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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (May 12, 1927)
THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1927. PIATTSMOjrrH SEMI -WEEKLY JOTTBSTAL PAGE THEa THE SCHOOL TEACHER SOCRATES AND THE COURTS LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SUIT TO QUIET TITLE 'v. 7 Cbc plattsmouth journal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA mtr at ioatoCAc. PU.ttamoo.tb. TCb. m eoo-cla mall mattar R. A. BATES, Publisher SUXSC2IPTI0B PBICB $2.00 FEB YEAS EH ADVANC1 World wide wheat pool seems to be favored. :o:- LaFayette, we are here, there and everywhere. :a: More rain, more grass, makes cows give more milk. :o: Quite an assembly attended the band concert Friday night. :o: The corn borer is known to attack 226 different kinds of plants. :o: . Low den boom head selected in the person of Frank J. Lund, of Iowa. :o: Stimson says the war is over in Nicaragua. We will see what we shall see. :o: The democrats will hold a conven tion next year. That is a foregone confusion. :o: Lowden saya he is in the race for good and will make a hot fight for the nomination. :o: Omaha distillery to age whiskey in 50 hours. What's the use when pro hibition prohibits sale? :o: " Cockroaches of an American species are raised in a London Zoo to provide food for frogs and lizards. :o: Again news is defined. It happened last week when a motor car pulled a team of horses out of a mud-hole. -:o:- Anyway, when some man is given control of an industry, he is referred to as a "czar," not as a Mussolini. :o: A diamond with a hole through the middle has been discovered In Elands putte. It Is of value only as a freak tone. :o: The New York Y, M. C. A. has given 2,000 bachelors quarters in Its buildings a year In which to find a wife and home. :o: Once iinnn n. tlmA ther wtid a. nnh- ltc official whose pointless ancestors, did not cause him to be credited with "a keen sense of humor." :o: : If you haven't made the rounds of this spring's flowers display, make it within the next few days. The beauty soon will fade, more's the pity. :o: And the Anti-Saloon League basro. not said anything about prohibiting' the manufacture, sale or transporta- tion of. window weights and picture wire. -:o: ' "Millions, billions, trillions what comes nexii was one or ine list ori questions. Later, we found out that(pars to get a divorce. Eventually, our answer, vare ana omun, was not right. An Indian prince has his private iram equippea wun a nuge tODacco pipe, mounted In the locomotive, from a. a a . a . a . I which smoke is piped to each compart ment for passengers to use. I"H A I I I I-l'fr-I-i-W"I"!"W- t Dr. John A. Griffin f Dentist ernes Hran: t-11; 1-6. Baadajra an4 pvcnlnxa Vj ublntnt only. . PHOND 229 Boeaaioiuen Building -FOR YOUR CHICKS- Duikers Duttermilk Starting Food Package 40c and Up! Contains the Vitamines, Made good not cheap. "The only reason some Utfeyrich & Plattsmouth, I Blondes prefer sash weights -:o: :o: Tip your hat but let your hand alone. :o: A third term president is out of the question. :o: A true home man is worth a thous and knockers. :o: Chicago plans to celebrate its cen tennial in 1933. :o: To back Diaz by force that's Cool- idge's plan, of course. :o: The most radical thing in Massa chusetts is legal practice. :o: We don't know much about Art but we know what we don't like. :o: Relief boats are having a race to save people in flooded sections :o:- 4 tuiuuiudiiuu uiuuiriid tiuu ucxliij robe for bathers has been devised. :o: A third party is probable, if Sena tor Norris will consent to run for president. :o:- A good war story is one that makes an ex-soldier buy himself another wrist watch- :o Mm-P nipasnnt "weather this week.'to a school room and take ud the Sometimes it does not pay to kick;heartg and han(Jgj makI not onl a against the priks. But nevertheless it is frequently done :o:- Nearly 175,000 automobiles of American type were sold from foreign ! branch plants last year. :o: The big majority of the voters of these United States are not favorable for a third term president. -:o:- Mounting luxury taxes In Belgium I have caused many outomobile own ers to refuse to run their cars. :o: Politics must be on the uplife in' this country when the 1928 cam-. nalfrn nnona In tha Atlantis Mftnthlv r "e Among some Indian tribes it is re garded as improper for a mother-in-, i.w r snpnlf trw hor rianhtpr'n him-' uaw to speak to ner daughters nus- Dand Experiements on certain house plants showed that an excess of to bacco smoke in the air was fatal to -:o: Then again, if there were more cable lines to China, the Great Powers would have reached the ultimatum stage by this time. :a: a. pair of Vanderbilts have gone to if the courts hold out, all the Van derbilts will be divorced. :o: There seems to be no abatement on the storm question. If not in one place it is in another. And they are destructive storms, and killing. :o: In a Paris ballroom the musicians must keep their eyes on a big dial like a clock face, which indicates how many beats are allowed to the min-l ute. It is controlled by the orchestra leader. :o: Despite the fact that the country is Jazz mad more garden tools are be ing sold than ever before, according to a dispatch. But you never can tell what a person is going to do with a garden tool these days. things are cheap, is Madraba, Nebraska The board of education is thru with its annual task of selecting the fac-, present in spirit, during me auempi Devlsees Legatees ulty of the Plattsmouth public schools .of a modern Greek lawyer to get his paT RepreWntltives' and ali for the next scholastic year a work case reviewed by the Supreme Court j other persons interested in the estate more important, by far, than any of Athens, he has doulmess been 'of William I. Mastin, deceased; and other duty delegated to this body amused at the idea that anyone should i the Heirs, Devisees, Legatees, Per In rul, real.zat.on of th.s tact, th.) confer such a t worth JUua. and a board enaeavorea to select tne very best material available, within the salary limits it is forced to observe, J and it must be conceded that today' Plattsmouth has a school faculty sec ond to none in the commonwealth. Teachers assume a very grave re sponsibility the moment they step in- ! duties of teaching boys and girls, There is no work that is more ser- ious, more fraught with good or evil,sti11 one of tne choice prducta of the results, nor is there any work that' icarries with it more, or even so much of responsibility. It is work that deals with human lives, than which' there is nothing more precious, in their formative periods. Aye, it is work that is wrought in the hearts' and minds of bovs and irirls snnn to be the men and women to whom will be assigned the varoius tasks by which they must live and by which must be,years after the execution of Sarvanola carried forward the enlightenment of progress and humanity, or for lack of which there must come retrogression, failure, and misery. How enormous, then, is the respon sibility of the teacher. Without real- 'ization of the responsibility there can ."be no thoroughly good work accm- j plished by those who engage to teach, :but much of harm. It is comparative - ly easy to assign lessons and hear recitations. But that is not teaching Very much more is expected and re quired of every teacher, a3 ha3 been indicated in the foregoing paragraph. Teaching, real teaching is training. which is even more important than giving instruction. The very best of school room training, as it is recog nized todav. includes minds and complexity of work for the teacher, I but also, presenting a task of unequal- c" . - Ieast" The oId adae- "As the twis is bent so is the tree inclined," illus-j trates the significance of what has' JliSl ut" J i. I. I J il Deins true mai leacning carries WIin 11 sucn very rave responsimmy.i how is it possible to meet that respon- sibility otherwise than by being pre pared for it, by being not only qual ified in the art and science of giving instruction, but by having imbedded in the human consciousness of the in the human consciousness of the true teacher the proper concept and : m i i. i o n j . i i lMUllusi Al1 1L lion, or love, or wnaipver one mav. j the fact stands out prominently- nat no one can be a teacher, in the ' truegt seng6 of the word? or Jn worthy j I attainment without it, that to be a! i ai auu ouw.rooi ui icav tic: i uuc niuci have in the work to be done, all of. soul and as much of mind as can be' brought into play. The real teacher studies the child . more than the latter studies books and works out problems. Unfortunate ly, the school system, that aims to give instruction to as many as pos- sible by the fewest possible number, only the day police there intervened of teachers, makes this necessary . just in time to save a girl from being child-study well-nigh impossible no offered as a human sacrifice. The girl teacher can do justice to himself or had been kidnaped by order of a voo herself, or to the pupils, when the' doo "doctor" who said that a sacrifice number of the latter in the various' would be the only means of ridding class rooms, or school rooms, is ex- one of his clients of disease, cessive, precluding individual atten- That belief dates back to the very tion by the teacher, such as is highly dawn of civilization. Yet it exists essential for successful teaching. It' side my side with all the refinements is argued that funds are not sufficient of 1927. to employ the necessary number of Truly, the Job of civilizing mankind teachers and that over crowding is has not yet been completed! unavoidable. What a crime against' :o: I future saving a few paltry dollars and thereby providing human wreck age, boys and girls, deprived of the education and training they should have, going out into the world im- proDerly equipped for the work that calls to be done, efficiently and worthily! Is it any wonder that abil ity is lacking In so very many direc tions? Are the teachers to blame or ta tho DTctoni at fault? ...... . . , . , ,. Without any doubt, some of the noblest and most worthy of God's . . . . 1 " ' serving the people in the public serving me peopie in me yuuwc schools and in the colleges and unl- ... , .uan oo,.,.. versifies. They are those teachers whose conscience is the feeling of re sponsibility, a realization that they are engaged in engraving on human hearts and minds that which is end less, enduring, reaizating tnat ior their work there is no time limit and, that it is done so will be the shape and course of human lives, influenced and directed wherever instruction is given and education made possible. :o: Chicago's new chief of police says his ambition is to drive all the thieves, thugs and crooks out of cago within ninety days. If he is in earnest about it, the exodus from Chicago will be far more imposing than the exodus from the flood- stricken regions of the Mississippi val - ley. If Socrates has been consciously - ... m r .. suuuiu ucn.c mat ma lcVjLurton F. Polk, deceased; and all utation would gain anything if thelother persons having or claiming to movement were to succeed. After the sentence of death was imposed and executed, the only worth while appeal was to the court of intelligent opinion through the ages, and in that court Socrates has had his vindication in every age since theamous condemna tion was recorded. His own defense, a3 handed down to us by Plato, is world's best literature, and will be i read long after the present movement to secure a formal reversal of his con- viction shall have been forgotten. The Supreme Court at Athens has rightly refused to give an official hearing to the lawyer who would reopen the case. To do so would make a farce of i judicial procedure. The city of Florence, four hundred placed a tablet to his honor on the spot where his body had been burned. and on that tablet one reads the con fession that his deatn sentence was unjustified; but Florence did not make this vindication ridiculous by going through the empty forms of a retrial and acquitting him. The Greek i lawyer should remember that one of 1 the essentials of a fair criminal trial ' is that the defendant and his accusers ! should face each other in court. If he will bring the parties concerned together, the Athenian Supreme Court will doubtless take the matter serious ly, but not otherwise. :o: PROHIBITION GOOD MANNERS Nobody is surprised to hear that Senator Willis has referred to the chief executive of New York state as Gov. "Alcohol" Smith. Everybody knows that the Ohio senator is one 0f the leading lights of the dry mil lennium, and they know what that i millennium has done to good man ners. They remember the case of Gen. Smedley Butler and they have heard ofIf indeed tney have been lucky h no(. tQ have experienced the '. . ,,. nf nhWa O J 1' r A.VA ""0 and acquaintances. They know, in fact, that under prohibition there is lonly one kind of manners, and that . . . precedeted about what has happened to good manners In the dry millen niuni. Whenever people have begun i nrvinc into each other's beliefs and , . morals, gotxi manners nave guuB iiuu W a W VI A I-? IVJnT IV f l'l lr n W II k h JflliVIMII HVi'l al V A A Ma W A a The civilized twentieth century still rubs elbows with barbarism. however much the fact may be hidden beneath the every-day manifestations of enlightment. Havana is probably as up-to-date and cultured as the average city. Yet ' TCm PTTTTT'RF. HTSTO'RIANS I Scarface Al Caponi, one of Chica go's most notorious gang leaders, is "broke." He says so himself. , , , x ... horses and dice during the last two years. This money, you 'know, wasj gained through his own gambling houses and through bootlegging. This item calls for a comment of :some kind; but somehow we can't ' . seem to say anything that will do the case justice. But what a revealing lit- la fof it ,11 no fnr tt niotnv- , t together some'trict court within and for Cass coun- .ians no try to P!fe ,gf e' M Ity. Nebraska, and to me directed, I Idea of our present-day civilization " -:o:- FLEETING FAME Unless fame has a verv sound basis in genuine service to humanity, it is aDt to De pretty shortlived a number of personal effects of the iate Rudoplph Valentino were offer- ed for sale in London recently, and! it was advertised that they could be viewed by the general public for a neriod of two weeks. Not one girl or woman visited the ! piace to have a look or to buy. The Chi-jauction was gparSely attended, and m0st of the buyers were mlddleaged! men seeking curios. :o: . Who can remember when the main . . j attraction about a murder trial was jthe date set for the hanging? In the District Court of Cass coun- V VfiKro clro have any interest in that part of the SW,i of the NW4 of Section thirty two (32), Township twelve (12K North of Range nine (9), East of the 6th P. M., in Cass county, Nebraska, described aa follows: Commencing at the southwest corner of the S of Section 32. Township 12, North of Range 9, East, thence east 26 rods, thence north 80 rods, thence west 26 rods, thence south 80 rods to the place of beginning, real names , un known: You and each of you are hereby nouiieu mat on me z 1 m aay oiitt- 1 iri.i -r - Ctv Tir.,. i April, 1927, Elmer C. Coleman and i Highest Market Prices SIX Days m Lula Coleman as plaintiffs filed their petition in the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska, naming you as de fendants, the object and prayer of which petition is to quiet the title in the plaintiffs to That part of the SW1 of the NW14 of Section thirty-two (32), Township twelve (12), North of Range nine (9), East of the 6th P. M., in Cass county, Nebraska, described as follows: Commencing at the southwest corner of the SV& of Section 32, Township 12, North of Range 9, East, thence east 26 rods, thence north SO rods, thence west 26 rods, thence south 80 rods to the place of beginning and to remove the cloud upon the Eli M. Smith, James M. Comer, Dan plaintiff's title as set forth in said jiei Smith, Asenath Smith. William P. Jdiuisuy auu is uai a. uu cavi uuc enjoin you and each of you from any right, title, interest, claim or demand in or to the said property, or any part thereof. You and each of you are further notified that you are required to an swer said petition on or before the 20th day of June, 1927. Dated this day of May, A. D. 1927. ELMER C. COLEMAN and LULA COLEMAN, By Plaintiffs. GEORGE YEAGER, Their Attorney. m9-? ORDER OF HEARING on Petition of Appointment of Administrator. The State of Nebraska, Cass Coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of J-.hn Koukal, deceased. On reading and filing the petition of Julia C. Kratochvil and Joseph G. Koukal, praying that administration of said estate may be granted to Emil A. Koukal, as administrator. Ordered, that May 31st A. D. 1927 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 peti tioner should not be granted; and that notice for 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 Journal, a semi-weekly newspaper printed in said County, for three successive weeks prior to said day of hearing. Dated May 6th, 1927. A. H. DUXBURY, County Judge. JOHN M. LEYDA, (Seal)m9-3w Atty. for Petitioners. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass Coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Maggie Stoehr, formerly Maggie Born, 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 Juue 6, 1927, and September 7, 192 7. at 10 o'clock a. m., each day to receive and examine all claims against the estate, with a view to their adjust ment and allowance. The time limit ed for the presentation of claims against the estate is three montiis from the 6th day of June, A. u. 1927, and the time limited for pay ment of debts is one year from said 6th day of June 1927. Witness my hand and seal of the County Court, this 3rd day of May 1927. M A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal)m9-4w County Judge. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska County of Cass, ss. By virtue of an Order of Sale Issued hr .Ortlrta Nnhlp Roftl. clerk of DIS tr.nt -lirt within nd for Cass coun will on the 14th day of May, 1927, at 10 o'clock a. m. of said day at the South Front Door of the Court House in the city of Plattsmouth, Ne- ibraska in said county, sell at puDUC .auction to the highest bidder for cash lilt) lUllUWIUg ncai iviai.c, Lots Nine (9) and Ten (10), Block Ninety-Six (96) in the city of Plattsmouth, Nebraska The same being levied and taken as the property of Laura G. Marshall,; view to their adjustment and al- tion will be taken as true and a de defendant to satisfy a Judgment of lowance. The time limited for the cree wljj be entered in favor of said court recovered by The Standard presentation of claims against said plaintiff and against you and each of savings ana uuan. Asauviauuu vm. 1st i lkT.l.WAMlrM M1Mln4lra A oro i w a t ' yit""Lliia said defendant. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, April 9th,! A. D., 1927. BERT REED, Sheriff, Cass County, Nebraska. All-5w. Legal blanks Of all kinds for U the Journal OdSoe. Moye Pays Cash for Poultry, Eggs, Cream Hides and Furs the week. Brine US your produce. We Sell Oyster Shell and Just-Rite Chick Feeds Moye Produce Co. Telephone 391 Plattsmouth, Neb. LEGAL NOTICE To: Mary Decker, George Decker, Julyann Smith, Julyann Conger, Enos Consrer. Amanda Smith, John Smith, Comer, Luvenia Comer, Sarah A. Lar- ison, Miles Russell Smith, Jacob E. Smith, William Smith, Frederick Buchel, Katie E. Buchel, S. F. Hut chison, real name unknown; Emma Amelia Hutchison, Josephine E. Smith; the heirs, devisees, legatees, personal representatives and all oth er persons interested in the estate of Purnel J. Smith also known as P. J. Smith, Purnell J. Smith, Pernal J. Smith, Pernell Smith, Parnell J. Smith, Purvel Smith, deceased, real names unknown; the heirs, devisees, legatees, personal representatives and all other persons interested in the estate of Mary Decker, deceased, real names unknown; the heirs, devisees, legatees, personal representatives and all other persons interested in the es tate of George Decker, deceased, real names unknown; the heirs, devisees, legatees, personal representatives and all other persons interested in the es tate of Sarah Comer, deceased, real names unknown; the heirs, devisees, legatees, personal representatives and all other persons interested in the es tate of Jacob Larison, deceased, real names unknown; the heirs, devisees, legatees, personal representatives and all other persons interested in the estate of Ellen Buchel, deceased, real names unknown; the heirs, devisees, legatees, personal representatives and all other persons interested in the es tate of Sarah A. Larison, deceased, real names unknown; the heirs, devi sees, legatees, personal representa tives and all other persons interested in the estate of Julyann Conger, de ceased, real names unknown; the heirs, devisees, legatees, personal rep resentatives and all other persons in terested in the estate of Richard An derson Smith, deceased, real names unknown, and all persons having or claiming any interest in all that part of the east half (E) of the north east quarter (NE) of Section 35, Township 10, Range 13, lying and being east of the right-of-way of the Missouri Pacific railway and north of the Weeping Water creek, in Cass county, Nebraska, real names un known, Defendants: You are hereby notified that David Murray as petitioner, has filed in the District Court of Cass county, Ne braska, his petition against you as defendants, the object and prayer of which is ta secure the entry of a decree barring and excluding each and all of you from the possession of or having or claiming any right, title, lien upon or interest in the above de scribed real estate, or any part there of, and quieting the title to all of said real estate in the petitioner against all claims by or on behalf of any of the said defendants, or per sons claiming under them. You may answer the said petition in said Court at Plattsmouth, Ne-! southeast quarter (SE1) of said Sec braska, on or before the 6th day of jtion thirty-four (34), running thence June, 1927, otherwise the allegations of the said petition will be taken as true and a decree entered according ly. Dated this 23rd day of April, A. D. 1927. DAVID MURRAY, Petitioner. GEO. M. LATHROP, a25-4w His Attorney. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass Coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Al fred B. Hass, deceased. To the creditors of said estate You are hereby notified. That I will sit at the County Court room in I'lattsmoutn, in saia county, on tne 12th day of May, A. D. 1927, and the 13th day of August, A. D. 1927, at the hour of ten o'clock of each day respectively, to received and examine all claims against said estate, with a miio 10 mi uiuuius uum me A f v j- f fow A Tl 1(197 a n A 4VlA tlmA T'iXa . ' "I "'Vr''. Tl 7- VZL litJ.IliifJS Year from said 12th day of May 1927. ivuuma uijr uauu auu lue ecai ui said county court this 8th day of April 1927. A. H. DUXBURY, (Seal)All-4w County Judge. All kinds of business stationery printed at the Journal office. In the District Court of Cass County, Nebraska. Searl S. Davis, Plaintiff vs. Henry Wortendyker et al. Defendants. NOTICE To the Defendants: Henry Worten dyker; Wortendyker, real name unknown, wife of Henry Wort endyker; Henry Wortendyke; Emily J. Worterdyke, wife of Henry Wor tendyke; W. R. Sperry, real name un known; Sperry, real name un known, wife of W. R. Sperry; Wil liam R. Sperry; Alice G. Sperry, wife of William R. Sperry; Wm. R. Sperry, Sr., real name unknown; Sperry, real name unknown, wife of Wm. R. Sperry, Sr.; William R. Sperry, Sr.; Minnie Sperry, wife of William R. Sperry, Sr.; Robert Al- baugh; Albaugh, real name unknown, wife of Robert Albaugh; William Nisbet; Nisbet, real name unknown, wife of William Nis bet; James L. Lambert; ( Lam bert, real name unkntjr.vn, wife of James L. Lambert; James L. '.Lom bard; Lombard i-eal ''name unknown, wife of Jautes L. Lom bard; John S. Tewksbury;' Alvira C. Tewksbury, wife of John S. Tewks bury; the heirs, devisees, legatees, personal representatives and all oth er persons interested in the estates of following named deceased persons: Henry Wortendyker; Worten dyker, real name unknown, wife of Henry Wortendyker; Henry Worten dyke; Emily J. Wortendyke, wife of Henry Wortendyke; W. It. Sperry, real name unknown; Sperry. real name unknown, wife of W. It. Sperry; William R. Sperry; Alice G. Sperry. wife of William R. Sperry; Wm. R. Sperry, Sr., real name un known; Sperry, real name unknown, wife of Wm. R. Sperry, Sr.; William R. Sperry, Sr.; Minnie Sperry, wife of William R. Sperry, Sr.; Robert Albaugh; Al baugh, real name unknown, wife of Robert Albaugh; William Nisbet; Nisbet, real name unknown, wife of William Nisbet; James L. Lambert; Lambert, real name unknown, wife of James L. Lambert; James L. Lombard; Lombard, real name unknown, wife of James L. Lombard; John S. Tewksbury; Al vira C. Tewksbury, wife of John S. Tewksbury, real names unknown; Redmond Cleary Commission Com pany, a corporation, its successors and assigns; Redmond Cleary & Co., a corporation, its successors and as signs; all persons having or claiming any interest in the following de scribed real estate in Cass county, Nebraska, to-wit. Tax -Lots eighteen (18) and nineteen (19) in the west half (WJ2) of the southeast quarter (SEi4) of Section thirty-four (34), Township eleven (11) North, Range eleven (11) East of the 6th P. M Cass county, Nebraska, more particu larly described as follows: Commenc ing at the southwest corner of the southeast quarter (SE) of said Section thirty-four (34), running thence north along the half section line one hundred twenty (120) rods, thence east to the Missouri Pacific Railway Company's right-of-way, thence south along the Missouri Pa cific Railway Company's right-of-way to the township line, thence west to place of beginning. Also Tax Lot fourteen (14) In Section three (3), Township ten (10) North, Range eleven (11) East of the 6th P. M., Cass county, Nebraska, being all that part of the northwest quarter (NWi) of the northeast quarter (NE4) of said Section three (3) lying north of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company's right-of-way through said northwest quarter (NW4) of the northeast quarter (NEi ) of said section, real names unknown, Defendants: You and each of you are hereby notified that the above named plain tiff filed a petition and commenced an action in the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska, on the 18th day of April, 1927, against you and each of you, the object and prayer of which is to obtain a decree of court quiet ing title in and to Tax Lots eighteen (18) and nineteen (19), in the west half (W) of the southeast quarter (SE14) of Section thirty-four (34), Township eleven (11) North, Range eleven (11) East of the 6th P. M., Cass county, Nebraska, more particu larly described as follows: Commenc ing at the southwest corner of the north along the half, section line one hundred twenty (120) rods, thence east to the Missouri Pacific Railway Company's right-of-way, thence along the Missouri Pacific Railway Com pany's right-of-way to the township line, thence west to place of begin ning. Also Tax Lot fourteen (14) in Section three (3), Township ten (10) North, Range eleven (11) East of the 6th P. M., Cass county, Nebraska, being all that part of the northwest quarter (NW) of the northeast quarter (NEVi) of said Section three (3) lying north of the Missouri Pa cific Railway Company's right-of-way (NWU) of the northeast quarter )(NE) of said section, as against you and each of you. and for such other and further relief as may be jUSt and equitable, including costs of Buit. you and each of you are required to answer said petition on or before Monday, the 6th day of June, 1927, tha you, according to the prayer of said .... Petition Dated thl. 23rd day of April. A. 'n 1097 SEARL S. DAVIS, Plaintiff. J. A. CAPWELL, His Attorney. a25-4w Need help? Tort en get it enieklj jby pfta?urg yma d 13 b X3eycL