The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, November 22, 1894, Image 8

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    CARMEN SVLVA‘8 HEART.
tt I* Tiry Trader, ii I Llttli KoumsnUn
Olrl Hu Kriuou to Know.
tier* it » pretty llttlo story about
Carmen By Ira: A few years ago,
When she was in the senlth of liar
popularity and health, she visited a
km all village school incog., and united
permission to put the children through
their "paces." The childron did their
mistress credit, answering with great
promptitude all the simple questions
the queen put to them.
Just before leaving the queen no
ticed one little tot in a far corner of
the room, with her tangled head of
hair bent over some book. The child
was so deeply engrossed in her read
ing that she took no notice whatever
of anybody in the room. The quoen
asked the reason of her silence; was
she deaf or otherwise afflicted? "Oh,
no," waa the answer, "but she is
stupid and iievcr attends to her
studies, but seizes every opportunity
to read stery books" Carmen Sylva
walked quietly up to the little reader,
and putting her hand on the eurly
head, asked gently what the child
was reading, and the latter held up
the book to the strange lady. It was
"Fairy Stories and Poems," by Car
men Sylva. "And do you like these
tales?” asked their author. "Like
them, madame? oh, I love them."
And Carmen Bylva took the child in
her arms, kissed the little flushed
face, and departed. About a weok
afterward the child’s aunt (for the
little maiden was an orphan) received
a letter from the queen offering to
educate and bring up the child. The
offer was gratefully and thankfully
accepted, and now the little one is in
one of the best schools in Roumania.
DANIEL WEBSTER’S PEES.
The Great Lawyer's In com a Was Un
uaally Limited Kwen for Hie llay.
One of ovr correspondents has been
■0 lucky as to fall in with a little
leather*oovered book, like those of
our bank depositors, whieh contains
Daniel Webster's autograph record of
his legal receipts. This chronicle fills
twenty-eight pages, and extends a
little more than from 1833 to 1830 In
clusive. The first entry, dated Sep
tember In the former year, Is of 950,
and the second of 930, for retainers
on the New York circuit The first
fee of 91,000 was paid in May, 1834,
hy a Mr. BadgeV. Services regarding
Ollley's will commanded 9800. The
total amount for the first year was
918,140, with the remark, "Sept 33,
1884, thus done and concluded.”
A similar summing up appears at
the close of eaoh other year. The
aecond total Is 913,183.74; the third Is
981,708. The first entry of 93,000 u^as
In 1835, March 7; the first of 93,000
December 7 in the same year. This
last payment was In respect to Flori
da land. The largest single honor
artum was 97,30a In February of the
fourth year 98,000 is set down as be
stowed in a case of Trinity church
(New York). In turning over this
record leading metropolitan and even
provincial lawyers are astonished that
Webster, although twenty years in
Boston, so undervalued his services.
Be learned' better at last When
Robert C Winthrop looked at the
earliest date he said; “That’s just
the time that I was ending my studies
In Webster's offioe,” and the ohirogra
phy led him to add that Webster
never wrote a firm hand.
Haases at Chinese War Ships.
To the Chinese there Is no con
fusion in the names of their orulsers
apd gunboats, and If Ting Yuen and
King Yuen get mixed by the* time
they arrive in New York it will not
seriously affect the fortunes of war
in the China soa. In colloquial Chi
nese the distinction Is preserved by
the difference of tone. In.the Chi
nese characters, or ideographs, the
possibility of confusion is absolutely
nil, for Chtng Yuen and Chlh Yuen no
more resemble eaoh other than do
New York and Minneapolis, or than
Bunker hill monument resembles the
state house. “Ting Yuen" signifies
“future security;" “Chen Yuen,"
“guarding the future." The charac
ters on the other vessels are as dls
tinot in sound, appearance and mean
ing at these two.
Fighting rtre la Chins.
When a fire starts In a certain lo
cality in Chinese cities proteoted by
walls extending from one end of the
town to the other, a large wooden
gate is swung across the street In
this way the fire is confined to defi
nite limits. Generally the fire is un
interrupted until there is nothing
left within the inclosure but ashes,
and in the ashes the owner must seek
his property, lie has no insurance
methods, and unless helped by his
own family is left to start anew.
The re-building ie not a difficult mat
ter, as there are no foundations or
cellars.
A Fine Passage.
A vary vain preacher having de
livered a sermon in the hearing of the
Her. Robert Hall, pressed him to state
what he thought of the sermon. Mr.
Hall remained silent for some time,
bat this only caused the question to
be pressed with greater earnestness.
At length Mr. Hall admitted: “There
was one very fine passage.’’ “I am
rejoiced to hear you say sa Pray,
air, what was it?’’ “Why, sir, it waa
the passage from the pulpit to the
vestry.”
Mr. Gilbert’s Pleasant Sensatiea*
W. S. Gilbert was lunching, not
long ago, at a country hotel, when
he found himself in company with
three cycling clergymen, by whom
he .was drawn into conversation.
When they discovered who he was,
one of the party asked Mr. Gilbert
••how he felt in such a grave and
reverend company. ” “I feel,’’ said
Hr. Gilbert, “like a Hon in a den oi
Daniels.”
Cost of a kiss.
lie Rad to Start over Again tor Hirtly
Asking One.
The police court report* In the Lon
don papers sometimes quote the price
of a kiss, which usually ranges from
half a crown to half a sovereign, no
cording to the temperament of the
magistrate. How ridiculously cheap
this is will be seen from the follow
ing account of the cost of merely ask
ing for a kiss, which has been sent to
mo from India:
Probably yon will hardly credit the
story, but it is quito truo, and though
the nemos are withhold by the Alla
habad paper which gives the facts,
the parties are well known. An offi
cer of the Madrns medical service
was holding one of the most desirablo
civil surgeonoies in the province, and
there ho received a visit from p civilian
and his wife. While driving with the
lady in a dogcart the doctor asked her
for a kiss. It was very wrong,
especially as there was a native serv
ant sitting behind tho couple, and he
met with the Btern repulse his Impu
dence and imprudenoe invited. This
exemplary woman afterward wrote
to the doctor that she had told her
husband of his conduct.
The doctor then wrote an abject
apology, which the husband submit
ted to the Madras government. With
out being allowod to say a word on
his own behalf, the doctor was forth
with advised to resign tho service to
avoid dismissal. Mince then the
Madras government has been Induced
to modify its decision. The offender
is graciously permitted to serve the
further nine months necessary to
qualify him for the lowest scale of
pension, but ho has been transferred
from his civil surgeoncy back to mili
tary service and packed off to a re
mote station in Upper Burmah.
A RELIC OP 8LAVERV.
The Bond Required Bafora Negroas
Could Travel on Railroad*.
It may not bo generally known to
those who came on the stage of ex
istence subsequent to the war that
slaves were transpor ted on the rail
roads subject to sue h conditions as
appear in the following document
which was preserved by Robert Mor
ris of Kentucky. As a relic of ante
bellum days It will be interesting
alike to old and young:
‘.‘Whereas, The president and di
rectors of the Louisville and Nash
ville railroad on the 1st day of Au
gust, 1800, passed the following reso
lution: ‘The transportation of per
sons of color over the road and the
liability inourred being under consid
eration; resolved that no person of
color be taken in the cars for passage
over any part of the road or its
brandies without the execution of
an obligation, signed by a responsi
ble party or parties, to indemnify
and save'the company harmless, and
tho superintendent print forms, to be
kept at the different depots, and give
full instructions to the agents and
conductors and have this resolution
fully carried into effect’ Now this
instrument witnesseth that the under
signed obligate themselves to pay the
Louisville and Nashville railroad com
pany all costs and damages which said
company shall incur for taking at our
instance the following slave (colored
person) over their road, to-wlt: A
negro girl named Milly, about four
teen years old, the property of Craig
Middleton, of Henry county, Ken
tucky. As witness our hands this
84th day of December, 186a
“Ossian Drank, Principal.
"John Neely, Surety.”
THROUOH THE FLOOR.
Drop of a Fat Negress Made Darkles
Think of Judgment Dag.
A New York colored Baptist ohuroh
was the scene of a rather amusing
contretemps at a rece nt service. As
is always the case the house was
crowded. The servioes had progressed
to that point where several of the
brethren and sisters were disposed to
give expression to their feelings in
fervent ament
All at once a 300-pound sister bobbed
up about tho center of the building
with a shout and began to pray. In
a jiffy the floor wont down and for
fifteen seconds pandemonium reigned.
Darkles piled out of windows and
doors like they had been shot out of
a gun. One old brother declared,
“For the Lawd, thought judgment
done come!”
The 300-pound sister stopped her
shouting and crawled out of the debris
of the broken down floor, looking
somewhat sheepish and surprised.
The Bishop's Instances.
Bishop Wilmer of Louisiana once
had a talk with a Baptist minister,
who insisted that there were several
places in the bible where immersion
was unquestionably referred to.
••Yes,’’ replied the bishop; “I recall
two such instances, where there can
be no doubt as to the mode: one is
where Pharaoh and his host were im
mersed in the sea and the -other
where the Gadarene pigs were
drowned in the deep.”
••Where Are the Rich?"
Not long ago, a London preaches
indulged in a little bit of sarcasm over
a small collection. He did it very
neatly in a preface to his sermon on
the following Sunday. “Brethren,”
he said, “our collection last Sunday
was a very small one. When I look
at this congregation, I say to myself,
‘Whore are the poor?1 But as I looked
at the collection when we counted it,
I exclaimed, ‘Where are the rich?' ”
Kletrlo Sunstrokes.
It is now claimed that there is such
a thing as electric sunstroke, the
workers around electrical furnaces
in which metal aluminum is pro
duced suffer from them. The intense
light causes Jpainful congestions,
which cannot be wholly prevented by
wearing deep-ooloredfglassea
STOPPED THE BABY’S CRY.
A Bachelor Urine* HI* Knowledge of
Human Mature Into Fl»y,
A bachelor Is not usually accredited
with much knowledge about the
proper treatment of children; but
sometimes they step in where angels
—that is, the mothers of the children
—fail to tread. A well-known man
about town, who is pretty well on in
yoars, and not very fond of children,
stopped in to see a married sister the
other day and found her trying to
amuse her little boy of about 5 years.
Not long after he arrived she stepped
out of the room to attend to soma
household matter or other, leaving
him alone with the child. The latter
eyed liitn dubiously for some minutes,
lie was a spoiled child if ever there
was one, and he had no idea of mak
ing promiscuous acquaintances. The
bachelor tried to make the little ono
laugh, but all ho got for his antics
was a sour look. Finally, without
warning, the child burst out crying.
Here whs a quandary to be sure, lie
didn't dare to pick the boy up and
soothe him. His attempts in a verbal
lino were dismal failures. What
should he do? Finally a thought
struck him. He looked at the crying
youngster and the crying youngster
looked at him through his tears. He
was evidently much pleased with the
impression he was making.
“Cry louder,” said he.
Tho child obeyed.
“Louder yot,” urged the bachelor.
A yell went up that would havo
done credit to an Indian.
"Cry louder still,” insisted the man,
and the boy did his best to obey.
“Louder!" fairly howled the uncle.
“I won't snapped the infant, and he
shut up his mouth with a click and
was quiet for the rest of the day.
HE LIVED AS A GIRL.
Extraordinary Experience of a Tooth
In the 8will Alpa.
An extraordinary story of a young
man passing as a girl all his life until
a month or two ago is related from
Treschatol, in the Alpine district of.
Switzerland. He was known by the
name of Laura Besnar, and came of a
good family. Why his friends should
have registered the child as a female
und subsequently kept up the decep
tion is a matter of mystery. The
young man is said to havo ' found the
companionship of the weaker sex very
pleasant, and would probably have
continued to frequent the society of
young women as one of their number'
had not he fallen in love, but in order
to woo and win the lady of his choice
he declared his proper sex.
The earlier years of his life were
spent in a convent school, on leaving
which he studied a cure for stammer
ing and subsequently founded a
school for that purpose. This was so
successful that in a few years he
amassed 40,000 francs and then decided
to study medicine. With this object
he was entered as a student at Gren
ople school of medicine as a woman,
and to all outward appearances was
one.
His features were distinctly femi
nine, and nothing in the shape of a
mustache or whiskers were to be ob
served. In every way he comforted
himself as a female and seemed quite
at ease in the character he assumed.
The only thing which might have be
trayed him, perhaps, was a slight sus
picion of the masculine in his voice.
This, however, was scarcely sufficient
to attract special notice.
Painting Aretlo Scenes.
Some of the difficulties of pursuing
art under disadvantageous circum
stances were explained recently by
Frank W. Stokes, who undertook to
make a thorough study of arctic ef
fects in connection with the Peary
expedition. One of his best pictures,
he said, would be a moonlight scene
on the everlasting snows. To paint
this he had to keep up a perpetual
dance before his easel, making a few
dashes with his brush and then shak
ing himself vigorously to save him
self from being frozen. He declared
the moonlight was the most gorgeous
he had ever seen, being so brilliant
that he could easily distinguish his
colors, even though they were on the
conventional dark palette.
A Novel Mustard Pot.
A new kind of mustard pot has been
made that insures always having
fresh mustard. It is the size of an
ordinary mustard pot. and consists of
two parts, in the lower half of which
is placed the dry mustard, while in the
neck of the upper part is a small con
tainer for the water necessary for
mixing, together with a little screw,
which, when turned by the consumer,
allows the water to escape into the
mustard below, the two being amalga
mated by a turn or two of the screw.
In this way a fresh supply for each
meal can be obtained without waste
or trouble, and as the pot can bn
taken in two in an instant, there is
uo difficulty about cleaning it.
Prosecuted for High Treason.
At Tarnopol in Galicia a secret so
ciety was recently discovered, com
posed of some seventy high school
boys of which the object was the sep
aration of Galicia from the Austrian
empire and the establishment of an
independent Polish kingdom. The
boys met regularly an hour before
school, to deliver speeches attacking
the emperor and the pope. The gov
ernment has actually prosecuted
eighteen of them for high treason.
Jack-of- All-Trades.
Sixth avenue, near Forty-secona
street, in New York, has an odd sign
which calls attention to a business
man who deals in "Misfit Clothing,
Jewelry and Bric-a-brac," while at
the Jefferson market, on the same
thoroughfare, a man shows a sign
reading: “Cut Flowers, Seeds, Plants
and Notary Public.”
ON AN IRONCLAD AT SEA.
Life on tho Ocean Wave and Home on
the llolling Deep.
Admiral von Werner, a high author
ity in naval matters in Germany, de
scribes in a work recently published
the behavior of armor-plated men-of
war in heavy seas. Ho says: “Even
with a moderate gale and sea an
armor-plated cruiser, if going against
tho wind, will find herself in condi
tions similar to those of a storm—at
least, tho crew will have that im
pression. The movements of the stern
of the ship are violent and exceed
ingly disagreeable. The waves pushed
by the advancing prow sweep con
tinually over the ship from bow to
stern. All windows and port holes
must be closed, and air reaches the
lower decks, where the heat increases
unbearably, only through tho artifi
cial ventilators. With tho ex
ception of the specially pro
tected command bridge all the
uncovered portions of the ship are
impassable; thus the whole of the
crew must bear as well as they can
the hell of the closed decks. On such
a ship no one can feel comfortable;
and when there is a storm in which a
sailing ship would feel comparatively
at ease the crew of an armor-plated
ship imagines itself to be in a heavy
hurricane which threatens destruc
tion at every minute. The long, nar
row forepart of the ship, which is not
borne lightly by the water, and is
rendered extremely heavy by the
mighty ram and the armored deck
and the cannon and torpedoes, forces
the ship in a high sea to pitchings
and rollings of such an extraordinary
kind that they cannot be described.
The crew of such a ship is not only
exposed to mortal dangers, but the
voyages they make render them
physically, extremely and danger
ously nervous; the mental impressions
they receive wear them out and make
the profession hateful.”
THEY ARE WELL "FIXED."
What the Comto de Farin' Family nan
Become Foaaeaaed Of.
The comte de Paris was not stingy,
but was fond of money. His view of
his children was that without heaps
of money and royal husbands or
wives their lot would be unenviable.
Between the dowries he could give
and the importance the courts of
Europe attached to him as a “legiti
mate’’ pretender, their matrimonial
prospects were brilliant. The queen
of Portugal was given 920,000 a year
during her parents’ lifetime. She
will altogether have about 900,000 or
more. So will each of her sisters.
||The youngest son was left the re
version of Villa Mamique, which is
now worth 8,000,000 francs. The
comte de Pafis must have been worth
9325.000 a year, independently of what
he had from the duchesse de Gallicra.
ne had a fourteenth part of the 52,
000,000 francs of appanges, and of
“the Orleans debt,” of 16,000,000
francs, which the Versailles assembly
allowed to Louis Philippe's debt.
Of the uncles’ and aunts’ shares he
and the due de Chartres had about
9200.000 apiece, the arrears of their
mother’s dower income, which was
secured on the Orleans estates. The
duchesse de Gallieragave about 1,500,
000 francs. A good deal of this
was sunk in improvements of the Eu
and Amboise chateaux and estates,
but very little of it was spent on po
litical organizations.
The fortune of the comtesse de
Paris must be very great, but it has
been kept “dark.”
Bernhardt's Dressmaker.
There is a modiste in Paris who
owes the fortune she is making to
Mme. Bernhardt. Her name is on the
billheads, tray-trunks and bandboxes,
but she is known all over the profess
ional and fashionable world as sim
ply “Bernhardt’s dressmaker.” She
picks her customers, gets her own
prices, charges like a body of cavalry
in combat, and makes gowns, robes,
wraps and those indescribable lace
things collectively known as confec
tions that are the envy or admiration
of the gay world. She has a dozen
American customers, a score oi so of
English patronesses and a hundred or
more French women, for whom she
designs.
What Ha Wanted. v
One evening, at a symphony re
hearsal of the Meiningen orchestra,
Bulow stopped the orchestra and ex
claimed: “Kettle-drums forte!” The
drummer, who thought he had done
pretty well already, redoubled his
efforts; but again Bulow stopped and
shouted: “Kettle-drums forte!” Once
more the drummer put on extra steam;
and, when Bulow stopped again, he
exclaimed. “Iteally, llerr Kapell
meister, if I beat any harder I shall
break the drum-heads!” “Who asked
you to do that?” retorted Bulow
quietly; “you play fortissimo, and
what I want is forte only. ”
to met* for tho Feet.
The latest atrocity in the interest
of fashion is a corset for the foot.
The new instrument of torture is
made so as to enable a size smaller
shoe to be worn than would be other
wise possible, and consists of a strong
though thin band of web, which is
fixed round tho instep while the foot
is off the ground. When it is in
place it is comparatively easy to put
on a shoe which is altogether too
small, and the pressure being on the
corset instead of tho shoe, the latter
does not stretch.
New ttaadin* of an Old Saying.
‘ Tommy,” said the teacher, “you
may put in different language the
expression, ‘Let me write the songs
of my country and I care not who
makes its laws.’” About fifteen
minutes later Tommy handed in a
paper bearing tho words. “Let me
pipe the lays of a country, and I
don’t care who lays the pines.”
Four Thousand Bads Are Constantly
Occupied by Fatlents.
What is doubtless the largest hospi
tal benevolent and free school com
bined is in Turin, Italy. It is called
the Cottolengo, and is three stories
high in the form of a St Andrew's
cross. It has 5,000 bads, over 4.000
being constantly occupied.
The connecting wing, forming .the
street front, contains the operating,
waiting and other rooms. Numerous
pavilions, cottages, school houses and
workshops occupy the grounds, sepa
rated by small but well kept gardens
and yards, giving plenty of air and
light and adding cheerfulness to
the conglomerate of stone structures.
The whole being scrupulously clean,
a pleasing, homelike effect is secured.
Sixty years ago a poor monk, nam.'d
Cottolengo, founded this institut: on
money solicited by begging. Its sup
port is still obtained in this manner
and by private, mostly anonymous,
contributions from one day to an
other. No sick asking for treatment
nor any healthy person needing shel
ter have ever been refused admit
tance. If the latter is in extreme
poverty and wants work and cannot
get it outside, it is given him here.
Homeless boys and girls receive free
schooling. They learn how to read
and write, knitting, sewing, embroi
dering or a trade. So do men and
women, the trades of carpenter, shoe
maker, tailor, printer, bookbinder,
baker and gardener being practically
taught.
The more skilled laborers are
placed in the repairing department
There is constant work for the hospi
tal, also work to fill orders coming
from outside. Deaf mutes, the blind,
incurables, idiots, fallen women and
picked-np children are taken in and
cared for. Anyone needing a roof
over his head, so long as he is poor
and destitute and not a criminal,
gnds a welcome home here, provided
he is willing to Work in exchange for
shelter and a good meal.
The Cottolengo is a city in itself,
managed by a board of business men
and physicians, ministered to by a
priest and attended by a sisterhood.
The question, however, whether the
applicant be a Catholic or not, has
never yet been raised.
A press dispatch from Sioux City, date
of November 16, says: A. H. Parsons,
a prominent live stock dealer in this city,
was indicted today on charge of embez
zlement and grand larceny. The former
charge is by L. I. Tuckett, of O’Neill,
Neb., who accuses Parsons of cheathing
him out of several thousand dollars on
a live stock transaction. The latter is
preferred by the Finance company of
Iowa.
The following special from Boyd
county to the State Journal of Monday
throws a little additional light on the
manner in which elections aic conducted
in that progressive piece of Nebraska:
“The populists derive little satisfaction
in this county from the election. The
defeat of Daugherty for congress and
Sample for state senator they now arc
seeing is of a great loss to themselves as
homesteaders. Their leaders now freely
express themselves as wishing republi
cans success in case of a contest. Mor
ton precinct, this county, is on the
Itundall military reservation. The
settlers have no rights there—so the in
terior department has decided. This
precinct gave a large populist majority.
In Spencer and Bristow precincts gross
frauds were practiced. Both went pop
ulist. In Spencer precinct the men who
acted as judges and clerks were the night
before released from custody of the
officers of the state (populist) so they
might take charge of the ballot box “in
the interests of a fair election!” The
charge under which they were held in
arrest was stuffiing the ballot box at the
bond election, which occurred a few
days before.
McCLURE’S
MAGAZINE
FOR 1895,
Volume IV begins December, 1894.
A splendidly illustrated life of
napoleon*
the great feature of which will be
SEFENTY-PIVE PORTRAITS
of Napoleon, showing him from youth
to death; also portraits of his family
and contemporaries and pictures of
famous battlefields; in all nearly
SOO PICTURES.
Begins in November and runs through
eight numbers. The eight 6
Napoleon Numbers, $1.00.
TRUE
- detective
STORIES
by authority from the archives of the
PINKERTON DETECTIVE AOENCT.
Mniw'w an<? Pinkerton (Nov. 1894;) tt
Molly Maguires; Allan Pinkerton’s L,if«
I*™* °f Capture of Train-robber
lorgers, Bank-rohbers, etc.; each con
plete in one issue, 12 in all.
SHORT STORIES BY
Confn OtafuK
Robert Barr n l ' R^mtl
Bret llarte Cm,? kIT*
Joel Chan,Her Harris and many others.
noted contributors
w TU ■ ll'j!>crl Low* Stevenson
Archibald Forbes This /lardy
copp to the'puwfshert’"11118 f°r * 8amp
S. S. McCLURE, L’t’d,
30 Lafayette Place. New York.
LEGAL ADVERTI8EM1
NOTICE.
Mary B. Calhoun, Orlea
Calhoun, Ida Daugberty j?
Ouy Calhoun, Clark Calhoun fj1!
and J. H. Keith, partners'11,,,*.?11
name of Ford & fteltb, defend??:'
notice that on the 2nd day on?1at8,
4 Eniiir !
J. H. Keith, trustee, and Em'ii','.'
plaintiffs herein, filed their i,r
district court of Holt count?1?
against said defendants,0^’?1
prayer of which tire to foreeln.^1
trust deed executed by one <2*
hnun and the dpfpndunt m.
houn and the defendant Marv v”!
upon the northwest quarter of £*71 ^
four (dl) of township twentyX*
ranirn twnlve M2> vnaf nf ♦*.„
range twelve (12) west of the kIyo
meridian, In Holt county, Nebrigu
the payment of ascertain bond or
May 1.1886, for the sum of five h„“
lars. due and payable in five ve»™
date thereof, said bond or nnffi
payable to Eugene Westervelt
endorsed and assigned to plaintfif
St lit, i*r. ii nri an 1,1 t.„.. u ' ,
Stuart.^and^sahl trust deed beijj
plaintiff, J. H, Keith, to secure ,,
there is now due upon said bond n,
trust deed the sum of (500 and inti,
onfron November 1, 1888, at elite —
per annum, also Interest upon mat,,
est at the rate of ten per cent .7®
On *20 from May 1,1880; on *20 fn»
ber 1, 1889; on I*0 from May l
from November 1,1890 and on S2oZj
1891. The plaintiff also claims thT
recover in said action amounts of a
on said real estate and a Hen there?
same as follows: (24.80 and Interm
cent, from November 10,1891- *i”J
terest at 10 per cent, from NovenTbi
(22.52 and Interest at 10 per cent
vember 21,189B; (19.66 and Interest
cent, from September 13. 1894. and
pray said premises may be decreed.
to satisfy the amounts due thereon
said, and that all the defendant!,
may be foreclosed of their right,din
es t and lieu In said premises, and tt
respective Interest therein may
to be Junior, subsequent and Infers
lien of said trust deed. *
You are required to’answer „
or before the 17th day of December
Dated Novembers, 1804. '
J. H. Keith, ran
and Emily l. gn
_ FUi
By R. K. Di<*
Mahtin I. Baot
Atta
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