FADE TWO rUXTSHOUTH SEHI WEZX1T JOOIUUL MONDAY, JULY 31. 1933 Ihe IPIattsmoufh J&prnol PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT Entered at Postofflce, Plattsmouth, R. A. BATES, PublUher SUBSCEIPTIOir PEICE $2.00 A 7SAB, OT HTST SOCIAL SOOT Subscriber living In Second Postal 3one I.I9 pr 7MT. Beyond 600 mile. $1.00 per year. Rate to Canada and fc reign coemtrlea, $3.50 per year. All sobscriptlooa sre payable strictly In advene. . i i.i.iuj.miwfBatii "We gave our baby everything for colic," a radio announcer purported to read from a testimonial, over the air. Giving babies everything is ex actly what produces colic. :o: It is said that people who live in penthouses don't have hay fever. Probably they are also comparative ly immune to chilblains, painter's colic, Bcorpion bite and stone bruise. :o: " "Let me live in a house by the tide of the road," sang the poet, but the man in the house by the side of the road these days probably was put there by kidnapers and is being held for ransom. :o: Children are taught in school that it is approximately 25,000 miles around our earth. It Is only when they grow up to read about world flights in airplanes that they learn about the short cuts. :o: Wiley Post says he didn't get more than twentv hours' sleep on his world flight. Although he used the robot pilot a good deal, he couldn't Eicon. That's the way with many modern gadgets. Although our new electric alarm clock runs more quiet ly than the old loud ticker which it displaced, it keeps us awake, evi dently because we miss the noise. :o: In Great Britain, it i3 unlawful to pay ransom for a kidnaped person. It is regarded as "compounding a felony." Great Britain hasn't had the experience in kidnaping neces sary to give her laws the right slant. When she's an older nation and has been through a few things, as we have, she will change her point of view. :o: SPECULATION WRONG ROAD TO PROSPERITY The temporary closing of the grain exchanges -was- ths obviously ;snlible action to taeifntler the conditions that had developed in preceding days It will permit a desirable breathing spell and will make it possible for all concerned to survey calmly the character and real import of the re cent swiftly moving developments in the grain and in other markets. It was clearly and increasingly ob vious that wheat and other commod ity prices had been advancing with an excessive rapidity. It was not question of higher farm prices, which everybody wanted, but a question of the methods being employed to bring tut-h prices, a question of the in ordinate, absolutely uncontrolled s peculation that was being widely in dulged In while the upward move ment was in progress. It was plain tnougn that the unwarranted pace of the advance would bring an ulti mate a::d equally unwarranted de cline, that excessive speculation would have to be paid for and that the price would not only be a mon- fctcr headache the morning after, but uiccruereu markets and a momen tary disturbance of the recovery pro gram. it must be said that this pro gram as formulated and at first pro moted by the administration was in part responsible for what developed in the grain markets. Not only was inflation itself a bid to mark prices up, tut there was zl the outset an undue stress upon the matter of raiding prices. Even the person who responded by speculating in wheat could offer the defense that he was helping to bring recovery. It was a natural, but most unfortunate, by product of the administration pro gram, a condition which now is recog nized and therefore must be ocrrect ed. The administration certainly vaa not responsible for the sensa tional reports based on heavy crop damage, which contributed to and aggravated an already dangerous speculative market condition. But now that a lesson has been learned at this early stage of recov ery, an adjustment of prices at their proper levels will be possible. Prof itablc returns to the farmer are as desirable now as they have been in the past. Confidence in prices can and will be restored. The balance will be struck. Prices will be. rea sonably stabilised rather than mani pulated, and the farmer and, every body else will stand to gain from that development. Kansas City Star. PLATTSHOUTg, PKBBAflXA Nf to., us' sacond-class pail pUf r An expert on beer says the new beverage should appeal to all the five senses. And the five centses, too. :o: Now that the banking situation is improved, when will dividends start back into the baby's bank, raided several times last spring? :o: Senator Borah, recovering from an operation, speaks a word of ap prvoal for the administration. They're doing some wonderful things in sur gery nowadays. :o: There is a good deal of evidence hearsay, of course that the cur rent bicycle and horseback riding fads are covering practically half the town with black and blue spots. : :o: Most of the personal injuries to men in the civilian conservation service occur because the recruits don't know how to swing their axes, The stroke is quite different from the golf swing, so we are informed by the pro. :o: When Wiley Po3t landed at New York he was too tired, almost, to radio a "Hello" to his family, but now we understand that he had to save his strength to write his signed story of the flight for the Sunday morning papers. :o: One of the big railroads is trying out a locomotive that will pull train at the rate of 110 miles an hour. This puts up quite a problem to most of us only a few owning cars that would beat such a train to a grade crossing. :o: HOW MUCH SHOESTRING BUILDING WAS DONE The basic weakness - of shoestring speculation in real estate is probably due to the expediency which guides the speculator in everything from the electionof the site, to Hhe smallest details "cif" the building Very often the location has been determined by nothing more than that, it was the first availahle - site for which the" owner would take a second mortgage instead of cash. Many thousands who held vacant land for years prided themselves on their, sagacity when they exchanged their deeds for a sec ond mortgage usually at a higher price than they expected only to find the whole value wiped out when the building could not yield an ade quate return. In the erection of the building It self the speculator was no less de void of conscience. The architect was selected after much shopping and haggling, for ability meant nothing. very oiten tnc choice fell on an architect who agreed to a very low- fee or who could guarantee hy de vious tricks to obtain more rentable space. Contracts were invariably peddled to the lowest bidder. Work manship and materials were skimped everywhere possible and the work carried out at breakneck speed. The success of the speculator depended on the quick completion of a build ing and the acquisition of enough tenants to produce an attractive rent roll. The speculator's next objective was to make as quick a turnover as possible. Pyramiding during the '20's was carried to fantastic heights. Some times a man with virtually no capital managed to start and maintain con struction of several buildings in var ious stages by taking money from one loan account to begin another or to meet . expenditures on those already in progress. One well-known oper ator was within a few years .of nom inal owner of 17 large buildings that cost many million dollars, and there were probably others who beat this record. Speculative building spread from New York City to the smaller cities, as the urge to gamble with Other people's monev . became enf demic. New office buildings, apart monts and dwellings were promoted with little regard tp the tenant mar ket. A great deal of this spurious investment ouiiaing went on for a few years without its abuses being realized, enabling many of the ear tier speculators to retire with hand some profits. ' r Many of the buildings that thus resulted will undoubtedly remain a serious drag on the investment build ing market tor yean to eome. -El mer R. Coburn .in. Current. History NEPOTISM PUZZLES ITS PRACTITIONERS Last winter when the newly elect ed democratic register of deeds aroused, a storm of public protest by appointing his yquthful son to a lucrative position as his deputy, a prominent member of the 'democratic county committee was asked by a Journal reporter what stand the com mittee intended to take on nepotism. "Nepotism!" A puzzled look, camej over him. "You can say that Ve county democrats are going to run our politics 'clean. We're not going to stand for smoking in election booths," the prominent democrat stated positively. Nepotism, it might be pointed out, is not a new ailment. Its beginning can be traced to the fifteenth century, when relatives of popes were given church positions, high honor or pen sions. Pope Innocent XII put an end to the pernicious practice in 1692. Napoleon conquered the greater part of Europe, but the great war rior was unable to check the greed of his relatives. They ran him rag ged by their unceasing quest for patronage, the record of which pre sents an Interesting and amusing portion of his life's history. Thomas Jefferson was one of the first American president to point out the danger of nepotism. Writing to a friend after he had retired from the presidency, Jefferson said: "In the course of trusts I have exercised through life with powers of appointment, I can say with truth and with unspeakable comfort that I never did appoint a relation to of fice and that merely because I never saw the case in which someone did not offer, or occur, better qualified." Words used by Jefferson 130 years ago in condemning nepotism are quoted these days by the opponents of the practice: "The public will never be made to believe that an appointment of a relative Is made on the ground of merit alone, uninfluenced by family views; nor can they ever see with approbation offices the disposal of which they intrust to their presi dent for public vurpose, divided out as family property." Jefferson's stand against nepotism had a profound impression on Groyer, Cleveland. Shortly after he was in augurated president for a second term, Cleveland amazed some of the army of job hunters by announcing that he intended to adopt the Jeffer sonan rule of not appointing a rela tive to office. .: f 'When a Pleading-member of con gress strongly urged the appoint ment of a candidate on the ground that he was related to the presi dent, Cleveland thundered: ' "That settles it! His name cannot be considered." He lectured the congressmen on the evils of nepotism, declaring that it was his intention to discourage it as long as he was president. "Family fever," as nepotism was called at the time, was epidemic. The vice-president appointed his son pri vate secretary, obtained the Belgian mission for his brother-in-law and Installed various other members of his family In minor positions. The secretary of the treasury made his son the chief clerk of the depart ment. President Benjamin Harrison dis tributed several' official positions among his relatives. Many other statesmen and near statesmen from Bismarck to Jimmy Walker have been panned for ne potism. Milwaukee Journal. :o:- ON VACATION While other cabinet officers in Washington are working from forty to seventy hours a week and seem ingly find no end of problems to soive, secretary Woodin takes a month's vacation, leaving the treas ury department to drift for itself. The affairs of the nation so far as his department is concerned, are in the hands of under secretaries. For nearly a month very little has been said in the press about the sec retary's unhappy position about him resigning or being requested to re sign. The Washington writers have decided, it would seem, to let the mu sical manipulation of financial policy get along the best he can without front page display. In plain words Secretary Woodin is being neglected by the press boys. iMr. Woodin, however, should not complain. He had his share of at tention early in the administration. The public was led to believe that a real he-man, was hidden behind a mild and apologetic exterior and that explosions of real worth and effect should be looked for when ever occasion seemed to demand. There have been occasions and occa sions but the explosions have not come. The public is now reaching the. . .-, , conclusion that' one of the weak nesses of the cabinet bidden behind the "brain trust" is to be found at the treasury. While the country la bors in the momentous effort to bring orth the new deal, while cabineteers and brain trusters sweat and toil in Washington's heat, Secretary Wood in has no part in the performance. He hides himself away in a cool re eort and there looks upon the efforts of others with imperturbable calm . .Maybe it is worth while to have one man ' near the top who can look upon rising prices one day and tumbling markets the next, who can review returns from the London con ference and read without sigh or sign what his fellow workers are doing to pull the country out of the hole. That's possible of course, and yet the people woul dappreciate a little more show of Interest and occasional re ports on the state or present order from one who sits so near the head of government. An occasional word from Woodin would be welcomed if he can ocer anything that will add to the sum total of our knowledge concerning where we are going and why. State Journal. :o: THE CONFERENCE RECESSES The world economic conference, which takes an indefinite recess to day, has accomplished nothing so far except to illustrate the futility of the conference method unless a sound basis of agreement has been found to exist in advance. If such a basis did exist, in fact, when the date finally was set for the opening of the conference, it obviously was destroyed in the interval; for by the time the first session began in Lon don, on June 12, the economic poli cies of the United States and most of the other principal commercial nations were so far apart that any general program of international ac tion was practically out of the ques tion. The American government, having undertaken a national recovery pro gram designed to raise prices intern ally and to increase, employment, was anxious to .have other governments adopt similar" policies, but was un willing to enter into agreements to stabilize its currency or to rduce its tariffs. The other governments, how ever, In general distrusted the type of recovery program sponsored in Washington, but wanted to take up the questions of currency stabiliz ation and tariff"' reductions. Under the circumstances it would have been much better if the con ference had not convened at such an early date.' But ' having convened and having demonstrated the funda mental divergence of national poli cies at this time, the conference could do nothing except recess. The task of statesmen now is to maintain sym pathetic international relations until such time as the economic confer ence can reconvene with a rason able expectation of sucess. It should be borne in mind that the onference method has not been discredited at London, but misused. Kansas City Times. :o: ' THE FIRST CODE AT WORK Reports from numerous centers in dicate that the cotton textile code the first adopted, has made a success ful beginning in actual operation The majority of this industry, at least, is displaying a spirit of co-op eration that has attracted wide at tention. Apparently Its workers are satisfied equally with their employ ers. Tiiere is better pay tor snorter hours, and more people have been given employment. The exact num bers that have been added, however, and the total influence of the code in broadening employment are ques tions to which answers still are awaited. One peculiar development has marked the first few days of trial of this initial code. It is reported nec essity of one textile plant at Chata nooga, Tenn., to lay off 20 per cent of its workers instead of increasing its employees. Operators of the plant hold that this arises from reduction of weekly hours, in accordance with the code, or the use of two 40-hour- a-week shifts, Instead of the three( previously used. The operators ex plain they would like to be excused from compliance with the code in order to protect their workers. This is a peculiar situation, and it seems to be an isolated case. No doubt, some means of an adjustment will be found. But it should be recalled that more than 20 per cent of the textile industry failed to agree to the code at its adoption. More adjustment will be required there, if the plan 13 to work out in accordance with ex pectations. :o:- Everywhere you go, optimism is in the lr. Prices are going up. fte?d the Journal ads for news of unusual barnains made possible by stocks en hand before the ad vance came. Now is the logical ANXIOUS DAYS FOR THE CORN CONSCIOUS These be anxious days and nights in the corn belt. The period of fruition is at hand when hopes or fears shall be realized. So much de pends upon what transpires in the next two or three weeks! And so those of us who are corn conscious, and who in Iowa is not corn conscious, look up to the brassy hot sky each day and survey each ribbed mackerel cloud to discover what promise of rain it holds. Stately each stalk stands in tas seled glory, lifting its waving green hands to the heavens in attitude of supplication for life giving heat and moisture that it may complete its function. That function is to fill with serrated rows of golden kernels the tiny cob but recently sprung from its bosom. Today the scent, of growing corn is sweet and heavy. Even the earth, doomed to perpetual twilight by the forest of blades above it, is frag rant. The vast silence of the fiald3 is broken only by the constant swish swish of the leaves, like a soft whis per borne on a gentle evening breeze. Here stands the cornbelt's prom ise to the world, a promise that soon will be translated into terms of pork and beef, lard, mutton, milk, butter, eggs and all the life-giving substances so vital to human needs. It seems little short of sacriligiou3 that men who till and tend and love corn should be required to assume any share of the responsibility of seeing that it is properly divided and distributed among God's worthy ones. There is rank injustice in the world when men who quarrel and snarl and fight over gold are enabled to deprive humble folks of food and despoil the labor that produces it. We of the corn belt have exper ienced many hectic days in recent months conditions, not of our own maklng, but which were forced up- pleted its task of building up, phy on us by the greed and avarice of sically, the Nebraska men who en designing men who, even if they listed in the civilian conservation knew, cared nothing about the sig- corps, and the last companies have niflcance of corn. And now, it seems, a new day is dawning, the light cf a new hope is breaking over the horizon, bath- ing the corn belt in the bright glow of economic honesty, human equality and political justice. May God speed the day when men shall be free to raise corn in the full knowledge that their labor will be justly rewarded and that those who are deserving hsall cat thereof! Sioux City Trib- une. -:o:- THE CRADLE CONTROVERSY We don't know how you feel about It, but it certainly is a relief to us to learn that Africa r.nd not central Asia was the cradle of mankind. Not that we Lave anything cgainst cen- tral Asin So far .is we know it's every bit as good as Africa and fully &s well qualified to be the cradle of mankind. We've never been in either Africa or central Asia and what we . ... . . aont Know aoout craaics wouia nn a line oi DaDy Duggies irom nere to Cape Town. During this whole cradle argument we have studiously nvntHpH fairing siip-. nrpfprrin to , , . : I V V , " uidiniam tn ainiuua oi &inci trality rather than to throw our sup- port to one side and then maybe lose. That is nrppiplv whit wnnlrl havp inat is precisely wnat would nave xi... iW, c Duu.u cast our lot witn central Asia. We i would have had no very good rea- son for it. but that i3 undoubtedly . . . ' t ha tt wrt cnnnirl novo crrhno Artrll imagine what our embarrassment would now be to have Sir Arthur Smith Woodward, British geologist, tell the international geological con gress that recent evidence is all in favor of the dark continent. This is a blow to he Gobi desert school, but blows are coming so fast and fur iously these days that it probably won't have the crushing effect It might have had a few years ago. The reason for our relief is not to learn that Africa was the cradle but simply to have the whole thing set tied. It was ridiculous for mankind to be going along epoc hafter epoch and not knowing where Its cradle was. It was beginning to get on our es Just the u-ccrtainty of the a national reforestation program, but count filed in this Court on the 11th g.Now that it 'has been decided hat result' at P'"nt. I "cond in fj d fe8rtatae8.S,5; can turn to ot'.ier le important importance to the far greater task, termination of heirehin: and for dis- nerv thing. we can turn to ot.ier les3 importa but perlwaps moro interesting pur suits. The change ought to be good for one. The only trouble li that maybe It Isn't settled. Mayba the central Asia faction will ask a rrrcailng and come lugging in a lot of new cradle vvl dence, and once the can la opened up again nobody can fcnfely predict where it will end. But then nobody can ever safely predict anything. o we needn't let that worry ua, need we? world-Herald. :o:- vvuBu Dcacmc yuiiuau uyvuiii a I pillar box he found a swarm of bees inside. It appears that the intelU- gent insects were attracted by a post- card which began "Sweetest Honey." 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 Cass county, Nebraska, against said defendants, the object and prayer 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, made, executed and delivered to the Bank of Polk, Polk, Nebraska, and another for the sum of $315, dated June 8, 192G, to God f red 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. Warren, and to subject and sell the t'tle and interest of eaid de fendants 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 Section 27, Township 11, Range 9. East of the 6th P. M.; and an un divided one-eleventh interest in and to the northeast quarter of the north east 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. By W. T. THOMPSON and E. R. MOCKETT, Her Attorneys. J 17-4 w 'CONSERVATION OF MEN' At Fort Crook the army has com- gone cut to do the forestry work as- signed to them. Approximately three thousand completed the training here, and are now employed in con serving the nation't natural resources, in Oregon, in California, hn South Dakota, in Oklahoma, and at several points in Nebraska. The first phase of one of the most interesting features of Mr. Roosevelt's attempt to deal with unemployment has thus been subjected to the test I 0f time. Beeun amid some doubt and with plenty of scoffing from cynical sidelines, the experiment has magnificently justified itself. More important than the conser- vation of resources Is the conserva tion of men. In his story of the daily routine of the foresters at work in Nebraska, Clayton W. Watkins in cHo'o witt.-., 1.1 i kiuiiuuf o a aiu ouunvu h this human conservation was pro- ceeding. Young men have been res- cued from enforced idleness They hn t.in trnm aat n " v "5 ners and poolrooms and gutters and given healthful outdoor work, excel- lent food and friendv encouraee- LPnf tkv ,vo w. nn. " .... ' .. . . ponunny co neip meir aepenaenis without accepting charity. They have developed physically, and their OI,fo, . hoJA- D. 1933, at 10 o'clock a. m., to I .A,.Ak(.UA HllllUUC LU It ai U J11C 11UO . . cha d f despair to hope. If anyone will watch these men in . tirsmnn( ri,o,in i t.aiiiu ql r iciiiuiil. in i .iiiiu iiii. in i j ... crroun - 7 .. OI meniany aiert and physically I magnificent men who are happy, the Plattsmouth Journal, a semi Multiply these small groups by the weekly newspaper printed in said many others in all parts of the coun- try, giving the totel enrollment of more than 300 thousand, and one will get a mental picture of a social experiment that is inspiring. ord come3 from Washington that provision is to be made for con tinuing the forestry work during the winter, for all who care to enlist again. Since the early recruiting brought far more volunteers than could be accepted, it is evident that to carry on the work will be to con- tlnue a helpful part of the national program for social happiness. Valu- ... . ... .1 u.t- jMUfe.c,.-, m iiavu een niaue "" with far greater benefits, of conserv ing the men. World-Herald. :o: On the basis of the repeal returns from Oregon, Portland cemented it. :o: A local man refers to his wife as "the tpeaker.of the house," and his wife rails him the "loud speaker." :o: A good mtny of tho new school utdnarcre are observed to be using hiirht mr "in th low nri field" this year. .v,. u.vi.. . 1 1 This probably is not very liiiui:aui ua It'fcaiuo um iiuica mi the kidnaping profession; it merely means that the people they custom- arily steal their cars from are not buying the big models at present. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of An ton Koubek, 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 Aug ust 25, 1933, and December 1, 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 paid estate is three months from the 25th day of August, A. D. 1933, and the time limited for payment of debts is one 'year from said 25th day of August, 1933. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 2Sth day of July, 1933. A. H. DIDCBURY, (Seal) j31-3w County Judge. NOTICE TO CREDITORS State of Nebraska, County of Cass, rs. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Amanda Prouty Rawson, deceased. To the creditors of Eaid estae: You are hereby notified that I will sit at the County Court room in Plattsmouth. in said count', on Aug ust ISth, 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 August, 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. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, 89. 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 sit at the County Court room in Plattsmouth. in said county, on Aug ust 18. 1933, 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 r.gainBt eaid estate is three months from the 18th day of August, A. I. 1933, and the time limited for pay ment of debts is one year from said 18th day of August, 1933. Witness my band and the seal of eaid County Court this 19th day of July, 1933. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) J24-3w County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING AND NO TICE OF PROBATE OF WILL In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. , ... State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. To all persons interested in the estate of Catherine Hawksworth, de ceased: On reading the petition of David W. Hawksworth praying that the in- strument filed In this court on the 2th day of July, 1933, and purport i . . . , . . . of the sa!d deCeased. may be proved and allowed, and recorded as the last wil1 ani testament of Catherine I nawKswortn, deceased; that said In- Strument be artmlttPd to nrnhato n.1 the administration nf Rai,i Mta . h granted to Mary Cook and David W. Hawksworth, as Executors " 18 hereby ordered that you, and Persons interested In said mat ter mayt and do appear at the Coun ty Court to be held in and for said county on the 25th day of August, I snow cause, li any mere ue, wny ine -o,. f mnr.- i,.i I . . , . . be granted, and that notice of the pendency of said petition and that ine nearing mereoi ue given in an .. ... .. .. the hearing thereof be given to all perpons interested in saia matter oy publishing a copy of this Order in r- m. ' ,a,d hearTng Witness my hand and seal of said court, this 25th day of July, A. D. 1933. H. DUXBURY, County Judge. (Seal) j31-3w 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: w" -i wain - Lynn. Executrix, praying a final settlement and allowance of her ac termination of heirahlp: and for dis charge of Executrix: - It is hereby ordered that you and all persons interested in said matter may, and do. appear at the County Cou'r't to be hd in "and Vo;7aid co n ty, on the 11th day of August. A. D. 1933. at ten o'clock a. m., to show 'r: 'T'T granted, and that notice of the pen Jency of said petition and the hear- ,n isereor oo given to all persona SjTSTpy XjJ oeMnheUtS: mouth Journal, a semi-weekly news- paper printed in said county, for area success i jn witness Whereof I JiavB tim unto set ray band and the seal of aid Court this 11th day of July, A. D. 19SS. , , A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) J17-3w County Judge. time to supply your needs.