THURSDAY, MAECH 3. 1932. PLATTSMOUTH SEMI - WEEKLY JOTTENAL PAGE THHTT1 i U TThe Plattsmouth Journal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA Entered at Postoffice. Plattsmouth, Neb., as second-class mail matter R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PEICE $2.00 A YEAR IN FIRST POSTAL ZONE Subscribers living in Second Postal Zone, $2.50 per year. Beyond 600 miles, $3.00 per year. Rate to Canada and foreign countries, 13.50 per year. All subscriptions are payable strictly in advance. What we need is more confidence and fewer confidence men. :o: More gas stations than bank? arc being robbed. Which shows where the money is. :o: How lucky Adam was! He knew when he Paid a good thing that no one had ever said it before. :o: If ever congressmen cut their own salaries it wcn't do any good. The millennium will be here by that time. :o: A Boston secretary who killed her employers will plead insanity. Any body who kills any employer these days is crazy. Well, better late than never, as the feller said as he locked the stable door after tht horse Lad got cut and eaten the coffee grounds. :o: "Heloise." complaied a colleague at a table in a restaurant yesterday, "the gent who finally put this cheese into circulation was a hoarder." :o: In a general election in Great Britain, a person is allowed by law to vote twie: once frcm his business address and once from his home. :o: The Police Gazette may suspend publication any day now. but if it were left to a referendum, the Con gressional Record would go first. :o: These fine sunny days and moon lit nights are all heresay to the man whose boss won't let him out of the office all day and Lis wife keep him in at night. :o: Well it's a different age all right. Many a young sport-a-bout of today who will eat only the breast of a fowl has a dad who was happy to grab the rumble seat. :o: Of course, we have regular con stitutionally provided times for such votes, but we manage to avoid a good deal of humiliation by calling them something else besides votes of con fidence. :o: These are ticklish days in inter national affairs, and really no time for metapho-mixers, such as the one who yesterday spoke of Secretary Stimson as "standing behind the open door." :o: The rooters on the Japanese side of the stadium have already begun to yell "Hold that line!" and we should not be surprised to hear mur mers from the alumni about the need of a new coach. Ilnabc's Hampshire Bired Sow Sale Tuesday, March 15, 1932 NEHAVIIA SALE PAVILION Commencing at 1:30 O'clock, Sharp This offering of sows (due to farrow in March, April and May) is equal in value to those sold February 1st. All are bred to the same boars as the February sale. Also offering 10 head Sept. boar pigs. Where five or more head are bought to go into the same county within 75 miles, we will make free delivery. Write for catalog. Hsunry ECmialbe ART THOMPSON, Auctioneer J. L. MTLLER, Fieldman Representing the Journal-Stockman Doctor says one's mind may taue indigestion. Before long-, unless we get a break, nothing else will. :o: First, the proud Spanish Don; then the rrcutl Prussian officer; now the proud Jap soldier. Pride goeth :o: The Chinese aren't so yellow. A Jap racketeer can't make them buy his goods by threatening them witn a gun. :o: Statistics cn the hundreds el spcak-easies in New York indicate that there the times are n t out of joints. :o: Secretary Mellon is so fond of the English people that he prefers their society to that of a ? 1.000,000,000 deficit. : o : Calling Chicago the Athens of America, as the professor did. sounds all right until ycu call Athens the Chicago cf Greece. :o: The farmer may now expect some splendid news from Washington. Our statesmen are thinking up new ways for him to get in debt. :o: It is stated in a press dispatch that the Federal Farm Board will func tion indefinitely. Well, that s tne way it Las been functioning. :o: A London man makes a specialty of removing squeaks and groans frcm haunted houses a last resort, evidently, frcm a disappointing ca reer in silencing used car bodies. :o : A teacher in the high school ask ed class, "What is the name applied to the place in foreign countries where the United States ministers stay?" About half the class replied, "The parsonage." There is one going the rounds of the Canadian press at this time con cerning two Scots who decided to buy a bus and go into business, both shewing up the next morning in con ductors' uniforms. :o: If the other nations representa tives had the sense of humor of even a football coaches convention, they'd get together sometime and call that disarmament bluff Russia makes at every new arras conference. :o: A new star has been discovered by the University of Turin, on asteroid of the fourteenth degree, near the constellation Ursa major. The Great Bear is gathering forces, perhaps, for another raid on the stock market. Taurus, we hope, has due notice and will take steps accordingly. 75 Head of BRED SOWS and GILTS LIMITING A DANGEROUS POWER The so-called "anti-injunction" bill, which now appears assured of passage in the senate, proposes an important piece of social legislation. Its general object is to improve the bargaining position of employees by curbing the power of the federal courts to issue injunctions in labor disputes. At present federal judges seem to have virtually unlimited au thority to en oin the activities ef labor union" in connection with in dustiial conflicts, and unquestionably some jurists in the past have abused their authority. These abuses long have called for a strict definition and limitation of the injunctive power, to the end that the right of employees to organize and bargain collectively with their employers (as long as only peaceful methods are used shall not be un fairly abridged. The recognition ot such a right is both simple jus! ice and good public policy. But too often federal courts have denied it. par ticularly by upholding what are known as "vellow dog" contracts. These are agreements, forced upon workers as a cendition of their em ployment, through which they un dertake not to join :;ny labor union, or, if thej- already belong, to resign. The result of the "yellow dug" system, as described in the senate, is that the worker under such an agree ment "surrenders his actual liberty el contract." Since that arrangement is cltuiiy contrai- to an enlightened public pclicy today, it should net be enforceable by law, pnd the pro posed bill would prevent the courts from recognizing it. But the bill goes farther. It provides, for example, that no federal court hereafter may enjoin workers or thei friends from contributing funds for men on strike, cr may prevent peaceable assembly in connection wtih strikes. The proposed law also would pro hibit the courts from issuing re straining orders without notice, ex cept on swern testimony sufficient, in the judge's opinion, to suftin tin application for an injunction witn novice to the defendants. Further- mere, it provides that a poison charg ed with violation of such an order or an injunction shall have the right to a jury trial, instead of having the judge alone decide upon the question of contempt. The generai tendency cf the bill is in the direction cf greater social justice, a subject which today is engaging the attention cf governments throughout the civilized world. :o: A BRITISH PAPER EXPLAINS The Manchester (England) Guard ian has performed a service by point ing cut to its readers that the Am erican policy against a general re duction of war debts under the ex isting circumstances may not be the product of crass ignorance of econ omic law. or of sheer brutality in the face fo Europe's distress. Such service is render-til all the more valu able by the fact that the Guardian seems to be virtually alone in grasp ing the point of view of a large num ber of Americans. The common as sumption abroad undoubtedly is that this country is both" stupid and un feeling in its present debt policy. The Guardian, however, has tak en the trouble to try to understand America's position, without simply condemning the national character. After observing how unlikely it was that the American government would take part in a new reparation con ference, a recent editorial in the Guardian continues: But the Americans are not at all an ungenerous people. On the contrary, they are, when ap pealed to in the right way and for good reasons (witness the American relief funds after the war), perhaps the most gener cus people in the world. May it not be that their insistence that Europe shall pay her debts is based upon something' more credible than economic igno rance or national greed? Their assertion that, If Europe can pay for armaments she can pay for debts, represents a moral if not "an economic truth. The Guardian suggests that if the leading European states were to cut their expenditures upon armaments in half, their action would meet with an immediate response in the Unit ed States and would greatly facili tate a debt settlement. There are, of course, Americans who would oppose further adjustment cf war debts un der any circumstances. But it is also true that a reasonable settlement of the whole debt problem would be much more likely if Europe were to strength her case by eliminating the scandal of extravagant military bud gets. :o: Advertising is the life of trade, and the merchant who advertises consistently and regularly will reap the greatest benefit. Let the Journal assist you. 7 . r; m. i uei luwd rmcsi aniens Orfateit clacks we eicr Latrlit.il at lowest i.cnv.i enence m cei starmu wit.'i swr.r ot lul-Wc-st at great saving! I-ur 17 tinnii size. TiKor aii'i lnv;u al.ilify in i-4 Won. fc? the I'-rfcs. .v I'iwn liti-a iiunHiucwi rttrulariy. I !'vks per-cmal'v culled anil mated by our Mr. ujc ri.(uebi j u evtr l.-en biwi Hocks. LKh'TiiF. V2r. etc. I.v-s ami iliicks liauljory winvtotl. ctrtied. accredited Inn t A. per ceii' i.v." ue.tTcry cuarafateed. i.ipcit cit-tom hattliii::. 'Ar ikt :::. Nev.est Simla llicMvKors. Sl:'ti;u- I'.avs. M Jfcmatlajrs. C.ei tne. free book. FRANKLIN HATCHERY kV. H. OUo. Mcr Drpt. L Council EUSSIA'S "PEACE' GESTURE it it is going on at all. will not be at the mercy of outlaws. Japan can- If the purpose of ti;e disarmament ! nn send fi?eis into all the capital? conference at Geneva is To'uTsarm, ii(cf the world to compel commerce, if might seem to the hasty observer! thf other peoples of ilie world b- that the Russian proposal for im mediate, complete and univeral dis armament furnishes the light basis t'er the conference's action. But the paradox is that the proposal was voted clown. Therein the conference acted wise ly quite as Russia expected it to act. indeed. That country has made the same proposal before with the same result. Its purple in making it casts a revealing lilit on the do vicus processes of S-r.'n t politics and diplomacy. The moving force in Fovietism is propaganda. Its hope is in internationalizing its system tiiat is, in spreading it throughout the world. To break down nation alism Soviet propaganda must break down national defense. It cannot work effectively on the -masses of other nations while those nations maintain armed forces not only for protection against foreign aggres sion, but to preserve domestic secur ity. Sovietism, while by no means pacifist, since it contemplates war and revolution as the means of spreading its system, would very gladly see nationalisms disarm throughout the world. They would then be a much easier prey to the propaganda the object of which is the overthrow cf thos- nationalisms by the revolutionary action of their own peoples. Russia knows there is no hope of complete and universal disarmament and the preparation thereby of fer tile fields for Soviet propaganda, but thrt country neglects no opportunity to make a gestuie for it. It knows if it does not accomplish, its first objective it may accomplish a second ary one. That, of course. Is to make the masses of other nations believe Sovietism is pacific, and that their own . nationalisms in rejecting its proposals tor disarmament are mili taristic. There i:-. of course, much militarism left in the world, but it is probable there is no more men acing and hateful form of it than the form Russian Sovietism has taken for its own. It has no intention of disarming, but in proportion as it can make ether peoples believe its purpoes are pacific the surer targets will thoy be fo the poisoned bullets of its revolutionary propaganda. :o: LEAGUE WAEN5 JAPAN Twelve nations, the members of the council of the League of Na tions except Japan and China, unite in a note to Japan. They point out that Japan, with superior force, has gone steadily ahead in occupying Chinese territory and making war, although her earlier promise to the league was that when her national in Manchuria ihad been protected her troops would withdraw. These league members, acting for some reason not as the council but as 12 nations, say to Japan that she has failed to live up to her covenant as a member of the league, has vio lated the Kellogg-Briand peace pact and the nine-power treaty. The re sult must be the distrust of all peace- seckinir nations, cr. as it is being called, "moral isolation." Time for warnings seem to be about past. Note writing that does not threaten action, either economic or military, seems pretty weak. Ger many, and with her Jugo-Slavia, ob jected to the note on the ground that it lacked force behind it. Japan has been tearing up notes of warning as well as treaties. Nevertheless, the warning is not worthless. It breaks new ground in asserting the world's right to insist that the world's peace shall not be at the mercy of aggres sion. It is natural to wish that the league could threaten police action. But it is not a misfortune that the league proceeds slowly. The case has to be made plain against Japan. The league has to create respect for it self by speaking calmly, deliberate lj' and justly. In doing this, it fails for lack of force, the nations which comprise it and approve it cannot miss the lesson. If peace is worth anything, it is worth some risks. As for the effectiveness of "moral isolation," it is not to be lightly rated. No nation which does not have the confidence of other nations has a future. Organized civilization, c oave moneys t . priitw we ever iBtw1!S Hie Huest Muoi i-.ranis in yeurs v.e have s;i,liiv bunt our j'lir-brcJ. farm-ratine e.cii- 7.00 W yaii.innes. r.WI ti-atel. i'rr V,HI I-s-nrtT lirenl-i slL'l.t'y rii'icr. A f vi-ry h'uee AAA. :y in Ml i r Joo N t r.i (1- t-iier A'! j: :;ii:u 'M. sny-Mjiki r' st'-j!!.. fr. 111 I.iwa "s fstm: i'r..i!- 'i. -truer:-, t'-ri free rati rj. S-.-ij Nimv'. - m.iv. ati'l Sli.J NOW ! Bljfli. la. gin to boycott her goods. The Jap anese bluff may g-j on. But if the state-mi n of Japan are far-seeing, they v.-ill not neglect the notice that Jap::!) has acted as a bad neighbor and has forfeited confidence. Mil waukee Journal. :c : "We notice that most of the grief whi !i comes to European cabinets occurs aftev they have asked for a vote c f confidence. In this country we skate around that little hazard very neatly by not asking for it. : o : Hollywood is considerably excited over Senator Brookhart's recent threat of a senatorial investigati"ti of the films manufactured out there, but probably there i.- no reason for 'agitation. At any rate, it hasn't been (the practice of the senate, when it Lad something it considered very important to the country to start in motion, to place the throttle in the hands of Senator Brookhast. :o: Northern society is snowing con siderably agitation because one of its prominent matrons, spending the winter in the South, has married her bootlegger. Although society's inter est in the affair centers only on it gossipy aspect, it really bar. its im portant social considerations. Up to this time, bootleggers have been pretty austere, and have shewn only contempt l'cr their customers. This one teems to have mellowed. :o: A Kansas editor says that next to l.eirjg told she's beautiful, a woman likes b?st to be told she has charm.' Charm, however, is something a woman either has had all her life cr else she can never acquire. Beauty is now almost a readily purchasable as prewar nose paint used to b? in the old days, and we suppose the reason is woman likes best to be told she's beautiful is that everybody likes to hear his investments approved. PUBLIC AUCTION The undersigned will sell at Pub lic Auction on the Alex Campbell farm, two and one-quarter miles east rnd a mile and one-quarter south of Murray; six miles north and two miles east of Union: six miles south and one mile east of Plattsmouth, on Thurs., Mar. 10th beginning at 10:00 o'clock a. m.. with lunch served at 12 o'clock by Lewiston Ladies (proceeds go to the Lewiston cemetery), the following described property, to-wit: Four Head of Horses One team black mares, 11 years old, weight 3000 lbs.; one sorrel mare. 11 years old, weight 14 20 lbs.; one brown horse, smooth mouth, wt. 1400 lbs. Cattle and Hogs One brindle cow, part Jersey and Red Polled, six years old; one Red Polled and Guernsey cow, six years old: two stock calves. Five brood sows, to farrow in May; six shoats. averaging 100 lbs. each. Farm Machinery One high-wheeled box wagon; one hav rack and truck; one 4-wheeled John Deere lister; one John Deere two-row: one Emerson disk; one 2 section harrow, C-ft. sections; one P & O riding cultivator; one Jenny Lincl walking cultivator; one P & O sulky plow, 16-inch; two walking plows. 12 and lC-inch; one Rock Island feed grinder. 10-inch burs: one hay rake; two gas engines, 212-h. p.; two pump jacks: one 3-barrel galvanized tank; one 30-gallon copper kettle; one Voss power washer; one grind stone; one Cruso cream separator, 550; some harness, and other articles too nu merous to mention. John Campbell Estate Feter Campbell, Administrator of the estate of John Campbell, deceas ed, will also sell at this sale the fol lowing: One farm wagon; one hay rake; one bob sled; one Jenny Lind cul tivator; ore walking lister; one 2 section harrow; one 1-horse drill; one 14-inch stirring plow; one double shovel cultivator; one set 14 -inch harness; one Fordscn tractor, and one grind stone. Terms of Sale All sums of f 25.00 and under, cash in hand. On sums over $25.00. credit may be arranged with the clerk of sale on bankable paper. All property to be settled for on date of sale. L. E. ELLIOTT, Owner. REX YOUNG. Auctioneer W. G. BOEDEKER, Clerk L. Jt. VI7fh 2V4sZ I v- z- 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 1.1th day of June. A. D. 1932. at ton o'clock in the forenoon cf each day to receive and examine all claims against said estate, with a view to their .djusiinent and allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claims atrainst said estate is three months from the 11th day of March, A. I). 19"2. and the time limited for pavmc-r.t ol dolus is one year from said 11th day of March. 1932. Witness ny hand and the seal of said Countv Court this Sth day of Februarv, i:-:!2. A. II. DUX BURY. (S'al) fir.-2v County Judge. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Florence- Rosellia Patterson, deceased. To the creeiiiors of said estate: You are hereby notified, that I will sit at the County Court room in Plattsmouth. in said county, on the 1Mb day of March, A. I). 1932 and on the 2'th day of June. A. D. 1932, r.t the hour of ten o'clock in the fore noon of each day to receive and ex amine' jill c laims i cair.st said estate. :with a view to their adjustment and 1 allowance. Tk" time limited for the (presentation of claims against said (estate, is three months from the 18th Ul.iv of March. A. D. 1932 and the time limited for payment of debts' is one year frcm said ISth day of March. 1932. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 19th day of Februarv, 1932. A. II. DUXEURY. (Seal) f22-3w County Judge. REFEREE'S SALE Notice is hereby given that by vi'tue of judgment in partition en tered on the 20th clay of February. H'32, confirming shares in the case of Humphrey Murphy, plaintiff, vs. Joseph P. Murphy, Margaret Mur phy, Edward W. Murphy, Agnes Murphy. Bradford J. Murphy, Mar guiet Murphy, Catherine Wonder. Charles J. Wonder, and Ershal Mur phy, then pending in the District Nebraska. Court cf Ca.-s county wherein the undersigned was ap pointed referee to partition the land involved in said action; upon re port e f the reTeree that physical par tition of the land could rot be made without great prejudice to the par- ties it was thereupon ordered and adjudged by the court that said land be scl'J and the proceeds thereof be divided into shares between the parties as theretofore determined. Pursuant to said judgment of the court, the undersigned referee will, on the 31st day of March. 1&32, at ten o'clock a. m.. ol said day at the south front door cf the court house in Plattsmouth. in said county, sell the said real estate, to-wit: The SEU and the N'i of the NEU of Sec. 20. Twp. 11, North Range 12, east of the 6th P. M., in Cass county, Nebras ka at public auction to the highest bid der for cash, ten per cent of the.. bid to be paid at the time of the sale and the balance of the purchase money to be paid upon confirmation cf sale and making deed by referee Said sale will be made subject to a mortgage in the sum cf $1842.12, with interest from Jan. 1, 1932 at per cent, to the Lincoln Joint Stock Land Bank on the N'i of the NEU cf Sec. 20. Twp. 11, North Range 12. Dated this 2Cth day of February, 1932. J. A. CAPWELL, Referee. D. O. DWYER. W. L. DWYER, Attorneys. f29-4w NOTICE OF HEARING on Petition for Determination of Heirship Estate of Stephen Osborn. deceas ed, in the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. The State of Nebraska. To all per sons interested in said estate, credi tors and heirs take notice, that Wal lace J. McClelland has filed his peti tion alleging that Stephen Osborn died intestate in Cass county. Ne braska, on or about August 10, 1S79. being a resident and inhabitant of Cass county, Nebraska, and died seized of the following described real estate, to-wit: South half of southeast quar ter (S1 SE.i ) of Section four teen (14). Township twelve (12), N. Range nine (9), east of the 6th P. M., in Cass coun ty, Nebraska leaving as his sole and only heirs atinrty in the possession of said Peter law the following named persons, to- Campbell. Administrator, belonging wit: Elizabeth J. Osborn, widow; Jessie Osborn; Stephen Osborn, Jr.: William Osborn; Harry Os born; John Osborn; Eddie Os born; Martin Osborn: Comfort Bryson and Mary Abel, child ren ; That the interest of the petitioner herein in the above described real estate is that of a subsequent pur chaser, and praying for a determina tion of the time of the death of Eaid Stephen Osborn and of his heirs, the degree of kinship 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 25th day of March, A. D. 1932, before the,court at the hour of 10 o'clock a. m.. at the court house in Plattsmouth, Nebraska. Dated at Plattsmouth. Nebraska, this 24th day of February, A. D. 19 3 A. H. DUX BURY, (Seal) f2D-3w County Judge. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, 8S. 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 (CO) 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. TI1IMCAN. Sin riff or Cass County, Nc braska. f4-5w LEGAL NOTICE To Alexander M. dayman, Alex M. dayman. George Snyder, William Statler, William Stottler. and all per sons having or claiming any interest in or to the south half S) f the southeast quarter (SE'i of Section 19. in Township 10. North of Ranee 14. East of the Cth P. M.. in Cass county. Nebraska, real names un known. 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 ing 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 2S, 1932. ANNIE R. HEAFEY. Plaintiff, By WM. H. PITZER. Attorney. fl5-4w 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 Alice Shipley. Jack Graves and i Clifford C. Graves and all persons in terested in tne estate or urury m. Graves, deceased: On reading the petition of Ralph J. Nickerson, Administrator de bonis non, praying a final settlement and allowance of his account filed in this court on me ciay or iruruary, 1932, and for order of distribution cf the funds in his hands as Adminis trator de bonis non, and for din charge; 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 coun ty, on the 11th day of March, A. I). 1932, at nine 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 in terested in said matter by publishing a copy of this order in the Platts- Tnrnni .pml.we.fklv news ,)apor printed in said countv. for three !SUC(.e3sive wt.eks prlor to Eaid day of In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and the seal of said Court this 19th day of February, A. D. 1932. A. II. DUX BURY, (Seal) f22-3w 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 6um 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 prcp- 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 Bald 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. f8-4w Journal Want-Ads get results I i r r1