HB bESERVED A REWARD. Yer HU Invention llad Cnnsnd tha World I*ota of Trouble. His satanlo majesty was in oxcep tionally good humor, llnslness had been excellent for some time, and he wished to show his appreciation of hla extraordinary run of g'ood luck. “Dantello!" he called to one of hi* sprites, "I wish to give a little relax* atlon to some one of the most deserv ing of my victims. You are familiar with them. Whom would you sug gest?" “That depends, sire," replied the sprite, “upon what you call deserv ing." “Well," said his satsnic majesty thoughtfully, “I would like to be stow some little favor upoiT-the"inan who did the most to make a hell upon earth." “1 think 1 know the man, sire," said the sprite deferentially, “but lest I be mistaken would you kindly be a little more spcciflc?" “I refer to the man who by his In nate devilishness has given me sub jects without number, who above all others has driven men to the use of profane language, who by his flend ishness has driven men, otherwise good and noble, to perdition." “I thought I could not be mistaken, sire. I will bring him to yon di rectly.” “Who la your selection?" “Who could it be, sire, but the man who Invented the big, clumsy, horri ble railroad-exit turnstile?" CURES INSOMNIA. A Man Hired to Squirt Water oa Hie Employer'* Window. Not far from Washington square, in Chicago, a man has been earning $1 a night in a novel way, and at the same time is breaking the ordinances which limit the use of water through garden hose. He begins work when the master of the house goes to bed, and remains on duty until he is con vinced in his own mind that his em ployer has gone sound to sleep. The man is paid 91 a night to stand under his employer's window and play the stream from the hose on the window panes. His employer’s friends say that he is such a great traveler that he cannot sleep unless he hears the swish of water under the port hole of his cabin, so that he is obliged to get up a substitute when on land, and that the nearest approach to this soothing swish is a slender stream of water moving over the window panes. The fact is, the man had discovered a cure for insomnia which is working well in his case. The idea was sug gested to him one afternoon when he was stretohed on the sand at the edge of the lake. The monotonous break ing of the waves lulled him to slum ber, and that afternoon he e njoyed his first good nap for a week. Soon after he hired a man to squirt water on his bedroom window, and he says that the muffled sound kept up for an hour sends him to sleep every night. TAUGHT HIM THE MANLY ART. ■ew a Thln-Lsfgsd, Narrow-Chested Boy Surprised His Assailant*. A well-known Philadelphian, who in his youth was given a little to sport, has a particularly fine boy who is very spirited. At school he suffered very much up to a few months ago from bigger boys, who abused and "pounded" him. Enjoining the lad to the strictest secrecy, the father employed a retired pugilist, a little bit of a fellow, and had him give the boy lessons several times a week in boxing. At odd moments he practiced with the boy himself. Fin ally the lad, with that assurance and sense of prowess which comes under such etreumstanoes. wanted to be loose, but the father held him back until he felt perfectly satisfied. Not long ago he told his son to go ahead. An opportunity soon presented itself, and it would be hard to describe the sensation that followed when the young whlpper snapper who had been taking thumps for a year or two sailed in and laid out completely two of the biggest bullies and braggarts in the school. Whtr* Royal Ashes Lie Henry VIII. is bnrled in accordance with the provisions of his will along* 'aide Jane Seymour, his third wife and mother of Edward VI., in St. George's chapel in Windsor castle. In the same royal vault are interred Henry VI., Edward IV. and his queen, George IIL and his queen,George IV., the Princess Charlotte, the dulce of Kent, the duke of York, William IV. and his queen and other members of the royal family. It is an interest* lag place to visit, and the keep of the castle near by is where James L of Scotland was confined. Fainting on Corn. It is said that the smallest piece 01 painting in the world has recently been executed by a Flemish artist. It is painted on the smooth side of a grain of common white corn, and pictures a mill and a miller mounting a stairs with a sack of grain on his back. The mill is represented as standing on a terrace, and near it are a horse and cart, while a group of several peasants is shown in the road near by. The picture is beautifully distinct, every object being finished with microscopic fidelity. Art aad Nature. The nsthetic Fran Von St— hao Contrived to secure the leading here in a well-known theater, and a great favorite with the ladies, as her com panion at the supper* table. The lad; displayed unlimited conversational powers, and her enthusiasm waxed more fervid as she proceeded. “Tell me how you feel when you hav< played the part of Borneo?” she whis ' pend. “Hungry 1" replied the actor, With the most artless and indifferent . air la the world. HER DOQ. Fru Wt|ntr Insists That It Shall It* Mealed In the Hospital. Fran Coslras Wagner continues to stir up the German people by her nu merous eccentricities. She is very fond of animal pets, and when the good burghers of liayreuth heard not long ago, that the great composer's son, Siegfried, had been dclaiming birthday odes to Frau Cosima’s pets, when the anniversary of one of these creatures came round, they uttered mild protests, thinking the amusement rather be neath the level of the family of a great master of art Hut their protests were changed to indignant criticism when they heard that Frau Cosima had sent one of her dogs, a magnificent St Bernard, which she had had great trouble in rearing, to the city hospital, to be treated for some trivial difficulty in the regular operating room among the human patients. The family physician of the Wag ners, Dr. Landgraf, is also the chief surgeon at the Bayreuth hospital, and upon him fell the resentment of the people of the village. Horrified at the idea that Frau Wagner should think a dog worthy to associate with their sick folk, they vented their spleen in the regular newspapers, and in the local clubs, and quite frightened the good lady. ltut sho is as strong-minded as ec centric, and practically told them to mind their own business. Her logic, too, is not without strength. She says that if a St Bernard dog, or any other dog, is good enough to associate with man in his daily life, and to be admitted to his drawing room and library, there is no reason why he should not be allowed in his hospital when suffering and in need of help. PIECE THE SHAH LIKED. As Barbaric to the Audience as Was the Ituler's Taste. The shah of Persia when visiting the emperor of Germany some years ago was taken to the opera, and dur ing the course of the performance was asked how he liked the music. He confessed that the majority of it was pretty crude, but that one piece the orchestra had just been playing was simply superb. The emperor at once gave orders for the repetition of the piece. “No,” said the shah, “that's not it.” Another one was played. “No,” re turned the royal visitor, “it's not that, either. Presently the orchestra began to turvvup their instruments. “'Wiat's it!” cried the shah, en thusiastically. “That’s the piece I was trying to tell you about!” So for the edification of this bar baric ruler and to the anguish of the rest of the audience, the orchestra tuned and untuned, and retuned their instruments in the most heartrending fashion, and the shah leaned back in his chair, while his face wore a look of unspeakable enjoyment. Ihe Center Board. The center board is said to have been the invention of one Jockocks Swain, a boat builder of Seaville, twenty miles north of Cape May. He secured letters patent on it April 10, 1811, signed by James Madison, president, and James Monroe, sec retary of state. Originally it was known as a “center board.” This new movable keel was afterword called a “lee board” through the efforts of cer tain builders to evade the terms of Swain’s patent by cutting on one side of the stationary keel for the board. Though of so early an origin, the cen ter board did not become widely pop ular till after 1850, or about the time the America took the famous cup at Cowes. The Bed of the Atlantic. The hollow of the Atlantic ocean U not strictly a basin whose depth in creases regularly toward the center. It is rather a saucer or dish-like one, so even is the contour of its bed. The greatest depth in the Atlantic has been found some hundred miles to the northward of the island of St. Thomas, where soundings of 3,875 fathoms were obtained. The seas round Great Britain can hardly be regarded as forming part of the Atlantic hollow. They are rather a part of the platform banks of the European continent that the ocean has overflowed. Curious Names of Famous Mem The names of famous men in many oases amount to misnomers when translated into English. Calderon de la Barca is a very high-sounding name, yet translated literally it means “kettle of a barque.” Torquato Tasso in English is “chained terrier." Dante, a deer skin; Giovanni Boccao cio means “Jack the Braggart;” Bramante, the famous architect, as far as his name goes, was nothing more than a whining pup, and Max Picolomini, the hero of the thirty years’ war, synonymous with “Max, the Dwarf.” Tooth Drawing. The Brighton, England, board ot guardians have found it necessary to order a wholesale extraction ot teeth from the children in one of their schools. It was found that a large number of children, from some unex plained cause, had defective teeth, and on a dentist being called in he found it advisable to extract 129 teeth from 67 boys, and 89 teeth from 49 girls. Chinese Honor. In China, drunkards, as well as total abstainers, are almost unknown. Gambling debts are pre-eminently debts of honor there, and are more willingly and speedily paid than any others. To pay them a Chinaman will pawn all his property, and even sell his children HE DREW THE LINE. The Boy ff«« AU Right Bat Ho Had to I Bo Sent to School. “I have a boy who is going to bo shipped away to a boarding school just as soon as he is old enough for his mother to give her consent," said a board of trade man with some feel ing a day or two ago. “He is only 5 years old now, but he is too observing and too ready with his tongue, lie casts aspersions upon his father's habits that are unjust and uncalled for. “You see, it was just tftis way: The baby has bright red cheeks, and so her mother has given her a pet name of Rosy Cheeks. It is very pretty, and I was wont to smile and feel proud as the mother and baby played together. Rut it is all changed now. The boy took up the pet name industriously and thought he would improve upon it. lie tried his im provement last night. “ ‘Ilullo, Rosy Cheeks!’ he suddenly exclaimed to the baby. ‘How’s Rosy Cheeks?’ “Every one smiled and encouraged ldm in his pleasantry, so he tried the next feature. “ ‘Ilullo, Rosy Lips!’ he cried to his mother, and of course she showed her pleasure. “ ‘Hullo, Rosy Nose!’ he yelled, sud denly turning to me. And that is why he is going away. I have got to draw the line somewhere.” WAR'S MODERN HORRORS. Science la Making Ita Effect! Too Dread ful to Be Engaged In. Various experiments with the new rifles, which have recently taken place in Germany, have demonstrated in a very conclusive manner that another war would practically be one of an nihilation. A well-known French writer, in an article which he devotes to the subject, says that the battle field would at the end of an engage ment be covered with two or three hundred thousand corpses all crushed and broken, and would be nothing but a vast charnel house. No one would be left to bury the dead, and pestilence would in its turn sweep away the country people. Pointing the moral', he adds that the man— emperor, king or president of a re public—who, under these conditions, would expose the human race to such a fate would be the greatest criminal that the world had ever seen. It is tolerably plain that the horrors and the butchery which a war would en tail are becoming more and more recognized, and that the terrible vista thus opened out is exercising a sober ing effect on those who were for merly wont to discsus varions even tualities with a light heart Tons of Sliver la an Altar. A dispatch from Mexico announces that the erection of the magnificent canopy ovor the high altar of Our lady in the shrine of Guadalupe has been completed. The pillars to sup port it are each of a solid block of polished Scotch granite weighing seven tons. The diameter of each pillar is three feet and the height twenty feet The additions to the church edifice will not be completed for nearly two years at the present rate of progress. When finished the shrine of the lady of Guadalupe will be one of the notable Catholic church edifices of the world. The solid sil ver altar railing weighs twenty-six tons, and many millions of dollars are in other ways represented in the palatial place of worship. Disraeli's Undignified Stand. Lord Dufferin met Beaconsfield on the afternoon of one of his elections, and stopped to offer his compliments on his success. This was the great Disraeli’s rather complacent reply: “I said a pretty good thing on the platform. There was a fellow in the crowd who kept calling me a man of 3traw, without any stake in the coun ty, and asking what I stood upon, so I said: ‘Well, it is true that I don’t possess the acres of Lord So-and-So or the vast estates of the duke of A-, but if the gentleman wants to know upon what I stand, I will tell him I stand upon my head.’ ” Au Old Story Improved. A prominent banker in Sydney was holding forth on his early life. “How did I get my first start in life?” he ex claimed. “Why, one day I picked up a pin”— “Oh! that game’s played out,” was the cry. “I picked up a pin,” the banker continued, “a dia mond pin, which I pawned for £50, and after giving 10 ‘bob’ to charity, to change my luck, I began my career as a money-lender with the other £49 10s. To-day. after thirty years’ hard labor, I am a millionaire, and to cele brate the event have just given 109 more to charity.” , Health In a Coal Mine. A physician asserts that disease is no more demolishing in its raids among the workers in coal pits than it is among the agriculturists and la borers. If one can be guided by sta tistics, the coal-dust atmosphere in which their life is passed has no ele ment of any serious evil to them. It may not be pleasant, but it is not un healthful; indeed, the actual death rate of these miners is not abuormallv high, even when it includes the fatal wholesale disasters which occur from Mme to time in the pits. Check* (or Bicyclist*. Deaconson—Our minister has struck a novel idea; he's set aside a room for bicyclists, where they can check their machines while the service is going oa Headerman—That’s all right as far as it goes, but if your minister would only devise some scheme to compel bicyclists to check their ma chines while they’re flying along the streets, he’d receive far more thanks than he ever will for accommodating them in a church. SLIGHTLY MIXED. BldcmlUder VTsddle, Wadblllader Cad die. or Wldbollader Diddle. When Lord Randolph Churchill was last in America he visited the city of Philadelphia, and, while there, set about collecting statistics relating to the state prisons of Pennsylvania. He was referred to the head of the state prisons board, a gentleman rejoicing in the somewhat singular name of Cadwallader Biddle. Before calling upon Mr. Biddle, however. Lord Ran dolph fell into the hands of some wags of the Union League club. “You've got the name wrong,” said one of the merry jesters. “It's not Cadwallader Biddle, but Bidcallader Waddle.” “Don’t mind what he says, Lord Randolph,” exclaimed another; “the real name is Wadbillader Caddie.” A third member took the ex-chancel lor of the exchequer aside, and im parted to him in confidence that he was being gulled on both sides. "What then, is the actual name of the prisons board chief? anxiously asked the noble loi-d. □ “The actual name,” confideo his false friend, “is Wilbollader Diddle.” And when Lori Randolph drove to the prisons board that evening he was so upset that he stammered. “Will you take this card into Mr. Bid— cad — wid—wad—did—dollader Whatshisname?—I mean the chief of the board, but I forget his extraor dinary nomenclatural combination.” Mr. Cadwallader Biddle himself, is the amused narrator of this story. A COSTLY COMMA. It* Presence Co it the Country Ab.^ut Two y llllo:i Dollurs. “Oh, punctuation marks are not of much account. They're ju.t put in for looks. I don't want to bother about them.” Such are the sentiments of a good many schoolboys with regard to the branch of letter and composition writ ing. Others, again, appear to think that all that is necessary i; t > put in a comma here and th re at haphaz ard, to set of the “looksof the thing.” How risky this way of doing thing; is may be learned from the following incident. □ It seems that some twenty years ago, when the United States, by" con gress, was making a tariff bill, on r of the sections enumerated what articles should be admitted free of duty. Among the articles specified were “all foreign fruit-plants,” etc., meaning plants imported for transplanting, propagation or experiment. The enrolling clerk in copying the bill accidentally changed the hyphen in the compound word “fruit-plants” to a comma, making it read, “all for eign fruit, plants,” etc. As a result of this simple mistake, for a year, or until congress could remedy the blunder—all the oranges, lemons, bananas, grapes and other foreign fruits were admitted free of duty. This little mistake, which anyone would bo liable to make, yet could have been avoided by carefulness, cost the government not less than $2,000,000. A pretty costly comma, that TOO NATURAL. The Snrprlae Be I'reparutl for a Tn Party. “A feat attributed to many eminent artists of painting on a plane surface a fly or bee so illusively true to nature that the innocent observer would at tempt to brush it away, is not so dif ficult as is generally supposed,” re marked a Philadelphia painter of still life. “The art lies in making the in sect stand out from the background.” “Not long ago a patron brought me a half dozed saucers and a card upon which was pinned a house centipede, or thousand legs, requesting me to copy it exactly on each of the saucers, so that the base of the cup would cover it. I did so without expressing any curiosity. Afterward he told me that he had given a little tea party, and, without the knowledge of his wife, had substituted the painted saucers for plain ones. His amuse ment consisted in witnessing the hor rified expression on the faces of the guests when they raised their cups and the quickness with which they put them down again to keep the monster imprisoned. It was only when the hostess noticed that none of the guests drank their tea that the deception was discovered." Beyond the Court’* Jurisdiction. . On one of the many official excur sions made by boat to Fortress Mon roe and Chesapeake bay, Chief-Justice Waite, of the supreme court, Judge Hall, of North Carolina, and other dignitaries of the bench were par ticipants. When the government steamer had fairly got out into the Atlantic, the sea was very rough and Judge Hall was taken violently with seasickness. As he was moaning aloud in his agony, the chief-justice, laying a soothing hand on his shoul der, said: “My dear Hall, can I do anything for you? Just sugarest what you wish.” “I wish,” said the seasick judge, “your honor would overrule this motion.” Ills Forgiveness. A little boy had been extremely naughty at dinner, and had been sent away from the table just as his favor ite dish—cabinet pudding with sweet sauce—was being served. About S o’clock that evening, when the othei children had gone to bed, and hi< parents were alone in the sitting room, a tearful little face and a white-robed figure appeared at the door. “Mamma,” it said bravely, be tween sobs, “you told me never to go to sleep when anything wrong had been done until it was all put right; so I came down to tell you that—that that—1 forgive you and papa for what you did to me at the dinner table.” SPARROW SYMPATHY. An Instance Showing That the Bird* Have It for Their Kind. “While walking along the street ill *,he residence portion of the city last Bummer," says Dr. H. D. Osterman of Chicago, “I witnessed an incident that illustrated the sympathetic na ture of birds. As I was walking alotig I noticed a little sparrow fluttering on the ground and apparently unable to rise. 1 stopped and was on the point of going to it to ascertain if pos sible the cause of its trouble, when ail at once I noticed two full grown sparrows fly down from a neighboring tree and alight on the ground near by. I watched with a good deal of interest to see what they would do. The old birds hopped around a min ute or two and then one of them picked up a little bare twig about three inches long. The old bird took hold of one end of the stick with his beak, while its companion took hold of the other end in the same manner. They then approached the young bird, that still fluttered helplessly on the ground, and it caught hold of the middle of the stick with' its beak. The old birds then flew up to a tree, carrying the young bird hanging to the stick between them to a place of safety.” _ Virtuous Indignation. Mrs. Peters, who is older than she used to be, but perhaps not so old as she looks, was once standing' in a pub lic waiting-room with one of her neighbors and her neighbor’s little daughter, when a well meaning old gentleman made Mrs. Peters angry. He spoke pleasantly to the little girl, and then, turning to Mrs. Peters, said: ‘•is this your little grandchild?” ‘•Grandchild!” exclaimed Mrs. Peters —"grandchild! Does that girl look like a grandchild?” A I>lro Threat. So far as the audience was con cerned, Von Bulow always made a point of doing exactly as he pleased. On one occasion, when a Leipzig audi ence insisted on recalling him, in spite of his repeated refusal to play again, he came forward and said: "If you do not stop this applause, I will play all Bach's forty-eight preludes aud fugues from beginning to end!” Will Pay Cash. Poultry, game, furs, skins, wool, but tei, eggs. Hiram P. Ballard & Co. 89 E 38th St., Chicago. LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS. LEGAL NOTICE. Charles Swarner, defendant, will take no tice that J. L. Moore, trustee. plaintiff, has filed a petition in the district court of Holt county, Nebraska, against said defendant, the object and prayer of which are to fore close a mortgage dated July 17th. 1888. for 8575 and interest, upon the west half of the southeast quarter and the east half of the southwest quarter, of section 28, in township 25 north of runge 12. west of the 6th P. M. !n Holt county. Nebraska, given by diaries Swarner. to the Globe Investment Company, and assigned to the plaintiff, which mortgage was recorded in book 40 at page 376 of mort gage records of said county, and to have the same decreed to lie a first lien and said land sold to satisfy the same. You are required to answer said petition on or before the 12t h day of November, I8st4. J. L. Mooke, Trustee, Plaintiff. By S. D. Thorton, Ills attorney. 13-4 NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Land Office at O’Neill, Neb., I October 8,18H4. f Notice is hereby given that the followin named settler has filed notice of Ids lntentio to make final proof in support of Ids elain and that said proof will be made before th register and receiver at O’Neill, Neb., o November 16, 1884. viz: „ WILLIAM ALLEN, H. E. No 14.791, For the NE (4 section 10, township 30, rang 12 west. He names the following witnesses to prov his continuous residence upon and cultlvu tlon of, said land, viz: Ed Uoraback an John Colburt, of Slocum, and John Carto and Barney Kearns, of O’Neill, Nebraska. 14-0 JOHN A. lIAltMON, Register. NOTICE. Joseph Valentine Uavidson.Mary Davidsc William Eechelberger, Mrs. William Eeche berger, Edgar W. Adams, Alice M. Adam Henry C. W ilson.Mrs. Henry C.Wilson, who* first and real name is unknown, non-residei defendants, notice is hereby given, that n the 28th day of June, ism, Ellen E. Barbie, the plaintiff in this action, filed herpetitlo in the office of the clerk of the district coui of Holt county. Nebraska, the object an prayer of which are to foreclose a certai mortgage executed by Joseph Valentin Davidson and Mary Davidson, upon the ne: and li/a of seV* and se1* of nw^and neU c BW/4 section 31, township 27. range 11 west 6t P. M. in Ilolt county, Nebraska, whic mortgage was executed and delivered t Miowalter Mortgage Company, and filed f< record on the 14th day of May 1888, and rc corded in book ,81 of mortgages, at page 58 that there is now due upon said mortgaa You Are required tcfai swer said petition on or before the 12th da of November, 1894, or the same will be take as true and judgment entered accordingly. H. 51. Lttley, attorney for plaintiff. 13 iNunuE. 11. S. Ballou & Co., defendants, will take 18M °Hm?v t" H,e F,rh day ot -September, ffiir Herslilser, plaintiff herein ennn!'iS tel!,ion in the district court of Holt county. Nebraska, against you, the obiect ‘l“d P.ri7er of said petition being to have cbi'iSriet* ,!\nd ssttsfied of record and de clared paid a certain mortgage executed and delivered by Patrick McCoy and wife to ?£? ““ u ate required to answer said netition ° Dated Nuvem^r, 18JH. to“sw iNeU1'NL'b-thls ls‘ “ty o/Oc B. K. Dickson, attorney for plaintiff. NOTICK TOE Notice Is hereby (riven ts!. named settler hai tlon to make Anal proof in?01 claim, and that said proof fore the Resistor and Bee.iJ* Nebraska, on October 17, ism 2'1 STEPHEN BAU8CH, H. R » For the NW !4 section 19,town,k, range 12 west. ’ 'ow*»*hlp He names the following wit.,*, bis continuous residenceunlw® tlon of said land, vis: Ernest, Henry Winkler and Jnir1 all of O’Neill, Nebraska. **' JOHN A. HARMok 9A PROBATE NOTICE, In the matter of the estate of » Elhaney, deceased. 01 * Notice Is hereby given that th. said deceased will meet the’er^. McBlhaney and 0. L, McElhil!. estate before me county C?!* county, Nebraska, at the count,!. In said county on the 29th dav ,u“ 1894, on the 6th day of November i the 29th day of December. 18« a. m. each day for the purpose’^ _ their claims for examination adi, allowance. Six months are S creditors to present their claiTJ™ year for the executors to settle? from the 1st day of Septemder i This notice will be published in Frontier for four weeks sueeeil to the 8th day of November, law f.SEAI«J G. A. McC^t, _ Count INUTIUE. Micbael Loftus, Oscar McPaoU^ W. Tyler. Jacob £leln and t his wife, first name unknown a will take notice that .1.1, plaintiff, has filed a petition “ court of Holt county, Nebraska defendants, the object and pram; are to foreclose a mortgage datwi. 20.1888, for 8800 and Interest on k and the south half of the north*® of section fl ve,In township twentw of range thirteen, west of then Holt county, Nebraska, given Loftus to the Globe Investment and assigned to the plaintiff, wkk was recorded in book 41 at page lit gage records of said county, audit same decreed to be a first lien sold to satisfy the same. You are required to answer sai on or before the 5th day of Novemi Dated September 25, 1894. 12-4 J. L. MOORE, Tbustei By S. D. Thoruton, his Attorney, NOTICE OF DISSOLUTKij Notice is hereby given that thcM heretofore existing between B. a 5 J’ A. DeYarman and .1. H. DeYan the firm name of DeYarman Bra general livery business at O’Neil this day dissolved by mutual com have sold our business and liven Lydia J. DeYarman, she to collett due said firm and assume all del® Bald firm. B. A. Dtl J. A. Df O’Neill, Neb., Sept. 8.1894.’ ' ^ NOTICE. Bichard T. Mills. Charlotte Mil Toncray. Joseph Holmes, Jandts Ezra R. Carr, administrator of th Norman B. Richardson deceased. < will take notice that J. L. Moor plaintiff, has filed a petition in ti court of Holt county, Nebraska,a defendants, impleaded with CM. John M. Diels, Ed. F. Gallaghc County of Holt, the object «s which are to foreclose a mortgar 14th day of February, 1888, for terest and tax payments, upon thr ■4 of the northeast Ji, and the ts the southeast 14. and the northvs southeast h of section 11 in t north of range 10 west of the K I'! county, Nebraska, given by Rida and Charlotte Mills, to the Dakou Loan Corporation, and assigned w tiff, which mortgage was recorded; page 538 of mortgage records of ms and to have the same decreed to i lien and said land sold to satisfy tb. You are required to answer said on or before the 22nd day of October Dated September 11, 1894. J. L. Moobe, Trustee, Pla By S. D, Thorntos, his At THE OMAHA... WEEKLY 12 pages a week—From now to! coveting the entire campaign, ft ^10 CENTS Send Stamps or Silvern THE OMAHA I OMAHA, NEB. Sioux City, O’Neill Western Railwi (PACIFIC SHORT LINE THE SHORT RO BETWEEN SlOlJX ClT AND Jackson, Laurel, Rando\\ mond, Plainview, 0'^ Connects at Sioux City with nil1 lines, landing passengers l> NEW UNION PASSENGER#1 Homeseekers will find golden of ities aiong this line. Invest)! before going elsewhere' THE CORN BELT OF A* For rates, time tables, or other inf £aU H?°.n.aJfe“ts or address (j McS( F. C. Keceiver. Gen'l Y& loti dolla PER M0N1 In Your Qwn Locai made easily and honorably, witWJ tal, daring your spare hours. A* woman, boy, or girl con do the i'y, without experience. T*® necessary. Nothing like It f»r making ever offered before. Our' always prosper. No time learning the business. We teac* a niglit how to succeed from hour. You can make a trial Pense to yourself. We start everything needed to carry en ness successfully, and g»ar"1!; asrainst failure If you but fo‘> simple, plain Instructions. 1,r yon are in need of ready want to know all about the b« business before the public, scuU address, and we will mail you ment giving you all the particul*1 TRUE & CO., BOX* Augusta, I*1