The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, August 01, 1932, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    MONDAY. AUGUST 1. 1932.
PLATTSXOUTH SEMI -WEEKLY JOURNAL
PAGE TKKEB
Ihe IPIattsmouth Journal
PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH. NEBRASKA
Entered at Postoffice, Plattsmouth, Neb., as second-class mail matter
R. A. BATES, Publisher
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 A YEAR LN EIRST POSTAL ZONE
Subscribers living in Second Postal Zone, S2.50 per year. Beyond
600 miles, S3. 00 per year. Rate to Canada and foreign countries,
13.50 per year. All subscriptions are payable strictly in advance.
If there is anything that can travel
faster than gossip, it must be mis
fortune. :o:
"There is a certain amount of luck
in bridge." says a writer. A good
deal depends on a good deal.
:o:
Another thing that has been both
ering a local citizen, is what people
do with their empty ginger ale bot
tles. :o:
"There was a contest among the
girls at our house last night." said
a very droopy-looking young woman
today, "to see who could stay out
the latest, and I won."
:o:
Mary Pickford wouldn't resume
an airplane flight because she
couldn't get in touch with her astrol
oger. Mary isn't quite as bright a
star as many people think.
:o:
A machine to stop and collect
enemy bullets has been devised fey a
Japanese inventor. What is reeded
now is something to prevent the
bullets from being started.
:o:
The divorce evil has changed the
meaning of . some words. For in
stance, a girl was asked recently if
she was unmarried. "Gosh, no." was
the reply. "I haven't ever, been mar
ried yet."
:o:
A year's observation has convinced
the California magistrate who is re
sponsible for stocking one of the jails
in his jurisdiction with 1000 books
that the inmates are profiting by
their sentences.
:o:
After all. it's of little advantage
to be of an inquisitive frame cf mind.
Here, a while ago we were all agog
to learn, what a torch singer is. Then
one day someone explained it to us
and today we've forgotten again.
:o:
A Moscow dispatch says baseball
will be played this summer in the
Park of Culture and Rest. That's
raising the great American game In
a new high standard. Or perhaps
the name of the park will be changed.
:o:
We wouldn't like to play with
Emily Post's crowd. We don't like
the ground rules. She says corn
shoulJ be held with only one hand
while being eaten. The way to eat
an ear of corn is to brace your el
bows against the table, grasp the
corn firmly with both hand3. and
bend it around your face.
:o:
One of our contribs appends a note
to his contribution expressing a feel
ing of embarrassment because he
was dressed strictly for comfort
while writing his latest message to
his public. There's no need for em
barrassment, however. He ought to
see how some of his readers are
dressed when they read hi3 message.
:o:
Although Ziegfeld was a glorifier
cf beauty and probably furnished
more millionaires with wive3 than
did any other man, he found time to
marry only two of them Anna lie Id,
who divorced him. and Billie Burke,
to whom he had been married the
last eighteen years and who was
nearing his bedside when the end
came.
Still Mot!
J Light, cool Shirts and
Shorts for these torrid
summer days !
JA11 to match the
weather and every
kind to suit your purse,
priced at
25c 3Cg 49c
II
Phrt
io'chiawlL.
J
It won't be long now until those
who are desirous or becoming ser
vants of the people can go back to
work for themselves.
:o:
If men really cared about what
other men were wearing, perhaps
there would be as many men as wom
en attending church.
:o:
Too much sleep is as harmful as
overwork, according to a writer, but
it seems a long time since we heard
of a bad case of either.
:o:
The ones who really feel the evil
of politics are the biographers who
wrote books about the daik horses
before the Democratic convention.
:o;
A Tennessee town had a moral up
rising and burned a!l the bathing
suits on the townsile in one bon
fire. The blaze, it is reported, was
visible at a distance of thirty or
forty feet.
:o:
A tiny boy and his father passed
under the office windows cue day
last week and the child was begging
for something. Finally he said,
"Well, daddy, can I have it when
the expression is over?"
:o
Money being plentiful and nobody
caring what becomes of it. the gov
ernment is printing a 25-volume his
tory of George "Washington at a cost
of $157,975. Probably the rets will
go to the congressmen complimen
tary. :o:
Thousand- of empty bottles were
found in the Chicago stadium after
the Democratic convention adjourn
ed. The explaantion mu?t be that
the place wasn't cleaned up after the
Republican convention the week be
fore.
:o: ' :
Th? idea of a lady decorator that
bad wallpaper makes bad tempers is
all right, a local gent believes. He
says his wife decided the wallpaper
is bed and keeps asking for some
new, and his temper is getting worse
all the time.
:o:
It is said that we now are enter
ing the season known as dog days.
If some of us don't fill the cellar
with potatoa:?, canned fruits and pre
serves, dog days will start about the
middle of November and last until
turnip greens time.
:o:
In this progressive agt? when so
much is bing said about frrm
boards, trar'e boards, bank boards
and town boards especially, Tlcuse-
wives, seem to be forgetting tne pos
sibilities contained in the old re
liable dough board.
:o:
Here's a new one congress has
appropriated $15,000 to salary for a
man to go to Europe to look around
and see what he can f.nd out about
tobacco. Considering that this coun
try knows more about tobacco now
than Europe will ever find out, it
ought to be a real snap.
. :o:
It is a curious and little-known
fact that Napoleon narrowly escaped
being born an Englishman. France
and England had long been wrang
ling about the possession of Corsica,
and only a fevv- months before the
birth of the great Napoleon in 1769
the matter had been settled in fa
vor of France.
-:o:
The grand old game of passing
the buck is cn the decline, declares
a writer who believes that hard times
have led people to a habit of check
ing things up squarely to responsible
persons. The explanation probably
is that when people once get hold of
a buck in hard times they are re
luctant to let it go again.
. -:o:
Can you remember (and no of
fence intended) the cans popular for
small boys wear during the McKin-!ey-Bryan
campaign of 18DG? The
G. O. P. caps bcre a band across the
front proclaiming "McKinley and
Hobart" in black letters on a gold
Geld; while the Democratic little
boys' caps were for "Bryan and Sew
ell" on a silver field; the gold and
silver question was paramount in
1896. Those were the days when
people really got out and tried to
save the country in campaign times.
COMMISSARS AND
BOARD OF TRADE
The farce of a hearing before an
administrative board of political ap
pointees having been gone through,
the rights of the Chicago Board of
Trade and its members are now to
be tested in the only place they ever
should have been tested: In open
court.
To anyone schooled in the tradi
tional theory of American govern
ment, the forms which have been
gone through thus far in the board
of trade case almost pass credibil
ity. The government has an agency
known a? the farm board which unes
the taxpayers money to gamble in
grain. The board of trade has per
mitted the farm board to enjoy the
privileges of the exchange, but at
length conies to the conclusion that
the agencies through which the farm
board has been operating have not
complied with the rules of the ex
change or ct the grain marketing
act ard thereupon withdraws those
privileges.
The law vests in the secretary cf
agriculture the right to license mar
kets in which future contracts can
be bought and sold. He may also
withdraw a license after a hearing
before a commission consisting of
himself, the attorney general and the
secretary of commerce, all of them
political appointees, all of them di
rectly responsible to the wishes of
the president who appoints them.
buch an administration ooara migni
be impartial, might respect individ
ual rights, might even have a prop
er knowledge of what private rights
are. But such a board of commis
sars might, with much greater prob
ability, be expected to act as poli
tical expediency and the lust for
power dictate. To subject the pri
vate affairs of American citizens to
the whims, the ambitions and cap
rices of ruch a trial board is a per
version of justice, a denial of con
stitutional liberty so gross as to ap
pear fantastic.
The absurdity ii heightened when
the action of the administrative
board is observed in connection with
the complaint against the board of
trade. The farm board wants its
agencies to enjoy the privileges of
the exchange and its clearing hou.e.
The remedy, if cne is required, would
plainlj- be to require the board to
extend those privileges. Instead, the
new tvranny dictates that the
bocrd of trade itself must "be de
stroyed and the livelihood of its
members, not to mention the farm
ers, cut off.
Tyranny ir. the abuse of power at
the expense of the citizen by his gov
ernment. It is no less tyranny when
the tyrant is net a king but an ad
ministrative official appointed by
a president. Fortunately, our con
stitutional defenses against opres
sion have rot wholly broken down.
The commissars do not yet have the
final word. That is still the province
cf the courts. Chicago Tribune.
:o:
THE END OF SECRECY
The secrecy which attached to
loans made by the Reconstruction
Finance corporation has been a scan
dal from the beginning. We are glad
congress has ended it, despite quali
fications. The great sums being doled out
of the federal treasury through the
corporation are the people's money,
and they have every right to know
who are getting it. If publicity is
sometimes prejudicial to the borrow
er, as we can well believe, it is a
thousand times more prejudicial to
the public interest to keep the loans
cecret.
The Post-Dispatch has insisted
from the outset that no secrecy
should conceal the operations of the
corporation. It is not surprised to
observe that whereas only a few
voices were raised against shoveling
the people's money out under cover
before the rush began, many people,
including most of the members of
congress, think now that publicity is
safer.
We are sorry Mr. Hoover, who
sided in the debate with the power
ful interests which fought publicity,
could not agree that the utmost pub
licity is the best possible guarantee
against abuse of the great lending
power placed in the hands of the cor
poration. We said before a dollar was loan
ed that the men charged with this
great responsibility could not aford
to lend themselves to suspicion that
favoritism, or even politics, is some
times a factor in making such loans,
to which we imagine they assent.
Certainly it ha3 not been pleasant
for them to hear the criticisms of the
SO million dollar loan to General
Dawes Chicago bank after Ee had
acted as chairman of the board.
St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
:o:
If you want to sell anything,
try a Journal Want-Ad. The cost
is small.
IOWA MAN SURVEYS
TEE SEAT OF GREED
Recently an Iowa business man
stood with his 14-jear-old son atop
the dome of the Empire building in
New York. At their feet lay the
great metropolis. Across the Hud
son they could see Jersey City and
the great industrial ports of New
Jersey. Bridgeport, Conn., was vis
ible in the distance. By use of bino
culars they could see the dim out
line of towns and cities in Massa
chusetts.
And as they stood mere, survey
ing the impressive panorama about
them, the Iov.an spoke to his son
about as follows:
From this point, son, we can ob
serve the heart and nerve center of
financial and industrial America.
We can see almost to to the limits of
the small area into which has been
conscntrated the bulk of the power
and liquid wealth of the nation. You
see here the seat of green and selfish
ness. "In this little area are gathered
the so-railed 'best minds' whose
thoughts and policies have dominat
ed the government and business of
the nation lor the last 12 "years,
bringing ruir, hunger and want to
all this great nation.
"The American people now are
engaged in electing a new president
and a new congress. Almost, one
might say, tne issue is between the
interests of this little spot we see
and the rest of this great land cf
which we are all so proud. It doesn't
seem right, and it isn't right, but
it nevertheless is true. Their inter
ests are not our interests out in
Iowa. Their thoughts are not our
thoughts. Their way3 are not our
ways."
That is just a paraphrase cf
course, but it reflects the impressions
of a thoughtful man with a keen
sense of proportions and an evident
flair for dramatics. And he knew
whereof he spoke, for from "the seat
of greed" as he termed New York,
has emanated the invisible power
thct controls government and shapes
the affairs and selfishness.
Let the people of these prairie
states contemplate this man's vision
and the moral he drew from it. Let
them reject upen the relationship
between the great farm regions and
the restricted money center. Let
them decide which party and which
candidate speaks for the interests of
the prairies and which speak3 for
the "seat of greed." Sioux City
Tribune.
:o:
CARELESSNESS IS STILL FATAL
Individual carelessness still re
mains the most destructive factor
in injury and death from industrial
accidents. A report compiled by the
state department of labor shows that
falls rank first as a cause of deaths
and recond as a cause of injury. In
a miner proportion of instances
faulty construction, such as improp
erly designed stairs, narrow window
sills, lack of protective devices at
openings in walls and floors, is to
blame. In by far the greater number
of instances personal heedlessness is
at fault.
This may be carelessness of a per
son injured or of another. An open
ing in the floor of a building un
der construction was"7e"ft unguarded
until after a workman had fallen
through it to his death. For lack of
a proper platform cn which to per
form his work, a mechanic got on a
box eighteen inches high to repair
an auto top; the box tipped over;
the man's head struck the concrete
floor; he was killed. A butcher en
tering an ice box for meat clipped
on a piece of fat, fell and was fatal
ly injured. A watchman stepped on
a loose timer, which turned over; a
driver cranking his automobile with
out taking the trouble to observe it
was in gear was crushed against the
wall of the garage; an electrician
carelessly put his feet where a slip
brcugnt him into contact with a
highly charged feeder wire; in each
of these accidents death was the pen
alty.
Although makers of machinery
strive constantly to devise new safety
devices, they are unable to foresee
and prevent accidents. A bulletin of
the labor department puts it: "There
is no essential difference between the
heaviest printing press and a sew
ing machine as regards accidents, ex
cept in the size and degree of dam
age." Employers should not only
make sure that machinery is equip
ped with every possible safety device,
but they should also see to it that
the instruction of each worker in
accident prevention is continuous
and persistent. From the New York
Sun.
:o:
When a saleswoman says to a
woman to whom she Is showing
dresses, "the lines are good for you,"
that settles it; the customer is fat.
WHERE'S MARK HANNA
AND WHERE THE FAT
The presidential campaign will
not be actively under way, except
as to the preliminary preparation,
for another month. There have been
no polls, as yet, to indicate the run
of voter opinion. Men active in poli
tics have their own private ways,
however, of measuring the currents
of public opinion. The betting fra
ternity, for one, never sets out to
fool itself. No matter who is to win,
the gambler wants his money on the
winning side. There is, therefore,
some significance, though not the
greatest, to Friday's report of Wall
street odds of 7 to 5 on Roosevelt,
the democratic candidate.
National Committeeman Julian of
Ohio declares himself ready to un
derwrite an undertaking to pile up a
350 thousand pluralTfy for Roosevelt
in Ohio. The majorities two years
ago for Senator Bulkley and Gover
nor White give credence to the pre
diction. But Ohio goes democratic
on state elections with much more
ease than when the presidency is at
stake. Electing democratic gover
nors in Ohio is, indeed, almost a
habit, while Ohio's vote for Woodrow
Wilson in 1916 stands out as an
extraordinary departure from the
rule. If Ohio is to go for Roosevelt,
v.e may as well admit that the re
ported odds of 7 to 5 are sound.
The logic of the situation, of
course, favors the democratic claim.
The times argue for change. The
voters can fairly reason that, pretty
much regardless of what they get by
inge, they cannot be worse off
than as they are. The frying pan is
so hot that there is no fear of any
fire. There is the matter of swap
ping horses midsteam; but there are
some horses, it can be answered, that
should be swapped even on the way
over Niagara Falls. There has been
a preponderance of report from peo
ple who cruise about the country
to the effect that the tide is run
ning as National Committeeman Ju
lian says it is. There should be no
surprise in that.
Cut it is not always the candi
date who seems ahead in July who
turns up with the votes in Novem
ber. It has always been judged that
in the summer of 189C William J.
Bryan had the votes to make him
president. How Marcus A. Hanna
fried out the fat to the tune of the
largest campaign fund ever, up to
thattime, even dreamed of, and by
the most effective voting of cash the
world had ever seen nosed Bryan
out, is now a commonplace of poli
tical history. But where is the
Mark Hanna for the party of Her
bert Hoover now? And if the Mark
Hanna were to be had. where is the
fat to fry? Dayton News.
:o:
HEAT
There is some consolation in the
assurance that summer heat, even in
its extremes, is good for most of us.
While excessive heat may be danger
ous to the weak or to those unduly
exposed to it, we are told that the
normal person can stand a lot of it
without harm, and perhaps with sub
stantial benefit.
But such assurances do not make
us happy when we are drenched with
perspiration, when the trees are like
painted pictures for lack of breeze,
when sleep refuses to anaesthetize us
against our miseries, and when the
heat has been sufficiently prolonged
to penetrate almost everywhere,
leaving us no place of refuge, even
when we are free to seek it.
One of the effects of torturing heat
waves should be to make the world
safer for democracy; it treats every
body the same, and we all suffer in
common. It should make us more
sympathetic with one another and
more responsive to suffering in gen
eral. It should do that, but isn't it
more likely to make us so heat-con
scious that we become irritable and
unreasonable and even unsympath
etic? Sometimes it seems so. If ex
treme heat has its uses, the uses
must be physical; there are no evi
dences that they are mental or
spiritual.
One of the things the government
has not yet done for us is to gather
statistics on swearing with respect
to degrees of heat and 'cold. But in
due time the sociologists of the bu
reaucracy doubtless will supply the
important figures, and then we shall
find, by consulting them, along with
the accompanying graphs, that in the
latter part of June and in July and
August the volume of realistic lan
guage takes a sweeping upward
course, ir, perchance, the heat wave
is Interrupted by cocl days, the graph
will show a precipitous downward
shoot, almost as If expression had
ceased.
Until we hav access to authentic
statistics on heat behavior, probably
wc should take with some allowance
the contention that heat that is,
hot heat i3 good for us.
PEOPLE MUST RUN COUNTRY
"After all," said a cynic, "the peo
ple have to be ruled by somebody.
The choice is between their being
ruled by those who want money and
will get it by exploiting them or by
those who want votes and will get
them by fooling voters. It is rule by
'special inteiests' or by demagogues.
Of the two evils I prefer the special
interests."
But is that the choice? Certainly
it is, if we will neither care nor
think. The exploiters can put up
campaign funds, organize political
committees and secure the services
of expert propagandists. They will
rule us for their profit if we are lazy
enough to let them.
Or if in reaction against them we
get too excited the demagogue puts
in his work. He is prefervid in his
expressions of sympathy with the
less fortunate, but very vague about
what he will do for them. Or he
offers them quack remedies which
promise them what they want, but
could not be fulfilled. In the guise of
food he presents them bait. If we are
indolent enough for the one cr gull
ible enough for the other they will
save us the trouble of ruling our
selves. The remedy, then, is in ourselves.
Democracy will work if we work it.
Everything else will work whether
we work it or not. The electric light
will come cn when you pu.h the but
ton and you do not need to know
how or why. The water flows aT the
turn of the faucet. Under our me
chanized society and the division of
labor most cf life is that way. But
not government. That, under a
democracy, will be run by and for
the people if the people are willing
to take the trouble to do it. If they
do not, somebody else will run it by
and for himself. The test is of the
people. From the San Francisco
Chronicle.
:o:
HIGHWAYS FOR THE PUBLIC
The right of a state to act as it
deemed fit to protect its investment,
a public investment, in its highways
wculd seem to be obvious. That i?
the right recognized and sustained
in the unanimous decision cf the
court of appeals that New York state
may erect screens cn the right of
ways of highways to obscure un
sightly billboards or advertising
signs that would tend to attract the
attention of motorists "a'nd interfere
with safe driving. The placing of
screens of lattice work cr the plant
ing of trees and shrubbery as pro
tection against commercialization of
public highways is proving to be ef
fective in a growing war against
roadside ugliness and for promotion
of safety.
Perhaps it will not be necessary in
a large number of cases to defend
such procedure in court; but the
decision in the Nw York case is en
couraging as to the outcome when
the test is made. There can be no
d'mbt that, although the billboard
or other objectionable sign may be
erected on private property, the
plain intent is to take an unfair ad
vantage of the public's use of a
highway. That condition the courts
more and mere have come to recog
nize in their liberal opinions on the
matter.
:o:
AMELIA EESTS AT OMAHA
Omaha. Twice conqueror of the
broad Atlantic, Amelia Earhart Put
nam is vacationing in the Eky.
She flew into Omaha late Sunday
from New Ycrk City, enroute to the
Olympic games at Los Angeles. With
her was her cousin. Miss Lucy Chal
lis of Atchison, Kas., and Gene VIdal,
vice presiden of an eastern sea
board airline.
"It's too warm, even for flying."
Mrs. Putnam explained in announc
ing the party would remain here
overnight. She explained that she Is
taking a brief vacation after her
two recent record breaking exploits.
the solo Atlantic flight and the hang
ing up cf a new woman's record for
a west-east transcontinental hop.
Incongruously, her "vacation" con
sists chiefly of flying.
SEEK ELMER SATTERLEY
Auburn, Neb. Officers are search
ing for Elmer Satterley, forty-two,
of Brock, Neb., who disappeared last
Wednesday. He left here for Nebras
ka City with a load of beans which
he delivered to a canning factory. He
collected money for the beans and
then disappeared. Relatives fear foul
play since he was carrying the money
received for the beans.
Satterley is 5 feet 11 inches tall
and weighs about 14S pounds. He
has sandy hair and has tatoo marks
on his body, one being an American
flag. He has a wife and three chil
dren and is a member of the Auburn
post of the American Legion.
Leroy Stohlman
Marries Popular
Capital City Girl
Church Wedding Unites Son of Form
er Louisville Residents and
Iliss Clara Johnson.
A beautiful church wedding whicJi
occurred in Lincoln on Sunday, July
9, at Trinity Lutheran church, was
of great interest to the Loisville
friends of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew
Stohlman, of 2402 P street. Lincoln,
former prominent farmers of this
vicinity, when their second son. Le
roy, was married to Miss Clara John
son, daughter or :urs. iiara jonn
son, of Vine street, in that city at
lour o'clock in the afternoon.
The impressive ceremony was con
ducted by Rev. Theodore Hartman,
pastor of the Immanuel Lutheran
church at Louisville, who was form
erly the pactor of the Stohlman fam
ily when they lived here. Mtes Mar
tha Stohlman. sister of the groom
acted as maid of honor and Miss
Heial Iledgcock was bridesmaid.
Rex Touzaliu and Betty Larson of
Omaha were flower children and
Robert Stohlman carried the ring.
Edward Stohlman, brother cf the
groom, was best man and the ushers
were Martin Stohlman, brother of
the groom and Arthur Johnson, bro
ther of the bride.
The gowns of the young ladies of
the bridal party were exquirlte and
the altar of .the church was banked
with palms and ferns with baske ts of
flowers adding to the beauty of the
affair. A reception was held later at
the home of the bride's mother.
The bride Is a' charming young
business woman of Lincoln and the
groom is a rising young attorney at
law. He has met with splendid suc
cess In his chosen profession and his
many friends here have felt much in
terest and pride in h'.s career. They
will have the be?t wishes and hear
tiest congratulations of their host of
Ca.s county friends for future happi
ness and success. They will go to
housekeeping at 2145 South 35th
street, in Lincoln. Their honey
moon trip will be to the Black Hills.
Louisville Courier.
Business goes wnere It Is In
vited. Merchants who advertise
are the ones who "sell the goods"
nowadays. Let the Journal assist
you in keeping up sales volume
during the coming year.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Th? State of Nebraska, Cass coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter cf the estate of John
F. Gorder, deceased.
To the creditors of said estate:
You are hereby notified, that I
will sit at the County Court rrom In
Platts mouth, in said county, on the
19th day of August. A. II. 1932 and
on the 21st day of November, A. D.
1932, at ten o'clock in the forenoon
of each day to receive and examine
ell 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 19th
day of August, A. D. 1932. and the
time limited for payment of debts is
one year from said 19th day of
Aucrust. 1932.
Witness my hand and the seal cf
said County Court this 22nd day of
July, 1932.
A. IL duxbury.
(Seal) j25-3w 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 es
tate of Robert Willis, deceased:
On reading the petition of Owen
Willis praying a final settlement and
allowance of his account filed In this
Court on the 21st day of July. 1932.
and for final assignment of the resi
due of said estate, and for his dis
charge as Administrator thereof;
It is hereby ordered that you and
all persons Interested in said mat
ter may. and do appear at tbe County
Court to be held in and for said coun
ty, on the 19th day of August, A. D.
1932, at ten o'clock a. ra., to show
cause, if any there be, why the pray
er of the petitioner should not be
granted, ami 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
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 said
Court this 21st day of July, A. D.
1932.
A. H. DUXBURY.
(Seal) j25-3w County Judge.
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