The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, February 05, 1931, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    THURSDAY. FEBR. 5, 1931
PLATTSMOUTH SEMI - WEEKLY JOFUKAI
PAGE THXBB
Cbc plattsmoutb lournal
PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA
Entered at Postoffice, 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, $2.50 per year. Beyond
600 miles, $3.00 per year. Rate to Canada and foreign countries,
$3.50 per year. All subscriptions are payable strictly in advance.
Hew to the waistline,
fall where they may.
:o:
let the hips
Reconsiderate Congressmen
are
not necessarily considerate.
:o:
All we care about is that the Pan
ama ns do not knock a hole in the
canal.
-:o:-
What the heck did people talk
about before we had prohibition to
cuss and discuss.
:o:
The official score may, we believe,
credit Mr. Lucas with a baek-to-my-old-Kentucky-homerun.
:o:
Mr. Hoover merely intended to take
a hand in the drouth relief problem
and he got his foot in it.
:o:
Women folks are getting more
hard-boiled every day. New styles in
berets have a boiler-plate finish.
o:
A few more f'bad Republicans"
like Senator Noiris wouldn't hurt the
country or the Republican party just
now.
:o:
Gangsters are not as efficient as
we thought when Chicago can fhow
7r thousand increase in population
in spite of them.
:o:
The nuts Sunday do their bit to
prevent the doctors, ambulance driv
en and undertakers from having to
j in the unemployed.
:o:
The drop of ten cents per 100
pounds in the price of sugar is al
most enough to justify a third spoon
fill in the morning coffee.
:o:
When winter is on his good behav
ior, we re suspicious, tor we Know
he will make up for it long about
the time he is supposed to go.
:o:
Misspelling of a word foiled an
extortion plot, which demonstrates
the need of educational fundamen
tals before starting a criminal career.
:o:
The French army boasts of a pri
vate 6 feet 11 inches in height.
Somebody ought
about the arms
ence.
to tell that bird
limitation confer-
:o:-
Since the fox turned away in dis
dain from the elevated grapes, stories
endowing animals with human char
acteristics have been among the most
fascinating.
-:o:-
Accidents. like many ether ills and.
of course, incalculable good, begin at
home. French statistics substantiate
this frequently cited but never fully
credited fact.
Unemployed men who have at
tempted to bridge the gap in these
hard times by selling apples report
they are making hardly enough to
keep body and soul together.
:o:
You think you are having a hard
time, of course, and mebbe you are.
out jusi mm ui t..e pws """.the people these days.
of those New Year resolutions so
badly abused since the 1st of Janu
ary. -:o:-
Psychologists have been analyzing
the laughter of children and we await
with considerable interest the assay
reports on the giggle of the Tadio an
nouncer who laughs at his own fun
nyisms. :o:
Modern doctors have taught us that
most headaches are rather a symp
tom of trouble than an evil in them
selves. Get rid of the eyestrain, in
digestion, or fatigue that causes them
and they disappear.
Harness $45
li2-Inch
Harness Oiled . $1
Wm. Schmidtmann
Cities of Java have had a 600 per
cent increase in population since
1920.
:o:
Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler has
stirred up another row in college
circles.
:o:
"That bootlegger knows his stuff."
"I wonder why he never drank any
of it." Wise guy!
:o:
If she weighs 170 pounds she is
willing to give hips and a hurrah
for the return of curves.
:o:
We have the word of the Financial
World that 1930 marked the use of
more snuff than ever before.
-:o:
"Uses rubbish to produce gasoline,"
is the headline cn a scientific story,
to drive junk cars, no doubt.
:o:
God help little Jhonnie of tomci -
row and his sister, Susie, if Profes
sor Julian Huxley, English biolog
ist, is right.
:o:
Our idea of the hardest job in the
world now would be to try to per
suade Mr. Wickersham to head an
other commission!
:o:
You can't convince 'em, this is
true, but just the same it is a fact,
that lots of folks are far from being
as important as they act.
:o:
Congress is asked to provide funds
for renovating the Statue of Liberty,
Never mind about the Statue. Con- ;
gress,
get busy on Liberty.
:o:
Former Gov. Edwards of New Jer
sey, who ended his life last Sunday,
though a tee-totaler was one of the
most fiery opponents of prohibition.
:o:
The fellow who is most officious
in giving you unsolicited advice is
. too often the same person who has
i made a sad mess of his own business.
: o :
A law telling the farmers that they
must not plant more than a certain
percentage of the tillable area in
cotton this year, or any other year,
is simply unthinkable.
:o:
Apparently 1931 will be an en
tirely normal year. The White House
has denied a rumor that Mellon has
resigned, and Mr. Shaw has denied
a report that he will visit this coun
try.
:o:
One of the reasons why things are
as they are is that too many families
live out of paper bags and cans. If
the average housewife should be rob-
bed of her can opener nowadays she
would be utterly helpless.
-:o:
Alternating periods of prosperity i
and depression are very much akin Jments, Federal and state, could sub
to going on a jag. You have a glor- stantially relieve unemployment in
ious time or think you do while duced even by a depression as severe
the jag lasts, but the sobering up pro
cess is exceedingly painful.
:o:
Politicians differ from the rest of
The people
are suffering from depression, the
politicians are trying to live on it.
At Washington, Republicans are each
ii i nig lu eee iiu
Of it.
:o:-
If the Wickersham Commission had I
been told to investigate the Ban, it j
would have reported that sometimes i
it can be seen and at other times it is j
behind the clouds, but the comm's-
i
Finn couldn't agree on what ought to (
! be done about it.
I
i :o:
Elwcod Mead, commissioner of Lie;
j Federal bureau of reclamation, is ,
quite enthusiastic over the prcflt3 ;
j which the government is to reap frcm j
I the great dam to be built across the
I Colorado river, on the northwestern i
border of Arizona.
:o:
Straws in the wind indicating a
trend away frcm prohibition tyranny
are beginning to result in concrete
effect. With the President's signing
of the Stobbs bill, amending the
Jones law. it may Justly be said that
modification has begun.
:o:
The Navy Department has decid
ed that the aeroplane is a destructive
agency in sea warfare of the future
that cannot be overlooked. A special
investigation of aerial flight in this
connection is to be made. At the
present there are no funds available
for the purchase of a flying machine
for tht navy.
THE ALBANY CONFERENCE
The Governors of seven industrial
states have been considering com
pulsory unemployment insurance in
a conference at Albany which was
called by Gov. Roosevelt. The states
represented by their executives, eith
er personally or by proxy, are New
York. Pennsylvania, Ohio, Massachu
setts, New Jersey, Connecticut and
Rhode Island. Those states pay 63
per cent of the nation's income tax
and more than 50 per cent of the
nation's total wage bill. The subject.
therefore, is one in which they are
vitally concerned, and anything they
decide to do or not to do about it
will be of consequence.
Nothing definite was agreed upon
at the conference, but sufficient in
formation was developed during the
discussions to make the meeting dis
tinctly worth while.
It is accepted, of course, that some
plan must be worked out, as a mat
ter of justice and public policy, to
protect employes in a measure
against recurring business depres
sions. Sentiment at Albany was
against any participation by the Fed
eral Government and for restricting
the individual state's participation
to a minimum. This attitude may be
partly accounted for by our national
tradition and, in larger part, perhaps,
by the European experience in the
venture, particularly that of Great
Britain. It was the judgment of the
conference that this was a problem
for industry itself to solve, with cap-
lital :in(, iabor lointlv bearing the
cost. The state, however, was not to
be excluded. Both the state and the
Federal Government must co-operate,
by legislation and construction.
In any effective program for coping
with unemployment.
Nothing was added in the way of
legislative suggestions to the now
familiar Wagner bills. Those bills,
the work of Senator Wagner of New
Ycrk, and introduced by him in the
Senate when the country was at its
prosperity peak, provided for bureaus
to compile dependable and up-to-date
j statistics on unemployment, for the
planning in advance of public works
I as a matter of intelligent prepared
jness against the necessities of a de
pression, and for the creation of Gov
ernment employment agencies.
Some disillusioning information as
to the national administration's re
lief contribution to the present situ
ation was given by one of the experts
in attendance, Leo Wolman, a mem
ber of the President's committee on
recent economic changes. There was
no more money spent upon public
works throughout the country last
year than in 1929, and less will be
spent this year than in 1930. The
same authority said that, during the
period of the last 10 years, public
expenditures "rose with the advance
in general business, furnishing add
ed employment at a time when em
ployment in private industry waB ex
panding." In Mr. Wolman's opinion, public
construction is a large enough indus-
try to serve as a balance wheel, If
competently administered. He quot
ed convincingly figures, to the effect
that, in 1927, public construction was
ia $3,400,000,000 industry, being but
$600,000,000 below the automobile
industry. It really does seem that
wi tli such means at hand the govern-
and persisting as the present. Ob
viously, though, it calls for manager
ial ability of a high order and that
genius for looking ahead which is
the hallmark of statesmanship. Ob
viously, too, the enactment of the
Wagnev bllls wouid not oniy be a very
practical form of unemployment in-
snranfo hut would ho n hnnn to h-
rassed statesmen as well as a bless
ing to people in need.
The financial ability of industry
to provide for unemployment insur
ance was pretty well demonstrated
in figures cited by Phil H. Douglas,
economist, of Chicago and the
Swarthmore College unemployment
study, who has won recognition in
the field of wage statistics. While
the country's payroll was declining
20 per cent the dividend payments
of a large group of leading corpor
ations was $8,000,000,000 in 1930,
an increase of a half a billion over
those in 1929.
It is in such facts and figures as
those brought out at this conference,
and in the research thus inspired,
that a way will be found to mitigate
the effects of industrial slumps. Of
course, something more than facts,
figures and formulas must be had.
There must be the illumination of a
new philosophy, as finely presented
by Senator-elect Costigan of Colo
rado in his Atlantic Monthly article.
A decade of reckless privilege has
blown the bubble and brought us to
the election of last November, the
mandate of which Mr. Costigan In
terpreted in these stirring words:
The demand is for a people's,
not a profiteer's, sovereignty; a
people's education, literature, fi
nancial system, tariff and life;
a people's electric age, a peo
ple's government in all branches,
executive, legislative and Judi
cial; a people's prosperity, a peo
ple's peace.
That is what we are striving for
security of spirit as well as body,
under the lash of an admittedly
stupid depression, logical sequence
of a stupid prosperity.
CONSTRUCTIVE LEGISLATION
One of Senator Wagner's bills, af
ter three years of effort, has been
passed by the Senate. It was design
ed to check unemployment by timing
the construction of public works in
advance instead of rushing the pro
grams in times of prosperity and cur
tailing them in times of depression.
The bill was passed at the last ses
sion of Congress, but was changed in
committee when it went to the
House. As just passed, however. It
represents in effect the agreement of
the conferees of the Senate and the
House and embodies the principles of
that sort of legislation which seeks
to prevent recurrence of distressing
periods of unemployment. The bill
creates a planning board for the sys
tematizing and timing of public
works. As its author claims, it cre
ates a permanent instrumentality of
government to keep a continuous
watch upon the rise or fall of busi
ness and unemployment.
The idea is that if it is well in
time of peace to prepare for war, it
is well that we should prepare in
times of prosperity to deal with con
ditions that arise in periods of dis
tress and depression. It should serve
as a balance wheel to help stabilize
private business by providing oppor
tunities for employment on public
construction when private demands
for labor are slack.
This bill long has enjoyed almost
universal approval, but it has been
slow to come to a head, so to speak,
notwithstanding its constructive
character and economic importance.
It is contended, too, that had the bill
as a law been in in operation even
a year ago much could have been
done to alleviate the present depres
sion by providing work rather than
relief, and, as Senator Wagner says,
"the country would have been both
happier and richer."
The essential elements of this
measure and equally applicable to
states and communities, and it is
Senator Wagner's belief that it may
serve as a model for the creation of
planning commissions ii) all the
states and municipalities throughout
the country.
:o:
FLOWERS FOR THE MAYFLOWER
What a gallant little bark the
Mayflower was! She bore up under
everything from caucuses of the Ohio
gang to Amherst reunions. In the
days when Commodore Harding was
at the helm, her deck knew the rub
ber heels of Jess Smith, Daugherty,
Newberry and Will Hays. She cruis
ed the far reaches of the Chesapeake,
stood off Marbiehead and rested in
Hampton Roads. From her rail the
greatest Secretary of the Treasury
since Carter Glass watched Mount
Vernon slip up the Potomac. Prin
cess Alice was privileged to write
notes home on her crested paper.
and Schoolmaster Fess, Lawyer,
John Garibaldi, Sargent, Joe Freling-
huysen and Puddlen Jim ate her
beans. Denby and the oil leases rest
ed his public-service-weary bones in
her white chairs. So did John W.
Weeks. Dr. Work Sterne and New
Hampshire's Moses. She knew the
warming sun and howling nor'west-
ers that sent sailors' hats whirling.
Airplanes dropped Sunday papers on
her decks and carrier pigeons took
messages back to an anxious White
House. In short. Harding's pride and
Skipper Coolidge's. too. And now a
wreck in the Philadelphia Navy
Yard! Fire swept her the other
night, water poured in and she went
down.
A tear, then, for the Mayflower.
She didn't blaze away on Lake Erie
or turn the Spaniards back at Manila
Bay, but she wrote American history
Just the same. All together, a salty
tear.
-:o:
ARMY GOES EXCLUSIVE
Getting into the United States
army nowadays, even as a private, is
an exceedingly hard Job almost as
hard as it used to be for a Catholic
or a Jew to get into the Ku Klux
Klan.
You might have all the social or
political pull In the world, but it
can't get you by a hard-boiled re
cruiting sergeant these days.
The army is taking on mighty few
new enlisted men, and those who are
accepted must be physically perfect,
have no wars or other blemishes, and
not addicted to jazz or crooning.
The flattened condition of the
army appropriations is responsible.
The enlisted personnel has been cut
down to the lowest possible limit.
.. mnZQi urn i
JouxngJ Want Ad gtt reioiU.
How did this idea that a Senator
had to become a public nuisance in
order to feel that he was making a
success of his job ever get started,
d'ya suppose?
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
j estate of Joseph F. Tubbs, deceased:
On reading the petition of Clifford
W. Jones, Executor, praying a final
settlement and allowance of his ac
count filed in this Court on the 2nd
day of February, 1931, and for dis
tribution of estate and discharge of
Executor;
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 27th 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 successive weeks
prior to said day of hearing.
In witness whereof, I have here
unto set my hand and the seal of
said Court, this 2nd day of Febru
ary. A. D. 1931.
A. H. DUXBURY,
(Seal) f2-3w County Judge.
ORDER OF HEARING
and Notice on Petition for Set
tlement cf Account
In the County Court of Cass coun
ty, Nebraska.
State of Nebraska, Cass county, ss.
To all persons interested in the
estate of Alfred W. White, deceased:
On reading the petition of Edith
Donelan praying a final settlement
and allowance of her account filed
in this Court on the 2nd day of
February, 1931, and for final distri
bution and discharge of Adminis
tratrix; 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 27th 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 set my hand and the seal of
said Court, this 2nd day of Febru
ary, A. D. 1931.
A. H. DUXBURY,
(Seal) f2-3w County Judge
ticorff Yrager, 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 estate 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 (SE4) of the Northeast
Quarter (NE) 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 (NEi) 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 fol
lowing described real estate, to-wit:
Fractional Lot Seven (7) in
the Southeast Quarter (8E14 ) of
the Northeast Quarter (NE4)
of Section Twenty (20), Town
ship Twelve (12) North, Range
Nine (9). East 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 ( NE ) 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 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. 1
By GEORGE Y&AGSR.
12-4w Her Attorney.
ORDER TO SHOW CAU'SE
In the District Court of the Coun
ty of Cass, Nebraska.
In re Guardianship of Maxine Rose
Hanni, a Minor.
On reading the petition filed and
duly verified of Metta May Hanni,
guardian of Maxine Rose Hanni, a
minor, for license to sell the follow
lowing described real estate: The
east half of the northeast quarter of
Section 2, Township 10, Range 13,
east of the Gth P. M., in Cass county,
Nebraska: and it appearing that the
income therefrom is not sufficient to
pay the expenses and taxes connect
ed therewith, and for the purpose of
raising funds for the maintenance
and education of said minor, and for
the benefit and best interest of said
minor child, that said real estate
should be sold;
It is therefore ordered that the
next of kin of said minor and all per
sons interested in said estate appear
before me at Chambers in the court
house in the City of Plattsmouth.
Cass county, Nebraska, on the 24th
day of February, 1931, at 10 o'clock
a. in., to show cause, if any there be,
why license should not be granted to
Metta May Hanni, Guardian, to sell
said real estate for the purposes
above set forth.
It is further ordered that a copy
of this Order be published once each
week for three successive weeks in
the Plattsmouth Journal, a news
paper published and of general cir
culation in the County of Cass, Ne
braska. Dated at Chambers in CaBs county,
Nebraska, this 6th day of January,
1931.
JAMES T. BEGLEY,
Judge of the District Court of
Cass county, Nebraska.
f2-3w
NOTICE
To Albert Van Horn and wife,
Hallie Van Horn: Sarah Craig; John
Doe Craig, first real name unknown;
Paul Nuckolls: Rupert Nuckolls;
William Ezra Nuckolls; Bruce John
son Nuckolls; Allen Fowler; William
C. Hall; Charles F. Miller; Augustus
Bonhers; Jane L. Craig and Richard
Roe Craig, first real name unknown;
Daniel Foust; Mrs. Daniel Foust,
first real name unknown; the heirs,
devisees, legatees, personal represen
tatives and all other persons inter
ested in the estates of Mercy Isadore
Van Horn, also known as Mercy Isa
dore Vanhorn, Stephen F. Nuckolls,
Sarah Craig, John Doe Craig, first
real name unknown, Paul Nuckolls,
Rupert Nuckolls, William Ezra Nuc
kolls, Bruce Johnson Nuckolls, Allen
Fowler, William C. Hall, Charles F.
Miller, Augustus Bohners, Jane L.
Craig, Richard Roe Craig, first real
name unknown, Daniel Foust, Mrs.
Daniel Foust, first real name un
known, each deceased, real names
unknown, and all persons having or
claiming any interest in and to the
west half (W) of the northeast
quarter (NE14) of Section five (5),
and the east half (EH) of the north
west quarter (NW) of Section five
(5) and the northwest quarter
(NW4) of the northwest quarter
(NW ) of Section five (5), and Lots
seven (7) and eight (S), in the
northeast quarter (NE4 1 of the
northeast quarter (NE4) of Section
six (6). and that part of Lot five
(5) of the northeast quarter (NE )
of Section six (6) lying east of the
road in Section six (6), and the
southwest quarter (SWV ) of the
northwest quarter (NW) of Sec
tion five (5) and all that part of
the northwest quarter (NW) of
the southwest quarter ($W4) of
Section five (5) lying north of the
public road, containing ten (10)
acres, all in Township twelve (12),
North, Range thirteen (13) east of
the Sixth P. M., and Lots six (6) and
fourteen (14) in the southeast quar
ter (SE4) of Section thirty-one
(31), Township thirteen (13) North,
Range thirteen (13) east of the 6th
P. M., in Cass county, Nebraska, real
names unknown:
You and each of you are hereby
notified that on the 2nd day of Feb
ruary, 1931, The United States Na
tional Bank of Omaha, filed its peti
tion as plaintiff in the District Court
of Cass county, Nebraska, against
you and each of you as defendants,
the object and prayer of said petition
being to quiet title of said plaintiff
in and to the lands in said Cass coun
ty, owned by said plaintiff, said land
being more particularly described as
follows, to-wlt.
The west half of the north
east quarter (W of NEi) of
Section five (5), and the east
half of the northwest quarter
(E of NW) of Section five
(5), and the northwest quarter
of the northwest quarter (NW
of NW) of Section five (5).
and Lots seven and eight (7 and
8) in the northeast quarter of
the northeast quarter (NEVi of
NE4) of Section six (6), and
that part of Lot five (5) of the
northeast quarter (Nil1-) of
Section six (6), lying (flat of the
road in Section six (6) and the
southwest quarter of the north
west quarter (SW of NW)
of Section five (5) and all that
part of the northwest quarter
of the southwest quarter (NW4
of SW) of Section five (5)
lying north of the public road,
containing ten (10) acres, all in
Township twelve (12), North,
Range thirteen (13), East of
the Sixth Principal Meridian:
and Lots six and fourteen (6
and 14) in the southeast quar
ter (SE3V4) of Seetion thirty
one (31), Township thirteen
(13) North of Range thirteen
(13) East of the Sixth Principal
Meridian in Cass county, Ne
braska and to exclude you and each of you
from having or claiming any inter
est therein.
You and each of you are required
o answer said petition on or before
the 16th day of March, 1931.
UNITED STATES NATION
AL BANK OF OMAHA
By Morseman & Maxwell.
Us Attorneys.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska, Cass coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of An
ton Krajicek, deceased.
To the creditors of said estate:
You are hereby notified, that I
will set at the County Court room
in Plattsmouth in said county, on
the 20th day of February. 1931, and
on the 22nd dny of May, 1931. at 10
o'clock p.. m., on each day. 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 20th day of February, A. D.
1931, and the time limited for pay
ment of debts is one year from said
20th dey of February. 1931.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said County Court .this 23rd day of
January, 1931.
A. H. DUXBURY.
(Seal) J26-3w County Judge.
NOTICE OF SUIT IN PARTITION
Dora Raney, Plaintiffs
App. Dock.
vs.
Ina M. Gidley et al,
Page 133
Defendants J
To the Defendants: Ina M. Gidley,
Harry J. Gidley, Homer O. Reason,
Violet Reason. Harold H. Reason,
Bessie L. Hanson, Lars Hanson, Ger
trude Struthers, George Struthers,
Eleanor McCoy, Walter McCoy, The
Unknown Heirs, Devisees, Legatees,
Personal Representatives and all
other persons interested in the sev
eral estates of Frank Parker, deceas
ed, Anna May Reason, deceased, and
Stella M. Wright, deceased, real
names unknown, and all persons hav
ing or claiming any interest in Lots
1 and 2 in Block 10, in Carter's Ad
dition to Weeping Water, in Cass
county, Nebraska, rea' names un
known: You and each of you are hereby
notified that on January 27th, 1931,
plaintiff in the foregoing entitled
cause, filed her petition in the Dis
trict Court of Cass county. Nebraska,
wherein you and others are made
parties defendant, for the partition
of the following described real es
tate, to-wit:
Lots one (1) and two (2) in
Block ten (10) in Carter's Ad
dition to Weeping Water, Cass
county, Nebraska
among the parties interested therein,
to-wit: The plaintiff, Dora Raney,
and the defendants: Ina M. Gidley,
Homer O. Reason, Harold H. Reason,
Bessie L. Hanson, Gertrude Struthers,
Eleanor McCoy, Orville Wright (a
minor) and Lova June Wright (a
minor), according to their respective
rights and interests therein, as may
be found, confirmed and decreed by
the Court, and that all defendants
named in said petition be required to
set up and assert their claims, if any
they have in or to said real estate,
adverse to the owners thereof and
that the same be considered and con
cluded by the decree of the Court, and
for equitable relief and for costs.
You are required to answer said
petition on or before the 16th day of
March, 1931, or your default will be
entered in said cause and a Decree
in Partition entered therein as pray
ed for in said petition.,
Dated: January 30th, 1931.
DORA RANEY,
Plaintiff.
By John M. Ley da.
Her Attorney.
George Tracer, Attorurj
LEGAL NOTICE
In th District Court of Cass 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
Southeast Quarter (SE4) of the
Northeast Quarter (NE ) 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 Southeast
(SE) corner of the Northeast Quar
ter (NE) 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, 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-wlt:
Lot Eight (8). in the South
east Quarter (SE) of the
Northeast Quarter (NE i ) 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 (NE) 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 MAT MARSHALL,
PleJrrfflr.
By G FORCE VEAGJg
Jll-tw Her Attorney.
1