The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, August 16, 1894, Image 8

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    CRANKS AT THE CAPITOL.
DlatarbaaoM Occasionally Taka'Flam ia
tha Gatlarlea of »ha Honia.
The recent appearance of a dement
ed negro in the gallery of the . house
of representatives recalled numerous
similar occurrences to some of the
older members. In the forty-fifth con
gress, when the 4th of March come
upon Monday, a deadlock ovor an ap
propriation bill led to a session which
lasted until Sunday forenoon. While
the house was thus in session, contin
uing the legislative day of Saturday,
an evangelist, who had been in the
habit of holding street meetings near
the capitol, aroso in the reserved gal
lery and In a loud voioe invoked the
curse of the Almighty upon congress
for desecrating Sunday by remaining
in session, lie was promptly hustled
out, but in the midst of the excite
ment a member arose and said:
"Mr. Speaker, I agree with the man
who has just been ejected from the
gallery. I do not think we ought to
be in session on the Lord's day. I
move the house adjourn." The motion
immediately carried.
Once, in the Forty-eighth congress,
while Samuel J. Randall was speak
lug, an Irishman in the gallery stood
up and said: "Oh, Mr. Randall, what
do you talk so much for? Why don't
you do something and stop talking?”
This man was also promptly sent out
of the building.
But no one ever gavo the capitol
officials so much trouble as Dr. Mary
Walker. Sho had an idea that Bhe
was entitlod to the floor under a vote
of thanks, and she would slip in
among the members at every oppor
tunity. Once, It is said, she took a
seat in a chair by the speaker’s desk,
and when the gavel foil at noon she
refused to budge. The only way by
which the doorkeeper could get rid of
her was to carry her out, chair and
all, and this was done with more speed
than politeness.
fancies op invalids.
A Gentleman Who Longad for a Dish
' of Grilled Elephant's Foot.
About the manner of serving their
t food patients sometimes have curious
fancies. In one case a woman per
1 statently refused to take her beef tea
"hunless the bread which accompanied
^ & v - it was out in the shape of diamonds,
while in another it was always neo
■?*;* essary to sorve the food in a blue
basin, for out of nothing else what
soever would she take nourishment.
A boy who was attaoked with scar
• let fever showed great disinclination
to take food, but finally agreed to
;■ - swallow what was necessary, pro
i'. vlded he was fed in the following
way: The beef tea, or whatever was
to be given him, was put into a silver
> ,’ teapot The spout was plaaed in his
■ mouth, and in this manner the food
was poured down his throat
% An elderly gentleman who had
passed much of his time hunting in
« • ; Afrloa, on] being asked if (he fancied
| any particular dish, replied that he
would like a bit of elephant’s foot!
Under certatn oironmstances, we be
lieve this dish is a dainty and nourish
ing one, but the price of elephant in
this country being prohibitive, this
elderly ntmrod wm forced to content
v himself with a beefsteak instead.
7 A clergyman with a broken leg had
a great longing to put on a pair of
jtv'Z-i stilts, a pastime whioh he had never
feWiK yet tried; while a man whose leg had
'™!fr been amputated, although admitting
r the impracticability of the wish, de
v ' dared that a passion for skating had
so seized upon Mm, since the loss of
his limb, that he regretted being
Operated upon chiefly on that aceount
IT %A| ‘ MATHEMATICAL.
v:
It"
■
if:
%■ : hi
II Wu an Intnllnotnnl tort of a Snake
" ‘ That He Had an Interest In.
isBald a well-known recounter of
>Mke stories the other day by way of
ft round up of several:
*9 can’t call any more to mind Just
at present My wife knows a lot of
snake stories, but I forget ’em. By
the way, though, I've got a regular
living curiosity’ down at my place.
One day my eldest boy was sitting on
a stool in the back yard doing
his sums, and 'he couldn’t
get ’em right lie felt something
against his face, and there was a lit
tle snake curled up on his shoulder
and looking at the slate. In four
minutes he had done all the sums.
We’ve tamed him, so he keeps all our
aeoounts, and he is the quickest head
at figures you ever saw. He’ll run
up a column eight feet long in three
seconds. I wouldn’t take a’prise cow
for him.”
“What kind of a snake is he?” in
quired the listener curiously.
“The neighbors call him an adder.”
“Qh, yes, yes," said the other a lit
tle disconcerted. “I’ve heard of the
species.”
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. The Uib (or • Moan Follow.
In Geneva, Ala., close to the Florida
line, Ed Cowart and Miss Lizzie Lun
wood were to have wedded. All ar
rangements were made, the preacher
and the guests had arrived, the wed
ding supper was spread, but the
bridegroom was missing. A delega
tion was sent after him, but he de
clined to come, saying he had changed
his mind. The assembled gentlemen
provided themselves with masks,
again called upon the bridegroom,
carried him into the woods, buckled
him across a log, and lashed him un
mercifully, the blood being made to
flow from his back.
J#ffr'
Nobly desisting Temptation.
“Ain’t that a fine horse Elder Keep
along’s drivin* to church?” exclaimed
Hammy. “It ’d make a splendid
match for our Pete. If you could
trade the chestnut filly to the elder
for that—" “Sammy,” said Deacon
Ironside, looking resolutely the other
way and heaving a deep sigh of
mournful resignation, “This is. Sun
day 1”
*7 n■
, a '
r:;j-a '-'fuw: a:
a v 'x ■ ' \ a ’ x. ■: ■. . x' "x.
HOR3E9 CRY OUT.
Whan la Pain and Hoirnrlnt Th»y Glv«
Vplmt to Their AntnUh.
"On the way to the city I purchased
ft copy of a magazine and read a very
interesting article on the patient way
in which animal* boar.pain withont
crying out," aahl a traveling man,
lately. "To ono statement in the ar
ticle I take exception from personal
experience, acquired _during the war.
The writer says that-a horse will en*
dure pain in battle without any out
cry, During flie war I rode the same
horse for nearly a year. He was
wounded two or three timos slightly,
and always gave vent to so pitiful a
cry that I felt as much sympathy for
him ns though he had been a human
comrade. One evening I was out with
a foraging party in Virginia, when we
were shot upon from ambush by a
small detachment of Confederates.
My horse was Btruck and fell, and I
escaped by riding double with one of
the other boys. We obtained re-en
forcements and soon drove that gray
coated detachment out of the neich
borhood.
As we were returning through the
woods I distinctly heard my horse’s
cry. and returning to it put au end to
its troubles and misery by getting a
friend to shoot it, the task being one
1 could not perforin myself. Last
month I positively saw half a dozen
mules do just the reverse. They had
been working in a coal mine for three
or four years, and when first brought
to the surface could not see at all in
the daylight. After a. few minutes
they got accustomed to the light, and
then, kick.ng up their heels, they
gave vent to something so much like
laughter that those who were watch
ing them enjoyed the scene hugely.”
OLDEST RUINS.
Immense Temples on the Mile’s Banks
In Mubla.
The most ancient architectural
ruins known are the temples at Ipsam
bul, on the loft bank of the Nile, in
Nubia. The largest of these temples
has 14 apartments, the whole of which
has been hewn from solid rock. Some
idea of the immensity of these tem
bles may be gleaned from the fact
that one single apartment of which
measurements were taken was found
to be 67 feet long and 58 feet broad,
the vaulted, dome-like roof being 30
feet above the floor and supported by
two rows of massive square pillars,
four in a row, and each of the same
material of which the roof, sides and
floor of the temple are composed.
To each of these pillars is attaohed
a oalossal figure of a man, the feet
being on the floor and the head touch
ing the roof. Those human figures
are necessarily of enormous propor
tions, and are each painted in gaudy
colors. In front of this wonderful
rock-cut temple are seated four still
larger figures of human, beings, two
of which are sixty-five feet in height,
and are believed to represent Ilameses
the Great, whose remarkable military
exploits are to be found depicted all
over Northern Africa. Reproductions
of two of those colossal figures on a
gigantic scale of the original, also a
fao simile of the temple itself, on a
small scale, were made and exhibited
at the celebrated Crystal palaoe, 8yd
enyham, England.
WOMAN COMBS LAST.
Bow the Arab Regards HU Wives and
Daughters.
An Arab—meaning a tent-dweller,
in an equine sense, the town-dweller
is no Arab—loves first and above all
his horse. No one need to recite the
oft-sung affection he will lavish upon
him. Next he loves his firearm. This,
poetically speaking, ought to be a six
foot, gold-in laid* muzzle-loading hor
ror of a match-look, which would
kick any man but an Arab flat on his
baok at ©very shot; but actually, in
Algeria or Tunis, when he lives near
a city, it is more apt to be a modern
English breechloader. You must fly
from the busy haunts of men to find
the matchlock. Next to his gun he
loves his oldest son. Last comes his
wife—or one of his wives, perhaps.
Daughters don’t count; I mean the
Arab doesn't take the trouble to count
them, unless in so far as they minister
to his comfort, dietetic or otherwise.
Until some neighbor comes along and
proposes to marry, in other words to
mako a still worse Blave of one of
them, she is only a chattel—a soulelss
thing. And yet she is said to be a
pretty, amiable, helpful being—said
to be, for no one by any hap ever
chances to cast his eye on one worth
seeing. This disregard for women,
be it said to their honor, does not al
ways apply to the Eedouins of the
Syrian and Arabian deserts.
Of Wh*t II “Bee Comb" Composed T
Bee comb, or “beeswax” the mater
ial of which the honey-cells in the
beehive are composed, is a wax pro
duced by a system of chemistry car
ried on in tha “wax pockets which
are located in the abdomen of all
•workiug bees. It is a peculiar sub
stance and is said to be analogous to
the fats of higher animals. Original
ly it was supposed that this wax was
taken up in an almost pure state from
the flowers by the bees, but recent
experiment carried on by the botanists
and chemists of the world conclusive
ly proves that the bee is capable of
elaborating his peculiar Wax, although
confined to a diet purely saccharine
in its nature.
Rescind Ing an Obnoxious Order.
Apropos of the official order for the
wearing of tall hats and frock coats
at Punchestown races, in England, it
is said that once upon a time a gen
eral officer issued a similar order for
the guidance of officers when out oi
uniform in Edinburgh. He was led
to rescind it, however, after being ac
costed on the street by an officer ar
rayed in a tall hat, frock coat and i
Bob Boy tartan kilt.
STOPPED SMOKING TO SAVE
Dat the I'roeMtiin Didn't Pan Oat a*
Profitably m Ha Bad Expected*
Xerxes Mones determined to quit;
smokfgg, not you know, that it had
any baneful influence upon his health,
but solely for the reason that ho didn’t
feel justified in spending twenty-fire
cents a day for the weeny luxury.
Jones had a good disposition and
began his new scheme on Sunday.
“Seeing I've quit smoking, I’ll put
an extra quarter in the oollection box
to-day," he mused, and in the money
went.
Monday, just to pleas* his little
wife, good Jones bought a forty-cent
box of mixtures ana handed it oyer to
hi* wife with the remark:. "No, ray
dear, it’s no extravagance. Just about
wliat I saved on cigars to-day, and we
both can enjoy this after tea.” Tues
day Jones bought a fifty-cent toy for
his little boy out of the cash saved by
abstinence from tobacco. Wednesday
he changed his dining place down
town from a twenty-five cent place to
n fifty-cent table d'hote, feeling justi
fied in spending the extra quarter
saved on cigars.
Apparently forgetting this Thurs
day, the reformer remarked to him
self: “There’s that new umbrella
my wife’s been talking about. I’ll
buy that and charge it up to two
weeks’ savings on smoko.” Friday a
new dinner set was purchased to
please the wife of his heart, and set
over against twenty weeks' savings
from tobacco and Saturday Xerxes
Jones spent 25 cents for cigars, hav
ing lost six days of his luxury, and
figured up that he had saved on the
wrong side of his books just about
838.00.
LITTLE SKULL OP GLASS.
A. Boston Man’s Ingenious Device for Pre
venting Poisoning Accidents.
The unlabeled poison bottle is as
bad as the unloaded gun for causing
fatalities. Carelessness at homo will
render useless the utmost vigilance of
the drug clerk who relies upon the
warning label required by law to
be pasted on all poisonous prescrip
tions. To obviate this danger a man
living in the suburb of Boston known
as Jamaica Plains has made a bottle
which very effectually conveys the
necessary information as to the dead
ly nature of its contents, so that not
only he who runs may read but he
who cannot read may understand.
The bottle is of blue glass, in order
that the contents may better resist
being affocted by light, and it is
molded into the shape of a skull, with
cross-bones underneath. The word
"poison” is placed in raised letters
on the forehead, and at the base of
the skull a snaco has been left for the
red label that tells the nature of the
drug. The hollow eyesockets, the
jawbones and the teeth would tell its
purpose to a blind man, and ghastly
as it may seem to those who are
blessed with sight, it is better to be
frightened than to die. That at least
is the philosophy of the inventor, and
he is not a druggist, or doctor, by the
way, but a plain, every day jobber in
boots and shoes.
ENGLISH ORTHOEPY.
The Work That Is Being Done by a Pri
vate Tutor of Foreigners.
In the national capital is a private
tutor of English to foreigners who
trains them in the idioms of pronun
ciation with this chain of similarly
spelled words: “Though the tough
cough and hiccough plough me
through.” The result is humorous as
these samples of the efforts of the
pupils will show:
“Tho the to co and hicco plo me
thro.
Thuf the tuf cuf and hiccuf pluf me
thruf.
Thof the tot cof and hiooof plot me
throf.
Thup the tup cup and hiccup plup
me thrup. *
Thoo the too coo and hiccoo ploo me
throo.”
It is not surprising that Voltaire,
when he began to study English'and
learned that ague was pronounced as
two syllables and plague as one,
should have wished that half of the
English had the one disease and the
other half the other.
, Burning Mountain of Coal.
At Winger, in New South Wales,
there is a burning mountain. It is
1,820 feet in height, and is supposed to
be a large coal 6eam which has in
some unaccountable way become
ignited, and has been burning for
many years, certainly long before the
advent of the white man in this por
tion of the colony. The course of the
fire can be traced a considerable dis
tance by the numerous depressions or
chasms occasioned by the falling in
of the ground from beneath which the
coal has been consumed. Smoke is
continually issuing from the sides of
the mountain, and in the vicinity of
these openings the surface is hot, and
has a dry, parched appearance, while
sticks thrust into these openings are
readily ignited.
Rather a Knowing Cat.
J. tv. Moses, of Megquier Hill, has
an unusually intelligent cat, called
Isaao, who is very fond at fresh fish.
Recently while the cat was lying on
the floor a member of the family said
to it: “Isaac, do you want us to go
a-fishing?”and then added, “If we had
a frog for a bait we would go.” On
this old Isaac got up with a knowing
look and trotted out, only to return
in a few moments with a good-sized
frog, which he had caught in a
swale near by.
Never Touched m—
A little fellow had been seriously
lectured by ,his mother and finally
sent into the garden to find a switch
with which he was to be punished.
He returned 6oon and said: “I could
not find a switch, mamma, but here’s
a stone you can throw at me.”
HIS VISIT CUT SHORT. v
An Indianapolis Lady* Solicited* lor tho
Cleanliness of nor Frlonda
A certain lady of Indianapolis .who
had never been us<yl to the luxury of
life until after hen husband made a
large sum of money in'ibe real estate
business, moved into an elegant
house which had, amoung other con
veniences, a fine bath room, It was her
pride, and every visitor was informed
about the bath room. Quests who
came from a distance were greeted
with: “Now, I know you are tired
and dusty after your long journey;
just go right up to the bath room and
you can have a refreshing bath at
once.” This worked well in most
cases, but one day she made a mis
ta»c. one weno 10 uie uoor one
warm summer afternoon to find a
young1 gentleman friend ot her hue
band’s from Louisville, and she took
it for granted that he was going to
stay all night. So her first words
after shaking hands with him were:
“Now, you are tired and dusty after
your journey; just go right up to the
bath room; a bath will refresh you so."
In vain the young man tried to ex
postulate; she had him by the arm
and started him up the stairway be
fore he could get in a word. In half
an hour he came down and took up
his hat and stick. “I thank you very
much,” he said; “I enjoyed the bath
very much.” Then he started for the
door. “Why, where are you going?”
asked the hostess. “To catch my
train,” he answered; “I only had
forty minutes to stay and my bath
took half an hour, so I must hurry to
catch the Chicago train.” It cured
the lady of showing off her bath
room.
FOLLOWING FRIENDLY ADVICE.
Qot a Snap on the Bicycle, Bnt the
Dealer Did Not Mourn.
"Wouldn’t it be a good idea,’* said
the disinterested friend, “to put a
high grade bicycle in your window
and mark it 950 or some such price?
You’d lose some money on it, of
course, but look at the advertising
you would get ou,t?of it Everybody in
town would be talking about it inside
of twenty-four hours, and your store
would get a reputation for selling
good machines cheap that would be
worth hundreds of dollars to you.”
"That’s not a bad scheme," said the
bicycle dealer, after thinking it over,
“John,” he called out to one of .the
boys, “put that Greased Racer in the
front window and mark it $50”
“But—”
“Never mind arguing the matter. I
know what I'm doing."
The Greased Lightning Racer was
placed conspicuousljr in the show win
dow with the $50 tag appended.
“Now,” said the disinterested'
friend, “that looks something like it.
You’ll see a crowd gathering there
inside of five mihutes. By the way,
you may just consider that machine
sold. I’ll take it off your hands. But
I’m no hog,” he added, cheerfully.
“I’ll let it stay in your Window till
to-morrow morning. ”
“Wasn’t thalf rather an unhand
some trick?” asked the silent partner, •
after the disinterested friend had
gone away.
“No,” reflected the dealer. “That
machine has been on hand two years,
but it's worth every cent of 947.50.”
SHE WANTED THAT NAIL.
Believing It Responsible for Tears and
Swears She Was After It.
This is a woman’s age, and a busi
ness man who knows says there is
positively nothing she will not under
take. He was lounging in his office
the other day when a well-dressed,
comely little woman appeared. She
wore a resolute expression in addition
to other apparel and in her hand she
carried a large tack-raiser.
“Good morning,” she said, winning
ly. “Is this Mr. Cash’s office? Will
you please tell me which chair it is
that has that nail in it?”
The business man was confused_
the nice little woman was a total
stranger to him. He answered mildly:
“What chair? What nail?”
“Why,” she exclaimed, “my hus
band has come home three times re
cently with dreadful holes in his coat
and trousers, and he said he tore
them on a chair in your office. I’m
about tired- darning and patching
those rents and thought it would be
more sensible and satisfactory to
come down here, pull the nail out and
be done with it Don’t you think so?”
Still in a trance the merchant
agreed with her, found the offending
chair, extracted the nail and with
many thanks and smiles the enter
prising little .woman withdrew.
muonerei Wearing a Rubber Band.
A mackerel with a rubber band—a
sort of primitive corset—around its
body has caused much comment at
Gloucester, Mass. The band had evi
dently been put on him when he wa s
small, and had stayed there in spite
of its rapid growth. Under the band
the fish’s body had not grown, and the
depression was about three inches
deep. The I>and was sound and flexi
ble, and the fish was in a healthy con
dition.
Matrimony Cheap In Australia.
Those to whom the wedding fee is
an obstacle to matrimony should emi
grate to Melbourne. Australia, where
clergymen vie with each other in their
advertisements to tie the knot
cheaply. Their charges range from
S-.50 to seventy-five cents, and m
some cases the wedding breakfast and
ring are included.
A Dovotert Grandmother.
In Charleston, Mass., there resides
a widow with one hand. The other is
wholly useless because of an acci
dent- The widow does washing and
other day work, is well along la
years, but has thus far fed, elothed
and educated a young orphan grand
i .
, vi
Th« Hotter tin Iroa the Uh Pels to
the Battering Patient.
“I bare never been able to under*
stand,” said Dr. C. T. Glenarm of
Denver! “why it'is that the pain re
sulting1 from a burn with a red hot
iron is so much greater than when the
flesh is touched with an iron at a
white heat, but I have seen the exper
iment demonstrated so many times
that I know it to be a fact. When
ever it becomes necessary for me in
my practice to cauterize a wound I am
always careful that the iron I apply
shall be of an intense white heat, and
in a great majority of cases the pa
tient has always said there was abso
lutely no pain felt, while if the iron
should simply have been red hot, the
effect would have been agonizing.
This applies to animals as well as
man. I once saw a veterinary sur
geon apply a white-heated iron to the
shoulder of a horse; the animal never
winced under the operation, and
seemed hardly conscious of what was
done to him.”
The Dutch Alarm Clock.
Ic. the back streets of most of the
towns in Holland, there may be seen
houses with this curious sign-board,
“Hero they Knock and Wake Pei*
sons;” for in the large comfortable
Dutch beds folks are apt to oversleep
themselves, and so the men and
women who have to rise very early
for their work pay a man a small sum
every week to call them at daybreak.
And call them he does, for he knocks
and rings until his customers appear
at their windows, and the row- he
makes is often enough to disturb a
whole street In summer, when the
careful Dutch housewife has taken
the stoves out of the rooms, the
waker-up earns a little extra pay sup
plying hot water as. well for an early
cup of tea or coffee.
Worst Railroad In England.
The Pall Mall Gazette has been pub
lishing opinions as to “the worst rail
way in England." The following let
ter may be recommended as an admir
able model: “Sir: The Southeastern
railway is the very worst railway in
the world. Its engines-are asthmatic;
its lamps are trimmed by foolish vir
gins; its fare excessive; its carriages
let in the snow in the winter, and are
furnaces in summer; its motto is un
punctuality; its principal station is
approached through the neck of a
bottly. It ruins the temper, destroys
the digestion and enables one to real
ixe the horrors of Dante’s Inferno. I
am, sir, yours obediently, The Worm
Who Turns."
Until After Election.
The present campaign is of unusual
interest to Nebraskans. Not only will a
full set of state officers be elected, but a
legislature will be elected that will
choose a United States senator. The
State .Journal, located at the capital, can
give you all this news more fully and
more reliably than any other paper. It
eomes twice a week and will be sent
until after election for only 25 cents.
Address, State Journal,
Lincoln, Neb.
There’s Always a Reason.
It is an easy thing to account for the
wonderful growth of the Daily State
Journal recently. Its price has been
reduced 'to 50 cents per month without
Sunday or 65 cepts with Sunday. The
Journal has always been reliable and
honest, printing the news without fear
or favor. The people of Nebraska realize
that they need a paper published at the
capital, and when the price of the Jour
nal was reduced the subscription list
grew at a phenomenal rate. The Jour
nal is a Nebraska paper through and
through.
Last June Dick Crawford brought his
twelve-months-old child suffering from
infantile diarrhoea, to me. It had been
weaned at four months old and had al
ways been sickly. I gave it the usual
in such cases but without benefit. The
child kept growing thinner uutill it
weighed but little more than it did when
born, or perhaps ten pounds. I then
started the father to giving Chamber
lain’s Colic Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy. Before one bottle of the 25
cent size had been used a marked im
provement was seen and its continued
use cured the child. Its weakness ‘and
puny constitution disappeared and its
father and myself believe the child’s life
was saved by this Remedy. J. T.
Marlow, M. D., Tamaroa, 111. For sale
by P. C. Corrigan Druggist.
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS.
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION.
Land Office at O’Neill, Neb.
» ., , ^ July 31, 1894.
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 the
register and receiver at O’Neill. Neb., on
September 8, 1894, viz:
, . JOHN L. KUHNS, HE No. 14357
forthe SWJ4 Sec. 25, Twp. 31, R. 13 westCth
He names the following witnesses to prove
nis continuous residence upon and cultiva
tion of said land, viz:
William Veal, Wallace Johnson, John Gor
don, of Hay, Neb.; Peter Winn, of Atkinson,
Neb. 4-« JOHN A. HARMON, Register.
NOTICE.
Isaac C. Edwards and Mrs. Ed
wards, his- wife, (first and real name un
known) will take notice that United Trust,
Limited, a corporation, plaintiff, has filed a
petititlon in the district court of Holt county,
Nebraska, against said defendants, im
pleaded with Orrin C. Smith, the object and
prayer of which are to foreclose a mortgage
Llated March 14,1889. for $700 and interest, on
the southeast quarter of section 7, in town
ship 30. north of range 10 west of the (ith P. M
in llolt county, Nebraska, given by Orrin C.'
Smith to the Globe Investment company and
assigned to plaintiff, which mortgage was
recorded in book 47 at page 78 of mortgage
records of said county, and to have the same
decreed to be a first lien and said land sold
to satisfy the same.
You are required to answer said petition on
Dr before tbe 24th day of September, 1894.
Dated August 15,1894. «-4
S. D. THORNTON, Atty. for Pltf.
NOTICE.
IN THB DISTRICT COCRT ON HOLr
NEBRASKA. c
Wyinan Patrldge & Company, plalnug
W. P. O'Brien. McCord, Brady Cm..
Abies & Company, R. L. Jlolw!
Goods Company, Dempster Mill jr
uring Company, Albert VoorS
Lewis E. Miller, defendants. fl
Tho above named defendants and
them will take notiee that on the a!'
June, 1894, the above named plalmn
their petition in the dlstrlot court
oounty, Nebraska, against the abov.
defendants and each of them, the obi
prayer of said petition being to f J!
certain mortgage executed by the <i,"
W. P. O’Brien to the plaintiff, up™'
lowing described real estate situate)
county, Nebraska, to-wit: The east
the northwest quarter and the wCt,
the nortlienst quarter of section u-,r
(22), township twenty-five (25), rant,
(15), west of the 6th P. M., which »
was given to secure the payment
promissory notes; four for the sun
each and one for the sum of tisti.sg,
due and payable; that there is nowfcTJ
said notes and mortgage the sunn,tr*®
for which sum, with Interest from n,
plaintiff pravs for a decree that the i
ants be required to pay the same or tk
premises may be sold to satisfy the •
found due. And further, that the :
of all of said defendants be decree
subject, junior and inferior to the
plaintiff’s said mortgage.
You are required to answer said n
on or before the 27th day of August
Dated at O’Neill, Neb., this loth
July, 1894. R. B. DICKSO'
2-4 Attorney for Pla
NOTICE.
Charles J. Asplund and Eliza Hon
fendants. Take notice. J. L. Moore
plaintiff has filed a petition in the
court of Holt county, Nebraska, agaii
defendants, the object and prayer of
are to foreclose a mortgage dated
1888 for $300 and Interest, on the east
the southwest quarter and the west
the southeast quarter of seotlon 21), ra
west of the 6tli P. M., Holt county, Ne
given by the defendant, Charles J. a
to the Dakota Mortgage Loan Corn
and assigned to plaintiff, which mo
was recorded in book 39, at page £
mortgage records of said Holt county
have the same to be decreed to be a 8i
and the said land sold to satisfy the ga_
You are required to answer said i*
on or before the 27th day of August,»
J. L, MOORE, Trustee,
By S. D. Thornton, his attorney.
CHECKER
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