The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, December 04, 1933, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
PLATTSMOTTTH SEMI WEEKLY JOURNAL
MONDAY, DECEMEEH 4. 1933
TThe IPIattsmouth Journal
PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA
Entered at Postoffice, Plattsmouth, 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 miles, $3.00 per year. Rate to Canada and foreign countries,
$3.50 per year. All subscriptions are payable strittly in advance.
Eighty-seven Pennsylvanians were
convicted this week in ons bunch for
violating the prohibitory law. It was,
eo to speak, the Last Roundup.
:o:-
Dean Inge says it is positively cer
tain now that the human race is des
tined for early extinction. We never
could understand why they called
him the Gloomy Dean.
-:o:
Ford once said he would quit mak
ing motor cars when prohibition was
repealed, and the Fredonia (Kansas)
Herald hopes the good man won't con
sider the distilling business at his
age.
:o:
King -George of England, who is
ued to having fun poked at him from
abroad, underwent a heckling in par
liament recently, which seemss to
carry out the familiar "tirade at
Lome" slogan.
:o:
Yer, children, this Al Smith, who
talked about baloney dollars the oth
er day, is the same Smith whom they
were calling "The Sphinx" during
the New York City campaign about
a. month ago.
:o:
An actuary finds that people over
25 have the fewest motor car acci
cnts. But the Detroit News points out
that as the American family is or
ganized today, the folks over 35 also
have the fewest motor cars.
:o:
FAIL-SIGHTED TRUCKER
WANTS RAILROAD, TOO
That wa3 a heartening story
which came from Bloomfield, Neb.,
this week; for it showed that regard
for the public weal can Etill rise
above private interest and that not
all men are so selfish that they can
not realize that the greatest good to
-them&elves. must cone from the pros
pcrity of their neighbors, even
thcugh some sacrifice upon their part
may be necessary in order that such
prosperity may be obtained.
Orville Tangeman operates truck
lines between Bloomfield and Omaha
and between Bloomfield and Slou.
City. He is doing plenty of business
la face he is doing so well that the
railroad company which owns and
operates the branch road of which
Bloomfield is the terminus a short
time ego told the business men of
that town that lack of patronag
might require abandonment cf the
line.
Tangcman stated that he was
anxious for all of the business he
could obtain, -but he knew that the
town needed the railroad and he was
willing to do his part toward retain
ins the one train a day. He will
therefore discontinue one trip each
week to each of the citie3 he has
been visiting. Evidently he is more
far sighted than some of the mer
chants for whom he has been haul
ing.
Bloom field does need a railroad
a fact lis at will bo fully realized by
very citizen and property owner of
tho town, should it be found advis
able to abandon the line. So wil
the pespla of every township and
schorl district through which it
rar,z-.: for the abandonment will
t-ju ;h them in the most tender of all
fcpots, their pocketbooks. Railroads
it r.;u.;t bo remembered, pay taxes on
thr-Ji rights of way and tracks, on
their rolling stock, equipment and
terminals, and these taxes help out
immensely in every subdivision
through which the roads pass. They
vanish when a lino is abandoned, and
must be replaced by levies upon oth
er property owners.
furthermore, when there is no
railrcad, all fuel, lumber and other
heavy materials must be trucked In,
with consequent increase in cost and
liabiltiy to delay when hast? 1 most
needed; and all farm products, of
whatever kind, rr.Uct be trucked out
Thcc thing3 necessarily result In the
depreciation of the value of real es
tate, with consequent increase In tax
Uvic3 and loss of population and
trade. Lumber yadr?, coal yards, ele
vators and other business enterprises
are abandoned and their operators
and employes go elsewhere.
Mr. Tangeman doubtless realized
that with the railroad gone he would
have far leas to haul than would re
main to hies should he give up two
trips per week. H was wiser thtn
his patrons. Bincoln Star.
Perhaps the easiest way to meet
people you wish to impress is to de
tide not to shave this morning.
:o:
We have looked over many a rug
ged individualist in our time, and a
halfback and two guards were usually
running his interference.
:o:
Now that Gen. Hugh Johnson also
has the liquor code to administrate,
too, we don't anticipate any further
trouble between him and Henry Ford
on that account.
:o:
Those who still view with great
suspicion our recognitoln of Russia
don't seem to realize how doubtful
Russia may have been of our national
sanity since 1929-
:o:
A careful search of Governor
Rolph's statement condoning the San
Jose lynching reveals one quite sen
sible remark: the one expressing his
belief that the sheriff of Santa Clara
County did his duty.
:o:
Pittsburgh's new mayor says he
will set up his desk in the city hall
lobby, where anyone may call at any
time. And so determined is he in
this resolve that we should't be sur
prised if it lasted a week or ten days
:o:
What the governor of North Car
olina and the governor of South Car
olina said to each other is not im
portant. The world wants to know
what President Roosevelt and Al
Smith said to each other a few days
ago.
:o:
A St. Louis gangster, now a radio
switchboard operator in the prison at
Atlanta, has applied for parole. But
his application has been denied, evi
dently because he is making modest
ly good as a radio operator, whereas
at his former trade of plumber in St.
Louis he did altogether too well.
:o:
CURIOUS EXHIBITION
OF OUR CURIOUS AGE
It is not so long since the utter
ance of the word Russia caused cold
chills to run up and down the spines
of eminent business men and bankers
from New York to San Diego. Pres
ident Hoover was persisting in the
policy of refusing to have anything
to do with a government dedicated
to the doctrines of communism, and
eve rybody seemed to support him in
his stand. Representative Hamilton
Fish, jr., wa3 charging up and down
the land at the head of A committee
of congressional stalwarts, ferreting
out every sugggestion of Russian in
fluence and at each of this supposed
ai3coverics crei3 of horror ascended
to high heaven from the patrioteers.
Yet on Friday evening there as
sembled in the grand ballroom of one
of New York's most elegant hotels
a group of 2,S 00 eminent business
men and bankers to do honor to a
reprecentatvie of tlm same Russia.
A vice-president of the nation's
largest bank, a Morgan partner and a
conservatvie leader of the New York
bar were among these eonspicuouily
in attendance. The Stars and Stripes
and the Rod flag of Russia floated
together above the diners. The band
played "The Star Spangled Banner"
and the "Internationale." The 2,500
cheered and shouted themselves al
most hoarse over a speech in which
the commissar of foreign affairs ex
toiled the gerat accomplishments of
his country for the benefit of his im
mediate hearers and for others who
Intoned in on a nation-wide radio
hookup.
We have no disposition to deplore
the change which the banquet to
Mr. Litvinoff signalized in cur atti
tude toward hi3 country. Our pres
ent attitude Is more realistic, is freer
from taboo3 and artificial fear3. But
me contrast with our attitude a
6hort time ago is too striking to go
unremarked. We do not know wheth
er to be prcud of the change as in
dicating devotion to free speech, or
whether to ba ashamed of the taboo3
before which we once prostrated pur
selves, or whether to be astonished
at the mercurial temperament of a
people capable of going eo quickly
from one extreme to another. Hence
we offer no comment on the phe
nomenon except to classify it as one
of the most curious exhibitions this
curious ast has brought us. Balti
more Sun. v
WHENCE THE FEAR?
"Give us an honest doliar,
they
demand.
"Let America honor her honest
debts," they shout. "Let's not have
repudiation through inflation."
"Don't rock the boat," they cry.
"This is no time for experiments."
Up and down Wall Street, back
and forth from the coast to the Alle
ghenics the cries of the financiers
arise. Fearful, from his mahoganized
ocice, the "big business man" shouts
"Wolf." Like the first man in the
first rain, he argues himself into
hysterical dread of a force for good
he cannot understand. Cliches, long
buried in after-dinner speeches, arise
once more to confuse public thought
on public policy.
"Radical," he shouts, and shud
ders. Whence the fear? Thrown, of nec
essity, into new roads to wealth, the
financier has often adjusted his
thinking to meet his own sweet end.s.
lie has embraced international trade,
snapped up the holding company, re
cognized Russia and glibly sold a new
invention called preferred stock, with
neither qualm nor quiver. But a fluc
tuating price for gold, a controlled
dollar- never!
Simple conservatism, strict Tory
training will not explain this enigma
of financial fear. Look, then, to other
things.
Tho difference tietween financier
and business man i3 fundamental.
Like the farmer, the business man
lives by adding something to the sum
of human services for you and us to
live on. By converting raw earth in
to corn and hogs, the farmer gives life
to our population. But the farmer's
service alone is not enough. The busi
ness man converts the corn into bour
and the hogs into pork that busy men
may eat. Other businesss men trans
port these products to all parts of the
country and divide them up into
small parcels for the average house
hold to buy.
Progress is the rightful field of the
financier. He promotes new corpor
ations to get out new products lsss
imaginative soul3 would laugh down
He combines corporations and elim
inates waste. He fights sloth and in
sists on the forward march of Am
erica. He has given us the automo
bile, the airplane, the radio and the
electric ice box. And he will give us
television and model housing in the
future. t By giving' us new'jproducts,
he has even been credited with pull
ing us out of past depressions. That
is his field.
But too many American financiers
have done everything but promote
progress and efficiency in the past
ten years. They have become en
grossed in the game of beating the
little fellow out of his honest gains.
By manipulating corporate shares
and board3 of directors, they have
become leeches on honest business
This is what is menaced. That is
what is feared.
The financier i3 a dealer in others'
speculations. He is a promoter, or
ganizer, leader for new enterprise. He
is liquidator, reorganizer for the
bankrupt old. He does not own a busi
ness. He does not run a business. He
"puts it over," sells it, manipulates
it, makes it or breaks it. He deals,
not in goods, but in stocks and bonds.
He may profit from the success of
a venture. But he may also profit,
and often docs, from the failure of a
venture.
He has developed a technique fcr
making money on the fluctuations of
"corporate equities," Dow-Jones' in
dex of seventy stocks, and the na
tion's price level.
His technique is based on a "gold
standard;" on a single price for gold
and a rising failing price for every
thing else. He knows the ropes of
making money by watching prices
rise and fall.
But if prices cease to rise and fall
sharply, what then? If a dollar's
worth of corn or corporation remains
little changed from year's beginning
to year's end, what then? If specula
tion is minimized, what will the fi
nancier do then?
Losing the basis of his leeching
system, he will have to return to pro
moting progress, increasing effi
ciency. That is the function many a
Wall Etreeter has unfitted himself
for. He has played so long with
phoney directorates, dummy corpora
tions and bogus Etocks that he is
afraid of his real job. World-Herald.
;o: '
PENDER JAIL-BREAKER
NABBED IN OKLAHOMA
Pender, Neb., pec. 1. The arrest
of Glen Whalen at Arapahoe, Okla.,
was reported to Sheriff Ray Elliott to
day. Whalen, wanted here on the charge
of breaking an entering, and the theft
of four hundred dollars worth of
merchandise, escaped jail November
17, 1332, with Wilbur Shirk on the
eve cf their trial in district court.
TOO MUCH TEMPER IN
AL SMITH'S ATTITUDE
Alfred E. Smith, it is to be re
membered, did not in any epontan
eou3 way contribute to the election of
President Roosavelt. After hi3 defeat
for the nomination by Roosevelt last
year, Smith retired to his tent and,
till the last days of the campaign,
remained silent. It is to be remem
bered further that he has at no time,
since the Roosevelt administration
was inaugurated, given it3 measures
his hearty support. Smith was
against Roosevelt for the nomination,
was only nominally for his election,
has at no time contributed his sup
port to the administration.
The recent sensational declaration
by Smith is only open manifestation
of a long settled fact. Tho discus
sion of Smith's motivc3 will range
from the opinion that his attitude is
merely that of a man unable to re
cover from the soreness of a personal
disappointment to the view that it
expresses the settled philosophy of a
man too honest to count the conse
quences of its expression. To the
country, the important thing is the
effect it may have on its economics
and it3 politics.
The Smith statement would have
had more weicht had it triven less
sign pf temper, more disposition to
discriminate. His talk of "baloney
dollars," his appeal to popular pre
judice by sarcastic reference to the
"brain trust," his personal flings at
the president give the appearance of
an attack of a hot and angry man
rather than the appeal of a cool and
wise one. Mr. Smith has not added,
by the temper of his statement, to the
even mental balance which the coun
try so much needs, at such a time
as thi3, to maintain. His implication
that the president has in mind any
such thing as greenbacks, that he
is wilfully disregarding the gold
standard, that he is operating by
"hunches" without reference to ex
perience or facta is simply, in view
of the nine months' record of the ad
ministration, too absurd to stand up
in court. It is the kind of thing a
loose-tongued partisan opponent ot
the president might say; it is not
worthy of Alfred E. Smith. Mr. Smith
charges the president with undermin
ing, by his policies, public confidence.
It is a grave question whether pub
lic confidence is being by any per
sons so dangerously undermined as
by those over-conservative person;:
who, misunderstanding if not mis
representing" what the president is do
ing, charge, him with undermining
public confidence.
Smith's declaration of war against
the administration is from the poli
tical point of view significant. It
was inevitable that these new and
difficult times, with their new
courses, would force new political
alignments. The attitude which
Smith now takes conform3 with the
course which Herbert Hoover, Ogaen
Mills the most conservative wing cf
the republican leadership has now for
some time been laying out. That
branch of the republican party sad
ly needs popular leadership. As
things are going the nomination o
Horace Greeley by the democrats in
1872 was no more strange than would
be the nomination of Alfred E. Smith
by the republicans in 193G. Dayton
News.
:o:
GET QUICK ACTION
CN CORN LOAN PLAN
Arrival in Iowa of the first corn
loan blanks marks an important
stage in our great agricultural ex
periment. Its effect immediately on
sentiment in the corn belt is certain
to be stimulating. It3 effect on gen
eral business conditions is likely to
be considerable, especially as the
weeks wear on.
The corn loans, of course, arc meant
to meet the situation of the hour. The
best explanation of them is that they
aim to make effective now the high
er price level for corn that is expect
ed to exist some months later. Gr,
putting it in market terms, they will
enable farmers to realize now the fu
tures price on corn.
The very making of the corn loans
is a demonstration of the shrewdness
of the epigram attributed by Paul
Malloon to Secretary Wallace that
it Is the squeaky wheel that gat3 the
grease. Cotton, wheat and corn loan3,
in that order, have been grease to
several squeaky wheels.
If corn prices are net up suffi
ciently next summer to enable farm
ers to market their corn at an even
better figure than that provided now
on the 45-cents-a-bushel loan basis
at the farm, the loan deal Is to be
come in effect a sale. The govern
ment will stand "any loss that may
be involved.
As a practical measure to enable
the administration to give its crop
reduction program a real test over the
necessary period of months, the corn
loan expsclitnt seems likely to be ef
fective. Iowans, and those outside Iowa
Happy Prisoner
"v
4
.-.::-::
- - '
VS.
f
9
Although he's In jail, Tony Serpa
believes himself to be extremely,
fortunate. Serpa was an inmate
of the San Jose county jail when the
lynch mob broke in to take Thomas,
rhurmond and Jack Holmes. Be-J
eause of resemblance to Holmes,
Serpa was mistaken for the kidnap
Liller and almost lynched. He is
now in San Francisco jail.
who are interested in the condition
of business in tho ttate, should not
overlook tho fact that (1) by reason
of its relatively h''a crop Iowa will
benefit much moro rroni the corn loans
than any otiur etale, ar. 1 (2) thr.t
the corn lonns rt prcrcnt o::ly one of
several definitely ascured Hov.i::g-s ot
funds into the state to crc?te pur
chasing power. The civil works pro
gram is auolhrr. Ar.d ct intervals
in the next ycr.r the c
benefits of
the ccrn-hog crop reduction l.'.an will
be turned into lav.a. T.o.-e benefits,
like the corn loan, will be enormous
in the c cere cite for the state of
Iowa, which lends all others In corn
hog production. Dcs Molr.cs Reg
ister. :o:
Someone rtpcrVs th dl-covc-ry of a
tribe in Scuih .r:o:icD. which hes
two languages enc- inr U e :::en, and
one for the v. o:rt-.f .Ik. V.'-j judso t In
former i-5 an arc! r.ic d;r.!;rt chiefly
of interest to the prefc-iors rr.d stu
dents in the tribe.
LEGAL NOTICE
In the District Court cf
County, Nebraska
Cass
Wilhclmine Ncltivr. 1
Plaintiff I
vs. NOTICE
Welchcr Card--'" t
Defendants J
To the Defendant?
Welrhcr Card well and wife. Mary
Card '.veil; I?oan Dcr!er: Josiah
Horning and Ann Hrrr.i", his wife;
Mary Ann Salome Adams; Cornelius
Josiah Horning; Sur-nnr.a Elizabeth
Shopp and Hershev Shopp; William
Hargrave; William IIargr3vc3, Emily
Margraves; Harris I,. Levi; W. P.
Roberts: F. Savaeorl; John Dunlap;
Hugh Ii. McCune; .'pries Feebler;
Samuel Chandler: J. I). Tutt; John
Black; Johanna Kennedy: Cade Rog
ers; Andrew Ii. Taylor; J. W. Conj;
John Roesr.ner; Hans P. Sundcll;
William I. Foster; Jstmrs Kennedy;
C. J. Horning; Mrs. Thomas A. Sul
livan; the heirs, dc-vh-fes, legatee;,
personal representatives and all other
persons interested i;i tho estates re
spectively of Wei. her Card well,
Resan Decker, Josiah Urn-ring, Ann
Horning, Mary Ann S.thrac Adams,
Cornelius Josiah Hcrr.i-ig. Susanna
Elizabeth Shopp, Her bey Shopp, Wil
liam Kargruvos, VI!i.;,ni Hargrave,
Emily Hargrave;., Harris L. Levi. V.
B. Roberta, F. Scv;;---',1. John Dun-
flap, Hugh B. McC:i?:e, James Feeb
ler, Sjr.iucl Chanel!?'-. J. I). Tutt,
John Black, Jrhan: a Kennedy, C:uie
Rogerr., Andrew B. T.iylor, J. W.
Conn, John Roessncr, Ilanr, P. Sun
dell, William B. IV-lov, James Ken
nedy, C. J. Hornin;; nrd Mrr. Thomas
A. Sullivan, eac'i !ect-n:-od, real
names unknown; nd all other per
sons having cr cir.i.T.ing any inter
est I:i the following described real
estate, to-wlt: C:rm ending at the
3outhwest corner of tho rcrthwest
quarter of Section 20, Township 3 2
North rf Range 1 1. East cf the Cth
P. M., thence rur.nfng porth on the
section line 70S f?.zt, thence south
88 degrees and 29 minutes ca3t 811
feet, thence north 2 degrees and 21
minutes tact 819 fo-t, thonce north
87 derrreei ar.d SQ minutes cast 540
feet, thence north "4 degrees and 36
minutes east 24 0 feet, thence north
77 degrees and 36 r.iinute3 eart 735
feet, thence south CG degrees and 42
minutes east 564 fec-i, thence south
74 degrees and 27 minutes west 402
feet, thence scuth 11 decrees and IS
minutes eaat 342 feet, thence south
82 degrees and 15 minute? wcFt 194
feet thence south 217 feet, thence
tast 197 feet, thence south 4 degrees
east f.39 feet, thence west on the
quarter tection line 2.13 5 feet, con
taining 6 4.43 acre3 mere or less, in
Cass county, Nebraska, real names
unknown; and all persons having or
claiming any interest in Lot3 16, 17,
IS, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23. 24. 25. 2t and
27 in Egentarer and Troop's -Addition
in the northwest quarter of Sec
tion 29, Township 12, Range 14, East
MS. '
WV1
I i
7 v?,.
of the 6th P. 11., and all persons
having or claiming any Interest In
Fractional Lot 32, Sub-Lot 1 of Frac
tional Lot 31. Fractional Lots 33, 34,
27, 29. 28, 44, 45, 56 and 57 In the
northwest quarter of Section 29,
Township 12, Range 14, East of the
6th P. M., in Cass county, Nebraska,
real names unknown:
You and each cf you are hereby
notified that on the 22nd day of No
vember, 1933, plaintiff filed her suit
in the District Court of Cass county,
Nebraska, the object and purpose of
which is to establish and quiet and
confirm the title ol Wilhelmine Nolt
Ing, plaintiff, in and to the following
described real estate, to-wlt: Coiu
incvicintr at the southwest corner tt
the northwest quarter of Sec tion 29.
Towndhip 12 North of Range 14,
East of the Cth I. M., thence running
north on the section line 798 feet,
thence south SS degrees and 29 min
utes east Sll feet, thence north 2
degrees and 21 minutes east 819 feet,
tbc-pce north 87 degrees and CG min
utes cist 5 K feet, thence north 5 4
decrees and 30 minutes cast 240 feet,
thence north 77 degrees ar.d 36 min
utes east 735 feet, thence Kouth 66
degrees and 42 minutes oa.st 56 1 feet,
thence south 74 degrees and 27 min
utes west 402 feet, thence south 11
degree:-; ar.d IS minutes east 3 12 feet,
thence south S2 degrees and 15 min
utes west 19 4 feet, thenre south 217
foet. thence eat 197 feet, thence
couth 1 degrees east 599 feet, then'o
west on the quarter section line 2,135
fret, containing 64.13 acre3 more or
less, in Cass county, Nebraska.
And to enjoin you and each of you
from having or claiming to have any
right, title, estate, lien or interest,
eithtr legal or equitable in er to said
real estate or any part thereof, and
to enjein you and each of you from
in ary manner interfering with the
plaintiff and her possession or enjoy-rr"-t
of sMd premises, and for equit
able relief.
This tiotice Is given pursuant to an
or.ier of this Court.
Ycu are hereby required to answer
raid petition on cr before Monday,
the 8th day of January, 193 1. And
failing so to do yr.ur default will be
e-.tered and judgment taken upon
p!al:.ti's petition.
WILHELMINE NOLTING.
Plaintiff.
A. L. TIDD,
Her Attorney.
n27-4 w
SHERIFF'S SALE
State cf Nebra.-ka, County cf Cass.
By virtue of an Order of Sa!e Is
rv.f.(l by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk of the
District Court within and for Cass
c-rurty, Nebraska, and to me direct
ed, I will cn the 30th day of Decem
ber, A. D. 1933, at 10:00 o'clock a.
m. of said day, at tho south fro".t
xlmv cf the court ho:!f:o in Platts-mr.-r.th,
in rali county, soil ct public
auction to tho highest bidder for cash
the followirg real estate, to-wii:
East 2 1 feet of Let 12 in
RIock 2?. in the City of Piatt -Mcnth,
Cass county, Nebras
ka The- sae beirrr levied upon ind
taken as tk? property of Edward Do
r.at ct al, defendants, to satisfy a
iudsmcr.t of saM Court recovered by
Fred T. Ramge. Trustee, plaintiff
against said defendants.
Plattsmouth.
!3, A. D. 1933.
Nebraska. November
H. SYLVESTER.
Sheriff Cass County,
Nebraska.
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
In the County Court of Cass coun
ty, Nebraska.
In the matter of the e?tate cf
Georrre L. Hathaway, deceased.
Nrti-e cf Administration.
All persons interested in paid es-
t?te are hereby notified that a peti-j
tion has been hied in said court al
leging that said de'-eased died leav
ing pn lest will and tes-tanient and
praying for administration upon his
estrte and for such other and fur
ther orders and proceedings in the
premises as may be requfred by the
statutes in rucli cases mrole and pro-
p.ll things pertaining thereto may be
finally settled and determine!, and
thrtt a bearing will be had on raid
pr tition before said Court on the 15th
day fif Deeerr-.bT, A. D. 1933. ard
that if they fail to appear at ran!
Court on said 13th day of December.,
lf)33, rt ten o'clock a. m.. to content j
the mid petition, the Court may j
Hrrnnt the f-ame and irrant i:dii.inistra-
th-.ii of said ertatc to John Tt. Ito'dri
cr some c.t'.er suitable persori and I
proceed f -a fcicment thereof. I
. Wlfjics:-; my haii 1 and the sea! of J
nid C.nntv Court this 14th day of
A. II. nrNBFRY
fS.T.n n20-3v
County Jmise.
NOTICE OI
AD.MINI3TRATION
I
In tho County Court of Ca-;s roun-l
ty, Nebraska
In the ra.-.tter of the estate or Wy
mora Fletcher, deceased.
Notice cf Administration.
AH persons interested in said es
tate are hereby notified that a peti
tion Lcs bven filed In said Court al-
leglrg that said deceased die l leaving y u ard ra-h of ycu. aid for kik h
r.o last will and testament and pray-jf thcr tt-Ilef a:; may he Just and cqtiit
Ing for administration upon his es-jaule in th? prcmi.-e3.
tate and fcr euch other and further You ami each cf you are further
orders and proceedirgs In th prerw- r.ft'fkl thzt yn are require-: to an-
Ijcs cs may be required by the ttat
utes in cuch cases made and provided
to the end that said estate and all
things pertaining thereto may be
Anally rcttlcd ar.d determined, and
that a hearing will bo had on sa!d
petition before said Court cn the
24fh f'ay of November, A. D. 1933.
Bn-1 that If they fa'l to appear at
said Court on paid 2th day of No
vember, 1933. at ten o't-Iork a. m., to
contest the said petition, the Court
may grant the same and grant ad
ministration cf said estate to Edgar
Fletcher or some other suitable per
son and proceed to a settlement
tl erecf.
Witness my haad and the sial ct
said Ccunty Court this 23th day cl
October. 1933.
A. H. DUXBl RY
Seal) c30-Sw County Judga.
SHERIFF'S ?.LE
State cf Nebraska. Cou-ty iff, T.
ss.
I?y virtue of an OrcVr of yy.r --o i
by C. E. Lcdgway. Clerk cf r, '.
irict Court, within nr. 1 f r i .
ty. Nebraska. fn;i t n !;r-. t. . , i
wfll on the 9th ilty i-r 1 ' . i,'.r.
I). 1933. at ten (l'K' l .!.,. ;i r ...
of fr.II d.iy at t?. :; piuli f:..-,t .! r
of the crurt hon-e l.i IMati
?alrl c;jiity. sell t p-iMi.- .r; i
the highest bidder for ;.-Ti t!
. i i
: f
f.-l-
lowin? real estate. to-v.!t:
The Kr.uthtvst qnar :- .-:;:',
of the noi:ther;rt q iarti ; ',
r Section thirty-!.. i32i.
Tfvns!i!t eleven (!!. 1 1 i o .-r
fourteen (11). K:irt f Sixth
P. M.: a!.' the n.irt :-f i , q-j.ir.
ter XK'i a ;d the tiort:.a t
quarter (N'n'i ) of t! e r.. if t
oiiarfr (SE'i) of St;on t:.e
."). Town-'i'p tn, (I'm. I;.-. r
fourteen (1J. Ea-f .f ti e S.tTi
P. M., in C:"s cunt v. .Vlr-s-ka
The sama ! ii; levi.-l ?in.in :r.
taken as t'-e property "f Ire 1 J.
Propvt et al. i-eft n.!a f-s. t fstNfy a
Judgment of s;;M fmirt rc'vered by
Ti e ('.in- rvatlve S;vi':r:; . l.n.f
A..-' i:i'i ii, I'a'i.ti.T a--.1. ir..-t I tie
fc"(!ar.ts. I'lattsii-.'jtit'i,
A. I). 19T.3.
Nc'.;-a-!.:i. Nov:.:I r
tt. svlveste::.
Sl.rrirf Ca-'t C ..ir.ty,
Nebraska.
SHERIFF'S
SALE
in.ty r.Z fa'.
State f.f
-cijra-'.
ss.
By virtue f f ::n f); r of S.;!e isio d
by r. E. I i ,' -..iy, (" vk of th Dis
trict C' ;;rt v.- t h ? : a r coun
ty. N'brrk.-i. r.nd to t:i i'!ret"l. I
will on tbp. 2.:rl d;:y f l.c-:ilr, A.
I. 19:;.-. nt 1" o 1.,. 1; i. i i . . f oi.I
day at the y r.th fr rt !' r f th
court h'-u -e In Platt.-m nt'i. i i nil
county. at pub': - ;uf lb to th.
hicl evt hid ?r f'-r e:.sh tbp f .ll iwing
real estrste. to-wit:
Snh Let two 2 in t'i -.-itTi-eat
qmrr of the s linvo t
q'li't.T ar.'l tbe nest -."t i S tbe
frut!i".'-t f;-:artr ff 13;
a:..' :: north 1 u'.f .'. X.- i: :th
v ?: t erj.rter ff S. e. 2 1. ;:! in
Tv.p. 12. i:r.nr; 13. r-st f tn
th P. M .. in C;iv rour.fy.
bra.-'I'a. cubjt h..v.ver. to the
ii'r.rt!"i5o of the (''- TV2 tire
M.itriv Cotr,:;'.y i:i the .ur:i
of $13.'nri.
The sar.-.D heb-r: Ivb-I upon nnd
l taken a tee property i f I.-.ke I..
Wiles et a'. de'en'r r t t fjfi fr a
judgment of sabl V :rt r re. I !r
I?anc ft. L. V.'i!e". sub-tlri . ;.!a!n
tl':' Piiiyt F-iid ''- f r-noar t ..
Platt-i.K.utb. Nebraska. November
IS. A. D. 1933.
II. SYLVE.-'TEIi.
Khc-rl.T Ca-j County,
n20-3w Ncbra.-k.i.
NOTICE OF SVIT TO QFILT TITLE
In the D:st-'-r Court cf ir.e Cour.t
ty cf Cs-f, Nebraska
Nettie Hirz. Plaintiit )
I
v. I NOTICE
E Imor.d A. IH -sIor.de et al
Defendant. J
To te Icfe-idar,t
E!m-r.d A. Drslor.de. Mn. E iniond
A. Deflrir.do. real nar;e natmtwn;
Th:n.:as T. Kiires'.n. frs. TI: nu T.
I'l'rre-on, r'-al irar.'c unknown. hoe
tri: r.ame is alleced to lc? Amanda
Furg.-sm; Jovpph Harper. Jn A.
Harper. Tlrs. Lciii.a A. i:;: l' r. u I
r.:!r.i tritrix rf f!.e o-t.-! of William
F.
Er.Ifirj. '-. ea.-;ei ; fe fuc-pors
?nd as--:-iarrs of I.oui-a A. End n
administratrix f tiie etat- of Wil
liam F. Errlors. lie .icd: the hrlrs.
devisee-?. Icgat'. personal represen
t .tives and vll other persons interest
ed in the estates of Kdmond A. Des
lorde. ''r-. E!n.urni A. De-Ior.de.
real name unk: own. Thonn T.
Furgc J!r-. Thomas T. Furge-
r.on. ral nr-rne si.lmnwn, whiw true
r.ame i.; alleced to !e Ar.ianira Furge
oii ; ,o eph H.u p' r. Jane A. Harper.
r.- I.oi:sn A. E'Miors. a!i;iir: itrat-
ri.x of the ri:'.'.c of Willinrii F. E:i-.'-:.
d c c.!: Wil Pain F. End-i .
V.'uli'r F. EmiTs. Will;nn F. Endor
,ir,I !.f.ti:--a A. E'.-iors. -a h !ecr:ise.
real i.nrne - nnkr:ov.-n. ar-.d a!I pernor.
!:avi!;--; or il.j::..:n:r inri- t in r
to the southo-i i quarter (SE'i f
ti c northeast qmiter ,NE4 and
the e:. t half E'j of the sonthea-t
'y:iw (.-:', of Section six ,'".
T. v.-n-r.in t 12t. Nc-.rth. Kanire
t'-irtf-i i:
t: Cies con.
u.-.kno v. n :
V. n aed
: . E i-t f.f the ;th P. ?..
ty. Nebraska, real names
ri'b of jv;i are l.rrrhv
ri't'fi-d that Nettie llirz as piaintifi"
'e I h petit io-t a:
f! o,t-.iru r.ce 1 a:s
rid fVnrt of tie
N-lra-ka. on the
(ti-n in t!:" Li
i C.-t:'Uy fif Ca. .-,
L3r I day of Nnve.-ir.or, 1333. ctr iirr t
vou ".-id tch if y n. the o:j- t. pur-
U( f.e prnyer of wbi h to f.btni'i
. ffef roe of tne court quu tfns thf
!:';!e to th southeast quarter of tri
-:r.rt?ica.-t c.uartcr ami the eait half
of t.' e roMirea't finarV-r of SMtio-j
. Tn-v:,--l ip 12. North. IUr.ee 13.
Cst ff the tUh P. M.. in Cass roun-
i ty. .Ncjra.-K?., in piatptiri. as j-a r.. t
sv.er Fr.f! petition on or before Mon
up.y. V..a 13th clay of January. 1931.
or ti c a'lozE tlo. s therein ror.talr.cl
v.!l! he taken ai true ar.d a decre
will l.e rendered In favor of th
Plaint?:! a-, against y-u and each rf
yen rording to the prayer cf aH
p2t:tion.
NETTIE IHItZ.
Plaintiff.
w. a. ucrr.iiTeoN.
Attorney for PlaintitT.
n2T-4vr
When a person needs a thing,
they pay for it whether tnay buy
it cr net. Thai's an old saying, as
true today as when first coined.
Prosperity Is already nearer than
"Juat arcund the corner," to don't
put off longer buying the things
ycu really need.