The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, February 13, 1930, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THURSDAY, FEB. 13. 1930.
PLATTSMOUTH SEMI - WEEKLY JOURNAL
PAGE THE.EE
Cbe plattsmouth lournal
PUELZSIIED SEIII-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH. NEBRASKA
Entered at Post office, l'hittsmouth. Neb., as second-class mail mutter
R. A. BATES, Publisher
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 A YEAR IN FIRST POSTAL ZONE
Subsi ribers living- in Second Postal Zone, ?2.50 per year. Beyond
'UU miles, $3.00 per year. Hate to Canada and foreign countries,
$3. So per year. All subscriptions are payable strictly in advance.
Two heads of a family are not bet-
to:' than one.
The giim reaper is the speed cop
that overtakes those who live loo
fast.
: o :
Several nations seem to have gone
into this conference with ships on
their shoulders.
-:o:-
As we get her, Senator Couzen's
eloping; daughter's opinion of p.e
v. riding showers is that they are all
wet.
: o:
.Most of the fulks who engage in
iwimly r.rgtimems about religion do t Another secret is out. Modsrn ap
' ot have enough religion to worry plianees have so eased up housework
i. bout. jthat wives just have to go out to
:o: eek employment.
T: world sin is stupidity, says j :0;
I:r.syfot Jrhnsu:
which indicates
that a lot of sinners have landed in
t 'ongress.
-:o:
The LaGuardia bill to prevent the
rale of stolen goods, was passed
Wednesday by the House and
to the Senate.
:o:
sent
You
cant make an old-fashioned
wife
out of a modern, two-thuds;
made, dance-mad and cigarette-smok- j
ing flapper.
either.
The new Mayor of an Indiana , Amendment would be the enforce
town. had a new lock put on each rnent of it.
door in the city hall. Bather decent j :o:
ot his predecessor to leave the doors.
-:o:-
Looks like they could find a way
to enforce prohibition from the 100.-
000. 000 opinions on how it can be
done Too many hooks burn the dinner-
: o :
There must he some application
Of what Senator Moses said about the
i
Western bloc judgi.ig by the way j
Jhey kick against all Admrrrt-trntion
measures.
Now two women of Nebraska have
put the new style long skiit into dis
repute with the Anti-Saloon League
by using Hum to hide supplies of
their husbands. .!
: o :
A prominent tobacco magnate re
cently stated that a man could smoke
a pack of cigarettes a day for 42 years
and still not consume a bale of to
bacco. Our worst suspicions have
been confirmed.
:o:
Maybe these New Yorkers who
rioted to gain admission to a build-
ing where a lecture in Einstein's
theory was to be given were merely
people who have suffered too many of
tiejn We mean relatives-
Baby
The last two years we have hendled Accredited chicks.
Thic year we are putting out our own Certified chicks, a
chick of better quality, as we want to give the buying
public more value for their money.
Our Prices Are Right!
Chicks $6.80 per 100 and up
Custom Hatching. . .2.t per egg
If yovi want the best insurance on your eggs, have them
hatched in a steam machine, as the temperature does not
"fluctuate like many other machines. And if the power
goes ofT, it doesn't affect our machine, as it hatches on
just the same.
It also Las the live steam sprayed in the machine to help
carry off the gases generated by the eggs.
Give Your Chicks a Chance
If you have poultry problems, bring them to us as we are
not experimenting. We are tried servants in the hatch
ery business.
We cany a full line of brooder stoves, poultry supplies
and feeds.
Elmer C. Wild, Manager
I
j
j Ordinarily it requires about 10
I.
inches of snow to make one inch of
water.
:o:
Many Rappers will lose their chief
attractions when they don the new
style skirt.
:o:
The honeymoon is over when the
florist and confectionary shops lose
another good customer.
:o:
By the way, what has Congress
done about those farm relief meas
ures to which both political parties
are pledged?
:o:
"Bombs Explode in Chicago." as it
seems they always do. In fact, we
don't recall hearing of such a ths
as a hum fuse in Cnicago.
I :o.
About this time we begin to feel
that there's been a serious overpro
duction oi winter ana t nat tne weaui-
er man ought to make a new inven-
tory.
-o:
reckon the only thing that
; would bring more criticism than I
I nonenforcement of the Eighteenth
Evidently one of the greatest
needs of the world today is a home-
ctnvin-week in every month so fam
!ilies can get acquainted and caught
Up on sleep an expenses.
:o:
Mr. Coolidge may be able to write jonice oi me ecieiary oi tne ueah
a history of the United States in 500 ,ury such a nice Jb-
woi.qs but Al Smith could say that j
jrnuch about the last couple of Re- i
publico n
administrations without
"taking a breath
to:
Bootleg protection in Wyoming, it
was revealed recently, was priced at
$1 a gallon. That also is now the
rate in Indiana. We wonder how
generally this stabilization has spread
over the country.
-o. I
There are two kinds cf women. !
those who are satishecr to wear
clothe9 that show off their shapely
underpinning, and those who wish
thev could wear clothes for the sake
jof keeping warm.
:o:
Just trom a once over the footwear
on feminine feet we'd say that the
, manufacturers of corn cuies and
j plasters ought not to have much
jcause for complaining about business
jbeing on the blink.
Chicks!
m
THE
MODERN OPHIH
Undoubtedly the Federal income
tax is the richest single bonanza
ever tapped by a national govern
ment. It is the modern equivalent
cf tiie mines of Ophir, which poured
I j their gold and precious stones into
I jthe coffers of Kink Solemon. and of
the treasure houses of the boutn
'American Indians, drained to aggran
Idize the Kings. of Spain. For the last
half of 1929, a total of $1,184,602,-
927 was paid in income taxes, an in
crease of $171,531,330 over the same
period of the previous year. That
half-year collection 15 or 20 years
ago would have been sufficient to
pay the entire expense or running
the Federal Government.
When the income tax first went
into effect in 1914, it yielded 360,
000,000, the receipts rising to 3,360.
000,000 in 1917. The next year, with
the excess profits provisions attach
ed to the law, receipts reached the
staggering total of 32,800,000, ap
proximately eight times as much as
in 1917. The pinnacle of the war
period was attained in 1920, when
$3,900,000,000 was returned. At the
end of the war period and with the
abolition of emergency tax rates, the
receipts declined. In 1922 they
reached the post-war low level of
$1,600, 000, 00, then began another
climb to $2,300,000,000 in 1929.
It is interesting to note that total
jincome tax collections since the law
.was enacted, excluding figures of last
year, total more than $29,000,000,
000. So that on that one item Gf
taxation, the receipts have been
'greater than the national debt rolled
I INCOME TAX:
-up by the United States during the These are properly called 'petty of- pens, like Mr. Grundy to be a in.n-i-U-ri.i
vo- ti,..,, ic o svmni,nn fi.n?(." to be dealt with without a sylvanian. Miss Ida Tarball's "The
,Vnrl(, Wnr Thpl. is svmnhonv
frir oine- mnhinp! rnmntnmeters
, h reKjsters
t noo .
speculation made up more than 10
which explains
the increased figures- The story of
1929 will be different because of what
might be called the unpleasantness
of last fall. But if the history of the
i income tax repeats itself, that will
ibe a mere momentary interruption
,to the dizzy asceut of in(ome tax fis"
ures. Altogether, the presence of this
law on the books is what makes the
( iv t n . . l m .
-:o:-
HUGHES MILESTONES
Washington, -February 3. Here
are a few milestones in the life or
Charles Evans Hughes.
Born at Glens Falls, New York,
April 11. 1S62. ,
Graduated from Brown University
in 1SS1.
Admitted to New York bar, 1884.
Married Miss Antoinette Carter in
1S88.
Declined nomination for Mayor of
New York. 1903.
Became Governor of New York
State, 1907; entered second term,
1909; resigned, 1910.
Became Associate Justice of the
Supreme Court October 10. 1910.
Nominated for President by the
I RennMir.in National Convention in
jchicago June 10, 1916, and resigned
from Supreme Court the same day.
November 7. 1916, he received 254
electorial votes for the Presidency
against 277 for Woodrow Wilson
Served as Secretary of State in
the Cabinets of President Harding
and Coolidge from March, 1921, to
March 1925, acting as chief delegate
for the United States at the Washing
ton Arms Conference.
Appointed by President Coolidge a
; member of the permanent Court of
International Justice at the Hague
in September. 1926.
Wa3 Chairman of the United States
delegation to the sixth Pan-American
conference in Havana. 192S.
:o:
TAFT MILESTONES
Washington. February 3 Here
are milestones in the life of William
Howard Taft:
Born at Cincinnati, Ohio, Septem
ber 15, 1857.
Graduated from Yale. June 27,
1878.
Admitted to Ohio bar. May 5, 1880.
Appointed Judge of Superior Court
at Cincinnati, March 7, 1887.
Appointed Solicitor General of
United States, February 4, 1890.
Appointed Federal Circuit Judge
for Sixth Judicial Circuit, March 17.
1892.
Named President United States
Philippine Commission, March 12,
1900. Appointed first Civil Gover
nor Philippines July 4. 1901.
Appointed Secretary of War In
President Roosevelt's Cabinet, Febru
ary 1, 1904.
Nominated for President by the
Republican national convention in
June, 1904.
Elected President, November 3,
1908.
Inaugurated March 4, 1909.
Defeated for re-election by Wood
row Wilson. November 4, 1912. Re
tired from Presidency, March 4, 1913.
Appointed Chief Justice of United
States by President Harding, June 30,
1921.
Resigned February 3, 1930.
:o:
We may be wrong, as we usually
are, but our bet is that the kind of
girl who always is telling the cock
eyed world everything, won't be mar
ried long before she starts telling the
divorce lawyer how
she wants.
much alimony
CASUAL OR SLIGHGT OFFENSES
The proposal of Mr. Wickersham
and his Law Enforcement Commis
sion to introduce into our Federal
court practice summary trial with
out a jury of certain classes of pro
hibition law violators to be defined
as "casual or slight," liable to pun
ishment by a $500 fine and six
months' imprisonment, recalls Elack
stone's condemnation of like exped
ients adopted by the English Parlia-
ment in the eighteenth century
The common law knew nothing of
summary proceedings save in cases
of contempt of court, but because in
dictment and trial by jury were bur
densome, summary jurisdiction was
conferred by Parliament in cases of
the excise and upon Justice of the
Peace as to vagrancy, drunkenness
and other disorderly offenses. Says
Blackstone in his Commentaries:
And, however convenient this
may appear at first (as doubt
less all arbitrary powers, well
executed, are the most conven
ient), yet let it be again remem
bered that delays and like Incon
veniences in the forms of justice
are the price that all free na
tions pay for their liberty in
more substantial matters; that
these inroads upon this sacred
bulwark of the nation are
fundamentally opposite to the
spirit of the Constitution; and
that though begun in trifles, the
precedent may gradually in
crease and spread to the utter
disuse of juries in questions of
the most momentous concern.
Following the English practice our
police courts punish summarily dis-
orderly conduct and breaches of po -
lice regulations touching such ques-
.tions as traffic, markets and the like.
fenses.
I jury. But the Federal Government
possesses no similar police juiisdic-
in it ie hmmd hv Artlrlo ill nf thp
Constitution, which declares that
"the trial of all crimes except cases
of impeachment, shall be by jury";
land this guarantee is particularized
jin the sixth amendment with respect
to "all criminal prosecutions." Cer-
tainly Federal prosecutions under the
prohibition laws are "criminal prose-
cutions, nor can any description oi
"casual or slight" offenses take them
out of that class.
The expedient proposed by the
Wickersham commission is the worst
of a choice of three evils. Dean
'Pound, of whom the country has been
I reluctant to believe that he acquires
in such a proposal, admitted before
the Senate Judiciary Committee that
this is exactly what it is. Something
has to be done to relieve what he
tprmct n cprfoiKi Kifn.tHon in the Fed-
eral courts, so the commission sug
gests this. In order to dispose of the
thousands of cases constantly aris
ing and increasing, there must be
hundreds of more District Judges, or
a vast system of Federal police courts,
or the abolishment of the constitu-
tional guarantee of indictment and
trial by Jury for the swift disposal
of cases. Dean Pound says the ccm-
mission rejected the first two because
it does not believe a ponderous judi
cial machine should be set up to re-
lieve an emergency. So opportunism conege. 11 of them get jobs as baik
holds the field. !ers witn street fairs and side shows.
Senator Wagner of New York An 0nio man wants a divorce from
makes what it is in our opinion an nis wife uecau?e sne makes home
unreasonable point against the P"o-,brew Well, it is better to make heme
posal. He says prohibition charges
are peculiarly of that class which
should enjoy the right of trial by
Jury. This is Indubitably true, since
only through juries can the force of
public opinion operate against un
popular laws. St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
:o:
THOUGHT FOR 1930
There are prongs that tear the
flesh.
Like javelins that pierce the
heart of roses.
Ranging the wooded slopes in
the green of spring.
To pasture where some crystal
river flows.
Or like the barb sent whizzing
from the bow
To i dye with crimson drops the
feathers of a bird
That only wished to sing, then
falling through the leaves.
With glazed eyes closing, ere
the song was heard.
Once I recall an unkind word
let fall.
Bruised so a heart, no potion yet
may heal.
Choking a Bong and darkening
a whole life,
Rending the soxil like well
w directed steel.
Who would not offer the full
reward of time.
But to recall some hasty word
once spoken.
That he might bind a wound,
hold back the unbidden tear
Or mend with love a heart in
sorrow broken!
Clarence P. Milligan, in the
Chicago Tribune.
-:o: :
Judging from the wild life they go
In for a lot of girls evidently have
Sthe idea that it is as easy to lose a
bad name as it is a last name in these
days of easy divorce.
is.
fx
Farms for Sale!
80 acres, new improvements, good
land, 12 acres alfalfa, running wat- corne Dut lor an inept political epi
er, on gravel road, 3 miles "west of ,SOde. That memorable occasion on a
Plattsmouth.
240 acres, splendid improvements.) w,hen the Republican candidate
) nrre rnmo W All land has"'1 to meet Hl,am Jhnsn. prot
30 ncres nrfliri hnv All land has
been seeded down to sweet clover and
4;m4V. j j
ing good crops. Good small orchard.
Three miles south of post office and!
11 t 1 To, rii'ere revising their reports ot the re-
1-2 11 L. ill giaiCJ. ItJ JUJ IV iUllj
purchaser. j
Other Bargains in Cass
County Farms See
PLATTSMOUTH, NEER.
WOMEN AND THE TARIFF
I Senator Grundy of Pennsylvania
jlong before he was Senator made a
speech to the National Association of
!Wool Manufacturers in which he
j slightingly observed that women
jknow nothing about the tai iff." And
'yet one of the most interesting and
lucid books on that intricate subject
was written by a woman who hap-
Tariff in Our Times," was well re
ceived in the controversial days when
I the Republican party betrayed its t
solemn pledge to tne people uy en-
'acting the Payne-Aldrich law.
i Another witness might be in Ire
duced to refute Mr. Grundy's uncom-
iplimentary estimate of woman's eco-
nomic intelligence. "Tom" Reed of
Maine, the economic intelligence
"Czar" of the House, whose epigrams
enlivened Washington in the gay
nineties, explained in a phrase why
the McKinley law broke the Harri
son administration and brought
Cleveland back to the White House:
"The woman with her market bas
ket." Disregarding the Senator from
Pennsylvania, Mr. Hoover might well
,be anxious about the-woman sewing
j"runs" in her rayon hose. She is the
daughter of the market basket lady,
and she has a vote.
-:o:-
It is just about as heart-breaking
for a girl to finally tumble to the
fact that, in spite of the ads. cod
liver oil isn't going to make her
calves plump enough to change short
skirts from a horror to a joy as it is
)for a wife to finany have to give up
lall hope of her meai ticket ever get-
!tjng out of tjie piker class.
:o:.
And now we know what becomes
of the cheer leaders after they leave
;i,rew tnan a home brawl.
?Z'-XA -"
t u-JT.
The Celebrated Grade Stallion
will make season of 1930 at my home,
three miles and one-half west asd
one mile south of Hurray; four and
one-half miles north of Nchawka
every day in the veek no Sunday
service.
Bob is an excellent grade stal
lion, well knewn to many .
breeders in this locality. He is
Percheron stock and will weigh
1,600 pounds. He is the sire of
a great many good animals in
this locality, and is a sure foal
getter.
TERMS $10.00 to insure colt to
stand and suck, at which time service
fee becomes due and payable. All care
will be taken to prevent any and all
accidents, but the owner of horse will
not be held responsible should any
occur. In case mare is removed from
this locality service fee becomes due
and payable Immediately, and must
be paid.
ROY GREGG, Owner
irr? lfF
3 W
3V H
n
A DIVINITY THAT
SHAPES OUR ENDS"
At CS Charles Evans Hughes looks
upon the office of Chief Justice of
the Supreme Court as the "greatest
opportunity for service" in his monu
mental career. And that "greatest
opportunity" would likelv never have
summer day in San Francisco in 1910,
fail-
ru ,u ' i-.uuau.j
cost Mr Hughes the presidency. That
at least was the interpretation in
the anxious November days when
sult on the early returns. California
at last swung officially into the Wil
,on column.
I There is no trace of slackening
power in Mr. Hughes at 68. His
nromgious capacity for work is the
wonder and despair of his associates.
"Straight as a cypress and tall as a
birch tree," he radiates health and
vigor with his springy step and mili
tary carriage. How would it be with
him, one wonders, if he had shaker.
Hiram Johnson's hand on that pivot
al occasion? He would have entered
the White House under the grisly
auspices of unavoidable war. The
burden that broke Wood row Wilson
would have been li is to carry. Four
years of staggering responsibility.
jWith the probability of re-election ex
pending the tenure for another quad
lieunium more exacting, perhaps, in
its final demands than the battle's
tumult and shouting.
On Mprch 4, 1925, he may be seen
in this historical hypothesis as mov
ing out of the picture of affairs, worn
jand weary, into the sunset of the
ex-presidency.
Perhaps Shakespeare was right.
iSurely Mr. Hughes may subscribe to
thedictum that "there is a divinity
which shapes our ends, rough hew
them how we will." Anyhow, in
the future that beckons so invitingly,
the political skid of 1916 may be ac
counted a beneficient intervention,
"whatever gods there be."
:o:
The JonrraT Job Department i
squipped to turn out anything from
T11in? rards to sale catatoes.
NOTICE
In
the District Court or Cass
County. Nebraska.
Charles W.
Daniel. "
Plaintiff.
vs.
Orpha Daniel,
NOTICE
Defendant, j
To ORPHA DANIEL,
Non-Resident Defendant:
You are hereby notified that on
the 11th day of January, 1930.
Charles W. Daniel filed a petition
against you in the District Court of
Cass county, Nebraska, the object
and prayer of which are to obtain a
divorce from you on the ground that
you have wilfully abandoned the
plaintiff without good cause, for the
term of two years last past.
You are required to answer said
petition on or before the 17th day of
March, 1930.
CHARLES W. DANIEL.
Plaintiff.
By C. A. RAWLS.
His Attorney.
f3-4w
NOTICE OF HEARING
Estate of Eva M. Vallery, deceas
ed, in the County Court of Cass
county, Nebraska.
The State of Nebraska, To all per
sons interested in said estate, credi
tors and heirs take notice, that Peter
J. Vallery has filed his petition al
leging that Eva M. Vallery died in
testate in Cass county, Nebraska, on
or about the Sth day of December,
1925, being a resident and inhabitant
of Cass county. Nebraska, and died
seized of the following described real
estate, to-wit:
Lot 63 in the northeast quar
ter of the southeast quarter of
Section 1'3, Township 12, Range
13, East of the 6th P. M., more
particularly described by metes
and bounds as follows: Com
mencing at a point 12 feet south
of the southeast corner of Lot 1
in Block 4 9 in Young and Hays
Addition to Plattsmouth, Cass
county. Nebraska, thence south
with the west line of the 12th
street 140 feet, thence west 26 4
feet, thence north 140 feet on
east line of 13th street to a point
within 12 feet of the southwest
corner of Lot 4 in Block 4 9,
thence east 26 4 feet to the point
of beginning
leaving as his sole and only heirs at
lav; the following named persons, to-
wit: Pettr J. Vallery, William J. Val- J
lery, Lottie M. Vallery Johnson and:
Nettie Vallery Durell;
That the interest of the petitioner
herein in the above described real
estate is an heir at law and praying
for a determination of the time of
the death of said Eva M. Vallery and
her heirs, the degiee of kinship and
the right of descent of the real prop
erty belonging to the said deceased,
in the State of Nebraska.
It is ordered that the same stand
for hearing the 7th day of March,
A. D. 1930 before the court at the
hour of 10 o'clock a. m., at the
County Court room in Plattsmouth,
Cass county, Nebraska.
Dated at Plattsmouth, Nebraska,
this 6t'a day of February, A. D. 1930.
A. II. DUX BURY,
(Seal) fl0-3v County Judge.
SHERIFF S RALE
State of Nebraska, County of Casi,
ss.
By virtue of an Order rf Sale
Issued by Golda Noble B-al. CWk of
the District Court within and for
Cass county. Nebraska, and to me
directed, I will on the 22nd day of
February. A. I). 1930, at Hi o'clock
a. m. of said day. at the south front
door of the Court House in the City
-f Plattsmouth. in said county, sell at
public auction to the highest bidder
for cash the following real estate,
to-wit:
The southwest quarter ISW')
of the northwest quarter ( NV )
of Section twenty-nine (2H).
Township eleven (11), North of
Range fourteen (14), East f
the Cth P. M., in Cass county,
Nebraska
The same being levied upon and
taken as the property of Alma Yard
ley et al. Defendants, to satisfy a
judgment of said Court recovered by
William Pporer. plaintiff against said
defendants.
PlattMiiouth. Nebraska, January
20th, A. D. 19.'!0. .
BERT REED,
Sheriff Cas County,
Nebraska.
j23-5w
ORDER OF HEARING
and Noti.e on Petition f;f 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
f st ate of William M. Burk, deceaed:
On reading the petition of Fied
Spar.gler, Administrator, pray in;? a
final settlement and allowance of his
account tiled in this Court on the
Sth day of February, 1030, and for
final settlement of said estate and for
his dis'-hargc as said Administrator;
It is hereby ordered that you and
all persons interested in said matter
may. and d. appear at the County
Court to be held in and for said coun
ty, on the 7th day of March, A. D.
1930, at 9 o'clock a. m.. to show
cause, if any there be. why tliQ pray
er of the petitioner should not be
granted, and that notice of the pen
dency of said petition and the hear
ing thereof be given to all persons
interested in said matter by publish
ing a copy of this order in the Platts
mouth Journal, a semi-weekly 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 cf
paid Court, this 8th day of February,
A. D. 19 30.
A. II. DUXBl'RY.
(Seal) fl0-3vv County Judge.
ORDER OF HEARING
and Notice on Petition for Set
tlement of Account.
In the County Court of Cass coun
ty, Nebraska.
State of Nebraska, Cass county, ss.
To all persons interested in the
estate of Belirend J. Beckman. de
ceased :
On reading the petition of Anna
Reinackle, Executrix, praying a final
settlement and allowance of her ac
count filed in this Court on the 25th
day of January, 1930, and for final
settlement of said estate and her dis
charge as paid Executrix;
It is hereby ordered that you and
all persons interested in said matter
may, and do. appear at the County
Court to be held in and for said
county, on the 2!st day of February,
A. D. 1930, at 9 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 three successive weeks prior to
said day of hearing.
In witness whereof, I have here
unto pet my hand and the seal of
said Court, this 25th day of January,
A. D. 19 30.
A. II. DUX BURY.
(Seal) j27-3w County Judge.
SHERIFF'S SALE
State of Nebraska. County of Cass,
By virtue of an Execution issued
by Golda Noble Beal. Clerk of the
District Court within and for Cass
county, Nebraska, and to me direct
ed, I will on the 1st day of March.
A. D. 1930, at 10 o'clock a. m. of
said day at the south front door of
the court house in the City of Platts
mouth. Nebraska, in said county, sell
at public auction to the highest bid
der for ccfsh the following real estate,
to-wit:
The undivided one-third ( Va )
interest in the southeast quar
ter ( 'i ) of Section eleven ( 11 ) ;
and the undivided one-third
(la) interest in the east one
half (E) of the southwest
quarter (SWU) cf Section
eleven (11). all in Township
twelve (12). North, Range
twelve (12) East of the Gth V.
M., in Cass county, Nebraska;
also
The west 13 feet of Lot three
(3) and all of Lot four (1). in
Block fifty-four (.r)4). in the
City of Plattsmouth. Nebraska
all subject to the life estate of
Elizabeth Meisir.gor
Tfee same being levied upon and
taken as the property of Carl C. Mci
singer, defendant, to satisfy a judg
ment of said Court recoveied by Ed
II. Tritsch, plaintiff against said de
fendant. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, January
24th. A. D. 1930.
BERT REED.
Sheriff Cass County,
Nebraska.
j27-5w
Pnone your news to Ho. ti.