The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, May 06, 1926, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    IHTTBSHAY, KAY 6, 1?36.
PXATTSMOUTH SEKI-WEIXLY JQUB3I,
PAGE THESE
Che plattsmouth journal
PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, KEBRA3KA
MmtmrmS at PoateClc. Plattamoatn. Nab. mm eoad-clasa mmil nuttier
R. A. BATES, Publisher
STJBSCEIPTIOB PEICE $2.00 PEE YEAE 117 ADVASCI
THE EAETH IS THE LORD'S
The earth ia the Lord's and the
fulness thereof. I Corinthians 10:26.
:o:
Fourth of July comes on Sunday
this year.
:o:
It's the easy paroles that make
uneasy payrolls.
-:o:-
No food merger can ever survive
in America except hash.
:o:
Federal aid laws, being questioned
on their constitutionality.
:o:
France wants a half billion from
Wall street. Will she get it?
:o:
Aid for prohibition agents and subs,
but nothing for the farmers.
:o:
The day dreamer Is sure to at
tract attention when he snores.
:o:
The irritating thing about the
back-seat driver is that so often she's
right. j
:o: I
Wall street is depressed again and
the farmers ought to do something
for it.
:o:
Political farm relief row feared.)
Tincher bill, better than nothing,
they claim.
:o:
The main objection to a "use-no-slang
week" ia that too many people
couldn't talk.
:o:
A good garden will pay if you don't
Lata to pay a doctor to straighten
eat your back.
:o:
A wlae wife never reminds her hus
band of the foolish things he said
while courting her.
. i :o:
A man may have heart enough to
Jove more than one women at a time,
not brains enough.
:o:-
When words fail to express a
Woman's contempt for a man he en
Jsya a moment's peace.
' :o:
Now they're shoutin', "Paint up
time Is here." Huh, the girls have
been doln' it all winter.
:o:
The wage of sin now depends
somewhat on how much the confes
sion magazines are paying. j
: :o:
An optimist is a suburban gardner
who thinks he can harvest a crop or
watermelons without a fence.
:o:
It may yet become a distinction for
young American singers not to have
sang in the Metropolitan operas.
:o:
Don't Imagine that because one of
the participants In a quarrel is wrong,
that the other is altogether right.
-:o:-
He that hath no automobile don't'
have to worry to keep it In repairs.
and buy gasoline. Every ' automobile
eoste at least a SI per day for gaso-!
line.
ram
V
Will congress adjourn this month.
:o:-
We sure need a gully washer for
the farmers.
-:o:-
Fair skys and mildness for an -
other week, reports 6ay.
The best life insurance policy is
keeping on the sidewalk.
:o:
Farm aid waits in senate.
How
long will it remain there?
:o:
Have you made your garden yet
picnic season will soon be here.
:o:
One of the quickest ways to study
astronomy is taking up boxing.
:o:
There is but one cure fcr spring
fever work to cure your laziness.
:o:
Education is a slow process and
i
CI CU L 11 U UCL VJ 1. uicu 6vtl 11 uy uc-
grees.
:o:
What makes this modern poetry so
interesting is guessing at what it!
means.
:o:
There are but few contented peo
ple who do not occupy space in cem
eteries. :o:
You can't judge the value of a
thing by the price card that is at
tached to it.
:o:
After some men have merely done
their duty they get sore if the crowd
doesn't cheer.
:o:-
Opportunity is an angel in disguise.
that some people suspect of being a
goldbrick peddler.
:o:
There's now a car to every five peo-
pie, which should limit each driver
to four pedestrians.
:o:
William Wrigley 6ays the sun never
sets on his chewing gum, but most;
everybody else does.
:o:
The solution might be in getting
the abandoned farmers and the aban
doned farms together.
o:
Women are braver than men. Tou
never see a man slipping off his shoes
In a theater or restaurant.
-:o:-
If a girl is naturally pretty, she
remains pretty, In spite of all shejnews. They are both in Kansas City.
may do to improve her looks.
:o:
This is the time when a wise hus-
band seeks a nice quiet place to stay,
while the housecleaning orgy is on. 1
1 TOT 1 - .
Smart people don't last long in any
community. That ia the reason that
McCampbell has to get out of Omaha.
:o: l
Somebody has "suggested that the
Congressional Record ought to con
tain advertising. It doesn't contain
anything else.
-:o:-
Now we know why they call 'em
strawberries. During the early part
of the season they taste like the first
part of the name.
:o:
Frequently it is possible to get New
York or Los Angeles on the radio, and
frequently it is impossible to get he would make for a bolt from the
your own wife on the telephone. (heavens, in another church there was
:o: 'quite a different form of worship.
President Coolidge does not permit Grandpa and grandma sat in the
himself to be drawn into the prohibi-j choir box as old old about thirty
tion controversy. No wonder he has odd peopie wb0 ha(j been married for
never been defeated in an election. I f0rty-five years and sang "Yes, we
:: . shall gather at the river." There were
Harvard asks for $5,000,000 for. , . .
xiantwu 0 ui ,v , tears in the eyes of many when one
law research.and if Harvard's dia;j- vin? owictc
nosis nas a cnance 10 ue luiiuwtu y
a remedy, It will be worth the money.
:o:
The woman who slapped her hus
band's face for criticising her brid.-.e
nlaviric nrobahlv made a erand sla:n.
although the new rules are silent on'down- his chIn h1. his eyes steady.
the subject.
:o:-
PE0HEBITI0N ON POLITICS
A story is related of a prominent f
Virginia nolitician. In season and;
--- i
out he is a devout prohibitionist (po
litically). Recently while entertain
ing some friends he served whisky.
Someone In a spirit of rallery in
quired, "How is it, Jim, that you are
such a Ehouter for prohibition, yet
you drink whiskey and serve it to
great man made this classic answer:
'Surely, Dick, you must understand
that prohibition is not intended for:
gentlemen.
-:o:-
Hives, eczema, itch Bets you crazy. !
Cant bear the -touch of your cloth
ing. Doan's Ointment is fine for
skin itehing. All druggists sell it.
60c a box.
SALEMANSHIP
Salesmanship has to do with selling
goods or commodities to intending or
prospective customers. In a sense, and
practically developed, salesmanship is
a fine art. Not everybody, or any
body, for that matter, can be a good
salesman there is so much to know
and to understand.
Perhaps the following ten points,
published by Standard Rate and Date
Service Digest, will be of real value
to business men who aim to pleace
patrons, and to those who are try
ing to be salesmen, but who have not
yet made good. The ten points are
as follows:
1. To treat each customer with the
courtesy that springs from genuine
' friendship and respect
2. To have more thought lor the
customer's final satisfaction than for
the amount of the immediate sale.
3. To know the stock and to be
accurate in statements about mer
chandise. 4. To be as attentive to the pur
chaser of an inexpensive article as
to one whose needs are more elabor
ate. 5. To be patient with the customer
who is provoked; prompt with the
customer who is hurried; sympathetic
with the customer who is puzzled;
considerate to those who are difficult
to satisfy, and hospitable to those
who are strangers In the store
6. To seek a fair understanding of
the customer's exact requirements
that the proper merchandise may be
shown.
7. To be friendly, but not familiar;
cheerful, but not boisterous; to give
information, not advice.
8. To keep the service up to the
standard of the merchandise.
9. To increase sales, not by means
of persuausion or trickery ;but by
making customers feel that this is
the store in which they are served
pleasantly, capably and promptly; so
that they will wish to do as much of
their buying here as their needs will
permit.
10. Be loyal to your employer, con-
Siderate toward associates and there-
fore keep true to yourself.
There is so very much of good sug
gestion in the above ouoted ten Doints
lhat estended comment might naTe
the effect of diverting attention by
those who can profit most by study
ing, every inefficient salesman is a
eerious liability to his employer 'and
to himself; that every effort made to
be a really good salesman is In the
direction of giving better and better
service to the buying public and for
the employers of salesmen inefficien
cy and incompetency are taxing
patrons and employers enormously.
:o:
MB. LEWIS AND OTHERS
Two churches break into the day's
They offer two messages to the world.
And what different messages
they i
are
In one churcn Sinclair Lewis, the
novelist take3 tne pulpit. He "con-
Hii nte q t ornoH mor t ' V r foTMncr nnt
his watch and defying God to trike
him dead in ten minutes.
"Here's a lovely chance for God to
show what he can do " declared the
autnor. wen, we cannot aisagree
with him there. It was.
But do not imagine Mr. Lewis has
done something new or original.
George Bernard Shaw did it much
better, much more dramatically.
"I give God three minutes to
strike me dead," Mr. Shaw once said. i
"I am a very busy man."
While Lewis in one church was
showing God what a fine opportunity
man 83 years old, sang in a soft
plaintive baritone five verses of "The
Beautiful Land."
Applause is not regular in that
church, but when the old man sat
the din of handclapping sweept up to
the choir box.
There are many kinds of people
in the world, the cheap and the sin
cere and many are the kinds of godSiaction weakens the bowels, leads to
tt . t chronlc constipation. Get Doan's
we Muisuiy. z uc lice to ciiuuet?
our own.
-:o:-
A Chicago gangster arrested in a
police round-up was found to have in
his apartment eleven rifles, five re
volvers and parts of a machine gun.
It 8eems possible he may have been ex
4.
I
pecting a call to mobilize.
:o:-
Announcement is made that i"
"bridge rule have been revised." The
most important bridge rule remains' .j.
unchanged, and that is not to cross '
;any bridge till you get to it. v
Spanish war pension bill.
BAKING
Same Price
far over
35years
2-5 ounces J"or 23 cents
WKyPay
Wa.xr Prices ?
Our Government
used millions cf pounds
LOVING THE BEAUTIFUL
We have been told many times that
a bir"d in the hand is worth two in
the bush. And yet, if all the birds
were gathered in the hand, there
would be no singing by the roadsides
of life.
It has Deen said that three things
forever make man different from the
beasts of the field the desire to
know the truth, the desire to serve
and the love of beautiy.
As long as man is conscious of
these three impulses in his life he
does not need worry about evolution
or much else.
It is better to appreciate the things
we cannot have than to have the
things which we cannot appreciate.
Are j-ou wondering what the rela
tionship between these random re
marks may be? They are all related.
In fact, they are all saying the same
thing.
They are saying that the possession
of things does not mean riches. Real
riches come from the inward ability
to appreciate the best whether the
best is in the field of painting, litera-
ture, music, science or religion.
Having things and not knowing
what they mean is not much. Having
thinps and not knowing what they are
all about is to remain in dire poverty
the poverty of the mind and soul.
Your money may enable you to buy
books to fill shelves that reach to the
roof of your bouse, but if you can
not read your books with pleasure and
understanding you are poorer than
the man who works in your garden
and loves the flowers, listens to the
birds songs and dreams dreams in the
afternoon sunshine.
Michael Pupin, great scientist and
teacher in Columbia University, tells
us what his mother said to him when
he was a poor peasant lad in Serbia.
"She could neither read nor write,"
Pupin says, "and always told me she
felt she was blind in spite of her eyes.
She said, 'My boy, if you wish to get
out into the world about which you
hear so much, you must provide your
self with another pair of eyes the
eyes of reading and writing.' "
The peasant woman sensed the
great store of riches than cannot be
bought with money. And within her
was the desire to know the truth and
love of beauty.
:o:
Looking back on the prohibition in
quiry it may fairly be said that
Wayne Wheeler and the Anti-Saloon
League have made the United States
as dry as the Atlantic ocean ever dar-
ed to be.
-:o
If the issue in 1928 is to be prohi-
bition, what a nice little time we
might have with a race of Butlers
with Nicholas M heading the wets,
and Smedley D., leading the drys.
:o:
Don't use harsh physics. The re-
Regulets. They operate easily,
at all stores. .
30c
Job Printing at Journal Office.
Dr. John A. Griffin
Dentist
Office Houn: 9-12; 1-6.
8&fft&s end evenings
by apTfiiifQnent only.
PHONE 229
t
Soennichsen Building
11 1 I I 1 1 I' 1 'i"I"I' I ! I l'l j
POWDER
JAZZING UP EDUCATION
"We must jazz up learning with a
lipstick and rouge," says Professor
William J. Newlin of Amherst College.
The go-get-em professor explains A. Davis, Attorney General, Plaintiff,
that in an age of Jazz and thrills, the. vs. Bank of Cass County, Platts-
world educational alone has remain-!mouth, Nebraska. Defendant.
w ? has remain . Jg fcy yIrtue
ed de-thrilled and de natered. f0f an Order of Sale duly made and
Once in a while such statements entered in the above entitled cause
make one wonder if the tendency to by the Honorable James T. Begley,
acclaim the new the modern the
acclaim the new tne modern tne
young, to grant without question that)
all its demands be met, that it be
gorged to satisfaction and no ques
tion asked is altogether good.
Once in a while one wonders if
youth should not rather be taught
of the beauties of the old, reepect for
the dignity and worth of tradition
and history welded together by the
final and best thought of many men
big and strong.
In other words, should youth's
greedy call of "Gimme! Gimme!"
yelled at the citadel of education, be
met on its own terms, or should
youth be led to see perhaps that what
it pcorns has some worth?
Should education be given "th
lipstick and rouge" 60 much as yowl
ing youth itself should be given
good trouncing until its unwhole
somely puffed head shrinks into some
semblance of a human head's shape
There must be a happy meaning
somewhere. We have as little pa
tience with those who say "give
youth all it wants and everything
as with those who drably say, "give
it nothing, let it takej what we offer
:o:
BANQUETS
A friend of ours over in Iowa sends
us an invitation to a banquet in his
home city with a personal note con
taining an Insistent demand for our
presence.
Nothing doing! We can be bored
stiff by banquets right here at home
No use in Journeying all the way to
Iowa for 'twould be only the same old
variety of boredom.
The chief features of a modern
banquet consist of some cold victuals
on a plate, and somebody you don'
know introducing a speaker you
don't care to hear.
:o:
The French politicians do not like
any of the plans so far proposed for
funding France's debt to the United
States. What these politicians would
like would be to let bygones be by
gones.
NOTICE OF BALE
In the District Court of Caas ooun
ty, Nebraska.
In the matter of the estate of
Mary E. Thompson, 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, Nebraska
made on the 24th day of April
1926, for the sale of the real estate
hereinafter described, there will be
sold at the south front door of the
courthouse In Plattsmouth, Nebraska
on the 1st day of June, 1926, at ten
o'clock a. m., at public vendue to the
highest bidder for cash, the follow
ing described real estate, to-wlt: Lots
four (4), five (5) and six (6), in
Block twenty-five (25), of South
Park Addition to the City of Platts
mouth, Nebraska.
Dated this 24th day of April, A
D. 1926.
FRANK A. CLOIDT.
a26-4w Administrator.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska, Case coun
ty, SB.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of
Michael J. Rys. deceased.
To the creditors of said estate:
You are hereby notified, that
will sit at the County Court room In
Plattsmouth, in said county, on the
24th day of May, A. D. 1926 and on
the 25th day of August A. D. 1926,
at 10 o'clock a. m. of 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 t hree
months from the 24th day of May,
A. D. 1926, and the time limited for
payment of debts is one year from
said 24th day of May, 1926.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said County Court, this 24th day of
April, 1926.
A. H. DUXBURY.
County Judge.
(Seal) a26-4w
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska. Caas Coun
ty, as.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of
George E. Nichols, deceased.
To the creditors of Baid estate:
You are hereby notified. That I
will eit at the County Court Room in
Plattsmouth in said county, on the
10th day of May. 1926, and the 11th
day of August, 1926, at 10 o'clock
a. m., of each day, to receive and
examine all claims against said
estate, with a view to their adjust
ment and allowance. The time limit
ed for the presentation of claims
against said estate is three montns
from the 10th day of May A. D. 1926,
and the time limited for payment of
debts is one year from said 10th
day of May 1926.
Witness my Jiand the seal of said
county court, this 9th day of April,
1926.
A. H. PUXBVfcY.
(Seal)al2-4w Coustr Jtidc.
NOTICE OF SALE
of Remaining Assets of Bank of Cass
County, Plattsmouth, Nebr.
In the District Court of Cass coun
Itv. Nebraska.
I State of Nebraska, ex rel, Clarence
Judge of the District Court of the
jSecmd Judicial District of Nebraska
hed wUhin and for Casg on
the 24th day of April, 1926, the
undersigned receiver will sell at the
south door of the Court House in the
City of Plattsmouth, in the County j of John Dempster, Anselmo B. Smith.
of Cass, Nebraska, at 3 o'clock p. m., Smith, real name unknown
on the 24th day of May, 1926, the, wife of Anselmo B. Smith; all per
following described property, being sons having or claiming any interest
the entire remaining assets of said' in the following described real es
bank (save and except the liability tate in Cass county, Nebraska, to-
of stockholders after assets are ex-
hausted) to-wit:
BILLS RECEIVABLE
Being Notes Against Var
ious Persons.
J. P. Falter (Note secured
by real estate mortgage
on land in Polk county
on which foreclosure is
pending) 1 5,000.00
Harvey. O. M. and C. A. 600.00
Parkening, W. E 44.25
Porter, W. B 24.80
Queen, E. R 259.93
Richardson, Floyd N 50.00
Richardson, C. F. 80.00
Sans. Walter 1,200.00
Snyder, George W 5,000.00
Interest In a note given by
Geo. W. Snyder for 3,
500.00 held by Anna M.
Wooley 2,250.00
R. J. Hall 400.00
JUDGMENTS
The following judgments in Dis
trict Court of Cass county, as fol
lows, to-wit:
Mar. 16, 1922, Gus R. Olson,
$1,483.90.
Mar. 16, 1922, Ralph J. Hay
nie, $1,396.35.
Apr. 26, 1922, Chas. C. Par
mele, $10,409.75.
May 22, 1922, Nellie Parmele,
$13,021.45.
June 28, 1922, W. R. Egen
berger, $1,677.25.
Nov. 20, 1919, F. H. Wynn,
$556.69.
Feb. 27, 1924, W. B. Porter,
$892.64.
May 22, 1922, Leonard F.
Terryberry, $4,063.36.
Judgments in the Circuit Court of
Jackson county, Missouri:
September 27, 1922, Reitz,
$1,791.80.
Judgments in the County Court of
Cass county, Nebraska:
Apr. 12, 1922, R. Shrader,
$100.00.
June 26, 1922,iWash Young,
$404.54.
Febr. 17. 1922, W. B. Rlshel,
$25.00.
Apr. 12, 1922, W. Parker,
$140.00.
Febr. 17, 1922, Percy Field,
$73.00. -
June 19, 1922, W. F. Davis,
$30.00.
OTHER ASSETS
Tax Receipts on the W SW'i and
the NE SWU and the NW'i
SEU of 26-16-1. Polk county Ne
braska $259.3
Balance due on Reese Hastaln con
tract in settlement of Mrs. C. H. Par
mele judgment $300.00
The above assets will be offered
separately and also as a whole. A
full list of notes and other assets
will be found in the office of the
Clerk of the District Court of said
county.
Said sale to be for cash, or as by
law provided, should the Guarantee
Fund Commission see fit to submit
bid or bids.
Dated this 3rd day of May, A. D
1926.
E. J. DEMPSTER,
Receiver of Bank of Cass
County, Plattsmouth,
Nebraska.
By C. M. SKILES,
His Attorney.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska, Cass coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of
Elizabeth Katherine Hild, deceased
To the creditors of said estate:
You are hereby notified, that
will sit at the County Court room in
Plattsmouth, in said county, on May
24th. 1926, and on August 25, 1926,
at 10 o'clock a. m., each gay, 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 claims
against said estate is three months
from the 24th day of May, A. D.
1926, and the time limited for pay
ment of debts If one year from said
24th day of May, 1926.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said County Court, this 24th day of
April, 1926.
A. H. DUXBURY,
(Seal) a26-4w County Jude.
Newspaper advertising' pays!
Truck and Transfer
l -1 - n - E
Call Phone 342-W
r see me at the Vallery Sales
Pavilion, Plattsmouth
Wade Porter
f'Lixe Stock Hauling a Specialty. I
NOTICE
In the District Court In and for;
the County of Cass, State of Nebras
ka. To the defendants: Louden Mullin;'
Barbara E. aiumn; Jonn Dempster;
Dempster, real name un-
known, wife of John Dempster; An-
selmo B. Smith; Smith, real
name unkn0wn, wife of Anselmo B.
Smith; Chicago. Burlington & Quincy
Railroad Company, a corporation;
(the heirs, devisees, legatees, personal
. representatives ana an oiner persons
interested in the estates of the fol
lowing named deceased persons: Lou
den Mullin, Barbara E. Mullin,
John Dempster, Demp
ster, real name unknown, wife
wit: Government Lot four (4) and
the southeast quarter (SEV4 ) of Sec
tion thirty-four (34), Township thir
teen (13), North of Range thirteen
(13), East of the 6th P. M.. and
Government Lot five (5) in said Sec
tion thirty-four (34), EXCEPTING,
however from the land above describ
ed the following described tracts of
land, to-wit: FIRST All that part
of said Government Lot five (5) lying
northerly from a line beginning one
hundred twenty-six feet east of the
quarter section corner between Sec
tions thirty-four (34) and thirty-five
(35), Township thirteen (13), North
of Range thirteen (13), East of the
6th P. M., and running north twenty
four degrees and twenty-three min
utes (24 23") west to the southerly
bank of the Platte river; SECOND .
A strip of land one hundred fifty
(150) feet in width, it being seventy
five (75) feet wide on each side of
the center line of a dike as now built
on said land and upon which a rail
road may hereafter be built; THHID
All that part of the southeast quar
ter (SEU) of said Section thirty
four (34) lying between a line drawn
fifty feet distant and parallel with
and northerly from the center line
of the present "Y" track of the Chi
cago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad
Company, and a line drawn seventy
five feet distant and parallel with
and northerly from the center line
of the main track of the said Chicago,
Burlington & Quincy Railroad Com
pany's Oreapolis and Ashland line:
FOURTH All that part of said land
hereinbefore described and conveyed
as lies south of the right-of-way of
the main track of the railroad of the
Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Rail
road Company on its Oreapolis and
Ashland line, in the State of Nebras
ka; real names unknown:
You and each of you are hereby
notified that on the 1st day of May.
A. D. 1926, Lyman Richey Sand and
Gravel Company, a corporation, filed
its petition in the District Court of
Cass county, Nebraska, as 6hown la
Appearance Docket , page ,
naming you and each of you as de
fendants, the object and prayer of
which said petition is to quiet the
title In the plaintiff to the following
described real property, to-wit:
Government Lot four (4) and
the southeast quarter (SEU) of
Section thirty-four (34), Town
ship thirteen (13), North of
Range thirteen (13), east of the
6th P. M., and Government Lot
five (5) in said Section thirty
four (34), EXCEPTING, how
ever, from the land above de
scribed the following described
tracts of land, to-wit FIRST
A 11 that part of said
Government Lot five (5) lying
northerly from a line beginning
one hundred twenty-six (126)
feet east of the quarter section
corner between Sections thirty
four (34) and thirty-five (35).
Township thirteen (13), North
of Range thirteen (13), East of
the 6th P. M., and running north
twenty-four degrees and twenty
three minutes (24 23") west to
the southerly bank of the Platte
river: SECOND A strip of land
one hundred fifty (150) feet in
width, it being seventy-five (75)
feet wide on each side of the
center line of a dike as now
built on said land and upon
which a railroad may hereafter
be built; THIRD All that part
of the southeast quarter (SEVi)
of said Section thirty-four (34)
lying between a line drawn fifty
feet distant and parallel with
and northerly from the center
line of the present "Y" track
of the Chicago, Burlington &
Quincy Railroad Company, and
a line drawn seventy-five feet
distant and parallel with and
northerly from the center line
of the main track of the said
Chicago, Burlington & Quincy
Railroad Company's Oreapolis
and Ashland line; FOURTH
All that part of said land here
inbefore described and convey
ed as lies south of the right-of-of
the main track oC the railroad
way of the main track of the rail
road of the Chicago, Burlington
& Quincy Railroad Company on
Said petition further prays that
the defendants and each of them be
decreed to have no estate, title, right,
claim or interest of any kind in or
to any of said real estate, or any
part thereof, and that the defendants
and each of them and all persons
claiming by, through or under them,
be perpetually enjoined from claim
ing or asserting any lien upon, or
any right or title to, or Interest In
said real property, or any part there
of, and for such other and further
relief as may be just and equitable.
You and each of you are further
notified that you are required to an
swer said petition on or before the
28th day of June, A. D. 1926.
LYMAN RICHEY SAND &
GRAVEL COMPANY.
(m6-4w) A Corporation,
Plaintiff.
H. E. KUPPINGER,
Attorney.
Advertise your wast in the Jour
nal for results.