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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1924)
THURSDAY. FEBRTJAEY 21, 1924. FAGS FOOL PLATTSHOUTH SEMI-WEEKLY JOTOHAL Cbc plattsmouth journal PUBM6HED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSM 0 UTH, NEBRASKA Eatered at Poioffice. Plattsmouth, Kb as lecoad-clus mall matter R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCBLPTION PEICE $2.00 THE EXEMPTION OF THE LAND Wherefore ye shall do my statutes, and keep my judgments and do them; and ye shall dwell in the land in safety. And if ye shall say. What shall we eat the seventh year? behold we shall not sow, nor gather in our Increase: then will I command my blessing upon you in the sixth year, and it shall bring forth fruit for three years. And ye shall sow the eighth year, and eat yet of the old fruit until the ninth year: until her fruits come in ye shall eat of the old store. Leviticus 23:13-22. -:o: They are expecting floods in every direction. -: o : Pay up week gives the opportunity to pass the buck the right way. :o: A man without money had just as well stay out of the fight this fall. :o: Anyhow, crude oil and crude busi ness ethics won't mix with politics. :o: One of the disasters of a lifetime is the losing of one's bunch of keys. :o: Who ever heard of a man with a big income wanting to run the gov ernment. t Pcrhpps a printed lotterh?.u jus tifies amuting contortions in a man's signature. :o: Severe colds are prevalent in this man's town and there are no good ones among them. :o: While our forests may soon be de pleted there will always be plenty of ! presidential timber. :o: You may take 'em off if you want to, but if you do don't come snuffl ing around this desk. o:o What has become of the old fash ioned man who carried his import ant 'papers in his hat. :o: The country isn't as much inter ested in "Who's Who in America" as who's wet in Washington. :o:- Oil on troubled waters is all right, but it doesn't seem to be getting anywhere in a political storm. ; :o: No matter how much politicians may lack backbone, they always sern to have plenty of jawbone. o:o Japan seems to have the right idea. Whenever there is an internal commotion she changes her diet. :o: 'Bryan is one ex-cabinet officer who has earned his money honestly by wringing the tail of the ape. :o: We predict the election next fall will be one of the most interesting and exciting ever held in this coun try. :o: Woman may be emancipated, but the hats in the ring. don't interest her as much as those in the shop window. o:o Mr. Doheny's allowance of a 1-mil-lion dollar ralary to himself shows that his liberality is not confined to loans to needy friends. :o: The Mexican presidential election will not be held until July 6. The Mexicans are now just carrying on their primary campaign. :o: There are two men that can defeat Senator Norris. One is Congressman ( John H. Morehead and the other is Congressman Shallenberger. Two as good men as God Almighty ever put breath into. :o: A committee of investigation re- port3 to Washington that there has been great profiteering in bread. Of course, there are so many engaged In the production of bread that it may take twenty-live or thirty ye?r- to lo cate the profiteers, but one an elim inate at first glance the consumer and wheat grower. :o: The oil investigation has led into the newspaper field. Vortunately for the newspapers and -for the pub lic, the great majority of newspapers are clean and honest. The newspa er of established character and repu tation is free from a certain kind of trespassing. The crook does not come- to its. door, either to eelj his service or buy immunity. He goes where he knows the' latchstring is out for him. PEE YEAS DI ADVANCE LINES TO REMEMBER Some folks won't mind their business; The reason is, you'll find, They either have no busi ness. Or else they have no mind. H-I"!-!- -o:o- One reformer says all persons ap plying for license to drive cars should be submitted to an eye test. How about a breath test? o:o Hunters tell us that the motor tar has destroyed wild life, and here we had been thinking that they had made life wilder, than ever. :o: Jud Tunkins says life would be easy if every man had nothing worse to worry about concerning his past than the theory of evolution. . :o: Any weather forecaster who can bring about his prophecies with such vindictive promptness as Mr. Ground Hog should have a place in "Who'? Who." :c: There are two things we want to learn most about tl.3 new Chink game. One is how to spell it and the other how to pronounce it cor rectly. :o: Bear in mind Bargain Wednesday. Bargains galore -and just what you want. So eome a running and take your cnances witn tne rest or tne bargain hunters. -:o: Things have reached the point where nothing discourages a farmer more than to pick up a paper and se that the government is going to do something for him. . :o:- The character f mueh of the pac ifist propaganda is such as almost to make the ancient and honorable em blem of the olive branch a badge of cowardice and" disloyalty. :o: A New York man wants us to pay him $8.75 for a book telling all about the monkey race. We can find out for nothing all we want to know about monkeys right here in this town. ' :o: The president should not be blam ed if he cannot find notable and able lawyers without oil connections to prosecute the oil investigation. It is said he still is prospecting for oil less talent. o:o The republican national conven tion will meet at Cleveland, June 10, the democratic convention at New York City, June 24, and the conven tion of "Workers, Farmers and Pro gressives" at Cleveland July 4. :o: The German flag over the embassy at Washington was slow tc come down to half mast when Wiodrow Wilson died, but there was a time when Woodrow Wilson brought that flag all the way down in a hurry. o:o 4 Acording to Secretary Hoover, there is some danger of civilization slipping back into teh Dark Ages. Our educational expert, consulted on the matter, says it is very doubtful, however, whether the people are ready for it. -:o:- A lion killed an actor in a motion picture production in the Roman Col- iseum That was ilustrative of the influence of historical surroundings. Such things don't happen in Holly wood, where movie actors are usual ly killed by chauffeurs or other jeal ous parties. :o: Well, perhaps if the Teapot Dome investigation committee, witnesses and all, were removed to some iso lated hamlet in tne Alaskan woods (if Alaska has any woods), and all the telegraph wire3 back to the states were cut, perhaps, we say, the rest of the members could settle down and do some serious work. :o: Mr. Thomas A. Edison was asked on his 77th birthday where we will get power wnen coai ana oil are gone. "From the sun. wind, tides and vegetable growth," he replied. Mr. Edison is an inventive genius. but the politicians have at least beat en him to getting power from wind. They also have had profitable re sults from the plum tree. ttvtt'o rr-n TifurriroTl? MB. M'ADOO Hegardless of what Underwood may insinuate, or republican leader may assert, even Mr. McAdoo has the right to practice law if he can find a client who will pay him honest money for honest employment. And the fact that the client was or wasn't an entirely honest man in some other transaction has nothing to do with it. In the absence of evidence to contradict him. Mr. 'McAdoo'a own statement should be accepted as the true account of his relationship with Mr. Doheny. And there has been no evidence to contradict him on the point. His work, as he outlines it, was to represent oil interests in Mex ico which were threatened unjustly with confiscation. It was a proper employment for a lawyer. It was a proper employment for Mr. McAdoo. And right here in passing let it be stated as a matter of common knowl edge that Mr. McAdoo is a corking good lawyer and the fee paid him by the Doheny Interests was not out of proportion with the services ren dered. It was natural, and by no means discreditable to Mr. McAdoo, that his connection with the Wilson ad ministration prior to his employ ment made him the more useful to his employer. The Wilson adminis tration had shown consideration for Mexico, and anyone connected with it would naturally have some per sonal prestige ever after retiring from office. If this prestige made his advocacy more acceptable to Mexico, that fact ought not to be considered as the basis for the suspicion that Mr. McAdoo was reprehensibly cap italizing his official connections previously held. The experience that any efficient man gnins in any presi dent's catiret is bound to be of use to him in after life. It ought not to be expected of him that he would honorable way. consistently avoid using It in any honorable way. If the protestations of American oil men against Mexican confiscation were just and they were; if Mr. Mc Adoo was a fit agent with favored entree for the presentation of those protestations as he was; and if hi? employment was limited to this pro fessional undertaking in line with the regular gaining of his livelihood as appears to be the case then Mr. McAdoo ought not to have to meet the unfair implications which some have, chosen to let loose" with out exactly sponsoning "them Un just and half-mouthed slanders should not be permitted to harm an innocent man or to hide, as with a smeke screen, the guilty man until he can slip out of the public eye. :o: " CONSERVATION IN POLITICS "Conservation is a republican pol icy," said the republican national platform of 1920. That fact, if fact it ever were, did not prevent the ap pointment of a Ballinger and the firing of a Pinchot by a republican president. It did not prevent the ap pointment of Fall, who is said to have been slated to purvey the pub lic domain before the above quoted platform was written. It did not prevent the looting of the naval oil reserves through republican officials as recently disclosed in Washington. Conservation, thanks to the late disclosures, is sure to come to the fore again as an issue In national politics. And when it does mere claims will not stand as a guaran tee. The Denby and Daugherty de fense of legality will rfbt stand- The Coolidge complacency and inaction in the face of damning evidence will not' inspire confidence. It took acts of corruption to awak en the people to the realization of an indefensible policy which should have been condemned even had there been no corruption. Now that they art aroused they will demand a gov ernment with more than a passive interest in the preservation of the na tion's resources. :o: TRIUMPH OF SURGERY A month ago, a baby in St. LouU accidentally breathed a carpet tack into its lung. Apparently about tue only chance against a fatal result would have been the expulsion of the tack by a fit of coughing; but the tack caught fast in the lung tis sue and remained. Finally, how ever, the child was taken to Phila delphia, and by one of the neatest feats of surgery recently recorded, the tack was successfully removed. The first thing, of course, was tha accurate location of the tack by the use of the X-ray, a gift which has come to surgery from the research laboratory of, the- physicist. With the child's head so held as to give a straight passage, a hollow tube car rying a diminutive electric light bulb, was inserted through the raoutEinto the lung cavity until it reached to tha point where the tack was lodged. The surgeon. Hien Jn- ! berted a slender pair of forceps thru the tube, grasped the tack and pull ed it out. This is not the first time the meth od has been used, we believe, but its successful use with a baby only a few months old Has attracted wide attention. Not a day passes but that modern surgery, witn comparative ease, saves lives which, a generation aeo would have been allowed to naos ,i, u .luva i,. nuuuui nic oiigiikcok wiwuui mat, cure was possible. Payne says the oil scandal has aroused republicans. Well, if it has not aroused them they must have been doped pretty soundly. :o: It took only three minutes to exe cute that Nevada Chinaman by means of poison gas. And in these efficient days, saving time is the main thing. :o: H-I"I"I-W"I"I"M"1"IH- FARM BUREAU NOTES 1' Copy for this Department furnished by County Agent Dairy Cattle An interesting meeting on care and feeding of dairy cows was held at Union. Mr. Davis who has charge of the dairy department at the col lege of agriculture was there. Two reels of pictures were shown, scenes in Colorado and the accepting of Morton park by the state of Nebras ka. T. B. Petitions Petitions are now being circulated in several precincts. If the cattle of Cass county are ever to be tested we mu3t sign these petitions. Why Grow Alfalfa or Clovers The effect of red clover on the yield of the crop which follows it is well illustrated by figures on a Rich ardson county farm. In the northern part of Richardson county, where the soil is good loess farm land, there is a place which has been rent ed by a number of years and farmed chiefly to corn, wheat and oats. Dur ing this period of time the highest corn yield that was- grown was thirty-six bushels per acre. This land was put to red clover for two years, then broken out-and put to corn. The three following crops of -corn made 65, 50 and 47 bushels per acre. By figuring a little on this, it will be found that the land produced al most as much corn per acre in three years after it had been seeded down as it would have if kept in corn for five years straight. Besides there were two years of clover to the good. The problem before the Nebraska farmer today is not one of greater production per farm but of cheaper production per pound or bushel pro duced. Soil fertility of eastern Ne braska farms robably has more to do with the cost of production than any other one item. With labor scarce and high priced why continue to farm so much of the land to corn. wheat and oats when it acn be seed ed down for a few years and still at the end of five or ten years, it will have produced as much as if continu ally cropped. The saving in labor, the hay crops for feed, and the in crease in fertility are the profits. NOTICE OF SUIT TO FORECLOSE MORTGAGE In the District "Court of the Coun- ty Of CaSS, Nebraska. Caroline Propst, Plaintiff, vs. Rob-ijMS. ert L. Propst et al. Defendants. To the defendants Robert L. Propst and Mayola D. Propst: You and each of you are hereby notified that on the 9th day of Feb ruary, 1924, the plaintiff Caroline Propst, filed her suit in the District Court of the County of Cass, Ne braska, against you and each of you impleaded with others; the object and prayer of which is to foreclose a mortgage given by Robert L. Propst and wife to plaintiff bearing date November 21, 1921, conveying to plaintiff Lots 7 and 8 in Block 20, City of Plattsmouth, Cass county. Nebraska, filed December 5, 1921, in Book 48, page 356, Mortgage Rec ords of Cass County, Nebraska, to secure the payment for six promissory notes dated November 21, 1921, be ing one note of $250.00 and five notes of $500.00 each; said $250.00 note being payable in installments of $25.00 each on the first day of each month, beginning January 1, 1922. on which the first four payments of $25.00 each have been paid; said $500.00 notes payable in one, two. three, four and five years respective ly from November 21, 1921, the first of which has been paid; all of said notes bearing interest at 6 per cent until maturity and 10 per cent there after; that plaintiff prays that an ac count may be taken of the amount due plaintiff on her said notes and mortgage, that it be decreed that plaintiff have a first lien on said premises; that defendants be decreed to pay plaintiff the amount so found due; that in default thereof, said mortgaged premises be sold according to law and each and all 01 the de fendants be forever barred and fore closed of any and all right, title, in terest or equity of redemption in and to said premises; that out of the pro ceeds, plaintiff be paid the amount due together with costs and that plaintiff be allowed to recover a de ficiency judgment against the defend ant Robert L. Propst, and for equit able relief. You and each of you arc required to answer said petition on or before Monday, March 31, 1924, or your de fault will be duly entered and a de cree of foreclosure granted as prayed in said petition. Of all of which you will take due notice. . Dated FebruarV 18. 1924. CAROLINE PROPST. - Plaintiff. W: A. ROBERTSON. Attorney for Plaintiff f 18-4w ORDER OF HEARING AND NO- JICE OF PROBATE OF WILL In the County Court of Cass coua- ty, Nebraska. State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. To the heirs and all persons in- teroarexl In tho ostntA nf Ada Ti Ties - tort deceased: On reading the petition of Frank M- Bestor, praying that the mstru- ment filed in this court on the 11th day of February, 1924, and purport- ing to be the last will and testament of the said deceased, may be proved and allowed, and recorded as the last will and testament of Ada R. Bestor, deceased ; that said instrument be ad- mitted to probate, and the adminis- tration of said estate be granted to! Charles K. Bestor, as Executor; It is hereby ordered that you, and all persons interested in said matter, may, ana ao, appear at tne county Court to be held in and for said coun ty, on the 29th day of February, A. D. 1924, at 10:00 o'clock a. m., 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 j 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 11th day of February, A. D. 1924. ALLEN. J. BEESON, (Seal) f!4-3w County Judge. NOTICE OF INCORPORATION THE SHELDON MANUFACTURING COMPANY. Notice is hereby given that George C. Sheldon, Roy G. Kratz, Arthur Dobson, W. G. Humphrey and A. G. Schreiber have associated together for the purpose of forming a corpora tion under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Nebraska. The name of the corporation shall be "The Sheldon Manufacturing Com pany." II Principal place of business, Ne hawka, Nebraska. Ill General nature of business, the manufacture and sale of concrete mixers and articles incidental to the making and using of concrete, the sale of machinery manufactured by others and the manufacture and sale of other products. Corporation shall have power to acquire, own, sell and convey real and personal property, borrow monev and execute its per sonal notes therefor, and secure the payment of same by pledge of its property by mortage or otherwise. IV Amount of capital stock authorized Twenty-five Thousand ($25,000.00) Dollars, divided into shares of One Hundred ($100.00) Dollars each. The stock may be paid for either in money or personal property and shall be non-assessable, but shall not' be is sued until paid for in -full. V Time of commencement of corpora tion shall be when these articles are filed in the office of the County Clerk of Cass county, Nebraska. The cor porate existance shall terminate fifty years thereafter, ' unless sooner dis solved as herein provided. VI The highest amount of indebted ness or liability to which the corpo ration is at any one time to subject itself, shall not ptpped twn-thirria of the eanital stock VII Ar. f nnm,f,. irinrrPfi hv Ttrmrrl rf nirontr.ro nt Tint rh!,n ihroa mnro tllaT1 coven tmwc in0,i mPt ins- nr th. tr,Mr hr,irirC 11,1 ,t .tll - nr;TW.infli nfr,P r,r tha .nmr.nntr on tne first Mondav nf janiiarv iri each year. Directors shall hold of- fice until successors are elected and qualified. Board of Directors shall elect a President, one or more Vice Presidents, a Secretary and a Treas urer. VIII Corporation may be dissolved by affirmatrve vote of a majority of the outstanding stock. TV I Board of Directors have power to adopt by-laws for the conduct of the business and regulation of the cor poration affairs. Stock holders may my majority vote, alter, amend or repeal said by-laws, and by-laws made by the stock holders shall not be repealed or amended by the Board of Directors. X These articles may be amended at any annual meeting of tht; stock holder? or any special meeting called for that purpose by a vote of a ma jority of the outstanding stock. Dated at Nehawka, Nebraska, Aug ust 10th, 1923. GEORGE C. SHELDON ROY G. KRATZ ARTHUR DOBSON W. G. HUMPHREY A. G. SCHREIBER. J24-4w. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of;Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Samuel L. Furlong, 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 26th day of February, 1924, and on the 26th day of May, 1924, at 10 o'clock, a. m., each day, to receive and examine all claims against said es tate,, with a view to their adjustment and allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claims against said estate is three months from the 26th day of February. A. D. 1924, and the time limited for payment of j debts is one year from said 26th day of February 1924. Witness my hand and the seal of said. County- Court, this 24th day of January, 1924. ALLEN J. BEESON. (Seal) j2S-4w. County Judge. NOTICE In the District Court of Cass coun- . ty, Nebraska. Leon L. McCarty, Plaintiff, vs. Cit- izens Bank of Plattsmouth et al, De- fendanta. To T. J. Jones, if living, if deceas- ' oil tn Viin nnVnnwn lipirs. rtpviseeS. i legatees, personal representatives and all other persons having any interest in his estate; Jacob Tallon, if living, if deceased his unknown heirs, devi sees, legatees, personal representa - tives and all other persons interested in his estate; Jarius E. Neal, if liv- ing, if deceased his unknown heirs, devisees, personal representatives and all other persons interested in his estate; William Wortman, if living, if deceased his unknown heirs, devi- sees, legatees, personal representa- tives and all other persons interested in his estate; the unknown heirs, devisees, legatees, personal represen tatives and all other persons interest ed in the estate of Henry Amison, de ceased; All persons having or claiming any interest, right or title or lien in, to or upon the north half of the west half of Lot ten, all of Lots eleven and twelve, and the south three and ono-half feet of Lot thirteen, all in Block thirty-one, in the City of Plattsmouth, Cass county, Nebraska, real names unknown: You and each of you are hereby notified that on the 28th day of January, A. D. 1924, the plaintiff the foregoing action filed his petition ' the District Court within and far in the District Court of Cass county, Cass county, Nebraska, and to me dl Nebraska, wherein you and each of rected, I will on the 22nd clay of you are made parties defendant, 'for March, A. D. 1924, at 10 o'clock '&. the purpose of obtaining a decree m. of said day at the south fro it from said Court, quieting the title in door of the court nous in Platt plaintiff to the following described mouth in said county, sell at public real estate, to-wit: The north half (N) of the west half (W)- of Lot ten, (10) all of Lots eleven (11) and twelve (12) and the south three and one-half (3.4) feet of Lot thirteen, (13) all in Block thirty-one (31) in the City of Plattsmouth, Cass county, Ne as against you and each of you. and and Amelia Detlef, defendants, to by such decree to wholly exclude satisfy a Judgment of said Court re you and each of you from all estate, covered by The Standard Savings & right, title, claim or interest therein, Loan Association of Omaha, Nebras and to have the title of said premises ka. plaintiff against said defendant!!, forever freed from the apparent! Plattsmouth, Nebraska, January claims of you and each of you and! 22nd, A. D. 1924. quieted in plaintiff, and for equit- E. P. STEWART, able relief. Sheriff of Cass county. You and each of you are required Nebraska, to answer said petition on or before O. W. JOHNSON, the 17th day of March, A. D. 1924,1 Attorney. f21-5n"; . or your default will be .vuui ucitiinu will ue emtieu 111 Jn,..,It II 1 X. . j ' said cause and a decree granted as prayed for in said petition. Dated January 28, A. D. 1924. leon l. Mccarty, Plaintiff. C. A. RAWLS, Atty. f4-4w . NOTICE Ot SALE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the estate of George Hanson, deceased. led to Minnie Lillie as Administrat Notice is hereby given that in pui rix; suance of an order of Hon. James T.) (Ordered, that February 25th,' A. D., Begley., Judge of the -District Court 1924. at 10 o'clock a. m.. is assfen. of said Cass county, made on the 31st day of December, 1923, for the sale of the real estate hereinafter describ ed, there will be sold at the south door of the court house in the City of Plattsmouth, Nebraska, on the 4th day of March,. 1921. at ten o'clock a. m.. at public vendue to the highest bidder for cash, the following describ ed real estate, to-wit: The west half of the northeast quarter and the east half of the northwest quarter in Section 32, and the east half of the south west quarter in Section 29, all in Township 11, north, Range 9, in Cass county, Nebraska. . Said sale to remain open for one hour. Dated this 8th day of February,; THOMAS HANSON and HENRY HANSON, Executors of the Estate of George Hanson, Deceased D. O. DWYER, Attorney. fll-3w NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun- ity, es. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Carey L. Stotler, 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 26th day of February, A. D. 1924, and on the 2Cth day of May, A. D. 1924, at ten o'clock a. m., of each day, to receive and examine all claims against said estate, with a view to their adjustment and allow ance. The time limited for the pre sentation of claims against said es tate is three months from the 26th day of February, A. I). 1924. and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 26th day of Feb ruary, 1924. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court, this 2 6th day of January, 1924. ALLEN J. BEESON, (Seal) j31-4w. County Judge. State Farmers' A. E. Agee, President Offers best policy and contracts for lest money. Cheap est and best insurance company doing business in Ne braska. Pays all losses promptly. Over 5,000 members. Organized in 1895. Insurance in force, $60,000,000. CALL. OK L. L. DIEHSTBIER Z615 Harney Street Omohs, Nehnwka. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS Sealed bids will be received at the Senate Chamber In the state house at Lincoln, Nebraska, on February 26, 1924, until 10:00 o'clock a. Bl and at that time publicly opened and read for Guard Rail and incidental work on the Eagle-Murdock Project No. 153-B, Federal Aid Road. The approximate quantities are: 708 lineal feet guard rail. 10 each anchors for guard rail. Certified check for five per cent ... V(f Will 1 (5 ) of the amount oi me j be required. This work must be tarta pr,ir!J 'to April 1, 1924, and be compieteu by August 1, 1924. Plans and specifications for tne work may be seen and information secured at the office of the county Clerk at Plattsmouth, Nebraska, or at the office of the State Department of Public Works at Lincoln, Nebraa- The State and County reserve the right to waive all technicalities and reject any or all bids. GEO. R. SAYLES, County Clerk, Cass County, . Nebraska. R. L. COCHRAN, State Engineer. JSl-Sw. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, SE. By virtue of an Order of Sale la- in'sued by James Robertson, Clerk of auction to the highest bidder , for cash the following described prop erty, to-wit: Lots one (1) and two, (2) In, Block thirty-nine, (39) in Young & Hayes Addition to the City of Plattsmouth, Cass county, Ne braska The same being levied upon and tak en as the property of Frank Detlcf . ORDER OF HEARING on Petition for Appointment ef Administratrix The State of Nebraska, Cass coua ty, ssr. ! In the County Court. In the matter of the estate ef Frank J. Lillie, deceased, i On reading and filing the petition !of Minnie Lillie praying that admin- istration of said estate mav hp mnt. ed for hearing said petition, when all persons interested in said matter may appear at a County Court to be held in and for said county, and show cause why the prayer of peti tioner should not be granted; and that notice of the pendency of said petition and the hearing thereof be given to all persons interested in said matter by publishing a copy of tBis order in the Plattsmouth Journal, a semi-weekly newspaper printed in said county, for three successive weeks, prior to said day of hearing. Dated February 2nd, 1924. ALLEN J. BEESON, (Seal) f4-3w. County Judge. Absolutely useless information: One hundred years ago whisky sold for 20 to 40 cents a gallon. f 'I-I-M- .x..4 35 years Experience Office Coatea Block DR. G. A. MARSHALL Dentist Automobile Painting! First-Class Work Guaranteed! Prices Reasonable Mirror Replating and Siarn Work! A. F. KNOFLIGEK, Phone 592-W, Plattsmouth Insurance Co. J. F. McArdle, See'y OR WRITE V i