The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, November 24, 1932, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    THURSDAY, NOV. 24, 1932. '
PLATTSMOUTH SEM-WEEKLY JOURNAL
PAQZ TTTTIT8
TThe (Plattsmouth Journal
PUBLISHED SE1H-WEEZLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA
Entered at Postoffice, Plattsmouth, Neb., as second-class mall matter
R. A. BATES, Publisher
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 A YEAR IN FIRST POSTAL ZONE
Subscribers living in Second Postal Zone, $2.50 per year. Beyond
600 miles, $3.00 per year. Rate to Canada and foreign countries,
3S0 per year. All subscriptions are payable strictly in advance.
Down in Kentucky they vote one
day, sober up and count the votes
the next day.
:o:
The trouble is that men -who drink
like a fish don't drink what a fish
drinks.
:o:
Now that they have invented a
pneumatic tire for wheelbarrows,
what are they going to do to im
prove the pick and shovel?
:o: 1
The most notorious woman in Asia
today is Lai Choi San, a pirate queen
who operates a fleet of twelve heav
ily armed ships in the South China
Sea.
o:
The puzzling aspect of Germany's
four or five elections a year is when
the tooth paste maker manages to
get his message on a national net
work.
:o:
The Chicago young woman who
has been asleep for ten months may
as well wake up now, as the cam
paign, which doubtless put her to
sleep, ended two weeks ago.
:o:
We, on the surface of the earth,
are passing our lives at the bottom
of a great ocean of air, just as certain
fish may pass their lives at the bot
tom of the great ocean of water.
:o:
The Joplin (Mo.) Globe asks If
any of Its readers are old enough to
remember when the business men in
a small town all chipped in to raise
a fund to bring the election returns
the night of the national election.
x:
The principal item in the weekly
press this week is the warning to the
rural correspondents to get their
news in a day early, so that ye ed can
get his paper out on Wednesday and
observe the Thanksgiving holiday at
home on Thursday.
:o:
It is thrilling to read tha heroic
measures that were taken to save
the Insull properties. And when one
read3 of some of the measures taken
and the salaries paid to those who
tok them, one wonders if the effort
wasn't almost too heroic.
jo:
The Ohio State Journal says science
hasn't succeeded in finding any way
to improve the baked potato. But it
keeps on trying and flopping. One
of the more notorious cook scoop3
out the potatoes, mashes cheese into
the contents, and replaces them back
In the skin. There ought to be a law.
:o:
Ruth Elder said she hardly knew
what to do when her about-to-be-divorced
third husband wrote her a
letter at Reno and Invited her home
to Thanksgiving dinner. But Ruth
decided what do and did it. getting
one of Reno's slot machine divorces.
Maybe she couldn't call to mind the
address of her home.
:o:
Scientists have made a startling
discovery that the skeleton found
about two years ago in Minnesota
probably is that of a prehistoric 17-year-old
American girl slain violent
ly 20,000 years ago. Now if the
learned men can discover a Stone Age
tabloid of that date the crime prob
ably will be cleared up for this generation.
M8QTOfl(E!
Ear Cora
We pay Market Prices. Can handle unlim
ited amount. White or Yellow.
Farmers Grain & (Luiiitar 6&
Cedar Creek, Nebr.
Louisville Telephone No. 2003
The President upon arriving home
turned his attention immediately to
debts, just like other vacationists.
:o:
The electors gave Mr. Roosevelt a
mandate, and with the big major
ities goes a gentlehint that they hope
it will not become a forgotten man
date. :o:
Dry agents were a year assembling
evidence on a speakeasy in a mid
western college town. The entrance
requirements everywhere, they say,
are stiffer.
:o:
The old-fashioned party game of
postoffice is not played very much
these days because folks are afraid
some government inspector might
come around and check up on them.
:o:
(Thanks to their literary abilities,
moEt of our ex-Presidents seem to
be able to take care of themselves
pretty well. The trouble this time
is going to be what to do with the
ex-postmasters.
:o:
America i3 a grest country for
presidents. It's a president of this
and that organization, president of
this and that club, president of this
and that board, president of banks,
president of railroads, president of
wholesale Louses, president of cor
porations of various kinds, president
of colleges, president of fairs and
president of wheat growers, and wool
growers, pools and so on for eter
nity.
:o:
MORE FUTILE GESTURES
Irresponsible persons with nothing
better to do now are engaged in pro
moting a "march on Washington" by
farmers while another group i3 try
ing to organize another demonstra
tion by bonus seekers.
For the good of both farmers and
veterans and the interest of society
in general, it is to be hoped that
these efforts will fail. Nothing is
to be accomplished by sending an un
organized mass of farmers or veter
ans to Washington.
The American electorate express
ed itself on the issues involved and
the government that will take office
March 4 understands w hat is expect
ed of it. The presence of misdirect
ed malcontents in Washington would
only tend to embarrass the new gov
ernment in carrying out the man
date it ha3 received from the Amer
ican people.
Agricultural relief will come
about in due time. By the time it
is ready to take office the new gov
ernment will know exactly what it
intends to do and will proceed to
do it with a minimum of delay.
Employment relief also will be
effected as rapidly as possible. Once
that is accomplished the demand for
payment of the bonus will lose
point.
There is a period of waiting ahead
for everybody, but the fact that the
people have named a government in
which they have confidence has al
ready developed a better spirit that
is reflected in business throughout
the country. There is nothing the
individual or small groups can do to
advance natters. Developments must
be permitted to proceed in an order
ly manner. Sioux City Tribune.
WORLD GOLD OUTPUT
SLOWLY INCREASING
Cabled reports that a rich, but
hitherto inaccessible Australian gold
deposit is yielding to modern mining
methods suggest that the value of
the yellow metal may be entering an
other of its cycles. For the history
of modern commerce, which began
with the nineteenth century, is re
plete with protests against the scarc
ity of gold as a monetary base, and of
subsequent discoveries of ore which
brought a remedy.
The Napoleonic wars were still in
progress when parliament appointed
a committee to investigate the high
price of gold bullion in the British
isles. Discoveries of gold in Califor
nia and Australia about the middle
of the century brought worry of an
other variety, and for the next 12
years learned English, French and
Scotch economists, and less learned
pamphleteers, debated their effect
One schol Insisted that the new
abundance cf gold would bring high
er commodity prices and social dis
turbances; the other "that the value
of gold will net become depreciated
by the large discoveries of that
metal."
In 1S96 William Jennings Bryan
thundered his denunciations of "the
cross of gold" in the United States,
and insisted on the free coinage of
silver as a form of counterinflation.
The echoes of tho free-silver cam
paign were scarcely ended before the
rush to tho Klondike began. The
Alaskan output of gold, combined
with new discoveries in Colorado and
other western states, permitted the
conage of $437,500,000 in gold by the
United States in the five years ended
with 1902, whereas the five-year av
erage output from 1S73 to 1893 had
been only 224 million dollars. New
gold and the moderate credit infla
tion due to the Spanish-American
war halted in this country a 33-year
decline in commodity prices which
began in 1SC5.
As recently as 190S, the author of
a series or .New lork market letters
felt called upon to prove that the
United States gold reserves were not
too great. Following the collapse of
the decade of credit inflation in
1929, however, most cf the discus
sion has been cf another nature, and
the debtor class attributes most of
its troubles to the rapid appreciation
of the value of gold, expressed in
of the value of gold, expressed
terms of commodities.
That increase is again producing
its own cure. Old veins of the ore
are being reworked in the west and
there has been a revival of placer
mining. The gold output cf the Unit
ed States in 1931, valued at $4S,
907,100, was 52.755,300 more than
that of 1930. The gold output of
the Transvaal in March this year set
a new monthly record, and that of
Canada is increasing steadily.
The Australian reports may be
treated with skepticism until sub
stantiated by actual results, but if
there should be suddenly added to
the world's gold reserve five billion
dollars, as a result of the new dis
coveries, the economists might again
be talking of the cheapness of gold
and the resultant recovery of the
prices of wheat, cotton, copper and
other commodities. Chicago Daily
News.
:o:
THERE SHE SITS
Good old Vermont. C. J. Caesar
thought the Northern Star was fixed
and constant, but compared with
Vermont, that little sky-twinkler is
changeable as a weather vane and
variable as the quivering aspen. Ver
mont is as i3 and ever will be. Look
t her constitution, though you'll
have to go to Montpelier to see it.
Written and adopted in 1777, the tert
of her organic law remains as in the
original manuscript. No jot has been
removed and never a title added.
In birch canoes they still glide
down the Ottaquechee in June's
chaste moonlight, when the maple
syrup has been bottled and jugged.
And in August, or make it Septem
ber, if you're fussily accurate, they
coast the snowy slopes of Mount
Ascutney, while the skaters yield to
the lure of Lake Mempfcremagog's icy
bosom. Their oaks are of a sturdier
fiber, their elms a loftier pride, their
poplar3 a deeper mysticism, all re
flecting the character of a people
tenaciou3 and immutable.
And, politically, Vermont is rigid
in her republicanism as the marble
of her green-clad mountains. Her
neighbors, fickle New Hampshire and
eccentric Maine and mercurial Mas
sachusetts, may be beguiled by the
printed word or the fluctuations of
fortune or the radio's siren voice.
Not Vermont.
Everyone remembers, of course,
how it was in 1912, when all New
England gathered her skirts about
her and leaped Into the democratic
pool. All New England, but not Ver
mont. Semper fidelis was Vermont.
St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
BLONDS FOR DEMOCRACY
Reference was made the other day
in our Berlin correspondence to the
use which Hitler is making of the
doctrine of Nordic race superiority
as originated by a Frenchman and
developed by an Englishman. The
Frenchman was Count Gobineau of
nearly a century ago. The English
man was Houston Stewart Chamber
lain, son-in-law of the great Wag
ner. Since the publication of Cham
berlain's "Foundations of the Nine
teenth Century" in the years before
the war much has been said about
his famous ascriptions of all the great
acts of history to the blue-eyed, blond-
haired races back to the very begin
ning of the present era in Palestine.
The liberation of the pure German
ra.e from the perils that beset it
the treaty of Versailles, Marxism, the
jews is an integral part or tne Hit
ler teaching. It has just been sub
jected to a spirited examination by
the Vienna Arbeiterzeitung, the lead
ing Austrian labor and socialist
daily.
It found its text in the recent
Swedish general election, which re
sulted in tha replacement of a con
servative government by a socialist
ministry under P. A. i-Jansson. In
Denmark a socir.list government has
been in power for soire time. Now
it is odd, argues the Vienna journal,
.hat just when Hitler is stigmatizing
democracy, socialism, and labor ism as
traits of the lower non-Nordic races
and exalting the dictatorship method
as the only one suited for the rescue
of the pure Germanic races just at
this time the social-democratic prin
ciples of government should be most
strongly affirmed among tho most
northern of Nordics, among the very
blondest cf Teutons, among the fair
haired, blue-eyed, long-headed na
tives of Denmark and Sweden.
if
there were something in the old
Wotan blood that is Instinctively re
pugnant to freedom and self-govern
ment for the masses it ought surely
to be visible among Wotan's close:
neighbors.
The Vienna writer scores hardest
when ho turns from Scandinavian
Nordicism to Scandinavian culture
Sweden and Denmark he describes as
standing at the very top of popular
education in Europe. It is there, he
says, that one may find "in almost
j every farmhouse a peasant lad who
i has baen through high school and
whose little book shelf wil lshow,
along with his textbooks in agricul
ture. translations of Goethe and
Shakespeare." The Scandinavian
countries have not escaped the world
depression. Tariffs and quotas have
played havoc with the dairy Indus
try in Denmark. Economic life in
Sweden i3 reeling from the effects
of the Kreuger crash. But in neith
er country have the people sought
salvation in fascism. On the con
trary, they have moved further on
toward democracy
The educational test Is a useful
one to apply in all discussions of
the alleged doom of democracy. It
cannot be sheer coincidence that Eu
ropean fascism flourishes in an en
vironment of high Illiteracy, while
the countries of advanced education
have remained true to democracy,
Germany is th9 only country of high
standing in popular education where
the democratic cause is on the de
fensive. But Germany'3 very culture
is an excellent reason for maintain
ing that in the end German dem
ocracy will come out on top. New
York Times.
:o:
THREE REASSURING DAYS
The history of three days cannot
be a certain index of the four months
between election and inauguration.
But it i3 clear that the three days
which have followed Governor Roose
velt's victory have seen a confident
steadying of the national nerves and
a denial of the prophecies of evil with
which the governor's opponents were
so ready. Mr. Hoover's effectively
worded telegram cf congratulation to
Governor Roosevelt, patriotically
pledging "every possible helpful ef
fort." has proved a reassurance of
large importance, more especially
since it was immediately followed by
similar expressions from the mem
bers of the cabinet and department
heads at Washington.
Four months is altogether too long
a period between election and In
auguration; but in view of the states
which have already ratified the "lame
duck" amendment, to which Massa
chusetts will be added In conformity
with tho recent expression of popular
opinion, it is apparent that this is
the last year in which the president
elect will be forced to suffer such, an
interval before assuming the actual
power and responsibility. Spring
field Republican.
:o:
What has become of the young
man who thought he couldn't dance
unless he had on a pair of high-heel
ed boots, a checkered vest and a
celluloid collar? .
GLOUCESTER BURIES
HERO OF THE BANES
Gloucester, which has buried many
seamen and commemorated the pass
ing of many more who found their
sudden graves at sea, paid her last
homage on Sunday to another of her
sons. He was Howard Blackburn,
whose great feat of enurance in the
winter of 1883 has been remembered
now through nearly half a century.
Captain Blackburn and his dory
mate, Thomas Welch, were setting
trawls from the schooner Grace F.
Fears on January evening when a
sudden snowstorm drove in around
them and cut them off. Lost from
their schooner, there was nothing for
it but to row ashore cn Newfound
land against a strong northwest wind.
The dory was half full of water, and
in bailing her Blackburn's mittens
were inadvertently sent overboard;
he knew his hands would freeze, so
he locked them around the oar looms
and let them freeze there. Welch
finally died amid the bitter and
heaving seas; Blackburn pulled on,
however, through five frightful days
and nights, and reached Newfound
land alive.
It cost him all the fingers of both
hands and was the end of his career
as a fisherman. But 16 years later
he was infected with that curious
germ which sends people to sea in
small boats, to make stupendous voy
ages alone across the empty oceans
for the pleasure of the achievement.
He entered the roll of the "single
handers" with a 30-foot sloop, which
he took from Gloucester to Glouces
ter, England, in 1S99, handling her
by jamming the lines between his
thumbs and the palms of his hands.
Two years later he made a second
transatlantic voyage alone; and he
once sought to prove his faith in
the dory as the greatest of all sea
boats by attempting to sail one to
Europe. For all her virtues, how
ever, the dory is hardly adequate to
that, and he had to give up after a
week or so at sea.
He was a quiet and pleasant man,
but the toughness of the iron that
must have been in him sometimes ap
peared in other ways than fighting
wind and weather. As honorary pall
bearers at his funeral there was a
distinguished group of men the sec
retary of the nav, the explorers
MacMillan and Bartlett, business and
political leaders of Gloucester and
master mariners from her fishm
fleets. Their presence was a tribute
to the great hardihood of body and
spirit with which tho sea endowed
those who followed her service in the
old way. New York Herald-Tribune
:o:
ROOSEVELT'S GREAT
GIFT OF CHARACTER
Bathing its eyes in the tidal pro
portion of Governor Roosevelt's vie
tory, the Chicago Tribune writes in
this reassuring vein:
"He is free from particular
obligations which he might re
gret. Tho claims of clique and
group upon him are not impera
tive. He has taken his mandate
from a whole people and there
are no special services to be re
garded as imposing either moral
or material obligations. When a
great vote, both in tbe popular
election and in the electoral col
lege, makes a president he is
free from the importunities of
special interests and special
pleaders."
The moral prestige which Gover
nor Roosevelt will derive from the
tremendous majorities piled up for
him in almost every section of the
country will indeed prove of ines
timable benefit to him as president,
but the best assurance that he will
be free from the "claims of clique
and group" lies in the genuine in'
tegrity of his character and Intel
lect, in hi3 ability to determine his
course by his own convictions and
not by the direction of others and
in the fine enlightenment of his dem
ocratic beliefs. Even without the
overwhelming mandate from the peo
ple to take on the job of vigilantly
guarding their interests, there would
be no chance for anyone to play
horse with him.
For the democratic president-elect
has not only the lean of leadership.
but the keenness of political judg
ment which usually accompanies it
We are very confident that Governor
Roosevelt will give the American na
tion wide-visioned and progressive
leadership. We said before his nom
ination for president that he was
he most progressive candidate put be
fore the Chicago convention, and we
think his conduct and utterances
during the last few months have
proved it.
Governor Roosevelt has a gift of
getting along with people of all
ranks and classes, and those who meet
him are impressed with his funda
mental sanity. He has a keen sense
of humor, which prevents him from
harboring a too arrogant notion of
his place in the political heirarchy.
He ts richly endowed with many of
the magnetic qualities which rally
men to the support of . important
causes. It is no light task under
taken in easy conditions and it can
be achieved by no ready-made path
of official correctness, no harking
back to the catchwords and the com
promises of an older day.
In view of the tremendously grave
and complicated problems confront
ing the country, and the vital neces
sity of composing the political fears
are ;conomic prejudices which are
such formidable obstacles to their
solution, tho presence in the White
house of such a skillful reconciler
and common-sense politician as
Franklin D. Roosevelt can only be
looked forward to with the most
cheering reassurance and hope. De
troit News.
:o:
Henry J. Allen, who directed tbe
Hoover publicity during the recent
campaign, Is going to Rumania for
a month. It is hoped while he is
there he will look into the Rumanian
publicity methods, particularly as it
applies to Rumanian royalty and of
ncial life, it appears to be a very
high grade of publicity, judging from
the spread it gets in the newspapers
:o:
Ten miles In a car is not time
enough for anything. It's no wonder
we can't get more things settled in
this country. That far in a carriage
with neighbors used to be time
enough to reach a conclusion occa
sionally, but in a car on a hard road
these days you are there quicker'n
thought can get a good start.
:o:
Gene Tunney's contribution to poll
tics during the last campaign was
able, but not enthusiastic, and we
are of the opinion it will be his las
effort in that direction. It is evry
dizicult to keep politics, as it is now
practiced, on a high literary plane.
:o:
Christmas cards for printing can
be found at the Journal office. Come
and look over the line.
SHERIFF'S SALE
State of Nebraska, County of Cass,
ss.
By virtue of an Order of Sale issued
by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk of the Dis
trict Court, within and for Cass
County, Nebraska, and to me direct
ed, I will on the 3rd day of Decem
ber, A. D. 1932, at 10 o'clock a. m
of said day at the south front door of
the court house, in said county, sell
at public auction to the highest bid
der for cash the following real es
tate to-wit:
The north eighty-seven (87)
feet of Lots one (1), two (2),
three (3), and four (4), in
Block four (4) in the original
town of Plattsmouth, Cass Coun
ty, Nebraska, as surveyed, plat
ted and recorded;
The same being levied upon and
taken as the property of William A
Wells, Flora M. Wells, Eduth Mar
tin and Becker Roofing Company
defendants, to satisfy a judgment of
said court recovered by Occidental
Building and Loan Association, plain
tiff, against said defendants.
Plattsmouth, Nebraska, November
1st, A. D. 1932.
ED W. THIMGAN,
Sheriff Cass County, Nebraska,
n3-5w
SHERIFF'S SALE
State of Nebraska, County of Cass,
ss.
By virtue of an Order of Sale is
sued by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk of the
District Court, within and for Cass
County, Nebraska, and to me direct
ed, I will on the 3rd day of Decern
ber, A. D. 1932, at 10 o'clock a. m
of said day at the south front door
of tbe court house in said county,
sell at public auction to the highest
bidder for cash the following real
estate to-wit:
Lots 1 and 2 in Block 31 in
Young and Hays Addition to
the City of Plattsmouth, Cass
County, Nebraska;
The same being levied upon and
taken as the property of James E.
Waller, Clara Waller, husband and
wife; Walt Minnear and Elizabeth
May Minnear, his wife, and M. S
Briggs, defendants, to satisfy a judg
ment of said court recovered by The
Plattsmouth Loan and Building As
sociation, a corporation, plaintiff.
against said defendants.
Plattsmouth, Nebraska, November
1st, A. D. 1932.
Sheriff Cass County, Nebraska.
ED W. TIUMGAN,
n3-5w
SHERIFF'S SALE
State of Nebraska, County of Cass,
ss.
By virtue of an Order of Sale, Is
sued by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk of the
District Court, within and for Cass
County, Nebraska, and to me direct
ed, I will on the 3rd day of Decem
ber, A. D. 1932, at 10 o'clock a. m
of said day at the south front door
of the court house, in said county.
sell at public auction to the highest
bidder for cash the following real
estate to-wit:
Lots numbered one (1) and
two (2) in Block twenty-seven
(27) in Young and Hay's Ad
dition to the City of Platts
mouth, Cass County, Nebraska,
excepting the west thirty feet of
said Lot two ( 2 ) ;
The same being levied upon and
taken as the property of Thomas S.
Svoboda and Anna Svoboda, husband
and wife, defendants, to satisfy a
udgment of said court recovered by
the Plattsmouth Loan and Building
Association, a corporation, plaintiff,
against said defendants.
Plattsmouth, Nebraska, November
2nd, A. D. 1932.
ED W. THIMGAN,
Sheriff Cass County, Nebraska.
n3-6w. ,
Lumber Sawing
Commercial sawing from
your own logs lumber cut
to your specifications.
We have ready cut dimen
sion lumber and sheeting for
sale at low prices.
NEBRASKA BASKET FACTORY
ORDER OF HEARING AND NO
TICE OF PROBATE OF WILL
In the County Court of Cass coun
ty, Nebraska.
State of Nebraska, County of Cass,
ss:
Fee Book 9, page 326.
To all persons interested In the
estate of Jonas Johnson, deceased:
On reading tbe petition of Joseph
E. Johnson and Fredolph N. Johnson
praying that the instrument filed in
this court on the 2Cth day of Octo
ber, 1932, and purporting to be the
last will . and testament of the said
deceased, may be proved and allowed
and recorded as the last will and tes
tament of Jonas Johnson, deceased;
that said instrument be admitted to
prcbate and the administraion of said
esate be granted to C. A. Johnson, as
Executor;
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 16th day of December,
A. D. 1932, at 'ten o'clock a. m., to
show cause, if any there be, why the
prayer of the petitioners should not
be granted, and that notice f the
pendency of said petition and that
the hearing thereof be given to all
persons 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.
Witness my hand, and the seal of
said court, this 17th day of Novem
ber, A. D. 1932.
A. IL DUX BURY,
(Seal) n21-3w County Judge.
NOTICE TO DEFENDANTS
To: James T. O'Hara. Roy Stewart,
George L. Kerr and all persons hav
ing or claiming ,aay interest in tbe
west half (W), except school
grounds in the northwest corner, of
Section twenty-two (22), Township
ten (10), North. Range twelve (12),
east of the Sixth Principal Meridian,
In the County of Cass. State of Ne
braska, real names unknown.
uerenaants.
You and each of you are hereby
notified that on the 19th day of No
vember, 1932, Bankers Life Insurance
Company of Nebraska, a corporation,
as plaintiff, filed its petition and
commenced an action in the District
Court of Cass county. Nebraska,
against Jerome G. St. John, Cora St.
John. James T. O'Hara. Roy Stew
art, George L. Kerr, James ,v. ti
wood, Ellet B. Drake. Ruth H. Drake
end all persons having or claiming
anv interest in the west half (W),
except school grounds in the north
west corner, of Section twenty-two
(22). Township ten (10). North.
Ranee twelve (12). east of the Sixth
Principal Meridian, In the County of
Cass, State of Nebraska, real names
unknown, defendants, the object and
rraver of which action is to fore
close a certain mortgage, dated July
23, 1923, filed August G, 1923, and
recorded in the office of the Register
of Deeds of Cass county, Nebraska,
in Book 52 of Mortgages, page 435,
B-lven to nlaintlff by Jerome G. St.
John and Cora St. John, husband and
wife, covering the following describ
ed real estate, to-wit:
The west half (W), except
school grounds in the northwest
corner, of Section twenty-two
(22), Township ten (10), North,
Range twelve (12), east of the
Sixth Principal Meridian, in the
County of Cass, State of Ne
braska to secure payment of a certain prom
issory note for $22,000.00, which,
with Interest thereon, was due and
payable in sixty-three semi-annual
installments on the first days of
March and September of each year.
from and including the first day of
March,-1924, until and' including the
first day of March, 1953; that de
fault has been made in the payment
of said installment which was due
March 1. 1932; that default has also
been made in the payment of said in
stallment which was due September
1, 1932; that default has also been
made in the conditions of said mort
gage, respecting the payment of the
taxes assessed against said real es
tate for the years 1930 and 1931, said
real estate having been sold for the
delinquent taxes for 1930, and re
demption from said tax sale not hav
ing been made; that plaintiff, by rea
son of said defaults, has elected to
declare the balance of the principal
of said note immediately due and pay
able; that there is now due and ow
ing to plaintiff the sura of $726.00,
with interest thereon, from March 1,
1932, at the rate of 10 per annum;
also the sum of $726.00, with inter
est thereon from September 1, 1932,
at the rate of 10 per annum; also
the sum of $19,561.74, with interest
thereon, at the rate of 5 per annum.
from September 1, 1932, to tbe date
on which plaintiff's petition was filed.
and with Interest thereon, at the
rate of 10 per annum, from the
date on which plaintiff's petition was
filed.
You are further notified that plain
tiff's petition prays for a decree of
foreclosure and for the sale of said
real estate; for costs; and for gen
eral equitable relief.
You and each of you are further
notified that you are required to an
swer plaintiff's petition on or before
Monday, the 9th day of January,
933.
BANKERS LIFE INSURANCE
COMPANY OF NEBRASKA,
Plaintiff.
By WM. C. RAMSEY and
SHERMAN S. WELPTON, Jr.
Its Attorneys.
n21-4w
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