The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, October 27, 1930, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    MONDAY. OCT. 27, 1930
PIATTSMOUTH BMP - WEEKLY JCFUXR&L
PAGE THEWS
Cbc plattsmouth lournal
PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBBA.SKA
Entered at Postoffice, Plattsinouth, Neb., as second-class mail matter
R. A. BATES, Publisher
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 A YEAR IN EIRST POSTAL ZONE
Subscribers living in Second Postal Zone, 52.50, per year. Beyond
600 miles, $3.00 per year. Rate to Canada and foreign countries,
$3.50 per year. All subscriptions are payable strictly in advance.
I road operation General Atterbury
certainly took that switch at amaz-
ing speed.
PATRIOTISM AND EFFICIENCY
The civil service law of 1883 pro
vided for competitive examinations
MONTANA'S KEPT PRESS
A glass-eater with one of the big
circuses cas urougnt sun against tne
Anything you want and can't af
ford is a luxury.
:o:
Old age doesn't justify hor9e and
buggy ideas and options.
:o:
What a man does isn't half so im
portant as why he dots it.
:o:
Looking for the brighter side of
things is their brighter side.
: o:
The slogan of all blocs is the
quaint American phrase: "Gimme."
: o :
Wall street rounded up another
herd of sheep and turned them out
as goats.
:o:
One good turn deserves another
when the battery's dcwn and the
motor cold.
Bobby Jones score
now stands four up.
:o:
for the year
Never drink poison or laugh at
tourist fixing a puncture.
: c :
There is an idea in radio broad
casting for oratorical politcal candi
dates. Hire an audience to furnish
the applause.
: o :
Another indication of better times
is that people are no longer exagger
ating the amounts they lost in the
stock market.
: o :
Paderewski says the automobile is
responsible for the disappearance of
pianos. It's so much easier to learn
horn-blowing.
T" I. . 1, : . rr-.:i,.. : . . :
"icagu niuuiit piera u makers of a certain brand of cigar
concern over the report of a corres- !ettes. claiming that thev irritate his
e
LEGAL NOTIC
-:o:-
While he was looking for an hon
est man old Diogenes should also
I have kept his weather eye open for
I an honest alibi.
:o:
When you lose your self-control I
the steering gear is broken. There are stiH a few people in this
:o: country who profess to think that
To Lonnie Hargraves, Non
Resident, Defendant:
to obtain the best uualifit-d annli- ' nondent that nine of 11 newsnaners u ,. i ! notice is nereby given that pursu
for Federal positions. How- in Montana's orinciDal cities are con- c,;, i ;
- It 1 1 1UUUV1 tl . i . . , lltritT 111
cants for Federal positions. How
ever, the inroads of cheap patriotism
and vote-getting zeal are reducing
this high standard of efficiency to a
meaningless gesture. By an executive
order of President Coolidge, signed
two days before he left office, 10
points are added to the examination
ratings of every disabled veteran, and
all such veterans are placed at the
head of the list, regardless of what
grades theii competitors made. Thus,
in an examination for postal clerk
at Washington, D. C, the best grade
made by a veteran ranked him 285th
on the list. Six veterans failed to
receive the passing mark of 70, yet
trolled by owners of great corpor
ations. It is a scandalous situation
and one which, as the Tribune says,
deserves serious consideration out
side as well as within that common
wealth. Other states are not im
mune from suffering a similar blight;
in fact, the Power Trust was well
on its way to control of public opin
ion through purchased newspapers
until its design was exposed last year
by the Federal Trade Commission.
In the Nation last July, Oswald
Garrison Villiaid made a study of the
journalistic situation in Montana, a
State that has b'-en for many years
Cass county
plausible.
on grounds far less
:o:-
A radical is a person who dies
violent death several years before
conservative steals his ideas.
:o:
FOR SALE
-:o:
The main trouble seems to be that
we all enjoy state's rights, but they
aren't bottled in bond.
:o:
Now that corn is dearer than
wheat, will there be more demand for
corn cakes and corn pone?
:c:
A New York man has put a radio
in his hen house, which ought to stir
the humane society to activity.
:o:
Winter, with its coal and snow
shovels, was placed on this earth to
prepare some men for the hereafter.
:o:
As lowly as his job is. the road
A law isn't much stronger than 'prohibition is a success, but that
those who enforce it, either.
:o:
I
is
mostl
One of the constantly drcli spec
tacles is the minus legs in the pius
four pants.
:o:
Blooms are fading from the golclcn
rod. a sure harbinger that au'umn
is almost ended.
:o:
Often they call it a bungalow be
cause, the builder bungled the job i
and they still owe for it.
: o :
Sometimes an amateur vocalist
loses his voice and the neighbors
live peacefully ever after.
:o:
Election contests are called races
"moonshine.'
:o:
all rated ahead of the first man, who the feudal fife of the Anaconda Cop-
made 98. 'per Co., whose super-government of
As if this were not encug!:, the: the State has lately been shared by
amendment of July C, 1932. to the
veterans' act of 1924 opens the gates
still wider. It
term, "disabled
the Montana Power I o. These two
companies, except for occasional out-
liu-ludes under thelnreaks, hold the State firmly in their
all ex-service men grasp and visit severe reprisal on cdi-
This talk of harnessing the atom
has been going on for a long time.
And all we have so far is a midget j
car and pygmy golf.
:o:
A New York man has just paid
$3,800 for an old sofa, and we'll bet
as the original owner, who probably
got it for a song, did.
laborer takes pride in
paving the way for
ations.
Football bleachers collapsed in
Ohio. The bleachers probably know
because of the puffing of hot air by
which they are accompanied.
: o :
In some Latin-American countries
it is not laws that are obsolete and
disregarded only constitutions.
:o:
Al Capone's life, at last, is in the
hands of the police. His biography
has just been issued at $3 the copy.
:o:
Now that soap has been found to
future gener- be an antidote for poison, little boys
will have to be careful not to be
poisoned.
:q:
-:o:-
If Chairman Fess just came around
with a pan light and a banjo player,
like other medicine men, we'd be in
clined to buy a bottle.
:o:
the fact he is
After reading of the speed of those
what a tackled ball carrier thinks ; racing yachts, we have a feeling that
about while he is waiting for the perhaps we have been driving i. lit
heap to untangle. tie too fast.
A film actress is suing for $100,000
damages for a broken nose. For $10,
000 we'd let 'em break our nose
:o:
We are a methodical people. It
is possible to get statistics of near
ly everything except the total cost of
opening jackpots for the fiscal year.
: o :
A traveler in Darkest Africa says
that jungle terrors are diminishing
there. That keeps the world balance
even. They certainly are increasing
here.
:o:
Henry Ford has issued an crder
that employes in his British factory
must not drink beer at lunch time.
Hank seems to be spending a lot of
his time taking enjoyment out of
life.
incapacitated after their discharge.
This action extends preference in ex
aminations to approximately 250,000
more veterans.
tors and politicians who dare chal
lenge them. Conditions in Montana
are perfect for such overlordship be
cause of the sparse population and
There can be no objection to re- 'the economic subjection to which the
warding men who incurred injury ! people are reduced.
in serving their country. Vet. nans
have been generously dealt with by
war risk insurance, the bonus, ad
justed compensation. .Tee medical
care and the wide extension of bene-
Mr. Yillard charged that the Ana
conda company owns the Montana
Standard and the Daily Post of Butte,
the Anaconda Standard of Anaconda,
the Helena Independent and Record -
Practically new automatic Delco
light plant, in fine condition. Rea
sonably priced. Mrs. Glenn Perry.
Phone 4012. o23-tfw
NOTICE
Whtreas. George Murray, convict
ed in Cass county, on the 2Cth day
of November, 1927. of the crime of
breaking and entering. ha6 made ap
plication to the Board of Pardons for
u parole, and the Board of Pardons.
P.ursuant to law have set the hour of
10:00 a. m. on the 12th day of No
vember. 1930. for hearing on said
application, all persons interested
are hereby notified that they may ap-;
.ear at the State Penitentiary, at i
Lincoln, Nebraska, on said day and
hour and show cause, if any there
t wny said application snouiu, or
thonld not be granted.
FRANK MARSH.
Secretary Board of
Pardons.
N. T. HARMON.
Chief State Probation Officer.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
ant to an order of attachment issued
by A. H. Duxbury. County Judge
within and for the County of Cass,
Nebraska, in an action pending be
fore said County Judge wherein Lena
Jordon is plaintiff and Lonni- Har
graves is defendant, to secure the
sum of $29.50. a writ of garnishment
in aid of attachment was issued and
levied upon money in possession of
the Chicago. Burlington & Quincy
Railroad Company, as garnishee, and
that said case was continued to the
4th day of November for trial, at
nine o'clock a. m.
LENA JORDON.
ol3-3w Plaintiff.
ORDER OF HEARING
and Notice of Probate of For
eign Will
ficiaries by last summer's legislation. Herald of Helena, the Missoulian and
Yet politicians, out to corral the
veteran vote, are always asking for
more. The efficency of the Govern
ment these men served should not be
impaired by misplaced liberality in
rewarding them. The Coolidge order
for the added 10 points was intend
ed to aid those who were, by physi
cal handicap, unable to compete rn
equal terms with the able-bodied. It
has resulted in putting inefficient
applicants in Government posts, often
of a technical nature, and in dis
couraging skilled persons without
war service from seeking these posi
tions. A survey of recent examinations
and appointments has been made by
the National Civil Service Reform
Sentinel cf Missoula the morning
and evening Billings Gazette and tht
Livingston Enterprise. I he com
pany does not admit ownership, tha
being vested in companies with dif
ferent names. But the deceased Mon
tana Free Press published the fac
on its first page for weeks on end
and it never met with a denial. The
fact that some of these papers are run
at a heavy loss makes it certain that
they have powerful financial back
ing.
Some of the devices used to give
the copper papers a pretense of inde
pendence are. to say the least, amus
ing. For example, although all the
papers serve one master, six are la
beled Democratic, four Republican
League. Among its findings it d is- five independent Republican and one
nnouncLna
an IRONER as good as the MAYTAG
WASHER at a popular price
closes that 2C9 veterans, who failed
to make a passing grade and are not
qualified by normal standards, have
been placed ahead of 18,000 better
qualified candidates. The league baa
appealed to President Hoover to nid
ify or rescind the Coolidge order.
We hope that Mr. Hoover will take
tiis action, in conformance with his
veto message on the last compensa
tion grab. St. Louis Prst-Dispat ch.
:o:
INTERNATIONAL PEACE GARDEN
THE New Maytag Ironer
takes the hard work out
of the ironing and does it
in much less time. It is
just such an ironer as you
would expect from Maytag
...compact, portable, sim
ple, automatic in operation,
of quality construction, and
at a popular price.
The New Maytag Ironer
heats faster and transfers
heat to the garments being
ironed, faster than other
ironers. It gives a finish
superior to hand ironing be
cause more pressure is ex
erted on the clothes. Irons
flat work perfectly with the
first ironing. Difficult pieces
such as ruffles, shirts and
dresses are easily handled
with a little practice.
The New Maytag irons
everything, presses trou
sers and pleated skirts . . .
steams velvets, ribbons and
neckties.
fm .. -' a ..a." the i , waiktr
mti m-.ui.: ...f
FREE
Home Demonstration
A 'phone call will
bring a Maytag
ironer or washer or
both to your home.
Your assurance of
satisfaction is the
Maytag slogan: "If
it doesn't sell itself,
don't keep it."
Divided payments
you'll never miss . . .
THE MAYTAG COMPANY
NEWTON, IOWA founded 193
IVrn. NrthwiH(lrrii Fnclory
Urn rich. Mavtnc HMic.
naxhlncton. vr.. ortli,
Mtunrapnlix, Minn.
Moritz Maytag Co.,
Plattsmouth. Nebraska
tunc t n
0 r J Z fr
i w
Aluminum w
Portable Ironer
asner
1
ON MAYTAG
RADIO
PROGRAMS
0r H.B.C. Cat to Cowl
Network Monday Evenings.
9:00 K.S.T.. 8 :00 C.S.T.. 7 00
Mt.T.. 6:00 P.T. WJZ. New
York; KDKA. Pittsburgh:
KVW, Chicago: KSTP. St.
Paul: WSM, Nashville;
WREN, Kansas City; KOA.
Denver; KSL. Salt Lake City ;
WKY, Oklahoma City:
KI RC. Houston . WFAA.DaJ
Us: KECA. Los Angeles;
SCW, Portland jm
Human history and destiny are
related to have had their origins in
a primal garden. It is pleasant,
therefore, to contemplate the pur
poses and activties of the association
which so earnestly has been laboring
for the creation and maintenance of
an international garden which ideal
ly and practically should give per
manent expression of good will and
friendship between the United States
and Canada.
The foundations for this enter
prise have been laid, public spirited
men and women in both countries
are engaged in it with enthusiastic
co-operation.
This ideal is most worthy. The
garden is to be established on the
boundary line between the two coun
tries. It will be a living memorial
to the hundred years of peace be
tween the two nations. In it will
be planted all flowers and shrubs na
tive to the United States and Can
ada. The plans propose that the gar
den be a thousand acres or more in
area, half in Canada and half in the
United States. The project will be
financed by public support. An en
dowment fund of $5,000,000 will be
required for purchase of land, plant
ing and upkeep. The garden will be
designed to become one of the great
show places of North America. It
should serve to perpetuate the tradi
tional feeling of good will between
the peoples of the two nations, de
spite controversies of politicians and
big business.
This enterprise should strongly ap
peal to Canadians and Americans
alike. A combination of the beauties
of nature In a great garden-park
should constitute a memorial to last
ing peace more charming and im
pressive than any that could be con
ceived and executed in stone or
bronze. The ideal is most inspiring.
and it is hoped that the plans may
be carried to a successful completion
to the end that the proposed garden
of peace may become a historic shrine
for pilgrims of both countries.
:o:
An invention is reported that is
said to make music out of nothing
more than gesture made by the hands
of the operator. Will we be hearing
music that sounds as the jazz band
director looks?
independent. In the town where tht
copper company owns two papers it
was arranged that the same man
who wrote the Republican editorials
in the morning should write the Dem
ocratic editorials in the evening.
Thus does the company work both
sides of the street.
In addition to its practical mon
opoly on the daily press the company
controls 30 of 140 weekly Montana
papers. Those of the weekly editor
who have not sold out to the com-
panv men like Dan Whetstone of
the Cot Bank Pioneer Press and
Harry Brooks of the Chinook Opinioi
are usually denounced as crank?
or malcontents when they attack the
company's vise-like grip on the State
its muffling of the press and its con
trol of politicians.
It goes without saying that thou
sans of people in Montana are per
mitted to read the news of the world
and of their State only after it has
been appropriately censored when
ever it might affect the interests of
the company. It is also certain thai
tons of subtle propaganda, and prop
aganda not so subtle, are dumped in
to the forms of Montana's kept press
This situation is antagonistic tc
the spirit of our institutions. The
press in many instances is the only
safeguard against governmental in
justice, tyrany and rapacity. It was
so regarded by the founding fathers
who made it free and threw the pro
tection of the Constitution and the
laws around its utterances. When
private interests seek to corrupt and
prostitute this magnificent heritage
to their own uses, our institutions
are menaced and a condition of in
tellectual slavery is forced upon the
people.
:o:
JOBS INSTEAD OF CHARITY
The State of Nebraska, Cass coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of
Mary E. Dull, deceased.
To the creditors of said estate:
You are hereby notified that I will
it at the County Court room in
Plattsmouth. in said county, on the
th day of November, 1930. and on
h, !-' liny of February. 1931. at
en o'clock a. m. of each of said days.
o receive and examine all claims
irainst said estate, with a view to
hvir adjustment and allowance. The
ime limited for the presentation of
laii"s against said estate is three
uonth3 from the 7th day of Novem
ber. A. D. 1P30. and the time limited
for payment of debts is one year
trom said 7th day of November,
1930.
Witness my hand and the seal of
;ald County Court this 10th day of
October, 1930.
A. H. DUXBURY.
'Seal) ol3-3v County Judge.
SHERIFF'S SALE
State of Nebraska, County of Cass,
s.
By virtue of an Order of Sale
ssued by Gorlda Noble Beal, Clerk cf
he District Court within and for
(ass county, Nebraska, and to me
directed. I will on the loth day of
November, A. D., 1930, at 10 o'clock
L m. of said day. at the south front
door of the court house in the City
of Plattsmouth, Nebr., in said coun
ty, sell at public auction to the
highest bidder for cash the follow
ing real estate, to-wit:
West half of Lot 8 and 9, and
the south half of the west half
of Lot 10, and the west 2 4 feet
of the east half of Lots 8, 9 and
10, all in Block 31. in the City
of Plattsmouth, Cass county,
Nebraska
the same being levied upon and tak
?n as the property of Sybil Brant ner.
Edward Brantner and Oscar Wilson,
defendants, to satisfy a judgment of
;aid court recovered by Paul H. Gil-
Ian, substituted for Silas Y. Gillan,
-lain tiffs against said defendants.
Plattsmouth. Nebraska, October
11, A. D. 1930.
BERT REED.
Sheriff Cass County,
Nebraska.
By REX YOUNG.
Deputy Sheriff.
In the County Court of Cas coun
ty. Nebraska.
To all persons interested in the
estaie of Ransom M. Cole, deceased:
On reading the petition of Mar
garet J. Cole, praying that the in
strument filed in this Court on the
14th day of October. 1930, and pur
porting lo be a duly authen'icated
copy of the last will and testament
of Ransom M. Cole, deceased, that
;aid instrument be admitted to pro
bate, and the administration of said
estate be granted lo Roy O. Cole as
EBsecntor for the State of Nebraska.
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 14th day of November,
A. D. 1930, at 10:00 o'clock a. m., t
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
healing thereof be given to all per
sons interested in said matter by pub
lishing a copy of this order in the
Plattsmouth Journal, a semi-weekly
newspaper printed in said county, for
three successive weeks prior to said
day of hearing.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said court this 14th day of October,
A. D. 1930.
A. H. DUXBURY.
Seal) o20-3w: County Judge.
ORDER OF HEARING
and Notice of Probate of For
eign Will
NOTICE OF HEARING
The City of Cleveland recently took
an admirably sensible measure to ease
the unemployment situation. Instead
of voting money for charity, the city
council voted a 1200.000 bond issue
for the immediate commencement of
certain public works, and 2,000 men
will be given jobs as a result. That
is the sort of unemployment relief
that really means something, really
solving the underlying problem. What
the man needs more than a meal is
a job. No matter how much charity
you dispose, you haven't helped him
much unless you have made his
chances of getting work brighter.
That is why this Cleveland plan de
serves copying widely.
:o:
The Cleveland man who drank
eleven tumblersful of water and
then invited all comers to compete
for the water drinking championship,
must be credited with some discre
tion. He might have issued his chal
lenge during the drouth.
In the County Court of Cass coun-
y, Nebraska.
In the matter of the Guardianship
of James Petersen, Mentally Ineom-oetent.
To all persons interested in the
matter of the Guardians "nip of James
Petersen, Mentally Incompetent:
You are hereby notified that Mrs.
Anna Marshall, formerly Anna Peter
sen, guardian of James Petersen,
mentally incompetent, filed in the
County Court of Cass county, Nebras
ka, on October ISth, 1930. a petition
together with her final report as
guardian, wherein she alleges that
Frank P. Sheldon, is now deceased,
and that during the lifetime of the
said Frank P. Sheldon, he was the
surety on her official bond as guar
dian and praying in said petition for
an order or court permitting and
authorizing her as said guardian to
file a new guardian's bond in this
ourt with a new surety thereon to
be approved by this court, and pray
ing further therein that all of her
reports as such guardian since the
ilate of her appointment as such guar
dian on February 25th, 1922, be ap
proved and allowed as c orrect by said
County Court, all of said reports be
ing now on file in this Court.
You are further notified that a
hearing will be had in tlae County
Court of Cas3 county, Nebraska, in
the court house at Plattsmouth, in
said county, on the 14th day of No
vember, 1930, at the hour of 10:00
o'clock a. m.. at which time the said
petition will be heard and a full and
complete examination of naid guar
dian's accounts will be had, and that
if you have any objections to the
prayer of said petition, same should
be filed in this court on or before said
day and hour of hearing.
By the Court.
A. H. DUXEURY.
County Judge, Cass Coun
ty, Nebraska.
In the County Court of Cass coun
ty, Nebraska.
State of Nebraska. County of Cass,
ss.
To the heirs at law and to all
persons interested in the estate of
Amanda V. Wiley Dills, deceased:
On reading the petition of Mrs.
Addie E. Park praying that the in
strument filed in this Court on the
10th day of October, 193, and pur
porting to be a duly authenticated
-oj;y of the last will and testament
of Amanda V. Wiley Dills, deceased,
that said instrument be admitted to
probate and the administration of
said estate be granted to Addie E.
Park, as Administratrix, with the
will annexed, for the State of Ne
braska. 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 7th day of Novem
ber, A. D. 1930, at nine o'clock a. m.,
to show cause, if any there be. why
the prayer of the petitioner should
not be granted, and that notice of
the pendency of said petition and the
hearing thereof be given to all per
sons interested in said matter by pub
lishing a copy of this order in the
Plattsmouth Journal, a semi-weekly
newspaper printed in said county,
for three successive weeks prior to
said day of hearing.
Witness my hand, and the seal of
:;aid court, this 10th day of October,
A. D. 1930.
A. H. DUXBURY,
(Seal) ol3-3w County Judge.
ORDER OF HEARING
In the County Court of Cass coun
ty, Nebraska.
In the Matter of the Guardianship
of Lucian Carper. Hazel Carper and
Dalien Carper, Minors.
To all persons interested in the
matter of the Guardianship of Luc
ian Cr.rper. Harel Carper and Dalien
Carper, Minors:
You are hereby notified that Ger
trude Carper, guardian of the above
named minors, has filed in the Coun
ty Court of Cass county, Nebraska,
on October 18th, 1930, her account
together with a petition wherein she
alleges that Frank P. Sheldon de
parted this life on August 31, 1930,
and that he is at present her official
bondsman as guardian of the above
named minors, and praying therein
that an order of court be entered re
leasing said bondsman from all lia
bility and for authority to file a new
bond in this court with new surety
thereon to be approved by this court,
and praying further therein that all
of her accounts and reports filed in
this court since the date of her ap
pointment as guardian of said minors
on June loth, 1916, be fully approv
ed, allowed and forever settled by
order of this court, and for an order
discharging her as guardian of Luc
ian Carper and Hazel Carper, who
are now of legal age.
You are further notified that a
hearing will be had before this c ourt
in the County Court room in Platts
mouth, Nebraska, in said county, on
the 14th day of November, 1930, at
the hour of ten o'clock a. m.. at
which time the said petition will be
heard and a full and complete ex
amination of said guardian's reports
and accounts will be had. and that
if you have any objections to the
prayer of said petition, same should
be filed in this court on or before
said day and hour of hearing.
By the Court.
A. H. DUXBURY.
County Judge Cass Coun
ty, Nebraska.
o20-3w