The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, October 21, 1886, Image 4

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    F. 3L AND E. 31. KIM3IELL ,
Editors and Publishers.
REPUBLICAN TICKET.
STATE.
For Governor ,
JOHN 31. TIIAYEK , of Hull county.
For Lteiitenant-Governor ,
11. II. SIIEUD , of Sauiidcrs county.
For Secretary of State ,
G. L. LAWS , of lied Willow county.
For Attorney General ,
WILLIAM LEESE , of Seward county.
For State Treasurer ,
C. fl. WILLAKD , of Thayer county.
For State Auditor ,
H. A. BABCOUK , of Valley county.
For Commissioner of Public Lands ,
SAMUEL SCOTT , of Buffalo county.
For Superintendent of Public Instruction ,
GEO. B. LANE , of Lancaster county. -
CONGRESSIONAL.
For Congress , Second District ,
HON. JAMES LAIRD , of Hastings.
SENATORIAL.
For Senator , 30th District ,
J. P. LINDSAY , of Furnas County.
COUNTY.
For Representative , 55th District ,
S. L. GREEN , of McCook.
For County Attorney ,
K. M. SNAVELY , of Tndianola.
For Commissioner , 2d District ,
STEPHEN BOLLES , of Box Elder.
ANNOUNCEMENT.
In accordance with the wishes of my friends
aa well as of the leading business men of Mc-
Cook , and also many of the delegates who op
posed me in the Republican Convention , and
who have since reconsidered the matter , I do
bernby announce myself us an Independent
candidate for the office of Commissioner , in
and for the Second Commissioner District in
Rod Willow county. J. P. SQUIRE.
NEXT Tuesday one week , is election
day.
THE people's convention did not pan
out at all. It adjourned sine die.
As usual , the railroads will bo out
politics , this year , until about election
day.
THE Chicago strike is ended. The
packers return to work under the 10
hour system.
OF course Van Wyok will be the
"people's preference for U. S. Senator. "
His will be about the only votes cast.
do in ago is in" is a very gen
eral complaint in the fall campaign ,
according to the newspapers through
out the state.
OVER 500,000 people have died of
cholera in . Corea during the present
season. The average death rate is yet
1,000 per day.
THE President has got a new parlor
grand piano , and Mugwumps are breath
lessly waiting to see whether he will
invite Carl Schurz to play.
"CousiN BEN FoL903i"gets the best
ioreign Consulship in the list. The
"cousin" ' business pays with this 'Jeffer-
sonian simplicity1'administration. .
POLITICS in the 5Gth representative
district are boiling merrily eneugh to
satisfy the most enthusiastic. The fight
over the assemblyman is becoming
most interestingly warm , while boodle
and trade and dicker are not unknown
in the canvass. I
"OUR VAN" is kept busy these days
working his "submission to the dear
people" , dodge. The probabilities are
that the people have taken Van's meas
ure already , and that the matter of ap
pealing to the popular vote is entirely
unnecessary.
IN 1883 the Courier considered and
styled S. L. Green a ' 'drug store sa-
loonist. " In 1SS6 he tries to make it
appear that Mr. Green is a prohibi
tionist. The fact is that S. L. Green
is about as much of a prohibitionist ,
practically and theoretically , as Beelze
bub is saintly. Just about , and a
river of alleged prohibitory water can't
make his whiskv record clean.
ON account of the great rush of busi
ness , and the fact that the new officers
have not arrived to take charge , lleginter
Laws , our next Secretary of State , has
not been able to make any visits through
out the state , during the campaign so
far , as he confidently expected to do. It
is a matter of regret to Mr. Laws that
this unfortunate state of affairs has been
beyond his power to change or rectify.
Nevertheless , the boys will roll up a
handsome majority for the Valley's can
didate , just the same.
AMONG the evils ? of the age are the !
over recurring difficulties between la
bor and capital , the strikes and lock- !
out ? , with their train of misery , want'
and woe , riots and bloodshed , destruc- .
tion of property , business and indus
trial stagnation , fear , uncertainty and
coyness on the p.'irfc of capital , and the
consequent withdrawal of wealth from
the channels of all the activities of this
busy world. That there is a.continual
friction and strain in the relations
between labor and capital , we need
scarcely state , the difficulty in Chicago ,
as well as scores of other facts are
plain evidences of that unhappy condi
tion of things. That arbitration , ( that
sovereign panacea for such a state of
affairs. ) has for the most part failed to
arbitrate is equally undeniable. That
the troubles continue indicates the in
sufficiency of the remedies or the
incurability of the malady. But why
this friction , this strain ? Is capital ,
( which is conservative ever , ) too grasp
ing and relentless in its acquisition of
still greater worldly possessions , or is
labor too unreasonable" and imperious
in its demands ? Or is the blame a
partnership affair ? That the prosper
ity and happiness of the people is ham-
j pered and retarded , that property and
life are in hazard , that uncertainty and
fear reigns perforce thereof in no small
degree none den } ' . That a sure and
speedy settlement of the labor ques
tion is desirable , if not possible , will be
readily acknowledged. There are at
least two points to settle. First , the
location of the responsibility for the
malady. Second , the administration
of the remedy. The far-reaching im
portance of the case suggests the ne
cessity of sagacity , wisdom , judgment ,
cool-headcdness , firmness and impar
tiality in prescribing the specific. He
who can satisfactorily solve the prob
lem will be the benefactor of the age.
The want and unhappiness that pre
vails among the laboring classes , the
silent spindles and unlighted furnaces
demand its settlement and adjustment.
Lubor is honorable in this "land of the
free and home of the brave , " and
the laborer is worthy of .his hire. While
on the other hand , capital , genius , en
terprise and ingenuity are just as es
sential. As the hand is to the brain ,
so is labor to capital , and the sooner
both recognize their mulual dependence
the better it will be for them.
J. P. LINDSAY , the nominee of the
30th Senatorial District , was a caller
at our sanctum , Tuesday. Mr. Lindsay
is formerly from the same county in
Iowa that ye editor is , and we remem
ber to have met him some three years
ago at Oxford , where he had but re
cently located. Soon after this he re
moved to Beaver City , where he has
since been engaged in the practice of
law. Mr. Lindsay is a young man of
pleasing address and of more than aver
age ability. He bears a good reputa
tion at his own home , which is the
best recommend a man can have. The
main point of interest to the people of
Gospcr county regarding his eligibility
is , is he a railroad tool ? That this
question is truthfully answered in the
negative , we can prove beyond a doubt ,
by stating what can be proven , that the
heaviest kind of railroad influence was
brought to bear on Mr. Lindsay to
force him to withdraw from the race ,
but feeling that he had the sympathy
of the farmers of his county , he declin
ed to acquiesce , and is to-day the reg
ular nominee of the party , and one in
the election of whom , we believe neith
er the people nor the railroads or other
corporations will receive the plightest
injury. In the support of J. P. Lind
say we imagine we descry a point upon
which the factional elements of the re
publican party throughout the district
will become a unit. To this end let all
good republicans work and roll up a
spanking majority for J. P. Lindsay
and the straight republican ticket.
Gosper County Citizen.
JAY GOULD has come and gone. Of
course he fell in love with Omaha. He
always ( foes , just as he is in the habit of
doing with every city where he wishes to
make temporary friends for his latest
road. Fie went into raptures over St.
Louis , threw himself into hysterics of
joy as he contemplated the future of
Kansas City , and smiled in ecstacy as he
discauted upon the marvelous prospects
of the saline industry at Lincoln. By
the time he arrived in Omaha he had
swept over the whole gamut of emotions
and had to begin again. Mr. Gould's
compliments mean nothing , and they are
taken for just what they are worth.
Omaha Bee ,
THE surrender of the Knights of La
bor in the strike against the Chicago
packing house was a well advised mean- ,
ure , all things considered. It would !
have been a bad-send-off for the order ,
if during the session of its national con
vention , a strike had been inaugurated
that ended in disaster to many thousands
of the members thereof. That the pack
ing house strike could not succeed was
apparent from the first. The prompt
preparations made for defending the
packing houses and yards and the new '
men employed from violence , and the
rapidity with which the Iresh men came
in to supply the places of the strikers ,
indicated that the strike was a mistake.
Slaughtering , cutting up and packing
hogs and cattle with the improved ma
chinery of the period , is not skilled labor
in the true sense of the term , and it
takes but a short time comparatively
to turn a green hand into a tolerably ex
pert workman. The great demand for
situations for unskilled labor at this
season of the year is apparent and the
best thing the strikers could do was to
stop the demonstrations as soon as pos
sible. The packing house men have
voluntarily improved the wages for ten
hours' work , meeting the strikers a part
of the distance , if not quite half way.
It is very likely that the move for eight
hours will not stop here and that the
controversy will reopen from time to
time as the conditions appear more fa
vorable. They certainly are not favor
able just now and the strikers were
butting against a stone wall. Journal.
THE Burlington & Missouri construc
tion train , when backing for dinner ,
Tuesday , ran upon a bull and was thrown
off a bridge thirty feet high , one mile
west of Dewcese station. The cars
were mostly loaded with ties and were
totally wrecked. There were fifty in
the wreck , of whom five were killed
and eleven wounded. The dead are :
K. II. Marvin , Deweese.
( Jeorge Burke , St. Louis.
Daniel Commr , Weston. Mo.
Dennis Hamilton , Michigan.
Kobert Collins , England.
The wounded are : Thomas Kelley ,
Ottawa , Can. , internally injured , will
die ; T. F. Gordon , Arcadia , 0. , flesh
wound ; William Cutter , Germany ,
broken thigh ; John Edwards , Kansas
City , leg broken ; Walter Ames , Aurora ,
leg and ankle broken ; Alex. Campbell ,
Dewcese , leg and wrist broken ; Chas.
Clark , thigh and leg broken ; Ed. Fraza ,
Harlan , Iowa , head cut ; John Fitzger
ald , slight bruise ; Owen Sharky , Kan
sas City , arm and foot crushed. Sev
eral others were wounded slightly. Re
ports just in , state that two others
were found under the wreck.
THE demagogue who recently said
that a workman is far better off in Rus
sia than in America , should note a re
cent cablegram , which says that hun
dreds of women in St. Petersburg
would be glad to accept work at 20 co
pecks a day. Twenty copecks is about
equal to 10 cents , and the purchasing
power of 10 cents in St. Petersburg is
not greater than that of 6 cents in Xew
York. We are not all that we should
be in America , but one strong indica
tion that we shall be so , some time or
other , is to be found in the fact that
we are conscious of our imperfection.
But , as compared with any other na
tion , we are in a condition to arise and
call ourselves blessed.
IT is said that all the powers are
threatening the Bulgarian assembly
that has been chosen to re-elect a
prince for their sovereign to succeed
Alexander , with their dire displeasure
if they happen to re-elect Alexander or
any other man who hasn't been agreed
upon beforehand by the signatory pow
ers. The Bulgarian might be permit
ted to ask the signatory powers what is
the bloody use of asking them to elect
anybody , if they are restricted in this
way. ] t is the roaringest sort of a farce
and the signatory powers ought to be
ashamed of it. Lincoln State Journal.
THE Louisville Courier Journal says :
"Of the babies born in the white house
not one appears to have gone there to
live in its maturity. The babies des
tined to live in the white house in their
later years are born in cabins , cottages
or houses of modest dimensions. " But
why discuss babies , may the Greek ed
itor ask ?
THE contest in the 5Gth representa
tive district promises to be the closest
and most hotly fought one that hat-
ever taken place in the district. Both
candidates are canvassing their possi
bilities thoroughly.
Beggs' Cherry Cough Syrup
Will relieve that C9iigh almost instantly
and make expectoration easy. Acts .simm
taneously on the bowels , kidneys and Hvei
thereby relieving the lungs of that sorenus
and pain and also stopping that tickliiiL
sensation in the throat by removing th
cause. .One trial of it will convince any out
that it has no equal on earth for coughs am
colds. M. A. Spalding has secured the sale
of it and will guarantee every bottle to give
satisfaction ,
THE BAKERS OF PARIS ,
A < Jutefc r.tfo Severity of the Vfot\-
Worn Oat at the Asa of 50.
[ P.irJs Cor. Chicago Journal. ]
I Parisian bakers excel all others in the
quality of their bread and yet its pro
cess of making seems todate almost
from the timo when Abraham com
manded Sarah , to knead fine meal , an I
make cakes to give a morsel of bread to
his three angel visitors. The bakers
are the most inoffensive of citizens ;
like the butchers , they will never be
foun J to figure in political riots or
revolutions. The baker's life passes
away in silence ; ho works by night and
sleeps by day. He is generally married ,
and his numerous family shows how he
ignores Malthus. Ho leaves that philos
opher to recruit his adepts among the
wealthy.
Being only passing rich , on 5 francs a
day , he can not enjoy the liberality of
the new college tariif , which allows the
parent having live sons boarders
in the establishment , the fifth to pay
nothing. That resembles the assistance
tendered in early days by the pawn-
brokiuuj institutions which lent only to
the rich. The baker is a living anatomy
pale , thin , prematurely old. a martyr
to rheumatism , and ever suffering from
a graveyard cough. He works in a cel
lar , from 7 in the evening tilli in the
morning , almost naked aud between i\ \
current of air liowing from the street
railings to the mouth of the fiery fur
nace. The work is so severe that no lad
is taken as an apprentice till between 1
or IS ; his life is worn out at 50 years.
and I never heard of any insurau e
o.Iico accepting bakers' lives for any
risk.
isten to the sigh , and note the head
drop as he puddles at the dough. Each
thud is a premature beat in his funenl
march to the grave. A o wonder that in
early Home , slaves , aye , and in chains
too. were condemned "to the kncadin ?
trough and Hour-mill as penal punish
meat. In tho fourth cent ry in I'rance ,
so difficult was it to obtain men to make
bread , that the master bakers estab
lished publiu houses near their work
shops to entice men inside , and when
the visitors wore muddled they were
dropped through a trap-door and m ido
captive for life. It was a soldier who
escaped divulged this Tour de Nesle.
This may explain why the Romans in
sisted that tho sons of bakers should be-
coino bakers.
TIio Meteoric Shnircr of 1832.
Tor. TJ'T hev Cft 1 G "v-c-ai. !
It was a rain of fire , not stars. The
stars , or sparks , not only occurred at
the end ot tho lines of iire Imagine a
rain of molten iron striking tho earth ,
each drop bursting into sparks. Moth-
ing else will compare. I could not now
describe it , if experience with foun
dries and smith-shops had not afforded
the comparison The iire fell in streams
like the heaviest lire rain I ever wit
nessed and swayoJ to and fro just as
the water is by the motion of the clouds
or wind The only stars I saw were
just such as one sees when molten iron
is running into or from the ladle , or
when iron with a welding heat is with
drawn from the forge , or such as seen
when the liquid metal drops upon earth ,
or such as seen in the wake of an ex
ploded rocket.
The strangest feature to mo was no
sparks or stars appeared except at the
en 1 of tho line of lire rain , which
stopped about live feet from the earth.
as near as I can judge. Tho pia : za had
three steps from the ground. I could
not have been moro than thrco feet
high , and the line of fire rain burst into
sparks on a level with my eyes. Non--
that I saw struck the earth , but a tur
sparkling on this lino disappeared , to be
succeeded by others in juick succession
I recollect distinctly o'usarving the scene
around the yard , and tho road led di
rectly from the gate , and wondering
why none of tho tire or sparks reacho.l
the earth. It was not as light as day.
but a lurid light gres r than I hav.
ever seen since. Ob.ects were perfect ! } '
discernible , though not so well as by
daylight.
Tho Fire G < 1 s
[ Cincinnati CoivrereiU Gazette. ]
Them is perhaps no excitement to
which the average Xew Yorker is more
susceptible than that which arises from
a burning building. He will leave his
business , his dinner , or any other occu
pation which ho may be engaged in at
tin time , to run to a fire , anil whether
he has stopped to put on his hat or pck :
up his coat will be with him an alter
consideration. A fire engine drawn by
a pair of infuriated steeds , tearing
the arms out of tho sockets of the hat-
less driver , with its sparks Hying and
its gong beating , can draw in its wnke
a perfect army of small boys and turn
the mostpeaceful neighborhood at any
hour of tue day or night into a perfect
bedlam.
A lire can gather together a bigger
crowd in a shorter space of time and
hold it longer than a political meeting.
a brass band , or Barnum s circus. ' 1 he
mere whisper of the word "tire" ' in a
crowded hall or theatre will suffice to
bring an audience to its feet at once ,
and will cause women to shriek and
faint aud men to turn wiiite as their
own shirt-fronts. ' 1 he wildest tempust
at sea could scarcely give more alarm
to tha passengers of an ocean steamer
than tho information that the s ip
was on fire. However great may be
the excitement consequent upon a
con : agration at the time , it soon
dies away after th. : ca ise has been re
moved , and it takes r.ut a few hours for
the matter to be forgotten by all except
those who have suiler-jd the loss.
Tin ) Htdlli of .e > ro v
'Be i ir ' ' ! " * "foT ( ' " "i'r.l
Paul Guttmann , in a careful study of
tho bacilli of leprosy , observed in ele
"
vated nodosities "in a girt bctwenn 1.J
and 13 j'ears of ago. found the microbes
always collected in cells , a feature which
distinguishes them at onca from the
bacilli ot tuberculosis , while the fact
that they stain more easily than the lat
ter further distinguishes them. The
bacilli are found especially in the s'du ,
but also in other organs tho seat of the
disease , and even in the blood. As a
rule , tho organisms aro extremely num
erous at the seat of the lesions. Tneir
microscopic appearances are the same in
every case , and hence it is no longer-
doubtful that th2y are the cause of the
leprosy , notwithstanding the failure of
attempts to inoculate animals These
seem to be refactory to the disease , in
asmuch as in no case baa it ever beec
observed among them. _
THIS SPACE IS RESERVED FOR
a
u i Jt
JONAS EXUEL , MANAGER.
WHO WILL OCCUPY THE FRANKLIN BRICK , ON THE S. W. COR.
OF MAIN AND DENNISON STS. , McCOOK ,
T 1
U Hj I.
>
LAND OFFICE AT McCooic. NEB. , I
October 4th. Ibbti. f
Notice is hereby given that the lollowing-
immed settler has tiled notice ot" his intention
to make final proof in support or iiis chiim ,
and that said proof will be made betore Reg
ister or Receiverat McCook , Neb. , on Fridav ,
.November 12th , IbMJ. viz : Heinrich .Meyer.
Homestead r UT . for the south iof southwest
L4 section 14 , and northj of northwest *
section 2o. town. . " ) , north range &i , west lith 1' .
M. He names the following witnesses to
prove Iiis continuous residence upon , und
cultivation of. Mini land , viz : Peter Hcrn-
heimer. Pbillipp Schmidt. FrankTsiinmcr and
Jacob Tsimmer. all of Osburn , Noli.
1'J G. L. LAWS , Register.
LAND OFFICE AT McCooK. NEB. , I
October.Mb. I8g(5. ( f
Notice is hereby gu en that the following-
natned settler has tiled notice of his intention
( o make llnal proof in support of his claim ,
and that taid proof will be made before Regis
ter or Receiver at McCook , Neb. , on Tuesday ,
November luth , IMi'j ' , viz : Gideon Kitchey ,
Homestead : ! . > ! ! > , for the northwest L.i of sec
tion I0. ! township 5 north , ranged , west 6th P.
M. He names the following witnes.es to
prove his continuous residence upon , and cul
tivation of , said land , viz : C. II. Shepherd.
Dr. Harlau. .1. C. Mo ford and F. Brown , all
ot Oshurn. Neii 1 ! ) G. L. LAWS. Register.
LAND Orrici : AT McCooK , NLU. ,
September27th , ISM ! . 1
Notice is hereby given that the following-
nlimed settler has Hied notice of her intention
to make llual proof in support of her claim ,
and that baid proof will be made before Reg
ister or Receiver at McCook. Neb. , on Monday ,
November ftth , IStO , Viz : Roxie Hillings , 1) .
5.1SIK5 , tor the westof ! northeast h. suid east
! of northwest J4 of section 9. town. north ,
range a' ' , west Otli P.M. She names the fol-
owmg witnesses to prove her continuous res-
dence upon , and cultivation of , said hind ,
viz : Henry Goodonberger. Isaiah Smith , Al-
onzo DoMuy and Fred IJfcnjamin. all of Mc
Cook , Neb. 18 G. L. UA.WS. Register.
LAND OFFICE AT MCCOOK. NEIJ. ,
September ! ilst , I860. f
Notice is hereby given that the following-
named settler has lilcd notice of her intention
: o make ilnnl proof in support of her claim ,
and that said pioof will be made liefoie Regis-
tor or Receiver at McCook. Neb. , on Thursday
November 4th , 1W > G , viz : Mary A. Hileman ,
D. S. : ! > ' . ) , for the northwest h section : . ' 4 ,
town. 2 , north range.'JO , west Cth P. M. She
names the following witnesses to prove her
continuous residence upon , and cultivation
) f , said land , viz : JohnVhittaker. . Jiunos.M.
Hoatumn. .John W. McCasliu and Charles Jac
obs , all of McCook , Neb.G. .
G. L LAWS , Register.
LAND OFFICE AT McCooic. Nnit. , I
September 14th , 18H5. f
Notice is hereby given that tho foUowing-
lamed settlerhas Hied notice of his intention
to make final proof in support of his claim ,
ind that said proof will be made belore Ueis-
or or Receiver at McCook. Neb. , on Saturday ,
October 23rd , ISSG , viz : John T. Gillespic. who
ilcd D. S. No. IMS , for the west H. noithwest
and west ' - . southwest J4.section24 , town -
lorth , ranged west. He names the follow-
ng witnesses to prove his continuous resi
dence upon , and cultivation of , said land , viz :
Willlun H. Smith. Alvaro X. Grillin , Charles
S. Kntiniisc and George Huggins , all of Me-
Cook , Neb. 1C G. L. LAWS , Hegister.
LAND OFFICE AT McCooK. Xin. , i
September 13. ISSO. f
Notice is hereby given that the following-
named settler has filed notice of his intention
o make final proof in support of Iiis ciaini ,
ind that said proof will be made before Rogis-
eror Receiver at McCook. Neb. , on Friday ,
) ctober 2L'd , 1S0 , viz : Franklin J. Hiishonir ,
) . S. 127fi , for the northwest J-4. section 22 ,
own. 1. north range 29.west ( ith P. M. He
mines the tollou-ing witnesses to prove his
continuous residence upon , ami cultivation
af , said land , viz : R. S. Cooley. John Cruw-
ey , George J. Myers and Eli Harger , all of
McCook , Neb. G. L. LAWS. Register.
LAND OFFICE AT Moronic. NEIJ. . f
September II. 18Mi. f
Notice is hereby given that the t-jllowing-
lamcd settler has filed notice of his intcation
o make llnal proof in support of his claim ,
ind thut said proof will bemadc before Regis-
cror Receiver lit McCook. Neb. , on Friday.
October 22ml. iStB. viz : Isniah Smith , Home-
tend 4. > ? fi , for the west 55 northeast ! * and
sast ; northwest * t , section Z * . town. 2. north
range - ! > . west 6th 1' . M. He names the follow-
ng witnesses to prove his continuous resi-
ence upon , nnd cultivation of. said land , viz :
lenry Goodenbprger. E. Henderson. William
Harmon and Dr. DeMay. all of McCook. Nebr.
19 G. L. LAWS , Kejfiitcr.
LAND OFFICE AT MCCOOK. Xeb. , I
September llth , 1830. f
Notice is hereby given that the following-
named settler has tiled notice of his intention
tomakelinai proof in support of his claim ,
and that mid proof will be made before Kegis-
teror Receiver at Mt-CooKNeb. ( outJuturday.
October fflril. 18si. viz : Stilwell Conner ,
Homestead 1IKO , for the southeast gcctiou
2 ( > . town. 1. north ptnje23. ; west Gth I > . M. Ho
names the following witnesses to prove big
continuous residence upon , and cultivation
of. said land , viz : U. B Duckworth. Jacob F.
Boyer , Wilber F. Saunders und George J.
Myers , all of Duuburjr. Neb.
u'G. . L. LAWS , Register.
LAND OFFICE AT MCCOOK , NED. , i
„ . September 14th , 1SSO. f
Notice is hereby given that the following-
named settler has filed notice of his intention
to make final proof in support of his claim
and that said proof will be made before Itegis-
teror Receiver at McCook , Neb. , on Friday
October 22d. is-i-K. vi/ : TravisMJenjaniin. .
Homestead ZM. for the southeast J * . section
31. town. 1 , north range 2'J. west Cth I * . M He
names tuo following witnesses to prove his
continuous residence upon , and cultivation
i of said land , viWilliam Rclph. of. Ilunk-
ville. Neb. , and John Goodenberger. R S
Cooley. F. J. Rushong. of McCook. Neb " "
10 G. L. LAWS. Register.
LAND OFFICE AT MCCOOK. NEK..I
„ . . . , September 15. ISSG. j
Notice is hereby given that the following-
named settler has filed notice of his intention
to unike final proof in support of his claim ,
and that s-aid proof will bemadc before Re"is-
ter or Receiver at McCook , Neb. , on Monday.
November 1st. lc 5. viz : fiphraim C. Gaston
Homestead Entry 1748 , for the southwest ? i of
f-CtOI-7ttfwnfrhil } ) ' north of ranKO 30 west
Oth P.M.
He names the following witnesses
to prove hit , continuous residence upon , and
cultivation ofsaid land , viz : Daniel demons.
wr V."ireiV Mu uUc an(1 cTUrewcr
;
all of McCook , Nebraska.
lu G. L. LAWS. Register.
LAND OFFICE AT MCCOOK , NEB. .
, . . . . October llth. IbWi. f
notice is hereby given that the followiiig-
nnmcil settler has tiled notice of his intention
to make final proof in support of his claim ,
and that said proof will be made before Reg
ister or Receiver at MeCook. Neb. , on Monday
November 2ith. ! ISSfi. viz : John Henderson
Homestead 292. for the northwest H section
o _ ' , town. 4 north , range 29 west , th i' . M. Ho
names the following witnesses to prove his
continuous residence upon , and cultivation
of. stud land viz : Hiram K. llixler , James
Robinson. John Modrell and Alfred Carter ,
all of McCook , Neb.
-0 G. L. LAWS. Register.
LAND OFFICE AT MCCOOK. NEB. , I
„ . . October 12th. 1SH5. f
Notice is hereby given that the following-
named settler has filed notice of his intention
to make final proof in support of his claim ,
and that said proof will be made before Regis-
teror Receiver at McCook , Neb. , on .Monday.
November 22nd. l&C. viz : Matthew Stewart
D. S. 1M , for the northeast * section : . town
. .north , range 29 west. th P. M. He names
the following witnesses to prove his continu
ous residence upon , and cultivation of. said
and. viz : J H. Stephens. J.B.Pipcp , w.I ) .
irinque and W ra. Weygint , all of Hox Elder
Neb. 20 u. L. LAWS. Register. 1
LAND OFFICE ATMCCOOK. NEB. , i 1H
„ . . . , , Octoberfith. ISStf. , '
Notice is hereby given that the following-
named settler has tiled notice of her intention
to make final proof in support of her claim
and that said proof will be made before Keirifc
teror Receiver at McCook , Neb. , on Saturday
November isth. 18t . viz : Gertrude A. Col
man. Homestead GOoO. for the southeast of
section 12. town. 4 north , range 31 west She
names the following witnesses to prove he ?
continuous residence upon , and cultivation
of. satd land , viz : Archibald IJ. Davis. Dax-
tcrJ.Davis..iohnN. Smith nnd Esrom Roth-
nuiu-
ermel , all of MeCook. Nebraska
G. L. LAWS , Register.
_
LAND OFFICE AT MCCOOK , NEB
, T . . . . , October 12th , ISSii. f
Notice is hereby given that the followinr-
nunicil settler has Hied notice of herintention.
to imike final proof in support of her cla m
and that said proof will be made before Regis-
tor or Receiver at McCook. Neb. , on Friday
2J'e bt'iP 13lh > viz : Xpttle cEast. . D7s :
= U3 , tor the southeast H southwest
i section
2. , , townshi p 4 north , range J west. She names
the following witnesses to prove her contin
uous residence upon , and cultivation of. said
land , viz : H. H. Berry. H. L Serrv F I
Brown and C. M. Collins , all of McCo"fe Nebr !
20 G. L. LAWS , Resistor.