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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (April 30, 1931)
THURSDAY. APRIL 30. 1931. PLATTSMOUTH SEMI - WEEKLY JOURNAL PAGE THREE Cbc plattsmoutb lournal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH. NERRASKA Entered at Postoffice, Plattsmouth, Neb., as second-class mail matter R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2 00 A YEAR IN FIRST POSTAL ZONE Subscribers living in Second Postai Zone, $2.50 per year. Beyond 600 miles, $3.00 per year. Rate to Canada and foreign countries, $3.50 per year. All subscriptions are payable strictly in advance. About all we have left is Canadian Bourbon. -:o:- If we are in the wrong, an ally is always welcome. :o: The mortality rate among spring poets is increasing daily. : o : Nowadays it is net far from a wedding ring to a divorce mill. : o : A 4 8 million Dollar Bolder Dam contract signed. Whew, some bill: :o: Many a man feels annoyed because his ancestors did not do more for him. :o:- The Senate is just the place for a man of General Smedley Butler's lo quacity. : o : knew One half the world never that the other half belonged to the Wendel heirs. :o: It would be hard to convince Al fonso that there is nothing unlucky in the thirteenth. : o : A new military airplane can fire 3.000 shots a minute. It will be swell for mosquito hunting. :o: Scattered showers over this section of the state have brought smiles to the faces of the farmers. tor- Reducing armaments won't do it. The important thing is to adopt his tories that tell the same lies. -:o:- What do the brawny ping pong champions do with themselves dui- ing the season of outdoor sports? :o: "What." asks a puzzled inquirer of a Boston medical publicist, "is the best time for a cold plunge?" Later. : o : One person in every eleven in the United States has a government job. so we can never be totally employ ed. :o:- The Joliet prison riots are blamed on the parole beard. Maybe one way to satisfy the prisoners would be to abolish it. :o: Senator Nye is home explaining why his committee ran up big bills while investigating candidates who had run up big bills. That young man who was paying his way through an Ohio college by selling liquor was lifting himself by his bootlegger straps. We might explain that when the King of Siam gets to this country it will not be the polite question to task, "Well, how are the twins?" A farmer friend of ours says there is money in every farm, he knows, because he has put a lot in his but the trick is to get moaey out of it. :o: Lack of sense is expensive mil lions have to be spent every year for safety devices to prevent darn fool drivers from killing themselves and others. :o: Soviet financiers have the comfort of knowing that if one five year plan does not work out there will be an other period of five years available J and maybe several others after tr.at. ;ed tomb which President Hoover . ill ,on action by Washington before re- -o: dedicate June 17. When the ren va- cognizing new administrations in "Is there anything the American i t;on js completed, the Spring"eld Latin America. Our action follows people love more." inquires thesnrine will be adorned with br ize recognition by France. Germany. Springfield Republican, "than inves- copies depicting the long trail f om j Great Britain and her dominions, by tigations even of their own wick- , wilderness cabin to the presidency j Belgium, Sweden. Portugal and sev edness?' Nothing, unless it is mur- and journey's end. Five of the st B-jeral Balkan nations, as well as by a der trials. ettes are to portray the prairie yc irs. j number of Latin American countries. '' These are copies of Crunelle's orator J la the week's interim. Ambassador According to Associated Press es- at Freeport. 111., and his rou; !ily ; Laughlin, at Madrid, had investigat timates the American public spent i dressed soldier of the Black Hawk ' ed the new Government and had sub 10 million dollars for concerts in thejWar at Dixon; Dorado Taft's gaunt jmiited a favorable report to Secre- season now ending. Or. as tne vauae- ville wag puts it. the music scale still begins and ends with daugh. :o: Prohibition officers raiding a produced especially for the tomb by,iy pressure will be put upon the peo Greek letter fraternity house in New jpred M. Torrey. Other well known pie by the monarchists of the right York captured 60 bottles of liquor. cfrigias wji be those of Weineman's and the radicals of the left. With Perhaps the boys thought it was com- mendable to purchase in quantities rather than to pay excessive prices in night clubs and speakeasies. UNABLE TO EAT "I Buffered Burn great distress from indi pestion that I was onable to eat. 1 bought ZINSEP and immediately obtained wonder ful relief." says J. E. Beeder, 9mDu City, Nebr. End tout stomach miseTy with ZINSEP. It's GUARANTEED. At ail draggu- 13 I Americanism : spinach. A sublime faith in :o: Winter is getting so to the slightest encore. :o: it responds Grandad may have been a sod buster, but not on the golf links. :o: Raw cotton valued at $13. 500. "00 was imported tatO Japan in a recent month. : o : Who remembers when a girl with an unattractive face had to let it go at that? :o: Senator Brookhart sh mid know that after-dinner speakers make anyjillK aud di;ing M the persons and banquet dry enough. : o :- You can't form a third party. ! There aren't enough people mad 'riVi'mr tbfi nmr ttiinsr : o : The reformer should be patient with us. After all. the world's wick edness keeps him in a job. There are few good auto drivers because few persons can do foot work and heati work at Uie same time :o: If men decide to play golf in shorts the appearance of most of them will add greatly to the mental. :o: Once more Mr. Raskob displays that rare acumen which has made him an infallible judge of political conditions. :o:- "Banks will fuse." says a New I ui k iieauuiie. 11 is iiiui e u- .i.u im : - i in t . i . them to refuse, according to average experience. If it should be irue. as Henry Ford says, that we are prosperous but do not know it. this ignorance is a queer sort of bliss. :o: The advantage of a big country is that you can find a community where the degree of law enforcement just suits you. :o: ic i,rt ir. , h ! a lie nun in i iic In Arkansas a family car has sued her husband for ; damages which ought to help his case considerably by the time she asks for alimonv. :o: I A former President or Mexico is now giving vocal lessons. But tins is no reason why he should not con- on international subjects and his con tinue to be protected from potential tributions to periodicals, De Mada assassins. I riaga stands in the front rank of :o: the intellectuals who support Spa:i- Another designer announces anjish republicanism. His extensive ex airplane designed for the masses, perience on various League of Na There will be no public stampede to t ions disarmament commissions has buy airships, however, until some-igiven him an extraordinary grasp of body invents a plane that will stand j world problems. His delightful lit- still in mid air while the owner sig- nais for a towing car. :o: The advertising manager of a : well-known eastern firm engaged in neids jn which he has made a name that a hearing will be had on said the manufacture and distribution of for itself ! petition before said Court on the cosmetics on a large scale, estimates . Recognition of the new republic ! - VapSaa" .V ad that it costs on an average three dol-jby the State Department makes it j Court on said 22nd day of May. A. lars annually for women of the Unit- 1 possible for De Madariaga to assume i D. 1931. at ten o'clock a. m. to con ed States to keep their varied com-'his portfolio as soon as he can ter- ! the said petition, the Court may plexions in a satisfactory condition :o: THE LONG TRAIL 177 BRONZE Illinois is gathering raplftcaa of i Lincoln statue for the reconstruct-1 iav,-yer who appt .irs t lean hzi: -t a courtroom table in Urbana. and two America's action will be of tre horse figures, the erect young ranger j mendous assistance to Spain in her jand the caped circuit-riding law yer, j :seated Lincoln at the Kentucky birth- .,jace gl Gaudens' standing figure in Chicago. Borglum's Hall of Fame head, and Daniel Chester French's pensive man with clasped hands in Lincoln. Neb., and his brooding bronze in the majestic memorial by the Potomac. Henceforth the city on the Sangamon will hold as much for I the lover of fine arts as for the lover of history. Illinois is making it the tomb of Lincoln, by the sculptors, for the people. ENCHANTMENT OF DISTANCE Alan J. illiers, the Australian ex- j On hillsides high above the road, plnrer, writer and lecturer, aliudesithe dogwood is in bloom. Dimpled with a smile to the prevalent miscon - - cepiion among all sorts of persons :that there is more romance anywheie and everywhere iu the world than at home. "It's quite a common idea,' he comments, "thai nothing wonder ful happens in our immediate envir onment, or in our town, or in our COB it try, and anything Strang! or in- te resting must happen elsewhere. The contrary is the fact, he ex- I (Plains. There is much near at hand that is extraordinary, and we can not overlook it if we use our senses. It is not necessary to travel afar in quest of the strange or enthralling, or to go through dangers and ad- ventn.es in order to find something interesting r thrilling. We may dis - cover something exceptionally sensa- tic i.al without moving, or. in other words, by simply thinking of persons son. Nor is that the end. After the and happenings and places which are foliage fire has burned out, deep red familiar to us. j berries keep the branches aglow for Why we have this erroneous idea is winter birds. Everyone should follow plain to our understanding. Every-a degwood through tfie year some body near us is like everything near time. Find one. Seldom is there a OS, being commonplace. We get intolbetter spring to begin the compan the habit of taking everybody and ionship. everything for granted. We are as :o: commonplace by our habits of think things that are part of our everyday existence. We live in a routine. We dream of great opportunities 1 dc,V0tjOn to the sacred principle of a la distant places. We vision enor- protective tariff but even Homer nods mous wealth that might be procured and to the dismay of his fellow at some daring and trouble. We revel jvotaries in the protective temple, he in imagination in the marvels thatlowered tne rates on paint-brush we could run across in distant places handles and Mexican quail. Scoffers and among strange people. About may say tnat relaxing the Fordney these beings, things and localities McClumber impositions on these two there is a brightness which makes quajnl items is about as helpful as them alluring. Nearby everybody j squjrting a child's water gun at a and everything are dull, and our own j conflagration ; nevertheless paint thoughts of them are dull. j brush handles and Mexican quail The fairest opportunities are in cave become rubric words in the another city, but in our own. It may , coolidge annals. b that, in exceptional cases, a young j Things fare not so well as to cher man having particular talent which Lt ciiinhnred or in brine, and to- j cau not be appiied in his home town maloes prepared or preserved. The , would do betu.r SCmewhere else; oriTariff commission thought the tariff I that the ability of one is not recog- those eatable should be reduced. ized by those who know him wellout M,. Hoover returned the recom- or too well. But with the average person the best place is where he lives, as he knows the citizens and i the conditions. Other places are en- Ranting because they are different. There are excellent chances here for those who are capable of seeing and using them. AMBASSADOR DE MADARIAGA It is an excellent testimonial tolmerous and diverse, the possibilities jthe Spanish Republic that it can j too hazy. But of all w ho wish Spain ! command the services of so distin-,a happy issue out of her present un- Swished a scholar as Salvador de -,-au'tl uu - " praisal of the United States is ex- pressed in the appointment of this eminent and able man as Ambassador I n our Mntr which has iust recce- i " ' nized the new regime. itieiy Known ueie uy ms erary style and his eloquence enable i i 1 11 i iDe Madariaga to express his views effective fashion as writer, teacher,' publicist, d'plomat and lecturer, all j minate his lecture series in Mexico :City. The United States, as a matter Of international courtesy, waited for I natlbns on the Continent to grant recognition before taking the step. jnst as European Governments wait; i-.rv St'.nison. early days of democracy. Undoubted- jthe republic formally admitted inTM i he family of nations, its cause is : trerpthened. The Old World's new-j est republic properly rejoices at this mark of confidence and esteem by the jNew World's oldest. j :o: i The superiority of man to all other animals, according to scientists of the Brush Foundation, arises chiefly from the fact that he is helpless for a longer time than other living things are. DOGWOOD DAYS i masses of breath-taking beauty, its pure white patches drift in pastel . traceries of red bud and spring green. J This April there are more flowers than last. A winter severely cold works a hardship; one like that just passed, when creeks freeze less often, sets the stage for a performance un rivaled. Now the creamy bracts, or peal-like leaves, form lain-washed si-ucers holding small clusters of faintly yellow blooms. Flowers, fol iage, fiuit dogwood's way of life is that of most trees and shrubs, but few are so generous with beauty in each outgiving. For whatever the season, dogwood is never done. Be- fore the blossoms have blown away j its glossy leaves are ready for May and summer time. Then at length comes autumn and its blazets trim- HANDLES. GUAIL. CEEE- RIES AND TOMATOES Mr. Coolidge has given a lifelong mendation ar,d asked the Tariff Cam- mission to reconsider its decision "upon the basis of the forthcoming crops and make another report." He does not propose lightly to blot the Hawley-Smoot escutcheon. :o: What a day may bring forth, for the new-burn republic, there is no predicting; the factors are too nu- j certainties and a future rich in pros- i - ar I" . " " : o ' more heartily than the United States i of America. ! " NOTICE OF ADMlMS IKA'l iu:s I In tne county Court of Cass coun- ty, renrasKa In the matter of the estate of Amelia Heisel, deceased. Notice of Administration. All persons interested in said es tate are hereby notified that a peti tion has been filed in said Court al leging that said deceased died leav ing no last will and testament and praying for administration upon her estate and for such other and further orders and proceedings in the premise-- as may be required by the stat- utes in such cases made and provided . , . , ,j i n to ine enci mat sum emuie anu all liiTii'K Tifrt ii i n i n sr thereto DIRT be finally settled and determined, and i ration of said estate to Anna Helsel or some other suitable person and proceed to a settlement thereof. A H. DUXBURY. (Seal) a27-3w County Judge. C'RDER 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 Gertrude L. Morgan, de ceased : On reading the petition of Kate O. Morgan praying a final settlement and allowance of her account filed in this Court on the 15th day of April. IV 31, and for final settlement of said estate and discharge of said Kate O. Morgan, as Administratrix of said estate; 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 15th day of May, A. D. 1031, at ten o'clock a. m.. to show cause, if any there be. why the prayer of the petitioner should not be granted, and that notice of the Pudency of said petition and the L!J ST Jf. lishing 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. In witness whereof, I have here unto set my hand and the seal of said Court, this 15th day of April, A. D. 1931. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) a20-3w County Judge. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, as. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Dora MeNurlin, deceased. To the creditors of said estate: You are hereby notified that 1 will sit at the County Court room in r-iausmoum. in saia county, on ine (-ass (.(;untv, Nebraska, in the fore 15th day of May, A. D. 1931. and on ; gning entitled cause. I the under the 21st day of August. A D. 1931, signed. C. A. Rawls. Referee, appoint at ten o'clock a. m., of each day, to , cd bv order of said Court. wni, on the receive and examine all claims , 4th dav of May 15,31 at tn hour of against said estate, with a view to! 10 oo ln the forenoon, at the their adjustment and allowance. The l south door of the court house in time limited for the presentation of S iqattSmouth. Cass countv, Nebraska. ' lain,s against said estate is three offer for sa,p to thp hiphef:t bid(ler months from the 15th day of May, , for casn tne followin g dei!Cribed real A. D. 1931. and the time limited for ;,.... pavment of debts is one year from said 15th day of May, A. D. 1931. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this ISth day of April, 1931. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) a20-3w County Judge. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the estate of Kath erine Karvanek. deceased. Notice of Administration. All persons interested in said es tate are hereby notified that a peti tion has been filed in said Court al leging that said deceased died leav ing no last will and testament and praying for administration upon her estate and for such other and further orders and proceedings in the prem ises as may be required by the stat utes in such ases made and provided to the end that said estate and all things pertaining thereto may be finally settled and determined, and ihat a hearing will be had on said petition before said Court, on the Sth day of May. A. D. 1931. and if they fail to appear at said Court on said Sth dav of May. 1931, at tn o'clock a. m.. to contest the said petition, the Court may grant the same and grant administration of ;-.aid estate to Searl S. Davis or some other suitable person and proceed to a settlement thereof. A. H. DUXBURY. (Sealt al3-3w County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING and Notice on Petition for Termina tion of Guardianship and Set tlement of Account. In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ; ss. To all persons interested in tbe estate of Dorothy Elizabeth Trent, a minor. Notice is hereby given that PauljCreek, Nebraska, for the erection of A. Trent. Guardian of Dorothy Eliza- . a grade school building, to be lo beth Trent, a minor, appointed by i cated in Cedar Creek, Nebraska, as the County Court of Hanson county, South Dakota, has filed a report in this court on behalf of Charles A. Trent, guardian of the said Dorothy Elizabeth Trent, a minor, appointed by this Court, but who is now de ceased, and also a petition asking fori posit of five dollars, said deposit to the approval of said report and the be returned to the unsuccessful bid termination of said guardianship in ders, on the return of the plans in this Court. good condition, with bonafide bid on It is hereby ordered that you and the work, all persons interested in said matter A certified check for five per cent may. and do. appear at the County i of the bid must accompany the pro Court to be held in and for said , posal. made payable to the treasurer county, on the 15th day of May, ' of school district number thirty-one, 1931, at ten o'clock a. m., to showjof Cedar Creek. Nebraska. In case cause, if any there be, why the prayer I the successful bidder fails or refuses of the petitioner should not be grant-i to enter into a contract for the per ed, and that notice of the pendency formance of the work and furnish of said petition and the hearing bond acceptable to the board, as re thereon be given to all persons in- quired by law, such check shall be terested in said matter bv publishing forfeited to the board, as liquidated a copy of this order in the Platts mouth Journal, a semi-weekly news paper, printed in said county, for three weeks prior to said day of hearing. In witness whereof. I have hereun to set my hand and the seal of this Court this 14th day of April, A. D. 1931. A. EL DUXBURY. (Seal) a20-3w County Judge. LEGAL NOTICE In the District Court of Cass County. Nebraska Carl S. Foster, Receiver of the First National Bank of Plattsmouth, Nebraska. Plaintiff ' NOTICE vs. William C. West and Emily S. West. Defendants To the Defendants. William C. West and Emily S. West: You. and each of you are hereby notified that on the 3rd day of March. 1931. the plaintiff filed his suit in the District Court of Cass county. Nebraska, the object and nraver of which was to recover on o 5:0 en ,rith intact nt iho r-i t of 8 from May 20. 1926 to August 1, 1926, and 10 interest thereafter, and costs of suit. That affidavits were filed for attachment and gar nishment, and on the 4th day of March, 1931. service of attachment and garnishment was served upon Henry A. Schneider and the Platts mouth State Bank, of Plattsmouth. Nebraska, to recover funds in the possession of said Schneider ana said bank belonging to you. You are hereby required to answer said petition on or before Monday, the 18th day of May. 1931. and fail ing so to do, your default will be entered and judgment will be taken upon the plaintiff's petition. This notice is given pursuant to an order of this Court. CARL S. FOSTER. Receiver of the First National Bank of Plattsmouth, Nebraska, Plaintiff. By A. L. TIDD, His Attorney. aC-4w Every shade of crepe paper and aD the complete Denniion line found the newest novelties and favors in only at the Bates Book Store. NOTICE OF REFEREE'S SALE Dora Raney. Plaintiff j App. Dock, j Page 133 Ina M. Gidley et al. Defendants Notice is hereby given that by vir tue of an Order entered on March O T. , 1. tool 'in, 1 .1 1 in the District Court of Lots one (1) and tuo (2), Mock len (10), in Carter's Addi tion to Weeping Water, Cass com:iy, Nebraska. Said offer of sale will remain open for bids for one hour. Date: March 26th. 1931. C. A. RAWLS, Referee. J. M. LEYDA. mC0-5w. Attorney. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass. By virtue of an Order of Sale is sued by C. E Ledgway, Clerk of the District Court within and for Cass 1 , on (ba 2:rd d.iy of Ma A. D. 1931. at 10 o'clock a. m. of ;?aid day at the south front door of the court house in the City of Platts momh. in said county, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the following real estate, to wit: Lots Eleven ( 11 and Twelve i 1J I in Block Five ( I in Town send's Addition to the City of Plattsmouth, Cass county, Ne braska The same being levied upon and taken as the property of W. T. Craig, real name William T. Craig, et al. defendants to satisfy a judgment of said court recovered by Plattsmouth Iian and Building Association a corporation, plaintiff against said de fendants. Plattsmouth. Nebraska, April 20th, A. D. 1931. BERT REED, Sheriff Cass County Nebraska. ow NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS Sealed proposals will be received, I until the fifteenth day of May. 1931. by the Board of Education of Bchool district number thirty-one, at Cedar i per the plans and specifications on file with the clerk of said school board, R. N. Stivers. Plans may be had from the Archi tect. Everett S. Dodds. 5011 North 22nd street. Omaha, Nebraska, on de damages. The bids will be received allowing general contract and heating. The Doara reserves tne rignt to reject any and all bids and waive any rcu mality. Plans are on file at the Omaha Build ers Exchange. R. M. STIVERS. Clerk of Board. EVERETT S. DODDS, a23-3w Architect. NOTICE OF SUIT IN FORE CLOSURE OF TAX LIEN In J. M. vs. Maud the District Court of Cass County, Nebraska Robertson, Plaintiff Berghahn et al. Defendants App. Dock. 5 Page 158 To the Defendants: The unknown heirs, devisees, legatees, personal rep- i persons interested in the estates of resentatives and all other persons in- John Scott, Mrs. John Scott, real terested in the estate of Viola G. name unknown, John Scott, Jr.. Otho Smith, deceased, real names un-jScott, Mrs. Otho Scott, real name un known: ; known, Josephine Scott, Isaac Coe, You are hereby notified that J. M. and Otto Scott, each deceased, real Robertson, plaintiff, filed a petition j names unknown ; and all persons hav and commenced an action in the Dis-jing or claiming any 'interest in and trict Court of Cass county, Nebraska, on the 6th day of April. 1931. I ajrai nst you and others, the object. ct, purpose and prayer of which is toioin r- n - ass county, iveDrasKa, foreclose a tax lien upon Lots 10. 11 jreal names unknown, and 12 in Block 20, in the City of I You and each of yu are hereby Plattsmouth, in Cass county. Nebras- I notified that Phillip A. Hild as plain ka. as evidenced bv Tax Sale Certifl- tlff- filed a Petition and commenced nt v ci: rf.i'oj K'.oKr., 7v. I an action in the District Crurt of 1927, and issued by John E. Turner. County Treasurer of said county, toi1" Udu , 1""',;"HI'. . y plaintiff. J. M. Robertson, for the!and each of you. the object, purpose sale of said premises for the delin-,nd Player of which ,s to obtain a for subsequent taxes paid by pur chaser for the years 1927, 192S and 1929, on said lots. I il,.;,. . - - .amuii u?.& mr iur .u. ,UDU j of said tax hen and the sale of said premises, together with attorneys' fees allowed by law, and for equitable relief and for costs expended. You are further notified that you are required to answer saia petition on or before the 25th day of May. 1931. or the relief asked by plaintiff will be granted and a decree of fore - closure entered in said cause in favor : of plaintiff as prayed for in his peti- ; tion. Date: April 9th, 1931. J. M. ROBERTSON. Plaintiff. By W. A. ROBERTSON and J. M. LEYDA. His Attorneys. al3-4w NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the County Court of Cass coun ty. Nebraska. In the matter of the estate of Etta Perry Barker, deceased. Notice of Administration. All persons interested in said es tate are hereby notified that a peti- 11011 uaf! oevn n,ea ln saia cun um? leging that said deceased died leaving no last will and testament and pray ing for administration upon her es tate and for such other and further orders and proceedings in the prem ises as may be required by the stat utes in such cases made and provided to the end that said estate and all things pertaining thereto may be finally settled and determined, and that a hearing will be had on said petition before said court on the 8th day of May. A. D. 1931. and tiiat if they fail to appear at said court on said Sth day of May. 1931. at ten o'clof k a. m. to contest the said pe tition the court may grant the same and grant administration of said es tate to Bernice Kiser or some other suitable person to proceed to a set tlement thereof. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) al3-3w County Judge. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the motter of the estate of Fred G. Coryell, deceased. Notice of Administration. All persons interested in said es tate are hereby notified that a peti tion has been filed in said Court al leging that said deceased died leaving no last will and testament and pray ing for administration upon his es tate and for such other and further orders and proceedings in the prem ises as may be required by the stat utes in such cases made and provid ed to the end that said estate and all things pertaining thereto may be finally settled and determined, and that a hearing will be had on said petition before said court on the Sth day of May. A. D. 1931. and that if they fail to appear at said Court on said Sth day of May, A. D. 1931, at ten o'clock a. m., to contest tbe said petition, the Court may grant the same and grant administration of said estate to Laura Coryell or some other suitable person and proceed to a settlement thereof. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) al3-3w County Judge. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. By virtue of an Order of Sale, is sued by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk of the District Court within and for Cass county, Nebraska, and to me direct ed. I will on the 11th day of May. 1931. at lOi o'clock a. m. of said day. at the south door of the court house in the City of Plattsmouth. Cass county. Nebraska, sell at public auc tion to the highest bidder for cash the following described real estate, to-wit: Lot one (1) in Block one-hundred thirty- four ( 134 in the City of Plattsmouth, in Cass county, Nebraska The same being levied upon and taken as the property of Joseph Carl Warga et al, defendants, to satisfy a judgment and decree of the District Court of said county, in favor of The Standard Savings and Loan Associa tion of Omaha, Nebraska, plaintiff, entered on the 14th day of March, 1931, and a decree and judgment of said court in favor of L. F. Holferty, Intervenor, entered on February 2Sth, 1931, against said defendants. Plattsmoutb. Nebraska, April 4th, 1931. BERT REED. Sheriff Cass County, " Nebraska aC-5w NOTICE OF SUIT TO QUIET TITLE In the District Court of the County of Cass, Nebraska. Phillip A. Hild. Plaintiff. vs. John Scott, et al. Defendants. App. Iock. 5 Page 156. To the defendants John Scott, Mrs. John Scott, real name unknown. jlsaac Coe, Otho Scott. Mrs. Otho Beott, real name unknown, Josephine Scott, Frank Schlichtemier, Ella Schlichte mier, the heirs, devisees, legatees. ! personal representatives and all other to the southwest quarter iSW'j Of section one (1), township eleven 1(11), range twelve (12), east of the range twelve (12). ea6? of the 1 the County of Cass Nebraska, on the . . a . 1 1 n ! 1 ... :... . . kion one (1), township eleven (11), range twelve (12), east of the 6th P. M. in Cass County, Nebraska, in , the plaintiffi a8 a&ainst you and each ;of you and for sucn Qther reef as may be just and equitable in the premises. You and each of you are further notified that you are required to an8Wer said petition on or before Monday, the 18th dav of May. 1931. or tije allegations therein contained wiu be taken as true and a decree wm be rendered in favor of the plaintiff. Phillip A. Hild, as against iyou and each of you according to the prayer in said petition. PHILLIP A. HILD, Plaintiff. W. A. ROBERTSON, J. M. LETTJA. Attorney tor Plaintiff.