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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (June 7, 1926)
MOITDAY, JTJXE 7. 192S. PLATTSMOTJTH SE3H - WXEEXY JQXTEltAIl PAGE TET.ZS. '."be plattBmouth journal PUBLISHED SE1HI-WEEXXY AT Etrl at PoctoCic. Flattmcuth. R. A. BATES, Publisher sub?cli?tio:j voice $2.00 BE THOU PREPARED Be thou prepared, and prepare for thyself, thou, and all thy company that are assembled unto thee, and be thou a guard untom them. Ezk. 2S:T :o: Fine weather to continue, so re ports say. -:o: In this motor age the way of many transgressor is a hard road. : o : The long-haired pianist is known by his locks as will as by his keys. :o: United States to pay debts first, no more tax cuts are on the program for years. :o: Under the present program, con gress will adojurn in about four weeks. :o: i Federal dry order is about to go up the spout, not many applications for badges. I ;o. I Antiques appear to be the order of the day in Faris. a girl of 15 married a man of 8S. , :o: ; If at the age of 30 a girl hasn't met her ideal man she tries to idealize tnms mnn the l-n5 met ' :o: Nine inches of rain fell in New Orleans, and we'll bet the dairyman left the tops off the can1;. :o: Are we to have a Fourth of July celebration? If we are it is time, that the committees are at work. j :o: ; I What the crowded big cities need is a house with the insi.'e about three limes a large as the outside. -c: j The things that cost more than they are worth are the things that we do not know what to do with. ;o: ! Occasionally we find a man who is looking earnestly for the truth but in isting that it shall be his special brand. I A stove exploded in Bloomsburg, Pa., and killed three. If you are tired ... of cook.ng JU,t show tins to your ii u. nar.ci. I :o:- i The man who doesn't know where is just as necessary that r. boy be pie he is going, but is on his way, is pared to help defend his country in the fellow who is just learning to time of ned as to know how to write drive a machine. j gcod English. :o: j :o: The most signal advance the drama; A trade note siys steel has replaced has made in the past 20 years is that whalebone as corset stays. So far as the young hero now wears golf knick- ers instead of white trousers. -:o:- We don't need to vtorry. any more, about the famous riddle: "Why 'does a chicken cross the street?" because, in these days of autos, it doesn't. I :o: Witnesses in the Carroll bathtub; case sav Mr. Carroll held a cloak be- tween Miss Hawley and the audience while she disrobed. Aren't thev the prudes' Educators who want to establish new schoolhouses on every lull in hill in' rural America should consider the number of filling stations that would have to be moved. CJfoiel RESIDENT KANSAS CITY, MO. D Yhcvc live hospitality ojf tke old SoutU meets Die gtviierositij of the neiiTVVcst i tliecKeavt of cAnierica 43 O ROOMS WITH BATH $3.00 AMD UP TV irk i -fv" Dr. John A. Griffin Dentist 5- i f ! J; .i. j Office Hours: 9-12; 1-5. Sundays and evenings by appointment only. i j Y PHONE 229 V Soennichsen Building t -:-i-i-M"i -:..i-:-t.:: wi i ft A PLArTSilGUTH, NEERASEA Neb., aa accoad-claaa mall mitwr PEE year in advance .1 Mo?t of our troubles never happen -to tlie other fellow. :o:- Love is the one thing married peo ple ought to know by heart. :o:- Brokhart seems to have Senator Cummins on the back ground.. :o: Being suspicious of others makes a man boastful of his own loyalty. :o: People who set a good example never know what it will hatch cut. :o: One big advantage of the French cabinet is that it has inU rehangc able parts. :o: The only way the summer is short is ho in connection iery. with skirts and :o: The anti?militarists might find it much easier to beat swords into auto accessories. ! :o: Pome people want the word "obey" taken out of the laws as well as the marriage ceremony. :o: It would be much better if much of the energy used against sinners was expended on criminals. , n A refrigerator is where you put dishes containing a little food when you don't want to wash them. It takes a church row to reveal the grvat number of word that otind like cussing and really aren't. :o: A woman's idea of economy eie- pends upon whether she is buying for t r husband or for herself. :o: A driverless motor car is said to be "making a hit in the west." 'One would imagine it wsuld mako several. :o: We don't see why Texas makes so much noise about having a woman governor; every man in this state has one to himself, :o: ration in political affairs cannot talk about "petticoat rule" because petti- . .. . coats are no longer the rule. j - ' There are Americans wao feel it that goes, steel has replaced leather las stagecoach springs but who uses stagvcoache: any more :o: Fundamentalism and modernism have been in another battle and fun- uamentdiism na on. me l.oiit, has won i.-ianu town or MirKsvme nas voieu not to change its name. :o: In their effort to achieve striking (Critic says, girls will stop at nothing. j And they've pretty nearly reached the Place where EtP- , iU linunc, me greatest, inine ui me age, Presbyterian assembly has been told. Make the law harder to get a divorce and a penalty attached and there will rot be so much cf it. : o: At hundreds of golf courses thr '.- out the United States yesterday the -e was hilarious play around the nir. -j teenth hole in celebration of t". e capture of the British open cha pionship by Jess Sweetser, an Amc.i can player. :o: A lady has arrived in New To:'.; from a town in Wales with a nan so long that train conductors str. t to announce it two stations ahead. Y'2 have the name before us but as th? composing room artists have treated us pretty well lately we will not in flict it on them. Multiply all the shades, tints and hues of vermillion scarlet, cerise, crimson and maroon by all the shades, tints and hues of yellow, orange, canary' and lemon, and one arrives at approximately the number of colors popularly considered as "bloom of youth." :o: Ston and lnok two wavs. drivers given advice in crossing railroad tracks. Railroads are not to blme for many of the accidents. It is easier to stop an -auto and listen than it is to stoD an encine on the railroad track, besides the auto is not on schedule time. THE TWO-THHtDS RULE Tlie Journal cordially agrees with numerous Democratic committee- women, and other prominent Demo- crais that there is no good reason for abolishing the two-thirds rule in Democratic national convention?, ap- plicable to presidential nominations, Certain party leaders have started than 1,700 uninterrupted perform an agitation to abolish Jhis rule, ances and seems certain to eclipse the which has been in existence for nearly record set by the London production three-quarters of a century, arguing of "Chu Chin Chow," which was that it has caused not only a great shown 2,000 times, dt-al of trouble in other directions, but ' The critics long since have ceased lias resulted in splitting the party to wail and gnash their teeth over the of Jefferson into many scattered bits. 1 phenomenal success of this undoubt- They turn to the horrible example in 1924 in Madison Square Garden and just "one of those things" that defy then Aith fingers on lips maintain an explanation and a reflection, say the eloquent silence, as if to ask, "Could drama scriverners. on American taste, a majority rule have pot the party j cut Anne Nichols, its author, into a worse pickle?" ! should worry. Aside from the show's Yes. The convention might have Uninterrupted run in New York i3 nominated William Gibbs McAcloo, the fact that scores of road and stock or it might have nominated Al Smith companies put it on and poured still instead of a stronger man and one more royalties into the already well-mo:-r; typifying the traditional dignity filled coffers of Miss Nichols. of the party, John W. Davis, of West irginia. Tlie split at New York was inevit - abtl. Nomination of cither Smith or McAdoo would not have changed the tide of events. The smug conserva- tism of Coolid ;e. Republicanism,' : somehow found a response in the minds of the American voters. Dut the nomination of either McAdoo or Smith inevitably would have caused a much greater diviion. possibly, in the 192S convention than in the last, j And why? Snce one of the two would have been defeated by as great a majority if not greater than John W. Davis suffered, the one who was rejected would have made trouble a? sure as f.nte. As the mntter stands,1 neither rf them seems likelv of ac- lt " L 1 1 convention, ana the paramount duty of the next ; gathering must be to nominate Davis ;cr some other big-gauged man of his political caliber. I Infinitely worse for the Democratic party to loe with a strong man head ing it up is to lo?o with a mediocre m;n. The arguments for abolishing the; twoltl.irds majority comes from , small-calibered men. Any compromise would be a compromise with medioc rity. ! ! If the Democratic party had been nominating on a majority basis, a 1 first-rate politician of the stripe of Champ Clark would have been named instead cf a statesman like Woodrow , Wilson. If a mere majority was all that was required, William G. Mc ' Adoo. a first-rate politician would -"'u 'imm ui a tial statesman like Davis, of West Vir- cinh " . ' i,Tw, ts i,n ., -i, ,.t. iTiuwviaiit piii i. ua iuiiiixitu some 71, ...... 1 t :l 1 good and strong presidents under the historic system. :o:- REJECTING PROGRESS Lorel Dunsnnv writes his fantasies and plays with a p!ain old quill pen. Any number of authors refuse to ex- ; chance their fountain pens and pen- t ils for typewriters. HHaire Belloc. we are told, was tj0 very fi. aut!i0r to use a typo. writer for his work, and received ot of critiCism from authors of the 'old' - r school who opined that no true artist could dabble with crass machin ery. We rather like this clinging to the old this gesture of disdain for the new but it would be interesting to know how much, if any. market ex isted for the product of these dis- da?nful author's Pns. if all the world rejected the progress of this mod ern day. Up iii the Air That is where cars land "when they come to us for overheanlinfj and re pairs. Wp pre enninnert -anih otrprViooz-l machinerv for liftins- ca-s nnv de the scheme of coffee Planters of Haiti interfering with plaintiff's possession Ah 'hi U11U1S C3iS any Ge". to deliver by parcel post in the United or enjoyment of said premises, and sirett neigni. I states sealed packets of hand-picked, ;foruitabIe re"ef-. Our mechanics get at the trouble roasted and eround Haitian coffee 11113 notice is ren pursuant to with ease ard make reDairs onicklv iroastecI and &rouna "altlan coffee. an order of the Court- You are here witti ease ana maice repairs qmcitly. .This win permit the poor peasant by required to answer said petition While you are on an errand the work'to inf,n, in thP CORtlv ,11Tlirv of on or before Monday, the 5th day of ic done ard yur car is ready to go 011 ts way as Sood as ever- Give us a trial. Frady's Garage Phone 58 ANNE SHOULD WORRY From New York comes the news that "Abie's Irish Rose" lias completed its fourth consecutive year in the me-j tropolis and is now launched on its fifth. The show already has run on Broad - i way or in its vicinity for niure edly cheap comedy. Seemingly, it is! Other playwrights of the "higher ' drama" may turn up a haughty nose jat the young lady's pot boiler, but ' that doe3nt hot her her. Anne by this time has something like a dollar for nearly every Frenchman in Paris, while some of her more artistically minded contemporaries are still un- able to support more than one auto mobile. -:o:- REAL ACHIEVEMENT Full realization of the mighty changes that take place during a gen eration is found in Louis de Koven r.owen s new door caneu urowingi Tr With p Citv " Mrs. Dcwen is an old resident of, Chicago, and 1 Iier books traces tne;af;aiui am t-Moir, ilu a. jt iu unfolding of that monster city from the mud of ju?t one generation ago. She tells of an early adventure in philanthropy when she sent a turkey to a poor famllv in whose home she i i t i .1 i nau luuim me niuii'tr uuutu luicau spools for soup. A day or so after sending the turkey, Mrs. Bowen called on the family and found the fowl, which was deader than a door nail, and dressed in the baby's one dress lying in the one bed. The family did not know what a turkey was and supposed it some sort of a doll for the baby. Today we still have our slums and our poor. But people do not starve in this country any more, nor is any fam- ily so utterly poverty-stricken that'a it would not recognize the Thanksgiv- ing bird for what it is. Sc ience has made great strides dur ing the last generation. We fly; we hear across great stretches of land 'and mighty oceans; huge machines lir i n. vi iiiTii But great as any achievement is the progress we have made in bettering social dition3. ONE CAUSE OF DIVORCE Only about 1,140,000 couples went, to the alter last year, a decrease of . nearly 40,000 marriages from the 1924 total of S, 178, 000. "And while marriage wanes, divorce increases." is Eileen Bourne's comment on the fact in an article in this week's , Libert-. i "There have been as many reasons advanced as there have been persons to give them," Miss Bourne continues, j "but out of the welter hos come a jcertain unaniminity of opinion as to 'the cause of divorce. This has come from judges, lawyers and clergymen, the three professionals mot interest ed in marriage, its uses, abuses and its frequent wrecks." It is their observation, she writes. j that the great majority of the un , happy partners in wedlock either t never went to a clergyman or else they i were strangers to the clergyman who married them. "Indifference to re-i jligion," she points out, "With the ac companying willingness to use any, substitute for the clergyman the last ercneration considered nece.ssar-v to toor . ... . ....... b. xo ,lia.xx and underlying cause of the complac- ent attitude toward divorce and the , rapid increase of marriage that "don't take." -:o: COFFEE A1U) ROMANCE Amorous swains of Haita are able to wed the luscious damozels of their several choices, all because America. . , , naving Deen lea to the trough of Hatian coffee, has been induced to drink. The American Chamber of merce confirms this with its report of holy matrimony." says the chamber. . ... . .... Thus does the high cost of living affect the dwellers in less complex regions of the earth as those in the maelstrom of cities. j Come to think of it, are there any uncomplex spots on earth left? Please MY BLACK Percheron Horse Will make the Season of 1926 ' ar mv home on the old Os- f l , a : ! Vdi. VJUfJClL 1(11 Hl -f south of Plattsmouth. J. IV. SAGE don't answer glibly, "The South Sea Isles." They can't find parking space down there now. :o:- It is awfully nice for one to be re membered on his birthday as we were on this occasion and we thank our friends for remembering us on our S4 birthday and many others that have passed. :o: FARM TOR SALE The Dovey section. Will sell in one i or write O. 11. ALLEN, Omaha, Nebr. Howard Street. 20 Phone us the news. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Valentine Tomazewski, 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 !29th day of July, 192C, and on the 30th day of September, 1926, at ten (O'clock in the forenoon each day, to receive and examine all claims their adjustment and allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claims against said estate is three months from the 29th day of July, A. D. 1926. and the time limited for j V7 J deb,tST Is n ear frm ll0' Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court, this 29th day of May, 192G. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal) m31-4w County Judge. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. By virtue of an Order of Sale is sued by Golda Noble Beal, Clerk of the District Court within and for Cass county, Nebraska, and to me di- ' 1926 1Q 00 0.clock m of ay, at tne south front door of the court house in Platts mouth, in said county, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the following real estate, to wit: Lot 12, Block 30, in the City of Plattsmouth, as surveyed, platted and recorded, in Cass county, Nebraska The same bein& levied upon and con-"taken as the property of Peter F, iGoos and Louise Goos, Defendants ' i . l r - -. 1 a B ..3.1 f . . 4 CO DHLisiy a juuguifui ui saiu cuuu recovered by The Standard Loan & Savings Association, Plaintiff against said Defendants Plattsmouth, Nebraska, May 27th A. D. 1926. E. P. STEWART, Sheriff Cass County Nebraska. O. W. JOHNSON, Attorney. m31-5w LEGAL NOTICE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. William Ballance, Plaintiff, vs John J. Worley et al. Defendants To the Defendants John J. Worley Mrs. John J. Worley, his wife, real name unknown; L. Pierce, real name unknown; Mrs. L. Pierce, his wife real name unknown; W. Pierce, real name unknown; Mrs. W. Pierce, hi3 wife, real name unknown; L.& W Pierce, real names unknown; Alice Shepherd, Shepherd, her hus band, real name unknown; George H. Warren and the heirs, devisees, legatees, personal representatives and all otherpersons interested in the respective estates of John J. Worley, Mrs. Jonn j. woney, u. fierce, Airs. jL. Pierce, W. Pierce, Mrs. W. Pierce, Alice Shepherd, Shepherd, George H. Warren, Wheatley Mickel- wait, Illisiania Mickelwait. Fred H. Mickelwait, Mrs. Fred H. Mickelwait, each deceased real namea unknown. and an persons having or claiming any interest in Lot 9 in Block 62. in tne Clty of Plattsmouth. Cass coun ty, Nebraska, real names unknown: You and each of you are hereby notified that on the 21st day of May, 1926. plaintiff filed his suit in the District Court of Cass county, Ise braska. the object and purpose of .which is to establish and quiet and i cnfirir plai""ff'? U?e jV SiUn above described lands and to enjoin eacn and all of you from having or claiming to have any right, title, es itate, lien or interest, either legal or Com-!eluitabl? in or to said real estate or nnv nart thereof and to enioin TOU ,, arh nf vou from in anv manner Jul?' 1926 In failing so to do, your default will be entered therein and judgment taken upon piaintiffs peti- tion. WILLIAM BALLANCE, Plaintiff. By A' L Sis Attorney, m24 - 4w. ORDER OF HEARING and Notice on Petition for Set tlement of Account. In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. State of Nebraska, Cass county, ss. To all persons interested in the estate of Fritz Heinrich, deceased: On reading the petition of William L. Heinrich praying a final settlement and allowance of his account filed in this Court on the 1st day of June, 1926, and for distribution of said estate; 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 coun ty, on the 14th day of June, A. D. 1926, at ten o'clock a. m., to show cause, if any there be, why the pray er of the petitioner should not br granted, and that notice of the pen dency of said petition and the hear ing thereof be given to all persons interested in said matter by publish ing a copy of this order in the Platts mouth Journal, a semi-weekly news paper printed in said county, for one week prior to said day of hearing. In witness whereof, I have here unto set my hand and the Seal of said Court, this 1st day of June, A. D. 1926. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) jT-lw County Judge. NOTICE OF BOND ELECTION Notice is hereby given to the quali fied voters of School District No. 3C of the County of Cass, State of Ne braska, that by the consent of two thirds of the District Board of said district, an election has been called and will be held at Calfee's Harness Shop in the Village of Greenwood in said school district on Tuesday, the 15th day of June, 1926, the polls be ing open from 8:00 o'clock a. m. to 8:00 o'clock p. m., at which time there will be submitted to the quali fied voters of said district the follow ing proposition: "Shall the Disrtict Officers of School District No. 36 of the County of Cass, State of Nebras ka, issue the bonds of said School District in the amount of Thirty Five Thousand Dollars ($35, 000.00), bearing interest at the rate of Four and Three-Fourths Per Centum (4 ) per annum, payable semi-annually, maturing in not to exceed thirty (30) years, to be dated July 1, 1926, and "Shall the District Officers of said School District cause to be levied annually a tax sufficient for the payment of the interest and principal of said bonds when the same become due, the pro ceeds of said bonds to be used for the purpose of erecting an addition to the present High school building." For said bonds and tax Against said bonds and tax Voters desiring to vote in favor of said proposition will indicate the same by marking an "X" in the square following the words "For said bonds and tax." Voters desiring to vote against said proposition will in dicate the same by marking an "X" in the square following the words "Against said bonds and tax." WATSON HOWARD, Moderator. JNO. E. SCIFULLING. m20-4w Director. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the Guardianship of James Howard Shepherd, Hazel Shepherd. Lawrence Shepherd and Dorothy Shepherd. Minors. Now. on this 31st day of May, A. D. 1926, this cause came on to be heard at Chambers, upon the petition of Clara May Wiltse, the guardian of the person and estate of James Howard Shepherd, Hazel Shepherd, Lawrence Shepherd and Dorothy Shepherd, Minors, , praying for a li cense to sell real estate, and tne Court finds that there is no moneys or personal property of any kind or description in the hands of the guar dian with which to pay for the sup port, maintenance and education of said minors. The Court further finds that the County Judge of Cass county, Nebras ka, has made an allowance of $5.00 per week for each of said minors for their maintenance, support and edu cation, and there is no moneys or personal property in the hands of said guardian with which to pay said amount. The Court further finds that each of said minors has an undivided one seventh interest in the following de scribed property, subject to the life estate of said Clara May Wiltse, to wit : East half of the northwest quarter (E NW ) of Section nine (9), Township seven (7), Range twelve (12), Otoe coun ty, Nebraska and that it will be necessary to sell the interest of said minors in said property for the purpose of paying for the support, maintenance and education of said minors. It is therefore ordered that all persons interested in tne eetaie oi said minors and all those who are next of kin and heirs apparent or presumptive appear before me In the be granted to said guardian to sell the above described real estate. It is further ordered that this Order to Show Cause be published in the Plattsmouth Journal, a legal newspaper published in said county, four successive weeks prior to July 3, 1926. JAMES BEGLEY. Judge of the District 7-4w. Advertise your wants in the Want! Ad column for quick results. ty court house in Plattsmouth Cass ,ien Interest either , , or county, Nebraska, on the 3rd day of equltable in or to said reaI esta or July. 1926. at ten o clock a. m to thereof and pnj ' show cause why a license should not OI, or. nf vn in ORDER OF HEARING on Petition for Appointment of Administ ratrix The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate oC Henry G. Long. Deeeas-d. On reading and filing the petition of Bertha Shrader. Ge rtrude Nil kle4 and Ella Long, praying that admin istration of said estate may be grant ed to Ella Long, as Administratrix; Ordered, that July 5th, A. I). 1921, at ten o'clock a. m., is assigned for hearing said petition, when all per sons 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 petition ers should not be granted; and that notice of th 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 ord r in the Plattsmouth Journal, a semi weekly newspaper printed in said county, for three successive weeks prior to said day of hearing. Dated May 24th. 1920. A. II. DUXBURY. (Seal) m31-3w County Judge. NOTICE OF REFEREE'S SALE In the District Court of the Coun ty of Cass. Nebraska. James W. Newell and wife, Hallie Newell: Ella Newell Stewart and husband William M. Stewart; Ber nice Newell Fuller and husband Roy J. Fuller, and W. A. Robertson, Trus tee for Helen Roberts Hunter and Newell Roberts, and Robert Newell, Plaintiffs, vs. Bertha Shopp and hus band Frank B. Shopp. Defendants. Notice is hereby given that under and by virtue of a decree of the Dis trict Court of Cass county. Nebraska, entered in the above entitled cause on the 22nd day of May. 1926, and an order of sale entered by said Court on the 22nd day of May. 1926, the undersigned Sole Referee, will sell at public auction on the 26th day of June, 1926, at 10 o'clock a. m.. at the south front door of the court house in the City of Plattsmouth, Cass county, Nebraska, to highest bidder for cash the following de scribed real estate, to-wit: The east half (EU) of the northwest quarter (NW'i ) of Section twenty-nine (29") Town ship twelve (12), Ranee twelve (12), Range twelve (12). east of the 6th P. M., in the County of Cass. Nebraska subject to two certain mortgages thereon; one of $6,000.00 given to Annis & Rohling Company and as signed to John Hancock Mutual Lite Insurance Company and one of J2H2. 50 given to Annis & Rohling Com pany upon which there is an unpaid balance of $180.00. Said sale will be held open for one hour. Ten per cent of bid cash at time of sale and balance on confirma tion. Dated this 22nd day of May, A. D. 1926. D. O. DWYER. Referee. W. A. ROBERTSON. ni24-5w Attorney. LEGAL NOTICE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. Glenn Vallery, Plaintiff, vs. Lillio M. Anderson et al. Defendants. To the Defendants Lillie M. Ander son; Lydia Wright and Y right. her husband, real name unknown; John Wright and wife, Mary Wright; William F. Hatch and wife, Mary Hatch; the heirs, devisees, legatees and personal representatives and all other persons interested in the re spective estates of Lillie M. Ander son, Lydia Wright and Wright, her husband, real name unknown; John Wright and wife, Mary Wright; William F. Hatch and wife, Mary Hatch, each deceased, real names un known; and all persons having or claiming any interest in, right or title to, or lien upon the following described real estate, to-wit: Com mencing at the southwest corner of the NE4 of the NWU of Sec. 35. Twp. 12 North of Rge. 13, east of the 6th P. M., in Cass county, Ne braska, running thence east 94 feet, thence in a northeasterly direction along the right-of-way of the Mis souri Pacific railway 618.8 feet. thence west 242.8 feet, thence south 618.8 feet to the place of beginning, containing 2.4 acres more or less, and known as Lot 2S; also the fol lowing tract of land, to-wit: Com mencing at the southeast corner of the NWU of the XW'i of Sec. 3 5. Twp. 13' North of Rge. 13. east of the 6th P. M., and running thence north 627 feet to the south line of Mynard, thence west along said south line 150 feet to the southwest corner of said lots, thence south 627 feet to the south line of said NW'i of the NWU of said Section 35. thence east 150 feet to the place of begin ning, containing 2 acres, more or less, all in Cass county, Nebraska, real names unknown: You and each of you are hereby notified to,at on the 15th day of May, 1926. the plaintiff filed his suit in the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska, the object and purpose of which is to establish and quiet and confirm plaintiff's title in and to the a Virwa 1acrri TinH 1 o n ii a nn1 t a i -i Ir.i n . Q . - . rT, . . you irom in any interfering vith plaintiff's possession or enjoyment of said premises, and for equitable relief. This notice is given pursuant to an order of the Court. You are hereby required to answer said petition on or before Monday, the 5th day of July, A. D. 1926. In falling so to do. vrtu v Hcfti ti 1 1 xxM 1 1 a nt i Vi Aral n jand jud&ment taken upon plaintlfr8 I UCllllUUi I GLEN VALLERY. . tUlii LIU. By A. L. TIDD, His Attorney. Jm24 - 4w