THURSDAY, JANUARY 25, 123. yULTTdoirni ssci FAQB TOTHL CTe plattsmoutb lournal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA Eatered at Poatofflce, Plattamouth. Neb., as second-class mall matter R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE THE FRUIT OF THE SPIRIT The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy; peace, long suffering. gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temper ance; against such there is no law. Galatians v, 22 and 23. :o:- Life and them. hash is what you make -:o:- Throw them out, Charley, throw them out. :o: Civilize and civil lies are part of the product. " ;o: The best nation in the world explanation. is All the Herrin defendants are ac quitted of murder. :o: Perhaps Europe is after the record for a non-stop tight. :o: Since 1918 prices have dropped 10 times and gone up 11. :o: Europe's one prayer seems? to be "Forgive us our debts." :o: All who have ready money are not always ready to part with it. :o: Don't you know, that our natural inclinations are always wrong. :o: ' Europe seems to be capable of wag ing peace as energetically as it wag ed war. :o: Europe's dream of peace won't come true as long as she is sleeping on her arms. :o: One of the problems of life is to get our neighbors to love us as we love ourselves. -:o:-- Only a few more months until time to worry about how funny your new Ftraw hat will look. The middleman seems to get all the pay, while the helpers right and left do all the work. -:o:- Otto Kahn asks America to adopt his plan to ease the allied debts; and, perhaps, we Otto if we Kahn. :o: Until he got into the movies Will Hays probably never realized what a clean wholesome sport politics is. :o: There is no room for the middle man anywhere in the road, wheujou talk about governmental positions. :o: Anyhow, with the Franco-German situation as it is, nobody can blame Premier Bonar Law from looking so. :o: '' The farmers might as well lock up and move to the city; congress failed to vote an appropriation for free seed. :o: ' When a fellow begins to realize that all the nuts are not in one party he is bordering on the age of discre tion. -o:o- Ilenry Ford makes $264,926.41 a day. We are glad we are not Henry. We could never have nerve enough to take a day off. o.o In certain wa-3 on certain days, this old world is getting better and better. On other days you wouldn't notice it so much. :o: Marriage by radio is a clever scheme. It keeps the groom from cluttering up the premises where the ceremony takes place. How to reduce freight rates and at the same time increase railroad wages is an easy problem for some of our modern statesmen. o:o The literary test undoubtedly has its disadvantages. The more literary some of our. immigrants are the worse anarchists they appear to be come. -:o: An exchange wants to know what we would do if every time we put our hand in our pocket we should find a $10 bill. That's easy, we'd take off the other fellow's trousers and apol ogize for having them without his knowledge. t :o: We picked up an ancient story the other day. It was written by Rad cliffe more than eighty years ago and in one paragraph the heroine is de scribed as Kitting on the. terrace drinking molten moonshine. If Agnes were to indulge this luxury today she would either be pinched by the police or claimed by the undertaker. Every now and then all of us get so mad- we tell the truth. :o: The postoffice fight goes bravely on, and guesses are numerous. :o: This winter is half gone and much to our surprise very few of us have frozen to death yet. :o: The people would enjoy the sum mer weather in January if the streets were sprinkled. :o: Conditions could be worse. There are always more troubles we haven't than troubles we have. -:o: We can't complain of the weather. lit is just as fine as it could possibly be at this time of the year. :o: Showing how the world changes, a New Yorker bit another man's nose off to spite the other man's face. :o: In Akron, Ohio, a pup of three months saved nine lives. No telling how many a grown dog would have saved. :o: " Jackie Coogan is making a million dollars a year, which reminds us that the income tax man has already sent us a blank. :o: Keep whiskey in the house, teach the children its virtues, and when they are grown maybe they will be bootleggers. -:o:- Something tells us that Grover Bergdoll is hastening home on the same boat Big Bill Haywood is try ing to catch. :o: Some counties in Missouri are cer tainly very hard pressed for repre sentatives in the legislature when they elect men who do not believe in the public schools. :o: i This controversy over who is the richest American will have to stop somewhere. So why not say that Rockefeller & Ford is the richest American firm? That's what it is. isn't it? :o: Washington still predicts congress will get through with its work March 4 and then go home until next December. Will the psycho-analysts kindly tell us what suppressed oratory? happens from :o: Half a dozen trained nurses have been discharged by a hcspital in Pa ducah because they had bobbed their hair. Why is it that when so many girls bob their hair, they a'so seem to bob their employer's b reins. :o: The Turks have begun hanging Christians on a large scale, explain ing that the persons hanged were Christians who were prisoners and tried to escape. Aren't the last seven words of the explanation superflu ous? : :o: In case you are not clear about the distinction between French and Ger man artistic methods, as exemplified in their music, painting, writing, etc., compare the invasion of Ger many in 1923 with that of France in 1914. 'or- Mine Paquin declares that there is .,tu,u6Urwu.uMu.uBuBu .,i umT. it seems to take a Paquin gown to set ii on. it wnite nair means beauty ine poorest ana numniest might pos- sess it in time, yet it is evident that I i . . ... I many of our loveliest ladies are glad to swap white heavy boot. for henna and pay -o:o- Representative Whitecotton of Paris. Mo., wants to nail up all the school houses In Missouri, and so stated. the other day in the legisla- ture. A man who makes such a state ment as that should be drummed out of the state house, and sent home with a tag on him. advising his home people to pen him up and not let down the bars anymore. :o: VTVTTn y i REX YOUNG General Auctioneer Live Stock Real Estate Personal Property PHONE 314 Plattsmouth, Nebraska Call at my Expense f-S-y"I fr 1-2 I Ijr ,II"2 Ia ,I S ! I SXAtJOHTtRllto HTTS$AND3 Up at Aberdeen a woman la in jail on the charge of poisoning her htis band. Bail has been denied, and (he district attorney says he is going to send the woman ot the gallows,, if possible. .Commendation of this declaration cannot be too cordial. This promis cuous shooting and poisoning of hus bands, which Is becoming epidemic throughout the nation, ought to be stopped. Scarcely a day passes in this alleged land of the free and home of the brave that some husband isn't sent to his heavenly home by an an- gered or jealous wife. It is really quite the mode to bump off a frac tious mate in this fashion, and gives the self made widow no end of pub licity and endless offers of matri mony from other men who seem to hanker to offer themselves as gun fodder. The comment is usually mad?. when some fair criminal has laid her rival low in the dust, that she show ed poor judgment in not killing her husband instead. It is so very diffi cult to secure convictions against a woman for slaying a mere man, espe cially a mere husband. The concensus of opinion is that he probably was not fit to live anyway, and more pow er to the lady for ridding the state of an undesirable citizen. It is doubtful if all these killings are actuated by true love. Mostly they are caused by the deadly fear of seeing the meal ticket snatched away and the probability of having to go forth and toil eight hours a day to earn the requisite money for meat and crackers. A contributing element is outraged vanity. When a younger and prettier woman caromes across a wires line or vision on her husband's arm, her self love is cut to the core, and primeval instincts of revenge well up in her heart. A better system than going in for (heavy artillery would be for the lady to secure a divorce, and promptly marry some one else, to prove to the recreant one what a treasure he had lost. The courts of this nation are generous in conrerring decrees on aggrieved wives, that there is small excuse for a woman to have recourse to murder to rid herself of a Don Juanish husband. Not to mention that divorce is cheaper, and less I fraught with dangerous possibilities. a. aivorce decree rarely costs more than $25. whereas a first class mur der trial costs several thousands. The economic waste is something awful. - :o: POOR WALLACE REID! Poor Wallace Reid! Clever, genial. lovable, what a career he might have had. How much laughter and delight he might have brought to the world, what satisfaction to his 'family and his friends. And now all those bright prospects lie in ruins. He was weak, we say. He contract ed the drug habit. He couldn't help himself. It wasn't his fault that he went wrong. Fast friends In the first place were to blame. He only wanted to be a good fellow. Well, and If it were all true, there is still the tragedy of the wasted life. There i3 still the broken home, the dead hopes. But couldn't he have helped him self? Not perhaps toward the end. But at the beginning? At any particular time we are much less free than we suppose. Our range of choice is limited. What we can do today depends on what we are today; and what we are today de pends on what we did yesterday and the day before. It depends on our character which is the sum of our habits. I won't count this time," says Rip Van Winkle as he takes his dr,nki But as Winiam James, the psychologist, pointed out, Nature counts this time. counts it in the crnnvps In the hrain that mpan the maklnff of hablts Th, . That is why little lapses, little turns from the straight path, are so tremendously important. They all help to make a weakness in charac ter, so that it crumbles under strain. Early when Wallace Reid began to go wrong his friends thought it did n't msttpf. Rarh HrnHrttnti vna n ,ittIe thing. What if he did go the pace? But the time came when it mattered horribly. The character he built could not stand up. Another thing. In those early days he thought he was having a good time. The path he took seemed the rasiift war Rut It wna Tint The .VV"Ilmorai CO(je i8 not something arbi may be dodged if we are slick. It era- uuuics iuo cii: i iiit i experience oi ine race. We cannot get away from it Look about you at the men and worn en you know. Did not Browning state the exact truth when he said; It's wiser being good than bad? Kansas City Star ; --.'-:o: Books for every member of the family at the Journal office. Some of us hav our toutie in our souls instead of our voices, says Da rid Gibson, dean ot business writers So, in the last analysis, we're all great singers. AH we lack is the pow er of expression a certain mechani cal arrangement of flesh in the throat. The real you is revealed in what you like and appreciate, rather than what vrm can An We're all singers, "we're aUda-qc ers, we're all artists. Maybe all singers, cannot paint a picture. But our souls have the ar tistlc sense the desire to paint, also appreciation of art when we view it at the museum. Flattering to the vanity, but true. All of us are inwardly clever, ar tistic shrewd, wise and good. But only a few of us can express what we feel. The rest "can't get it out." It's like a cork in a bottle. You are reminded of this when a friend, with a voice like filing a saw, tries to con vey to you a melody he has heard and which he is carrying in his soul. He has the message, all right, but he can't get it across. Wisdom resides in every soul. So called knowledge and education merely are spades with which we un cover our hidden wisdom. The un covering, we call "developing." But the real power is there all the time, latent, dormant, otherwise there wouldn't be anything to develop. We all nave evil streaks fa our makeup. The people we call good are the ones with the ability to keep their evil natures suppressed locked up. Others haven't yet found the key. so the evil runs at large. Good lies buried, dormant, in our makeup, same as evil. It also has to be developed. A more difficult job in some cases then others. Often It takes a heavy blow sor row or misfortune to bring out our better selves, our finer emotions. And sometimes the same sorrow or misfor tune sets loose the evil nature of the good. The quaities, good or bad, were there all the time waiting to be brought forth. Theoretically you may disagree with some of this reasoning. But you cannot disagree with the great truth lurking in the background. That truth is this: In the makeup of near ly every human there lies buried tre mendous powers and marvelous abil ities. To bring these out is the prob lem of life, of success,, of happiness, of destiny. The Real You Is a vast storehouse of treasures waiting to be opened. :o: A MILLION EXILES More than a; million men, women and children are to be driven into exile to fulfill the terms of the Lau sanne convention. All the Greek resi dents in Turkey except the large col ony In Constantinople are to be de ported into harassed Greece, while the Moslems of Greece, mostly resi dents in Greek Macedonia, will be sent into Turkey. So vast a move ment of people has not been recorded in modern history. Ancient kings occasionally cap tured entire nations and sent them Into exile and slavery. Modern con querors have been more humane. To send a race into exile is abhorrent to all humane considerations. It is a punishment only less severe than wholesale butchery. The Turks, however, claim hu mane motives. They say that as long as Greeks remain in Turkey there will be dissensions and massacres. Making Turkey an utterly Greekless land is held to be the only way to assure Turkish peace. Until recently there has been a very large Greek population in Tur key. Thousands of Greeks have fled since the Turkish triumphs in Asia Minor. Greece is already crowded with fugitives. It is estimated that 600,000 more will have to be housed and fed by the perplexed Greek state. The Moslems who are to be cast out of Greece will fare better. Their number, all told, is only about 400,- 000, and the Turkish realm is spa cious. Whatever sufferings may be en tailed by the reportation the Greeks of Turkey are less fortunate than the Armenians. The Greeks have a Hel lenic homeland to which they can flee. If the Armenians are similarly deported they will literally be a peo- pie without a country. There is. to be sure, a small 1 Armenian soviet 'republic" under the domination of Moscow, but patriotic Armenians are unwilling to take refuge under Trottky's wing. If Armenians are driven out of Turkey they will be scattered to the- four corners of the earth. It is a distressing prospect and a discouraging manifestation of he remoteness of the fraternity and jus tice which many who fought in the World war thought had been won for human ,ind. - . -;o: Journal want adi pay. Try them. In the County Court of Cast ooun ty, Nebraska. State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. - - To the heirs and to all persons in terested In the estate of Lee C. Sharp, deceased: On reading the petition of Hulda Sharp praying that the instrument filed in this court on the 6th day of January,' 1923, and purporting to be the last will and testament of the said deceased, may be proved and al lowed and recorded as the last will and testament of Lee C. Sharp, de ceased; that said instrument be ad mitted to probate, and the adminis tration of said estate be granted to Peters Trust Company, 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 January, A. D. 1923, at 10 o'clock a. ni., 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 that the hearing thereof be given to all persons interested in said matter by publishing a copy of this Order in the Plattsmouth Journal, a semi weekly newspaper printed in said county, for three successive weeks prior to said day of hearing. Witness my hand and seal of said Court, this 6th day of January, A. D. 1923. ALLEN J. BEESON, (Seal) Jll-3w. County Judge NOTICE OF SUIT TO QUIET TITLE. In the District Court of the Coun ty of Cass, Nebraska. August W. Cloidt et al, Plaintifls, vs. Airreu rnomson et ai, ueiena- ants. To the defendants Alfred Thom son; Mrs. Alfred Tnonison. real name unknown; Alfred Thompson; Mrs. Alfred Thompson, real name un known; Ellen A. Steel; Steel, real name unknown; Wm. L. Browne, trustee; the successors and assigns of Wm. L. Browne, trustee, real names unknown; John Williams; Mrs. John Williams, real name un known; Mary Ann Pronger; Pronger, real name unknown; James Jordan; Mrs. James Jordan, real name unknown; the heirs, devisees, legatees, personal representatives and all other persons interested In the estates of Alfred Thomson; Mrs. Alfred Thomson. real name un- nown; Alfred Thompson; Mrs. Al fred Thompson; real name unknown; Ellen A. Steel; Steel, real name unknown; John Williams; Mrs. John Williams, real name un- nown; Mary Ann Pronger; Pronger, real name unknown; James Jordan; Mrs. James Jordan, real name unknown; Samuel H. Moer; Homer-Goodwin; Joel Solomon and E. H. Eaton, real name unknown, each deceased, real names unknown, and all persons having or claiming any interest in and to all of Lot ten (10) and the east half (E) of Lot nine, (9) all in Block twenty-seven, (27) in. the City of Plattsmouth, Cass county, Nebraska, real names unknown: You and each of you are hereby notified that August W. Cloidt et al, Plaintiffs, filed a petition and com menced an action in the District Court of Cass county. Nebraska, on the 20th day of January, 1923, against you and each of you, the ob ject, purpose and prayer of which is to obtain a decree of court quieting the title to Lot ten (10) and the east half (Ea) of Lot nine, (9) all in Block twenty-seven, (27) in the City of Plattsmouth, Cass .county, Nebraska, as against you and each of you and for such relief as may be just and equitable. You and each of you are further notified that you are required to an swer said petition on or before Mon day, the 5th day of March, 1923, or the allegations therein contained will be taken as true and a decree rendered in favor of plaintiffs and against" you and each of you, accord ing to the prayer of said petition. Dated this 20th day of January. A. D. 1923 AUGUST W. CLOIDT, ANDREW O. MOORE, JOHN J. CLOIDT, Plaintiffs. W. A. Robertson, Their Attorney. j22-4w NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Wil liam M. Curyea, 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 27th day of February, 1923. and the 28th day of May, 1923, at 10 o'clock a. m. eacii day, to receive and ex amine ail 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 22nd day of January, A. D. Jr923. and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 22ud day of Jan uary, 1923. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court, this 22nd day of January, 1923. ALLEN J. BEESON, (Seal) j25-4w. County Judge. Let me explain my long time land bank loan. Also money at five per cent. Searl S. Davis, Plattsmouth State Bank Bldg. j25-8sw. Stationery and magazines at the Journal office. DR. H. G. LEOPOLD Osteopathic Physician t I V Eye Tested and Glasses ) Fitted t; Union Block Pbons PLATTSMOUTH ' V WANTED TO TRADE FOR MULES I have five full blooded Shorthorn cows which I wish to trade for good mules. v WM. HEEBNER, J15-2sw. Manley, Neb. NOTICE OF SUIT TO QUIET TITLE In the District Court of the Coun ty of Cass, Nebraska. Emmons J. Richey, Plaintiff, vs. William B. Warbritton et al, Qfe fendants. ' To the defendants William B. War britton; Mrs. Warbritton, real name unknown: Rosan Decker; Decker, real name unknown; John Ross; Susan Ross; A. E. Alexander, real name unknown; 1 Alexan der, real name unknown; Lafayette Nuckolls: Mrs. Lafayette nuckohs, real name unknown; Thomas w. Newman: Mrs. Thomas W. Newman, real name unknown: Edward E Jones: Mrs. Edward E. Jones, real name unknown; the heirs, devisees, legatees, personal representatives and all other persons interested in the estates of William B. Warbrit ton: Mrs. 'William B. Warbritton, real name unknown; Rosan Decker; Decker, real name unknown; John Ross; Susan Ross; A. E. Alex ander, real name unjenown; Alexander, real name unknown; La fayette Nuckolls; Mrs. Lafayette Nuckolls, real name unknown; Thomas W. Newman; Mrs. Thomas W. Newman, real name unknown; Edward E. Jones; Mrs. Edward E. Jones, real name unknown, each de ceased, real names unknown, and all persons having or claiming any In terest in Lots seven, (7) eight (8) and nine (9) and the west thirty feet of Lot ten, (10) and that part of Lot ten (10) described as follows: Commencing at a point on the north line of said Lot 10, 11 feet west of the northeast corner thereof; thence west on said lot line 3 feet, thence south 99 feet, 4 inches, thence east 3 feet, thence north 99 feet and 4 inches, to the place of beginning, all being in Block thirty-six. (36) in the City of Plattsmouth, Cass coun ty, Nebraska, real names unknown: You and each of you are hereby notified that Emmons J. Richey, plaintiff, filed a petition and com menced an action . in the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska, on the 20th day of October, 1922, again st you and each of you, the object, purpose and prayer of which is to obtain a decree of court quieting the title to Lots seven. (7) eight (8) and nine, (9) and the west thirty feet of Lot ten, (10) and that part of Lot ten (10) described as follows: Com mencing at a point on the north line of said Lot ten (10) 11 feet west of the northeast corner thereof, thence west on said lot line 3 feet, thence south 99 feet, 4 inches, thence east 3 feet, thence north 99 feet and 4 inches, to the place of beginning, all being in Block thirty-six, (36) in the City of Plattsmouth, Cass coun ty, Nebraska, as against you and each of you and for such relief as may be just and equitable. You and each of you are further notified that you are required to an swer said petition on or before Mon day, the 12th day of February, 1923, or the allegations therein contained will be taken as true and a decree rendered in favor of plaintiff and against 5-ou and each of you, accord ing to the prayer of said petition. Dated this 30th day of December A. D. 1922. EMMONS J. RICHEY. Plaintiff. W. A. ROBERTSON, jl-? Atty. for Plaintiff. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. By virtue of an Order of Sale is sued out of the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska, and in pur suance of a decree of said court, in &n action therein, indexed at Ap pearanee Docket , Number , Ex ecution Docket , Number wherein Merchants National Bank of Omaha, Nebraska, is plaintiff and Pollock Parmele, Louise Parmele, his wife, Charles C. Parmele, a widower. Will Jean. Marie Jean, his wife. Bank of Nehawka, a corporation, Gustave Philip Raschke, a single man, are defendants, I will at ten o clock a. m. on the 19th day of Feb ruary, 1923, at the south front door of the Court House of Cass county, Nebraska, in the City of Plattsmouth. Cass county, Nebraska, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, the following described real estate, to-wit: The west half of the south east quarter (W SEU) of Section thirty-four (34) in Township thirteen, (13) North Range twelve, (12) east of the 6th P. M.; the east half of the southwest quarter (K SW'J ) of Section thirty-four, (34) in Township thirteen. (13) North Range twelve, (12) east of the 6th P.-M. ; a strip of ground eight (8) rods wide off the east side of the northwest quarter (NWU) of the southwest quar ter (SWU) of Section thirty- four, (34) in Township thir teen, (13) North Range twelve, (12) east of the 6th P. M., in Cass county, Nebraska to satisfy the costs of the said, ac tion and increased and accruing costs; to satisfy the plaintiff's first Hen upon the said real estate In the sum of Six Thousand Eighty-nine and Eighteen One-Hundredths Dol lars ($6,089.18) with interesr.at ten per cent (10) per annum from date; to satisfy the plaintiff's second lien upon the said real estate in the sum of Eleven Thousand, Seven Hun dred Nineteen and Ninety-nine One Hundredths Dollars, ($11,719.99) wiiu interest at ten per cent (10) per annum from date, bringing the necessary to pay said debts and ex surplus, if any, into court to abide-censes further order of the court in thel premises; all as provided by said 'of order and decree; the said real es-' tate being levied upon and taken as the property of the said defendants. I Dated at Plattsmouth. Nebraska. this Sth day of January. 1923. C D. QUINTON, Sheriff, Cass County, Nebraska. LEGAL NOTICE In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. . State of Nebraska, County or To all persons interested in the es tate of Marquis LaFayette Scott, de ceased, both creditors and heirs: You and each of you are hereby notified that Emma J. Scott filed her petition in the County Court of Cass county, Nebraska, on the 9th day of January, A. D. 1923. alleging that Marquis LaFayette Scott, deceased, departed this life in the town or Pacific Junction, Mills county, State of Iowa, on the 20th day or oveui- ber, A. D. 1917, leaving a last j t,i toctflmpnt- that said last will and testament has been duly proved and allowed as the last will and tes tament of said Marquis LaFayette Scott, deceased, in the County of Arm ani st.itp of Iowa: that a copy of said will and the probate thereof, duly authenticated, is herewith pro duced by said Emma J. Scott, the person interested in said will; that the place of residence of said Mar quis LaFayette Scott, deceased, was thp town of Pacific Junction, in the County of Mills and State of Iowa; that said Marquis LaFayette Scott died seized of the following described real property in Cass county, Ne braska: Lots 1, 2, 3, 4 and 79, in the northwest quarter of the south east quarter (NWVi SE4) of Section twelve, (12) Township twelve, (12) North. Range thirteen, (13) east of the 6th P. M., in the City of Plattsmouth, Cass county, Nebraska; also Lots 89 and 93 x in the south west quarter of the northeast quarter of said Section twelve, (12) Township twelve, (12) North, Range thirteen, (13) east of the 6th P. M., in Cass coun ty, Nebraska, and containing in all 32.95 acres " And said real estate in absolute title was devised to Emma J. Scott; and the following is a copy of the prayer of the said petition: Wherefore, said petitioner prays that the said will be ad mitted to probate in Cass coun ty, Nebraska, and that the court shall fix a time for hearing up on this petition according to law; that notice of the time and place of said hearing be given to all persons interested in said estate, both creditors.. and heirs, for three weeks successively, ac cording to law, to show cause, if any there be, why said instru ment should not be proved, al lowed and probated as the last will and testament of said de ceased; and that said will may be allowed and probated as the last will and testament of said Marquis LaFayette Scott, de ceased, and that such other and further orders and proceedings may be had in the premises as may be required by the statutes in such cases made and. pro vided It is hereby ordered that you, and all persons interested in the estate of Marquis LaFayette Scott, deceas ed, both creditors and heirs, may, and do, appear at the County Court to be held in and for said county, on the 5th day of February, 1923, at ten o'clock a. m., to show canse 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 there of be given to all .persons interested in said estate, both creditors and heirs, by publishing a copy of this order in the Plattsmouth Journal, a semi-weekly newspaper printed in said county, for three successive rweeks prior to said day of hearing. Witness my hand and seal of said Court, this 11th day of January, A. D. 1923. ALLEN J. BEESON, (Seal) jll-3w. County Judge. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the estate of Anna Hart, deceased. Now, on this 15th day of January, 1923, this cause came on for hear ing upon the petition, under oath, of A. G. Cole, administrator of the es tate of said Anna Hart, deceased. praying for license to sell the follow ing described real estate of the said Anna Hart, deceased, to-wit: Beginning at the, southwest corner of Lot ten, (10) Block forty-nine, (49) in the City of Plattsmouth, Nebraska, running thence easterly on the South line of said lot, one hundred five (105) feet, thence Northeaster ly to a point in the North line of said lot ten (10) feet west of the Northeast corner of said lot, thence west one hundred thirty (130) feet to the North west corner of said lot, thence Southeasterly to the point of be ginning, being a part of Lot No. 10, Block 49, in the City of Plattsmouth, Nebraska or a. sufficient amount thereof to bring the sum of $1,220.70, for the payment of debts allowed against said estate, and allowances and costs of administration, for the reason that there is not a sufficient amount ot personal property in the posses sion of said A. G. Cole, administrator,' belonging to said estate, to pay said debts, allowances and costs. It is therefore ordered that all persons interested in said estate ap pear before me at chambers In the City of Plattsmouth, in said county, on the 27th day of February, 1923, at the hour of 10 o'clock a. m., to show cause, if any there be, why a license should not be granted to said A. G. Cole, administrator, to sell so much of the above described real es tate it is further ordered that a roov tht K-flfli11 L C0-P persons interested in said estate by causing the same to b? mitfiithed once e!ch wJSl -"f once each week for four successive weeks in the Plattsmouth Journal, a newspaper Printed and nublished in taid county of Cass. JAMES T. BEGLEY, jl8-4w. Judge of the Dist. Court.