$25,000 SoughtIbrood,”From ThreeStepchildreniMINNEAPOLIS (AP)—An elderly sheetmetal worker wants$25,000 from three stepchildren he claims are breaking up his home by turning against the man who! supported them ‘‘with aching .Richardhands and bleeding feet.”a meal ticket for her Finneman complained.Finneman’s attorneys identified the stepchildren as three Minneapolis women. Named as defend-, ants with them are their husbands.Youthful MalapropDES MOINES, Iowa (AP)—Mrs.Walker of Des Moineswas stunned when her 7-year-old„ ... . . .. daughter came home from schoolFaced with a suit for divorce anH ■ ngtpH.• * * * m „ « p. • i ana b si *by his wife, Theodore Finneman,72, asked the HennepinDistrict Court to: , _. . , .. ...„ 1 That was the day Des MoinesPreserve the plaintiff from the; r(,sjdent, vn,pd on a propo,a, t0 things he dreads and hates—a11_ Are vou going to vote for theCoun‘y French fries?I Iduel in the form of debate, the clash of argument, a jar of words are worse than the mortal brunt of rival sword.grant a power company a 25-year franchise.Bt IFinneman’s second wife, fiO, is seeking divorce on grounds of cruel and inhuman treatment Finneman says he was a widower with 11 children in 1940 when he married the woman, a widow with seven children.WHY TAKTo shelter all under one roof, Finneman wrote in his suit against the three stepchildren, be worked “in chill of winter and heat of summer . . . with torch in hand (to) sear scrap iron.With aching hands and bleeding feet he gleefully bore the burden so that the brood could live and breathe.”GUARANTEED IN'INTEREST PAID SEBut today the foster children no longer depend upon the plaintiff—persistently tell the plaintiff their mother only married to haveSecurity Loan7th and Front Streets