THURSDAY, MAY 18; 1933: !"T"J Ifae PlQftOiBQPttl JGQFIiOl pTOcsren ezsj-wesxly at piatteeouth. hebragxa Bnwrad at Pcatofffca, Plattamoutb. IUb.. aa mcozid-clmm mall matter R. A, BATES, Publisher STJBSCSZFXIOir PBIGB (2.00 A T2LAR JB JTJBOT POSTAL Z05B Subscriber Uring In Becond Postal Zona, $2.60 par year. Beyond 600 Ki lifts, $8.00 per year. Rata to Oanada and foreign conntflea, S.ED per yr. All nxbtorlpticma ara payabla ttrtotlr In adrance. Gaston B. Means seems Btlll to have that objectionable habit, among others, of knowing too much. :o: Mr. Brisbane reminds U3 once more than a million angels can ranee on the point of a needle. One really doesn't have to be an angel, in fact. - :o: Pcrhap3 the cover charge, more or less common in some dining rooms, is made to pay for the scribbling done on the table linen by wanton customers. :o: The nest thing to be decided, ac cording to Senator Borah, ex-Senator James A. Reed and others, is whether you can convict a million dollars in gold. :o: Somebody has devised a dastardly plan to defeat the Iowa farm mover-tent to starve the cities. The plan ii for the cities, when hungry, to go back to the farms. :o: Iowa seems to have nosed Kansas cut as the state of nut farm leader ship. Where eke, for instance, would a farm strike be called just as farm price3 ef all sort3 were beginning to improve? :o: To make it perfectly clear, France's position on the debt is that unless we forego the rum she does not in tend to pay U3 in June France will not pay U3 what Bhe never intended to pay us last December. :o: A road from Rome to Brindisi, started twenty-two centuries ago, was finished recently, and the contem-t porary objectors who protested that the expense would be a burden to posterity are at last vindicated. " ' :o: - Or- uadePian&inM)f :. theisrttslic soul is not very profound, and eo we suppose when Scnor Rivera accepts $14,000 from the Rockefeller Center folks, he chould paint -what they desire. And if Senor Rivera still feel3 he must paint heads of Lenin, there are plenty of others who will furnish the walls, and will not embarrass him by Insisting on paying him $14, 000 for it, either. .o: ; TOO MANY PEOPLE LOOKING BACKWARD Many people have fallen into the habit of living in the Iays that t were. They are thinking that the re turn to "normalcy" means going Lack to times that have passed, of conditions as they were. Even the federal government 13 trying to re adjust tbing3 economic upon the bs.i-; that obtained before the war Like Lot's wife, the nation or In dividual who looks back may be pre served but it la tLey who keep the vision fixed upon the new horizons that advance civilization. Bruce Barton, writing in Redbook magazine, say.3 it Is hi3 conviction that the backward looking are out of luck. "Truth," eav3 Mr. Barton, "never stand3 still. It goes forward rfometim23 slowly, sometimes by leaps and bounds. At present it i3 flying. "I am moved to this comment be cause too many people are now look ing backward. They arc 'busted and they dwell wistfully upon the days when they had money. They hope that same sort cf condition will oc cur again; they call thi3 'getting back to normal. "They c?c the world in turmoil and they arc marking time until it be comes quiet. They sec all sorts of social, economic and governmental experiments. They regard these as temporary makeshifts. They fully fully belicvo that soon we shall re turn to the old-fashioned ways of do ing things. "My own conviction is that every hour spent entertaining such delu sions is worse than lOLt. I believe we shall have no serene or settled days the rest of pur lives.' Not that we shall always be at the bottom of the depression. By no- means. Eut the processes of readjustment, of trial and error, of change, are going to be continuous. The backward looking ere cut of luck; the flexible, ..the lithe, ' the eager, will Inherit the earth." Living today, is the important is sue, living each day so it is finer, and bigger and better than the one3 that have "past. Beatrice Sun. Chicago school-teachers can't see that a century of progress has done much for them. :o: Wonderful machine age! A few thousand know how to make ma chines and the others push buttons that are foolproof. :o: The Liberal News notes that a Kansas man complained that it took 500 bushels of corn to pay for a set of false teeth. That, of course, was when the price of corn was at its worst. But, even so, with the roast ing ear season approaching, a good set of teeth, though false, is almost priceless. :o: Quality in cigars counts for more now than once it . did. Remember those good old days of the doll rack at the fair when the proprietor call ed out: "One baby down, one cigar; two babies down, two cigars; three down a quarter of a dollar!" Those cigars had no acquaintance with quality, yet no one was ever seen to throw them away or to grumble about their taste. Few of us had been educated then, and we smoked, just to be smoking, and not for mildness. :o: UNHAPPY GERMANY Those who thought they knew the German people well have found it very hard to understand some of the things that are being done under the new spiritof nationalism aroused by Adolf Hitler. The persecutions of the Jews, the bizarre overtures to ward setting up a new religion, and finally the absurd burning of the "un-German" books, all seem entirely cut cf place with previous concep tions pf German character.,.. , Oswald Garrison . Yillard, in his ncw""bo5!r, heGeTmtTf PHo'enlx"", suggests a reason for Gil this. It arises he believes, froni the 'depths of despair in a people miserably un happy, who feel that they have been tricked and betrayed by the rest of the world. He gives us a picture of tho soldiers, brave and courageous as their enemies knew them to be, who returned hopefully to Germany to defeat a threatened red anarchy, and to place a harness-maker in the president's scat, in the belief that through self-government in peace they would find a way to new liber ties, new prosperity. When those soldiers, and the people who looked to them, discovered that the treaty of Versailles set burdens upon them that could not be borne, hope turned to despair, faith to doubt, friendship to. cynicism. In such a mood they could trust no one, and when the fiery orator appeared who fed their wounded vanity by telling them to depend only upon themselves, they were ready to follow him. It Is one of the dearly bought les sons of the world war that hatred and the things conceived in hatred bring only deep trouble in their wake. The world i3 pretty generally agreed that come of the clauses of the treaty of Versailles were intolerably unjust. With that belief as a beginning, It is easy to understand that repeated calamities would but add to the Ger man tense of outrage. Yet there was little or nothing they could do about it except nourish resentment. A3 far as active measures to better their lot, there was nothing externally that could be done. And then came Hitler, ' showing them something to do. If they could not punish the makers of the Ver sailles treaty, they could burn books, they could turn to hero worship of German . leaders, they could flaunt fascism in tho face of an uneasy world. This, at least, they have done. To recover her sense of proportion, Germany needs sympathy and help from the rest of the world. She needs co-operation. She needs tolerance now when she is behaving in some ways co inexplicable. She needs a helping hand so that when the cur rent madness is past she will bo made to feel, that the rest of the world is for her, and. not against her. She needs understanding, so that when she discovers that nation alism la not enough,, and that the peoples of the world must, somehow, find a wayvtr get along, she will be welcomed as an equal in any associa tion' rf TP tifin s L'tt.-Arl4tT..it ' KILLING THE GOOSE The tragic paradox of famine in a land of plenty has a ludicrous com panion piece in the energetic efforts the nations are makingUo promote their foreign trade while at the same time building bigger and better bar riers aeainst that very trade. They are all at it. The Netherlands, for example, has authorized its bureau of commerce and industry to double Its salary al lotments and increase its personnel It is also formulating plans for an extension of its commercial attache service. The Canadian department of trade and commerce is conducting a vi n mil's advertising campaign. The dominion now has 34 trade commis sioners located in the world's great est business centers. The department appeals to every Canadian producer and business man to do his duty by exporting "as much a3 possible wherever and whenever possible." drpnt Britain is spending five times as much for this governmental function as the United States, on a per capita basis. From the far south seas comes the message that Aus tralia is planning to create a per manent foreign trade promoting agency, patterned after our depart ment of commerce. France, Spain and Brazil are debating additional export trade measures. The policy of always selling to the other fellow and never buying anything from him, to which all the nations are now committed, is a fatal hallucination, officially certified to by the statistical requiem of foreign trade. There is a happy middle ground in international iraue, one upon which all nations can trade across national borders, to their mutual ad vantage. The forthcoming interna tional economic conference can ren der the sick world a great service by pointing the way back to It. Jack son News. -:o:- R00SEVELT RECORD BEGETS CONFIDENCE Lamentations over the lack of leadership in Washington have been replaced by squawks that there is too much leadership. Congress has abdicated, the constitution, it i3 said, is in danger of demolition, and new powers promise 'to""make the " presi- pessimists forget that congress- abdi cated many months ago to narrow sectionalism and minority blocs They forget that federal authority can cope successfully with an eco nomic crisis only if unhampered by red tape and congressional jealousies, Tho record of President Roosevelt thus far inspires a high degree of confidence. The banking crisis was passed successfully. The pension evil was curtailed, despite powerful opposition. A decision for controlled nflation, brilliantly timed for diplo matic effect, had far-reaching and favorable reactions. At home, farm commodity prices have had the best advance in several years, and have brought many a debt-burdened farm er nearer to solvency. Abroad, the Lnited States has shifted its eco nomic position from one of defense to one of attack that has changed the entire outlook for the world economic conference. All this has been accomplished in two months, and, as a' result, a new spirit i3 abroad in the land. Car loadings and automobile sales reflect it. So doe3 the stability of the na tion's banking structure. Whatever the pessimists may believe, it i3 ap parent that tho public generally credits President Roosevelt with high ideals, sincere Americanism, and a desire to lead the way out of the de pression. It is true that the details of some administration bills have been freak- sh. Certain features of tho farm relief bill are impractical in th ex treme. The industrial dictatorship contemplated as a substitute for MiS3 Perkins cost-boo3ting 30-hour week bill would create chaos if it were authorized. Some sections of the securities ,. regulation proposal encountered justifiable objection The suggastion that income for bonds to finance a public works pro gram be provided by taxing both con tractors and materials i3 ludicrous. For proposals of that sort the pro fesslonal experts attached to Mr. itooseyeu s administration are re sponsible. They have boggled details in an eager desire to put pet theories to the test. Fortunately most of the powers proposed are merely permis sive. Academicians may devise, but it remains for the more practical president to -act. -Wise Americans will support, the president.' They know that, above all else, the nation needed leader ship, and that leadership has been forthcoming under Mr. Roosevelt. Chicago Daily News. ' ' J Cass County Farm t Bureau Notes a Copy furnished from Office T rvv r 4 D. H. I. A. Finishes Year The Cass-Otoe-Johnson Dairy Herd Improvement Association finished year of testing last month. Two cows made over 500 pounds of butterfat each, 26 made over 400 pounds, 54 over 300 pounds, 67 over 200 pounds and all others failed to reach the 200 mark. The average feed cost of the association was 13c per pound of fat and the average market price 19c leaving a net of 6c per pound, It Is easy to see that the milker would be paid at the rate of $1.00 per month for milking a cow that gave 200 pounds of fat. The following figures aro taken from the annual report of the tester, Ervin Stevens: Income over feed cost $20.07; Size of herd, 1G; Pounds of milk, 9,008; Average test, 3.9 Pounds butterfat, 347.1; Gross value cf product, 66.03; Days on pasture 245; Cost of roughage, $24.95; Cost of grain, $12.01; Total coct of feed $36.96; Returns for $1.00 expense of feed, $1.79; Feed cost per pound of fat, 11c; Feed C03t per 100 pounds of milk, 41c; Average market prico of product per pound B. F., 19c Margin of net profit per lb. B. F. over average cream market of year, 8c. Emergency Relief Act. With tho passage of the agricul tural relief act the question naturally arises in Nebraska as to Just how the act will effect tho farmers of th state, W. H. Brokaw said. As director of the agricultural extension service Brokaw is to be one of the state com mittee in charge of the administra tion of the agricultural relief act in Nebraska. All of tho members of the committee'' have not yet been named. ' Acceptance of the provisions of the new agricultural emergency re lief act will be entirely voluntary on the part of Nebraska farmers. There is nothing in the law which says farmer must ' reduce acreage, lease land to the government, or detsroy surplus crops.- He may take advan tage of whatever plan is worked out only if he cares' to do so. The : first 'more that'- Secretary Wallace will make according to the latest word from' Washington, will be to call together representatives of all industries ' concerned for com- mitv hearings." allace will be guided by the- facts brought out in these hearings in working out a prac tical plan in administering the law. Judging from the information coming to Brokaw's office from Sec retary Wallaeh so far. one of the fir3t and most important jobs of the Nebraska staWtommittee will be to acquaint farmers with the content of the emergency relief and to tell them how the act will work in Ne braska. The state committee will get the national information from a re gional or national conference to be held in the near future, and also a XX.- trom communications sent out uy Secretary Wallace's office. Brokaw will depend upon his county exten- ion agents to help in the distribu tion of information. The press and radio httve also agreed to print and broadcast material. In Brokaw's opinion, no Nebraska armer would be justified in delaying any of his seasonal farm work in the next few weeks on account of the emergency act. It will taKo time to have the hearings and work out the olan for administration of the act. Copies of the act will be available within a few days at tho office cf the county extension agent. Lead Arsenate fcr Currant Worms Currant, tvnrm cess have been laid and aro ready to hatch. There is no danger of using lead arsenate as tho rpray material at this time of the year and it is by far the most satisfactory rpray material to use. It should be applied right away because the currant worm makes short work of tho foliage fif no effort is made to control them. Should you forget to spray-and the worms have gotten well along with .their job, then the quickest' way of. killing them i3 to spray with nicotine sulfate at the rate of one teaspoon to a gallon of water in which has been dissolved an ounce of laundry soap. Thi3 ma terial is used to control lice on var ious fruit and ornamental plants. More 4-H Clubs. A number of 4-II clubs were or ganized during the past week, and are A3 follows: Girl3 Room, Mrs. Earl Horton, Elmwood, leader. . Girls Room, ' Miss Helen Norton, Weeping Water, leader. Learning toNo.w. Mis3 Marie Speck, Plattsmouth, leader. Learning to Sew, Mrs. J. E. Sperry, Weeping Water, leader. Learning to Sew, Mrs. Guy Wiles, Plattsmouth, leader. Learning to Cook, Miss Marie Da vis, Murray, leader. Rope club, John Ilobscheidt, Mur ray, leader. Write or call at the Farm Buerau office if you are interested in or ganizing a 4-11, club. Eat More Greens. Eat greens. . In the springtime eat more greens. When you were a child they gave you sulphur and molasses, but now they say eat green3. It is for good reasons, says the Bureau of Home Economics of the U. S. Department of Agriculture, that nutrition specialists harp so much on greens. In tho green leaves of the dandelion, of mustard, of dock or other wild greens, in the green tops of turnips and beets, as well as in kale, collards, spinach, lettuce, Swiss chard or green cabbage, are found food materials vh?ch are abso lutely essential to good health. These green leaves are all rich in minerals and vitamins. Particularly they are rich in calcium and iron, and in vita mins A and C. They are good sources also cf vitamins B and G. They rank at the top of the li.t as protective foods, riant enough kslo, rpir.ach and Swiss chard eo that a canned food supply for the winter months will includo two servings per family member per week. Mulch for Tomatoes arid Potatoes Putting straw mulch arcund pota toes and tomatoes will inerccsa tho yields, produce a better quality prod ucts, and keep down the weed'. Th increase in yield is ni03t ncrlcoable when the season is hot and dry. T straw should bo put on the poLatoes just as the plants are corning through the trcund. It should Le worked around the tomatoes after they a well established and about six to eight Inches tall. The rtrav fhould be from two to four inchc-3 deep when well settled. It takes about ten tons of straw to mulch an acre of land or about half a ton fcr a backyard garden 40 x 50 faet. Straw mulch is not recommended for early garden vegetables nor for svect corn. In tests at the Nebraska experiment station at Lincoln, straw mulch pro duced higher yields and better qual Ity vegetables than paper mulch, and in addition' the eiraw -was less ex pensive to put on the- gardon. The paper mulch produced heavier yields of early gardan crops than did straw, Apiary Demonstration f.t Warga's The Cass Couuty Hone Producers Association will have their second apiary demonstration at the farm of Charles Wcrga cf Pla-.tsmouth, Wednesday, May 24th at 1:30 p. m. O. S. Bare, C02 rpcci.-.llst from the College of Agriculture will be there, Every problem cn preparing the apiary for the June honey flow will be discussed and dcmonrtrr.ted at this meeting. Anyone interested In bee management is Invited to attend. SWINGING AEOTTND TO MR. ROOSEVELT Coming from a auoncu Republi can and a veteran industrialist like Samuel M. Vauclain, a combined tatement cf confidence In the Presi dent and in tiia burino:;s situation would be, under ordinary conditions, a singular development. Yet the peo ple of America arc living under extra ordinary conditions and they have been witnescirg a r.io-;t unusual per formance at Washington as tho coun try has begun a seemingly steady and mot heartening advance from tho low point of a depression that had just about t:,l:en hope out of the hearts of million?. Mr. Vauclain's frank declaration of loyalty to the President, despite a previous attitudo. cf opposition, doubtless exprcTiCT the feeling of many of thoa millions. It is un questionably true that the vigorous policies advocated from the White House, tfcat tha courage, faith and good nature cf th: President not only have contributed to a reversal in much r-cr.timnnt ?.z regards the execu tive himnclf but to the actual better ment i;i industry that so far has come. Had rendition-; r.oi shown positive signs cf Improvement, Mr. Roosevelt, whether he deserved it or not, would have Ei:i"crc:fl in popularity. The Am erican pccple hcv3 a way of holding their Prc-idonta to a vast degree of responsibility. Mr. Roosevelt has been extremely fortunate, both in meeting popular expectations and. in getting result?. R;gardle33 cf poli tics, every thoughtful citizen will de sire a continuance of the Roosevelt luck" because it happens to be the luck of th- Ansriean people them selves. . A woman usually can get the last word, tut a man canalway3 slam the doer." " " ' Lumber Sawing Commerolal sawing from your own log lumber cut to your peoifloatlona. Wa hava rady cut dimen sion lumber and sheeting for sale at low prices. RE8RASKA BASKET FACTORY When a fire occurs in Chile or Cuba, the owner of tho property is promptly arrested and held in Jail sometimes for weeks; until proof that he is guilty of incendiarism is shown to be lacking. :o; One man has figured mat the United States loses thirty years wait ing on traffic lights. We'd like to know how much time busy office peo ple lose by having time-killing friends come in to chat with them. ORDER OF HEARING and Notice on Petition for Set tlement of Account In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. Probate Fee Book 9, page 311. State of Nebraska. Cass county, ss. To heirs at law and all persons in terested in tho estate of Don C. Rhoden, deceased: On reading the petition of Aleck D. Rhcden, Executor, praying a final settlement and allowance of his ac count filed In this Court on the 1st day cf May, 1933, and for assign ment of residue of said estate, deter mination of heirship and for d's charge of Executor; It 13 hereby ordered that you and all persons Interested in r,ald matter may, and do, appear at the County Court to be held in and for said county, on the 2nd day of June. A. D. 1033. nt ten o'clock a. m., to show cause, if any there be, why tho 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 cony 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 cf hearing. In witnes3 whereof, I have here unto set my hand and the seal of said court, this 1st day of May, A. D. 1933. A. II. DUXBURY, (Seal) m8-3w County Judge. ORDER OP IfDARINO AND NO TICE OF PROEATD OF WILL In the County Court cf Caso coun ty, Nebraska. State of Nebraska, County cf Case, S3. Probate Fee Book 9, page 359. To the heirs at law and to all per sons interested in the estate of John Ilobscheidt, deceased. ' J -"-'-s-'- ' On reading the petition of John Ilobscheidt, Jr., praying that the in strument filed in this court on the 3Gth day of April, 1933, and pur porting to bo the last will and testa ment of the said deceased, may be proved and allowed and recorded as ho last will and testament of John Ilobscheidt, deceased; tfcat said in strument be admitted to probate and the administration of eaid estate be granted to H. A. Schneider and Henry Horn, as Executors; 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 tho 26th day of May, A. D. 1933, at ten o'clock a. m., to show cause, if any there be. why the prayer of tho petitioner should not be granted, and that notice of the pendency of said petition and that the hearing thereof be given to all persons interestea m Faid matter oy 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. Witness my hand, and the seal of said Court, this 26th day of April, X. D. 1933. A. II. DUXBURY, Seal) ml-3w County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING AND NO TICE OF PROBATE OF WILL In tho County Court of Cass Coun- y. Nebraska. State of Nebraska, County of Cass, Fee Bock 9, Page 3C3. To tho heirs at law and to all per sons Interested in the estate of W il- iiam C. Boucher, deceased. On reading tho petition of Alice Jennio Boucher, Gladys Martin and Kenry Warren Boucher praying that tho instrument filed in this court on tho 11th day of April, 1933, and pur porting to bo the last will and testa ment of tho said deceased, may be proved and allowed and recorded as the last will and testament of Wil liam C. Eoucher, deceased; that said instrument be admitted to probate and the administration of said estate be granted to Henry Warren Bouch er as executor; ....... It is hereby ordered that you, and all persons interested in said matter, may, end do, appear at the County Court to be held in and for said coun ty, on the 26th day cf May, A. D. 1933, at ten o'clock a. m., to show cause, if any there be, why the prayer of the .petitioners should not bo granted, and that notice of the pend ency cf caid petition and that the hearing therof 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. Witness my hand, and the seal of eaid court, this 29th day of April, A. D. 1933. (al) County Judee. CARL D. SANZ, Attorney. ml-3w NOTICE TO CREDITORS State of Nebraska, County of Casa, - In the County Court. Fee Book 9, page 353. In the matter of the estate of Dora Kastel, 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 26th day of May, 1933, and on the 1st day of September, 1933. at ten o'clock a. m., to examine ell claim . 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 26th day of May, . A. D. 1933. and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 26th day of May, 1333. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 28th day of April, 1933. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) ml-Sw County Judge. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE , Notice is hereby given that by vir tue of an Order of Sale issued by the Clerk of the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska, In an action wherein The Nebraska City Building & Lean Association, a Corporation, -Is , plaintiff, and Louis Keil et al are de- jfendants, I v. ill at 11 o'clock a. m.. on June 19, 1933, at the south frortt door of the Court House in Plaits- mouth, in Cass county, Nebraska,! of-. fer and eoll at public auction .the.,, following described real estate in Cass county, Nebraska, to-wft: -Lot 9 in Block 99. In the City cf Plattsmouth, and the east 14 . feet of ot 4, in Block 10, in ; , Young & Hay's Addition to the City of Plattsmouth. ' ' Dated May 13, 1933. : - H. SYLVESTER,. ? ' Sheriff of Cass County; Nebraska. WM. H. PITZER and MARSHALL PITZER, Attorneys for Plaintiff. ml 5-5 w L NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the County Court of Cass Coun ty, Nebraska. Fee Beck 9, Pago No. 365. In the matter of the estato of James Janca, deceased. i . : Notice of administration. All persons interested in said es tate are hereby notified that a peti-" tion has been filed in Bald court al- ' ' leglng that said deceased died leaving ; no last will and testament and pray- lng for administration upon his estate and for cuch other and further orders and proceedings In the premises 'as' may be required by the statutes in-' such cases made and provided torthe" ' end that eaid estate and all things;.,.. pertaining thereto may be finally. ... aettlod and determined, and that a " hearing will bo had on said petition before-said court on the 2nd day 'of ' N' June, A. D. 1933, and that , if ttey. iJ fail to-HipFearttSaidfCAuri,!!. aaJd ,.a 2nd day of June, 1933, at. ten o'efjbek court may grant tho same and grant'-' administration of said estate to Rose1. - - Janca or com other suitable person -t and procoed to a settlement thereof., . t Witness my hand and tho seal of paid County Court this 8th day" of " ' May, 1933. ,:.-. A. II. DUXBURY, ' (Seal) m8-3w County Judge. .. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the County Court of Cass coun iy, Nebraska. In the matter of the estate . of. David B. Ebersole, deceased. ' '" Fee Book 9. page No. 362. Notice cf Administration. ; -. All persona interested In said eg- - . tato are hereby notified that a petj-."- ' tion has been filed in said Court al- ' leglng that said doceased died lear-' ing no last will and testament and praying for administration upon his .', estate and for such other and further orders and proceedings in the prem ises as may be required by the 6tat utes 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 2Clh day of May, A. D. 1933, and that if they fail to appear at said Court on paid 2Gth day of May, 1933,. at 10 o'clock a. m.. to contest the raid petition, the Court may grant the same and grant administration of said estate to David K. Ebersole, or. some other suitable person and pro ceed to a settlement thereof. Dated this 28th day of April,. Ji.. D. 1933. - A. II. DUXBURY. .". (Seal) ml-3w County Judge. NOTICE OF SUIT To Roy O. Kunz and Kunz, his wife, first namo unknown: ' , Take notice that August Stander has commenced an action against you and each of you In the district court of Cass County, Nebraska, the object and prayer of which is to fore close a. mortgage given by the said,-, Roy O. Kunz, single, March 1, 1927. .. to secure tho payment ot a promis- -.' fory note In the sum of $4,200.00, 'bin 'i the east half of the NE4 of Boc. 32,1 Twp. 11, N. Range 9, east of the 6th P. M. in Cas3 County, Nebraska, :,' and for foreclosure of lien for taxes :' paid upon said lands; also for theV,' eppolntment of a receiver-to collect , the rent3 and profits, which npnlica-'.' tion fcr receiver will be heard on or,! after the answer day, and for eqalt-, 1 able relief. You are reoulred to answer iaid-- petition on or beforo the 19th -day, ut June, i3o, otherwise plaintiff J will have a decree of foreclosure and tppointment - of receiver- and feuch I other relief as the court may decree ' him to be entitled to under his petl- tion. ' -" . - , . ; ' - 'AUGUST STANDER. t , Plaintiff. r. By DWYEH & DWYER, ,jf '.- H. A. DWYER. , ' - . i -'V. - His Attorneys. ' '-' ml-4w - -t