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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 3, 1931)
MONDAY. AUG. 3, 1931. PLATTSMOUTH SEMI WEEKLY JOTTHTAX PAGE TTTRTH Cbc plattsmoutb lournal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA Entered at Postoffice, Plattamouth, Neb., as second-class mail matfer 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. Money will buy a mighty good dog. But it won't buy the wag of his tail. Read this again. :o: It behooves the college graduate henceforth to consider before his vacation. his vocation A Massachusetts man is said to be holding sixteen different jobs. Sweet are the U6es of diversity. :o: Well, the rain clouds haven't ar rived yet. Too bad, for vegetation is certainly needing rain badly. :o: A good many Iowa cars in town last night. Our neighbors in the tall corn state appreciate the opportunity of one toll-free day each week and are coming in increasing numbers. :o: It's only a couple of months now until we come to the second anniver sary of the Wall street crash, and per haps a big party or celebration of some kind ought to be prepared. :o: One of our readers referring to our editorial yesterday on the large num ber of candles used last year, offers the explanation that it's because peo ple are burning them at both ends. : o : A Chicago woman, applying for divorce, says that within 25 years her husband beat her up more than 2.000 times, but she doesn't say what she got mad about so sudden ly. :o: A burglar cracked the safe at a miniature golf course in Des Moines and found $10. Nobody seems to of fer any explanation unless the owner of the course had Just cashed his Christmas savings account. :o: We see where another one of those Bob Benchley imitators hrpaV intn the news a fellow named George Bernard Shaw. He went to the races in Moscow the other day and went to sleep and missed the big race. . :o: Mr. Shaw says he is ashamed to own that Russia made the Soviet ex periment before Great Britain did. As a matter of fact, Russia didn't make it so far ahead of Britain. The main difference is that Britain made it in reverse Britain pays the dole to the people, while Russians pay the dole to the governing party. -:o: It is still an undeniable fact that the Chamber of Commerce directorate used good judgment in voting to sus pend bi-weekly luncheons during July and August. It would be mighty hard to get the average man out to a noon day luncheon on a day like today, for instance, and so far the time has been made up pretty well of days just like today. An automobile was driven by rock ets in Berlin recently. That is prob ably more desirable than the usual run of back-seat explosions. :o: The best way in the world to make a man appreciate the job he holds is to require him to go on a vacation for two weeks without pay. : o : The Louisiana minister who preach ed for 58 hours on "What is Wrong with the Church?" had the answer right on the tip of his tongue. :o: "Everybody should pay an income tax," says Secretary Mellon. All right. Uncle Andy, but don't you think ev erybody should first be provided with -:o:- "My wife is a woman of few words." said a Plattsmoutb man recently, as he made the long drive for No. 4 hole on the local links, adding slyly "often spoken." :o: A west Main street resident, tell ing of an accident that befell his wife said: "She stood right there at the telephone until she wore a hole thru the floor and fell in." :o: The Plattsmouth Rotarians, Frank Cloidt and Carl Ofe have won the unstinted praise of their fellow mem bers as a result of the fish feed pro vided at Tuesday's Rotary luncheon. Whether the boys actually caught the fish or bought them makes no differ ence to the hungry Rotarians who did full justice to the repast. : o : When we feel "fagged out" from the extreme heat, why not think of the poor undernourished families in city tenements. Burning hot rays of the sun, shut in without a bit of cool ing breeze so. why grumble because we have to sweat for a few hours a day until we can get home to a tuui- ing shower or a place beside the elec tric fan? :o:- A CRISIS IN CALIFORNIA Chicago Tribune A delegation of Californians, with typical generosity, has taken the trou ble to go to Washington to present to the nation's leaders the opportun ity of conserving California's water supply. The situation is described as critical. Something has happened, it appears, to California's rivers. With pain it is learned that California has already paid a million dollars or more of her own money for a survey of the situation, but as the survey is re garded merely as a preliminary to a federal grant the rest of the country will not take offense. It is not as if Californian's had questioned our eag erness to pay their bills. Only the unduly sensitive could come to so bizarre a conclusion. After all, we have undertaken to build Los Angeles a 165 million dollar water works at Boulder dam and we have put the United States treasury at the service of the grape growers to per mit them to profit from evasions of the prohibition law. There is no limit to the expenditures we would be honored to undertake for the en hancement of life on the shores of the boundless Pacific. But, eager as we are to help, the fact is inescapable that an emergency exists. If Califor nia waits until congress meets and acts it will be too late. Unfortunate ly, too. few of the state legislatures are in session at the moment. Other wise, there is scarcely room to doubt that New York. Pennsylvania or Illi nois would leap to the rescue with unlimited funds. Emergencies must be met with emergency measures. In this in stance the rest of the nation can only humble itself and permit California to conserve her own water. This con clusion, needless to say, is reached with the utmost reluctance, for it is not easy to break with tradition. It must be clearly undersood that if the national treasury does not respond this time no precedent is established. An illuminated memorial to that ef fect, bound in appropriate style, should be presented to Senator Hiram Johnson. That is the least the rest of us can do by way of reparation. :o: THE NERVE OF B0WEN Merely because grasshoppers are threatening to add to our other woes of 1931 is no reason to take a pistol and end it all. It will be a lot more fun to live on and tell our grand children about the great plagues of 1941, enlarging on them with pictur esque details from time to time, after the annroved fashion of our own grandfathers. :o: Well, the county attorney of Doug las county has reversed his former de cision not to prosecute Botorff on a jail-break charge. He now faces two charges the Barrish robbery in um aha and the attempted escape. In the meantime Banning still is a fugitive from justice and we doubt if he is in the vicinity of Tekamah or anywhere around these parts by now. : o : with bo manv announcing that they no longer will be responsible for the little woman's debts, and so many others wanting to take folks on motor trips sharing expenses for oil and gas. there's hardly any room in the agony column of the daily press nowadays for the lovelorn. Yet, we have no doubt the course of true love is no smoother in depressed times than in any other. :o: If baby COL has i c a ruv fat ttfefat. Co&el No A far alarm ff Castoria is handy. vegetable preparation onna ilort, and can never harm. It the sensible thine woen ehaUren a no aSmc- Whether it s ttm stotnaen, or Seattle bamdkc cafe or constipation; When tary tongoea ace tK. brmth n bad. Whenever there's need of gentle regntoOon. um drenlcMe the taste of Castoria. and its Mini rpfrfc it aale for freqoent use. And a more liberal doae of CjKiftm mm okona hftttT tar bdvh! chaVtren Strang memw 'wuj National Guardsmen will en 'rain the last of this week for the a nual encampment at Ashland. The gr unds there have been greatly impro d in the past eight years, which . ".lows what might have been done h re if a little more effort had been ex rted to get the annual encampment here. When the encampment was held here in l22 fiatsmoucn was mgcu ij or ganize a motorized hospital company, but the enlistment of men was never undertaken and some other town got the unit. :o:- President Hoover warns: "Don't cut wages as a means of bringing in creased prosperity." No enterprise, big or little, would be expected to maintain wages at a level they simp ly couldn't meet and which would force them into bankruptcy. On the other hand, the enterprises that are making enough to maintain wages on present levels will surely find it to thoir advantaee to continue them there. This depression thing can't last forever In fact, financial experts see improvement in the near future. In the meantime, however, it is a real problem and one that concerns every wage earner and employer. When a crook gets into trouble he calls loudly for help from those who have befriended him the most and whose confidence he has betrayed 2 ""kIiv Rill I...M..1 tinted swindler and crook, writes local Le gion officials asking for a lot of things none of wnicn ne w:n get. He says his membership card was burned up in the fire and wants an other. And, why not : in u nanus of his ilk, a membership card in any organization is a magic passpo't the key to big money. He used itat Red Oak, at Davenport, Iowa, aid all along the way as he cashed hB forg ed checks, borrowed money torn a Legionnaire in Wichita, bout cars from other Legionnaires. Of course, he'd like another one possbly in the hope he might escape, rthough in his present condition tn? need be no immediate fear of thaon the part of hospital attendants When his "crooked" proclivities re dis covered, Plattsmouth Legiosofficials lent every effort possible to d in his capture, sending telegrams id other wise participating in the hit that ended only when an act ofrovince sent him spinning down theiountain side in his ill-gotten car id scat tered his forged checks to t view of those who came to his rele. His phvsical condition, pitiful it may be, is little more than justlleserved nortion of the nunishmentue. and will be added to when he aears be fore the bars of justice toltone to the state for his infractioif "man- made" laws. : o : THE RIGHT IND Of TRAINING FOR BOYS The opening ot the C. M. T. C. training period at Fort Crook yes terday, brings to the army post there, and in rotation to the rifle range north of this city, a large number of young men from all over this part of the west. Some of them are coming back for their second and third years while others are entered in the first year training class. The creation of C. M. T. camps was one of the finest things that came out of our lessons in the world war, al though there are still misguided and misinformed people who condemn the practice as militaristic. As a matter of fact, it is as far from being that as night is apart from day. Young men of today, especially the town youths, are not given the ad vantages of body development that existed even a few years ago when cars and a few other lazy man's con veniences were not plentiful. Even the noble art of walking has become an accomplishment of the past. The few who do walk today, hurry and scurry hither and yon with heads bowed and shoulders stooped. No time to straighten up, with head erect and chest expanded and just walk for the sake of the good that walking does us. The Boy Scout training program, admitted by all to be a valuable ad junct to present day living, because it gets boys into the open and makes them more or less self-sustaining, is founded on the sam basic principles as the C. M. T. C. training camp and is the most valuable health-giving opportunity open to boys and young men today. Regular hours, plenty of clean wholesome food, the proper exercise, medical attention, supervised program of sports and just the right amount of disciplinary routine, makes life at the camp a thirty day period of enjoyment for every red-blooded boy who goes. That's why the enrollment figures are constantly increasing un til now it is a problem each year to handle all those who apply. Best of all, is the regard for auth ority that Is instilled in the boys a wholesome attitude on the part of any youth. Other minor things that enter into the equation include neat ness of person, ability to cope with unusual situations and a broadened viewpoint of life in general. Anyone who knows war in all its v. -. ' 1 1 r v ii not linear in spp EUROPEAN HATREDS MUST FADE Kansas City Star Disappointment naturally has been expressed in Germany over the fail- j ure of the seven-power conference in i London to provide the long-trrm credit that Chancellor Heinrich Bruening and Foreign Minister Julius! Curtius had sought. But the uncer tainties of the German political sit uation, together with a reasonable j doubt as to whether the country reallv needed such a loan, made it impossible to grant their request. The conference, however, did produce im portant results. Two of them deserve special attention. In the first place, the governments involved assumed a serious responsi bility in advising private investors to keep their present loans in Germany. The conference went on record as re garding recent withdrawals of for eign credit as based on a lack of con fidence "not justified by the economic or budgetary situation of the coun try." In the event of a German revo lution which resulted in the repudia tion of private debts, for example, the position of the governments that had advised their investors not to with draw would be, to say the least, em barrassing. The conference, there fore, cannot be charged with a lack of courage. In the second place, the conference seems to have fostered a better spirit between the French and German gov ernments. The public recognition by Premier Pierre Laval of France, in a post-conference statement, that "there can be no confidence in the world un til harmony reigns between our two great peoples," is a distinct contribu tion. Much remains to be done on both sides of the Rhine to secure such harmony, but with good will it can be obtained. It is encouraging to hear the head of the French gov ernment declare that both pea e and safety depend upon Franco-German co-operation. :o: SENATOR C0UZENS SPEAKS Will Your Auto License Cost You $10,000.00 or will you pay a Few Dollars a Year to Protect Yourself against Such a Possibility? THK. KV Automobile Fiatanelal RfBonlblllt l n of Ne branka nklch birumm t i ,- Auimt 3, srlvm uu our In i - Tbia law provide tbat antra uu au atlat it STi.OOO.OO Judcni-iit for oar prnoo injured and JuUKmruu In the amount of SlO.tMMMMl an a reau.lt of one aeeideat la which miirr than one p-ron I injured aad a jadement for Sl.tMMMMi for damage to property, jour operator lleeae and the licene ol anj i r ou own will be nuapended and will not he reinitiated until mich j ml tt men i are aatlnSed and until tio ean cite proof of your ability to pay j nil ir . i, i . for future accident. The simplest and most inexpensive way to protect yourself is thru Automobile Liability and Property Damage Insurance taken out Now. After the Accident It is too Late See Us Now A. H. & R. M. DUXBURY "Dependable Insurance" Speaking in Los Angeles a few days ago. Senator James Couzens said: "I can not understand how any one can consider cutting wages, for it is only through payment of high wages that the workers are given a buying power that helps to make the market for our manufactured goods. Those industries that have maintain ed high wage schedules are best off The same thought was expressed by President Hoover, who has urged industries of the nation to hold fast to present schedules. Babson. the great financial wizard, making his first predictions in regard to relief from depressed conditions, says that business has seen its worst and that within a reasonable time this coun- a period of our nation ever plunged into another war big or little. But they do know, that if war ever comes, the uimre- paredness that preceded the great World conflict makes young men targets for a trained enemy and sub ject to virtual slaughter in time of close-rank combat. It won t hurt any youth to learn to carry a gun. to obey commands of try aga-n enter a superior office, to stand at atten- marked prosperity. tion or sleep under a pup tent, get up at daybreak, stand revilie, eat a hear ty breakfast and do a bit of drilling. And when every mother's son of the two thousand now in camp comes back home, he will stand a little straighter, head a trifle more erect. breathing deeper of the pure air that the great God has supplied for all humanity to inhale. The youths being sent to jail for law infraction seldom include one who has attended a C. M. T. camp. ter last year really great trouble. .o: didn't cause any 60.000 SIGN THE PETITION Referendum petitions on the new tru kers' license law. passed bv the cf last legislature over the veto of Gov ernor Bryan, have been filed at Lin coln. A total of sixty thousand Ne braskans have signed the petitions 15,000 more than the required num ber to invoke a referendum. Credit for the energetic campaign to secure signatures is due Rea Mc Maken, of this city, recently elected as head of the state truckers' associa tion. The truckers, spurned by the tax claims made by railroad adher ents, are opening an educational campaign in which they propose to give the public their side of the story. An advertisement in the Journal the past few days contains facts and fig ures that might well cause one to ponder. :o: Tomorrow is the last day of "free dom of the road" for auto drivers. Beginning Monday each will be held to strict accountability for whatever infractions of the law they may com mit. An especially heavy penalty (and justly so) is provided for drunk en drivers. Booze and gasoline don't mix and the sooner the driving pub lic takes full recognizance of this fact the better off it will be for everyone drivers and pedestrians alike. : o : The people of Plattsmouth have sweat more water during the past ten days than fell last night and early this morning. However, the rain clouds in the sky and the weather man's prophecy give hope that a real rain will yet come of this. :o: i-:"i":"M"i"i-i-i"!"i"H- Advice to "hold fast" to the fellow of moderate means who can't keep up his payroll, must of course be disre garded, following the law of self- SOUTH BEND Ashland Gaaette X 1 M I' M- and Mrs. Sawyer and Luella Sawyer attended a six o'clock dinner Fri day evening at the home of Mr. and M. Lloyd Scott of Alvo. Mrs. George Capeon motored to Lincoln the first of last week to get hr sister. Mrs. Iee A. Muckenhaupt Alvo from the Lincoln General hospital where she was receiving medical care. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hoffman and son, Milton, of Greenwood. Mr. and Mrs. Johnson and son. Norman and James and Lucille Cbristenson were Sunday dinner guests at the William 'jlum home. Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Kitrell and family of Lincoln, Mr. and Mrs. Sid Kitrell of Memphis. Mr. and Mrs. John Trader of Ceresco. Mis- Stella ( louse of Lincoln and Mr. and Mrs. George Thimgan were Sunday din ner guests at the Wm. Kitrell home. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska. Cass Coun ty, S8. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Ger trude E. Morgan, 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 21st day of August, A. D. 1931. and on the 21st day of November, 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 21st day of August, A. D. 1931. and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 21st day of Aug ust. 1931. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 20th day of July. 1831. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) j27-3w County Judge. NOTICE TO CREDITORS ty. The State of Nebraska, Cass Coun- Robert Long shipped two loads of attle Monday. Henry Stander and Will Kleiser motored to Omaha Tuesday. Miss Laura Richard spent Sunday preservation and if wage cutting will ! with Elizabeth Hoffmeister. do nothintr more for him than nro- Lula Mae Nuhn is spending a few long arrival of the fatal day when he must close his doors, it is justifiable. On the other hand, hard times are being used as a cloak by many in dustries amply able to hold up pres ent wage schedules as the excuse for cutting down their men to a stand- u.wU..i...B w.e mxUr suu.e ar(j of ,iv, t becomine to Inod. antagonists that they are a place of prn rinv Hviiw.tinn Just a few more weeks freedom for the boys and girls anlien the old schoolbell will ring ag. There are always the usual few lo look with apprehension on thelurn of school days, but they areiatly in the minority and we are i to say that for the most part thouth of today enjoys life at schooBally as well as the care-free life lacation time. It's the proper mixtf work and play tha: results in fest in tellectual and physical cfopment and the best place to ge! is the American public schools. :o: Continental company iVing its troubles in Otoe county, fTo date seven suits have been file district court, alleging false state by the agents seeking easemenivileges, mostly concerning the p of the company to exercise the lof emi nent domain But the oage still holds pretty true, namebsession is nine points of the land the pipe line companies havlr pipes safely imbedded under rolling acres of a good many Clid Otoe county farms. :o: Bead the Journal Wis. despoliation for young boys. Care ful scrutiny of the habits of every entrant and severe disciplinary meas ures for those who won't be govern ed by the rules of camp life quickly weed out the undesirables. The number of Plattsmouth bovs at camp this year is greater than at any time since the beginning of C M. T. C. nearly ten years ago, and the Journal congratulates every parent of a boy sent there this year on the good judgment displayed in giving the youth a chance to better himself physically. :o: Plattsmouth Legionnaires will elect delegates to the forthcoming state convention at Fremont, at a short business meeting next Tuesday night. This post is entitled to three repre sentatives on the floor of the conven tion. Fremont egionnaires and the At best, money is but a relative ar ticle of exchange and lack of it cur tails business generally. The lowering of wages in any con cern or commodity must necessarily curtail buying power and by that much longer delay the return of that prosperity we all enjoyed a few years ago. :o: MOEE ROAD CONTBACTS On August 20th, at Lincoln, the final letting of the current vear is to be made. The projects included are mostly grading and gravel, but included in the lot are a number of connecting links, principal of which is a 14-mile stretch north of Neligh, on State Highway No. 14, known as the K. N. D.. which means Kansas, Nebraska, Dakota. When this is completed. No. 14 will be hard sur businessmen of that enterprising city faced from where t enters tQe are working hand in hand to make it the most colorful and largest attend ed of any state Legion convention to date. :o: The state of Colorado is planning a wholesale release of "trusties" from its state prison at Canon City, which has been a hot bed of dissention and strife, includiner. several outbreaks in the past few years. Crowded con ditions will thus be overcome, say the officials, who offer that as about the only excuse for their action. :o: FOE SAL Fresh Guernsey cows. Likewise & Pollock, Phone 3103, Murray, Nebr. below Superior clear through to the towrv of Niobrara, where it makes its exit from Nebraska over a ferry line across the Mihsouri river, and where great efforts are being exerted to se cure a toll bridge. Other projects on U. S. 20 will close up gaps along that route. A negligible amount of paving is included in the letting, due to short age of funds with which to meet the federal appropriations. What is be ing put in is in widely scattered lo cations and at points where it has teen found well night impossible to maintain earth roads during the thawing-out season that comes nearly every spring, but due to a mild win- dav with Mrs Robert Long Henry Stander and son, Charles, were Omaha visitors one day last week. Mrs. Henry Stander spent Thurs day afternoon with Mrs. Bert Mooney. Harry Long, Robert Long and Tyler Nunn were Omaha visitors Monday. Mrs. Albert Blum ar.d son, Allen, visited at the Wm. Blum home Mon day afternoon. Mr and Mrs. V. L. Martin were Sunday dinner guests at the F. T. Graham home. Mr. and Mrs. G. Elrod and family crent Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Lert Winget. Mr and Mrs. George Capson spent Sunday visiting with their parents in Weeping Water. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Tallen and sons of Alvo spent Sunday evening at the Henry Stander home. We are glad to report that Mrs. B. Dill who has been quite sick for pome time is improving. Miss Esther Carnicle returned home Sunday after working in Schuyler for a few weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Orville Richards and daughter, Joyce, spent Sunday even ing at the John Sweeney home. Mr. and Mrs. Charley Buell and daughter, Alice, spent Sunday even ing at the Floyd Haswell home. Mrs. Wm. Winget spent from Sat urday evening until Sunday evening at the Crawford home in Murdock. Mr. and Mrs. John Timm, Jr., and sons and Mrs. Mollie Newman spent Sunday evening at the Oscar Dill home. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Stander and son. Charles, spent Sunday afternoon at the Chas. Stander home near Greenwood. Mr. and Mrs. George Vogel and son, Loren. and Mr.-,. Critchfield spent Sunday evening at the Wm. Blum home. S?mmy and Jack Long are visit ing with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Sturzenegger of Grefna a few lays this week. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Nelson and family and Rosalie Nelson were Sun day dinner and supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bert Winget. Mrs. Tyler Nunn who is at the Uni versity hospital in Omaha, under vent a serious operation Friday and i? getting along as well as can be erpected. Mr. and Mrs. F. T. Graham, Mr. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of John Gomerdinger, deceased. To the creditors of said estate: You are hereby notified. That I will sit at the County Court Room in Plattsmouth, in sail County, on the 21st day of August, 1C31 and on the 23rd day of November. 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 2 1st day of August. A. D. 1931. and the time limited for payment of debts Is one year from said 21st day of Aug ust. 1931. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 24th day of July, 1931. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) J27-3w County Judge. NOTICE OF REFEREE'S SALE In the District Court of the County of Cass. Nebraska llliam Mangold and wife Lola Mangold; Ruby Mangold, single; Ella clock and husband. Ja t Pock; Edward Mangold and wife. Lottie Mangold; Alice Hughes and hus band. Perry Hughes; Oscar Mangold and wife. Hazel NOTICE Mangold; Walter Mangold and wife, Mary Mangold and Winnie Dudley, widow, Plaintiffs. vs. Paul Mangold, a minor, and Louis Schiessl, Defendants. J Notice is hereby given that under end by virtue of a decree of the Dis trict Court of Cass County, Ne braska, entered in the above entitled ciuse on the 29th day of July. 1931. and an order of sale issued by said court on the 29th day of July, 1931. the undersigned, sole referee, will sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash at the south front door of the Court House in the City of Plattsmouh, Cass County. Nebras ka, on the 1st day of September, 1931, at 10 o'clock a. m.. the fol lowing described real estate, to-wit: The northwest quarter (NW) of section twenty three (23), Township twelve (12), north. Range twelve (12). east of the 6th p. m., in Cass County, Nebraska. Said sale will be held open for one hour. Abstract of title will be fur nished to purchaser; terms of sale 10 of the amount of the bid at time ot aale and balance on confirm ation; possession to be given March t. 1932. Dated this 29th day of July. 1931. WILLIAM G. KIECK. Referee. IT. A ROBERTSON, Attorney for Plaintiffs. J30-&W