ggUBSDAT, NOV: 10, 1932. PLATTSMOTJTH SSM - WEEKLY XOTfeXAL PAGE TI The IPIattsmouth Journal RAILROAD VS. TRUCK HUNGER MARCHERS DISPUTE LOOMING UP REGIONALISM IN LATIN AMERICA IN GREAT BRITAIN I The news of almost any day will police teH of one part of some Latin-Amer- PU3USHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA fiatered at Postoffice. Plattsmouth, Neb., aa second-class mail matter R. A. BATES, Publisher Safe Pleasant Uay TF !Ls Fa! SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 A YEAR IN FIRST POSTAL ZONE Subscribers living in Second Postal Zone, $2.60 per year. Beyond 800 miles, ULOX) per year. Bate to Canada and foreign countries, 3M per .year. .All subscriptions are payable strictly in advance. we live to learn what a great 'world this would be if wo could Just live. -:o:- Proeperity must be coming back. Fewer banks are failing and more are being robbed. i :o: A bride of a year cleaned out her reingerator yesterday and found a box of strawberries. ' :o: Old-fashioned people are those who can still throw a big party without the help of a bootlegger. :o: - Blessed is the man in the back row of the group picture. He has no quarrel with the photographer. :o: - What a man can't understand is why bis wife can't be as satisfied with him as he is with himself. :o: 1 The average age of the ant is ten years. Unfortunately Its instinct to attend picnics uninvited is hereditary. For the reader addicted to making marginal notes there's a new flat pencil which also serves as a book mark. :o: . And It's going to be hard on the nudist who has to go through the winter with nothing but a thin coat of frost. ! JOlL , Both of the major parties should organize a society or something to care for the burned-out campaign orators after today, :o: We've also heard It said against prohibition that the stories men telT much other now are not so funny as tha stores In the old times. J. correspondent In an evening paper wants to know why a popular tane Is seldom played on bagpipes. Probably because It wants to remain so. Did you ever see a man who could answer satisfactorily his wife's ques tions when she asked him What some woman wore at a, function he may have attended? :o - Speaking of fellows who are afraid to call a spade a spade, we call at tentlon to the radio announcer who calls a phonograph record "an elec trical transscrlption." ..-... ... . . Th. motor car may be superseding the piano as a piece of household fur niture, as .Sir William Morris ob WW L V R3, uui.il la UUl nj bUUTUUlUUfc tor standing photographs on. -. tot ' Sooner or later congress will have Clashes between London to settle the question whether trucks and the riotous unemployed direct Ican nation fiehtine or disagreeing are to oe reguiatea Dy national law, attention to one of England's grav- witn another. It may be that Anto as the railways demand. It is pos- est problems, but cannot be regard- Iaira8ta ODDoses movements in Santi- laible that the railwav L. ... : aB; inai Arequipa ana uuzco are How would you like to lose 15 w7 1Mtu sums upaeayai m ureai cniam. me situ- arrayed against Lima: that Guay- pounds of fat in a month and at the agreement In advance of legislation ; atlon in contemporary England Is aqun and Quito are at odds; that same time increase your energy and and if they do, the problem of con- vastly different from that which cul-Lw. ta ..,..., Jf. I Improve your health? i i - i o aa vvii tut ucu in an j i. v.-1 i -r ... . cress will be made easier. Th essen- min-tH in th hinnrfv T.nrirHtp. r,rt L.. llow v.ouia you line 10 lose your Z. ... ! . . oau iduio ana io ae Janeiro, or double chin and your too prominent .-o w ,l'""uu"l-u tuarusi nuu ui a reiuuij- Bu. uw, that Leon and Granada in Nicaragua hips and at the same time make your these: as then, millions are idle because have taken opposite sides on some skin so clean and clear that it will The railways represent a heavy in- trade has been dislocated by post- new auestion Innumerable other comDel admiration? vestment, and today their securities war economlc upheavals, and because instances could be cited to show the nGet 1 the 8C?e,f l?ay a?d are overwhelmingly in America. They . . , . j . . insiance3 couia BB cnea io snow we how mucn you weigh then get a bot- form a large part of the portfolios ImProvel machinery has reduced the existence of regionalism as a factor tie of Kruscfcen Salts which will last of Insurance companies and trust aemana ror miman laDor. nut n,ng- in the noliticR of almost anv Latin- you lor 4 weeks and costs but a trille. Abraham Lincoln made his cam- funds. The railways are in no dan paigns with horse and cart, on foot, jger of being superseded for the car- th-H-TYT wWch " ISnred in the ot this force in the Andean nations . , . ' . They are today, and promise to be Ished laissez-faire era wnen capital- may be formed, prehaps, from a sim land now assumes a eocal responsi bility for its involuntarily idle sub- American nation. A mental picture of the operation not the easy physical task It now is for many years to come, a national with radio, airplane, motor car and I necessity. fast train. But the new method has ism was young ana less enngntenea. Dje illustration. Three three-story The hunger marchers, who have houses, with little or no connection Take one-half teaspoonful in a glass of hot water before breakfast every morning cut down on pastry and fatty meats go light on potatoes, butter, cream and sugar and when you have finished the contents of this first bottle weigh yourself again. Now you will know the pleasant Th InrnrovPftiPTit nf rnnrJa thrn-i - .... I concentrated in London I rum inni- .mnm, va. em-iui omi nritvi rn mnonc I . i .... ,. 1 n n .1 n'n lf IcaHvontiurM Pino f fhtm Iqlnnt h. mnntrr ot, f Tio hnlMtnir I , v. a j 1UOc uiiaiiiu.jr lav aim " a " I J I -,,, iY,a. Irltiirilnm onnctitnta a noirH. i . , .1 1 lr,,,r ,V.o. r. oolto TTriia ..... .1.. .... ...... ,uv u ..c,. DT COmmUniCaLlOIl LU blicaiL Ul UIZ- I "Vit L.uit 1 . . w oM.t.o vm. - -J mat 11 enaoies a canaiaate to mase Digger ana netter trucKs lea to tne ibj6 percentage of tne three million fwPPn nnv two nf th, hnns wid en have presented you with glor- idlo British workers. They protest not be a too exaggerated simile for against a recent cut or lu per cent sucn a country as Bolivia, Peru, in the dole, and to introduction of Ecuador, Colombia or Mexico. There a means test wherebv 200 thousand rTi Am . . . I I (11 U All lit Witt 11 It All. VUV1S - t.Vl J w Tina t non t h a n 1 nrn ve T7 ilna wr I I a lot more speeches than Nature ever Immense growth of the trucking in dustry, for the truck owners were able to offer lower rates, and in most cases quicker and more complete ser- equipped him to make, and they can't all be smart. :&: A UNIVERSITY DEFLATES ITSELF revenues began to diminish under 1 ious health. But be sure for your health's sake that you ask for and get Kruschen Salts. Get them at F. G. Fricke & Co., or any drugstore in the world and if the results one bottle brings do not delight you do not joyfully satisfy why money back. I- The University of Washington, ac cording to its president, has been helped rather than hurt by the de pression. Its seven colleges and schools in 1912 had doubled by 1922, and to arts and sciences, engineer ing, forestry, mines, pharmacy, law an "alleged graduate school" had been added business administration, education, fine arts, fisheries, jour nalism, library science, and a second college of arts and sciences. Today the university, has but four colleges and schools: arts and sci ences, technology, law, and a "real graduate school" in those subjects in which It offers advanced degrees. President Spencer declares that these administrative and curricular changes, forced by the need of econ omy and retrenchment, might other wise have taken years instead of months. The depression has brought an almost Independent life, rely nnrt from the national terasurv arelnn. itut nn o oii , v, ntham . . . a . a - .. I 1I1K ll.UC V 11U. Ob Ull Ult .11 JUJ' Jt . .4 .v. . . , ' 4 thrown upon local poor relief, which for the necessities of life. . a . . , I . tenas to De less generou3 in us pro-i rhe countries mentioned have a visions and is rigidly administered, coastal region in contact with the Doubtless there is much real distress I mi..i a.m - In ..1 , . I " TYU1 1U 1 glUll V 1 9 All ""uro icc 1,1 DLa'l-c' nmnnp- thfi Hpmnrifrntnrs hut their I i ,, i i I That th,- rplisrinn nf enntpmnnrarv f Vi rir ttiov a tn i , - i , gcuciiii, iiupicai iiiuiaicB uuiam aim a mt tney may Operate in many, ana Oyi. . TOth a onm muni at I. . - x)mr1iae .a i ililTdren. Ihlrir frnm directed at the trucks. It was point i ed out that they use public property I at comparatively small cost, pay a RELIGION .AND THEOLOGY PARTING Judicious operation can buy their gas Ulnority seeking to create social un- the coast are far apart and except that of a generation ago is so clear &u state., nuiiu uavc iuc avjwcol taxes. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, S3. 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 3rd day of Decem ber, A. D. 1932, at 10 o'clock a. m. of said day at the Eouth front door of the court house, in said county, sell at public auction to the highest bid der for cash the following real es tate to-wit: The north eighty-seven (87) feet of Lots one (1), two (2), three (3), and four (4), in Block four (4) in the original town cf Plattsmouth, Cass Coun ty, Nebraska, as surveyed, plat ted and recorded; The same being levied upon and taken as the property of William A. Wells. Flora M. Wells, Eduth Mar tin and Becker Roofing Company, defendants, to satisfy a judgment of said court recovered by Occidental Building and Loan Association, plain- til?, against said defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, November 1st, A. D. 1932. ED W. THIMGAN, Sheriff Cass County, Nebraska. n3-5w SHERIFF'S SALE rest among the poor. I0r coastal vessels have little com- that all who run may, if they but TTnemnloved British sublects en- ill. read. Our oulDits. at least lib- n 1 - . - , . - . . . " I 111 U U1VU11VU TV 1 1 11 VMVii J 1 11 vl A. V14 I ' rinaiiy, tne rauroaas point out, jQy h,ger lnconies tnan do tho un- there is the intermediate zone higher eral pulpits, are humanistic rather employed of other countries. The up the mountains where temperate than theological. British dole is twice that received conditions are found and agriculture The name of God Is still invoked by idle Germans. The British gov- j8 carried on. Here frequently cities In them. But .to tne soclally-mind- ernment still navs 240 million dol- nni n,r,a nntn r,nr .nn-,iatnna od nrearher. that n.amfi connotes not The nublio i? th( intprpc?tPd third lunuo "Uk awn- . ine puunc is tne interestea miru larg a r Into a fund fQr the un. themselves but have very lit- so much the Creator or the Cosmic employed, to which every employed tie direct intercourse with those who Soul, as a sanction for ethics or an that they are compelled to assume a public liability which a truck owner can escape from lack of assets on which to levy for damages. party. It is in the Interest of the public that the question be settled worker and every goin& business also dwell below or above them. On the apotheosis of social Ideals. The other- equitably. And It must be remember ed that no matter how it is settled, the public must foot the bill. If the railways are to continue losing busi ness to the trucks the public may save in freight rates, but it will lose in security values. Oa the other contributes. A man on the dole in mountain toDB on bleak nlateaus live worldliness of traditional Christian- England can command at least as the other third, engaged perhaps in ity and Judaism ha3 been supplanted much food and clothing as an em- mining or in sheep raising, equally by a very definite tais-worldliness. ployed worker of equal skill can earn disconnected among themselves and No more vivid illustration of thi3 in Russia. The man with a Job inlwith others of their comnatriots. In fact can be found than the evolu- England earns the highest real wages Lome of hte nations mentioned there tion of the doctrine of the Kingdom in Enrone. So lonsr as such a stato of I !) livaa cntiroiir of God. This concent, bv oriein ex- TTniroroi.ir nt whinirtnn hack handt if trucks are regulated accord- affa!rs continues the social order inlin tronimi rpeinna and meriv adds nressive in Christian and Rabbinic 1 U .J VU(7 A (All 1 JKA UC-31l9 VUll It's too bad elections aren't near Christmas. The candidates, accord- in to their sneeches. could easily impalgn in the garb of Santa Claus, and there would be no limit 'to what they could promise. ' ?o: Th new bridge rules contain a code of ethics, but . the country is going to be so busy learning how to bid properly that it' will. have little time to learn how to count honestly If that is what the code of ethics is for," says the Pittsburgh Head light. -:o: A newspaper doctor advises one of his readers that "if your skin takes on a yellowish tinge, you will have to cut down on the number of raw and cooked carrots you are eating." Cut down on carrots? What sacri fices are we asked to make these days for the sake of beauty! to fundamentals. The former fifteen deans have been reduced to four, and there has been a definite reduction in stenographers, secretaries and gen eral overhead expense. Expenditures have been restricted to bona fide educational and schol arly needs. Duplicating curricula have been abandoned and an attempt has been made to avoid a far more rates will be increased and the na tional freight bill will go up. But at the same time, the trucks will con tribute more heavily to state road funds and the shipments which they carry will be better Insured. It is the contention of the railroads that the ing reported. Chicago Daily News. io: VTCATX FOE CONGRESSMEN The belief that the common man larger trucking companies, with their by reason of his very common heavy Investments, will welcome a ness is best fitted to govern the na- rimlitlnn that will ttiqVq it hai-rior tlon fa An Amprlran fallncv. Thnra serious duplication Of professional L wJMcat concerna tQ cut ,nt theIr has never been a time when it was business. On the other hand, the rail- J true. The great age of British poll- and technical courses in universities England will scarcely be jeopardized (more color and confusion to the so- thought of the coming of the Mes by such disturbances as are now be-lclal, ethnic, political, and economic siah, the end of days and the resur- mosaic. Irection, has come to represent the In the absence of adequate means ideal terminal point of all lines of of transportation, eah of these four progress, economic, hygienic, cultur- t groups has developed not only local al and sociological rhnrBctf.rist.es and distinct outlooks The Kinjrdozn comes no more in and needs derived in part from their the footprints of a mystic Anointed own systems of oroduction and :li-.One, but with the attainment of un- mates, but, also ' tremendous local employment insurance, old age pen loyalties, provincial attitudes and slons, legislation on yellow-dog con- what one might call subnatlonalisms. tracts and. In the opinion of mln located near each other, which had ; "t" fact, each Latin-American nation Msters who have visited Russia, with 1 v 1 I ways are themselves going in for the tics and of British statesmanship was ' . . , thn PnHllt rPvni.,t.nn and th dic- resulted in a bumper crop of engi neers, journalists, eachers and li barlans far exceeding the demand. The university is seeking to evaluate the needs of the state and to mini mize instruction in those fields where adequate preparation can be found within a reasonable distance else where. But economy is not the only' ob jective of this forced deflation. It Is 1 Jll M.j. a-. nKlnr.Ar. Pnalon'D I FJVCMW o, uuiuuw Ul I f lltioa and nnmlroil ran.nl orniina txrith I tatOrSDlD Ol tne UrOletarlat. TI13 HPS Vitt t i-n nlr Imihlit mpn had hpfln past in a com-1 I ... . It is practically certain that there mon mold by Eton and Harrow, Ox their own interests and ideals. Where the social splendor and po- still speak of salvation from sin and the grasp of death, but the heart is with economic redemp- retained its pre-eminence through tion. Milton Sternberg in the Mod republican days, as in Peru, there is ern Thinker. ...Ill V. .-.a-a Irt. J A 9 t...nlr inmi. fn.ll O A Pf 1T1 hrM CTA I IKtloal nnorai nf a nlnntal lontti1 hoo fOnoCmefl latlon by act of congress, and if, as Tne pontics ot prewar uermany - - - Elisha Lee, vice-president of the erflected the deep veneration of the Pennsylvania railroad, r e'e e n 1 1 y German mind for learning and ex stated, a railroad committee and a pertness. For generations the Man similar body appointed by the manu- chus gave China the best government fnft i.rora and nspra rvf nntn trnpka it haH had. hv the aimDle device of . . . . ' , . .... .. ji!,.ti a central group of states has chieved can agree on what the regulaTIon throwing the administrative services! .. .. .. apt to be Jealousy of its good for tune in all the other sections of the nation. Or, as in Brazil, where felt that if higher education is tol . . . .t . t , , control over the Government because I should be, so much the better. Cer- open only to those students who ex- remain higher education, the arts and sciences must be not only basic but dominant. Hitherto they had given way bit by bit to technological and professional courses until tLtion for road building purposes, and in more ways than one. Why. for -:o:- bad come to be but one course In a maze of vocational subjects running all the way from hotel management to making dill pickles. Once more due emphasis is to be placed on na tural science and the humanities on education rather than training. The president of the University ot Washington is convinced that his in stitution is turning the depression into prom ana iuai iue juuu6 iuu i raillng-on In transatlantic passen- and women who enter Its doors In gers or any other factor in the steam years to come will be more genuine- j 8hip . trade, France has gone ahead of Its economic supremacy in the na tion's life and has seemed to use it to promote sectional interests, there is discontent. But, in most cases, the greatest railroads to example, should our congress be i , . . eacn otner, as it is in international affairs. This Ignorance arises from tainly the Investment of the people celled in a stiff competitive examln In railways should be protected. At atlon In the Chinese literary classics. the same time, cheap cartage by road . It's high time that we realized has been a dividend from high tax- that the Chinese are "damned clever" Lumber Sawing CommerciaJ sawing from your own loss lumber eut to your specifications. We have reedy out dimen sion lumber and sheeting for sale at low prices. NEBRASKA BASKET FACTO BY State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. By virtue of an Order of Sale Is sued by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk of the District Court, within and for Cass County, Nebraska, and to me direct ed, I will on the 3rd day of Decem ber, 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 auction to the highest bidder for cash the following real estate to-wit: Lots 1 and 2 in Block 31 in Young and Hays' Addition to the City of Plattsmouth, Cass County, Nebraska; The Fame being levied upon and taken as the property of James E. Waller, Clara Waller, husband and wife; Walt Minnear and Elizabeth May Minnear, his wife, and M. 8. Briggs, 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, November 1st, A. D. 1932. Sheriff Cass County, Nebraska. ED W. T1UMGAN, n3-5w SHERIFF'S SALE it has stimulated the increase their efficiency; therefore I open to a man whose mind is a cross it should be safeguarded. Detroit section of the great American desert. News. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSH the tremendous difficulties of travel, the great distances, and the lack of NOW FIND THE PASSENGERS simply because he has roared and twisted his wt into the ballot box? Even now, we kick him out if his ot communicating thought I election is tainted with fraud. Why should we not consider that a man's pretensions to congressional fitness Undeterred by the depression, the may algo De fraudulent? When we want to make an army officer, a congressman armo.ntn him t wt ivMnt n,.t wt Pftlnt developed and as education spreads ly education, to say nothing of the bravely with the launching of her knowing congressmen, won't admit tbe beneflts of literacy a dimlnu- tnousanas oi uunars. mat UB new superocram liner, to he named h. Mnf1M,fl. ,omj non ot regionalism may do expecieu J M - IJJ ,.! I . a .. ...... ... I v.. " I savea xor b ia-nuueu yuim, bi- me xsormanaie. wot content witn I . i . j iV, i :o: . . . . . I I travail! Ill a HUH. atlllU UICII, LUO CVL. I """7 tuo ile u rran, sue oners tnis ves- polntee is not ?n officer, but has to xrrea WIPiniAM N01TRJS at least is one CTeat state university mi aa hr answer tn thA TtroTnan and .. . . ! - aiaa WltMiftffl, KUJtma which has honestly attempted ot set the Eurona and also to Italv'a newL.-..,UJ... . -5. I SECRETARY, IS MARRIED . . - I - - I training uwiurw nv cau uuidiu a cum its iiuuso in ui "-1 iiner, tne itex. witn.a tonnage or catlonal elephantiasis are numbered. 75 thousand and an estimated speed -nn ,. v ,A McCook, Nov. 7. The marriage The most cheering aspect of this Qf 30 knots, it is designed to giveLa- ,1, ,,-. . lof Miss Lois WIckham, for 15 years In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the Application of N. D. Talcott. Administrator of the Today the airplane is bringing to Estate of William D. Coleman, Deceas- Latin America a quickened Interest ed, for License to Sell Real Estate to In travel and a vastly quickened , 1 ,ww means for accomplishing it. As this 1932. came N. D. Talcott. Adminis- and other modes of transportation trator of the estate of William D, and communication continue to be Coleman, deceased, and presents his news from the Pacific Northwest is France the blue ribbon of unequaled di3trlct, why should voters afflicted PrlTato secretary to United States the Indication that educational in- supremacy in transatlantic passenger witll tn6 BjbHcal or the economic Senator George W. Norris of McCook, stitutions are beginning to get back service. It is inspiring to read the heaves, be permitted to thrust an was announced bere Monday Miss to tne iunuauwuuu mai. mum7 -" 1 roster or new snips or tne past de-1 , j j ., , , i wicKnam oecame tne onae ot U3car produce educated men and women. cade, but with the launching of each upon the natlon a whole? laaaitionai vessel one wonders where We are distributors for the famous : Rock of Acres granite. Largest stock : fcnd lowest prices. Drive over to our lant. southeast corner of Square. ffitenwcsd Granite Vorlis . CZenwecd. Iowa Isaacson of McCook in a ceremony fr. . 1 -a TT.. O.A. .la... 1 , . Why not follow the West Point I oatuiua. . the passengers are going to be found l v j , .... Isaacson is a representative of a to fill them. The depression Is not candidate to nass a written examin- Hastings food products company. The going to last forever. Steamship atlon and intelligence test before he coP on an eastern wedding travel win get nacK to normal ana Ia eligible to vote in congress on is- mp American tourists win ogm again gue3 affecting the lires and property tneir. annual pilgrimages across tne of 120 milllon of hls tellow cltizenflT NOTICE OF SALE Atlantic But even then there willl T.- be shins to snare for Hia rarrvine ' To Whom It May Concern trad Thin win nrnh,M, mM " The undersigned will sell at pub- " wars were once thought necessary no auction to the highest bidder for sacrifice of the smaller and slower by ccrtaIn economists, 'to hold the ca8h One Buick 1927 Sedan; Motor vessels in order that these giants of DODulatlon of the earth within ta- No- 1922367; Serial No. 1853114; the sea may be able to obtain paying S LnLl rh. m S161 27"29' for repairs and 6torage . . . 7 sonable bounds. Today tne motor due on the same in the sum of loads. A few more Normandles and car d08 itf and so war ls unncessary. $180.70. That unless this claim is iuhw Buveniuurs wm oe nanaiing tne 1 :Q. ipaia Derore the lotn day of Novem- entlre transatlantic passenger traf- . tai mtv nrvs-n lber 1932 at 10:00 o'clock in the VM mnii, vm una iiorenoon dv tne owner fwnoae name ia 1inVnftn-Ti aa.A -mill Vt a ia11 ot a comparatively small ship will be- rhtfw vhtt Rnnr. 11 the raraea of the iindersiend. io. come as much a thing of th past . as Gre Cedar Creek Nebr -.2g cated at 7th and Vine streets. Platts- a voyage under sail. New York Ere- mouth, Nebraska. nln- pot JOHN PRADY, ningrost. 4 . 4 , .... . JMHIC1 WaRt-AA fit HMUtl nt-Jw . Uea.Holder. petition for license to sell the real estate of the deceased party in order to pay the claims filed and allowed against said estate, and the expenses of administering said estate. It ap pearing from said petition that there Is an insufficient amount of personal property in the hands of the Admin istrator to pay the claims presented and allowed by the County Court and the expenses of the administration of said estato; and that it is necessary to sell the whole of the real estate of the deceased in order to pay the aforesaid olaims and the costs .of ad ministration It is hterefore Considered, Ordered and Adjudged that all persons inter ested in the estate of William D. Cole man, deceased, appear before me, James T. Begley, Judge of the Dis trict Court, at the District Court room in the court house in .the City of Plattsmouth, Cass county, Nebraska, on the 29th day of November, 1932, at the hour of 10:00 o'clock in the forenoon, end show cause, If any there be, why such license should not be granted to N. D. Talcott, Ad mlnlstrator of the estate of William D. Coleman, deceased, to sell all of the real estate of said deceased, so as to pay claims presented and al lowed with the costs of administra tion and of this proceedings. It is further Considered, Ordered and Adjudged, that notice be given to all persons Interested by publica tion of this Order to Show Cause for four successive weeks in the Platts mouth Journal, a legal newspaper published and of general circulation in the County of Cass, Nebraska. By Cfaa Court. JA1CES T. BEGLEY. elT-4w District Judjrs. Stato of Nebraska, County of Cass, 8. By virtue of an Order of Sale, is sued by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk of the District Court, within and for Cass County, Nebraska, and to me direct ed, I will on the 3rd day ot Decem ber, A. D. 1932, at 10 o'clock a. m. of said day at the eouth front door of the court house, in said county, sell at public auction to ths highest bidder .for cash the following real eatate to-wit: ' K' Lots numbered one (1) and two (2) in Block twenty-seven (27) in Young and Hay's Ad dition to the City of Platts mouth, Cass County, Nebraska, excepting the west thirty feet of said Lot two (2) ; The same being levied upon and taken as the property of Thomas S. Svoboda and Anna Svoboda, husband and wife, defendants, to satisfy a Judgment of said court recovered by the Plattsmouth Loan and Building Association, a corporation, plaintiff, against said defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska. November 2nd. A. D. 1932. ED W. THIMGAN, 8herlff Cass County. Nebraska. n3-5w. NOTICE TO CREDITORS State of Nebraska, County of Cass, S3. Fee book 9 at page 322. In tho County Court. In the matter of the estate of Charles Creamer, 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 25th day of November, A. D.- 1932, and on the 27th day of February. A. D. 1933. at ten o'clock In the fore noon of each day, to examine all claims against said estate, with a view to their adjustment and allow ance. The time limited for the pre sentation of claims against said es tate Is three months from the 25th day of November, A. D. 1932. and the time limited for payment of debts Is one year from said 25th day of November, 1932. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 25th day of October, 1932. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) o31-3w County Judge. NOTICE! TO CREDITOR8 State of Nebraska, County of Caas, ss. In the County Court. Foe Book 9, page 321. In the matter of the estate of Jes sie W. Hall, 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 18th day of November, A. D. 1932, and on the 20th day of February. A. D. 1933, at ten o'clock In the fore noon of each day to examine all claims against said estate, with a view to their adjustment and allow ance. The time limited for the pre sentation of claims against said es tate ia three months from the 18th day of November, A. D. 1932, and tho time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 13th day of November, 1932. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 21st day of October, 1932. A. K. XIUXRUKY, (Seal) o24-3v County Judge. Road oavlna In Oaas eountv this year win run about tan miles. Not bad, for "tftpr dow" tttttt .. V.