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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1933)
PAGE TWO PLATTSliOUTH SEMI WEEKLY JOURNAL MONDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1933. ? I Ihe IPIattsmouth Journal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA Entered at Postoffice, Plattsmouth, Neb., as second-class mall 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 rnllee, $3.00 per year. Rate to Canada and foreign countries, $3. 50 per year. All subscriptions are payable strtetly in advance. We trust the government won't wind up with so many irons in the f:re that the taxpayers can't keep the fire going. :o: When Lloyd Georce released his book over there about the same time Iluey Long issued his over here, it was bad luck for Huey. -:o: "The air belongs to the common recple!" shouts a speaker in a talk on radio control. Well, keep your shirt on, brother; they've been get ting it all along. :o: Chrysanthemums are a lot of trou ble, but are more easily grown than cpellcd. Occasionally you find a wom an who can grow them but can't pronounce them. :o: When a bachelor or a widower tells a woman how lonely he is, he should l.now he i3 walking along the edge of a volcano and liable to be swallow ed up any moment. :o: "In all Russia," William Allen White reports, "I never saw a fat man, nor a stout woman, so it can l3 concluded that they have a good "reducing" system in Russia. :o: They're having husband calling contests at some of the public events these days. Wonder if the callings are to bring husbands home, cr the ones they may receive after they get home. :o: Governor "Alfalfa Bill" Murray must be catching up with his work in Oklahoma. Ke now is proposing that the battleship Maine should be raised from the bottom of Havana harbor where it has been since 1S98 in order to prove that an explosion from with in and not on the outside wrecked the warship. Such proof.'he explains; would exonerate Spain of blame for starting the war, which is about all that Spain got out of the war. :o: MLO RENO IS WRONG Milo Reno, farm holiday leader, resenting the word that his ultima tum to the president i3 rejected, or ders the ctrike on again. And then ho says: "The responsibility for whatever happens in the. future will lest squarely on the shoulders of the administration and Secretary Wallace In particular." Mr. Reno is wrong. The country still elects its president, and the pres ident is responsible for the road he takes but not for "anything that may hr.ppcn" because he cannot ac cept the dictation of a Milo Reno. Secretary Wallace, whom Mr. Reno epparcntly feels, he can attack per-s-cnslly, perhap3 because they are both from Iowa, is not more respon sible than any other subordinate of the president. Oklahoma awhile ago wanted the federal government to do something nbciut.oil production. If a leader had per:uadcd the governors of five oil- prcducirg states to go to Warning- ten with dcmand3, and on liteir re jection had announced that the "pres ident would be responsible for what ever happened," it would not have made the president responsible. L.ut wnat does Milo Reno mean by "responsible?" If the violence v.I.ich hi L'tatements seem to con done rctults, and come mother's son is billed, will the administration be responsible? Will Mr. Dcno retain counsel for tha mother and bring suit against the president of the United States "r.nd S?cretary Wallace in particular" to recover pitiful money "damages"- since the son cannot be restored? If babies suffer for lack of milk; if neighbors are set against each oth er and meet with clubs and stones, and guns on the borders of com muniteis; if bloodshed grows fre quent, will the administration be "responsible" because it has not ac cepted the dictation of Milo Reno of Iowa? If Wisconsin .farmers suffer, de stroying their perishable product white Mr. Reno'3 Iowa farmers mere ly put their, nonperishable crops into bins, will the administration be re sponsible? Or will Milo Reno, dis ' gruntled that the president of the United States has not yet yielded the reins of gavernmaat to hira. have eome raponsibiiity?Milwaukee Journal. RNC SHOOTS AT PRESIDENT The republican national commit tee, RNC for short. Is disappointed in the Roosevelt administration and has said so in what the late Ring Lardner would nickname as no un certain tones. It charges the presi dent with breaking many of his cam paign promises. The Chicago plat form, it implies, might better be call ed the forgotten platform. The gov ernment, it says, has put enterprise in a straightjacket . The recovery program, in its judgment, i3 retard ing rather than accelerating recov ery. The situation, by and large, is a pretty sad state of affairs. To many of those charges, the Roosevelt administration would doubtless dead Kuilty. but not in melancholy accents. It would shout a gay yes. It might go on to explain that when the platform was written and the campaign speeches were being made, neither the democratic party nor its candidate had any no tion of what the present administra tion was going to step into on March 4. And the same may be said for the republican party and its candidate. We surely were on the toboggan in the latter days of the Hoover admin istration and speeding downward faster and faster with every tick of the clock. "Death wa.s on thy drums, democracy," economically speaking. It was Mr. Roosevelt's job to check the spreading paralysis. Whether we approve or disapprove of the admin istration's bewildering activities, whether we understand them or not, there is no gainsaying the fact that the spirit of defeatism was kicked off the front step3 and, as a nation, we suddenly found ourselves inspired with faith in the government's pur pose and capacity. And one promise, at' least, may be cited which has been kept. Mr. Doo3evelt pledged to -the country a new deal, and even the RNC will acknowledge, we feel sure, that we arc getting a new deal. Is this new deal preferable to the old deal? How many of us, if we could, would go back to March 4 2 It is a long march to recovery, and, a3 Mr. Roosevelt ha3 candidly admit ted, the harder and the longer part of the journey yet remains. But will anyone seriously say we have not made a fine start? In the few months of the recovery program, more than three million persons have been put back ot work, which is, we should say, a whale of a statistic and is no minor leaguer as a miracle. After all, the administration's task of tasks i3 to get the man back on his job. That done, the whole recov ery crusade will come winding tri umphantly down the road. It is be ing done. To accomplish what is al ready In the record has required ex perimentation and bold adventuring. To complete it may call for still fur ther pioneering, and for the aban donment of plans and projects which, wilted in the tests. Mr. Roosevelt is prepared to discard any remedial ef fort that fails and try something else. "If ws cannot do It that way," he has said, "we will do it another. Do it we will." The RNC, to be sure, is wholly within its rights in criticizing the administration. But the RNC's criticism is, in our opinion, without a trace of vision or counsel. It is a tale of accusation, unburdened by one constructive idea or suggestion. If it proposes any thing, it is that we renounce the new deal impersonated by Mr. Roosevelt and erpouse hte old deal, under the deadly genius of which we came at last to the edge of chaos. "Enter price in a straight-jacket" may be a bit of self-satisfying tory rhetoric, but enterprise in a shroud is the fu nereal truth we were looking at. As to what sort of world we shall be living in when the last wolfish howl of the depression has been si lenced, nobody can accurately say. What , may confidently be predicted, we believe, is that the rugged indi vidualism under which Insulism, Mitchellism, Wigginlsm and all the other Isms of Irresponsible (indus trialism flourished are gone forever. . The old deal is dead. Ring in the new! . St. Louis Po3t-Dispatch. :o: i .i Anyway ut in Hoirxosij they '4bfe't-iive tomake wedding rinss out1 of Tsry good material. GOVERNMENT AND AGRICULTURE President Roosevelt took the only possible course when he rejected the price-raising plan which was present ed to him last week by the gover nors of five mid-western states. The governors program would have required the federal government to license every farmer and every processor of farm products. It would hae imposed a compulsory monthly production quota on every farmer in the United States. It would have for bidden any processor to buy cr sell farm products below a stipulated price, a price some 70 per cent higher than the one which now prevails. The plan, in short, would have compelled the federal government to impose detailed dictatorial control over the whole process of producing, processing and distributing food products, from one end of the country to the other. The administration's objections to the plan are unanswerable. It is prob ably unconstitutional. It is certainly unenforceable. If other states were unwilling to co-operate in the scheme, restrictions of output in the five states proposing it would only induce increased output elsewhere, thus de feating the whole project. A sudden price boost of 70 per cent would cause a further cut in consumption. Inability to sell present supplies at the fixed price would throw an even larger surplus back on the farm. This surplus would have to be de stroyed by the farmer; or the govern ment would have to buy it, to give it away or to dump it in the foreign market. The huge sums which would be required for the purchase of this surplus and for the attempted en forcement of the whole program are simply not available. The bitterness with which some of the farmers spokesmen have greet ed the administration's decision is, perhaps, understandable; but it is none the less unfair. Governor Lan ger's repeated assertion that the farmer is the forgotten man of the new deal fir.tly contradicts the facts. Let us look at the record. The administration ha3-made two billion dollars available for refinanc ing farm mortgages. New mortgage loans are being made at the rate of one million dollars a day. Another 400 million dollars has been set aside by the RFC for direct loans to farm ers, and more than 200 million dol lars has already beerVlent tofi'nance crop production and harvesting. Mar keting agreements have been arrang ed by the AAA for the producers of rice, fruit, peanut3 and miik, with a view to boosting their prices. The government has bought 40 mil lion dollars' worth of hogs. It is pur chasing cotton, butter, wheat and other products for the relief of the unemployed. It is now lending di rectly on crops;. 250 million dollars at the rate of 10 cents a pound on cotton; 100 million dollars at the rate of 50 cents bushel of corn. Loans on sugar and other products will follow. And this is not all. Tho govern ment has Imposed a billion-dollar sales tax on the consumer, with t he proceed of which it is subsidizing the farmer In the curtailment of his pro duction. A tax of 30 cents per bushel on wheat will produce 120 million dollars annually. The tax of 4.2 cents per pound on cotton will raise another 111 million dollars. There is a tax on tobacco, which should prouuee L'O million dollars. A tax of $5 per hundredweight on hogs, ef fective this week, will collect another 174 million dollars. Corn 13 taxed 5 cents a bushel to the consumer now; it will be taxed 25 cents a bushel after the first of December. Taxes on butterfat arc in the offing. There has never before in history been a time when a government has so openly taken money from one group of it3 citizens to hand it to another. On top of all this, the ad ministration is attempting to boost farm prices by undertaking deliber ately to depress the purchasing pow er of the dollar. In the face of this record, it ap pears as ungrateful as it is inaccur ate to accuse the government of neg lecting the interests of agriculture. It has gone much farther than any other administration has ever gone; much farther than many of our peo ple belive that it should have gone. Its measures have only just been in troduced. They have not yet been given a fair trial. It would seem to be the counsel of wisdom to give them a chance before rushing on into a further experiment which can end only in certain disaster. St. Louis Post-Dispatch. :o: We fear the French cabinet system wouldn't do in this, country, a3 well as it does In France, even. By the time the governor of North Dakota could make the trip to Washington esty, that some new violins made by to protest against certain acts of the Soviet workers are better than those secretary of agriculture, there would 1 of Stradivarius and Guarnerius. It ba a totl strmjsr in that office with there ii ny daubt about it, one might a profound isnoranca as to what ths'flnd out by tryiagto sell one of the governor wished to talk about. NOTICE. Whereas, Robert Earls, convicted in Cass county, on the 29th day of November, 1932, of the crime of for gery, has made application to the Board of Pardons for a parole, and the Board of Pardons, pursuant to law have set the hour of 10:00 a. m. cn the 13th day of December, 1933, for hearing on said application, all nercons interested arc hereby noti fied that they may appear at the State' Penitentiary, at Lincoln, Ne braska, on said day and hour and show cause, if any there be, why said application should, or should not be granted. HARRY R. SWANSON. Secretary Board of Pardons N. T. HARMON, Chief State Proba-nl3-2w tion Officer. NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENT DEFENDANT JOHN THOMPSON, defendant, will take notice, that on the 2Sth day of October, 1933, Chas. L. Graves, a Justice of the Peace of Plattsmouth, Cass county, Nebraska, issued an Order of Attachment for the sum of $61. 7G. in an action pending before bin:, wherein Allie Meisinger i3 plain tiff and John Thompson is defendant, and that personal property of the de fendant consisting of one Internation al Model 1926 Duel Truck, Motor No. 105072 M, ha3 been attached under said order. Said cause was continued to the 20th day of December, 1933, at 9 o'clock a. m. Dated this 6th day of November, A. D 1933. ALLIE MEISINGER, n9-3w Plaintiff. THE B00SSES ARE DONE FOR It is the twilight ol the bosses in these United States. The people are reading and listen ing, but doing their own thinking and their own voting. And their vote is for a New Deal. Tuesday's elections are the evi dence of it. The Anti-Saloon league bosses are ditched. The Tammany bosses of New York are ditched. The Mellon bosses of Pittsburgh are ditched. Bridgeport, Connecticut's great in dustrial center, for the first time in its history elects a socialist mayor. Major LaGuardia, who smashed Tam many, is a radical, currently a pro gressive republican and a supporter of the Roosevelt policies. The demo cratic mayor of Cleveland loses his office because thousands of democrats refused to support,him, due to hi3 hos tile attitude toward President Roose- el,t, ., .," . , ;.,.jr, . , , , ,.... ; , The distinguished chairman of the democratic national committee. Post master General Farley, came in for his share of discipline too. New York City decisively rejected his candidate, McKee. And down in the Carolinas. where ho campaigned for prohibition repeal, were produced the only ver dicts in the whole nation against it. Independence is the rule. The peo ple follow leaders and advice that ap peal to their Judgment. They are re fusing to follow .leaders and advice that do not, regardless of machines and parties and habit and tradition. It i3 a good time for the old-fashioned bosses to be casting about for jobs in j private life. Their gravy is almost gone. What does Tuesday's voting indi cate as regards President Roosevelt? The answer comes most clearly from Pittsburgh, overwhelmingly republi can, where the president was di tinctly an issue. On Sunday before the election the New York Times carried a Pittsburgh dispatch saying: "The proverbial visitor from Mars might Indeed get the no tion that it is Mr. Roosevelt himself who is running for may or of Pittsburgh. . .-. Of course while local issues ale touched good and plenty, the whole effort ii under the title of the New Deal and extolling of the Roose velt accomplishments has a place in, every program. All this was helped along by a blunder in strategy on the part of a re publican campaign officer. He not only attacked tho NRA, but he intimated that the president was wrong in other respects. For a time this made the Roosevelt program a direct issue In the city's campaign." Pittsburgh turns from Mellon to Roosevelt, as the nation ha3 turned from Mellon to Roosevelt. It is hop ing and working for his success. If thiselers and obstructionists should bring his efforts to futility, and the Roosevelt leadership should there upon be rejected, there will be no turning back to Mellon or to Tam many, or to Vare. The movement Is far more likely to be In quite an other direction. And in this plain indication there is something for the chiseler3 and obstructionists to think about. World-Herald. :o: The Russian Soviet government In forms the world, with' becoming mod jnew fiddles to Fritz Kreisler or Efrem SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. By virtue of an Order of Sale issued by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk of the Dis trict Court within and for Cass coun ty, Nebraska, and to me directed, I will on the 18th day of November, A. D. 1933, at 10 o'clock a. m. of said day at the south front door ot tho Court House, in Plattsmouth, in said county, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the fol lowing real estate to-wlt: The southeast quarter (SE'i) of Section thirty-two (32), Township ten (10), North, Range eleven (11) East of the 6th P. M., containing one hun dred sixty (1C0) acres. Govern ment survey, Cass county, Ne braska The same being levied upon and taken as the property of William H. Grafe et al, defendants, to satisfy a judgment of said Court recovered by The Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company, a corporation, plaintiff again said defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, October 14, A. D. 1933. H. SYLVESTER, Sheriff Cass County, ol6-5w Nebraska. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter cf the estate of Lcuisa Conn, deceased. Nctice of Administration. All persons Interested in said es tate are hereby notified that a peti tion ha3 been filed in raid court al leging that said deear,ed died leav ing no last will ard testament and praying for administration upon her estate and for such other and further crder3 and proceedings in the prem ises as may be required by the stat utes in such cases n-adc and provided to the end that said cst3te and all thing3 pertaining thereto may be finally settled and determined, and that a hearing will bo had on said petition before said Court on the 8th day of December, A. D. 1933, and that if they fail to appear at said Court on said Sth day of December, 1933. at ten o'clrck a. m.. to con test the said petition, the Court may grant the same and grant adminis tration cf said estate to Ervin O. Conn and Gra-e M. Ccnn, cr some other suitable person and proceed to a cettlement thereof. Witne33 my hand and tho seal of said County Court this Sth day of November, ID 33. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) nl3-3w Ccunty Judge. ORDER OF HEARING AND NO TICE OF PROBATE OF WILL In the County. Court cf Cass coun ty, Nebraska. State of Nebraska, Ccunty of Cass, S3- .. .. .,, .... . .. Tc all persons interested In the es tate cf Louisa Fisher, deceased: On reading the petition of Edgar T. Fisher, praying that tho instru ment filed in this court on the 7th day cf November, 1933, and purport-', ing to be tho !at will and testament cf the raid deceased, may be proved ard allowed and recorded a3 the last will end testament of Louisa Fisher, deceased; tl at said instrument be admitted to probate and the admin istration of raid estate bs granted to Edgar T. Fisher, as Executcr; It is hereby ordered that you, and all persons interested in said matter, may, and do, appear at the County Court to be held in and for- said county, on the Sth day of December, A. D. 1933, at ten o'clock a. m., to show cause, if any there le, why the prayer of the petitioner should not be granted, and tint rotice of the pendency of raid petition and that the hearing thereof be given to all persons interested In said matter by publishing a copy of this Order in the Plattsmouth Journal, a semi weekly newspaper printed in said county, .for three successive weeks pricr to said day of hearing Witness my hand, and the seal of raid court, this 7th tlay cf November, A. D. 1933. A. II. DUXBURY, (Seal) nl3-3w Ccunty Judge. It. f W II.MAMS, Aity. f?r rinlntlfl Terminal lilils.. Lincoln, cbr. NOTICE OF SPECIAL MASTER'S SALE Notice is hereby given that by virtue of an Order cf Sale, issued by the Clerk of the United States Dis trict Court, District of Nebraska, in tho Lincoln Division, and In pur suance of a decree cf said Court en tered January 7, 1C33, in an action wherein The Union Central Life In surance Company cf Cincinnati, Ohio, is plaintiff and Harry A. Doty, et al are defendants, being number 450 Equity Docket. I, Daniel H. McClena han, Special Master, named in said decree to sell the property therein described, and to execute said decree, will on the 22nd day of November, 1933, at one o'clock in the afternoon of said day, at the entrance of the Ccunty 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-wlt: The South Half (SV4) of the South Half SM) of the North west Quarter (NY), and the West Half (W) of the South west Quarter (SW) of Section Twenty-eight (28), Township Eleven (11), Range Twelve (12), East, containing One Hun dred Twenty (120) acres, all in . Cas3 County, Nebraska, to sat isfy the decree, interest and costs. Dated October 14, 19S3. DANIEL H. McCLENAHAN, . Special Matter Untied States District Court, District ol Nebraska, Lincoln Division. w ORDER OF HEARINO 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, 1933, 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 said report and for an order reducing the amount of the trustees official bond herein filed, and it appearing to the Court that a time and place for hearing upom said report- and upn all other reports heretofore made by said trustees should be fixed and no tice thereof given; It is therefore ordered that a hear ing upon said report and all prior reports made by said trustees be set for hearing on the 24th day of No vember, 1933, at the hour of ten o'clock in tho forenoon of said day, and that notice of said hearing be given to all persons interested in said matter by publication of a copy of this Order in the semi-weekly edi tion of the Plattsmouth Journal, com mencing with the issue of November Cth, 1933, and continuing to and in cluding the issue of November 23r:l. 1933, and that all objections to said reports must be filed in said Court before said day of hearing. By the Court. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) nG-3w County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING and Nctice on Petition for Set tlement of Account. In the County Court of Cass coun ty. Nebraska. State of Nebraska, Cass county, ss. To all persons Interested in tho estate cf William Curry Boucher, de- ceased On rca'Tinc the retition of Henrvlto pay the claims filed and allowed Warren Boucher, Executor, praying a ilnal settlement and allowance ot Ms, acount filed in this Court on the 31st day of October, 1933. and for as f ignment of residue of said e?tate, de termination of heirship and discharge of Executcr: It is hereby ordered that yen and all persons interested in said matter may. ana tlo, appear at tne county Court to be held in and for said coun- ty, on the 1st day of December, A. D 1933, at ten 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-sor-s interested In said matter by pub lishing a copy of thi3 order in tho Plattsmouth Journal, a semi-weekly newspaper printed in said county, for three successive weeks prior to said day cf hearing. In witne33 whereof, I have here unto set my hand and the seal of said Court this 31st day of October, A. D. 1933. .. " - A. IL. DUXBURY....;, (Seal) nG-3w , County Judge. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, 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 9th day of Decern ber, A. D. 1933, 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-wlt: Beginning at the Northeast corner of the West Halt of the Northeast Quarter of Section Five, Township Eleven, North Range Eleven, East, extending West 79 rods, thence South SI rods, thence East 79 rods, thence North SI rods, to point of be ginning, containing forty acres more or less, and the Southwest Quarter of Section Thirty-three, Township Twelve, Range Eleven, all east of the 6th P. M., in Cass County, Nebraskasubject to a mortgage in favor of the Con rervative Mortgage Company in the sum of $15,000.00 The same being levied upon and taken as the property of Henry Hell, Jr.. et al. defendants, to satisfy a judgment of said court recovered by John H. Fowler, Trustee, plaintiff. against said defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, October 31, A. D. 1933. H. SYLVESTER. Sheriff Cass County, r.2-5w Nebraska. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. By virtue of an Order of Sale issued by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk cf the Dis trict Court, within and for Cass coun ty. Nebraska, and to nie directed, 1 will on the 9th day of December, A u. iyoLr, at ten (iu:oo) o'clock a. m. of said day at tho south front door of the court house in Plattsmouth. in paid ccunty, cell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the fol lowing real estate, to-wit: The southeast quarter (SE',4 ) of the southeast quarter (SEU ) cf Saction thirty-two (32), TownBbip eleven (11), Range fourteen (14), East of the Sixth P. M. ; also the northeast quar ter (NE1 ) and the northeast quarter (NEu) cf the southeast quarter (SEV4) of Section five (5), Township ten (10), Range fourteen (14), East of the Sixth P. M., in Cass county, Nebras ka Tho same being levied upon and taken as the property of Mildred J. Props? et al, defendants, to satisfy a Judgment of said Court recovered by Tho Conservative Savings & Loan Association, plaintiff against said de fendants. Platt3mouth, Nebraska, November 6, A. D. 1933. H. SYLVESIM, Sheriff Ca$ County, n0-5w Nebraska. ;o30 NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the Ccunty Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the estate of Wy inorc Fletcher, deceased. Nctice of Administration. All persons interested in 6aid es t:it are hereby notified that a peti tion has boon filed in said Court al leging that said deceased died leaving Ti Iant will nnd testament and pray ing for administration upon his es tate and for such other and further orders and proceedings in the prem ie a3 may Le required by the stat utes In tuch cases made and provided to the end that said estate and all things pertaining thereto may be finally Fettled and determined, and that a hearing will be had on said petition before said Court on the 2 4th day of November, A. D. 1933. and that if they fail to appear at said Court on raid 24th day of No vember, 1933, at ten o'clock a. m.. to contest the sr.id 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 25th day of October, 1933. A. II. DUXBURY. (Seal) c30-3w County Judge. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE In the District Court of Cass Coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the application of N. I). Talcott. adminstrator of the estate of William I). Coleman, de ceased, for license to rell real estate to pay debts. Now on this 2Sth day of October, 1933. came N. I). Talcott. Adminis trator of the etate of William I. Coleman, deceased, and presents hi3 Petition for License to S-ll the Real Estate of the deceased party in order (against said estate, and the expenres or auminisTering sam estate, it ap- pearing from said petition that there i3 an insufficient amount of personal property In the hands of the admin istrator to pay the claims presented I and allowe d by the County Court and the expenses of the administration of said estate; and that it Is necessary to soil the whole of the real estate of ;the deceased In order to pay the afore- said rlaims and the costs of admin istration. It 13 Therefore Considered, Ordered and Adjudged, that all persons inter ested in the estate of William D. Cole man, deceased, appear before me, James T. Uegley, Judge of tfce Dis trict Court, in the District Court room in the. court house in tha City of Plattsmouth. Cass County, Nebraska, on the 9th day of December, 1933, at the hour of 10:00 o'clock in tho fore noon, and show cause, if any there be, why such license should not be granted to N. I). Talcott. Administra tor of the estate of William D. Cole man, .deceased, to Bell, all cf the real festate of said deceased, fo as to pay. claims presented and allowed with the cost3 cf administration and of this proceedings. " It Is Further Considered, Ordered and Adjudged, that notice be given to all persons interested by publica tion of thi3 Order to Show Cau?e for four successive weeks in the Platts mouth Journal, a legal newspaper published and of general circulation in the County cf Cas3, Nebraska. By the Court. JAMES T. BEGLEY, o30-4w District Judge. (jw Office Drosnn, Klllrk A Shormikrr Cirsha, rhr. 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 ha been filed in the District Court of Cass ccunty. Nebraska, a petition. Appear ance Do. ket 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 Terrace C. Pitman, deceased: Samuel O. Pitman; George E. Nickles; Gard ner Hamilton; Murray Hardware ompany are defendants, the ohjtct and prayer of which i3 to obtain an accounting cf the amount due to said pia.'ntirr under the terms of a cer tain deed dated August 7. 1913. and filed in the office of the Register of Deeds of Cas county, Nebraska, and recorded on the 25th day of Aurust. 1913, in Book 51 of Deeds at page 435, at the rate cf Nine Hundred Dollars ($900.00) per year from and Including 1921 with interest thereon at the ra.c of seven per cent (7) per annum to the date of filina: safi petition, less the sum cf One Thous and Six Hundred Eighty-Seven ami 68100 Dollars ($1,687.68); to have fraid amount 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 cstcte described in said petition by virtue of the term3 cf said deed: to hrve caid lien foreclosed and to have eaid real estate and appurtenance sold to satisfy said lien. Interest and ccsts, and to bar and foreclose you and each of you of all right, title. intercrt. lien, claim, demand and equ ity cf redemption whatever in and to the raid real estate and appurtenances thereto, and to obtain such other and further relief as to the Court may ccem just and equitable. You are further notified that un less ycu appear iu eaid court in an swer to 6aid petition on or before the ISth day of December, 1953, Judg ment will te taken against you la accordance ulth the prayer thereof. RCSA WARK. - 4w Plainitff.