o 3I03TJAY, 1HAECK, SO, 1925. PLATTSMOUTH SEMI-WEEKLY J0TTEI7AL PAGE THRO Cbc piattsmoutb lournal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT trd .t Poeioffic. FiAitumouth. R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PEICE $2.00 BEAUTY AND EONDS I will feed the flock of the slaugh ter, even you, O poor of the flock. And I took unto me two staves; the one I called Beauty, and the other I called Bonds; and I fed the flock. Zechariah 11:7. -:o: Bad colds are still prevalent. :o:- Beware of the brides of March. Lots of people break friends every year in new The early worm will soon be here and get fished with. :o: Short skirts don't give the March winds much to blow about. -:o:- Better get used to the March wind. It will last until June, maybe. :o:- Alaska wants to be a state. What, with a legislature and all that! -:o:- One certain thing about spring is everything seems so uncertain. :o: Raise a garden even if you have to borrow the tools from a neighbor. The grass is green and the trees soon will be, and then we will have spring. -:o: In Manila the horse races are held early in the morning, leaving all day for cussing. :o: A New Jersey man struck a match to see if he had any gas. Now he hasn't any car. :o: The future is coming. but we ; won't enjoy it very much unless we j are ready for it. -:o:- The crop of winter wheat is re ported very backward in many sec tions of Nebraska. :o: Reports from China indicate that i the Confucian there is becoming I worse confounded. :o: You simply cannot tell who is, general manager unless you want something for nothing. :o: In Seattle, an auto driver ran in- j cate some neighbor is cooking cab to a new building going up, so can'bage claim it was going the wrong way. j :o: :o: A New York man found his wife It has become almost a3 hazard-j safely married to a fireman in Los ous to belong to a Chinese tong as it Angeles, showing there was no need is to be a law abiding American citi- ' to worry. zen. j :o: :o: j Both the president and the vice When you get stung by a bee you president have incited the national soon get over it, but it's not that lawmakers to verse, and if the verse way when you get stung by matri- had been clever it might have been mony I forgiven. :o: i The Pacific ocean is being meas- ured again. If they find the middle it will be a fine place for a singing school. :o: One mean old bachelor says the nice thing about a baby is the way it puts its cute little sticky hands all over your $60 suit. :o: The manufacture and sale of "hootch" still goes on, and so do the salaries of prohibition agents. And there seems to be but little decrease in sales. :o: The British definition of drunken ness is "when one takes enough alco hol to be a nuisance or a danger to himself or others." It seems to take not more than two drinks to do that to a motorist. The University of Cnicago will publish a dictionary, which will take ten years to complete. By that time, all the earlier words will have be come obsolete, in Chicago, and they can start right in on the new edition. William Jennings Bryan is now a 'old Bell Wright, says the novelist re millionaire become such, the news ! writes Bome sentences as many as a relates, through investment in Flor ida real estate. The report will as tonish many and shock but a few. We experience neither of those re actions. Some have it seems. :o: The prime need of the servants of this great government of ours is training in the gentle art of expres sion. It is our well-considered opin ion that the person, or persons, who prepared the income tax blanks simply collected a lot of cross-word puzzles, already solved, picked up words at random and put them to gether recklessly. We couldn't make anything of the jumble, and we have long enjoyed the writings of Shake speare and John Milton, too. PLATTSMCUTH, NEBEASKA Neb, a iccoid-cltii ms.ll matter PES YEAR EN ADVANCE To prosper, be a conformist. :o: You can live a long time if you don't do much else. :o: Long skirts had to go. considered effeminate. They were -:o: A man can be pretty smart, but never pretty and smart. :o: A cynic is a man who mistakes cheerfulness for ignorance. :o: Mind your P.'s and Q.'s and you won't always be in a stew. :o:- Lincoln fears more smallpox, and Omaha fears more bandits. Lent will soon be over and then you may get back your borrowed umbrella. -:o:- Japanese ambassador deprecates the possibility of war with the Unit ed States. -:o:- Outside of jail the smallest place on earth is a room in a boarding house in spring. :o: Philanthropist a man who wears his wrist watch upside down for the benefit of others. -:o:- The man who tells a girl he would die for her wouldn't be so rash if he had ever tried it. :o:- A hick town is a place where everybody recognizes the cars parked along the dark, roads. r :o: Moreover, those stooping exercises in the daily golf put one in shape for spading the garden. :o: Women are good looking but pe culiar. They want their clothes all just alike only different. :o: We asked one of our citizens the other day if he had an auto and his reply was: "No, I have a Ford!" ;o: j You can do anything unlawful in there progressive times and get away with it, if you have the right lawyer. -:o:- High noses may indicate the peo ple are stuck up. Or they may indi- :o: People will stay up until 1 or 2 j o'clock in the morning listening over ; their radios, but wouldn't get up at midnight even to hear Gabriel blow this horn. :o:- In order to detect escaping gas more readily. Little Rock, Ark., has added an extra odor to it. Which is a bit like painting the lily and gild ing refined gold. :o: A bunch of soldiers from Fort Crook are with us again out on the rifle range. Welcome, boys, to our city. Glad to see you. Come as of ten as you can. j :o: ! We see there is a town in Penn sylvania by the name of Shickshinny. , We don't know who is to blame and only mention it for the benefit of the cross-word puzzle-makers. j :o: i As long as a girl lets you spend jour money on her freely you are safe. It's when she begins to try ( and get you to economize that you are near the brink of matrimony. I :o: A correspondent, describing Har- dozen times. There are critics who would say that in Harold's case that is not enough. . :o: An eastern university professor contends that there are 650.000 feeble-minded persons at large in this country. Well, if they're at large they evidently have sense enough to keep out of the insane asy lums. 4 :o: Gloria Swanson is back home and was accorded a reception fit for a queen. She has placed the manage ment of her affairs in the hands of her husband, The Marquis Henri de la Falaise. Watch your P.'s and Q.'s, Gloria. WHEN COOLIDGE DECIDES country as the departments realize A very interesting analysis of the ' the benefits which can accrue from mental processes of President Cool- thus acquainting the junior3 with idge has been given by the Spring- J world-wide news. field (Mass.) Republican, a supporter j Prof. Hamilton, who is undertak of the president and for years a jng this new plan, is quoted as say close observer of his public career. jng: "The newspapers and the news Noting "the general disappointment" I qt-o a nrt nf hP rtailv lift of nnr that Mr. Coolidge did not veto the bill raising the salaries of represen tatives and senators, thus throwing "the entire responsibility on the leg islative branch" which "he must now share," the Republican admits that as a result "his economy plum age is perceptibly ruffled," and ex presses the opinion that he carefully weighed "the price he pays for yield ing" again "such advantages as may accrue from avoidances of a conflict in closer co-operation between the executive and congress in putting through the administration's pro gram at the next session." The friendiy Massachusetts editor then gives a picture of the working of the president's mind which indi cates not only lack of decision but a disposition to place good policy above right for its own sake as fol lows: "It is characteristic of Mr. Coolidge that until action takes place by which he becomes irrevokably committed no decision or conclusion, his mind may favor assumes any finality. A question remains open until it is closed by circumstances. Conversely, it accounts for his char acteristic reluctance throughout hia career to commit himself on any pub lic question concerning which he is not required to express an option. By these methods he instinctively seeks to reduce to a minimum the number of his mistakes. Many other public men have followed a similar course. The late Sir John MacDonald, the Canadian statesman, describes the method graphically in saying that lie never made up his mind how to vote in the house of commons until he walked across the floor to line up in the division." REGARDING COLDS With colds more- or less prevalent in Plattsmouth and elsewhere during the last few months, they have com monly been ascribed to weather con ditions. It is pointed out that the sudden changes in temperature are largely responsible. Persons dress too thinly or warmly, or sit in rooms that are chilly or that perhaps are not sufficiently heated. This is all true,' and no doubt the weather conditions and our own heedlessness increase the number of colfis. r?nt attention is fnllerl hv the Popular Science Monthly to the fact that we are prone to blame the weather for far too many disorders of the head or nose or throat. In substantiation of this opinion, it is pointed out that colds have their seasonal outbreak throughout the country, that the warm south suf fers along with the snowy north, that outbreaks occur at almost the same time in Chicago and Boston, and New Orleans and San Francisco. Also, persons in those climates where much of life is spent in the out-of-doors are affected along with those who must of necessity, on account of the extreme cold, keep close in doors during most of the winter. Finally, the conclusion is reached by Popular Science, and this opinion is doubtless that of many physicians who have dealt with the stubborn epidemics of colds, that germs are largely responsible. "The common cold is extremely contagious," it states. "It does not come from bad weather or wet feet, but from germs that attack those whose physical condition makes them susceptible. "Each of us, on an average, suf fers from 3.7 colds a year. "Colds make no distinction be tween youth and age. But indoor workers and city dwellers seem more tisceptible than those who have out- door occupations or who live in the count ry. "October is the worst time of the year for colds. Another bad month ' is January. June is the month in which you are least likely to catch ' rold." j And while all that is doubtless true, it yet behooves people to keep out of droughts and to dress prop-' erlv and to be sure their feet are dry, and to exercise all other reasonable . T precautions during the period of var iable weather. -:o:- NEWSPAPERS IN SCHOOLS For some time past newspapers have been used in educational insti tutions to develop certain features of such work, but it is probably something new announced from Chi cago when the principal of one of the public school departments of that big city intimates that he will re quire pupils of, the seventh and eighth grades to read the daily news papers. This innovation was dis cussed and favorably commented up on at the recent meeting of educators in Cincinnati and may be taken up 1 and followed in various parts of the i young people, and we believe in be ginning early in pointing out the good and bad points. We encourage our pupils to read the editorials and the news. We show them that some newspapers have a higher standard of ethics and fairness than others. All papers report crime and I am not sure that the elimination of crime news would be for the best interests of society, in asmuch as crime is a reality." The public will agree that Prof. Hamilton's reasoning is good. A newspaper unfit for the children to read should not be admitted to the home. The children read the news papers, anyway most of them and by having them in school they can be guided to the best use of these im portant features of modern life. In commenting upon the Chicago plan, the Cincinnati Enquirer re cently said: "Editors and publishers of the nation will greet this move ment with gratification; its develop ment will influence them to extend helpful co-operation through a more intensive effort to make their news papers worthy of such use as sug guested by the proposed plan." It is certain they will, for as the Enquirer goes on to say: "Editors and pub lishers are parents of children and believe in morals and Christian pro gress, the upbuilding of the Ameri can home and the development of the cardinal virtues as the only firm foundation of the social life, despite the sometimes expressed doubts, mis givings and hectic criticisms of ec clesiastical super-sanctity." American newspapers, with few exceptions, strive for the best ideals 'and the editor or publisher who does not take his newspaper home, where it can be read and understood by his family, is the exception. The use of newspapers in the schools will broaden the minds of growing youth and prove real and valuable assistance to the instruc tions. :o: EIGHTS OF TRADE UPHELD BY JUDGE W00DR0UGH Salt Lake City, March 26. A man ufacturer of goods has. a right to "drum up trade" in every state in the union and no state has power to stop the commerce or impose burdens upon it. ruled Federal Judge J. W. Wood- rough of Omaha in an opinion hand ed down in federal court here today. The opinion was rendered in the up holding of a writ of habeas corpus in the case of Dean L. White, sen tenced to ten days in the Eureka, Utah, jail for soliciting clothing or ders for a Cincinnati tailoring house, v.ithout a license. AUSTRALIA TO WELCOME TEE AMERICAN FLEET Adelaide, March 26. Promising in the name of the Australian people a rousing welcome to the American fleet, which is to visit Australia this summer, Prime Minister Bruce, speaking today at Bura, a mining center, eighty miles north of here, declared the coming of the Ameri can fleet was not a militaristic dem onstration, but a friendly visit by representatives of one power to an other linked to it by a common an cestry. The United States is more than a great foreign power; it repre sents the realization of aspirations that all Australians have for their country's future, he said. NOTICE, FARMERS! Red clover seed for sale, 1924 crop, free from weed seeds. If in terested call Sherman Cole. Platts naouth phone No. 2221. Business forms of all kinds printed at the Journal office. JOE J. STIBAL D. C, B. C. Chiropractor , Modern Methods Best Equipment Telephone No. 3 Selmidtmann Bldg. M-M-M I I 'I I !' I'l I I I-I-I-I-I-I'I-l-I-I-I-S-I-I- Dr. H. C. Leopold Osteopathic Physician General practice. Also Eyes Tested and Glasses Fitted. Office hours. 8:30 to 11:30; 1:30 to 6f30. Sundays and after hours by appointment. PHONES Office, 208 Res, 208-2R 531 Main Street i V 4 j XIIIIIIIII M I I I I I CATTLE DRIVING IN EARLY DAYS IN PLATTSMOUTH Plattsmouth at One Time Was Vis ited by Herds of Thousands Of Texas Cattle. The presentation here of the pic ture, "North of 3 6," which depicted the great cattle drives from the Tex as ranches to the northern railroad points, brought to mind to some of the real old timers of this city simi lar incidents in the seventies in this community. At that time, the middle of the seventies, the railroad projected by the Burlington had not as yet been started on the Nebraska side of the Missouri river and the terminal was at Pacific Junction or East Platts mouth as it was sometimes called. In conversation with the Journal reporter a few days ago, one of the old time residents here stated that in the year 1S77, as he recollected it. there arrived in this city a drove of Teras longhorns, wild and worn from their long drive from the plains of western Texas. There were from 7,000 to 9,000 head of cattle and they presented a great sight as they were driven down through the streets of the then straggling little settle ment along the Missouri river, the intention of the cattle owners being to ford the river here, the main chan nel at that time being at the foot of Main street. While the cattle were being driven through this city they suddenly be came frightened and a wild stampede occurred. They broke from all re straint and dashed to all parts of the city. All of the old time picket fences that adorned the resident sec tion of the city was broken down and the longhorns scattered all over this section, it taking days and days to round them up and get them ready to make the ford over the river Several of the cattle were located as far west as Louisville and all over this section of the country for days there were portions of the herd found. So it can be seen that this city has had a part in the romance and stir that marked the great epics of the western pioneers in the making of the nation. Broadcasting Station in Plattsmouth On the Air HOW DO YOU DO? This is station BESCO broadcast ing by stenographic control from Plattsmouth. Like Omaha, 20 miles away, we are surrounded by the United States and boosters for our products. The first number on the program will be "What Has Become of Car bon," by A. Carowner. This selec tion is dedicated to the Garage Men's Benevolent Association, words con tained in booklet titled "Bertschy Duplex By-Pass," music by any eld or new car. By an. ingenious combination of well known principles and unique mechanical features the By-Pass unit utilizes the commonly wasted by-products from motors, in a controllable, practical manner, to remove and pre vent carbon, reduce fuel consumption, increase life and efficiency of lubri cant and increase motor power with smoother operation. The securing of these conditions has long been de sired but never before actually ob tained. With the By-Pass these re sults are guaranteed. You shall be the judge. There is nothing like it nothing that even remotely approach es the By-Pass, either in design or performance. It is an 18 Karat Knock Out. You should get better acquainted with us and our product. Sorry, folks, our time is up. For the benefit of those who tuned in late our wave length is $12.50. Our next period in the chair will be any old time immediately after we re ceive your applause card or letter telling us how you enjoyed our pro gram. We will next broadcast that vola tile selection by the Gasoline Sextet, "The Pal that I Loved Stole the Well that I Loved," dedicated to Denti Tall Do-ra-me; music by Pot Tee Dome. It is now exactly the opportune time for you to get in touch with us. Address, By-Pass Station BESCO, Plattsmouth, Neb. Announcer A. J. P. B. signing off. Thank you. Henry Leacock, Jr., and wife were among those going to Omaha this morning to spend the day in that city visiting with friends. ORDER OF HEARING on Petition for Appointment of Administrator The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of George W. Shrader, deceased. On reading and filing the petition of Homer H. Shrader praying that administration of said estate may be granted to Ora Davis, as Adminis trator; Ordered, that Saturday, April 20, A. D. 1925, at ten o'clock a. m. is as signed for hearing said petition, when all persons interested in said matter may appear at a County Court to be held in and for said county, and show cause why the prayer of the pe titioner should not be granted; and that notice of the pendency of said petition and the hearing thereof be given to all persons interested in said matter by publishing a copy of this order in the Plattsmouth Jour nal, a semi-weekly newspaper print ed in said county, for three success ive weeks, prior to said day of hear ing. Dated March 27, 1925. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) m30-3w County Judye. Some people worry because they haven't anything to worry about. -:o:- Bad news from Paris. High heels for men are stylish. We would hate to be in their shoes. NOTICE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. Bessie Flockhart. Plaintiff, vs. liar- old Flockhart, Defendant. To Harold Flockhart. Defendant: You are hereby notified that on the ifith dav of December. 1924. Bessie Flockhart filed a petition against you in the District Court of Cass rnuntv. Nebraska, the object and prayer of which are to obtain a di vorce from you on the ground or willful abandonment, and for the custody of Harold Flockhart, her minor child. You are reouired to answer said petition on or before the 27th day of April, 1925. Thi notice is jriven m pursuance of an Order of the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska. BESSIE FLOCKHART. Plaintiff. By CHAS. E. MARTIN, Her Attorney. ml6-4w NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Rob ert B. Windham, Sr.. deceased. To the creditors of said estate: You are hereby notified, that I will sit at the County Court room in Plattsmouth in said county, on the 20th day of April, 1925, and on tne 20th day of July, 1925, at 10 o'clock a. m. each day, to receive ana ex amine all claims against said estate. with a view to their adjustment ana allowance. The time limited for the nrespntation of claims against said estate is three months from the 20th av of ADril. A. D. 1925, and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 20th day of April, 1925. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court, this 18th day of March, 1925. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) m23-4w County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING AND NO TICE OF PROBATE OF WILL In the County Court of Caw coun ty. Nebraska. State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. To all persons interested in the estate of Kate Barthold, deceased: On reading the petition of Harry S. Barthold praying that the instru ment filed in this court, on the lZth day of March, 1925, 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 testament of Kate Barthold, da ceased; that said instrument be ad mitted to probate, and the adminis tration of said estate be granted to Harry S. Barthold, 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 14th day of April, A D. 1925. at 9 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 said petition and that the hearing thereof be given to all per sons interested in said matter, by publishing a copy of this Order in the Plattsmouth Journal, a semi- weekly newspaper printed in said county, for three successive weeks prior to said day of hearing. Witness my hand, and seal of said court, this 12th day of March, A. D 1925. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) County Judga ALLXK J. BEEflOV. ml-Sw Attorney NOTICE OF SUIT TO QUTBT TITLE In the District Court of the Coun ty of Cass, Nebraska. J. L. Stewart and Charles Engel kemeier, plaintiffs, vs. the heirs, de visees, legatees, personal representa tives and all other persons interested in the estate of John S. Townsend, deceased, et al., defendants. To the defendants, the heirs, de- risees, legatee, personal representa tive and all other persons interested in the estate of John S. Townsend and Annie E. Townsend, each de ceased, real names unknown, and ail persona having or claiming any in terest in and to Lots six (S), seven (7). and eight (8). in Block three (3), Duke's Addition to the City of Plattsmouth, Cess county, Nebraska, real names unknown. You and each of you are hereby notified that J. L. Stewart and Charles EngelkemeJer as plaintiffs filed a petition and commenced an ac tion in the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska, on the 4th day of Maroh, 19 25, against you and e&ch of you, the object, purpose and pray er of which is to obtain a decree of court quieting the title to Lots six (6), seven (7), and eight (8). in Block three (3), Duke's addition to the City of Plattsmouth, Cass coun ty, Nebraska, as against you and each of you and for such other and further relief as may be JuM and equitable. You and wieh of you are further notified that you are required to an swer said petition on or before Mon day, the 20th day of April, 1925, or the allegations of plaintiffs' petition will be taken as true and a decree will be rendered in favor of plain tiffs and against you and each of you according to the prayer of said petition. Dated this 7th day of Mareh, 1925. J. L. STEWART and CHARLES ENGELKEMEIER. Plaintiffs. W. A. ROBERTSON, Attorney Wot Plaintiffs. 4vksar In Italy the, girls out of Jobs are asking for husbands, which is one way of finding work. :o: A man raises cain with the waiter about burned food because he can have that kind at home. -:o:- The world could be worse. Lots end lots worse. Suppose, for in stance, chewing gum was like chew ing tobacco. :o: Lots of novels are written for stenographers to read during busi ness hours, when they ought to be studying the spelling book. :o: To Mr. Dawes: They that keep Is rael shall neither slumber nor sleep in the afternoon when the senate is voting on it presidential appoint ment. NOTICE In the District Court of Cass coun ty. Isebraska. Gunave F. Jochim et al. Plain tiffs, vs. all persons having claim or claims againnt the estate of John H. Foster, deceased, real names un known, et al. Defendants. To all rersons having any claim or claims against the estate of John H. Foster, deceased, real names un known; And all persons having or claim ing any interest in the northeast quarter of Section twenty-four in Township ten North, Range eleven East of the Sixth Principal Meridian, in Cass county, Nebraska, real names unknown: You and each of you are hereby notified that on the 13th day of March A. D. 1925, the plaintiffs in the foregoing entitled action filed their petition in the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska, wherein you and each of you are made de fendants, the object and prayer of which are to obtain a decree from said Court quieting the title in plain tiffs to the following described real estate; to-wit: The northeast quarter of Sec tion twenty-four in Township ten North. Range eleven East of the Sixth Principal Meridian in Cass county, Nebraska as against you and each of you and by such decree to wholly exclude you and each of you from all estate, title, claim or interest therein, and to have the title to said premises forever freed from the apparent claims of you and each of you, and quieted in plain tiffs, and for equitable relief You are required to answer said petition on or before Monday, the 27th day of April, A. D. 1925, or your default will be entered in said cause and a decree granted as pray ed. GUSTAVE F. JOCHIM, LOUISA STOHLMAN, EDWARD J. JOCHIM. ANNA M. VOGLER. WILHELMINA HEIL and HENRY A. JOCHIM, Plaintiffs. C. A. BAWLS, Attorney. ral6-4w NOTICE OF SUIT TO QUIET TITLE In the District Court of the County of Cass, Nebraska. Philip A. Horn, plaintiff, vs. Paul Nuckolls et al., defendants. To the defendants, Paul Nuckolls, Mrs. Paul Nuckolls, real name un known; Rupert Nuckolls, Mrs. Ru pert Nuckolls, real name unknown; Bruce Johnson Nuckolls, Mrs. Bruce Johnson Nuckolls, real name un known; Joiieph T. Griffith, Mrs. Jo seph T. Griffith, real name unknown; Joseph H. Brown, Mrs. Joseph II. Brown, real name unknown; J. D. Rankin, real name unknown; Mrs. J. D. Rankin, real name unknown; Harvey Holloway, also known as Harry Holloway, lire. Harvey Hollo way, real name unknown; Adam Gsok ; the keim, devisees, lega-tew, pedreoeal Nprese&t&tlvss sad ail per sons interested in the estates of Paul Nuckolls, Mrs. Paul Nuckols, real name unknown; Rupert Nuckolls, Mrs. Rupert Nuckolls, real name un known; Bruce Johnson Nuckolls, Mrs. Bruce Johnson Nuckolls, real name unknown; Joseph T. Griffith, Mrs. Joseph T. Griffith, real name unknown; Joseph H. Brown, Mrs. Joseph H. Brown, real name un known; J. D. Rankin, real name un known; Mrs. J. D. Rankin, real name unknown; Adam Cook; Stephen F. Nuckolls, Isaiah Toy, Philip Seiden stricker, and Kate Seidenstricker, each deceased, real names unknown, all persons having or claiming any interest in and to the north half (NVi ) of Lots one (1), and two (2), and all of Lot three (S), all in Block thirteen (13), in the City of Platts mouth, Cass county, Nebraska, real names unknown. You and each of you are hereby notified that Philip A. Horn as plain tiff, filed a petition and commenced an action in the District Court of Cass county. Nebraska, on the 28th day of February, 1925, against you and each of you, the object, purpose and prayer of which is to obtain a decree of court quieting the title to the north half (N) of Lots one (1), and two (2), and all of Lot three (3), in Block thirteen (13). in the City of Plattsmouth, Cass coun ty, Nebraska, as against you and each of you, and for such other and further relief as may be just and equitable. You and each of you are further notified that you are required to an swer said petition on or before Mon day, the 20th day of April. 1925. or the allegation of plaintiff's petition will be taken as true and a decrea will be rendered in favor of plain tiff against yon and each of you ac cording to the prayer of said peti tion. Dated this 7th day of March. 1925. PHILIP A. HORN. Plaintiff. W. A. ROBERTBOK, Attorney Trsr Plai&kisT.