MONDAY, TUm 25. 1S23. ' PLATT3MGTJTH ST.m - JOTJBjiAI, PAGE TTTT.TT, Cbc plattsmoutb Journal rOBUSHED SEKI-WEEZLT AT P1ATTSM0DTH, KX2EASKA trA At HcaioClcA. Plttmouth. Nu m ooflclM mllm.Hr A. BATES suBscxrrnoK ?iacs S2.00 Houston is a beautiful city. :o:- Sccond thoughts are vice-presiden-tial candidates. -:o:- The Fourth of July, wjll come and go and no celebration. Why? :o:- W'ill Heflin support Al Smith if he is nominated at Houston? -:o:- The republican party and one man government! How do you like it? :o: In Indiana, "How many term3 have you served?" is an ambfguous ques tion. -:o:- The phrase "filthy lucre" is old fashioned and no longer used in good society. -:o: The time has come for lawyers to put divorce clauses in pre-nuptial contracts. :o:- It may be quite correct to say that the straw hat came in to fill a long felt want. -:o: Some authorities say that "Busi ness is on the upgrade," but which way is it headed? -:o:- Many a man thinks he's tolerant when he is just to shallow to de velop a conviction. :o:- Why is it that the best coiners of epigrams are so fond of aiming their shafts at the women? -:o:- Hefiin the Alabama monkey, can go home after the convention in spirit, and without honor. Better be broad minded than broad shouldered, but a little of each makes a good combination. -:o: The democrats are certainly not fool? enough to let the negroes con trol the politics of the south. As we understand the matter, the Republicans are responsible- for) everything but the late spring. -:o:- Will the farmers march on Hous ton? If they do, they won't get pnubbed like they did at Kansas City. :o: You can begin the day with a pmile although there are no brass rails upon which to put your feet. :o: Now that Kansas City has had her song festival and band concert, per haps Houston will give us a conven tion. :o: Occasionally we wonder what the Nicaraguan keynoter, if any, will find to say about our international philanthropy. j :o: Some people really like fresh air( all the year around, and others had j the window half way up when the i painters came. i .o. I Prince Carol of Rumania occurs to us as the undiplomatic kind who would pick the wrong country in a blindfold test. -:o:- Some people want the name of the , "District of Columbia," changed to the "District of Soquittal!" let it go at that. All right Don't Neglect Your Kidneys! You Can't Be Well When Kidneys Act Sluggishly. DO you find yourself running down -always tired, nervous and de pressed? Are you stiff &nd achy, sub Iect to nagging backache, drowsy leadaches and dizzy spells? Are kid ney excretions scanty, too frequent or burning in passage? Too often this indicates sluggish kidneys end shouldn't be neglected. Doan's Pills, a stimulant diuretic; increase the secretion of the kidneys and thus aid in the Jimination of waste impurities. Doan's are endorsed everywhere. Ja your neighbor DOAN'S A STIMULANT DIURETIC Tfoater-MUburn Co. Mfg Oci PILLS 60c n KIDNEYS a. Duffel. W- , Publisher per yeas in advakcs Harvest is on, but rain has inter fered somewhat. Charley Dawes didn't care to serve any longer, as vice-president. :o:- Senator Curtis of Kansas, for vice president, is big enough for the of fice. :o:- Who will be the President's close friend and White House guest after March 4. 192S? :o: Governor Smith lets come what will, he is not a man to go back on his record. Mark that. -:o: Moscow announces that the world is turning toward Communism but with its firsts clenched. -:o: A modern forum appears to be a place where the debaters who are wrong are the more vociferous. -:o:- If - the Anti-Saloon forces are de feated in this campaign, as they sure ly will be they will be no more, :o: When you hear some of the rumor? you wonder why they bother to as sure you the rumors are unconfirmed. -:o:- Whf n a bomb goes off in the mid del of a political speech in Chicago, it is considered the same as a coma. :o:- As long as we have inflexible laws to govern flexible misdemeanors there will be difficulty in enforce ment. :o: As a matter of fact the Republi can elephant and the Democratic donkey never drink anything except water. :o:- 'We 'do not suppose, that, the little King of Rumania cares very much where Carol is so lonjj as he stays there. -:o:- Governor Ritchie. of .Maryland has withdrawn as a presidential can didate, and declares for Governor Smith. :o:- No need to worry atout the col lege fad and going hatless. We have heard that some students are also brainless. o:- A mechanic:1.! man recently "vas used to drill United States troops, but has made considerable progress since 1917. :o: xnother optimist is the man who thinks that children get a vacation from school because the children need the rest. -:o:- Another optimist is the man who figures out what the percentages of some of the teams would be if they win the game. Some of our best murderers are so violently insane that they do not consider anything but the electric chair a deadly weapon. :o:- So far the umpires of the ball grimes have been in luck. The weath er is too cool to make enough pop bottles available as missiles. -:o:- Here's a ticket that would be a big winner: For president, Gove:-j nor Smith of New York; for vice-1 i president. Senator Reed of Missouri, i :o: In Utopia, we suppose, the her:; has the same opinion of your execu- tive's ability and general excellence; that an insurance agent claims h -J has. ! The reason a man always wonder? about the confusion of house clean ing is that he can get a room in tl. same condition without any special effort. -:o:- ! We know we should not feel that , Way, but when'we hear that a saxo phone has been stolen, we always think that the punishment fits the crime. ! :o: Mellon (Andy, we mean) wants it to be so he can dump all the money into the hand3 of sxiccessors without any investigation. The one way to prevent any such thing as that is to elect Governor Smith. :o: The democrats have tne best chance for success they have had in several years and if no mistake is made at the Houston convention. Our motto is "Al Smith and victory!" Watch him sweep the country. CANNOT BEAT SMITH It looks like Gov. Al Smith on the first ballot at the Houston conven tion. That the New York Governor will be Herbert Hoover's opponent in the Presidential campaign is now beyond all doubt. Nothing short of a miracle can prevent his nomination and mir acles are not happening in politics nowadays. All states have named their dele gates except Virginia. The Old Do minion convention will be held Thursday afternoon. It will prob ably be an anti-Smith delegation. Conservative estimates of the pres ent delegate strength show that Smith will be within 90 votes of the necessary two-thirds before the first ballot is taken. Ohio, Arkansas, Oklahoma, and Maryland, with t voting strength of 101 delegates, will certainly vote for Smith on the second ballot, and prob ably on the first ballot. If they switch ovr before the initial test vote is taken it will be all over but the shouting. Due to general recognition of the fact that it is humanly impossible to stop Smith, there will probably be considerable clambering aboard the band wagon this week. This is being urged by party leaders who want to make the Houston conven tion as unanimous and as enthusias tic a possible. It is significant that Gov. Smith has the New England states solidly behind him, and as the party stand ard bearer it is regarded as certain that he will carry New York, New Jersey and Massachusetts in the No vember election. These states, with the Solid South and several of the middle Western states, where oppo sition to the Republican ticket is very bitter, will be sufficient to place him in the White House. JUDGE GRAVES In the death of Judge W. W. Graves of the State Supreme Court an Unusual, perhaps unique, career ends. For 23 years he has been on the Supreme bench, and throughout that long span lie has been, one might say, a consulting engineer of the Democratic party. The law, they tell us. is " a jealous mistress." but the law is obliged to share Judge Graves devotion with politics. In rued, politics was hi3. first love. The whole interplay of it, the clash of conflicting ambitions, the drafting of party platforms, the expediences of campaigns he drank it all with deep joy. The shrewdest ot party leaders sought his advice, and pretty often acted on it. Most of our Judges have a certain fiair for politics. If they did not. they would not be Judges. But in the cloistered atmosphere of their offices, and uncle? the pressure o? burdensome duties they mostly be come lookers at the political game. Not so with Judge Graves. He never ceased to be a politician. Of his legal attainment and judi cial qualities the layman must ac cept the judgment of the profession. That judgment has pronounced him studious and able. -:o:- THEY DIDN'T LOOK Will Rogers says that at the open- ing session of the Republican Na- ticnal Convention a Methodist'1 luting with Mother and wc.i,h preacher dc livered the prayer told the delegates to "look to hills for wisdom." Well, they didn't do it. Rogers calls attention to the fact that the Republicans forthwith went to Kan sas tc get a candidate for vice-president and there is nary a hill in Kan sas not even a spot that could be called a respectable elevation. The nomination of Curtis wi-.s a flimsj bit of political expediency, an effort to keep the belligerent farm ers of the .Vest in line, but they piciced a poor man to do it with. Curtis ranks among the commonest of the commonplaces, and as his can- diuacy for President was regarded ; by his own party as a sad joke, his J aspiration for Vice-Presidential hon ors belongs to the same clas3. BOEAH'S RESOLUTION Senator Borah's reference in his ; t prohibition resolution to the vener-i ation of the Constitution enjoined by! Washington and Lincoln is about as ridiculous as his proposal to reim burse Sinclair for the money he ad- is kept constantly busy because mo vanced to the Republican party to torists recognize it as the best and corrupt American voters. 'most reliable repair shop for every The eighteenth amendment was kind of damage a car can possibly not a part of the Constitution when sustain. And, being practical men of Washington and Lincoln enjoined venerations of it. If their utterances shall be taken to indicate their poli- tical views, neither of them would have indorsed this attempt to kill' the. personal liberty they each strug-' gled to keep alive as the angel of our form of government. j USES OF PUBLICITY Publicity is to a community what gas is to an automobile. It is that indefinable something that pushes ahead and develops growth, that brings people together for the com - mon good, that eliminates cry'ing evils, creates public enterprises, and produces 100 per cent civic con sciousness. It is a modern business tonic, which once inculcated into the gray matter of the populace, sooner or later induces every man to respond to the call of improve ment, thereby dissipating all dry rot, bringing men into closer and better and more unselfish fellowship. It is then and not until then that the highest type of a true, intelligent, public spirited citizen becomes an actuality. The mere gathering to gether of many persons who live ir houses does not of necessity con stitute a city. We have a city only when men come to have common ideals, vhen men come to develop a love for one community in which they live and are ever rendy to sac rifice time and money ar.d energy to the end that those common purposes and aspirations are realized. Properly created advertising de velops character for a community as well as for an indivadual. It creates this character whether the invest ment is made by an individual, a firm, a corporation or by the com munity itself. Publicity uplifts the moral tone of a city mere titan all the ordinances and courts and m tro po'itan police systems combined and its tendency is contir.ua'.ly t' ele vate. It generates desire waves that groove in with the pc!; :.ie of thci city beautiful; it pricks the pride and warms the cockles of the hearts of men. which condition germinates latent civic energy; it tends to cur tail adverse criticism on the part cf "sour bugs," when the progressive element of a population is extending itself to the utmost in an endeavor to create and wish on the people much needed public improvements, while the rest of the population, pas sively interested but apathetically inclined, looks idly on. It is one of the most deserving. Lard-workin.s:. stimulating known influences in the development and elaboration of a city's resources and properity. It's value to a community, therefore, can not be measured by cold dollars and cents. Publicity !s a harbinger of con stantly improving prosperity. And your newspapers your "chief med iums for talking to the world are undeniably the truest, cheapest, most dependable and most thorough dis seminaters of dent-producing public yet discovered. :o: Wo have been under the strain for some time of having distinguish ed foreigners visit the United States and unload their ideas of what we are what we lack, and the general superiority of European culture as compared to our crudeness. :o: The supremacy of the law is all that any political convention should declare. :o: A CARD OF THANKS The children of the late Rebecca E. Monroe desire to express our mort sincere thanks to the many friends who came to us with words of syra- pathy and deeds of kindness in ourj it were nossihle for us to meet each an of you and assure you of our ap the ' nreciation of this evidence of your itrue friendship for Mother and for ; i " . f ' . 192S'. and the loth County. Nebraska us at the time when most needed,--! . flf October 19-S at 10-00 o'clock1 Tne blate or ?DrasKa, lo an per Mrs. Miranda Mayf.eld. Mrs. MlHan aof0 sons interested in said estate, cred- srvrira ATr , n xichnls. :m rt Mrs. ' a- - of. .ai? .dd . .T :? Zt. itors and heirs take notice, that Lizzie Kelley Our Repair Garage long and varied experience, all our repair work is excellently and thor- oughly done, without unnecessary de- Iav and at reasonable Charge Frady's Garage Phone 58 rGjAiiRfASGjE M WIB IT ULTIMATE 111 FORGIVENESS A New York man was shot by ) his angry wife and after hovering , for days on the brink of the grave now is able to appear in court. But ; rumor has it tht he will be refused to testify against his wife and that the couple have kissed and made up. This presents a problem for lawyers, for, under those circumstances, it would appear that only the state is the 'offended party." The wife, however, must stand trial and the district attorney has evolved the intriguing theory that the husband can be forced to testify despite the old rule. The district at torney bases his contention on the versity that a bullet certainly is not a confidential communication be tween husband and wife. This point appears unassailable. The case presents a strange study 1n complexes and paradoxes. The husband committed offenses that aroused the ire of the wife to the point where she shot him. Yet he loves her enough to forgive her ra'h ne.;s and she loves him enough to forgive his peccadillo's. It required two pistol shots to arouse this Slum bering passion. How vagrant are the processes of human reason! :o: HEFLIN AND SMITH Senatcr Heflin, who consumed many hours of the Senate's valuable time last session denouncing Al Smith, spoke at a suburb of Albany, N. Y., Sunday. The meeting, arrang ed by the Ku Klux Klansmen and their sympathizers, was protected by New York State police. Gov. Smith himself ordered the polite to permit no one to interfere with tfce Senator or his audience. It is characteristic of Smith that he should make special arrangement to insure to a political enemy his constitutional right of free speech. In a heated debate last winter. Senator Heflin promised Senator Rob inson of Arkansas a coat of tar and feathers if he should venture to re peat in Heflin's home state certain remarks which Robinson had made on the Senate floor. Smith and Heflin are both designed as Democrats, but there is little in common between tine South brand of Democrcy and the Heflin brand. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Frank B. Shopp, 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 July 13, 192S. and October 15. 192S, at 10:00 o'clock a. m. each day, to re reive and examine all claims against said estate, with h a view to their ad-jty, on the Cth day of July, A. D. llowanre. The timejl92S, at. 10:00 o'clock a. m., to show jusiraeni ana aiiowame. nine j limited for the presentation cf claims against said estate is three months prayer of the petitioners should not from the 1 3th day of July, A. D. 192S. ! be granted, and that notice of the and the time limited for payment of pendency of said petition and that debts is on? year from said 13th day the hearing thereof be given to all of July, 192 8. 'persons interested in said matter by Witness my hand and the seal of publishing a copy of this Order in said County Court this Sth day of the Plattsmouth Journal, a semi June, 1928. - jweekly newspaper printed in said A. II. DUXBURY. i county, for three successive weeks (Seal) jll-4"- County Judge. 'prior to said day of hearing. - Witners my hand, and seal of said VOTICF, TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun-j ty. ss. j In the County Court. j In the matter of the estate of V.'al-t ter E. Jenkins, deceased. To the creditors of said estate: You are hereby notiGed that I will sit at the County Court room in iwith a view to their adjustment and ! allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claims against said estate is three months from the 13th day of July, A. D. 1S2S. and the time limited for payment of debts is one year from said 13th day of July, ' QOJ Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this Sth day of June, 1D2S. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) jll-4w County Judge. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Neraska, County of Cass, , ss. j By virtue of an Order of Sale is ' sued by Golda Noble Beal, Clerk of i the District Court, within and for ' Cass -county, Nebraska, and to me 'directed, I will on the 21st day of 'julv. A. D. 1928. at 10 o'clock a. m.. of said day at the south front door ' of the Court House in .1.. Citv of T,, , . t,. :j frmn- fv seTl I te Jll11 .,;J foiw! ing real estate to-wit : ....uif.ftsnuihMst 1 lie vr rot iiaii vi. vin- v - v v. " Quarter of Section 32, Township 11, Range 14, East of the 6th Th en et n Oliver C. Dovey. plaintiff, against said defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, June 11, A D. 1928. BERT REED, Sheriff Cass County, Nebraska. P M CaSS Countv Nebraska uvorru l m me irai piuiciij' ui v uitu j "e p uuuii. e'same being levied upon and tak- tht? deceased died seized, which has! Dated this 4th day of June, A. D , thp nrivnprtv of Alma Yardley. oeen set ior nearing on tne zist day .XStlltlVi:- ot July, A. D. 1928 at 10 o'clock) BLANDINA KUEPPER. t of said Court recovered Dy t NOTICE Whereas Herbert Minch, convict ed in Cass county, on the 13th day. of June. lJ., of the crime of forgery,; has made application to the Board zatjon w;il niePt for the purpose of of Pardons for . a parole, and the equalizing the assessments of Cass Board of Pardons, pursuant to law ,.ounty, Nebraska, for the year 1928, have set the hour of 10 a. m. on the in the Commissioners Chamber at 10th day of July, 192S. for hearing tne court House in Plattsmouth, Ne on said application, all persons in- nrasi;ai beginning on Tuesday, June terested are hereby notified that they 12 1928. at 9 o'clock a. m., and con may appear at the State Penitentiary . tinuinR jn session from day to day at Lincoln, Nebraska, on said day and untn pri,iayt June 15. 1928. hour and show cause, if any there be. A1J (,ajms for equalization should why said application should, or!ll(1 niatiP on blanks, which can be se should not be granted. I cured at the office of the County FRANK MARSH. Irierk nnrt should hf filed on or be- Secretary, Board of Pardons. N. T. HARMON, Chief State Probation Officer. ORDER OF HEARING AND NO TICE OF PROBATE OF WILL In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. To all persons interested in the es tate of Henry A. Talcott, deceased: On reading the petition of Norris D. Talcott praying that the instru ment filed in this court on the 12th day of June, 1928, 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 Henry A. Talcott, deceased: that said instrument be ad mitted to probate, and the adminis tration of said estate be granted to Norris D. Talcott, as Executor; It is hereby ordered that you, and a!l ptrsons interested in said matter, may. ar.d do, appear at the County Court to be held in and lor said county, on the (Jth day of July, A. D.. 192S. at 10 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 June, A. D. 192S. A. H. DUX BURY, (Seal) jl4-3w County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING AND NO TICE OF PROBATE OF WILL In the County Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. State of Nebraska. County of Cass, ss. To all persons interested in the estate of Anna Vostrejs, deceased: On reading the petition of Frank. Janie.s and Charles Vostrejs praying that the instrument filed in this court on the 4th day of June, 1928, 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 Anna Vostrejs, deceased; that said instrument be admitted to probate, and the administration of said estate be granted to Anton Vostrejs, 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 coun . cause, if any there be, why the Court this 4tn ciay oi June, a. u 1928. (Seal) jll-3w H. DUXBURY. County Judge. NOTICE OF HEARING on Petition for Determination of Heirship i Estate No. of Anton Kanka, deceased, in the Courty Court of Cass Karolina Kanka, who is one of the , , er ii.. -1 ,1 .1 1 .J "l Z"5 ,,"J ""1 "v" "V V- . f. ing that Anton Kanka died intestate in Plattsmouth, Nebraska, on or about December 7th. 1918, being a resident auu umao.iani County, Nebraska, and the owner of resident and inhabitant of Cass nit; luiiurtiag ucstuucu icoi c-clci n , to-wit: Lots 7, 8 and 9 in Block 18, the west half of lot 5, and all of lots 6. 7, 8, 9. 10. 11. 12 and 13 in Block 20, and lots S and 4 in Block 21, all being in Duke's Addition to the City of Platts mouth, Cass County, Nebras ka. leaving as his sole and only heirs at law the following named persons, to-wit: Karoline Kanka, widow, and Anton Kanka. Edward Kanka, Anna R. Pittman and Joseph H. Kanka, children; , liluL oaiu ucifutui uieu iiueemit, . t. . ' .1 .3 , .1 1. .1 Z 1 fnnnnM. mac. no application ior uuminisire- "on has been made and the estate of said decedent has not been admin- istered In the State of Nebraska, and that the court determine who are the heirs of said deceased, their de - . gree of kinship and the right of . Dated at Plattsmouth, Nebraska, this lsth day of June, A. D. 1928. A. H. DUXBURY, - J18-3w (Seal) County Judge. : Legal blanks of all klrds fox txA ?ti the Journ&l o2i(M. NOTICE Meeting of Cass County Board of Equalization The Cass count v Board of Enuali fore Thursday, June 14. 192 8. GEO. R. SAYLES. County Clerk, Cass County, Nebraska. (Seal) NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, S3. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Wil liam Hallanee, 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 Cth day of July. 1928, and on the Sth day of October, 1928, at 10:00 o'clock in the forenoon of rach day to receive and examine all claims against said estate, vith a view to their adjustment and allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claims against said estate is three months from the 6th day of July, A. D. 1928, and the time limited for pay ment of debts is one year from said Cth day of July, 1928. Witness my hand and the seal cf said County Court this 1st day of June, 1928. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) j4-4w County Judge. NOTICE OF SUIT TO QUIET TITLE In the District Court of the County of Cass, Nebraska. Blandina Kuepper, widow; Anna Ertz. widow; Samp son E. Er'z and wife, Ma thilda B. Ertz; John Jo seph Ertz, single; Joseph Francis Ertz and wife, Theresa L. Ertz; Thomas William Ertz. single: Francis Bernard Ertz and wife, Mary J. Ertz; Anna Ertz Hoenig and husband, Thomas Hoenig; William Henry Ertz and wife, Helen Marie Ertz; Maggie Ertz, widow; Margaret Ertz Conell and husband, John Conell; S. Roy Ertz, single; S. Frank Ertz, sin gle; M. Frederick R. Ertz and wife. Helen Ertz. Mary Ertz, widow, and Amelia Fitzpatriek, widow. Plaintiffs vs. NOTICR Wm. C. Mcores, Mrs. Win. C. Moores, first real name unknown; the heirs, devi sees, legatees, personal rep resentatives and all other persons interested in the estates of Win. C. Moores. and Mrs. Wm. C. Moores, first real name unknown, and Columbus Neff, each deceased, real names un known; all persons having or claiming any interest in and to Lots three (3) and four (4), in Block ninety four (94), in the City of Plattsmouth, Cass county, Nebraska, real names un known, Defendants To the defendants Wm. C. Moores. Mrs. Wm. C. Moores. first real name unknown; the heirs, devisees, lega tees, personal representatives and all other persons interested in the estates of Wm. C. Moores, Mrs. Wm. C. Moores, first real name unknown, and Columbus Neff, each deceased, real names unknown; and all per sons having or claiming any interest in and to Lots three (3) and four (4), in Block ninety-four (94), in the City of Plattsmouth, Cass coun ty, Nebraska, real names unknown: You and each of you are hereby notified that Blandina Kuepper, widow; Anna Ertz, widow; Samp son E. Ertz and wife, Mathilda B. Ertz; John Joseph Ertz, single; Jo seph Francis Ertz and wife. Theresa L. Ertz; Thomas William Ertz, sin gle; Francis Bernard Ertz and wife, Mary J. Ertz; Anna Ertz Hoenig and husband, Thomas Hoenig; William Henry Ertz and wife. Helen Marie Ertz; Maggie Ertz. widow; Margartt Ertz Conell and husband. John Conell fS. Roy Ertz, single; S. Frank Ertz. single; M. Frederick R. Ertz and wife, Helen Ertz; Mary Ertz, widow, aid Amelia Fitzpatriek, wid ow, plaintiffs, have filed their peti tion and commenced an action in the District Court of the County of Cass. Nebraska, on the 4th day of June, 1928, against you and each of you, the object, purpose and prayer of which is to obtain a decree of court quieting the title to Lots three (3) and four (4), in Block ninety-four (94), in the City of Plattsmouth, Cass county, Nebraska, as against you and each of you, and for such other relief as may be just and equitable. You and each of you are further a i c it-umru iu u-n- swer said petition on or before Hon- day, the 16th day of July, 1928, or notified that you are required to an- the allegations of said petition will be taken as true and a decree ren- 'dered in favor of plaintiffs and against you and each of you accord- Plaintiffs. W. A. ROBERTSON, Attorney. J4-5w All kinds cf business mtionerj pxinied at the Journal office. v