The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, January 22, 1931, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    THURSDAY. JAN. 22. 1931.
PLATTSMOUTH 8EMI - WEEK1T JOTTUIAL
FAQS THBSB
Cbc plattsmouth loumal
PUBT.ISKFD SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA
Entered at I'ostoffice. Plattsmouth. Neb., as second-class mail matter
R. A. BATES, Publisher
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 A YEAR IN FIRST POSTAL ZONE
Subscribers living in Second Postal Zone, $2.5o per year. Beyond
COO railos, $3.00 per year. Rate to Canada and foreign countries,
$3.50 per year. All subscriptions are payable strictly in advance.
Where there's
times a phi.
smoke there's many
::-
Be sure yr.u have dignity enough
to stand on, then go ahead.
:o:
Here is a musical headline: "Tr is
Is G;ing To Be a Good Year."
:o:
There's poetry in everything, in-
eroding the waste paper basket.
:o:-
Shires didn't get any farther tlrnn
Brat base with the Hollywood prliir.
i
:o:
Bridge: A game in which four
fat women sit at a small table and
talk.
:o:
Kisses and rumors go from nioui.i
to mouth. They have no other way j
to travel.
:o:
for It's all right
a girl
youth.
to want
to hod onto 'her
but not
while he's driving.
:o:
We often wonder how Hercules
was on cleaning out the floor of the
sedan in sloppy weather.
:o:
Maybe if unemployment would
reach out and get some of the execu
tives conditions would pick up.
: o :
Let the left-handed child alone.
says a doctor. That's the idea. Don't j
try to change him, teach him control.
:o:
As far as a woman is concerned,
"takinu it on the chin" means merely
another application of the powder
puff.
: :o:
Stripes are popular with girls, the
ads say. but personally we'd rather
see the gangster than the girls wear
ing them.
be the
Try a fill of this radically new winteT
motor fuel . . . Then you be the
judge . . . You will agree with us
that it's the best gasoline in the
world. Try a tank of that QUICK
STARTING Cosden Gas today.
'MOTOR TZ$TED7rjjjl Jb
Winter Cas nr
A. H. Ward Service Station
'0' Street Filling Station
MURDOCK -:- -:- NEBRASKA
mm
"
Compared to 1980, the new yea.
c:in he an improvement without much
; effort,
:o:-
As we understand European crit-
j icv.. woman's sphere is this hemis-
pfcere.
:o:
Spain's big job is not ruling tne
i peopIe but in making them like the
'rule they have.
-:o:
Turnips in the Ozark Mountain
towns of North Arkansas are known
as '.Hoover apples."
: o :
Don't flatter yourself. If he grins :the city needy alike, on the strength
. before your story is finished, he has j of gross exaggerations of actual con
thought of one to tell you. Iditions, some strong check is needed
-:o:
We shall not feel the reported
shortage of alligators. Their skins
were used chiefly to make purses.
:o:
That Chicago man who hasn't been
.ate to work in forty-four years has
probably never had to ride on trol
leys. :o:
The most remarkable endurance
record is that established by a states
man. Think of squatting 11 years
on a fence.
:o:
To prove how highly a trade-mark
is regarded, witness the insurgents
who are ready to fight to retain the
name Republican.
:o:
This idea of sending scouts out
to the games of future opponents is
rather old. In war they were called
military observers.
:o:
The Chicago professor who con
cluded that the brain rests three
times in a minute failed to tell us
the length of each pause.
Judo
e
THE RIGHT WAY
The Red Cross is to conduct a
drive for $10,000,000 in emergency
relief funds to assist state and local
Bhicm in providing 10011. nouiai
and other necessities of life to those
I in distress.
The first reaction to this an
nouncement on the part of politi
cians who demand governmental mil
li ns to feed the destitute is an out
i that the Red Cross plan has been
cooked up by President Hoover to
Istop food loan legislation in the Con
gress. And it may be. If it achieves
this purpose as well as the broad hn-
i "-sanitarian one it is intended, the
.tm;ntry win owe Mr .Hoover and the
Rp( Cro- - double dpi,t of gratitude.
Relief will he handled by an organ
ization that knows how to do the
job. and the hungry family will not
jhave to share its bread with the hip.-
gfy bureaucrat.
Moreover, relief will be contributed
voluntarily by those able to contri
bute and struggling business and
smaller taxpayers will not be pushed
further into public debt. With Con
gressional proposals for food loans
i now boosted to demands for -30,-j
000.000 in order to feed farmers and
on the political philantrophy of the
lawmakers.
As much as anything else, the poli
ticians clamoring for Federal doles
wish to establish a principle and a
precedent, and a dangerous one. The
states and local communities, with
the aid of an augmented Red Cross
fund, will be able to take care of
their needy, any effort now or in the
future to stimulate political or in
dividual mendicancy at the expense
of Federal funds must be condemned.
:o:
NOT A TIME FOR POLITICS
The conventional attitude of the
public toward politicians is one of
disparagement. They seem to be re
garded as persons engaged in an un
wholesome avocation and possessing
Qualities suited only to the pursuit of
selfish ends.
Hardness, calculation and suspic
ion are set down as the prevailing
j e lements in their character, along
I with an experienced skepticism which
j prevents them from falling victims to
credulity or illusion.
It is an estimate which has had
much to support it in the past in the
lives of men and the history of their
iictivities. Seasoned politicians have.
indeed, been for the most part a prac-
tical lot, devoted to realities and lit
tle exposed to the attributes of in
nocence. But it begins to look as if politics
might be on the threshold of a new
day. Congress started to play politics
with unemployment and drouth relief
hut thought better of it.
:o:
LUXURY IN GOVERNMENT
Indebtedness of the common
wealths of the United States increas
ed from $1.74 per capita in 1905 to
$10.20 per capita in 1925. The rise
Of the total from $150,000,000 to
$1,247,000,000 in the decade was a
serious topic of discussion by the na
tional conference on government, at
the Cleveland meeting. Several of
the experts thought that one cause
c.f the increase was following the
line of least resistance. It is easier
to continue employment and multi
ply services than to pare expenses
and deny favors. Administration is
afficted with the same trouble as the
people themselves. This is an age
o fluxury.
:o:
Prohibition is the greatest joke
ever perpetrated on the American
people, but Americans know how to
laugh at it.
-:o:
Persistency does win as police of a
Connecticut city revealed when they
recovered a watch that had been stol
en 21 years ago.
:o:
Scientists are explaining how the
mocn affects static. Now let some of
the wise ones explain how the moon
often causes static, too.
:o:
The South is going to spend $6,
00,0,000.000 for highway improve
ment? this year. A section able to
spend that much money can't be very
bad oft.
-:o:-
Many a middle aged man who oth
erwise would be rheumatic and slow
on his feet has grown agile and
athletic by not owning a car, but in
dodging cars.
1 :o:
A lesson in liquid mathematics:
Sixteen ounces make one pint, and
two pints make a case of whoopee
from which it takes a person two
weeks to recover.
-tor-
It is said that one of theforemost
bootleggers in this neck of the woods
has gone broke because of a whis
pering campaign against the qual
ity of liquor he sells.
A PRINCE OF OLD INDIA
That United Press correspondent
who set himself the job of finding out
who is actually the world's richest
;raan managed to produce soraeming
jot a surprise. The title belongs, not:t;iat voters in the next election
ito Ford or Rockefeller, but to a rela-
tively obsc ure Indian prince called j pre-election pledges will not be toea
the Nizam of Hyderabad. L about in the futile ebb and flow
This gentleman is worth fully a!of factional discontent,
billion dollars, and probably a good) :o:
deal more. Furthermore, he has all
of his fortune where he can see it
and touch it. Half of it consists of
gold gold coins, golden bars, golden
ornaments, heaped up in the royal
coffers; the rest of it consists of dia
monds, emeralds, gem-studded brace
lets and coronets, pearl necklaces,
and the like.
And all of it, you may be very
isure, lies wasting its glitter on the
darkness of an impenetrable treasure-house,
with sword-girt guards at
the door ready to strike down anyone
who so much as tries to get an un
authorized peek at it.
All of this is surprising. We like
to think that our oil kings and mo
tor magnates are the earth's richest
men. But after all, it is entirely fit
ting that the title should go to a
prince of India. From the dawn of
history, India has been the fabulous
land of unbelievable wealth.
Alexander discovered it, and his
rough Macedonian infantry men,
clanking through rich Indian cities
with their long spears slanting over
their shoulders, blinked at the as
tounding richness of the palaces they
had seized, and doubtless told tall
tales about them to their children
when they got home. The Mediter
ranean people knew it throughout
the middle ages, starved Europe
dreamed incessantly of the storied
cities of gold and diamonds beyond
Arabia. The Arabs broke through to
loot; after them came the English,
gaping in disbelief at the wealth that
lay ready for their grasp, seizing
enough to make themselves uncom
fortably rich yet assuring the people
at home that there was so much
there that they were amazed at their
own moderation.
Naturally, the prince of India has
figured in literature. Lew Wallace
took him up and cast the Wander
ing Jew in the role of Indian nabob,
piling up his riches for uncounted
generations. Kipling took up the
theme, and drew an unforgettable
picture of the buried treasure house
beneath the abandoned city, with the
white cobra sleeping among the for
gotten chests of gems and sacks of
'gold dust, ready to deal out vengeance
or a aeaa rajan on any intruder. ceo-
nomists have worried about it, fear-
ing that all of the precious metal in
.. .-
tne woria win eveniuany drain uu
into India and vanisn, locKed secure
ly in the strong boxes of a thousand
turbaned princes.
The Nizam of Hyderabad, then,
has a right to his title. There were
billionaires before Ford and Rocke
feller. And what is more fitting
than a billionaire who lives up to
his position, and keeps all of his
wealth handy In hard cash?
:o:
ADMINISTRATION GAINS
A week ago the legislative situa
tion looked rather black for the
Hoover Administration. But several
abrupt shifts have changed this in
a very few days. The President se
verely censured the Senate for its at
tempt to reconsider confirmation of
Power Commission members after
they have taken office. This won
public approval and the Senate with
drew from its untenable position.
The Senate approved the Presi- petition before said Court on the
1.1 cholc, ror the Tarm Coram.s- J,
sion, including Edgar B. Brossard, sald court on said 6th day of Feb
Utah. This was a most important ad-. ruary, A. D., 1931, at nine o'clock
ministration victorw. Rejection of a. m. to contest the said petition, the
' I - I U 1 i Willi.-" 1 W I Iw-.-i, .--
House of Representatives, was a fur
ther gain for the White House, al
though we have not heard the last
of this controversy, probably.
If this trend continues, it is very
likely that a special session of Con
gress can be avoided a further gain
for the Hoover Administration, which
opposes such a session without say
ing why. But whether the Presi
dent or the Senate wins the major
ity of victories on Capitol Hill, the
present session shows a disparity be
tween executive and legislative that
bodes ill for 1932.
Quarrels over the respective powers
of White House and Congress have
been many. Partisan quarrels for
control of the Senate have been still
more numerous. But more menac
ing than these is the abrupt cleav
age between Administration and
anti-Administration forces on a ser
ies of vital questions. On control of
water power, on the tariff, on rail
way consolidation, on prohibition,
the gap widens daily. Bitterness has
increased until the Republican party
cannot possibly be thought a unit.
If we are not to have a repetition
of this miserable quibbling, to the
detriment of the public interest, for
many years to come, a thorough re- Much good newspaper and maga
statement of party aims and poli- zine space are being consumed by
cies must be facilitated. The party ; writers in frantic efforts to explain
conventions of 1932 and preliminary ! why matrimony is on the decline and
meetings before then should do their
utmost to set up a clear standard
, so
can
;c,;st their ballots with assurance hat
There are two sides to every ques
tion: Yours and the idiotic one.
NOTICE
Whereas, Otis Ireland, convicted in
Cass County, on the 23rd day of
August, 1930, oi the crime of driv
ing while intoxicated, has made ap
plication to the beard of Pardons for
restoration of driver's license, and
the Board of Pardons, pursuant to
law nave Bet tne hour or it) a. m.
on the 10th day of February. 1931,
for hearing on said application, all
'persons interested are hereby noti
fied that they may appear at the
State Penitentiary, at Lincoln, Ne
braska, on said day and hour and
show cause, if any thereby, why said
application should, or should not be
granted.
FRANK MARSH,
Secretary, Board of Pardons.
N. T. HARMON,
Chief State Probation Officer.
NOTICE
Whereas, Henry W. Miller, con
icted in Cass County, on the 5th day
Of January, 1929, of the crime of
s.uto theft, has made application to
the board of pardons for a parole,
and the board of pardons, pursuant
to law have set the hour of 10 a. m.
on the 10th day of February, 1931.
for hearing on said application, all
persons interested are hereby noti
fied that they may appear at the State
Penitentiary, at Lincoln, Nebraska,
on said day and hour and show
cause, if any there be, why said ap
plication should, or should not be
granted.
FRANK MARSH,
Secretary, Board of Pardons.
N. T. HARMON.
Chief State Probation Officer
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
In the County Court of Cass coun
ty, Nebraska.
In the matter of the estate of
Viola G. Smith, deceased.
Notice of Administration.
All persons interested in said es
tate are hereby notified that a peti
tion has been filed in said Court al
leging that said deceased died leav
ing no last will and testament and
praying for administration upon her
estate, proof of heirship, and for such
other and further orders and pro
ceedings in the premises as may be
required by the statutes In such
cases made and provided to the end
that said estate and all things per
tainine thereto mav be finally set-
!
t 1 . l an1 Hatorm i aH i n H t Via t o honr
wm be OQ 'said petiUon be
j(ore said court on the 6th day of
February, A. D., 1931, and that if
they fail to appear at said Court on
isaid 6th day of February. A. D.,
, , . . . . . . . .
1931, at ten o clock a. m. to contest
the said petition, the Court may
grant the same and grant adminis
tration of said estate to Frank R.
Gobelman, or some other suitable
person and proceed to a settlement
thereof.
A. H. DUXBURY,
(Seal) jl2-3w County Judge.
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
In the County Court of Cass coun
ty, Nebraska.
In the matter of the estate of
Thomas Troop, deceased.
Notice of Administration.
All persons interested in said es
tate are hereby notified that a peti
tion has been filed in said Court al
leging that said deceased died leav
ing no last will and testament and
praying for administration upon his
estate and for such other and fur
ther orders and proceedings in the
premises as may be required by the
statutes in such cases made and pro
vided to the end that said estate and
all things pertaining thereto may be
finally settled and determined, and
that a hearing will be had on said
administration of said estate to H.
A. Schneider, or some other suitable
person and proceed to a settlement
thereof.
A. H. DUXBURY,
(Seal) jl2-3w County Judge.
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
In the County Court of Cass coun
ty, Nebraska.
In the matter of the estate of
George E. Wever, deceased.
Notice of Administration.
All persons interested in said es
tate are hereby notified that a peti
tion has been filed in said Court al
leging that said deceased died leav
ing no last will and testament and
praying for administration upon said
estate and for such other and further
orders and proceedings in the prem
ises as may be required by the stat
utes in such cases made and provided
to the end that said estate and all
things pertaining thereto may be
finally settled and determined, and
that a hearing will be had on said
petition before said Court, on the
30th day of January, A. D. 1931, and
that if they fail to appear at said
Court-on said 30th day of January,
1931. at nine o'clock a. m. to con
test the said petition, the Court may
grant the same and grant adminis
tration of said estate to J. A. Cap
well or some other suitable person
and proceed to a settlement thereof.
A. H. DUXBURY.
(Seal) j5-3w County Judge.
birth control is becoming more gen-
ieral.
'
NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENT
DEFENDANTS
To Harry Ross Manspeaker and
Mrs. Harry Ross Manspeaker, real
name unknown, his wife, non-resident
defendants, and all persons hav
ing or claiming any interest in Lots
31, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38. 39. 40, 41.
4 2, 4 3. 44, 45 and 46 in U. W. Wise's
Out Lots in Government Lot Number
10, in Section 18, Township 12 North,
i Range 14, East of the 6th P. Id., in
the City of Plattsmouth, Cass coun
ty, Nebraska, real names unknown,
defendants not found:
You and each of you are hereby
notified that on the 26th day of De
,'cember. 1930, Margaret Elizabeth
Manspeaker. as plaintiff, filed her
petition against you in the District
Court of Cass county, Nebraska, said
petition now being on file in said
court, the object and prayer of said
petition being to quiet the title of
plaintiff as against you and each of
you in the following real estate:
Lots 31. 33. 34, 35. 36, 37, 38. 39.
40, 41. 42, 43, 44, 45 and 46 in U.
W. Wise's Out Lots in Government
Lot Number 10, in Section 18. Town
ship 12 North. Range 14, East of
the 6th P. ML, in the City of Platts
mouth, Cass county, Nebraska, and
to exclude you from all interest in
the same; also to enjoin you from
asserting any title to the same.
You are required to answer said
petition on or before the 16th day of
February, 1931.
MARGARET ELIZABETH
MANSPEAKER,
Plaintiff.
By E. R. Leigh,
Her Attornev.
d29-3w
NOTICE OF WATER EXTENSION
BOND ELECTION
Public Notice is hereby given that
an election has been duly called and
will be held in the Village of Alvo,
Nebraska, on the 2 7th day of Janu
ary. 1931, at which there will be
submitted to the legal voters of said
Village the following question:
"Shall the Village of Alvo, Ne
braska, issue its negotiable bonds
of the principal amount of One
Thousand Seven Hundred Dollars
($1,700.00), to become due in
twenty years from date of issue,
but payable any time after ten
years, and drawing interest ut not
exceeding five per centum (5)
per annum, payable annually, for
the purpose of extending, enlarg
ing and improving the village
water works: and shall said Vil
lage levy and collect annually a
general tax on all the property
therein in an amount sufficient to
pay the interest and principal of
said bonds as the same mature?"
The polls for voting at said elec
tion will remain open from 9:00
o'clock a. m. to 7:00 o'clock p. m., of
said date, and the voting place will
be as follows:
Stewart's Hall,
Alvo, Nebraska.
Voters desiring to vote in favor of
, eawi
saiu
proposition will mark an "X"
in tne square following the word
'YES;" voters desiring to vote
against said proposition will mark
au "X" in the square following the
word "NO."
CARL D. GANZ,
j5-3w Village Clerk.
(ieorjee Yea iter, Attornej
LEGAL NOTICE
In th District Court of Cas; Coun
ty, Nebraska.
To the heirs, devisees and legatees
of John R. Sheffer and wife, Martha
Sheffer, the heirs, devisees and le
gatees, personal representatives and
all other persons interested in the
estate of John R. Sheffer and wife,
Martha Sheffer, real names unknown,
and all persons having or claiming to
have an interest in Lot 8, in the
j Southeast Quarter (SEK) of the
I Northeast Quarter (NEK) of Section
Twenty (20), Township Twelve (12),
in Range Nine (9), East of the 6th
P. M. in Cass County, Nebraska, more
particularly described as follows, to
wit: Beginning at the Scut beast
(SE) corner of the Northeast Quar
ter (NEVi) of Section Twenty (20),
Township Twelve (12), in Range
Nine (9), East of the 6th P. M. in
Cass County, Nebraska, thence North
Thirty (30) rods, thence West 1336
feet, thence South Thirty (30) rods,
thence East 1336 feet to tfce place
of beginning, real names unknown,
and L. V. Sheffer, first and real name
unknown.
You and each of you are hereby
notified that on the 10th day of
January, 1931, Catherine Coleman,
Hettie G. Wright. Ella May Marshall.
Ada F. Gullion, Isa O. McLeese, Mat-
tie J. Bailey, Lula A. Landon, Myron
E. Coleman, and Elmer C. Coleman
filed their amended petition as plain
tiffs against you and each of you as
defendants, the object and prayer of
said petition being to quiet the title
of the plaintiffs in and to the follow
ing described real estate, to-wit:
Lot Eight (8), in the South
east Quarter ( SE K ) of the
Northeast Quarter (NEK) of
Section Twenty (20), Township
Twelve (12), in Range Nine
(9), East of the 6th P. M. in
Cass County, Nebraska, more
particularly described as follows,
to-wit: Beginning at the South
east (SE) corner of the North
east Quarter (NEK) of Section
Twenty (20), Township Twelve
12), in Range Nine (9). East of
the 6th P. M. in Cass County
Nebraska, thence North Thirty
(30) rods, thence West 1336
feet, thence South Thirty (30)
rods, thence East 1336 feet to
the place of beginning.
You and each of you are required
to answer said petition on or before
the 2nd day of March, 1931.
ELLA MAY MARSHALL,
Plaintiff.
By GEORGE YEAGBR.
J12-4w Her Attorney.
ORDER OF HEARING
and Notice on Petition for Set
tlement of Account
In the County Court of Cass coun
ty, Nebraska:
State of Nebraska. Cass county, ss.
To all persons interested In the
estate of Isaac Cecii. deceased:
l On reading the netition of W. A.
Robertson, Administrator, praying a
final settlement and allowance of
his account filed in this Court on
the 9th day of January. 1931, and
for distribution of estate and dis
charge of Administrator;
It is hereby ordered that you and
all persons interested in said matter
may, and do, appear at the County
Court to be held in and for said
county on the 6th day of February,
A. D. 1931, at 10 o'clock a. m.. to
show cause, if any there be, why the
prayer of the petitioner should not
be granted, and that notice of the
pendency of said petition and the
hearing thereof be given to all per
sons interested in said matter by
publishing a copy of this order in the
Plattsmouth Journal, a semi-weekly
newspaper printed in said county,
for three weeks prior to said day of
hearing.
In witness whereof. I have here
unto Bet my hand and the seal of
said Court this 9th day of January,
A. D., 1931.
A. H. DUXBURY.
(Seal( jl2-3w County Judge.
NOTICE OF WATER BOND
ELECTION
Public Notice is hereby given that
an election has been duly called and
will be held in the Village of Alvo,
Nebraska, on the 27th day of Janu
ary, 1931, at which there will
be submitted to the legal voters of
said Village the following question:
"Shall the Village of Alvo, Ne
braska, issue its negotiable bonds
of the principal amount of Twelve
Thousand One Hundred Dollars
($12,100.00), to become due in
twenty years from the date of
issue, but payable any time after
five years, and drawing interest at
not exceeding five per centum
(5) per annum, payable semi
annually, for the purpose of pur
chasing, erecting, constructing and
maintaining a village water works;
and shall said Village levy and
collect annually a general tax on
all the property therein in an
amount sufficient to pay the In
terest and principal of said bonds
as the same mature?"
The polls for voting at said elec
tion will remain open from 9:00
o'clock a. m. to 7:00 o'clock p. m. of
said date, and the voting place will
be as follows:
- Stewart's Hall
Alvo, Nebraska.
Voters desiring to vote in favor of
said proposition will mark an "X"
in the square following the word
"YE8;" voters desiring to vote
against said proposition will mark
an "X" in the square following the
word "NO."
CARL D. GANZ.
j6-3w Village Clerk.
Grorga Ys;rr, Attorney
LEGAL NOTICE
In the District Court of Cass Coun
ty, Nebraska.
To the heirs, devisees and legatees,
personal representatives and all other
persons interested in the estato of
John R. Sheffer and wife Martha
Sheffer, the heirs, devisees, legatees
and personal representatives of all
other persons interested in the estate
of John R. Sheffer real names un
known, Catherine Coleman, the heirs,
devisees, legatees and personal rep
resentatives and all other persons in
terested in the estate of Catherine
Coleman, Jane Coleman, the heirs,
devisees, legatees, personal represen
tatives and all other persons inter
ested in the estate of Jane Coleman;
E. B. Coleman, William Coleman, J.
H. Coleman, Mathilda Pearson, Lucy
Garrett, M. L. Coleman, Mary Laugh-
lin, Amanda Cheverant, Amy Farmer
and all persons having or claiming
to have any interest in the following
described real estate, to-wit: Frac
tional Lot Seven (7) in the Southeast
Quarter (SEK ) of the Northeast
Quarter (NEK) of Section Twenty
(20), Township Twelve (12) North,
Range Nine (9 E. of the 6th P. M.
in Cass County, Nebraska, more par
ticularly described as beginning on
the East line of said Section at a
point Forty (40) rods North of the
Southeast corner of the Northeast
Quarter (NEK) of Section Twenty
(20), township Twelve (12) North.
Range Nine (9) East of the 6th P.
M.; thence North 40 rods, thence
west 1336 ft., thence South 40 rods,
thence east to the place of begin
ning, real names unknown:
You and each of you are hereby
notified that on the 10th day of Janu
ary, 1931, Catherine Coleman, Hettie
G. Wright, Ella May Marshall. Ada
F. Gullion. Isa O. McLeese Mattie J.
Bailey, Lula A. Landon, Myron E.
Coleman and Elmer C. Coleman, filed
their amended petition as Plaintiffs
against you and each of you as de
fendants, the object and prayer of
said petition being to quiet the title
of the plaintiffs in and to the fal
lowing described real estate, to-wit:
Fractional Lot Seven (7) In
the Southeast Quarter (SEK ) of
the Northeast Quarter (NEK
of Section Twenty (20), Town
ship Twelve (12) North, Range
Nine (9), Bast of the 6th P. M.
In Cass County, Nebraska, more
particularly described as begin
ning on the East line of said
section at a point 40 rods North
of the Southeast corner of the
Northeast Quarter (NEK) of
Section Twenty (20). Township
Twelve (12) North, Range Nine
(9) East of the 6th P. M. ;
thence North 40 rods, thence
West 1836 ft., thence South 40
rods, thence Bast to the place
of beginning.
You and each of you are required
to answer said petition on or before
the 2nd day of March, 1931.
ELLA MAY MARSHALL,
Plaintiff.
By OBOBGE YEAGEB.
jif-w Her Attorney.
i