PAGE TWO MONDAY, SEPT. 25, 1933 PLATTSMOUTH SE2XI JOUBIJAL TThe IPlattamoutli ternal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEEXY AT PiATTSlIOUTJL NEBRASKA Entered at Postotfice. Plattsmouth, Neb., eecoad-elass mall matter R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PBICE $2.00 A TEAR IN FIRST POSTAL ZONE Subscribers living in Second Postal Zone, 98.19 per year. Beyond 600 miles. $8.00 per year. Rate to Canada and florelga countries. 13 30 per year. All sofescripttaoa are payable strfetly in advance. The locksmiths have signed their NRA code, and now the lovers must get together and draw up their code, ia derision of It. . :o: The Nazi decree that film stars' names shall not be billed In large letters is regarded as the latest move in the rivalry between Herr Hitler and Mr. Charles Chaplin. :o: The department of commerce, which started only a few years ago in a small way, is now a 17-million-dollar institution, and if we ever have any commerce it will come in very useful. :o: Pacific Coast physicians are asked to diagnose a case of headache which the sufferer says has lasted twenty six years. "Let's see," says the De troit News "that would bo the panic of 1907." :o: The James River in Virginia con tains the only known specimens of "the fish that cannot float." This strange creature has no air bladder niid therefore, when it stops swim ming, it sinks to the bottom. :o: "Mr. Koover likes dogs," said Mrs. Hoover at the fair yesterday. And how were the dog3 feeling, last night, after a day on the fair ground? The common experience is a willingness to trade them off, at a liberal dis count. :o: No wonder the American Iron and Steel Institute considers abolishing its prt-s-idency. There must be some thing radically wron with the posi tion. It paid $100,000 a year, and Rcbert I. Lamont resigned it the othtr day . :o: We continue to watch with inter est tnT" goTel-rfffffetlt's" experiment in pig slaughter. If it works, why wouldn't a recovery measure also work that calls for burning down a few hotels and office buildings in cities that are overbuilt? j :o: Back in the Hoover administration the task of railroad co-ordination was considered a pretty big job, but we not1 that Joseph B. Eastman, the new rail co-ordinator, is also taking on a few of the motor traffic prob lems, too. :o: One of the Big Six football play ers appears to have solved the prob lem of keeping up his studies dur ing the football season in a neat way. He reported for practice a week late w?ith the explanation that he re mained home to finish a correspond ence course. :o: There is a threat that if New York imposes the securities tax and the brokerage tax, the stock exchange will move over to New Jersey, where the buildings aren't so tall to jump out of, but theer is just as much water to jump into. :o: Only one out of eighty-two major league baseball experts picked the New York Giants to win the pen nant this year. And further investi gation probably would show that after picking the Giants, the smart expert Bald to himself, "Well, I might' as well be a damphool complete, so I'll guess Washington will win the Am erican League flag this year, too." :o: The 1-r.ian grand jury in the De troit banking investigation has found no evidence of criminal responsibil ity in the situation, but has learned that the two big banks there were solvent at the time the state banking holiday was declared. That, except for the mere fact (hat the banks are still closed, makes the banking situ ation -virtually hot6y-totsy In Detroit. . :o:- ; - Religious schools in Schleswig, Germany, have made what is prob ably their first step in revising-the Old ToKtamcni along Nazi' lines by expurgating the episode wherein abraham offers his son Isaac in sacri fice. Other corrections are expected to fol'ow,'. In fact, we may live to see the . day When nothing will re main la f he Nazi Old Testament ex rept the little business transaction between Jacob aii Ksau. with, per haps a homily, or two on the svila of telling one'$ brother fcr profit a la Joseph's brethren. NBA CRITICS GETTING THEIR SIGNALS MIXED Critics of NRA are getting their signals mixed. On the one hand, one is assured that the re-employment campaign is a flop becaust it is mere ly a job-sharing movement which will not improve mas3 purchasing power. On the other hand, the com plaint i3 heard from merchandisers that the cost of adding extra help is so heavy that there must be sharp increases In prices. If the first gen eralization Is true, the complaint is manifestly unjustified. From certain steel quarters comes the assertion that steel got exactly what it wanted in the new code: with the intimation that General Johnson is kidding himself when he claims a gain for the industry's em ployes. If this be true, why tho strong opposition to many of the code's clauses, notably the one about collective bargaining? The August decline in several lines Is naturally encouraging NRA snip era. But they should have a huddle before the open fire. Agreement on target and ammunition would make their attack more effective. The snipers are annoying. But happily they are in the minority. More representative of America In these nervous but hopeful days is the plea of Alfred E. Smith for "univer sal co-operation in a fair trial" of the recovery movement. Smith is a real ist, in economics and politics. ' He has always the courage to say what he thinks. When the recovery plan as announced, he was skeptical and Jid not hesitate to say so. He as serted in his magazine that he didn't see how NRA "could possibly workJ' Presumably he still has some doubts. But he is not allowing them to induce him to hide behind a cor .icr and throw rocks at those who are striving to make NRA work. He is wise enough to know that that is both unpatriotic and plainly stupid. For, as he warns, if NRA Is a failure through lack of Individual co-operation, "we must dig in for a long siege and make up our minds that recovery will be slow and pain ful." In effect, he warns that, while we need not expect a miracle, we can by full co-operation help NRA to at tain many of its desired objectives. Equally timely is his warning against "intimidation, compulsion blacklists and boycotts." He is right In asserting they wer never contem plated in NRA and "have no right ful place in the picture." Effective co-operation removes any excuse for coercion. Cleveland Plain Dealer. :o: WORTH HEEDING Whateer exceptions this or that party in interest may care to take to various thing3 which are being undertaken in behalf of national re covery, it is difficult to imagine any rincere objection to Senator Wagner's exhortation to peaceful settlements of differences between employer and emvloye. It i9 not surprising that labor, in some instances disappointed in the too roseate expectations that were created by some enthusiasts, should be tempted to strike; and that some employers, "seeing labor union- Ism officially lifted into a more ad vantageous position than it has yet enjoyed in the country's "history, should be tempted into a fight to the last ditch. Unfortunately fights to the last ditch are often just that, and It Is the desire of most of us to avoid the lat3 ditch if possible. Many men could have said sub stantially what Senator Wagner has said relative to tho futility of In dustrial conflict, the anxiety of the national labor board and its local subsidiaries to settle code differences fairly and the desirability of exhaust ing local recourses of conciliation before appealing to the government's arbitrage. But few could command the respect for such sane advice which Senator Wagner's career of patience and willingness to make concessions in the Interest of progress has won for him. Throughout this whole diffi cult period he has preserved his sense of balance and his sense fo justice, and -anyone tempted to ignore his words as just another official sermon takes too small account of the fact tfc-ft Mr.-Wagner, has consistently Vr'ietTie'd what he preaehed. Balti more Sua. i OWEN D. YOUNG URGES VIRTUE OF RESTRAINT We don't know tiiat Mr. owen D. Young had any part in Wednesday's parade, but his radio address in de fence of the recovery program was worth a whole division of marchers. In general, his plea was for self restraint. It Is better not to pitch expectations too high. Above all, the country must not think that "emo tion" can take the place of calm thinking and steady work. Any no tion that wc, have somehow got a magical formula which will enable us to dispense with correct and es tablished Ideas about wages and sav ings and tools and profits should be dropped at once. If NRA were to be thought of as a species of "jungle magic," it would be sure to fail. What it really presents to the nation Is a great opportunity. The people themselves must avail of it , and wring benefits out of it by familiar and honest methods. Mr. Young's chief warning was against selfish attempts to wrest special advantages out of the appli cation of the recovery act. His phrase was ""overreaching." Each of the parties to the great national compact may be guilty of it. Industrialists and big corporations may fix their thoughts too narrowly on large profits. Organized labor may defeat its own ends and wrong the public by demanding too much. Even the great body of consumers, Mr. Young remarked, may prevent full co-operation by "overreaching for bargains." The aim and ideal of the recovery act require restraint and self-sacrifice as well as enthusiasm and co operative activity. Great possibilities have been opened to the American people. But their animating spirit should be in line with the injunction of the poet: "Though we take what we desire, We must not snatch it greedily." Moderation is one of the outstand ing human virtues. It is an excellent thing in public as well as in pri vate life, good in diplomacy, useful even in war, Mr. Young has done well to urge it upon his fellow citi zens in the present emergency. He himself exemplifi3S it in his radio ad dress, which was neither hysterical nor overemphasized in any particu lar but was a clear and simple state ment of fundamentals, replete with wisdom and timeliness. New York Times. ; .... ; , i :o: INTERSTATE ASPECT OF CRIME PROBLEM Twenty police characters, all pub lie enemies or nuisances of various degree, were caught in the Monday raids put on by police at the direc tion of the prosecutor. Mr. Toy prom ises that this harassing of the un derworld will continue until Detroit has earned a tough reputation among hoodlums. His decision follows closely on sim ilar drives In Chicago, where 10 vol unteer judges are catching up with the criminal docket and driving the gangs to cover, and In Los Angeles, where California's vagrancy law is being put to service to rid that vi cinity of the hoodlum. Mr. Toy acts now to stem an influx of criminals from other sections where the law has them on the run. Herein we see another of the In terstate aspects of modern crime. So mobile is the underworld today that anything upsetting it in Los Angeles has a quick repercussion here. A lo cal prosecutor has no recourse, as thing3 are, but to Jail as many hood lums as he can with what law he can command, in the hope cf scaring others out of or away from his juris diction. Obviously, there is a great waste of time and motion in this process of shunting the hoodlum from town to town. If all communities were equipped with effective law against the public enemy, and' all were relentless at all tlmse in hi3 prosecution, there would be no peace for him anywhere. But laws vary, and so do local police and prosecutors in their capacity to cope with the hoodlum. So, though he is driven from one spot, he finds others more receptive, but remains, a3 ever, an enemy of society and living off what ever community harbors him. The situation bespeaks the Inter vention of a federal agency, to index him end keep tabs on his movements, to warn a local authority of the pres ence and co-operate In his prosecu tion where it is possible under local statute, and to crush him whenever he runs afoul of federal law. It may be that national legislation for the extermination of the hoodlum-at-large is a thing we must come to. It would have, at least, the consider able virtues of meeting the hoodlum with law as applicable btre as in Los Angeles or Chicago, and of working to end the constant procession of pub lie enemies from here to there as po lice presture sends them from one cover to the next. Detroit News. ' TOWARD THE GOAL OF ECONOMIC FREEDOM Regardless of the treatment that will be required, a more intensive NIRA, inflation or government own ership of major industries, American civilization will fail short of its goal until it provides economic freedom for all the people. This country of ours, the United -States, which for generations has been our proud boast as a nation that meant freedom, lib erty and the pursuit of happiness, has fallen short of the objective which the founding fathers must have been Inspired to conceive. Modern America holds fast to the growing hope that tho loss of eco nomic freedom by the people Is but temporary. We are all thinking to day along new and different lines. Mass thinking Is by all odds the most powerful thinking. Consider for a moment what it means when mil lions of educated men and women constitute themselves a jury to sift the evidence and to return a verdict. In the same environment, affected similarly by conditions of the times and interested alike in the rewards they expect from adjustments, they cannot fail to solve the problems con fronting them. If America is a free country, it is a brave nation, if the people are true to themselves and to their progeny, there Is no question as to eventual escape from economic thralldom, and that is what has been suffered in recent years in the United States because of economic develop ments so rapid we could not keep step with them. Journal readers, of course, are familiar with the name of a man who has occupied high places in the world of affairs, who has been identified with New York's Wall street and who has been prominently mention ed politically, Owen D. Young. Mr. Young is a straight thinker, a rich individual whose attitude toward his fellow men and his country is re freshingly frank and honest. Tnit is what he says about economic free dom : "No man is wholly free until he is both politically ' and economically free. No man with an uneconomic and failing business is free. He is unable to meet his obligations to his family, to society and to himself. No man with an inadequate wage is free. He is unable to meet his obli gations to his family, to society and to himself ., Business, as the pro cess of - co-ordinating men's' capital and effort (labor) In all fields of ac tivity, will not' have accomplished its full service until it shall have provided the opportunity for all men to be economically free." Mr. Young means simply this that all Individuals in our country shall have full opportunity to work out their destiny regardless of how or where they may be placed in life. He means that the wage earner shall be gainfully employed permanently, that the small 'business enterprise shall have a chance to survive, the individual talents shall find expres sion, that all the people shall find this their common country, partlci patlng In the enjoyment of Its abun- dancy. Sioux City Journal. :o: ADVERTISING RECOVERY As business turns upward the part advertising plays in this recovery scheme Is being discussed as it re lates to the cost of distribution. Somebody once said you can't run a department store in the Congo. Plenty of people there, but two essentials lacking desire and the wherewithal to buy. And even grant ed the wherewithal, if desire Is lack ing no customers. A people accus tomed only to loin cloths, fish, bananas, breadfruit and fiber huts doesn't constitute a market for all the things a department store has to sell. As civilization has advanced hu man wants have multiplied. The lux ury of yesterday 13 the necessity to today. Desire 13 something that has been created; something that didn't exist, but now does. As desires have increased the ca pacity of the human race to produce has increased in proportion. And the two working together have built the vast volume of trade that is modern business. Out of it employment flows. From it cemea prosperity if business Is active and misery if busi ness Is stagnant. ... When a depression comes and a people in whom the desires exist no longer can buy, then the crash; then the multitude of commodities which a people want pile up on the maker, and we have bankruptcy and chaos. Some call it overproduction. It is not. It Is simply the Inability of the people who want things to buy them. : That is where we have found our selves in the last (our years. So long as there is a slum, in a eity, so long as there is an unpaint ed house on a prairie, so long as hu man feeing In this land of unequal ized plenty go hungry and ragged and cold there will he no such thing as PUBLIC AUCTION to be held 2 miles southeast of Plattsmouth, on Rock Bluffs road, be ginning at 1:00 o'clock p. m., on Saturday, Sept. 30th The following described property will be sold: Live Stock and Poultry One bay horse, smooth mouth; one gray mare colt, coming 3 years old. Two milk cows, giving milk; one yearling Shorthorn bull. Fifteen shoats, weight 80 pounds. Three dozen gray Plymouth pul lets. Farm Machinery, Etc. One McCormlck Deerlng spreader, new; one Minnesota mower, 5-foot, new; one 16-inch sulky plow, new; one McCormlck Deering truck wagon, new;: one Newton wagon; one John Deere combine walking lister; one John Deere walking cultivator; one 14-inch walking plow; one corn planter; one 7-foot disc harrow; one 2-section harrow; one Hoosier seeder, grass seed attachment; one hay rack; one wagon box; one 1-hole corn shell er; two sets 1-inch harness; sev eral horse collars; one Vega cream separator; one grind stone; one sickle grinder; one roll cribbing; one set throw boards: two hog waterers; scoops and pitchforks; eight 10-foot lengths -inch galvanized pipe; one screw Jack; one block and tackle; one anvil; two log chains; one 14-foot ladder; one lard press; one sausage grinder; one scalding pan and numer ous other articles. Also some household furniture. TERMS Cash. Mrs. F. W. Nolting, Owner. REX YOUNG, Auctioneer Plattsmouth State Bank, Clerk. overproduction. Thus it is that only through re creating purchasing power so desires may be fulfilled and more desires created, more luxuries bo turned into necessities, can the modern show go on. That is what the NRA is all about. Through what forcJ3 are human wants multiplied and the innumer able things desired made available? Many fortes contribute, but more than all others put together is ad vertising. We ars not speaking of any particular kind of advertising, but of all advertising from the word-of- mouth of neighbor to neighbor over the back fence to vast publications that carry their thou3and3 of adver tised items into millions of homes. Chief stimulant of human desire and mass salesman of things desired that is advertising. Without more and more thing3 being' wanted and more and more things being told the machinery of modern economics breaks down. There are those who yearn to be rid of all the wants and the compli cations of modern life and to go back to the pioneer somplicities. But even if we all craved that, we couldn't do It without perishing on the way The millions who now make the things and the millions v. ho buy the things would all starve en route. So NRA cries for business and more business "buy extend credit open up the factories pay more wages increase employment to In creas the number of buyers more thlng3 to sell more people to make them more desires." In all that. Intelligently presented advertising is doing and will do a major part toward bringing this na tion out of Its long season of despair New York World-Telegram.. :o: THE COAL CODE Nothing more Important has hap pened under the New Deal than the bituminous coal oedc. Drafted by a committee of operators, miners and NRA officials, it deserves and doubt less will receive today acceptance by the operators and signature by the president. It is a great victory for labor. But It is much more than that. It is a victory for the nation. For coal has been America's sick est industry. Before the depression, and since, its disease of disorder has infected other industries and sapped the economic vitality of the country Labor wars, company gunmen, starv ing tent colonies of strikers' families. sordid towns in which companies ran everything from the local govern ment, churches, stores, on down feudalism in the midst of a democ racy which it belied! Few profited from that feudalism, not even the averago mine owners. It was a cutthroat business. When the operators were not fighting labor they were lighting each other. Meanwhile one of the nation's most valuable resources was being wasted by careless and Inefficient exploita tion. The purpose of the code is to bring order out of that contly chao3. It is not perfect. It. does not go the whole way. But it will constitute, when signed, probably the most sweeping advance ever made at one time by a.ay American industry. New Yerk World-Telegram. , ... i. :t:r- -Journal Want-Ad get raaultal NOTICE TO CREDITORS State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Otto F. Peters, 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 Oc tober' 13, 1933, and on January 19, 1934, at ten 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 13th day of October, A. D. 1933, and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 13th day of October, 1933. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 16th day of September, 1933. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) County Judge. V. E. HEDRICKS, Wahoo, Nebraska, Attorney. sl8-3w SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. By virtue of an Order of Sale is sued by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk of the District Court within and for Cass county, Nebraska, and to me direct ed, I will on the .4th day of Novem ber, 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 county, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the fol lowing real estate, to-wit: The west half (W) of the northwest quarter (NW!4) of Section eight (8) and the north east quarter (NEV4 of Section seven (7), Township ten (10). North Range ten (10), East of the Sixth P. M., in Cass county, Nebraska The same being levied upon and tak en as the property of Emil Borne meier et al, defendants, to satisfy a juderment of paid court recovered by Lillian I. Monia et al. Trustees, plain tiffs against said defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, September 25, A. D. 1933. H. SYLVESTER. Sheriff Cass County, s21-5w Nebraska. 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 all persons interested in the es tate of Mary Wheeler, deceased: On reading the petition of W. A. Wheeler, Administrator, praying a final settlement and allowance of his account filed in this Court on the 11th day of September, 1933. and for assignment of residue of said estate, determination of heirship, and for discharge of Administrator; 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 13th day of October, A. D. 1933. at ten o'clock a. m., to show cause, if any there be, w.y Ihe pray er of the petitioner should not be granted, and that notice of the pen dency of 6ald 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 said county, for three successive weeks prior to said day of hearing. In witness whereof, I have here unto set my hand and the seal of said Court this 11th day of Septem ber. A. D. 1933. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) sl8-3w County Judge ORDER OF HEARING and Notice of Petition for Termina tion of Guardianship, Settlement of Guardian's Accounts and for Dis charge of Guardian. In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. State of Nebraska, County of Cass ss. To all persons interested in the matter of the Guardianship of Gertie Beckner, Insane: Nctice is hereby given that Searl S. Davis, Guardian of Gertie Beckner, insane, has filed in this court his final report and petition for termina tion of said guardianship proceedings, approval of his accounts and for his discharge as guardian. Said petition alleges, among other things, that the said Gertie Beckner, is now sane, and competent to man ace her own estate and has been dis charged by the Insanity Commission of Cass county, Nebraska, and tnat for said reasons, said guardianship should be terminated and guardian disrharered. It is hereby ordered that you and all other Dersons interested In saia piatter may, and do appear at tne County Court to be held in ana iot oniri cnimtv. In the Court House at Plattsmouth, Nebraska, on the lJtn day of October. A. D. 1933 at ten o'clock a, m. to show cause, if any there be, why the prayer of the pe- ttHnnor afcmilri not be granted ana fhat notice of the nendency of said petition and the hearing thereon be riron hv uprvlnsr a codv of this no tice on the Bald Gertie Beckner per sonally, and to all other persons in terested in said matter by publishing a ccpy of this order In tne riaus- mouth Journal, a semi-weekly news paper printed in said county, for two successive weeks prior to said day of hearing. ... In witness whereoi, 1 nave Here unto set my hand ana me eeaj u said court this 20th day of Septem ber. It33. A. 11. UUABUttJ, County Judge Cass County, Nebraska. (Seal) s25t2w Journal Want-Ada gat reeulle! good alogan to observe. NOTICE TO CREDITORS State of Nebraska, County of Cass, es. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of John Wesley Woodard, 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 Oc tober 6, 1933, and January 12, 1934, 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 6th day of October, A. D. 1933, and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 6th day of October, 1933. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 9th day of September, 1933. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) si 1-3 w County Judge. NOTICE TO CREDITORS State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Philip Thicrolf, 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 Oc tober 6, 1933, and January 12, 1934, at ten oclock 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 6th day of October. A. D. 1933, and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 6th day of Oc tober, 1933. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 9th day of September, 1933. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) 6ll-3w County Judge. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. By virtue of an Order of Sale Is sued by C. E. Ledgway. Clerk of the District Court within and for Cass County, Nebraska, and to me direct ed, I will on the 21st day of October, 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 county, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the fol lowing real estate to-wit: The Southwest Quarter (SW'i ) of Section Twenty-one (21), Township Eleven (11), North Range Nine (9), Cass County, Nebraska; The same being levied upon and taken as the property of Charles A. Schuelke, et al, defendants to satisfy a Judgment of said Court recovered by Kansas City Life Insurance Com pany, a corporation, plaintiff, against said defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, September 13th, A. D. 1933. H. SYLVESTER, Sheriff Cass County, si 4-5 w Nebraska. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ES. By virtue of an Order of Sale is sued by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk of the District Court within and for Cass County, Nebraska, and to me direct ed, I will on the 21st day of October, 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 county, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the fol lowing real estate to-wlt: The West One-half W) of the Northwest Quarter (NW ) of Section Twenty-eight (28) and the East One-half (EH) of the Southeast Quarter (SE) of Section Twenty (20) all in Township Eleven (11) North Range Nine (9) East of the 6th P. M. Cass County, Nebraska; The same being levied upon and taken as the property of Charles A. Schuelke, et al, defendants to satisfy a judgment or saia court recovered by Kansas City Life Insurance Com pany, a corporation, plaintiff, against said defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, September 13th, A. D. 1933. II. SYLVESTER, Sheriff Cass County, si 4-5 w Nebraska. 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, sg. To the heirs at law and all per sons interested in the estate of Charles McGuire, deceased: On reading the petition of Thomas McGuire, administrator, praying a final settlement and allowance of his account filed in this Court on the 8th day of September, 1933, and for assignment of residue of said estate; determination of heirship and dis cbarge of administrator; 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 county, on the 13th day of October. A. P. 1933, at ten o'clock a. m., to show cause, if any there be, why the prayer or the petitioner should not be granted, and that notice of the pendency of said petition and the hearing thereof be given to all Der sons interested In said matter by pub- nsnmg a copy of this order in the Plattsmouth Journal, a semi-weekly newspaper printed in said county, for three successive weeks prior to said day of hearing. In witness whereof, I have here unto set my hand and the seal of said Court, this Stjj djy cf September, A. H. DUXBURY. Seal) sll-Sw County Judge.