F1ATTSHOUTH SEZJI . WEEKLY JOUXUJAL MONDAY, OCTOBEE 2, 1933 PAGE TWO 1 Ihe Plattsmouth Jeurnal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT Entered at Postoffice, Plattsmouth, R. A. BATES, Publither , SUBSCRIPTION PBJCE $2.00 A YJSAB IN HBST POSTAL ZONE "Subscribers living in Second Postal Zone. $.f, par jraar. Beyond 600 mi lee, 93.00 par year. Rata to 0a aad eomUrtes. ; 53.60 per year. All subscription ara payable strtotly 4a advance. Tut, tut, NRA, don't you cry; you'll be Inflation buy and buy. :o: Winter can't be Tar away, because the restaurants Lave added chili. to their menu. :o: Impending event3 promise to prove that the golden rule has a habit, roor.cr or later, of justifying its adop tion. :o: It used to be that girls wanted a husband with a future. Now they consider themselves lucky if they get one with a Job. -:o:- "Sunday was my third wedding anniversary, and what an anniver- rary!" remarked the wife of Machine (.Sun George Kelly after her arrest in Memnhis. Well, didn't he get her a nice bracelet? :o: The 12-year-old, who walks a mile iii his clcated shoes to the football field and back for practice each even ing, regards college players who dress at the field houes and change shoes tach quarter as sissies. :o: A Kansas physician advances the theory that riding in motor cars causes sleeping sickness, but the kind of sleeping sickness caused by mo toring only lasts until about 11 o'clock the next morni:. :o: "What will you give men if I dust the store?" a Plattsmouth wife asked her husband. "I'll give you a big kiss and bu7 you a nickel drink," he re plied. "Well, how about two nickel drinks instead?" she bargained. :o: The Nazi government has decreed that all Germans who listen to radio programs from Russia will be sent to jail. A really subtle government would fill the jail3 with radio re ceivers tuned .exclusively on Russian stations. :o: "The most important thing about bro&kfast is its smell," declares Dr. Logan Clendening, and we suppose that explains these persons who in sist occasionally upon breaking their fast with salt mackerel and toast made from salt rising bread. :o: The Cubans got out and paraded In protest against American inter ference in their affairs, but they ought to be convinced by this time how broadminded we are in regard to their local affairs, because our ma rines didn't zreak up their parade. The question of the day is: Which odor coming from the kitchen makes a man love his wife most the per fume of pickled peaches, the odor of chili ratice, or the appetite-producing smell of boiling apple butter. Our vote is cast for chili sauce. How doc3 yours go? :o: The boy or girl without an educa tion is like a beat without a rudder or a ship without a sail. They get no where. You must always go for ward. There i3 only one thing you can do well going backward. That is rov.ing a boat. Then more than like ly you will hit a snag. :o: . If Mary Roberts Rinehart, in her prediction last Sunday that women wcu!d be the agency by which the ccuntry was rid of crime, had said littles women, she would bs hailed as r.n uncanny prophet now. It was a 12-year-old girl who gave the tip on v hih George Kelly was traced and crrciUd. :o: A recent eurvey made in 800 cities of the forty-eight states by the wom en's bureau in Washington shows that there are about 50,000 women- homeless, friendless and Jobless roaming around this country today, a large number cf whom sleep night ly rj the hobo "jungles" on the out skirt? of tho bigger cities. ;o: It; all depends on how you look at it. Oie man stopped by a long freight train at a slrect crossing, eat In hi3 car and fumed and grumbled to beat the band. In the car next to him. a thoughtful citizen said: "By gum, that train laok3 like this thing recovery" we have been told was rr;iad ths corner. I'd like to sit here and watch a dozen trains like thzt gs by-" PLATTSHOUTH, NEBRASKA Neb., as secoad-class mail matter What is so useless as the "gold" column on a bank deposit slitp? :o: Having made himself obnoxious in everything else, why doesn't Huey Long take up crooning? :o: When one takes an umbrella to church, why does it always fall to the floor in the middle of a prayer? :o: If green peppers are so wholesome because they are full of vitamins what is the matter with green apples? :o: ' Joe Brown couldn't make a success of the Kansas City ball team. The players seemed to think it funnier to lose than to win. :o: Speaking of being on the spot, how would you have liked to be one of the eleven married men on the Sally Rand Jury last week? :o: In some parts of India, they say a man does not know his wife until he marries her. In a lot of cases, that holds good in this country. :o: Secretary Ickes, who administrates the oil code, warns the public against buying cheap motor oil. And where would one find any cheap motor oil? :o: We feel better already. A New York paper reports that large-size diamonds are more in demand today than at any time in the last four years. :o: Maybe it is because it simply isn' possible to make men look like some thing they "ain't" that clothes for them are always plain old garments meant to cover up nakedness. :o: Another thing that makes our re cognition of Russia seem more fitting is that as a nation we are a great deal raore'-:Marxian- ourselves- nowaday than we were two years ago. :o: Lieutenant Commander Settle ex ! pects to explore the stratosphere within ten days, thus preparing the way for the monetary ascent that is expected to come with inflation. :o: One of the latest to return home from the Century of Progress reports that Sally Rand (who recently bit her manager he can't manage her) i3 so far away, the lights are so dim and the fans so large that the act can't be anything but" artistic. :o: ACHIEVEMENT IN RECOVERY "This," said General Johnson in announcing the signature of the coal code, "is the greatest achievement of the recovery administration." To impose order upon the anarchy which has ruled for year3 in the bituminous coal industry is unquestionably one af tho tasks especially fitted to the machinery of the recovery act, and one which has long cried out for do ing. Since the war bituminous coal mining has been a "sick" industry, and it was never, perhaps, in as healthy a state as might have been wished. Together with export agri culture and (to a lesser extent) New England textiles, it was one of the great "30ft spots" beneath the sur fact of post-war prosperity. Owing to the character of the industry and the restrictions of the law. It was im possible for it to rationalize itself either on the side of labor organiz ation or managerial combination, and it remained a constant weakness in both the economic and social struc ture. As with the textile and oil indus tries, It offered an ideal point at which to apply a new regulatory ma chinery which was fundamentally based upon the necessity for elimin ating competitive' excess. The com plexity of the code, the long contro versy over its formulation and the fact that it has not yet been accepted by all the operators are sufficient to Indicate the difficulty of the prob lem. It is, however, the kind of prob lem which (the recovery machine ought to be able to solve and which the country is most nearly unani mous in believing'can and should be Eolved. The achievement of the code is, in fact, a great one; and the new regulatory administration will have the xatioa behiad it as it seeks to work eut the praetlesl applieatiea. New Yerk Herald-Tibune. ' ' PLATONIC DISCOURSE ON NOBLE EXPEBIMEXJa Now that the end of prohibition seems to be at hand it is well to re call the conclusions of a great phil osopher who sat in Judgment on the erreat experiment many centuries ago. For prohibition Is no new thing. It has failed before. In all ages, weherever it existed, worthy persons steadily opposed it. In ancient Greece, Sparta had pro hibition, while liberal Athens did not The Issue Is amusingly argued In Plato's dialogue, "The Laws." The Spartans defend their system on grounds of military efficiency; their aim is to remove temptation from the people. But Plato, the Athenian, a man both great and good, denies its moral efficiency. He beeins in a whimsical vein. If there is nothing to drink at banquets how, he asks, can the older men those who are over 40 and embitter ed, Join with full voice in the sing ing? Or if a stranger seeks to do business with you, or would marry your daughter, how are you to ascer tain whether, perhaps, he is not J scoundrel, if you cannot first try him out in conversation over a potent glass or two? Then follows the more serious con tention. The habit of wine, r-iato argues, should be regulated, not pro hibited. For what is wanted is not prohibition, but temperance. And temperance is not police control, but self-control. It is moderation in con trast to excess. It is the power to stop at a little instead of taking too much. By tho tona of public senti ment it can be taught and encour aged. And whether in tho individual or in society, no virtue, Plato thought is so desirable. All this, if true at all, is as true today as ever. It was the abuse of alcohol which first made prohibition seem desirable. The repeal of prohi bition must not be allowed to sanc tion a 'recurrence of such abusive habits, whether personal or social. After the great experiment, a greater ought now to begin an experiment in character, an adventure in na tional temperance. Chicago Daily News. -:o: NRA LEADERS SNUBBED BY OLD ASSOCIATES Their old friends are terribly dis appointed in them and are showing their displeasure, sometimes "with a chilly, distant nod,' occasionally with a direct cut. Such is the experience of Walter Teagle, Gerard Swope and Loui3 Kirstein, men of large affairs who have left their personal concerns to give their time and energy to the government. In their present posi tions, as members of the NRA's in dustrial board, they are working as hard as they ever did in their private enterprises, and they are doing such a good job of it, that General John son describes them as the "pillar stones" of his organization. But former associates frown on them, charge them with being pro labor, and, as reported in the Merry-Go-Round, are threatening, in some instances, to voice their disapproval in a harsji, practical way by tak ing business away from those trait ors who "are betraying their own clas3." It is an old story, old as the House of Have. The honest public servant, conscientiously devoted to the popu lar welfare, has always had to drink the hemlock, literally or figuratively. Ostracism has never been squeamish as to the weapons used. It has broken men, and women, too, with ruthless impartiality. The caste of privilege is a malevolent camorra. From George Washington to Franklin D. Roose velt, it has performed as consistently in the sunlight of our American dem ocracy as in the cold hall3 of aris tocracy. How tho votaries , of priv ilege sputtered their apopletic wrath when Theodore Roosevelt was shunt ing them into his "Ananias club," or calling them "malefactors of great wealth," or exhorting us to "shackle cunning as our forefathers shackled force!" was one of the laughable phenomena of the "strenuous days." Revolution has never enjoyed tae sanction of our "best people," and the present is no exception. But rev olutions come and grind ancient usages and vested rights into obliv ion, and when the dust has settled and the debris has been swept away and the new charter is adopted and operating, history stamps the period with the seal of progress and poster ity acclaims the revolutionaries In marble and bronze and song and legend. Messrs. Teagle, Swope, Kirstein and many others who have entered into the spirit of the new deal, are really In high company, in the im memorlally best society of the ages. They belong to what Harold J. Laskl terms that elite to which democracy looks for leadership. St. Leuls Poat Diapatch. ' IT SIMMERS DOWN TO CHOICE OF SHUDDERS Representative James W. Wads- worth of New York yesterday offered one of the finest exhibitions of sbudJ dering that we have heard about for a long time. Mr. Wadsworth was ad dressing a group of republicans. He announced that he shudders at the administration's economic theories that he shudders at the thought of .. K.nmn. i-n,n tori n.nnla ' that as a live stock man he shudders at the wanton destruction of four mil lion little pigs and that: "I shudder also at this public boy cotting of a man not able to live up to the NRA." In a word, the new deal is to Rep resentative Wadsworth Just one long shudder. It is not hard to see why a man of Representative Wadsworth's es sentially conservative temperament should shudder at the things that are happening In Washington at pres ent. But it ought to be made clear that he is no lone virtuoso when it comes to shuddering. We confess that, on occasion, we have shudder ed also. It may even be that Presi dent Roosevelt himself has now and then emitted a shudder or two. But there is one point which Rep resentativo Wadsworth has missed It all simmers down to a choice be tween shudders. The course of Am erican economic life from the begin ning of 1930 to the spring of 1933 was also provocative of shudder indeed, shudders of such force and power that they left the nation quite exhausted. Then there is the fact that 3,510,000 families, or 17.000, 000 individuals, or one out of every eight persons, are still receiving pub lie support. That also tends to pro voke shudders. An the object. of the new deal, as we understand it, is to eliminate those shudders. If, in the process, it pro vokes a few shudders of its own, why that i3 just one of the things that we shudderers must put up with. Baltimore Evening Sun. -u :o: AN OVERPRODUCTION OF ABOUT EVERYTHING Dr. Walter L. Biering of Des Moines, president-elect of the Amer ican Medical association, in warn ing there would be an overproduction of physicians merely cited facts in connection with one profession. He might have gone farther to include all prof esKionslill, trades jand virtu ally all business, lines The threatened overproduction of physicians, said Dr. Biering, was the result of training "without any con siceratlon of possible consumer re quirements." This meant, of course, overcrowding would result and would be accompanied by various unethical practices through necessity. An attorney once said there were twice as many lawyers as were need ed. This was three or four years ago. since which time thousands cf young men and young women have been ad mitted to the bar. Every year thou sands are added, to every profession, apparently without much thought given to actuar opportunities in a chosen field. This, too, is understand able if it be taken for granted that in most instances Individuals pursue professionally that for which thej are best fitted by virtue of their tal ents, The cuontry suffers from overpro duction in many lines. There is an overproduction of human talent and training just as there is of farm prod ucts. There are too many attorneys, too many dentists, too many engi neers and architects, too many teach ers. There also are too many skilled and unskilled workers in industry. too many coal miners, too many salesmen. On every side one sees a surplus, which operates exactly as does a surplus of wheat, or corn, or anything else in confusing the mar ket and forcing down prices. Civilization's responsibility hence forth is the task, not of reducing the number of men and women in given professions or trade3, but of provid ing them with something to do at which they may make a living. If year by year the population increases, if year by year many thousands of young men and young women are graduated by high schools and col leges and universities, if year by year the ranks of the professions and trades are increased, the time must come when their problem of gainful employment must be solved . and solved permanently. Attention must be given to opportunities in a chosen field with the individual governing himself accordingly. But society as a whole eventually must . answer the question raised by this constantly in creasing overproduction ;ln talent, training, skill and experience. Hu man beings must have something to do in the individual struggle to sur vive. Sioux City Journal. . i if :; mwi 'p It stems that prohibition new is la process of liquidation. ' NO CAUSE FOB PESSIMISM Are the big bears that Big Bual- ncss, one might say, which, combined with the conservative New England element of the republican party, was the "invisible government" before March 4 last are the big bears sell lng the people of the United States short? Is a cleverly disguised, In many cases no doubt unintentional and unconscious partnership, placing the reascendancy of the republican party ahead of the recovery of be na tion from the depression? The questions force themselves to the fore when one closely observes the trends of thought in regard to the NRA work, in connection with the comment on agricultural prices, and upon reading orthodox republi can newspaper comment on the plight of of the farmer, etc. Paul Mallon recently pointed out that the republican attitude as to NRA is that of boring unseen, from within but boring. It would, is the only possible inference be lament able for the welfare of the nation if the present administration's plans for recovery, because unusual, and dras tic, perhaps in some places, possibly even revolutionary, should be per mitted to succeed. Many business men, still unable to reconcile them selves to the theory that reconstruc tion must begin at the bottom, as ad vocated in the presidential campaign by Mr. Roosevelt and his party, rath er than from the top, and trickling down, as advocated by Mr. Hoover and his party many such business men, both industrial and commercial, are withholding support to the NRA movement rather than getting behind it and, for the time being, establish ing a truce on selfishness. Many newspapers of the classification oi "Old Guard." or "conservative" re publican, are, during the present re adjustment of prices, publishing comment similar to this exhibit "If a farmer were to swap dollars with a business man, he would have to put up one dollar and a half 'farm money' for $1 of the merchant's money. He's not doing that and never will, except in emergencies, and as long as such inequality exists in prices received for farm products as compared to prices asked for com modities, the economic troubles of the country are far from solved." Unquestionably some items in the line of agricultural products have recently taken a slump, the while some, perhaps many, of the articles he must buy have increased in price. Just what, however, is the relative condition? Is It as seriou3 as it was when the change in power took place at Washington? Is it worse than it was under the former regime? Or has some degree of recovery been made? One naturally turns to the market pages of today and a year ago for the real fact3. What do the figures show? Quoting Grand Island 'prices ex cepting as ' indicated a relative change in the Independent's market report making it necessary to com pare Chicago prices in one or two instances the following prices are found as of September 19 in each year. 1932 Wheat, No. 1, per bu .30 Wheat, No. 2, per bu. .29 Wheat. No. 3, per bu. .28 Corn, mixed, per bu .21 Corn, yellow, per bu. .23 Oats, per bu .11 Rye, per bu .20 Barley, per bu .12 Hides, per pound .02 Wool, per pound .05 to 1933 .77 .76 .75 . .36 .27 .50 .24 .06 .17 .21 Hens, per pound 1 .11 .06 Leghorns, per pound .08 .04 Roosters, per pound .04 .03 Springs, per pound .10 .06 Butter (Chicago) per lb. 21 -24 to 22 Potatoes (Chicago) per 100 pounds .70 1.50 tol.65 And yesterday the Omaha market on hogs was the highest it has been for 15 months! It is true that tho farmer's dol lar has been depreciated in recent years. Agriculture began to suffer deflation as early a3 1920. It was exploited during all of the twenties. It fared even worse under the farm board of the Hoover administration. Following it, though not necessarily on account of it, wheat went down from 85 cents to as lo was 27 cents. Other products likewise Increased not so materially it is true. But the trend has been upward, at least, not downward. At all evonts there Is reason for optimism rather than for pessimism.- Grand Island Independ ent. "' ' :o: The season - for pictures of bath ing beauties has ended. ' The season for pictures of-feminine cheer lead ers Ju3t has started. : : -o: Three-hundred-year sentences for the Urschel kidnapers might not stop kidnaping, but -they would give Mr. Urschel reasonable assurance that the next tlaje he a kidnaped it would bf ; y owebedy else.' And soaaetaiag. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, 8S. By virtue of an Order of Sale is sued by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk of the District Court within and for Cass County, Nebraska,' and to me direct ed. I will on the 21st day of October. A. D. 1938. at 1Q o'clock a. m. of said day at the South' front door of the Court House. In Plattsmouth, in said county, sell at public auction to the higbwt b)ddar for cash the 101 lowing real estate to-wit: The West One-half (WH) of : the Northwest Quarter (NWV4) of Section Twenty-eight (28) and the East One-half (EH) of . the Southeast -Quarter (SEU) Of Section Twenty (20) all in Township Eleven (11) North Range Nine (9) East of the 6th P. M. Cass County, Nebraska; The same being levied upon and taken as the property of Charles A. Schuelke, et al, defendants to satisfy a judgment of said Court recovered by Kansas City Life Insurance Com pany, a corporation, plaintiff, against said defendants. Plattsmouth. Nebraska, September 13th, A. D. 1933. H. SYLVESTER, Sheriff Cass County, si 4-5 w Nebraska. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, es. By virtue of an Order of Sale Is sued by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk of the District Court within and for Cass County, Nebraska, and to me direct ed,-1 will on the 21st day of October, A. D. 1933. at 10 o'clock a. m. of said day at the South front door of the Court House, in Plattsmouth, in said county, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the fol lowing real estate to-wit: The Southwest Quarter (SW',4) of Section Twenty-one (21), Township Eleven (11), North Range Nine (9), Cass County, Nebraska; The same being levied upon and taken as the property of Charles A Schuelke, et al, defendants to satisfy a Judgment of said Court recovered by Kansas City Life Insurance Com pany, a corporation, plaintiff, against said defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, September 13th, A. D. 1933. H. SYLVESTER, Sheriff Cass County, sl4-5w Nebraska. FANTASTIC PROPOSAL OF KHAKI SHIRT ARMY Suddenly we hear that there is great organization known as the Khaki Shirts with "millions of mem bers." They are to be ordered tc march on Washington and make Roosevelt dictator." Now every free American has a right to march on Washington, but there are some things to do before that. ' First, take the name Roosevelt off the banner. The president of the United States has given no Indica tion that he wants to be made dic tator. It is not fair to him to use ms name as a symbol for a move ment to destroy the government he i3 sworn to uphold and protect. Next, take off the khaki shirt. It is true a man may wear what color he will, but there is a sense of decency in the public mind that cannot wise ly be affronted even by two million men marching to take command of the other 120 million of us. The khaki shirt is associated with service to the country. It has been made sacred in many homes by men who went but wearing it and did not re turn. If men want to show that they can do something better than other Americans have done, they ought to find a uniform that Is new also. A few men, saying they represent the fantastic idea of making a man dictator who does not want to be a dictator and would not accept their 1 commission. They propose to take so many men to wasmngton tnat tney would be the gravest problem Mr Roosevelt has faced. An army foi which there would be neither food nor shelter and which would from the lack of sanitation be instantly a menace to the health of everyone whose duty puts him in Washington It is all so much more spectacular than playing at home to give Mr Roosevelt tho support he will need at election, since the Khaki Shirts are convinced that Mr. Roosevelt is the one hopa of the country.. It Is more exciting than helping to maW-? Mr. Roosevelt's NRA mean something since they believe he is qualified to be dictator. We can see the fantastic folly of this proposal. Therein is its harm- lessness; it carries its own vaccin ation. But is it any. more folly than the idea of men who say by their words or their acts that In these times of . distress, they will do nothing ex cept demand that what they want shall be done? That they will fight the taxes and get around the NRA and do' nothing until p. kindly for tune gives them the gains they, want? A khaki shitted marcher with a warped idea of making things bet far by ter.rlng things up at least real ises that others count In the program. It is possible to respect him more than the ope who -feejs be has -no 'part In -anything unless It is to be dJge juit as Uf vaatf, with an ad yanee guarantee of proits for hit pbskct. Milwaukee Journal. NOTICE TO CREDITORS State of Nebraska, County of Cass, SB. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Otto F. Peters, deceased. To the creditors of said estate: Yon are hereby notified that I will sit at the County Court room in Plattsmouth, in said county, on Oc tober J 3, 1933, and on January 19, 1934, at ten a. m. of each day to examine all claims against said es tate, with a view to their adjustment and allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claims against said estate is three months from the 13th day of October, A. D. 1933, and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from Baid 13th day of October, 1933. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 16th day of September, 1933. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) County Judge. V. E. HEDRICKS, Wahoo, Nebraska, Attorney. sI8-3w I 1 Ml SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cas3, S3. By virtue of an Order of Sale is sued by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk of the District Court within and for Cass county, Nebraska, and to me direct ed, I will on the 4th day of Novem ber, A. D. 1933, at 10 o'clock a. m. of cald day at the south front door of the court house, in Tlattsmouth, in said county, Fell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the fol lowing real estate, to-wit: The west half W) of the northwest quarter (NWU) of Section eight (8) and the north east quarter (NEU ) of Section seven (7), Township ten (10). North Rango ten (10), East of the Sixth P. M., in Cass ccunty, Nebraska The same being levied upon and tak en as the property of Emil Dorne melcr et al, defendants, to satisfy a Judgment of said court recovered by Lillian I. Monla et al. Trustees, plain tiffs ncainst said defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, September 25, A. D. 1933. II. SYLVESTER. Sheriff Cass County, s21-5w Nebraska. ORDER OF HEARING and Notice on Petition for Set tlement of Account. In the County Court cf Cass coun ty, Nebraska. State of Nebraska, Cass county, s. To all persons Interested in the es tate of Mary Wheeler, deceased: On reading the petition of W. A. Wheeler, Administrator, praying a final settlement and allowance of his account filed in this Court on the lth day of September, 1933, and for assignment of residue of said estate, determination of heirship, and for discharge of Administrator; 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 13th day of October, A. D. 1933, at ten o'clock a. m., to show cause, if any there be, wfcy Che 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 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. In witness whereof, I have here unto set my hand and the seal of said Court this 11th day of Septem ber, A. D. 1933. A. II. DUXBURY. (Seal) slS-3w County 'Judge. ORDER OF HEARING ' and Notice of Petition for Termina tion of Guardianship, Settlement of Guardian's Accounts and for Dis charge of Guardian. In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ES. To all persons interested in the matter of the Guardianship of Gertie Beckner, Insane: Notice is hereby given that Searl S. Davis. Guardian of Gertie Beckner, insane, has filed in this court his final report and petition for termina tion of said guardianship proceedings, approval of his accounts and for his discharge as guardian. Said petition alleges, among other ihings, that the said Gertie Beckner, is now sane, and competent to man age her own estate and has been dis charged by the Insanity Commission of Cass county, Nebraska, and that for said reasons, said guardianshln should be terminated and cuardlan discharged. It is hereby ordered that you and all other persons interested in said matter may, and do appear at the County Court to be held In and for naid county, in the Court House at Plattsmouth, Nebraska, on the 13th d.y of October, A. D. 1933 at ten o'clock a. m. to show cause, if any there be, why the prayer of the pe titioner should not be granted and that notice of the pendency of said petition and the hearing thereon be given by serving a copy of this no tice on the said Gertie Beckner per sonally, and to all ether persons in terested In said matter by publishing copy 01 mis oraer in the Platts mouth Journal, a semi-weekly news paper printed in said county, for two successive weeks prior to said day of hearing. In wltncBS whereof, I have here unto set my hand and the seal of paid court this 20th day of Septem ber, 1933. ' ::. A. H.' DUXBURY, t Ccunty Judge Cass County, Nebraska. . (Seat) t25-2w Letterftoads. enveiooaa an .n kinds of Job Printina at thn n office.