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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 28, 1926)
Cbe plattsmouth lournal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, KEEEASKA atr4 at PostoClc. Plattsxuoutfc. Keb. ma McokA-olaM mall mttlu R. A. BATES, Publisher BUBSCBIPTIOH PEICE $2.00 FEB YEAR EH ADVANCE THE LOBD AND HIS FLOCK Thus shall they know that I am the Lord their God, am with them. And yet My flock, the flock of My pastures, are .men, and I am your Cod, saith the Lord. Ezekiel 33:30. -:o:- Only a few more shopping months before light underwear. Sometimes the optimist has to bor row the pessimist's umbrella. -:o:- The night has a thousand eyeB, the neighbors twice as many. :o: Sometimes a girl's ideal is shatter ed, but oftener be is Just plain broke. :o: I One Sixth of the world'6 popula-J tion lives in America, in one way or another. -:o:- Maybe there are more killings now because people shoot straighter when sober. :o Hard coal as Jewels and Irish po-'to tatoes as desert are not among the impossibilities. "Women like long prayers in church because it gives them a chance to .ru-iV At th hatfi. ' .Q. J Just because you were married in a church is no reason for staying away , from the place now. -:o. The treasury asserts there is a predjudice against $2 bills. It ought . to try to prohibit them. :o: Americanism Paying $18 a ton for 6.59 coke and kicking about the price of English rubber. :o: Mosul reminds us that the surest way to trouble the waters these days; is to pour oil on them. -:o:- An ditor defines a banquet as an ordinary meal where olives and celery are served with the soup. :o: The world court will be all right if they can find somebody big enough to serve the bench warrants. :o: "Bow-legs are sign of courage," says scientists. They certainly are if their owner wears an up-to-date skirt. :o: The advice by Secretary Hoover that automobllists should use their tires a9 long as possible seems to be superfluous. :o:- The winner of the contest who ate 40 buckwheat cakes, pan size, at one sitting, has not been invited to dine with President Coolidge. :o: Evelyn Thaw, who was sick, will be around before the end of January, her doctor says. This must be the; usual "January Thaw." :o: Maybe the G. O. P. put Bobbie La we infer, must have cut short Sam Follette on the committee on Indian 'son's poetic career. Affairs in the hope that it might lead bim back to the reservation. -:o:- If General Pershing is unable to go back to settle the Tacna-Arica dispute it might solve several prob- lems to send Col. Mitchell there. :o: Harry Daugherty again in the lime- light. However he refuses to testify for fear of criminating himself, as he has been in so many of the schemes. -:o: Greece has issued a stamp bearing the portrait of Lord Byron, and the least England can do will be to re ciprocate by issuing a stamp bearing' the likeness of or somebody. Homer or Socrates :o:- We sincerely congratulate Father Shine on his ascendency to the posi tion of Monsignor, one of which is an . honor to him. We like Father Shine for his many excellent qualities and down deep in our hearts we hope to live long enough to see him warded with higher positions, which he truly deserves. J Dr. John A. Griffin ? OJHce Hours: f-12; 1-5. 6xcsiays koA evening by appointment only. PHONE 229 . Soenuiohgca Building .! Rather morning. frosty and snappy this -:o:- Dead men tell no tales and neither do dead women. -:o: Due to a shortage of underwear lots of knees are cold. -:o:- Texas seems to be getting more than her share of snow. :o:- What is needed is more stamps and fewer heroes to adorn them. -:o:- Clothes make the tramp, but the clothes doesn't make the man. -:q:- Wonder what the man who names Pullman cars calls his children? :o: "High heels for women's shoes coming back." Where have they been? Air travel is not yet popular ior several reasons, one of them being the overhead :o: One thing women's clothes leave the imagination is what makes them so expensive. :o: Nice thing about the present dance steps is you can't tell if the dancers are drunk or sober. -:o:- Evening gowns during the com- nS season are to be ankle-length. Something over two feet. -:o:- Sunday was a bad day for railroad crossing accidents, worse than for fl3' Sunday for some time :o:- Flling for ofSceB has commenced early. In this respect it isn't always the early bird that gets the office. :o: If motion picture censor boards were abolished, think of the suffer- ing that would result for the cen sors. :o:- Foot trouble is caused from danc ing the Charleston. Cut it out, boys and girls, and keep your feet in good shape. :o: The difference between an egoist and a go-getter is often the differ ence between the first and third person. :o: Well, its an awful world. In Gutherie, Okla., 55 are charged in a murder ring. This will make Chi cago jealous. :o: See where the hardware dealers are preparing to fight the chain store menace. All they have to do is find the weakest link :o:- We are at a loss to explain the popularity of the Charleston, con sidering that it is almost as hard work as taking care of a furnace. :o: : The Washington secretary of state thinks the state has no real poets be cause they bob their hair. Delilah, What will the next craze be? Ma Jong is deader than any doornail and .crossword puzzles are like the hash made from the last sad remnants of a Christmas turkey. -:o:- We are bound to say that if France s militaristic General Foch's pay of 13,000 a year indicates that there's less money in militarism than out pacifists had led us to believe. :o: A famous English novelist says the public's favorite fiction is ray. tery stories. The reason, she say?, is that they affect our most sensitive that of fear, as to no othrrj nerve sensation Think it over and see If . you don't agree. Secretary Wilbur urges the con struction of a dirigible two and a half times as large as the Los Angeles they were married. Desertion and re to replace the Shenandoah. Good.'fusal to return to the home they es but let us bpp that this one is DroD-! tahlished. are her crnnnds re-!eriy eqUiPped with safety devices, toj j avold a repetition of the disaster of its predecessor a disaster all the more tragic because been prevented. :o: It could have Prof H. O. Lloyd of Chicago uni-j vereity claims that the study of Greek ' papyrus manuscripts reveals the fact that St. Paul employed a stenogra pher. She muBt have been pretty sore when he dictated all that stuff about the subordinate place of women ln the human scheme. But maybe he . did it 1uHt to ant hfer print, nr fn rm - - - venge for Tier misspellings. y v If. IrL , NEW HANDY PACK Fits hand pocket and purse More for your money end the best Peppermiat Chewing Sweet for any money Look for WnW$ P. K. Handy Pack rtenyoHDealeriounteG7 THE PROFESSOR'S EGGS A professor in an American college has discovered how to produce the white of an egg without calling on the chicken. However, the advantage still rests with the hen, as the professor is stil! at a loss what to do for the yolk and the shell. The professor has not yet learned to cackle and we are willing to bet him three trillion dollars just as soon as we earn it that he can't put his white into a real egg and make it hatch. Nevertheless, he has started the scientific world and fairly dazed the patrons of quick lunch rooms. The day may be near at hand when we will be getting fresh country eggs from college professors instead of from chickens, and throwing crack ed corn into university class rooms instead of hen houses. The only question is whether pro fessors will lay 'em any cheaper than 60 cents a dozen. Poultrymen are very much alarm ed. They have ,put in millions of young chicks in anticipation of next year's business but not one faculty member. The professor who has produced half an egg is being given great en couragement. The dean has provid ed him with a splendid home of six rooms and four nests, and guranteed him all the gravel he can scratch. The professor has ben beseiged with handsome offers to be exhibited at poultry shows and has been guar anteed an extra fine roost if he will attend. A wealthy alumnus of the college involved has already made a gift of $250,000 to equip the university with marble hen houses and chicken runs for professors who are good layers. The dean is understood to be a little dissatisfied with this particu lar professor's work. He says no professor should 6tart anything he can't finish. His idea is that he should produce a whole egg or none. Meanwhile the public is waiting for further news. What it wants to know is whether it will have to go to college to get its eggs. And, if so, will it need a diploma to buy bacon. :o: RUDY'S DIVORCE Rudolph Valentino's divorce case, now before the tribunal of the Seine, in Paris, discloses some facts that are not generally known to the public. Mrs. Valentino, it seems, was Win ifred Shaughnessy, but was adopted by a family named De Wolfe. Later her adopted mother married Richard Hudnut of New York, the wealthy perfumer . On the stage, as most everyone who followed Rudy's affairs knows, she was known as Natacha iRambova. I She contends she has a right under the French law to a divorce accord ing to the statutes of Indiana, where She said nothing about desertion when she first made known her mari- tal difficulties in this country. Then it was merely an agreement to go different ways. But she very prob ably would have gotten the divorce in either Paris or this country. Nobody yet seems to have devised a way to keep the movie stara from getting" out of any marriage they get into. :o:- As time goes on and all other methods fall, those efficient and ar- dent law enforcers, axterlo-sclerosia anri Vifrh Vvlrmri 1 1 1 n n-n 1 mrvrmm . O - " " A A LUUIC I jto the rescue of the prohibition law.! SAVING AND SPENDING Times are flush. Everybody is mak ing money. You pay $1 for a simple meal in a restaurant and think noth- ing of it. Ten-years ago you could have had a better meal for 50 cents with' a glass of wine thrown in. Tempora mutantur at nos mutamur in illos. An old Latin proverb which means, "The times change and we! change with them." Some philoso phers maintain that we are being "short-changed." But while the money is coming in it is a good idea to save some of it for a rainy day. It rains a lot in this country. How much shall we save? What proportion of our income 6hall we "blow in" for a merry life and what proportion shall we put into the sock in expectation of the deluge? Says the Old Testament "He heapeth up riches and knowetn not who shall gather them." Says the New Testament "And Jesus looked round about, and saith unto his disciples, 'How hardly shall they that have riches enter into the kingdom of God.' " Of course you can interpret both these statements in you own way.! Most people do, depending largely upon how much they've got. If we all were to 'cut out" every luxury, buy only that which we ab solutely need and save every cent ,. . . , that we could for the rainy day, our bank accounts would surely grow.j But the widespread traffic among hu-' v. n KciflCc Ill 111 UCIUgo " t toil uuoiuioo. would be hurt, damaged possibly destroyed. Then, to our horror, we would find : our income affected. We would not; only have nothing to save but we; I would find that we are not making enough to pay for a comfortable liv - ing. We would be compelled to dive into the "rainy day" fund. And, when j that was empty the bread line. Therefore, in order to have the op - Dortunity to save we must spend. And that brings us back to the start - ing point. How much shall we save? How much shall we spend? The real estate salesman urges you to buy a good piece of property and save all the rest of your money to pay rorit. uniortunateiy. ne ooea not guarantee you that the property you buy will turn out to be good. The automobile salesman will ad vise you to buy a car and enjoy your life and build up your health. But it takes real money to keep up a car after you get one. John D. Rockefeller always ad- vised people to save their money. Gus . , , . , Hill, the well-known theatrical pro- ducer, says. "There are no pockets in the shroud." We all are in a ticklish position. We must not save too much. It would upset the equilibrium of busineas. We mustn't spend everything. It would leave us in the lurch in our old age. Won't somebody, who knows, kind- ly tell us Just how much to spend and how much to save? :o:- FOR YOUNG AND OLD Senator Henry V Bergenger, the new French ambassador to the' United States, did not have a great deal to say when he arrived in New York. A rather taciturn man. this Bergenger, as a diplomat ought to be. Some one asked him why he did ; not keep up his writing, for the am bassador has written good things. The reply was contentious. "Writing," said the ambassador, "is for the young and the old. I am no longer young and I am not at the office of tne state Department yet old. Therefore I do not write."; of Public Works at Lincoln, Ne Of course most of the great men. braska. nf Wtor h9 -BL-T-ttfon tV,cr, oil , t I right to waive all tech their years. The men who are not'reject any or all bida great in literature but who havei written a few things of merit are likelv to he vonne or old Th twpn-1 ties and the seventies are produc-! books thirty years ago. Twenty years hence he may write books again. :o: For dyspepsia, our national ail ment, use Burdock Blood Bitters Recommended for strengthening di- gestion purifying the blood. At all drug stores. xi.2o a bottle. Have VOU anyUling to sell or buy! Plattsmouth in said county, on the 6th P. M., Cass county, Nebraska; District t 15th day of February, 1926, and onBecond. to the west half (W) ofjbraska a ',the 17th day of May. 1926, at 10the southwest quarter (SWU) of ants, the Truck and Transfer L - I - N - E Call Phone 342-W or see me at the Vallery Sales Pavilion, Plattsmouth Wade Porter dIive Stack rTfuiliigft epfirf&HF. NOTCCE TO CONTRACTORS Sealed bids will be received at the Department of Public Works in the State House at Lincoln, Nebraska on February 24th, 1926 until 9:60 jyclock a. m., and at that time pub- .licly opened and read for GRADING, CULVERTS, GUARD RAIL and in cidential work on the UNION-ELM- WOOD Project No. 256-A, Federal I a 5 Road The proposed work consists of con- structing 5.1 miles of EARTH road The approximate quantities are: 89,600 Cu. Yds. Earth Exca vation. 500 Cu. Yds. Special Excava tion, Class B Grading. 450 Cu. Yds. Special Excava tion, Class A Culverts. 75 Cu. Yds. Special Excava tion, Class B Culverts. 75,000 Cu. Yds. Station over haul. 218.2 Cu. Yds. Concrete Class B. 628 Lin. ft. 18" Culvert Pipe. 4 6 Lin ft. 24" Culvert Pipe. 28 Lin. ft. 36" Culvert Pipe. 8.568 Lin. ft. Guard Rail. 80 Each, Anchors for Guard Rail. 8 Each Extra Posts for Guard Rail. Certified check for five per cent (5) of the amount of the bid will be required. This work must be started previous to April 1st, 1926 and be completed oy uecemDer isi, izt. Plans and specifications ior the work may be seen and information secured at the office of the County Clerk at Plattsmouth, Nebraska or at the office of the State Department of Public Works at Lincoln, Ne- braska. The State and County reserve the right to waive all technicalities and reject any or all bids. S1VIP5 v-a aj w . 'J'1 a ""i County Clerk, Cass County. R. L. COCHRAN, State Engineer. J25-3w NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS ; J Sealed bids will be received at the ' Department of Public Works in the (February 24th. 1926. until 9:00 o'clock a. m., and at that time pub- ; licly opened and read for GRAVEL SURFACING and incidental work , " ,TT J ' curl ai niu liuau. The proposed work consists of con structing 2.0 miles of GRAVEL road. The approximate quantities are: 24,500 Sq. Yds. 3" Gravel Surfacing. Certified check for five per cent j(5) of the amount of the bid will i rcymreu. I nis wortt must De 6tartea previous to April 1st, 1926, and be completed by September l6t, 1926. Plans and specifications for the work may be seen and Information secured at the office of the County at thf office of tne gtate Departmeilt of Public Works at Lincoln, Ne- braska. I . The State and County reserve the I right to waive all technicalities and reJect any Qr al, b,ds j GEO. R. SAYLES, County Clerk, Cass County. R. L. COCHRAN, State Engineer. J25-3w NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS Sealed bids will be received at the Department of Public Works in the State House at Lincoln, Nebraska on February 24th, 1926. until 9:00 1 Jl A .. A i J jo ciock a. m., ana ai mai lime puonc i iy openeu ana reaa ior uxt-A. v ci 'SURFACING and incidental work IN THE TOWN OF GREENWOOD, Pro 'Ject No. 107-E, Federal Aid Road. ; The proposed work consists of con- structing 0.7 mileB of GRAVEL road. The approximate quantities are 10,520 Sq. Yds. 3" Gravel Surfacing. Certified check for five per cent (5) of the amount of the bid will DJ required. to April 1st, 1926 and be completed by September lBt, 1926. Plans and specifications for the work may be seen and information secured at the office of the County Clerk at Plattsinniith. Npbraska. or oiitie uiiu uuuiy rebel ve iuC ingui lu waive tin letuuitaiiuee aiiu GEO. R. SAYLES, County Clerk, Cass -i & ouuiy . L. COCHRAN. State Engineer. J25-3w NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska. Cass coun ty, sa. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of ov.t.-- t To the creditorB of Bald eBtate: VfVI, ara koPI1w nntiA tw t win sit at the County Court room in - o clock in tne rorenoon 01 eacn or said days to receive and examine all claims against said eBtate, with a 1 ance. The time limited for the pre-. sentation of claims against said es-( tate is three months from the 15th day of February. A, D. 1926, and the; to answer said petition on or before time limited for payment of debts is ; Monday, the 1st day of March, 1926, one year from said 15th day ofjor the allegation of plaintiffs' peti February, 1926. Ition will be taken as true and a de- Witnesa mv hand and the seal of cree will be entered in favor of plain- said County Court, this 4th day of January, 1926. H. DT7XBURY County Judge. (Seal) JT-4w Fifty per cent of the farm women . according to a .rcent e'urvey, run.J their &vm raptar mm. th ether half ' drive faoa the back teat. Robertson Anderson, G. A. R. Post of York, Nebraska, is preparing to celebrate its 46th. annoversary of its' founding the latter part of next month. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS Sealed bids will be received at the! Department of Public Works in the, State House at Lincoln, Nebraska on 1 February 24th, 1926, until 9:00 o'clock a. m., and at that time pub- licly opened and read for GRAVEL, SURFACING and incidental work on' t of Ace H r)avis. deceased: the EAGLE-ELMWOOD Project No.. Qn readinp the petition of Mabel 153-A, Federal Aid Road. 'cook praying that the instrument The proposed work consists of con-lfil(i(1 jn this tourt on the Jn day t,f structing 6.5 miles of Gravel road. JJanuary 192C, and purporting to le The approximate quantities are: jthp ljist' wU1 aDd te.tament or the 80,400 Sq. Yds. 3" Gravel I said d(.t.easpd( may be proved and al- Surfacing. i lowed, and recorded as the last will Certified check for five per cent'am t.stamPt cf Alice II. Davis, d (5) of the amount of the bid 'iH I ased that said instrument l.e ad be required. 'mitted to probate, and the adminin- This work must be started previous trati(,n of said estate be granted f to April 1st, 1926. and be completed , Mabel Cook as Administratrix; by September 1st. 1926. j jt j,. hereby ordered that you, an4 Plans and specifications for the ' an persons interested in said matter, work may be seen and information j may ami do. appear at the County secured at the office of the County j (7OUrt to be held in and for said roun Clerk at Plattsmouth. Nebraska, or;ty on tne 1st day of February, A. D. at the office of the State Department j ingC at ten o'clock a. m.. to pho a of Public Works at Lincoln. Ne braska. The State and County reserve the right to waive all technicalities and reject any or all bids. GEO. R. SAYLES. County Clerk, Cass Countv. R. L. COCHRAN, State Engineer. j25-3w NOTICE OF SALE In the District Court of Cass coun ty. Nebraska. In the matter of the estate of Frank Hughson. Deceased. Notice is hereby given that in pur suance of an order of Hon. James T. Begley, Judge of the District Court of said Cass county, made on the 22nd day of December, 1925, for the sale of the real estate hereinafter described, there will be sold at the south front door of the court house in the City of Plattsmouth in said county on the 24th day of February, 1926. at ten o'clock a. m., at public vendue to the highest bidder for cash; ten per cent of the bid to be paid at the time of sale and the bal ance on confirmation thereof by the Court, the following described real estate, to-wit: The east half (E) of the southwest quarter (SWU ) and the southwest quarter (SWU ) of the southeast quarter (SEU ) of Section eight (8); also the northeast quarter (NEU) of the northwest quarter (XWU) of Section seventeen (17) and that portion of the northeast quarter (NE'i) of Section sev enteen (17) west of the Missouri river; all in Township ten (10), North, Range fourteen (14), in Cass county, Nebraska subject to a 112,000.00 mortgage; thereon. Said sale will remain open one hour. Dated at Plattsmouth, Nebraska, January 16, 1926. GUY HTGHSON, Administrator of the Estate of Frank Hughson, Deceased. D. O. DWYER. Atty. for the Estate. JlS-4w NOTICE OF SUIT TO QUIET TITLE. In the District Court of Cass coun ty. Nebraska Joseph V. ErancK and Paul Apple- gate, Plaintiffs, vs. Hugh Campbell et al, Defendants. To the defendants Hugh Campbell; Mrs. Hugh Campbell, wife of Hugh Campbell, first and real name un known; Mary Campbell, Executrix of the last Will and Testament of Hugh Campbell, deceased; Robert Campbell; the heirs, devisees, lega tees, personal representatives, and all persons interested In the estates of Hugh Campbell, deceased; Mrs. Hugh Campbell, wife of Hugh Camp bell, deceased, first and real name un known; Mary Campbell, Executrix of the last Will and Testament of Hugh Campbell, deceased, and Rob ert Campbell, each deceased, and their heirs and legatees, whose names and whereabouts are to plaintiffs unknown; and all persons interested in either the east half (E) of the southwest quarter (SWJ,i ) of Section twenty-seven (27), or the west half (W) of the southwest quarter (SWU) of Section twenty-seven (27), all of Township ten (10), Range thirteen (13). East of the 6th P. M.t Cass county, Nebraska, real names unknown. Defendants: You and each of you are hereby notified that the above named plain tiffs filed a petition and commenced an action in the District Court of Cass county, Nebraska, on the 13tb day of January, 1926, against you and each of you, the object and pray er of which is to obtain a decree of court quieting the title, first to the east half (E4) of the southwest quarter (SWU ) of Section twenty seven (27). Township ten (10), Ranee thirteen (13), East of the dttr. 4n'cntTonmn 071 Tnn'ncli lr "iuu mcuu-snu " " . ten (10), Range thirteen (13). East of the 6th P. M.. Cass county Ne- hraska. as aeainst you and each of you. and for such other and further) relief as may be just and equitable, You and each of you are required tiffs, respectively, and against you and each of you, according to the prayer of said petition. Dated this 13th day cf January, A. D. 1926. JOSEPH V. BRANDT and PAUL- APPLSGATE. Plaintiffs. ! J. A. CAFWELL. ,J14-v PlaiatiC' Attorney.. C0CKERAIS TOR SALE wand-oUe ,.ockerals. fl.5u eaCh. Ashland phone 1715. JULIUS REINKE. jll-12sw South Bend. Neb. ORDER OF HEARING AND NO TICE OF PROBATE OF WILL In the County Court of Cass coun tv. Nebraska. I State of Nebraska, County of T .", ,1(,rBnnl interested in the cause, if anv there be. why the pray of the petitioner should not be grant ed. and that notice of the pendent y of said petition and that the hearing thereof be given to all persons in terested in said matter by publish ing a copy of this Order iu the Plattsmouth Journal, a serai-weekly newspaper printed in said county, for three successive weeks prior to said day of hearing. Witness my hand, and seal tit said court, this 6th day of January, A. D. 1926. A. H. DUX BURY. (Seal) Cour.ty Judge. C. E. TEFFT. jll-3w Attorney. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE In the District Court of Cass coun ts', Nebraska. In the Matter of the Application of A. O. Ault, Administrator of the Estate of Edward P. McBride. de ceased, for License to Sell Ileal Es tate to Pay D-bts. Now on this 31st day of December, A. D. 1925, comes A. O. Ault. Ad ministrator of the estate of Edward P. McBride, deceased, and presents his petition for license to sell real es tate of the deceased to pay debts out standing against said estate; and it appearing from said petition that there is insufficient personal property in the hands of said administrator to pay the claims presented and allowed by the County Court and the expenses of said administration and that it i necessary to sell the whole of said real eBtate of said deceased for the payment of claims and costs of ad ministration ; It i! therefore Ordered and Ad judged that all parties interested in the estate of Edward P. McBride. tie ceased, appear before me, Jarne T. Begley, Judge of the District Court, in the office of the Clerk of thn Dis trict Court in the court house. In the City of Plattsmouth. in Cus -ov.nty. Nebraska, on the 20th day or Febru ary, 192C, at the hour of ten o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause. If any there be, why license should not be granted to A. O. Ault. Ad ministrator of said estate, to sell all of the real estate of said deceased h as to pay claims presented and al lowed with costs of administration. It is further Ordered that notice be given to all persons interested by publication of this Order to Show Cause for four (4) successive weeks in the Plattsmouth Journal, a legal newspaper published and of general circulation in said County of Cass, Nebraska. By the Court. JAMES T. BEGLEY, J4-4w District Judge. NOTICE In the District Court of Cas county, Nebraska. Ida F. Applcgate; Jessie A. Potter; Julian E. Applegate; Palmer C. Applegate and Delia A. Anderson, plaintiffs, vs. Herman M. Nye; Eliza Barnuni; Thomas G. Barnum; J. F. Hartmau, reel nome unknown; John Hull; Anna Maria Jennings; George Jennings; Otoe County National Bank of Nebraska City, Nebraska; John H. Bay ley; Edward Gooden ough; Charles E. Bayley; Jennie F. Bayley; William Horrican; E. . Barnum. real name unknown; Hctry W. Moore; Milton Tootle; Stopdell Stokes; George W. Hunt and Lee Ap plegate. and all persons bavins or claiming any interest in the west half of the northwest quarter (XWU ) of section twenty-seven (27), township (10) north of Range Thirteen (13). east of the Sixth Principal Meridian in Cass county, Nebraska, real names unknown, defendants. To the above named defendants: You and each of you are hereby notified that on the 21st day of December, 1925, Ida F. Applegate; Jessie A. Potter; Julian E. Apple- gate; Palmer C. Applegate and Delia A. Anderson, plaintiffs herein filed their petition in this action in the District Court of Cass county, Ne- gainst the above defend- object and prayer of which netitinii is tf niHet rifle t n the fnl- r, " . , lowing described real estate, towit: T,h "jf,. th- west Quarter (N 4 ) of Sec- tion Twenty-Seven (27), Town ship Ten (10), Ncrth Ranee Thirteen (13), East e the Sixth Principal Meridian, in Cass, county, Nebraska. You are required to answer Raid petition on or before the Sth day of February, 1926. Dated this 21st day of December, 1925, at Lincoln. Nebraska IDA F. APPLEGATE. JESSIE A. POTTER. JULIAN E. APPLEGATE. PALMER C. APPLEGATE. DELIA A. ANDERSON. Plaintiffs. By Frederick J. Patt, Their Attorney. 5w