The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, February 23, 1931, 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.

    MONDAY. FOR. 23, 1931.
PLATTSMOUTH SEM7 WEEKLY JOTTEN AL
PAGE THBEB
Cbc plattsmouth lournal
PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA
Entered at Postoffice, Plattsmoutb, 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.
Women are poor losers
comes to dieting.
when it
:o:-
Distance doesn't lend enchant merit
when you run out of gas.
: o :
Some men adore their wives he
cause it is either that or starvation.
:o:
Some men tell their wives every
thing even when they don't knew it.
:o:
The real balance of trade depends
largely on the accuracy of the scales.
:o:
That new French cabinet should be
quick to take out a life insurance pol
icy. : o:
Many a woman standing in front
cf a shop window has merely stop
ped to reflect.
:o:
The question before the house or
is it the Senate? is just who is the
Republican leader?
:o:
The measure of a man is the sum
of money required to make him scorn
the "common herd."
:o:
Oddly enough, when we send it by
ship, it is a cargo; and when it goes
by car it is a shipment.
:o:
No doubt. Columbus imagined the
world was round because it failed
to treat him altogether square.
:o:
Daughter is old enough to be call
ed "Miss" if she will go hungry rath
er than tackle spaghetti in public.
:o:
As slow as the American Congress
would make a pretty good simile,
only there is nothing else that slow.
:o:
The railroad presidents are long
ing for the good old days when some-
body slept
berths.
in the upper Pullman
:o:-
Stock Exchange seats are now
selling at $235,000. This strikes us
as a lot of money to pay for a place
to sleep.
: o:
We see by the paper that goldfish ,
are becoming more popular as pets,
experience with gold diggers as pets,
we reckon.
:o:
Uncle Sam may think prohibition
is hard to enforce. But if he ever
attempts to stop petting parties on
country lanes, he'll know what real
difficulty is.
: o :
From Saint Ste. Marie comes a
story of a deer that drinks beer. And
then, filled with Dutch courage, it
goes out, we suppose, to polish off a
few wolves and bears.
: 0 :
Arkansas evidently intends to be
come an active rival of Nevada in
the divorce business which in recent
years has assumed the proportions of
a great national industry.
:o:
Two African diamond prospectors
find gem worth fortune just as they
are about to abandon claim. Who
knows? We may get something worth
while out of Congress after all.
:o:
A New Jersey specialist says If
kissing could be prevented for ten j
years tuberculosis would be reduced
50 per cent. Yeah, and matrimony
would be reduced about 100 per
cent.
:o:
In the Federal court at Oxford a ,
22-year-old youth was sentenced to 1
serve 18 months in an industrial!
school for robbing the post office at
Stover of $18. Even in these depress
ed times it must be admitted that one
dollar per month is rather small pay.
Harness $45
H2-Inch
Harness Oiled . .$1
Wm. Schmidtmann
A true neutral is one who realizes
that both sides are lying.
:o:
A woman 102 years old. living
Mar Grlmby,
cendants.
Ireland, has 159 des-
Some people can solve every cross
word puzzle except how to keep from
speaking one.
:o:
Some of our farmers are becoming
so well educated they can't tell when
Ijt
is going to rain.
:o:
It is no indication a farmer is
domestic merely because he belongs
to the sowing circle.
: o :
It is not hard to find bright spots
in the news from over the state if
you will only look for them.
:o:
A hypocrite is a youth who quit
school at the seventh grade and yet
has wise cracks on his flivver.
:o:
"The Missippi River problem' is
water too much when it can't be
ued. too little when it is needed.
:o:
Chicago now has a divorce record
of one per hour. Evidently marriage
is quite breezy in the Windy City.
:o:
Forgiveness: The feeling that re
mains when time dulls the edge of
resentment and you no longer give
a darn.
:o:
Edward Albert otherwise the
Prince of Wales and traveling sales
man for Great Britain, carries no
samples.
:o:
Sometimes indicating wetness and
then turning dry. many a politician t
has proved harder to guess than even
the climate.
-:o :-
One clear thing is that no one can
ever make the charge that the Wick-
ersham Commission had a single
track mind.
: o:
The world grows better. If the
family doesn't go riding. Dad spends
Sunday in his bath robe instead of
his undershirt.
:o:
A lot of people are more interested counsels us io oeware oi iunnuB io
in having flush times come back than j Washington for treatment of every
they are in having good times buy !Plilical or economic or social tooth
a return ticket. ache. What he is pleading with us
:o:
Sometimes we fear the world is duties as citizens; to accept the obli
headed for destruction, and then we gations of the franchise as well as
read the ads in "confession" maga- its privileges. The thing resolves it-
z nes and don't care if it is.
:o:
One of our greatest needs during (in the ballot. If it doesn't, demo
the coming summer will be air-cool- ! cracv is a failure
ed typewriters for use in the cam
paign headquarters of the various
candidates for president.
: 0 :
Taxation without representation
was the cause of the Revolution.
Taxation without representation is
about due to cause political revolu
tion in the big cities of Ohio.
:o:-
Kathleen Key. the movie actress
! who busted Buster Keaton on the
beezer, gets her pictures in the paper.
ithree noses, all in scantv attire. Mph-
Ibe that's the reason she hit him.
:o:
WORKING FOR THE GOVERNMENT
The rewards for faithful Govern
ment service have seldom been mo e
ironically illustrated than in the 1 -cent
death of Joseph S. McCoy, gov
ernment actuary and Federal emplo; e
for 40 years.
To McCoy's obscure little offi e
went the great men of Washington
to "be sure my figures are correct."
Mr. McCoy estimated Government
revenues, tariff returns, data on U.
S. securities, future population. He
dealt in millions and billions, ard
governmental departments geared
their work to his answers. Indeed,
one of his jobs was to issue monthly
a circular showing daily market
pnees ana me investment value or
:U. S. securities. These figures appar-
nq in., it a preai impression in JMC-ia
jCoy, the Government actuary, but Just what Mr. Hoover will do with
jthey meant nothing at all to McCoy, jrn elkhound puzzles us quite a bit.
jthe family man. j W'e cannot imagino any possible use
Walsh of Montana, explained to a for the brute unless he is allowed to
j Senate committee that McCoy hadjroam on the White House lawn at
left a widow and seven children who night and how l requiems for Mr.
were in "bad financial shape." Be- H -over's absent brothers in the Re-
cause the Senate committee decided
'vn n t v. 3 - 11 ,
i Luoi iixvviy uau virtually ueen an
employe of the Senate, it approved
the payment of on year'B salary to
his family.
THE JEFFEBSONIAN HOOVER
Mr. Hoover's Lincoln day address
might, perhaps, be called an outline
of the philosophy of American demo
cracy. The principles laid down by
the founders of our Government are
familiar, but it is well, nevertheless,
that men in public life should, on
occasion, restate them. We are ac
customed to the warning words spok
en by the President but the truths
he reiterated bear repetition. All of
us listening to them give our intel
lectual approval.
Nobody questions that the corner
stone of our governmental structure
is local self-government. Still, there
is a sort of moral tonic in hearing a
President assert:
The moment responsibilities
of any community, particularly
in economic and social ques
tions, are shifted from any part
of the nation to Washington,
then that community has sub
jected itself to a remote bureau
cracy with its minimum of un
derstanding and of sympathy.
It has lost a large part of its
voice and its control of its own
destiny. . . . Where people di
vest themselves of local govern
ment responsibilities they at
once lay the foundation for the
destruction of their liberties.
This is a political gospel which
the Post-Dispatch has preached
throughout its entire existence. It is
a faith to which we all profess de
votion. In actual practice, however.
many of us are prone to sacrifice the
belief at the first call of expediency.
Moreover, if we can't accomplish im
mediately the dominant purpose of a
transitory mood we impatiently try
"to remold it nearer to our hear't
desire" by appealing to Washington.
Traditions wilt in the fierce blasts of
propaganda. We are bound to have
our way. If we cannot get it by the
processes of democracy then we fly
to bureaucracy.
We have gone far along this road
farther than most of us suspect.
As diligent and competent a public
man as former Senator Wadsworth
of New York declared, several years
ago, of our Government at Washing
ton that it was so huge, interlocked
and bewildering that nobody could
understand it. In the same vein Sen
ator Borah once remarked that "of
I all forms of governments yet devis-
led. bureaucracy is the worst." The
Chief Justice of our Supreme Court.
Mr. Hughes, if we remember rightly,
observed that if the states did not
exist it would be necessary to create
them. Thus these dignitaries of the
Hamiltonian heritage sit at the feet
of Jefferson, even as Lincoln did
when he wrote: "The principles of
Jefferson are the definitions and
axioms of free society."
Mr. Hoover is, therefore, in the
company of high contemporary as
'well as historical authority when he
to do is obvious to discharge our
self finally into intelligent voting.
The cure of our political evils rests
Mr. Hoover takes cognizance of
changing conditions. "Our concept
of Federal, state and local responsi
bilities is possible of no unchange
able definitions," he says, "and must
shift with the moving forces of the
nation, but the time has come when
we must have more national consid
eration of decision of the part which
;each shall assume in these responsi
bilities." It has. Indeed, the time
has come for a retreat to first prin
ciples, for the correction of mistakes,
for reassuming obligations we have
consigned to the bureaucracy at
Washington. And the time will pres
ently be here, we believe, when aca
demic consideration of our political
principles will not suff ice when pub
lic officials will have to identify our
mistaken policies and advocate their
repeal.
When our leaders rise to those
heights of courage and candor we
shall then have started on our way
back to home rule. St. Louis Post
Dispatch. :o:
THE ELKH0UND ARRIVES
A Norwegian elkhound has arrived
in New York for presentation to
President Hoover. The ceremony
will take place at an early date.
We must frankly confess our ignor-
ance on elkhounds in fact, didn't
jknow the canine tribe offered such
species.
publican party.
; q ;
"President shows congress how to
get down to brass r.acks" but as
usual it prefers a brass band.
PROLONGING A COSTLY FAILURE
i It is not likely that the present
i Congress, nor any legislative body
for some time to come, will be in a
mood to give the Grain Exchanges a
deliberate death blow and to estab
lish a perpetual Government corner
in produce. This may be done, how
ever, by degrees. "Stabilization" in
the cotton market has virtually put
the Cotton Exchange out of business,
supplying nothing but chaos and un
certainty in its place. Stabilization
in wheat did less damage to estab
lished means of trade and distribu
tion because of the vastly greater
bulk of product flowing through the
central exchanges.
As if in disappointment that Fed
eral tampering with the natural cur
rent of trade has not entirely de
moralized grain markets and grain
distribution, the Capper-Dickinson
bill is introduced. It would restrict
the volume of speculation, and is
clearly a measure meant to barm
established traders rather than to
help either grain farmers or the ulti
mate consumers of the product. Mr.
Legge has admitted that the bill, as
it stands, will seriously cut trading
in hedges, but that the full regula
tion proposed in the measure prob
ably will fail. In this case he sees
prohibition of short selling as the
next step.
And with this step the Grain Ex
changes go out of business. There
would then fall upon the Govern
ment to provide facilities for the
buying, selling, distribution of grain.
What would this substitute machin
ery be? No one knows; but the Capper-Dickinson
bill is ready to throt
tle all the useful function of the
Grain Exchanges before any possible
substitute for them is evolved. Deal
ing in grain would take on the fright
ened, hand-to-mouth character now
found in cotton dealings. And by
natural progression from such a meas
ure as the Capper-Dickinson bill the
Government would be forced not only
into the sole distribution of wheat,
but sooner or later would also prob
ably be forced into the milling and
baking business.
Meanwhile, even the farmers are
asking why Federal tinkerers insist
on prolonging and intensifying an
experimental failure.
:o:
If Senators were paid for the
senses they show they'd land in the
breadline, but if they were paid for
the words they use they'd all retire
millionaires.
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 Piattsmoutn in saia county, on
the 20th day of February. 1931. and
on the 22nd day of May, 1931. at 10
o'clock a. 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 claim?
against said estate is three months
from the 20th day of February, A. D. j
1931, and the time limited for pay
ment of debts is one year from sai-J
20th day 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 SALE
In the District Court oil Cass coun-
tv Nebraska.
In Re Application of J. A. Capwell,
Administrator d. b. n.. of the estate
of Katie Hooenshell. deceased, for
license to sell real estate.
Notice is hereby given that under
and by virtue of a license and order
of sale issued by the Honorable James
T. Begley. Judge of the District Court
of Cass county, Nebraska, on the 19th
day of June, 1930. that I, J. A. Cap
well. Administrator d. b. n.. of the
estate of Katie Heonshell, deceased,
will sell at public auction to the
highest bidder for cash, at the north
front door of the Greenwood State
Bank, in the Village of Greenwood.
Cass county, Nebraska, at 10:00
o'clock in the forenoon, on the 9th
day of March, 1931, the following de
scribed real estate, to-wit:
That part of Lot 9 in Jones
First Addition to the Village of
Greenwood, Cass county, Ne
braska, described as follows: Be
ginning at the northeast corner
of said Lot 9 and running thence
west 20 rods, thence south 2
rods, thence east 20 rods, thence
north 2 rods to the place of be
ginning; also the undivided one
half of Lot 10 in Jones First
Addition to the Village of Green
wood. Cass county, Nebraska;
also all of Lot 24 in Jones Sec
ond Addition to the Village of
Greenwood, Cass county, Ne
braska. Said sale to be and remain open
for one hour. Ten per cent of the bid
to be paid on the day of sale and the
balance upon confirmation and de
livery of deed.
Dated this 4th day of February,
1931.
J. A. CAPWELL,
Administrator d. b. n., of the
Estate of Katie Hoen
shell, Deceased.
W. A- Robertson.
Attorney.
fl-3w
KG
FOR OVER
0 YtP$
Guaranteed pure ' ' '
and efficient. mL )
USE ounces
less than of high
priced brands. ; 2 5
..............
Treasury officials estimated that
all but one-eighth of the $5,000,-
000.000 in large bills called in when
the new small size currency was is
sued 19 months ago have been re
deemed. One seldom sees a large
bill nowadays and not many small
ones, either.
:o:
Life is real, life is earnest. The
income tax blanks are out again.
LEGAL NOTICE
In the District Court of Cass Coun
ty, Nebraska.
In the matter of the application
of N. D. Talcott, Admr. de bonis non
estate of Maggie Failing, deceased, to
authority to sell realty.
Order to show cause why applica
tion should not be granted.
Now on this 7th day of February.
1931. N. D. Talcott, Administrator
de bonis non of the estate of Maggie
Pailing. deceased, having presented
his petition under oath for license to
sell the following described real es
tate of the said Maggie Pailing, de
ceased :
The north half of the south
east quarter of Sec. 32. Twp.
12. north range 9, and the
northeast quarter of the south
west quarter of Sec. 20, Twp.
12 north, range 9, east of the
6th p. m. in Cass county, Ne
braska or a sufficient amount thereof, to
raise the sum of $2350.00, for the
payment of debts allowed against
said estate and for costs of admin
istration, for the reason that there
is not sufficient amount of personal
property in the possession of N. D.
Talcott. Administrator, belonging to
said estate, to pay said debts and
costs.
It is therefore ordered that all
persons interested in said estate ap
pear before me at chambers in tbe
city of Plattsmouth, Cass County,
Nebraska, on the 28th day of March.
A. D. 1931. at the hour of ten o'clock
a. m. to show cause, if any there be.
why a license should not be granted
to said N. D. Talcott. Administrator,
to sell said real estate belonging to
the estate of said deceased to pay
said debts and expenses.
It is further ordered that a copy
of this order be served upon all per
sons interested in said estate by caus
ing the same to be published for four
successive weeks in the Plattsmouth
journal, a newspaper printed and
published in said County of Cass.
JAS. T. BEGLEY.
Judge of the District Court.
fl2-4w
NOTICE OF SALE
In the District Court of Cass coun
ty Nebraska.
In Re Application of J. A. Capwell.
Administrator d. b. n.. of the estate
of David J. Hoenshell. deceased, for
license to sell real estate.
Notice is hereby given that under
and by virtue of a license and order
of sale issued by the Honorable James
T. Begley, Judge of the District Court
of Cass county. Nebraska, on the 19th
day of June. 1930, that I, J. A. Cap
well. Administrator d. b. n., of the
estate of David J. Hoenshell, deceas
ed, will sell at public auction to the
highest bidder for cash, at the north
front door of the Greenwood State
Bank, in the Village of Greenwood.
Cass county, Nebraska, at 10:00
o'clock in the forenoon, on the 9th
day of March, 1931, the following de
scribed real estate, to-wit:
That part of Lot 9 in Jones
First Addition to the Village of
Greenwood, Cass county, Nebras
ka, lying north of the railroad
right of way; also all of Lot 8
in Jones First Addition to the
Village of Greenwood. Cass coun
ty, Nebraska: also an undivid
ed one-half of Lot 10 in Jones
First Addition to the Village of
Greenwood. Cass county, Nebras
ka; an undivided one-third in
terest in Lot 9 in Jones First
Addition to the Village of Green
wood, Cass county, Nebraska; an
undivided one-sixth of Lot 10 in
Jones First Addition and an un
aivided one-third of Lot 24 in
Jones Second Addition, all in the
Village of Greenwood, Cass coun
ty. Nebraska.
Said sale to be and remain open
for one hour. Ten per cent of the bid
to be paid on the day of sale and the
balance upon confirmation and de
livery of deed.
Dated this 4th day of February,
1931.
J. A. CAPWELL,
Administrator d. b. n.. of the
Estate of David J. Hoen
shell, Deceased.
W. A. Robertson,
Attorney.
fl6-3w
NOTICE TO CREDITOR?.
The State of Nebraska, Cass coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the Estate of
Robert Troop, deceased.
To the creditors of said estate:
You are hereby notified hat 1 will
sit at the County Court room in
Plattsmouth. in said county, on the
6th day of March, A. D. 1 f3 1 and on
the 6th day of July, A. D. 1931, at
ten o'clock in the forenoon of each
day, to receive and examine all
laims against said estate, with a
view to their adjustment and allow
ince. The time limited for the pre
sentation of claims against said es
tate is three months from the 6th
flay of March, A. D. 1531, and the
t.me limited for payment of debts is
one- y?ar from said 6th day of March,
1981,
Witness my hand and the seal of
said County Court this 4th day of
February, 1931.
A. H. DUX BURY.
(Seal) f9-3w County Judge
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska. Cass coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the Estate of
Viola G. Smith, 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
Gth day of March. A. D. 1931 and on
the 6th day of July, A. D. 1931, at
nine o'clock in the forenoon of each
day, to receive and examine all
claims against said estate, with a
view to their adjustment and allow
ance. The time limited for the pre
s( ntation of claims against said es
tate is three months from the 6th
-lav of March. A. D. 1931, and the
time limited for payment of debts is
one year from said 6th day of March,
1931.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said County Court this 4th day of
Februarv, 1931.
A. H. DUXBURY.
(Seal) f9-3w County Judge.
NOTICE OF INCORPORATION
Notice is hereby given that Frank
M. Bestor. William A. Swatek, Cyril
Kalina and Charles K. Bestor have
organized a corporation to be known
as Bestor & Swatek Company, with
its principal place of business at
Plattsmouth in Cass county, Nebras
ka. The general nature of the busi
ness to be transacted by said corpo
ration is general hardware business
with right to buy and sell real estate
and such kinds and classes of prop
erty as may be necessary in conduct
ing its business. The authorized cap
ital stock is $30,000.00 in shares of
the par value of $100.00 per share,
of which $24,000.00 is subscribed
and paid at the time of said organi
zation. Said corporation commenced
business on the first day of February,
1931. and continues for a period of
fifty years. The highest amount of
indebtedness or liability to which
said corporation shall at any time
! subject itself shall not be more than
two-thirds of its paid up capital
! stock. The business of said eorpora-
tion shall be conducted by a board of
four Directors and the officers of
said corporation shall be a President,
Vice President, Secretary and Treas
urer. Dated this 3rd day of February,
1931.
FRANK M. BESTOR
WILLIAM A. SWATEK
CHARLES K. BESTOR
CYRIL KALINA
f9-4w
NOTICE OF SUIT IN
PARTITION
App. Dock.
5,
Page 133
Dora Raney, Plaintiff
vs.
Ina M. Gidley et al.
Defendants
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, DeviBees, 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 CaBB
county, Nebraska, real 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, CaBS
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 casts.
You are required to answer said
petition on or before the 16tt 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. Leyda,
Her Attorney.
NOTICE OF APPLICATION
For License to Operate a Pool Hall
in the Village of Mauley
Notice is hereby given that the
undersigned will on the 16th day of
April. 1931, at 11 o'clock a. m., at
the court house at Plattsmouth, Ne
braska, make application to the
Board of County Commissioners of
Cass county, for a license to operate
a pool hall in the building located on
Lot 5 of Block 3, in the Village of
Manley, Cass county. Nebraska.
Dated this 16th day of February,
A. D. 1931.
GEORGE E. COON.
t'16-4w Applicant.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska. Cass coun
ty, BS.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the Estate of
Thomas Troop, 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
6th day of March. A. D. 1931 and on
the 6th day of July. A. D. 1931. at
nine o'clock in the forenoon of each
day. to receive and examine all
claims against said estate, with a
view to their adjustment and allow
ance. The time limited for the pre
sentation of claims against said es
tate is three months from the 6th
day of March. A. D. 1931. and the
time limited for payment of debts is
on? v ar from said 6tb day of March,
1931.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said County Court this 4th day oi
February, 1931.
A. H. Dl'XBURY.
(Seal) f9-3w County Judge.
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 Nuckollf; 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 Fount,
first real name unknown: the heirs,
devisees, legatees, personal represen
tatives and all other persona inter
ested in the estates of Mercy Isadore
Van Horn, also known as Mercy Isa
dore Vannorn. Stephen F. Nuckolls,
Sarah Craig, John Doe Craig, first
real name unknown, Paul Nuckolls,
Rupert Nuckolls, William Ezra Nu
kolls. Bruce Johnson Nuckolls, Allen
Fowler, W'illlam 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$4 ) of the northeast
quarter IXE"4) of Section five (5),
and the east half (E4 ) of the north
west quarter (NW4 ) of Section five
(5) and tbe northwest quarter
(MW ) of tbe northwest quarter
(NWfc ) of Section five (5), and Lots
seven (7) and eight (S), in the
northeast quarter (NEVi) of the
northeast quarter (NE"4) of Section
six (6). and that part of Lot five
(5) of the northeast quarter IXE )
of Section six (6) lying east of the
road In Section six (6), and the
southwest quarter (SW) of the
northwest quarter (NW4) of Sec
tion five (5) and all that part of
the northwest quarter (NW"i) of
the southwest quarter ( SW 14 ) 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 (SE"4) 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-wit.
The west half of the north
east quarter (W of NE M ) of
Section five (5), and the east
half of the northwest quarter
(Er2 of NW4) of Section five
(5), and the northwest quarter
of the northwest quarter (NW"4
of NW"4) of Section five (5 1.
and Lots seven and eight (7 and
8) in the northeast quarter of
the northeast quarter (NE4 of
NE4) of Section six (6). and
that part of Lot five (5) of the
northeast quarter INE'i ) of
Section six 6). lying east of the
road in Section six (6) and the
southwest quarter of the north
west quarter (SW4 of NW4)
of Section five (5) and all that
part of the northwest quarter
of the southwest quarter (Nw V
of SW4) of Section five ( 5 1
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 (SEH ) of Section 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
to answer said petition on or before
the 16th day of March. 1931.
UNITED STATES NATION
AL BANK OF OMAHA
By Morseman & Maxwell,
Its Attorneys.
Job Printing at Journal office.