The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, August 24, 1931, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    MONDAY. AUG. 24. 1931.
PLATTSMOUTH SEMI WEEKLY JOURNAL
PAGE THEsEB
I v
i
r
Cbc plattsmouth lournal
PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA
Entered at Postoff:ce, Plattsmouth, Neb., as second-class mail matter
R. A. BATES, Publisher
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 A
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
You should forgive many things
in others, but nothing in yourself.
: o:
You don't realize how much legal
rights mean to a man until gang
sters and racketeers commence to
fight for theirs.
:o:
Mebbe one of the reasosn for the
mounting cost of government is that
the people are more difficult to gov
ern than formerly.
:o:
Hoover let his 57th birthday pass
unobserved, which was perhaps prop
er. Our sad regret is that Heroert
is not older and wiser.
:o:
About the only thing that people
now spend their money for as freely
as ever is attempts to put uusuccess
lul men in public office.
:o:
A daughter of Congressman Bcnk-
head. of Alabama, has just obtained
her sixth divorce. She is the most un
married girl in Dixie, and stiil going
strong. ;
:o:
Health, beauty, vigor, riches, and
all the other tnings called gcoas,
things called goods.
operate equally as evils to the vicious
and unjust as they do as benefits to
the just.
:o:-
Al Smith is not occupying the
highest office in the nation, but he
is snug and serene on the topmost
floor of the highest office building in
the world.
:o:
Southern planters nave asked the
government to print the currency on
paper made from cotton. Well, well,
at last they've struck on a plan for
making money out of cotton.
: 0 :
Policemen who defend the use of
the third degree naturally stress the
fact that gangsters show no senti
mental forbearance when they get an
officer of the law cornered. The
third degree, ruthless as it seems, at
least gives its victim a chance to get
off with his life.
: o :
Nine men. under instruction of
W. Harold Lane, prohibition expert,
studied crime detection yesterday
"with booze as their textbook," ac
cording to the headline. And no
doubt the lessons they learned will
soon be causing certain gents here
abouts to turn over a new leaf.
:c:
Radio courtesy is a new invention
that is getting a good deal of moral
support, and. we doubt not, will
thrive until it, like road courtesy and
other kinds, fades away into mythol
ogy. Radio courtesy is so fine, so
beautiful, so benefieient from every
viewpoint that it's too good to be
true, and it consists merely of tun
ing your loud speaker down, along
about 10 o'clock at night, so your
neighbors can go to sleep.
How to train BABY'S
BOWELS
Babies, bottle-fed or breast-fed, with
any tendency to be constipated, would
thrive if they received daily, half a
teaspoonful of this old family doctor's
prescription for the bowels.
That is one sure way to train tiny
bowels to healthy regularity. To avoid
the fretfulness. vomiting, crying, failure
to gain, and other ills of constipated
babies.
Dr. Caldwells' Svrup Pepsin is cocx
for any baby. For this, you nave the word
of a famous doctor. Forty seven years of
practice taught him just what babies
need to keep their little bowels active,
regular; keep little bodies plump and
healthy. For Dr. Caldwell specialized
in the treatment of women and little
ones. He attended over ;." X births with
out loss of one mother or baby.
Or. W. B. Caldwell s
SYRUP PEPSI INI
A Doctor's Family Laxative
3
YEAR IN FIRST POSTAL ZONE
tries, I
ance.
are payable strictly in advance
A Chicago woman announces that
r-ht is not afraid of mice. But then
who would be afraid of mice in Chi
cago?
: o :
The Protestant denominations.
Congregational and Christian, have
formed a merger. On less detour on
the road to salvation.
:o:
A man who speaks 17 different
languages was married the other day
to a woman who speaks 12 languages.
It's a pretty safe bet that the 12
languages will get the better play.
:o:
Well, there's one thing about next
year's dances, which will be danced
to soft and dreamy music the danc
ers may have to learn all over again,
but so will the players in the or
chestra. : o :
A Missouri manufacturer of men's
pant.- reports business better than
usual. The adage that when your
panls wear out the depression's over,
seems to apply mainly to the pants
business.
:o:
Qne feature of the airwavs that
jis preferable to the roadways is that
the air drivers find it unnecessary
to pass up hitch hikers who are over
working their thumbs in an effort to
get a ride.
:o:
They've raided a two-million-dollar
brewery in New York, which
proves, of course, that prohibition
doesn't prohibit. And if they hadn't
raided it, 'twould prove the same
thing, y'understand.
:o:
Another reason we yearn for the
end of the depression is that we're
becoming pretty well fed up on that
joke about the fellow who asked for
an increase in salary and was threat
ened with being taken in as a part
ner. :o:
A well-matured lady school teach
er down in Texas, fell in love with
ne of her pupils, a 19-year-old lad
won much renown as an athlete.
The- school board told the teacher
-he would have to give up the boy
or give up her job. She gave up
her job. Yeah, education is the hope
of the world.
:o:
Yale has dropped Latin, we un
derstand, in order to devote more at
tention to the advancement of Eng
lish. And not a moment too soon,
either. From Rudy Vallee's probably
immortal romance, we read: "We
were both dancing with someone
else." With tears, no doubt, in five
cut of our six eyes.
: o :
"There are several grievous errors
in your remarks (if last Monday," T.
H. hastens to point out. "Daniel
Webster did not say he would rath
er be right than President that was
Al Smith. And when Stephen Grid
ley said, 'You may fire when ready.'
the remark was addressed to Captain
Flagg not Bragg who countered
with a snappy 'Sez you!' But who
can tell what Calvin Coolidge said?"
:o:
It's going to be interesting to
watch Buddy Rogers's attempt to
scale the heights of night club popu
laryit in New York. Our hunc'i is,
however, that he's too smart to en
ter into direct competition with
Rudy Yallee. We believe he will de
velop his career along other lines.
Ruddy has given only slight evi
dence of that peculiar doughy ual
ity of mind that insures succc 1 as
a world-beating crooner, and it is
unthinkable that he should att mpt
to dislodge anyone so admitted! . his
superior in that attribute a Mr.
Yallee.
:c:
MAKING THE FARM PAY
That "co-operation pays." is evi
denced by The fact that the Dairy-
men's League Co-operative Associa-1
tion of New l ork State handled a
bigger percentage of its supply and
surplus products for its farmer mem
bers luring the past April than for
any April since 1923. While the
dairy outlook May first was not
zright. nevertheless dairy and poul
try farmers are in a better economic
position than other farm industries.
On April 15 dairy products were 27
j points below prices of a year ago,
. fruits and vegetables 67. cotton 42,
i meat animals 40 and grain 36 points.
It looks as if scientific eb-oper-jation
ddi pay in the dairy industry.
LONG TERM CREDIT
About a decade ago the automo
bile industry was in a bad way. The
market was dwindling. No one was
buying. Everyone who could afford
to buy an auto had one. and the mil
lions of people who wanted cars had
neither cash nor credit to buy them.
The auto makers, thereupon, went
out and turned these millions into
automobile buyers by adopting a
courageous new system o f long-term
credit. Depression left the industry,
to return only when boom times led
the manufacturers to oversell even
this new and enlarged market.
In the current issue of the Maga
zine of Wall Street. Charles Bene
dict proposes that American produc
ers of raw materials take a leaf from
the auto industry's book and create
n-v markets for themselves not at
home, this time, but overseas.
He makes a good case for his pro
posal. Poland, for example, needs raw
cotton badly but lacks the credit with
which to buy it; why, he asks, should
not an American cotton growers' co
operative group propose to deliver to
Polanu a year's supply of cotton at
the current market price, under
terms by which payment could be
made in one to 10 or even 20 years.
What is true of Poland is true of
China. Mr. Benedict predicts that
this action would boost cotton prices,
open new markets, and bring pros
perity back to the cotton growers.
The same thing, he adds, could be
done with other raw materials such
wheat, copper, and corn. In the
end he believes that the risks inher
ent in such a process would be over
come and the way back to world pros
perity would be found.
The whole program seems sound.
The most striking thing about the
present depression is that it is caus
ed, not by scarcity, but by surpluses.
There exist plenty of potential cus
tomers for the surplus goods of the
earth. The one great problem is to
make it possible for them to buy.
: o :
PROPHECY IN A PLAGUE?
When old Pharoah got stiff neck
ed and bull headed back in ancient
times, the Lord, according to the
Book ot Ejodus. visited a series of
plagues upon the people of Egypt.
First, or nearly first, there was
a plague or stagnant water. 1 nen
came frogs, lice and fleas, boils, hail
storms, hoof and mouth disease, hali
tosis and a few other things, but
the natives being sturdy folk, held
up bravely until the locusts, which
are sort of first cousins to the grass
hoppers, came along.
The biblical story is sadly lack
ing in detail, but one gets the im
pression that was when the people
quit voting the republican ticket and
elected a democrat. That was one of
the new instances in history where
the Lord was on the side of the
democrats.
Students of the Bible have always
felt a deep and abiding sympathy for
the Egyptians at that time, because
it had all the appearances of a
tough break for them. Still, the Lord
knows best at least that is what
the world has been taught and it
probably was worth all the suffer
ing they endured to get rid of old
1'haroah.
This year a plague of grasshop
pers has descended upon parts of
S"Uth Dakota. Nebraska and other
itr.tes. destroying the substance of
well meaning citizens whose only
offense ha3 been in raising too big
farm crops and voting the republi
can ticket.
On the face of things this does
not look much like the Lord's work,
but there is the precedent of Egypt.
"The Lord moves in mystrious ways
His wonders to perform." The hop
per plague may be a prophecy of
forthcoming political events. Sioux
City Tribune.
WHEN MACHINERY FAILS
The devices of a mechanical age
have checkmated some of nature's
tcrnest threats, but mankind occa-
s ion ally gets a reminder that the'th-it the slump in the price of silver
forces of nature are not to be trifled
with. even in an era of perfected
machinery.
The disaster that befell th. auto
mobile party in the Mexican lesei t
the other day is a case in point.
Here were seven people, starting
out to cross a barren desert in an
automobile. The crossing had been
made many times before without
trouble, and a trip that was an in
vitation to death a few years ago had
become commonplace.
But the auto broke down in the
middle of the desert. 250 miles from
the nearest habitation. Four of the
party died and two went mad.
Machinery had robbed the desert
of its terrors, but when the ma
chinery developed a flaw, the desert
proved just as hostile and dangerous
as ever.
: o : -
Phone yonx Want Ad to No. 6.
FALLING FOR HUMBUGS
One thing that does not always
get the attention it deserves is the
average man's unquenshable desire
to believe in something that he
knows to be impossible.
A short time ago right in the
middle of a spell of extremely hot
weather, as it happened people who
live along the shore of Lake Erie
near Sandusky, O., got all excited
about a sea serpent which was sup
posed to be cavorting about in the
neighborhood.
First one man reported seeing it,
then another. From all accounts it
was a veritable monster long,
scaly, horrendous, doing everything
that traditional sea serpents do ex
cept breathe out fire and brimstone.
For about a week these tales kept
bobbing up. People laughed, Of
course but they enjoyed them, just
the same. For no matter how sen
sible we try to be, we always get a
secret kick out of letting a part of
cur minds believe in something we
know isn't so.
Then, finally came the climax.
Two men went out in a boat and
came back with a veritable serpent.
an lS-foot python, alive and authen
tic. They had captured it in the
water, they said, stunning it with
their oars before hauling it aboard.
Here was proof enough to satisfy
anyone. Unfortunately, the climax
was followed by an anti-climax. The
men turned out to be carnvial men.
the snake turned out to be a side
show snake, and the whole business
turned out to be a hoax. The two
men and the snake vanished, and
northern Ohio resumed its usual
calm.
But it was fun while it lasted. It
was fun. first of all. to pretend that
innocent Lake Erie really harbored
a sea serpent. Then it was fun to
pretend that an 18-foot python could
somehow find its way from India to
make a home in a North American
lake. Everybody knew, all along,
that it wasn't really true but that
didn't matter.
Why is it we get such a kick out
of peisuading ourselves to accept
facts which we know to be false?
:o:
HIGH SCHOOL STUDIES
Recognizing mat criticisms to
which the American educational sys
tem has been subjected ordinarily
are too vague to furnish a basis for
constructive action. Dean Briggs of
Columbia University has met an in
sistent demand for concrete proposals
by suggesting a national conference
of educators to recommend desirable
changes in the high school curricu
lum. High schols. Dean Briggs asserts,
serve but an insignificant fraction of
the pupils attending them. The cur
riculum, in his view, is antiquated
and unsuited to present-day needs.
Consequently the great majority of
the pupils waste time and at the end
of their course are poorly prepared
for their life work.
Illustrating his views. Dean Briggs
proposes that foreign languages and
algebra be eliminated from high
ichool courses. He would stress Eng
lish, civics, history and manual
training. He believes that most edu
cators agree with him in favoring
those changes. At any rate, he
thinks a committee of educators
should be appointed to study the
matter in a concrete way and make
known its conclusions.
Here, at last, is a definite proposal.
The colleges are undergoing reorgan
ization and are adopting new plans
designed to encourage the earnest
minority of students. Does the high
school articulate with the new col
lege? If not, what should be done
to modernize and improve it?
Educators shouiu seek the answers
to these questions.
::-
SILVER REVIVAL IMPERATIVE
Senator Borah of Idaho, chairman
of the Committee on Foreign Rela
tions, in a recent address, asserted
as an important contributing cause wnere tney met air. i.iers parents.
., . . Lvle returned home with his par-
to the nresent world-wide economic: - . T, . .
ents and Kenneth Livers came home
depression and blamed the govern- wjtri his parents.
ments of the leading powers for de- j Mrs. Carl Rissmann and daugh
lay in taking steps to remedy the sil- ; ters. Cora and Elsie, and sons. Carl
ver situation.
Mr Pcrah emphasized that reduc
tion in the alue of silver was stead
ily reducing the purchasing power
of an overwhelming portion of the
world's population, lowering world
trade and more than doubling in
debtedness of the countries using
EllVer.
He outlined in detail the depend
ency of many countries on silver as
their basis of credit and said:
"The silver problem is one which
requires government action. It can
not be solved or settled by resolu
lutions or through the action of the
citizens. Governments must deal
with it. And it is somewhat difficult
to understand the delay."
ROAD TO AUTOMOBILE SAFETY
It is to be hoped that during 1931
more states will go in for "Save-a-'-ife"
motor ehicle Inspection cam
paigns such a those conducted in
ten states in 1930.
This movement is something more
than an appeal to automobile owners
tc see that their machines are in good
condition. Usually the campaign is
backed up by a law making inspec
tion of brakes, headlights, steering
mechanism and horns, obligatory.
During 1930, in the ten states. 3,
500.000 cars were examined and
over a million had defective brakes,
2.000.000 had unsafe headlights and
219,000 had defective steering.
The ill-conditioned car causes ac
cidents. The newspapers are filled
with stories of cars which suddenly
swerve from their courses to collide
with other cars or trees or to leave
the road; of drivers being blinded
by glaring headlights and running
into disaster, and so on. There is no
room on our highways for cars which
are not mechanically safe, or for
reckless and irresponsible drivers.
Last year the "Save-a-Life cam
paigns produced splendid results in
the ten states where they were con
ducted. Making the movement nation-wide
would be a fine way of be
ginning a real fight against highway
accidents.
: o:
rwvAv'.v.''.T."r T
SOUTH BEND i"
Y
Ashland Gazette
i
Elizabeth Hoffmeister spent
Fri-
day with Laura Richard.
Emma Miller spent Saturday and
Sunday at the Paul Reinke home.
Mrs. Bert Winget spent Wednes
day afternoon with Mrs. Ida Thie
man. Mr. and Mrs. Elrod were Sunday
afternoon visitors at the Bert Winget
home.
Miss Mary MeGinness spent the
week end in Ashland visiting with
friends.
Maxine Smith and Elizabeth Hoff
meister spent Sunday with Laura
Richard.
Mr. ar.d Mrs. Yirgil Kitrell and
family spent Saturday at the Wm.
Kitrell home.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Troctor were
Friday evening visitors at the Rob
ert Long home.
Miss Yiolette Tate who was stay
ing with Mrs. Date Cox, returned to
her home Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Haswell and
son. Richard, spent Sunday evening
with John Sweeney.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Haswell and
son. Harold, spent Sundtiy at the
Orville Richards home.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Dill and fam
ily were Sunday evening visitors at
the George Yogle home.
Mrs. Paul Sick and sons, of Omaha
came Thursday and stayed until Sun
day with Mrs. Ida Thieman.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Long and
sons went to Omaha Sunday to take
Mrs. Long's sister. Marjory, home.
Mrs. Wm. Kitrell returned Mon
day from her trip to Denver. Mr.
and Mrs. John Kitrell returned with
her.
Mr. and Mrs. John Sweeney and
son. Donald, and Mrs. Mollie New
man, spent Sunday at the John Timm
home in Ashland.
Mrs. Pete Stander and Mrs. Ches
ter White and son, Donald, were
Sunday afternoon visitors at the
Bert Mooney home.
Mr. and Mrs. George Thimgan and
family and Mr. and Mrs. Bert Win
get and family spent Sunday evening
at the Elrod home.
Fred Rissmann from South Da
kota, a brother of Mrs. John Timm.
Sr., is spending his vacation with
relatives and friends here.
Mr. and Mrs. Louie Roeber and
sons, and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Stan
der and sons, were Sunday evening
visitors at the Bert Mooney home.
The new section foreman. L. J.
Herbge. of Bovena. Colo., came Mon
day to take the place of Mr. Hirsh.
Mr. Hirsh will move back to Fair
bury. Neb.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Glissendors
and son. Billy, and Emma Miller of
Plankington, S. D.. and Herman End
ter of White Lake. S. D.. came Wed
nesday to spend a few weeks with
their relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Haswell and
son, Harold, and Mr. and Mrs. Or-
ville Richard and daughter. Jayce.
ann mt. iving oi umana, went. io
Lincoln Sunday to see Mr. Richard
and Ila Haswell.
Mr. and Mrs. Verle Livers and
Lyle Livers went to Sutton Sunday.
ano waiter, ano .ir. ana .virs. r-mu
Haas and Evelyn Mae and Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Schulz and Donald, all of
Liberty, came Sunday to spend the
day with Mrs. John Timm. Sr. They
took their dinner to the fisheries.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Glissendors
and son, Billy, Emma Miller and
Herman Endter. Mr. and Mrs. Wm.
Blum and family. Mrs. Ida Thieman
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Reinke and son, Paul Eugene, and
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Blum and son
were Thursday evening visitors at
the Andrew Blum home.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Glissendors
and son, Billy, and Emma Miller and
Herman Endter. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. '
Blum and family and Mrs. Ida Thie-
man and daughters and Marvin Sut-
ton, were Sunday dinnei and supper t
guests at the Paul Reinke home. Mr. j
and Mrs. Albert Blum and son, Al-
len, were also supper guests.
NO TYPICAL AMERICAN
The American is a myth; he
doesn't exist. The typical American
town or countryside is likewise a fig
ment of the imagination: it has no
reality. There are many Americans
and many American towns, but none
representative of the whole.
An English commonwealth fund
fellow studying a Yale has been
touring the United States from coast
to coast. Some of his observations
are interesting. The Englishman or
the German may be discoverable in
his own country. But the search for
an American thoroughly typical of
his nation was in vain.
Between the Califcrnian and the
New Englander, or between the
Georgian and the Indianan there are
differences that might, to a casual
observer, indicate wholly different
nationalities. Between the dweller
in a congested district of an indus
trial community and the Kansas
farmer the diversities outnumber the
resemblances. Yet all are Americans
bound together by ties stronger than
mere personal appearance or men
tal slants.
The successful role played by the
United States in the late war proved
to the world that this country could
act unitedly and effectively in spite
of the vast differences due to geo
graphy, industry and the inherited
reactions from generations past. The
leadership in financial restoration
X. which Mr. Hoover now offers and to
which the country warmly responds
is timber indication that the nation
, .... ,,
can act as a unit, even taough the
! American doe.'-, not exist.
One is inclined to agree with H.
L. Puxley, the English student who
makes these observations touching
the diversities among us. It may be
impossible to isolate type, but its ab
sence seems not to hamper Amer
icans in anything worth while they
care to undertake. Cleveland Plain
Dealer.
: o :
LOW-COST. YEAR-ROUND
ROADS ARE NECESSARY
It may be the opinion of the aver
age city dweller that the United
States is pretty well provided with
good roads. But such is not the case.
Most of the good highways lead from
city to city and over trunk routes
from state to state.
Five million farmers, according to
an authoritative survey, are cut off
from their markets during a large
part of each year, by impassable
roads.
One very definite way to secure a
practical kind of farm relief would
be to set apart a specific portion of
all available road funds to be ap
plied to the building of low-cost,
waterproof-surfaced, farm-to-market
highways connecting up with thru
roads end enabling residents on out
lying farms to do their shopping and
marketing easily and conveniently
at all times of the year.
:o:-
FOR SALE: 260 acre Stock Farm
adjoining Weeping Water. 100 acres
farm land. Good improvements; three
good pastures. Walking distance of
High school. $85 per acre. P. O. Box
22L, Weeping Water. a24-3 sw
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska. Cass coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of John
Maurer. deceased.
To the creditors of said estate:
You are hereby notified that I will
sit at the County Court room in
Plattsmouth. in said county, on the
ISth day of September. 1931, and on
the 19th day of December, 1931, at
the hour of ten o'clock a. m. of each
day, to receive and examine all
claims against said estate, with a
view to their adjustment and allow
ance. The time limited for the pre
sentation of claims against said es
tate is three months from the 18th
day of September, A. D. 1931. and the
time limited for payment of debts is
one year from said 18th day of Sep
tember. 1931.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said County Court this 21st day of
August, 1931.
A. H. DUXBURY.
(Seal) a24-3w County Judge.
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
In the County Court of Cass coun
ty. Nebraska.
In the matter of the Estate of C.
X. Barrows, deceased.
Notice of Administration.
All persons interested in 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 and furthtr 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 pertaining
thereto may be finally settled and de
termined, and that a hearing will be
had on said petition before said Court
on the 18th day of September, A. D.
1931. and that if they fail to appear
at said Court on said 18th day of
September, A. D. 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 H.
W. Barrows or some other suitable
person and proceed to a settlement
thereof.
A. H. DUXBURY,
(Seal) a24-3w County Judge.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska, Cass coun
ty, 88.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of
Emma C. Miller, deceased.
To he creditors of saia estate:
You are hereby notified, that I
will sit at the County Court room in
Plattsmouth, in said county, on the
11th day of September. A. D. 1931,
and on the 12th day of December.
A, D. 1931. at ten o'clock in the
forenoon of each day to receive and
examine all claims against said es
tate, with a view to their adjust
ment and allowance. The time limit
ed for the presentation nf claims
against said estate is three months
from the 11th day of September, A.
D. 1931. and the time limited for
payment of debts is one year from
said 11th day of September. 1931.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said County Court this 14th day of
August, 1931.
A. H. DUXBURY.
(Seal) el 7-3 W 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 es
tate of Dora McNnrlin, deceased:
On reading the petition of Jennie
Barrett praying a final settlement and
allowance of her account filed in this
Court on the 22nd day of August,
1931. and for final distribution of
the assets of said estate and for her
discharge as Administratrix;
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 nth day of Septem
ber, 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 thereon 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.
In witness whereof. I have hereunto
set my band and the seal of said
Court, this 22nd day of August, A.
D. 1931.
A. H. DUX BURY.
(Seal) a24-3w 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 D. Wheeler, de
ceased :
On reading the petition of W. A.
Wheeler, praying a final settlement
and allowance of his account filed
In this Court on the 8th day of
August. 1931 and for assignment of
the assets of said estate and his dis
charge as administrator:
It is hereby ordered that you and
all persons interested in said mat
ter may. and do. appear at the Coun
ty Court to be held in and for said
county, on the 4th day of September.
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 given to all
persons interested in said matter by
publishing a copy of this order in
the Plattsmouth Journal, a semi
weekly newspaper printed in said
county, for three successive weeks
prior to said day of hearing.
In witness whereof I have here
unto set my hand and the seal of
said Court this 8th day of August,
A. D. 1931.
A. H. DUXBURY.
(Seal, al0-3w County Judge.
i
NOTICE OF REFEREE'S SALE
In the District Court of the
County of Cass, Nebraska
William Mangold and
wife Lola Mangold; Ruby
Mangold, single; Ella
iock and husband. Jacob
Pock; Edward Mangold
and wife, Lottie Mangold;
Alice Hughes and hus
band. Perry Hughes; Oscar
Mangold and wife. Hazel
NOTICE
Mangold; Walter Mangold I
and wife, Mary Mangold
3nd Winnie Dudley,
widow.
Plaintiffs,
vs.
Paul Mangold, a minor,
and Louis Schiessl.
Defendants.
Notice is hereby given that under
end by virtue of a decree of the Dis
trict Court of Cass County. Ne
braska, entered in the above entitled
cause on the 29lh day of July. 1931,
and an order of sale issued by said
court on the 29th day of July. 1931.
the undersigned, sole referee, will
sell at public auction to the highest
bidder for cash at the south front
door of the Court House in the City
of Plattsmouh, Cass County, Nebras
ka, on the 1st day of September,
1931, at 10 o'clock a. m.. the fol
ic wing described real estate, to-wit:
The northwest quarter
(NW) of section twenty
three (23). Township twelve
(12, north, Range twelve
(12), east of the 6th p. m.. In
Cass County, Nebraska.
Said sale will be held open for one
hour. Abstract of title will be fur
nished to purchaser; terms of sale
10 of the amount of the bid at
time of sale and balance on confirm-
ation; possession to be given March
i. 1932 Dated this 29th dav of July.
1931.
WILLIAM G. KIECK.
Referee.
V. A ROBERTSON,
Attornev for Plaintiffs.
J30-5w j
Journal Want Ada get result.