PijQS TWO PLATTSMOUTH 8X28 WXKKLY JOURNAL MONDAY, APEIL 24, 1933. PUBLISHED SEm-WEEKLY AT Entered at Postoffice, PUttsmouth, R. A. BATES, Publisher STJESCETPTION PRICE 2.C0 A YEAR EH FIRST POSTAL ZONE Subscribers living in Second Postal Zone, $2.50 per year. Beyond 600 miles, i 3.00 per year.' Rate to Canada and foreign countriea, $8.50 per year. All subscriptions are payable strictly In advance. Honesty 13 also the best politics. :o: And they called T. R. a rough rider! :o: In some theaters there 13 nothing reserved except the seats. :o: Another thing business seems to need at present is more outlet and less let out. :o: Hitler's new power seems to have cone to his head and may lead to defeat. . ' :o: Congress fixed the alcoholic con tent of beer but not the political content. :o: Can you remember when a man ence asked a woman: "Do you mind if I smoke"?"" :c: . , The limitation-of-arrns conference will pass into history noted chiefly for it3 own limitations. :o: Dandit: A man who wants what you have. Also, in the Orient, a man who has what you want. :o: Japan will keep tho League of Na tiens islands, but will Eend back the ctring they were tied up with. :o: Seeni3 to U3 that New Jersey man who confesed he ha3 three wives might properly be accused of hoard ing; :b: The way to travel around the world as inconspicuously as possible, would be to be Mrs. George Bernard Shaw. . :o: AT0ARD THE EXPRESS OUT OF THE SLOUGH Eleven important measures on Mr: Roosevelt's program of legislation for. the special session have still to be errfcted. This list doesn't include theJ 50-iqur week bill passed by thjj atef on it3 own motionanQ iasm. The foundling seems to be shut out from the White house, and Speak cr Rainey will have none of it. Mr. Byrnes, the house democratic leader, say3 that the house will put through rpcedily the legislation asked by the president. Mr. Snell, the minority leader, was probably speaking as a matter of form when he gave notice that the minority would "insist on careful and complete consideration' of the measures proposed. Mr. Byrnes was equally formal in assuming that the majority agreed with Mr. "Snell's statement. , In the stress of imperious national nee('.3 that "careful and complete con ride'ration is something very different from what it used to bo when there was more time for dawdling, supsr- fluou3 speech-making, for opposition for the mere sake of opposition. New occasions have taught new duties even to the senate. In the compulsion of disaster and public opinion that brdy ha3 shut off Its infinite capacity rf deliberation and debate. It has learned to act. The spirit of the I'.ouse, of the senate and of the na tion 13 one. The republicans as a rule have gone beyond partisanship Of some measures or details in them they may be doubtful; but they are all crgcr to pull the country out of the depression and will ir.g to stand behind the president. TJiii substantial, unanimity, this swift- passage- of momentous acts, has made "a "profound impression in Eu ropqL .In England the praise of the president may" in some" cases be tho rs?M to be. a hint or. a rebuke to tho 'inertia or- the.'-' timidity of Mr. Baldwin or-of ; the national govern ment's a whole, but of the sincerity of the 'praise there is no doubt. Th.e United States resolutely and immed iately? setting out on the road to re covery, is the leader of that, world re covery, which all nations hope and strive :for. Once more the. American "turns? a keen,, untroubled face Lome, to the instant need of things." "Leglslationin express train time," the Frankfurter Zeitung heads a let ter from. Its New York correspond ent 'about" affairs at Washington. Wclt.'AnierlCETis' have already loved fpeea.V. The faster they are yanked cut -ol the slough of despond, the closer jthe adherenco to the national character, temperament- and tradi-tion.-New York Times. " PIATTC3IOTJTH, JJEB3ASXA Neb., ae econ!-cl3fle mall matter "The present crisis," says Walter Lippmann, "is a good crisis." All right, Walter, you take it. :o: '- Many women think they are marry ing model husbands when they are only getting sport models. :o: : The arrival of balmy days call3 for scanty dresses, stockingless legs, swimming suit and a general back-to-the-form movement. :o: Some or our leading politicians don't know whether they're back of the President, or whether be just managed to get ahead of them. :o: No one seems to know why a joke that has stood up "valiantly on the vaudeville stage3 for forty years should suddenly go flat on the radio :o: In connection with the craze of the fairer sex for wearing pants, our stand simply i3 that it i3 O. K. for them to wear ants, but we think that they shouldn't show; :o: innocent remark or the week, heard yesterday over one of the early editions: "Well, there must have been something to all that gossip about Jimmy Walker and the Comp- ton girl, after ell." -;o: - It takes an awful lot of water to get the flower beds and gardens soak ed after a winter of drought and we suppose tho brewers And much the same situation after twelve or thirteen years of prohibition. ' ; : :o: ' Congressional leaders Inform us that the White House "is studying with great care" several congression al recommendations for Inflation of the currency. And nobody will dis pute that' Is the way congressional recommendations ought to be studied . n - Nobody - can reel more virtuous - than tho man who Just got under the .wire wipi hi3 ii3 1933 license tag in e'nthus-ftime'tft Svta .!affcsC His indignation toward those who are still dodging the police knows no bounds. One of those extra-virtuous ones drove down- town with his new tags shining glor iously the other morning, and "be came so sharply on the lookout for license slackers in other cars that he collided with a bus. . ;o: LIEBOWITZ SHOULD EE DISQUALIFIED Samuel S. Liebowitz, chief of de fense counsel for the Scottsboro Ne groes, has disqualified himself for further participation in the Alabama trials. Safe in Brooklyn, , he gave this description of the people of Ala bama as a reason why they could condemn these Negroes on the evi dence offered: "If you ever saw those creatures, those bigots, whose mouths are slits in their faces, whose eyes pop out at you like a frog's, whose chins drip tobacco juice, bewhiskered and filthy, you would not ask how they could do It. When I got back home I felt that I needed a moral, mental and phy sical bath.' That i3 Mr. Liebowitz's opinion of the people of Alabama, among whom he purpose? to go jnce more for the trial of tho remaining defendants. We say without hesitation that when he appears again, the court3 should tell him politely but firmly that he cannot appear in any court in Ala bama. Mr. Liebowitz, if he had an open mind himself, if he were not as nar row in his own way as he pictures the people of Alabama to be In theirs, if -he were not so steeped 'in1 his own prejudices, would consider what they might be thinking about the fact that 53 city blocks of disorder and riot ing attended hi3 return to New York. Hand-to-han fighting, policemen beat en, men "and women yelling them selves hoarse while marching "to municipal defiance how is that any better than Alabama? Wo hopo a way can yet be found to give these-Negroes a trial in ac cordance with Justice that is, to prove them guilty beyond a reason able doubt or let them go. But it v.-Jll never be accomplished by prc- uulee and bigotry from New York clapping in the faca bigotry and prc Jhdic'e in Alabama. - Milwaukee Journal. - ' THE ROOSEVELT PROFESSORS From the human standpoint, per haps the moat interesting thing about the new administration is the new type of presidential advisers wno have come in with Mr; Roosevelt:' They are different from any we have ever had. Usually the men closest to the president and of most influence upon his policies have been "members of hi3 cabinet, or leading members of the house or senate, or large, men pf finance and affairs. For example, Mr. Ccolidge leaned heavily upon the late Dwight Morrow, and Mr. Hoover was more prone to listen to the ad vice of hi3 cecretary of treasury, Mr. Mills, than any other. Mr. Harding had his Dougherty. Mr. Wilson his Colonel House, Mr. McKinley his Mark Hanna and Mr. Taft was great ly influenced by Senator Aldrich. Mr. Roosevelt is the first president whose administration has a distinct university flavor, given it by the small group of professors who are hi3 most intimate counselors and up on whom, in matters of general pol icy, he seems to rely more than up on anyone else. It is a unique situ ation, but appears to be working well. Not the least interesting part is that the Rooseveltian professors have had no previous experience in practical politics and are, in fact, as eomoletelv non-nolitlcal as can be imagined. To the average politician this would seem a disqualification for a presidential adviser, and in most cases it would be In the case of Mr. RooseveI:-3 pro fessors it is not at all. One reason is they do not advise on matters con nected with patronage or politics, but on matters of public policy. Anoth er reason i3 that, while the professors may be without political experience Mr. Roosevelt himself is not. For ; good many years ho has been in prac tical nolitics. Both In and out of public office he has been politically active. He supplies in this respect what the professors lack, and they seem to form a combination as good as it is unusual. There is this, too, to be said while the professors aro not politi clans, they are by no means idealistic dreamers. On the contrary, 'Prof Molev. the chief figure in this uni versity group, is rather on the hard boiled side, takes an extremely prac tical view of politics In general and is not without a cynical trace. Be ybnd doubt, Mr. Moley is closer to the president than any member of his cabinet, more nearly hi3 Chief ad viser than any of them, closer than the Secretary of Slate Mr.THUH, un der" whom "he'swreSL. HBOsraiiaani OX intelligence and character and de voted to Mr. Roosevelt. Among the other professors not quite.; so con spicuously close as Mr. Moley but consulted and trusted with Important work are Prof. R. G. Tugwell and Prof. A. A. Berle. Then there is Prof. Mordecal Ezekiel, not one of the In ner professional group, but credited with authorship, along with Prof Tugwell, of the farm-relief measure about to be enacted It is generally accepted that the preparatory work on the Roosevelt legislative program has been done by some one or some two of the profess ors, though, of course, others have been consulted and used. For ex ample, Huston Thompson, formerly assistant attorney general under Wilson, drew the securities regula tion bill. In the main, however, the professors have prepared the pro gram and neither members of the caDinet nor me statesmen in con gress have had much, if anything, to do with it. So far as congress is con cerned, in most cases, it has known nothing of the bills until they were introduced, with the president's re quest that they be passed. And they have not known much more about them after passage. A great deal of work was involved in the preparation of these measures. For the most part, however, the pro fessors keep unobtrusively In the background, go about their jobs quietly. Mr. Moley has been until now the only one with an official position. The othcr3 are pretty con sistently in Washington, and Prof Tugwell, who had beenasked to be come assistant attorney-general, only yesterday wa3 confirmed as an assist ant secretary of agriculture. Th bringing by Mr. Roosevelt of these students of economics and pub lie questions into the government, and utilizing their brains to supple ment lm own practical political knowledge, i3 an Ideal combination if it can be made to work. So far it has. Frank It. Kent in Baltimore Sun. :o: Only two years -ago, before the years - ago, Manchurian trouble started,- China was rated as a nation of 400 million people. Now it i3 said to have 500 million. The Japanese must 'be be ginning to realize that whittling China down to a reasonable size is a difficult undertaking. ' -' "' insurer prices There is no more 25-cent wheat or 10-cent corn in Nebraska. The day of such dismal prices has passed. Omaha wheat yesterday made a sensational advance to 664 cents. Corn sold at 29 H cents. Nor was that all. Everywhere commodity stocks, and price3 followed suit Stocks rose an average of $5 a share; cotton a dollar a bale. Steel mount ed to a new high for the year, and steel production was reported at 23 per cent of capacity, as compared to a recent low of 15, and 19.5 only a week ago. Only yesterday Moody's index re ported that the average of commod ity prices wat 92.5 the day before. A week before that it was 90.2; a month before S7.4. The low for the year was 78.7. The Increase, in so short a time, is remarkable and highly sig nificant. What is going on? The dollar is getting cheaper, and so prices are going higher. And why? Because we quote the Associated Press -"President Roosevelt moved today on the internationand domestic fronts in a broad campaign to re store American price levels, wages, and credits. ... He has in mind a controlled nrice level, a controlled credit, and a managed currency." Because quoting tho stock mar ket report "announcement of in flationary steps at Washington prompted feverish shifting of funds into commodities and shares to take advantage of prospective decreased purchasing power of the dollar." That is easy to understand. When dollars are going down in value it is high time to buy. For tomorrow, next week, next month, they will buy less. Tho goods and commodities they are exchanged for will sell for more odl lars. It will take more dollars to buy them. . What is it that President Roose velt is doing and planning to bring about this result? In the first place, there will be no more licenses to export gold. That means we are' off the gold standard. Our currency is at a discount "de preciated" abroad. It takes more of It to buy foreign goods.' Stating it the other way around, foreign cur rencies advance.' They will buy more dollars, and so more American goods. That encourages exports, and at bet ter prices in term3 of dollars. So there are higher dollar prices at home." ' ' ' ' " The president is not stopping with that;: There is'jA'cbntrolled expansion involved "In 'hfs plans' for developing the Tennessee valley and for an ex tended program 'of -public works. These will involve the ultimate use and expenditure of billions of dol larsor of bonds exchangeable for dollars and put multitudes of idle men to work, earning wages and spending money. The federal farm board, that two years ago held 325 million bushels of wheat and enormous stocks of cotton, has disposed .of .its holdings and is out of the market. An active, planned campaign is be ing launched to put to work the two billions of sound currency and the extended credits mad available by the recent banking act. At the same time some plan .for deposits insurance and for the release of large sums of deposits now tied up in banks only partly" open is being worked out. The underbrush has been cleared away. The foundations have Deen laid. And upon them 13 being reared a rareful and scientific policy for re storing price leyels through the med ium of a managed currency, increased credits, public 'enterprise, and pub lic aid and encouragement to private enterprise. " ; Th9 prompt response of prices 13 highly encouraging to every farmer, every miner, every manufacturer, every merchantr'to every worner with. a job and every worker looking for one. Encouraging, too, to every debt or, who has had to labor under the heavy injustice of repaying dollars that were cheap .when ho borrowed them with dollars. now dear beyond all reason- . ; Nor will this be a run-away ex pansion. President Roosevelt stands squarely on his platform pledge of "a sound currency to be preserved at all hazards." - H will countenance no fiat printing press money. Every dollar will know that its redeemer liveth in gold," or silver, or bonds, or adequate assets. But the. produc ers and workers. of . America are no longer to quote- William J. Bryan's familiar phrase to be "crucified on a cross of gold." -World-Herald. - -:o: It's hard to visualize the full and far reaching benefits of beer. A Chi cago man. who bets on the horses says it should be a lot easier to pick .win- ner3 now, since-, .the brewery truck horses have gone back to. their old Jobs. Cass County Farm J dmdwdm Copy furnished from Office of County Agent Walnscott Farm Record Summaries Returned. . Summaries of , the farm records completed in Cass county this year showed an average cash income of $2534 and a cash expenditure of $1605 leaving a let gain of $929.00. The average Inventory loss was, live stock $442, feeds and grains $358, machinery and equipment, $227 and farm improvement $153, or a total of $1180.00. Tho net cash gain minu3 the inventory loss leaves a minus figure of $251.00. The average rate earned on invest ment of the entire group was -3.84 The highest individual made plu3 C.2 and the lowest -10.S4. The most outstanding thing about the entire group of summaries is that practically all cf the income was from livestock. These that were forced to sell grain at tha low pre vailing prices are all in the low group. Another noticeable feature is that where a farmer milked about a donen cows and had about 200 good lay ing hens they showed a much higher cash income than thoce that did not. General expenses cn all farm:; were 20 lower than two years ago. Spring Kouscctecning Time. The U. S. D. A. bulcltm3 entitled, "Housecleaning Mads Easier," and "Floors and Floor CcTcrinss," con tain many helpful Ei'.g'jestions to housewives who are now confronted with spring housecleaning. Methods of cleaning walls and ccilins', floor coverings, furniture, windows, mir rors, china,' earthenware ur.J glass ware, as well as plumbing, refrig erator, and food receptacle and gen eral directions fcr cleaning a room aro taken up in dotcil. Floors end Gcor coverings are either the pride or dci-pair of most housewives. Fifty years ago little attention was given tho fiooi'3 them selves, bc-jond having them level, fairly tight ar.d of sound lumber, for they are usually covered entirely with carpet or matting in tho living rooms and left tare and unfinished or at most, painted, in the kitchen and pantries. Today, cmcothly fin ished floors and removable rugs are the ambition cf every homomalzer. Of those fortunate enough to have new hardwood, pcliwhcd floors, their problem tijitDojt -w&y to )"ccp them in prime cor.fcjtion. nd ttle le?s. fortunate hcraemakcrs, their task is to give new color and lustra to old floors and floor coverings. . Both of these classes of home- makers will fir.d the instructions in the bulletin cn floors and floor cover ings simple and easy to follow. The home extension agent will bo glad to discuss your housecleaning problems with you and the bulletins aro free for the asking. Gvercrowdirg ol Click Is Espcnsivi Crowding noro chicks into a brooder house than it will properly accommodate is cxpsiisivo and waste ful. It is Ilk 3 trying to crow too many stocks cf corn in one hill. A dim light, such as a lantern, will lessen the danger cf chicks piling and crowding in the brooder house as well as persuading a number of them to cat at night. Night feeding promotes rapid and uniform growth. To prevent breeder pneumonia, sprinkle r.ll moldy ilttcr thoroly with formalJahydo solution (one pint of formaldehyde to 4C gallons of wa ter) and cover overnight. When again dry, it is rtzly to use. Three cr fcur excellent chick feeders can ba mado fro:n one orange crate. The chicks' first feed may be had from feelers mr:de of ordinary lath. Encuc'h feeders to accommo date half cr tv.o-thirds of the brood at one time ar-3 recommended. Hard ware e'eth (hail screen) covered platforms for chick ccder3 and. wa terers r.re crctt r.5d3 to sanitation and chick heailh during the brood ing period. Chic'':; raash ground to flour, like finer. era I: not recommend ed tecr.us.c It is cftcn sticky and pasty. Trarv-Ia-t n, H-'.': of Eittsrsweet. If you ;;re- zorcy to, see disappear ing from 'our r.r.ttvnn' landscape. tho golden g!c'j?3 cf the? bittersweet vine, you will vvr.r.t to do nonie? transplant ing when rprir g comes. That is the season when the plant roct3 can most successfully bo lifted. Bittersweet threatens to become extinct along our roadsides, dut to the careless way it Is torn down, orch year by those who gather it for indocr decoration. A few root? brought each spring to some pari cf ycur yard where the , vines crin be protected will be both a. means or aaumg Leauty 10 ycrar home grounds and cf saving the bit tersweet vine which is a joy both 10 bird3 who eat the bright berries and, to those who cherish" tlialtoucIi6I color on leafless landscape. Red dogwood and buck brush which is native in this country can also bo secured almost, at will and will add much to the plantings in your yard. Too Early to Sow Sudan. Sudan grass, now widely used as temnorarv mid-summer Dasture. Is strictly a hot weather crop. The safe sowing date is about May 10th in southeastern Nebraska and later in the northern and western parts of the state. Earlier seeding is likely to result in a poor stand, especially if the weather is cool, The rate of seed ing for eastern Nebraska is 20 to 25 pounds per acre. Most farmers pre fer to. drill it, although small patches may be sown broadcast and harrow ed or disced in. Sudan grass will cross with cane if the fields are close together, or sudan grass reed may contain some cane reed. In either case the plants from the crossed or mixed seed may produce the same prussic acid which makes cane a dangerous crop for live stork pasture.. Farmers who want. a :-afe pasture for valuable livestock should bo particular about their sudan grass seed. In order to make available pure sudan grass, the Ne braska Crop Growers association be jran certification cf this crop in 1932, and a few members of thi3 associa tion havo an available seed supply at the present time. Gen. Ho Ying-Chlng, new military overlord of North China, says: "China's policy of resistance to the Japanese invasion remains unchang ed" That certainly make3 it easy for the Japs. :o: ARKY ORGANIZATION AND WHAT IT COSTS The recommendation to the mil itary committee of the house of rep resentatives by Major General John son Hagocd cf a plan for the reorgan ization of the army which he claims would save 50 million dollars an nually 12 coupled with such criticisms of the present system as to make the country prick up its ears. General Hagccd's assertion that the war de partment "has always collapsed at the outbreak, of every war" i3 not borne out, however, by the history of the world war. But there is no question that the war department substantially col lapsed, cr at least functioned exe crably, under Secretary Alger in the Spanish war. Nor any question that it functioned--still-'worse atCeiybut break of the civil war, after Lincoln, reluctantly fulfilling the terms of a political deal entered into by his managers without .his consent, se- Iectjed as his first war secretary, Si- mon Cameron, who thereupon en couraged a notorious traffic in army contracts. Following the reorganization of the arniy sj-Etem accompanied under the direction of Elihu Root around the turn of the century there has bean, on the whole, general conn dence in its efficiency. When the sen ate military affairs committee under took to investigate the department early in the world war it not only found In Newton D. Baker a secretary of far higher abilities and fitness than either Alger or Cameron, but it did not find a system that had collapsed. . Yet any officer who comes before a congressional committee and testi fies, ' as General Hagood has, that the .present organization is "top- heavy, contains too many conflicting agencies, has too much divided re sponsibility, etc., should get a care-i ful hearing and undoubtedly will His further claim that he presented hi3 plan of reorganization to Presi dent Hoover but that nothing was done about it adds an element of political interest and probably as sures rome democratic sympathy. It i3 apparent that President Roosevelt iz convinced that the rout ine operating costs of both army and navy' are far too high. Hi3 report ed belief that a total of 200 million dollars a year can be saved on the combined services has been especially linked with proposed economies in payments now made to civilian em ployes. While this involves an ap parently even larger saving in the war department than General Hagood proposes, it does riot, as yet, neces sarily imply grave dissatisfaction on the president's part with the way in which dthc army is organized under the general staff and its chief. But it i3 also true -that any system of organization tends in time o becom too complex unless subjected to per iodical overhauling. .. . It - is possible that the reorganisation for which General Hagood calls is needed both for economy and military efficiency Further hearings before the house military affairs committee should at least, receive close public attention. Springfield Republican. Luntar Scrbg Mt tO TOUT 9m at km pftoo. NEBRASKA BASKET FACTORY When a banker admit3 that ne uses the money of hi3 depositors to speculate, he might just as well leave off the "s." .... :o: And then there's the fellow who did his bit. in the rcnovizlng cam paign by getting his note renovized down at the bank. :'o: Those who follow the news from congress, closely will note that cer- 's? tain similarities between Democratic It,, politicians and Republican politi- 5 cian3 are beginning to crop out. ' :o: Mr. Shaw landed at Southampton, and Immediately denied once more,, the reported rudeness to Helen Keller f' and Ann Harding. Mr. Shaw has now denied hi3 way about two-third3 ,1 the distance around the world, and ; ; Isn't getting anywhere with it. Mr. '; Shaw's best hope of inducing" the,; world to forget his old rudenes3 13 to embark on other rudeness of a dif ferent form. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. - . - . - In the matter of the estate of Mary Wheeler, deceased. Fee Book 9, page No. 355. Notice of Administration. All persons interested in said es tate are hereby notified that a peti tion has been filed in said Court al leging that said deceased died leav ing no l?st'will and testament and praying for administration upon her estate and for such other and further orders and proceedings in the prem ises as may be required by the stat utes in such cases made and provided to the end that said estate and all things pertaining thereto may be finally settled and determined, and that a hearing will be had on said petition before said Court on the 5th day of May, A. D. 1933, and that if they fail to appear at paid Court on raid 5th day of May, 1933, at ten o'clock a. m. to contest the raid pe tition, the Court may grant the same and prart administration of said es tate to W. A. Wheeler or some other suitable person and proceed to a settlement thereof. Dated this 3rd day of April, A. D. 1933. " , A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) al0-3w County Judge. NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE Notice is hereby given that by virtue, of a chattel mortgage dated ths 13th llay-of April, 1931. and dujy filed in the office of the Cbiinty Clerk "of T!ass colfntyTTebraska, "on or about the 15th aydf April, 1931, executed by Frank and Bertha Schlichtemicr to J. J. Pollard at Ne hawka, Nebraska, and by J. J. Pol lard assigned to the INTERNATION AL HARVESTER COMPANY OF AMERICA, a Wisconsin corporation, to secure the payment of the sum of Nine Hundred Ninety-Five Dollars and Seven Cents ($995.07), and there 13 now due the sum of Seven Hun dred Forty-Four Dollars and Twenty Seven Cents ($744.27), and default having been made in the payment of said rum, we will sell the property therein described: One Farmall Tractor, Engine No. T-10S473; One Farmall Cul- tivator at public auction, for cash, to the highest bidder at the place of busi ness of Mrasek & Son, Plattsmouth, County of Cass, State of Nebraska, on the 13th day of May, 1933," at 1:00 o'clock p. m. of said day. Terms Cash. Dated this ISth day of April. A. D. 1933. INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER COMPANY OF AMERICA By A. Hoover. Collector. a20-4w ORDER OF HEARING and Notice cn Petition for Set tlement of Account ' - In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. State of Nebraska, Cass county, ss. Probate Fee Book 9, page 320. To the heirs at law and all per sons interested in the estate of David Murray, deceased: - On reading the petition of Flora Murray, Administratrix, praying a final settlement and allowance of her account filed in this Court on the 19th day of April, 1933, and for de termination of heirship, assignment of residue of said estate and dis charge of Administratrix; It is hereby ordered that you and all persons interested in said matter. may, and do, appear at the County Court to be held in and for said ccunty. on the 19th day of May. A. D. 1933 at ten o'clock a. m., to show cause, if any there be, why. the pray er of. the petitioner- should not; be granted, and that notice of the pen dency cf said petition and the hear ing thereof he given to all persons interested in said matter by publish ing a copy of this order in the Platts- jnouth Journal, a semi-weekly news paper printed in said county, for three successive weeks prior to said day pf hearing. In witness whereof, I have here unto set my hand and the seal of raid Court this 19th day of April, A. D. 1933. -'A. H." DUXBURY, (Seal) a24-3w County Judge. Everything for school most complete line In Cass county at eates Book Store. 1 m 5 i I