The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, December 15, 1932, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    THURSDAY, DEC. 15, 1932.
PAGE THRO
the Plattsmouth Journal
PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBSASKA
Entered at Postoffice, Plattsmouth, Neb., as second-class mail matter
R. A. BATES,
SUBSCRIPTION PBICE $2.00 A YEAR IN FIRST POSTAL ZONE
Subscribers living in Second Postal Zona, $2.50 per year. Beyond
600 miles, $3.00 per year. Rate to Canada and foreign countries,
$3.50 per year. All subscriptions are payable strictly in advance.
It must discourage the doctor a
wee bit, though, when he sees his
charity patients buying gasoline.
:o:
A lot of us with a note coming
swiftly due at the bank know Just
haw Great Britain feels.
:o:
The radical change in the weather
is expected to put folk3 in a more
Chrismasy frame of mind, a condi
tion rather hard to attain in warm
ful ldays such as we have been having.
In accordance with the recent Supreme Court decision
in regard to Senate File No. 33, passed by the 1931 Legisla
ture, Trucks will now be classified as (1) Commercial; (2)
Local and (3) Farm. Due to the fact that this decision was
made only a few days ago, we will not receive our Truck
plates until December 20, or perhaps a little later.
Last year, with the co-operation of the auto owners of
this county, we were able to issue all the licenses without hir
ing any extra help, thereby saving the county about $300.00.
I do not intend to hire any extra help this year. Therefore,
all persons ordering license plates by mail should order their
plates at least one week before February 1, if they wish to
drive their cars after that date. The 1 933 Passenger plates
are now in our office and are ready to be issued. The fees on
Passenger carsj are the same as in 1 932.
The following is a list 'of thefees for Trucks and Trailers
for 1933:
Commercial Truck license Fees
Advertised Carrying Capacity 1 Year Year j2 Year iA Year
less than 3,000 pounds 1 $ 10.00 $ 7.50T$50 f$ 2-50
3,000 pounds and less than 4,0001 15.00 11.25 7.50
4,000 pounds and less than 5,000 30.00 22.50 15.00 7.50
5.000 pounds and less than 6,000 50.00 37.50 25.00 12.50
b.000 pounds and less than 7,000 75.00 j 56.25 j 37.50 j 18.75
7000 pounds and less than 8,00O- 100.00 j 75.00 j 50.00 j 25.03
8,000 pounds and less than 9,0001 125.00 j S3.75 j 62.50 j 31.25
t'.OOO ponnd3 and less than 10,000 j 150.00 112.50 75.00 j 37.50
10,000 pounds and less than 11,000-1 175.00 131.25 87.50 j 43.75
11,000 pounds and less than 12,000-1 200.00 150.00 j 100.00 50.00
12.000 pounds, not to exceed 14,000-1 225.00 1S8.75 112-50J 56.25
17o truck, trailer or semi-trailer shall be registered or licensed for a
carrying capacity in excess of seven tons (14,000 pounds).
Lead limit cf truck or trailer shall not exceed 700 pounds per inch
vridth of tire.
Limit of weight of truck or trailer and load combined 16,000 pounds
on any one axle.
Lead limit cf truck, trailer or semi-trailer, 16,000 pounds.
Truck cr trailer, including load, shall not exceed eight feet in vddth
cr twelve feet in height, ncr ever 35 feet in length.
No ccmbuiaticn of vehicles, including lead and coupling shall exceed
0 feet in lengih.
No motor vehicle or semi-trailer unit may draw more than one
COMMERCIAL TRAILERS
Commercial Trailers, 50 of same schedule of registration fees as
for Commercial Trucks (listed above).
Local and Farm.TffiscSis, Trailers, etc.
Trucks and Trailers operated WHOLLY and exclusively within an in
corporated city, tawn, village or within three miles cf the corporate limits
thereof, and Trucks raid Trailers of farmers cr ranches used WHOLLY and
exclusively for carrying farm products or supplies:
Advertised Shipping Weight
Tracks less than 2.C00 pounds
2,600 poends cr more I
Trailers or Semi-Trailers, und. l,000j
Same, over 1,000 pounds
Com Shellers, Well Digging Outfits and other implements of husband
ry, bolted or fastened to Hotor Vehicle Chassis.
Corn Shellers, Well Diggers, etc
NOTE: For license purposes, a tractor and semi-trailer shall be con
sidered as a truck.
An affidavit stating the kind of license desired (Commer
cial, Local or Farm) must accompany the certificate. Under
the new law, all Commercial trucks must be registered for the
capacity the trucker wishes to haul. All Farm and Local
trucks are registered according to the advertised shipping
weight.
JOHN E. TURNER,
County Treasurer.
Publisher
-4
These new contract bridge rules
at least serve to remind U3 that we
didn't know exactly what tho old
oue3 were.
:o:
Miss Amelia Earhart will make a
nation-wide lecture tour in her fight
for sex equality. All the men are
hoping she wins.
:o:
"The air belongs to the people,"
a Southern editor asseverates. Well,
what's the matter? Haven't a let cf
them been getting it?
YYear Year y2 Year Year
$ 8.00 $ 6.00 $ 4.00 $ 2.00
12.00
9.00
A00
1.00
3.00
2.00 1.50
.50
4.00
3.00
2.00
1.00
1 Year Year 1 12 Year 1 14 Year
$ 12.00 $ 9.00 $ 6.00 $ 3.00
A lot of people are learning econ
omy these days the way a man learns
to swim after being pushed off a
dock.
:o:
Recommended for amnesia: Ever
ett Sanders, Mahatma Gandhi, Bishop
Cannon, Ogden Mills, the Rev. Rob
Shulcr and Sam Insull.
:o:
We used to worry about future gen
erations becoming soft, but no more.
Not when we think of the bond issues
they're going to have to pay off.
:o:
It is all very well to be assured
that we'll get a new deal, but what
a number of us want to knew is how
we are going to sit in the game with
out any chips.
:o:
You need not worry baout the oth
er laws if you keep the original Ten,
says a paragrapher. Oh, no? Well,
you can overpark and get fined with
out breaking any of them.
:o:
Only O. Henry could do justice to
the every-day tragedy of life as sym
bolized by that up-sttte dog which,
with a world full of creditors, went
and bit a man who had come to pay
a bill.
:o:
That wa3 a pathetic story about
Insull playing with a string of beads
in an Athens hospital. Even so, that
is probablj- better for the public than
having him play with a string of
public utiliteis.
:o:
There is a rumor that Vice-Presi
dent Charlie Curtis of Tcpeka may
not return to Kansas after hi3 term
of office expires next March. Ke
thinks some of staying back East in
the law business.
:o:
The head of the Bank of England
says ho approaches the problems of
the depression "not only in ignor
ance, but in humility." Some of our
statesmen would be in the same boat
if ttey had the humility.
:o:
We trust the relief agencies that
are receiving worn clothing for dis
tribution to the unfortunate will
take care that no one is atked to
wear any of the George and Mar
tha Washington costumes which have
suddenly gone out of fashion thi3 fall.
:o:
SAYS WIEE-TAPPINS
13 "VILE" PRACTICE
The ahominable practice of ob
taining evidencs by tapping tele
phone wires met with the censure it
deserved in a Boston liquor cane,
when Federal Judge Lo-.vell bitterly-
denounced it in his charge to the
jury. Judge Lowell, disdaining the
use of polite phrases, said wide-tap
ping i3 "contemptible" and "vile"
and that, under its usage, Uncle Sam
became a "sneaking cur" instead of
an "honorable, upright gentleman."
Although the United States su
preme court, in June, 1S28, held that
evidence obtained by wire-tapping is
admissible in prohibition cases, the
counlrywide protest against such in
vasion of the citizens led Attorney-
General Mitchell and Major Wood
cock, head cf the prohibition unit,
to discountenance it. Justice Bran-
dois, dissenting from the majority,
had said: "If the government be
comes a law breaker, it breeds con
tempt for law it ;invites every man
to become a law unto himself; it in
vites anarchy." That sentiment, rath
er than the majority opinion, was
followed by Mitchell when it was pro
posed to clean up Washington by sub
jecting the people to unreasonable
search and seizure. Mr. Mitchell
said:
"The government, by violating the
constitutional rights of citizens,
should not be placed in a better posi
tion than it otherwis would be. In
the long run, nothing will be gain
ed." Despite tho attitude of Mitchell
and Woodcock, dry agents have per
sisted in endeavoring to eend men
to prison with evidence obtained
from wire-tapping. The jury in the
Boston case, following Judge Low
ell's denunciation, disagreed, though,
If a less hardy jurist had presided,
one less devoted to our constitutional
principles, the "contemptible" de
vice might have worked. Wire-tap
ping has been practiced recently in
St. Louis and East St. Loui3 (Illinois
law makes it a felony) and a series
of cases built upon that kind of evi
dence is now pending in local fed
eral courts.
Happily, we are at the close of the
prohibition era. but we must be care
ful that its legacy of violations of
the bill of rights must . go with it
If not, the same means used to trap
bootleggers might worm their way
into general acceptance, destroying
the constitutional guarantees on
which our freedom is based. So long
as we have men on the bench of
Judge Lowell's fiber, however, the
ancient right of castle, the founda
tion stone of Anglo-Saxon freedom.
is secure. St. Louis Post-Dispatch,
OLD TIMES RECALLED
BY TIBBIES PAPEES
Personal papers and manuscripts
preserved by the late Thomas H. Tib
bies, which have just come into the
possession of the Nebraska historical
society, are a valuable addition to the
records of that organization for the
facts they contain bearing upon the
rise of populism and the free silver
movement during the 1890s. This
state played a central part in both
developments, as a result of which
it gave to the nation a new political
leadership in the person of William
Jennings Eryan.
Mr. Tibble3 was an active figure
in building up the populist party not
only in Nebraska but in other west
ern states. As an editor, Washing
ton correspondent, and political
speaker he had much to do with
building up a powerful public opin
ion that eventually turned many of
these states away from their long
established political moorings and
laid tho foundation for important
changes in governmental policies
and practices.
He wa3 closely associated in Ne
braska with such men as Charles H.
Wan Wyck, who had previously serv
ed in the United States senate as a
republican; William V. Allen, elected
senator in 1893 by a combination of
cVmocrat3 and populists in the legis
lature; W. J. Bryan, then congress
man from the First district; George
v, Uergc, several times a candidate
for governor; Silas A. Ilolcomb and
W. A. Poynter, both of whom were
elected and served in the guberna
torial dice, and others almost as
prominent.
ITis political activities also brought
Mr. Tibbies into personal contact
with Tom Watson of Georgia, Igna
tius Donnelly of Minnesota, James
B. Weaver of Iowa, Jerry Simpson
and Mary Ellen Lease of Kansas,
Mar!on Butler of North Carolina and
many other notable exponents of
populism.
William II. Harvey, who turned
the country upside down in the mid
dle 90's, with hi3 free silver treatise,
"Coin's Financial School," and thus
helped Bryan to gain national ascend
ancy in tho democratic party, was
one of Tibbies acquaintances and
friends. Though Harvey, one of the
few survivors of his era, cut only a
sorry figure in his lato presidential
candidacy, he wa3 a real power in
national politics 35 yxra ago. .
Clarence S. Darrow 'of Cbfca'go,
by the way, was . among the Inde
pendent thinkers who cast in their
lot with the ponul:st3. That was
what first brought him into the pub
lic eye.
Those were the personalities who
altered the currents of American
thought as applied to government.
They were the first to challenge forc
ibly the trend toward monopolies
and centralization of wealth, the free
pas3 system by which railroads then
controlled public officials, and the
widespread corruption then existing
in the administration of national and
state affairs.
Some of the things demanded by
the populists were the issuance of
giecnback currency to relieve debt
or:?, popular election of United States
relators, the Australian ballot sys
tem, the graduated income tax, pos
tal savings banks and government
ownership of the railroads. Though
their party Jorganization, a3 such,
failed to achieve any of these objects,
most of them were afterward taken
up by the other parties and are now
the law ot the land. Lincoln Star.
:o:
NOT ENOUGH TO DISTRIBUTE
Mr. Long of Louisiana returns to
the senate with the declaration that
the election of Mr. Roosevelt must
be Interpreted as a mandate for re
distribution cf wealth in the United
States. Aside from the merits of the
question and possible differences in
interpretation of the election, it is to
be hoped that Mr. Long has given
attention to another matter. It is
the disappearance cf wealth in the
United States, rather than its redis
tribution. Perhaps Mr. Long noted some fig
ures in the annual report of the sec
retary cf the treasury, made public
just a few days ago. They showed
that the number of taxpayers with
income3 of 100,000 or more had
dwindled from 15,780 in 1928 to 6,
152 in 1930 and to only 3,142 In
1931. Also, the number of those with
incomes of $5,000 or more dropped
more than 27 per cent from 1930 to
1931, while the amount of taxes paid
by this class declined nearly 50 per
cent. There are other figures of like
import, coming down only to last
year. What will be the report for the
current year?
What the country needs Just now
is reviewing business to produce more
wealth, for everybody rather than a
redistribution of the wealth that is
left.
:o:
Phone the news to No. 6.
THE FAMILY FARMER
"I expect to see tho large farms
split up Into little ones," says City
Attorney Wright by way cf post-depression
prophecy to the Omaha Real
Estate Board.
Large and little are elastic terms
which admit of a good deal of var
iation. By little, Judge Wright cer
tainly does not mean suburban acre
age, and by large, he doubtless would
rot Include everything above a quar
ter section homestead. If he is pitting
the family operated farm against the
so-called industrialized or semi-industrialized
farm, the phenomena of the
depression seem to bear him out.
In spito of tax delinquencies and
mortgage foreclosures and other ills
that afflict the small farmer as well
as the large it is the family operated
farm which seems to be standing the
depression with greatest fortitude. It
is the industrialized farm that is flat
on its back. We haven't hear! a peep
out ' of Tom Campbell, the agricul
tural engineer, about hi3 95 thousand
aero wheat and fiax farm for months.
Only yesterday the industrialized
farm was having a great play. Effi
ciency, mass production, modern in
dustrial methods represented the nut
cracker which wa3 going to extract
the kernel from the farm relief prob
lem, according to it3 publicists.
Wheat, as we recall cne of the boasts
about Mr. Campbell's efficiency,
couldn't go so low that he couldn't
beat it with lower production costs.
Prof. Pitkin of Coiumbia wrote a
magazine article, rot so long ago,
either, in which he referred to family
farmers as "quarter-section half
wits." His agricultural hero was
Hickman Price, who wasn't a farmer
at all but a business man who left
his good industrial job to manage a
22 thousand acre wheat farm in the
Texas panhandle. Now Hickman Price
is broke and his creditors have the
farm, but they don't know what to
do with it. Eventually they will prob
ably cut it up and dispose of it tc
"quarter section half-wits."
Even the farmers were getting a
little frightened at the menace of cor
poration farming and so recently as
two years ago they were wanting the
legislature to enact laws which would
prevent corporations from running
the family farmer off the land and
organizing it on an efficiency basis
with its reputed low production costs.
The danger appears to be past. It
i3 the inefficient little farmer whose
acres are under his immediate per
sonal control and who doesn't have
to support anything but a family and
maybe a hired man who is standing
the gaff. He is standing it best, be
cause when necessity drive3 he i3 bet
ter able to adjust himself to circum
stancs than tho manager of a big one
crop corporation farm. He may not
be able to match production costs
with the big one-crop farmers, but
his milk cows, his kitchen garden,
his pigs and poultry flocks not only
provide him with supplementary rev
enue, small though it may be, but
also supply him dircctiy, without the
intervention of a middleman, with
much of his first necessity, food.
Russia has been trying industrial
ized farming under soviet direction.
Industrialization has been successful
beyond the dreams of five-year plan
ners, but food production ha3 been
a failure. A national food shortage
is one of the chief features of the
celebration of the close of the five
year plan. Crops have been short and
there has been an alarming disap
pearance of live stock.
The American farmer has been
cruelly punished by the depression.
Individually he has suffered untold
economic hardship. He has been com
pelled to default on interest, rent and
tax payments. lie ha3 seen his prop
erty sold to satisfy the claims of mort
gage holders, ho has seen it offered
for sale to satisfy tho demand of the
tax collector. But as an institution
ho has been taking it with remark
able fortitude.
The family farmer is the heart and
soul of American agriculture. He is
so because he is endowed with love
for the land, love"for lifo on the land
and love for possession cf it in small
parcels from which hs and his boys,
yes and his women, too, can wrest
its rich fruits. We cannot believe
that he is ever going to be replaced
by a system of factory managers di
recting the work of laborers whose
sole interest in the soil is so many
days work for so many days' wages.
Judge Wright is right. World-Herald
.
:o: '-
One of President-elect Roosevelt's
hobbies which he pursues in spite of
everything is stamp collecting, and
his collection is said to be of great
value. We wonder if Mr. Roosevelt
has considered the services of George
Bungle as a guard for the stamp col
lection. He has a good record in that
line, and we're pretty sure he Toted
the Democratic ticket this year.
: :o:
Orders for Christmas cards print
ing can be mads now at the Journal.
This Itaasi Lost
40 Pounds of Fat
"Dear Sirs: For 3 months I've been
using your salts and am very much
pleased with results. I've lost 45 lbs.,
6 inches in hips and bust measure.
I've taken 3 bottles one lasting 5
wec-k?.- I had often tried to reduce
by dieting but never could keen it
up, but by cutting down and taking
Kruschen I've had splendid results.
I highly recommend it to my friends."
Mrs. Carl Wilson. Manton, Mich.
To lose fat SAFELY and HARM
LESSLY, take a half teaspoonful of
Kruschen in a class of hot water in
the morning before breakfast don't
miss a morning. To hasten results go
light on fatty mer.ts, potatoes, cream
and pastrk-s a bottle that lasts 4
weeks ccsts but a trifle but don't
take chances be sure it's Kruschen
your health ome3 first get it at
F. G. Fricke fz Co., or any drugstore
in America. If not joyfully satisfied
after the first bottle money back.
1-5
Architects have a lot to learn so
long as a man has to cuddle an over
coat and hat on his lap in any pub
lic hall or get fallen arches from
waiting in a check room line.
ORDER OF HEARING
and Notice on Petition for Set
tlement cf Account
In the County Court of Cass coun
ty, Nebraska.
State cf Nebraska. Cas3 county, ss.
Fee Book 9. page 251.
To all persons interested in the
estate cf C. N. Barrows, deceased:
On reading the petition of W. G.
Kicck. Administrator, praying a
final settlement and allowance of his
account filed in this Court on the
23rd day cf November, 1932, and for
assignment cf residue of said estate,
determination of heirship, and for
his discharge as Administrator;
It is hereby ordered that you and
all persons interested in said matter
may, and do, appear at the County
Court to he held in and for said coun
ty, on the 23rd day of December, A.
D. 1032 at ten o'clock a. m., to thow
cause, if any there be, why the 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 raid 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 of said
Court, thi3 23rd day cf November, A.
D. 1332.
A. H. DUXBURY.
(Seal) n28-3w 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. Ca:3 county, ss.
Fee Book 9, page 294.
To the heirs at law and all persons
interested in tho estate of John Stu
art Livingston, deceased:
On reading the petition of Maud
M. Livingston, Administratrix, pray
ing a final settlement and allowance
of her account filed in this Court on
the 26th day of November, 1932, and
for assign 12 en t of the residue of said
estate; determination of heirship, and
for her discharge as Administratrix;
It i3 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 coun
ty, on the 2Cid day of December, A.
D. 1932, at ten 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 pen
dency of paid petition and the hear
ing thereof be given to all persons in
terested in said matter by publishing
a copy cf thi3 order In the Platts
mcuth 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 tho real of said
Coi:rt thin 2Gth day cf November, A.
D. 1932.
A. II. DUXBURY,
(Seal) n2S-3v County Judge.
ORDER OF HEARING AND NO
TICE OF PROBATE OF WILL
In the County Court of Cass coun
ty, Nebraska.
State of Nebraska, County cf Cass,
iS.
Fee Bock 9, pagr; 334.
To the heirs nt law and to all per
sona interested in the catate cf Y"ash
Landi3, deceased:
On reading the petition of Bess
Halstead praying that the instrument
filed in this Court on the 9th day if
December, 19"2. and purporting to be
tho last will and testament of the said
decerned, may be proved and allowed
and recorded as the lant will and tes
tament of Wash Landis, deceased;
that raid instrument be admitted to
probate and the administration cf
said estate be granted to Frank A.
Cloidt, a5 Executor;
It is hereby ordered that ycu, and
all persons interested in said matter,
may, and do, appear at the County
Court to bo held in and for saH coun
ty, on the 6th day of January, A. D.
1933, at ten o'clock a. m., to ehow
cause, if any there be, why tho pray
er of the petitioner should not be
granted, and that notice of the pen
dency of said petition and that the
.nearing thereof be given to all per
sons interested in said matter by pub
lishing a copy of this Order in tho
Plattsmouth Journal, a semi-weekly
newspaper printed in said county, for
three successive weeks prior to Eald
day of hearing.
Witness my hand, and the seal of
said Court, this 9th day of December,
A. D. 1932.
A. H. DUXBURY,
(Seal) dl2-3w. County Judge.
Lumber Sawing
Commercial sawing from
your own logs lumber cut
to your specifications.
We have ready cut dimen
sion lumber and sheeting for
sale &t low prices.
NEBRASKA BASKET FACTORY
ORDER OF HEARING AND NO
TICE OK PROBATE OF WILL
In the County Court of Cass Coun
ty, Nebraska.
State of Nebraska, County of Cass,
S3.
Probate Fee Book 9 at page 333.
To the heirs at law and to all per
sons interested in the estate of Henry
C. L. Ofe, deceased.
On reading the petition of Carl P.
Ofe praying that the instrument filed
in this court on the 3rd day of De
cember, 1032, and purporting to be
the last will and testament of tho
said deceased, may be proven and
allowed and recorded as the last will
and testament of Henry C. L. Ofe,
deceased; 'that said instrument be
admittced to probate and tho admin
istration of said estate be granted to
Edward G. Ofe and Henry J. Ofe as
executors;
It is hereby ordered that you, and
ail persons interested in said matter,
may, and do, appear at the County
Court to be held in and for said coun
ty, on the 30th day of December,
A. D. 1932, at ten o'clock a. m., to
fhow cause, if any there be, why the
prayer of the petitioner should not
ba granted, and that notice of the
pendency cf raid petition and that
the hearing thereof be given to all
persons interested in said matter by
publishing a copy of thi3 order in the
Plattsmouth Journal, a semi-weekly
newspaper printed in said county, for
three successive week3 prior to said
day of hearing.
Witness my hand, and the seal of
said court, thi3 5th day of December,
A. D. 1932.
A. H. DUXBURY.
(Seal) d3-3w County Judge.
NOTICE TO DEFENDANTS
To: James T. O'Hara. Roy Stewart,
George L. Kerr and all persons hav
ing or claiming any interest in the
west half (W), except school
grounds In the northwest corner, of
Section twenty-two (22), Township
ten (10), North. Range twelve (12),
east cf the Sixth Principal Meridian,
in the County cf Cass, State of Ne
braska, real names unknown,
Defendants.
You nr.d 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 ,W. El
wood, Ellet B. Drake, Ruth H. Drake
and all persons having or claiming "
any interest in the west half (V),
except school grounds in the north
west corner, of Section twenty-two
(22), Township ten (10), North,
Rar.ge twelve (12), east of the Sixth
Princinal Meridian, in the County of
Cass, State of Nebraska, real names
unknown, defendants, the object and
prayer of which action is to fore
close a certain mortgage, dated July
23, 1923, filed August C. 1923. and
recorded In the office of the Register
of Deeds of Cas county, Nebraska,
in Book 52 of Mortgages, page 435,
.riven to plaintiff 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,
Rpnge twelve (12), east of the
Sixtli Principal Meridian, In the
County of Cass, State of Ne
braska fo 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
firrt day of March, 1955; that de
fault has been made In the payment
of raid instnllmcnt which was due
March 1.-1932; that default has also
been made in the payment of said in
stallment which wa3 due September
1, 1932; that default has also been
mode In the conditions cf paid mort
gage, respecting the payment of the
tcxe assessed agi!nst said real es
tate for the years 1930 and 1931, said
real estate having teen sold for the
delinquent taxes for 1930, and re
' caption from said tax rale not hav
ing been made; that plaintiff, by rea
son of raid defaults, has elected to
rf"l?re the balance of the principal
of raid note immediately due and pay
able: that thote i3 now due and ow
:r,z to plaintif? the sum of $726.00,
with Interest thereon, from March 1,
T32. at the rate of 10 per annum;
i the piim of $72G.00. with inter-
est therecn from September 1, 1932,
rt the ra'e of 10 per annum; also
the sun of $19,561.74. with interest
here on. at the rate of 5 per annum,
from September 1, 1932, to the date
on which plain tiff '3 petition was filed,
r.-vl with Interest thereon, at tho
rats cf 10 per annum, from the
date on which plaintiff'3 petition was
filed.
Yon are further notified that plain
tiff's petition prays for a decree of
foreclosure and for the cale 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 3th day of January,
1933
BANKERS LIFE INSURANCE
COMPANY OF NEBRASKA,
Tlaintlff.
By WM. C. RAMSEY and
SHERMAN S. WELPTON, Jr.
Its Attorneys.
n21-4w
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