MONDAY, NOV. 25. 1929. PLATTSMOTJTH SEMI -WEEKLY JOURNAL PAGE THEEE Cbc plattsmouth lournal ! PUBLISHED SEKI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOTJTH, NEBRASKA I Entered at Postoffice, Plattsmouth, Neb., as second-class mail matter R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 A YEAR IN FIRST POSTAL ZONE Subscribers living in Second Postal Zone, $2.50 per year. Beyond 600 "miles. $3.00 per year. Rate to Canada and foreign countries, $3.50 per year. All subscriptions are payable strictly In advance. Nearly 25,000,000 girls under 16 ia India are married. :o: Seme men believe in luck because they never have any. :o: We should all be harpy over the approach of Chr.stmas. . :o: The smaller the hole a man gets into the louder he howls. -:o: Matrimonial matches are frequent ly ipnited on money boxts. :o: Our merchants are preparing with up to date Christmas goods. :o: It is a t-tingy person that don't like to see Christmas ccme. :o: It is well to have fortitude. This conies in well in paying taxes. :o: : Rumania's new tariff contains many reductions in import duties. -o: A good Christmas sncw will please the kids bt-tter than anything else. -:o:- What would a lot of our statesmen do without the tariff and farm relief? -:o: About the hardest thing for a man to do is to kiss a girl unexpect edly. :o: The partial veto in legislation will act as a good tonic to the public welfare. Sunday school attendance will surely perk up as Christmas ap proaches. :o: If the meek ever do get anything in this world they will have to in herit it. :o:- That Plattsmouth is a good busi ness town indications sure direct you to that fact. :o: Omaha is having a hard time about their bridge. Build a new one, and be done with it. :o: Soon people will be accompanying their friends to skyscraper elevators to wish them bon voyage. :o: Will the new bridge across the Mis souri river be a benefit to the city of Plattsmouth? You tell us. :o: A hard winter is predicted and there are a whole lot of people in Plattsmouth unprepared for it. :o: There is one thing about Nebraska we should be proud of. and that is a governor who knows his business. :o: You can't convince some wives that if they keep their husbands in hot water all the time their husbands love is one thing they never will be able to keep. :o: The little gold digger may prove an expensive luxury as a wife, but one thing sure is that she'll never keep her home so nasty clean and n-at that her bank account will be afraid to smoke in it. BEST LAND OPPORTUNITIES WEST OF MISSOURI RIVER Hlrh quaJUy lands, virjfin or cul tivated, available at low prices and on easy Urms In South Dakota, from Chamberlain to Rapid City. The en tire territory Is improved with roads, schools, churches and rail roads, and enjoys a friendly neigh borhood spirit. Its record is good for production of non-perishable crors of wide demand and climatlo conditions are favorable to comfort able family life: also for develop ment of livestock. Surface of this territory varies from large level areas or slightly roll ing lands suitable either for trao tor or horse power farming to rough or hilly lands. Ideal for trax lng. Prices vary according to loca ilon..a.nAquallty' ranging from 15.00 to $25.00 per acre for unimproved, and from 15.00 to 40.00 per acre for improved lands. Real opportunities exist In this South Dakota region for men seek ing to engage In grain, diversified or stock farming. Corn, wheat, flax. . barley, alfalfa, sweet clover, vegetables aad small fruits profit ably grown. Production of alfalfa seeds extensive. Horses, cattle and eheep thrive on the nutritious, na VZZ -80ilti1 ,Da.kota srasees. roultry. hog and dairying Industries are suc cessfully carried on and are rapidly Increasing. Residents of this section SivSA"' t'J acc to the scenic. rh.hBfacakHlu2.ntlnC dnta of ou'al!'"'?? Roaa 8ks to aid 2 n.t ,?!jU,er": to Protect them ?o?d?ti-" ?Z i "foments about land VaTuV. fIp ,Becur maximum kIL. " t0MT PrIc paid: to ad vise before and after locating Write fr'nUratd boMt and detlned Information. Ask questions An. Kl!bla information on all parts rU.V'everv- J- Hom"sePeklr 5 iVr" verjr Tuesday. R. v Rev. Road ' F2T?VV,,1onep ThiMllwau; Road, m-o Union Station, Chica.ro. Happy hours in childhood days should bring pleasant memories in older days. :o: Judging by recent stock market activities, the lambs had better stick to their ganboling and let gambling alone. -:o: In order to make a tasteless castor oil they will have to put something in it that tasteg worse than the cas tor oil. -:o: We often hear of explosions caused by leaking gas and wonder why some thing like that doesn'thappen in con gress. :o: The new bridge is about complet ed. But how about the road leading to it. Get busy boys and whoop it through. :o: A woman hates a photograph that doesn't flatter her, and a man never is crazy about a woman who doesn't flatter him. -:o:- Engineers have pretty sharp eyes The other day a West Virginia girl tore a piece from her skirt and flag ged a train. -:o:- The guy who is cheerful and al ways sings the praise of other people generally has a hard time finding an accompanist. :o: Tunney took a sneering attitude toward fighting and fighters, hut he'd never have made $1,700,000 quoting Shakespeare. :o: The good old days were those when what came from the kitchen was a delightful odor instead of the sound of tin being cut. . : o : Santiago. Chile, is now to have a subway thirty blocks long. We need not boast of our superior progress There are others. :o:- One-half the world may not know how the other half lives, but this does not apply to apartment houses and narrow streets. -:o:- The fellow who lives by the side of the road to be the friend of man is probably charging extra to pull him out of the mud. -:o:- There is one thing about Afghan istan that will commend it to some observers. They evidently believe in rotation in office there. :o: The owners of the executed ele phant, "Black Diamond" could have saved a lot of expense by simply tak ing the beast to Chicago. :o: Mothers of New York debutantes insist that the dances shall end at 3 a. m. But what's a girl to do be tween then and bedtime. -:o: It is announced that Ambassador Dawes will attend the disarmament conference, probably to preside offi cially over the pipe of peace and cuss ing. :o: A kid doesn't have to be very sick to think he is too sick to go to school, and it is getting so a woman doesn't have to be so very sick of hr husband to think she would be hap pier living on alimony. :o: Another reason why the marriage license keeps up is because no you:g lad in love can be made to believe the angel who calls him those cute baby names ever will learn to cull him "you little shrimp!" :o: A high mountain in Idaho 1 as been named after Senator Borah. We know a couple of states with nice deep valleys that could be named after some other Congressmen, with out stretching the imagination, either. :o: When a man drops a million dol lars on Wall Street he is a financier. If he drops a nlckle in a slot ma chine he's a gambler and violating the law. But he's saved humiliation of straining at a gnat and swallowing a camel. :o: In the city of acquarlum in New York is a Nile crocodile which It 1b claimed is a thousand years old. By three hundred years that 'gator beats Old Oklawaha at Florida Alligator Farm, Jacksonville, which is 700 years old, according to his Jaw teeth. PROHIBITION AND TNE PEOPLE In fining Mrs. Rosie Cohen, who had sold drinks and liquor to prohi bition agents in the kitchen of her St. Louis home, Judge Faris, after listening to the woman's plea for len iency because her husband is out of work and her daughter a chronic in valid, said: I don't know what to do with you. That is one of the troubles with this law it corrupts men, women and children. Judge Laris fined Mrs. Cohen $1000 and stayed $800 of the fine upon good behavior. The case is only such as come before every Sederal Judge almost every day while courts are in session. Penalties vary according to the temperaments of the Judges. In the Western District of Arkansas several women who sold liquor have been sent to the Federal prison for women at Alderson, W. Va. One of these is the mother of 16 children. "It corrupts men, women and chil dren." That is what one Federal Judge thinks of this sumptuary law, and it is what many other Federal Judges in the country think of it. They have watched its operation. For 10 years they have seen men. women and children corrupt by a law which was designed to make the peo ple better. Has it made the people better? Here is the testimony of Franklin Chase Hoyt, Presiding Jus tice of the New York Children's Court: I feel that I am conservative in stating that today more than 50 per cent of the neglected chil dren, with whom we have to deal, are brought before our court because of the intemper ance of their parents. ThiB per centage, I believe, is Just as high, if not higher, than it was when I first became connected with the court a number of years before the passage of the eight eenth amendment. ... As I have already pointed out, pro hibition has not had the slight est result, in my Judgment, in reducing delinquency nor in eliminating the causes of neg lect. Time will no doubt rationalize this situation. It did so when the alien and sedition acts were passed in the 1790s, and it did so when the fugi tive slave acts were passed in the lS50s. That folly which think3 to make the people better by compul sion, so corrupts men, women and children," and "has not the slightest result in reducing neglect of chil dren by delinquent parents," will run its course as all fevers do. When that time comes the country can go back to temperance and those pow ers of suasion which remain the only known means of making men better. :o: MISSIONARIES AT HOME The American churches, which de vote much money and energy to the sending of missionaries to foreign fields, might well consider the need of missionary work right here at home, according to Dr. Lyman P. Powell, rector of St. Margaret's Epis copal church, New York City. Writ ing in the current Review of Re views, Dr. Powell says: "Of the million persons in the Bronx, only 170,000 are even nom inally attached to any fold. And with less than 20 per cent of the Bronxltes religiously affiliated one- quarter of these habitually attending services brings the total of the de pendably religious down to 4 per cent, and Indisputably makes the Bronx as definitely a missionary field as India or Africa. Similar conditions, to a greater or lesser extent, are doubtless to be found in practically every big city. Dr. Powell's statement is a thing the churches would do well to bear In mind. :o: DRIFTING LEAVES If all the autumns that the world has known Were swept together In one windy blast And drove their dead leaves from the flame-shot past. Russet and tawny myriads, tempest blown. They could not show more splendor than is shown Here where the trees, like living lanterns, cast A yellow brilliance; and red limbs, aghast. Haunt, like torn ghosts, a fiery phan tom zone. Beauty dreams here, a beauty more profound Than man can fathom . . . Could we read the flare Of those doom-lighted woods, perhaps we'd sound The secret of the stars; and earth and air. The graveyard shadows and the sun rise glare. Would have no further riddles to pro pound. -Stanton A. Coblentz in New York Sun. :o: It's and ill wind that blows nobody good, and if it were not for wom en's vanity thousands who are sit ting in the lap of luxury would be tanding in the breadline. OveP-38 Baking Rjwder Guaranteed Pure Use KC for fine texture end large volume in your bakings Millions of pounds used by our Government HOOVER REFUSES LEADERSHIP Mr. Hoover's public appeal to the Republicans of the Senate to com pose their differences and pass a tar iff bill will severely disappoint the widespread expectation that he would assume leadership in the tariff fight. The President has not done this. He has contented himself with re minding the Republicans, particular ly those in the coalition, of their party pledge to pass a limited tariff bill "by which adequate protection should be given to agriculture and to the industries where the changed in economic situations demand their as sistance." He renews his appeal for the flexible clause "in order that in Justice in rates shall be promptly cor rected by a scientific and impartial investigation and put in action with out such delays as the present dis eussions give proof." We are afraid this sort of thing gets neither the President nor the tariff bill anywhere. The people who need talking to are not the insurgent Republicans in the Senate coalition Rather It is the regular Republicans in both houses of Congress. The lat ter have loaded the tariff bill down with benefits to greedy Intersts ub til they have foundered It. Had the President said as much, and demand ed that all these extortions be aban doned, the thing would right Itself and go through within a very few days. If he could ask dictatorial power for his office under the flexible clause, and denounce the debenture as a device by which speculators would profit at the expense of agri culture, could he not say what ne-e4a to be said of a tariff bill devised only for what Mr. Grundy calls "the lm portant part of the country?" After lecturing Congress twice on features of the tariff bill, the President seems to feel that he cannot lecture it again on the subject of the bill Itself. He thus refuses leadership in a mat ter which needs it as nothing else on the national horizon does for the moment. St. Louis Post-Dispatch. :o: THE RETURN OF THE JEWELS The mystery of the hour is the re turn of the Jewels those trinkets collected on a dripping Sabbath morn ing in the country. The Pinkertons are running around in circles. The police are pop-eyed. The insurance folks are almost speechless. Radio Sherlock. Page Philo. Cable Sir Jas per. On second thought, don't do it. Listen to us. We have a theory. You know, of course, that the event was a coup de rue. The way the high waymen doubtless reviewed the feat with artistic satisfaction. One of them may have suggested that the picture should have a worthy frame. Just what did he mean? He meant that the triumph should be topped off with a gesture of magnanimity with out modern parrellel. "Let's return the baublee," he proposed, "secretly. without barter or haggling. Let's Bhow 'em that the Turpin tradition still obtains in the Bo-called under world. Let's toss the trinkets over the transom, even as Robin Hood, spurning reward or pay, and gallop back to our occult rendezvous In Eherwood Forest." In a word, the robbers restored the Jewels out of the goodness of their gangster hearts. That's all there is to that. :o: One time mother never wastes any pity on the woman who lives at Y. W., eats her meals anywhere she wants to and has no home life, is when she is out in the kitchen wash ing up the supper dishes alone, while the rest of the family is resting com fortably in the living room after their hard work of stowing away the meal. :o:- J. P. Morgan won a prize the other day at a flower show for raising the largest and prettiest violets. Mr. Morgan also does pretty well in clover. HOW THE WAR STARTED If you ever wonder how it happen ed that the murder of an Austrian archduke by a fanatic Serbian 9tu dent could plunge all of Europe into four years of war, you might read Emil Ludwig's new book, "July '14. It will enlighten you considerably, Indeed. thi3 is a book that ought k i k ii , , v v terestea in preserving me peace oi the world. It presents a terrible, damnine picture of the way in which a .i,..o oMo HrJIarally BPent Sunday afternoon with . " - their countries Into the worst war in history. It ought to be a warning to tha rf,rM fnr pnratinn9 tn pnmp. Ludw uneven, no new ,ac.. Xut hp summarizes the old facts admir- ably. Here is the picture he paints: A rtnzen men In different EuroDean , , . "V""" " ' c esting game the game of interna- tional politics. It was an insane game, but it had been played tor ' , . 4. . nv i generations, u mr Vl,iB r very much. In Vienna there was Berchtold, .rr,ncr fr Wfr in th Ralbana. "-"!" - in Russia mere was jayuuw, iw-.- ing for a chance to etrlke Austria and eet "revenare" for an "insult" that Austria had dealt Russia some yeare before. In Berlin there were Bethmann and Jagow, egging Berch- told on. In Paris there was Poincare, playing a deep game with the tsar of Russia. In England there waa Grey, honestly desiring peace, but bound by intangible, secret "under- standings' with the French. The murder started the ball roll- ing. All of these men went into ae- tion War drew near. These men grew frightened and tried to draw back. They tried only half-heartedly. and each effort was followed by a new move toward war. Worse yet; in each capital the army general staff came into power and moved relent lessly for conflict. The tsar of Russia made a frantic , , . , ,T . . last-minute effort for peace. He would general staff Informed him that this would be Impossible. The machln- ery could not easily be stopped. The t6ar let himself be persuaded. The German kaiser made a similar last-minute effort, trying to mobilize on the eastern front only. But his general staff, too overruled him. Mobilization, he was told, once start ed, had to go forward. So, with only two or three respon- sible official really wanting wax.tjr; an(j jgr: John Sweeney and son war came. Ludwlg makes it perfect- . re-a mailman itmaa, bwub, in- Petersburg or Paris, who really want- ed peace, and who waa willing to work for it. there would have been . . , . no war. But such , a man wa. lackT ins- ' -. . Thus the, world went tolwar.- It V.V.'. "-rr-Ji? a ed their game so long that tey.had lost all sense of values. And mil- Hons of men lost their Mvesd; " len lost thetr Uvesd ever doubt-'that some; en- . , . . . . , ? r. method of handling Inter- If you tirely new national relations ila imperatively needed by the" world. read thla book, It will persuade you. , . -- . T V DONT BLAME OTHERS Whenever Tou.ffet irritated at thefwtict -.attendedr the- ateck Akow - at reckless antic some other. motoV- 1st in the stream of trafflc,you might bear in mind the -remark - recently t. n,Q air - -. i of the American Legion. ; . . Major Bodenhamer said that tlcallv all of us. at on tfm or an- , ... , . - . v I ulu"' ar" 6U" vrT rainngs mat we are so quick to no- tice in the other fellow. You resent It when another driver cuts in ahead of you; hare you never aone tne same thingr Ton resent it when another driver turns hia bright lights on and dazzlea you; didn't you ever do that? Check over your driv- ing habits and you'll probably find I that you commit practically all of the sins that irritate you so when the I other fellow commits them. :o: A BOOH TO AVIATION The "automatic pilot" with recent It nroved its worth In a teat flisrht n.i r w..vut m.. from Dayton, O., to Washington may develop into one of aviation's moat important Inventions. The device holds a plane on its course and keeps it at . the proper eievaiion wunoui any iwuu the pilot. Its possibilities for use-1 fulness can easily be Imagine, They o V.Hl- hA oTO.rr.t. .. . . .. . . I it a puot can go aiou ana maaee it mechanically certain that his plane I will fly alonir the exact course that that he wishes to stay at the exact height above the earth that he wish es, half of his worries are over. El mer Bperry. Inventor of the dertc. has done aviation a great aerriee.. e;- Brookhart wants Mellon fired. Probably suspects him of having tak en a drink three or four years ago. j. .M-M-I-H-I..M-I-H-I"I f J. TTI 1 -- Tk X .... Ashland Gazette Mr?. Henry Stander was shopping in Omaha Friday Lute Winget hurt his ankle last week, and has to walk with a crutch Mrs George Duerr and children spent Sunday with relatives in Oma- ha. I Mr- and Mrs- George Thimgan and Mr. and Mrs. Douglas KItrell Mr. and Mrs. John Sweeney and son, spent Thursday with Mr. Sween fvs mother, Mrs. Mary Neuman 'XJtlT! "rt Sweeney's father, Mr. Wm. Richards. Laura Richards of Meadow came Bunaay evening to ppend a few weeks with her aunt and uncle; Mr. and Mrs. John Sweeney Mrs: Emma Calder spent Monday at the home of her daughter, Mrs "nJ- ,anf lped her cele lDrate ner 22nd birthday. Miss LytHa Bornnian returned home from Omaha Saturday evening. She had her tonsils removed Friday inenua trust ene win nave I TI M t X . I V... to- ValV. ... Mr an(J Mr8 Cna(J Snaffer and daughter, Caroline, of Murdock, spent tsunaay wun jar. ana Mm. jonn Campbell. Mrs. d Rau and children and Mm. Emma Calder n-trp nft-r- noon visitors. I Mr. and Mrs. Homer Caxnlt-le have moved into the house recently vacat- f? r- ana Mrs naier and Mrs. moTej jnto the house vaacted by Mr. land Mr. Cam icle. r. and Mrs. K. M. Uavts enter- L.- i r. it. vt,. r x. Brawn's birthday,' Mr. and Mrs. Geo! Brawn, Mr. and Mrs. Yyrle Livers. Mrs". Walter Towle and son, Lloyd, fA-JS w Mkl Mrs. John Grabow spent Monday I with Mrs. Virgil Beaack. . Kooert L-ong spent ruesaay r. T!iiinrinn0T. moved to Ashland, where Mr. Elling ton will husk corn. Mr. and Mrs. John Kupke and family spent Sunday afternoon with k,. ',,0 ' wv Mrs. Ernest Sturzenegger and Mrs. ITorensen of Sarpy- county spent Wednesday with Mrs. Robert Long. Mrs. George Vogel gave a very In- terestintr talk to the pupils of the I Ashland school last Tuesday about I her trip to Europe last summer.' Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Haswell and j and Mlsa Ruth Carnlcle spent Sunday boo. Kichara, air. Merle benwarta, afternoon at the Jacob Carnlcle I home. ' Mr. Willis Richards of Lincoln spent the week end at the home of his father. Mr. William Richards I Donald, were 'Sanday afternoon t!J tOff. Tim Soot Bead F. T. A. raaetfn tk- fcool house FrtdaT evenimr, TU well attended. One of the main subjects dlacuaaed wm t try and nave electric ; UghU put into the school house. , . . mJbs . Lydia . Bornman took- quIW lalck a week ro -unday' wltk 'hrt 1 trQUDje.; asa ia.unaer me. ae.or. Jjr BMr4i;.UU.tfMt.at:the fcome of btfhev Mr? JBornPvtfn": ' ' ' . - ."Mi WiI8icTlarda : returned tp hr, .home jU Lincoln Monflay 'after nqr M011 i. juiuwmd uoooay aner BpndInverardayVatJhf mn of her parent--Mr. aad Mrs; Wytaan y7r. HerlBrerr-Miaa Luella Saw. Iyer.' accompanied her home fer. k few days rlall and Bra-bhs rXJrabew. Mr; and.-Mrs. Oseair DUJ 6dsonr, H&tr aad Alft. Brv.Mootjtt Had onB;iUr, and-M.ra. Iwfnryi fitandef i: vera v.amona; thoae -a a'Tery.intepeatldg.meeting last Wed- ntdfty at . the, home of .Mrs. George IVoffeJ.. -Two. new--members. Mrs. n Sunder arid -.Mrs.; Earl Tal- bot iQtnA this tneAtlne. The next meetlne will be with Mr. Henrr prac-lstander the ' rat Wednesday in i-fcenioer 1 J mr. ana oxrs. jbcob uarmcie re- reived a telerram Sundav morninr stating their son, William, was In ISt. Joseph hospital at St. Charles MI"urt.rt Buffering from typhoid Wftrti5ll Br(V, tnmt tr some time. His many friends hope to hear he haa a apeedy recovery. With more than 30d Americans ln- nred for more than 11,000.000 each. it look as If there Is a campaign on for . better dressed widows. SHERIFF'S BALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, By virtue of an Order of Sale. Is laued by Golda Noble Beal, Clerk of Lv: t,',., ' Lgg county. Nebraska, and to me directed, I will on the 28th day of December. A. D." 1929. at 10 o'clock la. m. of said day at the south front drvrtr nf (h mnrt Ttmiaji in In lt of Plattsmouth, Nebraska, in said county, aell at public auction to the jUigheet bidder for caah the follow- real 1IU lO-HH IU OUHIUBOTI lon) ef gtlon (8) Townehlp Eleven (11). Range Thirteen (18), at of the 6th P. M. Caas M the property of George W. Rhoden and Mary E. Rhoden, defendants, to satisfy a Judgment of said Court re covered "by Conservative Mortgago Company, a corporation, plaintiff against aald defendants. " - Plattsmouth," Nebraska, November 21et A. a 1829. - . BERT REJ5J. Sheriff Cash County, ' Nebraska. THE NOTE OF FRIENDSHIP Premier MacDonald in his address before the Council of Foreign Rela tions, touched the keynote of his American visit, the keynote of friend ship and understanding. It is well that the American pub lic was enabled by the marvel of the radio to listen to this address, to hear the earnest tones of the speaker, to feel the sincerity that animated his utterances. If the basis of friendship and un derstanding between the people of his country and those of the United States is attained, the matter of treaties and agreements and diplo matic proceedings becomes second ary. :o: Phore vs the news. So. 6. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE By virtue of a special order of sale on execution of Judgment issued by Golda Noble Beal. Clerk of the District Court of Cass county, Ne braska, upon a decree entered in said court in favor of D. O. Dwyer as Intervenor of the cace of Emma E. Ronne vs. Charles Emory Ronne, wherein the said D. O. Dwyer was decreed a lien upon an undivided one-seventh of the Southwest Quar ter and the South half of the North west Quarter of Sec. 9, Tp. 11 Range 12, In Cass county. Nebraska; that pursuant to said writ. I will, on the 23rd. day of December, 1929, at ten o'clock a. m., cf said day. sell sai l teal estate at the Bouth front door of the court house in the city of Plattsmouth in said Cass county, Ne braska, at auction to the highest bidder for cash, to satiofy said Hen, the amount due thereon being 1250.00 with seven per cent inter est from the 4th day of February, 19 27. and costs of Buit, in the sum of 23. S3 and al30 accruing costs. Dated this 19th day of November, 1929. BERT REED. Sheriff of Cass County, Nebraska n21-4ws. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, sa. In the County Court. In the matter of the Estate of Flora F. Sans, deceased. To the creditors of said estate: You are hereby notified, that I will ait at the County Court room In Plattsmouth, in said county, on the 0th day of December. 1929, and the 7th day of March. 19 30. at 10 o'clock a. ia. of each day, to receive and ex amine all claims against said estate. with a view to their adjustment and allowance. The time limited for the jtreseatatloa oX claims against said estate la tore months from the 6th day ot December, A. D. 1929, and tkm tine limited for payment of debts la one year from said 6th day of De comber, 1929. Wltnesa my hand and the seal of said County Court this 9th day of March. 1929. . A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) nll-3w County Judge, NOTICE TO CREDITORS ..'The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, 'sa. In the County Court. Lb the matter of the estate of Ruth A.- C. Beverage, deceased. To the creditors of said estate: YDU are heraliT notified, that T ihlX alt at the County Court room in Plattsmouth. In said county, on De cember 1929, and March 7, 1930. at 10 o'clock a. m.. each day. to re ceive and examine all claims against said estate, with a view to their ad justment and allowanoe. The time limited tor the presentation of claims against said estate Is three months from the th day of December, A. D. 1029. and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 6th day of December. 1929. Witness my hand and the seal of aald County Court this 8th day of Noromber, 1929. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) nll-3w County Judge, ORDER OF HEARING AND NO TICE OF PROBATE OF WILL In the County Court of Cass Coun ty. Nebraska. State of Nebraska, County of Cass, To the heirs at law and to all per sona interested in the estate of Mal- vina Coffin, deceased. On reading the petition of Ruben E. Donnelly praying that the instru ment filed in this court on the 18th day of November, 1929, and purport ing to be the last will and testa ment of the said deceased, may be proved and allowed and recorded as the last will and testament of Mal- vina Coffin, deceased; that said in strument be admitted to probate and the administration of said estate be granted to Watson Howard as admin istrator with the will annexed; It is hereby ordered that you. and all persons Interested in said mat ter, may, and do, appear at the Coun ty Court to he held in and for said County, on the 13th day of Decem ber, A. D. 1929. at ten o'clock a. m.. to show cause, if any there be, why the prayer of the petitioner should not be granted, and that notice of the pendency of said petition and that 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- eekly newspaper printed in said County, for three successive weeks prior to said day of hearing. Witness my hand, and the seal of said court, this 18th day of Novem ber. A. D. 1929. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) al8-3w County Judge.