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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (May 22, 1933)
V: MONDAY, MAY 22, 1933. 991: I r 1 V Abe PloftsfDOirtfa Jonniol SZ33-T7E2XLY AT PLATUIZOTTTH, gKTCLAKZA Bntra at PostoffV. Ptottamoatii. Ifeb c oond-ls aU matter R. A. BATES, Publisher StJBSuHIPTIOJr IHI03 $2.00 A YEAR Iff TELST POSTAL ZOHB Buteeribers ll-cicg in Second Postal Zone, $8.80 per year. Beyond eot Jaiies, ;.00 per year. Rate to Canada and foreign countries, $3R0 per yearw All snbtoYlpttont are payable ftrtotly la adrsnoa. China seems to bo ac(yiiring a japanned finish. -:o:- A lecturer says that the ostrich Is Tvorth more dead than alive. To cope with this disadvantage it is equipped with long legs. ' :o: Business certainly is getting bet- t2r. Traveling salesmen again are telling a few risque stories instead cf hard luck stories. :o: Ccer, wo are told, has been of the greatest benefit to . the glass industry, what with the renewed demand for bottles, drinking glasses and so on. :o: A group of Minnesota farmers are planning a civil disobedience cam paign on Gandhi's model and Victor JIurdock observes that it is going to be a littlo difficult to decide whether Milo Reno or John A. Simpson will Lo chosen to do the fasting. :o: Thero 13 only a small matter of about ISO million dollars between the price Russia wants for the Chi nese Eastern railway and the price Japan is willing to pay. That differ ence of opinion doubtless will bs Ironed out possibly by a mixture of blocd and iron, before a deal is made. :o: It would seem that we need more Kentucky Derby days in our cal endar. Derby day gives state gover nors a brief holiday from, duty and politics, and then they come back home cufficlently refreshed to sign good bills and veto' bad ones. :o: A director of the motion picture research council say3 that children accept the things they see on the Ecreen unquestionably as truth. Evi dently the good man has never sat in o. motion picture house, while .the youngster in the-aud-isnce were--ex- pressing themselves In hoots cf de rision over the hero's admiration for the heroine, or his performance" of some Impossible feat. :o: . MAKING K0T0P.S EAT CORK Thruout the cornbelt the problem of forcing the farmer's mechanical aid3 to cat corn is being considered with much concern. Tho obstacle Is that theso machines prefer another kind of diet, that i3 as they are built now and bo far as progress goe3 in thoir building up to this time. They can be made to do the work on a part corn diet, but the questions of efficiency and co3t keep bobbing up. Before the power machinery came horsepower did the heavy work. Horses ate corn. They ate the sur plus that now bothers. They were hungry animals and they preferred Nothing more than corn, unles3 it was oat3 or alfalfa, ako products of the farm on which they lived and which they helped to produce. Power machine.: that did not eat corn came along and pushed the horse off the farm, with the result that there was nothing left to devour the surplus crop. Ln:cs3 th3 machines can be made to consume corn the farmer will continually overproduce. Fuel for the machines can bo made ircra corn and it can be used in growing mere corn. One trouble 13 that there are other raw materials from which the fual can be made, some say moro cheaply, that do not grow r.s well on the cornbelt farms. Tr.e?e cherpcr raw materials are liable to push the corn diet aside un less some things can bo docs to pro tect corn. Whether corn alcohol and gasoline mixture makes a satisfactory motor fuel, a3 now used, is a cubject of murh contention. Some report it satisfactory, show records of motor performances that owuld seem to prcv2 the contention. Just about the time the public 13 ready to accept thi3 mixture along come the gaso line interests with record of tests that chill prospactivc experimenters. The thing most desired, accord ing to experimenters who have test ed a mixed fuel, is a greater percent age of alcohol In the mixture. Ten percent i3 net enough to make it worth while to increase tho corn acreage greatly, and increase of the corn acreage with a market for its yieli 'Aculd .be a booa to the Ne braska, Iowa, 'Missouri and Illinois fararcs. State Journal. Even personal liberty is not en titled to more than half the high way, and no zigzagging. :o: This is the time of year when poet3 and fishermen put out a lot of lines and get meager returns. :o: We are afraid of this reforestation idea. Think of the poison icy pen sions future geneations may have to pay. :o: A golfer recently got married on a Saturday afternoon. Apparently he had drawn a bye in the week-end club competition. :o: Music in Germany isn't dead, we have it from the New York Herald Tribune. It is still permited to play on the Nordic's-harp. :o: What has become of the old-fash ioned woman who insisted that her children needed to drink a pint of sassafras tea for breakfast at this season of the year? :o: Running the government must not be so difficult, considering the free advico one gets. Secretary Fran ces Perkins has already received 2,000 cures for the depression. :o: Sir Walter Scott was the first to make the novel popular among the widest mass of readers and Balzac made cf the novel the most import ant literary vehicle of modern civil ization. :o: Wo are intrigued, but not con vinced, by the warnings of several senators that President Roosevelt's disarmament plea "won't work." We have long since ceased to look in the direction of the senate for mechan ical advice. We suspectit was a sen atorwbo first fcafcf of the aW I0cO- motlve that "they'll never get "er started." and later that "they'll never get er stopped." :o: CENSORSHIP AT SOME IS SENSIBLE METHOD MAKING EDUCATION PROPAGANDA AGENT The effect of motion pictures on children has been studied with sci entific thoroughness over a four-year period by Prof. W. W. Charters of Ohio State university and a group of 17 associates. Their findings, soon to be published in 10 volumes, are re viewed in Survey Graphic by Arthur Kellogg. The investigators found that 36 per cent of movie andiences are children ;and adolescents, and that 81 per cent of the feature pic tures they see deal with crime, sex, mystery, love and war. Testing child subjects with scientific instruments, it was found their pulse rates in creased alarmingly at an exciting pic ture and that the restlessness of their s!ef-p was greatly increased. Horror and shock often left lasting impres sions, said by a neurologist to be very similar to soldiers' shellshock. Inter viewing young convicts, it was found many had learned the technique or crime from movies, though it may be doubted that tho normal youth was ever made a criminal by the films alone. What is the remedy for such ad verse cffcct3 on children? Not pub lic censorship, for adults are entitled to see pictures of mature type, if they desire, that might be injurious to children. Censorship at home, with parents selecting tho type of movie to which they take cr send their chil dren, i3 the most sensible and work able method. List3 of approved pic tures, as issued by organizations and publications, are a valuable guide in this direction. It is encouraging to learn, from the report of Mrs. Arretus P. Burt, chairman of the motion picture de partment, at the recent convention of the State Federation of Women's Club3 here, how the "family night" plan Is spreading among film the aters. If parents respond as they should, the box office results will induce the producers to make more pictures suitable for juvenile movie goers. High type movies can be a favorable influence on children, Just as sensational pictures affect them adversely. The etate doe3 not regu late the child's food. A' proper film diet is, in its place, similarly import ant and equally the duty of the par ent. St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Every few hundred years there is a movement somewhere to burn books. The underlings arose them selves to the thought that intellect uals have been writing books which they cannot understand, and there is a huge bonfire. The pretevt has usually bsen tho same as Herr Hit ler's pretext, namely, that scholar ship Is unpatriotic and impious. Lit erature henceforth must not be above the comprehension of lictors, clerics, Boston magistrates or' nazls storm troopers. Everything written must subscribe to the tenets of the party in power. This ia what is happening In Ger many today. "Un-German" books, which apparently means almost all books not definitely committed to the prevailing nazi politics, which is a denial of all politics, must go. His tory, philosophy, mathematics, and . M i science, an must ue uemiau whatever that is understood to mean The Gorman school must fall into line and, instead of training men equipped for independent thought, is assigned to the production of a man who is "wholly and inscarably bound in his inmost being to his people's history and destiny." By making his history revolting and his destiny increasingly obscure, the nazi ring master may be counted on to make this process as difficult as possible. Thus one more country i3 added to the list of those which deliber ately elect to make education a def inite branch of propaganda. In Rus sia every sort of event and discovery is made somehow to fit into the soviet picture of the class war. Nothing, however incongruous, escapes. In Italy all knowledge must make its contribution to the greatness of Mussolini and the fascist ideal. And now, as was inevitable, German edu cation and this is perhaps more a reversion than an innovation must subordinate scholarship to a mass of ill-digested, preconceptions about Nordics, "blond man" and "heroic steely romance." The fact that most of this is so much tosh need not be expected to move Herr Hitler and his allies. Reared and ourished . upon tosh, it seems to them as veracious as the late Mr. Bryan's science ap pears to a not inconsiderable body of Americans. It is a tragedy to see a nation with such a record for distinterested investigation , as is y Germany's suc cumbing to this atavistic , revolt against sense and decency. But there will be other boks, among them, one may expect, a sound work in six vol ume3 by seme Herr Doktor now anonymou3 on the subject, "Influ ences of the Blond Nordic Myth on the Revolt of tho Illiterate." Ealtl more Sun. :o: NEXT BIG FIGHT IS ON TRANSPORTATION HITLER: PACIFIST! IT ALL DEPENDS In a communication to tho Sun this morning. Prof. Harry Torsey Baker of Goucher college, roundly denounces professors in government. interrupting himself only Ion enough to quote E. W. Kemmerer of Princeton, a professor in government, to provo that tho professors in Wash ington are all wrong. But if profess ors furnish both sides of the argu ment, how are we to escape them? The only possible courso is to heave all professors out of government, set ting up the theory that it is wrong for a classroom lecturer to have any hand in ruling the country a3 Prof. Baker rays, "Let tho teacher teach; let the man experienced in govern ment govern." This means that it is wrong for the government to depend upon the ad vice cf Prcf. Ripley, the railroad ex pert. It is wrong for half the republics of Central and South America when tney are In trouble to call in this same Prof. Kammercr quoted by Prof. Baker. , It was wrong for the Chinese gov ernment to depend for many years on the advice of Prof. Frank J. Good how. It wa3 wrong for France to fol low the leadership of Prof. Clemen ceau. It i3 wrong for the British govern ment to maintain its ancient policy of filling cabinet post3 in every gov ernment with Oxford dons. It is wrong for -the German gov ernment to put a Ph. D. in practi cally every Job. j That is to say. the fcistoricy pol icy of every civilized country in the world to rely on university-trained men for technical advice is all wrong. Maybe so, but we venture to doubt it. It seems to us that everything depends on your professor. Some are good and some are not so hot; If you get struck with a bad one, you are badly stuck, but if you get a good one history furnishes plenty of evi dence you have a laborer well worthy of his hire. Baltimoro Evening Sun. Hitler answers Roosevelt and ; The Tribune feels safe In saying his answer is a resounding "yes!" that the middle-west has won one of I The German dictator, the saber its two great battles the conflict I rattler of yesterday, take3 his stand on the agricultural front. The tide shoulder to shoulder with the Am has turned for the farmer. Our next erican president as an unqualified big fight is on the transportation champion cf disarmament and peace! front. J There are so many amazing devel Until the middle-west Is on a par-jopments in thi3 year of 1933 that ity with seaboard points as to trans-1 we have all but lost-our capacity for portation costs, this section of the amazement. On wonder doth tread nation will continue to suffer from so fast upon another wonder's heals, the economic handicap under which that the unusual, the unexpected it has labored ever since the con-j tho Impossible, has become a com struction of the Panama canal. Imonplace. But we have left the ca- In all probability congress will dolpacity for one last gasp of incred something about the railroad situ- ulou3 surprise, and we breath it out ation before it adjourns. This willjat the feet of Hitler. be largely in the nature of a sal-1 The Roosevelt personal message to vaging operation, however, and will 54 potentates, presidents and kings, not constitute a direct approach to was a bombshell of surpassing mag- the majorfeature of the transporta- jnitude. And the very next day Hit tion situation as it affects this sec- Ier's fearfully-awaited addres3 to the tion Of the country. Ireichstag was another Just like it. Officials of the Mississippi Valley! For the masterful German leader association have compiled rate fig -j was transformed into something ures on score3 of items which show I strangely resembling the dove of that rates from central state3 via At- J peace. He accepted cur president's lantic ports and tho Panama canal I disarmament proposal and thanked to west coast ports aro from one-J him for it. "Germany," he said, "is third to a half of the all-rail rate I willing without reserve to agree to from central points to Pacific coast this method." There can be no world points. I reconstruction without disarmament Tho Mississippi river and Its and peace. Germany, for her part. tributaries penetrate the greatest stands ready to disarm entirely If agricultural area in the world and other nations will, or to work to- yet, measured in cost of transporta- ward disarmament, according to the tion this area, is further away from plans of Roosevelt, MacDonald and the world market than any compar- jMussolini, with equality in five years able area. Inland industries cannot Germany will join, meanwhile, in compete with seaboard industries and any new nonaggres3ion movement never can until this transportation "There is but one gerat task before differential is removed.- the world, namely, to secure the The extent to which the central peace of the world." states have lagged in growth of What is there, then, that rtands population as compared with tho In- in the way of peace? Only one thing: dustrial states is reflected in the loss A further compulsion upon Germany of 17 members of congress by the the attempted imposition of a great-: valley states under the last congres- er inequality, of added humiliation sional reapportionment. Industries and injustice. And to that, "under follow low co3t transportation and no circumstance3," will Germany pay rolls follow industries. . Isubmit. The people of the central states o have waged a persistent and unre- And here Hitler turns the tables lenting fight for economic equality in on his adversaries, the matter of - freight costs( over a Germany, he says, "has a moral long period, but with small results, claim upon the allie3 to fulfill their A start toward development of an obligations under the treaties." Jus inland navigation system has been tice. and truth are with him there, made, but it is only a half hearted For the nations that forced the Ver start. To the people of this section, sailles treaty upon Germany have the sincerity of the government's ef- not lived up on their promises. The fort always has been open to qucs- disarmament of Germany was to be tion. 't followed by a general reduction of The Roosevelti administration has armaments. That pledge was made gone-more thani half -way to meet the in; 1919, In a-note to.'Gcrmariy from. price demands j'of agriculture. The I the allies. Yet today the world Is opportunity Is open to it to confer spending between four and five bil Germany stood onco more alone, friendless and feared, not only be cause of . the abominable treatment of the Jews, but because of the dread that -Hitlerism might once again, and speedily, precipitate war in Eu rope. And now, with Hitler's reply, the picture changes with startling rapidity. No one can say any longer. in the light of the addres3 to the reichstag, that a German will to war endangers tho present peace of the world. If war is to be threateend, the threat will be the result of pres sure from other sources. If economic rehabilitation Is to be defeated it will be a blind and imperious sel fishness not-'made In Germany" that defeats it. Hitler may be statesman or dema gogue. But It will be the verdict of history that on this one occasion, if no other, he rose to the heights of statesmanship and rendered a great service to his own counrty and to the cause of world peace and recov ery. World-Herald. :o: HENRY FORD FINDS HE WAS MISTAKEN 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 Thursday, Henry Ford proclaimed to the country in an advertisement widely printed: Ve have made a complete turn-around and at last America's face is toward the future." Mr. Ford himself has made a com pleto turn-around. On October 17, last, as the presidential campaign was drawing to It3 close, Mr. Ford sent a message to all Ford employes and agencies, in which he said: "President Hoover ha3 overcome the forces that almost destroyed in dustry and employment. His efforts to Etart the country back to work are beginning to Ehow results. Wo are convinced that any break in his pro gram would hurt industry and em ployment. To prevent times from getting worse and to help them get better. President Hoover must be re elected." On May 11, seven months later, we hear from Mr. Ford: "Three years 1929 to 1932 we Americans looked backward. All our old financial and political machinery was geared to pull U3 out of the de pression by the same door through which we entered. We thought it simply a case of going back the way we came. It failed. We now realize that the way out i3 forward through it. Thanks for that belongs to President Roosevelt. Inaugura tion day he turned the ship of state around." It Is not so wonderful a thing that Let corn advanceanother 20 cents and hogs another (S3. GO, and the chamber of commerce will forget all about the crying need for hitching posts. . :o: Many false notions, remarks a widely known economist, are being given currency. Gosh, we wish wo could get to be a false notion. :o: And we think the ancient Egyp tians weren't as civilized as we are. However, they minted coin on which was stamped: "Mind your own business." :o: Between 1913 and 1030, the com bined federal, state, county and municipal taxes of the United States increased per capita from $23 to ?S4, or 2G5 per cent. :o: A lot of baseball fans who watch ed the New York Yankees swing around the western circuit last week are wondering if they didn't send out tho No. 2 company. :o: With their checks for last Sep tember about to be paid now, the Chicago school teachers by this timo should have seme excellent practical knowledge of economics to impart to their pupils. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, a man should reverse himself. It Is further and enduring : benefits upon I lions annually for armaments, while J certainly to his credit that if he finds agriculture and all midwestern ener-jin 1913, the year before the warjho was mistaken, he should change prise, by taking hold of this naviga- broke out, It wa3 spending only two! his course. Undoubtedly Mr. Ford tion problem in a sincere and com- and a half billions. How shall thejwas sincere In urging the election of prehensive manner. I victor nations, how shall France In Mr. Hoover, and it is helpful that The Tribune believes thi3 will be particular, answer Hitler's Indict-jhe urges now that we all look "for i done, particularly if the proper en-Jment? There is but one way, and la hand-hold on the haul rope." Even ergy is put behind the request for ac-that is to keep faith, however be-modestly he says that the best thing tion. The president understand thejlatedly. It is to reduce armaments, he can do for the country is to build economic situation t of the central especially the arms of aggression, as j good motor cars and if he knew any states. He will do all in his power President Roosevelt urges. Hitler thing better, ho would do it. to aid them if Ue can get the proper stand3 ready to meet them all the But there Is a lesson fo rthe coun ss. By virtue of an Order of Sale issued by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk of tho Dis trict Court within and for Cas3 Coun ty, Nebraska, and to ma directed, I will on the 3rd day of June, A. D. 1933, at 10 o'clock a. in. of said day at the south front door of tho court house In I'lattsmouth, in said Coun ty, sell at public auction to tho high est bidder for cash the following real estate, to-wit: Lets 10, 11 and 12 in Block 20, in the City of Plattcmouth, in Cas3 County, Nebraska; The same being levied upon and taken as . the property of Maud Bsrghahn, et al., defendants, to satisfy a Judg ment of said court rccoved by J. M. Robertson, plaintiff, against said de fendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, May 1,;A. D.. 1933. ....... 1 - XL SYLVESTER. Sheriff Cass County, ml-5w Nebraska. ml-5w NOTICE OF SUIT To Roy O. Kunz and Kunz, support. Sioux City Tribune. :o: BETTER OMITTED way, or part or me way. uniam is i try in Mr. Ford s reversal. A man ready to act, and Italy. What oljwho has made a spectacular success France? las a builder of motor cars has not It is to that quarter the burden thereby become an authority on econ- of defense and explanation nowjomicB or government. He may be so shifts. And it was France, at Ver-jfar from an authority as actually to for the Imposition of the hardships J himself was a mistaken course. It ;upon Germany that Hitler now so does not necessarily follow that be- powerfully condemns hardships cause a man succeeds financially in that "crushed the economic life of a big way in manufacturing motor 60 million persons, leading to catas-jcars, stream shovels, aluminum ware tronhe for all." But for the injus-lor what not. that he therefore is ticca of tho Versailles treaty therejalso an authority on everything would bo no Hitlerism in Germanyjfrom ceramics to political economy. thtUjtodny, no anti-Semitism, no spirit ofj Mr. Ford's reversal casts no dis- uosporation, possiuiy even no ecu-i crean on mm lor caving urgeu ine nornjc collapse, re-election of President Hoover. It DavUl Lloyd George said this in does cast discredit on the way in London tho other dry: I which he and numerous other cra- "I was one of those who draft- ployers tried to influence men de od thoso disarmament clauses. pendent on their business for their Sscretary Wallace of the depart ment of agriculture may thank his lurkv striria for iYta nm fci nn nf ihp cost of production clause from the saUles' that W&S chieCy re3Pjnsj!,le bo advocating what later he will say farm bill. Mr. Wallace well knows (and almost any dirt farmer will agree with him) that no human be ing can tell exactly what it costs to produce a bushel of corn cr wheat, or a two hundred pound hog. Agri cultural economists, with all their special training In that field, aro In variable in disagreement on question. Without any cost of production clause in the bill, it will still be the aim of Secretary Wallace and of other o8icia,ls charged ,with oper ation of farm relief, to bring about a condition in which farming will bo generally profitable. But no matter how successful they are in that en deavor there will always bo some farmers operating at a loss. There were plenty of them even in 1919. when farm prices were the highest we have oven known. There always will be a margin group in farming and in every other industry, who cannot manage to make a profit how ever favorable conditions may be for profitable operation. It is not even clear whose cost of production was contemplated by the framers of the clause, or i3 contem plated by the Farm Holiday associa tion. If it i3 hoped to guarantee cost of production to.' the marginal pro ducer, that hope cannot be realized by passage of anv conceivable legis lation. If what is meant is the cost political economic, of Droductl.m t, nione of the av-sponse eraee farmpr ffw n,iid be too low) jbrought the issues out Into the open H. G. Wells, who is quite an au- "u,t. I - . . . . . J J You may havo any opinion you liko about the treaty of Ver sailles. It was n human docu ment and therefore imperfect. In two years Germany was dis armed to the minimum by the treaty. But what have the other signatories of the treaty done, the draftsmen who compelled Germany to sign that treaty? They havo not only failed to carry out their pledge to dis arm but have increased their armaments. It is ill to provoke a brave people by the imposi tion of a flagrant wrong. First we would cause them to go into a frenzy by Injustice and then mako that an excuse for not re dressing the wrong. Are you surprised that aftar waiting 14 years the Germans have got angry and that probably they have lost their balance?" livelihoods. If not coercion, it was at ! least assurance from, the boss that their wages and incomes would be served by election of Mr. Hoover. In that Mr. Ford went too far, and if ! presently he uses the came "tictics to urge support of President Roose velt, he will be going too far again. His best text for the country ia the suggestion that everyone find the best place to use hi3 abilities in mov ing things forward. Milwaukee Journal. :o: Ambassador Bingham, arriving In England, assures the correspondents that President Roosevelt's peace mes sage suited him. to the last syllable. We were not entirely unprepared for hi3 wife, first name unknown: Take notice that August Stander has commenced an action against you and each of you in tho district court of Cas3 County, Nebraska, the object and prayer of which i3 to fore close a mortgage given by the said Roy O. Kunz, single, March 1, 1927, to secure the payment of a promis sory noto in the sum of $4,20.00, on tho east half of the NE'i of Sec. 32, Twp. 11, N. Range 9, east of the 6th P. M. in Casa County, Nebraska, and for foreclosure of lien for taxes paid upon said lands; also for the appointment of a receiver to collect the rent3 and profits, which applica tion for receiver will be heard on or after the answer day, and for equit able relief. You are required to answer said petition on or bc-foro tho 19 th day of June, 1933, otherwiso 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, II. A. DWYER, His Attorneys. ml-4w ORDER OF HEARING and Notice on Petition for Set tlement of Account this. Mr. Bingham has not been in The Roosevelt plea for peace, both the habit of getting out of line with the Hitler re-tne administration. mvA cleared the air anal :o but of the great body of ordinary for all the world to see and under- thority, is writing a history of tht farmers, that u crortlv what the ad-fstand. Tney nave resioicu wiv iuvui. nu ever, ne mustn't expect ministration and Secretary Wallace breath of life to the Geneva arms all his discoveries to go unquestion will strive to achieve- and they will conference, and given a powerful ed. Many cf hia old readera may be be better able tn realize that aim impetus to the success of the eco- a bit rusty on the past, but they unhampered by an indefinite and con- nomic conierenco tu u m mcir mastery of fusing "cost of production" man- at Lcnaon. u l4"4 lMl are soinS to "iPPen date. Des Uoiaei-Register. The day before Roosevelt spoke next. In the County Court of Cas3 coun ty. Nebraska. Probate Fee Book 9, page 311. State of Nebraska, Cass county', S3. To heirs at law and all persons in terested In the estate of Don C. Rhoden, deceased: On reading tho petition of Aleck D Rhoden, Executor, praying a final settlement and allowance of his ac count filed In this Court on the 1st day of May, 1933. and for ns-n. ment of residue of Paid estate, deter mination of heirah! charge of Executor; It is hereby ordered that you and all persons interested In said matter may, and do, appear at tho County Court to be held in and for said U-,nt7; on tI,e 2n(! dar Jne, A. 1933 flt 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 of said petition and the hear ing thereof be given to all persons interested In said matter by publish ing a copy of this order in the Platts mouth Journal, a semi-weekly news paper printed in paid rmmfv . three successive weeks prior to said day of hearing. In witness whereof. I h unto set my hand and the coal rt nio0,111"1, thIs lt cf May. A. i a ,x A' H- DUXBURY. (Seal) mS-3w- County Judge. I