Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 278, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 24 November 1914 — Widow of Judge Marshall Files Suit in Partition. [ARTICLE]

Widow of Judge Marshall Files Suit in Partition.

Judge Albert O. Marshall, who recently died in Joliet, 111., left no will. He was about seventy- years of age and a brother of Ralph W. and George E. Marshall, formerly of this city. He had never been married until a short time before his death and his widow last Saturday began suit-in partition of his estate, as is customary in such cases. The Joliet Sunday Herald says: She was appointed receiver for the estate pending the settlement of the partition, and furnished $3,000 bond. Her attorneys, Oorlett & Clare, set forth in the bill that no one is in charge of the estate and the tenants are subject to no one authorized to administer it. Mrs. Marshall claims an undivided half interest in the whole estate and a life interest, her dower, in the other half. This claim being based on legal precedent. She recites that the other heirs are entitled to the following .proportions in the estate: One-eighth to each of the brothers and sister of the deceased, Griffin and George E. Marshall and Sarah Gillet. One forty-eighth to each of the children of Ralph Waldo Marshall, deceased, who was a brother of Judge Marshall; Frances B. Wigmore, Albert L. Marshall, Florence Brenner, Kathryn Goodloe, Caroline Brown and Edith Marshall. Property is fisted as follows: Store buildifig and lot on Ottawa street, next to the News office. South 60 acres se, % section 1, township 35. Eighty acres, w, 'A n’e, %, section 12. North 60 acres of e ’/« of ew %, section 12. North 30 acres of w ’/« of w’A,'se %, section 12.