I UTOifDAT. APRIL 26. 1926. JPLATOMOUTH SEM-WEG&LY JOTJMTAL pacte.theee THE WOMAN'S CHANCE LAW ENFORCEMENT NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE NOTICE TO CREDITORS 4 V tZhc plattsmouth lournal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA mtrd at PoatoClc. Flattamoutfc. Nb aa aacoad-daaa mall matter R . A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCEIPTIOH PEICE $2.00 WHEN HE OPENS THE GRAVES And ye shall know that I am the Lord, when I have opened your grave, O My people, and brought you up out of your graves, and shall put My spirit in you, and ye shall live. Exekiel 37:13-14. :o: .The trees are budding very fast. :o: The new mayor goes in next Mon day. :o: Farmers are pleased with the fine weather. :o: Meeting expenses isn't half so diffi cult as dodging them. :o: Either enforce the speed limit or 'take the law off the book. -:o:- Getting even is a virtue only if it is with your bank account. :o: The faster you try to wait the longer it seems to take you. ro: Autos and radios, you can't look at either and tell what distance you will get. -:o: New fashions would be more com fortable if the weather wasn't so old fashioned. -:o:- Well, just stop a minute and think. We can't understand what some motorists are driving at. :o: But the United States isn't such a terrific place. There are more than 100,000 bicycles in Tokio.. :o: ' President Von Hindenburg must have a new line now. He is making a speaking tour of Germany. :o: The points about spring yet to be settled are, have we had it, is it yet to come, or isn't there to be any. :o: Harlah F. Stone, who is 54, is the youngest of the justices of the su preme court of the United States. :o: It seems to be around election time in Spain. The king over there pick ed up a day laborer and drove him home. :o Those cocktails out at San Diego were the old familiar kind you could take a dozen of them, they were. so mild. -:o:- Vision BacK or engineers. tieaa-i line. The place for vision, it seems to us. Is in front. Hindsight is fine, but something everybody has. -:o: ivery jear int-ie i uu uc.v.-- tion of advice in this country, and -r- a. i i yet the producers seem to have no difficulty In disposing of the whole, crop. j -:o: Maybe another reason so little is heard of Billy Sunday these days Is that so many other erstwhile reserv- a.h roc,,H in nt-Riin- ,.c.wv.. . I daying him. :o:- Patriotism is the ability to believe ( that one would pay. less for one s automobile tires If the rubber mon oply was owned in the United States instead of in England. I-M-I-I-I-I-I-M- f"M-I-I"I- I-M- J Dr. John A. Griffin J f Dentist f 4 4 .J. Office Hours: 9-12; 1-5. I Sundays and evening - by appointment only. 4 JL. PHONE 229 A 2 Soennichsen Bnildins 4 ,t. T..T,.I .i-i.-M-m-T-T !!. Hudson and Essen MOTOR CARS! United States Tires! DEPENDABLE REPAIRING! Phone 58. PUtUmonth, Picb. PER YEAE EH ADVANCE Vacation will soon be here. i.o: Help the boys fix up the ball park :o: Tuesday was very warm, but no rain. :o: Everyone seems to save up a grouch for a rainy day. :o: Evervbody seems surprised when a' J . i politician plays politics :o: A California volcano is in action again. Poor old California! :o: One thing wrong here is pedestrians are not made out of rubber. :o: Anyway, the trial of Col. Williams was the greatest cocktail ever told. :o: Probably Mr. Briand doubts some- nn ... I. . 1 k n V, 1 ,1 ffi.. .mica viunuci .it nn.ro iu uum uw.r, anyhow. -:o:- The average farm housewife wipes three acres of dishes of a year. :o: in the course England may tax all betting. Churchill to advocate measure to offset possible budget deficit. -:o: That owl that flew into the White House didn't stay long. The wise bird knew it had met its master. :o: Even saxophones could be worse, j maybe. They never make any noise unless someone is bothering them. :o: All men are born equal. The trouble is that so many of them change their ways before they die. :o: The upshot of the court-martial is this: Don't blow your breath on your superior officer when he has a tooth- ache. :o:- "Scientists promise synthetic meats and hash." Hash? We had long sup posed synthetic and hash were syn onymous term3. :o: A friend asks us, "Can they recall an officer elected by the people?" T-fc . i-..-.-. i ..cbuicbu. uu ia""This reveals an alarming situation of which there are ten or fifteen in town. :o Tl n-n 1 ,1 VnfnFr, iutr "rL3 U' alK "c""&. the times of their lives, and it will a . eyent when the time comes for congress to adjourn their vacation. :o: for precinct ballot box by a Chicago judge of election. We contend that it should ruuuitu as a iui uui iuiuuu anrtra nnn.n fnr cfla,nr "lenu. ueorge urennan, ior senator. ( -:o:- Vriro rli nc a Tk o oo i n pom irirl os rf one of their duties by a proclamation . , . , , APril 19"24 as forestation 1U inis ldlls Aruur April 22. anniversary of the birth of; J- Sterling Morton, whose example; i - a x i -.ti a J3 I . . . . . , j! , . I ano precept aia so mucn iu sumuiaie tree planting in Nebraska. Truck and Transfer l -1 - n - E Call Phone 342-W or see me at the Vallery Sales Pavilion, Plattsmouth Wade Porter 3LiYe Stock Hauling a Specialty Nowadays any woman can succeed In the kind of work she likes to do. If you are a woman and have de- elded what job most attracts you, , take it. There is literally nothing' that sbme woman can't do. T . . - Is it the arts? A woman of the British nobility is one of the world'si ' ahlpst sculptors and within the nast ; few months two young girls, Marion; -.,, . , , T . . . I . ianey anu aiary iewis, nave reacn-j ed stardom in grand opera. Is it the professions? One of the' country's most eminent neurologists is a woman on the staff of the gov-J ! crnment hospital for the insane at naauinsiuii, auu me prosecutor oi all prohibition cases in the police court of the District of Columbia is Mrs. Rebecca S. Great house. Is it business? In Germany, after the World War, Frau Hedwig Heyl converted her immense rive far-tnrv fn- , , , . . . .. to a canned goods plant,, making it a paying business from the start. Last winter when Miss Cora C. Coldburn was put in charge of the cafeteria at Yale university, she made it pay good dividends, although all of the men who had preceded her in the work had lost money on it. In Oklahoma City Mrs. Walter Draper, 8 6-year-old w-idow of a con gressman, earns her living as a tele- phone operator. In Constantinople, ! ..... juaKDouie Hanoun, daughter or a former governor of Saloniki, is getting a mistaken-law, or with vigorous ef I rich running a dressmaking shop. forts to bring about its amendment or i A few months ago cablegrams re- repeal. The conscientious citizen is ported the death of Captain Maderhda! just as anxious to correct legislative Budennaya the Joan of Arc of Red' errors as he is to vindicate the au Russia, who was a dead shot and'thority of the law while it remains ! fought countless battle leading her own troops. Miss Gertrude Bell, who won fame . on secret service for the British in Cairo during the World War, is now one of the ruling powers in Iraq. Mrs. Jaco"b Baur, head of a big busi- ness and known as "Chicago's most extraordinary woman," announced re- cently that she was running for con- gress because she considered it her, civic duty. So it goes, and endless list of great , and courageous things brilliantly done by women who buckled down to work. And what they did is prophecy that you also will excel. A TIP TO THE FARM BLOC Those political friends of the farm ers who are always ready to fly in the face of economic law in order to save agriculture should give careful at-ilhat "publication would be incom tention to a report from the Depart- patible with the public interest" he ment of Agriculture on the consump- has been most faithfully addicted to ( tion of flour in the United States Since 1S97 the average per capita con- j summion nas aecreasea Der ceui. Moreover, the decrease has been pro- ceedinsr at accelerated velocitv. There , ; , T " " L,;" 1 . - - - " per cent during the previous decade, If this keeps up, what is to be- come of our wheat growers? There is S nly one thin to do. Congress should 'PaSS .a w a once requiring con- me ifiaee u, . , . . ever resident or tne unueu &iaies. includin lndians not taxed. Let's ; make the people consume bread just ,. . , ., ' . McKinley, peaceably if we can, forci-- bly if we must. In any event, save the farmer between now and the No vember elections. :o:- SAY IT WITH FLO WEES Once upon a time there dwelt a couple who grew tired of looking at each other across the breakfast table. Also, the dinner table. "Shall I consult a lawyer?" queried the man of himself. Then, shaking his head in negative fashion he add- ed: "No, I shall consult a florist." j Beginning next day, a high bank of cut flowers adorned the dining table. completely cutting off the man's view of his wife, and his wife's view of him. "This costs less than a lawyer," said the man, "and it looks better from the outside." But in a few weeks the florist lost- a good customer. The daily order was discontinues The woman had caught the man peeping curiously around the roses. :o: Congress need look no farther than Gen. Smedley Butler's testimony for the symptomology . of eplifflication: "I got the impression Williams was becoming intoxicated," the general.it testified. "He spoke to me at great length on the civilizing effects of radio on the American home." Either drunk or crazy, obviously. Later Col. Williams "spoke loquaciously about a pistol," and Gen. Butler knew that he was loaded. :o: Field Marshal Hindenberg has com pleted a service of sixty years in the German army. That's nothing. Some of us who took up arms during the World War were certain, when the thing was over, we had spent 100 years in the United States Army. Officials charged with responsibil- ity for impartial enforcement of laws. not universally approved cannot fail to derive encouragement from such a convention a3 that of the women's national committee for law enforce- . . . . . . , , ment, now in session in TAashington. President Coolidge perhaps with the' nra mat it nrnhihition hearing in min,1 ' T was moved tc observe in his, brief . . . . . message to tne convention mat ne was heartened by the interest of many sincere and thoughtful Amer - ican women in promoting obedience to the laws. As he said it is of utmost , . t importance that free citizens who be- , neve in seii-governmeni ana wouia make any necessary sacrifice to per - ... petuate it should realize mat law en - forceraent is "not a matter of choice but an expression of a moral re quirement." Only the superficial citizens of a republic can ask their public servants to ignore laws that represent the con victions and sentiments of popular majorities. Officials should be com mended, not criticized or derided, for doing their utmost the enforcement of a law duly enacted and judicially upheld. There is, however, another aspect of the question of law making. Insis tence upon law enforcement is not in the least incompatible with earnest intellectual and moral opposition to law. Politics and government are not exact sciences. Lawmakers constant- i j ly revise and improve their handi work. They are not infallible, and they do not serve the cause of good government by obstinate adherence to a demonstrable fallacy. To demand the impossible of human nature in j the name of law is to breed contempt for legislatures. The first and last duty of intelligent lawmakers is to make statutes enforceable by making them reasonable and consistent with the judgments of science and the as certained results of experience. :o: STEALING KELLOGG'S STUFF John Garibaldi Sargent is stealing the stuff of his colleague, Secretary Kellogg., If Kellogg did not originate the excuse of keeping things dark j t .,-, H. -d .a i v rr n line a fjvuu ic mittee was trying to find out some of the particulars of the notorious . . ;r. ,f cnninr vhneior the attorney-general stopped the proceed .- v,.. ,,i . . tion in his possession. e an rememoer ine iamuus siar witness of the government. George B Hayes, who fizzled so miserably at the trial of Senator Wheeler of Mon- tana. In tring to disC0ver why Hayes being prosecuted for prejury, senator Walsh was Informed by tne attorney-general that there are two thmp wIin ,.nnH have mrrohrat- ed Hayes' testimony. The following colIQuy ensued. "Will von tell Qj us the names those two persons?' "Can I or will I?" "Can j-ou?" "Yes." "Will you." "No." And the reason given for this reti cence is Attorney-General Sargent's tender solicitude for the public in terest. It is to laugh. :o: MEMORIALS The Liverpool Medical association desired to commemorate the great ! service which F. T. Paul, eminent sur-i geon, performed for mankind. In-1 ; tead of erecting the conventional' .Dust, the asBociation has made a ; bronze cast of the surgeon's right hand, the hand which made possible delicate and critical operations. if this form of commemoration be- comes a fad, we expect to see casts of Ann Pennington's knees. Lady Astor's eyes, Marion Talley's larynx,. Charlie Chaplin's feet, Dempsey's hold jobs, more power to their cake fist and, possibly, Mussolini's martyr-' mixing elbows. Soon enough as the ed nose. This may b an age of specializa-j tion when even parts of the body may - lead one to success. But, after all, - is the mind which is the directing force that makes all things posible.i For the average person, the mind ex-j presses itself best through the char-j acter of the face. I A bust of Surgeon Paul would prob-l ably be a more enduring monument ' and a greater inspiration to other physicians than the bronze cast. :o: Take an army of boys chasing but-! terflies, put bald heads and wrinkles on the boys, and change the butter- flies into banknotes, and there you have a beautiful panorama of the modern world. The State of Nebraska, Cass coun- - n n m the matter of the estate of Maria Lau, deceased. To the creditors of said estate: You are hereby notified that I will sit at the County Court room in piattsmnnth in RaM rnnntv on the 3rd day of May,, A. D. 1926, and on the 4th dav Of Aus-USt. A. D. 1926. v1n.l w 4 I n n n 9 v-s 1 St Vk at lc" u " l day, to receive and examine all claimg against said estate, with a view to their adjustment and allow- 'ance. The time limited for the pre- sentation of claims against said es- 1 Vta Tflfi AtSnJ iday of May, A. D. 1926, and the time limited for payment of debts is one year irom ssaiu iru uay oi iviay, ,1926 - I Witness mv hand and the seal j County Court, this 29th day of ' March 1926 iviarcn, i. A. li. UlaBUKY, (Seal) a5-4w County Judge HEAT FROM SEA The master quest of the scientists of the world is the search for new L Browne deceased; sources of energy. j An of Lots one (1) to ten (10), Seeking energy, they seek heat. both inclusive, in Block one (1); Among German scientists this fas-! Lots five (5) to twenty-one (21), cinatine onest has taken a new direc-lbotn inclusive' in Block two (2), ex cinating quest has taken a new direc icept one three-fourths (l?-4) tion. Germans are seeking to utilize feet off of the west j,ice of paid Lot the enormous supplies of heat latent 21; and Lots eight (8), nine (9) and in sea water. The American Chemical ten (10), in Block three (3), all in . . . . . , 4Ko, 5t 5 ' Browne's Subdivision of Lot 17 in society has received word that it is . . ., J innrfheast nnarter of northwest niiar- conceivably possible to obtain atmos- pheric nitrogen with the aid of elec- trie current produced by a power- plant harnessing such energy. On the surface of the ocean the temperature of the water in tropi - cal areas and in some other places is about 75 degrees. A comparatively j' short distance below the surface the. water is always cold. This means that there is only a limited level of water which can be came being a tract of land, two bun . .. . dred sixty-four (264) feet in length utilized because of its warm tempera-jeast an(J wegt and twQ hundred fifty. ture. In this level scientists say car-(four and five-tenths (254.5) feet in "bon dioxide or monia may be evap-. width north and south, lying along, orated iand abutting upon, the east side of . 4. Waugh Avenue in the City of Platts- The pressure of the vapor thus mou and being bounded Cn the obtained would be used in steam tur-)SOUth by the north boundary line of bines. The exhaust would be con-(said Block three (3) of said Browne's densed by means of cold water. (Subdivision; also all real estate A cable to the American Chemical 1 formerly platted as streets or alleys A came to tne American cnemicai Jn gald Browne.g subdivision, that society says mere is no aouDt as topa between any of the lots or tracts the practicability of such a power plant, its economy depending, how ever, upon how the amounts of en ergy obtained are to find application with the prevailing remoteness of the power sources from industrial cen ters." The search for new sources of en ergy is one of the most fascinating adventures that constatly confronts men of science. We know now that there is a tre- j Ul "ct"- "e. ln tne atom- aay " move"e' JtiHon and action are that h -nri ix-ith ti- nmroT w hich petition and action are mat " v,..... We know there is an unspeakably gaid action that plaintiffs are the ab great source of energy in the sun. golute owners in fee simple of all of Solar engines will one day turn the'the real estate above described, and wheels of industry. Iin the peaceable, open, adverse, ac- more fascinating place in which to live. :o: HONEYMOON COOKING A certain city health commissioner believes that young husbands are be - ing dangerously overfed. The young wife is so ambitious about her cook ing, so anxious to show off her -skill and keep her husband s heart by sat isfying his stomach, that she "serves her husband delicacies, pastries, sweets and an over-abundant supply 1 of fats, instead of feeding him fresh I fruits and vegetables. I It doesn't matter so much for little while at first, the doctor ad - mits. But if it continues the over- feedine will make the husband lazv feeding ill make the husband lazy. Ill-natured, lacking in pep. Undoubtedly .the warning is sound a n H rcrnn 1 Cxrvf&t ino- nith fata nnd ctarphM i5 had fnr npnnlp malp .anu eiarcnes is Daa ior people maie or femal . - .. . ... -and fruits and vegetables are good. But what most startles the casual reader is the commissioner's calm assurance of the skill of brides in the culinary arts. To hear the pessimists, one might think no modern young woman used more effort or knowledge than that required to open a can or make trip to the delicatessen store. If the "brides of that Messed eommunitv are keen and skilful with their house- family increases, will the rich choc- olate cakes give place to batches of plain cookies, the mayonnaise mixer vanish as the big bowl of apples and oranges appears on the sideboard, and buttered carrots and spinach march alone with a deadly regularity never accorded to mushrooms a la king. :o: If we may judge by reports of what was said In the pulpit one way and another around the country on Sun-! day, the country is spending six days a week friviously and getting well scolded for it on the seventh, :o: President Coolidge is not in favor, of a United StateB film censor.' He' is inclined to believe that the states should have control of this matter. To Joseph Harper; Jane A. Har - per; me nanraouin una ana un - the ...ncnr. onrt aaana nf The jPlattsmouth Land and Improvement George E. Nichols, deceased. Company, a Corporation, real names' To the creditors of said estate: unknown; Joseph Weckbach; Eugene! You are hereby no1; Weckbach; Louis Weckbach: Edward - will sit at the County Court Room in tvw.vw, Enn nf t it 'Plattsmouth in said county, on the deceased; Catherine Weckbach; Mrs! 1 T.vriMa Heimes: William Weclrharh J . W T 1 m..ll ATT A. 1 ! Jf.i jonn- u. iun, lirsi reai name unknown, widow of John D. Tuttj leased; 1 Virginia Frady; Mrs. Edna Forbes: Clarence W. Forbes: Edward S. Tutt; Mrs. Edna Tutt; Mrs. Mary Gharrett; Shirley Ghar- n"; l Gf Dt.r" C'aude Gentry; the unknown heirs, devisees, legatees and personal representatives or, ana all other persons interested in the following several estates re- ,fa,-r; deceased ;' Est ate of Jane A. Harper, deceased; Estate or Anton H. Weckbach, deceased; Estate of William Weckbach, deceased; Estate of Anna Roth, deceased; Estate of John D. Tutt, deceased; Estate of Mrs. John D. Tutt, deceased, real first name unknown, widow of John ter (XEU NW'4) of Section thir teen (13), Township twelve (12), North, Range thirteen (13), east of tne sixm principal Aieriaan; aiso that part of said Subdivision describ ed as "Park Place" in said Section, . Township and Range; also that part of said Lot seventeen (17) not plat- 'ted as a part or said lirowne s buu- division of said Lot seventeen (17), but designated in connection with the plat of said Browne's Subdivision as "Part Lot 17 not Platted," the hereinbefore described, except only Matilda street; all in the City of Plattsmouth, Cass county, Nebraska; and all persons having or claiming any Interest of any kind in said real estate or any part thereof, real names unknown; and all persons having or claiming any interest of any kind in said "Park Place," above described, real names unknown. Defendants: You and each of you are hereby nntifierl thnt nn TVhrnarv 20th. 1926. Inez Stenner and Gertrude Stenner, 'plaintiffs, filed their petition in the I District Court of Cass county, Ne- j urasKa, agamsi juu, nupieaut-u win witn f petition and action are that a the defendants have any right, title, interest or estate in, or lien upon, said real estate or any part thereof; that the pretended interest, right and title of the defendants and each of them therein be canceled, thati the title to all of said real estate bePhbe ,A- Ramsey et al Defendants. forever quieted in plaintiffs, and that' 'all defendants and each of them, and ail persons claiming Dy, tnrougn and under them, be enjoined from claiming or attempting to claim any title or interest in or lien upon said real estate; and for general relief. The object and prayer of said peti tion and action, among other things, is to obtain foregoing relief as against any and all of the defend ants named or otherwise designated In said petition claiming any inter est, rieht or title in. or lien upon. a above described real estate, or any 'nt twf hnpri unnn nr rplatinn- to any one or more of the following designated instruments of record in s ,er. (R (,.... nf rwfrii nf c-mmtv V- braska, respectively, to-wit: sr p-o of Edward T. Thomas and 1 an(j -TT0 r . ,7 7Z T ' wiara &l. 1 nomas, nis wile, 10 Anion i. vvecKDacn ana enry im. rut - u - nich for $3oo.OO. dated Fobru-M1!). ary 24, 1904, recorded February 25, jof the cth r- M- ln Cass county, 1904, in Book 30 of Mortgages at : Nebraska, except . that part thereof Pfje ofroneSubdivi- !&" Pacific RMny&wfy?! Jcntbefr g? recorded names unknown: November 8, 1889, in Book 19 at' You and each of you are hereby page 372; for the reasons respectively notified that William F. Stockas set forth in thg PJtUIon E to answer said petitioi? oi or before Court of Cass county. Nebraska, on the 17tn day of May, 1926, or the the 29th day of March, 1926, against allee-atinns thereof will be taken as true and decree rendered according INEZ STENNER and GERTRUDE STENNER, Plaintiffs. F. A. WILLIAMS, Attorney. a5-4w Mrs. Mable Walker Willebrandt, assistant attorney general of the United States in charge of prohibi- tion prosecutions, tells the women of the country they can make law ob- servance effective by making it styl- sh. But one trouble would be, we euDDOse. the tendency of feminine' styles to change. A flapper may "don a bathing suit and not swim, or a riding habit and not ride or a basketball suit and not play basket ball, but when 6he puts on a wedding gown she means busi- ness. 1 The State or AeurasKa, cass i.oun- . I In the matter of the estate of 10th day of May. 192C, and the 11th dav Of August. 192G, at 10 o'clock a. m.. or acn oay, to rtmis examine all claims against faid estate, with a view to their ailjUFt mtnt and allowance. The time limit ed for the presentation of claims again t said estate is three months from the 10th day of May A. D. 1926. and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from sail 10th day of May 192C. Witness my hand the seal of 3uid county court, thta 9th day of April, 192 0. A. II. DUXBURY. (Real )al 2-4 w County Judge. ORDER CF 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 Amelia V. Streight. deceased. On reading and filing the petition of William J. Streight praying that administration of said estate may be granted to William J. Streight as administrator; Ordered, That May 3rd. A. 1). 192C. at 10 o'clock a. m., is assigned for hearing paid 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 petitioner should not be granted: and that notice of the pendency of said peti tion and the hearing thereof be given to all persons interested in said mat ter by publishing a copy of this order in the Plattsmouth Juornal, a semi-weekly newspaper printed in f.aid county, for three successive weeks, prior to said day of hearing. Dater April Cth, 192C. A. II. DUXBURY. (Seal)al2-3w County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING On Petition for Appointment of Administrator. The State of Nebraska, Cass Coun ty. S3. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Alida A. Blair, deceased. On reading and filing the petition of Milan L. Blair praying that admin istration of said estate may be granted to Milan L. Blair as admin istrator; Ordered, That May 3rd A. D. 192C. at 10 o'clock a. m. is assigned for hearing sid petition, when all per sons interested in said matter may ap pear at a county court to be held in and for said county, and show cause why the prayer of petitioner should not be granted; and that notice of the pendency of said peti tion and the hearing thereof be triven to all persons interested in said mat ter 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. Dated April 12th, 192C. A. IL DUXBURY. (Seal) al2-3w County Judge. NOTICE OF SUIT TO QUIET TITLE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. William F. Stock, riaintlff, vs. To the defendants: Phebe A. Ram . y-l TT - T. . . . 1 .1 . M w . r,' 1 I'f t(f- i,en,uu JI ' 1 1 all other persons interested in the estates of Phebe A. Ramsey and George WT. Ramsey, each deceased, real names unknown: Ellis, husband of Maria Ellis, first and ..-al name unknown; Ram sey, wife of Joseph Ramsey, first and rtal name unknown; Ram sey, wife of John A. Ramsey, first and real name unknown; David Em rick; Jacob Mahin; the heirs, devi- Rs, legatees, personal representa- fivefs, and all other perrons Interested n t!e ,eTst.tes of avI.d Emrlck and Jacob Mahin. each deceased, real names unknown; and all persons Mort-inav,nE or claiming any int erest in auu iu me v eti uaii w j ) OI l lit? m a 1 nnrthppst nnartpr (NRH 1 nf Sprtinn 7VC 7 7 , twntv-nnp f21K Tnwneh n p pvpn f - - - --- : North. Range ten (10). eat uu auu v,xl-u UL uu' lne oojc-ci, pur pose and prayer of which is to ob tain a decree of court quieting the title to the west half -(W) of the northeast quarter (NE'4 ) of Section twenty-one (21), Township eleven (11), North, Range ten (10), east of the 6th P. M., in Cass county, Ne braska, except that part thereof owned by The Chicago. Rock Island & faclnc Hallway Company, as against you ana eacn or you ana for such other relief as may be just and equitable. You and each of you are further notified that you are required to answer said petition on or before ATnnrtav the 17th rlntr r f fr 10'C or the allegations therein contained will be taken as true and a decree j rendered in favor of Plaintiff and i against you and each of you, ac- fPf1 to the prayer of said peti- Dated this 29th day of March, A. D. 1926. WILLIAM F. STOCK, Plaintiff. CARL D. GAKZi His Attorney. I ao-4w f