of Ber nard Baruch, another economist, it was a success. Similiarly, one set of statesmen have faith in it; another set aversion to it. Poland, Jugo-Slav- ia and all other countries liberated under the Versailles and subsidiary treaties esteem it their badge of lib erty. Germany and Austria look upon It as their certificate of military de feat. . And so it goes. There is no doubt that many sec tions of the Treaty are subject to val id and cogent criticism. It is an im perfect document. But it Is-serving an indepensible function in a thous and ways, of which the collection of reparations is a striking example. The Treaty in the end, like one of its waiters, must play for the approv al of posterity. Until the machinery of the treaty breaks down, until it no longer con tinues to do what it purports to do. however, it should be borne in mind that "the failure of the Versailles treaty" is not a translation of facts into words, but a phrase which was originated by captions and partisan critics and has crept insidiously in to general currency. :o: Banish that awful insomnia that worries you every night. Let your atscn ho mat fill and rpfreshiner. Tan- lac does it. F. G. Fricke & Co. V WW i WW WABASH HAPPENINGS Lewis Dehning sawed wood Tues day. L. R. Stanley autoed to Lincoln Monday. A number of the farmers have fin ished picking their corn. Mrs. Theo Miller was a Lincoln passenger Wednesday evening. Cleny Underwood and Monie Syl vester spent Sunday at the Reege home. William, Harry and Meta Dehning helped at the Lewis Dehning home Tuesday. Miss Olive Baker spent Friday evening with her friend, Miss Ella Gerbeling. Word was received here that Wm. Edgar of Lincoln, left Tuesday morn ing for California. Rev. and Mrs. Miller spent Satur day and Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ollie Allis. Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Caygill and family spent Sunday afternoon at the home of Mr. Caygill's mother. Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Jackman and family spent Sunday afternoon- at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Jack- man. Mary Jackman spent last Tuesday evening with Ella Gerbeling. On Wednesday morning Mary and Ella went to Lincoln. You will find live news from all sections of Cass county in the Semi Weekly Journal. $2 will bring it to you for an entire year. Better sub scribe now. Mrs. R. H. Lawton and grand- children left Wednesday evening for Lincoln. The grandchildren will spend Thanksgiving with their grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rhymer. Mr. M. V. Wood, Mrs. Warren Richard, Mrs. Wm. Langhorst, Mr. m t r -ww i l ; l ji . aim ivirs. n. . oerueimg aim uLtugn- ter. j. ii., wunam .Murnn, cnarne Clapp. Ira Bosworth and II H. SnuirpR Htfprtiipri tlift funpral of T. M Ward in Elmwood Thursday after- A number of ladies came in and surprised Mrs C. S. Allis Thursday aiiernooii. 11 ueins ner ; u-;Etate 1 nose present were iurs ayni, .urs. Wilson. Mrs. Mitchell. Mrs. Bos worth, Mrs. Lawton and Mrs. Lar.g horst. A very delightful afternoon was spent. Mr. and Mrs. Ira Bosworth cele brated their fiftieth wedding anm- - a. 1 -xt 1. n 1. the home of their daughter, Mrs. T. eu 10 an itie tuuureu aim children Those Present were Mr. Ira Bosworth: Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs Ben Jenkins and family lock; Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Jones and versary eaiuruay, uvemuer x.in, si;tn ,iV,:nn r.m n mmnlo hktnrv nt family of Eagle; Mr and Mrs. C. L Ohm; Mr. and Mrs. T. E. C oloert and family and James and Lester Bos-ith worth, of Wabash. The children pre-' sented to each of their parents a gold ring. They also received several pieces of gold coin given by many friends and neighbors who called in the afternoon. 1 lirnOII COO limnri A IflLnUlLLOO JUiJuLi One Who Shows No Favor A merciless judge is Father Time. Before him the weak and the want ing go to the wall. Only tlie truth ! can stand. For years the following; ajso was planned a3 an educational statement from a Plattsmouth resi-;an(j co-operative movement and con dent has withstood this sternest ofjtained a strong program of social all tests. activities. In fact, the records show, Theo. Starkjohan. retired farmer, tbs grange in that day usually was Locust and 9th streets, Plattsmouth, j the social center of the neighborhood says: "For several years Doan's Kid-jin many of Nebraska's counties, es- ney Pills have been used in our fam- lly lor Kianey trouoies ana DacKaene, and they have proven to De all mat is claimed for them. Whenever myjwnat might be styled a platform to J back feels a little lame and my Kiel-; neys are not acting as they should, rather it is described as a slogan, and I take Doan's Kidney Pills for a few j rea(j something to this effect: "Gee days and they never fail to do nie Rirj Gf the Middleman and Buying good. Doan's can't be equalled and , Agencies." Many stores, elevators anyone having kidney trouble should ! avid small factories were purchased take them for they are very re- h3V tne Nebraska grange in all parts liable." (Statement given February; Gf its foundation, during which it 23, 1916.) j experienced its greatest growth, OVER FOUR YEARS LATER, or practically all of these co-operative-on May 12, 1920, Mr. Starkjohan ; iy owned establishments went bank added: "The cure I had from Doan's; rupt, or were absorbed by private in Kidney Pills several years ago has : dividuals who continued to operate been a lasting one. It has been anthem, many yet today, couple of years since I used or had Continued hard times, during need of a kidney medicine and my. which credit was broken up, lack of kidneys are now good and healthy. ' good business judgment, the failure I still have faith in Doan's and if ( of co-operation between members and ever I should need a kidney remedy ; the advent of politics are attributed X 1 11 1 X DUUU1U LCI lUllll M U I 111. 60c, at all dealers. Foster-Mil burn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. PLEASANT FAMILY REUNION From Saturday's Dally. The home of Mr. and Mrs Chas. H. Warner was the scene of a very . pleasant family gathering on Thurs- j aay wneu ineir cuiiureu anu grauu- educational an dsocial organization children met under the parental roof it WOulrt'have prospered. George II. for the observance of Thanksgiving Simmons, one time secretary of the day and for a reunion of the imme-j Nebraska grange, writes from Cliica diate members of the family. The go that ne ha3 forgotten most of the main feature of the day was the bignigtory of its organization, but the Thanksgiving dinner prepared by the fact that politics and a demoralized ladies of the family and which was condition Gf finances brought it3 one such as only can be found in the! downfall. And so with other promin old homes. The members of the fam-! ent members of the grange in its ily enjoying the event were: Will early day they all declare that pol Warga and wife and Miss Gretchen jtjcs and contributing factors ruined Warner, Roy Howard, wife and child- tae organization ren. Donald and Barbara Ellen Leon- Among the 'First Charters ard Terryberry. wife and children, Am " tue fJrst oranges to be Catherine and Wallace; Will Weten- Tsontained ivolume 1 Kau,p wn ami cmiu.eu. v in.iu and Frances; Wallace Warner wife and son, Charles H. Warner, II; : ml.o isjiu, uit, orwi i.i iooco x-i cine quu xjciu ..u..i.w ""- the (parents, Mr. and Mrs. C.-H. War ner. "I Got Real Mad when I Lost My Setting Hen," writes Mrs. Hanna, N. J. " YVTicn I went Into our barn and found my best setter dead I got real mad. One package of KaU Snap ki Jed six big rata. Poultry raisprs should use Rat-Snap. Come in cakes, no mixing. No smell from dead rats. Three sizes. Prices. 35c 65c $1-25. Sold and guaranteed by Bestor& Swatek Weyrich & Had- rabai F. G. Fricke & Co. I Notice to My headquarters hereafter will be at the ft lam still selling Chevrolet Motor Cars and Trucks and will be able to take care off all my old customers as well as new ones. All repair work and supplies can be had at the O. K. Garage or phone me at my residence, NO. 502 .7 W-. V3 CHEVROLET DEALER sRAKGE RECORDS PLACED ON FILE Six Volumes Contain Much Nebraska History in the Early Days Go to Historical Society f A The original records of the appli cations and organization of the na ,. , . x,oev tua an plicatiors being those signe(l by 1 , , - . . lc - .v. 1070 ri d m r r onrn "rar n-o in i tip kihih 1 1 Jin viic 111 rt affiliation - LIU U H1C y 1UU KJ L LUC feiaiis-VJ v a j frrna-f h li r tn 1 ft 7 O nrp thp IntpKt j contrlbutions to be filed with the historical society , Tfa records were .ent from the national secretary at Washington, r.nd Addison E. Sheldon, secretary of I the society, announces that they are I the first of the original records and history of Nebraska agricultural or ganizations which the rociety plans ,Bll v-v,r3liU;, farmprS' nnranizatinns. j The record? are contained in six 6iJiiu-.un,;1.a lf OVT,,,tfirt thot h remaimler will ! ready rcceiv.ed 8 follow as those al- are copied. The society ; iiLtciViito uuasuai iiitui col 1 v. 1. iicc re in writinfr the location, date and ( E1,mbers ECeking charter, as well as , , WMpir Mr. Sheldon . ta . ha vaW in fnVl,n.r nlul inrntinfr thft Pnrlv set- t, f ?;enrasi.a aT1(1 thosfi who werG instigators of the grange as well as other organizations that followed. Receipt of these volumes has caus ed the historical society to delve back into the early '70's and review the history of this organization, which. in that period, is described as the most powerful and influential of any of the early farmers' organizations. Founded to Obtain Relief The organization originally was fo-inded to obtain agricultural relief through a svstem of organization. It pecially among those in the south eastern part of the state. The organization did not adopt' obtain the benefits of organization. by observers of the grange as rea sons for the near death of the or ganization. The advent of politics spelled the temporary ruin of the Nebraska grange, early members of the order write the historical society. A. M. Walling of David City, declares in a paper contributed to the history be ing compiled, that politics ruined the ! grange, whereas had it remained an records, was that of Harlan January 11. 1872. with V"' tJL " , t d p 0 0r A. C KODbins. master, ana 1 . u. ur 1 cnofo- Th o rh-jrtsr rvn- tained seventeen names. This much is told by the historical society of the grange's rapid rise and fall In Nebraska. The history also will show its present status and its indications for the future. Statistics upon the growth of the organization show that in 1875, Ne braska had about 1,000 granges with a membership of 30,000 men and women. In 1S95 it was comparative- ,jV extinct, from a standpoint of the 1875 figures. The membership reviv- the Public! ed again 1893 only to lose half its gain in 1894. The period from 1898 to 1907, shows a new spirit in growth beating back to -where it was in 1877 only to drop again in 1909. Since that time steady advances are shown. The national membership in the or ganization today is near what it was in 1875, the year of its greatest mem bership 858,000 according to of ficial figures. Paul H. Roberts and wife of Ce dar Creek who were 'here to visit with relatives and friends for a short time departed this morning for Om aha where they will spend the day and where Mr. Roberts will attend the Shriner ceremonial. For Sale White Rock cockrels, $1.50 If pur chased soon. Mrs. Roy Stewart, Alvo, Nebraska. FOR SALE Poland China pigs $6 each. ' Phone 3513 A. 10 O. weeks old. - d&w RAMGE. Five dollars reward for Informs tion leading to recovery of strayed, two-year-old, branded Hereford steer. ' SEARL S. DAVIS, 2wks-w Murray, Neb. For the common everyday ills of mankind there is nothing to equal Tanlac. F. G. Fricke & Co. - Lose anything T Find anything f Try a Journal want-ad. 0'l'K K OP SALR VXDEIl A CHATTEL. MORTGAGIf Xoth-. tu of Is hereby given that by vlr a chattel morteaee, bearinar date July 5th, 1921, upon one Overland automobile, model and year 1918, a coijy of which niortpase is on file in the office of the County Clerk of Cass county. Nebraska, the fame having: leen filed on July 6th, 1SI21, at 2:45 o'clock p. m., executed and delivered ly L4. P. Terryberry to the Pennsyl vania Jiubber Company, to secure the payment of $715.00 and interest, upon which there is now due principal and interest the sum of $734.00, default having bce-n made in the payment of the sum secured by said mortgage, and proceedings having been had at law in the County Court of Cass county, Ne braska, on the note secured by said mortgapre to the end that Judgment In the sum of $734.00 was rendered there on and that an execution issued upon said judgment was returned by the Nonstable wholly unsatisfied, and said mortgage by its terms providing for a public sale of said automobile upon such default. Therefore, the Pennsylvania Rubber Co:npany. mortgagee, will, on the 6th day of December, 1921. at the hour of 11 o'clock in the forenoon at the gar ng. of John Bauer on Vine street in l'lattsmouth. Cass county, Nebraska, Fell the property described In said mortgage, viz: One Overland Automobile, model and year 1918, engine No. 8H21017, at pub lic auction to the highest bidder for cash. Said sale will remain open for bids one hour. Date: November 12th, 1921. PENNSYLVANIA RUBBER CO.. Mortgagee. , By JOHN M. LETT) A, nl4-3w. Its Attorney. XOTICE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. V- Orace McCardle, Plaintiff, vs.-Rojr H. V" McCardie, Defendnnt. To lioy H. McCardle: You are hereby notified that on the ISth dav of July, A. I). 1821, Urace McCardie riled a petition against you in the District Court of Casa county. Nebraska, the object and prayer of which are to obtain a divorce from you ' on the ground that you, being of suffi- ; cient abilltv to provide suitable main- tenance for i"antoniv "and for lier, ana your cimu, tne mai'-iage, nave grossly, d cruelly refused and ne glected so to do. and for the custody of the minor child, the issue of naid marriage, to-wit: Clarence Edward Mc Cardie, aged ten months. You are required to answer said pe tition on or before Monday, the 12th Oav of December. A. D. 1921. This notice in given in pursuance of an order of the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska. . GRACE McCARDIE. By Plaintiff. CHAS. E. MARTIN. . on-4w. er Attorney. SOTICK TO CRKDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Ellen J. Smith, deceased. To the creditors of said estate: You re hereby notified. That I will Kit at the County Court room In Platts mouth, in said county, on the 25th day of November, A. D. 1921, and on the Zlth dav ot February, A. D. 192J, at (i:00 o'clock a. m. each day, to receive and examine all claims against said Cf tatc, with a view to their adjustment and allowance. The time limited for. the presentation of claims against saiU eitate is three months from the 25llT duv of November, A. D. 1921, and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 25th day of No vember, 1921. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court, this 2th day of October, 1921. ALLEN J. BEESON. (Seal) 027-4 w. County Judge. 1 v 4 j r -v-r""-. ... . -