THITBSBAY, JTTHT C, 1929. PLATTSMOUTH Sim - W1LLHLT JOTTEHAL PAGE TFTPXE Cbc plattsmouth lournal PUBLISHED EEJU-WXEEXY AT PIATTSXOUTH, ggBTtAKTA tcr at Pcitoflc. Plattaxnoutfe. Nek- aa ooat-claM'mjkU'mmxtM R. A. BATES , Publisher BXJSSCX2FT203 PBICE $2.00 Of course, Lindy flew. -:o: Th average dream lasts five sec onds. :o: Don't argue with a wasp; it al way? carries its point. You will nevr be "happy if you nivy the happinf-ss of others. :o: A mosquito has 22 teeth, all of which can Ik seen through a micro- ) :o: Seventy-eight per cent of the world's automobiles are in the United States. It is easier to judge a woman by v. hat she doesn't say than by what she does say. :o: Headlines you never see: "Lindy Dines 4 0 Newspapermen at Morrow's Maine Home." :o: Four lumps of tujrar are sail', to contain as much nouiishment as a r.edium-sized potato. :o: The international trade in leather has increased in value over the pre war days about 535,000,000. :o: Don't conclude that Wall Street is crooked just because some of the: biokers seem to be following their r.atural bent. suit m saaldiittioimsiIl Polarine Advantages 1 Flows freely and lubricates safely in cold weather. 2 Correct body at all engine heats. 3 Long wearing oil and protec tive lubrication. 4 L9s carbon de posits in your motor than from almost any other oil you can buy at any price. btorim for protective lubrication STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEBRASKA 'A Xebraaha Institmtion9 PEE YEAE IB ADVANCE Alligator hide footwear is a skin. :o: Might may not always make right, but it seldom gets left. :o: Life is short, but men never out live their good resolutions. -:o:- The goodness of our intentions never excuse the badness of our ac tions. :o:- The man with the most sand is jthe one who gets the gills with the .rocks. -:o:- Ambition is the road that leads to fame, but you can't travel over it on a pass. :o: Federal income tax. State income tax, double taxation. Why do the people stand for it :o: There are lots of girls who would Jgo through anything for a man, in cluding his bank account. :o: Thirty-five states have passed laws stating that physical education must be part of the public school curri culums. :o: The peak of automobile export to Europe is reported. What with ex port costs, duties, and fifty-cent gaso- line, the poverty of Europe doesn't appear to be in for any rapid allev- Sation. Btt o o o e o THE constant aim of Standard Oil Company of Nebraska is summed up in those six words. It is the basis on which this Nebraska institution is built. When you buy a "Standard" petroleum product you get top quality without paying top price. By every test Polarine is a premium oil. It is made from a special grade of crude oil produced in Wyoming. A special refining process gives it unusual lubricating qual ities. It will do anything any motor oil can do. But no premium price is charged for this process and Polarine car ries no price premium to cover long transportation or high marketing costs. When you buy Polarine you get motor oil of top quality I accurately graded for service j in the Nebraska climate. For best results, consult the Polarine Chart and use the grade of Polarine experts recommend. Sold by Red Crown Dealers and Service Stations everywhere in Nebraska. GRADUATING TDIE The time of graduation brings ita infectious bright 9pirit into the city, , state and nation. Between now and roid-June, thousand3 of high-hearted young men and young women will leave high school for college that strange, keleidoscopic university call- . . . ! ea lire, wnerein matriculation is so pimple and progress so bewildering ' -- ".complex, wnerein, too, witnarawais so lamentably outnumber graduation But solemn thoughts ought not to shadow the gay, the bubbling youth ful atmosphere of commencement time; rather than depress the gradu ates with grave ambitions which they in no wise are ready to heed, those who struggle through their courses in the higher sphere ought now to reassemble their lofty motives, their rather tarnished, though once shin ing ideals, and renew them in the fresh spirit of another May. Even graduation, though essen- j tially the name, has changed. No longer do keen-witted graduates sur vey the world a little haughtily from their eminence, and spending anoth er four years finding, or being shunted into, their niches. Their training, for one thing, is more ex plicit. Many of them select as fresh men the destiny once left with Providence, and the vast machinery of the modern university is capable of concentrating them upon studies which are means to definite ends through instilling meanwhile the broader background requisite to a general education. Of equal import ance, perhaps, in the ordered careers of today, are the organizations which serve both students and employers in putting the right man in the proper place. The place, usually, is waiting, and we have learned how to guide the graduate to it. The trans ition from college to work is more abrupt, if it may be, but in mcst cases considerably more satisfactory :o: The Irish Free State plans to in crease its expenditures in road im provement by $225,000 a year. :o: There is no question about God having made women beautiful and foolish, else she wouldn't marry man :o: The Mayflower, former presiden tial yacht, is to be sold. It's rather a bad time to be selling pleasure yachts, too. :o The Chicago Medical Society may succeed in making illness less expen sive, but that will not make it any more popular. :o: Alabama is named after the In dian word wlncli means Here we rest." Nebraska is an Indian name meaning "water valley." :o: Marion Talley says there will be no pigs on her farmj Having been in grand opera for several years, Miss Talley probably is tired of them. :o: New YorkerE eat 7,000.000 eggs daily, says a bulletin of the Mer chants Association. And just think of the millions more they have to look at! -io:- Another uncertain moment must be when Victor Emmanuel begins to read his periodical address from the j throne, and wonders what he is go- ing to say. j Co: In another month wheat har vesting machine will be in operation. The wheat acre;ge is small and pres ent indications tre the yield will be comparatively Ight. London nov has an all black building. The icade is made entire ly of polished tlack granite, which reflects color ffm the sky and glit ters in the sutfhine. L:o: Of course anlionorable man has to keep his campign promises, but we often wish, as re consider the extra session, that Iresident Hoover had abolished povety first. :o: President Hfver had a black tye the other day jut he explained it to everybody's siisfaction. But, just think of the sfries you might have heard if Preklent Al Smith ever came down iri the morning with a shiner! -:o:- Another finehing about the warm weather that fes come to us lately, beside the fac that it makes things grow, is thatjt finally permits the young men wt have been wearing straw hats forhvo weeks, to take off their spats. -:o:- We doubt kat any paragrapher will ever win le Pulitzer prize. The policy of thefulitzer judges seems to be to prefefem long like "John i Brown's Bod vl and "Rtranee Inter- i,... t,.. A v l"uc- -""s i i-uiuzer comuiiee operating in European muaal circles in the '70s. Wagner wou have won all the prizes and w never have heard of Brahms. FREEDOM OF THOUGHT The extent to which the spirit of one man can live in another i9 re markably illustrated by the dissent- ing opinion of Justice Holmes in the case of Rosika Schwimmer. Madame Schwimmer, a Hungarian, is denied citizenship because she I . a win not lane ine cam 01 aueciance 'without a mental reservation against bearing arms in time oi war. ine Federal District court or the Nortn- em Illinois District denied her ap- plication for citizenship upon this ground, which is of course usually taken by all Quakers. The Circuit Court of Appeals upset this finding and rnlP1 that she should b admit- states supreme joun upnoius ine original exclusion. Thus, after years! of battling in the courts, the United States denies that principle which has made this country the most cele- brated sanctuary in history for free- dom of thought. It may be guessed that the 88-year- old Justice Holmes, in whom the spirit of Thomas Jefferson burns with a brilliance that has become one of the inspiring phenomena of 4! r v UUi i i airs, was umr j i tuuai: uisrui- B Aiwavs preserving mai sense oi nu - . mor wnicn in pari acounts ior ine balance he maintains between the rationalism of the past and the ir- rationalism of the present, Justice Holmes points out that Madame Schwimmer is over !0 and therefore beyond the legal age for military ser vice. He also calls the attention of the majority opinion to her prefer ence for our form of government. which she thinks the best in the world, and indulges himself the de licious doubt that so pacific a person as the Madame would restrain us if we decided to have a war. He avails himself of the opportunity to point out how far we are departing in such rulings from the freedom of thought for which America has become an examplar to the rest of the world. He saj's : If there is any principle of the Constitution that more Im peratively calls for attachment than any other, it is the prin ciple of free thought not free thought for those who agree with us, but freedom for the thought that we hate Justice Holmes does not believe that because Madame Schwimmer ab- hors war she would make a less de- sirable citizen, and he points out that perhaps a gTowing number of our own pt-ople share her abhorance. He himself does not regard war as the unmitigated evil which many hold it to be. but he nevertheless WnnH rMrt risrht f thn.o hn , j . . . . . uu .c lw .-iU3r - arms. That is, of course, the point. "Not free thought for those who aerop with us hut freedom fnr thelbraska, against said defendants and a..S equivalent of Voltaire's famous, "I do not agree with a word that you say, but I will defend to the death ,. Q w. a i ' . . b" , , , , leristic oi justice noimes, as n was characteristic of Mr. Jefferson. The majority against such a ra- tmnni o Knrit!.). viuw iu npr.iotn day or July, 1SZ disposed to think that in another one hundred years, when the Amer- ican nnnlp lindsratanrt vnltipq taft- 1 1 luc uinacriiiiiis tspiuiuiia ui i tice Holmes are much likelier to pre- vail than the majority opinions against which he bo courageously ; takes up arms. His dissenting opinions, indeed, are the test of America's faith. To doubt their tri umph in time is to doubt the ulti mate success of what Lord Bryce : called "the great American experi ment." St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Q ' AVIATION AND UGLY VISTAS Having spent so many centuries said estate, with a view to their ad ...... I liiRtment and allowance. Th Mm on the ground, man nas fallen lnio the practice of beautifying only what meets the worm s eye view, as it I were. This becomes very evident - . .1 when one views the scene from a tall punning, ugiy room anu uacs yaiua meet the gaze in every direction. Clothes lines and tangled aerlels, sag- ging fences and smoke-begrimed sky lights on every hand. With the increasing popularity of ' aviation, it has suddenly dawned up on some air-enthusiasts that the roof has become the fascade of the house. From an airplane, one obtains an en- tirely different impression of a town j or city than Is gained from the , T. . IV,i , , . , , . ground. It is possible to look behind the scenes and see the things that are hidden from the pedestrian. And the view from the cockpit is not bo pleasant , , , Flying over the town of Platts- mouth, one may view from the cock- nit of an airplane scores of back I varda that nr fnr frnm 8fr0(.tlr .... iuuuiou uuapiaaiea I nouses, etc., ana one wonders wny the owners don't have the same pride j in the rpar nrpmluM of theA-r hnm that they manifest for the front vard. Baby Chick Prices. ARE LOWER Owing to the cold, wet spring, many are now placing orders fur Baby Chicks. This has caused us to continue hatching a little longer than we I-tl-kAn4fm 'Mll.l Vntn YnvtA 1 uiucl ""' wvnc. at?y oreeas a un urpmg ons, u hito Tfrfba Tlirrort PnpVa U hits Wyandottes, R I. Reds, etc. $12.00 a hundred. Tancred-Barrow strain, heavy lay n V Wte Legnorns (June price) custom hatching 3c an eg We advise getting your orders in I NOW, aa eggs and pulletB will be high tnS Fall. tfKl-N.K MAIVMEHI. Plattsmouth. Nebr. phone C31-W 18th and Granite scrubs his cheeks vigorously, but never washes behind the ears -:o:- If you miss your train in Hungary your long wait will be made more pleasant by radios which are now in stalled in the railroad stations. Ear- "ia an hour -:o:- "I Mussolini has a plan to give the i, . . . , . ... fathers of the largest families the best jobs. Wonder what assignment that will le-ave open for the couple with "the canary that seems almost human." :o Most of the women in our n&igh borhood have become pretty well re conciled to Lindy's marriage, and as we understand them, would be con tent now "If Anne would only fix her hair different. :o: American towns along the Mex ican border have been experiencing a rush of tourists from near and far. driving down in the hope of seeing a battle between Mexican rebels and Federal troops : o; In speed, British railway leads the world, the average express train rates of the four principal countries being: Britain, 41.3 mllea per hour; United States 41.3; France. 4J.8; and Germany, 26.6. :o One of the things that even Mr, Hoover himself may be wondering anout tnese aays is now a ie-iiow can accomplish bo much with a starring nation and an overflowing riwr and jso little with Congress. NOTICE OF SUIT I Dan P. Phelps. Nina L. Phelps, Charles Phelps. Harry Phelps and Julian K. Phelps, defendants, will I laite nunc? tiiai uu uie isiu uay ui May. 1829. Cordis B. PhelDS. plain Jus herein, filed her petition In the District Court of Cass county, N omers. xo partition iis n ana lln the Village of Louisville, In said county, and the sonth half (S4 ) of the southwest quarter (BWVi) of Section 9, Township 12, Range 11, in Sarpy county. Nebraska, and to determine the rights of the parties I therein You are hereby reaulred to an- swer said petition on or before the I rnt1 tMa 9?ifh rta nf Vr A l) CORDIA B. PHELPS I Plaintiff. l D ER, Iq27-4w NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Marshall W. Smith, deceased. To the creditors of said estate) You are hereby notified that will sit at the County Court room in Plattsmouth, ln said county, on July 5. 1929. and on October 7. 1929. at ten o'clock a. m. each day, to re ceive and examine all claims againBt - . againBt said estate la three months from the 5th day of July, A. D. 1E29 ianu me units iimneu ior payment oi .1 4 ) 1 II I M A M d.eb,ts .,s ? year from BId 5th day Vltn. m-r hand and th aal f Baid County Court this 1st day of June. 1929. A. H. DUXBURY, County Judge. (Seal) j3-4w NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, as. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Benjamin Dill, deceased. 10 lQe creditors oi saia estate: You are hereby notified that I W,H sit at the nty room in Plattsmouth, in said county, on July 15. 1929. and on October 7, 1929, at jten o'clock a. m. each day, to re- iceive ana examine an claims against uiiu comic, nau a f Jew iu kuir u- jUBtment and allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claims against said estate is three OOIlthB from the 6th day Of July. A. D. 1929. and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 6th day of July, 1S29 Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this let day of June - I99' A. H. DUXBURY, County Judge. At Stratford-on-Avon, a sttidy of the visitors book at Shakespeare s Llrthplace, shows that three out of every five names of visitors outside the British Isles are those of Amer icans. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, bs. In the County Court. Jn,.tllenatter, of "thf estate of; Athaliah Bauer, deceased To the creditors of said estate You are hereby notified that I Will Bit at the County Court room in Plattsmouth. in said county, on the 28th day of June. 1929, and on the 30th day of September, 1929, at ten o'clock In the forenoon, to receive: and examine all claims against said estate, with a view to their adjust ment and allowance. The time 11m- ilea ior ine presentation or claims agamsi saia estate is inree monias 1929, and the time limited for pay xnent of debts is one year from said 28th day of June, 1929. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 22nd day of May, 1929. A. II. DUXBURY, (Seal) m27-4w County Judge. LEGAL NOTICE Roy L. McElwaln; the heirs, devi sees, legatees, personal representa tives, and all other persons Interest ed in the estate of Roy L. McElwaln, deceased; Florence McElwaln; B. A McElwaln; Jennie Dutton; John W. Dutton; Impleaded with others. De fendants: You will take notiee that on the 29th day of May. 1929. The Stand ard Savings and Loan Association of. Omaha, Nebraska, as plaintiff, filed Its petition ln the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska, against you and each of you. the object and pray er of which Is to foreclose a certain mortgage executed by Sarah E. Mc Elwaln, on the 16th day of October, 1924, and duly filed for record in the office of the Register of Deeds of Cass county, Nebraska, on the 29th day of October, 1924. ln Book 53 of Mortgages, at page 420, covering Lot 8, Block 11. In the City of Platts mouth, as Burveyed, platted and re corded, Cass county. Nebraska, ask ing for judgment of Thirteen Hun dred Thirty-Four and Slxty-slx One Hundredths Dollars ($1,324.66) and costs and fur equitable relief. You are required to answer tkia petition on or before the 29th day of July, 1929. THE STANDARD SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION of Omaha, Nebraska. By O. W. Johnson. Its Attorney. J3-? SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska. County of Cass, ss. By virtue of an order issued by Golda Noble Beal, Clerk of the Dis trict Court within and for Cass coun ty, Nebraska, and to me directed, I will on the 6th day of July, A. D. 1929, at 10 o'clock a. m. of said day at the south front door of the court house in the City of Plattsmouth, in said county, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the fol - lowing described real estate, to-wlt: Lota forty-two 42), forty three (43) and the north one half of forty-four (44). in Smith's Addition to the City of Plattsmouth, Cass county, Ne braska; Also that portion of Whit man avenue described as fol lows: Beginning at a point in said Whiteman avenue one rod west of the southwest corner of Lot forty-three (43), in Smith's Addition to the City of Platts mouth, Nebraska, and running thence east one rod to the south west corner of said Lot forty three (42), thence north 30 de grees and 15 minutes, east two chains to the northwest corner of said Lot forty-three (43), thence north 22 degrees and 45 minutes, west one chain and 16 links, thence south 30 degrees and 15 minutes, west one chain and 87 links to a post; thence in a southeasterly direction 1.05 ohains more or less to the place of beginning; Also Sub-Lot two (2) of Gov ernment Lot five (5), in Section seven (7), Township twelve (12), North, Range fourteen (14) east of the 6th P. M.. all in Cass county. Nebraska, as surveyed, platted and recorded. Also commencing at the bolt on the H section line in Section seven (7), Township twelve (18), North, Range fourteen (14), east of the 6th P. M.. where the said V section line Intersects with the right-of-way fence of the C. B. & Q. Railway Company, thence along the said right-of-way fence to a bolt 7.79 chains due south of the place of beginning, thence east 18.31 chains to a bolt 15 feet west of the west bank of a dry channel, thence north to the H section line, above described, thence west on the said section line 16.23 chains to the place of be ginning, containing 13.28 acres, more or less, ln Cass county, Ne braska, being known as Lot sixty-five (65), in said Section seven (7), Township twelve (12), North. Range fourteen (14). East of the 6th P. M. the same being levied upon and taken as the property of E. P. Stew art et al, defandents, to satisfy a judgment of said Court recovered by The Standard Savings and Loan As sociation of Omaha, plaintiff against said defendants. . Plattsmouth, Nebraska, May 28th. a. p. im. BERT REED. Sheriff Cass County. Nebraska. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of David G. Babbington, deceased. To the creditors of said estate: You are hereby notified that I will sit at the County Court room In Plattsmouth, in said county, on the 19th day cf April, 1929. and the 20th day of July. 1929. at 10 o'clock a. m. of each flay, to receive and ex- amine all claims against said estate. with a view to their adjustment and ! allowance. The time limited for the rMf.ntaMon nf claims ae-ainst ealfl estate l3 three months from the 19th day of AprI1 A D 1929 and the tirie iimltPd for payment of debts is one yfar from BaId 19tn day vt Aprn, jooq Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 13th day t March, 1929. A jj DUXBURY, (Seal) m!8-4w County Judge. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coua ty. es. In the County Court. Ln the matter of the estate of Jo seph Fetzer, deceased. To the creditors of said estate: You are hereby notified, that I will sit at the County Court room in Plattsmouth, In said county, on the 14th day of June, 1929, and the 16th day of September, 1929, at 10 o'clock a. m. 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 presentation of claims against said estate Is three months from the 14th day of June, A. D.. 1929, and the time limited tor payment of debts is one year from Bald 14th day of Jure ; 19Z9 Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 7th day of Hay, 1929. A. H. DUXBURY. (SeaJ) ml3-4w County Judge. NOTICE TO CREDITORS of the Farmers State Bank. Green wood, Nebraska, to File Claim Notice is hereby given that on May 27, 1929, the Honorable James T. Begley, Judge of the District Court of CaBs County, Nebraska, wherein the undersigned, Clarence G. Bliss, Secretary of the De partment of Trade & Commerce, was appointed receiver of tbe Farmers State Bank. Greenwood, Nebraska, made and entered an order pursuant to the terms of which all creditors and pertor.B having claims against said bank are ordered to tie the same with the said Clarence G. Bliss, Secretary of the Department of Trade & Commerce, receiver, at hie office in the city of Greenwocd, Cass County, Nebraska, or with the clerk of the District Court of Cass County, Plattsmouth, Nebraska, on or before the 13th day of July, 1929, under penalty of having their claims not so presented forever barred, un less for good cause flown, the Court shall by order direct payment there of within six months aftr sai l riuy. Hearing on claims shall to had at the County Court Housh in Cass County. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, upon jthe 29th day of July. 1929. at 2:30 -o'clock p. m.. or as soon thereafter 'as they may be heard. Any creditors not receiving through the malls proper forms for filing claims may procure them from the receiver at hlB office in the Farmers State Bank, Greenwood, Nebratka, or from the clerk of the District Court at Platts mouth, Caps Count v. Nebraska. CLARENCE G. BLISS. Sec'y., Department of Trade &. Commerce, Receiver. ORDER In the District Court of the Coun ty of Cass, Nebraska. In Re Application of Andrew Rabb. Administrator of the estate of Mury Burlan. deceased, for license to sell rvaJ estate. Now, on this 15th day of May, 1928, there was presented to the Court the petition of Andrew Rabb. Administrator of the estate of Mtry Burlan, deceased, for license to sell Lots 50 and 51 in Wise's Addition to the City of Plattsmouth, Cass coun ty, Nebraska, for the purpose of pay ing the debts and costs of adminis tration; And it appearing that there is not sufficient personal estate in the hands of the Administrator to pay the debts and costs of administration, and it further appearing that the personal property collected by said Adminis trator amounts to the sum of $328. 2, and that the claims allowed and costs of administration amount to the sum of f 447.35, and that an order should be entered directing all persons in terested in said estate to appear and show cause why a license should not be granted to said Administrator to sell said real estate; It is therefore Ordered that all persons interested in the estate of Mary Burlan, deceased, appear before James T. Begley, Judge of the Dis trict Court, within and for Cass coun ty, Nebraska, on the 29th day of June, 1929, at 10 o'clock a. m., at Chambers in the Court House in the City of Plattsmouth. Nebraska, to show cause, if any there be. why a license should not be granted to An drew Rabb, Administrator of the es tate of Mary Burlan, deceased, to sell Lots 50 and 51 in Wise's Addition to the City of Plattsmouth, Cass county, Nebraska, for the purpose of paying the debts and costs of ad ministration of said estate. It is further ordered that a ccpy of this Order to Show Cause be serv ed upon all persons interested in said estate by publication of this order for four successive weeks in the Plattsmouth Journal, a newspaper printed and of general circulation ln the County of Cass, Nebraska. By the Court. JAMES T. BEGLEY. Judge or the District Court. m28-4w It reminds one of a small boy who J (Seal) J3-4w J3-6w