Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The courier. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1894-1903 | View Entire Issue (June 15, 1901)
1HE COURIER. 11 V I First Pub., May, 25--IJ Notice to Non-resident Defendant. In the District Court of Lancaster county Nebraska. KdwardC. Perkins 1 Kxecutors of the will of Albert E. Touzalin, deceased. Plaintiffs vs Horace A. Sibley. I Defendant. I To Horace A. Sibley, non-resident defendant. You are hereby notified that on the 21 th day of May. 1901, Edward C. Perkins and Charles S. Maurice, executor, of the Will of Albert E. Touzalin. deceased, plaintiffs herein, tiled their petition in the above entitled cause in the Dis trict Court of Lancaster county. Nebraska, against jou as defendant. The object and prayer of which is to quiet the title of the plaintiffs in the W. H of the N. 1Z. H of section I, township 9. north, range 6 east or the P. M. in Lancaster county, Nebraska, that you and all persons claiming by, through or under you be forever barred from claiming any right, title or Interest in or to saIdTretalIs6i'uavere to the plaintiff's and be foreier enjoined from inter rupting their use and enjoyment thereof. You are required to answer said petition on or before the Urst day of July, 1901. Dated at Lincoln, Nebraska, the 21th day of May, 1901. Edward C. Perkins. Charles S.Maurice, Executors of the will of Albert E. Touzalin. deceased. Plaintiffs. Br Charles E. Clapp, Their Attorney. Doc 29. No. SO. First Pub. June 11. Notice to Creditors. E 1555. State of Nebraska, ss. County court, Lancas ter county, in re estate of Arthur E. Goddard, deceased. Creditors of said estate will take notice that the time limited for presentation of claims against said estate is October 1. 1901, and for payment of debts is July I. 1902; that I will sit at the county court room in said county on October 1, 1901, and on January 2. 1902. to receive, examine, adjust and allow all claims duly filed. Publish weekly four times in The Courier. Dated May 31, 1901. seal Frank R. Waters. County Judge. By Walter A. Leese, Clerk First Pub. June 8.-3 In re estate of Harriett S. Burnett, deceased, in county court, of Lancaster county, Nebraska, K. 1537. The State of Nebraska, to all person? In terested in said estate, take notice, that an instrument purporting to be the last will and testament of Harriett S. Burnett deceased, is on tile in said court, and also a petition praying for probate of said will and for appointment of Lewis C. Burnett and Thomas McCulloch as ex ecutors thereof; said petition will be heard and proof taken on said instrument by said court, on Juue 26th, 1901, at 10 o'clock, A. M., and un less you appear and contest, said court may . probate and record said will and grant admin xf istratlon of said estate as praved for. Dated June "th, 1901. seal Frank R. Waters. County Judge. By Walter A. Leese, Clerk County Court First Pub. June 84. Notice to Creditors. E 1553. State of Nebraska, ss. county court, Lancas ter county, in re estate of orissia u. ureene, deceased. Creditors of said estate will take notice that the time limited for presentation of claims against said estate is October 1, 1901, and for payment or debts is July I, IWK: that l will sit at the county court room in eaid county, on October 1,1901, and on January 2, 1902, to re ceive, examine, adjust and allow all claims duly filed. Publish weekly four times in The courier. Dated June 7, ivoi. (seal.) Frank R. Waters. County Judge. First Pub. June 8.-4. Notice to Creditors. E J554. State of NeDrasKa, ss. county court. Lancas ter county, in re estate of Polly Wilson, de ceased. Creditors of said estate will take notice that the time limited for presentation of claims ,f-AgaInst said estate is Oct. 1, 1901. and for the payment of debts Is July 1, 1902; that I will sit at the county court room In said count, on Oct. 1, 1901, and on Jan. 2. 1902. to receive, ex amine, adjust and allow all claims dulv riled. Publish weeklv four times in The Courier. Dated June 7, 1901. (seal.) Frank R. Waters, County Judge. By Walter A, Leesc Clerk County Court. First Pub. May 251. Notice of Sale of Real Estate. Notice Is herebv given that we. the under signed, will at 10 o'clock A. M. on the 2oth day of June, 1901, at the cast front door of the Lan caster county courthouse, Lincoln. Nebraska, sell as an entiretv at public auction, to the highest bidder, for cash, the following described real property of the estate of Albert E. Touza lin, deceased, situate in the county of Lancas ter, state of Nebraska, to-w it, the n. V, of lot H, and lots 15. 16, 17 and 18 in blocks. Lots 16. 17 and 18 in block 6. Lot 7 In block 8, all in Hillsdale, an addition to the city of Lincoln, as suneyed. platted and recorded. Also lots 1.2. 3. 1. 5, 6, St, 10, 13. 1 1. 15 and 16 In block 1. Lots 10, II and 12 In block 3; all of block 5. being lots from 1 to 18, Inclusive. All of block 7, being lots from 1 to 16, Inclusive. All of block 9. being lots from 1 to 12. Inclusive, in Second Hillsdale, an addition to the city of Lincoln, as sun eyed platted and recorded. C3 Kiw"ARi C. Perkins and CiiARi.ts S. Maurice. Executors of the will of Albert E. Touzalin, deceased. OMAHA LETTER. Omaha, Nebr., June .j, 1001. Dear Eleanor: In the spring we sniffle With a horrid stuffy cold ; In the spring the fire's comfort Is a story that is told. In the spring the moth ball Appears ridiculously soon, For in May we shake our flannels, Tho' 't were better done in June, the ecstatic contemplation of her dainty claes-day gown. "Oh!" she replied aa she came back with a thud from her dreamB to my prosaic meaning, "I don't know; but I would like to make a bon fire of. all the school books in the world drop all the pajjrer pads and pencils into the Missouri river and then He on my back somewhere and stare at the VtlllA alrv tnr a ttinllaanr? vaim in nnma" "The thoughts of youth are long, long thoughts," and I suppose hundreds of youog eyes all over our land lift from Isn't it just the fate of a genius to be the pages of learning with glad relief a little behind his generation, a little in and think they would be satisfied to advance of it, or a little something which stare at the blue sk for a thousand prevents, a full recognition of his merit? years to come. But alaa! dear hearts! A week or two ago how touchingly skies are not always blue and eyes grow appropriate would have been the gem I weary watching. J wonder if there is a have flashed above. Now, forsooth, niche waiting for everyone of these Nature deserts me, and the whole world eager beginners. Sometimes it seems has turned out and plumes about in the as if there were so many more people sun's golden bath, and everybody has for- than places in the world, gotten what an anachronism spring is, It probably is not good literary style that indeed there is no such thing, save to digress too suddenly but I am only in the minds of men. However, remem. writing a letter, and fortunately you are bering your joy in poesy, I determined not over-critical, and that remark of you should not be denied, so 1 dedicate mine refers strictly to the climbers and and Bend you my inspiration, in spite of ' most emphatically not 'to the class of the mockery of Earth and Sun. people commonly spoken of aa hired Eleanor, just so sure as your pen be- girls. This species seems in danger of comes too ambitious and shoves your extinction. Do you have such a time bark far on the sea of metaphysical or in Lincoln as people have in Omaha in physiological research you'll lose me. procuring "help?" Talk about the I shall stay at the end of my ribbons Cuban, Filipino or imperial question, bobbing up and down and courtesying mere bagatelle! The servant girl quea like an oriental dancing girl but tied tions bids fair to be the national prob- to the shore, quite unable to follow you, as your diminishing sail takes you out side of my mental boundary. You are disposed to give the rose too much credit for fulfilling itb manifest destiny. Who would not choose to be a rose even from the time the heart of the close-shut bud quickens and the close-curled leaves slowly unfold until it is a thing of perfect beauty. "What does the rose more than the lily, that "toils not, neither does it spin?" I really dislike to be put in contrast lem of the near future. A much-traveled society dame told "mama" that republics are not alone menaced; but the Old World begins to feel the inconvenience of that "I am as good as you" feeling. A feeling for which perhaps America is largely re sponsible. Those classic tales wherein tanners and canal drivers climb easily into the ermine and purple have gradu ally leavened the whole lump of humble but aspiring humanity. A friend of mine has recently bad a discouraging with anything that has such an obvious experience in this line, "snap" as the much-idealized rose. She tried vainly for some time to pro- Don't you imagine we might accom- cure a cook, when one morning the plish a fairly successful career if the coachman next door sent her word that powers had ordained that we need only an uncle of a friend of his knew of a grow and be beautiful? If no further niece of a cousin of his, who for a gen duty were required of us than to pas- erous consideration would come from sively accept admiration as opr rightful near Wahoo and preside over Mrs. Jones' heritage, living a poetic life, dying a domestic realm, if it suited her. Her poetic death, knowing our perfumed re- blistered finger tips and almost ruined mains will be treasured at beauty's complexion forbade parleying. The do- shrine? No one even suspects a rose of motives nor expects it. Aren't you a trifle conscience-stricken to think you contrasted faulty humanity with this perfect work of Nature? Ever since I can remember I have heard, "Penelope, if you had done so and so " or "if you hadn't done this or that, you might have amounted to something." There mestic in question was supposed to ar rive on a certain Thursday of an uncer tain week. Thursday dragged its weary length to eventide and no cook ap peared. The family retired hungry and disappointed. Somewhere in the wee small hours of the night they were startled by a sharp ring, which might have been the telephone or the electric door bell. A second ringing proved it the door bell. Mr. Jones hastily donned his bath robe and taking a feeble taper descended to the vestibule and de manded what was wanted. An unknown voice replied formally, "Miss Fitzgerald has come." Mr. Jones retreated in con- is small consolation in a rose to one who creeps away to chew the bitter cud of reflection on bis own record as a con spicuous and brilliant failure. The sweet girl graduates are much in evidence these June days. The shop windows are snowy drifts of mull and organdie. Dainty fans and floating rib- fusion and called his wife, bone are temptingly displayed to ravish Mrs. Jones grasped the personality of girlish eyes, as visions of commencement the visitor in a flash, "Goodness alive; night jostle Greek and Latin exams it's that girl." aside. It is so very near that eventful And so it was, for when the boits were time which shall put an end to colorless drawn and the door opened a sprightly school days and open the door into that damsel of some forty odd frosty winters magical existence which is vaguely called glided in wearing a much-beiiowered "life." hat and showing a magnificent set of To the winds with that time-honored store teeth. "I am Miss Fitzgerald," fallacy that one's school days are his she vouchsafed with queenly dignity. happiest. It would be a poor creature indeed who would hark back from the green lap of the fields the green arms of the trees to the desk, the ruler and duty-clad teacher of his youth. "What are you going to do when you are through school, Alice?" I asked a Oh! Eleanor, the time Mrs. Jones had with that proud but shop-worn de scendant of the haughty Fitzgeralds! She wept copiously on all occasions. The divide right of kings wasn't in it with her idea of her rights as a Fitz gerald. Heaven only knows where she young friend of mine who is to gradu- breathed that air of queenly prerogative ate from the high school this month. I she claimed. She could scarcely have knew it was a stupid, pedantic question, imbibed it on the outskirts of Wahoo. when she lifted puzzled gray eyes from Mrs. Jones declares ehe was a reincar- H " B- NICE DRESS SHOES Patent Kiel, Turned Solea, Glove Xlttinfc S WN WNpsTtH) 123 0 5TMEET. First Iub. JuneS. 190I-.V SHEKIFP SALK Notice Is hereby given. That by virtue of an execution Issued by the clerk of the district court of the Third judicial district of Nebras ka, within ami for Lancaster county, in an ac tion wherein Isaac Cahm is plaintiff, and Frank E. Komandorf defendant. I will, at 2 o'clock P. M., ontheDth day of July. A. D. II) t. at the east door of the court house, in the city of Lincoln, Lancaster county, Nebraska, offer for sale at public auction the following described lands and tenements to-wlt Ileginnlngon the west line of section eight een (IH). In township ten 1 10 , range seven (1 u east of the 6th P M. at a point nlnp hundred and forty-eight and tlte-tenths (1MMS-IU feet south of tho northwest corner of said section: thence east at right angles to the west line of said section fourteen hundred and seven (IWT) feet to a point, thence south two hundred and eighty-live (3C i feet to the north line of the county road, thence south westerly along the north line of said county road elghty-ttve (KiJ feet, thence west thirteen hundred anil forty live ( 1315) feet to the west line of said section: thence north along the west line of said section three hundred and thirty (330) feet to the place of beginning. Containing ten acres more or less, exclusUe of right of way of the Fremont. Klk horn and Missouri Valley Hallway Company across said tract; and also on the undivided one half interest In two houses situated on the a bote described tract, also including all the ma chinery In the mill building on said aboe de scribed tract. tJlven under my hand this fth day of June, A D. l'JOt. Z. S, UllANSO.N. Sheriff. nation of Cleopatra or Boadicea. Her reign was short, but left inefface able marks. Mrs. Jones foolishly ob jected when she found her stiver mani cure set on Mies Fitzgerald's toilet table and the proud descendant burst into angry tears, clicked her magnificent set of teeth and said "she'd never ought to have went to work in nobody's kitchen. Her folks didn't want her to anyway. They'd just got a new melodeon when she'd left and she'd had to give up her music lessons to come anyways, and she'd go right back!" Mrs. Jones agreed with her as to the advisability, and now any day you may read in the World Herald, "Cook wanted at 25 Ave. No reference required' If writing a letter means filling space, as an after-dinner speech is supposed to fill time without saying anything, then even Chauncey Depew at his best or worst could noi outrival this effort. Considered on those lines, it is surely a masterpiece, Yours, Pexelope. LINCOLN LETTER. Lincoln, Xebr., June 10, 1001. Dear Penelope: You are very much missed, as coun try newspapers say to a prominent citi zen who moves out of the town. Please do not skip your letters to me, whatever happens. Neglect your relatives, your meals, your church and all your relig ious duties, upon the fulfilment of which depends your eternal welfare, even neg- , ti h.