"2JIDAY, AUGUST 30. 192G. PIATOMOUTH SE1C-WHXII JOUKUS Cbc piattsmouth lournal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOTJTH, NEBRASKA mtr4 at PoatoClCw, Plattsmoutb; Nab. aa aacoaa-olaaa mall matte R. A. BATES, Publisher SUESCEXPTIOB PEJCE $2.00 FUR YEAB H ADYAKCX THE WOLF AND THE LAMB The wolf also shall (Jwell with the lamb, and the leopard shall lie down with the kid; and the calf and the young lion and the fatling together; and a little child shall lead them. Isaiah 11:6. -:o: A wet plank is likely to warp al most any party platlorm. :o: They are going to build a subway in Rome. The early Christians beat 'em to it. :o: The only funny things about some cartoons is the spelling used by the cartoonists. :o: The National Encampment of the G. A. R. is in Des Moines, September 19th to 25th. :o: : Europe agrees to pay us everything left after we agree to cancel every thing she owes to us. -:o: We hope the fellow who predicted a cool summer has to spend most of it in a telephone booth. :o: Be sure you are right, then go ahead, but not before, is the advice of all prosperous people. :o: Always look to see if medicine is marked "poison" and read the radio programs for the "sopranos." :o: Count no day wasted if at the end of it you have made the boss think he's exceedingly clever. :o: Writing philosophy is easy. All you have to do is correct the mis takes you made the day before. :o: Chilean Attacks Americans, the headlines inform us. Boy, see if we loaned that country any money. :o: A . Carbondale, 111., orchard has fuzzless peaches, bo maybe razor blades were grafted on the trees. :o: A movie star has married. Ordin I arily we wouldn't mention it, but this is his first one this month. -:o:- If the chairs are bright green and these are freak pictures on the wall it's a tea room instead of a restaurant. ' :o:- "I am only a girl," says Suzanne Lenglen. Still, Suzanne, you're quite a big girl now, and ought to know better. :o: There is very little need in worry- . i . - T rrx. ing aooui your sianun m iixe. is, Governor Pinchot demands the end always someone sticking around to of prImary "debauchery." This prob tell you where to get off. j bl meang sum in excess of :o: Only robust women should be sent to congress, where a strong constitu- . . n iT'i'tltpfn 4Via lion is uecesaciij iu mmoiouu , . . , a n 1 V, 1 danger 01 ut 1 u uuicu iu ucam, :o: Gen. Wood says tha Philippines are not a one-man problem, which will make Col. Thompson go some to counter as neatly. J :o: The best way to preserve your illu- sions about the old home town, or any other place of which you have been fond, in years past, is never to go back there. :o: Williamson county, Illinois, is in the midst of a religious revival. Get - ting them to go to heaven Is not only more commendable than sending! them there, but it does not need the aid of the militia. CHEAP BRIDGE CARS - TRUCKS 10 Cents 10 Discount on Toll Coapon Books T.H. Pollock Bridge! TOLLS Labor Day, Monday, September 6th. :o: Vatican has given full the Episcopate in Mexico. :o: power to One reason so many poets are poor is that there are so many poor poets. ' :o: j We ought; to be the happiest people j on earth, not. But the most of us are :o:- A man who keeps his nose to the grindstone seldom turns it up at his neighbors. :o: ; Cotton stockings have gone up in price, but none of the girls will ever find it out. :o: By this time we presume that June bride's biscuits are solid facts in family routine. :o: Most people are such silly creatures. Few are sensible enough to believe exactly as you believe. - :o: All compliments received are the property of the person giving them and should be returned. :o: They wear rouge instead of veils. But veils are not expensive. Why not wear powder for stockings? :o: Perhaps the man that is best at organizing voters serves the people best, and perhaps he doesn't. :o: Does higher education pay? We'll see this fall when dresses are sup posed to be shorter than ever. :c:- Another argument that has fallen . . . -hv thP wayride ia the one that bobbed hair represents a saving of time. j :o: The automobile has few draw- backs, but it does enable relatives to drop In on awfully short notice. ; ;o: Miss Barrett has failed again to swim the English Channel. She will not try it again this year, she says. :o: Tho mnilprn farmer is ton shrewd to exchange his cash for a gold brick. but he still swaps his vote for soft soap. -n- ' rri TT.11 ifin. s attaining murder of the difficulty in attaining murder privacy in the present trend of civil! zation. 1 :o: With the race so close in the National League, some of the fans are learning too late that decimals have their uses. :o:- any $188,489- -what he spent. We have our doubts about this tele-, :o:- . .. --ri . . . pnone-vision uusiness. no wants to j see the mug of a fellow who is dun j ning you for an overdue account? :o: - No one seems to know exactly what the Philadelphia sesqui-centennial needs, but to the casual observer it would appear to be more paid admis- sions. J -:o:- France complains that America no lonerer sympathizes with her predic- ament. and it cannot be denied that under the Mellon-Berenger debt set- tlement this country is losing in iterest. 1 -:o:- preiaeut 01 tne unnea aus, I A. M A. 1 f 1. . J 'since tne aeatn 01 tne ureat Lincoln has recelveu such notorlty as xvi- entino and can you tell us why a foreign born movie actor has received such great notoriety? :o: Upholding the dignity of his pro fession. Jack Dempsey, champion (pugilist and erstwhile war ship build-! 1- , dwj uo a Liiaiicugc LU a DL1CCI liglli. and suggests a substitute when Harry. Wills offers to meet the champ at any corner and knock his block off. Be-1 sides, Mr. Dempsey explains with a slight uptilt to his rebuilt nose, he does not make his living that way. All of which admits of no debate. :o: "When one bee discovers an unus ually fine place to collect honey," writes Arthur Brisbane, "he returns to the hive and begins a violent dance. Then the other bees swarm out to get their share." Arthur Ehould have noted that this applies only to the bees of the younger generation with their propensity for synthetic honey. Such scandalous demonstra- tions were unknown among bees of the pre-Volstead era. THE ILLINOIS ECLIPSE Now that the country is waking up to what happened in the Illinois primaries, we see little in the public print any more of what happened in I Pennsylvania. I In truth, what happened in Illinois ' is quite a different thing. No more ' portentous thing presents itself in j American politics. The Pennsylvania ' primary was a three-cornered contest 1 among millionaries. One of them had the tariff money of Pennsylvania be hind him, but it was still a race I among millionaries. J The Illinois primary was far more sinister than that. It was an inci dent in which the great electrical utilities swept the people aside and took over the selection of a candidate for the senate. Everybody sees this quite clearly now. It was as if in the Missouri primaries the Frisco and the Missouri Pacific railroads had decided the matter between them and thrust the rest of the voters out. It was not a coincidence that the nominee in the Illinois primaries wae also chairman of the commission which fixes electrical rates in Illinois. That is what politics in Illinois have come to. The American people have been warned for almost 50 years that our great industrial development would come to exactly this if we did not establish safeguards against it. How feeble those defenses were the Illinois primary shows. "I have an interest to protect," says Samuel G. Insull, electrical magnate, justifying his debauchery of the ballot. But the people have a much greater interest to protect That is why the Illinois primaries are being so widely discussed and why we hear no more , . . . , 01 wnai nappenea in Pennsylvania. 1 The Illinois primaries struck at the' keystone of our Dolitical structure. I The greatest experiment ever made I in democracy will fail if the ballot ua ue prosuiuiea. Fortunately, the country sees this.1 It is already moving against it. If the senate dares seat the man sent to' it by corporate interest in Illinois there will not be a man who so voted whom the wrath of the people will Til 1. : 1 j . v. I epare. Illinois, meanwhile, does noth- inS. She is to fast in the clutches of the big business interests which have brought her to this plight. But she is a rotten apple in the na tional barrel, and the barrel means to save itself. -:o: CHANGE In olden times, everything was measured hv Us durability. 1 The pyramids were built to house the exalted dead until judgment day. The law of the Medes and Persians' were nroclaimed as unalterable. i . fi TZ up with the idea that whatever stood still was strong, while whatever changed was weak. This held civilization back quite as definitely as lack of Bkiil aennueiy as iacK or skin. Men became not only distrustful, but &fraid of change Thpv e-7Pd nut nvor tho Atlantic for hundreds of years before they j j - ,. uareu to cruas it. They hesitated to penetrate the frozen north. Europe and Asia remainded sep- arate, though It was only a matter of XX Q 1 lr in cr t f fyrtm rn r r flin ntlior t,-. ,0- -'"- There were imaginary lines on" every horizon that few had the temer ity to pass. If these lines held people within their homelands, their native towns and villages, they enslaved them wnen it came to science. The. traveler was looked upon a ireaK. ana tne tninKer as an evil spirit, a a iato aa i7n rranntn-c Hcrht. ning d was prosecuted in France as an invention of the devil. an invention of the devil. When McCormick demonstrated his reaper, farm hands rioted because they feared it would put them out of worc , , v, A i j. iua j-i jiv urvci xid.iicru his mind was regarded as peculiarly good. The first problem of the modern world was to break this all-powerful v tradition, this abiding fear of change. I With rosrwrt tn mnnt material an. tivities, it has been pretty well solved.1 Tpd nn am Tint rintir . refirigerators have been'1? ? yonf the Public wl con- put on the market. They realize that It may put them out of business but are willing to take a change. 1 Everybody is coming to see that cnange orueny, wen tnougnt out of course is the sine qua non of Prog-' ress. -:o: HOME GB0WU PEACHES Home Grown Peaches for sale. En- quire of Albert Young, Phone 1803, ' 'Murray, Neb. a23-3tw FABM FOB SALE The Dovey section. Will sell ln one piece or will divide to suit purchaser. See or 'WTite I J2220 U. ti. ALLEN, Omaha, Nebr. Howard Street. Something Wrong with the Rear End Best thing to do is to let ns take it Richards home, apart and locate the trouble. If a new j Mr. and Mrs. Ed Rau and family j j v spent Sunday afternoon at the John piece is needed we can replace it De-jcmpbell nome cause we carry all new parts. In auto, Mr8. Venice Pierce of, Liberty, repair work we recognize no super-iNeb., is visiting relatives and friends iors. Our equipment is complete and our skilled mechanics are equal to the most complicated jobs. Frady's Garage Phone 58 EECKLESS DRIVERS The motorists who go tearing down a street in the residential dis-j trict, heedless of the children playing ing crews out in the state busy sein along the sidewalks, is a potential ing fish from ponds that are drying murderer. No other phrase fittingly describes him. At any moment one of those 1 little children mieht dart into the :atrattt Qftc ,q1, r BnTT11 ntw iMno, . . tn ,1onth v.,....,. thing and be ground to death beneath the wheels. There are so many children in Pitcmmitv, nnH then 9 tsn fPw i playgrounds, that the danger of. ac- cident of this character is increasingi daily, and only by the exercise of caution by mot0rists can tragedies be everted Mothers will tell you how" hard it ig tQ convjnce the ttle chaps that 4, kDvnnj r-,,-iH'D d and that whoever ventures be-1 yond the gutter may be killed In stantly, and there cannot be any more Countryman, who reside in Garden play for them. j county. And there are the crossings, tooA Mrs. Chas. Buell returned home last where it is extremely hazardous for cniiaren 10 pass, ah or tnem are cautioned by their parents to stop, look and listen. But the thoughts of 1 Mr. and Mrs. B. O. Mooney return youth are iong. long thoughts. Some-'' umes iney lorgei. mey may oe iuiu. - , . 1 , rr.1 I. 11.1.1. lnB 01 nnsimas, or &anid lwus, r -1 j 1 1 a 1 a t oa knos wuai oaoonng urooit or coonng parcnea Dron toes. And sometimes motorists Iorget( and fail to slow down at crossings ti-Ti afa Via Vi i 1 1 win n-icc Cimntimoo ol tne moton Sns just as if they were on open ! country roaa. . 'brother, Dick Myers. They left their, tion and that the hearing thereof be And that is wn te eaths of so brother somewhat improved in health, given to all persons interested in said , many ' children are reported in the: Sunday dinner guests at the Henry 'matter by publishing a copy of this J " Stander home were Mr. and Mrs. Don-7 order in The- Piattsmouth Journal, --" ---"----- J If anything should give these motor outlaws, tne Killing oi a mile cniu should be sufficient to bring them ! nrniinrl tn n rulp nf rpaann anil BUU,,ei-'- j Nobody, unless he possesses a crack- ed brain, would kill a little child, but ' they are be5n killed! i . O . ruaiALll U UAMl'.aUiH .fc The Benate "slush fund" investi- gators met temporary defeaf in Chi cago at the hands of two star witness- i es who "defied the committee" and re-' fused to "tell anything about contri - ' butions to local campaigns." Where - , nnnn RpTintnr T?Pr1 t h ron t on a r Yiovo' . . ,4 ti M Liie 1 KLaitl LI a 11 1 uurf)fa reported to the United States senate, where thy may be held n contempt of that aug- . Enough has Deen brought to light in Pennsylvania and In Illinois to make the public insistent on pitiless! , publicity. It is widely held that too ' much money was spent, though the amount of contributions is not neces- sarrily illegal. In these suspicious cir- . cumstance, aflat refusal to bare the ramifications, of the political sineys of war obviously can only heighten' , , J .7 " " tue -w urei pua&ioie conbtrutiion. xtignt- that tliaro ia cnmothtniv ntt&n if it cannot be told. I -:o:- Paris cabarets sell champagne to Americans who have the nrice and i t, . appetite but not the price resent the' I . iuc itppeiiie. 1 ai ieiaiis wuo nave tne K,, v.,. may yet force the introduction of the J hip flask as an incident of French' gayety. Circumstances have of late "been strangely favorable to the Intro-jjfl duction of American customs the " iu wcx. x l. nuum xrc uuiuriuuaiQ to find even our bad habits meeting! with sauve encouragement. :o: : Rebel troops in Nicaragua burn ed a distillery. Probably trying to enlist the support of our Anti-Saloon' League. AmL. SOUTH BEND - Ashland Gazette 4 i Mr. George Vogel was a Louisville visitor Monday. Roscoe Johnson was an Omaha pas senger Tuesday. ! Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Baum were Nebraska City visitors Sunday. Mrs. John Sweeney spent Saturday afternoon with Mrs. Eliza Leddy. George Foster, of Omaha, is spend ing a few days with his father, W. W. Foster. "Mr. and MrB. Martin Zaar and fam ily spent Sunday with relatives near Louisville. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Haswell were dinner sruests Sunday at the Wm. tms vicinitj. The Misses Mary McGinnis and Florence Wingett spent Sunday with Gertrude Reinke. Mrs. Henry Stander and niece, Miss Ilda Messer, spent Tuesday evening with Mrs. B. O. Mooney. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Wiliam Blum Wednesday, August 1, a girl. Mother and daughter are doing fine. Miss Mildred Jones is visiting at the home of her cousin, Mrs. Louis Sack and husband near Gretna. Ben Weaver, of Mitchell, South Dakota, is spending a few days at the home of his father, Fred Weaver. The State Fisheries have two seln- I upi , o..- ,o ri lirtf t installed last week ln piace of K A .!r: x.. i the Wilson electric which he formerly had. Willis Richards, who Is working at Ravenna, spent the week end at . . of his narents. Mr. and the home of. his parents, Mr. ana Mrs. Wm. Richards. j The Burlington has a gang of ome 40 men stationea nere laying i new steel on their road. They will i be here for some time. Mr Wm Wagner and family, of Winside. Neb., spent a few days of last week at the home of Mrs. Wag ner's mother, Mrs. W. D. Kline fr nnrt Mrs John Phelns and t t, tv,t, nnrn. sunda7 a tho Twnit TTiirich home near Mvnard. Mr- and Mrs- Wm- Oliver and Mr nr,A tns TI a rr-w TIoTiton lpff Sunflai and Mrs. Harry Henton left Sunday i to visit a few dayB with Mr. and Mrs. wees irom umana aner Bpenumg oe t eral days visiting at the home of Reno pierce and treatment. also taking medical pVrtft irsfxitimi irlEitinp' mnnv interest- oui 1. . . . . iing places at Colorado Springs, Min- , atare and Denver. f r J H T A nV TTBtI a V Q ClV Y I . tt.uV"ia-r , I n T-T-T IE . d , mave that Dlace their i future home Mr . Towle has a pUmp- ine station at that place. HM-rts TrvVin KiinVo snrt Mrs Herman TST " the petitioner not be Ersnted. and that - serious illness of the xtj,.,,, nf Tabor. Iowa. Mr. and Mrg Fre(J Lake and gon jone8, of, near Elmwood. Miss Ilda Messner, Kearney, and Mr. and Mrs. B. O. Mooney. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ross drove to T.,nrnin -Pk am Sunda-v and cot tneir daughter. Isabel, and son, Jack, who had spend a week visiting rela tives at tnat place, miss jean itoss re mained in Lincoln and returned Fri day. They all spent a very enjoyable time. j Dinner guests Sunday at the Frank 1 Ross home were Mr. and Mrs. Ira Parker and Mr. and Mrs. Jim Allo : way, of Louisville, Mr. and Mrs. A. Prall and son, of Louisville. Mrs. ATnrv Harmpr and daughters. Misses . MaDelf jesse, and Ursula, of Weeping - i Water. Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Roeber and . . rnu -nH Afrs buud. rcuuciu auu -v." Hfcnry Stander and son, Herbert, re- turned Thursday after spending a few days visiting friends and relatives at Hastinirs. Hearney. Chapman and Archer, Neb Miss Ilda Messner, of Kearney, reiurueu wnu mtui Tisit a 6nort time witn reIatiT6B- a. J w.2.W w a im rt1 Efficiency has struck the gambling. casino at croupiers Monte Carlo. mnro nur. took a winter' course mi the Tailor method for saving unnec- essary movements, says the' casino .1 ; manager, "the game ha been sued ... . UP Bucn au extent tnat an i are broken by our tables." Efficiencyand commenced an action in the Dis- . . -rnr.loro a nnmothlnc. butitrlct Court of Cas county. Nebraska. they can't do it all. If the suckers'the object, purpose and prayer of could b nersuaded to hand overi fi . their money without thp business of ibetting and dealing they could be trimmed 6till more expediently. :o: Igal blanks of all kinds for sale XL. T 1 .A! at the JoTrrnnl office. 'l"mlmlm1r'l',l"l"h'i"i"7"'i '1' I I 'I 'M' T .j. I m 4 Dr. John A. Griffin Dentist Office Honrs: 9-12; 1-B. Sundays and evening by appointment only. PHONE 229 Boeniichsen Bnflding it A woman will offer herself as a candidate for Governor of Oklahoma. Th ladv nvrs sh will trpnrt the political way on a platform of twenty planks. We are wondering how long sha will regard the first twenty as still being in fashion. , :0: ' 1 Col. SmithvW. Brookhart, repub- lican nominee for the senate In Iowa, told a Farmers Union Picnic audience ,T. , , A, A . Wednesday that one reason western farmers "cannot get a square deal i3 because there are springing up con- stantly statesmen in the west who are , . t traitors to their own communities. He charged that ex-Governor Allen of Kansas "seems to have recently joined this class." 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 directed, a n mi! ot in vwv a m f said day at the south front door of the court house, in Piattsmouth, Ne- hrofita in GatT rmi Titv aoTI at nuKlin auction to the highest bidder for cash the following real estate, to-1 wit: Lot 14, Block 49, in the City of Piattsmouth, as surveyed, platted and recorded, Cass coun ty, Nebraska tho cnmo hpfnir Ipripn n nnn nnn taken as ttie property of Austin S.,Ior rearing saiu petition, wnen an Christ, Carrie E. Christ. James O. Peons interested in said matter may Epperson, Gertrude Epperson and . ... . ,.. rnmnratinn. defendants, tn satisfy a judgment of said court recovered by Tk Qf,., cortnm. 0t,h t .ra r a The Standard Savings and Loan As sociation, of Omaha, Nebraska, plain tiff against said defendants. Piattsmouth, Nebraska, August 13, A. D. 1926. E. P. STEWART, Sheriff of Cass County, Nebraska. al6-5w ORDER OF HEARING And Notice of Probate of Will. In the County Court of Cass County, Nebraska State of Nebraska, County of Cass ss " al . j, .,, Z Jk i?t,Vf M, Tonkin 'Dst"ct of Nebraska, within and for Jenkins, Cagg county( fn &n &cUqq wherela aeceasea. . w Lincoln Safe Deposit Company, a cor- On reading the petition of TRu E. porat jon of Lincoin, Lancaster coun- l?1!1 .I?71 ?hKl 1? 2 ty. Nebraska. Is plaintiff and David filed in this court on the 14th day of p Tighe; Marguriet Tighe, also writ August. 1926, and purporting to be ten &reritl Tighe; S. Matthews; the last will and testament of the ni50, ,T Wict. r.nMhPfh tmp- Jen- said deceased, may be proved and al - lowed, and recorded as the last will ana testament 01 juary jensins, ae- Mattnew0; Charles Matthews; Ray ceased; that said instrument be ad- Bootn; Boyd E. Booth; Donald Booth; mitted to probate, and the adminis- j Q Booth. first and real name un tration of said estate be granted to known; Etnei Dague; H. F. Watson, W. E. Jenkins as executor I first and tpsI nam unknown: C. M. It is hereby ordered that you, andiWatgon nrBt and real name un- all persons interested in said mat-known; George E. Watson; Annie ter, may, and do, appear at the Bonnell; Flora Wilson; Zella Dalby; County Court to be held in and for,iary Bradbury; James Luce; Wil Baid county, on the 13th day of,iiam Luce; Eva Ingraham; George September, A. D., 1926 at ten o'clock'King; Howard King; Grace Lively; : a. TT1.. TO finOW cause. IT fl Tl V tDPTfi De. notice of the pendency of said peti- -a semi-weekly newspaper printed In said county, for three successive oi,weeKS prior to sam aay 01 neanng. Witneon my hand, and neal nf Raid court. this 17th day. of August A. D.J 1926. H. DUXBURY, County Judge. (Seal) a23-3w LEGAL NOTICE In the District Court of Cass coun. ty, Nebraska. Fred Lugsch, Plaintiff, vs. John J. Worley et al. Defendants. To the defendants, John J. Worley, trustee for Piattsmouth Town Com pany; Piattsmouth Ferry Company; Mrs. John J. Worley, real name un known, wife of John J. Worley; Cal vin C. Green; Mrs. Calvin C. Green, his wife, real name unknown; Me linda Green; Green, her hus band, real name unknown; W. F. Enders and Mrs. W. F. Enders, his wife, real names unknown; the heirs, devisees legatees, personal represen tattvpB and all nther tiprRnns tnter- egted in tne respective estates of John J. Worley, Mrs. John J. Worley, Cal vin C. Green, Mre. Calvin C. Green, Melinda Green. Green, W. F. Enders and Mrs. W. F. Enders, each deceased, real names unknown, and (nil nthpr nprRntm hnvln? nr rlalminp T . .-, ,Z any mieieei iu iaii. t, iu. xiuv:il x , iu tne city of Piattsmouth, Cass coun- ty, Nebraska. a . m I lou ana eacu 01 you are nereDy I notified that on the 4th day of Aug 192fi. nlaintiff filed a netitlon which is to obtain a decree of Court ...... -....., . i , 'quieting piumuu b tine tu me lure- going described premises and to en 'join each, and all of you from having or claiming to have any right, title. estate, lien or interest, either legal or equitable in or to said real estate m tne soutneast quarter oi tne soutn or any part thereof and to enjoin you east quarter (SEi SE ), Lot 5 in and each of you from in any manner .the southwest quarter of the south interfering with plaintiff's possession .east quarter (SWVi SEU). and Lot or enjoyment of said premises, and; three (3) in the southeast quarter for equitable relief. the southwest quarter (SEVi This notice is given in pursuance SW ). all in Section twonty-nine of an Order of Court. You and each 1 (29), Township eleven (11) North, of you are further notified that you Range eleven (11) East, in Cass r remilred to answer said petition county. Nebraska; Likewise subject on nr before Monday, the 4th day of October. 1926. or the allegations contained ln said petition will be taken as true and a decree rendered granting the prayer of plaintiff here in. FRED LUGSCH, Plaintiff. CHAS. E. MARTIN, a23-4w Atty. for Plaintiff. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass Coun- 'In h9 county Court. in the matter of the e9tate of Harry S. Barthold, deceased. 1 To the creditors of said estate: You are hereby notified. That I will sit at the County Court Room in Piattsmouth in said county, on the 2nd day of September, A. D. 1926. and the 3rd da,y,of, December A. D. 1926, at 10 o clock a. m. of each day tQ receive and examine all claims against said 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 2nd day of Septem. A D 1926. and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from jsaid 2nd day or September 1926. witness my nana and tne seal or said county court, this 9th day of August, 1926. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal)a9-4w County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING on Petition for Appointment of Administratrix. I The State of Nebraska, Cass coun- ity'T BSIt. iu me vuuiiiy v-uurt. In the matter of the estate of Pat- ,rlc J Flynn, deceased. On reading and filing the petition of Catherine T. Flynn praying that administration of said estate may be granted to Catherine T. Flynn, as Administratrix; Ordered, that September 7th, A. D. ,1926, at 10 o'clock a. m., is assigned vv L uuuiy uri iu in ann t nr ooin rrmnrv unn (.nnur cause 'hy the prayer Of the petition- er 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 matter by publishing a copy of this order In the Piattsmouth Journal, a semi-weekly newspaper printed in said county, for three successive weeks, prior to said day of hearing. Dated August 12th, 1926. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) al6-3w County Judge. NOTICE OF i SHERIFF'S SALE Notice Is hereby given, that by rtue of an Order of Sale issued by trict Court of the Second Judicial inie HoIb'ert; Frank Matthews; Alice iNyswaner; Jessie Gayman; William Totinla Kino-- ATnrv T Till 1 1 1H Farm. Titate raTik wibaEhT Nebraska, a banking cornoration: John Doe. whose real name is Ed Bauers; and Mary Doe, whose real name is Elsie Bauers, are defendants, I will at ten o'clock a. m., on the third day of September, A. D. 1926, at the South front door of the Cass county court house, in the City of Piattsmouth, ass county, .eurntiia, unci iui a at TJUblic auction, the following de- scribed lands and tenements, to-wit: The east hair or tne nortnwest quarter (E NW4) of Section twenty-nine (29), Township eleven (11) North, Range eleven (11) East, in Cass county, Ne braska; also The north half of the south east quarter (N SE) and Lots seven (7) and eight (8), in the southeast quarter of the southeast quarter (SE SEi), Lot five (5), in the southwest quarter of the southeast quarter (SWU SKY ) and Lot three (3) in the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter (SEVi SWU). all in Section twenty-nine (29), Township eleven. (11) North, Range eleven (11) East, in Cass county, Nebraska; also The east half of the northwest quarter (E NW4 ) of Section twenty-nine (29), Township eleven (11) North, Range eleven (11) East, in Cass county, Ne braska; also The west half of the west half of the northeast quarter (Wa W NEii) of Section twenty nine (29), Township eleven (11) North, Range eleven (11) East, in Cass county, Nebraska. Please take notice that said parcels of land will first be offered separately. and afterward offered for sale as a whole, the sale being either by par cel or whole as shall bring the most return. Said sale is subject to any unpaid taxes or tax sales outstanding and not included In the decree in said cause of action. It is also subject to the lease of Ed Bauers on the north half of the southeast quarter (NVi SE ), Lots seven (7) and eight (8), ito confirmation by the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska. Given under my hand this 31st day of July, A. D. 1926. E. P. STEWART, Sheriff Cass County, Nebraska. a2-? Bead Journal Want Ads.