r MONDAY, MATXH 21, 1933. FLATTSIIOinni SEUI-WEEEXT JOtJBNAL PAGE TERES hi" 4 i i 0 I K TThe IPIattsmQuth Jeiarnall PUBLISHED SEUI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSHOUTII, TXEE2&S2A Entered at Postoffice. Plattsmouth, Neb., as second-class mail matter R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 A YEAR IN FIRST POSTAL ZONE Subscribers Jiving in Second Postal 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. Apparently the great yellow race isn't. :o: Candidates are busy rounding up the elusive voter. :o: : New York political fights are usu ally won by the tin boxers. :o: Nothing more heard about the pro jected South Omaha bridge.. :o: Latest reports show that peace is still raging in the Far East. :o: The chief trouble with the law's teeth seems to be gold filling. :o: Mr. Hoover doesn t believe in boarding anything but delegates. :o: Shanghai optimists are locking forward to a spring building boom. :o: City election April 3th and then comes the Nebraska primary a week later. :o: If you're well acquainted with them, you always think of your rela tives as kinfolks. :o: Another thing much talked about, but nothing done about, is that oiled road on the Platte bottom. :o: The man in the bread-line i3 feel ing better now that stock are going up because the Government has made it easier for bankers. :o: A circus-manager says that con tortionists are the hapviest perform ers. No doubt, because they are able to follow their own bent. :o: Railroad companies issued 25 mil lion tickets a year, but you wouldn't think so from all the fuss they make if you happen to lose one. :o: Banker says that women will have all the wealth in the country by the year 2035. Well, by that time they'll be welcome to ours. :o: It's an ill wind that blows nobody good. By now pretty near every body know3 how many "p's" there are in kidnaped. -:o:- Hope the Literary Digest will hurry up and finish that poll. Nu merous public leaders are anxious to learn where they have always stood on Prohibition. :o:- The Platte bottom road can never be repaired. Best way is to break up the few remaining "shells" of oiled surface, and put it back into a main tained gravel highway until such time as it can be paved, for that is the only hard-surfacing that will "stick" there. It won't be war, we assume, un less the Chinese occupy Japanese territory. :o: George must have been good to get such a reputation before Sol Bloom started to help. o A man can do what he ought to do. and when he says he cannot, it is because he will not. :o: But if twenty poor men should in jure property as the "short interests" have, they would be dangerous Reds. :o: Submarines might be a lot more popular if it were not for their dis tressing habit of going permanently sub. :o: One harassed bridge playing hus band says his wife is a great ex ponent of the reproach bidding sys tem. :o: The really big story of the cur rent war will come when Japan pre sents China with a bill for repar ations. :o: Sales taxes, we read, are coming. So it won't be long before every part of the citizen will be taxed except his squeal. . :o: The saxophone came into use late in the last century, but nobody sus pected its possibilities as an offen sive weapon until just before the Great War. :o: ' We may have to wait as long as a week before we get an explanation of those 400-odd dry votes that show- id up in the Literary Digest poll from Milwaukee. :o: A French author has written a book titled. "India's Untouchables." He hasn's seen anything yet until he comes over here and tries to touch one of our bankers! :o: The probability of paving on a por tion of O street this year, lends as surance to it being "the" paved east and west road, instead of some of the winding side roads. :o: The canning factory has come into our midst without a penny subsidy making it all the more desirable. It will pay out many thousand dollars to laborers and farmers. :o: Certainly marriage has lost some of its horrors. You can now buy canned biscuit3 and also pie dough ready for baking, which, after a proper term in the oven come forth just as delicious as those mother used to make after fifty years married life and service. THE AGE TO FLY Diet Didn't Do This! J ff f?L t HAPPY little girl, just bursting with pep, and she has never tasted a "tonic! Every child's stomach liver, and bowels need stimulating at times, but give children something you know all about. Follow the advice of that famous family physician who gave the world Syrup Pepsin. Stimulate the body's lilal organs. Dr. Caldwell's prescription of pure pepsin, active senna, and fresh herbs is a mild stimulant that keeps the system from getting sluggish. If your youngsters don't do well at school, don't play as hard or eat as well as other children do, begin this evening with Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. This gentle stimulant will soon right things! The bowels will move with better regularity and thoroughness. There won't be so many sick spells or colds. YouH find it just as wonderful for adults, too, in larger spoonfuls! Get some Syrup Pepsin; protect your household from those bilious days, frequent headaches, and that sluggish state of half-health that means the bowels need stimulating. Keep this preparation in the home to use instead of harsh cathartics that cause chronic constipation if taken too often. You can always get Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin at any drug store; they have it all ready in big feoUka. What is the right age to learn to fly, and having learned, to continue flying? The popular answer is, , pre ferably in the early twenties. And this answer has been so long return ed to the query as to the best age to learn anything, from foreign lan guages and games to music and art, that those who have been forced to delay their higher education until a later period find themselves faced with the superstitious belief that learning will be more difficult for them than for their younger asso ciates. Within the last few years these superstitions have received an em phatic denial in the work of em in ent natural scientists, to whom the adult learner has presented a new and interesting problem; and it has been found to the satisfaction of many of these investigators that the ability to learn does not diminish. but actually increases, with ma turity. And now the statement is boldly made that these findings apply also to that most youthful of all occu pations, flying. That a man of fifty or sixty may drive his own automo bile, but may not fly his own air plane, is a view still generally 'held. An article in a recent issue of the Spur refutes this theory. Its author is one who first felt a desire to fly when he had attained the age of fifty, and who proceeded to put that desire into practice. The belief that only young can fly he calls a "fetish." When he inquired of his instructor whether he was the oldest student pilot in the school, a plane was pointed out to him "spiraling down from 2000 feet." Its occupant, fly ing solo, was a student of sixty, about to receive his pilot's license. Learning in the academic field3 has been for so long regarded as the exclusive prerogative of youth that a good deal of reiteration may be required to convince older people of their superior privileges in this re- pect. But flying, as a comparative ly new art, should be relatively free from the hoary superstitions that have withheld people from enjoying activities which, did they only real ize it, were rightfully theirs. The time to learn any subject is when interest and desire impel one to do so. The age to fly is the age at whicn one wants to fly, whether sixteen or sixty. ...... , :o:- MR. CHURCHILL IS CONFUSING On leaving America after a visit of several months, Winston Chur chill, former chancellor of the Brit ish exchequer, had little to ray and that little was puzzling. Mr. Chur chill merely remarked that "we in England have jumped our barrier, but you still have yours before you; but, of course, you will jump it." It is said that Mr. Churchill seemed to refer to recent English tariff leg islation, which "has made the way more clear for us." Yet this does not make Mr. Churchill's brief com ment clear for us over here. For it this country's hurdle is the tariff, nobody expects to jump it; not right away, at least. Britain jumped hers by putting on a practically general tariff of 10 per cent, having been al most a free trade country. Quite possibly there has been enough jumping in that direction in Amer ica, and most people probably are so tired of the exercise that they are willing to try something else. Even the Democrats in congress do not. seem inclined to do any jumping o LOST BUT W0 Not all the glory of the game is in winning, although that is a de sirable attribute of any team. And so, while Plattsmouth Hi gri deters yesterday lost an opportunity to ad vance to the semi-finals and probable victory In the state tournament, they have won the esteem of the sports writers and their friends and follow ers back home for the clean, sports manlike manner in which they have conducted themselves in all their con tests, reflecting great credit not only on themselves, but upon Coach Roth- ert. While they lost they have also won won not only the esteem men tioned above but a life-long lesson in true sportsmanship and one that will stand them in good stead when they go forth from school to battle for themselves in the world. In the many games they have play ed, we have never seen a Plattsmouth player deliberately foul an oppon ent, even, when the other team re sorted to that kind of ti ctics. Clean playing has been their n otto and the satisfaction of knowing they have al ways conducted themselves thus is worth more than a victory over Crete or even the state champijnship itself. Another thing, they Lave always been ready to abide by the decision of the referee without pretest or quib bling and so it was but natural that the spectators at Lincoln were boost ers for this clean young team, even when they were doomed to defeat. In an earlier game, a Crete play er thrcwed the ball into the bleach ers because the referee called him for traveling and earned the boos he received for such action. The con duct of players is governed largely by the training of tteir coach and this action reflected upon the entire team and Coach Kline himself. Last year. when defeated in the finals, the same Kline-coached aggregation announced It would never again enter the state tournament, earning them the title of poor losers. Victory doesn't always come, and the fellow who ctn accept defeat in the same good spiru as though he had won, is destind to make a mark for himself in the wirld. Plattsmouth lost a game at Lincoln yM(rdr ut wof Inestimably more in the sportemanlke manner they ac- W0RLD REVOLUTION As between the two bitterest ad versaries, Trotzky and Stalin, it will soon be true that each has answer ed the wish of the other by writing a book. If there were any doubt about the real Trotzky's new history of the Russian Revolution in his an cient rival Stalin, it would have been removed by the interview re cently issued by the exile of Prink ipo in which he predicts the col lapse of the StaUinist regime. It is now announced that Joseph Stalin will line up his own side of the story in the prolonged and celebrated de bate as to who is the true successor to the Lehninist teachings, he or Trotzky. But it is also stated that there will be a good deal in the book abont soviet Russia's relations with the outside world. That would be essential to the argument. One of the thecretiral issues between Trotzky and Stalin was the proper role for the soviet government in promoting the cause of the world revolution. Such a revolution was the real purpose of Lenin's labors, and to it every true Marxian must dedicate himself as the only true goal. Today the impressive fact about the world revolution which Trots ky and Stalin accuse each other of TT7 SHERIFF'S SALE SAME PRICE forover yeQrs it .if) 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 County, Nebraska, and to me direct ed, I will on the 9th day of April. A. D. 1932, at 10 o'clock a. m. of said day at the South front door of court house in Plattsmouth, Nebras ka, in said County, sell at public ! auction to the highest bidder for cash the following real estate to- wit: West half (W) of the southwest quarter (SV) of Section twenty (20) in Town ship twelve 12) north; Range twelve (12) East of the sixth principal meridian in Cass Coun ty, Nebraska; The same- ro be levied upon and taken as the property of James Tig ner and Mary Tigner, defendants, to satisfy a judgment of said court re covered by Charles Johnson, plain tiff, against said defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, March 7. A. D. 1932. ED W. THIMGAN. Sheriff Cass County. Nebraska m7-5w SHERIFF'S SALE State Cit Nfhrnckn Cmtntv of Pici i the hollow laugh of the war god By virtue cf an Order of Sale, is- rumbline down the count Iprs vparc FUed by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk of the I Tlir-t .! ...tLJ- 1 M . .... 1D w.c r.,.u MCoUDtJ.( Nebraska, and to me di me gnosiiy groans or Dutchered rected. I will on the 2nd day of boys, murdered in the flower of their April A. D. 1932. at 10 o'clock a. m. .... I Af COltfl 1 X t V. A r- -va V. .1 vs. M betraying is that its prospects should mannoou oy fcate and greed and il- the Court House, in the CI t y of nave Deen growing so dim under the " ,u..u-nriam. Fiattsmouth. in said County, sell at circumstances that in theory are ex- :o: public auction to the highest bidder mioT.PiiT favnhia t it rifr- I . . . . me icnowing aescrmea " ' " I lJoiice Judee rharies Hravps la nne real estnto to-n-if . - -w- . . ...... ror nearly tnree years the economic public officia, who ,t - r . . . . I - ',Jl OI ine capitalistic peoples nas port of both partIes an(, a ain this oten in a state cf prostration. The year was nominated by botn pomical " JUUS a,Uiy ot unemployed is esti- caucuses. The days of the hyphenated mated to be close to 20 millions. The brat.ket on ballot9 in N.braskaf how. nations nnances are disarranged. On ever. are over, and now when a man every side one hears of complete loss is nominated by both parties, it is up or commence m the entire scheme to him to determine the political of social and economic organization under which the world outside of Russia has been living. Wherever one turns to in Europe one discerns conditions that used to be set down as ideal for the proletarian revolu tion. But it is also true that no- designation under which he will run. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The north eighty-reven (87) feet cf Lots one (1), two (2). three (3) and four (4). Block four (4). in the Original Town of Plattsmouth, Cass County. Nebraska, as Furveyed, platted and recorded, together with all the appurtenance thereunto be longing, subject to the lien of Occidental Building and Loan Association: The same being levied upon and taken as the property of Edith Mar tin, cetendant, to satisfy a judgment of said Court recovered by Becker Roofing Co., defendant and cross- petitioner, againpt said defendant. Plattsmcuth, Nebraska, March 1, The state of Nebraska, Cass Coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of A. D. 1932 where in Europe today is the com- William G. Rauth. deceased. ED W. THIMGAN. muni,t peril regarded as serious. The To the creditors of said estate: Sheriff Cats County, Nebraska nrohlPm that enaa th. tprtinn ou are hereby notified, that I will m-5w . .. ... sit at the County Court Room in toaay is tne extreme challenge to Plattsmouth. in r.-iWI r.nintr ta NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S sat.f communism, and that i3, of course, 1st day of April. A. D. 1932. and fascism. n the 2nd day of July, A. D. 1932. OF LAND cepted their reversal. -o; , EASTMAN Rarely dea mma ' combine the Germany best illustrates the start- Le" lh fl l.Ii ihfl ling change, but the signs are to be claims against said estate, with a by the Clerk of the District Court of found in many places. Till four years view to their adjustment and allow- Cass county, Nebraska, in an action ago it was the common formula that ance- The time limited for the pre- pending in said court in which Vin- peoples must not be allowed to slide li11Ui3 ,aa,nst Baa es- ceni . atrauo is plaintiff and Frank , 1 . 1 ? auowe1 to sUde tate is three months from the 1st A. Cox and Louisa M. Cox are defend ing uespair lest iney throw them- day of April. A. D. 1932. and the ants, commandintr me tn ell th ri Dualities tfct achieve success in so es 1010 ine arms or Dshevism. Ior payment or debts is estate hereinafter described in satis- J ion Tt eHUCCeSS in Victor nations were warned not to er from 6aid lst d April, faction of the amount adjudged by many direions cf endeavor as did defeated na- "fv-", , , , . the decree of fial Court entered June George Eraarj. If posterity iden- ? n nard on lefeated na- Witness my hand and the seal of 13, 1931. to be due plaintiff In the tifies himnly with the populariza- Uo th vanquished turn red d County Court this 4th day of sum of $7,222.57? with . Inters? and Hnn of tcamora it ni vw i nd DIing down th ctor with Marca. 19 . costs, as in said decree provided. I. A. ti. UUXBIIRY. tho 1 ci : -m I I thTrMl VAS tf-fc rnrnmnti .... . n I part of tl man. But this can hard- , (Seal) m7-3w hr wVthe cs for hia the main arment for lair treat- " "J 4. -m .... I thror-v as stamped its indelible "1"11 01 rmany ana a solid argu- SHERIFF'S SALE nielli is mai ine uerman people UUXBlKl, I the unrierKffrnri Sheriff of Pn,, County Judge, ty, Nebraska, will, on April IS, 1932, at 11:00 o clock a. m.. at the south front door of the court house in the City of Plattsmouth, in Cass county. 0t V remembered 0 , J nust not be drive" Into the arms of I State of Xebraska. County of Cass Nebraska, offer for sale at public i v r. . Hitler. In any number of less fm.ra' . . vendue the following described real Knew r- ""'J w mane nis . . ay virtue 01 an order of Sale is- estate, to-wit: venticwork for him, but also how V a " 1 UIUPe on sees cued by C. E. Ledgway. Clerk of the South 75.40 acres of the north to m the resulting wealth work ."""-iti aes ana methods In district court within and for Cass west quarter of Section 2, in for tffellow men In two imnnrt vSue- But the communist menace cou?ty. Nebraska, an J to me directed. Township 10. North or Range LiV T k imPrt- ha8 dwindled Even in revolution- Lwl" on the 16th day of APril A- D- 12' East of tne 6th p- M.. in Cass nnt OeCtS his llberalifv heean at u' E,re" ln revolution- 103? nt m vio,lr o r j .on K,i- though it did not end there. y &paln uPn 'nich Trotzky s at the south front door of the court and will sell the same to the highest It tn. nrst of aii, in his own fac- "u msa wnn earnest in me uy 01 Plattsmouth, in oiaaer ior casn tore instituted a wage dividend l' ne Unist challenge h ,7" pIjAnd later gave a large block of CaS "een dlsPsed greater followI ng real estate to-wit: i st for distribution among the em- ease than would have been believed pies so that all might share the " 1 ' dU,UBe ,n -UTPe na perity of the company. It cen- ti, next, in his home at Rochester, e as a young bookkeeper he ftd his first 15000 to launch bis m mm . m . . ui 01 nwmng pnotOgrapniC dryl "Uh.n their oa mii.j fondants to cattf li I J " I t AltlCU nC a.w uvi0i; a fes- J called Here he built the Eastman School I beer. la dozen years ago. New York Times. :o: THE ANSWER The west half of Lot 2 and all of Lot 3 in Block 16, in Latta's first addition to the Village of Murray, in Cass coun ty, Nebraska The .same being levied upon and taicen as the property cf Frances F. lirendel and Thomas J ED W. THIMGAN. Sheriff of Cass County, Nebraska. Wm. H. Pitzer, Attorney. ml7-5w REFEREE'S SALE Notice is hereby given that by Music with its allied activities, they called it victory and celebrated peaking his own taste for music. with wine. We were too old to fight A Brendel de virtue of Judgment in partition en iVdement 'of on Ahe th day of February. tt , ,v. , said Court recovered i.v tnhn s v,i connrming shares in the case : v,iwi plaintiff, against said defend iV HumPhy Murphy, plaintiff. Ahen our sons were killed ant piaini,n' aamst said defend- jOSeph P. Murphy, Margaret a vs. Mur- nTk mm T! J W m . Plattsmouth. Vphrta fori, t .IiUa. Murpny, Agnes D i?? " Murpny, Bradford J. Murphy. Mar aw. ri rat u t vx V mw Ma- f v VV. 1 HlMllAN, I fhQ rloo T Wnnrlor f l.t ,.. Sheriff of Cass County, phy. then pending in the District Court of Cass county. Nebraska. wherein the undersigned was aD- pointed referee to partition the land involved in said action; upon re- Nebraska. the tariff, one way or the otheri, gaTe more than ,35,000.ooo to C" 1 'Jl "..1 J, f. ' But Mr. Churchill is encouraging lte UniVerslty of Rochester Hut t V. , ciniverstty or itocheeter. But 1 stood in front of this hotel nhPn me pairing worn mai uui umticr, atlt ol j , . . . - i whatever it is. will be iumned. Pet T!? t0. 81 mW? th" K son marched He oing to Ul7 - - iiv,uuu,uvu 10 ine aiassacnusetts his death and I eheered" hap, it'. bter h. we don-t knJMtUute of TMllIloloB)r. , entrt. h"Tb!rlC'e" ' h .,. lORDBR OP HEARING AND NO usi wnai me oarncr is. ,ute to Neero BPhnola nrwl t hiM l , ' ". . .TIPE f)F PRnmr- nt- trttt TJIl """" 1 " w uue ui nis cnaraciers a r.prman ' 1 1'"1 L iut mcic mai imysicai car - O. I. J.t, Jl,..,.. t t 1 - I - I tltlnn of Vi I..J . j . uioiciisai j lu inuun as ue rather who has lnct Ma hnr t - . I iimue ad done in Rochester eiff. oii toirt . in ine -ouniy court or Cass coun- without great prejudice to the par- 1 e in "ocnester girts all told war are from the nen of a Prpnrh. lv. Nehraska iA, .v,. ...L! J . of com a TK nnn nnn it- . , .... ' " . . "V . . '"""l" uiutieu uuu T.VVVU,vvv. Bigiii- man. in his play, "The Man I Kill- iaie 01 AeDraska, Cass county, ss. adjudged by the court that said land ficant about his philanthropy, how- ed," now beine shown in thi rnnn- To a11 Persons interested in the es- be sold and the proceeds thereof be ever, was his devotion of time and in, in mmi. I Kuaoiph H. Ramsel, deceased, divided Into shares between the study to have the moner mo,t r. - . , siaau I "n reading the petition of Tillie Parties as theretofore determined. money most re- hollows faithfully and fearlessly the Ramsel praying that the instrument Pursuant to said Judgment of the DU1"UU appiiea. voune Herman. Frinna n0rr,o nJed in this court on th 7th daw of court, the underpinned refrre -ni - 0 ' 1 . . ' 1 . . . . .. Too bad, boys! -:o: Plattsmouth is proud of you as proud as they were Tuesday when they showed in a measure appreciation of your splendid se record and regional victory. :o: Natural gas line to South will be completed soon but a j behind the predicted time wt was to have been available packing houses. :o: Better business conditions ing prophesied as the baby paign brings out the hiddei Restored confidence will dc ward bringing this about. :o: We hope it doesn't embany body to read that the enf rofit" Ing by Al Capone's refxper iences, are paying their In a period when so men would like to pay but have no incomes pay, it may be natural together proper, to si who does pay his crook. uu8 ne iook care to be success- The motif of Rostand's nlav fa th luarta ana purporting to be va lue aay or iiarcu, i3Z. at rul in Dhilanthronv as h h. hn ... .Z the last wil1 ani testament of the ten o'clock a. m., of said day at the in invent Ln Zf,fLi Remarque motif. "The Man I Kill- said deceased, may be proved and al- outh front door of the court house in in invention, manufacturing, finan- ed" is "All Quiet on the Western lowed and recorded a th. ?ct Plattsmouth. in said muntir. n tu I " W mm cial Organization, advertising and Front" all over ajrain Th. Mtti. i testament of Rudolph H. Ram sales direction. He placed a High is post-war. as Remarque's value on research in industry, the hnnk "Th . . .. , i 'uiuituauuii ui isaia estate De grant- results of which, under his sponsor- and the theme is handled differently. ed to Tillie Ramsel. as Executrix; rngea irom nexioie photo- But it is the same theme, the same " 18 nereDy ordered that you. and 'V'ZZ' rsrj: a - tttri ?,5S ssss , uivimcui ui mai uruiai ouicnery t;oun to De held in and for said grapher, Carl W. Ackerman, with called war. One may wrap it about conty. on the 8th day of April. A. having introduced mass production with flars. iHve it a Retting of mar. D- 1932 at ten o'clock a. m., to show for low price before Ford. tiftj mns. hoiat.r it ... cause- 1 any there be. why the pray- One who knw hin, .,n ... .k- "TI. , " ' . . . .. " er. OI i?e Petitioner should be grant- i inouc naranDues. dui it is still iea. ana that notiro of th n,t.H.n,v secret of Mr. Eastman's success lay butchery. ' petition and that the hearing in me iact mat be always thourht ti,, i . inereor De given to all persons Inter- a new project over from every ik- r -" p, T V , CSted !n 8ald matter by PublIs"S a sible anel in7th l German. says Paul in Rostand copy of this Order in the Plattsmouth siwe angle and then prepared for ptay, "and they teach German boys Journal, a semi-weekly newspaper tseemea io otners radical ac- French, and then when they grow Pnted in said county, for three suc tion. . . cessive weeks prior to said dav of tiicjr kuu lueizi uui iu Km eacn iiearinff other. Whv?" w5l . . . niminm. uui imn mmwa "uu" lu uaua, ana ine seal or waiwntHhtifl ln tTZZmf.?lf !l Ttat is a Question for this world said court, this 7th day of March, A. by roi.lna our puiimb i to ar'8wer- But this world can't an- power. swer and it knows it can't. There (Seal) ml 4-3 w A. H. DUXBTJRY. said real estate, to-wit: The SE4 and the N of the NE4 or Sec. 20. Twp. 11, North Range 12, east of the th P. M., in Cass county, Nebras at public auction to the highest bid der ror 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 of S1842.12. with interest from Jan. 1, 1932 at 5 per cent, to the Lincoln Joint Stock Land Bank on the NH of the NE of Sec. 20. Two. 11. North Range 12. Dated this 26th dav of Fehruarv. 1932. J. A. CAPWELL. , Referee. D. O. DWTER, W. L. DWTEB, Attorneys. f29-4w County Judge. Journal Want-Ada got results!