EONDAY, MARCH 31. 1930. PLATTSMOUTH SEMI -WEEKLY JOURNAL PAGE THREE Cbe plattsmouth lournal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA Entered at Postoffice, Plattsmoutb, Neb., as second-class mail matter R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 A YEAR IN FIRST POSTAL ZONE Subscribers living in Second Postal Zone, $2.50 per year. Beyond 60 miles, $3.00 per year. Rate to Canada and foreign countries, 13.50 per year. All subscriptions are payable strictly in advance. Apply the golden rule regardless of consequences. :o: A girl isn't necessarily artful be cause she paints. :o:- It would seem that clothes break, not make, the man. :o: Women and peaches are sweetest just before they are ready to fall. ' :o: It used to be wine, woman and song, hut now it's rum, rackets and radio. -:o:- "Coolidge Silent During Visit to Cincinnati" Headline. But that's not news. -:o:- What we need is an auto that will stop and count 100 before hitting a telephone pole. :o: Do they call it the Irish Free State because its marriage rate is the low est in the world? :o: The Literary Digest prohibition poll indicates that a large number of citizens vote as they drink. col- America is a free country where a woman teacher is not supposed to know what a man looks like. :o:- One way to enable the budding orator to learn to think on his feet is to give him a cafeteria tray. - :o: Prayers are being offered for an end of religious strife in Russia, ac cording to European cablegrams. :o: An expert says that a really good diamond will make a hole in almost anything. Especially a bank account. Awful thought. Suppose the mil lennium, when at last it comes. Is held up until ratified by the Senate-. :o:- It Is revealed that a camera has found a new planet after 300 years' search. There's a time exposure for you! :o: Youth has its advantages. So has age. Older you are the more easily you remember when the weather was wrse. :o:- One advantage to a third house of jcongrees composed of "expert advis ers" Is that there will be millions f candidates. -:o:- The Communists overlook the fact that if there were no law, there woaldn't be any policemen to escort their parades. :o:- Sometimes we wonder if it wasn't a mistake to turn Congress from its Jons habit of free seeds to thoughts of other possible gratuities. :o: Sir Harry Lauder, Scotch comedian, broke a rib when he fell in his bath tub. He might have been without an occupation had he fallen on his funny hone. -:o:- The average man is more het up over what the clothes fashion is gonna put on 'em than he is over the duty Congress is gonna put on the hides. :o:- Since it seems to be nearing the tariff goal, there is some thought of changing the nickname of the United States Senate from three-toed sloth to inchworm. :o: The peace conferees seem to be unable to agree on the matter of ra tion. Evidentaly their experience in diplomacy preponderates their know ledge of mathematics. :o: ' doe reason why matrimony is so often a failure is that the wife ex pects her husband to furnish a blue print of his mind, with a complete set of plans and specifications, each day'. ; . 'A woman In New Jersey who has Just .celebrated her 101st birthday attributes much of her vigor to the fact she eats an onion every morn ing. In onion there is strength, as it were. . :o: Ford (of course, you know his Christian name) bought an old saw mill at Brunswlek, Oa.. and will ship It to Detroit. About all that he still Beeds for His historic collection is a c4gr-store Isdiaa. Give your neighbor a right to an opinion as long as he keeps it to himself. -:o:- One thing about bathing suits is you no longer have to take a girl at face value. :o: Jamaica ginger seems to be more deadly than the old Jamaica rum down in Oklahoma. -:o:- Maybe the world is getting better and wiser, but more and more things are being made foolproof. :o: The treaty department warns against counterfeit 20 bills. More Hoover prosperity propaganda? :o: Opening beauty parlors for men would be a good deal like opening stations for rejuvenating old eggs. :o: It seems probable that the Farm Board would not be too unhappy over a heavy freeze in the wheat regions. :: A California man grew tired of his name and changed it simply to Stuart X. But what will his madams say? :o: About the best way some persons could get their minds off their trou bles would be to put their hands to work. :o: Hoover lost 15 pounds his first year as President, but, unfortunate ly, that way of reducing is open to so few. :o:- Books have been written about everything, now why not one by Al Capone on personal impressions of Philadelphia. The man who was caught drag ging a stolen bath tub through the streets of New York later found him self in hot water. :o: Henry Ford is quoted as saying that the big bankers make big boott leggers. Of course how else would they get their liquor? :o: The local politician used to go about the countryside in his shirt sleeves. Gandhi goes him one better; Gandhi hasn't any sleeves. :o: Summer dresses, according to a fashion edict, will be up to the neck in front. That ought to enable any woman to put on a good front. -tot- Senator Brookhart has had so lit tle to say about prohibition lately that the natural assumption is that he has been doing his eating at home. :o: "Most Americans who are really worTH anything," says George Ber nard Shaw "come over to see me," and perhaps all they want is his autograph. :o: The London disarmament confer ence seems to be an attempt of each nation to get as many cruisers as it possibly can with the consent of the other nations. -:t: Just judging from the illustra tions in the ads, we wcnild say that washing the feminine summer under things isn't going to. be classed as back-breaking work. :o: College health experts have got ten in their deadly work. Seventy per cent of Stanford women who an swered a questionnaire declared they do not enjoy kissing for its own saku. -:o:- Another of the unnumbered f cellences of Justice Oliver Wend 11 Holmes, who this month celebrated his eighty-ninth birthday, is that -we haven't the slightest idea what poli tical party he belongs to. :o: Dolling up the bathroom with dainty colored tile, towels, wash cloths and curtains may make it look "6weet." But it also makes ft look like a heap of trouble to the man who leaves it the way men usually do the bathroom. :o: "You don't seem to write as well as formerly some of your old vigor and virility is lacking," is the plain tive note in an Intimately personal letter to the editor. You are wrong, old chap. Our discernment is keener and our literary taste is Improving. Also, the corporation, up in Canada from whom we purchase newsprint does not manufacture asbestor paper. WASHINGTON Thanks to the Senate investigating committees, the Federal Trade Com mission and Mr. Hoover's will call for a limited tariff revision to aid agri culture, Washington stands before the country naked. Many of the newspaper corres pondents say they have never seen anything to compare with the pres ent situation. Oswald Garrison Vil lard, editor of the Nation, declares that in 35 years of observing and writing on public affairs he has never witnessed such a moral debacle, nev er such base selfishness, and never such cowardly opportunism. It is no captious criticism that seeks to warn the nation that a grave state of af fairs exists in the national capital. The wretched spectacle of the House of Representatives jumping through the hoop under the whips of a few cynical bosses, the open trading of votes in the Senate on the score of provincial self-interest, the disclos ure that money is lavishly used to deceive the public and grease the wheels of legislation, the discovery that lobbyists are quartered in the offices of Senators, plotting deals, exerting pressure and writing speech es to be delivered on the Senate floor these things have been sufficient to arouse many who ordinarily are in different to the processes of govern ment. That sturdy conception of public office as a public trust postulated by Grover Cleveland and commonly held in high esteem by honorable men of .all parties, suffered a rude jolt when Senator Caraway's committee got busy, and "Old Joe" Grundy put into practice his celebrated log-rolling theory of government. Scores of wit nesses have passed before the Cara way committee, and the substance of their revelations and admissions is that law belongs to the highest bid der. Men ostensibly engaged in pro tecting the interests of the farmers have been revealed as secret agents of the power and chemical interests, scheming to exploit the farmers. The national chairman of the ruling oarty, personally recommended for that post by the President, has been exposed as a former lobbyist who collected lobby funds from a corpor ation seeking legislative favors and temporarily diverted them to his per sonal stock-trading account. The public utility corporations have been caught subsidizing newspapers and college professors, and in poisoning the children's schoolbooks with prop aganda designed to justify their ex tortions. A great communications system has been detected in the act of attempting to hold up a competi tor for a fantastic profit, and then asking the Government to confirm the transaction on terms that would al low the victim to recoup its loss from the public's pocket. And in all this saturnalia of greed, this frantic scrambling for plunder, these base efforts to prostitute the functions of government to private uses, not one arresting word has come from the White House. Only one man is in a position to command a halt, and he has been content to utter platitudes on the present or prospective return of prosperity. Nor" may the Democrats take comfort from this fact, for their own individual betrayals and desertions have fre quently been the deciding factor in the triumphs of Grundy and his plunderbund. It might have been supposed that no element in Congress was truer to the American tradition of pure gov ernment than the Republican insur gents in the Senate. Often in the past they have put their country above their party and above personal political safety. Yet on the tariff Grundyism has moved some of them about as so many pawns on a chess board. With two or three exceptions, each has found an occasion when, to benefit the interests of his own state, 'he was willing to sell the rest of the country out. Tfie spectacle of Senator Norris refusing to vote for an in crease in the nation's sugar bill in order to administer an artificial stim ulant to the sugar beet industry of Nebraska is, as Collier's Weekly says, truly inspiring; but unfortunately it is almost unique. The fact that the whole business of tariff making has descended to the level of a gypsy horse trade. The New York Times ventures that so many and such grave disclosures in Washington will have a salutary effect in educating the public as to what happens behind the scenes. Let us hope so. After abandoning the field of public opinion to such an extent that the magazines swarmed into it, the daily press now shows a disposition to return. It is high time. Its apostasy has cost the country ex actly what Thomas Jefferson defined as the price of expunging a free press. More than one. newspaper en gaged in feathering its own nest while it let the country go hang has finally been aroused from its selfish absorption by the news now coming out of Washington. No national elec tion in the country's history pro duced more conflicting and confusing interpretations than those put upon the election of Mr. Hoover. Among many enlightened people his eleva tion to the White House was regard ed as the end of the old, discredited political methods in government and the beginning of a period of scien tific administration and straight for ward leadership. After a year it can only be inferred that all along the line, from the prohibitionists to those whose campaign contributions were intended to purchase favors, there has developed and grown among the selfish groups an impression that his election was a license to opportunism and aggressive self-seeking. There is only one remedy for such a condition. That is publicity. Only by throwing more light on the in credible chicanery, corruption, fav oritism and meanness that underlie events at Washington can there be aroused in the people that instinct of self-preservation which must even tually scourge the money changers out of the National Capitol. It has been said that democracies demand honest government only when times are hard. In that case, the present economic depression may turn out to be a not unmixed evil. St. Louis Post-Dispatch. :o: UMPIRING RADIO President Hoover's reappointment of the members of the federal radio commission and the Senate's confirm ation of those appointments may be said to reflect the wish of the rank and file of radio listeners and, with a few exceptions, the broadcasters. The position of the listeners is that the commission has made some headway with radio control and giv en time will further unscramble the air. They are showing patience be cause of a full appreciation of the problems of control of broadcasting. Congress can aid the commission by modifying and adding to the ra dio laws along lines dictated by ac tual experience with the present statutes. Legislation is needed if the commission is to succeed in its pro gram. Chief among the objections to the law under which the commission acts is that directed against zoning the nation for broadcasting purposes. Ra dio engineers in the government em ploy and the communications com mittee of the American Bar associa tions agree that the zone equality feature of the law is unsound and works injury to the west and south. In the end rules governing the radio will be made by experience, rather than by congressional pre science. -:o: POLITICS AND DISARMAMENT Now that both the American and British delegations at London have refused to enter a security pact, the conference should be in a position to consider limitation of armament. It is an amusing commentary up on the Kellogg treaty outlawing war that the French, who originated it, feel that their only security is noth ing less than more warships or poli tical guarantees made by either Great Britain or the United States or both. The next time one of these solemn pieces of make-believe is thrust into the world of hard real ities it should be routed with laugh ter. The French will, of course, take their defeat badly. We learned in the Commentaries of Caesar that they were unable to bear misfortune, and we cannot see that they have changed from his time to our own. The Lon don conference should go right ahead. It was called for the purpose of sup plying omissions of the Washington conference. It is still possible to stop international competition in the building of cruisers, destroyers, sub marines and similar war or craft not included in the Washington treaty, and we hope to see the conference do it. :o: VALUATION OF UTILITIES New York State proposes revision of the public service commission law so as to determine a legislative for mula for determining the value of utilities. It is a subject which every commonwealth should consider ser iously. Much evil to the public will be averted if valuation of rate-mak ing and capital purpose is equitably settled. The financiers of utility corpor ations look for gain. In recent years immense profits have been realized in the re-financing and re-franchising of utilities. The practice is not for the public Something will have to be done at least to prevent profit eering. :o: "Our popularity," says Rudy Val- lee, speaking of his band In his new book, "was the result of a steady hammering through the microphone." Say it isn't true, Rudy! t Dr. Joe J. Stibal 5" Chiropractic Physiean y 4- SCHMIDTMANN BUILDING 4 t . t J Specialty X - Nervous Liver Kidney J Sun-Ray assistance for Ton- J. silitis, Sinusitis, Piles. t X-RAY and LABORATORY . . t IT "CAN'T BE DONE" The world has always been in need of men to do things that could not be done. The need is more pressing today than ever. When Columbus started cut to sail around the globe men laughed at him and told him it could not be done. Columbus did not succeed in the at tempt, it is true, but he proved that the thing could be done. When Samuel Morse started to transmit messages between distant points by means of a tiny wire, people said it could not be done, but Morse soon proved differently. Fifty years later Marconic showed people how to talk through the air without even the use of wires. Edison achieved two things that most people declared to be impos sible when he used electric current to produce light and when he repro duced the sound of the human voice. Motion pictures are another of the "impossibilities." There are other achievements, seemingly impossible today, awaiting accomplishment. They stand as a challenge to the in genuity of mankind. The need of the world is for men who can do these things. :o: NEW BUICK AGENCY Sam Reed of this city is now the agent in Cass count' for the Buick automobile. Mr. Reed will be glad to call on you at any time. Call phone 215. ml-lmw. f 'I-i-i-i-i-i -i-i-i-i :: -i-i-i- 4 fr 4 SOUTH BEND Ashland Gazette X Mr. and Mrs. Charley Campbell were Lincoln visitors Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Haswell were shopping in Lincoln on Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Dill and sons drove to Lincoln Friday on business. Ben Knecht of Lincoln spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Dill. Mrs. Phillip Kline was a Monday afternoon caller at the Jess Fidler home. Henry Stander has recently had installed a Delco automatic light plant. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Graham have moved out onto the farm again for the summer. Paul Kitrell spent Sunday after noon with his folks, Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Kitrell. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Haswell were Tuesday evening visitors at the Clyde Haswell home. Mrs. Jason Streight and Carol Joy called on Mrs. Clyde Haswell Tues day afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Dill and sons spent Tuesday evening at the Charley Campbell home. Miss Gladys Campbell spent last week at the home of her brother, Chester, and family. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Stander spent Sunday afternoon at the Cecil Stan der home near Ashland. Mrs. Olive Moffit came home from the hospital Friday and is feeling as well as can be expected. Verla Rau and Kenneth Campbell are numbered among the sick list, both having sore throats. Miss Ruth Carnicle of Memphis spent the week end with her folks, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Carnicle. Mr. and Mrs. George Thimgan and family are moving into their house which they have been remodeling. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Haswell and son, Richard, were Sunday dinner guests at the J. L. Carnicle home. Louis Stander of Archer, Nebras ka, was a supper guest Saturday at the home of his brother, Henry, and family. Herbert Stander returned to school at Louisville Monday after a week's absence on account of having the tonsilitis. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Carnicle and son, Wayne, spent the week end with her folks at Milford. Mr. and Mrs. S. T. Sweasey. Mrs. George Brown and Mrs. Gar field Elrod and son, Carol, were Sun day afternoon callers at the J. L. Carnicle home. Born, Tuesday, March 18, fo Mr. and Mrs. John Grabow. at the St. Luke's hospital in Omaha, a baby boy. Mrs. Grabow is getting along nicely but the baby is very delicate. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Long drove to Lincoln Thursday evening and at tended the opera. Carmen, put on by a troupe from Chicago. Miss Hulda Bornman left Monday to spend a few days with her aunt. Mrs. Anna Kraft, near Louisville, who is quite sick with the flu. Virgil Besacks are moving their household goods to Louisville until they can improve upon htelr place. Mr. Harden and family are moving onto the Pettis place vacated by Be sacks. Mr. and Mrs. Corbin Cox and Mr. and Mrs. Wilby Cox and Lulu Mae Nunn drove over to Cedar Creek Sat urday night to attend the dance. They report a very good crowd and a fine time. BABY CHICKS Why not try Wild's certified brown leghorn baby chicks. ASHLAND HATCHERY, Inc. ml3-lmw Ashland, Nebr. A Buffalo man studying to be a missionary was found bootlegging li quor to help pay his tuition. The rys hope he won't preach what he practices. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. By virtue of an Order of Sale issued by Galdo Noble Beal, Clerk of the District Court within and for Cass county, Nebraska, and to me directed-, I will on the 5th day of April, A. D. 1930, at 10 o'clock a. m., of said day, at the south front door cf the court house in the City of Platts mouth, in said county, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the following real estate, to-wit: Lot eight (8), Block eleven (11), City of Plattsmouth, Ne braska, as surveyed, platted and recorded, Cass county, Nebras ka The same being levied upon and taken as the property of Roy L. Mc Elwain et al. Defendants, to satisfy a judgment of said Court recovered by The Standard Savings and Loan Association of Omaha, Nebraska, a Corporation, and Southbend Watch Company, a corporation, Defendant and Cross Petitioner, Plaintiff against said Defendant. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, February 2Sth, A. D. 1930. BERT REED, Sheriff Cass county, Nebraska. iu3-5w. 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 directed, I will on the 24th day of April, A. D. 1930, at 10 o'clock a. m. of said day at the South Front Door of the Court House in the City of Plattsmouth, Nebr., In said County, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the following per sonal property to-wit: The Oil Well equipment lo cated on the Southwest Quar ter of the Southwest Quarter of Section 20, Township 10, Range 13, East of the 6th P. M., in Cass County, Nebraska The same being levied upon and taken as the property of Underwriters Syndicate of Nehawka Oil Co., a co partnership, Clyde W. Dickenson, Arthur L. Mattison and Herman C Smith, defendants, to satisfy a Judg ment of said Court recovered by Henry Wessel, plaintiff, against said defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, March 17th A. D. 1930. BERT REED, Sheriff Cass County, Nebraska SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. By virtue of an Order of Sale issued by Golda Noble Beal, Clerk of the District Court within and for Cass County, Nebraska, and to me directed, I will on the 24th day of April A. D. 1930, at 10 o'clock a. m. of said day at the South Front Door of the Court House in the City of Plattsmouth, Nebr., in said County, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the following personal property to-wit: The Oil Well equipment lo cated on the Southwest Quar ter of the Southwest Quarter of Section 20, Township 10, Range 13, East of the 6th P. M., in Cass County, Nebraska The same being levied upon and taken as the property of Underwriters Syndicate of Nehawka Oil Co., a co partnership, Clyde W. Dickenson, Arthur L. Mattison and Herman C. Smith, defendants, to satisfy a judg ment of said Court recovered by An drew F. Sturm, plaintiff, against said defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, March 17th A. D. 1930. BERT REED, Sheriff Cass County, Nebraska SHERIFF'S SALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ss. Ey virtue of an Order of Sale issued by Golda Noble Beal, Clerk of the District Court within and for Cass county, Nebraska, and to me directed, I will on the 5th day of April, A. D. 1930, at 10 o'clock a. m., of said day, at the south front door of the court house in the City of Plattsmouth, in said county, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, the fol lowing real estate, to-wit: Lots one (1), two (2), three (3) and four (4), twelve (12), thirteen (13) and fourteen (14), Block ten (10), South Park, an Addition to the City of Platts mouth, as surveyed, platted and recorded, Cass county, Nebras ka The same being levied upon and taken as the property of Edward W. Cotner and Ella Cotner, Defendants, to sat isfy a judgment of said Court recov ered by Northwest Ready- Roofing Company, Defendant and Cross-Petitioner, and The Standard Savings and Loan Association, of Omaha, Nebras ka, a Corporation, Plaintiff against said Defendants. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, February 28th, A. D, 1930. BERT REED, -Sheriff Cess eunry. Nebraska. m3-8w ' NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court In the matter of the estate & Mary A. Street, 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 11th day of April, 1930, and on the 12th day of July, 1930, at 9 o'clock a. m., or eacn day, to receive and examine all claims against said es tate, with a view to their adjustment and allowance. The time limited for the presentation of claims against said estate is three months from the 11th day of April, A. D. 1930. and the time limited for payment ot debts is one year from said 11th day of April, 1930. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court this 17th day of March, 1930. A. 11. DUXBURY. (Seal) ml7-3w County JuJge. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the County Court of CasB coun ty. Nebraska. In the matter of the estate of Val entine Gobelman, deceased. Notice of Administration: All persons interested in said es tate are hereby notified that a peti tion has been filed in said Court, al leging that said deceased died leav ing no last will and testament and praying for administration upon said estate and for such other and fur ther orders and proceedings in the premises as may be required by the statutes in such cases made and pro vided to the end that said estate and all things pertaining thereto may be finally settled and determined, and that a hearing will be had on said petition before said court, on the 18th day of April. A. D. 1930, and that if they fail to appear at said Court on said 18th day of April, 1930, at 9 o'clock a. m., to contest the said petition, the Court may grant the same and grant adminis tration of said estate to Harry C. Gobelman or some other suitable person and proceed to a settlement thereof. A. II. DUXBURY. (Seal) m24-3w County Judge. 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 Flora Sans, deceased: On reading the petition of Emma Sans Garrison, Executrix, praying a final settlement and allowance of her account filed in this Court on the 10th day of March, 1930, and for final settlement of said estate and her discharge as said Executrix; It is hereby Ordered that you and all persons interested in said matter may, and do, appear at the County Court to be held In and for said county, on the 11th day of April. A. D. 1930, at 9 o'clock a. m., to show cause, if any there be, why the prayer of the petitioner should not be granted, and that notice of the pendency of said petition and 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. In witness whereof, I have here unto set my hand and the seal of said Court, this 10th day of March, A. D. 1930. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) ml7-3w County Judge. NOTICE OF SUIT TO QUIET TITLE In the District Court of Cass County, Nebraska. Henry Albert and Philip Albert, Plaintiff vs. Mrs. William Chappie, first V NOTICE real name unknown, et al. Defendants. TO THE DEFENDANTS: Mrs. Wil liam Chappie, first real name un known; the heirs, devisees, legatees, personal representatives and all oth er persons interested in the estates of Mrs. William Chappie, first real name unknown; H. L. Levi, real name unknown, Harris L. Levi, Julia K. Levi, each deceased, real names unknown; W. H. Forbes, H. S. Rus sell, ard Ira Griswold, trustees; the successors and assigns of W. H. Forbes, H. S. Russell and Ira Gris wold, trustees, real names unknown, and all persons having or claiming any interest in and to the south half (SH) of the northwest quarter ( NW ) of Section four ( 4 ) , Town ship twelve (12), North, Range twelve (12), East of the 6th P. M., in the county of Cass, Nebraska, real names unknown: You and each of you are hereby notified that the plaintiffs on the 10th day of March. 1930. filed their petition and commenced an action ia the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska, to quiet title to the south half (Si) of the northwest quarter (NW) of Section four (4), Town ship twelve (12), North, Range twelve (12), East of the 6th P. M., In Cass county, Nebraska, in the plaintiff Henry Albert, and to enjoin you and each of you and all persons claiming by, through or under you from claiming any right, title, lien or interest in and to said premises. and for equitable relief, including costs of suit. ' You are further notified that you are required to answer said petition on or before Monday, the 5th day of May, 1930, or default will be enter ed against you and a decree entered in accordance with the prayer of said petition. Of all of which you will take due notice. HENRY ALBERT, PHILIP ALBERT. C. E- MAJtTIV, Attorney for Plaintiffs. ml7-4w