PLATTSMOUTH SEMI-WEEKLY JQT7MTAL PAGE TMILE THURSDAY, MAY 20, 1926. 'Cbc piattsmo'Jth 3ournal PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT trd m.t PoatuXlc. Flattuiaoutb. R . A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 Mine blast at Pittsburg, Kansas, kills four men. -:o: Clain-up, brush-up, dress-up for Thursday- -the Big Day. :o: Mellon and Davis plead for pep Give a little salt and cool off. per. :o: If a man is easily bought, it i.s difficult to make him stay bought. :o:- The man with a family of girls can hardly afford to have his own hair cut. :o: After all, doing things right half as much trouble and twice much fun. is as -o: There are about 500 broadcasting stations in the country, not counting the gossips. :o; This is the time of the year when the shortcake is better than the strawberries. i :o: Many of the young men who are going to be married this spring know about it already. :o: Bargains day after tomorrow. Come in and get what you want and what you need, as cheap as dirt. :o: There would be more happy mar riages if both sides didn't think that argument was the best policy. :o: A man, says Henry Ford, should like his work. Yes, but the trouble is like other things so much better. :o:- No fear for the Norge. It is said. there are many theories but none that the giant Norge has been forced down, -:o:- Polish rebels near goal. Nearly all Warsaw in the hands of Pilsudski Goxernment officials have fled the city. It's pretty hard to keep your anger bottled up sometimes, when there are' so many people hanging around with corkscrews. Although courts uniformly that they have rights, the difficulty comes when they try to tell that stuff to the driver. -:o:- The Eskimos are not equipped to . , .i. lane uuvauias l n.c iUu.. but u tne t'oiar exploration levti . continues tney soon win oe. :o: You can always get more informa-'not tion from the man who does not pro- fess to know anything than you can from half the eye-witnesses :o: Several men have been walking down town tnese mornings, indicating that their ..i,., hnmP: .ll 1111 1 l 11 11C1.C 'HH- , from college and have the car. :o: Nathan Leopold, Jr., who, with Richard Loeb. is serving a .life tence in Statesville prison, for slay ing Bobby Franks, two years ago, wrote a farewell note to his father on the board seat of his solitary con- 11 111 111V 11 I. V- V- 1 1 K. v. wvy Z 1 7:: " ":: eeu pubui.ns c-.e yia,i.i6 deputy warden and preparing to es-'t cape, was revealed yesterday. A) RESIDENT )icrc Vac Hospitalilij of Uic old South, meets the generosity of the neuAVcst in tVic'Jfcart of cAuiertca 43 o ROOMS WITH CATH $3.00 AND UP 4 mm T Ur. John A. Lxriltm "rltlcated and therefore dangerous Dentist Office Hours: 9-12; 1-5. Sundays and evenings by appointment only. PHONE 229 Soennichsen Building I'-I"I"II..I..IMI..ItX"I"I"I-I"II- fr PLATTSMOUTH. NEBRASKA Ntb.. a.a aecoad-clas mtU mtMr PER YEAR LN ADVANCE The Philipinos are brown elephants, on our hands. I -:o:- Regret will never be able to head off indiscretion. :o: Walking is a Ioat art. It now con sists of jumping out of the way. : o : The Pole is a dull soul. All this exploration stuff is over its head. :o: Blessed are the peacemakers. No boyy erects a hideous bronz statue of them. -:o:- Obeying a torublesorae. more so. traffic signal is often But paying a fine is -:o:- If someone will climb the North read the article in the current An Pole now with a Ford, we will call nalist about price control and agri it a day. cultural co-operations, before lending O . ' I A nncln'tiiv rrri titun iu nno tiling -and an uncorking one is something else again. Will eirs disappear'' asks a wor-' ave failed just about in proportion I " may do me last ume uiai becia. ; t d to John Tomazewski, as Ad mit ears disappear . asks a , . .. .,-Jnf ns will ever have another oi)Dor-lii;,.,.. ried writer crystal sets. ..-Viiin ..-o ii .v ....- , -:o:- Whatever else Ben. Smedley may be, he never will be acclaimed the life of a party. ;o; Some men are as proud of what they do as others are of what they: Tlie original wise-cracker was thatj one that hid in the cvorner of the breadbox so nobody would eat it. -:o: T, l,o- n,l rrmnrlnn 11BOfi ! to get every time his sister went horseback riding in "divided skirts?" :o: It is well to be caution about set- ting a thief to catch a thief. When jie catches him the two forces The next time that evangelist gets can avoid doing. i i :o: 'into account the effect of higher, i Indiana has just destroyed 14,400 t,, vnilim(1 nf nrndi'ctinn ! will sit at the County Court room in wo,ouarrs of pre-war whisky. May the .,. tTl inv,-tnK, fn nrir 1 Plattsmouth in said county, on the T . . .Q ma, OTl 1ta crml 1 " r list day of June, 1926, and on the 1st Lord have mercy On its SOUI. -li5rh .vinct r-nmo with innromtori nrn-1 , no i. i i ." ...v. .. . uay OI sepiemuer, vzo, ai ten o iiuin nold.Herrin, 111., to bury the hatchet let's ' hope that they don't leave the handle j .sticking out. I :o: It is beginning to look as if con-. gressmen seeking re-election will have . , . ... . i. i lo bUuer neu ieu.im uo "".permanently solve the problem of theColirt of sai,i Caf helped the farmers, :o:- T),n .-,.-,r-c- nf th,r, T'nitoil 5tntf5 are really apathetic it is jt that they will not start debating public questions until they have been decid- led. -tor- Every cut in the income tax pro- . .... cut it to notnmg tne goverumeui would owe each or us sometning every year. -:o: i Mexico is organizing a baseball sen-,,eaf?ue an(1 soon the people may be -expected to work off' their enthusiasm , on umpires, instead of starting lutions. :o:- 1,1C IHier"ll" - m 1 I A. J w iiii-.rfnn la Tl" ir makes use of tne. president s pass m, , the ball gai bal. jrameg when "the White, j House spokesman has some other business? :o Gov. Hadley thinks we must lenk to the women for new leads in po i- The elder Cato said: "We E - tics. mans ruie me worm, aim um . . i i ,1 Was there ever a time before tint oi me enfe...eer - 'and examine all claims against saidiprayer of petitioner should not be v I,,- nmJ throttle of the flying limited train as ... , . Jf ranted- and that notice of the nend- led to Plea for support for cand'dat s It roars over its steel highway. We ment aml allowance. The time lim- ency of said petition and the hearing v,iTn!to,i qHtoo nnte i hvor' ronsider that, his task is in a sense ited for the presentation of claims thereof be given to all persons i in fer the United States senate as a ra or ;t5 'nrninst said estate is three months terested in said matter by publishing to tne presiut ui ; id nni'ii- l :o: I . . . n ,t i a in i.i in. l lie Willi auvciiiuic unaiiiii, ' - ' i rule us, so If the women lead i.:a.nigii oeuy mai meie wuum never uu. wav it will not be for the first time, :o:- One of the latest suggestions from the field of science i3 the possibility of turning smoke into perfumes. That would give a good number of citias a chance to enter competition for the title "the sweetest smelling town in the country." :o: Between the ages of 15 and 20 a woman is inocent and therefore dan-, gerous; at 20 she thinks she is 4- OA tntnlrn c-hn t si CATI fc ' us; be- Tjtween 20 and 30 she is sophisticated Xnd therefore dangerous; between 30 4!and 40 she thinks she is misunder 4 stood and is therefore dangerous; T after 40 she is misunderstood but T you won't get that far. -:o: Maps of Cass county, showing every! man's farm can be had at the Journal - - - i office. Price 50 cents each r A at Same Trice for over 35 years 2oufores25 USE LESS THAN OF HIGHER PRICED BRANDS Why Pay War Prices? CHE GOVERNMENT USED I MILLIONS pF POUNDS J PRICE FIXING Friends of the administration who ! believe salvation for the farmer is to 1 be found through co-operation should i-m Titinrt tn 1 1 1 Tinrlinr 1 1 1 1 1 whipll 'embraces Secretary Jardine's program for relief. The thesis of this discus- 'sion is that agricultural co-operatives iu men inieiesL in aiiiuc.ai unv-c. ' control; that the kind of co-operation! which the administration is seeking i to promote would almost inevitably lead to overproduction and to the defeat of the purpose for which such legislation was oesigneu. it is the principal shortcoming of an the farm relief bills proposed in recent years that they fail to take! ducticn. It has been possible in the in-,a. fduotrial field so to control output as;examine all claims against saiu es iu .uumu.w w.c- i,., but no success in that direction has I 1 , 1,J J :.,lt.,.n e er ueeu iriuiuru in usmuumeu none is likelv under conditions which obtain on the one-family farm. The resources of the American treasury are large enough to guaran-! tee the producer a lair price tor nis - - the field of price valorization on I large scale and say, for example, that the price of wheat shall not fall be- 0w $1.50 a bushel, it can do so with assurance that the government is able 'tv Nebraska financially to keep the price to the; " in the matt level. But neither through the use f tmhI, finil, nnr th(, nrnmntinn of C0.0prI " " rarive uvmc ana se ns van n ... . farm produce surplus. The question this week as the agricultural bil.s nrma 1 1 n hefinro tlio nniiKO i rn nelpr- ,:. .. :.. mine whether to use the public money to tide over what appears to be serious emergency, establishing 1 dangerous precedent in the process. or io anow me iunuameiiuu ii mcip.es no)ni rn -:o: YOUR HAZARDS Driving an automobile has become , so commonplace that it no longer is an auventuros occupation. Twenty revo-;ycarj agQ the autonlooiie driver was' a man oi coinage, wui.i.K iu - i. ...mi: dark nights and mud holes. Today e bo(1 driveg and it Ia all as ...., ""'f "' , I But there seems little reason for' this attitude Of nonchalance. We Gtill i have a respect for the responsibilities .. . . mm at every turn. Yet we step into automobiles and whiz all about the streets and coun- tryside as though no danger existed,! i . i i i r 1 1 r 1 1 ii k it in iiii v . in i nrc i v m i v vwu. i j - and our wivs'as tho we had been assured by some to u.v.v j anything Just around the corner but a smooth road and pretty scenery. So most of us are taken by surprise when it comes our turn to figure in ! a smash-up, to count our casualties, We wonder how we or the other! fellow could be so careles. And we do not stop to think that our attitude toward the automobile is a real re-J nnnnhiiiv it ia nnt a nnctimo tr C1W..S.U..11,. " - be entrusted to infants, no matter how precocious. It is freighted with haz- nflo nCX Y YC Q Vfll (cl HTllv liv widespread recognition of the hun- dred nf opportunities for accidents dreds of opportunities ior accidents which exist at every hand every day. :o:- ... In a. way it did seem a poor time to start a general strike in Britain, when there were 2 million idle men! readv to take iobs. And mavb that's it .j... xa. ii v I n o err kh x n ih iiiii. 1 1 mm i it ir r . so easy to get their jobs back. DECORATION DAY, MAY SO Brothers! Let us pause a moment; Let a requiem be said, As a token we are faithful To the memory of the dead! To the comrades Time hath taken, In his still, resistless sweep; Those, who, weary with life's burden, Rest in their eternal sleep. They have been transferred above us, And no more will greet us here; They have joined the grand division In life's higher, final sphere. Yet, so near is life to matter, And so n'iar is- soul to dust, That from out the land of shadows . , , , . ., . Their fraternal hand i:i thrust. ' Let us grasp it in the spirit, Soul meet soul through bound- i less air. With the old fraternal greeting To our brothers over there. That we'll keep the sacred trust; Pledge our faith unto the living In the promise to be just. Brothers! Let us pause a moment. Ere the last goodbye is said, Pledge again our obligation In the presence of the dead! Selected. -:o:- We would like to see every civil . - ti war veteran in Cass county in Platts- mouth on Monday, May 31st, to take part in the Decoration services. Re- On reading and filing the petition member there are but a fev of us, and of Frances Tomazewski, praying that ..... . ,. .'administration of said estate may be --- -- iu-y i"."1 muun: uU . :i Ar VA.rinn i.JK.tfn in 4hnpn n-hn nave gone neiore. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun- i ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Alida A. Blair, deceased. To the creditors of said estate: You are hereby notified, that m., of each day, to receive and tate, witn a view io ineir aujusimeui allowance xiie time limited for the presentation of claims against - . ix J 4 1 . u I, . said esiaie IS nuee uiuimis num uic 1 1st day of June, A. D. 1926. and the !t5nie limitfe1 for T nno one year from said 1st day of June, 1926 witness my hand and the seal of X At. S -i e saiu toumy tuuu, cms m ux ui. A. II. DUXBURY, County Jydge. (Seal) ml0-4v NOTICE OF SALE In the District Court of Cass coun- ter or tne estate of .vary i nompson. uec-easeu. I Notice is hereby given that in pur- ailUIILt? til Cl 11 UlUCi VV 1 1U1U. tl Ulliv.J n.. -.. s l. i;eKiey. juukb ui me ihmiiu ge of the District iss county, Nebraska. 24th day of April. tie of the real estate made on "the iur lu l"':".:,, nereinaner ucscnucu. nicie win uc sold at the south front door of the courthouse in Plattsmouth. Nebraska, a on the-1st day of June, 1926, at ten a o'clock a. m., at public vendue to the (highest bidder for cash, the follow ing described real estate, to-wit: Lots four (4)f five (5) aml six (6) In 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, Cass coun J ' i r cts Jn the Collnty Court. In the matter of the estate of 0r-'AmelIa V. Streight, deceased To the creditors of said estate: You are hereby notified, that will sit at the County Court room in Pl.ittsmnnth in said rnnntv. nn June 7, 1926, and September 8, 1926, at . frnm V. o "7 1 1. illw rf TllTIO A T 1 O Oft I11V1 11 11IC I 111 1IU tl 111 i ' . 1HWV i&n(1 the time Hmite(1 for payment of UeMs ig one year from said 7th day of June, 1926. Witness my hand and the seal of said County Court, this 3rd day of May 1926 H. DUXBURY, County Judge. (Seal) ml0-4w NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of RHnhpth TCntherine TTild. defeased. To the creditors of said estate: You are hereby notified, that I will sit at the County Court room in .. ... A moiu .n nt -,k nvinrk m. each dav. to re- X-, ,1 nvnnnA nil lolmo QfrQinof said estate, with a view to their ad- Justment and allowance. ine lime Umlted for the presentation of claims 'against sai(j estate is three months jfrom the 24th day of May, A. D. '1926. and the time limited for pay- raent of deMg ,f one year from sald 24th dav of Mav. 1926. Witness my hand and the seal oft . . M . , -9 AAA.. i . saia county jouri. mis n aay oi April, 1926 A. II. DUXBURY, j J(Seal) a26-4w County Judge. To feel strong, have good appetite and digestion, sleep soundly" and en joy lige, use Burdock Blood Bitters, the family system tonic. Price, $1.25. ORDER OF HEARING on Petition for Appointment of Administrator. The State of Nebraska, Cass coun- ty ss In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of Katie Hoenshell, deceased On reading and filing the petition of Earl J. Hoenshell. praying that administration of said estate may be granted to W. E. Hand, as Adminis trator; Ordered, that June 7th, A. D. 1926, at 10 o'clock a. m., is assigned lor nearing saiu pennon witn m sons interested in said matter may appcar at a county Court to be held . " - 1 . - .1 l- . . . . i in an ior saiu tuuuiv, anu miuw (faille whv the nraver of petitioner snoui,i not be granted; and that notice of the pendency of said peti tion and the hearing thereof be given 'to all persons interested in said mat iter by publishing a copy of this order lrounty for three successive weeks, prior to said day of hearing. Dated May 13th, 192(5. A. II. DUXBURY, (Seal) ml7-3w County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING on Petition for Appointment of Administrator The State of Nebraska, Cass eoun- y. ss. In the County Court, nf the Tn the matter of the estate of , valentine Tomazewski. deceased. iwimouoiui, Ordered, that May 29th, A. D. 1926, at ten o'clock a. m., is assign ed for hearing said petition, when all persons Interested in said matter may appear at a County Court to be held in and for said county, and jshow cause why the prayer of peti tioner should not be granted; and that notice of the pendency of said petition and the hearing thereof be given to all persons interested In said matter by publishing a copy of this lorder in the Plattsmouth Journal, a 'semi-weekly newspaper printed in said county, for three successive weeks, prior to said day of hearing. Dated May 5th, 1926. A. H. DUN BURY, (Seal) ml0-3w County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING on Tetition for Appointment of Administrator The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. Tn the matter of the estate of Howell R. Knowles. Deceased. On reading and filing the petition of Robert G. Knowles praying that administration of said estate may be granted to P. L. Hall, Jr., as Admin istrator; Ordered, that June 1st, A. D. 1926, at 10 o'clock a. m., is assigned for hearing said petition, when all per sons interested in said matter may appear at a County Court to be held in and for said county, and show cause why the prayer of petitioner VUBT, 1 "VV. I -fhould not be granted; a ticf th,e pe.nden'S aP.d the hea"nS thcre?f and that no- said petition be given to fall persons interested in said matter . - .... . i "'oV - i 1. 1 : 1. I . 4 h ia ryf1 til" weeklv newspaper printed in said county, for three successive weeks prior to said day of hearing. Datxd May 7th, 1926. A. H. DUXBURY. (Seal) ml0-3w County Judge. ORDER OF HEARING on Petition for Appointment of Administrator. The State of Nebraska, Cass Coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of - Cecilia D. Jahrig, deceased. On reading and filing the petition of Anna Hunter praying that admin istration of said estate may be granted to William Hunter as administrator Ordered, that June 12, A. D. 1926, I!at ten o clock a m., is assigned for hearing petition, when all persons in terested in said matter may appear at a county court to be held in and for a copy of this order in the Platts mouth Journal, a semi-weekly news paper printed in said county, for three successive weeks, prior to said day of hearing. Dated May 15th, 1926. A. II. DUXBURY, (Seal) ml7-3w County Judge. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The State of Nebraska, Cass coun ty, ss. In the County Court. In the matter of the estate of ! Michael J. Rys, 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 O . .1- .1 , u A tanti onH nn dav of Aucust A. D. 1 9 26, at 10 o'clock a. m. of each day, to rDPDlVO O Tl A CYflTTllnfl 11 rlafmS against said estate, with a view to ineir aujusimem auu buu. xu 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 payment of debts is one year from said 24th day of May, 1926. Witness my hand and the seal of ! J -A, A. iUtrt O 1 A rrr r f naiu vouuiy uun, mia -.m April, 1926. A. H. DUXBURY, County Judge. (Seal) a26-4w NOTICE OF SALE of Remaining Assets of Bank of Cass County, Plattsmouth, Nebr. In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. , State of Nebraska, ex rel, Clarence A. Davis, Attorney General, Plaintiff, vs. Bank of Cass County, Platts mouth, Nebraska, Defendant. Notice is hereby given by virtue of an Order of Sale duly made and entered in the above entitled cause by the Honorable James T. Begley, Judge of the District Court of the Second Judicial District of Nebraska held within and for Cass county, 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 of Cass, Nebraska, at 3 o'clock p. m., on the 24th day of May, 1926, the following described property, being the entire remaining assets of said bank (save and except the liability 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) $ 5,000.00 Harvey, O. M. and C. A. COO. 00 Barkening, W. E 4 4.25 Porter, W. B 2 4.80 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 Cas county, as fol lows, to-wit: Mar. 16, 1922, Gus R. Olson, $ 1,4 83.90. 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. II. Wynn, $556.09. Feb. 27, 1924, W. B. Porter, $S92.64. May 22, 1922, Leonard F. Terryberry, $4,063.36. Judgments in the Circuit Court of Jackson county, Missouri: September 27, 1922, Reitz, $1,791. SO. Judgments in the County Court of Cass county, Nebraska: Apr. 12, 1922, R. Shrader, $100.00. June 26, 1922, Wash Young, $404.54. Fe'br."l7, 1922, W. B. Rishel, $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 WVz SWU and the NE ' SWU and the NWU SEU of 26-16-1, Polk county Ne braska $259.34 Balance due on Reese Hastain con tract in settlement of Mrs. C. II. 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. LEGAL NOTICE In the District Court of Cass coun ty, Nebraska. W. A. C. Johnson, Plaintiff, vs. William H. McCord et al. Defendants. To the Defendants: William H. Mc Cord, and wife, M. J. McCord, real name unknown; the heirs, devisees, legatees, personal representatives and all other persons interested in the respective estates of William H. Mc Cord, deceased, and M. J. McCord, deceased (real name unknown), real names unknown; and all per sons having or claiming any interest in the SEU of the NE U of Sec. 1, Twp. 11 North of Range 13 East of the 6th P. M., in Cass county, Ne braska, real names unknown: You and each of you are hereby notified that on the Sth day of May, 1926, the Plaintiff filed his suit in the District Court of Cass county. Nebraska, the object and purpose of which is to establish and quiet and confirm plaintiff's title in and to the ' above described lands and to enjoin ' eathand all of you from having or1 claiming to have any right, title, es-1 tate, lien or interest, either legal or equitable in or to said real estate, or ' any part thereof, and to enjoin you, and each of you from in any man-, ner interfering with plaintiff's pos-1 session or enjoyment of said prem ises and for equitable relief. This notice is given pursuant to an order of the Court. You are here- I by required to answer said petition on or before Monday, the 21st day of June, 1926. In failing so to do, your default will be entered therein and judgment taken upon plaintiff's peti tion. W. A. C. JOHNSON, Plaintiff. By A. L. TIDD, ml 0-4 w. His Attorney. Advertise your want in the Jour nal for results. NOTICE In the District Court in and for the County of Cass, State of Nebras ka. To the defendants: Louden Mullin; Barbara E. Mullin; John Dempster; Dempster, real name un known, wife of John Dempster; An- selmo B. Smith; Smith, real name unknown, wife of Anselmo B. Smith; Chicago, Burlington &. Qufncy Railroad Company, a corporation; the heirs, devisees, legatees, personal representatives and all other persons interested in tho estates of the fol lowing named deceased persons: Lou den Mullin. Barbara E. Mullin, John Dempster, Demp ster, real name unknown, wire of John Dempster, Anselmo 15. Smith, Smith, real name unknown wife of Anselmo B. Smith; all per sons having or claiming any Interest in the following described real es tate in Cass county, Nebraska, to wit: Government Lot four (4) and the southeast quarter (SEU ) 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 tho 6th P. M., and running north twenty four degrees and twenty-three min utes (24 23") west to tho 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; THIRD 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 lino 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 lino 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 tho 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 shown In Appearance Docket , page , naming, you and each of you as de fendants, the object and prayer of which said petition is to quiet tho 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 1.1 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 (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 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 oi! 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. II. E. KUPPINGER, Attorney. Advertise your want in the Jour nal for results.