The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, February 16, 1931, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    MONDAY, FEBR. 16. 1M1.
FUtfTSMOrTH tfEMJ WfcBKLT Al
PAGE THBEf
I
Cbc plattsmouth journal
PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA
Entered at Postoffice, Plattsmouth, 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
600 miles, $3.00 per year. Rate to Canada and foreign countries,
$3.50 per year. All subscriptions are payable strictly in advance.
Tax does to your bank role what
tacks do to your tires.
:o:
A lot of the laws that are intro
duced are given the cold shoulder
:o:-
One way to move in the right cir
cle is to keep out of a triangle.
-roc-
Eggs are selling for five cents a
dozen in a western city. Beat that!
:o:
Relief is what the country needs
when the Senate starts discussing re
lief. :o:
When it comes to quick and clear
apologies Uncle Sam knows how to
make them.
:o:
These are the days when it be
hooves a man with an iron constitu
tion to prove his mettle.
:o:
From the crime news of the day
we gather that it is getting so that
even a safe isn't safe any more
:o:
A new liner is to be named after i
Pal Coolidge. The joke ' will be on
the builders if the ship doesnt choose
to run.
:o:
Chambers of Commerce seeking
publicity for their cities might take
a lesson from Bostonian. They used
their bean.
: o:
Furniture makers are s: ;d to be
coming out with a new "French Cab-
& ,
inet." You know
the kind that col
lapses easily.
:o: ""
rw... .wuu.a -,times
successes for the talkies apparently
believe in making amendments to a
good many acts.
:o:
Reading while traveling is bad for
the eyes, says a specialist. Tell the
billboard people that, and maybe
they'll quit business.
: o :
It is reported from Brazil that
Henry Ford's great rubber planta
tion scheme in the Amazon jungles
may eventually collapse because cf
the inability of the natives to get
used to American rules and customs.
:o:
The Do-X. giant German seaplane
which can carry scores of passengers
and tons of freight, is one of the
outstanding examples of how indu-
try is paying back an old debt to
science.
-:o:-
When a man has been unjustly de
prived of his liberty and his good-
ness through false imprisonment, it liquor tastes are doing the most kick
does not seem adequate to merely ing about the way our city water I
restore his citizenship with an offi
cial apology.
:o:
The Connecticut motor vehicle de
partment is preparing to make a de-
tailed study of auto wrecks and their
causes. Usually there isn't much to
studv except a bunch ot twisted metal
and the victims.
-:o:
The Chinese quarter of San Fran
cisco, in which up to ten years ago.
opium selling. Tong wars, and the
selling of slave girls was not uncom- '
mon, is described now as almost a :
model Dortion of the city oy uie 1
Golden Gate. !
:o:
There is one paradise which small
boys of today may never know. A
paradise more wonderful than all the Men will get so tired of women
educational movies and radios and;using cosmetics, says a beauty ex
automobiles that another age has pert, that they will turn in relief
brought. The livery stable, that jmilkmaids. But on cold wint r
mecca of freedom where mothers
never ventured, has gone away.
SWEET CLOVER
If in need of any kind of Clover Seed this spring,
see us now. Carload coming and we have good
prices to offer on this lot. Prices will have to be
higher after this car is sold.
SAMPLES NOW HERE FOR YOUR INSPECTION
Bester & Swatek Co.
Phone 151 Plattsmouth, Neb.
It is estimated there are 441,000
deer in the national forests of the
United States.
:o:
The giraffe carries his head high,
but many people do the same thing
with much shorter necks.
It looks as if revising the Eigh-
:o:
teenth amendment would be the fa
vorite political sport for a while.
: o :
Whenever we read the love notes
in a breach of promise case we re
flect that there's some discretion in a
telephone.
:o:
Wickersham says he is a "punch
ing bag." but what a large part of
the country wanted him to be was a
punch-bowl.
:o:
One of these days someone is go
ing to get Zwick, and then who will
we blame the crimes on? Well who
did get him?
:o:
There are so many little things
that go to make up life, and that re
Teal human nature in one or another
of its various forms.
:o:
Even the most ambitious candidate
for White House honors is not es
pecially envious of President Hoo
ver's job these days.
:o:
Snake skin will predominate wom
en s shoe stvles this vear. savs a
... . .. . . .
fashion note. ill it take lots ot
charm to wear them?
:o:-
Instead of buying things in good
and paying for them in bad
times we should buy in bad
t lines
and pay in good times.
o:
The leaning tower of Pisa was
; never upright because the founda
tion began to sink before the con
struction was completed.
rot-
There probably never was a time have stood up patiently under a bar
in the history of indusrty when so J rage of English English with their
much importance was attached to the iown previous nasal accent unimpair
profession of salesmanship. led.
:o: I In some quarters it has been sus-
Speaking of paradoxes, here Is peeled that radio announcers here
King Zog of Albania, with a name an(j there have been subsidized lib
like a cigarette, being ordered by erany by the British secret service.
his doctors to stop smoking.
:o:-
Washington headline reads: Demo
crats ask for $25,000,000 to Buy
pood And we lake it that there are
a few hungry Republicans, too.
:o:
A
lot of those who don't care a
about how awful the bootleg
han;
tastes.
-:o:-
If that scientist who says a man
becomes what he eats isn't spoofing
lit means a lot of husbands can look
forward to becoming their own
words.
:o:
The effect of internal or national
politics and conditions upon interna- j
tional affairs cannot be lost sight of
in the search for the key to world
peace and economic tranquility.
:o:
rwt. r.t ir,fn tv, r,,i ietT-itc i
i. ' I t ' ' ' I I I t - 1 I . - . I I i C I 1 . t . I I .
surrounding 1'lattsmout you
PiotfCmni,'i, vfM, will
find the farmers busy. They are solv- ,
ing their own problems, without Ce
jaid or consent of the government,
:o:
j mornings, even
Icold cream.
milkmaids handle
BSJ
CHANGE THE TEMPO
The song of the Nation's financial
and economic depression is over
stressed, its continued burden is
threaded with both under and over
tones of gloom and discouragement.
The fact retards the return of a
wholesome prosperity.
Among all this reek of depressing
circumstance and the dissemination
of thoughts of uncertaintly. timidity.
distrust and fear, the real force of
the Nation's enduring anthem of
hope, of confidenme, of promise, is
dulled or. for the time being, lost.
The American people do not stop
to consider how really fortunate they
jare. There is disturbance and hard
ship and suffering. These always
are with us. But it should be remem
bered that where with us a relative-
j ly small number of the country's
i population face situations of distress
J more than ordinarily ominous, there
are millions upon millions in other
lands who face the same, or worse.
conditions and who must continue to
endure them without hope of any
speedy relief. Our own people know
that they will have relief; not an
adventitious relief, but that which
is actual and adequate.
People generally do not remember
that nearly ninety per cent of the
workers of America are employed;
or. if thy remember the fact, they
do not give it proper normal consid
eration. They should remember an
other significant fact as well. These
millions of workers still employed
continue to receive the highest wage
paid to any workers on earth. Our
manufacturers and financiers have
not lost faith in our industrial sys
tem and its policies. Up to the pres
ent they have maintained this excep
tional wage scale that the buyinp
power of labor be not imperiled.
They have held that powder to a
minimum of impairment. They have
faith that the clouds will pass. And
they will. The sun of national sta
bility is shining even now if only
our people would see it. welcome it,
assist its radiance to a wide diffusion.
:o:-
BEANS AND TOMATOES
Laying aside all personal preju
dices, however well justified, against
that tribe of superior personages
known as radio announcers, it does
look as though there were some hope
for the American language after all.
From Maine to California and from
the American Riviera to our rear
ranged Niagara Falls, Americans
Once the Oxford accent was brought
into the great American home, these
suspicious souls reasoned Britain
: could count on the return to the
fold of their 13 wayward American
colonies with generous interest.
But this insidious menace has met
its death blow at the hands of one
; Frank Vizetelly, lexicographer in
chief of the Columbia chain. Vize
telly has ruled, with the finality cus
tomary among lexicographers, that
"been" will be pronounced "bin," and
no back talk. The "beans" of Ox
ford are out, unless they are spelled
like the esteemed vegetable of that
name. And as for "tomahtoes," they
too, are saved from the Anglophiles
and become "tomaytoes" from this
date on foreTer more-
vizetelly must De accounted a
hero. Not only does he run the risk
of being shot down by a British
cruiser if he steps over England's
twelve-mile limit, but he must con-
le"u wini me wiam oi an eniDameu
horde of returned Rhodes scholars
now flourishing to these states.
: o:
A HAPPY ILLUSION
i "I'm still the Emperor." former
Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany said
I the other day. He was in uniform
when he made the remark, and all the
edals from the years when he had
sin his ftn1riir en marrhiny flnu'n
broad roads to victory were pinned
across his chest. I'm still the Em-
nror!
No one pays much attention to the
1 72-year-old monarch without a
j throne. The glory that was Greece
and the grandeur that was Rome
aren t any more extinct than the
majesty that was the Kaiser's.
It is hard for men to realize that
old orders change and give way to
the new. Napoleon, at Elba, plan
ned to some day lead his troops to
victory. Caesar always had hopes
that he would conquer more than
the Gauls and the Helvetians. Wil
helm II thinks that he is remember
ed back in Berlin when the linden
trees begin to Moom along the ave
nue. Being forgotten isn't so bad,
when you can wear a uniform and
imagine you are remembered. The
former ruler of ttu German empire
is dressing; up and pretending exactly
like children do.
VCC BAKING
iVv POWDER
You save in using
KC. Use LESS than of
hish priced brands.
trtmctf
2B
FOR OVER
0 YEAS
IT'S DOUBLE ACTING
GOOD PAVING PAYS
Although rough going for motor
ists is the rule in most American
cities, a large number are making
steady progress in replacing the anti
quated streets of other years with
modern smooth pavements.
Studying the pavement construc
tion figures of the last few years for
various states, it is revealed that
the function of a street is now more
than that of keeping vehicles out of
the mud.
A prime requisite of the modern
street is smoothness. Modern cars
are built with precision and sturdi
ness. but nothing short of the rug
ged construction of a tractor would
stand up without costly upkeep un
der the jars and jolts of thousands
of miles of streets, called streets for
want of a better name.
Of the 26,700.000 passenger cars
and trucks on the nation's highways,
all but 6.000.000 are city owned.
Although city car operators do con
siderable rural driving, it is clear
that city streets, on the average,
carry more traffic than do rural
roads. As a matter of fact, pave
ments in the country are universally
better than those in cities.
Cities uner 100.000 population
and towns and villages are usually
better equipped with smooth pave
ments than larger cities. This is due
to a number of reasons. Smaller mu
nicipalities faced the dawn of the
motor era with vast mileages of
streets wholly unpaved. As paving
became necessary they were more
alert to build well.
Large cities, with extensive mile
ages of pavements built years ago.
have had a tendency to coddle them
along with constant repairing and
light resurfacing.
Some of the large cities, however,
are making commendable progress in
paving. For instance. Los Angeles
last year built 95 miles of hard sur
faced pavement, while Chicago con
structed 80 miles.
:o:
TO EM AN AND FRIEND"
There is something very appeal
ing in that story about the Confed
erate veterans at the Georgia Con
federate Home, in Atlanta, who un
veiled a bronze Plaque the other
day to Alexander H. Wray of Pat
chogue, N. Y., a veteran of the Union
army in the UlTll war.
Ever since 1907, Wray has given
his entire Federal pension to the Con
federate Home a total of more than
$5,000; and the plaque expressed
gratitude to "a brave foe who was in
heart a friend."
One feels that it would be nice to
know this man Wray. How much
trouble, misunderstanding, and suf
fering could have been avoided if all
of his comrades in arms had felt to
ward their former foemen as he felt!
:o:-
"I like to sleep in old houses with
indy-creaking shutters." says a
noted columnist.
He may be brave.
but likely he's
blind.
saying this for a
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska. Cass coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of An
ton Krajicek, deceased.
To the creditors of said estate:
You are hereby notified, that I
will set at the County Court room
in Plattsmouth in said county, on
the 20th day of February, 1931, and
on the 22nd day of May, 1931, at 10
o'clock a. m., on each day. to re
ceive and examine all claims against
said estate, with a view to their ad
justment and allowance. The time
limited for the presentation of claim?
against said estate is three months
from the 20th day of February, A. D.
1931, and the time limited for pay
ment of debts is one year from said
20th day of February, 1931.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said County Court .this 23rd day of
January. 19S1.
A. H. DTTXBUTIY,
(Seal) j26-3w County Judge.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska. Cass coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the Estate of
Thomas Troop, 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
6th day of March, A. D. 1931 and on
the 6th day of July, A. D. 1931, at
nine o'clock in the forenoon of each
day, to receive and examine all
claims against said estate, with a
view to their adjustment and allow
ance. The time limited for the pre
sentation of claims against said es
tate is three months from the 6th
day of March, A. D. 1931, and the
time limited for payment of debts is
on? year from said 6th day of March,
1931.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said County Court this 4th day of
February, 1931.
A. H. DUXBURY,
(Seal) f9-3w County Judge.
NOTICE OF INCORPORATION
Notice is hereby given that Frank
M. Bestor. William A. Swatek, Cyril
Kalina and Charles K. Bestor have
organized a corporation to be known
as Bestor & Swatek Company, with
its principal place of business at
Plattsmouth in Cass county, Nebras
ka. The general nature of the busi
ness to be transacted by said corpo
ration is general hardware business
with right to buy and sell real estate
and such kinds and classes of prop
erty as may be necessary in conduct
ing its business. The authorized cap
ital stock is $30,000.00 in shares of
the par value of $100.00 per share,
of which $24,000.00 is subscribed
and paid at the time of said organi
zation. Said corporation commenced
business on the first day of February.
1931. and continues for a period of
fifty years. The highest amount of
indebtedness or liability to which
said corporation shall at any time
subject itself shall not he more than
two-thirds of its paid up capital
stock. The business of said corpora
tion shall be conducted by a board of
four Directors and the officers of
said corporation shall be a President.
Vice President. Secretary and Treas
urer. Dated this 3rd day of Ft-bruarv.
1931.
FRANK M. BESTOR
WILLIAM A. SWATEK
CHARLES K. BESTOR
CYRIL KALINA
f9-4w
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 Joseph F. Tubbs. deceased:
On reading the petition of Clifford
W. Jones. Executor, praying a final
settlement and allowance of his ac
count filed in this Court on the 2nd
day of February. 1931. and for dis
tribution of estate and discharge of
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
county, on the 27th day of February.
A. D. 1931, at 10 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 2nd day of Febru
ary. A. D. 1931.
A. H. DUXBURY.
(Seal f2-3w County Judge.
LEGAL NOTICE
In the District Court of Cass Coun
ty, Nebraska.
In the matter of the application
of N. D. Talcott, Admr. de bonis non
estate of Maggie Pailing, deceased, to
authority to sell realty.
Order to show cause why applica
tion should not be granted.
Now on this 7th day of February,
1931, N. D. Talcott. Administrator
de bonis non of the estate of Maggie
Pailing. deceased, having presented
his petition under oath for license to
sell the following described real es
tate of the said Maggie Pailing, de
ceased :
The north half of the south
east quarter of Sec. 32, Twp.
12, north range 9. and the
northeast quarter of the south
west quarter of Sec. 20, Twp.
12 north, range 9, east of the
6th p. m. in Cass county, Ne
braska or a sufficient amount thereof, to
raise the sum of $2350.00, for the
payment of debts allowed against
said estate and for costs of admin
istration, for the reason that there
is not sufficient amount of personal
property in the possession of N. D.
Talcott. Administrator, belonging to
said estate, to pay said debts and
costs.
It is therefore ordered that all
persons interested in said estate ap
pear before me at chambers in the
city of Plattsmouth. Cass County,
Nebraska, on the 28th day of March,
A. D. 1931, at the hour of ten o'clock
a. m. to show cause, if any there be.
why a license should not be granted
to said N. D. Talcott, Administrator,
to sell said real estate belonging to
the estate of said deceased to pay
said debts and expenses.
It is further ordered that a copy
of this order be served upon all per
sons interested in said estate by caus
ing the same to be published for four
successive weeka in the Plattsmouth
Journal, a newspaper printed and
pubUiiti in aaid County of Case.
JAB. T. BEGLEY.
Judge of the District Court.
fl2-4w
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska. Cas coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the Estate of
Robert Troop, 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
6th day of March, A. D. 1931 and on
the 6th day of July, A. D. 1931, at
ten o'clock in the forenoon of each
('ay. to receive and examine all
claims against said estate, with a
view to their adjustment and allow
ance. The time limited for the pre
sentation of claims against said es
tate is three months from the 6th
day of March. A. D. 1931, and the
tune limited for payment of debts is
one- yzar from said 6th day of March.
1931.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said County Court this 4th day of
February. 1931.
A. H. DUXBURY.
(Seal) f9-3w County Judge.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska. Cass coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the Estate of
Viola G. Smith, 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
0th day of March. A. D. 1931 and on
the 6th day of July, A. D. 1931. at
nine o'clock in the forenoon of each
day. to receive and examine all
claims against said estate, with a
view to their adjustment and allow
ance. The time limited for the pre
sentation of claims against said es
tate is three months from the 6th
day of March. A. D. 1931. and the
time limited for payment of debts is
one year from said 6th day of March,
1931.
Witness my hand and the 8eal of
said County Court this 4tb day of
February, 1931.
A. H. DUXBURY.
(Sea!) f9-3w County Judge.
ORDER OF HEARING
and Notice on Petition for Set
tlement of Account
In the County Court of Cass coun
ty. Nebraska.
Stat of Nebraska, Cass county, ss.
To all persons interested in the
estate of Alfred W. White, deceased:
On reading the petition of Edith
Donelan praying a final settlement
and allowance of her account filed
in this Court on the 2nd day of
February. 1931. and for final distri
bution and discharge of Adminis
tratrix: 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 27th day of February,
A. D. 1931, at 10 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
i he Plattsmouth Journal, a semi
weekly newspaper printed in said
county, for three weeks prior to said
day of hearing.
In witness whereof, I have here
unto set my hand and the seal of
said Court, this 2nd day of Febru
ary. A. D. 1931.
A. H. DUXBURY.
(Seal) f2-3w County Judge.
NOTICE OF SUIT IN PARTITION
Dora Raney, Plaintiffs
App. Dock.
vs.
Ina M. Gidley et al
Page 133
Defendants J
To the Defendants: Ina M. Gidley.
Harry J. Gidley, Homer O. Reason,
Violet Reason, Harold H. Reason.
Bessie L. Hanson, Lars Hanson, Ger
trude Struthers, George Struthers,
Eleanor McCoy. WTalter McCoy, The
Unknown Heirs, Devisees, Legatees.
Personal Representatives and all
other persons interested in the sev
eral estates of Frank Parker, deceas
ed, Anna May Reason, deceased, and
Stella M. Wright, deceased, real
names unknown, and all persons hav
ing or claiming any interest in Lots
1 and 2 in Block 10. in Carter's Ad
dition to Weeping Water, in Cass
county. Nebraska, real names un
known: You and each of you are hereby
notified that on January 27th. 1931,
plaintiff in the foregoing entitled
cause, filed her petition in the Dis
trict Court of Cass county, Nebraska,
wherein you and others are made
parties defendant, for the partition
of the following described real es
tate, to-wit:
Lots one (1) and two (2) in
Block ten (10) in Carter's Ad
dition to Weeping Water, Cass
county, Nebraska
among the parties interested therein,
to-wit: The plaintiff, Dora Raney,
and the defendants: Inn M. Gidley,
Homer O. Reason, Harold H. Reason,
Bessie L. Hanson, Gertrude Struthers.
Eleanor McCoy, Orville Wright (a
minor) and Lova June Wright (a
minor), according to thir respective
rights and interests therein, as may
be found, confirmed and decreed by
the Court, and that all defendants
named in said petition be required to
set up and assert their claims, if any
they have in or to said real estate,
adverse to the owners thereof and
that the same be considered and con
cluded by the decree of the Court, and
for equitable relief and for costs.
You are required to answer said
petition on or before the 16th day of
March, 1931. or your default will be
entered in said cause t.nd a Decree
in Partition entered therein as pray
ed for in said petition.
Dated: January 30th, 1931.
DORA RANEY.
Plaintiff.
By John M. Leyda.
Her Attorney.
Phone yonr Want Ad to No. 6.
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE
In the District Court of the Coun-
ty of Cass. Nebraska.
In re Guardianship of Maxine Rose
Hanni, a Minor.
On reading the petition filed and
! duly verified of Metta May Hanni,
guardian of Maxine Rose Hanni, a
' minor, for license to sell the follow
lowing described real estate: The
least half of the northeast quarter of
Section 2. Township 10. Range 13,
east of the 6th P. M.. in Cass county.
Nebraska; and it appearing that the
income therefrom is not sufficient to
pay the expenses and taxes connect
ed therewith, and for the purpose of
raising funds for the maintenance
and education of said minor, and ior
the benefit and best interest of said
minor child, that said real estate
should be sold;
It is therefore ordered that the
next of kin of said minor and all per
sons intereHted in said estate appear
before nie at Chambers in the court
house in the City of Plattsmouth,
Cass county, Nebraska, on the 24th
day of February, 1931, at 10 o'clock
a. m., to show cause, if any there be,
why license should not be granted to
Metta May Hanni. Guardian, to sell
said real estate for the purposes
above set forth.
It is further ordered that a copy
of this Order be published once each
week for three successive week in
the Plattsmouth Journal, a news
paper published and of general cir
culation in the County of Cass, Ne
braska. Dated at Chambers in Cass county,
Nebraska, this 6th day of January,
1931.
JAMES T. B EC LEY.
Judge of the District Court ot
Cass county, Nebraska.
f2-3w
NOTICE
To Albeit Van Horn and wife.
Hallie Van Horn: Sarah Craig: John
Doe Craig, first real name unknown;
Paul Nuckolls; Rupert Nuckolls;
William Ezra Nuckolls; Bruce John
son Nuckolls: Allen Fowler; William
C. Hall; Charles F. Miller; Augustus
Bonhers; Jane L. Craig and Richard
Roe Craig, first real name unknown;
Daniel Foust; Mrs. Daniel Foust,
first real name unknown; the heirs,
devisees, legatees, personal represen
tatives and all other persons inter
ested in the estates of Mercy Isadore
Van Horn, also known as Mercy Isa
dore Vanhorn, Stephen F. Nuckolls.
Sarah Craig, John Doe Craig, first
real name unknown, Paul Nuckolls,
Rupert Nuckolls, William Ezra Nuc
kolls, Bruce Johnson Nuckolls, Allen
Fowler. William C. Hall. Charles F.
Miller. Augustus Bohners, Jane L.
Craig, Richard Roe Craig, first real
name unknown, Daniel Fou.t. Mrs.
Daniel Foust. first real name un
known, each deceased, real names
unknown, and all persons having or
claiming any interest in and to the
weBt half IWI of the northeast
quarter (NE14) of Section five (5),
land the east half (Ei) of the north
west quarter (NW4 ) of Section five
(5) and the northwest quarter
1 of the northwest quarter
(NW ) of Section five (5). and Lots
seven (7) and eight (8), in the
northeast quarter (NE4) of the
northeast quarter (NE!4) of Section
six (6). and that part of Lot five
(5) of the northeast quarter NE4 )
of Section six (6) lying east of the
road in Section six (6). and the
southwest quarter (SWi) of the
northwest nuarter (JTWU I of Ser-
i tion five (5) and all that part of
the northwest quarter (NW'4) of
j the southwest quarter (SW1, ) of
j Section five (5) lying north of the
public road, containing ten (10)
acres, all in Township twelve (12),
North, Range thirteen (13) east of
the Sixth P. M., and Lots six (6) and
fourteen (14) in the southeast quar
ter (SB4) of Section thirty-one
(31), Township thirteen (13) North.
Range thirteen (13) east of the 6th
P. M., in Cass county, Nebraska, real
names unknown:
You and each of you are hereby
notified that on the 2nd day of Feb
ruary, 1931, The United States Na
tional Bank of Omaha, filed its peti
tion as plaintiff in the District Court
of Cass county, Nebraska, against
you and each of you as defendants,
the object and prayer of said petition
being to quiet title of said plaintiff
in and to the lands in said Cass coun
ty, owned by said plaintiff, said land
being more particularly described as
follows, to-wit.
The west half of the north
east, quarter (WH of NE1) of
Section five (5), and the east
half of the northwest quarter
(E4 of NW14 of Section five
(5). and the northwest quarter
of the northwest quarter (NW
of NW4) of Section five (5).
and Lots seven and eight (7 and
8 ) in the northeast quarter of
the northeast quarter (NE of
NE4) of Section six (6). and
that part of Lot five (5) of the
northeast quarter XKV) of
Section Bix (6), lying east of the
road in Section six (6) and the
southwest quarter of the north
west quarter (SW of NWVi)
of Section five (5) and all that
part of the northwest quarter
of the southwest quarter (NW4
of SW4) of Section five (5)
lying north of the public road,
containing ten (10) acres, all in
Township twelve (12). North,
Range thirteen (13). East of
the Sixth Principal Meridian;
and Lots six and fourteen (6
and 14) in the southeast quar
ter (SEV) of Section thirty
one (31). Township thirteen
(13) North of Range thirteen
(13) East of the Sixth Principal
Meridian in Cass county. Ne
braska and to exclude you and each of you
from having or claiming any inter
est therein.
You and each of you are required
to answer said petition on or before
the 16th day of March, 1931
UNITED STATES NATION
AL BANK OF T7MAHA
By Moreenai & "Ma jewel i.
Its AttepfiejB.