The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, September 14, 1910, Image 4

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WKDNK8DAT. 8EPTEMBEK It. 1910.
BTKOTHKlt & COMPANY. Proprietors.
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pajmaot ha base reoaived ap to Jaa. 1,1966,
rabOBtoFeb.l,19aBdaooa. Whaa payment
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wlUlMohaacadaeoordiscly.
DiBCONTINOANCES-Keapoaaihle aabacrib
ra will ooatlaoa to reealTa thia joamal antil the
publisher an notified by letter to diaeontiaae,
wbeaallamaraiea maatbapaid.lt yoadonot
viah the Joaraal coatiaaed for another year af
ter the time paid for haa expired, yoa ahoald
preTloaaly aotlfy aa to dlaaontiaae it.
CHANGE IN ADDKK88 Whaa ocdarlac a
' aaace la the address, eabaeribara ahoald be aara
1 1 cite their old aa well aa their aaw addraae.
REPUBLICAN TICKET.
For U. S. Senator
KLMF.lt J. BUKKETT
For Congressman, Third DUtrict
JOHN F. KOYD
For Governor
C. II. AI.DKICH
For Lieatenant-Governor
M. K. HOPEWELL
For Secretary of State
ADDISON WAIT
For Auditor
SILAS It. IIAKTOK
For Attorney General
GKANT G. MAltTIN
For Land Commibsioner
E. H. COWLES
For Treasurer
WALTEK A. GEOltGE
For Superintendent Instruction
J. W. CKABTREE
For Railroad Commissioner
HENHY T. CLAItKE. jb
For State Senator
EDWIN HOAItE
For State Keiireentative
FRANK SCHRAM
For County Attorney
C. N. McELFRKSII
For Supervisor, District No. 1
C A. PETEItSON
DISPROPORTIONATE LEGIS
LATION. During the recent primary election
campaign incidental reference was
made to the disproportionate and un
fair representation in the legislature
which has prevailed in Nebraska for
so many years. Former Supreme
Court Reporter, Judge Wilbur F.
Bryant, in a published letter stated the
case in plain lauguage as follows:
"In direct violation of the constitu
tion the legislature for twenty-five
years has refused to reapportion the
representation in our legislature. Oue
county below, south of the Platte river,
which divides the state, has 20,000
inhabitants and three representatives;
another has 11,000 inhabitants and one
representative and a float. North of
the Platte Thurston and Dakota coun
ties are unrepresented in the legisla
ture except by a float with Cuming
county; and Cedar and Pierce, with
33,000 inhabitants, have only one
representative. Douglas county ought
to have thirteen members in the lower
house and four senators. It has nine
representatives and three senators.
Do you pretend to say that a legisla
ture like ours voices the people of the
state?"
The way this condition was brought
about and the reason why it has not
been remedied rest on the same foun
dation. The last legislative redisrict
ing iu Nebraska was made in 1887 on
the basis of a state census that sub
stantially confirmed the then existing
apportionment. A new apportionment
should have been had in 1891 upon
the federal census of 1890, but the
populist legislature refused to act
because Omaha would have been the
largest gainer. The mid-decade state
census went by the board owing to the
drouth and panic poverty which
afflicted the slate in 1893 and 1894
and .the redistricting due after the
1900 census went by the board through
the greedinessof overweighted districts
declining to consent to reduced rep
resentation. This explains how Nebraska comes
to be suffering in 1910 the injustice of
a legislative apportionment, made in
1887. In the intervening twenty
three years the population of this state
has been largely redistributed. Great
areas that were then almost uninhab
ited have become dotted with pros
perous towns and villages and tracts
supposed to have been wholly desert
and barren have been made to yield
prolific crops. Omaha, which in 1885
had 60,000 people, will have more
than twice that number by this year's
census. These later settled communi
ties, however, have practically no voice
in their law making corresponding to
their numbers.
The first thing needed to assure the
rule of the people in Nebraska is a
redistricting for legislative representa
tion that will conform with the present
day conditions and remove the shack
les forged upon us a quarter of a cen
tury ago. Omaha Bee.
MASK OF COMEDY HIDES
GRIEF.
"Were sure of your success. Baby
held thumbs Sat yoa until 11:15
o'clock, when she died."
Thus began the telegram, which
came to Trixie Friganza, who heads
the cast in "The Sweetest Girl in
Paris' Tuesday morning, and between
the lines of the message is revealed
one of those tragedies of stage life of
which the public so seldom knows.
"Baby," is Miss Friganza's adopted
daughter, little Margaret Friganza
whose coming into the world a few
weeks ago cost the life of its girl
mother, to whom Miss Friganza had
been protector as well as older sister
since the death of their parents. It
was to make a home for this younger
sister that Miss Friganza built her
house at Bensonhurst by the Sea, a
home which the young girl did not
leave when she was married about a
year ago.
This summer the premature birth
of the baby caused the death of the
young mother, who had always been
frail, and in her grief Miss Friganza
had the child given to her legally,
intending to lavish on it all the love
and care with which she had surround
ed its mother. Leaving the infant in
the care of a trained nurse and another
sister, she came west to begin reher
sal in the Askin production and on
last Thursday came the first intima
tion of the child's danger. She plead
ed to be allowed to go east for a few
hours, but determined to sacrifice her
personal feelings when it was pointed
out to her that her absence on the
final days of rehearsal would mean a
postponement of the production, a
costly proposition for both the man
agement and company.
Sunday night, after the last curtain
had fallen on the successful premiere,
the comedienne, who a moment before
had been laughing and singing gayly
on the stage, rushed to her dressing
room with the tears streaming down
her face.
"My baby is dying, my baby is dy
ing, and I can't be with her," she sob
bed to a friend who had gone back of
the stage to greet her.
In the eastern home at that moment
the spirit of the chjld, who Miss Fri
ganza likes to think held on until
after the successful first performance
was over, had taken flight Members
of the family thoughtfully delayed the
sad news until Tuesday morning, the
time set for the funeral. And Tuesday
night Miss Friganza, appearing as a
dashing widow, kept the audience at
the Pabst in merry mood by her jest
ing, her smile and her songs.
For the mask of comedy often hides
an aching heart.
ROOSEVELT ENDORSES SENA
TOR BURKETT.
When Col. Roosevelt was in Omaha
September 2nd, and made a speech at
the Auditorium, he was introduced by
Senator Burkett. In response to the
senator's introductory address Colonel
Roosevelt gave him a splendid en
dorsement The former president's
remarks were as follows:
"I am particularly pleased to be
introduced by Senator Burkett," said
the Colonel, "because he was one of the
men on whom I especially relied while
I was president, both while he was in
the house and in the senate. On one
occasion he paid a tribute to me which
may have been entirely unmerited, in
which he described what the typical
American public servant must be. He
said: 'In the great struggle of life he
(the good American) must be prepared
to take the side of the man rather than
of the dollar. Old time methods in
politics, old time ideals of governmeu
tal duty and prerogative are relegated
to the junk shop of political antiquities.
No man who is skeptical in his own
mind of the righteousness of the ad
vanced ground that the American
people have taken socially or morally
can have their confidence. No man
who is fearful of popular rule, or is
more afraid of the peoples oppression
of predatory wealth with law than of
the people without law is eligible to
popular esteem.'
"In my own case," Colonel Roose
velt continued, "All I can say is that
I have endeavored to live up to that
description and that I was able to
accomplish what I did accomplish in
Washington only because of the way
in which I was backed by men like
Senator Burkett and as we have a
guest from Iowa present, let me say,
also, like Senator Dolliver."
A South Arabian Foed Plant.
Jowari, a tall, slender plant resem
bling corn and headed with a grain
something like millet. Is the Abdall's
chief crop. He feeds the stalk to his
camels and eats the grain himself.
Three crops a year are produced. Jo
wari requires little cultivation except
weeding, which the Abdali does by
hand, and when ripe be cuts it off close
to the ground with his hunting knife.
New shoots spring up from the roots
to become the next crop. For a camel
load of about 125 pounds he receives
at Aden an average of two rupees, or
$04.88. A fair yearly yield is twenty
camel loads an acre. Consular and
Trade Reports.
THEODORE
Senator E. J. Burkett in
When I was in Montreal last sum
mer I saw some young men with tri
pod and transit and chain and note
book performing the always strange
bat familiar antics that go with sur
veying. Inasmuch as the particalar
place where they were seemed to me
to have passed the frontier stage, my
curiosity was aroused, and upon in
quiry I learned that they were uni
versity students surveying the cam
pus as a practice "stunt" The old
driver who was showing us about did
not seem to understand it at all, and
in a manner that almost savored of
superstition, imparted to us the infor
mation the men had been measuring
and remeasuring the same hill for over
twenty years, and that for some rea
son or other they never seemed to be
satisfied with the results. . .
The people of the entire world are
out now with their measuring appara
tus trying to get the real size of The
odore Roosevelt In fact, like the
boys of Montreal university, they have
been measuring him and remeasuring
him for the last dozen or fifteen years
and like those boys again nobody is
just exactly satisfied with anybody
else's measurements and not entirely
certain of his own. Mr. Roosevelt
has defenders and detainers; those who
swear by him and those who swear at
him, but all agree that he is the most
remarkable man in the world today.
"The most sterling figure in the world
since Napoleon Bonaparte," is the way
one writer gives the result ol bis sur
vey. Others have had to go back to
Julius Caesar for a prototype. "More
nearly like Jackson than any man in
American history," is a very common
way of expressing it, and, to say the
least, a verv conservative measure of
his greatness as the measuring b going
on in these limes..
That Theodore Roosevelt is a most
extraordinary man is conceded alike
by friend and foe( but just how great
as the world estimates greatnesB is, of
course, not universally agreed upon.
This is not surprising, because the
measurement of meu intellectually
and morally is not an exact science.
Greatuess of character aud mental
worth cannot be measured by metes
and bounds, for it is an operation of
judgment in which figures and inches
and bushels arc not employed in the
calculation; aud judgment, like dis
cretion, varies with the one who is ex
ercising it No two men by the sight
alone will agree exactly on color or
on the height of a balloon, or on the
distance of a ship at sea. The judg
ment of any single individual is affect
ed by the relative position he occupies
to the thing to be judged, the angle of
his vision or his proximity. Men are
generally underestimated at close
range, and are perhaps likely to be
overestimated at long range. The
man who has felt the whack of the
"big stick" will naturally view Roose
velt at a different angle from one who
nurses no such unpleasant recollec
tion. Members of the Ananias club
will have some difficulty in distin
guishing heroism from "bluff."
Nevertheless with all projier allow
ance for personal pride and political
pique, everybody must agree that
Theodore Roosevelt is stronger in the
minds and hearts of the people today
than any living man, and, in fact
stronger than he ever was before.
Criticise his methods or his doctrines
as they may, he has obtained results,
and results are what count with the
people. The people are seldom exact
ing as to methods and not always as to
motives, but they do like results. They
may never have inquired intricately
and specifically into the real offenses
of the malefactors of great wealth, nor
into the motives of those persons who
would stay their filching hand, but it
was enough for the people to know
that the verdict was against those out
laws to society, and that Theodore
Roosevelt proposed to enforce the ver
dict The people only knew that
there had been high financing of the
instrumentalities of their commerce at
their expense; they knew that there
had been rottenness in Wall street;
that there had been violation of plight
ed faith and juggling with the people's
laws, and it was enough to know that
Roosevelt was out with all his strength
in the people's interest
So, whether men like him or other
wise, they must admit and do admit
that he is a great man in the estima
tion and affections of the people and
that is the crucial test of a man. The
whole world has got by its doubts up
on that question, for, impossible as it
may seem now, there was a time when
there were doubts. The time was
when the people themselves were
quiring whether he was a great
m-
or a mere pretender, an opportunist
or a propagandist The question is
now settled beyond cavil at least that
is he was an opportunist, he created
his own opportunities and grasped
ROOSEVELT
New York Independent.
them with all the zeal and success of
one who had his principles thoroughly
at heart and his plans well laid.
The question now uppermost is what
is the secret of his power and his in
fluence among men? If he is a great
mas, why is he gnat? What are his
particular attributes? What is it that
attracts to him the attention of the
entire world? Why is he so extrava
gantly glorified everywhere? Royalty
and nobility do him honor, while the
soft, sweet strainsof Europe's national
airs and the wierd tomtoms of Africa
sound the same genuiness of his popu
lar welcome. Surely no other man
has ever been so acclaimed in so many
different tongues, under so many differ
ent skies and in so many different ways.
What is there in him that distinguish
es him front all other men? These are
the questions that all men are asking
everywhere. Why is it that he can
be lost to the public eye neither in
political retirement nor in the no
madic seculsion of an African wilder
ness? Why is it that in spite of po
litical mistakes for he has made them
and notwithstanding diplomatic tan
gles, he is still the lion of the hour to
all nations and to all the people there
of? Or, to be more colloquial, why
can he wear a silk hat and be "our
Teddy," and in spite of an aristocratic
birth and aristocratic environments
remain the idol of the common people?
We saw him nominated for vice-
president as the political expedient of
a corrupt machine for the idealistic
purpose of practical elimination, and
then we saw him, an exile, break the
machine, destroy the manipulators and
replace them with men and methods
of his own creation. We saw him
come to the white house under very
trying circumstances and handicapped
by an unfortunate popular opinion
of him, charitably expressed perhaps in
the words of Lowell in his fable for
critics. "Three-fifths genius and two
fifths sheer fudge." Nevertheless, we
saw him retire from that exalted posi
tion at the end of seven years rehabil
itated in the judgment of men and so
enshrined in the hearts and confidence
of the people that he could dictate his
own successor. We saw him enter a
self-imposed banishment to the most
inaccessible and impenetrable spot on
the globe, only to return tocivilzation
with greater applause than ever before.
He left with the American people as
escort, and returns with the whole
world at his chariot wheels.
What is it all about, the people arc
asking? What qualities does he pos
sess that others do not have? What
are the magic words that open all
hearts to him, and what the magic
spell that draws all men unto him? It
is a psychological question with which
psychologists are helpless, and a polit
ical attribute by which the most astute
politician is amazed. It is more than
a fleeting fancy of the hour, for it has
sustained him in the confidence and
esteem of the people in official position
and out of it It does not answer the
question to call it a mere appeal to the
prejudice and the passions of men, for
others have tried that without success.
Nor will it answer to say that he is
radical and that radicalism appeals to
the American people, for there have
been others more radical than he. It
is not sufficient to say that he has been
honest and able, for there have been
other honest and able men during his
public career. It takes more than an
honest and able man to win public
confidence as he has done it These
qualities are necessary, hut he who
would win it must also be energetic
and courageous, fearless, and deter
mined, and above all in complete sym
pathy with human rights aud human
welfare, and alive to present day con
ditions. In the great struggle of life,
he must be prepared to take the side
of the man rather than of the dollar.
Old time methods in politics, old time
ideals of governmental duty and pre
rogative are relegated to the junkshops
of political antiquities, and the man
who has become irrevocably imbued
with them is eliminated as a possible
competitor for popular esteem. No
man who apologizes in his soul for the
economic and industrial legislation of
the last decade in this country is
acceptable to the American people as
a political leader. No man who is
skeptical in his own mind of the right
eousness of the advanced ground that
the American people have taken
socially and morally can hold their
confidence. No man who is fearful of
popular rule or h more afraid of the
people's oppression of predatory wealth
with law than of its oppression of the
people without law. is eligible to pop
ular esteem.
Roosevelt has been measured by
every one of these tests; he has fought
the battle of the people against the
combined hosts of greed and avarice.
He has done it fearlessly and courage
ously and by it has endeared himself
to all mankind. This is why he is
popular in the minds of the people. It
counts for naught that he has made
mistakes, for they are of the judgment
while his motives are of the heart
Critics will look in vain for any un
usual ability or faculty that he pos
sesses beyond the one faculty of
serving the people and making them
to understand and believe that he is
serving them. There is no alchemy
for winning and holding men unto
him of which he alone holds the secret.
It is old as the world itself, a soul fired
with human sympathy, a heart that
beats in unison with the people in their
trials and struggles, and a courage
that goes to their relief. It is not a
pandering to the passions and preju
dices of the extremist, for the people
have not wanted for their idol an ex
tremist who jumps without looking
and denounces without investigation,
and condemns without rhyme of rea
son. Mr. Roosevelt's success has
perhaps been very largely due to his
conservatism in handling questions
that make most men radicals or per
haps better in dealing with questions
and to an extent that only radicals
usually approach, and all the while
maintaining an attitude of fairness and
honesty and conservatism. He never
advocated a law that would do any
more injury to legitimate business
than the law against bank robbery
would interfere with legitimate bank
ing. That is why he has the confi
dence and esteem of the strong minded
and successful but honest business
men of the country. The people have
asked only for a man wise enough to
know, courageous enough to do, and
practical enough to accomplish. Roose
velt measured up to this test. Like
Lincoln, he was denounced by some
because he went too far, and criticised
by others because he did not go far
enough, but between these two ex
tremes, between the rotten manipulator
who wants no regulation and the fanat
ical agitator who would stop every
thing. Theodore Roosevel t has steered
a middle course, and the great mass of
the people have followed him in the
past and are following him still.
INNS OF CHINA.
A Kneek That Wracked a Dear ami
Raised a Rumpus.
Some or the Inns of modern China
are badly built The correspondent of
the London Times in traveling across
the country recently had this experi
ence: "At only one village bad 1 any
difficulty. We were marching late in
the dark, and I had sent my groom
on ahead to find me an Inn. as he had
often done before, lie entered the
village, and, finding the large inn door
closed, be called out to the people to
open It But bis Peking speech la not
easily understood In Kansu, and no one
answered him. Then be knocked, and
to bis dismay the crazy door fell down.
Immediately there was a row. The
Innkeeper and bis vociferous spouse
shouted out their wrongs.
"Every one came Into the street to
hear; the whole village was roused.
When I arrived It seemed like a dem
onstration in my honor. As in the
custom, a dozen people together told
me what bad happened. I soon satis
fled every one by first examining the
damage and then paying compensa
tion In full. 1 paid 100 cash (rather
more than twopence), and my gener
osity was approved.
"The structure thus damaged re
minded one of the jerry built bouses
familiar to students In Edinburgh,
where It Is on record that a lodger
once complained to bis landlord that
the celling in bis room bad fallen
down. 'But bow do you account for
that? asked the landlord. Somebody
In the next flat sneezed. replied the
lodger."
A REC0RDJNHITTING.
Delehanty's Four Homers and a Sing la
In Five Times at Bat
The baseball expert Hugh S. Fuller
ton, In an article on "Batting" In the
American Magazine, describes as fol
lows the greatest hitting feat recorded,
executed by Ed Delebanty. and which
It was bis goodifortune to witness:
"Adonis Terry was pitching a great
pitcher with a wonderfully fast curve
ball and tbreetof the home runs were
made off the curve. The first time
at bat Delebanty hit the ball high over
the right field fence, perhaps seventy
feet from the'foul line, which would
be 245 feet from the plate; and the
fence was thirty-five feet high. The
second time behit over the same fence,
but farther i arard center field. The
third time beldrore a single over short
atop, a line nit and perhaps the hard
est hit of alL Dahlen. leaping, touched
the ball wltbiboth bands. They were
torn apart, and the ball caromed al
most to tbefteft fielders before it struck
the ground. The next borne run was
straight to the center field between
the clnbhoaaes, nearly 400 feet away.
The last time be came to the bat the
crowd was cheering him on. Lange
retired between thetclubbouses, which
were set at angles. Delebanty hit a
curve ban. It alighted on the roof of
one clubhouse, bounded to the roof of
the other and roUed f halfway back to
the second baseman i And yet Chicago
won the game 8 to 6.
The Prize; Holder.
"I understand youihare a fine track
team here," said thevIsitor to the man
who was showing Urn over the college
campus. What (Individual holds most
of the medals?"
"The town pawnbroker," answered
his guide after due deliberation. New
York Journal.
Misdeals.
Sillicus Love is a game In which
Cupid deals the cards. Cynlcus Then
why does he so often deal from the
bottom of the deck? Philatlelpala
Record.
FURNITURE
We carry the late styles and up-to-date
designs in Furniture.
If you are going to fur
nish a home, or just add a
piece to what you already
have, look over our com
plete line.
Need a Kitchen Cabinet?
See the "Springfield.'
HENRY GASS
21-21-23 West 11th St
Doubling Her Capacity.
"I want a nurse girl who Is capable
of taking care of twins," said a woman
to the manager of an employment
agency.
A dozen maids ranged against the
wall were questioned as to their fa
miliarity with twins. Finally one girl
produced documentary evidence that
for the last five years most of her
waking moments had been spent in
the company of twins. She got the
Job. When she reported for work in
the afternoon she was Introduced to
but one infant
"Where is the other one?" she asked.
"Ob. there are no twins about this
bouse," said her mistress. "I just
said twins so I would be sure to get a
competent uurse. Any girl who is
capable of handling two children can
give extra good care to one. That is
a little ruse I always employ when I
hire a nurse." New York Times.
Insect Sits en IU Eggs.
Family matters in the case of insects
usually meau only the depositing or
eggs In suitable situations for the in
dependent development of the off
spring, the parent insects often dying
before the young appear. The earwig,
however, provides a remarkable excep
tion to the general rule, for it sits upon
its fifty or more eggs until they are
hatched. Just as a bird would do. and.
moreover. If the eggs get scattered it
carefully collects them together again.
In the early months of the year, when
digging the soil, female earwigs may
frequently be found together with
their batch of eggs. At the slightest
sign of danger the young ones huddle
close to their mother, biding beneath
her body so far as It will cover so
large n family. Strand Magazine.
THE GOVERNMENT IRRIGAT&D
HOMESTER!)
of the Big Horn Basin and Yellowstone Valley
are today the garden spots of the country. Several farms are
now ready to homestead, and the Government Surveyors are
laying out more new farms for new settlers who are lucky
enough to get on the ground in time to get the choice of these
new locations. Our new literature just from the press tells
how you can homestead these lands and repay the Government
the actual cost of the water right in ten yearly payments
without interest.
CAREY ACT LANDS:-Several thousand acres of Carey Act
Lands just opened to entry only thirty days residence
required. The settler buys these lands from the State and
the perpetual water right from the irrigation company.
Long time given to settlers to pay for these lands and
water rights. Join our personally conducted excursions
the 1st and 3rd Tuesday of each month. Specially pre
pared Wyoming literature just off the press. Write today.
D. fiLFM
wmsmmmrm
illulUEUIIIfl La"d Scaknrs MannatlM Bureau
B
-H004 Farnam StrMt. Omaha. Ntbr.
I Magazine Binding
I Old Books I
I Rebound I
I In fact, for anything in the book I
binding line bring your work to I
I 6? I
I Journal Office I
I Phone 184 I
n
Columbus, Neb.
I The Wolvas and tne Meat.
l IkhI thought that It was peculiar
to human nature to regard that which
one lias as of less vulue thau that
which one has nut. but 1 had reason
to change my opinion the other day."
said a visitor to the zoo.
"A keeper tossed four pieces of meat
into the ltii of two gray wolves. One
piece landed on the roof of the shelter
bouse, and a wolf with a lame fore leg
passed over the pieces on the ground,
and. standing on bis bind legs, tried
and tried to get that on the roof, which
was Just out of reach. The other hun
gry wolf gave his attention to the
nieces on the ground and disposed of
all three. Uuiug over to the bouse, be
sniffed for a moment and then sprang
upon the roof, ate the fourth piece and
stretched out for repose." New York
Sun.
IX TIIK DISTRICT I OPUT OF I'LATIK
COUNTY. NKRKASKA.
In thft inattt-r i.f llift (trial of Freeman M. Cuok-
I idkIimii. deceased Onlrr to nhuw cnu.-e.
To all iron interested iu I ho rotate of
. Freeman M. 4'ookinKliaiu. di traced.
IIiih cnue cum tm lor tiearintc upon (lie tui
tion of F.iiRenia 1. 1'ookiBKhaiu, adinwintratrix
of th -tatM of Freeman M. f 'ookinirliaiii. le
eeawd, prajtinK fur license ton-1 1 thetiurth Imlf
of Into hve (5) anil six (J in Mock eighteen (If)
of Lorklier'a second addition to the ill:iKet
Humphrey, NYbranka, for the payment of lebl
allowed atminot aaid etato ami costs of ailmiui
t ration anil it uuixvirinir to the court, that the
itTMnal proiierty of Haiti estate in intintB'cie.nt to
iy unlit ilettla anil expend-?. 11 in llierelore
unluinl that all inton interested in aaid estate
apenr before me at I life, urt hoaitoin (Viliiiu
!hh. Nebraska, on th ml ilay of October. I!MI.
at the hour of ten o'clock zi. in., there to lnu
cun.ie, if any ther be, whj a I ice one should not
Im granted to wtiil (u-uiiuistratrix to tell ho
much of mid real estate aa may be neceeaary to
ioy Kiid debt and fiiUN'it. and that thin ordt-r
I be published four uccetivn weeka in the L'o-
iumiKiH journal.
Dated thin 3rd day of Sieuiber. 1910.
Ueo. 11. Thomas.
Judi! of the district couit of Platte county.
Nebraska. M
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