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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1931)
THURSDAY. MAY 21, 1931. THE PLATTSMOUTH EVENING JOURNAL PAGE THREE Cbe plattsmoutb lournal PUBLISHED SEMI -WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA 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 Postal Zone, J2.50 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. Two can't live as cheaply as one If one lives on alimony. :o: "Laugh and get rich" is ihe slo gan. Laugh, and you are rich. : o The fellow who borrows trouble has an annoying way of lending it. Listen girls: to reform him. him. Don't marry a man The altar won't alter As often as one gets something far nothing one gets nothing for some thing. :o: Don't take your furnace apart yet. May promises are not to be depend ed upon. :o: Pure recklessness is the only rea son that p;esents itself why some persons marry. :o: Our idle wonder for the day is as to how many reporters are left on the Lindbergh beat. :o: The hardest work there is cn Ea:-y Street is in trying to foiget the route taken to arrive there. : o : Be amiable. Good nature goes far ther toward making a girl popular than anyother one thing. :o: China is said to be moving toward gold currency. Their bandits have been doing it ail the time. :o: The better or the worse qualities of a person are brought out strongly ar.d vividly trial. in periods of extreme Whether to celebrate the fall of rtactillp nr to welcome? a ilenosed king, the Parisian public loves to We expect to maintain a benevolent along and do about as it pleases any clioer. I neutrality. jhow. SAVE "hundred miles in a NEW w "A Nebraska Institution? At Red Crown Service Stations and Dealers everywhere in Nebraska In round figures the United States loaded $11,000,000,000 to 10 na tions. :o: Marriage seems to be one thing that is not likely to be taken loo ser iously. The things a man gets at the ex pense of self-respect are net worth the cost. :o: A gangster taeks plenty of license but never buys a marriage, hunting or liquor one. : o : Members cf the English parliament have voted, 258 to 130, not to class on railway passes. :o: Historians, looking closely into the history of Spain, doubt whether the republic will endure. :o: Why is a drunken man like a match? That's easy. When he gets lit up he looses his head. : o : A tip to wives: If you keep your husband in hot water he will even tually become hard boiled. :o: A snob is a successful man who ; t i 1 1 feels cheated because his dad wasn't an important citizen. :o: President Hoover told the world it must disarm, and probably Mr. Brit ten, out in Chicago, feli in a faint. :o: By and by. maybe the night club will return to its old definition of ibei - g a stick that hangs to a police in in a belt. -:o:- j The approach oi summer is herald ed by a dispute as to the relative r. i its of snuash and nu.riDkin nie. WEAR Starting a motor wears it as much as a hundred miles of driving unless your motor oil flows freely and circulates prop erly while the motor is cold. New POLARINE is low cold test oil lubricates correctly every instant the motor runs does everything oil can do to pre vent wear. Thoroughly de-waxed, new Polarine does not clog oil lines, gum valves or deposit heavy carbon in the motor. To keep your motor full-po vered, con sult the chart and use the correct grade of new Polarine 25$. a quart for every grade Polarine STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEBRASKA John D. has stopped playing golf in Florida and gone home and spring can now officially commence. : o: Etude magazine says "Jazz is in its twilight." But it's around mid- j night that we get the most of it. :o: Mexico's rejection of American jjazz is sound indication of intellect ual progress south of the Rio Grande. :o: The next mistake that the unsk:ll- i e-! flatterer makes is not using suffi cient discretion in paying his conipli- Iment. i :o: M-n'.s four states: Proud of his muscle; proud of hi;-, knowledge; 1-ioud of his success; proud of his j outh. :o: If tlie republic of Spain needs some laws for the management of free peo ple, we have some that could be spared. : o: Fisherman operating about 60 miles off the Virginia capes recently hooked a strange specimen of the briny deep. The new Spanish republic won't touch (.0 million dollars borrowed by the monarchy. That is indeed revolut ionary. :o:- P LACING THE BLAME One of the popular activities of the times, if not of all time, is that of plaeing responsibility on others. Sometimes it can be accomplished with a degree of success, but in other attempts they only turn out to be ri oieulous. Public opinion may not al ways decide correctly, but it is known to determine definitely. It is not consistent on the part of adults to complain if beys and girls imitate them, or even inaugurate .me ideas of their own in the mat- ter of apparel and conduct. Instruc- tion which is not backed up by ex ample is not likely to prove very ef fective in the matter of behavior and morals. Some one has said that if you want id get the best results in character for a child you must begin with his When there is added t0 tnem the grandparents. This principle if it,oss from that sharp practice which eve r had a place, must still obtain, jMr Brewer savs has been too preva for human nature is very much the , ..... ,he tolal is en?rmous. What same u-om one generation to another What tht- ins Poct;.rirv n-ill c(it..o 1 minute 9? LIVE AND LET LIVE To live and let live is the first law of that civilization which Lloyd George characterizes as the art of living together in a state of order. Robert F. Brewer, vice president of the Chatham Phenix National Bank and Trust Co., of New York, has Just told the Missouri Bankers Associa tion in session at Excelsior Springs that this is what we must do in the United States if we are to recover our economic equilibrium. Said Mr. Erewer: "I believe there has been loo many inflationary deals, too much optimism in recapitalizing business upon a dividend Oasis that forgets lean years, too much sharp practice, too much neglect of the old truth that a bargain is not good unless it is good for both sides. This is very sound advice, and it comes from an authoritative quar ter. The peril to American capital ism is ussia, but among those in our own country who do not give capitalism a chance. For 10 years the United States has been in an orgy of inflation. If the overcapitaliza tion which Mr. Brewer says forgets lean years visited its consequences upon nobody but those who play this adventurous game, the country could possibly afford to let them continue doing it. They might run stocks up as high as they like, pyramid secur ities as much as they would, and at last, like Samson, puli the whole overbuilt structure down upon them selves. The objection made by Mr. Brew er is that we are all victimized by such a system. The same point was made a short time ago by President Whitney of the New York Stock Ex change, which has set about devising means to protect the small investor. Senator Borah said at a recent pro gressive conterence m Washington that only a very rich toUntry could , have withstood such a shock as that which the United States absorbed when the stock market collapsed in 1929, even if at this late date we can be said to have absorbed it. The : losses of the peopie from the sheer fortunes of business are large enough. I hnf, th nTpqtnr rif n fw years ago in the Kansas City Rail ways deal, or what chance would they have had if Mr. Newman and his associates had put over in St. Louis that private deal of which Mayor Miller complained in his let ter to Chairman Watts of the Re organization Committee. More than 1200 economists plead ed with Mr. Hoover and Congress in the tariff fight to live and let live. We have seen the consequences of their refusal, as we see about us everywhere the consequnces of what Mr. Brewer calls "too much neglect of the old truth that a bargain is not good unless it is good lor both sides." St. Louis Post-Dispatch. : o : COMMERCIALIZING SCIENCE Yolta invents the electric cell and ! for the first time generates a con tinuous electric current. Farday dis covers induction, and Gramme, Siem ens, Edison apply the discovery in the building of generators and motors. Maxwell mathematically predicts the possible existence of long, invisible waves in the ether, and Hertz later produces them in his laboratory. Mar coni sees the possibilities and radio is born. Sir Humphry Davy produces sodium with the aid of the electric current. The great electro-chemical industry at Niagara Falls follows a century later. Elster and Gietel show how potassium can be applied in con verting light into electric current. High-speed telephotography and tele vision are thereafter achieved. Such instances of industrial and engineering progress following in the wake of pure science could be multi plied without end. Yet the Voltas, Maxwells and Hertzes of science pass their lives precariously. Twenty years ago no one rose to remind in dustry of its obligation to pure science. A different note is now heard. The sureness with wnich corpor ation physicists and chemists con duct their inquiries, the inevitable ness with which they select just the scientific principle or discovery that happens to be appropriate in a given case, the spectacle of millions made by the organized exploitation of a mathematical equation or a chem ical formula may have bred a new fliscontent. Have these scientists a property right to their discoveries? The con viction is growing that they have. But as yet the scientist has no copy right or patent laws to protect him. There is much promise in the mere fact that the Outdoor Advertising as sociation is turning its collective thought to the outdoor signboard with the view of saving both it and me landscape. STOMACH BAD? T suffered untold agony from gas on mr stomach and indigestion and was told 1 had nlxxm. The first bottle of ZINSEP gave me quick relief," wntw Mm. H. J. Taimyr, Omaha, Nebr. End YOUR stomach agonv. U' GUARANTEED. At all druggists. 11 CANADA BENEFITS Another ill wind that brought good to somebody was the depression. While the rest of the world, having sown the wind, was reaping the whirlwind of hard times, Canada wa.s leaping a nice profit on increased tourist trade from the United States, much of the increase being attrib uted to economizing by those who in more prosperous times would have taken a more expensive tour abroad. A check at the international line oisclosed that the great exodus of tourist motor cars from the United States into the dominion was swell ed by 900,000 cars last year com paied with the 1929 flood. It is esti mated that 5.409,000 American auto mobiles crossed the line into Canada in 1930. While more and more Canadians are sight-seeing in the United States each year an increa.se of 127,000 tourist cars being recorded in 1930 Canadian business still enjoys a handsome balance of trade in field. Hundreds of millions of U. S. dollars are carried across the bordei and left there by tourists each year. Canada invites because she is the nearest "foreign country" to more than half of the United States, be- cause of her scenery, fishing, hunting and good roads, and because, in more or less degree, of her liquor dispen- saries beat. It is a hard combination to NOTICE To: Elva L. Baxter, non resident. Defendant: You are hereby notified that on the 10th day of December, 1930. Olive Baxter filed a petition against you in the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska, entered in Docket 5, page 95. the object and prayer of '.hich are to obtain an absolute di vorce from you and complete custody and control of Lela M. Baxter and Leonard E. Baxte-r, minor children. the grounds of having failed tolcU..d bv C. E Lec'.gway, Clerk of the support the plaintiff and her child ren. You are requested to answer said petition on or before Monday, the 29th day of June. 1931. OLIYE BAXTER. mlS-4w Plaintiff. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass Coun- ' ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Fred G. Coryell, deceased. To the creditors of said estate: You are hereby notified, that I will sit at the Couuty Court Room in Plattsmouth. in said County, on the 5th day of June. A. D. 1931. and on the 8th day of September, A. D. 1931. at ten o'clock in the forenoon of each day to receive and examine all claims against said estate, with a view to their adjustment and allow ance. The time limited for the pre sentation of claims against said es tate is three months from the 5th day of June, A. D. 1931. and the time limited for payment of debts is one vear from said 5th day of June. 1931. Witness my hand and the seal of isaid County Court this bin day oi May, A. D. 1931. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) mll-3w County Judge. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska. Cass Coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Etta Perry Barker, 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 June 5. 19.-.1. and bepteniDer lvsi, atand expenf.es of administering said 10 o'clock a. m.. each day to receive ec,tate and these proceedings; and it and examine all claims against said j appearing from sai( petition, that estate, with a view to their adjust- lhere is an insufTicient amount of ment and allowance. The time limit- jpersona property in the hands of the eu ioi cue MK.ciiiduuM i v.. against said estate is three montns from the 5th day of June. A. D. 1931. and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 5th day cf June, 1931. Witness my hand and the seal cf said County Court this Sth day of May, 1931. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) ml 1-3 w County Judge. LEGAL NOTICE In the District Court of Cass County, Nebraska Paul H. Gillan, Plaintiff vs. Alma R. Waterman et al. Defendants V NOTICE To the Defendants Alma R. Wat- m o tv Qtirl Trio WT W7 o crn T" You are herein- notified that on the . 18th day of April. 1931, tne plain-r "ra mi allowed " cot inclined that Henry F. Raa- ' :lain tiff filed his petition in the Dfc-trtetSi ,!fS?A Vl'l STlJ! tiff, has filed a petition i-i the Dis- Court of Cass county. Nebraska, the object and purpose of which is tol foreclose lien of tax sale certificate i on Lots 5 and G 111 DlUC.t ' City of Plattsmouth. Cass county. Nebraska, and for equitable relief. You are further required to answer said petition on or before Monday, June 8th, 1931. and failing so to do, vour default will be entered and judgment taken upon plaintiff's peti tion. This notice is given pursuant to an order of this Court. PAUL H. GILLAN. A. L. TIDD, Plaintiff. His Attorney. a27-4w NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the estate of Emma C. Miller, deceased. Notice of Administration. All persons interested in said es - tate are hereby notified that a peti- Ition has been filed in said Court al- leging that said deceased died leav- ing no last will and testament and praving for administration upon her estate and for such other and further orders and proceedings in the prem - ises as mav be required bv the stat- utes in such cases made and provided to the end that said estate and all things pertaining thereto may De finally settled and determined, and that a hearing will he had on said win lie nun u niiu , . . ., - said Court cn the 12th 2 dei'tf T, ,Vn n 1VM mrt that ifi8011 f,th daV f Ju,U- A D' 191' D. 19ol and that if Wlt hand an1 tlu. .al of pear at said Court on .. , J .... .... ..... petition before day of June, A they fail to appea aid 12th day of June. A. D. 1931, at ten o' lock a. m. to contest the said petition, the Court may grant the same and grant administration of said estate to Frank A. J. Miller, or some other suitable person and pro I red to a settlement thereof. A. H. DUXBURY. Seal ml8-3w County Judge. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of. the estate of Oscar Keil, deceased. Notice of Administration. All persons interested in said es tate are hereby notified that a peti- the'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 his estate and for such other and fur ther orders and proceedings in the premises as may be required by the statutes in such cases made and pro vided to the end that said estate and ay things pertaining thereto may be I finally settled and determined, and that a hearing will be had on said petition neiore saia Loun on me 29th day of May. A. U. 1931, anct that if they fail to appear at said Court on said 29th day of May. 1931, at ten o'clock a. m. to contest the said petition, the Court may grant the same and grant administration of said estate to Dorothea Keil. or some other suitable person and pro ceed to a settlement thereof. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal i m4-3w County Judge SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass. ss. Bv virtue of an Order of Sale is- District Court within and for Cass county, Nebraska, and to me direct ed, I will on the 23rd day of May. A. D. 1931, at 10 o'clock a. m. of said day at the south front door of the court house in the City of Platts mouth, in said county, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the following real estate, to wit: Lots Eleven (11) and Twelve (12 in Block Five (5) in Town Bend'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 Loan ar.d Building Association a corporation, plaintiff against said de fendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, April 20th. A. D- 1931. BERT REED, Sheriff Cass County Nebraska. !a23-5w ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE In the District Court cf Cass Coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the application Cf Searl S. Davis, Administrator of the Estate of John Karvanek, deceased, for license to sell real estate to .pay debts. Now on this Sth day oi May, 1931, came Searl S. Davis, Administator of the Estate of John Karvanek, de ceased, and presents his petition for license to sell real estate: of the de ceased in order to pay the claims filed and allowed against said estate. A. m n qt rat or tn nav tie c amis nre- sented and allowed by the County Court of this County and the ex penses of administration and these proceedings; that it is necessary to sell the whole of said real estate of the deceased in order to pay said claims, costs of administration and these proceedings. Tt ia Th urof oro PrinirtprfH OrHpr- L,i nrl Artliwle-prl that nil nersons interested in the Estate of John Kar- a ' t r luAnocof o n r. o q 1" hot rTO rtlP James T. Begley, Judge of the Dim- trict Court, at the office of the Clerk .i. T-i.: r. . r-.T-t House, in the City cf Plattsmouth. Cass County, Nebraska, on the 27th day of June. 1931, at the hour of 10:00 o'clock in the forenoon, and ishow cause, if any there be, why I such license should not be granted I to Searl S Davis. Administrator of the Estate of John Karvanek, de- leased, to sell all of the real estate inf cn w !(( tin a a tn Tin V Trie It la Further Considered. Ordered ,i.,rnA ,,otiro Ho P-iX'Pn 11 ,.oc i.r, t1H hv niililira- tion of this Order to Show Cause for four successive weeks in the Platts mouth Journal, a legal newspaper nublished and of general circulation in the County of Cass, Nebraska. By the Court. JAMES T. BEGLEY. mll-4w District Judge. The Journal Job Be part ment is equipped to turn out anything from calling cards to sale catalogs. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass Coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate oC Katherine Karvanek, deceased. ,To the creditors of said estate: j You are hereby notified, that I win sit at ine county v oun Mm m Plattsmouth. in said County, on the 5th day of June. A. D. 1931. and on the 8th day of September. A. D. ItSl, jat ten o'clock in the for, noon of each ;da - v to receive and examine all claims a&ainst said estate, with a vu m to ! th"r adjustment and allowance. The tlme 1,m,ted for thf Pntauon of claims against saiu .-iaie is mice Tii..Titt:c trfifll Tn.i :i.M fl.1V I.T -111?' A. D. 1931 and the time limited lor said Countv Court this 8th day or Mav, A. D. 1931. A. H. DUXBURY. (Sea!) mll-3w County Judge. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the estate of Ger trude E. Morgan, 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 Jurtber orders and proceedings in the prem ises as may be required by the stat utes in such cases made and pro vided 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 12th day of June. A. D. 1931. and that if thev fail to appear at said Court on said 12th day of June. A. D. 1931. at ten o'clock a. m.. to contest the said petition, the Court may grant the same and grant administration of said estate to Paul C. Morgan or some other suitable person and proceed to a settlement thereof. A. EL DUXBURY. (Seal) m!8-3w County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING AND NO TICE OF PROBATE OF WILL In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. State of Nebraska. County of Cass, ES. To all persons interested in the estate of Margaret Wehrbein, deceas ed: On reading the petition of John F. Wehrbein praying that the instru ment filed in this court on the 13th day of May, 1931. and purporting to he the last will and testament of the said deceased, may be proved and al lowed, and recorded as the last will and testament of Margaret Wehrbein, dec eased: that said instrument be ad mitted to probate, and the adminis tration of said estate be granted to John F. Wehrbein. as Executor; It is hereby ordered that you, and all persons interested in said matter, pnay. and do. appear at the County Court to be held in and for said coun ty, on the 12th day of June, A. D. 1931. at ten o'clock a. m., to show cause, if any there be. why the pray er of the petitioner should not be granted, and that notice of the pen dancy of said petition and that the hearing thereof be given to all per sons interested in said matter by pub lishing a copy of this Order in the Plattsmouth Journal, a smi-weekly newspaper printed in said county, for three successive weeks prior to said day of hearing. Witness my hand, and seal of said court, this 13th day of May, A. D. 1931. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) mlS-3w County Judge. ARTIIl it . PAX OO AST, Any. it 1(1 OmHhr .. Itank Hide omalia. -brnlvi. LEGAL NOTK E To: A. M. Snyder. Snyder, his wife, first and real name un known; Theodore H. Dodd and Dodd. his wife. fi't and real name unknown. Watson, first and real name unknown, wife of Al len Watson; Snyder & Dodd. a co partnership; Mathias Snyder. Mat thias Snyder, and Snyder, his wife, first and real name unknown; E. H. Eaton and Eaton, his wife, first and real name unknown; Mary Ellen Clark. Maty E. Clark; S. N. Merriam; Selden N. Merriam; J. W. Barnes; Robert T. Maxwell; Hiliare Gaudreault; C. Hinkley; J. H. Snell; Pronger, first and real name unknown, wife of George E. Pronger; Hickey, first and real name unknown, wife of John Hickey. Wm. H. Forbes. Trustee; Henry S. Russell. Trustee. John N. A. Griswold, Trustee; All persons claiming any interest in the follow ing described real estate, to-wit: All of that part of the northeast quarter """"east quaner -t. NE) lying south and west of the 'right - of - way of the Burlington & Missouri River Railroad Company in Nebraska; also the southeast quarter of the northeast quarter (SEi NEU) and the northeast quarter of the southeast quarter (NE'4 SE4 ). all in Section Six (6). Township .Twelve (12 ) .north. Range Ten (10. East of the Sixth p. m., Cass County, Nebraska, real names unknown: You and each of you are hereby trin Pnnrt rt Caaa CV-llTitv V . .h III l: fl Mng shown at Docket 5 Page 173. -J. OS", agitinwe vuu a "fin . . la in the object and prayer of whioh is to quiet the title of the plaintiff in and to the real estate desciibed above, and to have you and each of y BL de- fendants in said action, adjuc'. ;re.l to have no lien on or interest in the above described real estate. You and each of you are required to answer said petition on or before the 22nd dav of June, 1931. HENRY F. RAASCH. Plaintiff. Phone your news Items to Xo. 6.