The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, December 15, 1934, Image 4

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. . . EDITORIALS . . .
The Omaha Guide
Published every Saturday at. 2418-00 Grant St.,
Omaha, Neb.
Phone Wfibster 1750
Entered as Second Class Matter March 15, 1927
at the Post OTice at Omaha, Neb., under the Act
of Congress of March 3, 1879.
Terms of Subscription -452.00 per year.
.- -—--—- -- j
Race prejudice must go. The Fatherhood of
Col and the Broherhood of Man must pre
vail These axe the only principles which will
stand the acid test of good citizenship in time
peace, war and death.
Omaha, Nebraska, Hunmlay, Dec. 15, 1934
AAA AGGRAVATES NEGRO PROBLEM IN
THE SOUTH
Cotton Fhogram Produces Critical Situation in
Displacement of Negro Farm Labr, But Dale
Miller Believes Most Serious Effect is Upsett
ing of Equilibrium in Social Order
(from The Texas Weekly)
THE GRIM SPECTER of unemployment in
Southern cotton fields, whoaq forthcoming
shadow caused economists to sound a warning
when/ the cotton control program and subse
quent Bankhead act were first suggested, is
no longer a mildly annoying theoiy to regi
mentation enthusiasts bu an actual condition
reflected in heavily burdened relief roils
throughout the South. But while this condi
tion discloses an immediate crisis with respect
to the subsistence of this displaced farm pop
ulation, its most injurious effects, which now
eaxi only be guessed by the stories of suffer
ng which seojl like unreal legends from the
submerged masses of the Southern people,
can be expected to become increasingly mani
fest in a further dislocation of social strata in
the South. Particularly is this true of tin
plight in which 1'housands of Negroes have
found thdmselves.
An interesting and authentic insight into
this Negro problem is afforded by an appeal
ing letter which has come to light, but Which
probably was not intended to be made public,
from C. W. Rice, president of the Texas Ne
gro Business and Laboring Men’s Association
of Houston, to A. W. Mitchell, the new Ne
gro Democratic Congressman elect of Chicago.
The letter follows:
A( GEPT OUR congratulations upon
your newly elected office as United States
Congressman. We (feel that you as a Demo
crat, can help us in many of the problems
that affect t'he Southern Negro.
“As executive head of the Texas Negro
Business and Laboring Men’s Association, I
am calling your attention to t'he cotton busi
est* which furnishes employmet to hundreds of
thousands df Negroes in the South.
“Because of present day ob.tacles in the
channels of trade, the most important business
in the South, cotton, is rapidly dicing up. Be
tween August 1st and November 9th this year,
exports of cotton from the United States drop
ped 1,334,000 bales under the same period in
1933. Fojreiga fhjuidrs ar$ rapidly taking
the markets of world away from the Cotton
South.
as xnese mar nets are lost, Negro ten
ant farmers, Negro farm labor, Negro work
ers in the gins, compresses, and warehouses
on the railroads, in the cottonseed oil mills, on
the wharves, etc., will more and more lose
their jobs.
“According to figures released recently
by the Federal Relief Administration, Wash
ington, D. C., relief cases among Negroes at
Houston had increased 63 percent between
October, 1933, and May, 1934, and at Atlanta,
Georgia, 123 percent. From all indicatipns
he demand for relief will be greater as winter
comes on.
“The white employes in the South are
organizing and appealing to their Senators
and Congressmen for relief and protection,
but Negroes in the South have practically no
vote in electing these officials; therefore, we
appeal to President Roosevelt, who represents
ALtL the people, and to you, the only repres
ipntative of our race in Congress.
“Won’t you please look into this most
important matter and do what you can to help
save our occupations and jobs by removing
the obstacles now in the channels of the cot
ton trade?
“The very food and shelter required by
©ur wives and children are at stake.”
A companion letter went to the Presi
dent, in which the Texas Negro recited cases
of distress among his people and further ap
pealed (for aid: “When we ask what the
trouble is, the white leaders tell us that the
South is losing its export market for cotton,
and without an export market a great many
people Will lose their jobs.
“What can our people do for a living
if the South loses its cotton business? What
can we do to help you save the cotton business
for the South?
•
“We ask your help, Mr. President. We
need it and need it very much now.”
THF IE IS an inescapable pathos in
this picture of a humble people, struggling in
an effort to answer their own question to the
President, ‘‘What can we do to help you save
the cotton business for the South?” And
surely there is a certain sense of futility in
the pic.tre of a Texas Negro imploring a lone
Negro Congressman to “do what you can to
help save our occupations and jobs by remov
ing the obstacles r.ow in the channels of the
cotton trade.”
Ilut if there is a certain pathos and fu
tility reflected in this incident, there is also a
f: . degix-j of irony which cannot be escaped,
t is an unfortunate characteristic of. American
politics that momentous social and economic
problems seem to be recognized by practically
everyone in The country before politicians
have the remotest conception of them. The
eliects oi the cotton restriction program com
prise a case in point. Economists who first
foresaw the dangers buffeted a surging, hos
tile sea of public opinion by criticizing the
poplar program, but gradually as the results
have l>eeii sheen to conform so . closely with the
evidence a disposition to change perceptibly
and give audience to the explanations of eco
nomists that a restored world trade is the only
sound solution. But from indications Con
gress has heard nothing whatever' about this
theory. j
Texans and not landowners were dis
pressione of such, aa that of the Texas Negro
worker a clearer insight into the far ramific
ations of the cotton control program could be
afforded, because it is undoubtedly true that
the prostrate Negro class has suffered more
than any other, from the operations of the con
trol program and the Bankhead law. If ©
victions from cotton farms resulting from the
agricultural progiam had only been distribut
ed proportionately between Negroes and whit
es, a far greater percentage ttf Negroes than
Whites would still have been evicted, for the
percentage of Negro farmers to the total Ne
gro population in the South is far greater
than the percentage of white farmers to the
total white population.
Tenants and not landowners were dis
placed, of course, and the percentage of land
owners among white farmers is far greater
than that among Negro farmers.
It will not be long before the South gen
erally wakes up to the fact that what has act
ually been undergone is a tremendous social
and economic upheaval in the South, the grav
ity of which it is almost impossible to con
ceive and the effects of which will be felt in
the South for many years to come. The most
deplorable effect of these gyrations in our e
conomic ife has been the violent dislocation
of our social order, bringing with it a serious
retrogression in the South’s patient, endless
struggle to achieve a more substantial equili
brium by striving for the betterment of its
submerged population—its stolid, unrespons
ive, often illiterate Negro people. The task
•is herculean in its dimensions, and conducted
under conditions so peculiar to the South that
it is not always understood elsewhere, but it
has been as relentless in prosecution as it has
been kind and sympathetic in character.
DALE MILLER.
-—---- I
OPPORTUNITY
Now that the smoke of the terrific pol
£cal combat of >34 has cleared away, and the
National Administration having received a
tremendous vote of confidence from the Am
enean people by reas0n of a Democratie ,and
slide, which swept Federal, County, and State
offices clear of Republican exocrpt in a few
instances, their being a lone survivor here and
there, and the Negro democrats with their
audacious pioneers having succeeded in break
ing the thralldom of traditional republican
ism within the race, an almost super human
task, placing the bulk of the vote in the demo
cratic column for the first time in the history
of these United States. What does political
wisdom dictate?
All good field generals time attacks
never striking at an inopportune time, but
holding back for that one right second, the
psychological moment. Such a moment con
sents the Democratic party generals at this
time. The opportune time to take and hold
PaT‘t7’S SI'eatest st™ng
T, he Vote” presents itself. The
. Psychological moment for a successful sallie
has arrived. Equipment can be supplied to
completely route tho enemy wm » £
generals be far sighted' enough to furnish this
necessary equipment for the success of this
^tetpnse, worthwhiie political recognition
tor Negro Democrats?
T For hLstoncaI reasons, the Negro and
the democratic party have been at arm length.
The Negro deeming the Democratic party an
enemy contributing nothing to its success. On
■e mher hand the democratic party believing
*,egr°°ne 0f lts latest obstacles, contri
j! d n°th;n" toward the Negro’s welfare.
W^H ’ Ti C£"? a ^eat leader int0 the
and, Honorable Franklin Delano Roosevelt,
vet1? \t0Vt Mths, upset a seventy
jear tradition, making overtures to the race
sufficient to convince the Negro that good
I "I'T the dem0cn*ic Party, and as
a result the Negro went arm in arm with the
| demoeratle Party in the >34 campaign. It >s one
thing to get the vote and another to keep it.
V '
\
(Continued from page one)
N. R. A HIGHLIGHTS
must be built.**
—
Window Glass Manufacturers Get A |
Code
The window yria'fs manufacturing i
industry code goes into effect this'
month. Though window g!& b l* *
very coymon and widely distributed I
product, there are only 17 manufac. ]
taring establishments in thn industry!
and 3 of thtwe receive 75 per cent cf
all orders. In 1928. when many new'
windows were being installed the in. I
du .try had 5.000 workers The num- j
her fell off to 3,000 in the depression- j
but has now risen to about 4-500. !
—
labels i
About 75 or 80 codes provide for the
utjo of labels to show the consum-1
ing public that the articles to which |
they are attached are made under
pro rribed NRA code conditions. How j
many of thd^e little reminders are!
pursuing their mission to keep the!
general public a\v^ke to the need of
standing behind the recovery pro- i
gram may be guessed from a recent
report of the umbrella indurtrv code
authority to the NRA. So far, (5.000
000 NRA labels have been dr iributed
to meyber manufacturers, it says
“
|
Use of NRA Labels Spreading
A new amendment to the light
sewring industry code requires manu
facturers of mattress covers, com
fortr and quilts to affix NRA labels to
their article*. So. w« wrtil not only
carry the label* on our clotsing and
umbrella*, but th« NRA mav recall
itself to our memories ju»t before we
go to sleep at night. If the proposed
supplemental code for the sponge
industry, now being eonhldered *t
public hearings, 1* approved, the
sleepers myv awaken In the morning
to scrub themsolvai with sponges
equipped with NRA tags.
NIRB Gives Santa Clans a Br«*k
For several weeks, machines of the
Westinghouse Electric Company have
b«en striving to iHftall a movable
electric stairway In one of the nation
al capital’s leading department stores
to provide for the Chritma.i rush.
They failed to make the grade- So,
the company risked the NRA to per.
mit it to work its men overtime till
they complete the job «nd permission
we,s granted.
Razor Bakers Not Allowed To Cut
Workers
The Code Authority of the razor
manufacturing Industry has received
an answer to its question as to
whether workeus could be docked for
Christmas Day off. The NIRB rules
that employer's may not dock workers
for taking off legal holidsjys. unless
that was their custom before codifica
tion.
Packers and Alteration Workers On
Holiday Schedule
Skilled packers and alteration
workers will be allowed to work over
time between now and the end of the
year. Extra work in peak periods is
permitted under the retail trade code
They mr«v work 8 hours extra a week,
but not more than 2 hours extra a day,
and will receive time and a third for
their additional hours of labor.
15 FERA NURSERY SCHOOLS IN
NORTH CAROLINA
Washington, D. C-, Dec. 10. 1934
Or. Grace I>nvdon. head of the
FERA nursery schools, this week re
ported to Administrator Harry L.
Hopkins real progress' in thia through
out the South.
rThe colored population of North
Carolina is three-tenths that of the
white,” wrote Mrs. Mary G. Scarbor
ough, State Superintendent of nurery
schools in North Carolina, ‘%o thirty,
five white and fifteen Negro nursery
schools were approved 'by the State
administration”.
There is one colored nursery jn
Greensboro, Gastonia, Greenville,
Method, Goldsboro, Black Mountain.
New Bern, WiJ=on, Durham, Tarboro,
and Winston-Salem, and two in both
Wilmington and Charlotte. In each of
these nursery schools "here are two
full-time colored te^cherla and two
part-time workers
Twenty to thirty colored children of
needy,.uneyployed parents are aecom.
modated in each nursery school. In
dividual cots are supplied by the War
Department toys donared by the corcv
ntunity, cne or two meals a day in
cluding orange juice, fruits, and other
food stuffs are contributed by the
Federal Surpldsi Relief Corporation in
many instances- The colored women
employed in the nursery schools are
trained professional people, well
veised in teaching children proper
behavior, tidiness, dreeing them
selves, and in forming early habits of
orderliness. Play is supervised and
the youngtfters are also tausht group
games and entertainer by jjtory tell
ing. The children come at nine in the
morning and stay u^til late afternoon.
Parents are often given additional in
struction in child guidance and edu
cation.
My Social Attitude
By R. A. Adams
(For The Literary Service Bureau)
I want to rise, high as I jifatly may;
Ambition’s high behest I would obey;
But, even on ambition I would frown.
If rising, I must c«s1i another down
I w nt to bo just everything I car*—,
All thats in reach of any honest man, i
But I would . pirn honor, and
renown.
Attt&iablo by casting others down!
I w’nt to win ir. life’s exciting rare;
>"i 1 d the van, «nd bese t the fore
naodt place.
But I'd refuse, a yi tor’s crown.
That must be won by cat ting others
down!
X w this my attitude I summarize:
The best that s in me I will do, to
ri>e,
Ect will refuse advancement. If 1
must
In ri ing. bo to •’■ny ma.i unjust.
“PROVERBS and
PARABLES”
Dv A. B. M»nn
(For The Literary Service Bureau)
“Whom the gods would de> troy,
They first m-'lte mad '*
This is the human conception of
heathen gods. These gods were crea
tures of the human imagSrptien, and
their cre^torj attributed to
them human passion* and weaknesses.
If gods were temperamental, impul
sive, cmel. relentlers, inexorable.
This axiom means, tlhat when the
“gods” decided on the destruction of
anyone, they provoked him to anger,
caused him to commit some act which
would be used to justify such destruc
tion.
Of course, this is fiction. These
gods were but imaginary person&ges
But there are those who are foolish
enough to apply this to the Deity.
This .s foolish and wicked too, be
cause “The judge of all the e*rth. h«
will do right,” and He is “alow to an
ger and yet plenteous in mercy.” And
He would not deal bo unjustly with
His own creatures. There Is an abys
mal difference between “the sods and
and our “God”!
“LOOKING BACK”
(Liberties by Married People)
By Videtta Ish
(For The Literary Service Bureau)
In our younger days married people
were more disceet than now. Yees,
there was jealousy. There was dan
8Ter froip jealous husbands and wives.
But the chief deterrents were home
teachings and fear of scandal.
Not long ago in a Missouri town an
old woman was killed. She attended
a party. The revelers were “mostly
drunk”. A married woman under in
fluence of drink sat on the lap of a
married man. The man’s wife became
angry and “took him home”. The
conduct of this woman was discussed.
The old woman gave testimony that
this younger woman did sit on the
man’s lap. Hnraged the younger wo
man went to the home of her accuser,
struck her over the head with a heavy
lantern and killed her.
The conduct of this mfarried woman
is a sampie 0f the liberties taken by
married people today. Perhaps the
reason why such things do not more
often end in tragedies caUSed by jeal
ousy than they do, is because the
practice is so general that few mar
ried perrons have right to complin
because of their own improper con
duct. In regard to the caution and
propriety of the other days it seems
Appropriate to nate. Them days is
gone forever.”
Berating1 Leaders In
The Presence of
Children *
By R. A. Adams
(For The Literary Service Bureau)
Among the youth of today there is
lacking respect for leaders and con
fidence in leadership. Much of this
is due to the mistake of parents in ex
coriating these leaders in the presence
of their children. This is especially
true as it concerns preachers and
teachers.
Children hear it said of preachers
and other religious leaders, “They are
crooks”; “They are as crooked as a
barrel of snakes”; “They are grafters,
living off the churcs”; “They are as
rotten as they can be”; “They steal
everything in sight”; “The preachers
are worthless and just in the minis
try for what they can get out of it.”
School teachers come in for their
share of harsh, unfounded criticism.
They too. are berated in the presence
of the youngsters whom they are
striving to help; and by this their
work is made more onerous and more
difficult. Even little children hear
their mothers say of the teacher, “She
don’t know nothin’ to teach”; “She’s
dumb, herself, that’s why the child
ren don’t learn nothing”; “She’s a
mean old huzzy and I wish she didn’t
have to teach my child”; dnd I’ll raise
the devil with her if she bothers my
child!”
Often business leaders are called
“scoundrels”, “cheats”, “fakes”, and
sometimes, just plain “thieves and
robbers”, who would “cheat an angel”,
or who would “steal a nickel off a
dead man’s eye.”
Parents of the past generation h«d
more respect for leadership and were
mere careful in this particular. They
wanted their children to have confi
dence in their leafders; and they did
have confidence in them. But this
reckless berating of leaders in the
hearing of the you+h of today £3
rapidly undermining confidence and
doing irreparable injury to the cause
of progress.
Weekly' Short Sermon
•MARA”
By Dr- A. G. Bearer
(For The Literary Service Bureau) j
Text: Call me M*ra-—Ruth 1-20. I
No one can understand the my«-'
tones of human vicissitudes, humap
divergencies, and human diversities. I
But “nv<-ra” enters in the expeteenc* * j
cf all mankind- The expression w*s
used by Naomi when she returned
homo from her stay in Moab. She:
said. “Cal! me Men*4. because the aj. ■
mighty h:ith dealt bitterly with me.”
So “mara” means “bitter” or “bitter.
nes»” And the bittern" s of hunten ,
experiences is not always the disposi- i
tmn of providence, as Naomi indicat
ed.
1. By Bereavement. In this case
Naomi was bereft of her husband..
Elimelech, «nd her two s ns, Maihlon
and Chilion. The bitterness of be.
reavement she dharger to God. Doubt
le-ti there were natural causes which
she did not consider.
2. Bitterness Caused by Affliction.
Th'*re are many who complain
against God. when afflictions come
because they cannot understand, be.
cause they are weak. and blind, yet,
the afflictions are due to violations,
of nature's laws.
3. Bitterness Oused by Material
Looses. Many people honor and
praise God amid prosperity but when
adversities come, they complain Rnd
charge Him with inequity. But in »
large number of such cates the bitter,
ness s due to sins or mistakes, mak
ing the responsibility hum*n rather
than Divine.
4. Beneficial Effect of Bitterness.
Accepted and borne in the proper
spirit, bitterness tends to make us
sere ible of human weakness and de
pendence and of the need of Divine
help and support.
MAXIE MILLER WRITES:
(For The Literary Seryie® Bureau)
The age.Old Story— We*kiu»« of
Women’s Love and Man’s Perfidy_
0*her Boys May Be Telling Lies f0r
Spite—Yesy Son. M»rfy This Girl—
Make Atonement for Your Sin!
(For advice write to M^xie Miller
oare of Literary Service Bureau. 518
Mnnesota Ave.. Kansas City, Kans.
For personal reply send self-addressed,
stamped envelope.)
Maxie Millet; il’m, in a pickle sure
enough and I’d like for you to advise
me. I s.m twenty-two and I’ve been
going with * girl seventeen- Now,
this girl tells me she’s to be a mother
and says I ought to marry her. I
confess I’ve been with her in that
way. but other bo«ys say they have
been with her too, so I can’t know if
the baby is mine. J wonder if she
knows. I’d hate like the devil to
marry this girl and haVe another fel
low’s baby on my hands. What ought
I to do ?—Sorry Sammy.
Sorry Sammy; You ought to be
sorry in reality for taking advantage
cf this girl as you did. Have you a
sister ? How’d you like for some
other boy to deal with your sister in
that way? Now, you Wouid squirm,
play the coward and evade responsi. *
bility. You’d be just a contemptible
wretch to do such a thing. These
other boys may be telling lies to
spito the girl because she refused
them. However, you confess you
have ‘<been with her in tha,t way” and
it is your duty to marry her. save
her from dr£nace and saVe the child
from illegitimacy. To do leS3 you
confess yourself a despicable knave ,
and a scoundrel.—Maxie Miller.
NOTE FOR CONSUMERS
Of special interest to the consumer
is * recent amendment to the code
for the handkerchief industry, con
taining new provisions against mis
leading labels. Hereafter, “seconds”,
unless plainly marked, must not be
sold in sealed packages; and handker
chiefs cannot be labeled “linen” unless
the linen in the fabric constitutes, by
thread count, at least 80 per cent of
the material. In products where the
major fibre is leSs than 80 per cent
of the fabric, the exact percentage
must be “prominently indicated” on
the label. Handkerchiefs bearing the
term ‘pure linen” are already regu
lated by Federal Trade Commission
requirements.
Ask for a 1935
Ladies Birthday
ALMANAC
The nearest druggist will be
glad to give you one oi there
popular almanacs If you w:ll
ask for It before rncr I
they are all gone, rli&ftl
Swiftest and Best
RHEUMATIC
PRESCRIPTION
85 Cents
Pain—Agony Starts to
Leave in 24 Hours,
Just ask for' Allenru—Withhj U
hours after you start to take this
safe yet powerful medicine excess
uric acid and ether circulating
poisons start to leave your body.
In 48 hours pain, agony and swell*
lag are usually, gone—The Allenru
prescription ia guaranteed—if one
bottle deesn’t do as stated—money
back. ' #
STUART'S SERVICE BUREAU
“M ANDY AND ANDY"
■VT mdy:— Andy, I thought you said
th t the elation would be over Nov.
6th and that you would try to finish
writing your trip to Arkantab.
Andy;—Yes 4 know I told you that,
but it seems ar* though those who
were selected to run the Norths ide
.Democratic Headquarters, just moved
out to another place when the rent
tell due and tries! to make a nameless
organisation out of it. From the
action of some of these Afro-Amen
eans, who voted th„ Democratic tick
et for the first tin**, many of them
afraid to declare themselves for foor
the Republicans would win. I arn
not sure whether they know the elec
tion is over or not
M—I was over to “SI; Fanny’s" the
other day «nd she said that she heard
that you were out to a political
ing the ether nite; when a “Big Shot"
fired some kind of a committee and
appointed himself. When you got up
;,nd asked some fool que.-n.ion that
didn’t concern you.
A —Yes I w«s at a meo.ing. but I
don’t know what kind. The question
of a con Aitution come up and I ex
erted my constitutional rights, and
ask«d what was the constitution for?
No one seemed to know. I though*,
that it was just another one of those
Amos and Andy” resear al3. sp j
left, and went over to the Community
Center, to hear T. Arnold Hill, of New
York, speak on organization- 4 am
sorry that I didn’t come home for you.
M. Wh»t did you have to do wijth
it. two years ago the Nebraska Negro
Democratic Club met and kicked you
°“t- p°“ that one of the
BIG SHOTS” who was running this
show the other nite wa* placed on a
commute two yean, ago, and was
fired because he showed no result*, and
that the N. N. D. C.'a haven’t met
since ?
A —YM I told you that Th*t is
why I took the moling for a 8*tting
for “Amdf and Andy”, The big ZZt
w9o was running the s<W two year*
■go, w*8 on that committee, and fell
down on the job. When the question
<*nw up there was no mincing of
word. They were just fired, and the
boss took full charge of the works.
You know Mandy. in this world, one
reaps what they sow.
M-—But there were Doctor*. News
Paper men, Lawyers. Welfare work,
ers and also politicians. If they were
thtl^ riffht had you t0 «k
the Bd*s what he meant? You are
so dumb (that l am always uneasy
when you go away from home
A—You don’t know what you
rIlhtnf ab0UJ' 1 haVe just as much
ght to speak as anyone else. Didn’t
I vote the Democratic ticket? Be
sides there are three jobs that the de
serving Negro Derq|ocrats feel that
they should have and want 0ne of
them And if I can be one 0f the seven
®P. that c°ntact committee, (all of
om, are after jobs for themselves)
wiH get a chance to see the good
(White folks first.
M—You make me laugh. You old
broken down decrepit, not able to
walk a block, and talking about a
jo - If you were as well as Jaek
Johnson when he whipped Jim Jeffrie*
you would only be fitted for a Pullman
orter. For -the only thing that you
rV*Z ,h0neSty‘ S*” Fanny ^id that
iZ °°nmn had one of those polite
t^JObT: and he ^ to know his
zizttekes brains-vhich y
A.—You are right. But everybody
*** know that, and I don’t tZJ
*°around Mune ****.
oody that I am sick, as harH
™ T „ . . ' , as aar<1 up as we
are. I a^ (that if j werc abJe f
pC n°mng bett€r- ' a
that f* J’°b- But 1 Want to
30 °n that contact committee.
A. Stuart.
Atty. Ray L. Williams,
Room 200 Tuchman Block,
24th and Lake Streets.
NOTICE OF SETTLEMENT FINAL
administration account
In the County Court of Douglas
County. Nebraka.
In the Matter of the &tatQ of
feamuel Houston, Deceased.
All persons interested in said mat.
ter are hereby notified that on th«
“7t“ ray of November. 1934, Joseph
D. Lewis fiied a petition in said Coun.
ty Court, prayij^ that his fina, ^
ministration account filed herein be
•settled and allowed, and that he bo
discharged from his trust as adminis
trator and that a hearing will fee had
on said petition before said Court on
tho 22nd day of December, 1934, and
that if you fail to appear before said
Court on the said 22nd day of Decem
ber. 1934 at 9 o’clock A. M., and con*
test ispid petition., the Court may
grant he prayer of said petition, enter
a decree of heirship, and makc such
other and further orders, allowances
and decrees, as to this Court may
seem proper, to the end that all mat
ters pertaining to said estate may bo
finally settled and determined.
Bryce Oawford,
County Judge
Beginning 12—8—34
Ending 12—22_34
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