Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (July 27, 1933)
PAGE TWO THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1933. PLATTSHGUTH SEMI - WEEKLY JQUBNAX Ihe IPIattsmouth Journal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA Entered at Postoffice, Plattsmouth, Neb.. a3 second-class mail matter R . A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCBIPTION PBICE $2.00 A YEAS IN FIBST POSTAL ZONE Subscribers living In Second Postal Zone. $2.10 per year. Beyond COO miles. $3.00 per year. Rate to Canada and foreign countries, $3.50 per year. All subscriptions are payable etrictly-ln advance. Cheer up. It won't be long until the old-fashioned headaches will be back i'.gain. -:o: Steamships, stabilized, lose their roll, whereas business, done the same way, gets it back. :o: A Hollywood philosopher has fig ured out that business must be on the upgrade because it is so slow. :o: 1Z we must cling to the theory that 3.2 beer drives bootleggers to kidnaping, we must admit it got tuick action in Oklahoma. :o: Nobody ever worries about the pumpkin crop and the price thereof, but where would this country be it there were no pumpkins? :o: Now that the theory which seeks to prove beer has turned the boot leggers from, bootlegging to kidnap ing is pretty well under way, further ruggostions will be in order. Shall v.e return to prohibition to bring the kidnapcr3 back to bootlegging, rr shall we subsidize and support them in such luxury that kidnaping v. ill not be attractive to them? nOCCOOOOSCCGOOGOCOQCCSOOSCCOOOQGCO Bible School Sunday, July 30 VsososcoscccGcco9coooccoosooooooocoeo6Coeoooee6ooooo "Gideon" Judges 7:4-7; 16-21. The times and circumstances pro duced this extraordinary man. In courage, valor and faith, he has no equal in holy writ. One night he tore down the altar of Baal, which was worshiped by the people of his toyn, OrphrA.-.'.Tia: iwiensed people wanted to kill him, but his father i'liiic to his defense. The least in his father's house, but destined to be a national hero, prophet, warrior and judge. He won always as he won that night against Baal by surprise, lie won his greatest battle with an err.iy cf three hundred picked men tut of ten thousand, agahist 135,000. He fought long and gloriously for Israel. lie knew God's voice when be heard it. He was cautious and fkcnlical. His faith depended on fa'.ts an;! fi.srure3. Question marks oc cur as often in hi3 record as excla r.nticn marks. Yet by prestige of bis sword and intermarriage, he built un a kincdom in the heart of Israel. It was the nation's first at t'.nipt in kingdom-making. It failed. In our study we see the uselessness of armament. "Not by might, nor by power, but by my spirit, saith the Ird of hosts" (Zch. 4:G) are the battles fought for God and righteous nes3. Of the tv.elce judges of Israel, one wa.3 a wen an. Deborah. Heroic as were the deeds and exploits of others. Gidiori bar; boon an inppiration to all ages since his time. He lived in trcublous times. Israel was oppress ed by its enemies, the Midianites and Ama!ekites. for seven years, for their God-forsaken living. I I.c cepression cf our day is very lugr-Iy the result of materialism, re sulting from too much prosperity. A re turn, wholeheartedly to Gcd. by our nation will restore us again to God's favc.r, and nothing else. But we thank God that we can see a return to God of the masses, as the Christian Her ald shows that church membership increased 1.0SS.594 in 1932. The church ir. still the nation's greatest going concern. God's time has come, and the man i3 at hand to bring relief to his pao ple. Gideon's objections are over come by Jehovah. Gcd submits to Gideon's testing him. But being as sured of Gcd'3 presence in his un dertakings, he Is ready to go, to meet the foe. In the old battleground cf Jezreel he finds the enemy gathered in large numbers to make their raids on Israel. Gideon calls his people to arms. 32,000 respond. But what are they against 135,000? God says they' are too many. If victorious, they may say "We won the battle." The glory must be Je hovah's alcne. All the faint-hearted are told they could go home; ad 22.000 are glad to return. But God says 10,000 are too many; lead thear It seems that with our multimil lionaires nothing is certain except death and the dodging of taxes. -:o:- We suppose the hard part of ad justing the Aimee MePherson-Hutton divorce matter is arriving at the amount of alimony David ought to have. :c: : ' i As an example of a rabbit's foot bringing good luck, the man next door reports that his wife felt one in his nocket and thought it was a mouse. . . :o: There are oldsters who can think back to the time when gasoline, was taxed solely on the theory that mo torists ought to be willing to pay for their own highways. :o: The appearance of Lady Godiva in a pageant at Huntington Park, Cal., has been postponed because Lady Godiva has the measles, and the horse isn't feeling any too vell him self. Of course, we suppose, in case the promoters insist in going on with the show, that the artistic in congruity might be overcame - by using a speckled horse,- too. Lesson Study! By L. Neitzel. Murdock. Neb to the spring of Ilarod "and I will try them for thee there." The test was in the way they would drink only 300. being found to come up to God s standard. . Gideon is not dis couraged. We remember the story of Elisha as recorded in. II Kings 6:1-16. So are the invisible hosts pf God always feadyffcTleTyni'eln thai trust in him This is the lesson for us, not to be anxious to count heads when we are doing God's work, nor even be afraid of being in a minority. Minorities are generally right when they are the apostles cf new thoughts, though the minorities which cleave to some old fossil are ordinarily wrong. Let us be sure that we are on God's side. The three hundred had God with them and that was enough Gideon worked as if all depended on mm, and trusted In God like as though all depended on God. That should be the attitude of every child of God. Another lesson is to follow the leader. Only in strict co-operation can success be achieved. Every man in his place and doing his-part as sure.s success. But where are the leaders? During this world depres sion, no leader has appeared to lead man to a better day. This man would not send his men w here he would not go himself. How different today! Our generals stay far from the front, in a safe place behind the trenches, and send their men into the jaws of cer tain death, and then get all of the glory when the army is victorious, Not so Gideon! "Do as I do" is the order. The slogan is "For Jehovah and for Gideon." Jehovah and Gideon are invincible.' Other slogans might be cited from history: The Crusaders, "Remember the Holy City;" Nelson, "England expects every man to do his duty;" "They Shall Not Pass:" "Remember the Maine" and others. By a surprise attack Gideon rout ed the enemies;, in the zero hour of the night he causes a stampede. "Ev ery man stood in his place and shouted." Ati army like the Midian ites could easily be discomforted, as they had come to forage. on the land, rob a defenseless people, carrying their families with them.' With the noise and the flaming torches on all sides in the deep silence of the night, consternation seized them and they fled. .It was a glorious victory; over 120,000 being slain; the rest. were pursued and few escaped. .The peo ple tried to make Qideon king, but ha refused the honor. "-Godvi8 your king" that showjj the type of hero he was. We will J keep this picture in our mind and leave the later his tory out. Gideon's name is found with the hercee in the Hall of Fame. See Hebrew 1J:S2. He m-a's the Ith jiulse and -ruled Israel forty years. OOOCCCOGOSOOOPBOPPg 8 BIDDY PASSES When the death of Biddy gets a meager seven and one-half lines on an inside page it begins to look as if the .. futility-of-endeavory theory may be on the up and up, after all. Biddy, northern Wisconsin's oldest ben, passed away at the age of 18 years after having reared a brood of offspringfrys annually for 17 years. She missed only the first year of her long and sacrificial life, but what do you expect? She was only a chick herself most of that year. , During her lifetime she produced (laid) three thousand eggs. - Reader, do you realize what this all means in terms of simple arith metic? For one thing, it means that Biddy reared no. less than 204 young sters, herself, counting twelve to the hatch, and that's what we intend to count to our hatches, come fair come fowl. -Now if each of those 204 chick ens did as well as their mother and they say that the world is grow ing better, so why not? then they have, produced, are now producing, or will in the future produce, 17,136 chickens of their own. Going a step further, what do 17,136 chickens mean in terms of eggs? That's what we're about to show you. They mean a graod jt'otai ' of 61,408,000 individ ual eggs, not counting those with double, yolks. That number of eggs, figuring" fin average of two inches to the egg, amount to exactly 102,816, OO'O inches or 8,568,000 feet or 1,- 623 miles and if you think that isn't a lot of eggs try hitch hiking on them from Kearney to Kalifornia without getting your tootsies wet. Ah. Biddy! Ungrateful is the cruel world to genius. For eighteen years the world egged you on to big ger and better efforts. On Wisconsin! On. -Wisconsin! For., eighteen years they bragged about you, as though it had been they who. were laying those eggs and producing those babies year after year. Then when you ups and dies what do you' get outen it? You gets 7 lines, which, in terms of egg nogs counting'" two eggs "per nog, which seems, a fair ratio fig ures up to a super-grand total of a little less than one-half of one per cent of a underdone omelet served cold and without salt .or pepper. It is utterly reprCHENsible, Biddy, ut terly repreHENsible." . What we all deserve is .to nave ot'put 'up with a flock of hens for a while among which there won't be a caekle in a carload. It would serve us right, .MJ)od-bye, gal; may-you robst henceforth inrjei feet peace upon the topmost f ung of the golden ladder. .You have It conv ing! World-Herald. :o: . THE TERMITE BORING INTO SOUND TIMBER "It is time for each and ' every one of us to cast away self-destroying, nation-destroying efforts to get something for nothing and to appre ciate that satisfying reward and safe reward come only through " honest work." Thus President ' Roosevelt ad dressed conservation corps members In a brief radio speech. If the Am erican people In the lowest and high est places took those thoughts into their hearts and minds, there would be.. no depression and but little pov erty In this land. From the first, Am erica provided bountifully for its peo ple so long as those people engaged in "honest work." By honest work the prairies and forests, valleys and elopes, yielded sustenance : at . least and bounty in the end. But when men began to try to "get something for nothing" they c, began - to lay blighting influences upon this sound prosperity. When they began to de vise smooth schemes to gain riches by promotions an dspeculations and trickery, they introduced shoddy into the fabric .of .the, nation that has weakened the whole cloth. He who, by honest work, creates a modest farm or a gigantic factory, a snug shop,' or a great railroad, a home spinning wheel or a mammoth water power, lay3 a' secure, founda tion lor himself' and others. But he who by . shrewd manipulation tries to "get something for nothing" out of those. farms, factories,, shops,, rail roads or water powers is as the ter mite, boring into the sound timber of the building. It is his destructive undermining that .at. last shatters the good public structure and brings want and misery to the many. If the people will -understand what President Roosevelt means; if they will think beyond the super ficial import of his words "it is time for each and every one of us to cast away self-destrpying, nation-destroy ing efforts to get something for noth ing" there will be plenty, again, for Americans. But unless they do, those In soft places, those who live by fi nancial vampirism, those who choose by promotions . arid speculations to "get something for. .nothing,",- will continue to rema, 'attached ' like leeches,' to the sound endeavors of the nation'. Milwaukee Journal. . , J Gass County Farm Bureau Notes Copy furnished from Office of County Agent Wainscott Project Club Fun Day. All out for the big county wide fun day: A big day of fun games, music, stunts and eats is being ar ranged for all .women project club members in the -county and their families if they care, to come. It is planned for .Friday, August 4th at the city park in Weeping Water. The day's fun will start with a bas ket dinner at 11:30 o'clock and con tinue until everyone is tired out or home chores make it necessary for them to leave. . Mark this date on your calendar now and get out your old shoes and be ready to participate in all the events of the day. All the responsi- bility you will" have is to bring a covered dish, sandwiches, and your own dishes. 4-H'ers in Camp at Bellsvue. About 60 Cass county 4-II club members are .now in . attendance at district 4-H club camp, at Bellevue with members' from Douglas and Otoe counties. ; '"'. - 4-H club members who found it impossible to attend camp for full time are welcome at the Friday night and Saturday afternoon programs, which are put ;on by the camper3 themselves. Why not plan a club picnic for Friday evening-or Saturday and en joy a few hours of real camp fun? Can Poultry This Summer Many - farm ; women are canning poultry this summer. It is profitable to can the roosters and the hens that have quit laying. Either year old or older birds that, are in prime condi tion' may be canned. Plump, well fed hens, two'years 'bid, or a rooster eight or ten months,- have a good texture and a better flavor than six months old chickens. It is best not to feed the chickens for at least "124 .hours before killing. Bleeding quickly and thoroly are both essential to securing a good flavor. When the feathers have been removed and the pin feathers drawn, the bird -shouM- be cooled rapidly. This rapid cooling after killing is essential to g'6o9' flavor. Some prefer to have the cj$?v? kjligd ..the day before, it is, used; in this case it should be iepf in a cold place over night. Thesbirdshould be singed and washed carefully after .it .has been properly cooled.. In cutting up chick en do not separate the wishbone from the breastbone. 'Wash "the pieces carefully. Preheat the chicken in boiling water or in the over so it may be kept' hot. Do not roll "the chicken in flour before cooking be cause this makes it more difficult to process, -pack: immediately into hot jars without cramming. After the chicken has cooked ten minutes, remove the skin from the breast and wltn a sharp knife cut the fish from the breast bone in two large pieces. Do not can tle giblets or. eggs, if ono has several! chickens to can at one time, it is best to sort the pieces. packing the choice pieces in one jar and the soup pieces in another. Trim off any' large pifeces of fat. If there is a great deal of fat in the jar it may cook out on the rubber ring and cause it to slip.' , "The following method is suggest ed for pacink a i four pound chicken in a auart Jar:! Place a drumstick with the' thick ehd down in the hol low of the back, holding the tail end up. Place these in the jar, skin side of the back 'next Wo' the glass and the cut and resting on the bottom of the Jar. , On either side of the back place the two piece3 of breast meat. Pack the two sings with the elbows rest; ing on the bottom. Place the thighs agove the wings Avith the skin side out. Packing, the pieces around the Jar in this manner leaves a small space in the center". In this place a drumstick with the small end down. Place the shoulder blades on top. Fill the jar up to within U inch of the top with boiling hot liquid from the pan in which the, chicken was pooked; or if seated in hot fat dilute fat with broth prepared from bony pieces and pour over meat. Partially seal glass jars and complete the seal after processing -period. When pro cessing in boiling water, if the alti tude is over 1,000 feet, increase the time 10 ' for each additional 500 feet. When processing in pressure cooker, if the altitude is over 2,000 feet, increase the pressure 1 pound for each additional 2,000. For quart glass Jars, process 90 minutes at 10 pounds pressure 'or three hours in water bath hot pack. County 4-H Club Picnic. A county wid 4-H club picaic, the first to be held In Cass county, was voted unanimously by 4-H club lead ers and assistant leaders who met at , the Congregational church in Weeping Water last Wednesday eve ning. The leaders voted to hold this picnic on Sunday, August 13th be ginning at cne o'clock when the big picnic dinner will be spread. All 4-H club ( members, leaders, and their families are urged to attend. Plan your family or club group now and bring a picnic lunch with you. County Committees lor Wheat Program. Chosen The wheat administration commit tee members for the Triple A wheat allotment program have been select ed. They are Harry Bricker, Green wood; Frank Buell, Murdock; Henry Ragoss, Louisville; Elmer Hallstrom, Avoca and Roy O. Cole, Mynard. These five men with the county agent will be the advisory and ad ministrative committee for the coun ty. This committee met Monday at Lincoln with tho committees from the southeast district and heard the program discussed and explained Sixteen meetings will be held in the county to explain the program to the wheat growers. These meetings will probably start about August 1st. Many ask if the plans will be car ried out because of the short crop this year. This can well be answered by Secretary Wallace's own answer when asked this question: "Do you think the wheat crop for this year will be sufficient for all needs?" He replied: "Yes, with the carry-over it will be more than sufficient." Then, taking an old envelope from his pocket, he warmed to his subject and set down the figures winch tell the story. "The estimated crop this year is about 500 million bushels, giving us a total supply, with the carry-over of around 200 million bushels, of about 8 GO million bushels. Disap pearance for the coming year, in cluding domestic concumption, seed, and erports, is placed ai 6C0 million bushels. This would leave U3 a mar gin or carry-over cf about 200 mil lion bushels for the end of ihe year. "With the normal seeded acreage and an average yield, the crop nex year may be expected to be about 845 million bushels. All to this th 200 million estimated carry-over and v.e have r.gain a total cupply of more than a million bunhels. Eve if we should have sonie increase in consumption, the - carry-over at the end of that ycar-July--1.-1932) would be twice i.ormal. And so "In cpite of the shortest crop since 1893, there 13 every reason for going ahead with the wheat production control plan. One average crop would bring back the old ruinous condi tions unless the wheat-productio program is carried cut." GENERAL MOTORS PICZS UP New York. Net earnings of Gen eral Motors corporation totaling 41, 198,169 for April, May and June were announced, showing nearly a six fold increase over the year's first quarter, The second quarter earnings were 90 cents a cenmon share, compared with 11 cents a share made possible by the first quarter's earnings of -6,870,007. "The improvement in sales trend,' said Alfred P. Sloan, jr., president "has been so rapid in 1933 that i has been difficult to increase produc tion from the previous law levels in order to have adequate stocks in the field to fully capitalize the increased sale3 possibilities." ' Some folks don't even like to get up to see the dawn cf a new era. :o: The new model inspirational bio graphies are quite attractive. The poor boy, by thrift and industry, fi nally gets so rich he doesn't have to pay any more income tax. :c: r The federal government now asks for a 60-day notice before paying postal bank deposits with interest showing that it must have been get ting some banking experience. :c: If a child begins to become un manageable, advises a Chicago ex pert, switch his attention. Ah, how we do progress! That wasn't what they used to switch when we were a boy. :o: Merry quip contributed by Presi dent Lowell of Harvard: "No won der there is a lot of knowledge in colleges the freshmen always bring in a little and the seniors never take any away." :o: The welfare officials in New York have advertised, for "cast-off women's bathing suits," and the response has been very liberal. It also nidicates that there ar more cast-off women in New York, than we had euppceed. and. thy peem well supplied with new bathing suits. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Nel son L. Pollard, deceased. To the creditors of said estate: You are hereby notified, that I will Bit at the County Court room In Plattsmouth, in said county, on Aug ust 18, 1333, and on November 24, 1933, at ten o'clock a. m. of each day, to examine all claims against said estate, with a view to their ad justment and allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claims against said estate is three months from the 18th day of August. A. D. 1933, and the time limited for pay ment of debts is one year from said 18th day of August, 1933. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 19th day of July, 1933. A. II. DUXBURY, (Seal) j24-3w County Judge NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENT DEFENDANTS Albert E. Foreman and Essie R Foreman, defendants, will take no tice that on the 8th day of June 1933. the plaintiff, Josephine S. War ren filed her petition in the District Court of Cas3 county, Nebraska, against said defendants, the object and praj'er of which are to recover a judgment against said defendants on two certain promissory notes for the sum of $3,000.00, dated June 9, 1926, snade, executed and delivered to the Pank of Polk, Polk, Nebraska, and another for the sum of $315, dated June 8. 1926. to Godfred Olson and R. L. Cox. on which notes there is now due the sum of $4,641.00, to gether with interest thereon, from June 9, 1933, at ten per cent per annum, which notes are now owned and possessed by the plaintiff, Joseph ine S. Wgrren, and to subject and sell the t'tle and interest of said de fenclants in the following described property, which has been attached In said action to satisfy said judgment, to-wit: An undivided one-eleventh interest in and to the southwest quarter and the south half of the northwest quarter, the northeast quarter of the northwest quarter of Ssctlon 27, Township 11, Range 9. East of the th P. M.; and an un divided one-rlevcnth interest in and to the northeast quarter of the north cast quarter of Section 28, Township 11, Range 9. East of the 6th P. M., in Cass county, Nebraska; and an undivided one-eleventh interest in and to Lot 5, of the northeast quar ter of the northwest quarter, and of the southeast quarter of the north west quarter of Section 2, Township 11, Range 9, all in Cass county, Ne braska, - for the payment of the amount found due the plaintiff on said notes, and for the costs of said action. You are required to answer said petition on or before the 4th day of September. 1933. JOSEPHINE S. WARREN. ' W. T. THOMPSON arid -E. R. MOCKETT, Her Attorneys. jl7-4w NEW BARGE CANAL AND THE NEW DEAL The whole inland empire of North America joins with Chicago and the lower Mississippi communities in celebrating the completion and form al opening of a nine-foot barge canal from the lakes to the gulf. It 13 a suitable preface to work3 yet to be accomplished and a reassurance that the program set on foot by President Roosevelt is in tune with the needs of the nation. The new barge canal is a highly important link in an inland water way system which, in due time will honeycomb this country. The first and most available task is the full development of the great Mississippi system. Of this system the initial project selected by the president, on sound reasoning, is the Tennessee valley. Obviously, if the Mississippi is valuable for navigation, then the Tennessee, the Ohio, the Missouri and other members of the Mississippi system are also important for the same purpose. The people living in the minor basins of the system are as much entitled to the full use of the water flowing through their region as are the people along the lower Mississippi who get the benefit of the waters of all the tributaries. The profound lesson to be learn eu irom tne opening of the new barge canal is that the foundation task is the one suggested by the President's program, which is the adequate and effective control of sur plus waters. The Mississippi river system discharges each year 24 times the water discharged by the St. Law rence from the Great Lakes system, as Chicago in its saner moments fully understands. The adequate control cf this huge Mississippi valley water supply will remove flood peril, in sure, constant flow for navigation and eliminate . seasonal limitations for shipping. Both floods and drouth will be eliminated. There is only one way to do this thing, and that is to do it right. Control of the huge economic asset of. surplus watera and their employ ment, for the varied needs cf the country will change the whole face of America's inland empire which then, with its unique seaway thru the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence, will pos6e5 a mobility and economy f ccmmircial nter?risa su-h at the orld nsver before has teen. Dstroit News. . NOTICE TO CREDITORS State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Amanda Prouty Rawson, deceased. To the creditors of said estae: You are hereby notified that I will sit at the County Court room in Plattsmouth, in said county, on Aug ust 18th, 1933. and November 24th, 1933, at ten o'clock in the forenoon 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 18th day of AuRiist, A. D. 1933, and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 18th day of August, 1933. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this ISth day of July, 1933. . A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) j24-3w County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING and Notice on Petition for Set tlement of Account. In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. State of Nebraska. Cass county, ss. To the heirs at law and all per sons Interested in the estate of Dan iel Lynn, deceased: On reading the petition of Martha F. Lynn, Executrix, praying a final settlement and allowance of her ac count filed in this Court on the 11th day of July, 1933. and for assign ment of residue of said estate; de termination of heirship; and for dis charge cf Executrix; 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 coun ty, on the 11th day of August, A. D. 1933, at ten o'clock a. m., to show cause, if any there be, why the pray er of the petitioner shculd not bo 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 lay cf hearing. In witness whereof, I have here unto set my hand and the seal of said Court this 11th day of July, A. D. 1933. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) J17-3w County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING and Notice on Petition for Set tlement of Account. In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. State of Nebraska, Cass county, ss. To the heirs at law and all persons interested in the estate of Lewis II. Young, deceased: On reading the petition of C. It. Troop, Administrator c. t. a., praying a flnaJ.frUement, and allowance ,of Ms account filed in' this Court on the 7th day of July, 1933. and for as signment of residue of said estate, including personal property not re duced to cash; determination of heirship and for his discharge as Administrator c. t. a. thereof; 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 4 th day of August, A. D. 1933. at ten o'clock a. m., to show cause, if any there be, why the praj-er of the petitioner should not be granted, and that notice of tho pendency of said petition and the hearing thereof be given to all per sons interested in said matter, by publishing a copy of this order in the Plattsmouth Journal, a semi weekly newspaper printed in said county, for three successive weeks prior to said day of hearing. In witness whereof, I have here unto set my hand and the real of raid Court this 7th day of July, A. D. 1933. A. II. DUXBURY. (Seal) j!0-2w County Judge. NOTICE OF HEARING on Petition for Determination of Heirship Estate of Alozsia Koubek, deceas ed. In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. The State of Nebraska: To all per sons interested in said estate, credi tors and heirs take notice, that Jo seph J. Stanek has filed his petition alleging that Alozsia Koubek died Intestate In Cass county on or about March 28, 1925, being a resident and inhabitant of Cass county and died seized of the fclIcAvIng described real estate, to-wit: An undivided one-half Inter est in and to the east three fourths of the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter of Sec tion twelve, Township twelve. North. Range thirteen East of the 6th Principal Meridian leaving as his sole and only heirs at law tne following named persons, to- wit: Anton Koubek, her husband; Joseph J. Stanek,' a son; Emil J. Stanek, a son, and Mary Racek (nee Mary Stanek), a daugh ter. That the Interest cf the petitioner in the above described real estate Is that of a son and. heir, and praying for a determination of the time of the death of said Alozsia Koubek and cf her heirs, the degree of kinship and the right of descent of the real property belonging to the said deceas ed, in the State of Nebraska. It Is ordered that the same stand for hearing on the 28th day of July, before the County Court of Cass county in the court house at PJattsmouth, Nebraska, at the hour of 10 o'clock a. m. Dated at Plattsmouth. Nebraika. this 1st day of July, A. D. 1933. A. II. DUXBURY. (Saai) jl0-3w County Judge. No better town in which to re side than PlatUrriouth.