The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, January 10, 1895, Image 8

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    CURBD KIM.
M OM •(
twwl*
Hi* huflatlUt to probably a mori
patent fiitM la oar everyday Ufa
Ikon mostpeeplo waol4 bo wilting lo
admit The other day a naa som
alalned to tho wlto of bto koioa of
fool lap 4 road fall/ sharp polno shoot
tap between tho shoulders and
through tho chest Sho rUlsulod
him. for ho to a man who aoror pots
otak an4 hao ao sympathy with com
plain Inf peoplo.
"I ihoulda't woadot If yon had tho
pneumonia," saldabo. “And It would
serve yon right—staying out ovsry
night of your Ilfs aftor i o'clock in
tho morning."
“No doubt, but tho possibility of
bolng a widow within tbres days
sooas to plsass you. Don't count
your chleksns bsfors they're hatohod,
my 4sar. I'm not dying yet"
“But pnsumonla is nsarly always
fatal," sho rsmarksd pleasantly. “Of
course I would giro you tho regula
tion allowance of sllror handles,
flowers, etc. I always thought a
plain plats with name, dates of birth
and death are about the correct
things I taw a nice second-hand
ons In a window that might bo altered
very easily.”
But ho was so mad by this time that
ho missed tho qulst laugh that fol
lowed him down stairs The more he
thought about it, however, the more
ho felt convinced that ha had tho
pneumonia. IIo stopped in a drug
storo and tho druggist said it was In
digestion. Then he got about a dol
lar's worth of patent medicine and
lay down in his back offleo and took
It all day. IIo felt worse. He stopped
at his doctor's on his way horns and
was examined for pneumonia. After
being thumped and pounded for half
an hour he was told by the doctor
that his lungs were all right, for
which ha paid pS. IIo got a prescrip
tion for a cold, went home and, lying
down, went to sleep and forgot to
take it. The next morning ho was
all right
•T know I’d euro you,” said his
wife,
LEAH. THE FORSAKEN.
The Mseh- Espsrlenee4 Man Don if at
Cry Over Its Pathos.
Wt went to the play the other
night, Mery end I. It wet "Leah,
the Forsaken." On the wey home
tender-heerted Mery cried eoftly over
the eed fete of the heroine. I chided
her, teylnjr in my cold-blooded wey:
"Wasn't It beet to drop the carteln
when the romenoe died out of Leeh'e
Ufef Suppose the bed lived end mir -
ried her Rudolph. She would here
become e blowey gerllo-eeter end
Rudolph would heve teken to beer.
Better stop living before the love
■tone."
Mery retorted thet I wee only the
orising ebout merrted life, end then
I told her this story:
Lately I heve been watehtng the
oequel to en elopement. The elope
ment occurred fifty-two yeers ego.
The young oouple merrled end set
tled down. They seemed mede for
seek other. Their love wes greet.
They were people of education end
refinement They had never had the
herd struggle for e living to coarsen
them. Yet this pair heve led but e
eet-end-dog life. For half e century
they heve wearied their neighbors
with thsir mutual recriminations.
The women wee e few yeers older
then the men, and he has resented
the feet for fifty yeers end fgnoled
himself Imposed upon. The wife has
been In bed health for some yeers,
and the husband has been anxiously
waiting for her to die. lie an
nounces his intention of seeking n
young wife ns soon as the old one Is
gone. He continually denounces to
others whet he oalls his wife's selfish
ness in asking him to promise thet he
will net merry again.
Oh, yes, love la beautiful. But the
novelists end the dramatists know
their business when they write
"finis" or ring down the curtain as
the hero end heroine turn away
from the marriage altar.
Onua Mendelssbea.
While etIU » young men, Gounod
went to Lelpsie end played some of
hie mutie to Mendelsshon, to whom
he hed been introduced by the eieter
ef the meestro during hie stey in
Rome. He wee •ittlng1 et the pieno,
executing one of hie masses, when
Mendelsshon suddenly rose end inter
rupted him. “Was thet composed by
you, young men?" he asked. “Yes,
my deer mester,” was the reply.
“Astonishing!" rejoined Mendelsshon.
“Why, Cherubini could not do better.”
At thet moment Cherubini wes en un
con tested euthority. The compliment
wee, therefore, ell the more precious.
Mosart DM Not Caro.
In e supplementary (third) volume
of Liest's letters, the greatest pianist
relates en anecdote, which, while
omitted in ell the Mozart biographies,
was told him on the best authority
at Prague. At the first performance
there ef “Titus,” the emperor, in
whose honor the opera had been com
posed, left the house after the first
act. The director, in great consterna
hestened to Inform Mozart, who re
plied calmly. “So much the better,
then we shall have one donkey less in
the theater.
Wire Isllrosd Car Seat
Wire car seats are being experi
mentally introduced by the North
British railway into a number of
their earriagea The seat is composed
of a series of specially manufactured
steel rings knit together and firmly
stretched, the chief features claimed
being comfort and durability, al
though an important point is the fa
cility with which the seats can be
rigged up, thereby materially expe
diting the process of coach eonstruo-'
tion. ‘
IF .
| A HOMBMADB COFFIN.
: Ad BnglUhmaa N*ods Acroai the At
lantia for Ilia On Collin.
It 1* seldom that A mao if 1 vea In
Itructlooo how hi* body 1* to be ein
bnlmad after death and send* aoros*
the Atlantlo for a Canatllan-inaile
coffin, yet »uoh precaution* have been
tttkun by a well known business mun
in the provinco of Ontario. The do
taila, a* related, are of more than or
dinary interest. Mr. W. P. Power of
llowinanville, who ha* been reeve of
the town for eighteen yoara anti also
for a long time warden of the united
countie* of Northumberland and
Durham, decided to takn n trip to
the old country for the bene tit of
hi* health, which had been consid
erably impaired for the last two years
or more. Mr. 1’owcr was an under
taker by trade and a native nf Devon
■hire, England. Ills medical advisers
thought that tho air of his native
heath would bring him back to health
and strength. Hu was accompanied to
the old land by his wife and family,
and, when relatives and friends were
expecting thorn back to O'anadu, sad
news reached ltowmanville, as well
as a moat singular request, Mr. Power,
feeling that he had little time to
live, personally cabled to his brother
in-law, a few days sines, to send over
their foreman undertaker, tho dis
patch enjoining the latter to bring
with him embalming Instruments.
While tho friends of tho absent
gentleman were making preparations
to send tho man over to England
another and more pressing cable
gram arrived asking the foreman to
hasten his departure, and also to
bring a metal-lined coffin. As a matter
of course there was no time to loso,
and Mr. Dennot took passage on
lonrd tho Dominion liner Vancouver
at once. Carrying out his master's in
structions, the faithful servant is
taking over with him the coffin and
other articles requlrod, and tiie poor
man is sad enough in having to do
1 part on such a mission.
TOOTHLESS YANKEES.
Deluded by Traveling Dentlata Into liny
Ing Mata of False Molars.
"There is many a Now England
village in which you will hardly find
a natural tooth," said a dental sur
geon to a reporter. “That is to say,
not an adult inhabitant will possess
any teeth of his own. All of the
grown-up peoplo wear fulse teeth.
This rather odd state of affairs is due
to the operations of cortain unscrupu
lous persons who go about the coun
try with false teeth for sale. One of
thrso fellows will go through a vil
lage and literally pull every tooth in
the place. To take the places of the
toetii extracted ho offers artificial
sets at 88. In rural parts, for obvious
reasons, people very commonly
suffer from toothaohe. The
malady is distressing, und the
customary way to get rid
of it is to have the tooth drawn. No
dentist is at hand to restore the af
flicted grinder to a healthy color by
lllling. The peripatetic quack comes
along with Ills forceps and oilers to
give final and permanent relief from
all such suffering in the future. For
the small sum of eight dollars he will
remove all the natural teeth from the
customer's head and substitute for
them an artificial set of much better
appearance, which will never cause
uny pain to the wearer. By this at
tractive offer the people are deiuded
into parting with the chewing appa
ratus with which nature has furnished
them, and the result is a toothless
population. As you are probably
aware, tooth pulling is rarely resorted
to by a good dentist, inasmuch as it
must be an extraordinarily bad tooth
that cannot be fixed up so as to be
better than a false one.
A Scrapbook of Fa.hlon.
A bright woman has been making
for many years, a collection that is
far from completed, that is absolutely
unique and that has great intrinsic
value. In the early days of the late
war she began a scrapbook of nothing
but fashion plates. This has been
added to from time to time until tho
one volume has grown to several. It
is a wonderfully interesting sight,
the passing in review of ail the absurd
fancies that have flourished in these
thirty odd years. There is the
tirocian bend, tho chignon, tho water
fall, the ••pull-back,” the crinoline,
the tiny bonnets and the pokes, the
large bustle and the large sleeves.
Only extremes of styles and oddities
are used, or the collection would
swell beyond all proportion. As it is,
it is the source of much mirth when
ever she brings it out as a "company
trap.” __
'■ he Lorgnette.
The girl whose eyes are as bright as
stars should not be expected to wear
a lorgnette, but she do?s. She wears
one of silver or steel, if she is moder
ately poor; of gold if she is wealthy.
These gold lorgnettes are studded
with jewels, and often have tiny min
iatures painte4 on them. One seen
recently was of plain gold without
carving of any kind. In one end the
owner's monogram was placed, all in
tiny rubies set off admirably by the
plain background. The chain which
was fastened to this gorgeous affair
was strung with rubies at intervals of
five inches. The lorgnette cost $150
and the chain $75.
lilearhlng Smoko.
An ingenious method of bleaching
the smoke of soft coal in factories
has recently been tested successfullv.
The exhaust steam from the engine
is discharged into the chimney near
its top, where its moisture is absorbed
by . the particles of carbon in the
smoke. This^ added moisture in
creases the weight of these particles
and causes them to fall back to the
foot of the chimney in the form of
aoot, while the surplus steam keeps
up the draught
E
CHAMPION HARO-tUCK STORY.
lie Helps* tfl* Untltdr Who Wu
Proof A*«ln«» Whistling.
It so happened that an easy-going
younf man who lodged In oomfort
abla quarters at no much a week be
came rather irapecuulout, a misfor
tune suffered even by the most ex
travagant of us, and his cash assets
amounted to but S3. While sitting in
his room wondering whether ho could
lire on that sum for tho balance of
the week, and coming to the conclu
sion that ho could, with economy,
someone rapped on his door. It was
tho survant girl and she had with her
a lot of perplexity. Would ho kindly
pay S.’ OO on a package loft C. 0. I),
for the landlady, who was out for
the afternoon. Of course ho would,
ho said, and the S3 was soon reduced
to 10 cents. If he was in sore straits
nobody would be the wiser of it. In
any event the landlady would pay
the money back to him that day and
he could still live.
QHut she didn't heenuso she thought
he diil not ueod it. and it could be de
ducted from h ; bill at any time, lie
sutTersd in silence, with tho exception
of whiatliug to attract her attention
to his existence, in wiiich he failed,
llo lived from day to day on small
sums borrowed from friends. On pay
day he was lined with wealth. Then
the thoughtless woman said: “Oh, by
the way, I owe you 83.90, and here it
is." Such was the experience of u
week.
BODYGUARD.
I nrlslnn Kwlmllnra Taka Htranga Moai
urM to Trotaot Themselves.
An exciting scene has been wit
nessed in Paris at the arrest of a fe
male swindler. It was at a nicely sit
uated house standing in Us own
grounds, that has been for some time
in the occupation of a man and wo
man who made a business of striking
up an acquaintance with wealthy
strangers and entrapping them to the
place in order to rob them. The last
victim was an American, who had a
pocketbook containing 30,000 franc*
(80,000) stolon from him.
The matter was thought important
enough to merit the special attention
of M. Cochefort, the head of the Paris
detective police, who went to arrest
the incriminated persons. lie was
accompanied by several policemen.
On arriving at the house ho rang the
bell for some time, but got no answer.
He then sent for n locksmith, who
was proceeding to open the door
when alarming growls were heard
from inside. It Was thon found that
there woro six enormous housedogs
in the passage.
M. Cochefort, however, was not to
be balked, lie sent for some sheeps’
heads, which were thrown to the
dogs to keep them quiet, nnd an
entrance was then effected. The
woman was arrested, but the man
had flown. The house was full of the
proceeds of different robberies.
CANON HOLE AND HIS G’S.
A Habit Which l>nc> Sot Obtain With
Mo«t Knjrllsh-Spunking People.
Some of those who listened to Canon
Hole’s loctures aro shocked to find
that he does not sound the final *‘g"
in such words as "running,” ".sleep
ing,” "eating,” and many others of
that class, in which all the diction
aries agree that there is a "g” to be
sounded.
But if tho real language is the
spoken language in the mouths
of the people Canon Hole has ample
precedent for dropping the "g”—or
rather for refusing to pronounce it
where it never did exist in the living
—that is in the spoken—language.
Tho early English. like the modern
Germans, refused to pronounce their
final "n's" through the nos-. They
said "rainin'' and “runnin"—not
•’raining" nnd "running.”
The Normans, however, did pro
nounce all tlie final "n’s” through the
nose, and the presence of the "g” in
"running” ns it is spelled in tho dic
tionaries is due to that habit of theirs.
But in spite of the N'ortnans and the
dictionaries the great majority of the
Knglish-speaking people,both i:i Eng
land and America, still refuse to al
low their noses any share in the pro
nunciation of their present participles.
A Strike at Church.
A curious speech was deliverca the
other day in a little church not far
from Maidstone, England. The bell
had been ringing' long after the usual
time for service to begin, and the
congregation sat quietly waiting and
wondering. At last the bell stopped,
and the organist struck up the tune
to which tho parson always pro
gresses up the aisle; but no parson
came. The bell-ringer shuffled up
the aisle, turned and faced the
congregation, hummed, wiped his
mouth with the back of his hand, and
thus delivered himself: “1 ain't going
to ring no more. I’m tired of this
job. It's no use for you a-waitin’; he
ain’t a-comin’ ter-da.v.”
A <:r-»t Walker.
The greatest walker in England is
said to be a vicar of a parish near
Stockton-on-Tees. FT is ordinary daiiy
exereise is n 34-mile walk before
lunch, with a stroll of eight or ten
miles afterward. llis daily average
is thirty miles, which he takes in per
ambulating about his large parish,
where he is very popular. He is 67
years of age, in most vigorous health,
and has not a gray hair on his head.
He attributes his good health to his
walking habits.
Wulttut Wood.
American walnut is a high priced
wood, partly, perhaps, because of its
scarcity, hut the Italian walnut and
not the American is used In the
finest carved furniture. The Italian
is of much fluer texture than the
American and is peculiarly rich and
beautiful for massive pieces of carved
work.
STORY OF A DIAMOND,
The Kara limm That Now Belongs to
tha Countess ot I>ndlay.
For many years the rumor of a mag
nificent diamond, said to be in posses
sion of a tribe dwelling In a far-away
region vaguely indicated by the ex
pression "up country," had tickled
the ears of adventurers. Many had
gone In Rearch of it; none had come
within measurable distance of obtain
ing it.
About 1809 a Dutch farmer named
Van Neikerk got upon the track of
the diamond. He wandered from
tribe to tribe, and from village to
village—one day hopeful of success
and the next disappointed. At length
ho was directed to a medicine man, or
witch doctor, residing in a certain
Kafllr village, and, sure enough, after
a good bit of palaver and plentiful
libations of jowla. discovered him to
be possessed of a pure white stone of
extraordinary size and luster, which
he had little doubt was the diamond
referred to.
The witch doctor, however, was ex
tremely unwilling to part with it. A
high price was offered, then a higher
still, but he remained immovable.
The Dutchman now became excited,
and offered him his whole span of
oxen. To this had of necessity to be
added the tent wagon which he had
fitted out for his journey, together
with his appurtenances. And at last,
stripped of all his belongings save
his gun and ammunition, he departed
with the gem safely concealed some
where about his person.
The bargain, nevertheless, was a
good one, as the stone was found,
when brought to the frontier, to be a
beautiful, flawless diamond of the
purest water and worth £25,000. This
diamond—which is now in the pos
session of the countess of Dudley—
may be called "the feundation stone
of the diamond industry.” ■
WON HIS BET.
A Flying I.«jtp With a Ilona Over the
liunquat Table.
The latest sensation of the day in
Paris is the result of a novel bet made
between two of the leading lights of
the fashionable jockey club of that
city. It came about in this way:
During the dinner the guests began
to tell stories of fine horsemanship.
An elderly officer present said that he
thought the young men of this gener
ation did not ride so well as they did
in the good old days. This led to an
animated dispute, which ended by
Max Lebaudy offering to bet that ho
knew a lady rider that could do any
thing with a horse that any man of
tnis or any generation had done. The
old officer accepted tha bet, stipulat
ing that the lady should ride her
horBe into the banquet hall and take
a dying leap over the table without
disturbing or touching the wina bot
tles, flowers, or anything else on the
table.
Nobody dreamed that tha bat would
be accepted. It was done, however,
and the next evening when the same
party was gathered round the festive
board the event took place. The
world-famous equestrienne, Camilla
Von Walilburg, mounted on her fa
vorite full-blooded Arabian horse and
attired in the regular riding habit,
suddenly appeared in the door of the
dining room. With a cheery “Good
evening, gentlemen,she gave the spur
to the animal, and before the thor
oughly surprised and amazed diners
had time to collect their thoughts she
had been carried over the table in the
most graceful and approved fashion
by her spirited horse. Not even the
filled wine glasses were jarred, and
Max won his bet and the crowd did
homage to and toasted the dashing
equestrienne.
iserauie lurks.
There are a large number of Europ
can noblemen, particularly members
of the French, Italian, German and
Hungarian aristocracy, who have re
nounced along with their former
Christian faith, their names, which
are concealed under Turkish patrnny
raics. Thus, Nouri Pasha, whom the
sultan hiul appointed as ambassador
at Vienna and whom Emperor Francis
Joseph declined to receive at his court,
is no other than the French comte de
Chateauneuf, who, after entering the
Ottomon army and marrying a Turk
ish lady, embraced the Mohammedan
faith. There has always been an an
tipathy felt since the time of the cru
sades' against these renegades, and
it is solely on this account that the
emperor of Austria refused to permit
Kouri Pasha to represent the sultan
at his court.
lh© 1 at© - Slippers.
Evening slippers have succumbed
to the perforated craze. Slippers of
black patent leather have the toe
pierced with holes, showing a bright
color beneath. Scarlet, cerise and
the new greens are the most effective
for the foundation color. Black
suede slippers, with patent leather
tip and vamp, are adorned with a
rosette of bright gauze. These slip
pers are for informal occasions and
the rosette matches in color the stock
worn. Black and white slippers are
still the vogue. The latest are of
black suede perforated, showing
white kid beneath and adorned with
a rosette of white and silver gauze
sprayed with jet. Suede ties match
ing in color the gown worn are the
proper thing for evening wear.
Klectric Poultice.
An electric poultice has been in
vented by Mr. Snedekor. The appli
ance involves no novel principle, but
is a new and useful application of an ,
old one. The poultice consists merely
of an arrangement of bad conductors
covered with a fabric of some descrip- i
tion, and by sending a current through '
this unique cataplasm it may be
raised to any desired temperature,
which remains constant so long as ]
the current is allowed to pass.
F. £. and H. ▼. Bf.
Change of time of passenger trains
No. 3 ami 4 to connect with the tlyer on
the C. and N. W. for Chicago and points
east. A dining car will be put on the
Northwestern train so that passengers
ran get supper leaving the Valley, also
breakfast going into Chicago on “A La
Carte” plan, passengers to pay for what
they get. Passengers going to Omaha
ran do so and get home in two days in
stead of three as heretofore.
W. J. Dobbs, Agent.
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS.
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION.
Land Office at O'Nkiix, Neb., i
December 5, 18W4. (
Notice Is hereby given that the following
named settlor has tiled 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
January lit, 1KB. viz:
DANIEL TOOI1 ILL, one of the heirs of Dan
iel I*. Toohill. deceased. II. E. No. 14400,
For the SNV NW and NW SW U, Sec. 3,
Twp.SHn Range llw.
He names the following witnesses to prove
his continuous residence upon ami cultiva
tion of, said land, viz: Henry lloxie, John
Wynn. James Wynn, James Gallagher, all of
O’Neill. Neb.
22-6 JOHN A. HARMON, Register.
NOTICE.
Delphos National Bank. Paddock Hawley
Iron Company, National Bank of Sioux City.
Iowa, Quincy National Bank, and Michigan
Stove Co., defendants, will take notice that
Jane A. Dlmoek, plaintiff, has tiled a petition
In the district court of Holt county, Nebras
ka, against said defendants, impleaded with
John J. McCalTerty. Mary A. MeCalTerty,
Timothy Dwyer, Mary A. Dwyer, I he County
of Holt. Bank of Valentine. The city of
(),Neill. Lee Clarke Andresen Hardware Co.,
Blair State Bank, II. C. MeEvony (real name
unknown,) Cortelyou, Ege A Vanzante, John
li. Cortelyou, A. A. Kgeireal name unknown,)
and M. N. Vanzante (real name unknown,)
the object and prayer of which is to foreclose
a mortgage dated February 1, 1*88, for ^iOO.Ui
and interest and tax payments, on t he west
half of southwest quarter, aud southeast
inarter of southwest quarter of section two,
township twenty-eight, range eleven, in said
county, given by Patrick C. Murphy to Mira
J. Abbott, and assigned to plaintiff, which
mortgage was recorded in Book IK), Page 413,
of the mortgage records of said county, aud
to have the same decreed to be a ilrst lien,
and said lands sold to satisfy tiie same.
You are required to answer said petition on
:>r before the 28t h day of January, 181)5.
Dated December 17.18D4.
24-4 Jane A. Dimock. Plaintiff.
By Munger & Courtright, Attorneys.
Notice to Non-ltesident Defendants.
John A. Proffitt, Louisa A. Proffit, Eliza
Ann Bowen, T. It. Bowen, her husband. The
Kimball Champ Investment Cofnpany, J. F.
Kimball, Louise G. Kimball. George H.
I'hntnp. Alla D. Champ. George tV. Turner
ukI Mrs. George W. Turner, tirst name un
known, defendants, will take notice that on
I he Sul day of November. 1894, F. C. Lougee
ind Chailes Burr Towle, trustees, plaintiffs
herein. Hied a petition in tie* district court of
Holt county. Nebraska, ugainst said defend
mis. the object and prayer of which are to
foreclose a certain mortgage executed by
ietendants John A. Proffitt and Louisa A.
Proffitt, liis wife, to The Kimball Champ In
vest incut Company, upon the east half of the
northwest quarter or section four, and the
ast half of the northeast quarter of section
live, in township twenty-seven, north of
range nine, west, in Holt county. Nebraska,
to secure the payment of their promissory
note dated August is, 1888. for the sum of
hiot) and interest at. the rale of seven per
-ent. per annum payable seuii-uunuaHy and
len per cent, after maturity; that there is
now due upon said notes and mortgage ac
cording to the terms thereof the sum of $‘130
and interest at the rate of ten per cent, per
annum from November 1. lsui. and plaintiffs
pray that said premises may be decreed to
be sold to satisfy the amount due thereon.
Vou are required to answer said petition
>n or before the 7th day of Junuurv. 1894.
Dated November *_’9, Ispf.
F. C. Lot'llKK AND CllAKl.KS BUitU TOWLB.
rrustees. Plaintiffs. 21*4
By W. K. Butler. Attorney.
Notice of Dissolution of Co-Partnership.
Notice is hereby given that the partner
ship heretofore existing between \i. j. Hayes
oid J. L. Mack and doing business under the
linn iiHino mid style of the O'Neill Klour and
Keed Company, Is tills day terminated by
mutual consent. It. J. Haves retains posses
-ion or all partnership property, will con
tlnue the business, collect nil accounts due
and pay all debts of theilrm.
liivcn under our bauds tblsUth day of De
cember, 1M*4. H. ,1. Haves,
J. L, Mack.
In the District of Holt County, Nebraska.
Karmers’ Loan & Trust Co.,1
Plaintiff, |
vs. • j
Nelson Moore and the south . _ fl
wrest quarter of section iW, [ ^°ncc o. Suit
township 29, ranee 9, west of |
i hertth p. in. in Holt county, j
Nebraska, Defendants. J
State of Nebraska, Holt County: To Nel
son Moore and the southwest quarter (awU)
»t section thirty (3U). townshsp twenty-nine
■Mi. range nine (9;. west or the sixth p. m. in
Holt county. Nebraska, and all persons Inter
sated in said real estate:
You are hereby no titled that you have been
*ued by the plaintiff in the above entitled
aetloit: und tlaa^t in »»id »uit, the petition of
Plaintiff is now on tile in the office of the clerk
>f the district court in and for Holt county.
Nebraska, claiming that it lias a lien on tlie
real estate above mentioned, for. and mi
iccount of icrtain tax sales made of said
property on the 31 st day of December, t8S8,
u,d on thd ith day of November, 1891, and the
payment of subsequent taxes thereunder;
lie service of notice to redeem from such tax
sales, and the execution of certain tax deeds
pursuant thereto.
That the payment of taxes which plaintiff
;eeks to recover, and for which he claims a
ien. were made as follows, to-wit:
^vy,?"n\r a1, twenty-one and 5U-100
f-l.aO> dollars.
November 2, 1883, twenty-one aud 41-100
$21.41) dollars.
lollars 18 ^ nineteen nnd 60-100 ($19.00)
*n0wt!Il.'0ur *• 190,» twenty-one and 16-100
f 5i.lt*) dollars.
May 2, ^fifteen and 64-100 (Sir. 64) dollars.
September 29. 1MM. sixteen and 90-100 ($16.90)
V«,U1 of ten(^10.00)dollars
mid by plaintiff and its assignor as costs for
"i’Tiyfi* notitVjl redeem; said claim of
jldintiff amounted on November 15. Is94, to
.tie sum of t wo hundred one and85-100,$201.85)
iollars; and plaintiff prays in its petition, a
.oreelosurc of its said uen against said de
endents and said real estate and all persons
n teres ted in said real estate, and prays that
laid property be sold to satisfy said claim,
vitli interest, attorney fees and costs of suit.
And you arc further notified that unless
'\.u appear thereto and answer tlie said
Jetition of plaintiff, the Farmers’ Loau and
l™st Vonipany. on the 21st day of .January,
suit^ petition will de taken as true, aud
udgment and decree rendered accordingly.
Dated December 11. 1H94.
r akmeus* Loan \ Tiiu.st Company, Plt f.,
M. J.Sweelcy and E. H. Benedict,
Its Attorneys.
Notioe to Non-Residents.
. M^yne. single, Leonard Ldweiy and
v. t» Marr non-resident defendants, notice is
rnreby given, that on the 26th day of Decem
>er, 1^94. Jacobs. Leise tiie plaintiff in this
let .on. l.led bis petition in the office of the
Ierk of the district court of Holt county, Ne
»ns ska. tile object and prayer of which is to
oreclose a certain mortgage executed by
o u.mm Mayru'upon the south west quarter
ection nine, towuship 2s. nortli range 11
vest 6th »*. m.. in Holt county. NVnraska
vbich mortgage was executed and delivered
o Nebraska Mortgage and Investment Coin
)any and tiled for record on the 15th day of
tlareh. I8>*9, and recorded in 4;
uortgages at page 66; that there is now due
ipon said mortgage thr* sum of $600 UO and
merest from October 1, ls94 * ‘ w dna
\ ou are required to answer said petition on
ime 'wr htl t ‘)By ,lf .'et'runry, 18.« or the
“rae„^acoofdin”Hy" v'‘ ,n‘K iu,<1 i“d»“ent
25-4 H. M. T*TTI*E Y,
___ Attorney for Plaintiff.
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