MONDAY. MARCH 27, 1933. PAGE TWO PLATTSMOUTH SEMI - WEEKLY JOURNAL 1 Me MQttmQuth Journal PUBLISHED SE3H-WEEEXY AT Entered at Postofflce, Plattsmouth, A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PEICE $2.00 A YEAS IN FIRST POSTAL ZONE fucscribcrs living in Second Postal Zone, $2.50 per year. Beyond 6C0 miles, 3.00 per year. Rate to Canada and foreign countries, 33.50 per year. All subscriptions are payable strictly in advance. One cf the most delightful things in the -world is to Introduce one bore to another and then duck. :o: Wc Lave a tender spot In our heart for men who say "Ye3 ma'am." It may not be according to Emily Post, tut it sounds friendly. :o: Now we know what the word "im mediate" means, thanks to it? pro longed, association with beer. It means April 6, or maybe 7, if not 8. :o: The be3t depression sermon of the week comes from the Indianapolis News: "The New York department store that sold 10.000 pairs of shoes in one day must have told someone that it had the shoes." :o. One business man who didn't have much of the same during the bank ing holiday got to reading books dur ing his snare time. He has just about waded through all the volumes on e-ound money at the library. :o: Hucy Long says he didn't engage in service during the war in Europe because ha wasn't mad at anybody ever there. However, lot3 of other men didn't have Mr. Lens's advan tage of a family quarrel to keep them at home, and go had to go across. :o: President Roosevelt signed the economy bill with an old pen lying close at hand. The usual demand for special gold pens to be treasured as couvenirs was not present. No body was around except office holders whose salaries may be cut, and, of course, they wouldn't care for such a keepsake. And as for the taxpayer, his tax receipt will serve nicely as a Ecuvccir of a great event. :o: NEED BEJTAIESA3CE.0F ; . ' PRACTICAL IDEALISM "there is another lessen which 1 think our experience should teach us and which must exercise a pro found effect upon cur whola outlook into the future. We need a renais sance of idealism. Some people have a false impression of the significance cf idealism. They think cf it as a philosophy separated far from the practical everyday life of affairs. They would go farther perhaps and insist that the man who has an ideal istic philosophy of life unfits himself to live satisfactorily in the world as it is. Now for me idealism means that there are values which cannot be expressed in material terms. In the time of prosperity value3 are like- ly to he expressed solely in material terms. In the years of plenty we loo sight of the fact that there are other values so far beyond the sphere cf getting and spending as to be catily overlooked or, if hastily recog nized, at once forgotten. When we como in tho quiet and sober moments of these ycaro of de pression to aik ourselves what are, after all, the highest values high est in tho sense that they can never be sacrificed for any other we come to thz calm judgment that there do exist values cf th'u higher order, which reveal to us sources cf su preme satisfaction within tho depths of our spirit and which are not medi ated through tho senses, or by the things we possess, but by those thoughts and feelings which trans cend this external world wherein we seem to live and move and have cur whelo being. I have i:i mind those deeply imbedded thoughts and emo tions which, cannot ho counted or measured cr weighed by any ma terial units of description cr com putation auch as tho illimitabi3 mass cf cur affections, within cur own family groups or the circlo of cur friends, cr in that Etill larger iphero which commands our interests and solicitude for the welfare of hu manity in general; cr cur instinctive appreciation of the order and beauty of the world in which we. live, cur sens of Justice and fair play, of duty, honor, the dictates of con science and the integrity of char acter. "These are the things that men iive by." It is only through an idealism of such a nature that we can penetrate to the core of reality. Otherwise we iive on the surface of existence and never aound its depths. John Grier Ilibben, former presi dent of Princeton university in the Forum. PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA Neb., as second-class mall matter i "Why is It that the ugliest people sometimes tako the best looking photographs? -:o: President Roosevelt keeps his mes sages short, which not only gets them printed in all editions of the news papers, but al30 it goe3 a long way in getting them generally read. :o: If every fellow who is in such a hurry when he drives his car down the street really had business at his destination, the depression never could havo started in this country. :o: The North Dakota governor who called out the militia to enforce one of his proclamations must be a rela tive cf Alfalfa Bill Murray of Okla homa. :o: "Tho President," says one of his spokesmen, "will strike while the iron is hot." And what is even more pleas ant to contemplate, he struck while the assets were cold. :o: One local cynic remarks that Sen ator Borah's proposal to prohibit the sale of 3.2 per cent beer to minors Is thoughtful, but doubtless super fluous. Our cynic doesn't believe 3.2 per cent beer will appeal much to "bottle babies" raised cn homo brew of a much higher alcoholic content. :o: LET'S C03IE OUT OF THAT ST0EH CELLAR Hey, all you timid souls down there is the storm cellar! Come out of your " 'fraid hole!" The storm is -over! Come out and sec the pretty rainbow! The bank3 are reopening! Your money is safe! The banks are sound and your old Uncle Sam i3 going to see them. through! .... .., . ... .. Common reason ta3 been en throned at Washington! The crisis has been met with intelligence and courage! The worst that could pos sibly have happened has already oc curred! Let's forget it now! Let's get down to work, loosen up, go on about our business and get things going again! All of cur best assets are intact land, homes, buildings, railroads, highways, schools, churches and most of our securities are good! We have everything we ever had to work with and for! We have been seeing ghosts for three years and wolves in sheep's clothing have been dogging our flanks! Now they havo been dis persed! This country today is as sound as a nut and it always was. We just had to have a little reassurance on that point, though, and now we have had it! Ey putting the bank3 on a sound basis, President Roosevelt has laid the foundation for new confidence and a new superstructure of busi ness! Anybody can sec that! Let's cas,t aside cur timid fears. Lct'.s start building, planting, ex panding j-i3t as if nothing had hap pened! Thero are so many things that need to be done, so much work awaiting idle hands! Prices aro coming back they simply have to come back! They are coming back because tho basis has beer, established for new credits and expanding demands that will create work and increase consumption. Overhead expenses havo been re duced in every line of enterprise. Taxes are coming down. Waste is being eliminated. Productive and consumptive capacity are coming into balance once more! It behooves everybody now to ap ply the same God-given sense of rea son to his own affairs that Roosevelt i3 applying to national affairs! His couraga and common senso should afford an inspiration to every indi vidual! Confidence is the keystone in the foundation of our civilization con fidence in our government, in its in stitutions and in our selves! Things are not going to pot! Let's get a new grip on ourselves and set to owrk to make this country what the Lord intended we should make it! The stage i3 set! America is go ing forward with Roosevelt! Come out of that ctorm cellar, timid ecu!, and joint tho precession! Let'3 go! Sicux City Tribune. QUAKES AND SCHOOL EUILDING3 Great as tho loss of life in the California earthquake was, it would have been appallingly greater if the public schools had been in session. Fortunately the disaster came at an hour when the children were in their home3 or on the streets. Lit tle has been said of this aspect of the calamity, hut the people of the stricken area are so grateful because of it that they are taking their losses, and in some instances their bereave ments, philosophically. Of all the schools in the most af fected area, only seven are in condi tion to permit repairing; the others were reduced to heaps of brick, mor tar and twisted steel. Even in those there would havo been many deaths ar.d injuries if pupils had been in them. As for those totally destroyed, the conclusion must be that more would havo been killed than would have escaped if they had been occu pied. It is amazing that In a region sub ject to earthquakes, greater precau tions were not taken in the con struction of school buildings. It has been demonstrated in Japan that it is possible to construct buildings in such a way as to have them with stand the most violent shocks. Cer tainly such construction should be employed in school buildings, at least. Tho additional cost is neg ligible compared with the liability, human and property, that i3 incur red by following conventional con struction. Of course, the demand for safe construction of school buildings is not confined to earthquake arcasL Cities and regions immune from such convulsions are subject to tornadoes ar.d hurricanes which may be even more destructive, though more limit ed in their ravages. The greatest less of life Kansas City has had from storm was that incident to the de struction, in part, of the Lathrop school i:i the hurricane of May 11, IS 86. The building vas of the old type, and the tragedy carried an ad monition observed in all later school construction. Kansas City Times. :o: BILL TO DRIVE TRADE AWAY FE0II NEEHASEA Once again a Nebraska legislature Is confronted with. a. bill providing for placing an excise tax upon cig arets. It should.be entitled: ,."A bill to transfer the sale ot cigarets from Nebraska merchants to those of oth er states." For it is a fact so plain that it could escape the attention cf none, that if the price of cigarets is raised in this state, consumers will havo them sent by parcel post by dealers located in other common wealths. As a matter of fact there is noth ing in the world contributing more heavily to the cost cf government than cigarets, which are taxed from the tobacco field to the ash, and for state governments to project them selves into this domain i3 little short of unthinkable. We are getting ail mixed up on this taxation business, and the sooner we straighten our selves out, the better it will be for tho people and for all taxing agen cies. It is not the tobacco companies wo are taxing; it is the people, for the tax falls on the public. The federal government did wrong in placing a tax on gasoline, and this will doubtless be rectified with in the coming year. The tax on this commodity was originally levied by the state of Oregon for road purposes, and so successful and popular did it immediately become that within 14 year3 it had been adopted by every state in the union, and whereas Ore gon had levied but 1 cent a gallon, two cf tho states are now collecting as much as 7 cents. This was dis tinctly a state tax for a specific pur pose, and for the federal government to invade the came field was wrong in every respect. Likewise, the taxing of tobacco products and liquors ha.3 always been a federal function, and it ha3 been exercised to the limit. Nothing now pays a higher tax than cigarets, un less it be gasoline, and the taxing should be left entirely in federal hands, just r.s the gas tax should be left to tho states. Cut aside from this consideration, should be the mat ter of protection to Nebraska mer chants, who pay property taxes and salaries in the state, and who are entitled to the business of the people cf Nebraska. A state 13 never Justified in levy ing a special sales tax, except in such case as that upon motor fuel, the revenue to be used for road pur poses; and very convincing argu ment can bo made against the fed eral government making any such levy. In order to be Just, such a tax should be very low and should be applied to everything, with the pos sible exception of food. If a busi ness is legitimate it has a right to live. Lincoln Star. MOVING TO ATTACK OIT THE FARM FEON: President Roosevelt moves so rap idly in hia attack on inherited na tional problems that the cheering public can hardly keep up with him. One day it is hank reform, the next day it is more revenue through le galizing light beer and today it is farm relief. Almost every one understands the EigniScance of the bank and beer moves, but probably seme city dwell ers will wonder why all the haste for the farmers after all, tho farm ers are a minority of the population and the rest of the country is in a pretty bad way. Fortunately ,the president does not take that attitude. He knows, as every one who has studied the problem knows, that there will be no prosperity for the cities until na tional purchasing power is restored and that ma33 purchasing power de pends upon the farmer having money to spend. So the president proposes to help the entire country by first helping tho long-suffering farmer, rhat isi good economics. Business men get the point, as witness the efforts cf the United States Chamber of Com merce during the last few months in behalf of farm relief. There are remarkable things about the Roosevelt farm program besides speed, though speed is essential to help the 1533 crops. In addition to speed tho president brings to this problem long study, the aid of ex perts and a broad scientific attitude The president attacks the prob lem along three broad fronts.the un bearble mortgage burden, the destruc tion of foreign markets by trade bar riers and world depression, and the overproduction or underconsump tion of farm products. The campaign on the mortgage front is in preparation. On the for eign front a special ambassador, Nor man K. Davis, is being sent abroad to negotiate with other governments regarding control of production, trade barriers and the world economic con ference. The immediate bill is the attack on the third front to limit domestic production by leasing and taking out of production excessive acreage and to raise the needed funds and in crease prices to a pre-war parity with industry by a tax on processors, such as millers and others. The bill com bines parts, cf, the older, domestic al lotment, leasing and cotton option contract plans. We do not know that this will work. More significant than the details of tho pian which may or may not work is the president's scientific and experimental attitude'toward it. Instead of presenting it in the con ventional cure-all manner, Mr. Rocse velt in his special message to con gress says: "I tell you frankly that it is a new and untrod path, but I will tell you with equaT frankness that an unprecedented condition calla for the trial of a new means to rescue agri culture. If a fair administrative trial of it is made and it does not produce the hoped for results, I shall he the fisrt to acknowledge it and advise you." This i3 an excellent approach to almost any problem of government. New York World-Telegram. :o: MONTANA'S BAD PRECEDENT 'Governor John E. Erickson cf Mon tana is to succeed the distinguished Thomas J. Walsh in the United States senate. The circumstances cf hi3 appointment are that he resign ed as governor, and the lieutenant governor'3 first act was Erickson's appointment to the senate. Montana has set a precedent that is not desirable, nor is it a healthy one for American politics. Such a coup has often been considered, and tho country has frequently been threatened with it, but this seems to be the first time that a governor and a lieutenant governor ever had the nerve to go through with it. Since the ice has been broken, we may new expect to see frequent ap plications of it. Memphis Commer cial-Appeal. -:o: 'n other tMn will weaken a man's faith in himsolf as these: (1) Letting the car crankcase bo drain ed 100 miles too Eoon; (2) losing a golf argument with the worst player in the club; (3) realizing that he is beginning to like spinach. -:o: "We are in a war today, the great est one this country has evsr been in, a war against poverty, a war against unemployment, a war against dissolution cf industry, a war against fear, a war every bit as vivid, every bit as destructive, a3 the one that wo fought with arms fifteen years ago. And since it took organization and leadership to win' our other wars, so it is going to take organization and leadership to win this one. WHAT WARE DECLARES EVERY TOWN FEELS Ware, in Calvin Ccclidge's county of Hampshire in Massachusetts, had a town meeting the other night. The hall was crammed. The majority of the citizens were bound to cut ap propriations for everything except relief work. They got what they wanted.' After the meeting Tom Prendergast said: "They cut every thing but the old pine tree." The ap propriations committee recommena ed a cut cf 13 per cent in all wages and salaries. The meeting voted a 5 per cent in addition except in re gard to wages. Cheered by this good beginning the friend3 of economy forced reduction upon reduction all along the line. Even the schools and the llhrary had to take their medi cine. Tho superintendent cf schools wasted his eloquence and poetry. This time the Ware folks meant busi ness. They wound up a good night's work with a set cf resolutions that have an eightenth century ring. Af ter reciting the privations of the townsmen, "heavily oppressed with taxes in multiplied form." the rceo lutions celled the rpcv.ir.l the great and general court to the serious situation m ware. Tne cit!- zens of Yv'are are to petition court for such changes in t?:e as will bring abcut pcut.on that iU V.' "Tho elimination cf the many state commissions v. hlcli now inter fere with local self-government and which have usurped local rights; e reduction cf salaries o; public offi cials, and the stoppage of pat activities of our cl.-.tc government so we can conduct ci:r c.vn local af;us and net be governed by state house strangers." The inhabitant- cf Ware wish to return to the happier conditions of their ancestors. They object to beins inspected, intcrfc::d with, ordered about by a pack of expensive and useless placemen. They sr.y to the intruding busybodies ar.d job makers under the gilded dome, "Mind your own business and give viz th.3 right to mind curs." If the spirit of Ware spreads the great and general court, which ha3 resitted savagely efforts to reduce its pay and loves to poke its inquisitive i.eco and regulating hand into matters that are r.cne of its concern, may yst be driven into abolishing superfluous offices, les sening the txp:i;sej of Government, lightening instead cf -continually raising taxation and restoring local autonomy. What Ware r?.y every town in the United States feci;. New York Times. :o: COURT HAD UZEY3 CASE Baltimore. A Baltimore court wa3 asked to deUrmir.c what share Libby Holman Reynolds, Broadway torch singer, and her infant son will have in the fortune built u: by the late North Carolina tobacco magnate, R. J. Reynolds, and al o the validity of her marriage to tho late Smith Reynolds. f:uit was Hied in circuit court by the S?.fe Dcno'it and Trust company cf Baltimore, trustee of the Reynolds estate, requesting the court to take jurisdiction and construe the will3 and dcedi involved. ,The court was ached not only to settle the case of Libby Holman Reynolds, but it also was asked to make a dec:ion in the cr.se of Smith Reynold's fhvt wife, Anno Cannon Reynolds Smith, from whom he was divorce;!, and their daughter. Altho Smith Reynolds left a will in New York, he was a miner when he died nd the Ncrtii Carolina law does not ncrm't a mir.cr to mr.he a will. The R. J. nev::o!db wi.M. under which h was a. l eicnc'r.rr. was filed ir North Carcli::r. IOWA EF.rTiA.L'C'F TiVE DAY IICEI-7SF. T,A"7 13 IN EFFECT Iowa's five day marriage license law went cut cf c::ir.te:icc tolay. as the governor signed the bill for its repeal. An Cmaha couple was the first to apply for a license at Council Bluffs, which again hopes to become the Gretna Croon cf western Iowa. While the lows s.-lon3 were mak ing it ca-.'rv to get married the Ne braska legislature made it easier to have the t'cs di-srlvcl, passing the hill that cuts t.Lo "ccoling-off" per iod frcm e' mer.ths to five weeks. In other wcrds, f.ro . wocks after a di vorce i' grantci, either of the par ties' are free to r ed again. The Zlzrcli -hattle between winter and spring is r.!.vay3 a gocd fight to watch, because we know it's in the bag for cur favorite to win, event ually. :o:- For rcme reason, the dlrpatchos have not inontlcnod It, but it must be very anncying to California jig:r.v; puzzle f.er.di to have pu;zle3 com pletely dh-r.rrar.ged hy c:uake3 when on has made a fair ctart toward as sembling them. V SB Money for CHOICE Farm Loans See an a. oavis Ground Floor Bates Bids PLATTSMOUTH E00SEVELT FINDS IT EASY TO BE SIMPLE Ey the great and unquestioned success which ilr. Roosevelt has had in his first approaches to congress, and in winning public confidence to :-o large a degree, politicians of the oi l sthool are puzzled. Washington diatches represent them az rubbing their eyes and scratching their heads as they observe the new president at work. They dovnot deny his ef fectiveness, but consider his methods net to bs "professional." This re calls the Austrian generals who com plainc I that Napoleon had defeatcu them in violation of established mili tary ruiej. To speak of Franklin Rooccvelt as an "amateur" in poli tics is merely silly. In many ways and under different tests he has shown himself to bo a consummate politician. IIi3 planning and win ning the democratic nomination for the presidency did not betray the hand of a bungler. It now appears that hl.i frequent reference during the presidential election to the need of leadership wa3 no idle use cf words. His assertion of executive au thority since March 4, together with the energetic rapidity with which he set himself to overcome one diffi culty after another, was plainly the result of long study and prepar ation. If there ha3 been any political art about it ail, it i3 the kind of art which ccnccals art. As president. Mr. Roosevelt has gone after uie tilings needful with the utmost frankn?s3 and directness. Without any peso or beating cf drums, he has announced his plans and quietly taken it for granted that congress and the country would give him cheerful co-opcraticn. He had, to be sure, the great advantage of appear ing undismayed when the wails were fallirg about him, and giving calm ?.nd collected orders when nearly every one else was hesitant or fright ened. That partly explains why the nation has risen to hi3 leadership with such acclaim. Like the oars men of the Latin poet, he has been strong because he has appeared to be strong. This is what baffles the old prac titioners in politics. They stand abcut much in the attitude of a vicux sabreur wondering how the untrained fencer can display such skill. But this, after all, only ar &U2S that it is Etill true, as Edmund Burke said it was in his day, that politicians do not know their own trade. Mr. Roosevelt has been show ing them aspects of it which never before fell under their eyes. "The great thing." wrote Pascal, "is to b simple." "But," he added, "it is so bard to be simple." Thus far in his icaficrrhip President Roosevelt has fortunately found it not too hard for him. New York Times. :o:- When the term3 of sale biils again read "cash in twelve months' time on notes with approved security," we will have turned the corner. SHERIFF'S SALE State cf Nebraska, Ccunty of Cass, ss. By virtue cf an Order of Sale issued by C. E. Ledgway. Clerk of the District Court, within and for Cass county, Nebraska, ard to me directed, I will on the 15th day of April, A. D. 1933, at 10 o'clock a. m of faid day at the south front door cf the court house in Plattsmouth, in said county, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, the fol lowing real estate, to-wit: North half of tho northeast quarter of Section 2, Township 10 North, Range 9; South half of the southeast quarter of Sec tion 35, in Township 11 North, Range 9, all East of tho 6th Principal Meridian, containing 15S.C0 acre3, more or less, all in Cas3 county, Nebraeka The same being levied upen and taken as the property of John D. Foreman, et al, Dafendant3, to satis fy a judgment of said Court reeovcr fd hy The Federal Land Bank, of Omaha, a corporation, et al. Plain tiffs and cross petitioners against said Defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, March 11, A. D. 1933. II. SYLVESTER, Sheriff Cass County, Nebraska. ml3-5w . , Lumber Sawing Commercial 6 awing from your own log lumber cut to your specification. Wo have ready cut dimen sion lumber and sheeting for sale at low prices. KE33ASKA BASKET FACTORY Thero is considerable difference of opinion on what beer will cost by the glass, and eo we surpose we'll havo to wait a couple of weeks to find out hwat it will come at in a tin pail. :o: We have never seen anything so ravishingly beautiful about the dawn. Tho new times that we have been able to see it, we couldn't appre ciate its finer points for thinking of tho beautiful sleep we could have been enjoying had we not been there. NOTICE OF GUARDIAN'S GALE In the District Court of Cass Coun ty, Nebraska. In tho matter of the- guardianship cf Gertie Beckner, insane. Notice is hereby given that in pur suance of an order and license issued by tho Honorable Jnme3 T. Begley. judse cf the District Court of Cass County, Nebraska, on tho 18th day cf March, 1933, to ma, Searl S. Davi3. guardian of tho person and estate of Gertie Beckner, iarane, I will on tho 24th day of April. 1933. at 10 o'clock a. m.. at the front door cf the court house in the City of Plattsmouth in Cass County, Ne braska, offer for sale at public auc tion, to the highest bidder for cash. the following described real estate, to-wit: The West 37 acres, in the Weat half of tho Southwest Quarter (WVa of SWU ) of Sec tion 17, and tho East 7 acres in the Ea.?t half of the South east Quarter ( E 'z of SEU) of Section 18, all in Township 11 North, of Range 13, cast of tho 6th P. M., in Cas3 County, Ne braska. Said offer of sa'o will remnin open for a period cf one (1) hour and said premises will be sold subject to all liens and for cash. Dated this 20th day of March, 1933. SEARL S. DA VI 3, Guardian of Gertie Beck ner, insane. A. L. TIDD, Attorney. m20-5w ORDER OF HEARING and Notice on Petition for Set tlement of Account In the counfy court of Cass County, Nebraska: ,.f State, of Nebraska, Cass County, es.. Probate Fee Book 9, page 322. To the heir3 at law and all per sons interested in the estate of Charles Creamer, deceased: On reading the petition of Georgia Creamer, administratrix, praying a final settlement and allowance of her account filed In tlm court on tha 11th day of March, 1933, and for assignment ot residue or said estate; determination of heirship; and dis charge of administratrix; It is hereby ordered that you and all persona interested in said matter may, and do, appear at the County, Court to bo held in and for said county, on the 7th day of April, A. D. 1923, at ten o'clock a. m. to show cause, if any there be, why the pray er of the petitioner should not bo granted, and that notice of the pend ency of said petition and tho hearing thereof be given to all persons inter ested in said matter by publishing a cBpy of this order in tho Plattsmouth Journal, a semi-weekly newspaper printed in paid county, for three suc cessive weeks prior to said day of hearing. In witness whereof I have here unto set my hand and the seal of raid court this 11th day of March. A. D. 1933. A. II. DUX BURY, (Seal) ml 3-3 w County Judge. NOTICE OF HEARING cn Petition for Determination of Heirship Fee Book 9. page 351. Estate of Elizabeth Elle deceaped. In tho County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. The State of Nebraska: To nil per sons interested in said estate, credi tors and heirs take notice, that An drew v. Stander has filed his petition aiiegmg mat Elizabeth Ellen Akeson died intestate in Cass county, Ne braska, on or about September 3rd, 18S5, being a resident and inhabitant cf Cass county, Nebraska, and died seized of the following described real estate, to-wit: An undivided one-half of the north half cf the northwest quarter of Section seven (7), in Township eleven (11) North, Range twelve (12) East of the S'xth Principal Meridian in Cass county, Nebraska leaving as her sole and only heirs at law tho following named persons, to wit: Mattes Akcscn, her father; That the interest of the petitioner in the above described real estate is as a subsequent purchaser of said real estate and praying for a deter mination cf tho time of the death of said Elizabeth Ellen Akeson end of her heirs, the degree of kinship and the right of descent of the real prop erty belonging to the eald deceased, in the Stato of Nebraska. It 13 ordered that tha sama stand for hearing on the 14th day of April. 1933, before the" County Court of Cas3 ccunty in the court house at Plattsmouth, Nebraska, at the hour of ten o'clock a. m. Dated at Plattsmouth. Nebraska. this 17th day of March. A. D. 1933. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) ci20-3w County Judge.