PAGE TWO --. - , - - m , . Iiie PS PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT Entered at Postoffice, Plattsmouth, R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 A Subscribers living in Go, PnKtal fiftrt mile. S3. 00 Der year. Kate V.. - . .. 53.50 per year. All subscriptions Some of these off-the-face hats the girls are wearing look as it they are almost off-the-head. . :o:- Michigan has more in common with Kansas than appears at first tlance. It seems that each seyids citi zens to Lansing for certain terms. :o: The depression has taught U3 all a lot about saving money, which would have been useful if we had learned the lessons before the income was shut off. :o:- It must have been a great satisfac tion to many who listened in on Bee thoven's Mhsa Solemnis last Sunday to find out at last where the theme for "We Want Cantor" came from. :o: About the only thing we gathered from the recent libel suit of the Countess Youssoupoff against Metro-Crldwyn-Mayer was that the murder of Rasputin gave general satisfac tion. :o: We hear that complaints are be ing received from constituents in Arkansas against the distribution of government pork during Lent. It seems the government hasn't any fish distributing department. :o: Politicians are now beginning to Mtend lodge meetings, go to church, ibake the hands of their fellow citi zens and generally serve advance no tice that they have their eyes on a public job in 1934. :o: Political prosecutions for literal violatons don't always do much to ward correcting the evils, and the prosecutor who merely points to his total of distinguished convictions is like a small boy who proves that he has washed his face by exhibiting the towel. :o: "And I don't care wno you tell this to," wrote the President to Speaker Rainey, on a government matter re cently. Of course, some Presidents would have said, "I don't care to whom you tell this," but nobody would have thought he meant it, putting it that way. :o: Every country editor need3 a sec retary employed on full NRA time to cpen mail from the thousand and one government bureaus sending out pub licity and propaganda fr free publi cation. How does the said govern ment expect a country newspaper to pa yits bills with this free publicity? They appropriate fcr everything else, why not for publicity? :o: In Vienna, where the Christian spirit and the consciousness of virtue run high after a good many Austrian Socialists have been killed for the "good of the government," one of the official newspapers demands the suppression of a Mae West film. Well, we suppose Mae West dialogue done ii'tr German would be pretty terrible, Ma being a gal who puts her verbs pretty early in the sentence. :o: An exchange says it's pretty dumb legislation that allows the same in come tax exemption for a kid at the age of 2 as when he reaches the ex pensive age of 13 and upwards. May be eo, but we rather doubt it. When they're little, htye cost a plenty, too. Then, too, when the average boy gets to l:o 11 or so, he can (if he will) help cut a little on the family bud get by doing odd chores, carrying papers, or what not. With girls, of course, it's different. :o: rrlvatc employers as a rule are not utilizing the services of the fed eral re-employment offices. The CWA forces and all men for work on pub lic works such as river, paving, etc., where all or part of the money comes through government channels, are drawn through the re-employment service. Card indexes are maintained of all registered men, listing their special qualifications and containing a history of their employment, reason for quitting, etc., and any employer In search of men for any class of work can be well served through the re-employment office if they would but make use of this free service. The list cf available men cn any average county roster includes tradesmen of all classifications as well as common laborers. atfsmoufh Journal PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA Neb., as second-class mail matter YEAR IN FIRST POSTAL ZONE Zone. $2.50 per year, ceyonu n.tinlhr in nHvanCA to uanaaa ana are vyuo BETTER LATE THAN NEVER Came the dawn to the board of temperance of the Methodist Epis copal church. In a report made by the body to a Methodist conference in Philadelphia recently one sees the rosy fingered Aurora penetrating the darkness. Discussing prohibition and its failure, the report stated: "Large numbers of those who voted to place prohibition on the statute books remained personally wet and simply mocked in private at the cause they pretended to uphold in public. Everybody else has known it for years, but it took the Rev. Clarence True Wilson and his temperance board 14 years to learn that it was badly buncoed by dissemblers and hypocrites. Lessons learned slowly are some times learned well. It is to be hoped that this is one of those times. Bal timore Evening Sun. :o: EVIDENCE THAT THIS IS AN ELECTION YEAR The disregard shown by the house for the president's attitude on the! innationary Patman bonus measure is but one evidence that is a year ct elections. The whole debate is, as j Paul Mallon puts it, "just political byplay, not even seriously intention ed." President Roosevelt publicly an nounced weeks ago that he would veto any such proposal. Indeed, a good many of the politically-minded adherents to the measure would not even be voting for it, probably, were they not assured of the veto. It is a twdry and deceptive play for the votes of veterans and theid families, and in many instances nothing more. Nor is the senate immune to such considerations. A few days ago it stuck on an extra 350 million dollars, for veterans' payments and increases in government employes pay, on the independent offices appropriation bill. The house caucus of democrats refused to object. The principal re mains of the famous economy act would thereby be destroyed. It is as- sumed, of course, that the president j will veto that. In the meantime the St. Lawrence waterway treaty, which the senate is supposed to vote upon by Wednes day at the latest, is conceded the necessary two-thirds majority by al most no on.e The tariff-dealing priv ileges for which the president is ask ing will probably be granted to him only with much remonstrance, and with limitations imposed by the sen ate that will keep congress' finger in the pie. Now Mr Roosevelt has, been too shrewd politically up to now fcr any one safely to assume that he was blind to the congressional opposition that is beginning to appear But the sort of opposition that is appearing is not that which can be regarded by the mass of citizens with any great satisfaction. It is a question wheth er unreasoned and undebated con sent to a stupendous new program of governmental action is more to be deplored than subservience to po litical interest1? in determining the nation's course during a still criti cal period. At any rate, the administration is meeting seme reverses that add no prestige to anyone If any power sought by the president has been warranted, the freedom to "dicker" as to tarifTs is one of them. If the principle has been calculated to bol ster business confidence and insure stability, the steadfastness against a two and one - half billion-dollar bonu3 inflation was one and the economy moves were another It is only incidental that the president's own program of spending ha3 caused some groups almost as much misgiv ing as the tangent an unruly con gress is off on now. It would be a splendid thing if congress would debate intelligently and vote conscientiously on eome of the huge pile of legislation that lias been proposed to it. The status of the country Is not yet so invulner able as to make horseplay entirely in nocuous. Des Moines Register. :o: A theatrical code discussed brings out that Broadway is again using live showgirls, instead of painting a dozen or so on a back drop. SOLDIER BONUS VOTE POLITICAL SELL OUT The house vote on t:ie soldiers' bonus was as "raw" a display of congressional politics as Washington has seen in years. It was not even good party politics, for which some times there may be excuse. This vote was of the personal variety, with the interests of self on the part of con gressmen placed ahead of the inter ests of both party and country. The law of the jungle could be no cruder. Congressmen are going home for re-election that is the story. They voted the way they thought they could get the most support. Their predecessors of the SO's and 90's, who were ever ready to bid for G. A. 11. support, were idealists in comparison of these gentlemen of 1934. Those older congressmen who traded veteran votes for another term in congress did mean to carry out their bargain. They expected to de liver the goods. These men of the twentieth century model know it is a gold brick they are voting, but they keep a straight face and do it. A young Kentuckian, Representative Brown, serving his first term, had the courage to tell them what was what. "You are buying veterans' votes. You are holding out this piece of bait to gtt veterans' votes this summer. There is not a man in the house who believes this bill will ever become a law, and yet ycu sit hrre and vote tor it for your own political welfare." The plain warning of the presi dent that he would veto this legisla tion is disregarded. In fact, what he meant as an honest effort to keep the house from doing an unwise thing is turned to political account. The strategy was poor; it would have been better if Mr. Roosevelt had net a:i- nnnnn:';l his intentions. Instead ol halting the drive, Le left the mem hers free to play their game without running the risk of also wrecking the treasury. What do the veterans get out "of it? Nothing nothing at all. There are only two possibilities, assuming that the senate will be as reckless as the house. One is the presidential veto, which has already been fore cast. The other is the possibility that the president will fall into line, or that the bill could be repassed over his objections. In that case, the vet erans would be paid, not with real money but with printing press scrip. They would be cheated and .-the coun try would suffer. What a prospect! Milwaukee Journal. :o: nr "code or the sea" WERE APPLIED ASHORE While pushing her way through the Mediterranean the other day the American Export line's steamship Exarch bumped into the island ol Cyprus. The ship was not seriously damaged and no lives were lost, but the captain shot himself. The tradi tion of the sea, say some by way of explanation. But there is no such tradition. When a captain's ship goes down through his own negli gence there is an unwritten code which dictates that he should go with it. Also when a car tain loses a ship, even though no fault of his own, the owners often will not give him another billet. But if the skip per is held blameless in a trivial ac cident iie will be continued in com mand. But even in its generally accept ed form the code in regard to a cap tain and his ship is much harder than that applying to other men in equally responsible positions. A doc tor whose patient dies through carc- treatment does net jump out of j the: hospital window. A lawyer who bungles a murder defense and whose client is condemn d to death is not by tradition required to hang him self. Steamship executives ashore do not observe any code so rigid as that applying to their captains. They can mismanage their companies, causing hundreds of employes to lose their livelihood and hundreds of stockhold ers to lose their savings. Yet public opinion doss not dc;-;and that they take cyanide of potassium. Maybe !.t would be a good idea if our business ethics were stiffened by the development of a cede which de creed that whenever a railroad went into a receivership, a manufacturing company was declared bankrupt or a bank closed its dcors the president should repair to his speakeasy . and order a goblet of hemlock. Cur citt03 are full of discredited business offi cials who, having lined their pock ets out of other people's losses, not only fail to end their lives but stand arcund licking their chops waiting fcr a new bunch cf suckers to come their way. They never even miS3 a lunch. Nation. :o: Dying penniless is net so bad it's being that way right now that hurts. :o; . Journal Want-Acs eel results! PLATTSMOUTH SEMI - - WEEKLY JOURNAL THE "DICTATORSHIP' Much pother has been made about the Roosevelt "dictatorship." It is un-American. It i3 dangerous. Con gress should be its own master. So should business. So should everybody and everything else. ' Powerful arguments can be piled up for that point of view. They have been piled up. Here and there they are beginning to influence the course of events. Are wc happier b&cause of that? Do wc feel safer, more assured of the future? If the Roosevelt leadership in congress and out were to be defin itely rejected tomorrow would our cup of happiness thereupon become overflowing? It is a question, we venture to suggest, worth thinking about. In the last few days congress has 4ieen asserting its independence in a manner that ought to rejoice the hearts of all the impassioned plead ers for normalcy and old-fashioned Americanism. Congress is whooping it up for pay ing out $2,400,000,000 of printing press money to take up the bonus certificates due ten years hence. Con gdess is insisting upon smashing the plans for a balanced budget by add ing hundreds of millions to the inde pendent offices supply bill. The sen ate, influenced by sectional and sel fish irierests, has killed the St. Law r ::te waterway project that would have opened seaports in the middle west. On these issues congress has re jected the Roosevelt leadership. The country is saved from the dictator. But it is "saved" from the ways cf wisdom to the way of profligacy and folly. It is save from the ways of safety to a path that, if pursued, promises certain disaster. Tor if the government is to con tinue spending more money than it can collect the federal treasury goes bankrupt and the nation's credit is dangerously impaired. The issue of rag-baby paper money then becomes the on.e remaining expedient. With that sanity and safety, hand-in-hand, fly cut the window. The bedlam that wa3 Germany's under like circum stances may become ours. On the St. Lawrence waterway is sue the national welfare, viewed as a whole, as ?ai rificed to local and class considerations. That, unhap pily, is the way congress works. That is why high tariff bills become monstrosities.15 Back-scratching and log-rolling colittol,' with results that are depressing. For a year the valiant leadership of Mr. Roosevelt has prevailed. Al ways the interest of the whole people, of the whole country, has been served. The people have known it. For that reason hone and courage and con fidence grew. Faith in democracy, faith in our republic, revived. And our condition, in consequence, im proved steadily. Not alone our ma terial and economic condition, but our condition with respect to moral and spiritual "tallies. Will this be the story a year Hence, two years hence, if congress breaks loose from the "dictatorship" and goes its own sweet wild way? He would be a rash prophet indeed that ventured to say so. And with rofpejet to the nation it self, outside congress. Business, for the most part, has been going along with the president. Agriculture has. Labor has. The whele people have. Improved conditions, restored stabil ity, confidence in the future, have flowed from that followership. Suppose that, too, were to come to an end tomorrow. Would we there- upon be encouraged to plan more confidently for the future? If so, on the ba?is of whose leadership? Or would it be ebtnr to have no leader ship at all, and proceed to cure our selves of a desperate illness according to the rule of every man for him self and the d:vil take the hinder most? It was that rule that made us sick. It is hard to think that a return to it, now when there is such ctiil whon tlierft 2,10 SO euniie.J.) : v 1 1 1 1 " many intricate problems to be solved requiring co-operation, would make us well again. i: Mr. Hearst demands that the "dic tator" be overthrown and that busi ness be empowered to "take care of itself and of the nation too." In 1933 production was 24 per cent below the 1923-25 average. But employment was 33.8 per cent below. Man-hours were 48 per cent below. And pay rolks were 52.5 per cent be low. . What would rugged individualism unassisted, what would unrestricted and uncontrolled competition, do with that problem? If production relative to the power to buy the product continues to go up, what will become of the producer, and how will the people live? What will become cf business? That problem cannot be solved NOTICE OF HEARING on Petition for Determination of Heirship. Estate of Dan Moore, deceased. In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. The State of Nebraska: To all per sons interested in said estate, credi tors and heirs take notice, that Theo dore B. Farmer has filed his petition alleging that Dan Moore died Intes tate in Cass county on or about September, 1916, being a resident and inhabitant of Cass county and died seized of the following described real estate, to-wit: Lots seven (7), eight (8) and nine (9) in Block sixty (60) in the City of Plattsmouth, Cass county, Nebraska, according to the surveyed and recorded plat thereof leaving as his sole and only heirs at law the following named persons, tc-wit: Charlotte Moore, his widow; Janey Hanson, his daughter, and Elizabeth Eiseheid, his daugh ter. That the interest of the petitioner in the above described real estate is in fee simple title to all cf said real es tate by purchase and warranty deed, and praying for a determination of the time of the death of said Dan Mccre and cf his heirs, the degree of kinship and the right of descent cf the real property belonging to the said deceased, in the State of Ne braska. It is ordered that the same stand for hearing on the 13th day of April, 1934, before the County Court of Cass county in the court house at Plattsmouth, Nebraska, at the hour cf ten o'clock a. m. Dated at PJattsmcnlh, Nebraska, this 19th day of March. A. D. 19 34. A. II. DUXBURY, ml9-3w County Judge. with everyone a ri'ggcd individual ist. It calls for something beside an archy. It calls for planning. It calls for common counsel, common action; yes, and for common sacrifice. And with all this it alls most of all for leadership. It cells for leadership that commands confidence. Such a leadership Las been Presi dent Roosevelt's. It is by far the greatest asset this country has had during the last year. Few, if any, agree with it wholly and in every re spect. It is frankly experimental, with its policies cubject to revision as results reveal the necessity. But to conspire now to tear it down, with nothins tangible to replace it. Is strongly suggestive of the man who sets out to tear away the foundations of his own home, his own business, his own job. World-Herald. :o: PRESIDENT SURELY HAS EARNED A REST Mr. Roosevelt is reported to be planning a short fishk.g trip to Flor ida during the latter part of this month if there is "a satisfactory situation in congress." If all that stands between the president and a short rest in the scuta is a satisfac tory situation in congress, such a situation ought to be ordered and ac complished by the leaders cf both parties. People may be democrats or re publicans, Roosevelt men or anti Roosevelt men, or anything else, without having the least difficulty in agreeing on this one thr.gi, that Mr. Roosevelt is giving everything that 13 in him to the country. Nobody any where i3 working any harder; nobody anywhere is working with any more generous purpose. He has earned a break in the grind, if anybody ever earned one. And he would come back to his job in better form to go on with it if he seized r. period to relax mentally as well as physically and to look at things from a little distance. Besides, even a gay and gallant pres ident can get fed up on this winter's weather. Mr. Roosevelt ought to make up his mind to go, and the leaders in congress ought to make up their minus so to arrange tnnigs mat ne can go without worry about legis lation. Baltimore Sun. :o: ARMY AIR MORTALITY NEEDS EXPLANATION To the total of fatalities in army aviation, four more were added j es- terday, indicating that the number for this year will not fall below thp average. Durine tnc last 10 years army flyers have been killed at the rate of nearly four a month. Depressing figures. Here is the list covering a 10-year period: 123, 59 killed; 1924, 34 killed; 1925, 38 kill ed; 1926, 42 killed; 1927, 43 killed; 1928, 27 killed; 1929, 61 killed; 1930 52 killed; 1931, 2G killed"; 1932, 50 killed. The total for the fiscal year which ended June 30, 1933, was 46 killed, while the number of deaths for the six month period ended De cember 31 last Is 3 approximately "average." Whsn army aviators crash to their death, we usually hear a great deal about where they crashed and how they crashed, but very little about why they crashed. Detailed technical reasons back of such disasters, are rarely made public. Though the pub lic certainly wonder3 at the peace time mortality rate. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. To all persons interested in tne estate of William Douglas McCrary, deceased: ilit . Take notice that a petition has been filed praying for administration of said estate and. appointment Ol Frank A. Cloidt, as Administrator; that said petition has been set for hearing before said Court on the 13th day of April, 1934, at tea o'clock a. m. Dated March 17, 1934. A. II. DUXBURY, ml9-3w County Judge. NOTICE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. Alexander Mitchell, Plaintiff, vs. Edna Xing and Oliver M. King, hus band and wife. Defendants. To the Defendant, Oliver M. King. You are hereby notified that the plaintiff, Alexander Mitchell, filed his petition against you in me Court of Cass county, Nebraska, on the 16th day of November, 1933, the object and prayer of which is to ob tain a decree and order of partition of the southeast quarter of the north east quarter of Section 17, Township 10, Range 11, East of the 6th P. M., Cai; county, Nebraska, confirming the shares of the parties to this ac tion therein, for partition of the same according to their respective rights therein, or if said property cannot be equitably divided, that the premises be sold and the proceeds thereof divided according to their msnoptivfi interests therein, to de termine the descent of the interest of Bert Drennen in said real estate, and for equitable relief. You are required to answer said petition on or before Monday, the 9th day of April, 1934, or said peti tion will be taken as true, and the prayer thereof be granted, and said prcperty partitioned, or sold 33 the court may in its orders direct. ALEXANDER MITCHELL. By Plaintiff. J. A. CAPWELL, Ills Attorney. f26-4w NOTICE OF HEARING In the matter of the Guardianship cf TL.elr.ia Nichols, Helen B. Nichols, Anna L. Nichols and Charle3 E. Nichols, Minors. To all persons interested in the abeve entitled matter: Ycu are hereby notified that Phil L. Hall, Guardian of the above named .minors, ha3 filed in the County Court of Cass county, Nebraska, his final report as guardian of said minors, to gether with a petition for the final approval and allowance of hi3 ac counts as guardian since his appoint ment as such guardian, and for his discharge as said guardian, and for an order of court accepting his writ ten resignation herein filed as such guardian ; You are further hereby notified that Helen B. Nichols. Anna L. Nich ols and Charles E. Nichols, minors. ever the age of 14 years, have filed herein a written request fcr the ap pcintment of Fanny Sayles as their guardian; Ycu are hereby further notified that a hearing will be had in said matter upon said reports and peti tion for final settlement and dis charge before the County Court on the 30th day of March, 1934, at the hour cf ten o'clock a. in. in the Coun ty Court room in the court house at Plattsmouth. Nebraska, at which time and place you may appear at said hearing and make objections, if any there be, why said reports and petition herein filed should not be allowed and approved and the prayer cf said petition should not be grant ed. Dated this 17th day of March, 1934. By the Court. A. II. DUXBURY, ml7-lw County Judge. NOTICE OF HEARING Estate of Dade Rakes, deceased. In the County Court of Cass coun ty. Nebraska. The State cf Nebraska: To all per sons interested in said estate, credi tors and heirs take notice, that W. L. Stine has filed his petition alleg ing that Dade Rakes uled intestate in Cass county, Nebraska, on or about April , 1913, being a resident and inhabitant of Cass county, Nebras ka, and died seized of the following described real estate, to-wit: All of Lot ten (10), SWU, NEU, Section six (6), Town ship ten (10), Range fourteen (14) and all of Lot twelve (12), W'4, Section six (6), Town ship ten (10), Range fourteen (14), all in Cass county, Ne braska, according to recorded plat containing 33.41 acres. more or less leaving as his sole and only heirs at law the following named persons, to wit: Callie Stine (former widow cf Dade Rakes); Lena G. Kccne (formerly Lena G. Rake3) daughter; Letha McClain (form erly Letha Rakes) daughter; Gallant K. Rake3, all over 21 years of age. That the interest of the petitioner In the above described real estate is that cf a subsequent purchaser of an undivided one-third of said land, and praying for a determination of the time cf the death of said Dade Rakes and of his heirs, the degree of kin ship and the right of descent cf the reat property belonging to the caid deceased, in the State of Nebraska. It Is ordered that the same stand ror bearing on the 13th day of April. 1934, before the County Court of Cass county, in tho court house at Plattsmcuth, Nebraska, at the hour cf ten o'clock a. m. Dated at Plattsmouth, Nebraska, this 16th day of March, A. D. 193 4 A, H. DUXBURY, ml9-3w County Jude. MONDAY, MARCH 19, 1934. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. To all persons interested in the estate cf James T. Begley. deceased: Take notice that a petition has been filed praying for administration of said estate and appointment of Erma M. Begley, as Administratrix; that said petition has been set for hearing before said Court cn the Cth day of April, 1934, at ten a. in. Dated March 10, 1934. A. H. DUXBURY. m12-3w County Judge. NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the County Court of Cass comi ty, Nebraska. To the creditors of the estate of Martha S. Lewis, deceased: Take notice that the time limited for the filing and presentation in claims against said estate is June 3o. 1934; that a hearing will be had at the County Court room in Platts mouth on July 6, 1934, at 10:00 o' clock a. m., for the purpose of ex amining, hearing, allowing and ad justing all claims or objections duly filed. Dated March 2, 1934. A. II. DUXBURY. m0-3w County Judge. NOTICE TOCREDITOK'.3 In the County Court of Cass Comi ty, Nebraska. To the creditors of the estate of Ferdinand Prohaska, deceased: Tal;e notice that the time limited for i lie presentation and filing of claims against said estate is July Ctb, 19:: i; that a hearing will be had at th County Court Room In Plaitsmoutli on July 13th, 1934, at ten a. m. for the purpose cf examining, hearing, allowing and adjusting all claims or objections duly filed. Dated March 10th. 1934. A. II. DL'XBl'RY. ml2- County Jufj-i NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT In the County Court of Ca.-:.; coun ty, Nebraska. To all persons interested in th estate cf Christina Rummel, deceas ed: Take notice that the Exe titor "f said estate has filed his final rep vi and a petition for examination and allowance of his administration ac counts, determination of heirship, as signment of residue of said estate and fcr his discharge; that said petition and report will be heard before said Ccurt on April Cth, 1934, at 10:0 o'clock a. m. Dated March 10, 1934. A. II. DUXBURY, ml2-3w County Judge. NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the County Court cf Cass coun ty, Nebraska. To the creditors cf the estate of Nellie B. Smith, deceased: Take notice that the time limited for the filing and presentation of claims against raid estate is Juno "', 1934; that a hearing will be had at the County Court room in l'lat;--mouth on July 6. 193 1, at 10:00 o' clock a. m. for the purpose of ex amining, hearing, allowing and ad justing all claims or objections duly filed. Dated March 2. 19 31. A. H. DUXBURY. mo-3w Ccunty Judge. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass. ss. By virtue cf an Order of Sale is sued by C. E. Ledgway, Clerk of the District Court within and for Cois county, Nebraska, and to me direct ed, I will on the 31st day of March, A. D. 1934, at 10:00 o'clock a. m. of paid day at the south front door of the court house, in Plattsmouth, in said county, sell at public auction to the highest bidder tor cash the fol lowing real estate, to-wit: The north half (KVs) of the southwest quarter (SW'i) of Section twenty - eight (2S, Township ten (10). Range ten (10), East of the Cth P. M.. in Cass ccunty, Nebraska, subject to a prior mortgage in favor of the Conservative Mortgage Com pany The Fame beincr levied nnon mil taken as the property of LeRov Rhoden and Neva Rhoden et al. de fendants, to satisfy a judgment of said Court recovered by John H. Fowler, Trustee, plaintiff acainst said defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, February , A. D. 19 34. II. SYLVESTER. Sheriff Paca Pnnntv f26-5w NVliraska NOTICE OF CHAT TEL MORTGAGE SALE Notice is hereby given that tho undersigned will sell at public auc tion to the highest bidder for cash at the Propst building on Lots 11', and 14 in Block 2. South Union, ijnion, Nebraska, on March 23, 1934, at 2 p. m., the property in a certain mortgage dated February 15, 1932. made by Mrs. Ella Swanson of Doug las County, Nebraska, and Henry Swanson also known as Henry K. Swanson of Cass County. Nebraska. a.i mortgagors, to A. W. Propst of Nebraska City, Nebraska, as mort gagee, and on which there is now due v-28.76, ,the following described prcperty, two-wit: ' One pop cooler; One snooker table oxio feet; One snooker table 4x8 ieet; four pool tahl o-. jo six eet of billard balls; seventy-two ques one wall case: two rfr one cash register; two benches; three .i""8, fcald mortgage heing filed in the office of the County Clerk or C?f,oC0U.nty' Nebraska. February . 2-a1 8:30 a- m- N- i6s chattel moitgage record, 9, page 280; said property being now in my posl for nn" , CalG Wl11 be heId for ons hour. Dated February 26, 193 J. A. W. PROPST. uil-4v Mortgagee.