THUESDAY SEPT. 19. 1829. PLATT31I0UTE SZiH-WXEELT JOURNAL THESE TZhe plattstnoutb journal PUBUSHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, SEBILoSXA BtarA at PtwteCe, PlAttMnant. NK. m aeom-eiM nrl atui R. A. BATES, Publisher gU232PTI03 PEICX $2.00 Let everybody be good. -:o: Never a9 long as the prohibition is on. -:o:- One woman never really knows an other woman until their children quarrel. -:o: A Boston man slapped his wife as she slept. Men are getting bolder aud bolder. :o: A wife is sometimes known as a man's better halt and sometimes as the whole thing. :o: Misery' loves company, so the old paying says, but it is terribly hard on the company. :oi Both China and Russia are fight ing a defensive war, so nobody can be blamed, after all. :o: . It is mighty tough when a lady can't be sure of enough alimony to start her divorce suit. :o: A statement is made that the for eign element controls most of the big cities. Is it not a shame? :o: Complaining about your bad luck is simply broadcasting the informa tion that you lack backbone. :o: Modesty: A woman's reluctance to undress in the locker room when there's a hole in one cf her socks. :o: Other endurance records don't im press the man whose neighbors has a pup that gets lonesome at night. :o: For that matter, there is bribery and official corruption in the en forcement of the law against steal ing. :o: There is one place In Paris that is so shocking the lady patrons, wear. shock-absorbers instead of evening gowns. ;o; Talking about politics, there Is one thing to be said in favor of the woman politician, she is honest in her efforts. :o: Borne noted politicians claim that the woman's clubs are the ruination of politics in the United States. Well, what of it? :o: . A Red General who had been fight ing "White Russians has fallen into the Black Sea. That of course makes him an Elk. :oc The Soviet has abolished Sunday ae a day of rest, says a contemporary. The motor car and golf did that over here quite a spell ago. :o: The eaBtern G. A. R. seems to be opposed to the Confederate and Union soldiers Joining hands in unison, and a resolution was introduced at the encampment to that effect. Why? :o: There has been lots of vim dis played by our merchants in the past few months, and they have made Plattsraouth noted for it's effort to please those who prerer to do busi ness at home. :o: In the Bix months since he re tired from the presidency, Mr. Cool idge has made $100,000 writing for magazines, which sum will keep the wolf away from the Coolidge Ioor until the day of Judgment and two or three eternities after. We Want Dead Animals Horses, Hogs, Cattle, Sheep Our trucks are waiting for your phone calls. No charge for removal of dead animals from your farm or feed yards. We pay telephone charge. Our plant is newly equipped with entirely modern equipment and we are now able to sup ply you with the highest grade FRESH TANKAGE Give Us a Trial Packing House By-Products Co. 2730 M Street, South Omaha Day Market 0326 PHONES Night Market 0337 PEE YEAE LB ADVAKC2 "In time of peace prepare for war." :o: The United States' idea of repara tions seems to be quite a healthy Young plan. :o: This much can be said of fashion; It has lifted quite a burden off the family clotheslines. :o: Wilhelm says that if he goes back to Germany he'll go back as kaiser. He must like Holland. :o: - Too often a man thinks "being good to his old mother" means taking her side against his wife. ;o: Some people get an education late in life and some have no children to teach them how to work. :o:- Btrnard Shaw defines Socialism as work for everybody. If the definition sticks, the cause is doomed. -:o: xne only tning a man tries as hard to keep as a woman does her school-girl complexion is his hair. :o: One would imagine from the way Senator Patterson of Missouri votes that he repreeenated Patterson, N. J. :o: The flapper who was so dumb she thought an autobiography was some new kind of accessory for a motor car? -:o:- A champion golfer is a big man. But like the champion ringside fight ers he got it In the neck some time ere he quits. :o: . The only people who could refuse to hear the other side are those who know it all and those who don't want to learn. :o: The United States has paid more than 19.000,000,000 on its war debts. Just $16,000,000,000 more and the war will be ours. :o: Why not bring the whole matter above board and send a shipbuild ers' delegation to the next naval dis armament conference? :o: Wonder why folks don't Just write the chorus of songs and save all that Ink and brain waste, since nobody sings the verse anyway. ;o: The British critics who says Amer ica hasn't a true respect for anti quity must not have seen any bur- flesque choruses when he was over here. -:o:- Americanism: Frankly showing "lower class" people you are too proud to associate with them; won derlng why they don't come to church. -:o: New York officials, without say Ing much about prohibition, assert with emphasis that the average night club is a first rate argument for to tal abstinance. -:o: Two Texans have started battling a croquet ball to New York. If they only would push it with their noses. 'chewing 100 sticks of gum at the same time that would be news. :o; Americans want the rest of the world to progress. And as the num ber In foreign places increases, the great web of communication wires that is bending the civilized world together grows In Importance a id possibilities for progress. LEE AT WEST POINT becretary. or War Good has ap proved the suggestion of MaJ. Gen William Smith, superintendent of the United States Military academy at West Point, that "large and appro priate" portraits of Gen. Robert E Lee and of Gen. P. G. T. Beauregard be hung in the cadet mess hall of the Military academy. Both of these Confederate generals were superin tendents of the Military academy at West Point, and small pictures of each are already in place. Gen. Smith considers, however, that por traits of a size similar to those of other pa3t superintendents should be substituted, and the work will be done at once at the expense of the Military academy. The Roanoke World-News, one of the leading papers of the Old Domin ion, has this to say about the sugges tion to which Secretary Good has given his approval: "The fact that Gen. Lee, when a colonel or the United States army, was for some years superintendent of the Military academy at West Point, is one that has been largely overlooked by his biographers. There would seem to be a field here for real historical study. It would be inter eating to know what general officers in both armies were cadets at the academy under Lee, and how far the rather elderly Confederate command er had the opportunity of Judging character' and competence on the field of battle, by what he knew of their work as cadets at West Point "President Henry Louis Smith has rendered a fine service in his study of the career of Lee as president ot Washington collegeat Lexington, in the five years that followed the war between the states. Dr. Smith shows that as a college executive, Lee was far in advance of his time, proposing to his beard of visitors a school of business administration, aud other forward steps such as the larger American universities have only adopted in very recent years. As Dr. Smith points out, Lee was deeply im pressed with the more serious prob lems of southern reconstruction, and with preparation of the leaders for the building up of the New South. "It would be interesting to know what policies he advocated, and what instruction methods he introduced while superintendent of the Military academy at West Point, and to have a list of those who later achieved eminence in the armies on both sides of the Civil War, who were trained under him in the arts of war." THE TAEHT IN TROUBLE Adoption of the Simmons resolu tion making available to the Senate on demand the gains of tariff bene ficiaries is a surprising turn in the tariff fight. The mightiest of all American political myths is in trou ble. For the first time in more than half a century the tariff barons are placed on the defensive. The Senate will require the Secretary of the Treasury to open the income records of the manufacturer and the import er, and what has been for so long secret will become a matter of public 'information. The tariff barons brought this reprisal upon themselves by trying to exploit farm relief in Mr. Hoover's special session of Con gress. They induced the committees to devise a new tariff bill in which less than one-third of the items bear any relation to farm relief. The rest of it is a steal, characterized by op ponents of the bill in political parties as the most colossal in the history of the country. Adoption of the Simmons resolu tion was brought about by a coalition of Republicans and Democrats which shows how wide a gulf has opened between industry and agriculture. Twenty-one Republicans Joined the Democrats in voting for the Simmons resolution, every one of them from the region west of the Alleghanies and most of them from the territory west of the Mississippi. Missouri alone of the great agricultural states failed to cast a vote for the resolu tion. Senator Patterson voted with the Republican regulars against it. and Senator Hawes was not present. The significance of the vote is very great. The tariff is an artificial de vice easily exploited for the benefit of a limited segment of the popula tion. It has been so in our country for half a century. The benefits of the tariff were never widely dissem inated, but the American people were induced to believe they were. The plight to which agriculture came at last under such an obsession brought about the awakening which resulted in the Simmons resolution. It was not a matter of political faith, but of realization. The country at last realizes what the tariff is. As Abra ham Lincoln said: "You cannot fool all the people all the time." St. ,Louls Post-Dispatch. :o: Bead the Journal Want-Ads. JBhK&ibm m mm , A'fciiw MODEL 75 THE new Haag 75 will gave you an entirely new idea of how fine and serviceable a washer can be. It has many brand new features iwlning the patented safety agita tor and the new Haag direct drive. It is speedy, safe, quiet, thorough. Free home demonstra tion. Easy terms. V Fred Beverage . Murray Joe Mrasek . Plattsm'th "UNITED STATES OF EUROPE" So says the New York World That the United States of America need have no qualms about givin their blessings to M. Briand's project for the study of a United States of Europe. This is the kind of idea of which it may be said that prophecy is safe and certain to be successful. It is like prophesying television and a regular trans-atlantic passenger air jservice. One must believe in them without necessarily knowing how to achieve them. The continent of Eu rope will some day have federal unity of some sort; the era of sharply separated national sovereignty which began about four hundred years ago will not last forever; though nobody today knows how to make a United States of Europe, it will somehow and sometime be made. It will take a long while, and in the meantime there is no occasion for non-Europeans to conjure up nightmares about a Europe united against them. If the European na tions had the political maturity and the political intelligence, the habit of give and take, the breadth of ympathy and enough common con sciousness to unite politically ana economically, they would have ad vanced so far beyond the existing standards of international morals that none of our present political theories would have any relevance. If the present Europe, with its Com munists, its Fascists, its Imperialists, its Nationalists, could unite, it might be a threat to Asia or America. But a Europe is composed of Commun ists, Fascists, Imperialists and Na tionalists cannot unite. It could not conceivably unite until it had purged itself of the very elements which in theory would make a united Europe dangerous. : :o: MAKING PROGRESS It is a good thing to be too opti mistic: and the obstacles that lie in the pathway that leads toward complete, friendly agreement between the United States and England on naval matters are, admittedly, any. Yet friends of peace have a right to feel encouraged by the most re cent developments. When Ramsay MacDonald announc ed that the two governments had already reached agreement on 17 of the 2 points at issue, he did not clarify his statement by explaining what the three points are that arej still the basis of disagreemnt. Never theless, the mere fact that negotia tions are continuing and are reac-h- lng some sort of goal, is a cause for optimism. It is only within the last few years that an attempt of the kind MacDon ald and Hoover , are now making would ever have been dreamed of. The mental attitude, in an affair of this kind, is all important; and the present attitude, on each side, is one that must be vastly . depressing to the ingoes. ; :o: Large size maps of Cass county on sale at Journal office, 50c each. u You may, be a Democrat at heart but a Republican in name because of percentage, early association and environment. A Democrat (a genu ine one) is one who believes in the doctrine that "the people should rule," not as a mob acting on the! impulse of the moment, but on cool deliberation after much thought, who work for the interests of the many and not a special select few, and not special privileges. :o: Bare legs were banned at an out ing of the Philadelphia hosiery work ers and we hope they don't pick out this kind of weather for an outing of the overcoat makers. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass Coun ty, ss. In the Countv Court. In the matter of the estate of James F. Wilson, deceased. To the creditors of said estate: Von are herebv notified. That I will sit at the County Court Room in Plattsmouth, in said County, on tile liiu uuy Oi uciuuei, on me i. J ill uay ui j uai j , . i . . i , . m t t n q i at 10 o'clock a. m., of each day to receive and examine all claims against said estate, with a view to their ad1nRtmnt and allowance. The time limited for the Dresentation of niner cairt Rt9t is three months from the llth dav of October a t ifQ and th tinio limited for navment nf df-htn in one vear from lltTi rtav nf Ortnhpr. 1929. Witness mv hand and the seal of said County Court this 10th day of Rpntember. 1929. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING on Petition for Appointment of Administrator. The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. Tn ttie matter nf the fRtnXe nf As burv Jacks, deceased. On reading and filinc the netition nf Mrs: Tlnre Trivnlv Tiravlne that administration of said estate may be granted to John W. Elliott, as Ad- sons Interested in said estate, credi zninistratcr tors an b&irR take notice, that Ordered, 'that October 4th, A. D. Nancy L. Mullen, who Is one oi the 1929. at ten o'clock a. m., Is assign- &eirs deceased, and interested ftrt fnr hrhr sairt petition, when all persons interested in said matter ing that Isaac N. Wolfe died intes mnv air at a Pnnntv Court to be tate In Cass county. Nebraska, on or held in and for said county, and inw csnw whv th nrnrer nf nM- tioner should not be granted: and that notice of the pendency of said petition and the hearing thereof be given to all persons interested in said matter by publishing a copy of this order in the Plattsmouth Jour nal, a semi-weekly newspaper print ed in said county for three successive weeks prior to said day of hearing. Dated September Bth. 1929. A. 11. DUXBURY, (Seal) s9-3 w County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING on Petition for Appointment of Administrator The State of Nebraska. Cass coun- RB- In the County Court. In the matter of the Estate of Margaret A. Wolfe, deceased. un reading ana nung me peuuon oi iancy wuiien prajiiiK ui administration or saia estate may be .... . . granted to L. D. Mullen, as Admin- istrator; uraerea, mat sepremDer zvm, a. D. 1929. at ten o'clock a. m., is as- signea ror nearing saia petition, . . . .... wneu tm persons lnterestea in saia l matter may appear at a County Court to be held in and for said county, and show cause why the! prayer of petitioner should not be granted; and that notice of the pen- dency of said petition and the bear- Ing thereof be given to all persons interested in said matter by publish- trip- a onrvv nf this nrrtor In th Platta- mnntli Innmil a csml.vai.V1i n.wo. o r " I naner nrinted in said countv. fori three successive weeks, prior to said I day of hearine. Ie Dated Auenat 20. IflSB 1 A- - UUiBUKX, I (Seal) s2-3w Oonnty Judge. ................ . I TTr-T' nw TTnr a n-xr. no ttttt In the County Court of Cass Coun ty, Nebraska. State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. To all persons interested in the estate of James T. Reynolds, deceas ed. On reading the petition of William E. Reynolds, praying that the Instru ment filed In this court on the 14th day of September, 1929, and purport ing to be the last will and testament nf th Bi rf.Pi.ouri w nrtVrA and allowed and reordedYast Lwill and testament nf Jamos T Tte- wlll anrt testament nf Tnmoa T Tt d. nolds decease? thafsd TnstTumeJt ? -'J:??3?- iid.I8t5?m!t be admitted to probate and the adof you- tie obiect. VuVoae 75 ministration of said stat h .rrantarf !7u'. t?..?l3.?cV r?,06. "" . 7 . . . au in - ministration of said estate be granted , . 7 : ' . Laura Reynolds, as PTpnitHr Tt 1u I tn i .1 nils r. iinvnninR PTAPiunr ann i v.- , 7 . . .. " sons interested in "said matter may Z L I1a""nou,in tBa coun; sons lntereBiea in saia matter, may, Nebraska, in the plaintiffs as against and An. annear at tb PnnntT Pnnrtl. . . . - . to be held in and for said countv. nn - " " - - i Khe llth day of October. A. D. 1929. i -r i at len o ciock a. m... to snow cause, i if nv thr h. wn tu nf L - - v' the petitioner should not be granted. I and that notie nf the nendancv nfU sain netltT, anfl tnat tna na-rlne- .. - V: T 7 tnereoi De given to ail persons inter- 1 eatafl in sal matter h nnhiuhinr a I copy of this order In the Plattsmouth " J -. .. 0 I journal, a semi-weekly newspaper printea in saia uounty, ior three sue- cessive weeKs prior to said day or hearing. Witness my hand, and the seal of I said court, this 14th day of Septem- ber. A- D. 1929. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) il6-3w. County Judge. FOR SALE Spotted Poland boar. registered. JOHN CAMPBELL, s!2-3tw. Murray, Nebr. Advertise your wants In the Want Ad column for quick results. PUBLICATION NO TICE TO CONTRACTORS Sealed proposals will be received by the City Clerk of the City of Plattsmouth, Nebraska, up to 8 p. m. o'clock upon the 25th day of Sept., 1929, for the furnishing of labor, tools and material for the grading, graveling and construction of the Missouri River Bridge Road from Third and Granite Streets to theiemDer. A- ana me ume north line of Diamond Street and first allev East of A. Avenue, and all appurtenances thereto. In the City of Plattsmouth, Cass County, Ne- braska. The work to be done In accord- ance witn pians ana specmcauons now on nie wim me uiy uiera ana adopted by the Mayor ana Ulty L'oun cil upon the ZSth day or August, 1929, which plans and specifications are hereby referred to as shown on - .7 ... . . . . i hi n a win np mrne nui nn nrnmnai i - - - iorms iurnisnea Dy me ier. and snail ne accompaniea ny a ceru ped check in the amount of five per cent a Vfc ) oi me Dia as eviaenoe oi gooa raun or me Diaaer. The engineers estimate of cost, ex elusive of viaduct, engineering and miscellaneous is 110,136.00. Aaaiuonai eeumaie ior gravenus 11,116.00. nana ana specincauons may u obtained from the Bruce Engineer ing Comply; 7. upon me aeposu ol iiu.uu Signed, HERMAN L, THOMAS, City Clerk. JOHN P. SATTLER, Mayor, NOTICE OF HEARING on Petition "for Determination of Heirship. I Estate No. of Isaac N. Wolfe, deceased, in the County Court of CafiS COUnty, Nebraska The State of Nebraska, to all per- m sucn. nag meaner petition auee- about May 10. 1921, being a resl- aent ana mnaDiiani oi L-ass county. Nebraska, and the owner of the fol lowing described real estate to-wit: Lot ten (10) in Block three (8) in Hunger's First Addition to the Village of Alvo, Cass county. Nebraska leaTing tts uia rcie bjiu uoijr uum to-wit: Margaret A. Wolfe, his widow, and only wife; Mary E. Dim mitt and Nancy L. Mullen. daughters; That said decedent died intestate; that no application for administra tion has been made and the estate of said decedent has not been adminis tered in the State of Nebraska, and that the Court determine who are the heirs of said deceased, their de- gree of-kinship and the right of de- scent in the real property of which i" ". uiw unu " " J I f-t a 1 A TV A A oi sepieiaoer, a. v. is, i ten o clock a. m.. In the County Court room in ruiiismouia, .wbbs w""11?' - Dated at Plattsmouth. Nebraska, iA m m a w a a "wv aha mis jvid aay ox .august. a. u. ivxv. - iwauui, (Seal) sa-7 - County Judge. NOTICE OF SUIT TO QUD2T TITLE in the District Court of the County of Cass, Nebraska K- Metelnger and Jitjiiiifici , m.i-il.. IT I 111 HiAO I NOTICE TH- Jnn Seymore ieienaants To tha defendants. John W. Sev- more. Mrs. John W. Seymore, firet real name unknown, the heirs, devl- 1 . 1 . i or n loco, jforwu-. iifva tijuu ail uiuer ycrouuo uivcmicu in the estates of John W. Seymore, Mrs. John W. Seymore, first real name unknown; William E. Pardee, Stephen F. Nuckolls, each deceased, and all persons having or claiming any interest in and to Lots five (5) and Bix (6), in Block fifty-three (53). in the City of Plattsraouth, Cass county, Nebraska, real names known: un" I You and each of you are hereby nounea mat J. tu. aieisinger ana - a mi aiDin vat not riiainri tt a -n lai n i f"""f "X 5 . - .7?"'' . I 1 . . . I T - ?a88' Neka' n, the 34th ?ay ' AuUBt, 1929. against you and each of you; the object, purpose and mouth Nebraska or at the office of of whIch ta to obtala a AlSJ'viiJSZ Jt . ... . , ... . . i . i cre oi me court quieting me hub . , . - . . . io a ana o, m cioca o, in me 17 ",."-.. v. .."I " vfii h n ri wirn nr tou. &dd ior kiii'ij I equiUble in the premises. " in nnr rmiHi mji nit, w un i uhl uiiu i you and each of vou are further .5.-77?.. .l".: nouoeo mat you are requirea w nowaT . ,.v. 7 oTT ' A" - ' I ur iu snesauuus vi nuu tion will be taken as true and a de-1 ,i, v . . .v- plaintiff - . J. E. Meiainger and Ina Meieinger, as against you and each I of you, according to the prayer of said petition. J. e. MEISINGER and LENA MEISINGER. Plaintiffs. W. A. ROBBHTSOX. Attorney for Plaintiffs. 2-tv Ulim Will u 1CUUHI1U 111 UTUl 111 LUOI...1 f . . . . . . NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, RS. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Ed Metteer, 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 27th day of September, 1929, and on the 28th day of December, 1929, at 10 o'clock a. m., of each day, to receive and examine 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 27th day of Sep- limited for payment or debts is one year rrom sam n in aay or :epiem- I Der 1929. "UIIt8a uuu tmu me bi ui saia county touri mis au uuy oi August, A. II. iJLA.llL.itl, (Seal) s2-4w County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING on Petition for Appointment of Administratrix Tho Stata nf V1rcl-n r9 rnnn i - . - - , i . v In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Jo seph C. Ellington, deceased. On reading and filing the petition of Anna A. Ellington praying that administration of said estate may be granted to Anna A. Ellington, as Administratrix: Ordered, that September 27th, A. D. 1929, at 10 o'clock a. m. is assign ed for hearing said petition, when a" Intterted Jn I?1"' held in and for said county, and show cause why the prayer of the petitioner should not be granted: and that notice of the pendency of said petition and the hearing there of be given to all persons Interested in said matter by publishing a copy of this order in the Plattsmouth Journal, a semi-weekly newspaper printed in said county, for three successive weeks prior to said day of hearing. Dated August 29th, 1929. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) s2-3w County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING and Notice on Petition for Set tlement of Account In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. State of Nebraska, Cass county, ss. To all persons interested in the estate of John Varady, also known as Johan Uaovics, deceased: On reading the petition of Stanley Serpan (Czecho-Slovak Consul), Ad ministrator, praying a final settle ment and allowance of his account MfllA(, in f1, Pn,1P. n fva Ath n. September, 1929, and for final set tlement of said estate and for his discharge as said Administrator; It Is hereby ordered that you and all persons interested in said matter may, and do, appear at the County Court to be held in and for said county, on the 4th day of October. A. D. 1929, at 10 o'clock a. m., to show cause, if any there be, why the r of I Detitioner should not be granted, and that notice of th of petItlon and the nearine thereof be riven to all ner- BOng interested In said matter bv I nublishine a conv of this order in the Plattsmmith Jmirns a cam l I -.( M AAA weekly newspaper m-inted in said COunty. for three successive week3 prior to said day of hearinz In witness whereof. I have her- unto Bet mv had d th . f saId Court this 4th day of September, A. D. 1929. A. II, DUXBURY, County Judge. (Seal) s9-3w NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS Sealed bids will be received at the office of the City Clerk at Platts mouth, Nebraska, on Sept 25th, 1929, until 8 o'clock p. m., and at that tIme publicly opened and read for Eiauuig, grave suriacing , culverts, guard rail and Incidental work on the Plattsmouth East Project No. 649 A. State Road. I Th nmnncB wnrV mndato nr i-.t structlng 0.7 miles of graveled road The approximate quantities are: 25.000 cu. yds.. Unclassified Excavation; 40,000 cu. yds., Sta tions Overhaul; 11,000 sq. yds.. Sand Oravel Surfacing Class "A" 2 deep; 100 cu. yds.. Un classified Excavation for Cul verts; 150 Lin. ft. 18 Culvert Pipe; 76 Lin. ft. 24" Culvert Pipe; 2,400 Lin. ft. Guard Rail. This work may be performed in conjunction with similar work In the City of Plattsmouth which will in- crease very materially the Quantities listed herein. . . fia.ua ana specmcauons ior tne k lmation secuxeu Bt ln omce oi me iuniy wtmou u mo uuito ui mo Clerk at Plattsmouth. Nebraska, at office of the Citv Clerk at Platts- "' w WlX C M . mouth. Nebraska, or at the office of - . . rjnonln Mahraalrn. ianooin, XNeorassa. Th sueenful hlddar will h re- quired to furnish bond in an amount MUal to i00C. nf his onntrart equal lO lUUy OI niS Contract. n t m . . i . . ueroneo eneexs maae payame to a j a a . """'ti 7J 7 7 ' the amount of the bid will be re- THIS work must be Btarted pre- iOUS tO October 15th, 1929 and be -,.tk, t... lot lOtn 7.r , ,7J . ' T" ' . fle ngni is reaervea to waive an 7. cauue8 anB rejeci anT or au DEPARTMENT OF PUB LIC WORKS, R. L. Coch ran, State Engineer. GEORGE R. SAYLES. County Clerk, Cass County. Phone yonx sews to the Journal.