KOlttllT, SEfrT. 20, 1959. PLAT755IQPTH SM-WfJ ft JCUBffAl PAQE THREE Cbe plattsmoutb lournal flTBUSHXD SEMI-WEEKLY AT PUkTTSUOUTH, mrmkBTk a. Lara at Pwtsfflea. FltujtaoutB. R. A. BATES, Publisher SSS3CSIPTI0S PUKU 12.00 PX1 YEAJL IB ABVASCI Another pleasant day. :o: Senator Howell: oca rum." :o: 'I smell the de- When a man has nothing to do he attends to it personally. :o: Some grown folks are harder to amuse than some babiea -:o:- Tbe man wbo confines his courting to widows never courts a-miss. -:o:- Tou can get some men to join most everything but a church. :o:- Flenty of grapes, some have been sold as low as two cents a pound. :o: Nothing: so humanizes a great man as th publication of his golf score. :o:- People are almost afraid to make what little wine they need for home use. The first cuss-word was invented when the first bald man missed a fly the third time, :o: A man in Kansas married to get out of Jail. Sometimes you have to take what comes. :o:- vYhat was need to hasten the Blow moving commendation work was a littto condemnation. :o:- II the Chinese wish to steal rail reads, they should learn the peace ful Wall Street method. Americanism: Palntin? soft pine ta imitate oak; trying to achieve cul ture by the same method. :c: If they ever form that "United States of Europe" maybe we'll have a chance to laugh at their Congress ;: president Hoover's naval reduction flan suge&t thai now is the time fr all good men t come to the aid 7 tt parity. Tk Socialist-Progressive group 4ja convinced that 800,009 la about all thai can be hoped for as to In erfosin revenues. :o: The social war In Washington has ftow gotten la to the literary stage. wUH Sirs. Gann publicly giving her a14 of the matter. :: The merger of the fruit and vege tah.Lt men encourages the hope that (hey may make the prices of prunes &x4 spinach prohibitive. :o: Maybe the reason the Russians wore so cocky at the start was be cause they thought Chinese yellow was more than skin deep. :o: A acientlst in England has invent ed an automatic figure that writes its uot. In this country figures like that are i charge of boxers' man agers. :o: There have been many dramatists, bat the peer of them all was William Shakespeare. Here was a poet, phil osopher, dramatist, and the keenest d5ssetor of the human soul and mo tives. :: la the past fiscal year government co-operation with the states secured 7,902 mllea of improved roadway, without which the work would not have been done. Year by year the good work Is being pushed. Ulfe Ulfant Dead Animals Horses, Hogs, Cattle, Sheep Our trucks are waiting for your phone calls. No charge for removal of dead animals from your farm or feed yards. We pay telephone charges. Our plant is newly equipped with entirely modern equipment and we are now able to sup ply you with the highest grade FRESH TANKAGE Give Us a Trial Packing House By-Products Co. 2730 M Street, South Omaha Day Market 0326 PHONES Night Market 0337 Safetta A modern "go-getter" is one look ing for a parking space. :o: Favors are seldom satisfactory. The beet way is not to need them. :o: There is a growing disposition to discourage the public hearing. :o: A Doll Contest would bring in sev eral hundred people. Talk it up. :o: Domestic happiness is said to be founded upon the rock of a cradle. -:o:- The man wbo pays as he goes sel dom goes fast enough to overheat himself. -:o:- Household hints says table scraps can be converted into many things, including divorces. -:o: This summer as never before the women have been demonstrating that they have backbone. :o: Sometimes it's pretty hard for peo ple to recover from the effects of their vacation daze. -:o:- Charity is the thing that begins at home; reform is the stuff you per petrate on your neighbor. :o: If wax and hell are synonymous. why do the naughty abolish one and the good abolish the other? -:o:- The fishermen are troubled with some people taking their fish off the lines. That is not proper. Quit it. :o: A huge sun spot put the crimps on telegraph wires, yet the radio was not affected. Mr. Edison may know the reason why. :o: There is some strife over the flex ible provision of the tariff, the diffi culty being to bend it enough ways to suit everybody. :o:- When the modern bride takes off her wedding clothes it Isn't to get into dresses designed to be worn in the kitchen, you bet! :o: You nearly always can tell from a girl's get-up and make-up whether she lets her mother get up the meals and make up the beds. :o: Of course, the saloon will never return. How could It expect to wrest the corners back from the chain stores and filling stations. :o: Premier Ramsay MacDonald isn't bringing any naval experts with him to Washington. He must want to find out a few things for sure. :o: : It costs )6,000,000 to prepare the preliminaries for the construction of subways to cost $175,000,0000 In New York City. Nobody seems dazed. :o: New York has taken up a new fad. the bride and bridal attendants appearing without rouge. Everybody knew the bride wasn't blushing, any way. : o Mr. Schwab, who would "like to see all armaments sunk to the bottom of the sea," is just the kind of per son Mr. Shearer has been warning us against. :o: A man enjoyB having his wife wait on him, but nothing gives him less pleasure than getting home at 3 a. m. and finding she ia wait lug FOR him. Kb. m mmI-Uu aoaji Our idea of the most useless search would be trying to find a girl with shapely legs who envied a girl who bad nothing but brains to boast about. -:o: Everybody has had their vacation, they now go to work to fill their coal bins. Pleasure takes money that is sometimes needed in the following winter. -:o:- An honest-to-goodness egotist is a man who doesn't develop an infer iority complex after spending four or five years listening to his wife's opin ion of him. Reports say that we are to have a severe winter, but there is no use of saying so early. We ought to have at least two months of good weather yet. :o: King Alfonso says he would be a mechanic in an automobile shop if be weren't a king. There isn't much difference between a king and a ban dit after all. -:o: As the Legion are incessant work ers, and makes a go of most every- thing they take hold of. why not try this "Doll Contest." It would helo them as well as others. o: lassacnuseiis proiessor says irnmcn t.arhcr. o fomni7lnr tho " " " " ' "t 1.1 . A . the men will never learn the ladies' way with a bridge hand. :o: A woman's idea of being a good financier is to get the ragman to give her two or three cents more for the privilege of cleaning up her cellar by carting off all the junk that's collected there. -:o:- If stenogs were hired just to keep the minds of the men in the office of their work, or to add to the scenery of the office, a lot of them would be worth a lot more than they are as pounders of the keys. :o: The Chicago Tribune shrieks in anguish every time a lynching Is staged in the South. Chicago's death toll from gang wars since the first of January shows a total of 39. Write your own comment. :o: That oriental custom of removing me snoes Derere entering me nouse Is finding favor In this country when friend hiiohon rotnrno hnm lata of nlirht nftr a har1 Hut at tha nftlpp - - - -v-. . mwm. v - " j In spite of prohibition, too. :o: O. The air of endurance tests bring out all the qualities of physical and mental strength In the fliers, but they also serve another useful work in testing the motor engines and other plane necessaries. Don't pass these by lightly. A husband feetahe is pretty good at doing things to make his wife l hitrhlv .nrtlimant. hut h fAla liV. a . . . . i - I uicic ttuuiieui wuru ue oeeu uuw much more highly indignant it makes her when some cat in the neighbor hood gives a party and leaves her out. :o: President Hoover expresses pleas ure that no nickname has been fast ened upon him since he entered the White House. He'd better be care ful with his talk. We know a rather , . . neavy-seigenneman Dacs nome me i folks used to call "Pudge." :o: CLOUDLAUD I love to sit In the twi light. Just after the sun's gone down; And watch for the curious creatures That people my Cloudland town. My Cloudland's streets are paved with gold, Its castles of stone are made; And so many kinds of crea tures Move together, unafraid. There are dogs, cats, pigs, cows. And lions and tigers too; Birds both real and fan tastic, Cloudland must have a zoo! And then there are won derful people. Witches, ladles and kings; Why 1 have even seen angles. Hovering on gauzy wings! Oh, it must surely be fairy land! WTiere else could anyone find. So many gorgeous cre ations. Of every conceivable kind? Thus in my fancy I it. In the dusky evening ky; A Cloudland of fabulous castles, Searing their towers on high. Mildred Wills Pathfinder. in The Baking Powder Guaranteed Pure Use KC for fine texture end large volume in your bakings Millions of pounds used by our Government MR. HOOVER ON TEMPERANCE Mr. Hoover's views on temperance have been waited with a creat deal Lf onrindt, vr dnrp ho tl t intn 1 the White House. It was imnossible I J in the heat of a presidential cam- 1 pairn to determine how far the pro- ......... 1 tiihif lonictf? were lustinexl In Dellev- I " - " would jead them out of the wilder. ness He had, it is true character- message to the W. C. T. U. National convention a few days ago asssumes very great significance. He said: Since the adoption of the pro hibition amendment, too many people have come to rely wholly upon the strong arm of the law to enforce abstinence, forgetting that the cause of temperance has its strong foundations in the conviction .of the individual of the personal value to himself of temperance in all things. If we may Judge by thlB, Mr. Hoo ver does not belong to a powerful school of American thought which holds that enforcement of law auto- matically follows enactment. Many detached observers have remarked that this is the chief characteristic f th liauo Droblem in the United gtatee n0twith8tandlng the Amer ican DeOD,e are said to nave nullifled . I In -11 -a In 1 Ml voa r T n !4 n I . otner people in mstory. air noover is disposed to credit the law with no ImrA nri-mro than it artlla11v TWwRKAKGfa This Is a contradltion of his posi tion of a few months ago that if we are to select only such laws as we are going to respect and disregard the rest the law as an institution is doomed. The difference is that he was in the one case merely theoret- leal, whereas in the other he is prac- tlcal. -r.ii vii.ii:..ii. . v. iuiieprouiumuiiiBu.ut.iK, i, will Donaer wen mese woras or me . .. . . . . . i - PrpKidpnt. The sDecial committee OI - - - r r.n,mccn 1111 . xiw 'ci 1 1 ized prohibition in complimentary door is openea a mtie wiaer ana in aainEt said estate, with a view to "y fconwt day cf 6c terms. He had not said how prac- another annoyance, which ordi- their adjustment and allowance. 'J ?929 at en o'clock a. ticable he thinks it is. Therefore, his narily we -uld not hav e noUced The ime which is studying prohibition can no is now, were shut out and lost to Yqu Rre hereby notifledf That I the Plattsmouth Journal, a semi more meet the expectations of the the world and rediscovered a cen- will sit at the County Court Room weekly newspaper printed in said nrohibitionlst8 than Mr. Hoover has tury hence. Of what import this re- in Plattsmouth, in said County, on county, for three successive weeks met them. The committee cannot ... tH V LllaL UIUUIUIUUU 13 ruiUlio and if it did say so it would only make itself ridiculous. The situation in bv this time so concrete as to - . mate it morally certain wnat is to happen. Indeed, it has already hap- Dened. The Drohibltion law is dis- regarded where the neonle do not j :. i j i . i. want li, u.uu ii i i cgdi ueu wueie iuc people do want it. Mrs. Willebrandt came to the conclusion after years of active service as the Government s nmhihitinn nrnRcntnr that thl law. m .v- io i n.c ' "" i wnere it enjoys me consent oi me . . . i . m V 1 governed. I Our experience with the question ha o-nino- t Ho Tointihia Am a writer in xr. p0r.hii, ...v. ago said: "We are going to learn from It something we need to know about the nature of law. :o: WE GEOW IN SPIRIT A new great business house in Cin cinnatl on Saturday opened its doors with invitation of service to the pub He, which was quite in the ordinary routine of things. But as so generally V . 4 1 V 1 ,L. I iiaa ujuic iu uc me tuae iu iuis auu. I other cities of the present day, the distinguishing characteristic of this opening" was not so much in any- thlne suire-PRtinir rnmnVtunPU! nf fn nishing or appointments, or in any- thing proclaiming efficiency of ser- vice. It was the wealth of floral mag- nificence the contributions from I business rival houses that caught j land held the interest of visitors. competition nas tasen on new i qualities in this day; it is generous and understanding and yes it Is helpful in time of "tress. Business f"" B'Dnu 1U Dvt m America, a certain chivalry ana courtesy has placed the buccaneer impulses of a half Mnttirr atrn Um auolr f course, of the clean, normal, health- iui compemion or average ousmess. a 1 FIGHT YOUR TROUBLES "When sorrows come, they cornel not single, spies. But in battalions." wrto Qvnc!.rB whpn ho w " ponrayea me mina or. tne trouoie- i haunted King of Denmark. So we an think, when annoyances, big and lit- tie, make "everything go wrong." At such times' we are pretty likely to reei mat no mauer wuai we things are bound to go wrong, we take a fatalistic attitude, and feel HVo Bittlnp- htr nnil Uttine the o , - powers 01 evu nave mfir iuoiiifUl. Then it is tnat tne book 01 job makes congenial reading. There is a perfectly logical ex- iv" come in bunches. In the first place, they do not come. We merely imag- ine for the time being nothing but trouble. We see trouble where none exists. It's our own mental attitude. Have you ever observed that some- thing like nine-tenths of all the thinga you worry about really never happen? As Abraham Lincoln's phil osophy went, "This also shall pass." What are the elementary psychol ogical facts about our troubles, real and imaginary - . . . . trouoie, 01 course, stans I . . . . . . 1 tilings going. ve try to get out 1 01 tne W- MOTe OIien inan e Buppose' we Tf w f-jU thTi the imoETinarV I " - I V,- 1 ! 1 f.-rn being lost our grip on our surround- igs. We have lost our morale. The Roirnr annnTod hv thp vader, we begin to look around and see all sorts of dire things that might t -" unwelcome imaees. they loom large, t Yacri n trt . vaMa11nI,a they begin to come in battalions The psychological formula is simp ly this: 1. Some real trouble or annoyance and failure to effect a tolerate ad justment to it. 2. The lowering of the morale. 3. An expectation of some other trouble. 4. An exaggeration of the expecta tion. 5. A further retreat in conse- quence of lowering morale. 6. The conclusion that ours is a world of trouble. I "r' ZZ The moral of which Is to remem- lllttl UHi juu. uuuui .. linary. Don't let your inferiority complex . are unwilling I ...... to belive you are nciea, men youiiz, ana me time limitea ror pay- are not licked. TARIFF WAILS An idea recalled from a recent magazine article keeps astir in the mind Tall would be the tnat zeppeiiMor aripianes couiu I q rrnHi Wnich the barriers tnrouKn - 1 VI -w ni4..n rn.nnaona rrn I n T1 OT iwuitu. ruuuci, " I. .1. : Dore. isui auwaj, ouvi"c rontfnental United States, lust as It 1 - - discovery? -n im..inMinn ton nrn- I - found for assertion here are neeaea to construct a picture wnica comu be offerea to serious reaaers. ii io I 8J ., A uncu vi - could support meir popuiauuB n vaz m w cut off from the other states. For the whole large rich survival of its mil- iinna with a unrcpjui that would rank i " w- the rediscovery of the United States with the original aiscovery oi Amer- I . A. .LZ.AA 1 am m aL ica as an erem ui uiaiuncui vuuh- ouences and interest. But we confl- Lonti - r nfuurt anothsr side. . uc"""'"uu;' - aw a wAlll1 1 nPltina fl host of narasnips more exacting man lack of an adequate supply of dia-I monds. tiparla. and furs. No bananas. Inn cciccia oils no coffee, no rubber. Materially and intellectually, the de- velopment of 100,000,000 isolated people would be a lopsided one. it the fantastic situation reaulted from rtnhrat rhnirA. th American Ij Irixit IUI I.U1U1UUU rcuoc nvu.u io tOO. When we contemplate our present I high tariff at the further extremes of altitude now pending, the idea ceases to be wholly a vain reach of the . . ...... . ... I imaKinailon. Wlia BO manv iuiuso barred, the conception of impene- trable Imagination. With so many I thinira barred, the conceDtion of im- n.n.tr.M. v.1t r.rrlu. the hl-h tr- iff fetis to its logical conclusion. We are so far toward Isolation that, as the proposals to go yet farther reach the verge of enactment, the Yankee name for hard sense already is jeo- pardized. Many of the extremes be-FT jng undertaken at the moment are I las silly as certain to work injur- ious and costly deprivation upon us a, a full decision by our one-tenth n ue civuizeo worm to cut dis-laway for a century from the other I (nine - tenths. I Yan 0f tmslnesf ftationerf pruiteu: at tha Jonrnal offiec " SENATOR HOWELL HEDGES Snator Howell of Nebraska has! hedtred. That wa ft holrt nttpranne Ln .v o v- I"" '- " ocimie lliOl nihition could be enforced in Wash- i ington if the President wanted it en- forced. But when Mr. Hoover uromnt My requested Mr. Howell to furnish the facts of violation on which the , i uovernment could act, the Senators (reply was disappointingly feeble. in our 1udrmnt th Prpsidpnt has U ki.. .v I "-v wmuiomaui, m i cumstanccs. Tne national capital is notorious for "making the laws it fflouts and flouting the laws it makes." it invahi. that Afr Wowm- 1 ww iuus lesiuence luertf, tail entertain any Illusion as to the farce 0f prohibition at the seat of Govern- jment. The violation of liquor laws at Washington by the men who en act those laws for the rest of the (country is a contemptible and vicious condition. It ought not to be toler- ated NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In he matter of the estate of Mag- I j.i:.. o,.v. a u- . 'Z I 111 III ITW 1 I IIIM III NHHI I will sit at the County Court room i r.l. K t 1 " 1 mu-umuiu, wuuij, I.K IO. W J t V, 1 OOa on the 20th day f January. 1930 0 . n 192o. and the time limited for payment of debts is one year i " -'' Witness my hand and the seal of eaid County Court this 17th day of September, 1929. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) s23-4w County Judge. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska. Cass coun - ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate Behrend J. Beckman, deceased. To the creditors of Baid' estate: You are hereby notified that II I will sit at the County Court room in Plattsmouth. in said countv. on the 18th day of October. 1929. and on the 20th day of January 1930. at 10 o'clock a. m., of each day. to re - ceive and examine all claims airalnstl said estate, with a view to their adjustment and allowance. The time Mm IUH fry tVin nroo An o I rt .l,!mol j atralnBt Is three months from th isth d of Hrtnhor a r I aam . . . ...... ment of debts is one year from said ISth day of October, 1929. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 20th day of September, 1929. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) s23-3w County Judge. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska. Cass Coun- 1 1 I In thA I'ntinrv ITftlirf i - -j I In th mattnr rT tti mfnttt rfl . . rr".. ' in w a a n" 1 ifrtn am r ei e 1 Trfc TTn rrAHUnra rr oam aetata " Z on ae 13th day of January, 1930 I o t in n'fllnnlr a -m anon n rec-.Te and examine all claims against said tatate, with a view to ineir aajiuimeni ana allowance, ine time limited for the presentation of , ' , t - o&vi caiaLC a a liii cij i . f- . .. . f 0etober A D 1829. and the time limited for nayment of debts Is one year from i said 11th dav of October. 1929. I . T . ' . . I w- l lSaUmi)er i99 I w " . nnXBTTRY. rSeal Countv Judsre. d interested in said estate, cred- 1 ORDER CiV HRARTVfl AVT1 Nfl. I - - - I . TICK qv PROBATE OF WILL. i In the County Court of Cass Coun- Ity, Nebraiika. ote oi ieorasaa, wouniy or uass, o. Interested In the of jj T Reynoidgf deceas- led. On reading the petition of William LB. Reynolds, praying that the instru- I U1CUI U1CU 1U UllB CUUU UU LllO IIIU I ua ui oeyuuuiRir, x?, auu yuiyuu- I J 1 1 n n n J Ilnir tn Vu thn laat will and faBtomon t of the said deceased, may be proved land allowed and recorded as the last p"!" d testament of James T. Rey- ?iafl- ",a. ,l " i. ,.,-, Ka vr-ontol jto Linus E. Roynolds, executor, and Laura Reynolds, as executrix. It Is hereby ordered that you, and all per- iu nuu .anil An finnAflr at thik fVvu Tit. PAiirt I to b. held ln and for county, on the 11th diy of October. A. D. 1929, jat ten o'clock a. m... to show cause, nT were WQy me prayer or Ithe petitioner should not be granted, J in A f Vi o r nrttfmh rsf tha IwndAnrT nf I thereof be given to all persons Inter- 1 Jested ln said matter by publishing a tnlB orter in the Plattsmouth prlflted ln fldd county, tor three sue- eeeslve weks prior to said day of i i hearing. Witness my hand, and the seal of) said court, this 14th day of Beptem- her. A. D. 1929. I A. H. DUXBURY. fSeall 16-3w. County Judge. I NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun- ty, ss. ln ine bounty court. In th. TT.dtt.r r.T t V,Q estate of Leonard Muir deceased To the creditors of said estate: - - I You are hereby notified that I ? Vouni.y, Lourl. room n,.,!. ,7 JTS, t- ivviwuc v . & & m aau u au uai v -vf 19 30. at ten o'clock in the forenoon of each day, to receive and examine a claims against said estate, with a view 10 ineir aajusimeni ana ai - I T, .tto limits tr,y ih,n presentation of claims is three months from the 18th day of Octo- er, A. D. 1929, and the time limit M for payment of debts is one year 1 C V ,1 -rr r. j.Ua-. 1QOQ wttnocB mv hanrt onH the oeal r,f Laid County Court this 20th day of ! September, 1929. A. II. DUXBURY, County Judge. (Seal) s23-4w 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 Joseph Fetzer, deceased: On reading the petition of Char lotte Fetzer Patterson, Administrat rix, praying a final settlement and allowance of her account filed in this Court on the 19th day of September, . v ' r.."lrA- " 1929, and for final settlement of laam raiaie uuu lur ucr "'tune it.t.i. I DO.Vi nUUlUlDliail !A Vl 0 U Ci, a persoQa interested in Baid mat. ter may and do. appear at the should. not be panted and that no igjj persons interested in said matter . , " 7 , f in the Plattsmouth Journal, a semi- weekly newspaper printed in said county, for three successive weeks prior to said day of hearing. In witness whereof, I have here unto set my hand and the seal of jBaid Court this 19th day of Septem- ber, A. D. 1929. H. DUXBURY, County Judge. of (Seal) s23-3w ORDER OF HEARING and Notice on Petition for Set tlement of Account. I In the County Court of Cass Coun- ty. Nebraska. l State of Nebraska. Cass county, ss. To all persons Interested in the estate of Henry Bartek, deceased: On reading the petition of Frank A. ClOldt- AflmlniSt TftTrir nrflTitlP A final settlement and allowance of his account filed in this Court on the I in.u r i t n n n j oepiemuer. ana I for final settlement of said estate and for his discbarge as said Adminis- trator of said estate; j It is hereby ordered that you and all persons Interested in said matter may, and do, appear at the County Court to be held in and for said county, on the 18th day of October, A. D. 1929, at ten o'clock a. m., to show cause, if any there be, why the Prayer of the petitioner should not l v i . . . ,. , UU granieo, ana mat notice OI me I , . i . ueuueutj ui aiu ueuuuu ana ins v ., r i, r0""" 6i'iu i yc. 1 1 a . . ooua ,Uiere8ieu in saia matter uy 1 Kvti.i,!.. . . t. . , J I . In witness whereof. I have here- 1 im Y. .1 .1 1 1 said Court, this ISth dav of s.n- tember, A. D. 1929. a. ti. duabiky, (Seal) s23-3w County Judge. 7 : NOTICE OF HEARING on Petition of Determination or "eirsnip ! xv n- txr Dal. ...i Marley A Rennie, ded". in the County Court of Cass County, Ne- II 1 orasna. The SUte of Nebraska, To all per- Itora and hir take notlre. that Mar- I caret M. McPherson has filed her netl- tion alleging that Geo. W. Rennie and wife, Marley A. Rennie died intestate lln Plattsmoutb. Nebraska, on or aooui juiy o, ana uctoDer zo. Inhabitants of Plattsmouth. Cass County, Nebraska, and died seized of the following described real estate, to-wit: Lots one (1). two (2), three I 17 11U lUUl 1 111 1J1UVK L111C17 I n 1 T-.1. A J Jill . oi 111 uu&c a auuiuuu iu 1.110 I Pitv rf Plattamouth. Pa a nnnn. ty, Nebraska leaving as their sole and only heirs at law the following named persons, rwl John H. Rennie, Elizabeth Maude Ord. Margaret M. Mc Pherson, Frank A. Rennie, George W. Rennie and Allien A. Adams. That the Interest of the petitioner riAraln In tha nhmrA A oaprl Ytxi rpul estate is an heir at law. and Dray- Ing for a determination of the time of the death of said Geo. W. Rennie ana wire, Marley A. Kennie and or their heirs, the degree of kinship and tha i1frht nf JftoTit t -tha real nrnn. in the State of Nebraska. It is ordered that the same stand for hearing the 18th day of October. hour of 10 o'clock a. m. at the County Court room in Plattsmouth. Cass County, Nebraska. Dated at Plattsmouth, Nebraska, this 20th day of September, A. D. J929. A. H. DUXBURY. County Judge. (Seal) 1 i i