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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 23, 1933)
. THURSDAY, FEBE. 231933. PAGE TWO PLATTSMOUTH SEMI WEEKLY" JOUENAL f he IPIattsmouth Journal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA Entered at Postoffice. Plattsmouib, Neb., as second-class mail matter R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 A YEAR IN FIRST POSTAL ZONE Subscribers living in Second Postal Zone, 12.50 per year. Beyond 600 milea, 13.00 per year. Rate to Canada and foreign countries, J3.50 per year. All subscriptions are payable Btrictlyln advance. The former kaiser still insists he didn't start the war. Bo that as it nay, Wilhclm didn't finish it. " :o: The man who hides behind a wom en's petticoat nowadays must have a pretty lonesome time of it up there in the attic. :o: A3 loner r; Jim Reed wai in the rrnate and "Big Bill" Thompson was mayor of Chicago, we didn't have ruch terrible fogs. :o: Anyone who runs a country news paper has harder puzzles to work out every week than any of those that ret on the market. :o: Well, the depression is another evil out of which seme good has come. It has put an end to the professional booster end cheer leader. :o: Warm weather is back and people ere beginning to speak with less re rpeet cf the groundhog, who was a pretty fcroocious beast a week ago. :o: Camouflage, is to wrap a toweJ r.rcund a rolling pin and pound vig orously on the table so the neigh bors will think you have beefsteak for breakfast. :o: Will Rogers's latest movie role is that cf a contented fanner, happy as the farmer in the dell. Which is per fectly natural for a Democrat after an election like that cf last Novem ber. :o: Truth is bound to trickle through. From radio studios comes the infor mation that crooners croon with their eyes closed. That is the way women kiss, but there is hepe the cir cumstances are not related. -:o: He New York Giants are going to have secret practice at their spring training camp this year. It seems Eomc-body on one of the other club3 finally stole McG raw's signal calling for the batter to hit a home run. :o: The customs officials who finally removed the stigma of obscenity from the Michelangelo pictures will doubt less be surprised to hear themselves tailed stupid. They no doubt con sider themselves very broad-minded by this time. :o: After reading once more what the situation would be if one of those wild bullets at Miami had found it3 intended mark, we trust it is not necessary to remind the secret service men any further concerning their great responsibility. :o: As an example cf differing view points, Mr. Ford and the governor of Michigan have succeeded in putting the same facts in about as widely di verse fashions as our language per mits. It would be interesting to lis ten to these gentlemen discuss the merits of a motor car, each in hi3 own way not a Ford car, necessarily just any car in the "low price area." Longer Wear, Comfort in WcSwerina Work Shoes Made cf genuine shell cordovan re tanned upper leathers which stay soft and pliable, resisting barnyard rquid3 aud giving ycu longer service. Built over lasts that fit and are com fortable steel support in shank, making a stronger shoe. Leather or cccpcoiticn soles rail or "welt con struction plain tee or tip. Sizes 6 to 11 Widths A to E. COME IN AND LET US FIT YOU DT WOLVERINE Work Shoes FetiBF-Stoa,Co. , - -, -.V"' V '' IIf of Cnalitv Foorweax -" Plattsmouth, Nebraska . Husband Leaves in Midst of Wife's Bridge Party; Disappears. Head line. Just a fugitive from a chin gang. :o: Fortunately the senate subcommit tee which speaks highly of 3.05 per cent wine has no control over women and song. :o: Some men resemble dogs in this respect. They don't take any inter est in anything but a love affair, a light or a big feed. :o: Perhaps, says the Lawrence Jour nal, in a few years, the tourists abroad will be told, "Wo are now approaching the islands formerly known as Japan." :o: A Chicago woman has fiied suit for 1 million dollars against another woman she alleges stole her husband. It will be noted that the wife placed this valuation on her husband after she had lost him. No wife ever as sessed her husband that high while she had him. :o: Diamonds, according to a news article, have been brought within the reach cf more persons than ever be fore. That is a popular way of say ing they hav ccome down in price, but it isn't saying they're within the reach of any more people. The- people they were intended to reach were yanked a little farther away, and none too gently, either, at the same moment. HAD NO DIFFICULTY GETTING THE GUN "I went to a store on North Miami avenue and bought a pistol. Thcie was a siar,'jf"8Bfrf"Tit waie! read 'Money to Loan.' t paid ?S for' the gun." . Thus Guiseppa Zangara, would-be assassin of President-elect Roosevelt, explained the possibility, if not the motive, of his murderous assault. Assassination is a term derived from the Arabic word, "hashishin," tho name given to the drug we call hasheesh, a dangerous intoxicant. Ey law we regulate the sale of hasheesh, as we attempt to control distribution of all such drugs. Eut any crazed fanatic, suffering from a combination of stomach tor ment and mind-fcg induced by years devoted to hatreds, need only find a sign reading "Money to Loan," and he has located a pistol. "Lire" has been bad for me," Zan gara said. Life has been bad for many men, and pistols are ready to their hands. Until some serious and nation wide effort is made to control and limit the distribution of firearms and other lethal weapons we are only begging the question by suggesting that if Zangara had been unable to buy a gun at a pawn shop in Miami he would have obtained it elsewhere. That is all too true. But it should not escape attention that immediately after being ad vised of the wounding of Mayor Cer mak cf Chicago by tho missile in tended for tho president-elect, the chief cf detectives cf that city asked Florida officials to take into custody IS Chicago gangsters supposed to be in the southern state. Everyone knows that those 18 men are armed, wherever . they may ne. No one in Chicago, and the police least of all, can have been unaware of it, for month.3 and for year3. It i3 common knowledge that there are in the hand.3 of potential killers enough sub-machino guns to plow a pathway of slaughter through the most massive cordon cf police and secret service protection that could possibly bo thrown around our pub lic men at an open-air appearance. Yet we send our Al Capones to prison for income tax evasion give them a year in jail for carrying con cealed weapons. Absolute regulation of the sale of hasheesh has not been achieved. Il licit drugs are still peddled In small quantities. But they are not dis played in pawn shop windows. Half of tho regulatory zeal which ha3 gone so far toward stamping out tho narcotic blight could, if directed toward common arms, greatly mini mize murder and wipe out at least a part or a national saarne. ucs Moines Register. ' : .' " .. THE FIX THE RAILROADS ARE IN Senator Ccuzens has raised a vital question In recommending that rail road loans by the Reconstruction Fi nance Corporation be stepped, and that railroads that cannot meet their interest payments without federal aid be compelled to reorganize their capital structure. There are numerous railroads whose bonds are quoted at very low prices, for various reasons, the chief being that the security is question able. And that is due largely to the fact that in times past certain rail roads have been run by and for the financial manipulators, rather than by expert railroad executives in the interest of the public and the stock holders. There was more money to be made by the manipulation of se curities than there was by running an honest railroad; more to be made by inflating the capital structure and selling new bonds, debentures and certificates to an investing public that was far from cagy than in pay- ins off matured securities. There fore there are railroads today which are worth not a half, a quarter, a fifth of the face value of their out standing securities. This fact is re flected in the prices of their bonds on the New York Exchange, and in the extremely low value of their stocks, both common and preferred. As long as such railroads can bor row from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, they can keep up a fic titious front; they can avoid receiv ership; they can maintain a capital structure which was unjustifiable in prosperity, and is still less justified today. Loans to such roads smack of a gift from the people of the United States to the security holders tb whom thej' arc passed on. To be sure, there are some companies in such bad shape that not even the Reconstruction Fi nance Corporation will come to their aid, in spite of all the pressure -the financial interests can bring to bear. It is to be noted that in one casa the interstate commerce commission pleaded that it was "coerced" into approving a loan; its members knew very well that the railroad's capital structure wa3 past saving. - But the argument wa3 used that failure to pay the interest due w.oulj mean col lapse, and possibly panic; and rather than , risk demoralizing the entire railroad bond market, they approved the deal.Editorial Opiioji. of the Detroit News. . 5 , ;0; !-?.?v;v. A POPULAR TEST , , ON EErEAL IS -NEAR The senate action on l-epeal -and virtual certainty ' cf hou;o concur rence in a few days will hasten the whole movement aimed at a change in the eighteenth amendment. If the house adopts the repeal resolution, as now is expected, then the door will have: bean opened to action by the more than forty stato legislatures now in session. The legislatures, however, could not proceed to ratify or to refuse it, since the resolution requires thai ratification be by state conventions. But the legislatures would be ex pected to provide in part, if not wholly, for the conventions. And if the legislatures, or at least thirty six of lhera, should take that step in the forthcoming weeks, then enough of tho state conventions to decide the fate of repeal might be held some timo this year. Had there been or should there be congressional delay in submission until tho special ses sion expected in April, then adjourn ment cf the legislatures probably wculd mean postponement of state action for two years or longer. The exact manner cf providing for the state conventions is not deter mined. There i3 no precadent with respect to amendments considered in this way. The Constitution itself, as submitted in it3 original form, wa3 ratified by the convention method. In that instance, the states proceeded wholly on their own initiative in set ting up the conventions. It seems to be the opinion of most authorities now that congress could participate, at least to the extent of paying the state convention costs, although it is held by rome that the issue would rest entirely with tho states, either to provide or not to provide for the ratifying conventions. That phase of the question remains to bo threshed cut. The principal point now is that ths issue cf repeal may bo thrown into tho state3 much earlier than had been expected; that public sentiment cf the country shortly may be called upon for a definite and 'direct expres sion on the question. :o: Michelangelo's Sistine Chapel fres coes have been passed as legitimate are by the United States customs officials In New .York, although at first the officials were inclined to regard, them ara bit risque. We trust we shall hear no cynical reports that Michelangelo brought undue influ enco upou the customs ocicials to get his stuff, by.. . .. ' BARTER IN PRACTICE AGAIN All over tlje country people are learning how to live without money. That i3 the way. our primitive an cestors lived, by barter. It is, of course, the direct and simplest way of doing business, but its handicap is that it does not provide any way of storing up values or of making change. If every man who had services or goods to sell could always find somc ono who would make an even trade with him, giving such goods or labor as he required in exchange for his own, we never would need any money. But it i3 difficult for the man who wants to dispose of a day's work for a pair of boots to find the precise person who wants that work at that time, or who is willing to swap groc eries for boots. Time that is labor is a perishable commodity. If it isn't used now it never can be used. The value of money consists in its power to enable the worker who can dispose cf his labor for cash to store up that day's work against the time when he needs to spend it for other commodities. To get around this difficulty com munity after community has adopted one form or another of temporary money called "scrip." We have read of a dczen or so different kinds of scrip, but they all work on the same principle. Tho man who does a day's work receives what is, in effect, a promissory note, which the givet agrees to redeem in such commodi ties as he deals in, no matter who presents it. If enough merchants and manufacturers" can be brought to gether in a scrip lan cf this kind the scrip is jugt.as good money as if it were issued by the government, so far as local use i3 concerned. We understand there is a move ment on foot to nationalize this scrip barter plan. Wo don't see any rea son why it shouldn't work, provided that all the scrip .issued was based on ctual values, .in services performed or common. uc3 aeuvereu. rne main trouble would bo in determining the value behind each unit of scrip. The early Virginia colonists used paper money based on tobacco, but they found a gooC, many planters working off inferior grades of tobacco, and they had plenty-cf trouble with their currency for. a j good, many yearn. As a temporary, relief measure, however, th,e,f rf iprbartcr plan seems us to h3Ye.Idjecilcd merit. - , A professor in the-medical school of the University of Illinois reports to the Secret Six vigilantes in Chi cago that he has received threats of being taken for a ride from persons whom he suspects to be members of his classes, demanding passing grades. ThU3 has the ancient device of "apple polishing" progressed into the realm bf modern big business. -:o: Everything' for school most completo line in Cass county at Sate3 Cook Store. PUBLIC AUCTION Having decided to quit farming and go into trucking business. I will sell at Public. Auction on the Gus Stock farm 2 miles east of Murdock, Nebraska, on Monday, Fete. 27 beginning at 10:30 o'clock a. m., with Fay's Lunch Car on the grounds to furnish refreshments, the following described property: Six Head of Horses One bay mare and one black horse, 7 and 8 years old, wt. 2S00 lbs.; one blael: horse, smooth mouth, wt. 1200 lbs.: one bla?k horse, smooth mouth, wt. 1250 lbs.; one black mare, smooth mouth, wt. 1J.00 lbs.; cne brown horso, smooth mouth, wt. 1000 lbs. Seven Head of Cattle Three dairy cows, 3 to 5 years old, giving milk; one red cow, giving milk; one heifer, coming fresh; one heifer calf; one good Short Horn bull, 14 months oM. Five Head of Hogs One sow and four gilt3, all to far row in Spring. Farm Machinery, Etc. ' Porable grain elevator, 3G-ft., with speed jack, like new; one Dcerin? binder; one Rock Island 2-row culti vator, like new; one Rock Island 2 row lister; one McDeering cream sep arator, like new; one P & O lister cul tivator; one Jenny Lind walking cul tivator; cne Thomas lG-hole drill; cne single row lister; one Bud Long disc, 16 disc; one hay rake, 10-foot: one McCormick; mower; one hay rack with steel gear; one grain wagon; one good wagon gear; one buggy; one tank heater, burns wood or oil; one good gang plow; one walking plow; one 45-gal. butchering kettle and jacket; one Ottawa gas engine, with truck; sohie steel fence posts; pteel barrel with hog waterer; Stover feed grinder; one 3-section harrow; three sets of farm harness and other articles too numerous to mention. Terms of Sale Sums of $25 and under, cash. If credit is desired, make arrangements with Clerk before the sale, or see your banker. No property to be removed until settled for. . Ray Gamlin, ...... - Owner. REX YOUNG, Auctioneer . WILLIAM RAU, Clerk i SOME FACTS WHICH CHEER News that might bring warmth to the heart of the American business man has not been plentiful in Wash ington or elsewhere for many months and that which has sounded an en couraging note has left most of those interested in a skeptical state of mind. But when there are announcements of a sharp increase in the bank clear ings of a great commercial center such as New York, or an increase in the volume of federal reserve credit in the country as a whole, or an in crease in the postal receipts in many of the larger cities, such facts have a cheerful significance. They are weighed most carefully in official juarters, no less than in business quarters. And in some they are taken to mean that a decided healthier tone is developing in the country. Officials of the federal re serve board, for example, are in clined to that point of view, although, like others, they have learned the les son of caution, particularly in what they say for publication. The chances are that the next monthly bulletin of the board will show a better seasonal situation than has existed for many months, but again the board, while locking with satisfaction upon favorable reports other than its own, refuses to anti cipate what it will cay in its formal comment later on. Those favorable reports do not in volve the reopening of an isolated factory here and there or a few more unfilled st2cl orders than usual or any other matter cf minor import ance. Instead, they chow: That bank clearings are increas ing in New York nearly 10 per cent, and for the first tin, in 31 months. That there is an increase cf 2C2 million dollars In the volume of fed eral reserve credit during the last week, as compared with the came week a year ago. That postal re2c!pf3 in approxi mately 25 of the largest American cities increased curing January as compared with January, 1932. These increases In postal receipts are net large, but the fact that there i3 any Increase at oil i3 regarded as if importance ii the view cf the fur ther fact that fcr mere than a year there ha3 been a rather, systematic decline all along the' line. Of perhaps greater moment arc the figures itrjgrriNlv; $t5prk "Hianfc clearings;: . , CJcxamcctias; onUhemAthf New York Times' pointed cut that "the Improvement, i3 zo substantial, amounting to almost 10 per cent, that it lifted the total for the entire coun try above the corresponding week for 1932." The federal rczcrve board is not yet in possession cf official figures to bear out that statement, but mem bers of that body would not . be sur prised if tho crt urns proved to bo exactly as forecast. "On February S," the board says, "total reserve b?.nk credit amounted to $2,CS5,000,000, an increase of 15 million dollars for the week. This in crease corresponds with an increase of 53 million dollars in money in circulation and a decrease of 13 mil lion dollar3 in monetary gold stock." Bank clearings, postal receipts and car leadings are generally re garded by business economists as ths surest indices of business conditions. Car loading reports already received for the week ending February 4 In dicate that there will be an increase, although the exact figures have not been released except by a few of the individual carriers. The New Ycrk clearings for the past week, it is pointed out, amount ed to S3, 419,703,000, while for the same week a year ago they totaled $3,120,953. COO. Thi also is an in crease over th? preceding week. The greater volume of commercial trans actions, a3 .ho.vn oy tne xsew ior. figures, however U over the period of a year. Figures of thin sort for one week, as compared with that immediately preceding, are net al.vays regarded as of particular irr,fiicance. But when thcro i3 an incrons or decrease as compared with a similar period of the year before, all business, statis ticians sIt.-cH upon iheir importance. One r.ther h'i hiczr, item of inter est. Is tte fact that last veek there was : tho .Euac. earful sale of. approxi mately IS m';l'lon Collars in the new i bond crrerlnsa,' In the same week of a year rga there vera no offerings to the public cf &zi tcrt. Washington Correspondence cf Ealtiniore Sun." :o;- HELD UP 3Y SIT0W5T02H Fargo, II. D.- Ileld up by a snow storm, the Ellsworth trans-Atlantic monoplane end its party was com pelled to remain here. The group had planned to leave for Winnipeg from where the plane will be tested under winter conditions expected 'to be en countered in tho Antarctic. Phone the-news to flto. 6. HOLDUP ATTEMPT FAILS Columbus, Neb. Two would-be holdup men who selected Milt Pitt man, co-holder of the Nebraska rifle marksmanship championship, soon learned what a poor choice of victims they had made. Pittman was sitting in his auto when the pair jumped on the running board of his car, jammed a gun in his ribs and ordered him to reach for the sky. Instead, there was a crash of glass, the bark of a pistol, and the holdups found themselves targets of a hail of lead. Police arrested Felix Kiltieka, 30, and Ed Kuta, 21, as suspects at their homes here. Both were In bed with their clotes on. "If I had had my rifle, there would have been a different story to tell," Pittman said. NOTICE TO CREDITORS State of Nebraska, County of Cass, In the County Court. Fee Book D, page 341. In the matter of the estate of Lew ss. is H. Younsr. 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 17th day of March, 1933, and on the 10th day of June, 1933, at the hour of ten o'clock a. m. of each day, to examine all claims against said es tate, with a view to their adjustment and allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claims against paid estate is three months from the 17th day of March, A. D., 1933, and the time limited for payment of debts is one yenr from said 17th day of March, 1933. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court thi3 17th day, of February, 1933. A. II. DUXBURY, (Seal) f20-3w County Judge. NOTICE TO CREDITORS State of Nebraska, County cf Cass, ss. In the County Court. Fee Book 9, page 339. In the matter of the estate of Sarah E. Young, deceased. To the creditors of said estate: You arc hereby notified that I will sit at the County Court room in Plattsmouth, in said county, on the 17th day of March, A. D. 1933, and on the 19th day of June, A. D. 1933, at ten o'clock a. m. of each day to examine all claims against said es tate, with a view to their adjustment and allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claims against said estate is three months from the 17th day of March, A. D. 1933, and the time limited for payment of debts -nnn Tear from said 17th day of March. 1933. Witne3 my haid and the seal of iald County; .Court ' this r 1 4&; flay ,ofl February, 1933. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) f20-3w County Judge SHERIFF'S SALE " State of Nebraska, County of Cass Br virtue of an Order of Sale is sued by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk of the District Court within and for Ca3s County. Nebraska, and to me direct ed, I will on the 20th day of March, A. D. 1933, at 10 o'clock a. m. of said day at the south front door of the court houce in said county, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the following real estate, 10- wit: The west half (W), except school grounds in the northwest corner, of Section twenty-two (22), Township ten (10), north, Range twelve (12), east of the Sixth Principal Meridian, in the County of Cass, State of Ne braska, containing in all three hundred and twenty (320) acres more or less, according to gov ernment survey; The same being levied upon and taken as the property of Jerome G. St. John, et al., defendants, to satisfy a judgment of said court recovered by Bankers Life Insurance Company, a corporation, is plaintiff against said defendants. - Plattsmouth, Nebraska, February 15th, A. D. 1933. II. SYLVESTER, Sheriff Cass County, Nebraska. flG-5w. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE Notice is hereby given that pur suant to an order of sale issued by the Clerk of the District Court of Cass County, Nebraska, and accord ing to the provisions of a decree en tered by said court on the 30th day of April, 1932, in an action pending in said court wherein Lantie Mae Frost is plaintiff and Tetge Meyers, et al., are defendants, commanding me to sell in tho manner provided by law the real estate hereinafter de scribed, to satisfy the liens fixed and determined by the terms of said de cree in an aggregate amount of $2,- 9 Go. 90, with interest from the date of eaid decree and costs of such pro ceedings a3 In said decree provided, I will on Monday, March 20, 1933, at 10 o'clock a. m., at the south front door of the court house In Platts mouth, Cass County, Nebraska, offer for sale at public auction and will sell to the highest bidder cash the following described real estate, to wit: The south half of Section 17, and the . northwest quarter of Section 20, all in Township, 12, Range 9, east of the 6th p. 'in., In Cass County, Nebraska, subject to a first mortgage in favor of the Conservative Mortgage Com pany at Lincoln, Nebraska. Dated this 14th day of February, 1933. ... H. SYLVESTER, I SaerlS of Caes County, . Nebraska. - Lumber Sawing Commercial sawing from your own logs lumber cut to your specifications. We have ready cut dimen sion lumber and sheeting for sa!o at low prices. NEBRASKA BASKET FACTORY NOTICE TO CREDITORS State of NebraskaCounty of Cass, ss. Fee Book 9, page 33 8. In the County Court. - In the matter of the estate of John M. Kirker, deceased. To the creditors of paid estate: Ycu are hereby notified, that I will sit at the County Court room in Plattsmouth, in said county, on the 10th day of March, 1933, and on the 12th day of June, 1933, at the hour of ten o'clock a. m., of each day, to examine all claims against said estate with a view to their adjustment and allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claims against said estate is three months from the 10th day of March, A, D. 1933, and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 10th day of March, 1933. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 10th day cf February, 1933. A. II. DUXBURY. (Seal) fl3-3w County Judge. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. By virtue of an "Alias" Order of Sale issued by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk of the District Court within and for Cass county, Nebraska, and to me directed, I will on the 18th day of March, A. D. 1933, at 10 o'clock a. m. ot earn nay ai me souin num door of the court house In said coun ty, sell at public auction to the high est bidder for cash the following real estate to-wit: 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, Cats, County, Ne braska, as surveyed, platted and recorded The same being levied upon and taken as the property of William A. V.'ellr,, and Flora M. Wells. Edith Martin, and tho Becker Roofing Company, defendants, to ratisfy a judgment of said court recovered by the Occidental Building Loan Asso ciation, plaintiff, against said defend ants. Plattsmouth. Nebraska, February 7th, A. D. 1933. II. SYLVESTER, Sheriff, Cass County, Nebraska. fl3-5w . -f .4.."' ORDER OF HEARING v and Nctioe an PetUioa tf ttle ' '' . tnieift of xSbunt? ? v ; In the County Cburt of Cassv coun ty, Nebraska. State of Nebraska, Cass county, ss. Fee Book 9, at page 41. To all persons Interested in the es tate of Marshall W. Smith, deceased: On reading the petition of L. B. Egenberger, Administrator, praying a final settlement and allowance of hia account filed in this Court on the 8th day of February, 1933. and for assign ment of estate and discharge of Ad ministrator; 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 fcr Eaid rounty on the 10th day of March, A. D. 1933. at ten o'clock a. m.. to show cause, if any there be, why the pray er of the petitioner should not be granted, and that notice of the pen dency of said petition and the hear ing thereof be Riven to all persons in terested In said matter by publishing a copy of this order In the Platts mouth Journal, a semi-weekly news paper printed in said county, for three 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 February, A. D. 1933. A. II. DUXBURY. (Seal) fl3-3w County Judge. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the guardianship cf Gertie Beckner, insane. Nov on this 11th day of February. 1933, this cause came on for hearins upon tho petition of Searl S. Davis, as guardian of Gertie Beckner. in sane, praying for a license to eell said ward's interest in the following de scribed real estate, to-wit: The west 37 aore3 of the west half of the southwest quar ter of Section 17, and the east . 7 acres in the eaet half of the southeast quarter of Se-tion 18. all in Township 11, North of Range 13, East of the 6th P. M., in Cass county, Nebraska for the purpose or paying debts'and expenses of administering said estate, and tho support of said ward. It is therefore ordered that all per sons interested in eaid estate appear before me at the District Court room in the court houso at Plattsmouth. In Cass county, Nebraska, on the 18th day of March, 1933, at the hour of 10 o'clock a. m., to show cause, if any, why a license should not be granted to said guardian to sell said Insane person's Interest lnsthe above described real estate for the purpose pf paying debts, expenses of adminis tration and support ot said ward. It is Further Ordered that a copy of this order to show cause bo pub lished in tho Plattsmouth Journal, a newspaper in general circulation in Cas3 county, Nebraska, for a period of three successive weeks prior to the date of hearing. JAMES T. BEGLEY, ..J Judge of the District fl3-3wc court. Get ycur Ccnool Supplies at tho Ettes Bock Stcro where quality Is nigh and prices low. r-ir v.