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About The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 28, 1910)
! J . t ti ' i If i) ! I i ! II! li'i 5" i if I Cfflnmtms Qtmvtml. Colambna. VCaVbr. Consolidated with the Columbus Times April 1. 1804; with the Platte County Argn January 1.18W. Kataradattaa PoetoSW.Colambsa,Habr..aa leeoad-elaat mall matter. tbbss o v icnoumoi : Or year, by mall, snatasj grspsM M..fLS0 is moats. rriMMadM - WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 28. 1810. 8TBOTHKU A COMPANY, Proprietors. RENEWAL!-The date opposite roar name on $ oar paper, or wrapper ahows to what time your abecriptloa U paid. Tboa JanOS ahowa that payment haa been reoeired op to Jan. 1,1905, fab06toPeb.l,liaadaoon. When payment la made, the data, which answers aa a reoaipt, anil be chanced aooordincly. DiriCONTlNDANCES-llaiponaible anbecrlb era will coatlaae to receive this journal until the patliabara r.-a notified by letter to discontinue, wbea all arreanea meat be paid. If yon do not iah the Joaraal ooatinaed for another year af ter the time paid for haa expired, yoa ahoold pravioaalr notify na to diaoonttaaa it. CHANGE IN ADD11E88-When orderin. a jaana la tbaaddrafca,enbecrib(rB ahoold be tore to give their old aa well aa their now address. REPUBLICAN TICKET. For U. 9. Senator ELMEK J. BUKKETT For Congressman, Third District JOHN F. HOVD For Governor C. II. AI.DKICII For Lieutenant-Governor M. K. HOPEWELL For Secretary of State ADDISON WAIT For Auditor SILAS K. BABTOX For Attorney General GBANT G. MABTIX For Land Commissioner E. B. COWLES For Treasurer WALTER A. GEOIiGE For Superintendent Instruction J. W. CKABTHKK For Railroad Commissioner IIEXKV T. CLARKE. ia For State Senator EDWIN 1IOARE For State Representative FRANK SCIIBAM For County Attorney C. N. McELFBESH For Supervisor, District No. 1 C. A. PETERSON There ia little doubt of the result of the coming election being favorable to Senator Burkett if the reception accorded him wherever he goes is to be the judge. His very enthusiastic re ception at the state fair grounds l the large crowd which heard him, not possibly of the loud applause kind, but by the wrapt attention given speaks volumes in his liehalf. However his reception at the Modern Woodman picnic at Fontanel le last week was more of the enthusiastic line and in fact his reception there was most gratifying. All along the line of his trip last week he was greeted with good crowds and a warm reception, which goes far toward showing that the senator hus not lost any of his po ularity. The ieople if Nebraska are not going to lose the best chance they have had for many years to step into a position in the United States senate which will mean much for the state. In the return of Senator Burkett to Washington, he will lie in a position to receive by reasin of his service there some of the much coveted assign ments on committees which have For merly been held by the old timers, whose terms of service will expire and who retire. This will mean that Sen ator Burkett will be in a position to get results. A new man will have to work up, and while he is working up, Nebraska takes a back seat as far as he is concerned. Can she afford to doit? HONESTY PAYS BEST. There is something insultingly gra tuitous in the reiterated suggestion that Governor Shallenberger might, if he had so chosen, have uncovered a whole lot of fraud in Douglas county. If anything were needed to disprove it, the result of the recount there ought to be sufficient But that is not the only evidence we have. After having looked into the situa tion there fully through counsel and with the aid of his ftiends in the metropolis, the governor himself de clared in his statement to the public, at the time he conceded the nomina tion to Mayor Dahlman, that their search of the ballot boxes had not disclosed any material fraud. Speak ing of the recount, he said: It has also been a great benefit to Mayor Dahlman and the rest of the state ticket, in that it has satisfied my friends and the people of Nebraska generally that the many rumors alleg ing frauds and unfairness in Douglas county were untrue. While it is pos sible that I might still hope to win the nomination in a legal battle because of irregularities and technicalities shown in the recount in Douglas county, I do not care for a victory that is to be won in that manner, and I think more of the welfare of the party and of the many friends of mine, who are candidates this year, than I do of any personal ambition of my own, or disappointment because of a seeming repudiation of my administration. , If there had been fraud in Omaha, does anyone imagine that Governor Shallenberger was not in the humor to avail himself of it? When he did not find it, it estops the mouth3 of all hon est men from asserting it in political discussion. Surely Omaha has enough to bear if it answers for the faults that are actual, as has any other commu nity. It does Lincoln and Nebraska no good to be constantly endeavoring to arouse false and damaging political impressions about the citizenship of the metropolis. Lincoln Star. SENATOR BURKETT BEGINS CAMPAIGN. Senator Burkett began his speech making tour September 14, speaking at a Modern Woodmen picnic in Fontanel le. The senator gave utterance to the doctrine that good men were more desirable and necessary than smart men, and that the best and biggest things that had been done were not done by the smartest men of the time. He referred to the great botanists, whose names had come down to us as the smartest men of their class, but none of them took the seed out of the orange. He spoke of the flying machine, and told how all the wise men of the ages, school teachers and scientists, had scoffed at Darius Green when two men unknown to scholastic fame, just common boys, came out of Ohio and upset the smart men of all the ages with a "heavier than air" flying machine. "Abraham Lincoln was not looked upon as a great states man before he became president, and the smart men admitted it," said the senator. Some of them were in great distress of mind because the great responsibilities of his high office and the destinies of the republic should be placed in so ignorant hands. But Lincoln had ideals of eternal justice, he walked and talked with God, and communed with the great masses of the people; and the greatest things come not from the smartest men but from the best men. "The good legislation that we get from our congress and from our state legislature does not originate usually with the wise men, but comes from the Toms and Dicks and Johns and Bills, just ordinary men as fame goes all over the country. It is the great heart throb of the people and not the brain machination of great men that brings great reforms. It is necessary there fore to have the peoples' hearts right, their ideals must be high, their pur poses must be noble, their visions must be clear and their motives pure, their souls must not be congested with sel fishness and greed, their outlook must not be clouded with disappointment and despair and disloyalty. We talk about getting better men in public life, but first we must have good men in private life. Barring accidents of our election system men in office reflect the character of the constituency that elect them. If we would relieve our selves of the rascals in office we must weed out the notions in private life that public office is a private snap. The man who will blackmail a mau in public life cither for financial purposes or because he did not get an appoint ment should be scorned just as would the man who would graft the public in office. A man who will pettifog with facts and mislead the people or who will pretend to be what he is not to get into office will be dishonest after he is elected. The people ought not to tolerate dirt practices by candi dates for office if they do not expect to endorse the feaine kind of methods after such persons have lieen elected. "These great fraternal orders are doing a magnificent work in civic righteousness. They are elevating the standards of men and deserve to be classed along with the churches and the schools. The arc helping to weed out the vagabonds and disreputable men in our social and industrial life. The Modern Woodmen of America has become the mast stupendous thing of its kind in all the world. It com mands our attention because of its immensity, but it commands our esteem because of the good it is doing for society. It is helping and saving and elevating men, fur it teaches the higher ideals and nobler purposes of life." PAYNE TARIFF LAW NEEDS NO DEFENSE. Danville, 111. Speaker Joseph G. Cannon, in accepting his twentieth nomination for congress, said the pres ent tariff needed no defense and de clared agitation for its revision dan gerous to the welfare of the country. He said in past: "Gentlemen: In accepting this twentieth nomination for representa tive, I want to express my conviction that this is to be a campaign for the serious consideration of one national policy, which touches every man in the country. That is the policy as to how we are to raise one billion dollars a year for the expenses of the various functions that have been puff upon the federal treasury. "The minority party in congress always indulges in talk about economy, but they vote for the largest appro priations. There are now in the various committees of the house of representatives bills, introduced by democrats alone, which would call for appropriations amounting to nearly $500,000,000 more than was appro priated. "The tariff contest today is just what it has been for fifty years a contest between protection and free trade. We now have in command of the dem ocrats in the house of representatives a man who has never attempted to dodge or explain away the democratic position. The honorable Champ Clark announced himself a free trader 'from the sole of my feet to the crown of my head,' as he expressed it, when he came to congress, and he has been con sistent in that declaration throughout his public service. "With Mr. Clark as the democratic leader of those who are dissatisfied with the Payne tariff law, there ought be no misunderstanding as to what the contest means. It is progressive only toward free trade, it is reactionary as to all the progress we have made under protection in the last half century. The agitation for another tariff revi sion, or another attempted revolution in our revenue policy, is just as dan gerous to the welfare of the whole peo ple as was that of 1894, when the Wilson tariff was enacted. "I have no defense to make of the Payne law, for it needs none. It is the enactment of the pledges made by the republican national convention of 1908. It is iu keeping with the policy of protection which the republican party has maintained as the correct revenue iolicy ever since the election of Abraham Lincoln; in fact, it is in harmony with the very first revenue legislation of the first congress under the administration of Washington. That policy a to protect the American producer from the unequal competition of the foreign producer, in order that we may keep our labor on a higher plane than is the labor of Europe, Asia aud the islands of the sea. "The credit of a nation can be ex hausted as is that of an individual. While talking about conservation, would not it lie well to see that our credit is conserved? We must pay as we go. Mauy talk of economy, but they are general, not specific, in their statements. We have got beyond the speculative state of this question. It is now intensely practical, ot will be after the first of November if a con gress is elected, commissioned to go back to the reactionary policy of 1894, with the business conditions of today. "I am uot a Jeremiah, for I have faith in the good sense of the people, even when advised by those who are peddling novelties in govern mental pol icies, to keep abreast of this acre of pub licity. My notion about congress is that it should be a move forward, not a loud noise about tbe necessity for the move ment, and not an extravagant promise to accelerate tbe movement of Riven con trol of the niHchine. I have reen men who promised to get GO miles ont of an engine that had been making only 30 miles an hour if tbey could only get hold of tbe lever, and I have seen some of them in their ignorance, reverse the engine, sending it and the whole train backward. "I have met the man who claimed he conld extract gold from sea water; bnt I have also seen John T. Raymond play Col. Mulberry Sellers, and beard him get off that dramatio eentence, 'There's million's in it,' and I bave measured tbe fieriona pretentions of tbe former with the comedy of Raymond as he illustrated the humor of Mark Twain. I may be a little old-fashioned in each matters, but I prefer a demonstration to a declaration and our friends, tbe enemy, who demand a tariff revision to bring into effect a revenue tariff in place of tbe protective tariff law, to me like reactionaries who would reverse the engine and go back over this phenomenal progress to tbe old order before tbe war." HOW "RUBY" PLAYED. Jud Brownin, when visiting New York, goes to hear Rubinstein and gives the following description of his playing: Well, sir, he had the blaradest, big gest, catty-cornedest pianner 'you ever laid eyes on; somethin' like a distract ed billiard table on three legs. The lid was hoisted, and mighty well it was. If it hadn't been he'd a tore the entire inside clean out and scattered 'em to the four winds of heaven. Played well? You bet he did; but don't interrupt me. When he first set down, he 'pearcd to keer mighty little 'bout plain', and wisht he hadn't come. He tweedie leedled a little on die treble, and toodle-oodled some on the base just foolin' and boxin' the things jaws for bein' in his way. And I says to a man aettin' next to me, says I "What sort of fool play in' is that?" And he says, "Hush!" But presently his hands commence chasin one another up and down the keys, like a parcel of rats scamperin' through a garret very swift. Parts of it was sweet, though, and reminded of a sugar squirrel turnin' the wheel of a candy cage. I was just about to get up and go home, bein' tired of that foolishness, when I heard a little bird waking up away off in the woods, and call sleepy like to his mate, and I looked up and see that Ruby was beginning to take some interest in his business, and I sit down again. It was the peek of day. The light came faint from the east, the breezes blowed gentle and fresh, some more birds waked up in the orchard, then some more in the trees near the house, and all begun singin' together. People began to stir and the gal open ed the shutters. Just then the first beam of the sun fell upon the blossoms a lettle more, and it techt the roses on the bushes, and the next thing it was brod day; the sun fairly blazed, the birds sung like they'd split their little throats; all the leaves was movin', and flashin' diamonds of dew, and the whole wide world was bright and happy as a king. Seemed to me like there was a good breakfast in every house in the land and not a sick child or woman anywhere. It was a fine mornin. And I says to my neighbor, "That's music, that is!" But he glared at me like he'd like to cut my throat. Presently the wind turned; it be gan to thicken up and a kind of gray mist came over things; I got low spirited directly. Then a silver rain begun to fall. I could see the drops tech the ground, some flashed up like long pearl earrings and the rest rolled away like round rubies. It was pretty but melancholy. Then the pearls gathered themselves into long strands and necklaces, and then they melted into thin silver streams, runnin gold en gravels, and then the streams join ed each other at the bottom of the hill, and made a brook that flowed silent, except that you could kinder see the music, specially when the bushes on the banks moved as the music went along down the valley. I could smell the flowers in the meadow. But the sun didn't shine, nor the birds sing; it was a foggy day but not cold. Then the sun went down, it got dark the wind moaned and wept like a lost child for its dead mother and I could 'a' got up then and there and pretched a belter sermon than any I ever listen ed to. There wasn't a thing in the world left to live for, not a blame thing, and yet I didn't want the. music to stop one bit It was happier to be miserable than to be happy without being miserable. I couldn't under stand it. I hung my head and pulled out my handkerchief and blowed my nose to keep me from cryiu. My eyes is weak, anyway; I didn't want anybody to bea-gazin'at measnivlin and it's nobody's business what I do with my nose. It's mine. But some several glared at me mad as blazes. Then all of a sudden, old Ruben changed his tune. He ripped out and he raved, he tipped and he tared, he pranced and he charged like the grand entry at a circus. Teared to me that all the gas in the house was turned on at once, things got so bright, and I hilt up my head, ready to look any man in the face, and not afraid of nothin'. It was a circus and a brass band, aud a big ball all goin' on at the same time. He lit into them keys like a thousand of brick; he gave 'em no rest day or night; he set every livin' joint in me a-goin'; and not bein able to stand it no longer, I jumped, sprang onto my seat, and jest hollered: "Go it, Rube!" Every blamed man, woman and child in the house riz on me and shouted, "Put him out! Put him out!" "Pnt your great-grandmother's grizzly-gray-greenish cat into the middle of next mouth!" I says "Tech me, if you dare! F paid my money, aud you just come a-uigh me!" With that some several policemen run up and I had to simmer down. He had changed his tune again. He hop-light ladies and tiptoed fine from end to end of the keyboard. He play ed soft and low and solemn. I heard the church bells over the hills. The candles of heaven was lit, one by one; I saw the stars rise. The great organ of eternity began to play from the world's end to the world's end, and all the angels went to prayers. Then the music changed to water, full of feel ing that couldn't be thought, and be gan to drop drip, drop drip, drop clear and sweet, like tears of joy fallin' into a lake of glory. It was sweeter than that It was as sweet as a sweet heart sweetened with white sugar mixt with powdered silver and seed dia monds. It was too sweet I tell you the audience cheered. Rubin he kind er bowed like he wanted to say, "Much obleeged, but I'd rather you wouldn't interrup' me." He stopt a moment or two to ketch breath. Then he got mad. He run his fingers through his hair, he shoved up his sleeve, he opened his coattails a little further, he drag up his stool, he leaned over, and, sir, he just went for that old pianaer. Heslaped her face he boxed her jaws, he pulled her nose, he pinched her ears, and he scratched her cheeks until she fairly yelled. He knockt her down, and he stampt on her shameful. She bellowed, she bleated like a calf she howled like a hound, she squealed like a pig, she shrieked like a rat and then he wouldn't let her up. He ran a quar ter stretch down the low grounds of the base, till he got clean in the bowels of the earth, and yoa heard thunder galloping after thunder, through the hollows and caves of perdition; and then he fox-chased his right hand with his left till he got way out of the tre ble into the clouds, whar the notes was finer that the p'ints of cambric needles, and you couldn't hear nothin' but the shadders of 'em. And then he wouldn't let the old pianner go. He for'ard two'd he crost over first gentle man, he chassade right and left, back to your places, he all-hands'd-aroun', ladies to the right promenade all, in and out, here and there, back and forth, up and down, perpetual motion, double twisted and turned and tacked and tangled into forty-eleven thousand double-bow knots. And then he wouldn't let the old pianner go. He fecht up his right wing, he fecht up his left wing, he fecht up his center, he fecht up his reserves. He fired by file, he fired by platoons, by company, by regiments, and by brigades. He opened his can non siege guns down thar, Napoleon's here, twelve-pounders yonder big guns, little guns, middle-sized guns round shot, shells, shrapnels, grape, canister, mortar, mines and magazines every livin' battery and bomb a-go-in' at the same time. The house trera bled, the lights danced, the walls shuk, the floor come up, the ceilis come down, the sky split, the ground rokt heavens and earth, creation, sweet po tatoes. Moses, ninepences, glory, ten penny nails, Samson in a 'simmon tree, Tump Thompson iu a tumbler-cart, roodle-oodle-oodle ruddle-uddle-ud-dle-uddle-uddle raddle-addle-addle addle riddle iddle-iddle reedle-eed-le-eedle p-r-r-r-r-lang! Bang! ! ! lang! perlang: p-r-r-r-rr! ! Bang! ! ! With that bang! be lifted himself bodily into the air and he come down with his kceee, bis ten fingers, bia ten toes, bis elbows, and bis nose, striking every single, solitary key on the pian ner at tbe same time. The thing bast ed and went off into seventeen hundred and lifly-seven thousand live .hundred and forty two heme demi semiqnivers, and I know'd no mo. When I come to I were under ground about twenty foot in a place tbey call Oyster bay a-treatin a Yankee that I never laid eyes on before, and never ex pect to again. Day was breakin' by tbe time I got to the St. Nicholas hotel, and I pledge you my word I did not know my name. Tbe man asked me tbe num ber of my room and I told him, "Hot roneis on the half shell for two!" (An onymous Author.) SALVE FOR HIS WOUND. A Strenuous Scan That Was Not on the Bill of the Play. Giovanni Grasso, a Sicilian actor of unusual dramatic energy, was playing in Florence in one of bis fiercest parts, where he bad to stab bis enemy with a dagger. Suddenly, in tbe beat of his passion, Grasso let tbe weapon slip out of his hand. It alighted in the pit on a man's bead, cutting it slightly. An indignant member of the audi ence flung tbe knife buck to tbe stage, where it was dexterously caught by Grasso. Raising it aloft in bis band and as if it were accursed, Grasso smashed it in two and then stamped upon it Then, with a swift bound, Grasso was in tbe pit beside tbe injured man. Tbe next minute be had climbed back to tbe boards, with tbe victim in bis arms. After settling bim in a chair Grasso threw himself on bis knees and began a long entreaty for forgiveness. This was rapidly granted by tbe much em barrassed playgoer, who on bis side begged to be allowed to return to bis seat But this was not to be until Grasso, weeping copiously, bad bestowed no fewer than fifty resounding kisses on tbe man's blushing cheeks. Tbe action was greeted with loud cheers, and after Grasso bad grace fully bowed bis thanks tbe play was resumed and successfully concluded. London Express. Social Distinctions. Are we born snobs, do we achieve snobbishness; or do we have snobbish ness thrust upon us? If we achieve It we sometimes do It early. The other day 1 beard Beatrice, a little nine-year-old. expounding to a visitor of about her own age. "No," said Beatrice impressively, "we don't play with Sarah any more. We found out that ber father has only a first name job. Our papa, you know, holds a mister position." Woman's Home Companion. An Effective Threat. A certain Missouri editor Is ready to take a flier in high finance. He got his schooling bj threatening to publish the name ot tbe young man seen with his sweetheart's Head on bis shoulder If he didn't come across with a dollar on subscription. Fifty-seven young fellows slipped In and paid a dollar. Tbe editor says be has letters from several others Informing blm tbey will hand him a dollar tbe next time they ax In town-Kansas City Star. Losing Their Charm. Vicar's Daughter 1 suppose tbe rain kept you from tbe funeral last Tues day. Mrs. Bkg? Mrs. Blogg-WdL partly, miss; bat. to speak true, wot with the rnemmatJz and doin away with the 'am and the cake afterwards, funerals ain't the Jaunts tbey used to be for M!-&ondoa Opinion. Five Hundred Miles Away That distance seemed a great width of territory a few years ago, but now it is cov ered instantaneously because the Bell Tele phone has satisfactorily and universally bridged distances between twenty millions of people all over the country. Most men call up their families every night when they are away, to relieve anxiety ahd de termine how things are progressing at home. They are enabled to do this because the Bell Telephone has univeral connections. m nsS FREEZING CAVERNS. ' Subterranean Cavss That Aro Lined With Crystalline Ico. There arc deep cavities and tunneled recesses in the earth far away from sunlight and held in the tight embrace of rocky strata where secret hoards of glittering ice find habitation all the year round. Yet down In these queer places the ice is as clear and chrys talllne as any that nature maintains in tbe open air. Moreover, it occurs on a truly grand and massive scab?. Imagine thick underground Ice walls and floors and craftily fissured col umns beautiful In shape and color streaming from roof to floor of lofty rock chambers! And under the slow drip, drip, drip of percolating water this same ice learns to fashion itself into cave adornments frozen water drops, curling slopes, stalactites and stalagmites of fantastic shape and rainbow hues. Subterranean cold waves, or "gla ciers," as they are frequently called, crop up In some 300 scattered localities in Europe, Asia and America, but all, with rare exceptions, whether true ice caverns or grottoes and deep hollows, are conGned to the north temperate re gions of these continents that is, to places where there Is a sufficiently low temperature at some portion or tno year to reach freezing point and render snowfall possible. Pearson's Magazine. Visual Proof. She Mr. Sweetly has such polish and such finish! Haven't you observed them? He (savagely) No, I haven't, more's the pity! I'd like to see his finish. New York Press. THE GOVERNMENT IRRIGftTBD Mm'mfm) AJTatpV &t7i MfM MM 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. GLEM ban) festers hrfsrwatlsw ssssPflRMsl HlUlllJffH ssffSfBBfjsfSjSBfssfffaBjfjMiWBMMiiBBsssssssss-i Magazine Binding I Old Books I I Rebound I I In fact, for anything in tbe book I I binding line bring your work to I I Z5fe I I Journal Office I I Phone 184 I Nebraska Telephone Co. Every Bell Telephone is a Long Distance Station Easier to Writs It. In 1ST1 Klv;ird Leur was staying with tin Kiivenmr of Bombay at Ma babalrNhwnr. the bill station of the Bombay presidency- 1 was there and look a walk with blm one day. Be asked me tbe name of some trees. 1 told blm i by were called -Jambul" trees In India. He Immediately pro duced his sketch hook and In his in imitable style drew u bull looking Into a Jam pot. He said it would help him to remember tbe name. London Spec tator. Hardness and Csldnssa. Ethel-Jack really won Mand by hardness and coldness. Elsie What do yon nieun? Ethel Diamonds at. t Jce cream.-Boston Transcript IX THE DISTRICT COUNT OF PLATTE COUNTY. NKBKASKA. Id the matter of the estate of Freeman M. Cook- l inirlmni. ileceaited Order to show cause. To all irone interested ia the estate of Freeman M. fookinttbaiB. deceased1. Thia cause came oa for heariBK upon the peti tion of Eugenia I. Coosinghaia. administratrix of the esUtnof Freeman M.Coohinsham. de ceased, praying for license to sell the north half of lota five (5) and six (It) ia block eighteen (In) of Lockner'a second addition to the villain of Humphrey. Nebraska, for the payment of debts allowed against said estate and coats of adiuliii- - . TZ ; -.-.-tM.... ..n. Ik. sw fth&f flit. UmUOO SOU I SVVWIM i.ir.j ...... ... personal property of said estate ia iasaSJcteDt to I 1 .1 jALt. ! It at kswmfiirM ordered that all persona interested ia aaid estate appear before bm at the court hoaaoin Lolaa bosT Nebraska, on the 22nd day of October. Will, at the hour of tea o'clock a. na.. there to show canse. if any there be. why a license should not be granted to said administratrix to sell much of said real eatiite aa may be necessary to Ev said debts and expense, and that this order published foar successive weeks ia the Co lumbaa Journal Dated this 3rd day of September. 1910. Ueo. H. Thomas. Judge of the district court of Platte county. Nebraska. -- DEftVER. General men $jrm 1004 Farnan Street. Omaha. Nekr. A 'v A i n r i-