The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, November 29, 1894, Image 8

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    HIS MARK.
fkm Are Were of Utatinsnlslilng the
FrofMtlnnal Almc .tiker.
"Say, fronts, can't you (five a poor
fellow a few cents to got something
to eat? Haven't hail a hite all day.
Can't you give a poor follow a few
cents to get something to oat?”
lie was running alongside of them
repeating hla plea over and over
again In a singing voice. One of the
men hesitated and then put his hand
In his pocket, but his companion took
him by the arm and turned upon the
beggar.
"(lot out of this,” ho said In a tone
which seemed almost brutal, and the
beggar turned away abruptly.
"Don't you think you were pretty
rough to him?” asked the men who
had shown an Inclination to give
alms.
"No,” answered his friend unsym
pathetloally, "he's a professional."
"How do you know?"
"Just you keep your wits about you
when a beggar approaches you. That
fellow said 'gents.' That's profes
sional. He asked for a few cents.
That's professional. And what's more
to my point, he kept repeating hts
sentences over and over again. He
has learned to sing them over that
way by repeating them a thousand
ttmen When a man who Is not used
to begging asks you for help he
doesn't do it that way. lie just stum
bles along, uttering any appeal that
comes to his ltpa He hasn't anything
by heart He doesn't sing It and it
doesn't slip off hla tongue so glibly.
The professional beggar is like an ac
tor. He has his lines and he always
reads them in the same way. Don't
let one of those fellows fool you
again."
A TERRIBLE DRBAM.
Mr Bleak la Tortured with • llu|
Tear That Uamani Him.
Mrs. Blank went chopping. Mr.
Blank went with her. No one can
explain why he went, for ahe didn't
poalttvely compel It, and he la atlll re*
yarded aa aanel He went, anyhow.
8he wanted button*. Thoae at Jenk
Ina’ atore were too email, much too
amall. So ahe went to Kahn'a and
Poananakl'a and the Merohanta’ Sup
ply; then to Poananakl’a and the Mer
chants Supply and Kahn'a. At Jenk>
tna* again they ahowed her the learna
buttona and ahe found them too largel
Blank gueaaed it a eaae of expanalon
eauaed by tha heat; It aeemed hot to
hlml She got almoat to another plaoe
—not quite—for they aaw her coming
an4; locked the door for the night
{the went home.
That night Blank'a hard breathing
woke hla tired wife, and ahe woki
him, in turn.
"What'a the matter?’ ahe da
mended.
*‘1—1 had a dreadful dream,” hi
gaaped; “1 thought we were botl
dead, that you had gone to>heaven
and that 1—I hadn't!” i
“How perfectly awful," die cried
graaplng him convulalvely around thi
neck, “to bo aeparated and£-"
“We—we weren't aeparated,'
moaned Btank with a ahudder; “I—:
could have endured that! But no
no! I dreamt tffct you were to b<
allowed to go affipplng forever, anc
that 1 waa condemned to go wltl
Ton.’’ __
A BEIDLITZ POWDKR.
A IM Duiwom Heats la the Coart 01
the Rajah.
As doctor, attached to tha
ooart of1 rajah, made hlmielf almost
ladUpaniable to his highness. He
' had, fortunately, also made a friend
of hla prime minister. On one occa
sion hie highness being slightly indis
posed, had taken, by the dootor's ad*
sloe, a aeidllts powder, with which he
expressed himself delighted. Its
g tendency to “b^g and flis ready to
, Mow your nose fjlKr seemed to him to
* "scatter ooolnets;" and he seemed so
mnoh better after taking it that the
doctor felt himself justified in Joining
In a hunting-party. Presently a
horseman from the palace, in the con
fidential employment of the grand
vixier, galloped up to him. "My mas
ter bids me tell you,"J(e said, "that
his highness has broken open your
medieine-chest and taken, first, all
the white powders and then all the
Mue." "Gracious goodness,” cried
the doctor, "there were twenty-three
of each of them!” "My master adds,”
continued the messenger, dropping
his voice, “that you had better make
for the frontier without one moment’s
delay.” The doctor put spurs to his
horse and never drew rein till he was
“ont of the jurisdiction of the court.”
Wire Shafts for Steamers.
- Trials that have \>een made with
the new plan of wire shafts for steam
ships are said to show that when the
shaft is in position and rotating stress
is applied a tensile force is exerted
' upon the individual wires and their
*■- several fastenings—each a unit of
atrength sustaining its part of the
total amount of stress. The strength
of the individual wires and of the
fastening being known, the strength
of the shaft as a whole can likewise
be ascertained.
A Lart* Profit.
The walls of Paris are doomed. No
other large city la Europe is sur
rounded by a wall, and as the one
round Paris occupies a space compris
v> ing no fewer than 13,000,000 square
yards, or one-eighth of the total area
of the capital,, the state will derive an
. immense profit from its removal and
the sale of the ground which it stands
upon.
■acred Spiders.
One American tribe believed that
at death the soul had to pass over to
the other world on floats made of
* cobwebs. On this account the spider
was held in high veneration, it being
accounted a highly dangerous act to
kill or injure one. i
HB BAW HIS ERROR
1st Then It Hu All the rult at ll«r
Dwell-llretMil Friend
"I have just called, MIm Simpson,
«aid tho angry lover, “to say farewell;
but boforo 1 nay It 1 want you to know
that I bare discovered your falseness
and I despise you for it!”
"Why, llilly, whatever is the mat
ter?”
“Oh, you know well enough. May
be I didn't pass the gate last evening
uml see you with your head on an
other man’s shoulder. Who is the
happy man?”
“But Billy, I haven't seen any man
but you, dearest; honest I haven't."
“No, I suppose not Then, maybe.
1 am blind, deaf and dumb, anil an
idiot Maybe you didn't have com
pany last evening?"
“No one, Billy, but my best friend,
Emily. No, I didn't and I think you
are a wretch.”
“And you didn't stand at the goto?”
“Oh, yes, we did. We were count
ing the sturs in the big dipper—mak
ing wishes on them."
"Oh, yes, I suppose I was blind.
Now, maybe you’ll describe Emily to
me?”
“Why, she had on her Knox hat,
her black blazer suit, a white shirt
waist, with a black satin tie, and a
black satin vest You know Emily,
Billy."
Billy—Um—ml I sec.
And what might have been a
modern tragedy was averted and
Billy made up at once.
KNEW NEITHER.
* Reporter Use on Experience With nn
Enplleh Vleltor.
A few evening's ago there chancod
to be a distinguished visitor from the
llritish isles at one of the Washing*
ton hotels, and to him the reporter
sent up his card, putting his name
just over tho paper he represented,
thinking the juxtaposition would es
tablish the connection between the
two with sufficient clearness. It has
always done so with American vic
tims. The bellboy who took the card
tarried long—in fact, ho stayed so
long that a second boy was sent after
the first, to see what caused tho delay.
In a little while down came both, No.
1 bringing the Information that tho
tourist said he didn't know either
one 'of the gentlemen, and begged to
be exoused.
Tnen the boy explained that the
guest on being handed the card gazed
at it awhile in silence, and finally
went to his trunk and hauled out a
book. For some minutes he hunted
for the name of the reporter in his
list of acquaintances, and then he
began running through the Fs,
thinking it possible he must have met
a Mr. Post somewhere in his travels.
As his search wasn't successful in
either case he got a sooond book and
1 went through that with a similar re
sult That was why the bellboy
tried the reporter's patience and that
was why the message came that "he
1 didn't know either one of the gentle
men.”
ONE ON OSCAR WILDE.
Why Artut Whtatler Couldn't Heller*
HU Cal Had Had Kittens.
Everyone knows the story of Whist
ler’s celebrated reply to Oscar Wilde's
envious exclamation of delight of a
clever sketch of the eccentric painter
—how Oscar said, “Oh, Jimmy, how I
wish I had said that!" and how Whist
ler answered, “Never mind, dear
boy, you will’’—but everyone does
not know, says the Chap-book, how
during the time that they w$re
frlnds, a kitten was given to Whistler,
and that in token of affection and
withoutjundue curiosity he had named
it Oscar. Time passed a nd Whistler’s
wife invaded the studio one day with
a momentous announcement
' “Jimmy," said she, “did you know
Oscar has kittens?"
“Impossible,” said Whistler, laying
down his brushes; “Oscar can’t"
“Come and see,” said his wife.
Together they went to where Oscar
and the kittens lay. Mrs. Whistler
looked at her husband, who stood for
a moment >n amazement and dismay.
“Never mind," he said, “they must
be plagiarized.”
Saved bjr a Doc ttad a Drum.
In 1778 ft ship was wrecked on the
south coast of England, not far from
Portsmouth. Fortunately, owing to
the sharp wits of one of the sailors,
all souls were saved. He got a drum
that happened to he on board, re
paired its defects so as to make it
quite watertight, then fastened a
rope to it securely, and tied the whole
round a dog. Next lie let the dog
into the sea, and the noble animal
succeeded in reaching the land.
Thera some on-lookers seized the
drum and hauled in the rope, lly
now a much stronger rope had been
tied to the end of the first one, and
by its means passengers and crew
were gradually drawn ashore.
Complimentary.
A well-known professor of natural
science mnrried recently and took his
young wile to a meeting of a learned
society. Another eminent professor
df the same branch took pity on the
evident shyness of the bride, and
came up to her; whereupon she, fish
ing for a little compliment, said: "I
feel so out of place among all these
clever people!" And he answered—
gallantly, as he thought: “Well, you
know, scientific men never do marry
clever wives!”
Oscar Wilde's Iteply.
A story is being told that on the
death recently of the great scholar,
Walter Pater, the editor of a London
evening paper telegraphed to Oscar
Wilde to ask him to supply some per
sonal gossip about the dead man, whe
was known to be a friend of the ex
aesthetic, whereupon Mr. Wilde wired
I back: “Leave the gossip to the jack
. als, not the lions, of literature.”
LIGHTHOUSES.
Nunli of Coatrlvanee and Sclsnrs—
Ths Bong of tha Mraa.
Did you ever see ft lighthouse of
the modern kind? Here in Ita narrow
tower is a strong eleotrie light; round
the light all night long, revolves the
cylinder of prisms artfully arranged.
Flash of ten seconds; rest of ten see*
ends; flash again; rest of five seconds;
third flash; darkness for the rest of
the minute. And so on all night long.
Out at sea the officer on watch counts
the flashes and knows the lighthouse
and where he is. Or there is a fog
horn; in a chamber beside the light*
house are the tanks or cisterns filled
with compressed air; nothing short of
compressed air will sound this terri*
ble alarm; compressed air worked with
« steam engine.
Then there is the voice of the elren.
You have heard the modern form of
the once enohantlng and alluring
voice of the siren; it is now the voice
>f torturo and agony; the maiden,
the water rymph, the ear piercer, is
now provided with a throat which
contains one cylinder within another.
Both cylinders are provided with
long, narrow apertures; the inner one
is set to revolve at a thousand turns
t minute. Then the compressed air
is turned on; and the song of the siren
begins. It is the shriek of the im
prisoned air forcing its way out
through these apertures; it passes at
the velocity of 3,000 feet a minute.
“Beware!" cries the modern siren.
“Come not nearer; give me a wider
berth! Stand off! Here is danger;
hero are rocks; here lurks death upon
sharp and relentless rocks, hungering
for sailors!” Safety before poetry.
Lot us not regret that we no longer
wreck the ship and drown the crew
for the sake of a sweet false face and
v sweet falso song.
AVAUNT FOUL BUTT8R.
*. Plan to Hftkt tli* Rank«it Small Lika
a Fragrant Flower.
Boarding house Inmates, whose
aostrlls are offended by the soent of
rancid butter, can thank their stars
that they will not hare to suffer
nuch longer. One of themselres—J.
V. Bannister, of New York, who^p
sense of smell was long since blunted
by boarding house butter, has discov
ered a cheap way to give foal smell
ing butter, butterine or oleomar
garine the scent of the most fragrant
(lower. This discovery will at the
same time be a priceless boon to
boarding house keepers, who are pes
tered half to death by the plaints of
their prisoners.
So, if Mr. Bannister succeeds in
bringing his discovery into general
use in boarding houses the inmates
thereof are likely to hail him as a
Newton, a Davy and a Franklin rolled
into one. His plan is to treat rancid
butter with essential oils. By this
means, hr says, he can give the most
offensive butter any scent that may
be desired.
Violet, lily of the valley, rose,
verbena, heliotrope, magnolia and
jessamine are among the sweet per
fumes butter buyers may chose from.
Still, he confesses that experience
has taught him that' there is a brand
of so-called creamery butter used In
theatrical boarding houses in summer
time the rankness of which musk
alone can overcome.
KBBPINO THE DEVIL AT BAY.
low the Chlnaae Clrcumrant the luaj
of Mankind at a Fnnaral.
A Chinese funeral is a constant suc
cession of efforts to cheat the devil,
who is supposed to be lying in wait
to capture the soul of the departed.
So long as the body remains in the
bouse the soul is safe, for the devil
cannot come in; the risk begins when
the funeral procession starts. When
ready to inarch great quantities of
Brecrackers and pyrotechnics that
emit much smoke are set off in front
of the door, and under cover of the
smoke the pallbearers start at
s lively trot, run to the nearest
corner, turn it as quickly as they
can and sfbp short. This is done for
the purpose of throwing the devil off
the tack, since it is well known that
he cannot easily turn a corner, and,
to aid in the deception, whenever a
corner is turned more fireworks are
burned. By dint of turning quickly
rod trotting as fast as they can the
bearers finally arrive at the cemetery,
but do not enter the gates^ but go
through a hole in the surrounding in
closure, for they know that the
baffled devil will be waiting for them
%t the entrance. In the cemetery the
soul is comparatively safe, though to
make the matter perfectly secure the
discharge of firecrackers is kept up
tntil all the rites are ended.
Left Hitniieilueis.
A French physician mentions a
furious case of left-handedness. One
child in a certain family was left
handed, and a second appeared at
the age of one year also to be left
handed. It was then learned that
the mother always carried her child
on her left arm. She was advised to
carry her child on her right The in
fant, having its right arm free, began
to grasp objects with it and soon be
came right-handed.
Charou’a Error.
Satan ordered the windows opened
at once. "Christopher,” he exclaimed,
“what an awful odor!” Lucifer nod
ded. “Your majesty,” he explained.
“Charon must have got mixed with
his passenger list and sent that india
rubber man up here by mistake.” It
teemed a very plausible theory.
The Scapegoat.
"Everything that is done in this
souse is always blamed onto me,”
sniffled the small boy, "an’ I'm jist
gittin’ tired of it. I'll run away,
that’s what I’ll do. Doggone if I
mean to be the Li Hung Chang of this
family any longer."
THEY WERE SUSPICIOUS.
The Lady I’ruiolaail, lint the Bojrs
Wouldn't Trait Her.
It happened a*, out of the island
'ake resorts of Wisconsin. A young
man from Chicago was stopping there
with his wife, and th • wife had wan
dered down to tiie shore of the lake
to enjoy the evening breeze. A short
pier jutting' out inito the lake looked
inviting, and she went oat on it, un
mindful of several small urchins who
were hovering about the boat house
at the shore end of the pier. A few
minutes later her husband came to
the lake to join her, but was inters
cepted by one of the urchina
"Say, mister, is that your girl?”
asked the boy.
"She is my wife,” replied the young
man.
"Well, you tell her to go home,
cause we boys wants to go in swim
min',” said the youngster, and, think
ing that would settle the matter,
they all retired to the boat house to
undress.
The young man promptly Informed
his wife of the request, but Bhe was
enjoying herself and was not anxious
to leave. She laughed, and called to
a new arrival at the boat house:
"Tell the boys,” she said, when he
had come to her, “to run out and
jump in the water if they wish to. I
won't look."
The little fellow hurried to the.
boat house with the message, and
there was an immediate council of
war. At its conclusion he returned
to the end of the pier and said:
“Please, ma'am, the boys say they
dasn’t risk it."
A MAN’S POPKET.
Filled With no Account Stair That Be
Treasures.
“Men are fond of laughing at the
little ways and whims of women,”
said our sprightly hostess, “but I wish
some man would expl ain to' me why
he carries unimportant papers about
with him for months, wearing them
out in so doing.
“I have often watched my husband
carefully change the contents of coat
or trousers pockets from one suit of
clothes to another. Soiled, worn en
velopes and folded papers are tender
ly transferred, and for a long time I
was impressed w ith the importance
of the operation, and drew an invol
untary sigh of relief when the opera
tion was over. One day my curiosity
got the better of me, and I begged
for a s ight of those mysterious docu
ments guarded with so much care.
“To please me my husband exam
ined them. He found several unre
ceipted bills—some that had been
paid and receipts filed; a note from a
friend, dated three months back, re
gretting that he didn’t find him in his
office svhen he called; one or two bus
iness cards of firms he had no recol
lection, of knowing; several advertise
ment mrculars, a play bill of last sea
son’s perfor raanee, preserved for some
forgotten temporary reason, and per
haps three really important papers
among the whole lot And I honestly
believe if I had not prompted the in
vestigation he would be treasuring
those worthless bits of paper to this
day, under the impression that they
were of value.”
FOOLED BY A BAD EYE.
The Battered Han Bothered the Doctor
Considerably.
A man with o ne glass eye and the
other e~e badly battered caused Dr.
Simpson no small amount of trouble
at the San Francisco receiving hos
pital.
He ente red the hospital to have the
battered eye tree ted, and after the
doctor had lanced it and done the
other things necessary in order to re
duce the swel ling he carefully tied it
up in half a ya rd of bandages Then
he said:
‘‘Now, 1 guess that will turn out all
right, but you want to be mighty care
ful of it You can go home now.”
The man thanked the doctor for his
kindness, but made no effort to move,
so Dr. Simpson again said:
“I’m through with you. Why don’t
you go home?”
“I can't move,” the man replied.
“Can t move? What’s the matter
with you? Are you drunk?"
“No; I can’t see.”
“You are not blind, are you?”
“Nope.”
“Then what is the matter?”
“The other eye is glass.”
Dr. Simpson made no further inqui
ries, but quietly, led the man into a
ward and put him to bed.
A Long Nam a.
An English farmer presentee,
his first-born for christening at his
parish church with twenty-six
Christian names selected from scrip
ture, representing every letter of the
alphabet. Only with the greatest
diffi culty could the clergyman per
suade the farmer to content himself
with the first and last of the appela
tives proposed. The name of the un
fortunate infant was to have been—
Abel Benjamin Caleb Daniel Ezra Fe
lix Gabriel Haggai Isaac Jacob Kish
Devi Manoah Nehemia Obadiah Peter
Quartus liechab Samuel Tobiah Uz
ziel Vaniah Work Xvustus Yariah
Zechariah J inkins.
No Doubt About Bis Head.
Admiral Drake, when a lad, at the
beginning of his first engagement
was observed to shake and tremble
very much, and being rallied upon it,
; observed, with a presence of mind
(or, at all events, of humor) in which
even Nelson was lacking: “My flesh
trembles at the anticipation of the
many and great dangers into which
my resolute and undaunted head will
’ead me. ”
New Jersey, Please Head.
A gentleman has invented an eleo
tric mosquito net which electrocutes
Insect pests which come in contact
with it.
ONLY FOOLED HER ONCE.
An Impecunious Husband Forgot the
Trick Ho Ployed on HU Wife.
I have a friend who ia comfortably
well off, with a reasonable amount of
good investments and a good salary,
but he has a weakness for using
money freely, fie has also a good
wife with “a frugal mind,” and by a
domestic arrangement she exerts a
salutary check on the liberality of
her spouse. Occasionally he exceeds
his allowance and indulges In tricks
on his ‘•banker” to secure a little
pocket money, for which he
does not desire to render a
strict account Not long ago
he needed a new hat and bought it,
reporting to his good wife that it cost
him S3, and that sum was duly
charged by her to his personal ex
penses, while in fact he paid but $1.50
at a “mark-down” sale, and so had an
equal amount to “blow in” without
exposure. In a little time, however,
the wife called his attention to the
fact that his hat was looking shabby
and suggested that he should get a
new one, coupling the suggestion
with the remark that the hat did not
seem to have worn well, and he must
exercise more care in his next selec
tion. Having forgotten his “little
game,” the husband replied hastily
that he thought the hat had done
pretty good service for a cheap one.
“You can’t expect anything from a
$1.50 hat.”
“How’s that?" says the wife, and
forthwith she exhibited her account
book with its charge of $3, and the
husband was forced to confess his
fraud and promise better conduct in
future. There is peace just now in
that family, but when he brings home
a purchase the wife calmly but firmly
asks him to turn in a receipted bill
from the salesman.
• THAT WONDERFUL BABY.
Not All Its Fond Mother Irntflaed, Baft
Did It* Little Beet.
The proud young mother had come
to pay her first visit, accompanied by
the infant son and heir and his nurse.
“I don’t wish to appear in any way
partial,” said she, “but really for a
child of sixteen months I consider Al
gernon a marvel of intelligence. He
understands every word and joins in
the conversation with a sagacity that
almost alarms me at times. Speak to
the lady, Algernon.”
“Boo-boo,” said Algernon.
“Listen to that!” cried the delighted
mother. “He means, ‘How do you
do?” Isn’t it wonderful?”
“Now, Algernon, ask the lady to
play for yon (he adores the piano).
Now, Algie, dear” (very coaxingly).
“Boo-boo!” said Algernon.
“He means, ‘musio’ by that. ‘Boo
boo’—‘music.’ Isn’t he too smart for
anything? Now, love, tell the lady
mamma’s name.”
“Boo-boo!” said Algernon.
“That’s right. ‘Boo-boo’—‘Louise!’
My name's Louise, you know. Oh,
dear, I do hops ho isn’t too clever to
live! Now, say by-by to the lady,
precious. ”
"Boo-boo!” said Algernon.
“ ’Boo-boo’—‘by-by.’ Why, upon
my word there’s hardly any differ
ence. Bless his little darling heart!
Isn’t he a wonder?”
me tom fitted.
A few days a go, while a gentleman
was buying stamps at the Boston post*
office, some one took his umbrella, as
he believes, by mistake, and the loser
put this card in the morning paper:
“The kind friend who .carried off my
umbrella at the post-office yesterday,
will bear in mind that the ‘Gates of
Heaven’ are only twenty-four inches
wide. My umbrella measures twenty
eight inches. At the other place he
won’t need it. Didn’t Dives pray for
just one drop of water? He had bet
ter return it to 208, chamber of com
merce, and no questions will be
asked.” A few days later a boy
brought in an umbrella, but, alas! not
the advertiser's. He had caught the
wrong man's conscience.
McCLURE’S
MAGAZINE
FOR 1895.
Volume IV begins December, 1894.
A splendidly illustrated life of
NAPOLEON,
the great feature of which will be
SEFENTY-FIVE PORTRAITS
of Napoleon, showing him from youth
to death; also portraits of his family
and contemporaries and pictures of
famous battlefields; in all nearly
800 PIGTURES.
Begins in November and runs through
eight numbers. The eight
Napoleon Numbers, $1.00.
TRUE
DETECTIVE
STORIES
by authority from the archives of the
PINKEBTON DETECTIVE AGENCY. '
Lincoln and Pinkerton (Nov. 1894;) the
Molly Maguires; Allan Pinkerton’s Life;
Stories of Capture of Train-robbers,
Forgers, Bank-robbers, etc.; each com
plete in one issue, 12 in all.
SHORT STORIES BY
W. D. HmceUs Rudyard Kipling
Conan Doyle Clark Russell
Robert Barr Octave T/tanet
Bret llarte Copt. King
Joel Chandler Harris and many others.
NOTED CONTRIBUTORS
Robert Louis Stevenson
K. Marion Crawford Archdeacon Farrar
Sir Robert Ball Prof Drummond
Archibald Forbes Thus. Hardy
Send three 2 cent stamps for a sample
copp to the publishers
S. S. McCLURE, L’t’d,
30 Lafayette Place, New York.
LEGAL ADVERTISE!*
notice.
Mary E. Calhoun, Orton r«u
Calhoun, Ida Daugherty x
Guy Calhoun. Clark Calhoun „ i1**
•ml J. H- Keith. paVtnm"-li"l>
nutntt at !• L. nt>i.
name of Ford & ke1tli,'iiefend»-r 11
nntl.io Tl.at on rt_ J a “*1 <1
notice that on the 2nd dav
J. H. Keith.trustee'.".^ Enhiy!^
plaintiffs herein. Uled their m.,,,,
district court of Holt cumfiv v
against said defendants, th'5 ,,,N'
prayer of which are to foreolu.,, J'
trust, deed executed by one *
upon the northwest quarter',iVL-u'
four Ml) of township twenty Y,.1"
range twelve (13) west of the in , fl
meridian, In Holt county.sfebniVi!! p
flip IlllVIllDllt. Ilf M hnr lu I .. 1...
the pa) intuit of a certain bond ..i
May 1. lsst), for the sum of live Y,
lars. due and payable In Hve
hurid'
'nun
date thereof, said bond or nun. 1
payable to Kugene Westerveli . !;,V
endorsed and assigned to plnnitirr v
Stuart,, and said trust deed ben,,
plaintiff, J.H. Keith, to secure "i*
there Is now due upon said bond :
trust ueed the sum of &Viu sml lnt,.
An fwAn MoVumlum 1 lewu ... '
P«_anmim, also Interest upon niatunt.
estatthe rate of ten per cent »
On 130 from May 1, 1889; on
her 1,1889; on 14) from May ) S
from November 1,1890 and on j 'u I,/'
1891. The plaintiff also claims th ®s
recover In said action amounts of
on said real estate and a lien there™,!
same as follows: *24.80 and Interest,
cent, from November 10,1891; Ir'io
terest at 10 per cent, from November
*22.52 and interest at 10 per cent r,
vember 21, 1893; (19.W and Interest it
cent, from September 13, 1894, and ,i
pray said premises may be decreed to,
to satisfy tlie amounts due thereon a,
said, and that all the defendants at.
may be foreclosed of their right claleu
est and lien In said premises, and tbu
respective interest therein may be,
to be Junior, subsequent and Inferior
lien of said trust deed.
You are required to answer said petuM
or before the 17th day of December n
Dated Novembers, 1894, ’ “
J. H. Keith, trcbs
and Emily L Stcm,
BVR.R.I&
Martin I. Brow*
Attorn
Notice to Non-Resident Defendang
John A. Proffitt, Louisa A. Proffiti
Ann Bowen, T. R. Bowen, her husband
Kimball Champ Investment Compani
Kimball, Louise G. Kimball, Ueoni
Champ, Alla D. Champ, George IV f.
and Mrs. George W. Turner, first naa
known, defendants, will take notice tha
the Sid day of November, 1894. F. C. U
and Chatles Burr Towle, trustees, plii
herein. Hied a petition In the district cot
Holt county. Nebraska, against said as
ants, the object and prayer of whiclu
foreclose a certain mortgage execuia
defendants John A. Proffitt and Loat
Proffitt, his wife, to The Kimball Cliu
vestment Company, upon the east halli
northwest quarter of section four.ait
east half of the northeast quarter uln
five. In township twenty-seven, non!
range nine, west, in Holt county, Nebs
to Beoure the payment of their promt
note dated August 18,1888, for the sm
•650 and Interest at the rate of seven
cent, per annum payable semi-annusllj
ten per cent, after maturity; that tha
now due upon said notes and mortgag
cording to the terms thereof the sum of
and interest at the rate of ten per cent
annum from November 1, 1894, and plain
pray that said premises may be decree
be sold to satisfy the amount due them
Tou are required to answer said pet
on or before the 7th day of January, w
Dated November 28, 1894.
F. C. Lougce and Charlcs Bcrr Toi
Trustees; Plaintiffs. 3
By W. R. Butler, Attorney.
Sioux City, O’Neill i
Western Railway
(PACIFIC SHORT LINE)
THE SHORT ROU1
BETWEEN
SloUX ClTY
ANP
Jackson, Laurel, Randolph, (
mond, Plainview, O'Neil
Connects at Sioux City with all dirat
lines, landing passengers In
NEW TTNION PASSENGER STAR
Homeseekers will find golden opport
ities along this line. Investigate
before going elsewhere.
THE CORN BELT OF AMEN
For rates, time tables, or other inform^
call upon agents or address _
F. C. HILLS, W. B. McNIDEl
Receiver. Gen'l Pass, ip
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