FAQS TWO PIATTSKOUTH 8E2Q V WEEKLY JOURNAL THURSDAY, MAT 4; 1933. I III I I T Ihe PSatfsmoRfh joornal HTEL263LED SEXI-WEEKLY AT . Entered at Postoffice. PlatMmouth, R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PaiCB $2.00" A YEAH JS ITBOT. POSTAL ZOHB Subscribers living in Second Postal Zone, $2.50 per year. Beyond COO miles, $8.00 per year. Rate to Canada and foreign countries, $8.50 per year. All subscriptions are payable strictly In advance. Mr. Inraan left the presbytery wait ing at the churcli. ' '- :o: Lilac time is here again, but some folks do not wait for spring to lilac the dickens. -:o:- Who remembers the old-fashioned girl who used black ink to hide holes in her stockings? :o: Lucky i3 the man who can "break" c. young mule this spring instead of baring to purchase a new car. : :o: Keep on plugging. Remember the first olive ycu succeed in fishing out cf a bottle loosens up the others. :o: "The public prefers a joke with whiskcra on it." contends a radio clown, in self-defense. It seems an unusually clear explanation of Mr. Chaw. ' :o: Kuey Long has forbidden Louis iana to rend an exhibit to the Chi cago world's fair. Of course, if Uuey gees himself, any other exhibit would pale in comparison. :o: If, as the Freudians say, a bluster ing manner is often the sign of an inferior complex, Huey. Long's com plex must be so inferior as to be practically subterranean. :o: The Akron disaster, officials say, must not" discourage us from going ahead : with dirigible construction, for the Zeppelins are indispensable in national defense. E3pecially if the war i3 held on a niqe day. . . . :o-- - ' "The art of politics," according to S:g. Mussolini, "i3 the highest call ing La which the human spirit can. indulge," Anyhow, no. taxpayer Y.illibook. "Jauary 2, -postage stamp arfcui that it isn't the highest priced calling now available' to mankind. : :o: The premier cf Franco is prepar ing to ask his deputies to pay the December installment on the Amer ican debt. It is a matter cf soma deli cacy, judging from the way he goes bcut it something like taking wife No. 2 for the alimony money due wife No. 1 last summer. :o:- GSEATEST FORCE IN THE WORLTJ'zine Steel reported a production ad The other day Dr. George Crile, one of the most distinguished men in . medical research, announced his discovery that the functioning of the human brain i3 in the nature of elec trical discharges. The ;brain com tains millions upon millions of tiny cicatrical generators, deriving their energy from the body through the rupra-renal glands, just above the kidneys. Mental activity depends upon-. th3 proper functioning of those glands. That i3 another demonstration cf tho depths to which modern science has penetrated into Nature'3 secrets. It is more than that, however; it is an illustration cf the fact that noth ing, net oven the most serious eco nomic distress, can keep men from thinking. And as long as thought persists, and the human mind reveals truths from day to day, the human race is in no danger c lapsing back into barbarism. We go forward in the things which really count for something in the lifo cf the race, regardless of our temporary money difficulties. Noth ing can rtcp our forward progress. Imagination r.rd couraga still are more powerful than wealth, immense ly mere potent than war. Thft ether day a ycung man flew his airplane at a spesd of 410 miles an hour, more than six mile3 a min ute, a . mile in under ten seconds! Twice in the past month daring ycung Britishers havo flown over the peaks of Mount Everest, seeing end photographing a spot heretofore un seen by man. The great airship Akron was wrecked, but the greater Macon starts out on her maiden flight with her crew undaunted. And astronomers discover cosmic lights in the distant realms of space which "may be unseen planets signalling to unknown worlds across the vastnesse3 of the universe. "Imagination can keep us young forever," e. great . teacher said a few days ago. imagination and courage are the only real forces in thi3 world of ours, and they have not failed yet. PLATTSHOUTH, HEBEASKA Neb., as second-class mall matter J The skeleton of a prehistoric man with exceedingly long arms has been dug up in Asia. Probably the first piscatorial raconteur. :o: "A poet's work is a reflection of his mind," we read. This may ac count for some of the modern blank verse we have read recently. :o:- One day we read that "Omaha Pas tor Denies Kissing Girl," and the next dav we read "Girl Denies Kissing P.nstnr." So it must have been a couple of other pillars. :o: The difference between a talking machine and a radio, according to Aithur Aull of the Lamar Democrat, i3 the talking machine isn't always trying to sell you something. :o: The more one reads cf Ogden Mills's remarks cn the Roosevelt poli cies, the more one gets the idea that although the President has won many over to his side since March 4, Mr. Mills is hardly yet to be counted among them. :o: We gather from the vigorous con versation of Secretary Woodin that President Roosevelt is known among the cabinet members as "The Chief," but we shan't become alarmed as long as the President doesn't point his puns with "Think o' that, Graham." -:o:- A ' local husband, " rummaging around one evening this week, en countered an account book his wife had purchased the first of the year as a means of putting their .household on a rigid budget "basis. 'He opened the book to see how things wede com ing. Caly one item marred the vir gin whiteness of the psgea of the .03,LFread..v,' :o:- ilAY WE BE HOPEFUL AGAIN? No barometer or imslness condi tions 13 more indicative than that of steel production. At that, there is no necessity, just now to rely upon this one- indicator in any effort to reveal the forces of betterment that are. at work. But consider, first, the show ing of steel. Last Monday, the maga- vance' cf 4 J2 per cent for the week ending April 22, bringing, the figure up to 25 per cent. That was "the first time since the depression set in thai any week's rate exceeded that for the corresponding week in the preceding year." It was predicted that the gain for the week ending last Saturday, would advance the rate from 25 to 27. But anticipations were exceeded and the previous week's final figure became 29. Not only has there been another significant weekly advance, but it is necessary to go back nearly eighteen months, or to November of 1931, to get a comparable showing. Toward the close of that month, production reached or slightly exceeded 30, but the rate receded quickly to 20 by the end of 1931; and only once 1 out 1932, in February, did it through- approx imate the present showing.- Beyond all that, on the other occasions there was limtiad hope of continued im provement, whereas now there is an accumulation of ifactors pointing in that direction. The latter include a marked rise in motor output for April, with pros pects that Hay will be still better; a brighter outlook for railroad buy ing, and a moderately strengthened hope in a wide range of construction. Along with this, bolstering the en tire business structure, is . pointed evidence of a quickened consumer de mand in numerous fields. One of tho agreeable surpluses of recent weeks has been the failure of retail trade to undergo the customary slump fol lowing the Easter season. Sharp ad vances in commodity prices, includ ing most farm commodities, have re flected in good part the talk of infla tion. Yet there is growing assurance that the inflation that may develop will be held within bounds and that ihe stimulus It affords will be neith er purely artificial nor temporary. .It is too early to bo sure of the continuation of the present trend. There are few who will be quick con verts to optimism. But the actualities are unfolding themselves for the mo ment. And mankind's last and abid ing resort is faith and hope. INFLATION AND THE ' FARMER We have heard folk argue that inflation of the currency, bringing higher prices for farm commodities, will not do the farmer any good be cause It will increase the cost of the thing3 he buys by Just as much as it increases the cost of what he sells. We do not think that is true. . In our opinion, the farmer will be the first as well as the greatest bene ficiary of any change in our cur rency system which diminishes the purchasing power of the dollar. The farmer's cost of production has not fallen anywhere nearly as much as the prices he gets for his products have fallen. Labor cost on the farm is down a little; feed and fertilizers are slightly cheaper. But insurance, interest on mortgages, and taxes have increased, whila prices of farm prod ucts have gone down. Not long ago a farmer could get eight to ten dollars for a cowhide; now he Is lucky, most places, to get fifty cents. Have any of our farmer rparlers had occasion to sell a cow lately? We hear of cows which were worth $75 to $100 three years ago being sold for $5. One cowhide will make eight pairs of shoes, but It takes nine of them to buy one pair One farmer told lately of getting a pair of shoes for the price of seven hundred pounds of milk. In normal times nearly half the output of "the U. S. Steel Corporation went into things used on the farms. It is going to help that business and all other business when the farmer can again have a surplus to spend; though it is hard to figure much of a surplus so long as taxes absorb all that even the prosperous farmer earns. We know of farms that have been sold up for taxes; we have heard of farmers giving their . farms away to escape responsibility. We do not think that any kind of Inflation could make conditions worse. . - o: ' UNEASY ABOUT WILLIE We have always thought of bath ing as one of. tho national virtues. There is, however, some dissent from this opinion. Bathing i3 all right, say the dissenters, up to a certain point, but. from there, on it. ceases to be a.Tirtue'and becomes a vice.-. It hasn't -been quite clear just where this point-lies except that it-is con- netd witU-baUvia-for - rocreation. Bathing for cleanliness is of course above reproach, but bathing for "the sheer fun of it, that Is another mat ter. It i3 suspicious to say the Jeast. .A persistent-effort to fix the vice in public recreational bathing has been made through an attack on the habiliments of the bath. But it has been a losing effort as will be noted by a comparison between bathing costumes of today and those of 20 or 30 years ago. The Minnesota legislature, how ever, has abandoned the one-piece bathing suit as the seat of vice and found it in the time element. It has decreed that bathing is virtuous, somewhat doubtful parr,ips, but still virtuous up to 10:30 o'clock at night At that point it becomes a vice and remains such until 5 o'clock the next morning. It is perfectly obvious to right minded people that other people don't go bathing at 11 o'clock at night for the sake of bathing alone. They must be up to some other devilment The trouble is that nobody ever catches them at this other devilment, no matter how much you try to sneak up on them. The only way to stop U is to forbid them bathing at all after good people have gone to bed at night or before good people have got up in the morning. The legislative interest in people's conduct reminds us of the mother who said to her husband, "John, go and see what Willie is doing and tell him to stop it." World-Herald. :o: While shorter hours are easily arranged for ordinary working sched ules, what the President's advisers would welcome is some wonder work er who could endow time with an elasticity to permit a 24-hour day to produce the equivalent of forty-eight hours' work. ; :o: A Tublic Mind contributor insists that Germany 13 far happier under Hitlerism than it was under the older Republic. But sometimes happiness Isn't all there i3 to it. The well known Roman holiday was not a sad occasion except .. for the gladiators and Christians, but it was finally de cided to be in bad form. :o: The suit in El Paso, Tex., between Dr. J. B. Brady and the widow of the slayer of Billy the Kid, oyer the possession of the pistol with which Billy wa3 killed, has been decided in favor of the widow. With the knowl edge that justice still, -prevails in this country, cur citizens may -now proceed to other problems with re newed confidence. - AMERICA DRIFTS NO MORE All the so-called extraordinary powers President Roosevelt has pre viously asked for are eclipsed by those embodied in the currency bill. The republican statement of general op position to the pending measure, specifying one particular, declares "it Is unthinkable, that there should be vested in any individual the arbi trary power to alter' the value of money." ... In any situation other than that confronting the country . and the world, it probably wuold be unthink able. But it certainly is thinkable now, it has been proposed, and, ac cording to the news from Washing ton, it will be promptly granted. The democratic majority in sen ate and house is solidly behind the president, apparently, and determined to go through with the program. It cannot otherwise discharge its re sponsibility to a nation which elect ed it for the purpose of leading it out of the wilderness. More important, perhaps, than the attitude of the congress is the sup port of public opinion which Mr. Roosevelt commands, in a degree un precedented in our history. Let it be acknowledged that Senator Reed of Pennsylvania, .spokesman of the op- Ipositioii, and his republican asso ciates, are wholly sincere in their position. With all respect for their sincerity and their recognized ability, tho country today is not listening to them. The point was devastating ly made by the Springfield, Mass.. Republican during the campaign when, in announcing itself for Mr. Roosevelt, it declared that the repub lican party, having lost public con fidence, was no longer a competent agency of government. The truth of that assertion is ex emplified in the present instance Republican alarms and fears and pre dictions of failure and disaster evoke no response. To the counsel of nega tion, and that, after all, is the sub stance of republican objection, the country turns a .deaf ear. There is no solid body of opinion behind Messrs. Reed, Mills and Mellon, who are understood to . constitute the spearhead of the opposition. Even republicans ere becoming articulate in their opposition to a negative view which has had its te3t and lost the confidence of the people Thus Charles A. Miller, former presi; dent of the Reconstruction - Finance Corp rtfeMt-j-uin Aar , Mr. lioover-,. i ,ex; presses "amazement at .President Roosevelt's, grasp of the very complex causes of our depression' and calls upon the country to support him. Says Mr. Miller; "Even the impending inflation, which seems to be necessary rather than" voluntary, may turn out to be a good thing, in spite of our old and conservative economic notions. "If the new ra.&ical school of eco nomic thought can get us into a worse scrape than the old-fa3hioned conser vative did, I shall be surprised. Our economic future is in our own hands. ... A courageous leader can do more for us . than all the wisdom of the economists, and we seem to have one. "It is our duty to give him loyal backing and not to expect miracles from him. Ke may make mistakes, but still we must back him up. The only way to be sure of avoiding mis takes in this crisis is to do nothing, which would be' the greatest mistake of all. Under republican leadership the country drifted slowly but steadily towards the rocks. The efforts and maneuvers of the Hoover administra tion may have retarded the drift, but they did not stop it, and, assuredly, they will not turn the current in the other direction. The hour has struck for action. The unforgivable crime of statesmanship today is in action. That 13' what Mr. Reed and his fellow republican objectors pro pose. The country will have no more of it. How the Roosevelt program will work out we do not pretend to say. What may confidently be said Is that the powers granted the president will not be unadvisedly used. Along with the extraordinary powers to be. vested in the president will so & proportion ate responsibility. The qualities ex hibited by Mr. Roosevelt in his brief but really epic 'incumbency cf the nrpFfrfontinl nfPloo r.re a courage, a confidence, a buoyancy of decision, a mastery of events, that have already transformed our national p3ychology Action is the Roosevelt watchword There is no fear, no timidty, in him His proposals and actions thus far have bsen an air of inspiring gal lantry as he has swept along from emergency to emergency. Emergency is not the word for the present momenta .-This is a crisis. It demands a capital operation. The Eurgeon i3 ready. The country has faith in his skill and resolution. It has no sympathy with the outcries of thosa who Insist that the president and hi3 party will "ruin the coun- 7." That is always the alarm of an intrenched status quo. Lumber Sawing Commercial sawing from your own logs lumber cut to your specifications. We have ready cut dimen sion lumber and sheeting for sale at low prices. NEBRASKA BASKET FACTORY The great thing is that America is moving. She drifts no more. St. Louis Post-Dispatch. :o: !! -M-M-I-I -I -I -I "I-I-I-I-M- t Cass County Farm t Bureau Notes 4. "I" T Copy furnished from Office V of County Agent Wainscott 4 Prevent Off Flavored Milk. Frequently when milk cows have been changed from dry feed to spring pastures, or in late summer when weeds are more abundant, oS flavors appear in milk and cream. Pastur ing wheat and rye usually causes flavors, peculiar to these crops, to appear in the milk. Bringing the cows in from the pasture two or three hours before milking time may help some in preventing this trouble, or, in case the off flavor comes from some feed being fed while the cows are in the barn, the cows should be milked before they are fed. Thi3 i3 especially true in feeding silage. If Yea Wert Fruit Spray. In the growing of fruit, spraying is perhaps of the most vital import ance in May. As soon as the petals have dropped from the cherrien, pears, and apples, the tree3 should te spray ed with a mixture cf limo-sulfur and lead arsenate. The lead arsenate kill3 leaf eating insects and the lime sul fur controls fungcus pests like scab and black rot on the apples and shot hole fungas on cherries. If the or chard is small and contains various kinds of fruits, then the variou3 kind3 of fruits will probably be sprayed with the same mixture and the strengths to be U3ed are one gallon lime culfur (liquid) and ouc and one half pounds lead arsenate to E0 gal lons water. In terms of a single gal lon of spray tli'.3 would be two table spoons of lead arsenate and three fluid ounces cf liquid lime-sulfur. If dry lime-uifur"i3 preferred then one ounce of this material 13 used per gallon' spray material. Where cher ries arc sprayed . commercially the lime-sulfur is used at tho rate cf one half gallons per 50 gallons of water. This strength Iz net recemmondod for apples, however, because it has tendency to injure tho foliage and fruit, especially when th? humidity is high. Cane Hot IIcrc Acid Than Cora. Chemical analysis of torn and At las sorgho milage disproved the com mon idea thct cane til ago is more acid than corn sil?.ge. When allow ed to stand fcr a day cr two, how ever, the Atla silage di dshow more acid which indicates that it deter iorates rapidiy when exposed to air. If fed regularly frcm a silo of the correct size, thi fact i3 of little prac- tcial importance. Make the Planter Drop Accurate. Inaccuracy of drop in a corn plant er may usually be traced to either the improper selection cf the plate or to the use of ungraded corn. The fol lowing method is a good way to de termine the correct plate to use: A. Set the pla-nter up off tne ground so the wheels may be turned by hand at c tpeed not greater than if drawn by horses. The planter should be cat for three kernel3 per hill. B. As tho whoel 13 turned, the ker nels are caujht as dropped for each hill, counted r.rd recorded. The op eration chculd be continued over a run of 25 hill3 for each plate. C. Select the pqlate which gives the greatest number of hills con taining three kernels. Proper selection of th? plate is dif ficult if ungraded corn is used. This is due to the varirtion in size of the kernel!. Each sized kernel needs a different tised ho! in the plate. Uni formly sized 'kcrncli may be obtained by grading- TLia in turn increases the acerracs in the number of kernels dreppod psr hill Lf ths proper plate is used for e-ch elzs of kernel. lOt'.- Ar:;n.:.l Club Week. The eighteen th annual boys and girls club week will be held at the agricultural coilugc cam?u3, Lincoln, May 9 to June 3. The week will be cram full cf work, play and trips for the 4-H boys end girls. '. Any member completing their 1932 project is eligible, to attend by pay ing their CS.CO registration fee. Many club members and leaders plan to have club week cz thi3 year'3 vaca tion.; Erillncnt ; b!ar.k3 are avail able st ths farui bureau osiice ana must be filled in and returned, by to attend, by May Plan Year Round Vegetable Supply. When planting the farm vegetable garden plant enough to insure your self a sufficient variety and quantity of vegetables for canning and stor ing as well as enough for use dur ing the growing season. An adequate diet each day thruout the winter and spring month3 means supplying seven servings of canned vegetables to each person each week in addition to seven servings of stored or dried vegetables and potatoes or dried beans. Extension Circular 908 The Gar den That Feeds the Family will of fer many helps in working out the family food budget for the year. Make Own Lawn Furniture. Extension Circular 1171 contains many suggestions for making simple porch and lawn furniture. With the first warm sunshiny days comes an urge to fix up the alwn and porch in preparation for the many happy hours which will be spent by the family out of doors. A brick book rack, covered auto seats, and a desk chair can be made with no great outlay of money, yet each has its place in making the porch and lawn comfortable and pleasant. If interested write or call at the farm bureau office for a copy of this circular. When anything as crooked as the pretzel can come back there is hope for the corkscrew. .0: "We have the assurance of a senate leader that inflation will bo handled prudently, and we trust that pru dence has finally come to mean some thing to a senator. :o: Chancellor Hitler has finally found a Job for Captain Goering, who has been making a good many "speeches without much official justification. He is now aviation minister, and can speak freely cn all topics ranging frcm Judaism in German art to the improvements on whatever is the Berlin equivalent of Brush Creek. : :o: : " Journal VVant-flcTs cost only s rv cAnts and oet real result' NOTICE TO CREDITORS ' State of Nebraska, County of Cass, esL- . . . I In the County . Court. Fee Book 9, page 353. . In the matter of the estate of Dora Kastel, 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 26th day of May, 1933, and on the 1st day of September, 1933, at ten o'clock a. m., to examine all claims against said estate, with a view to their adjustment and allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claim3 against said estate i3 three months from the 26th day of May, A. D. 1933, and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 26th day of May, 1933. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 28th day cf April, 1933. A. IL DUXBURY, (Seal) ml-3w County Judge NOTICE TO CREDITORS State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. In the County Court. Fee Book 9, page 354. In the matter of the estate of Charles McGuire, deceased. To the creditors of said estate: You are hereby notified that I will sit at tho County Court room In Plattsmouth, in said county, on the 26th day of May, 1933, and on the 1st day of September, 1933, at ten o'clock a. m. of each day, to examine all claims against said estate, with a view to their adjustment and allow ance. The time limited for the presenta tion of claims against said estate is three months from the 26th day of May, A. D. 1933, and the time lim ited for pas'ment of debts is one year from said 26th day of May, 1933. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 28th day of April, 1933. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) ml-Sw County Judge. 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 Coun ty. Nebraska, and to me directed, I will on . the 3rd day of June, A. D, 1933, at 10 o'clock a. m. of said day at the south front door of the court house in Plattsmouth, in said Coun ty, sell at public auction to the high est bidder for cash the following real estate, to-wit: Lots 10. 11 and 12 in Block 20, in the City of Plattsmouth, in Cas3 County, Nebraska: The same being levied upon and taken as the property of Maud Berghahn, et al., defendants, to satisfy a Judg ment of said court recoved by J. M. Robertson, plaintiff, against said de fendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, May 1, A. D. 1933. H. SYLVESTER. Sheriff Cass County, ml-Sw Nebraska. ml-5w those planninj 15th. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the estate of David B. Ebersole, deceased. Fee Bock 9, page No. 362. 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 last will and testament and praying for administration upon his estate and for Euch other and further orders and proceedings In the prem ises nit nmv ho rpniilred bv the Stat utes in such cases made and pro vided to the end that said estate and all things pertaining thereto may be finally eettled and determined, and that a hearing will be had on said petition before said Court, on the 26th day of May, A. D. 1933, and that if they fail to appear at said Court on said 26th day of May, 1933, at 10 o'clock a. m., to contest the said petition, the Court may grant the same and grant administration of said estate to David K. Ebersole, or some other suitable person and pro ceed to a settlement thereof. Dated this 28th day of April, A. D. 1933. A. II. DUXBURY, (Seal) ml-3w County Judge. NOTICE OF SUIT To Roy O. Kunz and Kunz, his wife, first name unknown: Take notice that August Stander has commenced an action against you and each of you in the district court of Cass County, Nebraska, the object and prayer of which is to fore close a mortgage given by the said Roy O. Kunz, single, March 1,. 1927, to secure the payment of a promis sory note In the sum of $4,200.00, on the east half of the NEV4 of Sec. 32, Twp. 11. N. Range 9, cast of the 6th P. M. in Cass County, Nebraska, and for foreclosure cf lien for taxes paid upon said lands; also for the appointment of a receiver to collect the rents and profitswhich applica tion fcr receiver will be heard on or after the answer day, and for equit able relief. You are required to answer said petition on or before the 19th day of June, 1933, otherwise plaintiff will have a decree of foreclosure and appointment of receiver and such other relief as the court may decree him to be entitled to under his peti tion. AUGUST STANDER, Plaintiff. By DWYER & DWYER, H. A. DWYER. His Attorneys. m 1 - 4 w NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE ; "NT ? .- r f AVAhv (rlvan V o YtW virtue of a1 chattel mortgage dated duly filed In the office "of tne'County Clerk of Cass county, Nebraska, ' on or about'the 15th day of April, 1931, executed by Frank and Bertha Schlichtemler 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 is 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 sum, we will sell the property therein described: One Farmall Tractor, Engine No. T-108473; 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 18th day of April, A. D. 1933. INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER COMPANY OF AMERICA By A. Hoorer, Collector. a20-4w ORDER OF HEARING AND NO TICE OF PROBATE OF WILL In the County Ccurt of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ES. Probate Fee Book 9, page 359. To the heirs at law and to all ner- sons Interested in the estate of John Hcoscbeidt, deceased. On reading the petition of John Hobscheldt. Jr., prayincr that the in strument filed in this court on the 20th day of April. 1933. and pur porting to be the last will and testa ment of the said deceased, mav b proved and allowed and recorded as the last will and testament of John lioDseneiat, deceased; that said in strument be admitted to probate and the administration of said estate h granted to H. A. Schneider and Henry lorn, as Hrxecuiors; It is hereby ordered that von. nd all persons Interested in said mat ter, may, and do, appear at the Coun ty Court to be held in and for said county, on the 26th day of May A D. 1933. at ten o'clock a. m.,' to show cause, if any there be. why the prayer cf the petitioner should not bo granted, and that notice of the pendency of said petition and that the hearing thereof be given to all persons interested in said matter by publishing a copy of this Order in the Plattsmouth Journal, a semi weekly newspaper printed In said county, fcr three successive weeks prior to said day of hearing. " . Witness my hand, and thk ...1 AaIDClC9U3r3'. 26th day of April, A. II. DUXBURY, County Judge. ' (Seal) ml-3w Don't send youp monu you want to see peal prosperity in Cass county. Plattsmouth Is th loflical "blfl town" ahoppiSa b0ii? for every resident r'npo'nt mo county.