THURSDAY, AUGUST 3, 1933 PAGE TWO PLATTSMOUTH SEW . WEESXY JOURNAL If he IPlattsmouth Journal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA Entered at Postoffice, Plattsmouth, Neb., as second-class mail matter R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 A YEAR IN FIRST POSTAL ZONE Subscribers lhrtac In Second Postal Zone. 2.50 per year. Beyond 600 miles, $8.00 per year. Rate to Canada and foreign countries $3.60 per yea. All subscriptions are payable strictly la advance. A smile is all right, but a con tinuous giggle is a nuisance. :o: Flagrant case of Journalistic ex aggeration from a country weekly in Michigan: "Hailstones fell as small as peas." :o: We learn from O. O. Mclntyns tnat Westbrook Pegler, the hard boiled writer of sports and politics, has. a home in Connecticut built entirely of rock. Like Mr. Pegler, with a hard exterior, but with a heart, no doubt cf gold, or some similarly malleable tubstance. , :o: Aside from the fact that one isn't welcome anywhere, being a disting uished exile like Leon Trotsky has its cd vantages. Wherever he does suc ceed in becoming a guest, he is taken care cf with all gentleness and kind ness, as if he were some kind of ex plosive. :o: reeling is reportcc to have grown up between Secretary Hull and his able assistant. Dr. Moley, on ground that the latter has become too able. We feared something like this. How ever, it is not without precedent. When a similar siuation arose in St. Jxiuis, they traded Ilornsby to the Giants. SSCCOOOSCCCCOOOOOOOOCeOCOOOOQCOCOOOOOOOOOOCOSGOOOSOCCf Bible School Sunday, August 6th . oososocosoocacoccoooosooccGoeosooocoocsosoosoosoco "Ruth" Ruth 1:6-10, 14-lDa. The Bock of Ruth presents U3 with a simple story of domestic life, such as has happened and is happening ore ando"vT7f ngTTTiPin'the world the familiar story of a daughter's af fection and a young wife's happiness. In Ruth we see a daughter clinging to a parent in her age, with all the unselfishness of true-hearted affec tion; volunteering to share her lone liness and her distress; finding favor for her piety with the Lord and also with men; chosen by Boaz to be his wife; from obscure poverty to an honorable home; the young, lonely widow of the first chapter, changed in the last into a joyful mother of child ren. The time is laid during the rule of the judges in Israel, and prob ably during the seven year raids by the Midianites under Gideon. The br.ck opens with a tragic famine. There were famines in Palestine in Abraham's. Joseph's. David's, Elijah's end Elisha's times. The writer is un known Samuel is suggested by the rabbis. Because of the famine, a family moved from Bethlehem to a heathen country. Moab. "Chemosh" was the god worshiped by these people. Was it right fcr this family to go there? Was the tragic death of these three Men a punishment? There was no doubt that Elimelech was wrong, very wrong in leaving the land cf Judah with his family. and nettling in the godless country of Moab. It is a fearful ' thing to set little store by our religious advant ages and blessings, when God has given them to U3. It is of the great est importance in choosing a place for a heme, whether it will be a help or a hindrance to ycu oh your way to heaven. We do not read of any other Bethlehemlte emmigrating, or that these remaining starved. Inside cf ten years, much ha3 hap pened two marriages, three deaths all that is left i3 three widows. . Heartsick, poor and lonely, Naomi is. also homesick and one day she tcll3 her daughters-in-law of ber de sire to go back to Bethlehem. We are happy to report that by her consist ent godly life, she had won these two wemen over to her religion. Well, the day of departure came at last,' and we 6ee three lonely travelers, their possessions in a bundle, trudging alone to the border of Palestine. If there was an understanding that all three would go to Palestine or wheth- er Naomi thought the daughters-in-law would only accompany her to the border, we do not know, The Ut ter thought teems to have been in Naomi's mind. Anyhow,, she thouslit t.y had gone far. enough and kised them, telling them, to return to their mother's house, for she had nothing ; ; Things work out. - Lack of jobs made Democrats, so now there's a Democrat for every new job. :o: A sweet, young thing wants to know if they put mortar between bricks to hold them apart or keep them together. :o: : So the old Police Gazette is going to stags a come-back, and will be edited by the daughter of a Meth odist minister. Well, we'll get a slant on Methodist college life anyhow. :o: Down In raramaribo, Dutch Guiana, the native women "carry ev erything from milk bottles to cot fins on their heads. In fact, their aversion to using their hands is so strong that they even carry letters in this manner, weighted down by a brick. :o: : T:ie cliy or Louisville', Ky., is em barking upon one of the boldest and most formidable enterprises ever un dertaken by a community. It is go ing to teach its motorists how to make a left turn. Louisville wisely refrains from referring to it as any thing so casual as a Five or Ten Year Plan, indicating that it has a good idea of the size of the job be fore it. Lesson Study! By L. Neitzel, Murdock. Neb. to offer them. She herself was home less. Orpah sees the hopelessness of go ing further, but not so Ruth. This may also show us how some people w7io a?e".nqt "wEolly' consecrated to God are easily discouraged whenever trials and tribulations come, and turn their back3 cn God and the church like Orpah. Back into the world, to the old companions. The question may arise: "Would these Moabitish women find a welcome in Bethle hem?" Orpah is not sure, but Ruth thinks differently. If nobody will welcome her, she has Naomi, and Na omi is old and poor; she need3 her. A3 for herself, she is young and strong, she can earn enough for both of them to live on. Such is the char acter of love; it knows no defeat, no obstacles that it cannot conquer. The declaration of Ruth has been repeated time and again by lovers, and is one of the finest sentiments ever spoken by men, only too sad that it has not always been lived up to. There are at least three choices which meet men in life the choice of work, the choice of love, and the choice of God and each of these is mirrored in some measure in the choice of Ruth. She goes with Naomi all the way: "Whither thou goest. I will go; where thou lodgest, I will lodge; thy people my people; thy God my God." Only death can part U3. Such a determination and stead fastness of purpose is admired by men. and rewarded of God. r ' As the lesson includes the whole book only 8S verses we notice that God had a hand in the affairs of these people, and has an interest in every life. Ruth and Naomi reach Bethle hem the w;hole city is stirred. "Na omi is back again" goes from mouth to mouth. "Ruth, the Gleaner." The next day she takes her. place as the breadwinner. The harvest is on, the poor are allowed to gather the ears that otherwise would be lost. Ro mance enters the wealthy Boaz vis its the harvest field and there sees the demurer, young widow. Inquiry re veals her Identity; she finds favor with him. Naomi is a relative of his. Tbia young woman taking care of the older woman, logic says, she has good traits of character. Result marriage. This is a story with a happy 'ending. We see the working of the wisdom of God ; how Jew and Gentile are all God's children ' and how in -Christ Jesus all are made one-.'.., ' : . There ."are no more strangers and foreigners, but fellowcitizens with the saints and of the household of God." (Eph. 2:19.) ; Many great men are forgotten, but Ruth and Boaz have their pames inscribed in the genalog- ies of our Lard. (Math. 1:5 and Luke 3:32). .Ruth, the great, ance&tor of our Lord." MASS PRODUCTION " JOBS AND LEISURE If this were indeed the best of all possible world no difficulties would arise in it because of achievements, desirable in themselves, of modern civilization. ( Unhappy the task of reconciling to one another and to broad human needs the various tri umphs of this ingenious age ha3 as sumed colossal proportions. Witness the current industrial recovery pro gram of the Roosevelt administra tion. There is a distressing lack of jobs, yet sharp anxiety is shown by fed eral authorities because of demoral izing overproduction on farms and in factories. Machines have perform ed their liberating work so well that unemployment threatens to become a permanent evil. There has come to be too much leisure, and it is so badly distributed that many of those who have it deplore it because they have it to excess. The Rooseveltian new deal, in undertaking to dis tribute jobs and leisure as evenly as possible, is compelled also to coun sel restraint in any quarter where mas3 production is barging ahead of consumer demand. . Presidents of railroads and insur ance companies, some of whom have been accustomed to receiving sal aries much larger than the salary of the president of the United States, are urged by the government to be content with less magnificent com pensation. At the same time mini mum wages for workers in great in dustries are being fixed under fed eral supervision. Thus top and bot tom prices in the field of employ ment are becoming slightly less di vergent. The shearing of hours off each day's work is undertaken, one may say, for thepurposa of so dis tributing the total volume of leisure that every worker will have his sharo and no more. Equitable distribution of leisure manifestly is a task-of great nicety. To provide a living wage. in . ex change for hours of work sufficiently few to permit every available work er to earn a living is industry's prob lem. Industry will have to obtain tre money from its gross profits; for these It must rely upon the consum ers of Its products. 'In theory the consumers can afford to pay all the costs of the new deal because they will have fair incomes as workers in the Industrial vineyard,, , If industrial recovery is Inujpea Jo "thrive"1 on khe elaborate balanced ra tion presently to be provided, 'Special privilege and every sort of 'waste must be curbed to the fullest possible extent. Mass production cannot be held permanently in leach. There must be world peace, world economy and a system of fair exchange of world products in order that there may be world recovery and broad markets. .Thus is unfolded an un limited field for new deal statesman ship. Nor can the proper fruits of In creased leisure for the many be ig nored. Among those fruits should be cultivated a wider popular interest in, and a better understanding of, the elements essential to popular gov ernment justly and efficiently ad ministered. Chicago Daily News. , :o: A STRANGER AT THE THROTTLE The comment of the engineer of the Royal Scot, one of the crack British trains, after driving the Twentieth Century Limited from Chicago to Elkhart, Ind., presents an interesting and Informed view of American railroad practices by an outsider. To this visitor the most extraordinary things about an Amer ican passenger train were the size or the equipment and the heavy cost of operation. The locomotives that haul the Royal Scot between London and Eidenburgh weigh thirty-five tons, compared to 175 tons for those of the Twentieth Century Limited, and consume about one-fifth as much coal per mile. The British engineer apparently was too polite to say exactly what he thought, but his suvgestion that American' road3 might lighten their equipment, without sacrificing speed, safety or - comfort, implied that he considered our present trains both heavy and '.wasteful. The recent tendency of some roads here to sub stitute short ; gasoline motor-driven trains for trielr heavier' equipment On local runs might be interpreted as being in line with such a criticism. But it would be Interesting to know what an American, engineer, given a similar opportunity' to drive the Royal Scot, would think about the British trains. . ''to; ' , Professor This must be my lucky day I have already ..found three species of a flower that does not exist in this region. . ; . -7 - :o: 'Politlcally I am deaf,; dumb and blind." fays Vice-President Garner. Until the Jobs'eeke'rs thin out, these infirmities would seem well-advised. Casa County Farm Bureau Notes Copy furnished from Office of County Agent Walnscott 4-H Club Calendar. . The following are some of the 4-H club activities which will take place within the next few weeks: August 5 Special help on all agri cultural and home economics demon stration teams. If you contemplate having a demonstration team we urge you to come to the Methodist church in Weeping Water sometime during the day. No matter what stage your demonstration is in, we will be glad to give you all possible help. August 9 Country try-outs for home economics judging teams at M. E. church In Weeping Water, starting promptly at ten o'clock. Bring your own lunch. This applies to home economics projects only, and will be the final elimination for teams to represent Cass county at the state, fair. August 13 Red Letter Day! Big county-wide 4-H club picnic to be held at Bakers Grove, one mile south of Weeping Water. Picnic dinner at 12:30, after which a supervised pro gram will be taken . up. All 4-H members, leaders, assistant leaders and their families are invited. All are requested to bring a covered dish, sandwiches, and their own dishes. Come prepared to join in the fun and help all to have a good time. County Song Group A county song group is being chosen to repre sent Cass county at the state fair. Practices are held in Weeping Water on Sunday afternoons. Try-outs and elimination of voices was begun last Sunday. Enroll Now for Project Club Work. 644 dresses, 169 coats, 67 boys suits and SG children's hats, as well as 215 other garments were remade last fall by women enrolled in the "Live at Home'V. extension project. 101 followed suggestions on remodel ing sleeves, 13S. on collars and 222 made other changes. ' The enthusiasm with which these Women studied and completed re quirements for thi3 lesson, was the Incentive to include another such les son in the "Live at Home" project this fall. The first lesson to be given the women's project clubs will be re-styling of garments, and will stress tailored, finishes. All clubs who .expect to take the work this year. should send their en rollment, blanks t.o the Home Exten sion Agent on orjbcfoye August-15 Only five women are required to form a project club. If you have a group interested' in taking the work, get in touch with the Home Agent at once. Questions and Answers, Triple A Wheat Plan. Question: What is the difference between pre-war purchasing power and pre-war prices? Answer: The pre-war price is merely the number of cents per bush el at which wheawas selling dur ing the 1909-14 period, or around 88 cents per bushel. Pre-war purchas ing power means a price high enough now so that a bushel of wheat will buy as many handkerchiefs, carving knives, spades, sewing machines, etc as one bushel of wheat bought dur ing the base period, 1909-1914. If the prices of things that farm ers buy were no highe rtoday than they were before the World war, or during 1909-14. the farm price of wheat would be said to be at parity if it scld at 88 or..90 cents a bushel. However, If the prices of things that farmers buy were at the 1926 level, the farm price of wlieat would have to reach $1.37, or thereabouts, beforo the purchasing power of the farmer would be at parity. Question: How much is the tax? Answer: The tax i3 30 cents per bushel on the wheat used for human domestic consumption. Question: Wha,t Is meant by hu man domestic consumption? Answer: That portion of the wheat crop that Is made Into flour or any sort of product meant - for human consumption In this country. This includes, white, graham, and whole wheat flour and all cereal products. j Question: What is the estimated wheat consumption in the United States? Answer: The annual domestic consumption is estimated at 625,000, 000 bushels. 450,000,000 bushels is for human food. 75,000,000 is for seed. 100,000,000 is the annual dis appearance for feed. Question: How many acre3 of wheat will have to be signed up bo fore proposed benefits will bo paid? ' Answer: There .is no requirements as to percentage of - sign-up. Question: Will it be necessary for each county and state to conform to requirements .before the plan w-lll be put Into effect? , I' Answer No. .'-':' Question: If growers in any one county fail to sign up for the full reduction, will rhe total benefits to go to that county be distributed among those who have signed? Answer: In its present' form the plan does not contemplate any pro ducer receiving more than parity price on the proportion of his crop domestically consumed. Question: How will a tenant farmer receive his share of benefits? Answer: He will share in the benefits according to the leasing con tract. If he rents for cash he will get all the benefits. If a share ten ant, according to his lease. Question: When a farmer has op erated his land for less than three years, will his benefits be based on his acreage and production during the time of his occupancy? Answer: No. The allotment will be based on the acreage and produc tion of the farm regardless of the occupant. Question: If a farmer does not have an accurate record of his acre age and production will his affidavits as to estimated production be ac cepted? , Answer: Yes. but checked by a thresherman's certificate, and if pos sible evidence of sales to elevators or grain buyers. Question: How will farmers liv ing in counties which have produced less than 150.000 bushels receive their benefits if they reduce their acreage? Answer: Where there 13 not suffi cient acreage in one of the small wheat producing counties, regional associations probably will be form ed. Question: Will reduction in acre age be based upon tho number oi acres seeded or number of acres har vested? Answer: The acre:; secdod. Question: In case of excessiva hail or flood damage, will tho c-timatcd yield be considered? Answer: The rulC3 and regula tions on hail and flcod damage have not been formulated. It i probcble a county committee will be given dis cretionary power in su:h ca03. MAKING MORE FARM LAND While indignant citizens of Kan sas are denouncing a project for throwing a dam across the Kaw River, with federal funds, and there by 'drowning cut"' millions of acres of fertile farm lands for the bene fit of other at res, Governor Murray of Oklahoma cants thiz cye on the arid counts SJtJat ;f ( ? state extending across the northern reach of the Texas Panhandle, The governor thinks it would be a good time to get acme federal fu:id3 for establishing huge lake3 there for pur poses of irrigation and providing fish for the inhabitants. Two gia.nt res ervoir projects are advanced, and Oklahoma wants 45 million dollars from the government for the job. The question naturally rises whether the present state of affairs in agriculture justifies tha expend! ture cf any mere public money in irrigation projects. Given the actual need for additional farm lands; those already in production produce a sur plus that makes a most troublesome phass of the ."farm problem." would be a more sensible expenditure of public fund3 to employ them for transporting the farm families in tho communities involved to other regions where farfn lands do not re ouire costly Irrigation projects to make them productive. The history of the reclamation pro jects generally is not inspiring. More often than not the cost, changeable against tho land in the form of acre age prices and water fees is so great that the farms simply cannot bo made to pay. The result usually has been wholesale default in payments for lands and then a pica to congress to rebate the payments. This, also usually comes to pr.33, and the net result i3 that the taxpayers money has been spent for work demonstrated uneconomic at a tlmo when plenty of land requiring no expensive fed eral treatment was available. In the case of the Oklahoma pro jects, as well as that of the Kaw in Kansas, the regions are chiefly adapt ed, or would be chiefly adapted after the projects were completed, to the growing of wheat alone. This is one of the crops in which overproduction has contributed seriously to the eco nomic disadvantage of American agri culture. Wheat can be raised under irrigation, of course, and if we need ed more wheat land to keep from starving the expenditure would be justified. But wheat raised on irri gated land can never compete in pro ductlon cost with wheat raised on self-sufficient land, and with more wheat already than the country knows what to do with, increasing production in high-cost regions might be considered inadvisable. Editorial Opinion of the Fort Worth Star-Tale-gram. :o: It is everybody's duty to help speed the economic recovery, but net by gambling in stock- or anything else. NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENT DEFENDANTS Albert E. Foreman and Essie R. Foreman, defendants, will take no tice that on the 8th day of June, 1933, the plaintiff, Josephine S. War ren filed her petition in the District Court: of Cass county, Nebraska, against said defendants, the object and prayer of which are to recover a judgment against said defendants on two certain promissory notes for the sum of 13,000.00, dated June 9, 1926, made, executed and delivered to the Bank of Polk, Polk, Nebraska, and another for the sum of $315, dated June 8, 1926, to Godfred Olson and R. L. Cox, on which notes there is now due the sum of $4,641.00, to gether with interest thereon, from June 9, 1933, at ten per cent per annum, which notes are now owned and possessed by the plaintiff, Joseph ine S. Warren, and to subject and sell the t'tle and interest of said de fe'ndants in the following described property, which has been attached in said action to satisfy, said judgment, to-wit: An undivided one-eleventh Interest in and to the southwest quarter and the south half of the northwest quarter, the northeast quarter of the northwest quarter of Section 27. Township 11, Range 9. East of the 6th P. M.; and an un divided one-eleventh interest in and to the northeast quarter of the north east quarter of Section 28, Township 11, Range 9, East of the 6th P. M., in Cass county, Nebraska; and an undivided one-eleventh interest in and to Lot 5, of the northeast quar ter of the northwest quarter, and of the southeast quarter of the north west quarter of Section 2, Township Hi Range 9, all in Cass county, Ne braska, for the payment of the amount found due the plaintiff ' on said notes, and for the costs of said action. You are required to answer said petition on or before the 4th day of September. 1933. JOSEPHINE S. WARREN. By W. T. THOMPSON and E. R. MOCKETT, Her Attorneys. jl7-4w TO AVERT ANOTHER WHITER LIKE TH5 LAST President Roosevelt says it will be our own fault if we go through another winter like the last in the United States. So it will. No test of patriotism could be truer than that which the adminis tration proposes. Nothing is impos sible if we have the Will to do it. If we may judge by the response to the president's appeal, we are going to do it. In time of war, there is never any difficulty about co-operation in a na tion. -The; people are moved bya com mon impulse. It is this common Im pulse that, the president, would arouse in making war upon the de pression. No such peace-time test of the patriotism of tho people has ever been made in our own country, and it has few counterparts anywhere Perhaps the most recent is the Brit ish bond conversion. It was accom plished by patriotic appeal, by dis play of emblems, by parades and orations. It is a Question whether or not such a great objective can be accom nlished bv that persuasion with which the president hopes to achieve it. Wo hope so. If it cannot, then the government must apply compul- an persons interested in said mat sion. We have endured the depres- ter may, and do, appear at the Coun- long as we can. Not until now have we made any real effort to conquer it. It is not an, unreasonable request that the president is making of the people. Everyone adm.its the soundness of the principle that an industrial civilization can function only by diffusion of wealth through the masses. The blanket code is a simple ap plication of that principle. Since welprj0r to said day of hearing. all believe it. wc must abide by it. Enlightened self-interest could do no other. The code reaches deeply Into the growing problem of unemploy ment. It puts the machine, which is at the bottom of unemployment everywhere, in a new relation to so ciety. It is axiomatic that the owner of the machine should compensate so- cirtv for the profits accruing to it, Otherwise, we would not have at last an ordered society and a Daianceu i national economy. We would have only more and more machines and a few rich machine' owners, with growing multitude of unemployed. Tmlv. this is a new deal. If we do not suppotr it, we do not deserve it.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch. :o: One tr.ing that doesn't require any capital to start is a rumor. :o:- Bcauty experts registered in Cali fornia number 24.700. So the cli mate isn't everything. :o: "Earth smoking" Is not uncom mon today In countries where smok- inir materials are scarce, as in the "'"r'".;, " Kalahiri region of South Africa. The natives lie on the ground with tneir mouth.3 over a email hole that leaaa to the bottom cf a pit filled witu . ' .... nurainr ieives ana mm . u-c iu . . earth as a pips. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of An ton Koubek, 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 Aug ust 25,. 1933, and December 1. 1933, at ten o'clock a. m. of each day, to examine all claims against said es tate, with a view to their adjustment and allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claims against said estate is three months from the 25th day of August, A. D. 1933, and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 25th day of August, 1933. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 2Sth day of July. 1933. A. H. DUXBURV, (Seal) j31-3w County Judge. N NOTICE TO CREDITORS 'State of Nebraska, County of Cass, G3. . In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Amanda Prouty Rawson," deceased. ; To the creditors of said estae: You are hereby notified that I will sit at the County Court room in Plattsmouth. in said county, on Aug ust ISth, 1933. and November 24th, 1933, at ten o'clock in the forenoon of each day, to examine all claims against said estate, with a view to their adjustment and allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claims against said estate is three months from the 18th day of AugUst, A. D. 1933, and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 18th day of August, 1933. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 18th day of July, 1933. A.. II. DUX BURY, (Seal) j24-3w County Judge. NOTICE TcTcREDITORS The State cf Nebraska, Cass county,- ss. ' . In the County Court. , In the matter of the estate of Nel son L. Pollard, deceased. To the creditors of naid estate: ! You are hereby notified, that I will sit at the County Court room in Plattsmouth, in said county, on Aug vet 18, 1933, and on November 24, 1D33, at ten o'clock a. m. of each day, to examine all claims against said estate, with a view to their ad justment, and allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claims against said estate is three months from the 18th day of August, A. I. 1D33, and the time limited for pay ment of debts is one year from said 18th day of August, 1933. ; Witness my hand and the seal of paid County Court this 19th day of July. 1933. .' '- if A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) J24-3W, County Judge., ORDEa.ftFiMfcARINO AttDHXO- r'iC. TICE. OF PROBATE OF, WILL : In the County Court of , Cass coun ty, Nebraska. . estate of Nebraska, County of Cass, ES. To all persons interepted in the estate of Catherine Hawksworth, de ceased: On reading the petition of David W. Hawksworth praying that the in strument filed in this court on the 25th day of July, 1933, and purport ing to be the last will and testament of the said deceased, may be proved and allowed, and recorded as the last will and testament of Catherine Hawksworth. deceased; that said In strument be admitted to probate, and the administration of said estate be granted to Mary Cook and David W. Hawksworth. a3 Executors . It is hereby ordered that you, and Court to be Je in ana rcriMJ I nnnntv nn thf 25th dav Of AUCTUst. A D 1933 at 10 0-ciock a. m to show cause, If any there be, why the prayer of the petitioner snoum not De erranieri. anu mac. nuuee oi ine 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, for three successive weeks Witness my hand and seal of said omrt. this 25th day of July, A. D. 1933. , A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) j31-3w County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING and Notice on Petition for Set tlement of Account. In the County Court of. Cass coun ty, Nebraska. State of Nebraska, Cass county, ss. To. the. heirs at law and all per- sons interested in tne estate or Dan- j . t . ..... . L Executrix, prayine final settlement and allowance of her ac- count filed in this Court on the 11th day of July, 1933, -and for assign ment of residue of said estate; de-. termination of heirship; and for dis charge of Executrix; . . 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 coun ty, on the 11th day of August, A. D. 1933, at ten o'clock a. m., to show cause, ff any there be, why the Brav er of the petitioner should not be granted, and that notice of the. pen- . Jency 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 newt- paper printed in said county, for three successive weeks prior to said Jay Qf hearinff "?r lo "aia ja witness whereof. I hav hr unto set my hand and. the seal of "ivi - V llu oy or July, A. iJOO. A, H. DUXBURY, County Jude. (Seal) Jl7-3w i. H