The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, March 19, 1931, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    THURSDAY. MARCH 19, 1931.
PLATTSMOUTH SEMI - WEEKLY JOURNAL
FAGE XHRSB
Cbc plattsmoutb journal
PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH. NEBRASKA
Entered at PoBtoffice, Plattsmouth, Neb., as second-class mail matter
R. A. BATES, Publisher
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 A YEAR IN FIRST POSTAL ZONE
Subscribers living la Second Postai 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 strictly in advance.
Nostrums never lack a good mar
ket. :o:
Most of us would rather have what
we want than be happj-.
: o :
Legge says the farm board is a go
ing concern, going, going, gone
:o:
The White House seems to be suf
fering from deflation of the veto.
-: o:-
The first Continental Congress met
in Carper's hall, in Philadelphia, in
1776.
:o:-
A heavy fall of snow helps the
farmers and boosts the sale of porus
plasters.
: o :
Another business that suffers from
lack of vision is the poison liquor
business.
-: o:-
Did Capone return to Chicago to
vote or to decide the election some I
other way.
:o:-
Two popular senators tne otner
one from luano ana tne otner one;.,
from Nebraska.
:o:-
One way to make a safer city is
to make it decidedly unsafe for care
less and reckless drivers.
:o:
A fur expert is one who can look
r
at a leopard skin and tell what kind
of a dog formerly used it.
. :o:
It is not a question of how early
an individual gets on the job, but
what he accounts for results.
: o :
Boston is famous for many things
these days even for bombarding ,
Rudy Vallee with over-ripe fruit.
:o:
The fellow who can tell the pres''- '
dent just where he was wrong will
soon be yelling: "Kill the umpire.
:o:
The fellow who believes that the
only safe place is with the major-
ity under any and all circumstances in the matter of a state constabulary, fear that the market could not ab-:ing that "it will be a scientific trag
will never be accused of originality and evidently the bank robbers are sorb a large issue was. to say the.edy" if these researches are to be
in thought or action.
Like Tea
EVEN the Japanese maiden who
laboriously picks the tea leaves
knows that before you sip the delicate
beverage from your cup, leaves of an
other npe of tea must be added, for
the best teas invariably are blended.
When the tea merchant takes a
quaniuy ui Japanese
China tea, and a touch of Ccylonese,
then blends them according to the -
dictates of his expert knowledge, he 7
parallels the making of CONOCO
Gasoline. For this is a blended gasoline.
It is blended because this is the only
method which brings together in one
mi the desirable properties of several
types of gasoline. No one type of gaso
line can contain them alL
THE BALANCED - BLEND
Benjamin Franklin was the first
post-master general of the United
States.
:o:-
1, ls
The seventy-first conpress
proved that one can mix politics and
finance.
:o:-
It seems you can call the Dry law
everything and anything but uncon-!et
institutional.
-:o:-
"The Maple Leaf Forever." by
Alexander Muir. is the national hymn
of Canada.
:o:-
The unkindest cut of all was that
nobody asked Senator Blei.se to stay
until the show was over.
:o:
The country is still waiting for
someone to criticize the impartial
ity of the Wickersham report.
: o :-
An aniazing lot of people are these
folks who parade across the front
pages of the newspapers each day
:o: -
A lot of ra(iio jazz programs give
- .h. imnrpssinn rhnt thuv :irt nut
r
on to boost the patronage of the bug-
houses.
:o:-
For a staid, uudermonstrative peo
ple the English are doing a pretty
good iob of welcoming Cliarlev Chan-
., .
lin home.
: o:-
Canada should get something so
i startling as to take its breath away.
The Dominion is to have- an "Eat
more onions week."
:o:
The President of Peru doesn't seem
to have a chance to stay on the job
long eough ever to be worried by
the bad actors in the Senate.
:o:-
Modern progress is a wonderful
thing. It has made it possible for
man to get indigestion and a remedy !
!for it at the same drug store.
:o:
It's all well enough to pussyfoot
heartily in accord with the idea.
. . . the bes :
is Blended
CONOCO refiners use: Natural
Gasoh::?, for quick starhtg; Straight
run Gasoline, for power and long
mileage. Cracked Gasoline, for its
anti-k::ock properties.
There is no secret formula covering
the elements which compose this
triple-test gaseline. The secret is in the
knowledge behind the blending.
Knowing how makes one tea blend
better than all others . . . and knowing
how places one gasoline in a distinct
quality class. Experience the perform
ance advantar a of CONOCO Balanced-Blend
Gasoline. You'll find it
wherever the CONOCO Red Trian
gle is displayed.
8
uj, a un ui
CONOCO
IS
; The optimist who thought March
would behave like February is now
running for President of the pessi
mists. : o :
"Why worry about the railroads
and bus lines; the railroads have al
ways been able to take care of them
: selves?"
:o:
After all the talk, nothing much
has as yet been done about gluttony.
'This world has its uses, but is it
indispensible?
: o:
Green face powder is coming into
vogue, say the cosmeticians. This
will save a lot of women the trouble
of tinning green with envy.
: o:
There is no doubt about ignorance
being bliss when it comes to knowing
too much about the activities of the,,tne latter instrument the Powers af -
llihc:ups of the underworld.
Th. old bicycle club which dis-
banded in New York recently might
some comfort in the fact that we
sull have our business cycles.
:o:-
You see. it isn't wicked for the
Government to take part of the li
quor revenue if it's called an in
come instead of a license fee.
:o:
Alfred Smith, conservative, of New
York visiting the capital, expresses
the opinion that "the number of Wets
has grown considerably since 1928."
:o:
RESPONSE TC NEW GOV
ERNMENT FINANCING
,, , , . . , , , .
Mr. Mellon a phophecv that the
. , , . ...
puBsage of the veterans loan bill
would have a disorganizing effect
n the Government's financial struc-
i v i
IU1C Utts UUl Ut V I I UUi lit UU I .
On the other hand, the Govern
ment has just offered '1.400.000 000
worth of bonds and certificates tmdei
the most favorable terms ever ob
tamed by the Treasury on a major
Issue. The response was amazing.
Tim Snti non noo Imm of 1S.vmu
., . , - .
o -s per cem uonus was oveis-uu-
scribed four times
rpi ,. . Cru
ernment could have sold $2,000,000,
000 worth of this security. The one
year 2 per cent
: v i vci i i i v u iv. o I
of indebtedness. In the amount of
$000,000,000. was oversubscribed
twice. There was even a heavy de
mand for an issue of $200,000,000 in
six-month certificates bearing only
1 2 Per cent interest.
It is obvious that the state of the
money market just now is peculiarly
favorable to the sale by the Govern-
ment of its securities, and that op-i
position to the loan bill based upon
i least, an inexpert view.
Gasoline
GASOLINE
A PROTEST FROM GERMANY
Now that the Franco - Italian
treaty has established naval under-
standing on a five-Power basis, it is when Prohibition was an issue, ul
timo again to consider land arma- though not the major issue. In a na-
ments. Welhelm
Defense Minister,
Groeuer, German
calls the world's
attention to the unbalanced military j Wet and Dry line-up, notably in the
situation in Europe. Germany at the (election of Dwight W. Morrow and
close of the World War "disarmed to Robert J. Bulkley to the Senate. But
an extent unparalleled in history," jdespite this, the events of two years
supposedly as a prelude "to a general jmake it painfully apparent that our
limitation of armaments of all na- political parties, as parties, are tui
tions," he says. Today she finds her-jlikely to solve the liquor question 10:
self still disarmed, and her neighbors
armed to the teeth, heedless of their
pledge.
Groener's charge is based on the
slemn engagements of the Versailles
treaty and the League Covenant. In
firmed 12 years ago that "the main
tenance of peace requires the reduc-
tion of national armaments." Ger-
many surrendered her navy, her ser
ial equipment and her war materials,
and cut her army from war strength
to a police force of 100.000. Failure
of the other nations to reduce their
forces has led to the building up of
dangerous private military organiz
ations in Germany, said to number
1,000.000 men. It is futile to expect
Germany to remain disarmed while
her neighbors increase their estab
lishments, and statesmen in other
European natious have said bo.
Should other countries decline to re-
duce their armaments, then Germany
is entitled to arm herself similarly.
iFor this, however, she does not ask.
i
:Her people have learned the bitter
i lesson of what a high-geared military
machine inevitably costs.
After years of preparation,
the
world disarmament conference now
. . , ...
IS SCiieUUieu to meet in tjri its
. outcome depends the late of Europe.
whether for murderous war or peace-
ful progress. Meanwhile the Bruen-
ing Government continues us enorts
to instill patience into the German
I people and to meet the nation's tre -
- -
, , , r - .
UI6UUUIH uuiiftauiuiD. .uuu.iiri j v-
.ner, in calling attention to the uii
I just situation, in effect repeats Wil-
r mMtinii tar-seeing truism oi is.
'Only a peace between equals can
llast.
-:o:
THE PLIACENE MAN
Will the Pliocene mar. be discov
ered? Dr. Roy Chapman Andrews
j believes that he will be discovered.
perhaps in the Gobi Desert. He has
i conducted the fifteenth Central
Asiatic expedition cf the American
Museum of Natural History, declar-
stopped because of untoward local'
j conditions the exactions and depre
dations of bandits.
Already his discoveries are monu-
mental mastodons and prehistoric j
remains of many other beasts, all
sealed in the Pliocene strata.
The Pliocene man is the oldest
type of humankind. In the view of j
Dr. Andrews, he may have sat on
the hills "watching the mastodons
struggling in the bog." Compared
with him the Pieping man. discover
ed in 1929, Is a mere infant.
And still the seekers labor. In a
gypsum cave nesr Las Yegas, Ne
vada, there has recently been dis
covered the bones of a man estimated
to have lived there 20.000 years ago
a late earth-comer. He is chal
lenged by the antiquity of the
Neanderthal man. the Javan Pithe-
canthropus, the Cro-Magnon finds of
the scientists.
In China the scientists have dis
covered the Pieping skull the Sin
anthropus, in union with the types
of Java and Piltdown. the pro
claimed Dawn Man, a million years
young. It is a quite perfect skull.
It is the opinion of an English au-iin
thority that the owner of the skull
lived long before man had begun to
fashion stone instruments. He holds
it to be a hitherto unknown genus
of the human family vastly more
ancient and primitive than any other
human remains. And yet it is not a
Pliocene skull.
Little by little the earth yields Rb
secrets, dim in the mist-shrouded
ages before history began. Dr. Sven
Hedin. associated with Dr. Andrews,
continues to carry on with Chinese
students. The volume and value of
the work mounts. Interest in these
researches is stimulated by the dis-
covery of a prehistoric beast well ing the fact that no individual can
preserved in ice that has held it forjhold more than $2,430 worth of cer
ages flesh still intact, measuring 24tiflcates at the same time, there is
feet long, weighing 1.000 pounds, no provision against individual mem-
with a head like an elephant's. A
flesh-and-fur-covered lizard 26 feet
in length, similarly incased in ice,
has been discovered, while in Canada
the oldeBt deposit of preserved wood, this way, a "normal" Irish family
said to be 15,000,000 years old, has may acquire a very respectable cash
been brought to light in Northern reserve.
Alberta.
But the Pliocene man sleeps on
undisturbed. Will he greet us some
frne morning with authentic intro
duction by Dr. Andrews or another?
The indefatigable ecientlcts have
hope that this dream may come true.
WET AND DRY CURRENTS
A good deal of bad whisky has
flowed under the bridge since 1928,
tional political campaign. In politics
there have been some changes in the
us.
Mr. Hoover is prepared to stand
hie ground as an emphatic Dry. It
is unlikely that he will have a cor-
responding Wet opponent. And even
if he did, even if the issues were
j clearly drawn, the problem is letns-
lative in character, not executive.
Party platforms are no less vague
in the hopes they hold of settling this
persistent question.
If there were no
other miT""'"
than those of party politics it would ; .
1
be a most discouraging situation. But
the fortunes of Prohibition to date
have not been linked with a single
party. Prohibition came about as a
constitutional and statutory entity
through a powerful lobby acting on
both parties. Any readjustment of
our present set-up is likely to come
about in similar fashion.
What, then, are the currents of
late years? One. certainly.
is ttie
j trend away from state action,
1 Steadily more of the states are aban-
idoning their attempts to support the
I
Federal Government in its liquor pol-
llcy. Another trend is toward larger
tolerance of wine and beer making
on a small scale for domestic use
This is apparent in states and local
. , u
.uieas a. wen us in reueiui iuin
More important is the trend among
a wide public toward rational debate
on temperance schemes
which are
nut pamcuia.iy ei oi uiv m a nB'u
! sense. Men and women everywhere
;are giving up their aelf-iroposed ia-
, .
. ...... 1- ;
j - v ...... u
for a grave social problem, and are,. Tl ,'no, . to. ii, .
refusing to see the question as the
tug of war of two sharply defined
tactions.
This greater objectivity in respect heaI.ing "thereof be given to all per
to the liquor question undoubtedly sons interested in said matter by pub-
arises from a fuller appreciation of
. , . , . . !. . . .
, midt ihuci mmm iTin n tcu v '
!do, and from a realization of the vast
importance of the bootleg liquor
; trade as the economic foundation of I
'the Nation's syndicated crime.
It is no longer a simple choice, as j
tin the era of headlong reform, be -
'tween allowing liquor and not allow
ing it. Today it is the recognition of
a complex fabric of illicit industries,
the admission that ths fabric is built
on popular desire for liquor, and the
choice of a dozen alternatives to miti
igate the evil.
We are still a long way from suf
ficiently clear thinking on the ques
tion. But as a people we are making
tangible nrogress. And the sooner
.... . . .
we
ceas-e to divide ourselves into
"wets" and
"irvi" ttip ennnpr wt
urvs uie suoner f
will find a workable middle path be -
tween the intolerable saloon age and
the equally intolerable epoch of the
speakeasy and the hijacker.
:o:
THE IRISH FREE STATE
From Old Erin, that "most dis
tressful country" of which poets of
the Jeremiah bered formerly sang so
touchingly. there comes now the
strange cry of "too much money!"
The Irish Free State Treasury has
too much money, the people have
been hoarding up cash in savings
certificates. They have grown thrifty,
with a vengeance.
This is strange even in contra
dictory Ireland, and it came about
this way: The Government has
been issuing savings certificates a
form of thrift copied from "tyran
nical" England shortly after the
war. The principle is the issue of a
$4.86 certificate for $3.72. This cer
tificate of 5 per cent compound in
terest becomes worth $4.80 to the
investor in five years. It is exempt
from income tax and need not be de
clared in income tax returns.
The Irish people simply "ate it up"
this economic proposition of a be
nevolent Government. The security
was gilt edged; it was a most de
sirable form of investment for people
with small incomes. Not withstar.d-
bers of the same family holding up
to the maximum amount. And Ire
land is a land which does not pnic
tice birth control. So it is that, in
But the rush for these certificates
has been so great that the Govern
ment is not able usefully to employ
all the money which is being put
into certificates amounting to the
respectable sum of nearly $10,000,
000 in the current year; and as the
Government must provide the inter
est yearly, it naturally is anxious
to tum it into some other directions.
where the interest Is much less and
there is no bonus. Hence it is seek
ing for expedients to get out of an
economic hole. Perhaps it might en
ter into correspondence with Uncle
Andy Mellon who no doubt would
sugeest disposition of the money by
lending it to former soldiers.
:o:
FOR SALE
Several hundred good barrels, good
for feeding troughs, water barrels or
garbage cans. 50c each. See Mr. Wil
liams at Smith Bros, camp on Mis
souri river. m9-4sw
Life in New York is getting to be
a;- picturesque and uncertain as it
was in Rome in the days of Borgias.
NOTICE OF SALE
On the 1st dny o' April. 1931. nt
10:00 o'clock in the forenoon, the
undersigned will sell One Blue Jew-
ett Touring Car. belonging to n-
iam Oertell. Motor Number 240225
at public auction to the highest bid
i der for cash, a' the North front door
of the Murray Garage at Murray,
Cass Bounty. Nebraska, to satisfy a
lien for 'abor. material and storage
I in the sum of $07. S5.
A. D. BAKKE,
ml6-2w. Lien Holder.
ORDER OF HEARING
and Notice on Petition for Set
tlement of Account.
In the County Court of Cass Coun
ty. Nebraska.
State of Nebraska. CasB County,
BE.
To all persons interested in the
estate of Amanda V. Wiley Dills, de
ceased :
On reading the petition of Addie
E. Park. Administratrix with Will
: annexed praying a final settlement
and allowance of her account filed
in this Court on the 14th dav of
March. A. D. 1931. and for final set-
jtlement of said estate and for her
uiscnarge as Administratrix
u ill annexed
u jg hereby ordered that you and all i
persons interested in said matter!
may
and do. appear at the County
Court to be held in and for said
fniintv on the Ifith il:iv r.f Anril
show cause, if any there be. why the
I . . . . j . p i IV II v v iu v n. CI . ill.,
prayer of tne petitioner snouiu not
be granted, and that notice oi tne
npMilpncv of saifl netition and the
"ning a copy oi tnis oroer in tne
Plattsmouth Journal, a semi-weekly
i . m m . - i . i
newspaper printed in said county, for
three successive weeks prior to saidlbrasKa.
i day of hearing.
In witness whereof. 1 hereunto set
my hand and the Seal of said Court,
this 14th day of March. A. D. 1931.
A. H. DUXBURY.
: (Seal) ml6-3w
County Judge,
ORDER OF HEARING
and Notice 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 the
estate of Minnie Kaffenberger. de
ceased :
r ,i ; .v, ...... m. ......
iW'ill n n n-rfi nravinff for a finnl set
.. : r '
1 ..... .... ..,,! .. 1 1 . . ii- i n if. . . t ri i o r
. i j - . . . ,..v,
count filed in this Court on the 14th
jday of March. A.
D. 1931. and for
finnl sfTf Ipnient
of said estate and
fnf hie rlicnhnrffc no Iflminictrntrir
mu
Tt iu li . i .-.i it nrrl nroH ttmt vnn ;i n rl flll
persons interested in said matter
may. anu do. appear at tne t ounty
Court to be held in and for said
County, on the 10th day of April,
A. D. 1931. 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 Riven 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. j
In witness whereof. I hereunto set
my hand and the Seal of said Court,
this 14th day of March. A. D. 1931.
A. H. DUXBURY.
(Seal) ml6-3w County Judge.
ORDER OF HEARING
and Notice 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
estate of Edward D. Slocum
In the
deceas -
ed:
On reading the petition of Theo
dore L. Amick, Administrator, pray
ing a final settlement and allowance
of his account filed in this Court on
the 2nd day of March, A. D. 1931.
and for final settlement of said es
tate and for his discharge as said
Administrator;
It is hereby ordered that you and
all persons interested in said matter ;
may. and do. appear at the County j
Court to be held In and for said
county, on the 3rd day of April, A.
D. 1931, at ten o'clock a. m.. to show
cause, if eny there be, why the
prayer of the petitioner should not
be granted, and that notice of the
pendencv of said petition and the
hearing thereof be given to all per-
sons 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
prior to said day of hearing.
In witness whereof, I have here
unto set my hand and the seal of
said Court, this 2nd day of March.
A. D. 1931.
A. H. DUXBURY.
(Sealj m9-3w County Judge.
wu ieu...B "ZT" " Lillie and Augusi Doering and prav-
Kaffenberger. Administrator with:ftl . n ormin:i.in nT th tim
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
In the County Court of Cass coun
ty, Nebraska.
In the matter of the estate of W.
D. Wheeler, de'-eased.
Notice of Administration.
All persons interested la said estate
are hereby notified that a petition has
been filed in said Court alleging that
said deceased died leaving no last will
and testament and praying for ad
ministration upon his estate and for
such other a?id further orders and
proceedings in the premises as may
be required by the statutes in such
cases made and provided to the end
that said estate and all things per
taining thereto may be finally settled
and determined, and that a hearing
will be had on said petition before
said Court on the third day of April.
A. D. 1931. and that if they fail to
appear at said Court on said third
day of April. 1931. at ten o'clock a.
m. to contest the said petition, the
Court may grant the same and grant
administration of said estate to W.
A. Wheeler or some other suitable
person and proceed to a settlement
thereof.
A. H. DUXBURY,
(Seal) m9-3w County Judge.
ORDER OF HEARING
and Notice 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 the
estate of William Shea, deceased:
On reading the petition of Searl
S. Davis praying u final settlement
and allowance of his account filed in
this Court on the 26th day of Febru
ary, A. D. 1931. and for final settle
ment of Bald estate and for his dis
charge as Administrator
It 1b hereby ordered that you and
all persons interested in said matter
may. and do, appear at the C'unty
Court to be held in and for said
County, on the 27th day of March.
iA
D. 1931. 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-
sons interested in said matter by pub-
withllishing a copy of this order in the
: Plattsmouth Journal, a semi-weekly
newspaper printed in said county,
for three successive weeks prior to
I said day of hearing.
In witness whereof,
I have here-
liintn sft mv hand and the Seal of said
tn!rm,rt thio 9f.th ,v nf WMu mm t
cw1v, mwm m mmmm m mnmmw & 0
A. D. 1931.
H. DUXBURY.
County Judge.
iseaii m.'-jw
NOTICE OF HEARING
I i-f -i f r if I II I ill. Ilorn-llic 'il.J l 1 T ft
r"V '"J , T: "T a W'
Christina Doering. both deceased, in
the County Court of Cass county. Ne-
The State of Nebraska, to all per
sons interested in said estate, credi
tors and heirs take notice, that Ern
estine Jahris hn.s filed her petition
alleging that Julius Doering and
'wife. Christina Doering died intestate
in Plattsmouth prior to 192"' being
residents and inhabintants of Cass
county, Nebraska, and died seized
of the following described real es
tate, to-wit:
Southeast Quarter of Section
Thirty-four, Township Seven
teen. Range Nineteen, all in
Custer county. Nebraska.
leaving as Ms sole and only heirs
at law the following named persons.
to-wit: Ernestine Jahng, Minnie
of the death of said Julius Doering
and wife. Christina Doering. and of
L. . .. , T ,. . ,
their heirs, the degree of kinship
and the right of descent of the real
PfPerO
belonging to the sa'd de-
ceased, in the State of Nebraska.
It is ordered that the same stand
for ca.rJPF hp 27lh. da- of Marc.h
A. D. 1931. before the court at the
hour of 10 o'clock a. m.. in the Court
House in Plattsmouth. Nebraska.
Dated at Plattsmouth, Nebraska,
this 28th day of Febru.irv. A. D.
1931.
A. H. DUXBURY.
(Seal) m2-3w. County Judge.
LEGAL NOTICE
In the District ( ourt of Cass
County. Nebraska
. Carl S. Foster, Receiver of
the First National Bank of
Plattsmouth. Nebraska.
Plaintiff
vs.
William C. West and Emily
S. West,
Defendants
NOTICE
To the Defendants, William C.
West and Emily S. West:
You. and each of you are hereby
notified that on the 3rd day of
March. 1931. the plaintiff filed his
suit in the District Court of Cass
I county, Nebraska, the object and
1 prayer of which was to re over on
two promissory notes aggregating
$1,859.83 with interest at the rate
of 87C from May 20. 192G to August
1. 1926. and 10 interest thereafter,
and costs of suit. That affidavits
were filed for attachment and gar
nishment, and on the 4th day of
March, 1931. service of attachment
and garnishment was served upon
Henry A. Schneider and the Platts-
mouth State Bank, of Plattsmouth,
Nebraska, to recover funds in the
possession of said Schneider ana said
bank belonging to you.
You are hereby required to answer
said petition on or before Monday,
the 20th day of April. 1931. and
failing so to do, your default will be
entered and judgment will be taken
upon the plaintiff's petition. This
notice is given pursuant to an order
of this Court.
CARL S. FOSTER.
Receiver of the First National
Bank of Plattsmouth,
Nebraska.
Plaintiff.
By A. L. TIDD,
His Attorney.
m9-4w
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