IT JOTJUniL MONDAY, SEPT. 4, 1933. FXATTSXttUTK &SXXI nan ntTTA (AUA iH U - - - - , . " i ulie IPiottsfiiGufSi Jleurnal i , , 1 i ' - 1 ' PUEUSHXD SE1U-WEEKLY AT PtfTTSKOUTg, 'SBBiLSKA Entered at Fostofflce Plattsmouth, Nab., a3ycnd-ass mail tneUtar R. A. BATES, Publisher SUESCaiPTION PHICE $2.00 A YEAE IN PffiST P03XAX ZONE Subecrlbeni living- la Second Postal Pgn'ti JM JWd 600 Billet. $3.00 per year. Rate to 0ana4a and conntnee. $3.C0 per year. All aubacrtpttona aw paybf attfttly lu advance. "How times change!" The bare back riders are now on bicycles. :o: Wc bet Macliado Is another one who looks under the bed before re tiring. -:o: Wo cannot understand why, when making a movie out of a book, it is not thought good form to read the Look. " :o: Wouldn't it be fine to have indus try back on a scale where the fac tory smoke could be called a nuisance once more? :o: Now that it has been scientiflcallr determined that man can fly upside down in an airplane for hours and hours, what of it? :o:- We often wonder which the De troit ex-bankers fear more that the government will reform some bank ers, or reform some banking laws? :o: And now when is the government planning another coast-to-coast hook up giving Eddie Cantor an opportun ily to talk about his new pictures? :o: It is the opinion of some that if the investigators at Topeka don't rail it a day pretty soon, the Finney forged bond ecandal will equal the national debt. :o; "We're now in the revolution so frequently predicted a few years ago," pays an Ohio editor. The usual vio lence, however, is missing, except in the rase of a few old custuoms. :o: A snorts writer points out that Gehrig enjoys an advantage by fol lowing Dabe Ruth In the batting or der. Fore thing, the pitcher is often throwing him a brand new ball. :o: -J'-' There was no intention on any one's part to be funny, was there, in the news item concerning the cir cus man who became a father at 80, by identifying him as a magician? :o: Prcf. Irving Fisher opposes tying the value of the dollar to gold, be cause gold, he says, is like a bucking broncho. Why not tie it to the pub lic utilities rates? They seem pretty stable. :o: The Mexican bullfighters are or ganizing to go on a sort of NRA code for more employment and better wages. It remains to be seen what the bull will think about a red cape with a blue eagle on it. :o: A Fcientist predicts the perfection noon of a plane that will take you clear around the world and back to your starting point without stop. This would be rather inconvenient if you wanted to get to Chicago. :o: I -lark shirts, brown shirts, blue Flilits, rod fchirts some day history will recount how In the year 1933 a rnpged world sat plying needle and thread and sang in a voice of dolor ous pitch the Song or the Shirts. : :o: Former President Machado has brcn urgently invited to return to Cuba, but he appears to be interest ei until he finds out what is wanted of him. Our guess is that whatever it 1c, they won't keep him long. :o: At wo rerall it. Secretary Wood In'a music.1! compositions were first heard on the radio about the same timo we first heard "Sstormy Weath er." but for some inexplicable reason we're still hearing "Sstormy Weath cr." Senator Copeland, who Is also physician. Is. now conducting a sur vey on gangster crime, and soon should be able to report to us whether the criminal can bo cured merely by a mere tonsillotomy, or .had we bet ter take off his whole neck. . :o: ' " " Who hit Huey Long? The nation is not going to rest until it estab lishes the identity of Senator Long's iKflllant . inH nnnltliM -film rtr rA wards him as the case may demand. J It is a curious situation, different from most assault casts. Usually tha problem is "Wfeo tyt fejm. and wy?" I, th. premt wer. tja only mys - tfry U '!-?' Evtjrypody assumas he knows why. . i '. REVOLUTION C0MINO IN RAILROAD TRAVEL Only the most pig-headed execu tive will deny that in the past the railways have stood like iron against the thrust of new ideas. They sneer ed at the telegraph; they refused to build refrigerator cars, compelling the formation of private companies; they would not speed up their box cars beyond 12 miles an hour and let ex press companies capture the fast freight traffic; they sat idle while interurban trolleys took away their patrons; finally, stone blind to the possibilities of automotive transport, they did little to meet the competi tion of the busses and trucks beyond clamoringjfor legislation that would tax them off the highways. All this, however, relates to the past. The steam lines are on the eve of a revo lution that will make present-day rail travel seem every whit as antiquated as the 6tage coach and the ferry boat. Inventions and improvements al ready under way make it certain that the next few years will see trains running from coast to ocast in two or three day3, and this in cleanliness and comfort; trains in which the cars are built of aluminum, aluminum alloy or stainless steel, light and gay as dragon flies; DIessels, electric or gasoline engines replacing the chug ging, snorting, 6inoke-belching loco motive, and instead of the old blunt- nosed construction, everything resistance is reduced to minimum. As resistace is reduced to a minimum. As a result of the new construction and increased motive power, speeds will average SO to 125 miles an hour. And travel will be cheap. Pullmans, as we know them now, are going to take their place in the Smithsonian along ith shaving mugs. bootjacks, horsehair furniture and other fossil remains. The red plush seats that Rutherford B. Hayes used to admire are scheduled for the Junk pile, and the new seating arrange ment will be made up of lounges, settees and big comfortable chairs. There will be no bumps or Jars; every possible part of a car will be mount ed in live rubber. Artificial ventila tion will eliminate dirt and noise. :o: HIJACKING FARMERS THE LATEST RACKET Hijacking has developed a new- angle, if the information of state and federal authorities is correct. Instead, or in addition to dealing in beer and liquors, the hijackers are taking loads of live stock away from farmers or from those employed to haul to mar ket. This new crime development is startling. It Jars us out of our com placency that the highways are safe for legitimate business. The time is not so far distant when people look ed rather disinterestedly on the re ports of the hijacking of liquor loads That was a fight bctwen two illegal businesses anyway. Why worry? All we needed to do was repeal prohibi tion and the gangster would disap pear Now wa find that we have really a formidable situation to face. The formidable thing is this: We have gone through an era which has built up a gang group used to easy money The gang group is not going back to work, no matter what laws are made or unmade. It is going to continue tts play for easy money in whatever avenue offers the best chance. There is what this country has to deal with- not ju3t gangs and gangster habits, not Just alliances between politicians and crooks, so much talked about where crime is discussed or investigated, not Just disregard of law. It Is deeper than that.' It rests on a basis of the de termination of groups of men to make money by their wits, as they have mads money in an era now closing. It can be , broken up. And thes3 non workers can be taught to work again on a rock pile. But it is not going to be as easy as this country thinks not half as easy. The task will require a national determination to break it up. Milwaukee Journal. . :o: ., , And in New York, Elmer Davis write to the Herald Tribune of the great number of blue eagles in sfcop , windows. adding tfcat VSeleman in fll bin fiery waa net KRA'd like est jaf thasa." LIFE'S GOLDEN MEAN No Ufa is entirely devoid of those recurrent lapses into sheer Irrelev ancy which dart like unexpected shafts of light or shadow perhaps of both across the more or less hum drum surface of all human exper ience. .. Striking quickly, when one least suepects; startling, perhaps dismaying, In their suddenness, near ly always they catch us unawares, take our breath, leave us trembling, confused, exalted. These interludes of life can shatter the monotony in an instant, throw us off balance, be fog our vision. Yet irrelevancies they are, irrelevancies they shall ever be. They are. and by their very nature must be, little mor than poignant re minders of what life mgiht be at its worst or at its best; they are the occasional glimpses of the extremes which Justify and render imperative the golden mean. No individual could possibly live his life (balanced on his toes, his head In the cloud3, his heart in his throat Most of the time we must stand flat on our heels, our foothold "mortised and tenoned in granite." However high the spirit may soar on the fluttering wings of a sudden ly liberated imagination, the time comes an d auickly. too when it must return to earth again, there to nestle like a weary and errant child against the mother breast. Yet there is nothing in this to de press us. For nature balances, equal izes, cancels all things. Viewed not mlscroscopically but at the distance of even a few yars, life straightens itself out superbly and we find that its course is true. Compensation re mains its immutable law. Good can cels the bad, heat the cold, high the low. He who is unduly elated by success, or what he takes for success or who permits himself to be cast down by failure or what he takes for failure, is whether he knows it or not, blind to the eternal and un changeable laws of the universe. Despair is as wise as unrestrained ecstacy and as foolish. In the well ordered life there is no room for eith er. For true and enduring happi ness (life's ultimate goal, say what you will), look not to the mercurial spirit but to the calm and equable temperament that with unerring ac curacy can distinguish reality from unreality, truth from falsehood, whether he encounter them in the full light of day or in the enveloping gloom of the night. 1 Bear bravely on! "The. unreal can never be, the real can never cease to be." Wise men knew this in the un written centuries agone. Wise men know it today. Wise men will know it ten times ten million years from today and the knowledge will see them through. World-Herald. :o: THE COURTS AND THE NEW DEAL When an army is in the field its commanders undertake to observe certain rules of warfare, but the su preme law which governs its oper ation is the law of military neces sity. No American army is in the field today, but the civil power of the state is engaged in a campaign along a wide front or on several fronts against a common enemy, depression It too is operating under a law of necessity. The commander-in-chief is exercising under the specific sanc tion of congress such powers as no president in peace time has ever be fore sought to use. In the exercise of this special authority the courts are disposed to uphold him. Twice now the issue has been Join ed in the supreme court of the Dis trict of Columbia and twice judges of that court have held that the emer gency Justifies the means which have been adopted for coping with it. In the Texas "hot oil" case Justice Cox declared, "All laws should be read in emergencies in the light of the law of necessity." Justice O'Donoghue follows that declaration with a sim liar decision in the case In which an effort was made to enjoin the secre tary of agriculture from nforcing the Chicago "milkshed agreement." "The court finds," in this case, 'that an emergency exists and that the welfare of the people and the very existence of the government it self are In peril." The court asserts specifically also that the agricultural act is constitutional and that the executive orders issued under it are reasonable and valid. The constitu tionality of the national recovery act was not specifically affirmed by Jus tice Cox. What the supreme court of the Lnitcd States may say on these ques tions is far in the future. By the time it speaks it is very probable the emergency will have passed and Judi cial interpretation will be a matter of academic rather than active in terest. Its decision will determine now muca or the New Deal is to be regarded as of a purely temporary emergency nature and hew ucfc of it is ta became permanent.- Werld Herald. . ' ROOSEVELT WILL WIN OR 00 DOWN FIGHTING There la enough ,to indicate that the Roosevelt administration is de termined to employ everything with in itc reach to put an end to the eco nomic, anemia from which the coun try is suffering. It has the power from congress to go to extreme lengths. The chief executive can, if Ije desires,.and will, if .he must, make himself an absolute dictator. Inter ests that doubt he might do this do not know the man, although he has shown himself to the whole country. The point Is this: President Roose velt is going to win this fight or go down , fighting with every weapon he can lay hands on. NIRA is to be tried for all it is worth. Everybody knows that Wash ington has a hope that it will put the country over the top. Govern ment officials are 'going along with the White house, of course, but it is said a good many of them feel that the patient may have to be given an other shot in the arm before recov ery may be had. Codes have been approved by var ious industries. The NIRA movement has gained considerable momentum, but not in as great degree as federal officials had hoped. The whole thing is necessarily slow. It is a plan that involves a tremendous amount of un remitting labor on the part of offi cials and assisting committees. Yet headway has been gained. Official reports have it that condition are gradually improving as a result. However, there is reason to be lieve that the government is quite ready to take another step, that Un cle Sam .will assume the role of phy sician and give the patient an addi tional shot in the arm if NIRA's medi cine does not produce the desired re sults rapidly enough. The reference is to inflation. Make sure that it is coming, provided it is regarded as necessary. Mr. Roosevelt has the power to re duce the gold content of the dollar. That would shove prices up. It would make more business, would acceler ate buying and production, would in crease pay rolls along with the ob servance of codes. It would restore the balance between money and com modities, would put the country back on a reasonable basis. Operating together, NIRA and In flation would work great changes in the business life of the country. And they are to work together, unless NIRA can succeed alone. So far the only inflation has been psychological. Actual Inflation, if used by the ad ministration, would be more marked in Its effects. If the country doesn't want In flation, the only way to es cape it is to help put the NIRA move ment over. Sioux City Journal. r-:o: INCLUSIVE BENEFITS IN RIVER WORK Great news for the Missouri Val ley! A 6-foot channel is to be made for the Missouri river between Kan sas City and Sioux City. The work, which will begin almost Immediate ly, contemplates the expenditure of 14 million dollars, mostly in wages the employment of 8,000 men on the river and thousands of others in pro vidlng and shipping the materials. This project demonstrates in con crete fashion the whole scheme of the administration's public works pro gram. The construction Itself is for the public benefit. The expenditure means extensive re-cmployment, and to a considerable extent re-employ mcnt means reduction of the char ity rolls. The' expenditure means more buying power, more retail busi ness and in turn more demand on productive sources. There is no "vic ious circle" in this operation; It is all to the good as an emergency measure, and it is permanently to the good as a transportation plan. The decision to complete the 6-foot channel to Sioux City stimulates the hope that in time the channel, at least to this point, will be deepened to nine feet, thus standardizing it with the Mississippi. But this hope is likely to be realized or unrealized according to representative experience with the 6-foot channel. If that ex perience emphatically indicates the wisdom of the deeper channel, then should come also the storage reser voir on the upper Missouri to stab- alize the channel and to prevent floods. Kansas City Star. -:o:- For five days after she ate a red flag a cow on a farm near Hiawatha is reported to have given red milk. which leads one to suspect that some of the dairymen around that city have been feeding their, cows blue flags. :o: Somebody has said it takes four year to become a first class nudist, and this puts tp old-fashioned man at quite a disadvantage witn io wawenfolks ( the fsiwii' "n bv alry earned their fTeshnnan cred its, practically. REVISING NOTION OF UNCLE SAM'S SLEUTHS A few more feats of detection likej the roundup of Harvey Bailey and associate kidnapers, and we shall hare to revise a notion, nutured through the years by mystery fiction, that all official sleuths are boobs. The Bailey capture by federal agents was not effected by bringing in sus pects and softening their heads with a hose till one confessed; it was car ried through quite in the mood of a tale by R. Austen Freeman, where science lends its aid to art. Consider the scenario: In relating his experience to officers, Urschel, the kidnaped oil man, recalled that while confined in Texas or Oklahoma (he was unable toisay which), a plane passed over the place twice a day, but that one afternoon it failed to come. With this slender clue, the of ficers set to work to localize the place of Urschel's detention by a study of air line schedules. Through elimina tion they hit on the probable route, and, after convassing pilot3 and ra dio operators, found that on the day Urschel noticed the failure of the plane to fly over his prison, one of the pilots had swerved from his course In one place because of bad weather. This narrowed the search to a sparse ly settled corner of Texas, near Para dise. The officers proceeded to comb the district until they came upon a farm house meeting all requirements. This they raided, and so carefully screen ed was their foray that Eailey was taken in his sleep, along with a huge arsenal and $199,620 in marked bill3 corresponding to money paid for Ur schel's release. Fingerprints left by Urschel were found throughout the house, and the case now ha3 every evidence of being airtight. Bailey, a desperado with an extensive past, is identified as the leader of a gang that massacred four officers on the plaza of a Kansas City railway sta- tion some weeks ago, and is known to have led the previous break from the Kansas State nenit?ntlarv. s Thus, the department of justice scores a 10-strike on Its first month of campaigning against our more des- perate criminals. Perhaps it has been studying the method-, of the Vances Pnlrnt anrt nth- infniHhiA and Poirots and othc; infallible uiooanounas oi iiciion. ii n Keeps us nnpp th nrentnra nf thrsp rpmarlt- able fellows may presently take tol studying the methods of the men with badges, whom they affect to- desptse. Detroit News. DON'T FORGET PURPOSE OF RECOVERY FR0GRAM Because current d,ScuES,on c, ,M vtti i i. . i. : i iMVrt. ul limes l CdLiira inr emuiiuuai I stage there is a dansor that its real purposes, and the nature of the means to accomplish them, may be forgot ten in the future controversy over details. The people of the United States have put themselves over whelmingly behind administration leadership for economic recovery. But friction arises in innumerable places ove the application of NRA princi ples to specific trade rituations. So frequently does this happen and so difficult is it to reconcile some of the differences between NRA officials and individual or corporate Interests that the progress of the general un dertaking is seriously delayed. It should be clear by this time that the usefulness of the movement lies, not in the terms of the act, not in the merits of codes, not in the supersagaciyt of greater and lesser functionaries. It lies in the univer sallty of a people's effort to find ways! ... x, . of making ana aisiriDuung more coods. satisfying more human crav - io-o tnU incr nr of the needv Dy ings, taking care ot tne neeuy "J the wholesome plan of giving tliem useful work to do. That is the essence of NRA and its essence is vastly more important l ' .t w nf tL on- man me i.innr onrinsiner it. Universal effort I . j-w ... .r-n umrlr in liolter wavs c-an-lat ... . . , ,u t not neip dui succluu m iu .1.- i,hh million to a nlane mw.f, of existence measurably better than that on wnicn tney Degan to &nie. ... .. . I Many may have to be reshaped or nhtndnned before the turn of the yea i vation ii whole-souled effort to revie its trade and industry and to distnoute me . . .v. I,. V. ! looks to the essentials of a national Staking. . n n DVArriBR inn cumniun Dtunu . - i i . .1.. n . n.n.rii I it 19 RAia ma i x unuiui" m.,i.v has a remarkable memory for faces And when he finds a federal ' . i..i ,,i.mhr a I vacancy n co .-.that will fit into the place Just i : . . . I tlgai. -:o: Journal Want-AiU get re.ulte! I .. Detailed method or the prescr- Thj wy tQ teH wnether a water. Clerk at Plattsmouth, Nebraska or at of the specific plan m us ong- . "'"J11? OI Department of Road ,al form is insignificant; a nation's a. Jon .at. L'ncoin, Nebraska. fruits of production as equitably as "p ,a t " As an evidence, of good faith in the wit of man allows is eerything. fotten moen;, ,s a betw"" submitting a proposal for tbU work We can be foolishly technical in Smedley Butler and Owen D. Young. ttM . wTthnV measuring the individual's parti. :o: fo the S?r.Kr1Il,Vi,n5d p-wM6 !he recovery program or we Down in Kansas, according to the gallon Vn? ' ffVi ' ! - NOTICE TO CREDITORS State of Nebraska, County of Cass, 88. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Cath erine Hawksworth, 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 29th day of September, 1933, and on the 5th day of January, 1934, at ten o'clock a. m., of each day, to examine all claims against said estate, with a view to their adjustment and allow ance. The time limited for the pre sentation of claims against said es tate is three months from the 2th day of September, A. D. 1933, and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 29th day of Sep tember, 1933. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 30th day of August, 1933. A. H. DUX BURY, (Seal) s4-3w 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, ?s. To all persons Interested in the estate of Henry C. L. Ofe, deceased: On reading the petition of Henry J. Ofe and Edward G. Ofe praying a final settlement and allowance of their account filed in this court on the 21st day of August, 1933, and for discharge of said executors; as signment of residue of said estate; and determination of heirship; 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 15th day of September, A. D. 1933, at 10 o'clock a. m., to show cause. If any there be, why the prayer of the petitioner should not be granted, and that notice of the pendency of said petition and the hearing thereof be given to all per sons interested in said matter by pub lishing 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 WlltlCVl, 1 1 1 ii , c licit- unto set my hand and the seal of said court, this 21st day of August, A. IT. DTTXBTTRY. t.,- I r"Sft 1 H Z. 1 W County Judge. w ' " " Tn thp rHotrfrt Court of Casi roun- ty. Nebraska. In the matetr of the application of N. D. Talcott. Administrator of the William D. Coleman, de- f i:,.on.0 ceii roi -atata f rar laho Notice 1 " " " k,- " --ST Begley, Judge of the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska, on the 8th day of July. 1933, to me as Adminis- trator, that will on the 9th day of September. 1933. at the hour of 10:00 o'clock in the forenoon, on the premises, offer for sale at public auc- """'"f fha fnllAwlnp' ripsrrihed real estate. I o ' One-half () undivided in terest in Lot nine (9) in the northeast quarter (NEU) of Section twenty-nine (29), Town ship twelve (12), Range nine (9); and the northwest quarter (NWU ) of the northeast quar ter (NEU) of Section twenty nine (29), Township twelve (12), Range nine (9); and the northeast quarter (NEU ) of the southwest quarter (SW!4) of Section twenty-nine (29), Town ship twelve (12), Range nine (9); and the northwest quarter . (NWU) of southeast quarter (SEU) of Section twenty-nine (29), Township twelve (12), Range nine (9); and the south east quarter ( SB V4 ) of the southwest quarter (SW) of Section twenty-nine (29), Town ship twelve (12), Range nine (9): and the northeast quarter (NEVi) of the northwest quar ter fNWU) of Section thirty two (32), Township twelve (12), Range nine (9), all in Cass , . . . on . onM,mTiranM o.jv x.. ....u ' and on the same day at 3:0o o'clock Mn the afternoon on the premises. I I ... r i a. At x-1 i . I win oner ior saie id me nignesi inu-i fniiowlnr - All of Lots five (5) and six (6) in Block six (6) in Ryder's Artdition to tne village or Green- wood. Cass county. Nebraska subject to all liens and encumbrances, c - ntrar fnr caia . r. romo.n rnon tn I least one hour for the recpivlnir of I hidn. . , J . . aAe" lIlls -ulu OI a. m iy33. N D. TALCOTT. j . .... . I Auinnusiraior or me jsiatei oi wmiam u. Coleman. - "" , I . i Hutchison News, the mnlhcr. nrilthan trtft... rv .. u teaching their babies to pray "NRA me down to sleeP" ..w It is determined th.it a man - nun has a commercial value, chemically i speaking, of 65 cents; and it is elso interesting to know tht frtr 9a 1 . T wore he can be mad. a K-intucky coionci. Daily Journal, 15o per week. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE Notice la Hereby Given that by virtue of an Order of Sale, issued by the Clerk of the District Court of the Second Judicial District of Ne braska, within and for Cass county, in an action wherein The Lincoln Joint Stock Land Bank of Lincoln. Nebraska, is plaintiff, and George L. Meisinger, et al.. are defendants, I will, at 10 o'clock a. m. on the 23rd day of September, A. D. 1933, at the south front door of the County Court House at Plattsmouth, Ne braska, offer for sale at public auction, the following described lands and tenements, fo-wit: The Southeast Quarter (SEU ) of Section two (2), Township eleven (11), north, Range eleven (11). East of the Sixth Prin cipal Meridian (6th P. M.), in Cass County, Nebraska; Said land to be sold subject In the lien of the plaintiff for the non delinquent balance of its mortgage which was as of September 1, 1932. the sum of $12,130.52, payable in installments of $400.55 on the first day of September end March in each and every year, with a final pay ment of $373.97, payable on Sept ember 1, 1965. Given under my hand this 8th day of August, A. D. 1933. H. SYLVESTER. al7-5w Sheriff. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS Sealed bids will be received at the office of the Department of Roads and Irrigation In the State House at Lin coln, Nebraska, on September 22. 1933. until 9:00 o'clock a. m.. and at that time publicly opened and read for SAND GRAVEL SURFAC ING and Incidental work on the Louisville-Avoca and Murdock-Mur-ray Patrols Nos. 130 and 133, State Roads. The proposed work consists of re surfacing 8.7 miles of graveled road. The approximate quantities are: 2,220 Cu. Yds. Sand Gravel Surface Coarse Material. The attention of bidders is direct ed to the Special Provisions covering subletting or assigning the contract and to the use of Domestic Mater ials. The minimum wage paid to all . . . . fce Bx' U r hour v Vn,nJnU,m Pa,d t0. Un sKiueu iaDor empioyea on tnis con- tract hall be fQrty (4Q) cents per I The attention of bidders is also (11- rected to the fact tnat George Hodge, S , te D.i,"ecto,r of Reemployment, Lin- ;- nrVnrVinn f supervision over the preparation of employment lists for this work. " Bjiecuiidiiuns lor me at the office of the Department of Roda aid Irrigation, at, Lincoln, Ne ' f V,,rn h3 Je.d '"r",s'V h"d, ' The successful bidder will be re in an amount contract. As an evidence of good faith in .ir-Tr' submitting a proposal for this work. a cS . to the Department of Roads and Ir rigation and in an amount not lesn than One Hundred Fifty (150) Dol lars. The right is reserved to waive all technicalities and reject any or all bids. DEPARTMENT OF ROADS AND IRRIGATION, R. L. Cochran. State Engineer. George R. Sayles. County Clerk Cass County. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS Sealed bids will be received at the office of the Department of Roads and Irrigation in the State House at Lin coln, Nebraska, on September 18. 1933, until 10:00 o'clock a. m., and at that time publicly opened and read for Sand Grave Surfacing and inci dental work on the Plattsmouth East Patrol No. 129, State Road. The proposed work consists of re surfacing 1.3 miles of graveled road. The approximate quantities are: 260 Cu. Yds. Sand Gravel Sur face Course Material. The attention of bidders is directed ,, ... ' " ... J" provisions covering sub- , ,v assigning me contract and to tne Use nr nnmAt'tn t r i i . - , ... -v widieriain. Tne minimum waire nnirt tn skilled labor employed on this con- "act shall be sixty (60) cents Der no"r . . ."',u,u,a wage paid to all un- labor employed on this con- i 1 8,,au ue Iorly () cents per our. The attention of bidder la i rected to the fact that nm- rr ni-n,. . . 7" . - - - - - i "employment. Lin- ru, - eurasKa. will etorri.a rn...i supervision over the nrenarati , snin1nnn..A .. . - ' " - "'""' "'""i usis ror this work a"J specification, for the "-U"' an information 2"'"r",8h bond in .n .mount tqual to 100 of hi. r "The right Is reserved to waive all hMi"1"""6" rec W or all nicvn i 10 1 iiniitM ?EAJ15NT OF ROADS nnu iKHiniTinw R. L. COCHRAN.' Ctto AV. tra Stata Engineer. ?A IyBS v w I A 1 1 HIIITBDiril V -J . a, a m not less county Clerk. Cat. Cmm UtMw cointy. nal orfSoa. v V