PAGE TWO F1ATTSTJOUTH SEMI - WEEKLY 1 . yu JOTOIfAL MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1924. Cbe plattemoutb "Journal UBLISHKD SEill-WEEKLY AT -utSMOirTH, iJEBllASliA .atrd at Potufflc.PlttBm6ath. &eb.; ficoi-eUu m mltter R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 THE GRACE OF GOD Now unto God and our Father be glory for ever and ever. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you; all. Philipians iv, 20, 23. :o: A lot or worry also comes to those who wait. . :o: Well, the hot weather we all were wanting is back again. 0:0 Entirely too many girls get mar ried to keep from being old maids. :o: Poor little movie stars; several pf them have been married again yet. :o: Fire broke out in a Chicago police station, but they caught it in time. :o: Big crowds attend the state fair it Lincoln. Really, larger than ever before. -o: Labor chiefs ray Davis is the best choice in the presidential race. Why, f course. :p: T!ip stcne age man hard his wife at his feet. The modern man has her Lt his heels. :o: "Shot bv Suitor" headline. The! sui?or didn't suit her so he decided to shoot her. :o: . If we really become what we eat, lot of us are headed toward being plass cf ice tea. :o: What is needed now is some form f regulation that will give more publicity to the bridegroom. :o: Another astonishing thing about riving the country is how often the ntmy is up and beat you to it. : o: Dawes says he intends to make cwral speeches in Wisconsin. Take a fool's advice, General, and stay out. :o: An immense crowd of peopl.will visit Omaha Saturday to see the next resident of the United States John V. Davis. :o: A hypocritical two-faced person, whether in religion, politics or the laily walks of life will bear watch n continually. He is not honest rT truthful. :o: We note that the girls who had temporarily discarded the short skirts, a few monts ago are resum ing their work along higher educa tional lines. -0:0- The department of pgricullure says farming doesn't yield an adequate return. Re-turns in November are expected especially to distress the ad ministration. Beauty shops are ruining the land. Today a single eyelash worries a woman more than a sink full of dirty dishes. And sometimes a sin gle ej-e wink will worry a" man for life. :o: When the barber had c6mp!eted bobbing her hair he said: "Will you have a singe, midara?" She replied "No, I guess my husband will attend to that when he finds I have bobbed my hair." :o: A scientist has calculated that the eyelid of an average man opens and shuts no fewer than 4,000,000 times in the course of a year. In the course of a year a man certainly sees a lot of things he has to wink at. 0:0 Grade crossings took their usual amount of toll both Sunday and Mon day. Such accidents are becoming more numerous than ever. Will the people of tomorrow never learn to look and listen at those crossings? It seems not. 0:0 Judging from the press dispatches reporting the agricultural activities of Calvin Coolidge, who was sum mering in Vermont, the farmers of that state don't raise anything but hay. We profess no knowledge of the resources of Vermont soil, but we do know that it raises darned poor presidential timber. OM) Senator La Foilette is not a bad man by any means, and is no doubt honest in his convictions. And even if elected president, he would not try to run the country to the dogs. He claims still to be a republican, but believes the present administra tion if let alone would run it by the centralization 6f power by taking many state rights from the pebple. j PER YEAR IN ADVANCE Due to the world peace shortage, Mexico is having trouble again. :o: - Wives cost eight oxen In Zululand because they do the work of more. -:o: Any man who get9 tip early on Simday Is lazy. He does it so he will have more time to loaf. :o: The harvest moon is coming, and if a bachelor can get by It he will be fairly safe until fpring. : 0 : If the flight from Iceland to Green land was a hop, the remaining stages of the world flight are mere steps. ' :b: In Faris the fashionable girls are going without stockings, perhaps so they won't have to go without men. :o: "Facts About Women," says a newspaper headline, but there isn't any 6uch thing as facts about women. ' :o: A woman's place is in the home, and when she is out of her place everything else seems to be out of place. :o: Mr. Darrow says the crime is proof of their insanity; and the law pre scribes a cure fof that kind of in sanity. :6: : ' "Beauty is an accident," say psy chologists. And we say it often re sults in internal injuries, such as heart trouble. '-o: : The obsessing fear that a candi date for vice president will fly off the handle and say something Is mora than the old line politician can bear., :o: Dan Butler has again been select ed as a candidate for governor by- pe tition. Dan's only object is to beat somebody and that's all their is to it. He knows he can't be elected. 0:0 Thi3 country has a competent po tential army on paper. The crucial moment for such a force arrives when necessary to get the units together to try out the communications to trans mit the word to the men and the of ficers. This is the big idea behind "Defense Day." :o: According to the newspapers, the president has been busy raking "Cousin Ed's" hay. That shows Mr. Coolidge is provident. He's making hay while the sun shines. Perhaps he has taken the hint that, for re publicans, the sun isn't going to shine much longer. :or Senator Norris says he IS not for La Foilette and he is not running on that ticket. If he is running on the republican ticket can the pro gressives support him? Norris is simply hoodwinking the people by carrying water on both shoulders. That's his game. :o: President Coolidge has admitted to newspaper men, that he doesn't care for doughnuts, thus breaking down the old tradition that all New Eng enders Tffre (hat sort of true. If we could Just get Mr. Coolidge to talk a little more he might break down a few others. Fof example, there is one about Plymouth Rock antedating Jamestown as the first permanent English settlement fh this country. :o: The cost of living is 62 per cent higher than before the war $1.62 needed to buy what cost $1 in July, 1914. For rents, the figure is 85 per cent instead of 62. These are the latest statistics from the Nation al Industrial Conference Board. They cover the needs of a wage earner with five in the family. And they represent an average for the whole country. In some districts, the cost of living is higher, in others it's lower. The only consolation is that the long range tendency is down ward. v -:o: The republicans in thi3 campaign do not hesitate to say that the demo chatic ticket deserves defeat because of the "Bryanism" that swept the party twenty-eight years ago. Yet, if the democrats suggest that the re publican ticket deserves defeat be cause of the mixture of Fallism, Forbesism, Newberrylsm, Daugherty ism, Jess Smith ism, W. J. Burnsism and a good many other isms that swept the republican party only a few months ago, General Dawes puffs his up-side-down pipe and yells demagogue" at them. It just de pends upon which party you attempt. tb darnn with isms. THE ISSUE "I have one message for the Amer- lean people in this campaign. I ex- States. The message I am .rfIn ment whether they do or not wani j In this country an honest, candid and a fearless government.' In this short statement, John W. Davis defines what, In his opinion and in the plan of his campaign, will . .. lccQ Tt i rcitfr be us dominant issue. 11 is a reutr ation of what he said in his speech of acceptance and what he said at Seagirt. The same thought was lat- "... .... ... ...... . . .. er repeated in tne address Derore me democratic convention at Columbus. Charges of mud slinging notwith- standing, Mr. Davis proposes to keep nl. t)lo ,.mlrie nf before the people in the course of the campaign the mistakes of the present administration. There is go- ing to be no attacking of President Coolidge, no attempt to fix upon him ,i,,u.., ,v, t..n.,ilo f . i- uent ior nis nrsi Term. ise worKcn .- ..i. responsibility for the scandals of the ho first fmjr months at s month n.f 1921 at 10 ft.cIoek a m to s,1(i,v past year. But at the same time the at Eiigic-word, New Jersey. After ca'.i.se, if any there be, v. hy the pray democratic candidate insists that the that I went to Manlin?. New York. rr of the petitioner, should hot he mistakes and failures of the repub- working in a tannery. The panic of rranted.rndthst notice of the pen- Ilcan party must not be hidden be- hind the new president's skirts with out an effort. A campaign along this line has one obvious advantage from the dem ocratic point of view. It tends to keep the administration on the de fensive in an issue where the case for the defense is admittedly weak. And in view of the good war record of the last democratic administra- tlon and the failure of the fepubli- . . can party, despite its campaign pledges, to bring to light a e.ngle case of maladministration or corrup-' tion in the face of the heavy war ex- penditure, it opens the door for seri ous reflection as tow hlch of the ma-.njng rbout 6.000 miles. After two "cr' A- 1;,24 it being one of the Jor parties is more properly to be en-'years he was sent to Or.iaha and here ,-a's of tno regular May, A. D. 1921 trusted with the trovernment ' h? Ferved two years when he was,tf of this court, this caue came trusted Uh the government. transferred to Madison, where he la-:0" hearing upon the petition of The democratic party was iniDOred for three years, when the con-Alma Yardley, Administratrix of the charge of the administration at ajferonce sent him to Milford. Here' estate of John W. Yardley. deceased. ner'n'l when opportunities for eraft ' tM!?' woro two -verir?!- At ,,lis time- Rra-V,n f"r i'lffment and Order of ner.o.l vMien opportunities for gran y ag Jn iggo & p Cfturt HxUhor,zins tne petitioner as and corruption were almost limit-; Rv wa, l).ljlt tnrogn Casg COunty such administratrix of said estate, to less, yet no charge involving Ihclt-cn rc icarnel about this he de- party was ever sustained. On the other hand, the republican party, in power for the past three and a half year, has established a record honeycombed with graft, fraud and various forms of inexcus ible corruption. Mr. Davis has well defined the is sue. If honesty in government is de sired by the people of the nation they must support the democratic! ticket. :o: DEFECTIVE BRAKES A five-year-old boy was killed in Hackensack the other day by an au tomobile which oould not be stopped efficiently owing to defective brakes. This is not a new story. It is an old story. Defective brakes are prob ably causing more accidents than careless driving. Driving cars with brakes that are not ready for efficient service is care less driving in another sense than the generally accepted talk of "care less driving." The driver with bad brakes majT be an otherwise careful driver. He may not be a speeder, he may do all manner of careful things to keep out of accidents, but if he cannot com mand quick control of his car. in stopping, he is not a careful driver. A careful driver will put more im portance on keeping his brakes test ed than he will in keeping his motor hitting on1 all cylinders. Being able it sop a car is more important in a serious, necessary way, than being able to make a car so. In many cities throughout the country campaigns have been started against defective brakes. It is important work, it is work that should not call for any cam paign, for every man should see to it that the brakes on his car are in good condition at all times. But when they fall, it is then necessary for others to se to it that the brakes are in good working condition. :o: COSTLY BITTERNESS It is truly unfortunate that the little things cause the big troubles in this busy world. The reason is usually that said little things are considered with a seriousness entire ly out of proportion to their import ance in actual life. A disagreement that might well be dismissed with a smile becomes a cauldron of hard feeling unnecessarily. If that 'returned dividends, it might be excused. But it rnerely serves to make life more worrisome and generally miserable. The happy man is he who can take things as they come, refusing to embitter hia', own life over the petty arguments which in the end have little bearing on his own welfare and in almost every in'stande mould themselves for' the betterment of tne majority of the people. "' This doe?" not nroarf to belittle pub lic expression- btr any subject. It merely points' btrf that there are very few public questions worth the loss .of a friend or the disruption -cf -amic- between fellow I ..... ..........Jt......T....tT. ,t . i . ---"-------- r MAKERS OF CASS COUflTY J. T T Louis Neitzel A t 5 T I V ri-nn"rrWriVVVI-n4 V ...... -- the writer or tnis kccicti, i-ouis N-itzel. was born in Pommern. Prus- Germany in 1S54 attended the, corjni0n schools until 14 years of age; nn3 was c6hflrmed in the faith 6f the Lutheran church. When 15 years old he betran to learn h'is chosen orofes- . . . m,, n; -as hard and the hours long from 4 a. ra. until 8 p. m., the year f round, tnd he is still at this date pn "early riser," a habit of early trfi,nIn hrtohfr c ,672 be em f-rrife.l to tne iaTU nf hjs dreams America, landing November 4, 1S72. the day when U. S. Grant was olectod prosi- discournped. Not being Pble to find work at his trade, lie worked fcr a butcher three years at Turtle Cieek. Pa., finally in Julv. 1S7C. he lrnded in South Bend. Ind., where ho wrrked In the Studebakcr Shops, operating a trip hammer for nearly fiva years. Here he was converted in January, 1S77 and Joined the Evangelicil church. Here he found the girl who he thought would make 0 good wife and on February 19, IP7S, they were duly married. Her father was the pastor of the First Evangelical church of South Bend, fhp Rp.. M jfoehn. In the vear. 1J!;, thy came to Nebraska. He 'n:er entered the ministry arfd was FPointe;! to Wahoo mission withsix I nrfaehing appointments. This meant much travel: his annual trius run- Hrd to come hero : r.d grow wp with n new town. So on April 7, 1S91, he landed on the. present town site which hnd ro name yet. He was ac -orded th? privilege cf naming . the now town and he called it "Eickhof" to which n5n;e Mr. E. objected and it was named after one of the rail road officials, Murdock. Mr. Neiiel r"t the first store build ing in the tovnsite. Bonemeier and Fickes lisd put up a tore building lout it was not on platted ground. and wr.s closed when he came. May, 1S92. Mr. E. T. Tool and son. Arthur, visited Murdock and decided to make this their homo. Hass Bros. built the same year he did a general "tore on the site of the store run by CI. Baur today. Mr. Neitel is today the oldest settler in Murdock. with A. J. Tool next in line. Many changes have taken place in these 33 yenrs. ir.p nrst scnooi nouse was built in 1892 and the second in 1924. The first religious services were held in the present depot by a Rev. Jac ops. Soon we called a Methodist minister and a class was organized Meetings were held in the school house. Their children grew up in Mur dock but all have left home and he is' alone with his companion of 46 years married life. The children are all married, our son, A. J. Neitztl is on a farm one mile north of Mur dock; Mrs. O. J. Hitchcock In Have lock. Nebraska; Mrs. P. A. Hartung in Kansas City. Missouri; Mrs. S. B. MacDiarmin in Omaha. FOR SALE Two good farms, four miles from Louisville. For particulars address Box 654, Louisville. Nebr. sl-6sw Mr. BlT.nie'Picnid was a passm ter for Cri aha thfs monring wn.-re she viil virnd a few hours loj :l ig a'"i or st me n atters of business. ORDER OF HEARING . Petition for Appointment of Administratrix Oh The state of Nebraska, Cass coun ty. S. In the C6unfy Court. In the matter f the estate Of ifar ry H. Kuhney, deceased. On reading an.l filing the petition of Penrl MayfieM. praying that ad ministration of estate may be trrinted to Mary Kuhney as admin istratrix: vt Ordered, that October 2nd, A. D. 1921. at 10 o'clork a. m.. is assigned for hearing said petition, when all persons inteested in said matter may appear at a county coutr to be held in and for said county, and show cause why the payer of petitioner should not bo granted; and that no tice of the pendency of said petition and the hearing thereof be given to all persons interacted in said matter by publishing a. copy of thi3 order In the Plattsmouth Journal, a weekly newspaper printed in said county, for three successive weeks, prior to said day of hearing. Dated September 4th. 1924. 'ALLEN J. BEESON, County Judge. Well Digging and Cleaning We fire prepared to sink Wells, clean wells or do" any kind of well work j. W. Hdbson & San able relationships citizens. FARMERS' MEETING Wednesday evening. Sept lf-.h at iarm nome 01 wium-a muu, one - miI .est of Murray. Speaker from : state headnuarterS at Omaha Free refreshments. T Erlng foxtr f: mtlie. H. V. EORNEilEIER, Sec'y. Famers Union. uuun.ii ur nrJ.Aiu.-.-j . And Notice on Petition For Settle- Arrirn DTI 111. 4 T" T X 1 1 ment of Account. f Irt.tbe County court or cass coun - ty. Nebraska. state of Nebraska, Cass coUnty, ss. To all persons interested in the estate cf S?na' James, deceased: On reading the petition of N. D. Tlfrtt swvtnisiratnr. nrnviner a. fin - . ' e account filed in this cotxrt on the Rth day of September, 1924, and for final settlement of snid estate and for his discharge as said adniinistra- tor It is hereby ordered that you and all persons interested In said matter may, and do, appear at the county cout to he held in and fo siKl coun- ns thereof be given to all nefsons In lTrMH! 111 ma ter ny puoiin- Ing a copy of this order In the Platfs- rnoum .lournai. a weekly newsparer printed in raid county, for one sue ccsslve week prior to said day of hearing. In witness whereof, I have here unto sot my hand and the seal of said court, this 5th day of September, A. D. 1921. ALLEN J. BEESON, (Seal) sS-lwk ,sw County Judge. ORD'ER TO SHOW CAUSE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. In the matter of the estate of John W. Yardley, Deceased. -NOVV oa lIlls -ra nay or hcpiem- negotiate a loan of Thirty-one Hun- (rod Dollars $3,100.00) and roctire the same by giving a first mortgage on the southwest quarter of the northwest quarter of Section twen i ry-nino -y ,n Jownsnip. eleven UD North. Range fourteen (14) I f'ast of the Sixth Principal Meridian, In Cass county. Nebraska, for the f.urpcse of paying mortgages already againrt said real estate and past due. and securing funds for paying debis and expense of administering said estate, there not being personal property with which to meet such obligations. ' It is therefore ordered that all persons interested in said estate ap pear before me at the District Court room in Plattsmouth, Nebraska, on the ISth day of October, A. D. 1924, to show cause xvhy a Judgment and order should not be issued by the Court authorizing said administrat rix to mortgage the real estate here inbefore described for the sum of $3,100.00 to pay off mortgages against said real estate and pay debts and expenses of administra tion. It is further ordered that ser vice of this order be made by pub lication theYeof for four successive weeks in the Plattsmouth Journal. Dated this 3rd day of September, A. D. 1924. JAMES T. BEGLEY, J Judge of the District! Court. -iw. NOTICE OF SUIT FOR DIVORCE In the District Court or the Coun ty of Cass. Nebraska. Minnie Evans, Plaintiff, vs. Myron Evans, Defendant. To the defendant Myron Evans: You will take notice that on the 12th day of May. 1924. the plain tiff Minnie Evans filed her petition In the District Court of Cass county Nebraska, the object and prayer of hlch is to obtain a decree of diT vorce from you upon the grounds of desertion and non-support, and to Obtain restoration of her former name. You are required to answer said petition on or before Monday, Oc tober 13, 1924, or a decree will be entered in accordance with the prayer of said petition. Dated August 30, 1924. MINNIE EVANS, Plaintiff. W. A. ROBERTSON, Attorney for Plaintiff. sl-4w. LEGAL NOTICE To P. Nickel, owner of the S of Lot 3 in Block 10 in the village of South Bend, Nebraska. You are hereby notified that upon the 5th day of December 1922 Virgil Kitrell purchased at tax sale. Certificates No. 5609 at the office of the County Treasurer of Cass Coun ty, Nebraska, covering the real estate In the village of South Bend, Nebras ka, described as followes: S1 of Lot 3 in Block 10 in the village of South Bend, Nebraska, said property being assessed in the name ofP. Nickel fof the 1921, for the taxes delinquent for said year or 1921. You are further notified that after the expiration of three months from the 28th day of August A D 1924 the purchaser Virgil Kitrell will. apply to the Treasurer of Cass County, Nebr eska ,f6f a Treasurer's Deed of and to the said property hereinbefore ; described. You are further notified that the sard purchaser has paid the subse quent taxes levied against the sard ab6ve described property sfrree the year 1921 including taxes for the year 1922 and 1923. Datd this' 28th day 6f August, A. D. 1924. " VIRGIL- KITRELL. By- Purchaser. J A. H. DUXBURY. a28-3wks-sw His Attorney. LAD STARTS TRAVELING ' Yesterday, Chief of Police William neinncnsen was caneu upon 10 sjSt in locating Donald, the little son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Erickson, who bad wandered away from the home on South Sixth street and caused the family a great deal of wcrrv. The mother of the little lad : maoe a nurriea searcn 01 iue uei6- ; borhood to try and locate him but made a hurried search of the neigh 1 without success and then the cVof of police was called upon to assist in 1 the search as it was teared tne nine j bov might get injured in getting out ififid being run over by a c-r. The j chief of police finally locate J the hey I at the Burlington station as lio li. d Evidently decided that he would get !nnt nrwi r n lifMn of the world on rv " t.i, Mrr.infnrr influence of the mother and ; fn'her. When foiind by the chief, ! Donald stated that he was going to j t movies and was not well pleased jthnt w? pr?vented carrying (cut his desire: NOTICE TO CREDITORS Tire State of Nebraska1, Cass coun ty, fs. In the County Court. In the m'dtter of the estate of Stephen A. Barker, 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 Sep tember 15. 1021, and December 15, 1024, at 10 o'clock a. rri. each day, to receive and examine all claims against said estate, with a view to their adjustment and allowance. The time limited for the presentation Of claims against said .estate is three ir.cnths from the 15th day of Sep tember; A. D. 1924, and the time liL-iit&d for payment of debts is one vear from said 15th day of Septem ber, 1924. Witness my hand and the seal Of said County Court, this 11th day of August, 192 4. ALLEN J. BEESON, (Seal) al8-4w County Judge. SHERIFF'S feALE State of Nebraska, County of Cass, ES. ... By virtue of ah Order of Sale is sued by James Robertson, Clerk of the District Court, within and for Cnss county, Nebraska, and to me directed, I will on the 13th day of September, A. D. 192 4. at ten o'clock a. ra., of said day at the south fron doer of the court house, iri Platts mouth, Nebraska, in said county, sell at public auction to the highest bid der for cash the following described property, to-w?t: Sub-lot one (1) cf Lot forty six (4S), described as follows: Commencing at the southwest corner of the southeast quarter of the southeast quarter (SE4 SE'4) of Section thirteen (13). in Township twelve (12), North Range thirteen (13), feast of the Sixth P. M., Cass county, Ne braska, thence north six hun dred sixty-three and eight tenth's 663. 8) feet to a stake, thence east nine hundred eleven and forty-six one-hundredths (911.46) feet to the west line of Chicago avenue, ih Platts mouth, Nebraska, thence south west along said Chicago avenue, in the center of the county road and to the south line of said Section thirteen (13), thence west to the place of beginning, containing ten and four-tenths (10.4) acres, be the same more or less; also Lots numbered twenty-eight (28), thirty-three (33) and sixty (60), all in the southwest quarter (SW4) of the southeast quarter (SEJ,4) of Section thirteen (13), in Town ship twelve (12), North Range thirteen (13), east of the 6th P. M., Cass county, Nebraska The same being levied upon and taken as the property of Nellie M Pttrmele, widow; William L. Carey Mrs. William L. Carey, real name un known; Fred E. Eodie, Receiver o the Bank of Cass County; Build ers Supply Company, a corporation; Frank R.'Gobelman; Robert McClan ahan and W. G. Boedeker, Defend ants, to satisfy a judgment of said Court recovered by Murray State Bank, of Murray, Nebraska, a cor poratlen, Plaintiff against said De fendants. Plattsmouth. Nebraska, August 13th, A. D. 1924. E. P. STEWART, Sheriff Cass County. Nebraska. NOTICE OF HEARING In the county court Of Cafe's coun ty Nebraska. . In the matter of the' estate Of Frank Kuschinsky, deceased. To all persons interested in the estate of Frank Kuschinsky, deceas ed, creditors and heirs at law: You are hereby notified that on the 20th day of August, 1924, Ma thilda Kuschinslcy filed her petition In this court in which she alleges: that Frank Kuschinsky, late a resi dent and inhabitant of Plattsmouth, in Cass county, Nebraska, departed this life intestate on or about the Sth day of February, 1921, and left surviving him as his sole and only heirs at law, his widow and three children, who are all of legal age and whose names and relationship are as follows: Mathilda Kuschinsky, his widow; Anna M. Hrasky, a daughter: Rose 11. Haffke, a daughter; Robert Kuschinsky, a son, and that said de cadent, Frank Kuschinsky, was seized and possessed at the time of his death of the ownership by title In fee simple, of the following de scribed real estate, to-wit: Lots 7, 8 9 and jo, in Blo6k 2 Iri Palmer's Out Lots, an ad dition to Plattsmouth, in Cass cbunty, Nebraska, and that petitioner is the widow and 6ne of the heifa At law of said de ceased, and by vlrfhe 6f a conveyance from the 6ther heirs at law of said decedent she is now the owner in fee sfmpie 6f the real estate before de scribed; that more than twtf j-earfi have now elapsed since the" death Of said deceased and. that no4 -appHca- tlon has ever been made in the State 'of Nebraska, for the appointment of an administrator of said estate, and praving for Judicial determination of the' time of the death of said Frank Kuschinsky, the names of his heirs at law and the degree of kinship thereof and the right of descent of the real property belonging to said decedent in the State of Nebraska, and for an order barring claims against said estate and for such oth r orders and decrees as may be nec esry for a correct determination of said matter. t ' Fiid matter has been set fcr hear ing at the County Court . room In riattsmouth, Cass county, Nebraska, 0:1 the 25th day of September, 1924, at 10 o'clock a. m., at which time and place all persons interested may .'appear and contest said petition. Dated: Avis. 21st, 1914. i T?v the f'ourt: ALLEN J. BEESON, a21-3wks-w County Judge. NOTICE TO QUIET TITLE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. App. Dock. 2, page , No. Charles H. Sheldon, Plaintiff, vs. Thomas Allison ct nl, Defendants. To the defendants: Thomas Alli son; Mrs. Thomas Allison, real name unknown; Mary Allison and hus band, John Doe Allison, real name unknown; John F. Doud; Mrs. John F. Doud, real name unknown; John T. Doud: Mrs. John T. Doud, real name unknown; Elias GIbbs; Mrs. Elias GIbbs, rer-1 name unknown; Jane R. Porter and husband, John Doe Porter. real name unknown; George W. Fairfield; Mrs. George W. Fairfield, real name unknown; the unknown heirs, devisees, legatees, personal representatives and all oth er persons interested in the several estates 6f Thomas Allison, Mary Al lison, John F. Doud, John T. Doud, Elias GIbbs, Jane R. Pofter and George W. Fairfield, each deceased, real names unknown; and all per sons having or claiming any Interest in Lot number nine (9), a sub-division of Government Lot seven (7) in Section thirty-three (33), Township twelve (12) North, Range fourteen (14) east of the Gth P. M., in Cas3 county, Nebraska, real names un known: You and each of you are hereby notified that on the 29th day of July; 1924, the plaintiff in the fore going entitled cause filed his peti tion in the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska, wherein you and each of you are made parties defend ant, for the purpose of obtaining a decree from said court quieting the record title in plaintiff iu the fol lowing described real estate, to-wit: Lot nurnber nine (9), a sub division of Government Lot seven (7), in .Section thirty three (33), Township twelve (12) North, Range fourteen (14) east of the 6th P. M., in Cass county, Nebraska as against yon and each of you and by such decree to wholly exclude you and each- of you from all state, right, title, claim or Interest. therein, and to have, the title to said prem ises forever freed from the apparent claims of the defendants and quiet ed in plaintiff and for equitable re lief You are required to answer said petition on or before the 15th day of September, 1924, cr your defaults will be entered in said cause and a decree granted as prayed for in said petition. Dated July 29th, 1924. CHARLES II. SHELDON, Plaintiff. By A. II. DUXBURY, His Attorney. a4-4w. We Repair Autos! Any Make or Any Work and Giar2Biee Absolute Satisfaction IVERSON GARAGE Pearl Street. Roy Long. Standard Ored Single Gomfa V.. F. SRVBSKV Plattsmouth Phone 3604 Mynard, Nebraska Automobile Painting! First-Class Work Guaranteed! Prices Reasonable ftlirro? ftepTating and Sign WoTk! , A. F. KHOFLIGEK, Phcme 592.W, PlaUtmouth REDS!