The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, May 11, 1931, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    MONDAY. MAY 11, 1931.
FUTT9KOUXH SOU WEEBiY J0U3WAL
packs ni
Cbc plattsmouth 3urnal
PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA
Entered at Postofrice, Plattsmoutb, Neb., as second-class mail matter
R . A. BATES, Publisher
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 A YEAR IN FIRST POSTAL ZONE
Subscribers living in 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.
If a woman dresses with taste she
ought to look good enough to eat.
:o:
The only job less pleasant than
paying for dead horses is paying the
piper.
: o:
School teaching is a highly profit
able profession if you understand its
possibilities.
:o:
That submarine expedition to the
North Pole may discover the bottom
of the depression.
:o:
Chancellor Snowden. of the British
exchequer, says the nation's budget
faces a large deficit.
:o:
Only a political architect of first
magnitude could have designed the
Hoover-Morrow ticket for 19U2.
:o:
Another sign of returning prosper
ity: This year's mosquitoes are big
ger and better than ever before.
:o:
Instead of making Jimmy Walker
an ex-Mayor they gave him exoner
ation and restored his exuberance.
:o:
You can always tell a woman who
is past 30. She can pose for a kodak
picture without showing her teeth.
:o:
Finland has increased the alco
holic content of beer. You can't beat
those northern races for good taste.
:o:
Another way of expressing it is
do unto gossipers as you would if you
were the subject and they didn't
know you.
:o:
The credit man is a business estab
lishment is the chap who tells the
firm it can't afford to sell to the man
who can't afford to buy.
:o:
Members of the British House of
Commons have been denied free:
matches. Now you know what the certain ex-Mayor of Chicago
burning issue is before the House. ! probably considers it a personal com-
:o: jpliment that, as soon as he retired
Sunday. May 10th, will be observ-from 0fnce, King George felt much
ed as Mother's Day throughout the better.
nation. It will be nice to wear a flow- j :n:
er In your buttonhole in honor of Poker games are virtually un
Mother. known in Hopkins, the Journal states,
:o: jbecause men just can't keep up with
The British government has stop-j a motor car and a poker game at the
ned giving free matches to members
of the House of Commons. Starting
its economy move from scratch, ap
parently. : o :
There's not much pleasure, we ad
mit, in listening to an anvil chorus
but there's this consolation when
folks knock it means they can's ig
nore us!
:o:
Illinois I
Announcement that the
Central has been forced to reduce its
annual dividend basis from $7 to $4
per share is not good news for sev
eral thousand stockholders of that
corporation.
:o:
Building contracts in the United
States awarded during the month of
March totaled $370,000,000, as com
pared with $235,000,000 for Febru
ary. Give all the credit to Hoover.
He needs all the credit he can get
these days.
DUKES
Registered Percheron
Stallion
The Ira Parker horse, of
Cedar Creek will make the
season of 1931 at my
place one and a half miles
east of Mordock.
Terms, $10
Care will be taken to pre
vent accidents, but will not
be desponsible should any
occur.
L. A. Bornetneier
Sympathy for a man after he's
down is a twin brother to mockery.
: o :
The supply of coal in the United
States amounts to more than 3 tril
lion tons.
:o:
The incinerator was built at Camp
Washington, but most of the time
it's in the Courts.
:o:
Makinf
not such
a fool out of yourself is
a serious mistake if you
realize who did it.
. Q
There must be a little something
wrong in a land that has plenty of
everything except prisons.
:o:
In driving about this summer you'll
notice that the weenie stands, as
usual, will be hot on your trail.
:o:
If you are tired of existence, just
keep on making ieft-hand turns from
the extreme right of the roadway.
: o:
Ham Fish wants to send Butler
down to Nicaragua. Why, man.
Smedley could
even insult Sandino!
:o:
King Carol of Rumania probably ! scenes of government which often in
is quite sincere in assuring his sub- vade the states that accomplish noth
jects that he does not contemplate a ing. Mr. Borah is himself an ardent
dictatorship.
-:o:-
"Are writers human beings?" asks
J. B. Priestley in The Bookman. Do
your own grading old chap and the
rest of us will speak for ourselves.
:o:
Thirty babies are born per hour
in New York. There is a fascin
ation about the big city which seems
to attract our younger generation.
:o:
Hip pockets in men's summer suits
are much larger than formerly, some
of them being full quart size. Just
another sign of returning prosperity.
: o :
isame time
:o:
High wages are the secret of pros- j
perity, according to Secretary La
mont of the department of commerce, i
Not much consolation for the man .
minus a job.
:o:
A1 SmiOi invito! Horhpvt Hm.ver
to help dedicate the Empire Build
ing, out you u:un t near 01 Mr. Hoo- i
ver askinS Mr. Smith to help accept
the Presidency.
:o:
Too bad the doctor cannot restore
vitality to the human body like a
mechanic puts life in the old auto
mobile by grinding the valves and
taking out the carbon.
: o :
While saldiers of the Portuguese
Government are putting down rebel
lion on the island of Madiera, the
people back home are about to put
down the government.
:o:
Birmingham gangsters dynamited
a barber shop the other day. T!iere
are still a few barbers who de. jrve
treatment almost as rough as that
accorded to customers.
:o:
A New York woman is suing her
husband for divorce because of his
habit of pretending to oe dead. T. at s I
,
how a man gets sometimes who p. ays i
dummy at bridge too long.
:o:
The king of Siam went back age ,nae repeaieuiy snown. it is war. past
to congratulate the beautiful Lilynd future, which is mainly respon
Pnss after her opera performance, jsible for keeping government ex
There's not so much wrong with His !PP"ses high. Payments for past wars
Majesty's eyesight as we thought.
:o:
Governor Roosevelt's action in dis-
missing the charges preferred against
Mayor Jimmy Walker by Raboi
Stephen Wise and Rev. John Holmes
might be interpreted as a notice to in both houses, voted and Mr. Hoover
those worthy clergymen to stick toi approved $30,000,000 for the mod
their pulpits and leave municipal ernization of three old battleships.
politics severely alone.
:o:
Jack Dempsey is in Reno to get a
divorce from Estelle Taylor, and hisjreaus and examine them for fruits.
former manager. Jack Kearns, is be
ing held in contempt of court for
failing to pay $500 per month ali
mony. In spite of their quarrels, it
looks like these two Jacks were able
to get along with each other better
than they could with anybody else.
MR. BORAH AND THE BUREAUS
Answering Mr. Hoover's demand
for reduced congressional appropria-
jtions to prevent higher taxes, Sen
jator Borah says it is the fixed cost
icf our many Federal bureaus and not
ithe appropriations of Congress that
i makes government so expensive,
j The Idaho Senator points out that
iin the last 10 years Congress has cut j
budget estimates by $414, 000, Ou,
! whereas Federal appropriations have
grown from $ 1,098.000, C02 in 1914
ilo $4,821,374,000 in 1931. All lis,
7 1 , . , ...... . j . i. i . - A . ..
iic: says, uesjme iiif siuceie enoii 10
cut down expenditures," made by Mr.
Coolidge. It is a system, and an im
mensely cumulative one. There is a
degree in which it is unavoidable.
Few of u. would care to assert that
the Government ought not to exercise
supervision of transportation, as the
Interstate Commerce Commission
does; or continue vigilant in defense
of public health, as the Bureau of
Animal Industry is now doing in St.
Louis in its insistence that meats
should be inspected; or join with the
states in the building of roads; or
administer the public lands and
parks; or that the Government should
not defend agriculture against invad
ing insects, protect the fisheries and
the seal herds, and do a thousand and
one things that are for the benefit
of the country. That popular indig-
; nation which Mr. Borah forsees will
rise against a great Federal bureau
cracy will not, in our opinion, rise
against the beneficient works of the
Government, which not only supple
ment the work of the states but of
tentimes supply their omissions.
The true case, and the one against
which the people are already rising,
is against those unnecessary excre-
suppoiter of the most flagrant of
these, the prohibition bureau. The
prohibition bureau is a heavy contri
butor to these excessive costs which
he ascribes to executive departments.
According to estimates by the House
Appropriations Committee, the ex-
penses of government attributable to
prohibition enforcement are about
$40,000,000 annually. This includes
over $11,000,000 appropriated to Di
rector Woodcock's organization in
the Department of Justice. It includes
one-half the cost of the Coast Guard,
the total cost of which is about $32,
000,000 a year. The balance is made
up of additional expenses which pro
hibition has laid upon customs ser
vice, district attorneys' offices and
Federal courts throughout the coun
try, and expenses imposed upon Fed
eral penitentiaries. The estimate of
$40,000,000 does not take account of
the great loss to the Government in
taxes on spirits, which Is over half a
billion a year.
The Farm Board falls in the same
category. So. too. at least to a de
gree, does the Wickersham commis
sion. We have never meant to dis
parage all the works of the Wicker
sham commission, but we do feel that
the money spent upon its prohibition
t . t .. ; ...... Vi
ilu1u"J nnn uu. u
! troublesome issue to it was sheer po-
jlitical artifice the insincerity of
which was proved by the report. The
unpolitical and therefore valuable
work of the commission, most of
which is still to be reported, is some
thing else. As to the Farm Board
and its $500,000,000 revolving fund,
the best that can be said of it is
that it has been a losing gamble.
Gambling is expensive for either in
dividuals or governments. There is
a vast difference in bureaus, and we
must distinguish between those that
are in their nature political, and
therefore useless, and those that are
utilitarian and sometimes scientific,
a necessary corollary of government
for the benefit of the governed.
It is true, as Senator Borah says,
that Congress often whittles down
budget estimates; but it is also true,
as Congressman Wood, chairman of
the House Appropriations Committee,
& 7
calling upon the executive depart-
, 1
I raeuu ior new expenuitures, notaoiy
Jin the field of war pensions. As we
and preparation for future war take
nearly 70 cents of every dollar paid
to the Government by the taxpayer,
Apropos this vital fact, to which Mr.
Hoover has often called attention,
the last Congress, by large majorities
Nevertheless, our bureaucracy
needs pruning. We suggest that the
next Congress list all the Federal bu-
It will not take long to discover that
we are spreading an immense amount
of money to no purpose at all. We
do not need a popular uprising for
that. It i3 a field in which Congress
itself can very effectively rise. St.
Louis Post-Dispatch.
THE CABBAGE LIFE
An eminent physician accounts for
John U. Rockefeller's longevity with
the explanation that the greatest oil
man of all time "lives like a cab
bage." Lest the comparison be mis
understood, the eminent physician
hastens to say that the cabbage is a
model of temperance, eating and
drinking only when the spirit moves
;it and only in such quantities as de-
sired. Never, it seems, doe3 the cab
bage unwisely indulge its appetite.
Again, it never worries. And that,
we are informed, is the Rockefeller
regimen.
One may wonder, though, just how
the eminent physician so completely
won the confidence of the cabbage
as to possess himself of its innermost
secrets. To the layman, anyhow, the
cabbage seems as unsusceptible to
flattery or cajolery as any member
of the vegetable kingdom. Once the
Sheraton contour of its youth is gone,
it takes on a grossness that suggests
gluttony and guzzling instead of re
straint. Temperamentally it appears
placid, yes, stolid, but who knows
what humiliations it suffers at the
hands of its associates the high and
mighty bean, for example, or the su
perior tomato, or the insufferably
snobbish lettuce? It weie as fair, and
certainly a more generous, guess that
the life of the cabbage is one of pro
found despair rather than bland self
sufficiency. A happier vegetable simile for Mr.
Rockefeller would be. we should say,
the naive and guileless onion that
outsmarts them all.
A TRIBUTE TO BOY
HOOD AND GIRLHOOD
The President has many highly
interesting experiences along with
his heavy responsibilities and exact
ing duties, but not many of them,
we fancy, have been more touching
than his interview with Bryan Un
tiedt. It was a gracious thing on the
part of Mr. Hoover to invite the
young hero to the White House, but
the invitation and the entertainment
of the boy were more than personal;
they were a tribute to boyhood, the
kind of rec0gnition President Hoover
never misses an opportunity to pay.
It was made more symbolic by the
attitude of the boy himself. This boy
was presented in a little news talky
in Kansas City this week. His man
ner was serious, composed and frank.
He said he appreciated the honor the
President had shown him. but he in
sisted that others in the bus party
were as active as he in meeting the
tragic situation. His modesty denot
ed that he represented them. too. in
accepting the invitation. And so he
did; not only them, but heroic boy
hood and girlhood everywhere.
:o:
Miss Louise Astor Yan Alen,
whose name sounds like a lot of
money, and whose home is given as
New York, Palm Beach, and New
port, is going to marry Prince Alexis
Mdivini. whoever he is. No doubt
the bride-elect is well aware of the
fact that divorces can be more quick
ly obtained now than formerly.
.o:
One of the pathetic sights one oc
casionally encounters these days
while driving through the country
side is a farmer trying to plant a
crop on a hillside scarred and seam
ed with ditches and gullies evidence
of his ignorance or lack of energy.
If baby has
COLIC
A CRY io the night. Cofie! No cause
for alarm if Gastoria is handy.
This pure vegetable preparation brings
quick comfort, and can never harm. It
is the sensible thing when children ace
ailing. Whether it s the stomach, or
the tittle bowels: colic or constipation;
or diarrhea. When tiny tongues are
coated, or the breath is bad. Whenever
there's need of gentle regulation. Chil
dren love the taste of Castoria, and its
pfldo makes it safe for frequent use .
And a more liberal dose of Castoria
is always better for gnawing children
than strong mffficme meant only for
adult use.
KC
FOR OVER
0
Guaranteed pure
and efficient.
USE
less than of high
priced brands.
25
ounces
for
25
A FUTILE CONVENTION
The Chamber of Commerce of the
United States, brought face to face
with the most serious business de
pression in our history, contents it
self with the impotent reiteration of
the threadbare formulas. One search
es in vain throughout the long list
of resolutions adopted at its conven
tion in Atlantic City last week for
constructive measures which will re
store prosperity and insure future
business stability.
The chamber would reduce public
expenditures. It would cut the tax on
capital gains. It opposes increases
in taxes on income and inheritance.
It would have the Government with
draw from competition with private
business. Politics, not business, is to
blame for the depression, declared
Juiius H. Barnes, chairman of the
chamber's board of directors. He
would forbid United States Senators
to speak disparagingly of business
men. He denounced "legislative
panaceas" and decried "the paralyz
ing injection of government into the
free play of unfettered effort." Mus
cle Shoals he would sell, or even give
away, in order to stop the agita
tion for public operation which has
so discourage private business. He
would solve the farm problem by giv
ing agriculture more credit, and the
monopoly problem by "reconsider
ing" the anti-trust laws. The whole
question cf inequality of purchasing
power he dismisses with the airy de
nial that there is any concentration
of wealth in our country. Thus the
leaders of the nation's business fall
back on the ancient catchwords of
"private initiative" and "rugged in
dividualism." the very words which
were on their lips when the indus
trial structure came tumbling down
on their heads.
Constructive ideas, to be sure,
were not denied a hearing at the
convention's sessions. The members
heard L. D. H. Weld, director of re
search of the McCann Erickson Co.
of New York, propose the creation
of industrial councils tor economic
planning. They heard L. C. Rey
nolds, comptroller of the American
Yriting Paper Co., propo-ed that such
groups be given a quasi-governmental
status; that they be empowered
to forecast consumption demancl,
plan production and control sales;
that they be required to control the
rate of industrial expansion by so re
straining the exploitation of new in
ventions and the extension of indus
trial operations that production will
not outrun demand; that they build
up reserve funds to guarantee labor
income and thus maintain consumer
purchasing power during periods of
business depression. They heard
Morris E. Leeds describe the Leeds
& Northrup Co.'s employment re
serves and they heard M. B. Folsom
of the Eastman Kodak Co. tell how
14 concerns in Rochester, N. Y., have
established similar reserve funds to
cope with unemployment in that city.
They listened to a description of the
Procter & Gamble Co. salary guar
antee and heard Edward D. Filene.
Boston department store owner, plead
for unemployment insurance. They
received a recommendation from the
Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce
that the Wagner public works stabil
ization plan be extended from the
Federal to state and municipal gov
ernments. They heard the direct,
of the National Unemployment
League call for the immediate inau
guration of an ambitious program of
public works as a means of revital
izing private industry. They listened
while exporters and importers de
nounced the Hawley-Smoot tariff of
abominations..
But they took no action. Should
wages be maintained or cut? They
did not say. How is unemployment
to be reduced and relieved? There
was no answer. Should tariffs stay
up or come down? This problem.
like every other vital economic issue
of the day. they met with silence.
The convention's futility justifies
the severe criticism of American
business leadership which was voiced
at one of its sessions by Dr. Joseph
H. Willits, professor of indsutry at
ithe University of Pennsylvania. Only
jlO per cent of our industrial leaders,
he said, "are alive to the present
(Situation; 40 per cent are shrewd
men of common sense; but the re
maining 50 per cent are far down
the line. Such leadership will land
us in another major depression with
in a decade. We may again abandon
politics and trust ourselves solely to
business, but we shall do so only at
our peril."
RAIDING THE ILE DE FRANCE
Great energy was displayed when
the customs service got an anony
mous tip the other day that the
liner lie de France was conveying
1000 cases of liquor to these shores.
When the vessel docked, 135 inspec
tors and guards went into action.
They searched it from stem to stern,
without result. Not satisfied with
that, they had the entire cargo piled
on the pier, and swarmed over it like
ants for the next three days. When
the hunt was ended their persistence
had been rewarded by 110 pint bot
tles of liquor gathered from 900
members of the crew, a quota in no
wise startling. The agents' salaries
for the time spent in the elaborate
wiid goose chase totaled $4000, and
overtime for stevedores was $800 ad
ditional. There was also a loss, im
possible to calculate, arising from
the delay suffered by consignees of
the vessel's $200,000 cargo. The
convenience of passengers and the
speeding of freight across the ocean
had been set at naught by a hint
from an irresponsible and nameless
informant. The great drama of en
forcement again had descended to
farce comedy.
: o :
PICK YOU TB.EE
The United States Forest Service,
we learn, is making a study of the
kinds of trees that are most often
struck by lightning. The intention
is to advise people which trees are
the safest as places of shelter during
thunderstorms. If the plan is to di
vide the country into sections, mak
ing recommendations for each, well
and good. Otherwise we register pro
test. One set of recommendations for
all the states, would no, doubt, give
first three places to the date palm,
eucalyptus and sequoia, in the order
named. That would be entirely satis
factory to Californians, but it would
leave the rest of us without a tree
to stand under.
:o:
Job Printing at Journal office.
LEGAL NOTICE
In the District Court of Cass
County, Nebraska
Paul H. Gillan,
Plaint
vs.
NOTICE
Alma R. Waterman et al,
Defendants
To the Defendants Alma R. Wat
erman and Ida W. Wf.gner:
You are hereby notified that on the
ISth day of April, 1931, the plain
tiff filed his petition in the District
Court of Cass county, Nebraska, the
object and purpose of which is to
foreclose lien of tax sale certificate
on Lots 5 and 6. in Block 10. in the
City of Plattsmouth, Cass county.
Nebraska, and for equitable relief.
You are further required to answer
said petition on or before Monday,
June Sth, 1931. and failing so to do,
your default will be entered and
judgment taken upon plaintiff's peti
tion. This notice is given pursuant
to an order of this Court.
PAUL, H GDLLAN,
A. L. TIDD, Plaintiff.
His Attorney.
a27-4w
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals will be received,
until the fifteenth day of May, 1931,
by the Board of Education of school
district number thirty-one, at Cedar
Creek, Nebraska, for the erection of
a grade school building, to be lo
cated in Cedar Creek. Nebraska, as
per the plans and specifications on
file with the clerk of said school
board, R. N. Stivers.
Plans may be had from the Archi
tect, Everett S. Dodds, 5011 North
22nd street. Omaha, Nebraska, on de
posit of five dollars, said deposit to
be returned to the unsuccessful bid
ders, on the return of the plans in
good condition, with bonafide bid on
the work.
A certified check for five per cent
of the bid must accompany the pro
posal, made payable to the treasurer
of school district number thirty-one,
of Cedar Creek, Nebraska. In case
the successful bidder fails or refuses
to enter into a contract for the per
formance of the work and furnish
bond acceptable to the board, as re
quired by law, such check shall be
forfeited to the board, as liquidated
damages.
The bids will be received allowing
general contract and heating. The
board reserves the right to reject any
and all bids and waive any formality.
Plans are on file at the Omaha Build
ers Exchange.
R. M. STIVERS, i
Clerk of Board.
EVERETT S. DODDS.
a23-3w Architect.
NOTICE TO CREDITOR:
The State of Nebraska, Cass coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of
Alexander Jardine, deceased.
To the creditors of said estate:
You are hereby notified that I will
Bit at me county touri room in
Plattsmouth, in said county, on the
22nd day of May. A. D. 1931 and on
the 28th day of August, A. D. 1931.
at ten o'clock a. m., of each day, to
receive and examine all claims
against said estate, with a view to
their adjustment and allowance. The
time limited for the presentation of
claims against said estate is three
months from the 22nd day of May,
A. D. 1931 and the time limited for
payment of debts is one year from
said 22nd day of May. 1931.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said County Court this 2 0th day of
April. 1931.
A. H. DUXBURY.
(Seal) a27-3w County Judge.
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
In the County Court of Cass coun
ty, Nebraska.
In the matter of the estate of
Amelia Heisel. deceased.
Notice of Administration.
All persons interested in said es
tate are hereby notified that a peti
tion has been filed in said Court al
leging that said deceased died leav
ing no last will and testament and
praying for administration upon her
estate and for such other and further
orders and proceedings in the prem
ises as may be required by the stat
utes In such cases made and provided
to the end that said estate and all
things pertaining thereto may be
finally settled and determined, and
that a hearing will be had on said
petition before said Court on the
22nd day of May. A. D. 1931, and
that if they fail to appear at said
Court on said 22nd day of May. A.
D. 1931, at ten o'clock a. m. to con
test the said petition, the Court may
grant the same and grant adminis
tration of said estate to Anna Heisel
or some other suitable person and
proceed to a settlement thereof.
A. H. DUXBURY.
(Seal) a27-3w County Judge.
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
In the County Court of Cass coun
ty, Nebraska.
In the matter of the estate of
Oscar Keil, deceased.
Notice of Administration.
All persons interested in said es
tate are hereby notified that a peti
tion has been filed in said Court al
leging that said deceased died leav
ing no last will and testament and
praying for administration upon his
estate and for such other and fur
ther orders and proceedings in the
premises as may be required by the
statutes in such cases made and pro
vided to the end that said estate and
all things pertaining thereto may be
finally settled and determined, and
that a hearing will be had on said
petition before said Court on the
29th day of May. A. D. 1931. and
that if they fail to appear at said
Court on said 29th day of May. 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 Dorothea Keil. or
some other suitable person and pro
ceed to a settlement thereof.
A. H. DUXBURY.
(Seal) m4-3w County Judge.
SHERIFF'S SALE
State of Nebraska. County of C
ss.
By virtue of an Order of Sale la
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 23rd day of May,
A. D. 1 "9 3 1 . at 10 o'clock a. m. of
said day at the south front door of
the court bouse in the City of Platts
mouth, in said county, sell at public
auction to the highest bidder for
cash the following real estate, to
wit: Lots Eleven (11) and Twelve
(12) in Block Five (5) in Town
send's Addition to the City of
Plattsmouth, Cass county. Ne
braska The same being levied upon and
taken as the property of W. T. Craig,
real name William T. Craig, et al.
defendants to satisfy a judgment of
said court recovered by Plattsmouth
Loan and Building Association a
corporation, plaintiff against said de
fendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, April 20th,
A. D. 1931.
BERT REED.
Sheriff Cass County,
Nebraska.
a23-5w
NOTICE OF SALE
In the matter of the estate of
Maggie Pailing, deceased. ,
A notice is hereby given that in
pursuance of an order of Hon. James
T. Begley, Judge of the District
Court of ("ass county, Nebraska,
made on the 28th day of March,
1931. for the sale of the real estate
hereinafter described, there will be
sold at the Pailing Homestead adja
cent to the Village of Greenwood.
Nebraska, in said county, on the 23rd
day of May. 1931, at 10 o'clock a.
m., at public vendue to (he highest
bidder for cash; 15 of the bid to
be paid in cash at the time of sale
and the balance of the bid to be paid
on or before confirmation and deliv
ery of deed, the following described
real estate, to-wit:
The north half of the south
east quarter Section 32, Town
ship 12, North, Range 9. and the
northeast quarter of the south
west quarter of Section 20,
Township 12. North. Range 9,
east of the 6th P. M.. in Cass
county, Nebraska.
Said sale will be open one hour.
N. D. TALCOTT,
Administrator of the Estate of
Maggie Pailing. Deceased.
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