The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, April 20, 1922, Image 8

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Blind i (
By CLARA DELAFIELD
Snoirletat, 1522,
': Mrs. Armlger Brown could not hco
itbut her now niiild wits a Iutly, but
ttiat wus hot her fault, because sho
wag not lulte one herself. Amy Trent-
;lctfo father hud been n prosperous
lawyer, but, when lie tiled Intestate
and bnnUrupt, she bail to work for it
living. And, being a home-loving body,
she deliberately chose domestic serv
ice. '
She choso It because Bhe liked It,
and there was no one In the world to
depute her decision. Mrs. Armlger
iBrown admitted Amy was the best
,cook In the world, the beet girl she
Iiad ever known. Hho was that hid
den treasure, tho Perfect Maid. She
i thought her a superior girl, Hut a
, ludy? Well, Mrs. Armlger Hrown was
.aot quite
Yearn had disguised her common
origin. Mr. Armlger Urown was n
"stc-ck broker, and their Hon, Howard,
had Just left 1'rlnceton to enter his
ktlier's oillee. The mother ruled the
tcosL She was ory proud of her son,
wry proud of their home and money,
Jheir car, their friends of course It
never entered her mind ''that Amy
I'remlott Could be a lady.
, The fear of losing her was alwayH
with her. Amy was devoted to her,
Ucr husband, and Howard, hut maids
"marry. And It was about n month
after' Amy's arrival that Mr. Armlger
1 'Hrown thought who detected her In an
incipient lllrtatlon with the Iceman.
"Kr Amy," who said, "I don't want
to Interfere with you, but I nuppo.se
ym know that man who comes with
Ihe Ice Is an er-convlct? Yes, his em
tVeyer belongs to an association for
wrfplng released prisoners. Vou won't
vrblsper a word about It, of. course,
Bot 1 thought you ought to be told."
The baker's man, who next seemed
ttilorcstcd In Amy, was a different
(proposition. Everybody In the town
knew young llamlln. Hut Amy was a
newcomer. Mrs. Armlger Hrown took
the occasion to look In at tho baker's
shop one day.
, ul told my maid to order rolls In
future," phe said to young llamlln,
but she gets more forgetful every day.
I'oor thing, I don't blame her, though;
she's worried about her husband."
"What did you say, Mrs. Hrown?"
asked young llamlln, bristling.
"I Dfsald," snapped Mrs. Armlger
Urown, who did not like to be ad
dressed as plain "Mrs. Hrown," "that
the poor child's worrying about her
husband. You see, he's In the peni
tentiary, and she has the two children
I to support, and It gets on her mind.
, Don't you say a word to her ubout It;
nobody's supposed to know."
The baker's man and the Iceman
' lrfr their freight without dalliance,
land Mrs. Armlnger Hrown's spirits
rTvm. Hut the third danger loomed up
(presently in the shape of a mysterious
chnrncter who used to engage Amy's
evenlugs off. And Mrs. Armlger Hrown
could learn nothing about him.
"Amy, who Is that man you meet In
tho evenings?" she asked her.
Amy 'colored. "Oh, Just a friend,
Mrs. Armlger Hrown," she answered.
There was nothing more to be said.
Hut Mrs. Armlger Hrown watched
Amy;.. This was really a case of love,
& decided. Amy looked so very
spruce anil lovely when she set out In
tho evenings for her unknown destina
tion. Mrs. Armlger Hrown noted the
oolor In the girl's face and decided
That this latest amour must be stopped
tit any cost. Shu resolved to fullow
lior.
She did so. She trailed her one
warm, dnrk night In the summer to
Klverslde purk. Amy descended the
lope toward the river, sat down on a
rit, and waited. Mrs. Armlger Brown,
not very fur away, presently heard a
man's footsteps approaching, A dim
figure appeared and Amy sprang to
her feet with n little cry, und In an
other moment she wns folded In his
RHUS.
- Mrs. Armlger Hrown's blood jran
cold. This meant the loss of Amy.
She would never get a maid like her
again. Terror gave her a supernat
ural' cunning, and she edged forwnrd
softly among the trees, until she could
hear what the lovers, side by side on
tho bench now, wore saying.
( "b tuluk sho suspects something,
darling,' Amy said In a low voice.
"And after those tales sho told the
baker's man nntl the Iceman, she'll
top at nothing."
The- man laughed. "You did throw
her off tho scent nicely about those
men," he laughed. "Poor mother!
She's so blind !"
"Mother !" With a strangled cry
Mrs. Armlger Hrown sprang forward,
to look luto her son's face.
"Howard !" she cried In nninsed fury.
"Amy! You'll leuvo tho apartment to
night this very night. Of all the out-
rusoMis, wicked things "
-' "Wo can't be. married till tomorrow,
Mother," said Howard, politely. "So
;you'll really have to let Amy stay
overnight. It would bo such a scandal
1 sou turned her ont at this hour of
night. Sit down," ho added, drawing
the panic-stricken woman down on
toe- bench, "and let mo tell you who
stay Is."
New Geyeer Reported.
A dispatch from Great Tails, Mont.,
i ays that Information through tho for
i at at Hlack Leaf, Teton county, re
vived at tho Jefferson national forest
headquarters states that a geyser, or
volcanic eruption, occurred ot Mount
Black Lent canyon recently, mud and
'Steam shooting up 200 feet high for
two days und then subsiding to u
steady outpour of hissing steam.
, Western Newsflnpor Lnlon. .
Thirty Years Ago
April 10, 1802
Geo W. 1 1 nil is' m-, boiler maker at
ttie U. it M round lioioe narrowly es
iipetl u severe si'iildliiit Ajtril (lilt lnt
by the breaking of u poitlmi of u steam
cock winch opened mi efccupn valve, the
jor of hteiim striking on tho left hIiIo
sen tiling the outer portion of left arm
fioiu shoulder to wrist.
Monde Marsh, daughter of M S.
Mitrhhi gave her young frlondfc i plouf -
an! party on bor blrihilny which oc-
cutreil on last Saturday.
(ireat excitement prevailed lit Wien.
or'n clothing store on Wednesday oven-
log, and Frank fowtloii thought that
bis life was not woith n sixpence for
a.bout IKteeti seconds, in fuel hh luiir
19 still standing on end from his great
fright. Thu "ciium of nil thistles"
wns from an explosion that, took place
in the largo clove in the rear end of
tho room which had iicetimtilatodsiilll
oluntgas to blow tho pipe down.
Married at Kid Cloud, Neb., Apill
12, 18112 by 0. Schenok, F.mj., Albert U.
Ilntfluld and Mlt,s Flon M. LudloW.all
of tills city.
Iltl Cloud is certainly on the high
rnul to prosperity.
Th( following pupils attending the
lied Cloud schools for tho term Ik'k'1 li
ning January lib and ending Mutch 25
have huoii neither absent or tnidy:
Mat.dcGiecnleo,Ollva tlieenlec, Don-
uhl Pope, Willie Kellogg, Hdwln Over-
Ing, Marry Hentloy, Alary Humes.
Ulaneh Sellnrs, Edwin Mmtley, Hairy
L'lsoii, Charlie Perry, Slacey Moihart,
Evi Foster, Ethol Hatfield, Frank Pot-
erson, .lohn Wilson, Willlo Ward, Carl
Illrkter. Kliiiio Hirkner, Hoss Fearn
'J'he CoiuinittcQ on Finance for the
entertainment of tho delegates for tho
iiiiiiiihI inoi'titig of tlie Golden Hod
Highway Association, announces the
following statoniont for pyblioition.
Amount collected $01 fit), amount, c.
pended for oiitrtiiiuuiciit and badges
(8'J r0, bulanco on band Si).(li). Luneh
min nurved to 122 people 'Iho baliuiuo
on hand will lx tttriied over to tho
local committee of I he Oold'Mi Uod
Highway Atsnulatlo i.
A0R9FIGE
East
Indian Ruler's Tribute to
Wonderful Woman.
European Lady Who Has Withdrawn
From the World to Comfort ,
Victims of Leprosy.
The ranee of Sarawak, writing from
Knelling, Sarawak, to a London paper,
says :
I was asked tho other day what I
considered to bo ono of tho greatest
deeds a woman had ever done. This
Is my answer: Far from thu town,
along a straight white road fringed
by a brown mud ditch and rubber
trees, there lives a Uttlo pale, unas
suming wonum; her only companion
Is a bent nnd aged Chinaman, who
keeps house for her and looks after
everything Hint she needs. Thu houso
Itself, standing a few yards from thu
road, Is nothing but a native hut made
out of rushes and palm leaves, am
built on wooden piles.
1'asslng by, ami seeing the woman
sewing in her garden, you might say:
"What a strange choice this Is to
cut oneself off so entirely from clvllza
tlon." Hut that would be because,
hidden among the trees below her,
you hud not seen the leper camp.
It Is true that this little European
lady has cut herself off from what
Is called the' world, from tho friends
that she once knew, and the relations
she once had.
But what has she taken to herself
In place of them?
An encampment of human souls that
no one elso dares go near. A herd of
beings more terrible than death.
Sho Is not even of their rnce. 'They
speak to her In every language from
their decayed and crumbling mouths.
Riieh dnv xho imps to them nurses
those that aro most sick, encourages
those that havo talents, to make use
of them.
It Is she who occupies tho time they
spend In waiting to die.
She helps them to tend their gar
dens. One Js a basket-maker, another
carves In wood; nnd nil tho time her
eyes aro confronted by the ravages
of disease. Things indescribable sho
sees, and yet her gazo remains puro
and unaffected, even Joyful, as If that
great mission within herself uplifts
hor from It all.
When I went to visit her I expected
tq And her morbid, perhnps Infinitely
sad.
Instead, sha talked eagerly and
frankly of all that she was doing. "I
nm so deeply Interested In my
patients," she said, "that I am busy
taking Impressions of their thumbs. It
Is remarkable how the thumbs of a
leper bend backwards, and are abso
lutely flattened at the tips."
She went on to describe how charm
ing some of the lepers are. A few of
them a.o boys of only twelve and
thirteen years of age. One or two of
them had run away from tho camp
and had died a horrible denth In tho
Jungle.
As I wns leaving, sho said with a
slight smile. "You know tho most
populnr person among us Is tho cof
fin maker." That wns tho only touch
of shall I say? bitterness In tho
very greatest little wouiun that I
know.
JOY IN S
if
TUEY GET IT
THEY'LL ONLY SPEND IT
Just n boy fiom homol There lie.
was lying; out in i lent thn cold No-
ember day.
I had known th s iioy for a lonr,
lonK time; wo had grown up together,
and I hnd watched him go from gram
mar school to high school and fi-om
high school to college. Ills mother
was widow who had educated tho
hoy herself by teaching school, and
she was deformmed to have him .fol
low in his father's pr.fcssion -the law
With his mother's lflp lie got through
law school nntl g.aduatcd with honors.
A job in tho little c.iy where ho lived
was er.sy and it looked as though in a
few years his- mother's troubles would
be oor and her sacrifices well repa d.
Then came the war. The hoy
thought, it over and r. month after it
had been declared he was on his way
downtown to a recruiting office. No
officer's training corps for him, h"
wanted to get into action as soon as
possible.
They sent him to tho First Divis on
then being made up near Syracuse,
New York and two months later lie
was in France. Tho usual training;
(l.ar, (l.n r..,1, 4J, Tt .. Cj- M!V.-1 I
:;.; L, n?,i. ' :: " :.r-r ;"' v;:,f thy wantc-1 t one thing-work!
Miibii ,i, juivi-vywi'Uiyi;! jiv juui;ii uii
with his division somewhere south of
Dun-Sur-Mouso. And bumped Into n
p'ece of shrapnel thnt wedged its way
through ills bloure antl coat in such
a way that ho was sent b?Iow Dijon
to what was called "the largest hos
pi.nl in the world." By accident I
stumbled into h'm lhc:-e.
Tho day was old, the a'r was freez
ing, and the tdnt was, to say the lenst,
uncomfortable; but lie was the same
smiling hoy from home tis lie lay ther
saddled out on his narrow cot. lie
was suffering, however, mentally and
physically; for someone at the casul
ty cletring station had removed nine
ty dollars back pay from his pockets.
This money he had ben going to send
to his mother as boon as ho got out
of action, ami the low worried him.
Moreover, as ho was suffering pa'n
from t. hole in his chest tha!: you
could stick your fist nto. The doctor
called me aside and told mo that the
operation at the front had been very
badly done; they hnd left a piece 'of
shrapnel one thirty-second of an inch
fiom his heart.' It might havo to be
removed If so yes, I understood,
and the sweat came out on my fore
head despite the chill in tho open
tent. You see I knew this boy from
home.
lie was also hungry. I saw his noon
meal, soggy bread &nd still moic
soggy oatmeal, bad food for a mKh
so weak that he could not sit up in
bed. I remember I pinched a loaf of
bread from the Colonel's mess; I idso
remember the ravenous way he ate it,
almost like an animal. It was not
pleasant. to see.
Somehow he lived, and soon he was
up and around. Once when I was
passing by a long line of men unload
ing fricght cars I ran into h'm un
expectedly. Those men wore carry
ing burlap sacks of vegetables from
tho siding to a nearby warehouse, and
a forlorn f w were hanging on the
outskirts of tho lino to pick up any
that fell out by mistake. I saw one,
bolde:' than the rest, go up to one man
with a sack on li's back, and null a
carrot out of a small hole in the bag
II? stuffed the carrot into his blouse
and turned quickly away, but I recog
nized the boy from home That, too
was not a pleasant thing to see.
It was nearly a year before we met
again, and ho had returned to his old
job. Two years service with a fight
ing division had cured him forever of
this so-called "wanderlust," which is
commonly supposed by writers n the
dn'ly papers to afflict all exervico
men. He was glad to get back, said
so and meant t.
Ho found things in tho off'co some
wluu changed, for to fill his piece the
bo. s had taken on a Miss Smith. Yes,
these modem young women were tak
ing up law now; but his employer as
Btued him tho old job was open and
'that there was work enough for all.
So there was, too, for about a year
and a half,; during wh'ch time ho was
busy, got two small raises, tind had
about decided to have his mother give
up teaching the no:.t car and move
out into the country with him. Things
wci certainly looking up!
Then in the spring of 1921 the boss
IKid him in nnd started to tell him
how unfortunate it was. Oh, no his
work was perfectly satisfactory; but
business was all going to p'cecs,
clients fewer and fewer, bills not be
ing paid, and times ahead looking very
bad. The boy from homo was n. real
expense, whereas Miss Smith was
still working for fifteen dollars n
week. Tho old man handed out a
check for a month's pay in advance,
remarked how bad! jr ho felt, and told
tho'boy that ho would liayo no diffi
culty at all getting- placed with some
largo firm.
That's what tho boy thought until
hoy were all cutting downjwop,
ovorywherc ho got the samo" nnsyor;
they would tako h:& name but could
exactly four wcolcs of waiting in tnte
rooms made him feel, dlfferenlly.'
T
promico nothfng. He became anxious,
then disturbed then plainly worried.
One morning his mother found h m
taking off tho silver Irttfon hv had
. !v.ay wo'-, so nrur". in tho lapel
of liin coat, .'t," :-I: i' ., he v.
doing it.
"Oh, they don';, care anything nbftut
tho war, thoftj lihrds," he aaawercd.
Midsummer' and still n0 '. jtjlv al
though he had bo to ovrry-t-w tir.v,
every bank, rul every btuir.ers lion-'
in tho small city; lad advertised in
th- papers, had answered dcRens of
advertisement and had ha 'irod th"1
offices of his friends. So he decided
to go to work at something tho next
d y, and ho thanked hl&vcn he nail
built roads nnd reservoirs, b.idjjc?
and banncka in tho Army. He didnt
mind swinging a pick, all he wanted
v. .. work.
Ho thought lie would land some
lting the very nc::t day; but he didn"
He found to his surprise that thoro
wrre otlier men also in search ot
work; some of them men he had
fought with on tho banks of the Veslo
and in the woody slopes below Monl
faucon. They were dressed like himself in
flannel shirts and hobnails, like him
.-.... II
At last ho discovered that the local
iv.ilwny company w.s short of freight
handlers, so ho got hi long desired
job. Got it, and held it, tco, all
tli ough those blistering hot days hht
.summer; stuck to it despite the aching
muscles just as ho had stuck those
hot days on tho -Mnrr.e exactly t'nve
years beforo.
Then in October came another
shod:, for orders come from tho head
office to reduce, and in one day two
hundred men wore dropped. Ho camo
homo that night with a yueer look on
his face; but lie was at seven tho next
day hunting for another job.
Factories, stores, anywhere th re
was a chance for work he went, ar.d
everywhere he wns told the same
thing nothing doing. In one place
ho was received by a large, fa man,
with a diamond in his necktie.
"Naw, wo don't want none o' you
soldier bums around here."
Tha boy from homo almost hit 'he
fat man who said that I'm gkd he
didn't, because he swings a mean left
when ho wants to
So October passed on to November,
with rumors of a railway strike and
calls for telegraphers He had served
as a telephone coporal at tho front,
and although ho hadn't touched a key
board for exactly three years, he blew
in and took the test. He stood first
out of a hundred and fifty-three men,
and tho company gave him a job at
once at forty dollars a week Once
more he whistled as he went home
front work, once more lie began to
feel things wore on the upgrade
You remebor the strike never came
off? Yes, hoy were sorry, they
would ceAninfy keep his name; but
at present they had their own men to
look after. He slogged off into the
dusk that night will a heavy heart
and no job.
That was just before Christmas,
since then he has hardly dont a stroke
of work Why? Because he can't
get it to do; you sec he lives in a
small city where there aren't many
jobs to be hnd. He spends part of
each day going the rounds, tho rest
of the time he reads the papers, reads
the papers and thinks And somo of
his thoughts well, they are just a
little unpleasant.
The other day, for instance, he read
that Mr. Mellon ,thc Secretary of the
Treasury, was opposed to compensa
tion, regarding it as money wasted.
On another sheet of the same paper
ho happened to see a small item me-i
t toning that Mr. Mcllon's bank in
Pittsburg had just declared a dividend
of twenty five percent!
lie read that the country can't af
ford adjusted compensation at thi.
time when business is so bad. That
sounded reasonable enough to him
until he read in the identical paper
that a bankrupt Eastern railroad (the
New Haven) was to rccieve a loan of
three million dollars from the Govern
ment. And on another page he notic
ed that the Shipping Board was get
ting eight million dollars to recondi
tion the Leviathan. Eleven million
in ono day; but to give a tenth of
that to tho ex-service men will bank
rupt the country! Do you wonder
he is very thoughful these days as he
goes patiently from factory to factory
asking for work?
The other day ho road that tho bank
ers of the nation wcro united against
tho Adjusted Compensation Bill, and
that they had sent thousands of let
ters to Washington protesting against
it. One prominent banker in Wall
Strcet was quoted as saying that tho
bankers wanted everything possible
done for tho disabled man; but they
could not see whv tho able-bodied man
.1 !..... , . 1. ' rV -
made the boy from homo laugh; you
sec, ho has some disabled buddies, und
he happens to recollect how thoy st'tg
inded tv'o years after tho Armistice
fJoAcret afow dollars -from tho Govorn-
AfA.. ..: , ... . .,
manc.'SCJriealso Tcmemuers tnai incs.
1 samebankctHjwho nre now
"r T . . . ., !
SO K9l.r.if
::::::::t:s:t:!!::t!:::u:::::t::::::::!::::::::::::!fr:::::::::3::::::::t:::::::::::::::"::::::
Our Long Distant
!! Service Is Your Servant 11
i.
"
Our Long D,ance lines connect everywiiciv nnd avail you of a ::
:: hcrv ce that is jiractically uni'mi'.cd. At any hour, at any place you
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You will f r.d tha.t our Long' Distance son ice will head the li3t
of bus ness gett rs it will multiply your selling time min'mize tho
selling expense nnd will carry your voice from city to city without
delay. '
The sociul and family uses of our service arc manifold, it places
every member of tho family within the instant call of tho absent mem
ber and makes possible tho accomplishment of tiiose multitude of
duties in a quick and satisfactory manner.
Long Distance service is always your ready servant, willing and
anxious to assist in the quickest and best accomplishment of business
transact'ons and social and family affairs.
The exchange manager will be glad to furnish you additional in
formation relative to tho Long Distance Service and Rates.
Liiirii! Telephone S Telegraph Co. I
'tataaiflsatptaaaaa(aarraa,,asa,B9,t(.Avat,,a,at,,a,aMtwsa,etaa ,a t aaaaaa-iaaaJ J7J
, n n lf jF
I COAL I
Es
I We Sell f
U Miggerlieacl Maitland u
1 And n
Routt County Lump
swaBsaMm,teBMawaMraMawaMaBaaMaMaaBBBM
We sell for
why we sell
k4
FARMERS
ous about 'he disabled man, were not
so ready to write letters to Washing
ton as they aro now. In fact' ho
doesn't remember a single letter from
Wnll Street two years ago, asking
thct the disabled man ba taken care
of; ho does, however, recall distinctly
that Tho American Legion went to
Washington and got action for the
wounded. These arc a few of the
things he is turning over in his mind.
Just a few.
Meanwhile his mother is still teach
ing. Thoy have moved to a smaller
and cheaper flat in the city, and he
is practising all the mean little econo
mies that go with being poor; cutting
down on tobacco, walking when he
ought to take a strccit car, sliding
down back streets to avoid meeting
the men he used to know and work
with, going without lunches whenever
ho can. He is willing, eager, even to
work, but still he cannot get a job of
any sort. So he thinks and thinks,
and the other day something happened
that made him think harder than ever.
A factory advertised for two men
to wash windows and act as porters.
He was down vat the factory at six
fifteen tho next morning to find a
line several blocks long, mostly com
posed of cx-sorvicc men. No use to
vait, so he blew off up town, passing
on his way several men ho had former
ly known. They did not recognize
him in his. 0. D. shirt; but as he pass
ed ho heard one man say:
"Hang it, Tom, if they do get tho
bonus, they'll only spend it."
Ho looked around. The speaker
was tho son of a millionaire automo-
bilo manufacturer, himself the husband
of a rich girl.
"If they do get it, they'll only spend
it.".
Well, if he did spend it, that would
bo about tho only thing he had spent
for the past seven months; ho could
testify to that. His thoughts were a
little more bitter than usual that
night, for ho was obliged at last to
drop hi3 government insurance. It
wns about all hd had saved out of the
wreck, and it hurt to sco it go.
. Perhaps this is not a real case ?
Perhaps it is all my imagination?
No, thja is all true, it is not my imagi
nation. Indeed, it is a very real
case to me, for I happen to know this
boy quite well. You see ho is my only
brother. Tho American Legion Week
ly. Variation In Icebergs.
Icebergs
in the Arctic regions are
neither so Inrgo nor so numerous as
those seen in the Antnrctlc seas, but
thoy aro usually loftier and mora
beautiful, with spires and domes.
i. ui-
i:
t:
t:
u
cash that's
cheaper.
awd
ELEVATOR
In The District Court of
Webster County, Nebraska.
In The Matter of the Application of
Myrtle A. Putnam, Administratrix of
tho Estate of Newell C. Putnam, De
ceased, for Leave to Sell Ileal Estate.
Notice is heroby given that, in 'pur
suanco of an order of Hon. Lewis II,'
Biackledge, Judge of tho District
Court of Webster County, Nebraska,
made on tho COth day of March, 1922,
for thu sule of the real estatp herein
after described, thero will bo sold at
public vendue to tho highest bidder
for cash, at the so'mh door of the court
houso in the City of Red Cloud, in said
County on the 2ltb day of April, 1922,
at the hour of two V. M., the following
described real estate:
Tho Northwest Quarter of Section
20, Town 3, Range 10 in Webster Coun
ty, Nebraska. Said sulo will remain
open ono hour.
Dated this 22nd day of March, 1022.
Myrtle A. Putnam
Administratrix of tho estate
of Newell C. Putnam, Deceased.
Notice of Probate
In the County Court of Webster Coutw '
ty, Nebraska
State of Nebraska, )
Webster County, fBS
To all porsons interested in the es
stafo of Noah E. Cling, Deceased;
Take Notice, that a petition has been
filed praying that tho Instrument tiled
in this court on the 15th day of April,
A. D. 1922, purporting to be the last
will and testament of said deceased,
may be proved and allowed and record,
ed as tho last will and testament of
Noah E. Cling, deeotihudj that said in
strument bo admitted to probate, and
tho administration of said estate, bo
granted to Frank 0. Cling and William
0. Cling, as Executors.
It is hereby ordered by the court,
that all persons Interested in said es
tate nppear at the County Court to bo
held in and for said county on the 5th S
day of May, 1922, at ten o'clock, A. M.,
to show cause, if any thero bo, why
tho prayer of the petitioner should not
be granted, and that notico of tho
pendency of suid petition and the hear
ing.thereof, bo given to all porsons in.
forested In sold matter bv nubllshinu n
copy of this order In tho Red Cloud
Chief, n legal weekly nuwspapor print,
ed in said couuty, for thrco cousDcutlvo
weeks prior to said day of hearing.
Witness my hand and tho seal of
Bald court this 15th day of April, A. D
1022.
(Seal.) A. D. RANNEY,
. . County Judge.
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