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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 27, 1943)
MONDAY, SEPT. 27, 1943 IAQE TWO THE JOURNAL, PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA IV - Ihe iPlattsmouth JJournaS PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSSIOUTH, UEBEASXA Entered at Postofflce, FlatUaratt, Neb., as eeood-elaaB mail matter 4i Federal Employes As Draft Timber MRS. R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 A YEAR IN FIRST POSTAL ZONE Subscribers llYing in Second Postal Zone, $2.50 per year. Beyond 600 miles, $8.00 per year. Rate to Canada and foreign countries $1.50 per year. All subscription are payable strictly in advance. Induction of Fathers Discussion Rsveals Many Men in Service of Government. Out of Draft RUSSIAN FORCES NOW IN SIGHT OF KIEV, CAPITOL OF UKRAINE Card of Thanks Navies Face Hard Task 1 wish to thank all my friends j Loudon Scpt. 24. (UP) U. S. for their calls, cards and beautiful gocietavy 0f the Navy Frank Knox Mowers sent me during my stay in 'gaill today that the American and i lie hospital. They helped make my : Briti3l, navies face their greatest Htay mere pleasant anu win ionQ tagk in tJlc battie of defeat Japan. The campaign against Japanese j Washington, Sept. 24. (UP) Congress looked to government em ployes as a possible source of draft j manpower today as prospects became : very dim for senate approval of the Wheeler bill to defer induction of fathers. Further congressional moves in Amos Alonzo St agg Great Football Coach At 82 Years Has Coached Through Three Wars of the Nation, 1898,, 1917 and the Present Conflict New York, Sept. 23. (UP) He's 82, but he won't give up the foot- 1 connection with the selective ser- ball bench for a comfortable easy i vice rails will come next week pro-, chair. bably within the pattern outlined by remembered. Mrs. Henry Adkins Observes Birthday these two developments: 1. It was announced that Selec tive Service Director Lewis B. Her- will continue, he said at a press conference. aueauy lias uku onj I . ..,, . tr evnlnin I to a congressional committee why I i ;n ri.iii cino-lo miH 1f.ft 000 nmrried- He emphasized that naval forces i ' ' Wednesday was the 57th birthday ; must carry the Drum 01 cue hav(J not been drafted. anniversary of Charles C. Barnard, sive in the Pacific, with a great, informed ad- ' ministration sources in the senate ORDER OF HEARING ON PETITION 1 fnn.mr nf Mvnsrd. who liiim'ucr of light vessels lncntdinE for the past forty years has made light aircraft carriers, a major need. . dlcted tnat Scn. Burton K. wheei. Cass county his home. Mr. Barnard Knox urged mi am not w ' er's bill to delay drafting fathers arrived m mis county m w u.n...ivv. ....... - ; As usual his college of the Pacific Eleven started the season with a well earned victory so for the second time the United Press names us its coach of the week: Amos Alonzo Stagg, "the grand father of football." He was born in one war and coached through three others. He thinks it is the football team which makes the men, not the men who make the team. "The navy and the marines will have more and better officers by . i until Jan. 1 would eet "a maximum a youth of 17 and his since been en- fort wili.be over when Germany has . o voteg in the gcnate next reaon of continuing football," Stagg rolled as one of the leading farmers been be aten.Prime Minister Churchill j j gaid Thig v.omd hold mie fof tnQ of the county. During the time of., remarked on the subject still has; ' ,w Urmv also if the army had taken an the King Kom Karnival. Charley ! not a.spelled completely the ' mittoe focused attention on the de- opposite view of sports. I feel cer- . i i .., ,.-;th .1irr tnnr h.rifr inn iieiieveis MS one OI IUC wwcu uu:i,iy. o .. U0,,,, nf rovpvnnpnt. pmnlov of the leading farmers of the annual i the main war is in Europe, he said, . tfai Farmer's day of the fall festival. . . . - -, - . j i .- 1 The birthday was nuiciij.uwneujg LOVELY GIFT und the many menus win iu u many more anniversaries. Congress Seems To Abandon Hope Of Changing Draft ..Showing of Need for Father Draft Causes Doubt of Any Action Al lotments to Be Upped Mrs. Tony Klimm from the Lewis ton community, was a caller at the journal today and presented the owner. Mrs.- R. A. Bates, with a beau tiful riant. The plant is a rare speci men cf pink begonia, called the "Seven Sisters" variety and is one wh'cli Mrs. Klimm raised from a cutting of a plant she received as a gilt irom California. It is in full bloom and a thing of beauty. This thought fulness on the part of Mrs. Klimm is much appreciated by Mrs. Pates who is a lover of flowers. es affairs committee was concluding hearings on the Wheeler bill. The subcommittee said the figure tain the army made a mistake. Foot ball stimulates officer candidates to study in order to maintain eligibil ity." Stagg's team this year has plenty of 200,000 deferred non-fathers in ; of spectator appeal as usuak By pass-r.r-o-.T.nt cnrviM n a "ponsprva-1 in? and deception it defeated a T CI 11 lilt, li k, J V 1VV U M - i tive estimate" based on data sub-! more rugged Alameda, Cal., coast mitted Aug. 15 by the selective ' guard team Saturday 14 to 7. There service administration. I is a colorful halfback named Johnny Chairman John M. Costcllo, D., (Presto) Podesto of Modesto, Cal., Calif., pointed out that at that time i that the boys like to write about selective service already announced . and only two of the 51 squadmen all other sources had been exhausted are civilians. The rest are marine nd the- induction of 4 4 6,000 father and naval trainees and they get just to complete 1943 quotas- would be , 4a minutes a uay 10 piacuce inuua- mentals and scrimmage. He believes the schools that quit football for the duration made a Washington. Sept. 25. (UP) . . i ...... ......... 1 li q rj Congress eouay appeal vu iu ijv. j abandoned hope of delaying the draft of fathers and to have turned . j IJ Tl instead to plans for increasing the (J jLl5i,U55 1 HC living allowance of servicemen s families. A dozen bills have been iutroduqed calling for higher dependency allot ments to make families better able to subsist when fathers are called for induction. Sen. Burton K. Wheeler, D., Mont.. E,till hoping their induction can be delayed, defended his bill to defer fathers until Jan. 1 in a radio address last night in which he said victory gained at the expense of broken homes would be a hollow triumph. He said he was all for giving the army the men it needs, but insisted there are enough single men and 4-F's who could handle non-combat jobs and make drafting of fathers unnecessary. There was also a strong move in congress to 'draft 800,000 unmarried and childless government employes in an attempt to slow the process of putting family heads in unuorm. Wheeler's bill is scheduled for senate floor debate Tuesday, with administration loaders nredictinz it red reporters to recently published Stimson Declines ! Marshall Question Secretary of War States Generals are Placed Where it Is Felt Most Needed Washington, Sept. 23. (UP) ' Secretary of war Henry L. Stimson refused today to deny, or confirm that Gen. George M. Marshall may be made Anglo-American command-cr-n-chief but commented that gen erals are placed where they will be "of the greatest possible use." Questioned at a press and radio conference about published asser tions that the U. S. army chief of staff will be made commander of all Anglo-American forces throughout the world, Stimson said: "In general, we don't put a gen eral where we thing he is not of the greatest possible use." 'Stimson inferentially denied suggestions that a change in as- necessary. The figures indicated that fewer than 117,000 of the 300,000 non-. fathers in government service have mistake and that they will realize been deferred. The rest, according j it later on. to Dobert M. Barnett, chairman of J "While some colleges were giving the wai; manpower commission com- j up football because they thought deferments, ,liev naa l0- inty migiu nave guu; mittee on government "just haven't been called. on with a little more courage. Thai Members of the military affairs ones that did won t regret it." committee also, plan to question Her- Stagg's lifetime record is 32S won, shey concerning selective 'service's 203 lost and 36 tied. He is a Yale rpnort that 6.136 male government : graduate of 1S38 and in 1S90 start- "ept. 23. (UP) Rus sian armored forces drove to within artillery range of Kiev, capital of the Ukraine and biggest German base in southern Russia, today while other soviet armies cut through the hedgehog defenses of Smolensk and Dnepropetrovsk. (The official German news agency in a Berlin broadcast reported that nazi troops had evacuated the rail road junction of Poltava, 5 miles northwest of Dneprtpetrovsk and IS 3 miles southeast of Kiev, 'according to plan after all military installa tions were destroyed.") (A Madrid dispatch said well informed sources in Berlin were ex pecting Smolensk to fail momentar ily. German troops have begun pull ing out of southern Russia from Pol- tava to the Crimea to prevent possi ble encirclement if Kiev is captured, the dispatch added.) The capture of Kiev was believed perhaps only a matter of days, front dispatches said, as soviet troops pushed dov.u both banks of the Desna river to capture Leski, 1M miles northeast of the nazi-keld bastion. Other forces closing in on Kiev along an S 5-mile arc captured more than ISO localities in advances of up to IS 1-2 miles, including Yab- lovka, 20 miles to the east, and Pereyaslav, 4 7 miles to the south cast and five miles from the Dnieper river. More than 2,000 Germans were killed in fighting on the Kiev front alone yesterday and 10 tanks were captured intact. At the railway junc tion of Zoloutonosna, 75 miles south east of Kiev and only 14 miles north of Cherkassy on the west, bank of the Dnieper, the Russians seized scores of guns and much other booty. Altogether, red armies liberated nearly SoO towns and villages in advances of up to 15 1-2 miles along the 750-miio front fro in .Smolensk to the Sea of Azov. Nearly 16,000 Germans were killed. The threat to Smolensk was in creased by the fall of Demodov, 4i miles to the northwest, to a Rus sian flanking column. The capture i oi i.itmiuov was announceu uy i re- mier Marshal Josef Stalin in a special order of the day that referred to it "a powerful German defense base." - 14 WAK i AOS j F0R PR0BATE 0F reign will i 8. County of Cass J In the County Court - PESS0UAL PERMANENT VA E, 59c! Do your own Permanent with Charm-Kurl Kit. onipleto equipment, includ ing 4i) curlers and shampoo. Easy to do, absolutely harmless. Praised by thousands including i Fay McKenzie, glamorous movie star. Money refunded is not satis fied. Cass Drug. sw-tf-30 N WAR TED WANTED: Load of good dry hard wood, Move size. Call Journal. 9-3td;2tw WANTED: Four men with team and v agon if possible, to shuck corn. I'ay 15c a bushel. Gus Pen i ner, cue mile and a half east o Weeping Water. lG-otw roa SALE FOR SALE: All modern dwelling. 114 avenue E., $4,250. If interest ed call or see Mrs. L. W. Egen bergcr. ' 9-2tw FAIiMS FOS SALE FOR SALE: 110 acres Sarpy Coun ty, three miies southeast o i S p r i n g f i o 1 u, 00 acres bot tom, i-uiiivated 44 acres pasture, lias a vaiuauie sione quarry, not in opciation on account oi he!i, improvements, good o-room house and lair outbuildings. $llo per acre. F. M. Graham Co., oil Bian deis Theater Llug., Omaha Nebr., Phone AT. 3442. 13-itd; 2sw To the heirs at law and to all persons interested in the estate of William G. Ost, deceased: On reading the petition of Amalia S. Ost, praying that ihe instrument tiled m this Court on the iiOth day of August, 1043, and purporting to Le a duly authenticated copy of the laot will and testament oi Wil liam G. Ost, deceased, that said m trument be admitted to prouate, and the administration of said t.state be granted to V. A. Ost, Ad ministrator with will annexed for the Siuu; of Nebraska. It is herotty ordered that you and all persons interested in said matter, may, and do appear at the County Court to be held in and tor said county on the 24th day of September A. D., 1943, at 10 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 pendency of said petition and the hearing thereof be given to all per sons interested in caid matter by publication in the Plattsmouth Journal, a Semi-weekly newspaper prfnted in said county, three suc cessive weeks prior to said day of hearing. WITNESS my hand, and the seal of said court this 30th day of August, A. D., 1943. A. II. Duxbury, County Judge. fOP. UE2JT OE SALE FOR SALE OR RENT : 100 acres south of Plattsmouth, about S miles, no house on place but one nearbv available. S.e MiKe Lutz or call phone 221-W. NOTICE OF HEARING ESTATE NO. 3723 Estate of Fred G. Egenbergcr, De ceased. In the Comity Court of Cass Coun ty, Nebrasha. LOST employes between 18 and 37 have no draft status and are listed as "unclassified." Rep. Forest Harness, R., Ind., said ; ed his first coaching job at Spring field, Mass., where Dr. James Nai smith, the inventor of basketball was one of his players. After two years he was "particularly intersted" in there in which his teams won only the status of civilian employes of j one game and lost 11. he went to th- war dPnartmpnt. where accord- ! the University of Chicago and re- Germans Acknowledge Losses laudatory articles on the chief cf "I believe others ing to the selective service analysis, ,S33 single men and 83,477 childless married men arc employed. mained for 41 years. Mrs. Roosevelt Returns From 23,000 Mile Trip FirLt Lady Visits Wounded Scldiers at Guadalcanal But Miss es Jap Air Eaid Consider Extension Of Manpower And Production Control War Manpower Commission to Continue Control on West Coast to Forestall Service Legislation Washington, Sept. 24, (UP) The War Manpower commission today considered extension of the strict London, Sept. 24. (UP) An ob scurely-worded Berlin radio report of violent Russian attacks in many sectors today hinted that the red army may have forced a crossing of the Dnieper river north of Kiev. Capt. Ludwig Sertorius, nazi radio commentator, said advanced soviet elements tried to cross the Dnieper at its confluence with tho Pripet river, 50 miles above Kiev. The Russians were partly repelled and annihilated, Seritorius said. The ambiguity of his wording left room for the possibility that some of the crossing force was successful. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the County Court of Cass Coun , ty, Aebrasna. The State cf Nebraska: To ail 13-4td; 4sw persons interested in said estate,- creditors and heirs take notice, that Mattie If. Fgenberger has filed her petition alleging that Fred G. Egen- LOST: Cameo pin between Soen- ( berger cied intestate on or about nichsen's and it inky Dinky stores, J August 1st. 1941 being a resident Saturday. Reward. Mrs. Earl Pui-j. j and innrbitant of Long Beach, Cali- I.ouisville. L-lsv forma md died seized of the follow ing described real estate, to-wit: Lots Seven (7), to Twelve (12) inclusive, Block One Hundred Sixty- eight tl6S), Original Town City of Plattsmouth, Cass County, Nebraska, leaving as his sole and only heirs at law the following named persons, to-wit: Mattie M. Egenberger, widow, Helen F. Rogers, daughter. John Frederick Egenberger, son and Charles Edward Egenberger, son, all of legal age. That no application for adminis tration has been made and the es tate of mi id decendent has not been administered in . the State of Ne braska. That ihe interest of the petitioner in' the above described real estata is an heir and praying for a deter-., mination of the time of the death cf said Fred G. Egen berger i;rd of his heirs, tho degrpp of kinship and the right of descent cf the real property belong ing to the said deceased, in the State of Nebraska. It is ordered that the same stand for hcarfng on the Sth d;iy of Octo ter 19 13 before tho Comity Court of Cass County in the Court Houso nt Plattsmouth, Nebraska, at tin hour of 10 o'clock A. M. Dated at Plattsmouth, Nebraska, this Sth day of September A. D. to 43. A. H . Duxbury, County Judge To all persons interested in the estate of Harold Reed Wolevtr, Jr., deeased. No. 3725: Take notice that a petition ha.s been filed praying for administra tion of said estate and appointment of Harold R. Wolever as administra tor; that said petition has been set for hearing before said Court on the 22nd day of October 1943, at ten o'clock a. m. Dated September 25th. 1943. A. II. Duxbury (Seal) County Judge NOTICE TO CREDITORS 7 the County Court of Cass County, Nebraska. To the creditors of the estate of William G. Ost, deceased. No. 3722: Take notice that the time limit for the filing and presentation of claims against said estate is January 24th, 1944; that a hearing will be had at the County Court room in Plattsmouth on January 28th, 19 44 at ten o'clock a. m. for ihe purpose of examining, hearing, allowing and adjusting all claims or objections dulv filed. Dated September 24th, 194. A. II. Duxbury (Seal) County Judge San Francisco, Sept. 24. (UP) Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt was enroute manpower and production controls ti New; York today to visit her eld- now in effect on the west coast in an est son, James, after a tour of Au?- ot'i'ort to forestall the demands for tralia and the South Pacific area, national service legislation. Mrs. Roosevelt returned to the ' The proposed extension, a WMC mainland yesterday in an army official said, would embrace some of Liberator, ending a war-theater trip the 56 critical labor shortage areas, of more than 23,000 miles with 17 . He indicated that this application "board of trustees" of the war will island stops. She will report at once, would be broadened in areas or reg unclergo a change in composition and i she paid to Norman Davis, national ions to meet crisises like that on the rbnt-s in fnnrtinn chairman nf the Red Cross, on her west coast where, during the sum-. trip. mcr, aircraft and shipbuilding corn- Mrs. Roosevelt visited at Guadal-' panics failed to meet production canal alter twe successive night schedules. bombings. Ehe landed there just be-; its principal features include: London. Sent 24 (I'i'l A hie fm-o an alprt but visited wounded' 1- Controlled lClerrai OI WOlKOlb force of British four-engined bomb-! soldiers at an island hospital. to plants with the highest existing crs sent a non-rtop allied aerial of- "I watched the boys in the hospital manpower priorities which are bas-. fensive into . its second day with a . when the alert sounded," 'she said. ' cd an urgency of the work being; y our Wj. r T. dh 1 buy :ng 1 hroug h ihe payroll saving? plan oa a Ife r-;iv ninn. which means Gr- Ol' .... urn ii oui juu.o..." will win less than 30 votes. m. I,,, ! staff and added l lie lilt I il j ttcot i-Jii Vs ii c.ice iiie.ui. ( , . , , ,,,,: have answered that fully and free- increases seemed to be ho.v much the present allowances of $5j ai'y' c ... r- e I Observers here believed that if month for a wite. vG2 for a wito I , , ., , i is I Marshall is appointed to the glcoal and child and $10 lor each audi-1 ... , . . I command position the Anglo-Ameri-lional child shoulu be boosted. 1 1 , . ., ... . , ..lean combined chiefs of staff the measure allowing a wife and child $GS a month and $11 for each ad ditional child. President Philip Murray of the Congress of Industrial Organizations Bombers Raid Germany told congress yesterday these amounts were below the barest level of necessiiy and urged minimum al lotments of $55 for a v. ife, 'J0 for, wife and child and $30 for each ad diiional child. The closest any house mea comes to his proposal is one intro duced by Rep. William B. Larry. 1)., N. Y., which would maintain the present $50 for wives but would provide $78 for a wife and child and $20 for each additional child. t nairnian Atum-w . .isiv u . i , , , Marauders attack on the air field was there in 1942. iy., ui me nouse Jiiiuaiy .-iiaii .-3 committee, said his group would chart its course of action at a pre liminary meeting Tuesday. Speaker S. Ray burn predicted tho house would consider allotment in-. rease legislation soon and probably pass it. NOTICE OF REI EREE SALE In the District Court of Cast County, Nebraska Fred W. Beil. Plaintiff, vs. Min nie L. Beil ct al.. Defendants. Notice is hereby given that under and by virtue. of a Decree of the Dis trict Court of Cass County, Nebraska entered in tiie above entitled cause on he 22nd day of September. 194o, the sole Referee will on the 30th day of October, 194o, at ten o'clock A. M. at the south door of the Court House in Plattsmouth, in Cass Coun ty, Nebraska, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, that is to say, 20 cath on the date of sale and the balance when said sale shall be confirmed by the Court, the following described real estate, sub- SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT In the County Court of Cass Coun ty. ebraska. To all persons interested in the j estate of Helena Timni Wendt, de-; ceased. No. 3G70: Take notice that the Executrix j of said estate has filed her final re port and a petition for examination and allowance of her administration accounts, determination of heirship. asignment of residue of said estatf and for her discharge; that said said County, sell at public auction petition and report will be heard to the highest bidder for cash the bclore said court on octooer znu, 194?. at ton o'clock a. m. Dated September 22nd, 1943. A. H. Duxbury (Seal) County Judge i S3. County of Case J BY VIRTUE of an order of sale is sued by C. E. Ledgway within and for Cass County, Nebraska, and to me directed, I will on the loth clay of October A. D., 1943, at 10 o'clock A. M. oi said day at the Municipal I.uiiding in the Village of Eagle, in NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT hi the County Court of Cass Coun ty, Nebraska. To all persons interested in the estate of Fannie P. Eikenbary, de ceased. No. 3G04: Take notice that the Executor of said estate has filed his final re port and a petition for examination and allowance of his administration accounts, determination of heirship, assignment of residue of said estate land for his discharge; that said pe- heavy block buster assault last ; "Only two of them seemed disturb- performed and the utilization of its night on Mannheim Ludwigshafcn, ed. There was on? whom i could n.anpuwei. ! Germany's second largest inland help, but the other one,. I could not pert and a vital arms center. get through to. Then I went to a I Marauder medium bomber of the surface shelter." Eighth U. S. air ' force carried on' The First Lady remarked that j the offensive by daylight. Escorted "London was more dangerous ' than ! and supported by Spitfires, the Guadalcanal during an air raid. She 2. Withholding of new contracts and cancellation of old contracts, if necessary, If the needed rroduct can be produced elsewhere. 3. A broader basis for occupation al deferments to draft registrants. (Seal) 9-2" A. H. Duxbury County Judge The Axis Stops at Nothing. S Don't f.i"p your War Bond Fay ret! Savings at IOC. Every so:;I:cr is a 103 percenter. Fig ure it out yourself. targets in the Everlau-Fauville area. 'I don't think I have ever worked j An air ministry communique an- as hard," Mrs. Roosevelt said. j i liounced that 32 bombers were lost The president had asked that she !in that raid and subsidiary attacks visit as many soldiers, sailors and tui the railroad junction of Aachen uiarincs as possible. I in western Germany near the Dutch "Everywhere," he said, "I found and Belgium borders at Darmstadt, the boys interested in things at home 20 .miles south uf Frankfort, striking and concerned about them. None in the wake of American Flying ever talked about, what he was go- - Fortresses and other allied bombers mg. to get out of the v ar such as occur. They were reasonable, how- they raided Nantes naval base in bonus or special consideration." ever, she said, adding they cimply France and more than a dozen other ' She said they were puzzled over could not understand why there targets in western Europe yesterday, strikes and asked why they should should be any. BACK UP YOUR BOY hzrzaie ysjr payfoll savings t) year fcziily lisl: jec t to a lease thereon expiring , tiUon and r(.port wi )e hea,.(1 be March 1st, i'J4o, io-w u . l.oib uue ( fore sa5(1 Court on October 22, 1943 (1), Three (3), Four (4) and Five j at ton o'clock a.m. Southwest Quarter, (M ;4 I an in, natccl September 25th. 1943. Section Thirty-three (.',,), 'Jownsnip Eleven (11), Range Fourteen (11), East, of the 6th P. M. in Cass County. Nebraska, containing 224.20 acres according to Government survey. Said Referee sale will be held open for one hour. Dated this 27th day of September. 1043. Walter H. Smith, Attorney for Plaintiff. Florence A. Fouchek, Sole Referee. following Real Estate to-wit: Lot 25 in the SW'i of the SE'i of Sec. 20, Twp. 10, Rge. 9, in the Village of Eagle, Cass County, Nebraska. Lots 4, 5 and 6 in Block 25 in the Village of Eagle, Cass County, Nebraska. Lots 1, 2, 3 and 4 in Block 2C in the Village of Eagle, Cass Couniy. Nebraska. Lotj 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10 in Block 26 in the Village of Eagle, Cass County, Nebraska. The same being levied upon and taken as the property of Martha M. Cooper, widow, et al., Defendants to satisfy a judgment of said Court recovered by Village of Eagle, a Municipal Corporation. Plaintiff against said Defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, September 13 A. D , 1943. Joe Mrasek, Sheriff Cass County, Nebraska NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT In the County Court of Cass County, Nebraska. To all persons interested in the estate of Katheriue Nolting, deceas ed. No. 3 6S9: Take notice that the Executor of j NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT In the County Court of Cass Coun ty, Nebraska. To all persons interested in the estate of Florence M. Allen de ceased. No. 3665: said estate has filed his final report said estate has filed his final ren t nnl n nclitioTi for p viim i?i n t inn "o.wl 'iinrl n j.tii;.n . eport .,,., i . -'"- i vnuuii iui examination mi allowance of his administration ac-. r.llowanee of bi n,i,.-...- .... . . u . -.HH-'H-KH-H-I" ; counts, determination of heirship, as- counts, determination of hrT i Mgiiinont oi resiauo or said estate I assignment of residue nf c.,;.i . : Thomas Walling Company jand for. his discharge that said, peti-land -for his discharge; thatsaid r -I tion and report will be heard before petition and report will u i i Abstracts of Title 4". said Court on October 22nd 1943 at ; before said Court on October ftl phono 32 t - Plattsmoufrh v 'ten o'clock a. ni. Dated September 27th, 1943. A. H. Duxbury (Seal) . County Judge 134.1, at ten o'clock a. m Dated September 9th V943 (Seal, A. H. Duxbury County Judge