THURSDAY, JULY 1, 192G. PIATTSM0UT3 SEMI - WEEKLY JOURNAL PAGE TEEIS LEARNING TO PLAY RADIO AND WEATHER To All My Old NOTICE TO CREDITORS SHERIFF'S SALE Che plattsmouth loumal ?I;KL1SHEU SEMI -WEEKLY AT Ktard at Postofflcc Flatt mouth. R . A SUBSCKIPTIOB PKICE $2.00 S0R0W5 IN GOD'S ANGER. How oft is the candle of the wicked put out! and how oft cometh their hstiuctlon upon them' Gd distribut- ith sorrows in his anger.- Job 21:17. i I . ;o: A man with a lake or creek does not need a bathtub these davs. About the easiest way to live long' is to una out some plan tor keeping alive. :o:- Latest popular auto hit in the son .i line is I m Wearing JNIy tires out, for You." I :o: Iirt.- Coolidgc- really wa-.'. tc bclpj .umers" know him. F.j his wt-rk w. M.-ul -:o: This is the month when the print shops advertise engraved wedding a;;- nouncements. This is the season of the year when the ice cream socials are claiming at- tent'on and patronage. Charles W. Uryan h.T? hOS'3 f fiioiu'.- in Cass ounty, a'.! a l.trj number of the"i ire repub'.: ii's ton. :o: Of all the noises to worry a fellow trying to sleep at night it's the one- lung flivver being driven by the milk- man. -:o: : Catherine Lovell, Lritish authoress, i writing about American wild life must have secured her data from New York cabarets. :o:- Dank robbery in St. Louis the othci dr,v in which the bandits kindly loft the bank building, the furniture and t lie fixtures. . ! :o: After shoveling out about ten tons. of coal in a British freighter, pro-, hibition officers found nothing but blistered hands. :o: Over 20,000 votes were missing in the Pennsylvania primary, dispatches j announce. Only trouble wrong fellow got them. :o: was the Roads leading into town should be kept in first-class condition, says a Missouri paper. Not much interested in the roads leading out of town. -:o:- Now a Boston minister says thel skirts worn nowadays are the height! of immodesty. The girls, however.! claim that they are the height of . fashion. -:o:- wiuuiDaw is a uaseuuu uucner 110 , throws the ball with his left hand, al-' though no one would ever know it from the name the sport writers have given him. a few days the Kar.i City Fiat be f-old. It j.-s one of tr. greatest wil' r.ew.-r.pcrs in t"e west and has done; r.d -s for !!ie upbuildii of ihe coming great city of the vcst. j :o: 1 Government officer faces a court- martial for intoxication, having used government liquor for the purpose.1 T... V - 1- f . i t- 0 iu ijue ne j;gureu mai nquur ui ar.V Kind IS Of no USe UnleSS It iS he- I ing imbibed. RESIDENT Kansas cm; Ma flvcrc the HospitA-lilij of Die old South, meets Uxe cjeiievositij of the ncuAVcst u tlieeart of cAmerica 430 ROOMS WITH BATH $34KAND vr Dr. John A. Griffin f Dentist ? OfTlce Hours: 9-12; 1-5. Sundays and evenings by appointment only. 4 ! j PHONE 229 Soennichsen Building (mm PLATTSMOUTH, NE3RASKA Ned., u ecoad-claiaa mall matter BATES, Publisher PES YEAE IK ADVANCE Ltisiuess is looking up s inicwhat iu J'ia'.ttnouth. :o: Vncmiitoi's do not lnvo to hunt the open .-paces in the hosiery nowadays. :o: T - . . 1 . - - 1 T f rum a rauio siuuuiuimi 1 u- davs worst hookun a voile one at I ?4.'S." :o: Grog:;n the cop will now .render that touching ballad entitled, Lome With Me. There is at leat one organization mere is at ica.t on organization for every purpose hitchracks. except restnrin Funny how :o: kids nlavinir baseball will pick out the weakest and meekest to act as umpire. ! : :o: I A week from today and then comes the fire-works. He her'; take in the whole business cai :o:- We have no more "over the hills to the poor house." Thc-y are all "over i the hills to the garage" nowadays. ; -:o:- No summer Sunday is complete un til tl! Irnrl.nk nrint f! ri chuckled . .. over at 5 o'clock Monday afternoon. :o: Hero at tins season ot year is tne fellow who can knock a home run with three men on bases and the score tied. :o: There are but two parties in this country and that is all there should be. in order for people to know where they are at. :o:- Will Hayes' job as movie czar has been extended ten years, so we can't hop? for anv impure movies fcr at least that long. .o: An Ohio paper is "agin war." It says "We'll tell the world we stand flat-footed for 'peas'." Mighty fine vegetable to sit down to. -:o: The democratic partv has the op-! port unity of its Lfe, if it only FAS th:- staminy to accept it. ivj'iy "will do thf busines- ' :o: Af.d ha! Spending a little matter of nearly a quarter of a million dollars for cam- paign expenses does not seem to bother some Pennsylvania candidates. ' :o: ; Girl who slapped a preacher's face, in Kentucky recently far calling her a "puintcd flapper," has been set free, Some day she may slap a prize fighter and spend a few days in the hospital. :o: ' oucakinu 01 airuiane anu aiuuiuu- bile rides, but how would you like to ride an iron beam from the ground up to the twentieth story of a sky- Iscrsrer, with nothing between you and the earth tut a slender cable? 1 and the earth tut a slender cable? :o: Thomas Jefferson's one-horse to being exhibited at the Philadelphia rermicentennial. It is nrobable that Jefferson's gig is more popular in that to tnan his Poetical doctrines wouId be in one of its primary elec- tions. -:o:- .. . ..... . . Things must be bad in tne cnicago o - o n cr n-or uhrn rne wnrnnn Mrs 1 ang war, wnen one woman, Frank Camera, is widowed twice in one month by gangsters. Chicago i would no doubt be pleased to vc-, cept any plan for ridding the city of. gangsters. :o:- A man out in the desert in Wyo- ming who was in a dying conditio n, , ; wrote a will on his shirt, giving his partner a ....m . P. ;When the partner returned to S :n Francisco his wife sent the shirt to the laundry and the will was washed out. "Cleanliness before riches" is a ' woman's motto. ! :o: 1 Ih a man of the political status of in public about other democrats whom The State of Nebraska, Cas3 coun 1 Brookhart, a good representative for they do not like as candidates. This y ss- j any state? A man of this day and age ' is not the proper caper. He may get Clfr C0?rtihe estate of should either be a democrat or a re- the nomination, and if he does, you Valentine TomazewskI, deceased, publican, for people to have confidence may have to support him at the gen- To the creditors of said estate: iin. A man who doesn't know on which eral election, or consider yourself as' You are hereby notified that I will side his bread is buttered, can't rep- resent the people rightfully. A wishy- washy politician is no good at all. :o: Charges of embezzlement of an automobile and fast and reckless driv- ing against Tony Tommy, beminoie chief, who was married recently to a copper-houed Seminole belle, were t, . dropped in Miami the other day. Tony lornmy left tne court witn nis oriae,; and will take a long canoe ride for his honeymoon, which is no doubt , . ... . much safer than the white man a gas wagon. j There was a time, and that not long ago, when old-world philosophers admonished the American people as ' a people to beware of overw ork and insufficient recreation. Herbert Spen- cer on his visit to this country select- ed that theme for his only address to Americana. ! Conditions have ch nged. The peo- ites have been pie of the United Sta and ceitainly the motor car has revo- ; Unionized the habits of millions. Dos- ,..,. i . line me auioniouiii', iiunevci, 11 uui partly because of it, other forms of j healthful recreation are increasingly lesorieu 10 uy Americans 01 an sons ana 311 u's- 1 According to the latest report of 4 1. A T 1 . .1 . . I . . .' a . v. i lajsiuuuu aim lit'iit'auun assu- ciation, last year was notable for addi- Hons to the recreational facilities and j for an increase in amateur athletic clubs. The tot:il number of such ciubs rose from 5,000 to 6,000. Very many new golf courses were con- structed. as well as hundreds of new . tcnais courtS- Several hundred play- grounds for children'were opened dur - ing the year. No community, it is in- l tere.sting to note, spent last year more for public recreation than did Chicago . . ' which is now credited with 221 play centers. 1 ne American people are learning V anu 1 anu iu pia lmii i l uovii 3. iiit, ukis iiia nuiacu 111 111c iuiuic. j complaint of some that tno much time Control rain and over weather cer ' is spent in moving picture theatres tainly is not to be placed beyond and too little in the fresh air is not as well founded as it is lightly assumed by these critics. Perhaps the greatest familiarity with nature will cause due attention . ;.i . v. .,is lvj ir jtaut iu llic" tuunaiiuu Ul 1 1 rt a anii grass within cities that, like Chi - cago, have permitted hemselves to,v lapse into indifference toward ftructive forestry. enn . CROCODILE TEARS t Amid the sheer disgust approaching nausea over Pennsylvania's political extravagance and corruption of the public is entitled to one prolonged hearty burst cf merriment. No more effective excitant of the national risi- bilities can be imagined than the' spectable of Secretary of the Treasury Mellon, one of the world's richest men and the so-called brains of the recent Pepper campaign, and other heads of the Pepper machine lamenting and shedding bitter tears because the ad - , . . vent of the primary system for the selection of party candidates is serv-j - a 1 n 4 V. n wn -1i ,L1B 4JU.1 I J LUC JfUUl ilia 11 111! political aspirations. It will not be t'onsn it witn a nne emery paper. . , ..1 4. If the binder attachment is not ; denied that the primary system as it;t,med properly it certainly will not ; Is operated in Pennsylvania is a poht-. work. Some binders are timed in as ical bar to any but the ultra-rich. The1 politician who is poor but honest will' hardly lunge into a contest where campaign language is couched in mil- lions. It is already on record that the Tepper-Yare-Pinchot primary for' the senatorial nomination cost more than $2,000,000. Of that sum more than half was spent by Mr. Pepper. ' Never in this nation's history has there been such lavish expenditure for ,, , i, at, ""'V , Z I , ....v.. .v " . v . .. vestigation. Secretary Mellon and senator Reed seek to justify the ex- penditure on the ground that it was, j t. i. 1 necessary, and that the slush funds ' were expended as rightly and as prop-, orlv oa 4f fhov Ti a rt hoin fnr Vi ltonofit of a church-an(1 under cnurchly BUj pervision. It is difficult to believe (llo tll jng the WQrst SQrt Qf tWaddIe. But thpv Knhmi, tn lntprvW nnf1 rlrB ft. statements in all seriousness, and thpr In th on t rinrl ween srpat pnnw ' o- c -j tea rs because the poor man has no ..... ' has Cf)me QUt of Pcnnsylvania.s politi caJ cesPp00i .0. The irrespressible Jerry Howard has announced as a candidate for I member of the house of representa- tives. Jerry has been there several times as a democratic member, and! "filled the bill." He can be elected' it he w... , a.ed to M, own affairs, and not be so explicit in condemning other democrats, whom ' i,e doe3 not particularly admire. I J The trouble with some democrats is. they are entirely too free to talk a "bolter, year. Let us have no bolters this' tfl thf C?unt CoUT room n Plattsmouth, In said county, on the Il2th day of July, 1926, and on the When Jed Hoskin's mule ran away while he was carrying the returns from Frog Hollow to the county court house, tne Daiiot box was lost and Jed had to go back and ask the four voters how they voted in order to get . . . . . things straightened out. :o: ' "He that hath hands, let him use them," is an old Chinese proverb. But . , . . .u ' J , , in those days the Chinese had no pick- pockets or prize ngnters. Paul Painleve, former premier of France, and a scientist of note, offers' a possible explanation of the rainy ( weather which Europe is experiencing this summer. Experiments lmwf shown, he points out, that the intro duction of radio-telephonic emis- I sions into a tightly inclosed room i causes drops of water to be formed,' or as he puts it, the "invisible fog found even in every home" to be turn ed into water. From this it may be' reasonably deducted that the heavy" -n, - , .,4. luauiiig Ji iiie iiLut-i uuisiue wuui radio waves has the same effect, and transforms a traditionally beautiful june in I'ans miu a mucin oi rain. I ..... . . . I Should tnis liypotnesis be suostan-, tiated control of the weather would bej j 1 . . . . T ... . .. f me uexi siup. r ui jt-uia mhuus ui one kind and another have been put forth "to make it rain," but without much success. In fact scientists have nrnrticallv ."jrreed that the forces which produce precipitation are be yond the control of man, and have belittled all attempts in that direction. ...... Weather control, after the scientific i accomplishments of the past century, would be no less wonderful than much t that has been done already. In a , thousand ways civilization ha the forces of nature to meet its will (and no good reason can be offered for not oencving mat even greater won- the learn of scientific possibilities. !V T t miA BUREAU NOTES ;v Copy for this Department furnished by County Agent :-!-t?"3"!"!-T' Pet Stock Association Formed A Tri-County Poultry and Pet srnrk' 45Rnri3Tinn wns inrnipn ;uwi a si10w will be held the first part of December in Ashland. Mrs. Norris of keeping Water, and atson Howard of Greenwood were elected to the executive board to renresent Cass ! county. Two poultry raisers from other counties were elected, making an executive noaru oi six person Watch for the premium list. Ten Binder Hints. the machine travels witn 1. If a jerky motion, main drive chain is loo -loose or it may be dry, try a little oil !0111 - M x, , . ! 2. If the slats rip off the canvas tJ elt.vators are not saUare. 3. if the knotter hook is rusty and - lirrK it xi- ill tint uTtrlr nrnncrlv ivur,u w t. iu lit n. ivv ij . many es five places. o. If the knotter hook does not turn far enough to close the fingers on the twine, no knot will be tied. Look at tt,e fcnotter pinion. It should not be worn. 6- If the twine slips thru the cord nold(,r tne twine will be pulled out conholder spring. if should" take 40 nounds to Mill the twine from tho disk. 7- If the needle is ben or out of s-nape mere win ue a, loose euu uaiiu. i . 1 . ii 1 1 .... . 1 J11?1? and may ue iiammereu uacK n; snaye. 9. If the twine i.i pulled from the hok before the knot is tied try the knift, it may be dull. '. 0. Tf von wish to rlianep the size cf bun(iles do it with th o bundle sizer spring, not the tension or compress SlilinET. The refusal cf the New York box ing commission to let Dempsey fight Wills Just now because he is not in condition, will cause a widespread de mand for Dempsey to fight somebody right away, before he has time to get pink. :o: One of the best rules for conversa tion is to use only word3 you know you can pronounce correctly. When in doubt, select other words to vey your meaning. The English friiajre t the mmt elnhornta on the globe. FAEM FOE SALE : p.S,,? jE&r! See or write O. H. ALLEN, Omaha, Nebr. zzu tiowara street. novtcf! to cnF.mTrms . 13th day of October, 192C, at ten o'clock in the forenoon each day, to receive and examine all claims :o: against said estate, with a view to)(SE4), of section twelve (12), tneir adjustment and allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claims against said estate is three : ?"th" fm the12ii1 da,y f iy' !A. D. 1926, and the time limited for Ipayment of debts Is one year from said 12th day of July, 1926. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court, this. 11th day of June, 1926. , . ' AH DUXBURY J(Seal) jl4-4w County Judge.W. A. Robertson, AU'y. Friends-Patrons i am buck at xne oici siann taiung . A i 1 . 1 A J A 1 orders for Nursery Stock, and will appreciate any order you may hold for me until I call on you Yours for a square deal. ANDKL.W bloiiLMArs. J" ' , A 3 x goods the year 'round. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun- tr c o "j Countv Court Jn the matt"er of he . . estate of Cecilia Jahrig, deceased. To the creditors of said estate: You are hereby notified, that I will sit at the County Court room jin Plattsmouth in said county, on the 19th day of July, A. D. lyze, and onthe 20th day of October, A. u. 1926, at ten o'clock a. m., of each day. to receive and examine all claims '.against said estate, witn a view to tcS, ,iic,mnf aiinivan ThP time limited for the presentation of claims against said estate is three months from the 19th day of July, A. D. 1926, and the time limited for pavment of debts is one year from said 19th day of July, 1926. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court, this 26th day of June, 1926. A. H. DUX BURY, (Seal) j28-4w County Judge. NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned will on the 16th day of July, 1926, at 11 o'clock a. m., at the O. K. Garage, Plattsmouth, Ne braska, sell to the highest bidder for cash One 1926 Ford Coupe, Motor No. 12,864,331 Engine Model T covered by a chattel mortgage signed by Ed Cotner in favor of the Platts mouth Motor Company and assigned Edson & Company for a valuable consideration, said chattel mortgage being dated the 18th day of Decem ber, 1925, and having been filed of record in the office of the County Clerk of Cass county, Nebraska; that no action at law has been commenc ed to collect either the whole or a part thereof: said sale will be held for the purpose of foreclosing said chattel mortgage and satisfying the amount due thereon, to-wit: $226.64, together with all costs accruing by virtue of this foreclosure. EDSON & COMPANY, j28-3w Mortgagee. ORDER OF HEARING and Notice on Petition for Set tlement of Account. In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. State of Nebraska, Cass county, ss. To all persons interested In the estate of Barbara A. Taylor, deceas ed : On reading the petition of Calvin II. Taylor, administrator, praying a final settlement and allowance of his account filed in this Court on the 26th day of June, 1926, and for final settlement of said estate and for his discharge as said administrator; It is hereby ordered that you and all nersons interested in said matter may, and do, appear at the County Court to be held in and for said county, on the 8th day of July, A. D. 1926, at ten o'clock a. m., to show cause, if any there be, why the pray er of the petitioner should not be granted, and that notice of the pen dency of said petition and the hear ing thereof be given to all persons interested in said matter by publish ing a copy of this order in the Plattsmouth Journal, a semi-weekly newspaper printed in said county, for one week prior to said day of hearing. In witness whereof, I have here unto set my hand and the seal of said Court, this 26th day of June, A. D. 1926. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) j28-lw County Judge. NOTICE OF CHATTEL MORTGAGE SALE Notice is hereby given that under and by virtue of a chattel mortgage con-'given by Willie Meierdlerks to Platts lan-inioutn btate isanK, aatea iway z, n1924. tO secure the SUm Ot ?1,743.UU, payame uecemoer a, wiiu m terest at 8 per annum from date to December 1, 1924, thereafter at 10. on which the mim of $1,075.07 ia now past due and unpaid; which said mortelaee was duly filed for record in the office of the County Clerk of Cass County, Nebraska, May 28. 1924. at 9:40 o'clock a. m.; the undersigned. Plattsmouth State Bank will sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, the following chattel property covered by said mortgage, to-wit: Two wagons; one planter; one disc; one cultivator; one mower; one gang plow; one rake; one Ford truck 1919 model; one grey stallion; two bay horses; one bay mare and colt; ten head hogs; six Bhoats, six suckling pigs; seven milk cows; five heifers; three steers; seven calves. Said sale will be held on the west 'half (W) of the southeast quarter township twelve (12), range eleven (11). Cass County, Nebraska, known ! as the John Wolff farm, about one and lree T,, 7, ml.ue , t,V. one and one-half miles north of Louis- ville, and about three miles south- west of Cedar Creek, Nebraska, on Monday. July 12, 1926, at 10 o'clockj a. m. Dated June 21. 1926. PLATTSMOUTH STATE BANK Mortgagee j2l-3w The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. in the county court. In the matter of the Estate of Rachael M. Worley, Deceased. To the creditors of said estate: ou are nereby notitied that l will sit at the County Court room in Plattsmouth in said county, on the , ltn ciay or juiy, a. u. iw:t, at-tne nour or ten o clock in the rorenoon of said day and on the 13th day of October, A. D. 1926, at the hour of ien o ciock a. m., to receive anu ex- lamine all claims against said estate-. ,wnn a view to tneir adjustment ana allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claims against said estate is three months from the 12th tiay oi juiy , a. ij. izb, anu tne lime limited for payment of debts is one year from said 12th day of July, 196. Witness my hand and the seal of saiu county court, mis izm uay oi June, laz'j. A. II. DUXBURY, (Seal) jl4-4w County Judge ORDER OF HEARING on Petition for Appointment of Administratrix The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Mary J. Taylor, deceased. On reading and filing the petition of C. E. Taylor praying that adminis tration of said estate may be granted to Evelyn Stamp, as Administrat rix; Ordered, that July 22nd, A. D. 1926, at ten o'clock a. m., is assign 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 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 June 18, 1926. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) j21-3w County Judge. SHERIFF S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. By virtue of an Order of Sale issued by Golda Noble Beal. Clerk of the District Court within and for Cass county, Nebraska, and to me direct ed, I will ob the 10th day of July, A. D. 1926, at 10 o'clock a. m., of said day, at the south front door of the court house, in Plattsmouth, Ne braska, in said county, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the following real estate, to-wit: Lots 5 and 6, Block 171, in the City of Plattsmouth, as sur veyed, platted and recorded, Cass county, Nebraska The same being levied upon and taken as the property of Clifford C. Burbridge, Minnie Alice Burbridge and Wolf Manufacturing Company, a corporation, Defendants, to satisfy a judgment of said Court recovered by The Standard Savings and Loan Association, Plaintiff against said De fendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, June 5th A. D. 1926. E. P. STEWART. Sheriff Cass County Nebraska. 0. W. JOHNSON, Attorney for Plaintiff. j7-5w NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS Sealed bids will be received at the office of the Department of Public Works at Lincoln, Nebraska, on July 1st, 1926, until 9:00 o'clock a m., and at that time publicly opened and read for GRADING. GRAVEL SURFACING. CULVERTS. GUARD RAIL and incidental work on the Plattsmouth-Omaha Project No. 138 D. Federal Aid Road. The proposed work consists of con structing 3.4 miles of EARTH AND GRAVEL road. The approximate quantities are: 63,000 cubic yards common excavation. 50,000 cubic yards stations overhaul. 43,500 square yards 3" sand gravel surfacing. 500 cubic yards common exca vation for culverts. 172 cubic yards concrete, Class "A." - 40 lineal feet 24" culvert pipe. 66 lineal feet 30 culvert pipe. 126 lineal feet 36" culvert pipe. 74 lineal feet 48 culvert pipe. 2,464 lineal feet guard rail. 32 anchors for guard rail. 4 extra posts for guard rail. Plans and specifications for the work may be seen and information secured at the office of the County Clerk at Plattsmouth, Nebraska, or at the office of the Department of Public Works at Lincoln, Nebraska. The successful bidder will be required to furnish bond in an amount equal to 100 of his con tract. Certified checks made payable to the Department of Public Works for not less than five per cent (5) of the amount of the bid will be re quired. This work must be started previous to August 1st, 1926, and be com- p he right is reserved to waive all technicalities and reject any or all Dids. GEO. R. SAYLES. County Clerk, Cass County. R. L. COCHRAN, State Engineer. Legal blanks of all kinds for sale at the Journal office. State of Nebraska, County of Cas9, ss. By virtue of an Order of Sale is- sued by colda Noble Heal. Clerk of the District Court within and for 'Cass COUnty, Nebraska, and to me di ' re(.te(j j Wjjj on tne 3r,i (jay &f juiy A. D. 1926. at 10:00 o'clock a m cf sajd (ay at the south front door of tne court house in Platts- mouth, in said county, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for jcasn tne following real estate, to- Lot 12. Block 30, in the City of Plattsmouth, as surveyed, platted 'and recorded, in Cass county, Nebraska .The same being levied upon and takpn as thp nronertv of Peter F. (;oos an,i Louise floos, Defendants, to satipfv a judgment of said Court I recovered by The Standard Loan & Savings Association, Plaintiff again.-t K.,i(, Defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, May 27th, A. D. 1926. E. P. STEWART, Sheriff Cass County, Nebraska. O. W. JOHNSON, Attorney. m31-5w NOTICE OF SUIT TO QUIET TITLE. In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. John Oakemeier, Plaintiff, vs. James D. Walters et al, Def nclants. To the defendants James D. Walt ers and Mrs. James D. Walters, real name unknown; Ann E. Walters and Walters, real name unknown, husband of Ann E. Vaters: the heirw, devisees, legatees, personal represen tatives and all other persons inter ested in the estates of James D. Wal ters, Mrs. James D. Walters, real name unknown; Ann E. Walters and Walters, real name unknown, husband of Ann E. Walters and all other persons having or claiming any interest in the north half of the northeast quarter of Section 31, in Township 12, North, Range 11, Ea.t of the Sixth Principal Meridian, in Cass county, Nebraska, real names unknown: You and each of you are hereby notified that John Gakemeier as plaintiff, filed a petition and com menced an action in the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska, on the 5th day of June. A. D. 1926. against you and each of you. the ob ject, purpose and prayer of which i to obtain a decree of Court, quieting the title to all of the north half of the northwest quarter of Section 31, in Township 12, North. Range 11, East of the Sixth Principal Meridian, in Cass county, Nebraska, as against you and each of you and for such other relief as may be just and equit able. You and each of you are further notified that you are required to an swer aid petition on or before Mon day, the 19th day of July. A. D. 1926, or the allegations therein contained will be taken as true and a decree will be rendered In favor of plain tiff and against you and each of you according to the prayer of said peti ion. Dated this 5th day of June, A. D. 1926. JOHN OAKEMEIER. Plaintiff. W. G. KIECK, j7-4w Att'y for Plaintiff. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the Guardianship of James Howard Shepherd, Hazel Shepherd, Lawrence Shepherd and Dorothy Shepherd, Minors. Now, on this 31st day of May, A. D. 1926, this cause came on to be heard at Chambers, upon the petition of Clara May Wiltse, the guardian of the person and estate of James Howard Shepherd, Hazel Shepherd, Lawrence Shepherd and Dorothy Shepherd, Minors, praying for a li cense to sell real estate, and the Court finds that there is 110 moneys or personal property of any kind or description in the hands of the guar dian with which to pay for the sup port, maintenance and education of said minors. The Court further finds that the County Judge of Cass county, Nebras ka, has made an allowance of $5.00 per week for each of said minors for their maintenance, support and edu cation, and there is no moneys or personal property in the hands of said guardian with which to pay said amount. The Court further finds that each of said minors has an undivided one- seventh interest in the following de scribed property, subject to the life estate of said Clara May Wiltse, to- wit : East half of the northwest quarter (E NWU) of Section nine (9), Township seven (7), Range twelve (12), Otoe coun ty, Nebraska and that it will be necessary to sell the interest of said minors in said property for the purpose of paying for the support, maintenance and education of said minors. It is therefore ordered that all persons Interested in the estate of said minors and afl those who are next of kin and heirs apparent or presumptive appear before me in the District Court room of the Cass coun ty court house In Plattsmouth, Cass county, Nebraska, on the 3rd day of July, 1926, at ten o'clock a. m., to show cause why a license should not be granted to said guardian to sell the above described real estate. It Is further ordered that this Order to Show Cause be published in the Plattsmouth Journal, a legal newspaper published in said county, four successive weeks prior to July 3, 1926. JAMES BEG LEY, Judge of the District Court. 7-4w. Your ad in the Journal will be read by 75 per cent of the buying public.