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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 25, 1928)
THURSDAY, OCT. 25, 1328. PLATTSMGUTE SEJH - WEEEXY JOURITAX taz THRO ?Zhc plattsmoutb journal flTBLISEJED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH. NEBHASXA tatoril at PaatoCloa. Platumsntb. I., aa moob-cUm mall mini R. A. BATES, Publisher SU23C3IFTX0B PRICE 12.00 PEE YAs! Di ADV AMCX The Chinese are at it again ham mer and tongs. :o: Hanging is too good for some of the paintings sent to exhibitions. :o: Be careful with your camp fires, careless ones are forest fire starters. -:o: Many of us take things for grant ed, and then chase around for relief. :o: No attention is paid to a chronic liar when he utters an occasional truth. -:o: Philadelphia thinks she has a gang war. Chicago would think it was a peace conference. :o: A woman may have a face like am np n book, but a man always finds it difficult to read between the lines. -:o: What always surprises us, consid ering the present fashions, is the fact that the spool of thread ere as big as ever. :o: Men who are brutal in the name of religion are bruteB in their own homes, and should never be interested with legal authority. :o: If the object of the gossip were there to hear it, a great deal of gos sip really would come under the head of constructive criticism. :o:- Nearly 140 delegates from 42 countries attended a recent triennial congress of the International Spirit ualists' Federation at London. :o: Then there is the football game which always leaves the spectators wondering who made up the sched ules of the two contending teams. :o: Still, the advocate of personal lib erty and individuality functions much like a member of the herd when he decides to buy a straw hat. :o:- Secretary of Labor Davis says labor is well employed, and that the poli tical campaign ia not interfering with regular business. This is good news. :o: The president of the American farm bureau Bays the farmer needs and must have bargaining powers. This is not Just clear but it will have to go. r:o: Tests of a fire proof paver recently discovered by Franz Franck. a Ber lin chemist are said to have demon strated that even clothes for fire men may be made from the new product. :o: No republican speaker has told from the platform that Harry K. Cur tis, Bon of the Republican Vive-Presidential nominee, is and has for sev eral years, been an attorney Tor Harry F. Sinclair. Why? :o: Herbert Hoover may be a very good mining engineer, but for presi dent of the United States we need a man who is an expert in political economy, and knows something about human nature. In these matters Hoover is a veritable tyro. :o: . Gov. Smith's proposal on the pro hibition question is a sincere and orderly attempt to bring about real temperance, and rid the country of rum runners, bootleggers, grafters, thieves, liars and hypocrites. His plan may not be practical, but it is an honest effort to 6olve an aggra vating problem. Talie no cbaiaces on Ccod Malic Guirc oC tbe pacEiage fc3 As Made in Shredded Wheat Factories for 34 Tears It is co easy to serve or any meal, and co tasty and noor isMnc cn tbe table la a i2Sy no Iiitchcn vorli. I Time was when a girl who had nothing to wear was out of style. -:o:- Politics, like some other things, has the seamy side, not always seen. -:o:- The virtues have their garland of fragrance, pleasing to those who earn them. :o: There is no protective tariff on hides as far as as the mosquito is concerned. -:o:- War is now illegal in fifteen na tions, but no enforcement act has yet been writen. -:o: The meanest person in the world is the one who pries into everybody's business but his own. -:o: The troubles with both candidates in the doubtful states is that they don't dare leave them. :o:- The late corn belt conference in dorsed the Democratic platform plank on agriculture. It is easier to write than carry out. :o: An exhibit of rare postage stamps in London was valued at $30,000, 000. This again illustrates the value of the past and gone. I :o: Five hundred bunches of grapes were taken this season from the fa mous grape vine 160 years old at Hampton Court, England. :o: If Pennsylvania went Democratic and Georgia went Republican, politi cal progress would get something out of the campaign anyway. :o: South American countries are not indifferent to air travel, and reports show commercial lines are being es tablished with our country. -:o:- Now that the new French divorce law is being rigorously enforced, American tourists will have that dis couraged feeling. No help for it. to: No bootlegger will try .for the Durant prize of $25,000 for the best solution of the prohibition question. iHs business pays better than that. :o: If Mr. Hoover can talk prosperity in the dying mill towns of New Eng land, Gov. Smith must be wasting a lot of candor one way and another. :o: The Mississippi legislature has levied a privilege tax of $50 per year on airplanes. That's what you call going up in the air after revenue. -:o:- American tourist expenditures in France have been as much as one and a half times greater than the or dinary exports of France to the United States. Probably the biggest advantage qf the radio to the orator who is a lit tle uncertain as to his facts in the radio, prevents anyone from asking embarrassing questions. :o: Not that it is a commentary on anything, but even the best photo graphs of these Balkan Kings do not look as though the king were very well pleased with his Job. -:o: Herbert Hoover says that prohi bition is "a noble experiment." Mrs. Aline Pettus, one of the presidential electors for Hoover, now serving a sentence in jail at Aberdeen, Mis sisippi, for bootlegging, found prohi bition to be an unfortunate experiment. war 12 ounces full-size biscuits SMITH AND THE VOLSTEAD ACT Those who . try to discredit Gov. Smith's attitude for the modification of the eighteenth amendment and the Volstead act say that if he should be elected he could do nothing, be cause he will probably have a major ity in Congress against him. Aside from the possibilities of the great change in the situation that will take place in the event of Gover nor Smith's election, these doubters ought to look at the record of the Volstead act in Congress. Take the vote in the House for illustration. When the Volstead act first came to a vote on July 22, 1919, the vote was 287 yeas, 100 nays, 40 being ab sent and 5 not voting. This vote rep resented the sentiment of many op posed to Federal prohibition in opin ion but voting for it either under stress of war pressure or the bullying of the Anti-Saloon League. The yea vote was short of a two-thirds vote. President Wilson vetoed the bill, and another vote was taken Oct. 2, 1919. This was a snap vote, when most of- the opponents of the Vol stead act were absent, including even former Congressman Cleveland A. Newton of the Missouri District, probably the strongest anti-prohibition district in the country. The vote against the President's veto was 175 yeas, 55 nays, with 198 absent and 3 not voting. The constitution requires a two third majority of both Houses of Congress to pass a measure over the President's veto. The membership of the House numbered 435, ( so that the 175 votes which carried the Vol stead act over the President's veto was far short of two-thirds of the House. In fact, it represented a min ority of the House membership. As a matter of fact, the vote which pass ed the Volstead act despite President Wilson's veto was two-thirds of a quorum and not of the House. The Anti-Saloon League showed what can be done in Congress with a measure requiring a two-thirds ma jority to make it a law. In the event of Gov. Smith's election, only the majority of a quorum would.be re quired to change the Volstead act, because there will be no veto from the President. The record shows how foolish it is to assert that Gov. Smith as Presi dent could do nothing with Congress. :o: .WHISPERING ON HOOVER If it is not too late, let's start a whispering campaign against Hoover. There has been one going on against Smith. Anti-Smith persons have been going about whispering as follows: 1. Smith is a Catholic. 2. Smith is uncouth. 3. He wears a brown derby. 4. He says "foist" for "first." 5. Once, on a hot day, he said he would like to blow the froth off a schooner of beer. (This last is obviously the bunk. Smith is smooth-shaven. He would not have to blow the froth off a glass of beer. That custom was started by men with large mustaches to prevent telltale snowy patches of froth from clinging to the mustache to serve as a giveaway to inquiring wives-. Now, for this Hoover Whispering campaign, we shall require yabout 3,000 expert whisperers, and they ought to be able to whisper in at least two or more foreign languages, for we must cater to the foreign vote. We shall want three whisperers to skulk silently about on dark nights between the hours of midnight and 4 a. m. .whispering the following set of little-known facts from Her bert Hoover's lurid past: 1. He is a Catholic. 2. He is the follow who killed the Austrian Archduke in 1914, thus starting the World War. 4. He invaded Belgium. 5. He is the missing Charlie Ross and also the missing Dorothy Arnold, and he killed Elwell. 6. He once wore a gray fedora with the brim turned up in front and down in back and with a red feather stuck in the band. 7. He butters his radishes. 8. He says "Pardon me." Both he and Al Smith are really Senator Curtis in disguise, and Sen ator Curtis, if he could be induced to take off his mustache, would stand revealed as Senator Robinson, who in private life is Senator Borah. That's all dog-goned nonsense, say you? Sure it is. But no more nonsensical than the things they have been whispering about the Democratic nominee. :o: "What's the trouble?" asked the driver of the car that pulled up long side of the stalled machine. "Oh," growled the man working over the engine, "that dad-blasted bus has been associating with my wife's visiting relations and now even it hasn't got sense enough to go when it ought to. AN AESURD DISTINCTION It is well to remind any people of their history at a time when they are experiencing what to them seems unprecedented, and Prof. Earle of Columbia University has Just done this with respect to the Smith cam paign. He finds that very much the same things people are saying of Gov. Smith were said of Andrew Jackson and Abraham Lincoln. In Springfield, 111., Mr. Lincoln's home, 20 of the 23 Protestant pastors joined in an opinion that he was not a fit person to be sent to the White HouBe. Much the same opinion as to Jackson was widely held in the East and South east, where the Tennesseean was re jected upon the score that only gen tlemen should go into the White House. The people who backed the fashionable John Ouincy Adams did not consider Jackson a gentleman. Nevertheless; as Prof. Earle points out, these men made two of our greatest Presidents. The New Republic has taken cog nizance of the growing, absurdity which distinguishes between the peo ple who are for Mr. Hoover as the better element and those who are for Smith as the rough element of the population. It finds that among in tellectuals a great majority are for Gov. Smith. University presidents, philosophers, writers, magazine edi tors, ministers and persons who lead the national thought, are shown in the New Republic poll of the intel ligentsia to be for Gov. Smith by more than 3 to 1. To Dr. Hadley, formerly president of Yale; to Mr. Sedgwick, editor of the Atlantic Monthly; to the scolarly Rev. Mr. Fosdick, to the eloquent Rabbi Wise, to the rudite John Dewey and to the learned Dr. Frankfurter of Harvard, the New York Governor, an expert in the difficult art of government, a genius who undestands the relation of government to the people, is vast ly preferable as President to an engi neer like Mr. Hoover, who gets his political ideas second hand. It is the opinion of historians that trying to make it appear that Mr. Lincoln and Gen. Jackson were ruf fiians, opposed by all the good peo ple and supported by the bad people, really elected both men. Maybe the same absurd distinction will elect Gov. Smith. It is, at any rate, dan gerous for any party to arrogate to itself all the virtues. That has caused more than one revolt at the polls, and it can cause another. It is by such revolts that a free people re buke snobbery. St. Louis Post-Dispatch. :o: HURRAH FOR SCIENCE Early to bed and early to rise Makes a man healthy, wealthy and wise. We always doubted it. If you go to bed early, you cannot sleep; if you get up early, you never know any of the neighbors. Go to bed late and get up when you please. Better, far beter, are thoughts such as these. Or. Go to bed late, get up when you may. Hang all the proverbs, that is my way. Instinctively we like to sleep late, and psychologists tell us the best thing to do with instincts is to fol low them, short, of course, of com pelling the police to horn in on the party. Now science says if we get up early, we are liable to heart disease. The admonition was not couched in exactly those words but if you bound out of bed in the morning, the cook will one day be spared the trouble of boiling your eggs. And no late riser bounds out of bed; it is your early riser who does it. Then he brags about it. Well, he's inviting heart disease. Now. if science will show the fallacy in a few more pro verbs, we shall continue to sleep late in the morning. :o: A correspondent of the Chicago Tribune says there are parts of Phila delphia where putting up Mr. Hoo ver's picture is to get a rock through the window. Upon the other hand, there are parts of the South and West where putting up a picture of Gov. Smith is to get a Plymouth Rock through the window. We all like fried chicken. :o: CHESTER WHITE BOARS A bunch of good husky Chester White Boars, sired by "Snowbank," first prize boar at the Nebraska state fair, 1928. One good yearling sow to farrow October 23rd. FRED REHMEIER, olS-4sw Weeping Water, Neb. We have a full stock of rough Cy press Cribbing, 6 and 12-inch, and Cedar Poles. If you are going to build a new crib or repair the old one, it will pay you to see us. We deliver anywhere. Cloidi lumber & Coal Co., Plattsmouth, Nebr. FIGURE IT OUT YOURSELF Jail inmates at Millsburg, Ohio, are marched in a body to church every Sunday. "People have a right to know what Jailbird9 look like," says Sheriff J. V. Gray. But the Jail birds object. When they enter the church, they say, they are the ob ject of so many stare from the con gregation that they grow embarrassed They have aBked the sheriff to dis continue the practice, although he refuses to do so. We're not quite clear Just what moral ought to be drawn from all of this. Does the fault, if any, lie with the Bheriff, congregation, or prison ers? Figure it out for yourself and see how you feel about it. :o: FOR SALE Several good Hampshire male hogs Inquire or Perry Nickles, two and r half miles east of Murray. ol8-4tw. LEGAL NOTICE To Hattie Shrider. George Shrider, Charlie Pittman, Luella Pittman, Ed ward Pittman, Lulu Pittman, and ail persons having or claiming any in terest in Lot 11 in Block 1 in the Village of Union, in Cass county, Nebraska, real names unknown, de fendants: You are hereby notified that Hattie M. Eaton, as plaintiff, has filed in the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska, her petition against you and others as defendants, praying for the decree of said court exclud ing you from having or claiming anv richt. title, interest or estate in or to said described real estate and quieting the title to said real estate in plaintiff as the owner thereof in fee simnle. You may answer said petition in said court at Plattsmouth, Nebraska, on or before December i, 19 2 S HATTIE M. EATON, Plaintiff. By PITZER & TYLER and LLOYD E. PETERSON. Attorneys. 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 William Ballance, deceased: On reading the petition of Henry H. Tartsch. Executor, praying a final settlement and allowance of his ac count filed in this Court on the 22nd day of October, 1928, and for the discharge of said Executor; It is hereby ordered that you and all persons interested in Baid matter may, and do, appear at the County Court to be held in and for said county On the 2nd day of November, A. D. 1928 at 10 o'clock a. m.. to show cause, if any there be. why the prayer 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 said matter by publishing a copy of this order in the Plattsmouth Journal, a semi weekly newspaper printed in said county, for one week prior to said day of hearing. In witness whereof, I have here unto set my hand and the seal of said Court this 22nd day of October, A. D. 1928. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) County Judge. CHAS. E. MARTIN, o22-lw Attorney. NOTICE OF SUIT IN FORECLOSURE In the District Court of the County of Cass, Nebraska Jennie A. Smith, Plaintiff vs. NOTICE Frank E. Vallery et al. Defendants. To C W. Burd. first real name un known, non-resident defendant: You are hereby notified that on October 9, 1928, Jennie A. Smith, as plaintiff, filed her petition and com menced an action in the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska, tht object and prayer of which is to fore close a mortgage on the following described real estate, to-wit: A square lot out of the north west corner of the west half of the northwest quarter of Sec tion 23, Township 11. Range 13, east of the 6th P. M., in Cass county, Nebraska, and more par ticularly described as follows: Commencing at the northwest corner of the northwest quarter of said Section 23, running thence south 147.58 feet, thence running east 147.58 feet, thence running north 147.58 feet, and thence running west 147.58 feet to the place of beginning, in the County of Cass, Nebraska. To have said mortgage, which is re corded in Book 51 of the Mortgage Records of Cass county, Nebraska, at page 696, declared a first lien on said premises, and in default of pay ment thereof; that said mortgaged premises be sold; that you and all other defendants be forever barred and foreclosed of all right, title, lien, interest or equity of redemption in and to said premises and that out of the proceeds of said sale plaintiff be paid the amount due and for equitable relief and costs of suit. You are required to answer said petition on or before Monday, Novem ber 26, 1928, or your default will be duly entered and Judgment obtained in accordance with the prayer of said petition. Of all of which you will take due notice. JENNIE A. SMITH, Plaintiff. W. A. ROBERTSON. Atty. for Plaintiff. ol6-4w. ORDER OF HEARING on Petition for Appointment of Administrator The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Samuel H. Shumaker, deceased. On reading and filing the petition of Claude L. Shumaker praying that administration of said estate may be granted to him as Administrator; Ordered, that November 9, A. D. 1928, at 10 o'clock a. m., is assigned for hearing said petition, when all persons interested in said matter may appear at a County Court to be held in and for said county, and show cause why the prayer of the petition er should not be granted; and that notice of the pendency of said peti tion and the hearing thereof be given to all persons interested in said mat ter by publishing a copy of this or der in the Plattsmouth Journal, a semi-weekly newspaper printed in said county. for three successive weekH, prior to said day of hearing. Dated October 15. 1928. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) ol5-3w County Judge. NOTICE OF REFEREE'S RALE In the District Court of the County of Cass, Nebraska C. C. McCune. substituted for Clark W. Kinzie, Trus tee in Bankruptcy, in the Mattpr of Marion S. Davis. Voluntary Bankrupt. NOTICE Plaintiff vs. Marion S. Davis et al. Defendants Notice is hereby given )hat under and by virtue of the decree of the District Court of the County of Cass, Nebraska, entered in the above en titled cause on the 22nd day of Sep tember, 1928, and an Order of Sale entered by said Court on the 29th day of September, 1928, the under signed sole referee, will sell at pub lic auction at the south front door of the Cass County Court House in Plattsmouth, Nebraska, on the 19th day of November, 1928, at 10:00 o'clock a. m., for cash, the following described real estate, to-wit: The east half (E) of the southwest quarter (SW4) of Section twenty-one (21), in Township eleven (11), North, Range thirteen (13), east of the 6th P. M.. in the County of Cass, Nebraska. Said Bale will be held open for one hour. Terms of sale: Ten per cent (10) cash at time of sale, balance on confirmation. Possession to be given March 1, 1929. Dated this 15th day of October, 1928. C. E. TfiFFT, Referee. W. A. ROBERTSON, Attorney. ol5-5w Delaimatre A. DeLanaatr, Omaha, Nrbr, ORDER In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. Doc. 4, Page 82. No. 8185. In re Application of C. W. DeLama tare to vest and transfer the real es tate of the Jlethodist Episcopal church at Lewis ton, Nebraska, in and to "The Nebraska Annual Con ference of the Methodist Episcopal Church" of the United States of America. A petition having been filed in the above entitled cause by C. W. DeLa matre, asking that a Trustee be ap pointed and directed to transfer the following described real estate situate in Cass county, Nebraska, to-wit: Beginning at a point five and one-half (5) chains west of the southeast corner of Section twenty -five (25), Township eleven (11) North, Range thir teen (13), East of the Sixth (6th) P. M., thence west four (4) chains; thence north two and one-half (2) chains; thence east four (4) chains; thence south two and one-half (2) chains to the point of be ginning from The Trustees of the Methodist Episcopal Church at Lewiston, Ne braska, and their successors, to "The Nebraska Annual Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church" of the United States of America, upon the ground that the said Methodist Epis copal church at Lewiston, Nebraska, has ceased to exist and has ceased to maintain its organization, and, there fore, said The Nebraska Annual Con ference of the Methodist Episcopal Church has the right to have Baid real estate transferred to, and vested in it. It is Ordered by the Court, that said petition be heard on the 26th day of November, 1928, at 9 o'clock a. m., or as soon thereafter as counsel can be heard; and all persons Inter ested in said real estate, or in said Methodist Episcopal church at Lew iston. Nebraska, are hereby directed to appear and make objection there to, if any they have, and if they do not appear and make such objection, at that time, such Trustee may be appointed and ordered to transfer said real estate as proposed in said petition. It is further Ordered, that a copy of this notice be published in the Plattsmouth Journal for three (3) weeks prior to said time, and a copy of this notice be posted in three (3) prominent public places within the County of. Cass, Nebraska, tor three (3) weeks prior to said time. Dated at Plattsmouth, Nebraska, October 22, 1928. By Order of the Court. JAMES T. BEGLEY. o22-4w. Judge. Along about the beginning of the third argument, we always wonder whether the fellow who first called those places ''speak easies" ever had been in one. ORDER OF HEARING on Cuardian's" Report and Petition In the County Court of Cas coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the guardianship of A. A. Nnnziato, Insane. On due consideration of the report of W. G. Kieck filed herein on the 6th day of October. 192 S. showing that the funds are practically ex hausted of said Guardianship and that Guardianship should be closed; It is therefore Considered and Or dered that a bearing be had on paid matter in this Court on the 2nd day of November, 1928. at the hour of ten o'clock in the forenoon and that notice ot the filing of said report and petition and of said hearing be given A. A. Nunziato, Insane, ana the Superintendent of the State Hos pital at Lincoln, Nebraska, who is in charge of said A. A. Nunziato by per sonal service of notice and to all other persons interested in said mat ter by publication of notice in tne PlattBmouth Journal, a newspaper published and of general circulation in Cass county, Nebraska, for a per iod of three weeks prior to said day of hearing. Given under my hand and the seal of said Court this 6 th day of Octo ber, 1928. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) County Judge. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska. County of Cass, ss. By virtue of an Order of Sale Issued by Golda Noble Beal, Clerk of the District Court within and for Cass county, Nebraska, and to me di rected, I will on the 27th day of Oc tober, A. D. 1928, at 10 o'clock a. m. of said day, at the south front door of the court house in the City of Plattsmouth. Nebraska, in said county, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the following real estate, to-wit: Lot 5 in Block 61. in the City of Plattsmouth. Cass county, Ne braska; and the following de scribed real estate, to-wit: Com mencing at the southwest corner of the southeast one-fourth of the southeast one-forth (SEU of SE1) of Section 19, Township 12, North of Range 14, EaBt of the 6th P. M., running thence east along the south line of said Section 19. to the center of the County Road 55, as now travel ed and used; thence northwest erly on the center line of said county road to a point where said line intersects with the west line of the SE of the SEli of Section 19, thence south along the west line of said SEVi of the SE of Section 19, to the place of beginning, all in Cass county. Nebraska, and containing about eight (8) acres, more or less The same being levied upon and taken as he property of Adelaide Burnett et al, defendants, to satUfy a Judgment of said Court recovered by The Standard Savings & Loan As sociation, of Omaha. Nebraska, plain tiff against said defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska. September 21st. A. D. 1928. BERT REED. Sheriff Cass County. Nebraska. 624-5w NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. By virtue of an Order of Sale issued out of the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska, and in pursuance of a decree of said Court in an action therein, . indexed in Appearance Docket No. .4, at page 49, wherein the County of Cass is plaintiff and The First National Bank, a corpora tion, et al. are defendants. I will at ten o'clock in the forenoon on the 20th day of November, 1928, at the south front door of the Cass county, Nebraska, court house, in the City of Plattsmouth. County of Cass, Nebras ka, sell at public auction to the high eat bidder, for cash, the following described property, to-wit: 24 feet of Sub Lot 3 of Lots 12. 13 and 14 and 22 feet of Sub Lot 4 of Lots 12, 13 and 14. all in Block 32 in the City of Plattsmouth. County of Cass, State of Nebraska. $528.49. East 24 feet of Sub Lot 1 of Lots 12, 13 and 14 and west 24 feet of Sub Lot 2 of Lots 12. 13 and 14, all in Block 32 in the City of Plattsmouth, County of Cass, State of Nebraska, $663. 13. West 23 feet of Sub Lot 6 of Lots 13 and 14 and west 23 feet of Sub Lot 6, the north 16.30 feet of Lot 12. all in Block 32 in the City of Plattsmouth. County of Cass. State of Ne braska, 12.361.14. Lots 1 and 2 and north 80 feet of west 24 feet of Lot 3 and the east 20 feet of Lot 3 and the north 40 feet of Lot 4. all in Block 4 6 In the City of Platts mouth, County of Cass, State of Nebraska, $1,119.38. Lot 6 in Block 36 in the City of Plattsmoutb, County of Cass, State of Nebraska, $908.05. East 22 feet of Lot 4 in Block 33 in the City of Platts mouth, County of Cass. State of Nebraska. $1.1199.38. East one-half of Lot 3, in Block 33 in the City of Platts mouth. County of Cass. State of Nebraska. 11.242.59. Lot 10 in Block 42 in the City of Plattsmoutb. County of Cass. State of Nebraska. $367.75. Lot 11 in Block 42 in the City of Plattsmouth. County of Cass, State of Nebraska. $387.51 to satisfy the liens and encumbrances therein set forth opposite the descrip tions of the property and costs and increased and accruing costs, all as provided by said order and decree. Dated at PlattBmouth. Nebraska. this 13th day of October. 1928. BERT REED. ol5-4w Sheriff.