PAGE TWO FLATTSKOUTH SEMI . WEEKLY JOURNAL MONDAY, N0VE3IBER G. 1933 r Ihe IPlaftsmouth Journal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA Entered at Postofflce, riattsmouth, Neb., as second-class mail matter R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 A YEAR IN FIRST POSTAL ZONE Subscribers living In Second Postal Zone, $2.50 per year. Beyond 600 milee, $3.00 per year. Rate to Canada and Joreign countries. $3.50 per year. All subscriptions are payable etrfctly In advance. A lot of men who went to the devil in the days of their youth got back In time to run for office. :o: : The chancellor of Austria says his country has turned the corner. So that's where that corner Is. - :o: Afghan warriors are poisoning their barbed wire. A people as ad vanced as this should be sending forth missionaries. :o: New York panhandlers are said to be adding humor to their pleas. "We doubt, though, if even Chevalier could swing another touch for France. :o: The new dal must be working pretty well. At any rate, the pa tient, who thought he was on his ljt leg3 a few months ago, has re covered enough to begin to be fret- lul with his physician. :c: Someone defines genius as a per ron v.boce mind doesn't go blank when he's asked to write something In an autograph book. We dunno. Ycu should see some of the stuff al leged gcnius&3 write there. :o: Saniusl Insull has lost considerable weight since he took up his abode in Greece, but Instead of buying new clothes with somebody else's money a3 formerly, hs is spending his own money to have his old clothes altered. :o: fec-retary Ickes hastens to assure the Inhabitants of the Oklahoma drought area that the government has no intention of moving .them out to other and fairer land3. We trust this is the kind of assurance the Okla h'-.r.-.ans wanted, but one can't always Le ture. ;o: A Baltimore newspaper declares tl.nt there have been too many lyr.chir.g3 in Maryland. Although he neglects to rey. just what number of lyn hinge he believes Maryland is just.'y entitled to, he evidently Is con vinr-id that the lynche3r in that state have finally Gone Too Far. -:o: Five years ago we never would have dreamed the day would come v. hen Irvin Cobb's streamline chin would fit so artistically into a motor car advertisement. :o: Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt's ad vice to American women to stop be ing afraid especially of things that don't exist wa3 timely, at least. There's no better time than Hal lowe'en to convince women of the relative harmlessness of spooks. :o: There was a white coating on the r-ofi and a Ekim of ice on the chicken t'ougLo the ether morr.Ing. Most of the prominent loafer.? of the town have bad colds and the Model Ts show a di.-position to backfire, all of which indicates winter is not far off. :o: PF.CGBES5 ENDED THE BUFFALO HERDS Ti e buffalo herds of our plains were too vast ever to diminish from mooting. The destruction of the bi e.i myriads wa3 a mathematical ir.ipi-ibllity for the number of hur.tcrs and rifle3 in the United Eti'.es. You will have to look to other factors. There ir. a clue in the very period during whi:h the buffalo disappear ed; the two generations after the Civil War were those of our greatest ir.durtrial booming and commercial crpr.rtLion; cur wid?st peaceable ter ritorial conquest. It was not the rifle, but the plow that caused most cas ualtiea in the buffalo's ranks. Ha was killed off by the survey or's axes and chains; by the railroad bulMei 'z spikes and plate - bolt wrejehes and sledge3. He and the antelope and elk and other big game of the Wczt that, like the bison, were creatures of the free and open ranges wai killed off by the stockman's fences. The most rabid conservationist rannct point to any stage of the hunting of the buffalo and say: "Here Is where It all began." The sensible appraiser, looking backward, sees tho death knell of the buffalo in the completion of the first transcon tinental railroad. This was a great ttetl knife stabbed through the heart cf the buffalo herds. THE TROUBLED HOLY LAND It is particularly unfortunate that anti-Jewish riots should have brok en out in Palestine Just at this time. Under the terms of the so-called "Bal four declaration" of 1917, the British government, which is responsible to the League of Nations for the admin istration of Palestine, is definitely committed to the Zionish project of establishing there a "national home" for the Jews. How many of the Jews who have just been driven from Ger many by the Nazi revolution may eventually find a new home In the ancient Holy Land Is uncertain, but settlement in Palestine would seem to offer a natural solution for the problems of a considerable number of these involuntary exiles if return to Germany is permanently barred. The anti-Jewish rioting on the part of certain sections of the Arab population in Palestine Is not going to make that solution attractive to people who have just escaped from a similar racial intolerance in Germany. The resentment of the Arabs against the whole policy of the Balfour de claration, based on the fear that their country is being taken away from them, to be given to the Jews, appar ently has flared up again as a result of the continued Jewish immigration under a permit system supervised by the British authorities. (The system is designed to limit immigration ac cording to the capacity of the coun try to provide work for the newcom ers.) Four years ago racial antagonism, largely of "the same origin, caught the British administration unpre pared and resulted in the death of several hundred Jews and Arabs be fore it could be brought under con trol. Thi3 time, undoubtedly, the au thorities will not permit the situation to get out of hand again. But the revival of violence in Palestine plain ly indicates that there still are grave obstacles in the way of creatlnv a national home for the Jews in a country where another race predom inates and seems to regard the pro ject with bitter hostility, and it has come at a time when the need for some such refuge for at least part of the German Jews is particularly ur gent. Kansas City Star. :o: A BOY AND HIS HOME "Please, Eir, President Roosevelt, I always worry that something might happen to my mother. I lose every thing what I got. Please can't you You should see some of the suff al willing to sleep under a tree but I feel sorry for my mother and father, sister and rest of the family." Your eyes filled up and your throat was choked when you read this from the letter cf Adam Schmidt, 12-year- old boy, asking President Roosevelt to save hi3 home. "I always worry that something might happen to my mother. I lose everything what got." And then the postscript: "Please don't tell my father and mother that I wrote this letter. They were al ways good citizens." It ccmes to U3 that a boy whose parent3 were always good citizens may be worth as much to this coun try as a great many other things it spends money for. Mr. Roosevelt saved the home for this time. He Is saving others. But It all costs money our money. A great many people are making a fight on the idea that the govern ment can save the Homes of its 12-year-old Adam Schmidts. They prefer to reach their own private decisions of. what they owe to community funds. In the year of our declaration of Independence, a man named Adam Smith wrote a book called "The Wealth of Nations," and i3 called the father of modern economics. A boy named Adam Schmidt wrote to his president about saving a home. It might bs rather nice, though it would cost Eomething, to live in a nation where the words of a boy of 12 about saving his home rated along with the words of. the great economist.- Milwaukee Journal. :o: . ."If you love me bo much, why net come to tee me? Baby," says a ctr-ronal In tr n rnnv rnlnnn Tfe not uitt ths lUe West" words, but ths tune is familiar. THESE ARE GENUINE NEW DEAL DIVIDENDS The old axiom that the proof of the pudding is in the eating is being exemplified in the results now being obtained from the new deal. It 13 interesting and illuminating therefore, to check the results of the new deal to date. Here are some of the things that have come out of it: 1 The Missouri navigation proj ect which will reduce freight rates in valley territory at least 20 per cent, stop soil erosion, control floods and provide cheap power. 2 Tennessee Valley improvement project which will establish new low rate levels for electricity, provide the south with adequate power and cheap fertilizer and build a great new in dustrial center. 3Payments to cotton farmers amounting to 150 million dollars and the stabilization of cotton prices by means of establishing a minimum loan value. 4 Employment provided for 340 thousand youths in conservation camps. These youths have returned 40 million dollars from their wages to their parents and other depend ents. 5 Inauguration of the corn-hog program which will release 500 mil-J lion dollars of government easb through processing taxes and bonuses to . midwest farmers. C More than 2,500,000 men have found employment thorugh the blan ket and permanent codes established under the National Industrial Recov ery act. 7 Authorization of payments ol processing tax benefits to wheat farm ers which will amount to around 100 million dollars, payment to be made this fall and winter. 8 Financial arrangements made In co-operation with states, munic ipalities, etc., for construction pro jects costing upward of two billion dollars which will provide employ ment for another 500 thousand to one million men. 9 Preparations under way for the underwriting of one billion dol lars of frozen assets in closed banks to release money to depositors in those institutions. 10 Set up of a new system for financing farm credits to divorce such borrowing from commercial sources has been inaugurated by the farm credit administration. ' If the 'recovery program hac fallei short of ecme of its objectives, its actual achievements are so great by comparison to its disappointments, there is small ground for criticism. Despair has given way to hope; , a new psychology has been born; a new philosophy of life is being instilled into the minds and hearts of the people; a new spirit of mutual help fulness and co-operation has grown out of the new deal practices Sioux City Tribune. :o: A NEW STIMULUS TO RECOVERY The twofoldVagreemer.t the Presi dent has negotiated with the eieei industry should have the immediate result of stimulating employment far beyond the limits of that industry and its affiliated coal mines. It indi cates at the same time the tremen dous part the administration may be expected to play as arbiter both of prices and industrial disputes. Executives of the industry were led to make important concessions on steel rail prices, although there was a compromise on a figure half-way be tween that submitted by the execu tives and that previously named by the administration. There also were concessions, but only on the part of the industry, with acceptance of the check-off and collective bargaining in the so-called captive coal mines of the steel industry. It may ba assumed now that the administration's proposal of advanc ing money for purchase of steel rail? will go through, that the industr: will be lifted out of its slump to only 25 per cent of production capacity, that the mine strife for the time be ing is Eettled and that perhaps a pre cedent has been established for mod erately lower steel prices, a condi tion that for months has been held an essential to revived construction of hundreds of kinds. Thu3 through the administration there have been effected adjustments that will mean employment for addi tional thousands and the hastening of recovery to that extent. There has besn revealed, as. well, the probable necessity for repeated exercise of offi cial influence that will make the gov ernment the final umpire in the set tlement of dirferences arising from conflicting niterests under the recov ery act. Kansas ity Star. :o: This kind of times divides the citi zens Into three classes, boosters, knockers and chlslahs. :o: Help speed tho retnrn of pros- perity by buying tho things you noed now! j THE GOVERNORS' PARLEY After two days spent listening to spokesmen for the farmers, the con ference of mid western governors and their representatives at Des Moines has adjourned. The governors have demonstrated, what everyone already know3, that they are fully alive to the plight of agriculture and want to rescue it. Their resolutions will serve to draw naiional attention, one more, to the fact that agriculture is not earning cost of production. New corn, reaching the market now in a fairly steady stream, is bringing perhaps twice as much per bushel for the Nebraska and Iowa producers as it brought last year. Yet this year's figure i3 not enough materially to .reduce the farmer's debt, or to pay his taxes and the in terest on his mortgage. So the governors ask for controlled inbation which the president is at tempting. They ask for more liberal farm credit financinc w:iich is be ing extended. They declare for a fur ther moratorium upon foreclosures and to that idea the president Is lending aid. They want agriculture placed under the same kind of an NRA code, which would license pro ducer and processor to maintain the essential price level. In last analysis, it seems that agri culture must depend largely upon the program of action which has been adopted by the administration and placed in operation by Secretary Wal lace. Wallace may be only the "nice boy" that Milo Reno calls him, but he has set in motion prodigious ccheme3 to lessen the burdens of agri culture. The program involves the payment to the farmers, within a year, of what seems to be a fantastic total in bonuses 580 million dollars. The wheat and corn producer and the hog raiser is to be paid for reduc ing his production. In attacking the prcblera of the surplus in such a real istic fashion the administration comes to grips with the. fundamental farm difficulty. . Besides these bonuses there are the loans to distressed farmers, increas ingly more liberal, there is the gov ernmental gold , policy which should help the price cf all commodities, there is the prospect of extending foreign markets , in Russia and., in South America, to take more of the farm surplus, and there is the firmly declared pledge o the administration to keep everlastingly trying. In that pledge the farmers li'nd their greatest comfort. They have already rejected, with startling and reassuring unanimity, Milo Reno's proposed strike. They have attested, in emphatic fashion, their continu ing confidsnce in Mr. Roosevelt. They doubtless welcome the gesture on ths part of the governors. They pin their hopes, however, on the president and his secretary of agriculture. World Herald. !' NO WORK, NO EAT One result of the unemployment situation that is going to !2mand treatment Is the threat that is al ready apparent in the fact that en forced idleness tends to breed con stitutional laziness. There are a lot of men who have taken to the road In search of jobs, who will have be come so used to getting a living with out work that it is going to require vigorous treatment to put them back on the industrial path. There are thousands of well-disoositioned men panhandling from door to door men that vould wori ir it was offered. It is not a hard matter to distinguish between the mendicant and the unfortunate.- Conversation with those who come to your back door will soon inform you as to the difference in disposition of the two classes. If it were possible, in every case where aid is extended recipients should be required to return some service as an antidote for the poison that the "world owes me a living." The world owes no man anything that he does not himself show an appreciation and disposition to pay for in services or cash. It is one of the unfortunate effects of the depression that many good men are to be ruined through their association with the hobo clas3. The ordinary hobo who live3 in the jungles and preys upon society for. necessities is the bane of the nation. Unemployment is tending to Increase thii large and unwholesome element to the end that, public authorities, charitcy worker3 and the public will have the burden, of what it is felt will be a growing evil unless it can be stopped. The motto should be "No Work, No Eat." Wahoo Werao- crat. !- 7 ' . :o: .Dr. -Morris Fishbein says u high ball, dictetlcally .speaking, is equal to three hard-boiled eggs. The aa similatory process is quite rapid, too; frequently no more than five , hlgh bsll3 will turn three very gentle guests into three very hard-boilei eggs. ORDER OF HEARING In he County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the Trusteeship of the Estate of Caroline Williams, de ceased. Now on this 4th day of November, 1033, this cause came on for hearing upon the report of C. H. Longacre and August Longacre, trusteee, under the last will and testament of Caro line Williams, deceased, together with the petition of said trustees, praying therein for the approval of eaid report and for an order reducing tho amount of the trustees' official bond herein filed, and it appearing to the Court that a time and place for hearing upon said report and upon all other reports heretofore made by said trustees should be fixed and no tice thereof given; It ?3 therefore ordered that a hear ing upon said report and all prior reports made by said trustees be set fcr hearing on the 24th day of No vember, 1933, at the hour of ten o'clock in the forenoon of said day, and that notice cf faid hearing be given to all persons interested in said matter by publication cf a copy of this Order in the pcml-weekly edi tion of the Plattsmouth Journal, com nieiieinjr with the ipsue cf November Cth. 1933, and continuing to and in cluding the issue of November 23rd. 1933, and that all objections to raid reports must be filed In said Court before said day of hearing. Bv the Court. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) r.G-3w County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING and Notice cn Petition for Set tlement of Account. In the County Court cf Cass coun ty, Nebraska. State of Nebraska. Cass ecunty, ss. To all persons intercte 1 in the estate of William Curry Boucher, de ceased: On reading the petition cf Henry Warren Boucher. Exciter, praying a final ECttTenent ad allowance cf H3 account filed in " th's Court on the 31st day cf Octolrr, 1923. and for as signment of rsidrs of raid etite. do termination of heirship and dls.harge of Erecutcr; It in hereby ordered that ycu and all porsons interested in rr.M matter may, and do, appear at the County Court to he hel l in nril for r-nltl coun ty, on the 1st day of Be. ember, A. D. 1933, at ten o'cl'k r. in., to show cause, if any tlora be. why the prayer cf the petitioner fhould not be granted, and that notice cf the pendency of tali petition and the hearing thereof he rr'.ven to all per sons interested i:i said matter by pub lishing a ccpy cf tMa order in the Plattsmcuth Jr.urral, a semi-weekly newspaper printed in' said county, for three successive weeks pricr to said day cf hearing. In. witness hereof.. $ have here unto set civ I'pr.d. ajKJ L'te seal or sain Court thls-Slst day -of October; A. D 193 3 a. ii. nrxcuRY. (Seal) r.6-3w County Judge SHERIFF'S f5ALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. By virtue cf an Order of Sale, i sued by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk of the District Court, withi.i ar.d for Cass County, Nebraska, and to me direct ed, I will on th3 9th day of Decem ber, A. D. 10SC, at 10 o'clock a. m. of said day at the south front door of the Court House, in said County, sell, at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the following real es tate to-wit: Beginning at the Northeast corner of the West Half of the Northeast Quarter of Section Five, Township Eleven, North Range Eleven, East, extending West 79 rods, thence South 81 rod?, thence East 79. rods, thence North SI rod3, to point of be ginning, containing forty acres more or less, and the Southwest Quarter of Section Thirty-three, Township Twelve, Range Eleven, all cast of the 6th P. M., in Cas3 County, Nebraska, subject to a mortgage "in favor of the Con servative Mortgage Company in the sum of $15,000.00 The same being levied upon and taken a3 the property of Henry Ileil, Jr., et al, defendants, to satisfy a Judgment of said court recovered by John H. Fowler, Trustee, plaintiff. against said defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, October 31, A. D. 1933. H. SYLVESTER, Sheriff Cass County, n2-5w Nebraska. EARLY DECISION ON DEBTS Washington. An early decision in Anglo-American war debt nego tiations was indicated by Secretary Hull after a conference with Under secretary Acheson of the treasury. The hint was givon by Hull at his press conference when he wa3 asked whether discussions had narrowed from a settlement of the entire debt problem to the single question of th payment due from London in Decem ber. The secretary said he expected to be able to answr this question de finitely later on and indicated the reply might be forthcoming this week. Hull emphasized the debt con versations still were going on. The debt payment due from England Dec. 15 amounts to $41,720,765 of prin cipal and $75,950,000 of interest. In addition, there is due $65,950,900 which was not paid last June, plus interest at 3 percent. In June, ths United States received from London a token payment of 10 million dol lars. Phone news Items to XiO. 8. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the estate of Wy more Fletcher, deceased. Notice of Administration. All persons interested in said es tate are hereby notified that a peti tion has been filed in said Court al leging that said deceased died leaving no last will and testament and pray ing for administration upon his es tate and for such other and further orders and proceedings in the prem ises as may bo required by the stat utes in such cases made and provided to the end that said estate and all things pertaining thereto may be finally settled and determined, and that a hearing will be had on said petition before said Court on the 24th day of November, A. D. 1933, and that if they fail to appear at said Court on said 24th day of No vember, 1933, at ten o'clock a. m., to contest the said petition, the Court may grant the same and grant ad ministration of said estate to Edgar Fletcher or some other suitable per son and proceed to a settlement thereof. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 2th day of October, 1933. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) o30-3w County Judge. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE In the District Court of Cass Coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the application of N. D. Talcott, adminstrator of the estate of William D. Coleman, de ceased, for license to sell real estate to pay debts. Now on this 28th day of October, 1933. came N. D. Talcctt, Adminis trator of the estate of William D. Coleman, deceased, and presents his Petition for License to Sell the Real Estate of the deceased party in order to pay the claims filed and allowed against said estate, and the expenses cf administering said estate. It ap pearing from said petition that there i-? an insufficient amount of personal property in the hands of the admin istrator to pay the claims presented and allowed by the County Court and the expenses of the administration of said estate; and that it is necessary to sell the whole of the real estate of the deceased In order to pay the afore said claim3 and the costs of admin istration. It Is Therefore Considered, Ordered and Adjudged, that all persons inter ested in the estate of William D. Cole man, deceased, appear before me, James T. Begley, Judge of the Dis trict Court, in the District Court room in the court house in the City of Plattsmouth, Cass County, Nebraska, on the 9th day of December, 1933, at the hour of 10:00 o'clock in the fore noon, and show cause, if any there bo. why such license should . not , be granted to N. D. Talcott. Administra tor of the, estate of William D. Cole-.! hnan, deceased, to sell all of -the "real I estate cf said deceased, so as to pay claims presented and allowed . with! the costs of administration and of this proceedings. It 13 Further Considered, Ordered and Adjudged, that notice be given to all persons interested by publica tion of this Ordsr to Show Cause for four successive weeks in the Platts mourn journal, a legal newsppper published and of general circulation in the County of Cass, Nebraska. ' By the Court. JAMES T. BEGLEY, o30-4w .. District Judge. 1m v nmeett IlroRan, I'lllclv A: Shoemaker Omaha, 'rlr. NOTICE TO Sophia M. Schafer and Calvin H Taylor, Executors of the Estate of Terrace C. Pitman, deceased; .Scphia M. Schafer; Albert Sch afer; Terrace Leone Schafer; Bert Hennlngs Schafer; Clara Shorten; Maude A. Randall; Sophia M. Schafer, Trustee: Ycu. and each of you, are HERE BY NOTIFIED that there has been filed in the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska, a petition. Appear ance Docket 6, Number 235 of said court, wherein Rosa Wark is plain tiff and ycu and each of you, together with W. A. Robertson, administrator with will annexed of the Estate of Terraee C. Pitman, deceased; Samuel O. Pitman; George E. Nickles; Gard ner Hamilton; Murray Hardware Company are defendants, the object and prayer of which is to obtain an accounting of the amount due to said plaintiff under the terms of a cer tain deed dated August 7, 1913, and filed in the office cf the Register of Deeds of Cass county, Nebraska, and recorded on the 25th day of August, 1913, in Book 51 of Deeds at page 435. at the rate of Nine Hundred Dollars ($900.00) per year from and including 1924 with interest thereon at the rate of seven per cent (7) per annum to the date of filing said petition, less the sum cf One Thous and Six Hundred Eighty-Seven and 68100 Dollars ($1,687. 6S); to have said amcunt with interest at six per cent (6) per annum and costs de creed a lien, prior and superior to the right, title, interest, lien, claim, de mand and equity of redemption of ycu and each of you upon the real estate described in said petition by virtue cf the terms cf Eaid deed; to have said lien foreclosed and to have said real estate and appurtenances sold to satisfy said lien, interest and ccsts, and to tar and foreclose you and each of you of all right, title, Interest, lien, claim, demand and equ ity of redemption whatever in and to the said real estate and appurtenances thereto, and to obtain such other and further relief as to the Court may eeem Just and equitable. You are further notified that un less you anrjear in said court in an swer to said petition on or befcre the 18th day of December, 19 ii, judg ment will be taken against you In accordance with "the -prayer thereof. o30-4w Flainitff. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, Count v of Cas, SB. By virtue of an Order of ?ah iuM by C. E. Ledgway. Clerk f.f th, trict Court within and for r.i-s -un-ty. Nebraska, and to no directed I will on the 18th day of NOVe tb r. A. D. 1933, at 1) n I , k ;, ,,, f.j said day at the south front ii...r (.f tho Court House, in PlaMT:n.-th in said county, tell at puMic auttioii to the highest bidder for ra-h tho fol lowing real estate to-wit: The southeast quaru-r (.K'j of Section thirty-tw.i ::'), Township ten (1). N rii, Range eleven (11) H;.-t of the 6th P. M., tontainir.tr dred sixty (160) a-re. (;.,vrn ment survey. Cars county, Ne braska The same being levied upon and taken a3 the property or William 1L Grafe ct al, defendants, to .-.vfy a Judgment of said Court recovered by The Mutual Denefit Life Ir.Mirarve Company, a corporation, plaintiff again said defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, October 14, A. D. 1933. H. SYLVESTER. Sheriff Cass County, ol6-5vv Nebraska. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. By virtue of an Order of falo 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 ISth day of Novem ber, A. D. 1933. at 10:00 o'clock a. n. cf said day at the s-outh front door of the court house in said County, w-II as public auction to the hit I.e.-1 bid der for cash the following real estate to-wit: Lots twelve (12). thirteen (13), sixteen (16) and s veu teen (17) in West Greenwood, Greenwood, Cas3 County, Ne braska The same being levied upon and taken as the; property of Orvel E. McCluer, et al., defendants, to satisfy a Judg ment cf said court recovered by Greenwood State Bank, a corporation, plaintiff, r.caintt faid def ndants. Plattsmouth, Nebrask?., October 9, A. D. 1933. II. SYLVESTER. Sheriff Cass County, o9-5v Nebraska. ORDER In the County Court of the County cf Cass Nebraska. In Re Trusteeship of V.'. A. Rob ertson, Trustee under Last Will and Testament of William H. Newell, de ceased. Now on this 18th day of October, 1933, this cause came on for hearing upon the report of W. A. Robertson, trustee, under the la?t will and testa ment "of William--ft. New34,-deMad, praying for approval of. ;saii' report and for -an order directing payment of the income, and there being filed with said report, the dtcrec of the District Court of Douglas County, Ne braska, directing payment of the in come due Newell Roberts to the Clerk of said Court as child fupport for the minor child of raid Newell Rob erts, and it further appearing that a time and place for hearing upon Faid report and upon all other reports heretofore made, by said trustee, should be fixed and notice therect given. It Is Therefore Ordered that hear ing upon said report and all prior reports mad by said trustee, be set for hearing on the 10th day of No vember, 1933, at 10 o'clock a. m., and that notice of said hearing be given to all persons interested by publication of a copy of this order in tho semi-weekly edition of the Plattsmouth Journal, commencing with the Issue of October 19th and continuing to and including the issue of November 9th. and that all ob jections to said reports must be filed in said Court before said day of hear ing. By the Court. A. H. DUXBURY. (eal) ol9-4w County Judge. II. . W ll.l.ll'IS All), tnr IMalHllfl Terminal IIIIk. l.laeola, elr. NOTICE OF SPECIAL MASTER'S SALE Notice is hereby given that by virtue of an Order of Sale, issued by the Clerk of the Unittd States Dis trict Court, District of Nebraska, in tho Lincoln Division, and In pur suance of n decree of said Court en tered January 7. 1933. in an action wherein The l'uU: Central Life In surance Company of Cincinnati. Ohio, i3 plaintiff and Harry A. IHty. et al are defendants, beins number 450 Equity Docket. I. Daniel 11. McClena han. Special Master, named in said decree to sell tho property therein described, and to execute said decree, will on the 22nd day of November, 1933, at one o'clock in the afternoon cf said day, at the entrance of the County Court House of Cass County, Nebraska, in Plattsmouth, the Coun ty Seat of said County, at the usual place where sheriff's sales of land are made, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, the follow ing described property, to-wit: The South Half (SH) of the South Half (SH) of the North west Quarter (NW4), and the West Half (WVi) of the South west Quarter (SWi) of Section Twenty-eight (28), Township Eleven (11), Range Twelve (12), East, containing One Hun dred Twenty (120) acres, all in Cass County, Nebraska, to sat isfy the decree, .interest and , costs. Dated October 14, 1933. DANIEL H. McCLENAHAN. Special Mar.ter Untied States District Court. District ot Nebraska, Lincoln Division. o!9-5w Journal WansAds get results I