THURSDAY. AUG. 27, 1931. PAGE THREE PLATTSMOUTH SEMI - WEEKLY JOURNAL Cbc plattsmouth lournal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA Entered at Postoffice, Plattsmouth, Neb., as secoud-olasa mail matter R. A. BATES, SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 A YEAR IN FIRST POSTAL ZONE Subscribers living in Second Postal 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. Men's thoughts are much accord ing to their inclination. :o: ( A soft answer may turn away wrath, but never an insurance agent. A rumor says Coolidge is coming out for beer. Mebbe he's a few hops ahead now. -:o:- The ladies may rule, but man will survive. Without him there would be no excuse to wear a bridal veil. : o : - Many jobless men in California have gone in for gold digging. But until they strike they'll be on the rocks. -:o:- It would be a fine thing for every body if all the farmers could get their neighbors to cut down a little on production. :o:- Action in Tennessee against Clar ence Darrow's film may be taken to mean that the state wants no more monkey business. :o: George M. Cohan has written a song about George Washington. Well, that's about the only thing that hadn't been written about him. -:o:- Life insurance actuaries say fewer people are killed by lightning than formerly. It simply takes more to shock folks than it used to take. -:o: Bandits robbed several American tourists recently in China. That seems to be going pretty far out of the way for that kind of experience. : o : A Kansas Justice performed a mar riage ceremony, payment for which was the bride's weight in wheat. Evidently he's in the business for his health. -:o:- A well-known publishing house is putting out books in covers that can be laundered. Now if it will issue some books with washable stories, it will also help. -:o:- A Norwegian explorer proposed to go to the North Pole on a motorcycle. If we could only sell that idea to the fellow who goes past cur house every night with the cutout open! : o : That was a wise crack from Gov ernor Huey Long of Louisiana when he said of the cotton situation: "Something has got to be done, but damned if I know what it is!" : o : It has Just been declared illegal to ride a bicycle while intoxicated in the city of St. Paul. The city should now pass a blanket ordinance making any form of suicide a fel ony. One of Mahatma Gandhis ten rules of life is that it is man's pri mary duty to serve his neighbor. Cruel and inhumane treatment if the home brew in India is the same as it is in this country. :o: The Governors of Oklahoma and Texas have cut down the production of petroleum 1,000,000 barrels per day. Now watch the price of gaso line go upward. When producers benefit consumers must suffer. A German archaelogist says he has discovered the spring at which Solo mon drank. That old boy must have gulped it down in large quantities during the cold grey dawn of the morning after. In those days pitch ers of ice water could not be obtained by picking up the telephone and ask ing the bellboy to come in a helluva hurry. Nebraska State Fair Night Show Will be Spectacular Event Thaviu, distinguished bard leader of the world, is com ing to the Nebraska State Fair with an especially fine program consisting of his band and musical revue "Follies of Life." The costumes, scenery and stage setting used In the Folies Bergere in Paris as well as many prin cipals are direct from Paris. Sixty-two people constitute the cast. The entire evening program is spectacular from beginning to end. You will be pleased with the night show and fireworks. For a complete daily program wr. GEORGE JACKSON, Secretary Capitol Building Lincoln, Nebraska SEPTEMBER 4-11, 1931 Publisher Malicious gossip has been a cup ( f hemlock to many a suffering soul. :o: - Listen, Marjorie: One way to get your face lifted is to peer into the gas tank with a lighted match. Fewer Americana are touring Eu rope this year, but they are prob ably enjoying every drop of it. : o : The story that gold has been dis covered near Reno sounds reason able, there are so many golddlggers out there. -:o: It is easy to drive an automobile. Just hold to the steering wheel and trust the other fellow to be lesser lool than you are. : o : - Men are not homlier than they were in the previous generation. They only more generally wear large black rimmed spectacles. :o: "Business dislikes the self-satisfied man." says Gordon Selfridge. jr. Per haps, but oh! how business does kowtow to the self-satisfied man's money. :o: New Call hats for females are of the Empress Eugenie type all cock ed up on one side. If you want to know what brand of gin your lady freind has been drinking you will have to approach Tier from the lee ward. :o: MR. LUCAS SHINES AGAIN Emerging from too long eclipse. Mr. Lucas, executive director of the republican national committee, daz zles once more with prophetic wis dom. Cardinal national issues are infallibly picked, as we all know, by Lhe genius of national committees. Mr. Lucas chooses the tariff as "the real issue" in 19152. The republi cans will probably stand pat on the wonder-working Hawley-Smoot act, though a large number of them will ory for still steeper rates. The dem ocrats will demand revision and re Juction. There you have a direct is sue between the parlies. Prosperity can t be lugged in because both par ties want it. So there can be no di vision about it. Mr. Lucas has often shown a rich simplicity in his political proceedings and utterances. It is doubtful if even he can produce any richer product, any maturer judgment, than this. No other commentary on it is need ed than to say it is worthy of Mr. Lucas, of Chairman Fess, of the un interrupted sagacity that is to be ex pected of the republican party under its present management one is al most tempte dto say under the pres ent administration. Yet there is something disarming and childlike in Mr. Lucas. If he had not been execu tive director, he might well have been on the farm board. Let us forget all the blunders, all the golden promises that turned out to be brass. Let us have no resent ments or regrets next year. Demo crats and republicans must discuss nothing but the tariff. Admiring that as much as it ought to bo ad mired, one still finds it har.l to penetrate the mazes of the Luc isian mind. Isn't the tariff the fount and origin of prosperity, including the remarkable brand of it now on view? Then if "the real issue" is the tariff, isn't prosperity "the real isue?" There seems to be a solution oi con tinuity in Mr. Lucas' argument, but even those who cannot follow him will not cease to marvel at him. Nev York Times. BE IT UNDERSTOOD The state department has pointed out that the bankers who formed the Wiggin committee spoke for themselves when they urged a revi sion of Germany's international pay ments. Nevertheless there is a dan ger of confusion abroad. It would have been as well if the department also had explained that the position of Albert Wiggin, the American member of the committee, differed materially from that of any of his colleagues. Each of them person ally represented the central bank of the country from which he came. Mr. Wiggin did not so represent the Fed eral Reserve Bank, although his ap pointment was suggested by the gov ernor of the New York Federal Re serve Bank. The distinction is more important than it might seem. In Germany and France the central banks are so closely associated with the govern ments as practically to constitute de partments of them. As a result, pub lic opinion in those countries natur ally attaches an official significance to the activities of ihe banks and their representatives. There is a dan ger, therefore, that the report or the Wiggin committee, headed as it was by an American banker, may be -upposed abroad indirectly, at least, to commit the American government. Unjustifiable hopes may thus be raised which may in turn create ill will for this country, when the gov ernment does not act upon the re commendation of the committee. European opinion also is apt to draw mistaken conclusions from the popular support accorded President Hoover's moratorium proposal here. There is a great difference between a temporary suspension of all inter national debt payments ia a finan cial crisis and the permanent scal ing down of war debts due to the United States, which in most cases already have been vastly reduced for the benefit of our debtors. There is no evidence that the American pub lic has changed its opinion that as long as so many of those debtors maintain extravagant military and naval establishmetns, they cannot reasonably claim that their just debts impose an unjust burden. -:o:- MY COUNTRY. "TIS 0 THEE!" It is a far journey from the old Park Street Church in Boston, where it Independence Pay, 1832, a small Sunday School chorus, under the di rection of Lowell Mason, first sang in public the stanzas of "America, to that mora momentous occasion, Feb. 22. 193:. when the same an them is to be sung by millions of Ajn encan citizens assembled In Wash ington and around radio sets scat tered throughout the United States. At least, such a happy Id. tiding of voices is advocated by Dr. Cloyd H. Marvin, president of George Wash ington University, and chairman of the commission planning for the cele bration of the two hundredth anni versary of Washington's birthday next February, in the city which hears his name. Upon Dr. Walter Damrosch, well known orchestra conductor, will rest the responsibility of keeping this vast singing organization in proper tune and pitch, if the program goes through as scheduled. lie probably will have little difficulty with the singers led by the military bands and within sight of his baton, but what shall be said of that vaster company of unseen choristers who try to keep up with the measured cadences brought by a national hookup of ra dio stations? While bassos in Cali fornia stop to give "My Country" a well rounded crescendo, enthusiastic tenors in New Jersey may dash for ward with "Of Thee I Sing" so that the result may be a bit exciting and incongruous. But happily few per sons will note the discrepancy, and the agreed signal may find someone lustily singing "America" every where in the United States and be yond. Incidentally, in regard to the anthem, it is interesting to recall that many years ago, its author. Dr. Samuel F. Smith, wrote to a friend: I did not know at the time that the tune was the British "God Save the King." I do not share the regret of those who deem it an evil that the nation al tune of Britain and America is the same. On the contrary, I deem it a 'new and beautiful union between the mother and daughter, one furnishing the music (if indeed it is really English) and the other the words. It is more than likely that Dr. Smith would have found rare satis faction in this project for a com mingling of patriotic sentiments throughout the national domain next February. Up in Illinois a woman went be fore a local school board, showed her divorce papers, and was promptly given a job. She ought to make a wonderful teacher of domestic science. History of Plattsmouth from Early Day (Continued From Page 1) of Plattsmouth until Samuel Martin built the old "Barracks" there in the winter of 1S53. Until the organization of the Ter ritory of Nebraska in 1853, no one was permitted to settle west of the Missouri in what is now Nebraska, without a permit from the Secretary of War. Samuel Martin, ferry oper ator, now brought the beginnings of Plattsmouth definitely nearer when he obtained the first permit to es tablish a trading post on or near the confluence of the Platte and Missouri rivers in 185 2. In the win ter of 1853. Martin, assisted by James O'Neil and J. L. Sharp, brought logs across the Missouri River on the ice and erected the "Old Barracks" and a council house to facilitate trading with the Otoes and Mormons going west. The "Old Barracks" was a two story building while the council house was but one story high and used as living quarters and as a place to meet the Indians who si ill lived in considerable numbers in eastern Cass county. O'Neil erected another building for Martin shortly afterward immediately north and west of the two original buildings which was later used for county offices. On March 15 and 16, 1854, treaties were concluded by a commissioner representing the United States and the Omaha and Otoe Indians where by the natives agreed to evacuate the territory adjoining the Missouri River near the mouth of the Platte. This removed any impediment to white settlement from this source and pushed the Indians to the west ern part of the state. President Pierce's proclamation removed set tlement restrictions from the Nebras ka Territory went into effect on June 24, 1854 and a number of emi grants had previously gathered on the Iowa side to await preemption, some even pencilling names on claim stakes in Cass county before the territory was officially opened. The Plattsmouth Town Company was formed October 2C, 1854, and was composed of Samuel Martin, James O'Neil, J. L. Sharp, C. Nuck olls. Manly Green and Lafayette Nuckolls. Other early settlers in 1S54 included Jacob Adams. W. H. Shafer. Wheatley Mickelwaite. C. H. Woolcot. Levi Walker. Stephen Wiles, A. J. Todd and Wm. C-ullion. The city was mapped out by Surveyor (). W. Tyson and by an act approved March 14, 1S55, Plattsmouth was officially incorporated and designated by the Territorial legislature as the county seat of Cass county, much to the disgust of the aspiring citizenry of Kanosha. In return for being named county seat, fifty town lots were to be donated for tlie erection of suitable county buildings. The only other towns preceding Ports mouth in incorporation were: Ne braska City on March 2nd; Bellevue on March 5th: De Soto on March 7th, and Florence on March 13th. On the same day articles of Incor poration were granted Plattsmouth. grants of incorporation were also made to Blackbird. Brownville, Ches ter, Elizabeth, Fontanelle and Te kamah. Little is known of Samuel Martin, founder and first settler of Platts mouth other than that he came from Illinois to Coonville. Iowa, in 1S50 and succeeded L. T. Coon as ferry operator in 1852 as previously cited. Until the second city election in 1857, Plattsmouth Precinct was known as Martin's Precinct but his name was dropped from that time on and does not survive in any monument of any kind nor in any memorial. Aside from having the distinction of being the first settler, he also has the distinction of filling the first known white grave in the new town, his death occurring De cember 15. 1854. Martin's applica tion for a ferry permit and his es tablishment of a trading post are reasonably conclusive evidence that he made his livlihood by carrying Mormons and other passengers west across the Missouri River and in trading the Otoes and frontiersmen. His death in 1S54 preventsd him from sharing to any appreciable de gree in any profits which might acrue to the Town Company from the sale of lots scheduled for November, 18 54. The Bellevue Palladium became aware of The location of the new town as early as October 25, 1S54 when it announced that it had learn ed that a company of pioneers were engaged in laying the foundation of the future city of "Otoe," three miles below the mouth of the Platte. "This is a commanding point with a yood steamboat landing, surrounded by a territory abounding in timber and stone .... Success to our neigh bors!" . On November 3. 1854, Editor J. E. Johnson of the Omaha Arrow com mented editorially on a trip to the south Platte country with Actiig Governor Gumming and United States Marshall Izard. He related that the "first townsite passed was one claim ed by Mr. Martin upon which he lives and has a trading post for the Otoe and Missouri Indians. It is a pleasant site and may eventually he come a town of some importance." A week later, the Arrow called at tention to the fact that Plattsmouth had been surveyed and a sale of lots announced for November 13th. "It is at present called Plattsmouth and will doubtless become a place of some importance. We visited there a short time ago and were well pleased with the location." The charter granted Plattsmouth by the Territorial Legislature con tained forty-four sections outlining the provisions for a .municipal gov ernment and made manoatory a city election to select a Mayor, three Aldermen, a Recorder, Assessor, Treasurer and Marshall on the first Monday in August. 1855 or as soon thereafter as possible. While it became the custom for succeeding city councils to record the results of the city elections, the first brief session of the initial city council, January 29. 1S57, did noth ing more than certify that Wheatley Mickelwait was duly elected Mayor and that Jacob Vallery, Enos Wil liams and William Slaughter were duly elected as Aldermen. A little over a year had elapsed since the charter specified an election which may be reasonably charged to the fact that there were important mat ters of keeping the struggling fron tier town alive to be worked out be fore the frills of political organiza tion were sought after. At this first session of the new government, it was agreed that regular meetings would be held on the first Monday of each month and empowered the Mayor to call special sessions upon petition of thirty citizens. Plattsmouth's first legislative body began its direction of municipal af fairs with a council of three mem bers elected annually and was di vided into two committees: Improve ments and Accounts and Expendi tures. In an effort to achieve finan cial statbility, the council in it second session passed Ordinance No 1 which levied a tax of one half of one per cent on the taxable property within the corporate limits. Pour other ordinances were passed at this session which indicate somewhat the needs and exigencies of the times. Ordinance No. 2 was designed to pro hibit swine from running at large under a penalty of twenty-five cents per head. Ordinance No. 3 provided that one dog could be kept free of taxation in the corporate limits but levied an assessment of one dollar on each additional dog. To enforce the peace and quiet was the object of Ordinance No. 4 and it provided a fine of from five to fifty dollars for disturbing the peace and dignity of the city. The fifth and last act made at this first legislative session looked toward municipal improvements, au thorizing the building of four bridges at designated places. After having served all year with out pay, the council voted its mem bers an annual salary of one hun dred dollars on December 7, 1857. The council was enlarged from three to five by an act of the Territorial Legislature October 20, 185S. This led to an error in the city election of January 1859 when six aldermen were elected. Upon learning of the error, a special elect ion was held on April 1, 1S59 at whic h five members were chosen. Financial difficulties worried the new government from the start. A tax of only one half one one per cent brought little revenue as the amount of valuable property was as yet small. The chief source of rev enue came from an annual license fee of twenty-five dollars against saloons and gaming houses and from fines collected through the Recorder's of fice for drunkenness and disorderly conduct. The government had been organized but a little more than a year when bills were presented and there was no money in the treasury to pay them. A committee of two aldermen was appointed by the .Mayor to investigate the financial status of the city but a month later it was still asking for "further time." showing something of the difficulty the finance committee was having in locating revenue. The only expedient was to authorize the payment of five per cent interest on all bills payable until tiie practice of issuing city script was hit upon in the early sixties. On December 17, 1859, the treasury showed a deficit of $1,071.39. Bond issues of all sorts became popular after 1869. re lieving the council of the puzzling question of setting funds but at the same time introducing a system whic h brought with it a host of new evils. It is not surprising then that Mayor-elect Warbritton closed his inaugural address in I860 with this solemn admonition: "If we expect to rid ourselves of this debt which hangs over our head, fe must begin to keep up the corners." We have seen the government of Plattsmouth get under way despite the difficulties which beset it, let us now consider a few of the outstand ing events in the early organization aside from the political adjustments. Settlement reached the western part of Cass county in 1855 but the popu lation did not increase with very perceptible rapidity. The census of 1860 gave Plattsmouth a population of 474 while a contemporary esti mates the population of the county in 1855 as 712 which included the settlements at Kanosha and Rock Bluffs. The bulk of the settlers were clustered on the Missouri River and were kept alive by the river traffic which was just beginning to give prophecy of the increased business whic h ushered in a "boom period ' during the Sixties. The soil of Cass county was very fertile nd produc tive and profitable farming was well started by new decade which began in 1860. Further evidence of the value of farming will be discussed in a chapter dealing with the steam boat trade. While subsequent settlements in central and western Nebraska were harassed by the Indians, this situa tion offered no problem to the set tlers of Plattsmouth. Reference has already been made to treaties which pushed the Indian further west and what few Otoes and Omahas remain ed were bereft of their former war like spirit by the white man's civili zation and were not viciously in clined. But there were a few Indian "scares" and the local Indians made themselves nuisances by their con stant begging. They visited the set tlements frequently and made it an especial point to come when the men were at work. They would ask ror food and if refused, would not leave but peer in at the windows much to the discomfort of the women and children who had an instinctive fear of Indians whether good or bad. With considerable Indian trouble no further west than Kearney, it is not surprising that the settlers could be aroused by rumors of forth coming massacres. During the winter of 1856 news came that an attack had been made by hostile Indians on settlers on Salt Creek in Lancas ter county. Companies of vigilantes were hurridly formed at Plattsmouth, Rock Bluffs and Nebraska City but the much feared uprising failed to materialize. In February, 1857, a party of whites made an attack upon a band of Indians in the western part of the county largely as a re sult of the hysteria fearing an In dian attack. Three prisoners were taken along with a dozen ponies. All were later returned to the Indians. Child, a contemporary, expressed the opinion that someone should have been punished for the affair but not an Indian. These unwarranted fears were further agitated during 1863 and 1S64 when the- settlers became suspicious that southern sympath izers were inciting the Indians. Some anxiety and unrest followed and al most eve ry settlement had regular drills for defense. ( To Be Continued ) FOR SALE 260 acre Stock Farm adjoining Weeping Water. 100 acres farm land. Good improvements ; three good pastures. Walking distance of 1 1 i ij-1 1 school. $85 per acre. P. O. Box 225. Weeping Water. a24-3 sw CHRISTIAN SCIENCE The subject of the Lesson-Sermon read at all Christian Science churches and societies on Sunday, August 23, was "Mind." One object of the cita tions read is to show that God is the only Mind, and properly to distin guish between God as the real Mind of the universe and the false sense which fails to understand God and iran and which really is illusion. One of the selections read from "Science and Health with Key to the Scrip tures ' by MarJ- Baker Eddy (p. 469) is in part as follows: "The exter minator of error is the great truth that God, good, is the only Mind, and that the suppositions opposite of infinite Mind called devil or evil is not Mind, is not Truth, but error, without intelligence or real ity." One of the selections raed from the Bible is in part as follows: "Happy is the man that findeth wis dom, and the man that getteth un derstanding. She is more precious than rubies: and all the things thou canst desire are not to be compared unto her." (Prov. 3:13,15.) Real special, guaranteed house paints, $1.65 gallon: barn paint, $1.25 gallon. Buy it at Murdock Farmers Usion. a20-4tw EIGHT MILE GROVE LUTHERAN CHURCH Sunday. August 30th. 9:30 a. m. Sunday school. 10:30 a. m. English services. The usual congregational meeting will be held in connection with this service. All members are urged to be present. FARM LOAN WANTED On 145 acres 5 miles SW of Platts mouth. $7,000.00. at 5 on 5 or 10 years time. If interested call on or write me. JOHN M. LEYDA. a20-2tw Plattsmouth, Neb. FIRST FROST OF SEASON Ashland. Wis. The first frost of the season was reported in the Che quamegon bay district. Cucumber and tomato plants were nipped, but not damaged seriously. Need help? Want a Job? You can pet results in either event by placing your ad in the JournaL NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of John Maurer. 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 18th day of September, 1931. and on the 19th day of December. 1931. at the hour of ten o'clock a. m. 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 cf claims against said es t:ne is three months from the 18th day of September, A. D. 1931. and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 18th day or s. i tember. 1931. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 21st day of August, 1931. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) a2 4-3w County Judge NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the Estate of C N. Barrows, deceased. Notice of Administration. All persons interested in said estate are hereby notified that a petition has he.Mi til. in said Court alleging tnai Bald deceased died leaving no last will and testament and praying ror ad ministration upon his estate and for anch other and further orders and proceedings in the premises as may be required by the statutes in sucn cases made and provided to the end that said estate and all things pertaining thereto may be finally settled and de termined, and that a hearing will be had on said petition before said Court on the 18th day of September, A. D. 1931, and that if they fail to appear at said Court on said 18th day of September, A. D. 1931, at ten o'clock n. tti c. contest the said petition, the Court may grant the same and grant administration of said estate to H. W. Barrows or some other suitable person and proceed to a settlement thereof. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) a24-3w County Judge. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Emma C. Miller, deceased. To the creditors of saia estate: You are hereby notified, that I will sit at the County Court room in Plattsmouth. in said county, on the 11th day of September, A. D. 131, and on the 12th day of December, A. D. 1931, at ten o'clock in the forenoon of each clay to receive and examine all claims against said es tate, with a view to their adjust ment and allowance. The time limit ed for the presentation of claims against said estate is three months from the 11th day of September, A. D. 1931, and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 11th day of September. 1931. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 14th dav of August. 1931. A. II. DUXBURY, (Seal) al7-3w County Jude. 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. TV) all persons Interested in the es tate of Dora McNurlin, deceased: On reading the petition of Jennie Barrett praying a final settlement and allowance of her account filed in this Court on the 22nd day of August, 1931. and for final distribution of the assets of said estate and for her discharge as Administratrix; It is hereby ordered that you ami all persons interested in said matter may. and do. appear at the County Court to be held in and for said county, on the 18th day of Septem ber. A. D. 1931, 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 pendency of said petition and the hearing thereon be given to all per sons interested in said matter by pub 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 hereunto set my hand and the seal of said Court, this 22nd day of August, A. D. 1931. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) a24-3w County Judge. ORDER OF HEARINC 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 William D. Wheeler, de ceased : On reading the petition of W. A. Wheeler,, praying a final settlement and allowance of his account filed in this Court on the Sth day of August. 1931 and for assignment of the assets of said estate and his dis charge as administrator; It is hereby ordered that you and all persons interested in said mat ter may. and do, appear at the Coun ty Court to be held in and for said county, on the 4th day of September, A. D. 1931 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 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 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 8th day of August, A. D. 1931. A. EL DUXBURY. (Seal, al0-3w County Judge. NOTICE OF REFEREE'S SALE In the District Court of the County of Cass. Nebraska William Mangold and wife Lola Mangold: Ruby Mangold, single; Ella Bock and husband. Jacob Rock; Edward Mangold and wife. Lottie Mangold; Mice Huches and hus band. Perry Hughes: Oscar Mangold and wife. Hazel Mangold ; Walter Mangold and wif. M:.iy Mangold NOTICE and W I a a I Dudley. widow. Plaintiffs. vs. Paul Mangold, a minor, and Louis hiessl, Defendants. Notice is hereby given that under and by virtue of a decree of the Dis triel Court of Cass County, Ne braska, entered in the above entitled cnuse on the 29th day of July. 1931. and an order of sale issued by said court on the 29th .lay 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 ol sale and balance on confirm ation; possession to be given March i, 1932. Dated this 29th day of July, 1931. WILLIAM G. KIECK. Referee. W. A ROBERTSON, Attorney for Plaintiffs. J30-5w Journal Want Ada get results,