THURSDAY, APFJL 9, 1925. PLATTSMOUTH SZM-WEEHLY JOTOIUI PAGE THREE ; PUBLISHED SOnWECXi;? a7 Kmte'--l at Potttwrtlee. PlaCtwmounri. R. A. BAHS, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PEICF. $2.00 CLEAVE TO TEE LORD Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God; Him shalt thou serve, and to Him shalt thou cleave, and swear by His name. Deuteronomy 10:19. :o: People, with or without teeth, may enjoy learning a Chicago dentist is in jail. :o: The way they trip the light fan tastic now it looks as if they really were tripping. :o: Lots of nice girls who are as gen tle as a dove, ppoil it all by being pigeon-toed. . :o: Even the four-wheel brakes seem inadequate in stopping them at the railroad crossings. :o:- Lightning struck a movie house in Kansas City, perhaps because it read the posters out in front. :o: Dr. Williams Beebe. internation ally famous naturalist, is now on his way to see what he can see in the Sargasso sea. :o: Almost had a fight in congress. One started to throw a bottle of ink. That sure would have been a blot on his reputation. :o: The estate of Robert G. Icgersoll has been appraised at $60.00. This i should about kill off the infidel busi ness In America. :o: The radio, cross-word puzzles and home brewing make It almost im possible for married men to spend any eveningB out. :o: The Massachusetts legislature has repealed the law against long hat pins. They'll be sorry, when hair comes into fashion again. :o: President Coolidge recently settled his argument with the Eenate the same way a man usually settles an argument with his wife, :o: It's an Inconsiderate automobile driver who will knock a man down ' a in me past Dy comparatively un on the streets with his car and then ' Important states, nobody seems un demand damages for a bent fender, j dulr excited over the fact that Po- :o: Cincinnati indicted forty-eight po - licemen for violation of liquor laws and everyone of the accused Imme diately produced the $10,000 bond.) Cops certainly have good jobs. :o: Now the United States has a tax ( surplus estimated at $6S,000.000. It : sppms nice ior Lncie sam io nave, that much, but wouldn't it be doing more good if his nephews had it? :o: Lieutenant Colonel Ian Onslow ing the republican majority for sev Dennistoun, now husband of the j eral years In Missouri, and it is quite Dowager Countess Carnarvon, whose J sure to go republican on the mayor testimony in court you may have read, Ehould write the British army play and call it, "What Price Promo tion?" -:o:- The fact that four Chicago robbers whn hrppzpd in on a toker came and annexed a few berries better than I S 1.000 out of the crowd only goes to . show again that four of a kind al ways take the money away from a full house. :o: Rnme nenatora have the oDDortun- ity of their lives, by deciding to work, first, last and all the time, for the welfare of the country. In the congress recess they have time to re - fiect and Etudy the country's fore- most needs and be ready next De- cember to do work that will make them famous and at the same time bring benefits to the people. :o: Mr. AkimofT. a Philadelphia manu facturer, tells the Associated Press it is possible to destroy tornadoes by exploding bombs In them. Possibly EO, if you know when and where the tornado is going to show up and you know how to shoot straight when it comes; but the best artillerymen are a little nervous at the approach of so uuchivalrous a foe as a tornado is. :o: ' Scientists tell us that the human life span has been lengthened nearly ten years in the ecientific progress of the last quarter century. And now a "scientific food" manufacturer tells us in an advertisement that our chances of attaining the as of St are fewer than ever before. Unless, of course, we take up a diet of his products for the next forty or fifty years, which ie mot a happy proseet. Scienee has performed emly half ie task when it givee yeu a efcoiee be tween living long and living well. PJj53LTET.a5XH. ITEEEASEA Nrr, . -od-cim"- nal raarter PEE YEAR IN ADVANCE Never get along nicely when your wife's away unless you want to make her mad. :o: Easter is coming, so get a hurry on you and get the first pick of the new Easter bonnets. :o: A man's good qualities are liable to be all forgotten if he lacks one important one dependability. -:o: An egoist thinks that the world revolves around him, while an ego tist thinks that, in addition he start ed the revolutions. :o: The scientist who predicts that some day we will live on air doesn't seem to have observed how many people have been living on hot air for years. :o:- The papers tell of an Ohio boot legger who was caught with 26 pints in his pockets. No wonder he was caught how did he expect to get away with that cargo? :o: A Kansas City Judge has sentenced a dirty vagrant to jail until he had taken 25 baths. He had taken his last bath July 4. At that rate he will be a free man in 1943. :o: A city 1,000 years old has been exhumed in Nevada. It Is sad to think that today there's not a large enough population In the entire state to make one good-sized city. :o: A Swedish scientist says that laughter Is a primitive trick and that when man becomes sufficiently civil ized he will etop laughing. When that time comes, it won't be much of a sacrifice to stop living, too. :o: With a couple of Roosevelts absent from the United States at the same time Theodore and Kermit leave for India soon we tremble foT the Eafety of the republic. Congress ought to do something about it. :o: In spite of the fact that lots of world, wide troubles have been start- Mon Vioq cant on ti1t4Matnm . T I V. t AUUU 4-L Lv7 DCUl. i-1 Ul 11 ilia t UUi L LH .uania :o:- An aviator has proved, by experi ments with a parachute, that a per- j son jumping from a great height J would retain his senses until he hits the ground. But he doesn't care to prove what happens to his senses af- itr mat :o:- Hot election in St. Louis for mayor today. St. Louis has been furnish- questlon, although the are claiming a victory. democrats -:o: A busy prophet predicts that the tornado was only the first of a list of terrible disasters that are to hap pen this year. It's a safe bet ter rible disasters happen every year on this poor old planet, In spite of which most of us are rather fond of it. :o: Thanks to the recent naval man- euvers the problem for our navy J general staff is now clearly defined, . If eleven dreadnaughts firing 880 'shells at eight flying targets failed to , score a single hit how many shells would be required to bring down the Japanese air force? -:o:- Young Fowler McConnick, son or the multi-millionaire binder maker, has gone to work as a common la borer in one of his father's plants. Millionaires in the United States are so common these days that they have to resort to all sorts of things to get their names in the papers. :o: The honey bee carries a sting, the rose bush a thorn. The Gloria Swan son poke beautifies the young face it all but covers, but it will Increase automobile accidents. Who weara the poke is rendered them defense less than a horee with blinders, since the blinders do not cover the horse's ear. :o The President and the edmlnistra tiom leaders may be right im think ing they earn return to gag rule aai party discipline to carry out their program and yet retain the favor of the voters. It remaina to be seeni jwhether people in 12 and 19H are! . essentially different fresa people iu4 1912. D. CUPID, SCOFFLAW The Nebraska legislature has abandoned an attempt to regulate the personal habits and private af fairs of Dan Cupid. By a vote re- vt-mij ib.cu me siaie eugenics mar - t .. 1 - . 1 - 1 riage law will be officially abrogated July 1, after two years' trial. More over, so anxious are county judges of the state to restore Mr. Cupid's lib erty that they have issued leave by which Nebraska lovers may dis regard the law from now on. This complete failure to reform Cupid by law might have been ex pected. Cupid laughs at legislators as Love laughs at locksmiths. The eugenics marriage law required him to serve 10 days notice on a couple so that they could post intentions to wed where all might see. And did he? Not by a quiverful. Creeping up on hesitant things at the last minute, he sent his arrows home. So they eloped to Iowa, Kansas or South Dakota, where 10 days' notice is not required. Marriages de creased two-thirds in Nebraska. Cupid revolted all the way down the line. He believed in blushing brides, but' not blushes that come from answering obnoxious, intimate questions put by the eugenics mar riage law. He insisted on matching eugenically outrageous pairs. He shot with his eyes closed. Finding that the law considered his aim bad, Cupid's victims limped away to Iowa, Kansas and South Da kota, where marriage clerks made al lowances for the little fellow. Nebraska was plunged Into an or gy of bootleg marriages. Jewelers missed sales in wedding rings. Fur niture houses objected. Clothing stores lost business. And, worst of all, preachers were going without their fees. Marriage was being driv en from the state. The thing could not go on. A great wave of popular resentment alarmed the legislators. Cupid was a scofflaw, but even the preachers wanted him to go ahead and scoff. So he scoffed the law out of the statute books. MUST BE DISTRIBUTED The export tax of 26 per cent im posed by the allies upon German pro duce is proving a boomerang. De signed originally to embarras Ger many in the work of reconstruction and of reparation payment, it ap pears now as one of the most likely causes of depression among Ger many's trade competitors. The necessity of paying the tax In volves that also of reducing wages and other costs to a point where the tax can be paid. And while the ex port duty alone would give German competitors the advantage which they sought in the economic adjusts ments growing out of the war, lower costs of production which the tax renders necessary affords the re quired compensation, and in some cases enough more to give Germany advantage which she is not slow tc take. Here is one more indication that, try as they will, the allies will be unable to make Germany pay for the war. With the Dawes plan settle ments and expert duties they may convince themselves that the enemy is paying, but in the last analysis the cost is being widely distributed throughout the world. The British shipbuilding and iron and Bteel in dustry feel it already. Important in dustries in France and the United States will feel it long before the final payment on the reparations ac count has been made. :o: STANDARD FOE TEACHERS At the recent meeting at Cincin nati of the National Educational as sociation it was held by a prominent speaker that deliberate moral and ethical training i3 a function of the school, despite the general accepted theory that character training is not a purpose of education, but a by product of it. It was the old theory that character development ehould not be definitely aimed at in educa tion, yet it was some things that would follow naturally if the work of education were properly done. Now it seems from the various opin ions expressed at the association meeting the other day that there is a ehirt in the other direction. It was the general assumption of dis cussion at the meeting that the school has a specific duty in charac ter training. H. B. Wilson, superintendent of schools, Berkeley, Cal., suggested that training to be helpful in char acter development must be made to appeal to the whole nature of the pupil, not simply to the mind; that it should relate itself to the every day interests of boys and girls and avoid abstractions and generalities. He aaid: "It ia only at children reelic the difference between the moral and respond from the stand point of right to the doing of the: right thing that growth in ethical! character tikes place. Intellectual diceussion about what is rigkt, with out opportunities and responsibilities for carrying into effect the conclu sion reached, ia of little use in estab lishing ideals and purposes and in fixing fundamental determinations l always to act in harmony with the ; hiehest and best conceptions of duty." The idea of character training Is 1st of October or later. This is the linked up with the recent effort toitirae of the year to iroduce cheap, rive more attention to the individ-! healthy Prk b' means of good ual child in school rather than to consider the pupil as one of a class or a group to which knowledge is to be imparted in routine fashion; and also to the increaing desire to make education more of a direct and prac tical benefit to the pupil in his daily life and future work. All of which must inevitably lead up to the ques tion of new standards of training for teachers. The blind cannot lead the blind into pathways of vision and enlightenment. We have got to create a great teaching class. We have got to offer more inducements to first class men and women to adopt teaching as a profession. We have got to 6et higher standards for teachers. FARM BUREAU NSffiS 4 Copy for this Dena-rtmect furnished by County Agent Convenient Kitchen. Tuesday, March 31st., the delegates from the Home Management clubs met for their third lesson. Each member of all these women's clubs will decide during the month that at leaet three things can be improved in her kitchen and then she will start to improve them as the work pro gresses thru the summer. All the members have scored their kitchens from the standpoint of light and ventilation, arrangement of equip ment. Each member will work to im prove three of these general condi tions and will rescore her kitchen next August to see how much she has accomplished. In her discussion. Miss Smith urged the women to consider their own health first in making the improve ments. Posture, muscle strain, regu lar habits, rest periods, and com fortable clothes will be thought of. The leaders at the meeting practiced standing and sitting correctly, learn ed how high their work tables should be, and decided to form more regular habit9 of working and resting. They began to realize how much Influence attractive clothes and surroundings have upon the housewife as she works as the home maker for her family The leaders each made a filing case from cardboard and a shoe or or cigar box in which she can keep addresaes, business references and accounts, household hints, and other useful information. The morning be gan with a short demonstration in which Miss Smith showed the leaders how to clean woodwork with a home made cleaning liquid. Each leader took home a sample and directions for n aking more. Pig Pasture Profits. Good pig pastures reduce the cost of growing pigs nearly one-third. If it cost Eix cents a pound to raise them in a dry lot, by using pastures this cost may be reduced almost to four cents. Experiments carried on in hog belt states show that good pastures help to produce chaep pork. Not only do pastures help in reducing the cost but worms and diseases are material ly reduced by keeping the young pigs out on fresh pasture lots. Alfalfa is probably the best hog pasture crop but many farms do not have fields fenced near buildings so that they can be used. Many farms do not have alfalfa or other pastures. Sudan graBS makes an excellent temporary pasture lasting well into fall but Is not ready as early as is often wanted in the spring. Sweet clover may be spring seeded in late March or April and should then be ready to pasture by June 1st to 10th REPORT OF THE CONDITIO OF THB PLATTSMOUTH STATE BANK Of Plattsmouth. Nebr. Charter No. 786 in the State of Ne braska at the close of business March 31. 1925. RESOURCES Loans and discounts $643,560.48 Overdrafts 1.428.32 Bonds and securities 115,602.60 I'.ankinir house, furniture and fixtures 25.000.00 Other real estate 3a.012.48 Bankers' conservation fund.. 1.367.84 Due from National and State banks. $189,270.66 Cash in bank 18,827.32 208.097.98 TOTAL 1.030.069.70 LIABILITIES , Capital stock paid in S 50.000.00 Surplus fund 10.000.00 Undivided profits (Net) 20.315.71 Individual deposits subject to check. I355.8S0.36 Time certificates of deposit 579,913.94 Cashier's checks outstanding- 8,054.46 943,848.76 Due to National and State banks none Re-discounts none Hills payable none Depositor's guaranty fund.. 5,905.23 TOTAL Stat of KWtfk4 1 ,..1,030.069.70 Omi rf OKI J I. H. A. Schneider President of the above named bask, do solemmly swear that the above statememt is a true and correct copy of the report made to tha Department of Trade and Commerce. H. A. SCHNEIDER, Attest: President. MEKRT BOIV, TMreetsr. FRAKK A. CLOIDT, Director. Subsrriteed 86 s-worw to bfo ma this 3rd day of April. 1I2R. X9TBLLA L. CETS. Ktary Public (My commission expires Aug-. 1. 192T.) First year sweet clover makes good pasture until late in the fall. The second year it comes on very early but by mid-summer becomes rather , woody and set with seed. Rape alone, or with corn, makes a good supplementary pasture. By using certain crops or combinations of crops, hog pastures can be made available from April 1st. unlti the pastures. Tuberculosis in Cattle. Chris Johnson and C. L. Livingston (of Weeping Water said, "It you do not Deneve in cattle naving r. a. go to Omaha where they slaughter the reactors and you will soon be con vinced." They saw 13 head slaugh ered and 6 went to the tank. Remem ber some of these were milk cows. Tipton and Stove Creek precinct have tested and three others are testing. In the two precincts 275 owners owned 3.3S3 head of cattle, there were 16 reactors or less than i per cent. Three objectors in the pre cincts. One fact to note is that 6 per cent of farms have infected herds so it is time to clean up. Let everyone co-operate. Treat Potatoes Before Planting. One pint formalehyde to 30 gallons water. Let potatoes soak in thfe for one hour. Do this before cutting to plant. Sjread out and let dry. Same solution will treat over fifty bushel. POLICEMAN'S JOKE HAS FATAL ENDING Covington, Ind., April 6. A hoax which Al Schaff, a police officer de clared he intended to perpetrate on Joseph Tagg, a youth, ended in the latter's death. Schaff was held on a charge of manslaughter by the coroner's jury following his own story of Tagg's death. Tagg. while awaiting a train for Milwaukee, his home, fell asleep in the railroad waiting room early Sun day morning. The officer entered and seeking to tease the youth fired his revolver over his head. The youth awakened angry because he had been made the butt of a joke. In order to scare Tagg, Schaff declared, he fired another shot aiming high over the youth's head. The bullet, however, struck Tagg in the center of the forehead and killed him instantly. ARCHBISHOP CHRISTIE DIES IN OREGON CITY Portland, Ore., April 6. Arch bishop Alexander Christie of the Catholic archdiocese of Oregon City, died at a hospital this afternoon. Archbishop Christie, who was 7Z years of age. had been in a critical condition at a hospital here for more than a week. A few days ago an im provement was reported, which con tinued until tody, when a sudden turn for the worse occurred. Archbishop Christie presided over the archdiocese of Oregon City, which Includes all of western Oregon. He also exercised an over-lordship over the Catholic sees of the Pacific north west. He became archbishop of the see of Oregon City in 1899. He wa born at High Gate, Vt., in 1950, and REPORT OP THE CONDITION OF THB FARMERS STATE BANK of Plattsmouth, Nebr. Charter No. 14C0 in the State of Ne braska at the close of business March 31, 1925. RESOURCES Loans and discounts $330,404.90 Overdrafts n.bi Bonds, securities, judgments and claims (exclusive of cash reserve) 19,902.01 Hankine house, furniture and fixtures 11.407.1C Other real estate Sa.E.02.15 Bankers' conservation fund. . 557.7k Due from National and State banks.! 92,191.52 Checks and Items of exchange 1.539.23 Cash in bank 11.521.26 105.252.. 01 TOTAL J493.043.5J LIABILITIES Capital stock paid in S 50.000 00 Surplus fund 6,000.00 Undivided profits (Net) 1.017.41 Individual deposits subject to check. $181. 256.29 Time certificates of deposit 184,477.32 Savings deposits.. 61,978.86 Cashier's checks outstanding 15.862.85 433,575.32 Depositor's guaranty fund.. 2,450.80 TOTAL $493,043.63 State of Nebraska 1 County of Ca-ss J I. R. F. Patterson. Cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is a true ana correct copy of the report made to the Department of Trade and Commerce. It. J? l'ATTEKSU., Attest: Cashier. T. H. POLLOCK, Director. JAS. K. POLLOCK. Director. Subscribed and sworn to before m this 6th day of April. 1925. A. H. DuXBURT. (Seal) County Judge. NOTICB Ia the District Court of Oaw ou&- ty, Nebraska. Bessie Flockhart. Plaintiff. r Har old Flockhart. Defendant. To Harold Flockhart, Defendant! You are hereby notified that on the 10th day of Deeember, 1924. Beuie Flockhart filed a petition axalnst you in the Diimet uourt or lm county. Nebraska, the object and prayer of which arc to obtain a di vorce from you on the ground of willful abandonment, and for the mstody of Harold Flookhart, br aainor child. Tou ere retired to aarrer sid petition en or befioee the ITta day f April. ll. Tmic notice u frfes t eujwaanee ef am Order ef tke Dterie Cmrrt of Caw ctrumtr. Nebraska, BEWTS FLOOEUi-RT, Plaintiff. y CILaS. If iim-, Her ittMBV. H1C-4V Bring in yourBoLval any time and have it overhauled WE are prepared to render service ar.d put your De Laval Cream Separator in such condition that it will give you the perfect sen-ice which every De Laval Separator is capa ble of giving. Bring in your complete machine. To save you unnecessary expensa we suggest that you clean out the oil chamber and gears with kerosene or boiiing water, which ycu can do at home just as well as we can. Iven if there is nothing wrong with your sepa rator, if you have used it for sometime it is a good plan to have it inspected and overhauled. You know "a stitch in time saves nine." Every Day is DeLaval Service Day! Plattsmouth Implement Oompany li .xjw I I ii ii J' "i . 'mil',, iHr .-s."'-i-'v j .IIOT Mmwi HtaaBHW 1 ..Hill I ill aBBBI grew up in Wisconsin. He was or dained priest for the St. Paul (Minn.) diocese in 1877. COWS FOE SALE Twenty head of good Holstein milk cows for sale or trade for other cattle. E. Ii. Leech, Union, Nebr. a6-2sw. Most every tdiool daaaiid in the way of staiioaery, pencils and ink may he kad c Alb B&taa JLaok jbA Gift Eko$. T&t very best $&4 ef hiskay paper ior T5 per ve&a. 5 saooef for 8. JfePtf BflttMfflCHSiL NOTICE TO CREDITORS The euite of Nebraska. Oaes ty, as. In the County Court. In the matter of the eetate of Rob ert B. Windham, Sr., deceased. To the creditors of said estater You are hereby notified, that I will sit at the County Court room in Plattsmouth in aaid county, on the 20th day of April, 1926. and on the 20th day of July. 1926. at 10 o'clock a. m. each day, to receive and ex amine all claims against said estate, with a rlew to their adjustment and allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claims against said estate is three months from the 20th day of April, A. D. 1925. and the time limited for payment of debts is one year frcm aaid 20th day of April, 1925. Witnesj my hand and the seal of said County Court, this 18th day of March, 1925. A. H. DUXBURT, (Seal) m23-4w County Judge. NOTICB in the District Court of eo ta ty, Nebraska. Oustare F. Jochlm et al. Plain tiffs, r. all persons haying claim or claims against the estate of John H. Foster, deceased, real namf un known, et al. Defendants. To all persons baring any claim or claims against the estate of John H. Foster, dacea&ad, real namx un known; And all persons haying or claim ing any interest In the northeast quarter of 6ection twenty-four in'tongr should not be granted; Township ten North, Range eleven jthat notice or tne pendency of East of the Sixth Principal Meridian, In Cass couaty, Nebraska, real names unknown: You and each of yon ere hereby notified that on the 13th day of March A. D. 1925, the plaintiffs in the foreering entitled action filed their petition In the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska, wherein you and etch of you are made de fendants, the object and prayer of which are to obtain a decree from said Court quieting the title in plain tiffs to the following described real eetate, to-vit: The northeast Quarter of Bao tion twenty-four in Township ten North, Range eleven East of the Bixth Principal Meridian in Cass county, Nebraska as against you and each of you and by such decree to wholly exclude you and each of you from all estate, title, claim or interest therein, and to have the title to said premises forever freed from the apparent claims of yon and each of you, and quieted in plain tiffs, and for equitable relief Ton are required to answer aaid petition on or before Monday, the 17th day cf April. A. D. 1925, or your default will be entered In said cauee axui a deorea granted as pray OTOTAVB F. JOCHTM, LOUISA STOHLMAN. EDWARD J. JOCHQC ANNA M. VOGLEB WTLHELMINA HEH and H1NBT A, JOOHItt, Plaintiffs. 0. A. KiTLI, AJfcmeF. alC-4w 23 NOTICE OF SALB UNDER EXECUTION Notice i9 hereby given that on the 11th day of April, 1925. at 10 o'clock a. m., at the Cromwell Land & Cattle Company Farm, known as the "Mark White farm," located in the north west quarter of section 27, the south west quarter of section 22, and the southeast quarter of section 21; the northeast quarter of sectiou 2 8, all in Township 11, Range 14, Casa county, Nebraska, I will sell at pub lic sale to the highest bidder for cash, the following described prop erty, to-wlt: Three hundred pieces of mis cellaneous dimension hard wood lumber; also 15 pieces of 6x6 oak timbers, 14 and 16 feet in length; 150 wagon load3 of caw dust in piles, 1 black Jenny mule, smooth mouth; 1 brown Jenny mule, smooth mouth, mouth, each weighing about 4 1,460 pound6. Also three tem porary shack houses and two temporary shack chicken houses built of natural lumber. The same having been levied upon by me and taken as the property of T. II. Cromwell under an alias exe cution Issued out of the County Court of the County of Casa, Nebras ka, to satiefy a Judgment obtained by Frank E. Vallery in said court against the said Thomas H. Crom well for the sum of $500.00 with in terest at 7 per annum from Octo ber 2, 1923, and costs, taxed in the sum of 134.90 and increased costs; said sale will remain open one hour. Dated March 31, 1925. E. P. STEWART, Sheriff of Cass County, Nebraska. ORDER OF HEARING on Petition for Appointment of Administrator The State of Nebraska, Caas coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of George W. Shrader, deceased. On reading and filing the petition of Homer H. Shrader praying that administration of said estate may be (granted to Ora Davis, as Adminis trator; Ordered, that Saturday, April 20, A. D. 1925, at ten o'clock a. m. la as signed 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 the pe- and said petition and the hearing thereof be given to all persons interested in said matter by publishing a copy cf this order in the Plattsmouth Jour nal, a semi-weekly newspaper print ed in said county, for three success ive weeks, prior to eaid day of hear ing. Dated March IT. 1925. A, It DUXBITRY. (Seal) mIO-lw County Juija. ORDER OF HEARING On Petition For Appointment Of Administrator. The State of Nebraska. Cass coun ty, ss. In tha County Court, In the matter of the estate of Wil liam Klaurens, deceased. On reading and filing the petition of J. M. Klaurens and William H. Klaurens, praying that administra tion of said eetate may be granted to Joseph Lidgett as administrator: Ordered, that April 27th. A. D. 1925, at 10 o'clock a. m., is assigned for hearing aaid petition, when all persons Interested In said matter may appear at a Countj Court to txi held in and for aaid county, and show cause why the prayer of peti tioner 6hould not be granted; and notice of the pendency of said peti tion and the hearing thereof be given to all persons interested in paid mat ter by publishing a copy of this or der in the Plattsmouth Journal, semi-weekly newspaper printed In said county, for- three euceemfve weeks, prior to said dsy of hearing. Dated Msrch 10th. 125. A. H. DUXBITRY. County Judge.