The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, April 16, 1925, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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THTJBSBAY, APSZL 16, 1923.
FLATTSMOTJTH SEMI-WEEKLY JOTJEJAL
PAGE IHKEJ
Che plattsmouth lournal
EHBI1SHED SEJHJKEKLY AT
Bafeyq at Foatefflo, Fla ttaiaoutn.
A . B.A O&EaS
SI
OH PEICE 2.00
AND IT SHALL COME TO PASS
And it shall come to pass in the
last days, saith God, I will pour out
of my Spirit upon all flesh ; and your
sons and your . daughters shall
prophecy, and young men shall see
visions, and your old men shall
dream dreams. Acts 2:17.
-:o:-
Save your dollars and they'll save
JOM.
:o:
Good looking kinfolks seem to be
Tery scarce articles.
:o:-
An assistant is one who is hired
for the boss to help.
:o:
Turning over a new leaf too often
makes you lose your place.
:o:
An optimist Is a man who buys a
msed auto from an enemy.
: :o:
People who live in glass houses
should not wash their windows.
-:o:-
Always close your mouth before
Blaring at funny looking strangers.
:o:
An old heavy undershirt dyed
a beautiful spring sweater.
:o:
With the boyish bob came that
noticeable mannish ring around the
neck.
-:o:-
The cafe works from sun to sun,
but Ita doggone 6teaks are never
done.
:o:
Sometimes we think a spinster Is
one who used her sense Instead of
hiding it.
:o:-
Love is something which makes
you sorry that you did kiss her or
sorry that you didn't kiss her.
:o:
And, one might add, in the spring
a young man's fancy, lightly ,turns
way from thoughts of anything. .
;o;
When a man thinks a woman
doesn't understand him It usually Is
because she does understand him.
-:o:-
Moet wrongs are ignored on the
principle that If you don't look' to
aee if your tire is flat you won't
have to Sz it.
:o:-
Atlantic City will fine drunks ac
sording to their breaths, but one
pleading bay rum may escape by a
hair's breadth.
:o:
No matter if your love letters are
oot- literary models, fame will be
yours whenever the plaintiff's attor
ney read9 them in court.
:o:
A Maryland man, arrested for be
ing drunk, set up the defense that
he had never heard of prohibition.
He should move into a dry state.
:o:
' We have our moments of depres
sion when it seems as if our own
great party devoted a large share of
Its time to showing the need of two
great parties.
:o:
Senator Butler's son says the fine
cotton goods manufacturers have "a
Just complaint as to the present tar
1H." What's the matter? Did some
body sneak In a shoestring?
-:o:-
President Coolidge has had his
last year's hat reblocked and rerib
boned and his shoes half-soled. And
we'll bet this Yankee wastrel has
had his Bocks freshly darned.
:o:
Uncle Sam spends 70 cents a day
educating each native Eskimo and
some of them, even at that, will turn
out better than some of the gradu
ates of our high-brow universities.
:o:
Book publishers with bargains to
day, we have learned, will have bar
gains tomorrow. The statement that
"You must hurry and buF now be
fore the present lot Is sold out, as
no more will be available at the
present price," sounds worse than it
Is. Books will always be compara
tively cheap. Competition will take
care of that.
:o:
We have Just seen a picture of At
torney General John Garibaldi Sar
gent, taken when that gentleman
weighed 300 pounds. At the time of
his entry into Washington to fill the
place of high morality, lately vacat
ed by Mr. Daugherty, he tipped the
scales at just a little more than 200.
We suppose Brother Sargent would
have pined away altogether if he had
not succeeded in getting his feet
firmly planted in the publie trough
oi the nation. '
fiXATISMOirrH, NEBBASXA
Neb., m ecomd-d&ia mall matter
, P uh lkh e r
FEB YEAR IN ADVANCE
r9
The first person to bring in a
spring poem may spade the editor's
garden.
-:o:-
Virtue is its own reward; but the
naughty can sell their record to
Borne magazine.
:o: .
The bigger the house you live in
the more liable you are to move to
a sanitarium.
-:o:-
You can never judge your neigh
bors by what you see hanging on
their clothesline.
-:o:-
The way to see how far your car
will go before it needs repairs is to
lend it to a friend.
-:o:-
A legislator may grow purple In
the face with anger, but you never
see one speechless. ,
-:o:-
The husband who has a den is
fortunate he doesn't have to growl
all over the house.
:o:-
The hard part of being poor is
trying to save while spending as
much as the rich do.
-:o:-
Unlike Freud, we seem to come in
contact with many more superiority
than inferiority complexes.
:o:
Recent army tests show that
shooting at airplanes is about like
throwing rocks at birds.
:o:
A foolish man is one who Is kept
from being foolish by the fear of
what others would say.
:o:
You never know what some people
think until you make them mad
enough to tell the truth.
:o: '
Let your little boy play in the
dirt and he may be a divorce case
lawyer when he grows up.
:o:
Grand opera was thought up by a
man who had just finished mashing
his fingers with a hammer.
:o:
A lavender hat on a grown man
makes us wish we were young
enough to throw rocks again.
:o:
Professional baseball season will
start this week. It is where we hire
men to take our exercise for us.
:o:
More farm relief is planned. Run
ning a farm seems to pay about as
well as sending a boy to college.
:o:
The bones of a mastodon have
been found in New York, probably
proving the ancients had taxlcabs.
:o:
Picnics are dangerous. Opening
sardines and pickle bottles may in
still the desire to become a safe
blower.
-:o:-
When men say they want justice,
what they really mean is that they
want some particular case settled
their way.
Old fashioned spelling matches
are a good thing, but who would
know what to do with a syzygy after
he had spelled it.
:o:
Fifty years ago, pious mothers
begged their boys to get religion,
while practical fathers escorted them
to the woodshed.
-:o:
While the democrats were trying
to capture St. Louis, the republicans
were trying to capture New Orleans.
They all want the moon.
: :o:
Another professor defending the
college students. If all this cham
pioning keeps up we'll think thera
is something wrong with college stu
dents. :oi
The English are adopting grape
fruit as a breakfast dish, and we
rather pity them for the years of
training they will have to undergo
before they get to the technique of
eating it that we have acquired.
:o:
Napoleon Bonaparte Brown, an
80-year-old Arkansas man, on whose
farm oil was recently struck, is now
the owner- of nine automobiles. Even
so, 'the" gas is said to be coming in
faster than the aged motorist can
burn it.
:o:
The German method of choosing
presidential candidates is hard to
understand. They don't have con
ventions lasting several weeks, and
what is more remarkable they don't
have any platforms. We doubt if
the Germans are fitted to have a
presidential election at all.
FRANKLIN AND THE KITE
How much . of the Benjamin
Franklin kite-flying story is truth
and how much fiction may be the
subject of a scientific investigation.
Both the Academy of Arts and Sci
ences and Harvard university have
the question of such an Investiga
tion under consideration.
The revival of interest in the kite
story grows out of its characteriza
tion by Prof. McAdie of the Harvard
department of meteorology as a
myth; and the charges which fol
lowed, that this characterization
had done untold harm to the mem
ory of Franklin. Then came the
suggestion that the whole question
be investigated scientifically and the
truth determined.
As Prof. McArdie himself de
clares, such an investigation at the
present time in view of modern
knowledge of electricity would be
futile. Certainly no one but a mov
ing picture producer would think it
worth while to rig up ateilk kite after
the best Benjamin Franklin fashion
and undertake to repeat the alleged
experiment, and any investigation
without the experiment would
scarcely be scientific.
The Franklin kite story, like that
of Washington and the cherry tree,
is probably no more than a tradi
tion, a fairy story for grownups.
But a century and a quarter after
the death of the hero of the story
that might be hard to prove, and is
probably not worth attempting. The
picture of the little old man stand
ing out in the rain in a violent elec
trical storm conducting a "scientlf
ic" experiment is too vivid to be ef
fectively denied either by scientists
or historians.
OUR ALLEGED PERILS
A West Virginian of eminent po
sition, the other day, made an ad
dress in which he depicted America
as standing between two great per
ils. On the one hand is the red rev
olutionist, despising all established
guarantees of social and political or
der and ever on the watch for an op
portunity to cut the props from un
der this order and let the structure
of civilization fall where It may. On
the other hand are drawn up, we are
told, the greedy forces of material
wealth and power, careless of the
general good, regardless of the
rights and feelings of those in hum
bler positions, and . devoted only to
the advancement of their own self
ish interests. It is this latter class.
the speaker said, that is doing more
than any other cause to drive the
masses into the acceptance of bol
shevistic doctrines and action.
This speaker saw two things that
do unquestionably exist. We have
the red revolutionist, and we have
the reckless abusers of the wealth
and power, which are possible under
existing social and political institu
tlons. But he saw both through the
distorting glasses of an over-excited
and not sufficiently Informed imagi
nation. The power of "predatory
wealth" to ride roughshod over the
rights of the weak is far less today
than it was a quarter of a century
ago. We have made many blunders
in attempts at regulation, but on the
whole we are gradulaly advancing
On the other hand, the danger of
communistic revolution has virtual
Iy passed away. The world has
learned from Russia what a mingled
farce and tragedy it is.
Between the two perilous preci
pices which this West Virginia ora
tor saw Is a broad level plain of or
dinary common sense, and on this
plain the great bulk of the popula
tion stands. And this sane major
lty will neither permit predatory
wealth to devour it, nor revolution
to drive it down into the famine-
stricken deserts of bolshevism.
:o:
THOSE 50,000 FEDERAL LAWS
One of our contemporaries draws
a very interesting picture of the
law-encircled citizen of "the land of
the free," standing in the midst of
some 50,000 federal laws enacted
since the adoption of the Constitu
tion, and scarcely knowing which
way he can turn, or what he can do,
without danger of getting himself
jailed or fined for some violation
committed accidentally through ig
norance, no matter how free he may
be or any Intention offense.
It is an interesting picture, as we
have said; but, after all, it is im
aginative, not real. With the great
majority of all laws passed, whether
federal or state, the average citizen
who goes about his business in a
peaceful and honest frame of mind
never comes into conscious contact
at all. A very large part of all laws
passed have been special in their
character and have passed out of ex
istence, as laws, with the passage of
the persons, or things or circum
stances, to which they were inten
ded to apply.
. We do not mean to argue, of
course, that there has been no un
dule multiplicity of laws at all, and
that no well-intended person is ever
inconvenienced or injured by un
necessary or meddlesome legal re
quirements; but nothing is to be
gained by exaggeration as it has an
unfortunate tendency to prejudice
the ignorant and the unthoughtful
against law. After all, our difficul
ties and dangers would be enor
mously greater and more numerous
if we were to array the experiment
of living without laws.
:o:
OUT OF HARMONY
There is a certain fascination
about the smell of paint in the
springtime. When one gets hold of
a brush it is hard to put it down
again. It is a magic working thing.
It makes the old new and the dull
beautiful.
A goodly number of folks in
Plattsmouth have already come be
neath the spell of the paint brush.
Here and there, as windows are
flung wide to let in the spring
breezes, and as green carpets appear
on lawns, the houses have taken on
a fresher look, as the brush is ap
plied in the most needed spots.
But painting is only a part of the
task. Spring is doing her part to
make the world beautiful. There is
much that must be done by man
and woman.
During the winter time, when one
is not off at work or recreation, he
is sitting beside his fireside. The
porches are forsaken, except on
those occasions when mild days are
sandwiched between the cold waves.
One forgets how things look and
as they should look outside.
But when the early Epring comes
the northern population gets out
doors as quickly as possible. The
house becomes largely a place to eat
and sleep. Living rooms are for
saken for the more pleasant porches.
And sometimes one Is shocked, when
he fairly looks about him, to see
how shabby his premises have be
come. Perhaps the step Is sagging
or the garage door" 19 sadly swinging
or the swing has become a creaking,
dilapidated thing or the garden is
demoralized.
Somehow, it Is all out of harmony
with the freshness of nature.
Look aDout you, and If there Is
need, paint up and fix and tidy up.
It is worth while.
:o:
SPRING AMBITIONS
At this season of the year. Just be
fore spring fever ' becomes an epi
demic, the bleached urbanite swells
with longing and puffs with deter
minatlon:
1. To own a little place In the
country, if it weren't so far from
town.
2. To raise chickens and sell the
eggs, If it weren't so much trouble
to feed them.
3. To have a nice little garden to
grow Just enough stuff for ourselves,
If weren't that spading gives one a
kink In the back.
4. To walk to the office every
morning and home again In the
evening, if it weren't so far and the
sidewalks weren't so hard, and if it
were not so clearly a public duty to
own an automobile.
And so the bleached urbanite goes
out and buys another golf club.
:o:
DISEASE AND ACCIDENT
The supreme court of Illinois has
upheld a verdict of the lower and
intermediate (appellate courts,
holding an accident insurance com
pany liable for a claim of $1,130,
based on the death of the policy
holder from typhoid fever. Attor
neys for the beneficiaries of the pol
icy held that the disease and death
came from the drinking of contami
nated water, which, of course, was
done accidentally, not intentionally
Therefore, as the policy did not by
its terms exclude "accidents" of this
sort, the company must be held lia
ble; and the Illinois courts, from
bottom to top, accepted that argu
ment as valid.
If this view is generally accepted
as good law, it must result in one of
two things: Either accident insur
ance companies must make their
calculations to cover not only "acci
dents" in the heretofore usual mean
ing of the term, but all kinds of dis
eases contracted through some act
of danger of which was not at times
known; or, if the company wishes to
hold to the heretofore usual and
more limited field, it must draw Its
policy in such a form as will defi
nitely exclude such diseases. In the
former case, an upward revision of
accident policy rates would seem to
be inevitable.
-:o:-
SPRINGTIME
Springtime is here and the man
who can't be happy during dayB
such as these has a brickbat for a
heart and an atrophied soul.
Sunday was an ideal day. Just to
be alive was cause enough for re
joicing. On all sides were a thou
sand signs of spring, and her happy
presence was made manifest by a
myriad of soft and singing voices.
Only a few week9 ago the trees
were brown and leafless. Now they
are arrayed again in their freshest
of green garments. Bulbs that have
lain dormant since last fall have
sprouted forth and burst into bloom.
The gardens where only the hardier
plants remained to brighten the
colder months are now becoming ra
diant with color. Tender grass and
clover lawns that hitherto were
cheerless drab stretches.
The birds are busy with their nest
ing. When one wakes in the morn
ing it is to hear their bust chirp and
call.
The air is soft and balmy. Win
ter was kinder than usual this year.
He gave frequent respites from his
cold winds. There have been other
balmy days long before it was time
for spring. But, somehow, a differ
ent feeling is borne in on the light
breezes of late March breezes that
hint of many pleasant April days to
come, of sunshine and showers, of
more green grass and more blossom
ing plants and more singing birds
and of country roads that wind and
wind and of cool streams that seem
to be called to those who would
wield the rod and reel.
Yes sirree, it's springtime. Won't
somebody please invite us to go fish
ing? :o:
Learn to cook, girls. Affections
are more easily alienated than an
appetite.
. :o:
A man downtown broke feel9 like
a, woman downtown without her
powder puff.
:o:
When you are lonely and want the
doorbell to ring, try to take a bath.
LEGAL NOTICE
John M. Henry and Minnie J. Hen
ry, you and each of you, are hereby
notified that on the 14th day of
April, 1925, The Standard Savings
and Loan Association, as plaintiff
filed its petition in the District Court
of Cass county, Nebraska, and you
and each of you are made parties de
fendants. The object and prayer of
said petition is to foreclose and can
cel a certain contract in writing
dated December 2S, 1922. made and
executed by and between the Living
ston Loan and Building Association
of Plattsmouth and the said John M.
Henry and Minnie J. Henry for the
purchase of the following described
real estate, to-wlt:
The north 78 feet of Lots 7,
' 8 and 9. Block 54. in the City
of Plattsmouth, according to the
surveyed and recorded plat
thereof.
That a decree be entered by the
Court foreclosing said contract. That
you the said defendants and each of
you be enjoined from claiming or
asserting any right, title or interest
in and to said real estate or any part
thereof. That said real estate be
quieted in said plaintiff and that said
plaintiff have such other and fur
ther relief in the premises as it may
be entitled to and to the Court seem
just.
You and each of you are required
to answer this petition on or before
the 1st day of June, 1925.
THE STANDARD SAVINGS AND
LOAN ASSOCIATION.
By O. W. JOHNSON,
Its Attorney.
IN THE DISTRICT COURT
OF CASS COUNTY, NEBRASKA
P. A. McCrary, Plaintiff,
vs.
The heirs, devisees, legatees, personal
representatives and all other per
sons interested in the estates of
Oran S. Thompson, . Rebecca B.
Thompson, his wife, Joseph Mc
Creary, Edmund A. Donelan and
ucinda Billings, each deceased, real
names unknown; and all persons
having or claiming any Interest In
Outlot sixty-four (64), Section eigh
teen (18), Township twelve (12),
Range fourteen (14), east of the 6th
P. M., Cass county, Nebraska, or any
part thereof, real names unknown.
(Notice of Suit to Quiet Title
To the defendants, the heirs, devi
sees, legatees, personal representa
tives and all other persons interested
in the estates of Oran S. Thompson,
Rebecca B. Thompson, his wife, Jo
seph McCreary, Edmund A. Donelan
and Lucinda Billings, each deceased,
real names unknown; and all per
sons having or claiming any interest
in Outlot sixty-four (64), Section
eighteen (18), Township twelve
(12), Range fourteen (14) east of
the 6th P. M., Cass county, Nebras
ka, or any part thereof, real names
unknown:
You and each of you are hereby
notified that the above named plain
tiff filed a petition and commenced
an action in the District court of
Cass county, Nebraska, on the 15th
day of April, 1925, against you and
each of you, the object and prayer
of which is to obtain a decree quiet
ing title to the Outlot sixty-four
(64), Section eighteen (18), Town-
Ehlp twelve (12), Range fourteen
(14) east of the 6th P. M., Cass
county, Nebraska, as against you and
each of you, and for such other and
further relief as may be just and
equitable.
You and each of you are required
to answer said petition Monday the
28th day of May, 1925, or the al
legations of plaintiffs petition will
be taken as true and a decree will
be entered in favor of plaintiff and
against you and each of you, accord
ing to the prayer of said petition.
Dated this 15th day of April, A.
D. 1925.
P. A. McCRARY,
Plaintiff.
J. A. CAP WELL, ,
Plaintiff's Attorney, j
al6-4w.
YOUNG MEN'S
BIBLE GLASS IS
ENTERTAINED
Enjoy Social Evening at "Sunny-
side,' Home of Teacher and
Friend, Last Night.
From Wednesday's Daily
Following the custom of enjoying
one evening in the year as the guests
of their teacher and friend, the mem
bers of the Y. M. B. C. of the Meth
odist church last evening gathered
at "Sunnytide," the home of Mr. and
Mrs. E. H. Wescott, to spend a most
pleasant time.
There were some forty present
and for several hours the home was
the scene of the most delightful in
formal pleasures, with games and
contests providing many pleasant
features of the occasion. The con
tests in which questions were an
swered by the members of the party
proved unusually pleasing and taxed
the knowledge of the members to
solve.
As a feature of the evening there
was also a number of musical selec
tions given, mandolin, guitar, banjo,
piano and drum music adding their
part in the enjoyable program of
popular numbers. The members of
the class also enjoyed group singing
that was a part of the program and
in which all joined in with the
greatest cf fervor.
In the course of the evening,
Jesse P. Perry, for fourteen years a
member of the class, who has occu
pied all the offices of the class and
been one of its chief workers, was
elected honorary president for life
and presented with a suitable cer
tificate. The evening was closed by dainty
refreshments of ice cream and cake
being served by the Wescott family
and the members of the class.
CALIFORNIA TO REGULATE
AERIAL TRAFFIC BY LAW
Sacramento, Cal., April 13. Aerial
traffic, balloon and airplane, will be
regulated in California's skies if a bill
passed by the state senate receives
the approval of the assembly and the
governor.
The regulations provide that no
person less than 18 years old shall
operate air craft; that an aviator
must volplane from 500 feet and land
within 150 feet of a designated spot,
and that aloft he must make three
figure eights around specified objects.
Balloons would have the right of
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska, Cass conn-
'in the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of
David J. Pitman, 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
8th day of May, A. D. 1925, and
on the 8th day of August, A. D. 192o
at ten o'clock a, m., of each day to
receive and examine all claims
against Raid 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 8th day of May
A. D. 1925, and the time limited for
payment of debts is one year from
said 8th day of May, 1925.
Witness my hand and the 6eal of
said county court, this 7th day of
April, 1925.
A. H. DUXBURY,
(Seal) al3-4w County Judge
ORDER OF HEARING
On Petition For Appointment
Of Administrator
The State of Nebraska, Casa eoun
ty, 68.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of Bar
bara Klinger. deceased.
On reading and filing the petition
of George J. Klinger, praying that
administration of said estate may be
granted to petitioner as administra
tor: Ordered, that May 4th, A. D
1925, at Nine o'clock a. m., is 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 petitioner should not be
granted; and that notice of the
pendency of said petition and the
hearing thereof be given to all per
sons 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.'
Dated April 13th, 1925.
A. H. DUXBURY.
(Seal) &13-3wks,w County Judge.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska, Cass coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of
Frank Hughson, deceased.
To th creditors of said estate:
, You are hereby notified, that I
will sit at the county court room in
City of Plattsmouth in said county,
on the first day of June, 1925, and
the third day of August, 1925, at ten
o'clock in the forenoon of each of
said days to receive and examine all
claims against said estate, with a
view to their adjustment and allow
ance. The time limited tor the pre
sentation of claims against said
estate is three months from the first
day of May, A. D. 1925, and the time
limited for payment of debts Is one
year from said first day of May,
1925.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said county court, this 7th day of
Ajril, 1926.
A. H. DUXBURY,
(Seal) &9-4wks,8w County Judge.
Chicks are money
little fluffy puffs of
gold. Not much in any
one, but in a flock, well,
they're a bank balance.
Put up a good house
for them. Make the
walls and ceilings of
Sheetrock this differ
ent wallboard that
keeps out the heat and
the cold, doesn't warp,
shrink, buckle or
bulge, is verminproof
and fireproof.
I .A IhT
r3
Ask your lumber
dealer for it
GLOIDT LUMBER &, COAL CO.
way over airplanes. An airplane com
ing from the right would have right
of way over another. One airplane
overtaken another would pass to the
right and not dive beneath the other
machine.
Impure blood runs you down
makes you an easy victim for disease.
For pure blood and sound digestion
Burdock Blood Bitters. At all drug
stores. Price, $1.25.
9& K2SBJ tS3
HOTICH TO ORBDITOS8
Tfcs Stat of Nebraska, Oass coun
ty, u.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of Rob
ert B. Windham, Sr., deeeaaed.
To the creditor! of said estate
You are hereby .notified, that I
will ait at the County Court room In
Plattsmouth in aald county, on the
10th day of April, 1116. ead on the
10th day of July. Ill, at 10 o'clock
a. m. each day, to receive and ex
amine all claims against said estate,
with a view to their adjustment and
allowance. The time limited for the
presentation of claims against sail
estate Is three months from the 10th
day of April. A. D. 1915. and the
time limited for payment of debts is
one year from aald 10th day of April.
1925.
Witness my band and the seal of
aald County Court, this 18th day of
March, 1125.
A. H. DUXBU3VT",
(Seal) m21-4w County Judge.
ORDER OF HEARING
on Petition for Appointment of
Administrator
The State of Nebraska, Case ooun
ty, as.
In the County Court
In the matter of the estate of
George W. Shrader, deceased.
On reading and filing the petition
of Homer II. Shrader prayln that
administration of said estate may bo
granted to Ora Davla, as Adminis
trator; Ordered, that Saturday, April 30.
A. D. 1925, at ten o'clock a. m. is as
signed for bearing said petition, when
all persons Interested in paid matter
may appear at a County Court to be
held in and for said county, and
show cause why the prayer of the pe
titioner should not be granted; and
that notice of the pendency of aald
petition and the hearing thereof be
given to all persons interested in
said matter by publishing a copy of
this order in the Plattsmouth Jour
nal, a semi-weekly newspaper print
ed in said county, for three success
ive weeks, prior to said day of hear
ing.
Dated Uarch 17, 1911.
A, U. DUXBUKY,
(Seal) mtO-Jw Oocnay ula
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 Wil
liam Klaurens, deceased.
On reading and filing the petition
of J. M. KlaurenB and William H.
Klaurens, praying that administra
tion of said estate may be granted to
Joseph Lidgett as administrator:
Ordered, that April 27th, A. D.
1926, at 10 o'clock a. m.. Is assigned
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
notice of the pendency of said peti
tion and the hearing thereof be given
to all persons interested in said mat
ter by publishing a copy of this or
der in the Plattsmouth Journal, a
semi-weekly newspaper printed in
said county, for three successive
weeks, prior to said day of hearing.
Dated March 80th, 1926.
A. H. DUXBURY,
Coulter Jiae.