THURSDAY, FEBR. 18, 1932. PLATTSMOUTH SEMI - WEEKLY JOURNAL PAGE THREE TThe IPlattsmoiith Journal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSKOUTH, NEBRASKA Entered at Postoffice. Plattsmouth, Neb., as second-class mail matter ft. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 A YEAR IN FIRST POSTAL ZONE Subscribers living in Second Postal Zone, $2.59 per year. Beyond 600 miles, f.3.00 per year. Rate to Canada and foreign countries, 3.50 per year. All subscriptions are payable strictly in advance. The best depression joke will be the last. :c: Those who are trailing 'em are au thority for the fact that a dollar goes farTiier nowadays. :o: It seems that Europe can't give the United States anything but love, sc it won't give anything. :o: If there is anyone who thinks he is not living in the land of promise, let him ask a bill collector. :o: Anyway, if we take all these opti mistic predictions with a grain of salt, it will help the salt business. :o: A snail, fastened to a card three years ago in a glass case in a Lon don museum, awoke recently and started to explore his surroundings. This would seem to indicate that nothing remains static forever, not even business interests of the snail type. nans Custom ISMehing afc BABY CHICKS W. F. WoSte Mynard, Nebr. (Phone 3614) S5 fr & m jj fr &t m .ajj&ti CHj)S --. Profitable feeds for livestock and pn:il- SWT-Cf (r- TL ey lower your cost of p.-oduciion gjBCrx and make you more: profit. - Xgjp HOI i & immk of la To be Sold at Manley, Nebr. At 1:00 P. M. at the John Stander Farm These Horses Consist of the Following: Bay team, 7 and 9 yrs, wt. 2900 Black team, 6 and 7 yrs, wt.. 2600 Brown team, 8 and 9 yrs, wt. 2600 Black team, 7 and 8 yrs, wt 28G0 Black team, 6 and 7 yrs, wt 2600 Black team, 4 and 9 yrs, wt. 2700 Gray team, 6 and 7 yrs, wt. 2800 Horses may be seen at Stander farm a week before sale Look them over The following farm machinery will be offered for sale: One 12-foot hay rake, new; one 3-section harrow, new; one Letz 10-burr grinder; one Monarch 4-ton scale, extra good TERMS CASH Irflplhi Dananelsoinia Onaeir Timber Lake, South Dakota REX YOUNG, Auctioneer W. J. RAU, Clerk The cr-nventions will be held in Chicago, a city that knows how to choose leaders by elimination. :o: World diplomats seeking a plan to prevent fighting might be able to get some good ideas from Max Schmeling's manage r. What puzzles us is the psycho logical side of New York City pol iceman who can't remember where he got ? 150,000 never forgets where he put it. :o: Add sliort cuts to history, as de vised by a hish school boy: Alex ander Hamilton was the greatest sec retary of the treasury before An drew Mellon. :o: They tell us that adapting our sele3 to the depression is merely doing without what our grandpar ents never had. Well, one of the things they never had was a depres sion like this one. & m Per Egg ... 6c each One black horse, 7 yrs, wt. 1350 One sorrel mare, 7 yrs, wt. 1250 One bay horse, 6 yrs, wt 1300 One black horse, 3 yrs, wt. 1200 One black horse, 8 yrs, wt 1200 One black horse, 8 yrs, wt 1250 One bay horse, smooth, wt 1300 Franklin Roosevelt is now report ed as being for the dole. It will be news when somebody finds something which Mr. Roosevelt is against, be tween now and June. :o: The Japanese are said to be decidedly successful imitative people. and what's more, we believe we have a very definite idea about whom they're imitating, too. :o: A noted financial expert says the people of this country will not tarn per with the gold dollar. On th principle, no doubt, that you can hit 'em if ycu can't see 'em. :o: The scientists now announce that the world will last a trillion year: instead of fifteen billion as previous ly estimated. There's plenty of cheering news in the papers if you only look for it. :o: l or its world s fair next year Chicago is going to erect a replica of Hamlet's castle at Elsinorc. The scheme is warmly backed by the ,un paid school teachers, who hope the ghcrt will walk there. :o: Hollywood reports the suicide of a man "in his modest Hollywood apart mcnt. This is tlie first time we ever heard of a modest Hollywood apartment, and may furnish a clue to the reasons for the suicide. :o: BLAMING HOOVER Has any democratically elected statesman ever been as unpopular as Mr. Hoover? A friend of mine who nays frequent visits to the United States writes to me from New York that Hoover's name is now uni verraUy linked with the depression and that a common form of New 1 ear s greeting: is to turn cut an empty pocket. It is called the "Hoo ver salute." "Two more years of Hoover and Gandhi will be the best dressed man in the world" is another pcpular saying. The Hoover-Meiion story has already come to England, but not in its correct form. The original version is: Hoover ana .Mellon walking m Washington. H. H.: "Iend me a nickel, Andy; I want to calf -wp a friend. Mellon: "111 lend you two nick els, and then you can -fall up all your triend3.", Jrit1c" -Mn New Statesman' and Nation, London. SALE! MEAID) etitle Horses 77 is THE MINUTEMEN USE AGAIN The embattled farmers of Con cord and Lexington have again fired a shot, and if it is not heard around the world it may at least be heard in Washington. If so, it will be heard there with amazement and with what other mixed feelings of joy and terror will depend on the attitude cf statesmen toward the the threat or hope cf states rights as they may respectively see it But there can be no doubt about Washington's amazement, for Con ccrd and Lejflngton have called out their minutemen to repel a federal appropriation proposed by Senator Walsh of Massacnuseus to taKe over the towns two battlegrounds and maintain them a national memor ials of the War of the Revolution. So far as available records show. this is the first time a federal appro- pi iation has been repelled oy any American communtiy, and it may be the momentous occasion marks the beginning of a new revolution for the return of the government of the states to the people thereof. In the confusion attending the opening war of this magnitude, dispatches are neeesfarily brief and obscure, but as nearly as we can make out. Concord and Lexington take the position that their battlegrounds are Massachu setts battlegrounds and that the fed eral government, which did not fight the Redcoats at the North Bridge or on Lexington common, ana in deed did not exist at that time, has nothing to do with them The position strikes us as sound and well calculated to make con gress pause in its reckless course of showering down federal money on sovereign states even when they have their hands outetretched for it The rude arch that spans the flood at Concord and the Common at Lex ir.gton are not national. When Paul Revere set out from Boston on his midnight ride he had not heard of the United States, and when the minutemen of Concord and Lexing ton sprang to their arms the only government they had heard about that was in any sense American was the government cf the selectmen of their respective towns. Nor did con- gress furnish the arms to which they r sprang. Senator Walsh,, being a Democrat, probably never has heard of the doc- trin nf ships' riht! n(i lwal cpif. . T, . ' - ,,- gUfCIUUJCUl. iJUL UC 9 11UIU iuusa chueetts and should have heard, we should think, of the war that Massa chusetts conducted against George III for more than a year before the rest of the colonies decided to take a ; s. ti v. ,v,,. I nauu m ic. lie ouuaiu ib. iucw ters up before proposing to congress that it nationalize the battlegrounds of that Massachusetts War. Mean while the minutemen of Concord and Lexington are lining the fences, fin ger on trigger, waiting, for congress to show up down the road bringing that federal appropriation. :o: "AT TAIL OF FRENCH CAET" Diplomats with whom I talked in Vienna told me with the greatest freedom that the events of the last few months had detached their coun try from Germany and had put her. however reluctantly, at the " tail of the Fjrench cart. They considered! the Austro-German customs union, j j ,vA I , I Ansenjuss ue uniuu iui ueiaiau postponed for at least a gener-jpost ation. I "What can we do?" they asked, ana men repeaieu, m siriinB iaau- on, what I had heard in Berlin. I 'France has all the power, and in-1 tends to use it solely for her own a?er.mdlzment. Germany is at last I aa ,nnoiMc v,- a r years, she has been counting on aid from Great Britain or the United States, hoping that these countries would intervene and compel France to be reasonable. England and America have not the power, even if they had I the will to help. We must take from France such terms as we can get. If they are bard terms, so much the worse for us." When I suggested, perhaps with American optimism, that with the next election France may move to the left, and the new government may of its own accord take a more reasonable position, they shook their heads sadly and smiled. We have, been here in Central Eu rope for a long time, they said in effect, but we have yet to see any government, whatever its supposed political theories, which acts other i than in accordance with realpolitik. A French government of the left which tried to be really friendly to Germany and Austria would find It self promptly thrown out. Bruce Bliven in the New Republic. :o: How does one go about getting! the federal reconstruction corpor ation to help him get some new pis ton rings for & motor that is rapidly becoming a frozen asset? 91.011 Lard Table C3t $10 Armstrong Bugs G95 oa en fild Trusts TnPTiWr filO Duofolds, Davenports--$10 to $15 Walnut Dining Room Suites $49.50 to SG9.50 Badics, Electric and Battery Ssts SIS to S79.50 Piancs $15 to S1CO Pajlcr Heaters $20 to $45 Kitchen Ranges $20 to $75 Oil and Gas Stoves $5 to $15 Beds, Bed Springs, Mattresses, Dres sers, Chests, odd Dressing Tables, Wardrobes, Cupboards and Hundreds of Dollars worth of Be claimed Goods going at a great sacrifice. Now is the time to buy and here is the place! NEW GOODS in Every Line at Prices never before Known Gtirist Furniture Go. Plattsmouth - Nebraska EIGHT MILE GROVE LUTHERAN CHURCH Sunday, February 21st. 10:30 English service. The semi annual congregational meeting will be held in connection with this ser vice. :o: Women will have all the nation al wealth by the year 2035, says a banker. They must be saving their alimony. PUBLIC AUCTION I will offer for sale on the Charles Peacock farm. 7 miles west of Platts mouth, 7 miles east of Louisville, and 4 miles south of Cullom, Nebraska, on the Plattsmouth-Louisville road, on Thursday. Feb. 25 beginning at 10:00 o'clock a. m. I with lunch served by the Woman's Club at noon, the following described property: Horses and Cattle One black jnare, smooth mouth. wt. 1600 lbs.; one black mare, 10 yeare old. wt. 1400 lbs.: one black mare, 9 years old, wt. 1400 lbs, - . . f.-a II C UJ11& tun i iicou own , t. ii heifters; 2 Guernseys, fresh, and one black heifer. Stock Hoes Sixteen head of stock hogs, Farm Machinery Two grain wagons; one rack and wagon; one 7-root peering Dinaer; one Deering corn binder; one single row lister; one Case corn planter, with 80 rods of wire; one 18-foot disc harrow; one tandem disc; two 16-in. walking plows; one Satley New Departure cultivator; one New Century cultivator; one Jennie Llnd cultivator: one Rotary Hoe; one Stover feed grinder; one 1-horse Van Brunt drill, with grass seed attach ment: one broadcast seeder, with grass seed attachment; one 3-h. p eras engine; one pump jack; two corn driers; one bob sled; two mowing machines: one hay rake; one bar I 1 . n . ama f1 n 1 IfttifOiT manure rtrl Mil ay . Ulic vtbhuhuj wuuui spreader; one 1-hole corn sheller; . fnnrs- nno 1 0fl-lh anvil; one drill; four feed bunks; one new 18-ft. Case narrow; one z-row iis- Jer; one Rock ping .Plow iz- Wnrk harness, and many other ar tides too numerous to mention. Terms Oi Sale All sums of $25.00 and under, cash in hand. If credit is aesirea on sums over $25.00. make arrange manta nrlfh t Via !! V nf RHIA. All property to be settled for oa date of Bale. Cha- E. Brilikmail. Owner w R YOUNG. Auctioneer PLATTSMOUTH STATE BANK. Clerk A Late Valentine Uog? TTogij JIf you are as short of money as we are Ions on suits, it will be to your advantage to stop in and inspect these especially good bargains in suits. , Cflf you need a suit it will be hard for you to pass these, for we've cut the livin' day lights from the prices. m)aOQ(30 at CEDAR CREEK Saturday Night February 20th Given by th Rinky-Dink Dancing Club MUSIC BY 'Chuck' Howard's Mur ray Orchestra OLD AND POPULAR RIUSIC Everybody Invited Senator Fess began a speech the other day by saying, "Lady and Gentleman." But, according to the Associated Press, Mrs. Caraway, who was reading, took no notice. Why is it people are nearly always busy reading when Senator Fess speaks? :o: FOR SALE Red clover seed, $8 bu., two for $15. Walter Engelkemier, Murray. f!5-2tw NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Rob ert Willis, 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 11th day of March, A. D. 1932. and on the 13th day of June, A. D. 1932. at ten o'clock in the forenoon 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 11th day of March, A. D. 1932. and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 11th day of March, 1932. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 8th day of February, 1932. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) fl5-3w County Judge. LEGAL NOTICE To Alexander M. dayman, Alex M. Clayman, George Snyder, William Statler, William Stottler, and alLper ing or claiming any interest in or to the south half (SH) of the south east quarter (SEU ) of Section 19, in Township 10, North of Range 14 East of the 6th P. M.,.in Cass coun ty, Nebraska, real names unknown Defendants: Notice is hereby given that Annie R. Heafey. as plaintiff, has filed in the District Court of Cass county, Ne braska. her petition against you as defendants, praying for the decree of said court barring and excluding each and all of you from having or claim lng any right, title, interest or lien in or to said described real estate and quieting the title thereto in plaintiff in fee simple. You may answer said petition In said court at Plattsmouth, Nebraska on or before March 28, 1932. ANNIE R. HEAFEY, Plaintiff. By WM. H. PITZER, Attorney. fl5-4w NOTICE OF HEARING on Petition for Determin ation of Heirship Estate of Marion S. F. Wiley, de ceased, in the County Court of Cass County, Nebraska. The State of Nebraska, To all per sons interested in said estate, cred itors and heirs take notice, that Joephine Timblin, has filed her petl tion alleging that Marlon S. F. Wiley died intestate in Alaska on or about the year 1921, being a resident, and inhabitant of Alaska and died seized of the following described real estate, to-wit: An undivided one-thirteenth (113) part of Lot seven (7) in the southeast quarter of northwest quartet (SE)4 of NW4); northeast quarter of southwest quarter (NE"4 of 8WU);, Lots three (3) and thirteen (13), In the northwest quarter of northeast quarter (SW14 SEU); and Lots four and eight in the southwest quarter of northeast quarter (SW14 NE4); all In Section nineteen (19); Township eleven (11), N. Range fourteen (14). east of the 6th P. M., in Cass County, Nebraska; leaving as his sole and only heirs at law the following named persons, to- wit: Josephine Timblin, Lizzie L. Jenkins. Sarah F. Smith, Wil liam G. Wiley. Rosabell N. Hess er, Charlie E. - Wiley, Addle E. Park, Annette N. Ellington, Warran M. Wiley, James C. Wiley, George E. Wiley, brothers and sisters; and Helen R. Read, Rose K. Smith and Malvern W. Read, children of a deceased sister. That the interest of the petitioner herein in the above described real estate is that of an heir and praying for a determination- of the time of the death of said Marion S. F. Wiley and of his heirs, the degree of kin ship and the right of descent of the real property belonging to the said deceased, in the State of Nebraska. It Is ordered that the same stand for hearing the 20th day of February, A. D. 1932, before the court at the hour of ten o'clock a. m. In the Court House In Plattsmouth, Cass County, Nebraska. ... Dated at Plattsmouth, Nebraska, this roth day of January. A. D. 1932. A. K. DUXBURY, (Seal) f 1-3 w County Judge. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. By virtue of an Order of Sale Issued by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk of the Dis trict Court within and for Cass coun ty, Nebraska, and to me directed, I will on the 5th day of March. A. D. 1932, at 10 o'clock a. m. of said day at the south front door of the court house in said county, sell at public action to the highest bidder for cash the following real estate, to-wit: Lot one (1) in Block sixty (60) In the City of Plattsmouth, Cass county, Nebraska The same being levied upon and tak en as the property of Doris Morgan et al. Defendants, to satisfy a judg ment of said Court recovered by The Plattsmouth Loan and Building As sociation, a Corporation, Plaintiff against said defendants. Plattsmouth. Nebraska, February 2, A. D. 1932. ED W. THIMGAN. Sheriff of Cass County, Nebraska. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the eHtate of W II- liam G. Rauth. 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 bis 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 4th day of March, A. D. 1932, and that if they fall to appear at said court on said 4th day of March, A. D. 1932. at ten o'clock a. m. to contest tne said petition, the Court may grant the same and grant administration of said estate to Theresa Rauth or some other suitable person and proceed to a settlement thereof. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) f8-3w County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING and Notice on Petition for Settle ment 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 Emma C. Miller, deceased: On reading the petition of Frank A. Cloidt, praying a final settlement and allowance of his account filed in this Court on the 4th day of Febru ary, 1932. and for the assignment of the residue of. said estate and his discharge as Administrator;. ... 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 4th day of March, A. D. 1932, at ten o'clock a. m., to show cause, if any there be, why the pray er of the petitioner should not be granted, and that notice of the pen dency of said petition and the hear ing thereof be given to all persons interested in said matter by publish ing a copy of this order in the Platts mouth Journal, a semi-weekly news paper 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 raid Court, this 4th day of February, A. D. 1932. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) f8-3w County Judge. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the application of Peter. Campbell, Administrator of the Estate of John Campbell, deceased, for License to Sell Real Estate. Now on this 6th day of February, 1932, Peter Campbell, Administrator of the estate of John Campbell, de ceased, having presented his petition under oath praying for license to sell the following described real estate of the said John Campbell, to-wit: ' The northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of Section twenty (20), Township eleven (11), Range fourteen (14), in Cass county, Nebraska; and Lots numbered twelve. (12) and thirteen (13), in Block numbered four (4). in the Vil lage of Murray, Cass county, Nebraska or a sufficient part thereof to bring the sum of Six Hundred Dollars ($600), for the payments of debts filed against said estate, and for al lowances, and costs of administration, for the reason that there IS not a sufficient amount of personal prop erty In the possession of said Peter Campbell, Administrator, belonging to said estate, to pay said debts, al lowances, and costs. It is therefore ordered that all persons Interested In said estate ap pear before me at Chambers in the City of Plattsmouth, In said county. on the 24th day of March, 1932, at the hour of ten o'clock a. m., to show cause. If any there be, why a license should not be granted to said Peter Campbell, Administrator, to sell so much of the above described real estate of said decedent as shall be necessary to pay said debts and ex penses. It is further ordered that a copy of this order be served upon all persons Interested In said estate by causing the same to be published for four successive weeks in The Platts mouth Journal, a semi-weekly news paper printed and published In said County of Cass. JAMES T. BEG LEY, Judge of the District Court of said County of Cass. f8-4r Ttts Journal Will capreofats your phoning 1ft ntws lUms. Call Ro. manual