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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 11, 1932)
TUTTBSDAY, TEESi. 11, 1022. PLATTSXIOUTH SEMI - WEEKLY JOTTILIIAL PAGE THSEE TTEie Plattsmouth Journal FDBIISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, KEBBASKA Entered at Postoffice, Plattsmouth, Neb., as second-class mail matter R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PBICE $2.00 A YEA& 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, 13.50 per year. All subscriptions are payable strictly in advance. All that most foreign countries ak of Uncle Sam is to be left a loan. :o: A Chinaman's chance seems to be hat the Chinese haven't got in Manchuria.. :o: As -we understand it, Germany is due to remain financially sick until she is 'well heeled. :o: Maybe the stars and planets don't affect human conduct, but it's the most. charitable explanation. ' :o: Fortunately, every closed bank has sufficient assets to pay the receiv ers and lawyers who "liquidate" it. :o: There's currency enough in - this country, no doubt, but our personal impression is that it's insufficiently current. -:o:- There is nothing strange in the fact that the American tourist trade in Canada has taken a drop. It al ways did. :o: It is a fact that singing is ex tremely beneficial in certain cases of deafness. say3 a medical column And vice-versa. -:o:- Thirty years ago a motor car on the highway was considered just as big a nuisance as a horse and buggy on one are now. :o: The Japanese recognize only two kinds of Chinamen. If they run, they're Chinese soldiers. If they fight, they're bandits. :o: A business leader says that work will end the depression. Well, turn about is fair play the , depression has almost ended woxlt - :oV Ripley tells of a nebula which is "speeding away from the earth at the rate of 11,000 miles a second." We'd say that its discretion matches its speed. :o: : It's the little things that have made America look askance at Japan's intentions in Manchuria things like sending the regulars in, instead of Marines. - :o: On reading the dispatch, "Japan warns foreigners to leave Man churia,"., we almost burst out with applause; but after a. moment we remembered that .Japan is not in the habit of talking to herself. : :o: A Des Moines woman- who with eight children has lived in poverty for years, is heir to part of an estate in Germany. She says she is going to indulge her lifelong ambition to raise chickens, which gives you some idea of the immense fortune which has been bequeathed to her. GIVE HIM- these PRECIOUS VITAMINS enfld from winter colds and ills. SSw?6 ets Plentiful supply of body building vitamins D and A. thilt oils contain some of f,T?h?Uns- ?e od "Wen contain. 5t ??Sly , them come ne spot m cold arctic regions. That is SL V ? It is the S?-0 ?ro'0ten' Norway, catch. Set it at Kexall Drue Stores onlT F. G. FRICEXE GO. . Plattsmouth, Nebraska When Japan gets the Chinese bandits all subdued will she be elig ible for the Nobel peace prize? :o: "What, do you do with your old suit?" asks a woman novelist. Take it off at night and put it on again in the morning. :o: The only certain thing about pros perity is that a lot of busy people will be enjoying it while others are watching for it to show up. :o: No doubt T. R., Jr., will have a successful administration in the Philippines. For one thing, he will not have to run against Al Smith. :o: Buckingham Chandler says that the farmer never knows hunger or unemployment. It's the farmer's wife who never knows unemployment, and that is why the farmer never knows hunger. :o: We string along with the Toledo Blade which says: "One of the mar velous tricks done by radio is that of lifting a man to the realm cf the stars, through the medium of divine music, then dropping him into a can of soup." :o: We do not feel fully qualified to help out the information man in explaining the maKe-up of the Jap anese Diet, but from the way things have been going lately we wouldn't be surprised to find out that it was mostly raw meat. :o: There are few of us who can get along without incurring pecuniary obligations, but an unusual case is that of a motorist friend of curs who is still paying installments on the car exchanged for the car he sold in part payment for the car he --now has. :o: The communications from the Jap anese war office justifying Japan's course in Shanghai have a curiously reminiscent- sound to anyone who re members reading the papers in 1914. But one important feature is miss ing. ve haven t heard tnat the Jap anese war office has effected a na tional hookup mit Gott. :o: "Is there a time limit, after which the old large size currency will be of no value?" inquires an anxious read er of an eastern newspaper. Unfor tunately the editor was obliged to reply that there was not, however much he would have liked to state otherwise. A negative . reply might have caused a hoarder to loosen up and put some old money into cir culation. :o: LAST WHISTLE OF THE 5:15 All over America the 5:15's are going and going rapidly. They are licked. Their business is gone. Not alone to the motor busses, but to the private motor cars, so-called the individual vehicles of the individuals of a highly individualistic nation who long since have found that a car in the garage, read yto go any where at its owner's bidding, at any hour of day or night, is worth more to them than a lot of cars down at the railroad station, which move only when some distant power at head quarters so ordains. Thirty per cent of the rail mile age of the country last year brought in less than 2 per cent of the gross revenues. That is the answer. More decapitation. In many cases, actual abandonment. Against political and other strong pressures, this last is not always easy to accomplish. A good many small communities begin to appreciate their railroads when they are about to be taken from them. Then comes the hue and cry. The Milwaukee road cut a short branch line out of service running up to a small Wisconsin county seat. and prepared to abandon it entire ly. Then it was that email county eeat first realized that the branch road, upon which it had turned its back contemptuously for nearly a decade past, was a large source of its school taxes. It shrieked to the high heavens. Too late. Tblast train made its last trip 7-and the county y.seat was left to the glories, and the occasion al vagaries, of the highway alone. Edward Hungerford In the American Mercury. WHO SACKS TARIFF BOARD APPOINTMENTS Shortly after President Hoover entered the White house he inaugur ated the practice of making public the backers of successful candidates for appointment to important admin istrative posts. The departure was accompanied by a general round of applause and there was much talk of the "constructive statesmanship' involved. Soon, however, the prac tice was abandoned. And now, far frcm favoring appointments "open ly arrived at," Mr. Hoover has re fused the specific request of the sen ate finance committee for the names of the backers of his appointees to the tariff commission. Robert L O'Brien of Massachusetts and Ira L. Oinburn of Connecticut. The reported reason for refusing to divulge to the senate committee tht backers of these appointees is that it wou'a be contrary to prece dent. Just what precedent was dus up to cover the case it is not easy to imagine, since the president him ce'f se. a precedent pointing in ex actly the opposite direction, amid the great fanfare of trumpels. But regardless of the technicalities in volved, the refusal quite justifies Sen ator Costigan of Colorado in his de cision to oppose the confirmation of the appointments, which were report ed favorably by the senate finance committee after its request to the president to furnish the names of the backers vfas refused. As matters stand at present, the president has named to a commis sion which, with inevitable changes in our tariff law, will assume a na tional importance of the first rank, two men whose records disclose lit tle or no peculiar competence for the job at hand, which is primarily one of expect economic analysis. Under such circumstances the principal re liance in attempting to guage the quality of these appointments is the nature of the backing which prompt ed the president to make them. And to that obvious necessity the presi dent, relying upon technicalities, re plies with a refusal to disclose the nature of this backing. While Senator Costieran, whose opinions about the tariff commis sion's set-up gain weight by virtue of 10 years of distinguished serv ice on that body, apparently bases his opposition to the " confirmation on broader-grounds than the pres ident's refusal to divulge the sup port for the appointments, that re fusal is. of itself, sufficient ground for opposition. A senate committee more alert to its duty in hte prem ises would not have supinely accept cd Mr. Hoover's refusal to enlighten it about these appointments, and the senate, as a whole, should refuse to confirm until the nature of the ap pointments is more clearly indicated To do less would be inexcusable shift lessness. Baltimore Sun. :o: ' WE'EE COMING BACK STRONG The economic depression from which the United States is just em erging is the seventh major attack of "hard times" that this country has been through in less than a hundred years. The people who are scared al most to death for fear that America can't come back are not a bit worse scared than were the same type of timid-minded folk in each of these previous panics. But, as we know, America came back after every one of them, and came back stronger than ever. The first great financial crisis was in 1837, when practically every bank in the United States suspended pay ment, half of the property and the entire nation was sold in "bankruptcy proceedings and there was no work for anybody and nobody had any money. But we came back so strong ly that in less than twenty years our national wealth had been multiplied by three. We came back from the crisis of 1SS7, went through a terrific and de vastating Civil-War and again much more than 'doubled our national wealth in the course of sixteen years. Then we had the panic of 1873, and that was followed by another great revival that again doubled our na tional wealth, until the panic of 1S93. We came back from that one richer than before, and we did the same thing after the crises of 1907 and 1920. Everybody knows how rapidly our wealth increased between 1921 and 1929, how prosperous everybody was in those fat years. There is only one way to foretell the future, and that is by studying the past. It is as certain as anything can be hat we are coming out fo the present crisis toward a great and more widespread prosperity than we have ever known. And if we have any sense we will take greater pre cautions against another depression than e did against this one. :o: The Journal will aoDreciata vour phoning In news Items. Call Co. 6. Thanks! UNSALTTNO THE GREAT SALT LAKE Shall Utah's famous Great Salt Lake lose its saltness? A news re port says a plan to convert part of this inland sea into a fresh-water lake is being pushed by the Utah Society of Engineers and other or ganizations. The project had its origin with Count Ferdinand de Lesseps, the energetic French engi neer who built the Suez Canal and started the one in Panama. By build ing dikes across the huge saline pond in the Ute country a portion of the lake into which the principal tribu taries flow could be walled off and would become fresh, the Count cal culated. Subsequent investigation points to two possible locations for the dike. When one contemplates such pro jects, the dikes that keep Holland dry, the ditches that drained the Everglades, the dredging and dump ing that filled the Chicago lake front, the levee building that dis ciplines the Mississippi River, the construction of harbor works 6uch as those of the new port, Gdynia, in Poland, and the piling up. of con crete that is to make Boulder Dam, he cannot but be impressed with what a large volume of human ac tivity is concerned with removing portions of the earth's crust from where they are to somewhere else. Lately there has been more in clination than formerly to question each such project, and especially many smaller ones, to determine whether their usefulness justifies the expenditure. In the western United States certain lakes have been drained for "reclamation" only to find the original lake with its wild life was more valuable than swampy "farm" land. No doubt the Great Salt Lake project will be carefully scru tinized. Presumably such a reser voir would provide a water supply for city uses or irrigation not now available. The builder of the long railroad trestle across Great Salt Lake, which is quite an engineering marvel, is re lated to have said to a younger en gineer: "There is practically noth ing that is impossible from an engi neering standpoint; the question is whether a project is . -economically feasible." In other wrds, will the return justify the outlay. With the conveniences of modem inventlonat their hands, men are.asklng this question about many other interests besides construction in recreation, transportation, production educa tion, and so forth. Of the many things that men know ho wto do, which are most worth the doing? :o- FINLAND FACES NEW LIQUOR CONTROL PLAN Finland, which showed itself 70 per cent wet in the recent referen dum, has now passed a new liquor control law to take the place of pro hibition. In view of the large wet majority, the law must be consider ed a most astonishing piece of work. While it places no limit on the con sumption of liquor by the individual. it very definitely restricts private profits from sales. Manufacture, im portation and wholesale handling of lijuor is vested in a monopoly. Re tail sale is by licensed stores and restaurants. Local option may every where be exercised, except that res taurants catering to tourists may have permits even in dry territory Restaurants will be permitted no profits on liquor sold. The profits of the monopoly, except for a small percentage on invested capital, will revert to the national treasury. Gov ernment profits will be used for temperance education, for old age and unemployment funds, for bene volence and general state purposes. The advertisement of liquors by pri vate manufacturers is forbidden. This, then, is what the "other" prohibition country, leaving prohi bition, feels is proper control. It's main feature is limited profit to in dividuals concerned in the traffic. from top to bottom, in order that there shall be no incentive to stimu late consumption. This is a very important feature and one which the wets of this coun try, if they are sincere in merely wishing a restoration of the avail ability of liquor, must not lose sight of. A good share of the present agi tation for the repeal of prohibition is being fostered by brewers and dis tillers who approach Tepeal chiefly from a desire to see a return of old- time profits, some of whom intend to resume exploitation of the Amer ican thirst on an even larger scale than before prohibition. There are three major . points which must be considered in any plan to replace prohibition in this country (1) controlled profits, (2) limited sales and (3) protected lo cal option. It will be necessary to control profits to end system tlsed debauchery at the hands of inter ested individuals, to make' liquor fill 20 Reduction in Service Prices on all Cars during remainder of February and March Grind Valves ancl Remove Carbon Dodge Bros7"6" $6.80 Dodge Bros. "4" 4.00 Whippet "6" 6.80 Whippet "4" 4.00 Chevrolet "6" 4.20 Chevrolet "4" 3.60 Ford "A" 4.80 Pontiac 6.80 Chrysler "6" 6.80 Chrysler "4" 4.00 Plymouth 4.00 Model T Ford 3.00 I7i?Qlsr9c Phone 58 6th and Vine cheap so that the bootleggers will disappear and to give to government the major part of liquor revenues. It will be necessary to limit sales to prevent abuses by the over-thirsCy. It will be necessary to protect terri tories which wish to be dry in wet surroundings. These three things can be accomplished under one sim ple plan by monopoly manufacture under the federal government and by monopoly distribution under the state governments, with the real profit in all cases going to the sup ervising governments. Milwaukee Journal. :o: FARM FOR RENT 125 acres splendid plow land close to Plattsmouth: no buildings. Pos session March 1st. Answer by letter. Address Bex ,','K," care of Journal, Plattsmouth, Nebr.' . " IS-ld, 2sw SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. By virtue of an Order of Sale issued by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk of the Dis trict Court within and for Cass coun ty, Nebraska, and to me directed, will on the 5th day of March, A. D. 1932, at 10 o'clock a. m. of said day at the south front door of the court house in said county, sell at public action to the highest bidder for cash the following real estate, to-wit: Lot one (1) in Block sixty ( 60 ) in the City of Plattsmouth, Cass county, Nebraska The same being levied upon and tak en as the property of Doris Morgan et al. Defendants, to satisfy a judg ment of 3aid Court recovered by The Plattsmouth Loan and Building As sociation, a Corporation, Plaintiff against said defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, February 2, A. D. 1932. ED W. THIMGAN. Sheriff of Cass County, Nebraska. f4-5w ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE In the District County, Nebraska. Court of Cass In the matter of the trusteeship of the estate of Anna Gorder Ploetz, deceased. Now on this 23 rd day of January, 1932, this cause came on for hear ing upon the petition of Frank A. Cloidt, trustee of the estate of Anna Gorder Ploetz, deceased, praying for a license to sell the following de scribed real estate to-wit: The east half (E) of the northeast quarter (NE4) of Sectiond (18), Township (12), Range (13) in Cass County, Ne braska, and the undivided one half interest in Lots 2, 3 and 4 in Block (35) in the City of Weeping Water, Cass County, Nebraska, for the purpose of paying the specific legacies be queathed in the last will and testamenfof Anna Gorder Ploetz, deceased, and costs and expense of administration of said trust estate. It Is Therefore Ordered that all persons interested in said estate ap pear before me at the District Court Room in the Court House at Platts- mouth, Cass County, Nebraska, on J 12th day of March, 1932, at the hour of 10 o'clock al m., to show cause, if any, why a license should not be granted to said trustee to sell the above described real estate for the purpose of paying specific legacies bequeathed in the last will and testa ment of Anna Gorder Ploetz, de ceased, and costs and expenses of ad ministration of said trust estate. It is further ordered that a copy of this order to show cause be pub lished in the Plattsmouth Semi- Weekly Journal, a newspaper of gen eral circulation in Cass County, Ne braska, for a period of three suc cessive weeks prior to the date of hearing. By the Court. JAMES T. BEGLEY, Judge of the District Court. JZS-Sw ORDER OP HEARING on Petition for Appointment of Administrator de bonis non In the County Court of Cass Coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the estate of Drury M. Graves, deceased. Probate Rec. 8, Pg. 397. Upon reading the petition of Ralph J. Nickerson filed herein on the 21st day of January, 1932, praying for his appointment as administrator de bonis non of said estate: It Is Ordered that the 19th day of February, 1932, at 10 o'clock a. m., be and hereby is assigned for the hearing of the petition, when all per sons interested in said estate may appear and show cause, if any there be, why the prayer of said petition should not be granted, and that no tice of the pendency of said petition, and the time of hearing, be given to all persons interested in said es tate by publication in the Platts mouth Journal, a newspaper printed in said County, three weeks success, ively, prior to said hearing, of a copy of this order. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) J25-3w County Judge. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the estate of Wil liam G. Rauth, 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 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 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 4th day of March, A. D. 1932, and that if they fall to appear at said court on said 4th day of March. A. D. 1932, at ten o'clock a. m. to contest the said petition, the Court may grant the same and grant administration of said estate to Theresa Rauth or some other suitable person and proceed to a settlement thereof. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) f8-3w County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING and Notice on Petition for Settle ment 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 Emma C. Miller, deceased: On reading the petition of Frank A. Cloidt, praying a final settlement and allowance of his account filed in this Court on the 4th day of Febru ary, 1932, and for the assignment of the residue of said estate and his discharge as Administrator; It is hereby ordered that you and all persons interested in said matter may, and do, appear at the County Court to be held in and for said county, on the 4th day of March, A D. 1932, at ten o'clock a. m., to 6how cause, if any there be, why the pray er of the petitioner should not be granted, and that notice of the pen dency of said petition and the hear ing thereof be given to all persons interested in said matter by publish ing a copy of this order in the Platts mouth Journal, a semi-weekly news paper 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 4th day of February A. D. 1932. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) f8-3w County Judge, ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the application of Peter Campbell, Administrator of the Estate of John Campbell, deceased, for License to Sell Real Estate Now on this 6th day of February, 1932. Peter Campbell. Administrator of the estate of John Campbell, de ceased, having presented his petition under oath praying for license to sell the following described real estate of the said John Campbell, to-wit: The northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of Section twenty (20), Township eleven (11), Range fourteen (14), in Cass county, Nebraska: and Lots numbered twelve (12) and thirteen (13), in Block numbered four (4), in the Vil lage of Murray, Cass county, Nebraska or a sufficient part thereof to bring the sum of Six Hundred Dollars ($600), for the payments of debts filed against said estate, and for al lowances, and costs of administration. for the reason that there is not a sufficient amount of personal prop erty in the possession of said Peter Campbell, Administrator, belonging to said estate, to pay said debts, al lowances, and costs. It is therefore ordered that all persons interested in said estate ap pear before me at Chambers in the City of Plattsmouth, in said county. on the 24th day of March, 1932, at the hour of ten o'clock a. m., to show cause. If any there be, why a license should not be granted to said Peter Campbell, Administrator, to sell so much of the above described real estate of said decedent as shall be necessary to pay said debts and ex penses. It is further ordered that a copy of this order be served upon all persons interested in said estate by causing the same to be published for four successive weeks in The Platts mouth Journal, a semi-weekly news paper printed and published in said County of Cass. JAMES T. BESLEY, Judge of the District Court of said County of Cass. f8-4w . Journal Want-AOs oost only a fsw oenis and get real results! NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass Coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Floyd M. Saxon, 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 19th day of February, A. D. 1932, and on the 20th day of May, A. D. 1932, 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 19th day of February A. D. 1932, and the time limited lor payment of debts is one year from said 19th day of February, 1932. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 18th day of January, 1932. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) J25-3w County Judge. NOTICE OF HEARING on Petition for Determin ation of Heirship Estate of Marion S. F. Wiley, de ceased, in the County Court of Cass County. Nebraska. The State of Nebraska, To all per sons interested in said estate, cred itors and heirs take notice, that Joephine Timblin, has filed her peti tion alleeine: that Marion S. F. Wiley died intestate in Alaska on or about the year 1921, being a resident and inhabitant of Alaska and died seized of the following described real estate, to-wit : An undivided one-thirteenth (113) part of Lot seven (7) in the southeast quarter uf northwest quarter (SE'i of NW'i); northeast quarter of southwest quarter (NEU of SWVi); Lots three (3) and thirteen (13) in the northwest quarter of northeast quarter (SW'i SEVi); and Lots four and eight in the southwest quarter of northeast quarter (SW4 NEU); all in Section nineteen (19); Township eleven (11), N. Range fourteen (14). east of the 6th P. M., in Cass County, Nebraska; leaving as his sole and only heirs at law the following named persons, to wit: Josephine Timblin, Lizzie L. Jenkins, Sarah F. Smith, Wil liam G. Wiley, Rosabell N. Hess er. Charlie E. Wiley, Addie E. Park, Annette N. Ellington, Warran M. Wiley, James C. Wiley, George E. Wiley, brothers and sisters; and Helen R. Read, Rose K. Smith and Malvern W. Read, children of a deceased sister. That the interest of the petitioner herein in the above described real estate is that of an heir and praying for a determination of the time of the death of said Marion S.J'.. Wiley and of his heirs, the degree of kin ship and the right of descent of the real property belonging to the said deceased, in the State of Nebraska. It is ordered that the same stand for hearing the 20th day of February, A. D. 1932, before the court at the hour of ten o'clock a. m. In the Court House in Plattsmouth, Cass County, Nebraska. Dated at Plattsmouth, Nebraska, this 30th day of January, A. D. 1932. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) f 1-3 w County Judge. NOTICE OF REFEREE'S SALE Pursuant to an order of the Dis trict Court of Saunders County, Ne braska, made and entered on the 19th day of December, 1931, in an action pending therein, in which, Nora Folsom and husband. Guy Fol- som; Margie Gilbert, a widow, are plaintiffs, and David Wagner and wife, Abbie Wagner; Edward Wag ner and wife, Sarah Wagner; Harry F. Wagner and wife. Anna Wagner: William Wagner and wife. Rose Wagner; Josie Nichols and husband. James Nichols; Amanda Morgan and husband, Morris Morgan; Jesse Wag ner and wife, Neddie Wagner; Addie B. Gilbert and husband. John Gil bert; Emma Graves and husband. Hod Graves; Nancy Graves and hus band. Wallace Graves; Frank G. Arnold and wife, Effie D. Arnold, arj defendants, ordering and directing the undersigned Referee in said cause to sell the following real estate, to wit: The south half (S) of Lot two (2). in the northwest quar ter (NW4) of the northwest quarter (NW), Section seven (7), Township twelve (12), Range ten (10), Cass County. Nebraska, containing five acres (5 A.). And. the north half (N) of Lot three (3). in the northwest quarter ( NWU ) of the north west quarter (NWVih Section seven (7), Township twelve (12). Range ten (10). Cass County, Nebraska, containing five acres (5 A.). And, all of Lot five (5), in the southwest quarter (SW4 ) of the northwest quarter (NW) of Section seven (7), Township twelve (12), Range ten (10), Cass County, Nebras ka, containing ten acres (10 A.). And, the west half (W) of the southwest quarter (SW ) Section seven (7), Township twelve (12), Range ten (10). Cass County, Nebraska, con taining sixty and 28100 acres (60.26 A.). Notice is hereby given that on the 15th day of February, 1932. at the hour of 3 o'clock p. m., at the Wag ner farm, one mile east and one mile south of the post office In Ashland, Nebraska, the undersigned Referee will sell the above described real es tate at Public Sale, to the highest bidder, for cash. Said sale to be held open for one hour. Dated this 12 th day of January, 932 JOE MAYS, Referee. J. C. BRYANT. Plaintiffs' Attorney. J14-5W