PAGE TWO the Plattsmoutti Journal PUBLISHED SE1II-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA Entered at rostoffice, Plattsmouth, Neb., as second-class mail fnatter 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, J 3.00 per year. Rate to Canada and foreign countries, tZ 50 per year. All subscriptions are payable strifctly in advance. As it turned out, the wolf of Wall Street who died the other day was only a sheep in wolf's habiliments. :o: The loce letters of Napoleon were recently sold at auction. He wasn't tuch a smart man, after all, because he signed his name to them. :o: The rage for standardization seems to have reached its climax in Los Angeles where the city council is studying a proposal to fix the size of doughnuts and coffee cakes. :o: If Sam Insull has to spend the rest of his life sailing the seven seas on Greek ships because no country will permit him to land, it is all right with us. Instead of having a sweet heart he will have a. summons in every port waiting for him. :o: The President honors the vice pres ident and wife with a dinner and there was no row about where the wife of the vice president sat. Come to think of it, no one cares where the si;ter of an ex-vice president sits. The reports indicate that there has :o: Jin. Emma Bergcoll, resigned to her son's fate through three Repub lican administrations, has appealed j to the new deal to bring her son, Grover, back home from Germany: where he has been hiding out ever since evading the draft in the war. Grover i3 doubtless a pretty big boy by now. :o: Frank A. Vanderlip, banker and former assistant secretary of the treasury, is going to become an editor. He thus joins other brainy and weal thy former government officials who have become editors. We don't know whether brains ara necessary to be come a successful editor, but wealth certainly is a great help. f :o: ; The New York Times writer who tells the story of the Maine trapper who rode a bear to death opening hi3 hunting knife with his teeth whil? riding the bear downhill at full speed doesn't take time to ex plain what the bear was doing wan dering arcund in the open when he should have been hibernating. We have learned later that the bear was a somnambulist. How 1 ,f yy msp! tfwm I y v$ WF .- s- i sy w i I S'ml J y. Y$v:' y ' o Now that they have caught sev eral of tne convicts from Lansing, the only notables missing are Charley Curtis, Pretty Boy Floyd, Annie and Elmer. :o: been a "definite upturn" in business not great but something. If the unemployed can be put back to work without government aid, the recovery will be complete. That state is yet to come. :o: Postmaster General Farley gave a little girl an orchid the other day without even inquiring her politics. Referred to Representative Blanton of Texas, who complains that the G. O. P. is getting all the new deal glory. :o: "There is no legal training com plete," says a Detroit lawyer, "with out full knowledge of the contents of the Bible." Full command of the details is essential, we judge, even if it isn't so necessary to follow the precepts. :o: Why is it that the fellow who at tends a man at his wedding is called the best man?" If he was really best man. it is contrary to the adage, "the best man wins. "Or maybe he is the best man because he was able to keep out of matrimony. -:o:- If Cuban politics were conducted in the efficient way our baseball games are operated, a Cuban Hughey Henry would have appeared the other day to announce through a mega phone, "Mendieta now pitching for Cuba in the sixth." :o: We trust that Mile. Lily Pons will pardon a suggestion from several well wishers that the sooner she has a rug made from the skin of that young jaguar she carries around as a pet, the better her, admirers .will feel about the future of vocal art. :o: Most of the song3 the cowboys of the long ago sang have been forgot ten. iow ana men someooay dodsi up with a modern version of one of those nasal masterpieces, but rarely. And most cf the cowboy songs folks are humming have been changed so in words and music that the cow hands of forty and fifty years ago would not recognize them. Long Will He Keep It WELFARE ISLAND SAID BARES PRISON RACKET When Sinclair Lewis, in "Ann Vlckers," described the revolting con ditions in a metropolitan Jail, some of his readers thought he was draw ing the long bow. But Mr. Lewis did not give his prison into the keeping or racketeers, nor invent a police dog owned by a prisoner supposedly to keep turnkeys at a respectful dis tance, nor introduce a prisoner who kept pigeons and sat in a garden con structed by hi3 fellow-inmates. All these discoveries, which would have been too incredible for use in fiction, were made in New York's municipal prison which bears the amusing name of Welfare Island. From beginning to end the story smacks of the corruption and degrad ation which we are accustomed to as sociate with prisons in the seven teenth century. Lists of prisoners to be paroled were submitted to the dom inant racketeer for his approval. He lived in quarters behind which a gar den had been constructed by other prisoners, who also acted as nis valet? and lackeys. The dope racket was carried on among the prisoners with as much freedom as in the out side world, and if a prisoner wanted anything to eat mere than a greasy stem he had to pay the favored thugs for the right to get it. They had ap propriated all the decent food in ad vance. If a prisoner was not familiar with racketeering before he was sent to Welfare Island, he certainly learn ed its technique there at the ex pense of the city. To submit to the racket was the one way to get decent food, keep cut of solitary, secure a parole. Commissioner MacCormick did a splendid job in his raid upon the prison before the authorities and their underworld allies could prepare themselves for the shock. At the same time, he made a dramatic contribu tion to popular education. The edu cational valu? of the raid ought also to be increased by the knowledge that most cf what Commissioner Mac Cormick found was described as long ago as last June by Harry M. Shul nian, former research director of the New York state crime commission, in a report to a former city commis sioner of correction. Nothing hap pened. Judge Seabury hinted at the need of an investigation of municipal jails, but with political protection on all sides, the control of Welfare Island by the ally of Dutch Schultz and Ciro Terranova was unchalleng ed. The clean sweep of New York's municipal offices by the Fusion movement has opened the way for an airing without which every standard of rivif. (wnPV wfl. th rf.it r-nrd The stench is terrible, but other cities should refrain from the reproaches of the Pharisee until they have had similar investigations of their own. Baltimore Sun. :o: Journal Want-Ads get results' Up?. PIATT3MOUTH SEMI - WEEKLY TOTTEHA1 LAWFUL PRACTICE, BUT IS IT RIGHT? Criticism of the mailing of pamph lets advocating the unicameral state legislative system, under the frank of Senator Norris, ha3 brought from G. W. Kline, head of the committee in charge of the campaign in favor of the one-house legislature, the reply that the pamphlets were mailed by the committee in Lincoln and that the practice was strictly lawful. This hardly meets the objection. There is no question about the legal ity of the mailing. A law of con gress made for the benefit of con gressmen permits such campaign documents to be mailed without post age, but that does not satisfy those that believe the practice wrong. Con gress also operates a restaurant in the capitol which shows a deficit of 50 thousand dollars a year, which means that the congressmen are pay ing 50 thousand dollars less than their meals cost, and charging the difference to the taxpayers. It is law ful, but is it right? The postofi'ice department last year ran a deficit of 155 million dollars which the taxpayers had to pay. A part of this was due to the tons of franked mail carried for congressmen and the departments. The envelopes containing this franked mail carried the word "Free." What they should have said was: "Carried at the Expense of the Taxpayer." Perhaps if the truth were thrust in the face of their con stituents every time they opened a franked envelope, congressmen would not be quite so free with their use and abuse of the franking privilege. Assuming that there is a good rea son for carrying much of the frank ed matter at public expense, there is still the question whether it is right to include documents for use in a purely local or state campaign In the ongressional Record and then send them through the mails at the expense of the taxpayers of the whole nation. This i the issue in this in stance of Senator Norris' use of the word frank. Norfolk News. :o: HEAVY EXACTIONS OF THE ESTATE TAX Walter ITarnischfeger, sen and executor of the late Henry Ilarnisch- feger, Milwaukee industrialist, com plains that the exactions of inheri tar.ee taxe3 amount almost to confis cation. Payments have drained the heiis of cask;.and . if time for settle ment were not allowed threatened further hardship. The courts have just interfered to grant the estate additional time for final settlement. In th3 perio:! between the ap praisal and the date for payment the general market has slumped so it would take several times more col lateral now to raise needed cash than at the time of death. It is a more striking proof that the power to tax is the power to destroy because it is not an extreme case. Al though the sum is large it is not a great fortune as some estates are reckoned and the proximity of rela tionship saves the heirs from the highest tax penalties. Harishchfeger built industrial ma chinery. From his arrival as a Ger man immigrant boy he gave all Ms life to the growth of the business he and one of his associates founded His work contributed much to the development of the nation. The sour est fault imcier can take no excep tion to the manner in which hi property was accumulated. He had a cene cf social responsibility and before death provided a fund of around 450 thousand dollars for the protection of his employes. The estate was appraised at $1,- 900,000, but the courts decided that gifts of about two million dollars to his children during life wera In an- ticipation cf death and subject to tax. Ecsinniujr at 2 per cent, the state takes as high as 40 per cent of that part of some estates valued at more than 500 thousand dollars. The Harnischfeger heirs were re quired to produce at once in cash something more than 400 thousand dollars. The Wisconsin law was en acted in 1903 at the beginning of the elder La Follette's second term of governor during the early days of radical domination in Wisconsin. The federal inheritance tax is less de structive only that it permit3 80 per cent of the state tax paid to be con sidered as an offset. "The confiscatory inheritance tax is a death warrant to success, jvit. Harnischfeger said. "Industries a which cannot escape it must die be cause purchasers cannot be found who will pay an adequate or honest price at a forced sale. The govern ment takes it3 toll in cash and with out delay regardless of price or mar ket. It means that in time specula tors and rarVpteers will come into tho final possession of industry." :o: : Journal Want-Ads act results! VAST SHRINKAGE IN AMERICAN INCOME Treasury figures published last week show in some detail the vast shrinkage of American income In 1832 a year which will ia all prob ability be found to have been the worst of the depression. That the number of persons reporting a "million-dollar income" declined to 20, compared with 75 in the preceding year and with 513 in 1929, is only one indication of what happened. Large losse3 occurred in all of the higher brackets of personal income taxes and were still more impres sive in the case of corporations. The treasury's figures of corpor ation income are classified under eight major groups. Public utilities made, on the whole, the best show ing in 1932. But not in any one of the eight classifications did the ag gregate net income of those corpor ations operating at a profit equal the aggregate deficit cf those operating at a loss. In this sense, an excess of income ever deficit was shown only ii two subdivisions within the man ufacturing group including indus tries manufacturing tobacco products and chemicals and their allied prod ucts. Very heavy losses occurred in the case of industries producing tex tiles, metals and forest products. For the manufacturing group as a whole, 14 thousand of the most successful companies showed an aggregate in come of 657 million dollais; but 68 thousand less fortunate concerns re ported an aggregate deficit of ?2 103,000,000. Fcr all corporations, manufacturing and non-manufactur ing, the aggregate ir.corna of those able to operate in the black was $1,- S52,000,000; the aggregate deficit of those in the red was $6, 420, 000, 000 or more than three time:; as large. These figures explain the reduced dividends and the increa.scd unem ployment which characterized 1932, as well as the smaller yield to the government of taxes paid on that year's earnings. There is reason to believe that when comparable data are available for 123 3 they will show an improvement; for in many indus tries production showed a gain last year. But the fact remains that a great number cf co-porations have experienced reverses f:ora which they can never rcovr only gradually and only if they find encouragement in the policies pursued by the govern ment. Their recovery wculd bcne3i owners, creditors and employes. Though ths payment c'f larger taxes it would " greatly aid the treasury, which is itself operating in 1934 with a larger deficit than was shown by all of the private corporations which reported a loss in 1D32. New .urk Times. :o: CONSTRUCTION AND RECOVERY The importance of the construction industry, as an employer of ordinary and skilled labor and as a stimulator of all manner of other industries, is vividly illustrated in statistics pub lished in a recent editorial in the American Builder. In the years between 1923 and 1926, inclusive, home construction (which amounts to a little more than fifty per cent of the construction in dustry as a whole in normal times) was a four billion dollar business. It gavee employment to several million men actually employed in building, and to as many more ia favoriss, mines and forests supplying neces sary materials. Employment was nicely balanced between large cities, small and medium sizsd towns and rural areas. In 1929 one-tenth of all gainfully employed workers were engaged in construction. And in 1930, when cen sus figures were taken, there were 167,50.0 builders a::d building con tractors, 929,400 carpenters, and 34,- 070 lumber and building material dealers. There were likewise 22,000 architects, 33,700 designers, 170,900 brick and stone masons, 430,000 painters and glazier.?, and 240,000 real estate agents. The nation s normal requirement to quote the American Builder again, is 800,000 new homes each year. At the moment, a tremendous housing deficit exists, due to the almost en tire lack of building, particularly in the low and middle cost field, during the past four years, and the abnor mally high rates of depreciation and obsolescence caused by insufficient repair and maintenance. Aggressive efforts are now being made to speed home building by making financing cheaper and easier. Success of such movement Is essential to recovery. :o;- A nationally known pacifist writer for died in California the other day at 1 the age of 91 a 'much more ad vanced age than pacifist3 usually at me tain, vhat with the strenuous life 6 they lead. :o: . A man is as old as he feels before breakfast, and a woman is as old as f5- she looks before breakfast. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. To all persons Interested In the es r rn-tha a T.wia. deceased: mi- Ynt a Detition nas been filed praying for administration of said estate and appointment ui y . II. Coffolt as Administrator; that paid t:0'fni hearing be- r, f Via 2nd day or lore cam luuh March, 1934, at 10 o'clock a. m. Dated January 30, 1934. A. H. DUXBURY. f5.3w County Judge. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the County Court of Cass Coun ty, Nebraska. To all persons interested in the es r TMoiiio n Smith, deceased: Take notice that a petition has been filed praying for administration r cn!ri sfnt and anDOintment of J. t-t Tcpnnlen as Administrator; that said petition has been set for hearing before said Court on the 2nd day of March. 193 4, at ten o'clock a. m. Dated February 5, 1934. A. H. DUXBURY. f5-3w County Judge. NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the County Court of Cass Coun ty Nebraska. To the creditors of ths estate of Oline C. Johnson, deceased: Take notice that the time limited fnr tho fiHrsir nnfl nresentation of claims against said estate is May 16. 1934; that a hearing will be had at the County Court room In Plans jrsouth on May 18, 1934, at ten o'clock a. m., for the purpose of ex amining, hearing, allowing and ad justing all claims or objections duly filed.. Dated January 19, 1934. A. H. DUXBURY, j2213w County Judge. NOTICE OF PROBATE In the County Court of Cass Coun ty, Nebraska. To all persons interested in the estate of Christoph Beil, deceased; Take notice that a petition has been filed for probate of an instru ment purporting to be the last will and testament of said deceased, and for the appointment of Fred W. Beil as executor thereof; that said petition has been set for hearing before said Court on the 16th day of February, 1934, at ten a. m. Dated January 20th. 1934. A. H. DUXBURY, J: ;w County Judge. NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT In the County Court of Cass Coun ty, Nebraska. To all persons interested in the estate of William D. Coleman, de ceased: Take notice that the administrator of said estate has filed his final report and a petition for examination and allowance of his administration ac counts, determination of heirship, as signment of residue of said estate and for his discharge; that said petition and report will be heard before said Court on February 16th, 1934, at ten a. m. Dated January 22nd, 1934. A. H. DUXBURY, J22-3w County Judge. NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. To all persons interested in the es tate of Clarence W. Fleshman, de ceased : Take notice that the Administrator of said estate has filed his final re port and a petition for examination and allowance of his administration accounts, determination of heirship. assignment or residue of said estate and for his discharge; that said neti- tion and report will be heard before CO 1 M Paii v4- - 1 . , O O . r ii . . I i-cuiu-iy ji, at ten o clock a. rn Dated January 23, 1934. A. H. DUXBURY. 32 9-3 w County Judce NOTICE OF HEARING Estate of Chester 11. Smith ii.-Mc eci. In the County Court of Cass rnnn. iy, ieorasica. ine btate cf Nebraska: To all nor sons interested in said estate rrprii- i'rs ana neirs take notice, that Tin bie l-.. leesaraen has fiioH . r "w nuii aueginir mat Chester Ti iucu niiestaie m Cass rnnntv r cuuskh. on or about the 5th day of IWay, 1931, being a resident and in- i i . "- nauuant ot Cass county, Nebraska, and died seized of the following de- ecuuuu real estate, to-wit: The west one-half (WH) of Lot ten (10) in Block twenty eight (28) in the City of Platts mouth, Cass county, Nebraska law the following named persons, to- and Tinsie L. Teanien uutu . aueenan, ters. his daugh- the above described real estate is - f aii heir at Iaw of said de ceased and praying for a determina tion of the tiiro rf "L ln? Chester H. Smith and of hVUVs - vi iwubiun ami th.. e ris-ht "l "--em oi tne real nronertv ha ass. !?.&w - & It. fa nrrTaiAi il.x . ?' hearing on tlnX 934 before the County Cour SV uvicu i iinr tma . . county in th rv,,.. V 1 V'ass mrrh :"-ruu."8e at Platts cuth Nebraska, at The hSr of lJ noes a. rn. ' - v w uated at Piatt this 5th dav ; eoraska, 19S4. 1 uar't A. D. Ar IL DUXBURY, ' County Judge. Dally Journal, i5o p MONDAY, FEBRUARY 5. 1934. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. To all persons Interested in the estate of George Everett, deceased: Take notice that a petition has been filed praying for administration of said estate and appointment of John Everett as Administrator; that 8aid petition has been set for hear ing before said Court on the 16th day of February, 1934, at ten oclock a. m. Dated January 15, 1934. A. H. DUXBURY, J22-3w County Judge. NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. To the creditors of the estate of Jacob F. Brendel, deceased: Take notice that the time limited for the filing and presentation of claims against said estate is May 23, 1934; that a hearing will be had at the County Court room In Platts mouth on May 25, 1934, at ten o'clock a. m., for the purpose of examining, hearing, allowing and adjusting all claims or objections duly filed. Dated January 26, 1934. A. H. DUXBURY, j29-3w County Judge. NOTICE OF SHER IFF'S SALE OF LAND By virtue of an order of sale issued by the Clerk of the District Court of Cass County, Nebraska, on a decree of foreclosure, wherein Joseph Philipps, Barbara Philipps and Tena Vavra, are plaintiffs, and now Glen II. Foe is assignee of plaintiffs, and Christian O. Schlytern, administrator c. t. a., d. b. n., of the Estate of John E. Casey, Deceased, et al, are defendants, I will sell at public auc tion to the highest bidder for cash at the south front door of the court house in Plattsmouth, Cass County, Nebraska, on the 6th day of March, 1934, at two o'clock p. m., the follow ing described property: The northeast quarter (NEU ) of Section nine (9), Township ten (10), North Range nine (9), East of the 6th P. M., Cass County, Nebraska, to satisfy the judgment and costs in said ac tion. Dated this 31st day of January, 1934. H. SYLVESTER, Sheriff of Cass County, Nebraska. THOMAS E. DUNBAR, Attorney fl-5w NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, and by virtue of a certain chattel mort gage dated on the 22nd day cf May, 1931, and duly filed for record in tho office of the County Clerk of Sc-ward County, State of Nebraska, on the th day of May, 1931, also filed in the office of the County Clerk of Cass County, State of Nebraska, under date of May 13. 1931, said chattel mortgage executed by Marvin Larsen to the INTERNATIONAL HAR VESTER COMPANY OF AMERICA, a Wisconsin Corporation, to secure the payment of the sum of Seven Hundred Sixty-Seven Dollars and Four Cents, ($767.04), and there is now due the sum of $576.38, (Five Hundred Seventy-Six Dollars and Hhirty-Eight Cents), and default hav ing been made in the payment of said sum, we will, there lore, offer for aslo the property therein described: One Farmall Tractor number T-124569; One McCormick Deering Middle Buster, and one McCormick-Deenng Tractor Cul tivator at public auction for cash to the highest bidder, at the farm nf FVPfi Thimgan, known as the Millpr f.um ty2 miles north of Murdock. Ne braska, (NEi; of Section 3, Town ship 11, and Range 10, Cass County, Nebraska) on the 24th day of Febru ary, 1934, at 1:00 o'clock p. m. on .i ih h Dated this 29th day of January, 1934. INTERNATIONAL HAR VESTER COMPANY OF AMERICA. HOOVER, Collector. By A. LEGAL NOTICE To Preston MidUff t,-; rM Midrfiff. Sarah Midkiff, Matilda Eve line Midkiff. Tnci,!,, t . t t . famder, Samuel Midkiff. Rachel M. flowery, Martha w-Tot. m,.,. Rowe. L. M. T?n-.vo C1,.l ,r t,:. ,-t Joseph Vebster. nnH oil t,c. ing or claiming elegit (8) in the southeast quarter of tllG Southeast nnarta e!.. ...., ty-nine (29): Lot fnnr t ih southeast quarter of th north wrst. quarter, and the southwest quarter of ection twenty-eight (28); Lot seven t) in the northoast nnnr'n. n.n outheast quarter, and Lots nine (3) ?! V11 (10) in the southeast quar ter or the southeast quarter of Sec tion twenty-nine (29); and Lot four J in the northwest minricp of tho northwest miartor o o i, v .et.(3) a" in Township ten (10) tv, r' J1-"1116 fourteen (14), East of tne 6th Prinri cass county, Nebraska, real names unknown: : Take L i"Ul JclUJUS l. Jll'UU.' nas comraenrprt in h. tmi Pn.ut V'HSS COUnty. NehrpcVa on nrtinil against ycu as defendants' the object anu praver of whit, i uni aecrce of said court barring and excluding- earh an oil e 1, , v. aina: earh nnri nil n h n- . VJl JUU 11U1U '-' or claiming any right, title, lien, interest, or estate in or to the above described real estate, or any part inerecf. and nuiotin, v tuu tn all said real tnto in iiintiff 'n!n,t the 8aId WendantsT ' lou are ren tta earn petition on or before the 26th. day of February, 1934. JAMES C RODDY, c rr Plaintiff By Tyler & Petereon. of Nebraska City, Nebr., His Attorneys. jll-lS-25, fl-S