1 r" THURSDAY, APRIL 1, 1926. pidfZTsxoinH ssm-weekly jotjbnax PAGE THBEB HUMAN INTEREST WHY BLUE LAWS FAIL BANKRUPTCY NOTICE " NOTICE OF LIQUIDATION ! . Cbc plattsmouth journal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA BaUrst at PoatoClcs. PlatUmouth, Nb, as coad-cl&u mall matter R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 THE POWER OF THE LORD And they Ehall say. This land that was desolate is become like the garden of Eden. Then the heathen that are left round about you shall know that I the Lord build the ruined places and plant that that was desolate. Ezekiel 34:35-36. :o: A new broom sweeps clean, but a henpecked husband doesn't. :o: It is the clean tablecloth that catches the early grease spot. :o: It's a poor memory that doesn't allow a man to forget what he owes. :o: Women forgive more easily than men. Tney get more chances to practice. ' " :o:- Money doesn't mean everything but you can't say it doesn't mean anything.' :o: France seems to be having as much trouble as a man with a second-hand automobile. :o: You can eat best on an empty stomach, but you can't think best on an empty head. :o: A man in Illinois listed a $50 auto , as an asset. If we had a $50, car we'd; list it as a liability. :o:- Some continue to go In the direc tion they started the Duchy of Hades. Others beat back. I Q. I March serves the excellent purpose'about 520.000 has 123,000 telephones,100 a newspaper today, would they .1 of keeping us from having spring, too soon. She knows her spring, onions. -:o:- Gen. Smedley Butler will not, we learn, receive any more invitations toa dine out, now that he has turned, professional sniffer. -:o: Funny how some flappers vamp all the good looking sheiks in town,, and ' then wind up by marrying some old,: tat. bald-headed man. :o: Spring fever season is again ap-,U. proaching. One sure cure for the fever le iu hub a. ujj on, Bu mi" me wwuo and get covered with redbugs. :o:- If only those people reached con- elusions who have taken pains to Inform themselves, there would be a good deal less of trashy discussion. :o: At the age of 77 Luther Burbank, plant wizard, maintains that the most Important work of his life lies ahead. Burbank Is optimistic, to say the least. I -:o:- The man who originated the ex-. pression, "there's music in the air,"j One very seldom picks up a paper some fifty or more years ago never and reads of a horse running away realized that the radio would spread ; and Injuring some one. What few it the way now noticed. j horses that are in use haven't the :o: (ambition to run away with a plow. Having slid the tariff on straw hats up until they will cost us an addi- tional $13,500,000 annually, we pre-' bume inai jir. oonage wm Buoriiy et Vila Trn V. tnA Vi ntntr O a a. Ml J. 1 . . . m . third term. :o: T?rf nMnr 4.,o V father a $25,000 home, according to the A. P. This was a mistake. He hould have bought a $5,000 home and invested the other $20,000 in six per cent bonds. :o: A Detroit pastor says flappers should be stripped of their right to parade the streets for the purpose of vamping the sheik population. Butiture. The poll showed that eigh y hasn't the flapper had about all the stripping she can stand? :o:- A young chemist of Vienna has in- vented a substitute for the electric storage battery. This department's curiosity will not be satisfied until some smart Aleck discovers a substi- tut fnr Tt.t,. o .u.Jwo a ,-on. h . will move as fast, if not faster, that' will shock less and that will not go out on stormy nights. -"i"I-I"I"I"I"M-S. Dr. John A. Griffin Dentist 4 Office Hours: 9-12; 1-6. JL Sundays and evening! jt. by appointment only. X PHONE 229 ju f Soennichsen Building 4 ?-H I I I I M I I I I I i M-frj; PEB YEAB IN ADVANCE Speaking of nationality, most of the sheiks are "rushing." :o: Bashful lovers and kernels of corn turn white when they pop. o: In winter golf players swap yarns about what they didn't do in summer. -:o: The holes burned in shirts would feed quite a few moths for quite a while. :o: The boyish haircut for girls looks much better than the girlish haircut for boys. :o: You cannot say that the magazine stands are wanting in variety of offerings. i n i The average man doesn't cast his bread upon the waters until it be- comes stale. :o:- What has become of .the old fashioned dad who used to play mar bles with his son? :o: A skirt is a garment which always seems to be too long, too short, too tight or too something. :o: Xo danger of that clock in business offices being stolen. watched too close for that. :o:- The man who called them "easyi payments" wasn't thinking of those; who would have six schedules on hand at once. :o: population of 1U1UI11U, Willi or one to every four peopl -men, l women and children -:o: 'Europe's Voice Heard Across Ocean," says a headline, referring to new achievement in radio. Did it carry a request for a loan? :o:- Fight in senate on Italian debt terms has begun. Smoot begs col- leagues not to make settlement of the football of partisan politics. :o:- Gifford Pinchot announces for the' S. senate on a supporth-the-ad- ministration platform. That quali- uca vi.i. aa a 1UUl.ub cmui l",tne university. Life. -:o:- It is well enough for a man to pay for the gas his wife uses in riding! around town in the family bus, butl at least she ought to buy her own cigarettes. :o: Chicago police are raiding near - . . beer saloons in that city with hat- chets, a la Carrie Nation. That is, they are recorded in the license I bureaus as near-beer saloons. i :o: r- -:o:- H Vi n n a fsl nita Amorito it c t o Tn 1 to strike the country right between' me eyes. iow we imve uib vuaiio-, 4 - j - i - n nn1rH'a a Y A tTlA P b a rlpctHTI . T.-- Vts " Xt nlrvO A ,1o B(,,or(J stockings, and some college students, , -i,0,i,fnn oor, Tt are wearing the Charleston cap. It' " 1 c c" 8 . , , cillior hp f fl th( greater hit it makes. :o:- DISTINCT PRONUNCIATION One of the large radio stations in the north-west recently made a pll to determine the most popular eloss of radio programs and will govern themselves accordingly in the f:i- per cent of radio listeners wanted popular songs, old time melodies andj Jazz numbers. Very few expressed a 'wish for classical music, speaking ard recitations. The station announced that it will discontinue classic so-' prano solos in the future and cater tn t. . . , m to the orchestra and popular num- Hcatlon maintains that soprano solo-, ists have themselves to blame, for attention0 to & distinct ! . . they pay no pronunciation of the words of a song. Radio listeners desire distinct pro nunciation the same as phonograph recordine studios. No sineer can re- cord for a phonograph company un- less he or she is practically excellent in regards to pronunciation. The Fascist newspapers of Italy j are not trying to conceal their sat-' iegaction at the Geneva mess; which proves that with all Its faults Fascimo t lint trililtv rt Via ain Vmnotm " - lilt D1U VI UJAfWllDJ or the virtue of expert diplomacy. A woman of 105 turned down the suit of a courter of 102 in New York the other day. A good story, full of human in terest. The heart is ever young. Incidently, so are press agents. The story was obtained at the Home for Aged Hebrews. There are in that home at least a dozen persons of both sex past the age of 90. All of them live, wide-awake, interested in life. Xo wonder heart concerns affect them. It isn't a hard job press agenting a home like that. Strange things these press agents. though. They run a risky life. They often have to "pull" stunts which carry them into physical danger. They must be able to write well, know the 1 news as thoroughly as the editors, and "time" it also. For instance, when a murder story is getting two columns of the front page and six or more inside, it is futile to "pull" a stunt. Press agents, generally, are con structive. Take the work of press agenting a revival. Editors want news. Evan- gelists are too often propagandists, stubbornly insistent upon the value of what they say as news over events. That's why editors rejoice when men like Howard William become evan gelists. They know news. They help. And incidentally help themselves, for they put into their work the same interest that makes "reader in terest." expression,' Originality, effective whimsicality often is as valuable as.lang. it denies that its domestic news. It helps to balance the news- paper diet. Opie Read, recently told of how he! EOmeigot his job on the old Xew York Sun : 11 under Dana. He visioned the drama of life passing Broklyn Bridge in an! I hour. And his extraordinary English, his magnificent sweep, carried thruj About all this can mean is that the a story that was essentially a maga-'New York bank is not committed in j zine story. i Were Lafadie Heard, or Opie Read,! or JosePn Conrad to apply for a job land; Yes, good writing is as appreciated as good news. The explanation is simply human interest is as great today as it ever was. It appreciates values. :o: GO-GETTERS AND LIFE Dr. Mattoon Monroe Curtis, for thirty-five years head of Western Re- serve University's department of phil-' osophy, told a group of undergradu- te3 the other day that he wa s so tired of "go-get-'em" d1 lilosonhv go-get-'em" philosophy that he was resi&ning from his chair at The struggle to teach esthetics in a world saturated with talk only of dollars, progress, 100-percentism and . that, is too great a battle in this ' I swift age, the doctor thought. Perhaps after all, what tires Dr. Curtis more than anything else is Sham Thprp' nilltp SI hit nf it these ! .days. The national pastime has be- come "putting up a front." There might be some excuse for this persis is a great deal of silly superciciality. tent carping about "helping Eng The modern highpowered sales- land," but such is not, and has not man, for the greater part with only technical equipment, and without the background of liberal arts, is a par- 'rot. Ask this higtfpower fellow a few j simple test questions and the chances are great that his front of stern wisdom will collapse. He thinks in I a. liichnnu'er ornnvp Hot him nil t i nf his irrnnvp and he is as (ill inn as "" " . . i"" Fuunuicu ui uui. The only remedy is a little time de- TOted to B1Qcere study of a few of , . . . . . , llfes finer th,nSs that do not mmed- ... ,,, , . iatIv mpnn rtnllnrs and ports hut ' ' which widen a man inestimately and open up for him an enlarged vista serve banks to say frankly that it is of life. There is considerable cynicism, their aim, as far as consistent with It might almost be called the day's the welfare of this county, to use trend of thought. But do not be the gold now impounded in their fooled by the synicism a fool affects vaults for purposes of European fi to hide his weakness. That also is one nancial rehabilitation. of the twenteith century's popular, :o: indoor sports, the scoffer scorning Wall Street rumbles, captains of in what is fine because he cannot un-; dustry fall and messenger boys take derstand it. i There are too many rules of sue- i cess. Too many young persons are .mu..-uu moura inai unless iney specialize iney win uc Z T V . ..... ket. And the buyer i3 the all around man wno nasu i piuiiea nimsen aown to the stu,dy any thin5 but who studies all things. There is no rule for success that wiU app,y to a11 men'! :o: , A Dakota man proposed to a girl on a Postal card, and she sent him a card in return on which was the word; . K m w 1 - "e ,-uu,u "ave euL1U!eQ n,s, Proposal in a letter ana maybe he I would have received "yes" as an answer. EGGS FOR HATCHING Purebred Barred Rock eggs for hatching. $3 per 100. IRS mll - 4w IVAN BALFOUR, Rt. 1, Union, Neb. Look for it on the dealer's counter n JT7 -More money and the best Peppermint Chewing Sweet for any money C13 GOOD CASE; WEAK DEFENSE The Xew York Federal Reserve bank says either too much or too lit tle in its annual report with respect to its relations to the Bank of Eng- credit policies are influenred by its relations with the British bank, but adds in the next paragraph that its intention is to exchange information fully, and to do nothing "detrimental to the maintainahce of a free gold market" and the gold standard. advance to a discount policy which will protect England's gold position; that it may if it choose pursue , policy with respect to domestic credit which conceivably might draw gold : from England, but that it is not its intention to do so. The position of .the Xew York bank in helping England restore her cur rency needs no defense except from that happily limited and diminishing number which believes this country should have nothing to do with eco- nomic conditions abroad. The bank last spring created a credit for the British account which would assist her in the return to the gold stand- ard, and maintained until recently a rediscount rate consistent with that policy of assistance. At recurring in- tervals the nolicv has drawn the fire 'of certain groups hostile to American participation in international affairs, and the bank's statement denying a definite commitment to England is a reply to them. If the policies pursued by the Xew York federal bank or by the reserve crctom in o-DnnrQl u-iim in an, cpnea , detrimental to our own interest there been the case. In fact the federal reserve authorities are forsighted enough to see that the surest and soundest.w-ay of helping ourselves is to help' Europe restore stable curren- Cy systems on the basis of the gold standard. a a ncnit rr i-. v l, t tn- onmiti-n.l a-nnr-mma mil ctnol-c V. H -....i. 6-u .which are a auurtB ui uuiemiai uau- ger here, and which are sorely need- ed in the countries from which they ... Cam as a basis of new monetary sys- J . t : e . t il.i 1:11 -i "THIS. It 13 UUIU, lUlltfie lllill pUlllICBl considerations do not permit the re the seats of the mighty. In the re .,.,. cent bear drive x-.aiiK. i. nuiswu, i; lirand Kapids, Kansas City, New -bu, me canyons wnere me tiCKer writes . . 7 . . v , v,ewueui . . was taken by "Dick" Schaddelee, couecior ana messenger. Twenty messenger. years ago such a wild selling wave as the street went through would have created a national panic. Today there isn't a rinDle. The DrosDeritv of the country is pretty sound. :o: HOG TAKEN UP A Duroc Jersey boar weighing about 225 pounds came to my farm 4lo miles northeast of Nehawka. The owner can have same by prov ing property, paying for keep and advertising costs. Otherwise, the hog will be sold according to law. OMAR SCHLICHTEMEIER. m29-5w. Nehawka, Nebr. Advertise your wants in the Jour nal for results. Ifo Opposition by President Coolidge has sounded doom for a blue law bill ?r . A- . ai1"'- U1 Lincoln Division. that congress was getting ready to. in the matter of Webb Russell and clamp upon the District of Columbia. Rlerritt Russell, partners as Russell Evidently the president, like many Pharmacy, and as individuals, bank of the rest of us, thinks that Moses ruPt- Cose 1255' in Bank- riintfv did very well at Mount Sinai, and) that attempts to improve upon the third and fourth commandments are painting the lily. . . . . . . Ten thousand laws might be pass- ed but the Sunday would remain just as red, green or blue as the individ- ual chose to maka it. That is because observance of the Sabbath is really , a matter of how a man s mind works. America is a paradise for reform- ers but not the only country where they flourish. A young swain of Turin, Italy, was arrested for kiss ing his girl as he was leaving her at her doorstep. The police magis trate dismissed the charge of "off ence against public decency," but the supreme court of Italy reversed the decision and upheld the law. If you feel like kissing your girl in Italy, better take her on inside or down in the cellar. And, on top of it all, a local op tion drive has ben started in Germany. That sounds like a dream. But it is expected to obtain 8,000,000 signa- tures to petitions addressed to theito Ann L. Rys, as Administratrix; Reichstag. It would be a fine, broad minded thing if they would include Limburger cheese in the petition. The next number on the program might be a drive against garlic in Italy. And say, let's purge the Ber- mudas of those dreadful onions! :o: ELEMENTAL NAMES The new element, Xo. 61, has been'thig or(jer in the Plattsmouth Jour formally christened "illinium" inlnal, a semi-weekly newspaper print honor of the University of Illinois at'?d in said county, for three success- TifA Ti-nrvlrn nvtinw r oo?l lltr r f V no which institution the ahstrartlv im - portant discovery was made. It is, of course, a wholly artificial name, but it is constructed after a pattern that has generally been followed in the naming of new elements. The ending "ium" makes for uniformity, though a few new elements such a "xenon" and "noon" do not follow the rule. Of the old elements known at the dawn of chemical understanding some had established names which were tactily accepted by the scientists. An timony, sulphur, arsenic, bismuth are names of this class. The common motnllir olomonta snph sq loaci iron .... - - - - 1 tin, gold, silver, nickle all have the' simple Anglo-Saxon names, while the rare metals such as unranium, irid-j ium, titanium and thallium have more or less fanciful names built up from classical material. Only recently has the idea of per- sonal or national pride appeared in the naming of new elements. We have a germanium, and it was urged that Xo. 61 be similarly christened "ameri- canum." Unquestionably illinium is better. It has a more specific appli cation, and its aspect is less bar barous. SEED CORN FOR SALE ORDER OF HEARING On Petition for Appointment of Administrator. The State of Nebraska, Cass count ty. ss. In the County Court. . In the matter of the estate of Elizabeth Katherine Hild, deceased. On reading and filing the petition of George M. Hild praying that ad ministration of said estate may be granted to Michael Hild as adminis trator; Ordered, that April 19th A. D. 1926, at 10 o'clock a. m., is assigned; for hearing said petition, when all ity. in the ear. Shows a germination will sit at the County Court room in .ag,f L"m n " , test of 95 to 100 per cent. Single Plattsmouth in said county, on the an delivered to said defendants picked. $1.50: double picked. $2.50 26th day of April. A. D. 1926 and on s wares and merchandise, all of bushel At farm one quarter mile the 27th day of July, A. D. 1926. at hJCBh,nerrte ZlYJLlni south of Murray on Walker place, ten o'clock a. m.. of each day, to re- .J?0. ?pa 5, nfinfS ROY GERKIXG. ceive and examine all claims against S"!1? "'1 n f 174 -0 mlS-tf sw said estate, with a view to their ad- fr,oni defendants the sum of $174.i0. persons interested in said matter! The State of Nebraska. To all per may appear at a county court to be sons interested in said estate credi held in and for said county, and show tors and heirs take notice, that M ch raii. tha nravor nf nptitioner ael Hild his filed his petition alleg- shnniH nnt h P-rantort- and that notice of the pendency of said peti- tion and the hearing thereof be given tn all nprsnne intorosteri 3d in said matter .'bv miblishine a conv of this order in ' ; . me riaiismouin journal, a. semi weekly newspaper printed in said county, for three successive weeks, prior to said day of hearing. Dated March 29th, 1926. A. H. DUXBURY, County Judge. - (Seal)m29-3wks TjjpK Tfanefpf uv" C11VI IlOUOlbl L - I - N - E Call Phone 342-W or see me at the Vallery Sales Pavilion, Plattsmouth . Wade Porter ' ggf lave Stock Hauling a Specialty. ; i ' . 7.-"'' 1 ' 1 In the District Court of the United Qn o 4 TV I--. wis-. n0 XV.. ft V r To creditors of the above bank. rupts of Weeping Water, in the County of Cass, the district aforesaid, (bankrupts: Notice is hereby given that on the 24th day Qf MarhfA D 1926f the sai(i bankrupts were duly adjudicated bankrupt and that the first meeting of their creditors will be held in the edeJal Cou T Jn U?C?ln:, N?' braska. on the 9th day of April, A. D i926 at 9 0.clock jn the forenoon, at which time the said creditors may attend, prove their claims, examine the bankrupts, appoint a trustee and , iiaiisitii sum in lit I uumtr:9 as nmj properly come before such meeting. Dated March 25, 192 DANIEL H. McCLEN'AHAN, Referee in Bankruptcy. ORDER OF HEARING on Petition for Appointment of Administratrix The State of Xebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Michael J. Rys, deceased. On reading and filing the petition of Ann L. Rys praying that adminis- tratinn nf tsair! PRtate mav he erantpd Ordered, that April 19th, A. D. 1926, at ten o'clock a. m., is assign ed for hearing said petition, when all inprannn interested in said matter mav appear at a County Court to be held jn and for said county, and show cause why the prayer of the. 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 bv Dublishine a conv of ",c l" l" "l lng. Dated March 23rd, 1926. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) m29-3w County Judge. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Xebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Lu cinda Brittain, 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 12th day of April, A. D. 1926. and on the 13th day of July, A. D. 1926, at ten o'clock a. m., of each day, to I TCelve and examine all claims i n nn in ff Act o a Txr t y o vlanr r - " enrand7nownhe tjme Umited for the presentation tf claims against said estate is three months from the 12th day of April, a. u. lyztj. ana tne time iimiiea ior payment of debts is one year from said 12th day of April, 1926. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court, this 8th day of March, 1926. A II. DUXBURY, County Judge. (Seal) mll-4w XOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of John II. Sibert, deceased. TY tha rrfi itnra nf cairi pqtatp- You are hereby notified that justment and allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claims against said estate is three months from the 26th day of April, A. D. 1926, and the time limited for pay ment of debts is one year from said 26th day of April, 1926. Witness my hand and the eeal of said County Court, this 15th day of March, 1926. A. H. DUXBURY. County Judge. (Seal) m22-4w NOTICE OF HEARING Estate Xo. of Adam Hild, de ceased, in the County Court of Cass county, Xebraska. lng that Adam Hild died intestate in Plattsmouth, Nebraska, on or about May 5th. 1920, being a resident and , innaoiiam ui nausmuuiu, ieurnsita, and the owner of the following de- scribed real estate, to-wit: . Lot eight (8), In Block ninety-seven (97), in the City of Plattsmouth, Cass county, Xe leaving as his sole and only heirs at'ent amount of the same to bring the law the following named persons, to-wit: Elizabeth Katherine Hild, widow; and Michael Hild, Fer dinand Jacob Hild, George Mich ael Hild, Philip Adam Hild, Fredrick Leonard Hild, Anna Katherine Puis and Emma Eliz abeth Friedrich, children and praying for a decree barring claims; that said decedent died in- of Plattsmouth, Nebraska, on the testate; that no application for ad- 24th day of April, 1926, at ten o'clock ministration has been made and the a. m., to show cause why a license estate of said decedent has not been should not be granted to said ad administered in the State of Nebras- mlnistrator to sell the above describ ka, and that the heirs at law of said ed real estate of said deceased to pay decedent as herein set forth shall be debts and expenses of said estate and decreed to be the owners In fee slm- that this order be published in the nle of the above described real estate. Plattummith Journal for four mirrpiu. which has been set for hearing on the 1st day of May, A. D 1926. ) I Dated at Plattsmouth, Nebraska, 'this 29th day of March, A. D. 1926. t ' A. H. DUXBURY; I Seal! m29-3w flnHntv Judee. County Judge. The First National Bank. located at Greenwood, in the State of Ne braska, is closing Its affairs. All note holders and other creditors of the as sociation are hereby notified to pre sent the notes and other claims for payment to the Greenwood State Bank of Greenwood, Nebraska, which has assumed all the debts and lia bilities of the First National Bank under an agreement of merger be tween them. Dated December 31, 1925. 11. K. FRANTZ. f4-9w. President. NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENT DEFENDANT In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Xebraska. To A. D. Welton, Defendant: You are hereby notified, that on the 29th day of January, 1926, the Cass County Investment Company, a corporation, filed a petition in the District Court of Cass county, Ne braska," against you, the object and prayer of which is to quiet title in itself and cancel a certain mortgage alleged to be a cloud upon the title to the following described real es tate, to-wit: Lots 362 and 363. in the Vil lage of Greenwood, Cass county, Nebraska and enjoin you and all persons claim ing by, through or under you from asserting any right title or interest in or to the above described real es tate. That unless you answer said peti tion on or before the 10th day of May, 1926, the contents of said peti tion will be taken as true. CASS COUNTY INVESTMENT COMPAXY, a Corporation, Plaintiff. BRYANT, Attorney for Plaintiff. m25-5w J. C. ORDER OF HEARING on Petition for Appointment of Administrator The State of Xebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate' of George E. Nichols, deceased. On reading and filing the petition of Harold G. Nichols praying that administration of said estate may be granted to X. D. Talcott, as Admin istrator; Ordered, that April 6th. A. D. 1926, at ten 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 petitioner should not be granted; and that 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 order in the Plattsmouth Journal, a semi-weekly newspaper printed in said ; county, for three successive weeks, prior to said day of hearing. Dated March Sth. 1926. A. IL DUXBURY. (Seal) mll-3w County Judge. LEGAL NOTICE In the District Court of Cass coun ts. Xebraska. Henry M. Soennichsen, Plaintiff, vs. Micnaei rreis ana Louisa rreis, Defendants. To the defendants Michael Preis and Louisa Preis: You and each of you are hereby notified that Henry M. Soennichsen, plaintiff, filed his petition in said District Court of Cass county, Xe- i braska, on the 13th day of January, i!1?.26: against you and each of you 26th, 1922, and in order to collect the same, plaintiff has commenced a suit in attachment and levied upon your real estate in the City of Platts mouth, Xebraska. You are hereby notified to appear and answer said petition on or before the 3rd day of May, 1926, according to law and the rules of said court, or Judgment will be entered against you by default and your real estate sold to satisfy the siiue " HENRY M. SOEXNICHSEX, Plaintiff. ALLEN J. BEESOX, m22-4w His Attorney. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the Matter of the Estate of Mary E. Thompson, deceased. The above cause came on for hear- mg upon tne petition or t rann a. cioidt, administrator of the estate of Mary E. Thompson, deceased, pray ing for a license to sell Lots four, five and six, in Block twenty-five, of South Park Addition to the City of Plattsmouth, Nebraska, or a sufflcl- :sum of $500.00 for the payment of I debts allowed against said estate and the cost of administering the same. there mot being sufficient personal property to pay said debts and ex penses. It is therefore ordered that all persons interested in said estate ap pear before me in the District Court- room in the courthouse In the City ive weeks preceding said time, Dated this 11th day of March, A. D. 1926. JAMES T. REOLEY. Judg of the DUtriet m 1 i-inr Cnurt. ml6 - 4w I w 1 1 II I 'n iuififl lueicuu nuui juuc