The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, November 07, 1932, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    PAGE TERES
TThe Plattsmouth Journal
PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA
Entered at Postoffice, Plattsmouth, Neb., as second-class mail matter
R. A. BATES, Publisher
SUBSCRIPTION PEICE $2.00 A YEAR IN FIEST 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,
$3.60 per year. All subscriptions are payable strictly in advance.
Common honesty should be more
common.
:o:
Economy A reduction in some
other fellow's salary.
:o:
What the world needs is more
starters and less cranks.
:o:
New York has closed the regular
burlesque shows, but the folks can
still watch government by the peo
ple. :o:
The real debt-cancelation propa
ganda will begin when R. F. C. loans
are due.
:o:
Clarence Darrow has denied a ru
mor that he has joined a church. So
has the church.
:o:
Next to getting a 10-year-old boy
into a bathtub, the hardest job is
getting him out.
:o:
If business continues to pick up,
maybe properity will hitch-hike
around the corner. j
:o:
As we get the threat of Japan, it
the League of Nations throws ter
out, she will quit.
:o:
The Powers may not recognize Ja
pan's winnings in Manchuria, but
they recognize the method.
:o:
There is no exact definition of a
radical. He is Just somebody who
wants what the conservative has.
:o:
Raising taxes increase demand
for tax-free securities, which encour
ages bond issues, which increase
taxes.
:o:
How encouraging it is to hear
other nations condemn Japan's land-
grabbing. It means they have all
they want.
IOC
The snail has a thousand teeth,
Eay3 a naturalist. Its rate of pro
gress always suggests that it is on
its way to the dentist.
:o:
A Chinese statesman indignantly
denies that China is between the devil
and the deep sea. Both Japan and
the deep sea are on the same side of
China, he says.
:o:
"For dinner, a thin piece of un
derdone steak two inches by two
Inches should be taken." says a
slimming expert. It doesn't seem
much, but after all it's a square meal.
to
"Woman asleen nine months is
about to awake," says a newspaper
headline. Just think how much po
litical bunk she has missed, but,
sister, you had better Bleep another
week yet, then it will be safe to wake
up.
:o:
"A woman who responds to a
man's flirtation is as guilty as the
man," says a Chicago judge. Do you
mean to say, Judge, that a girl who
merely leaps across the street and
into a motor car Is as guilty as the
man who first sounded his horn?
Judge, it's an affront to American
womanhood.
:o:
The new International contract
bridge rules have made it' possible
now for an American to play with
Argentines, Greeks or Chinese. In
ether words, contract ha3 Just now
reached the stage poker had attain
ed in Bret Harte's time. And no
doubt the American contract bidder
will find that the way of the heathen
Chinese is still peculiar.
i
We are distributors for the famous
Rock of Ages granite. Largest stock
and lowest prices. Drive over to our
plant, southeast corner of Square.
Glenwood Granite Works
Glenwood, Iowa
Occasionally among the women
voters you find a real serious dieter;
but most of them are diettantes.
:o
A Newark man found a pearl in
an oyster stew the other day, prov-
ing once more mat tne u monins
are me uci ior peans.
Iowa is said to be the only state
in which poison ivy does not grow.
However, as the Atchison Globe
points out, Iowa has Brookhart.
:o:-
Many a fellow who won a medal
for bravery in action when he was
"over there," lets his wife run him
off the plac every time she gets good
and ready.
:o:
Chicago should keep in the back-
ground for another week, as it has
nothing new to offer and the country
already has about all the excitement
it can stand.
:o:
Development of a left-handed mon-
key wrench by a Hoosier inventor
snouia prove a Dig surprise ior tne
jelly machinists who sent the factory
bocb out looking for one.
:o:
Pretty Boy Floyd robbed another
bank in Oklahoma yesterday, there-
by proclaiming to his creditors that
he will have all his bills in the mail
by the tenth of the month.
:o:
Senator Borah still declines to say
whom he will support next Tuesday,
There is said to be a movement on
foot in several parts of the country
to go ahead and hold the election
anyway.
:o:
Radio sales are reported to be lag -
ging a bit but any manufacturer who
can bring out a set which will tune I
a crooner out and leave only the or-
chestral accompaniment would soon
have a demand for a night shift of
workmen.
:o:
Gene Tunney can't vote on ac-
count of not being registered, ana
- i
we guess the thing to do is pair Mr.
Tunney's Democratic vote with the
Republican vote of that other Eterl-
ine: but unregistered athlete, Mr.
Henry Ford.
:o:
T.-tr frantlrnllv vravlnf a ukulele I
j o
which attracted the attention of a
tug, a man in a' motor boat saved
himself from a perilous position on
the Nore Sands. We always felt that
ultimately a use would be found 'for
these things.
:o:
A few days ago I saw a typical
tramp of a former period walking
down the railroad with the prover
bial bundle on hi3 back . I thought
that species was extinct, having
been replaced by the large-thumbed
gentry who throng the highways,
Ycur old-fashioned tramp was a gen-
tleman and a scholar in most re-
I
ci.cvt.a. .u.vxuK-u . .
r--.. e- TTa n-no -:-.Tl t -"- m -r ts O I
usual thing, and he knew hov to
behave himself. His failings were
that he would not work, and that he
liked to roam. The printer's trade I
knew a lot of them in the old days,
and I've fed a host of them, who
were willing to work a day or two
n order that they might get to the
next town. Just to see what it was
like. There was an old saying, then,
"learn the printers' trade and see the
world," and it held more than a lit-
tie truth.
:o:-
Everythlng for the student-
from penny leadpenciis to type
writers. The olace to get them -
why, at Bates book store, 01
course.
POLITICIANS HATE
TO ADMIT MISTAKES
How rarely Goes any public man
admit that he has made a mistake!
It seems to be a rule of politfcs that
the politician who admits his falli-
bility has committed political suicide.
The whole world may know that he
has made an egregious mistake. He
himself must never admit it.
In 192S there was the famous
promise of the two-car garage, the
chicken In every pot. Has the maker
of those promises ever acknowledged
his mistake? You may read every
line the president has written or
spoken and never an admission of
that error will be founL when the
panic came there was the assurance
that business was still sound; pros -
perity just around the corner. Has
Mr Hoover acknowledged that mis-
take? Never by as much as a nod.
There was the farm board, an eco-
nomic experiment. Kolelv on the re-
proved disastrou3 al5ke to the farm.
erg d , th national treasury. The
nearest the president has come to ac-
knowledging that mistake was when,
as a matter of political necessity, he
promised the Iowa farmers that he
wouldn't do it again. Aside from this
minor concession, the president makes
uig campajgn Dn the thesis that he
j3 incapable of being wrong about
anvthine
lt isn.t president Hoover alone
wno makes the bluff of infallibility.
There is reason to believe that the
peopie demand and expect infallibil-
nv fhotr oniirintf.c- an,i what
they demand and expect, the candi -
dates, of course, must appear to give
them. If this w'ere not the case tne
candidatorial claim to infallibility
wouid hardlv be so universal
I Yet how refreshing it is to find a
public official, in this case the sen-
ator from xew Mexico, acknowledg-
jng a great mistake. Senator Cutting
tells the people how happily and
heartily he advised them four years
&io to elect President Hoover. Then
he tells them with equal candor how
terribly mistaken he now believes
himself to have been. Senator Borah
made the same mistake; but sulks
on t0 Idaho making his acknowledg-
ment brudgingly or not at all. Is it
possible that a public should not
j think better of a Cutting who makes
ja ciean breast of it than of a Borah
who locks up his bitterness in the
boiling cauldron of his breast? it
js a question whether the people, if
given a chance, would not prove their
nnnrpfiatinn of the frankness that
admita mistakes, abandonine the
bombastic claim of infallibility. Any-
way it would be Interesting to seelciples of economy and sound govern-
t mnr oftpn tripd Davton News.
-:o:-
VHAT OWEN YOUNG BELIEVES
To Owen D. Young, outstandingly
the ablest and wisest big business
.
man in America, an employe or tne
r - i tt.i.i I
lUfc'UKiai niaiiit i-iti uiiy W1UIC IVl
advice as to how he rhould vote. Mr.
Youne answered
"I do not think that you
should ask any officer of the
General Electric company how
you should vote or accept their
advice If they were so unwise as
to volunteer it, which I am
thankful to say they have never
done. What we need in this
country, and in this election par
ticularly, are votes reflecting the
views of the voters free from
the coercion of fear or favor."
To a stockholder in the same giant
corporation, replying to a similar re-
Quest, Young Wrote:
"I hope you will vote as your
iTit.M HirpnrA Ann vniir intuitions.
"
.-hirh T T9 lie onna v hlirh rile-
tate. The General Electric corn-
pany can succeed only when, as,
and if, the United States suc
ceeds, so you will be serving
your own and your country's in
terests best by thinking of your
country first."
A third letter from Young is in
rply to an inquiry from the Tax-
payers' union. Ho was asked if "radi-
cals will have the greatest influence"
with Governor Roosevelt, if he is
elected president, and he believed
that Roosevelt "has in mind a pro-
gram of private property confisca
tion." This is his answer:
"I have no thought that Mr.
Roosevelt is the ki?d of man
who will be subject to 'influence
either of individuals or of
groups, conservative or radical,
if I did, I would not support him
for president.
"I believe him to be a man
of sound intelligence, fine intui
tions, deep sympathies, adequate
understanding, and real inde
pendence. "Because I think he has these
qualifications, I have no thought
that he will resort to any pro
gram of confiscation on the one
side or that he will be oblivious
to the needs of masses of hu
man beings on the other.
"It will be easy to say that
that sentence is a straddling one
but the fact is you know, that
with the great resources of this
nation properly organized and
handled, there is no reason why
individuals should not be free
from want and private property
protected."
Here in these letters is revealed
a big business man who is really
big, and really wise. How high,
he looms above others who
crack the whip of fear, who seek
by coercion or intimidation to
rob American citizens of the un
trammelled use of their most prec
ious birthright the freeman's bal
lot!
Think of your country first. What
is good for the country is good for
the General Electric company. And
what the country needs at this time
lis for president a leader "of sound
I intelligence, fine intuitions, deep
I sympathies, adequate understanding
and real independence." What is re-
quired is a policy and a program un
der which protection can be assured
to private property while at the same
time the masses of the people are in-
lsured against want
That is what Owen D. Youne be-
lieves. Because he believes it heis
supporting Franklin D. Roosevelt for
nersident. on the platform adopted
hv thn tlpmnrratio. national ennven.
-World-Herald.
:o:-
IN THE HOUSE OF HIS FRIENDS
When President Hoover tried to
make the country believe, in his
speech at New York, that a demo
cratic victory "would destroy the
very foundations of our American
system" he dealt his own candidacy
the severest blow it has suffered in
this campaign
Mis fry of alarm, that his own
defeat would mean that "the grass
will grow in streets of a hundred
cities, a thousand towns, the weeds
iU overrun a million farms," was
unworthy any president of the United
States. i iTlrlETTTl
vwtn utterances sura as these Mr
Hoover throws away not only all dig-
nity but all restraint. It is a sight
to make the judicious grieve
Of all men in this republic, its
president should be the very last to
attempt to arouse panic on top o
J distress; to imperil the stability of
his country in the vain hope of fur
thering his own ambition. And con-
siderlng the record and results of
hi3 Ill-fated administration, Herbert
Hoover should be of all president
the last to raise the cry of distress
and crack the whip of fear against
an opposing candidate.
It is significant of the resentment
his course has aroused that no less
an institution than the National City
Bank of New York hastened, imme
jdiately following his speech, to speak
a sanely reassuring word. Its rebuke
to Mr. Hoover is unmistakable. It
says there Is no basis for anxiety.
Both parties stand for sound prin
ment. Economic panaceas of un-
sound character have found but lit
tle support.
Nor is the National City bank
'""
3 . lcJUUIClllU6
alarm anneal to which his ramnslen
r
has Sunk.
-i:,
un tne very aay mat jut. Hoover
himself resorted to it Roger Babson
admitted that "we do not expect any
serious dislocatlon.of business should
the democrats win."
General W. W. Atterbury, head
of the Pennsylvania railroad, and a
republican leader, a short time be
fore told a meeting of Chicago bank
ers that no matter who won busi
ness would not suffer from the elec
tion. "Business Week" disclaimed the
"in r-s i v 1 1 1
mm
;,i-;,:ii-l
THE PUBLIC should be
prudent in seeking relief from
pain. Take nothing which does
not have the approval of the
medical profession.
BAYER ASPIRIN win never
do you any harm, and almost
always brings the desired relief.
But remember that the high
medical endorsement, given
Bayer Aspirin does not apply te
all tablets for relief of pain,
THE DOCTOR is careful to
specify Bayer Aspirin for these
important reasons:
It has no injurious ingredients.
No coarse particles to irritate
throat or stomach. Nothing to
upset the system. Not even any
disagreeable taste. The Bayer
process insures a pure, uniform
product.
INSIST on the tablet yen
know to be safe. And the one
that has sped. Bayer tablets
dissolve so quickly, you get
immediate relief from your
headache, neuralgia, or other
pain.
(BAYER)
theory that the election would have
any adverse effect on business con
ditions.
Prof. Irving Fisher, a strong Hoo
ver supporter, declared that "wheth
er Roosevelt or Hoover is elected,
America will continue to climb out
of the depression."
And the Commercial and Finan
cial Chronicle, the foremost organ
of finance in the United States, said:
"Many of the president's most
ardent supporters seek to instill
a feeling of fear in the mind3
of the voters. For ourselves we
have no patience with tactics of
this kind. Without wishing to
exprss a preference for either
one of the two candidates (and
the editor of this paper is not
yet entirely clear as to how he
shall cast his personal vote),
we have no hesitation in saying
that things will go on pretty
much the same whichever can
didate is elected, and w still be
lieve that things will improve
after the election, whatever the
outcome."
These are the responsible voices
of American business and industry.
They refuse to throw in with the
discreditable panic campaign or to
be affected by it. They are not will-
ing to attempt to scuttle the ship
merely because they cannot have
their own pilot, iney put tneir
country above their party, and pur-
pose to continue the hard battle for
recovery whether Hoover or Roose
velt is the next president.
It is too bad that Mr. Hoover, be
fore engaging on his last despearte
barnstorming effort, did not stop to
learn a lesson from the wisest of his
supporters. World-Herald.
:o:
A WOMAN CABINET OFFICER?
The attitudes of President Hoo-
.
ver and Gov. Franklin u. Kooseveu
toward wompn In nolities rre leadine
, .
predict the installation of a woman
member into 'the hitherto male-mon-
onoHzed President's Cabinet. No
matter which candidate gains the
driver's seat on the nation's admin
istratlve wagon for the next four
years, a woman is haded for the post
of Secretary of Labor, according to
reports
The reeord3 of women have
shown that the country need not
v, 1 t v, --.-;mi;
view will, cl 1 a i 111 iuc yoDiuiiiij( v.
such an appointment. From the
ranks of the 10,000.000 female work
ers in the United States, several
women of the needed executive ex
perience have risen, capable of fill
ing high positions satisfactorily,
Women have entered the United
States House of Representatives, the ter, Frances, who had been attacked
United States Senate, and have held by the Maust police dog. Mann ask
important state positions from Gov- ed $10,000 damages. Before evidence
ernor down. At present two of the was introduced, tne aeiendant au
seven important bureaus of the La- mittcd liability for the attack, aiffl
bor Department are headed by worn- the jury's work was confined to the
en the children's bureau by Miss determination of the amount of dam-
Grace Abbott, and the women's bu-
reau by Miss Mary ADderson. Miss
Frances Perkins, commissioner of
the New York State Industrial Com
mission, also has gained the neces
sary background for the position. In
fact, she has been talked of a3 the
Secretary of Labor if Mr. Roosevelt
gains the presidential position.
With the importance, of women In
politics growing rapidly, there is no
reason why a woman Secretary of
Labor or a woman secretary of some
thing else should not be acceptable
to all concerned, should the next
President make such an appoint
ment.
:o:
ROOSEVELT'S ENEMIES
As in the case of the great Gro-
ver Cleveland, many persons wno m
the beginning could not find it in
their hearts to love Franklin D.
Roosevelt for himself alone are learn-
ing to love him because of the
enemies he has made.
The foregoing statement has no
.oforo.r. thna , nnri nnv.
. xt I
ernor .ooEeveit in iue cuiivemiuu,
but the enemies he has made come
into the open since his nomination,
Particularly reference is made to the
power interests and the internation-
al bankers.
The power interests have been ac-
tive against Mr. Roosevelt since he
. . .....
first became an avowed candidate tor
the democratic nomination. Their
fluenco was felt in many state con-
ventions and primaries and it was
massed against nim at unicago. iney
will leave no stone unturned to de-1
feat him.
, . . , . 1
If the International bankers and
usury boys had any last lingering
hope that they might be able to con-
trol Roosevelt, It was dispelled In
I
his Columbus speech when he went
straight to the heart of the banking
and credit situation and proposed
specific reforms.
The predatory interests see in
Roosevelt, not the impractical dream-
er and radical they try to picture
him to others, but a man with firm
. . I , , , .
convictions who is Inimical to their
drag and pull.
It is no exaggeration to state that
every major vested interest that has jAina T. BEGLEY.
profited by privilege, favoritism andel74W District Judge.
FT
SAME PRICE
AS 42 YEARS AGO
25 ounces for 254
Full Pack
No Slack Fillinq
exploitation is lined up solidly
against Roosavelt. Obversely, not a
single great liberal group or liberal
leader has raised hand or voice
against him. Sioux City Tribune.
-:o:
ECLPH WILL GREET HOOVES
Sacramento. Calif. Governor
olph was making plans to greet
President Hoover when the latter ar
rives in California next Tuesday en
route to his home at Palo Alto, to
vote. The governor said he would
meet the president's train at the state
"r 'Ml"mc""
land eithpr hold a rerrntinn for him
I i : : 1. : c? in .
x
at tbe Sovrnor's mansion or extend
tne state s onicia. welcome ai iuu
nouur- bUU 01 luu-
arrived at 1'alo Alto rrom 1.03 An-
kele3 to welcome his father. Herbert
J j-.
Instltute of Technology, Mrs. Hoover
lAvtsl tVi 4 Vi itm -( rl Vi i 1 A ya r r f Vl O
ttUVi .
President are expected soon. The city
Pal A-ito is planning a nonparti-
san welcome tor tne prcbiueiu. Ar-
rangements are being made by Mayor
1 uuiuaa.
S5C0 FOR D0O BITE
Falls City, Neb. A district court
jury returned a verdict of $500 for
Leonard Mann , in a. suit aga.inst.Mr3.
Nancy Maust in behalf of his daugh-
ages.
Journal Want-Acs Get results!
Lumbar Sawing
Commercial sawing from
your own logs lumber cut
to your specifications.
We have ready cut dimen
sion lumber and shoetlng for
sale at low prices.
NEBRASKA BASKET FACTOSY
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE
In the District Court of Cass coun
ty, Nebraska.
In the matter of the Application
of N. D. Talcott, Administrator of the
Estate of William D. Coleman, Deceas-
. for License to Sell Real Estate to
Now on thia 14th day of October,
1932, came N. D. Talcott. Adminis
trator of the estate of William D.
Coleman, deceased, and presents his
peiuiuii iui iiveiise iu ecu iuc icui
estate of the deceased party in order
to pay the claims filed and allowed
against said estate, and the expenses
administering said estate. It ap-
pearing from said petition that there
i3 an insufficient amount of personal
property in the hands of the Admin-
istrator to pay the claims presented
"y CVJjld,
said estate; and that It is necessary
to sell the whole of the real estate of
the deceased in order to pay the
aforesaid claims ana tne costs .or aa
ministration
It is hterefore Considered, Ordered
in-land Adjudged that alt persons inter
ested in the estate of William D. Cole-
------
trct Court, at the District Court room
in the court house in the City of
r lattsmoutn, uass counxy, jeorasKa,
on tne zatn day or isovemoer, is,
. ' Q0 O.clock In tbe
forenoon, and show cause, if any
there be, why euch license should
not be granted to n. u. raicou aq-
rnlnlofrntnii rT f Via Actofo nf William
D Coleman, deceased, to sell all of
the real estate of said deceased, so
las to pay claims presented and al-
I 1 J 11L iL. m .JmI,!.!.
iowea w.in iiie cww ui aum.u.M.,,-
u Js further Considered, Ordered
and Adjudged, that notice be given
to all persons interested by publlca-
on of tbis ,rder Shw1Ftr
four successive weekB In the Platts-
moutn journal, a legal newspaper
published and of general circulation
in the County of Cass, Nebraska.
SHERIFF'S SALE
State of Nebraska, County of Cass,
S3.
By virtue of an Order of Sale Issued
by C. E. Ledgway. Clerk of the Dis
trict Court, within and for Cass
County, Nebraska, and to me direct
ed, I will on the 3rd day of Decem
ber, 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 auction to the highest bid
der for cash the following real es
tate to-r.it:
The north eighty-seven (S7)
feet of Lots one (1), two (2),
three (3), and four (4), in
Block four (4) in the original
town of Plattsmouth, Cass Coun
ty, Nebraska, as surveyed, plat
ted and recorded;
The Eame being levied upon and
taken as tho property of William A.
Wells, Flora M. Wells, Eduth Mar
tin and Becker Roofing Company,
defendants, to satisfy a judgment of
said court recovered by Occidental
Building and Loan Association, plain
tiff, against said defendants.
Plattsmouth, Nebraska, November
1st, A. D. 1932.
ED W. THIMGAN,
Sheriff Cass County, Nebraska.
n3-5w
SHERIFF'S SALE
State of Nebraska, County of Cass,
S3.
By virtue of an Order of Sale is
sued by C. E. Ledgway. Clerk of the
District Court, within and for Cass
County, Nebraska, and to me direct
ed, I will on the 3rd day of Decem
ber, 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 auction to the highest
bidder for cash the following real
estate to-wit:
Lots 1 and 2 in Block 31 in
Young and Hays' Addition to
the City of Plattsmouth, Cass
County, Nebraska;
The same being levied upon and
taken as the property of James E.
Waller, Clara Waller, husband and
wife; Walt Minnear and Elizabeth
May Minnear, his wife, and M. fc.
Briggs, defendants, to satisfy a Judg
ment of said court recovered by The
Plattsmouth Loan and Building As
sociation, a corporation, plaintiff.
against said defendants.
Plattsmouth, Nebraska, November
1st, A. D. 1932.
Sheriff Cass County. Nebraska.
ED W. THIMGAN,
n3-5w
SHERIFF'S SALE
State of Nebraska, County of Cass,
S3. .
By virtue of an Order of Sale, is
sued by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk of tho
District Court, within and for Cass
County, Nebraska, and to me direct
ed. I will on the 3rd day of Decem
ber, 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 auction to the highest
bidder for cash the following real
estate to-wit:
Lots numbered one (1) and
two (2) In Block twenty-seven
(27) in Young and Hay's Ad
dition to the City of Platts
mouth, Caas County, Nebraska,
excepting the west thirty feet of
said Lot two (2);
The same being levied upon and
taken as the property of Thomas S.
Svoboda and Anna Svoboda, husband
and wife, defendants, to satisfy a
Judgment of said court recovered by
the Plattsmouth Loan and Building
Association, a corporation, plaintiff,
against said defendants.
Plattsmouth, Nebraska, November
2nd, A. D. 1932.
ED W. THIMGAN.
Sheriff Cass County, Nebraska.
n3-5w.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
State of Nebraska, County of Cass,
S3.
Fee book 9 at page 322.
In the County Court.
In tbe matter of the estate of
Charles Creamer, 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
25th day of November, A. D. 1932,
and on the 27th day of February,
A. D. 1933, at ten o'clock in the fore
noon of each day, to 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 estate-
Is three months from the 25th
day of November, A. D. 1932, and
the time limited for payment of debts
is ono year from said 25th day of
November, 1932.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said County Court this 25th day of
October, 1932.
A. H. DUXBURY,
(Seal) o31-3w County Judge.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
State of Nebraska, County of Cass,
ss.
In the County Court.
Fee Book 9, page 321.
In the matter of the estate of Jes
sie W. Hall, deceased.
To the creditors of said estate:
You are hereby notified, that I
will eft at the County Court room In
Plattsmouth, In said county, on tbe
18th day of November, A. D. 1932,
and on the 20th day of February, A.
D. 1933, at ten o'clock in the fore
noon cf each day to 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 18th
day of November, A. D. 1932, and
the time limited for payment of debts
is one year from said 18th day oC
November, 1932.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said County Court this 21st day of
October, 1932.
A. H. DUXBURY,
(Seal) o24-3w County Judge.
Road paving In Cass oounty this
year will run about ten miles. Not
so bad, for "depression" times .