The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, May 16, 1895, Image 8

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    DRAWINGS IN MULTIPLE. '
What la Dona at a Funny Little Bull A.
Inc Hack of tint Traatury.
Tho cffoct to the eye was somewhat
like that of arranging scenory on the
stage. Approaching from the direc
tion of tho Washington monumont it
was difficult to make out what sort
of performance was being conducted
on the high platform attuchod to tho
small fruine building in tho roar of
tho troasury department. Persons
wero wheeling about a number of
quoor-looking frames of largo size.
Each ono was placed In such a way
that tho bright sun’s rays were re
Jloctod from its bright surface daz
zllngly toward tho beholder, says the
Washington Star.
Probably there are comparatively
few people in Washington who have
taken notice of this building or who
have any notion as to what sort of
work is done there. On entering
tho door one finds himself confronted
by a spectacle of many great tantts
apparently full of chemicaU. On
the surfaco of those tanks big pieces
of paper are floating and at intervals
busy workmen take out the wet
sheets and put in others, hanging
the former up to dry. On the paper
are all sorts of architectural draw
ings and designs.
*o uiiubrou up annuo uuu
superintendent in chargo, Mr. Mac
Blair, who explains that the estab
lishment is a branoh of the oflice of
the supervising architect of the
treasury. Here the plans for Undo
Sam's publio buildings are multi
plied by tbe aid of photography.
Pne reason why much of such work
has to be done is that numerous con
tract bidders for in the way bf con
struction must be supplied with
copies of the drawings, on which
they have to base their estimates as
to cost, eta Of course, to reproduce
the drawings by hand would be enor
mously laborious and expensive; but
the sun does it comparatively cheap
ly and with absolute accuracy. The
only disadvantage of the celestial
workman—not intending to refer to
him as a Chinaman, be it understood
—Is that he frequently goes on a
strike, sulking behind a cloud.
Architects all over the world
utillzo the sun's rays for the purpose
of multiplying their drawings. They
take a plan or elevation, for example,
and reproduce it in the shape of what
1b called “blue print.'' That is to
say, they lay a tracing of it upon a
sheet of sensitized paper and expose
them to the solar orb. Wherever
the sensitizod paper is not protected
by the lines of black ink on the
tracings it turns blue and the result
is a Bheet with a blue baok-ground,
on whloh all the lines of the tracings
are copied in white. In other words,
It is a negative.
But the method practiced at the*
government establishment described
is much better. A chemically pre
pared paper is exposed to the sun
beneath an ink-drawing or tracing
linen, just as in the case of the blue
print But the result is that the
lines appear in light green on a white
background. Then the sheet is put
into an acid bath, whloh turns the
green lines to black. Thus a posi
tive is obtained from a positive,
which is much more satisfactory. It
is in this work that the frames
already spoken of are used, and- on
any fine day they may be seen out
on the high platform at the rear of
the building, with their glass-covered
faces toward the sun.
Rrausoltstsd to Order.
A young girl in Miskolez, Hun
gary, pretended to see the holy vir
gin daily, and to converse with her.
Her mother enoouraged the pious,
who brought presents, and when the
priests Interfered the excited crowd
threatened to ill-treat them. Some
days ago, the would-be saint lay in a
coffin. Her mother told everybody
that the virgin had told her to die
and she would resuscitate her on the
third day. There was terriile ex
citement in the place, and thousands
prepared - to wait the prescribed
three days in prayer and fasting.
Tbe local authorities came with a
doctor to put a stop to the scandal
ous affair. In the presenoe of the
crowd the doctor said: “It is very
serious that she died so suddenly.
We must have a post-mortem exam
ination." Immediately the young
saint sat up in her ooffin, crying:
“Oh, don't cut me up! I can be re
suscitated immediately!”—Argonaut
Bo W»» Boss for Once.
The conductor of a cable car ap
proached a hard-visaged woman and
asked her (or her fare.
“Go on with you, now; I’ve paid
you once,” said the woman.
‘•No. you haven’t”
“Yea, I have.”
“Give me a nickel or I’ll put you
off."
“Do i( you dare."
The conductor stopped the car and
put her off.
“Rather a hard thing to do,” said
one of the passengers, “but it served
her right suppose. ”
“Oh,” the conductor smilingly
answered, “it wasn’t hard for me to
do; hut it isn't often I have a chance
to get even with her. I am her
husband—Texas Siftings.
Patent Looki.
It has been proved that in a patent
lock with an average-sized key hav
ing six “steps,” each capable of
being reduced in height twenty times,
the number of changes will be 86,400;
further, that as the drill pins and the
pipes of the keys may be made of
three different sizes, the total num
ber of changes would be 2,592,600.
An Extraordinary Woman.
“Yes sir, my wife is a most extra
ordinary woman. When I proposed
to her what do you think she said P”
•-•This is so sudden,’ of course.”
“No, sir; she said *1 expected
this.’" . _ , ___ ;
SUNDAY IN A FRENCH TOWN.
The R»(f-Fair Before the Church— After
noon In the Mtiaeam.
On Sunday there wai a slight
cliarigo in our program. For then
tho market in our square had a rival.
J'ho wide bare Place of the Church
or St (iornin, usually a desert at
other times, was the scone of the
weekly rag-fair. All around the
great brick building, beautiful of
old, but now a monument to the inca
pacity of the modern restorer, booths
were set up, or else the merchant’s
stock in trrde laid out on the bare,
dusty ground. 1 have never seen such
a motly collection. There were piles
of rags that looked as if they might
contain enough cholera germs to dev
astate all Europe, old dresses, old
shoes, old hats,old sheets, old towels,
old bits of old cloth and old cotton;
there were books—we never came
across any of special value — and
musical instruments; there wero
chairs and tables and beds and pieces
of rusty iron and brass; there woro
new berets and peasants’ caps and
slippers with gaudy flowors on the
toes which aro so much worn in the
country about here; and there woro
even antiquities, amongst which oc
casionally was something worth
picking up. One man was eager to
force upon us a lantern which, he
said, was Henri II., another had a
" ««vu» vv'viuii niuu
the portrait of some ancent Toulou
sian dignitury boaton upon it, and
this we captured without any press
ing much to the satisfaction of an
interested crowd who had come out
to be amused. For it was a curious
feature of the rag market, as of the
other in the Place du Capitole, that
those who attended it Beemed to
gather there less for business than
pleasure. Now and then a bargain
was made, when a peasant stepped
in front of the new caps and tried on
one after another, and examined the
effect in a broken bit of looking glass
lent him by the old woman in charge.
But, as a rule, the people simply
looked at everything as they
wandered about, before going into
the church to hear a mass in the
friendly, familiar way in which
Southern Catholics take their re
ligion. The briskest trade of the
morning was really on the church
porch, whore women sold rolls and
cakes and beggars demanded an alms.
And while the market flourished
outside St Gernin, inside mass after
mass was said in the chapels, with the
hideous frescos on the walls, and
there was a never ceasing stream of
people down the nave and aisles, by
the piers, where all the stone joint
ing is carefully and neatly painted.
But fortunately not the worst detail
can destroy the solemnity and im
pressiveness of this tine old Roman
esque interior as a whole.
On Sunday afternoon the museum
was open and admission free, writes
Elizabeth Hobins Pennell in Harper's
Magazine. Here Toulousian gayety
is slightly more subdued. Visitors
walk decorously through the gal
leries, where thoro aro a tew pictures
of note—chiefly those bought by the
state at the salon of recent years; a
few of historical Interest, as, for ex
ample, one showing Napoleon assist
ing in a fete on the Garonne—and
where there is a marvelous
collection of Romanesque sculptures,
sad witnesses of the beauty gone for
ever from St. Gernin and many an
other ancient church of Languedoc.
The museum of old was a Franciscan
monastery. If in France the state
has taken many buildings from the
clergy, it has been most often to hand
them over to the people. All through
the provinces you will find churches
or convents turned into galleries and
the Frenchman now comes to look at
pictures and statues where he once
came to pray. The old architecture
gives additional interest to provincial
collections which usually contain
something worth seeing. I know of
no museum, however, so lovely in
itself as the one at Toulouse, with
its beautiful cloisters.
Admiral*.
The title admiral is a modification
of a Latin word, signifying com*
mander. In the sense of a naval
commander it was introduced into
Kurope by the Venetians in the
fourteenth contury. The English
lord high admiral has the govern
ment of the navy. Tho admiral of
■the fleet is the next highest officer;
the vice admiral and the rear ad
miral follow. The admiral’s flag is’
displayed at the main top-gallant
mast head, the vice admiral’s at the
fore-top-gallant-mast head, and the
rear admiral’s at the mizzen-top
gallant-mast head.
Curran'* Wit.
A very stupid foreman asked a
Judge how they wore to ignore a bill.
“Write ‘Ignoramus for self and fel
lows' on the back of it,” said Curran.
“No man,” said a wealthy but weak
headed barrister, “should be admit
ted to the bar who has not an inde
pendent landed property.” “May I
ask, sir,” said Mr. Curran, “how
many acres matte a wise-acre?”—Ar
gonaut,
-1
The Origin of the Sheriff.
The sheriff was once a shire-reeve,
or county steward, having the care
of the finances, income and order of
a community. In England the
sheriffs are appointed by the sover
eign; in tho United States they are
elected by the people. In the former
country the office is both judicial
and ministerial; in the latter it is
almost wholly ministerial.
8he Wm m rtafe One.
Brownjugg—Your wife is such a
talented woman that I should think
you would be jealous least some man
fall in love with her.
Smithers—Oh, dear no. You see
she never is tete-a-tete with a man
three minutes before she begins .to
recite some of her verses to Urn.”
PAINLE8S DENTISTRY.
He Had an Experience With Laughing
Gat mid^tVIll Never gorget It.
••Does It hurt vory much to have
a tooth pulled P” inquired a Boston
Herald man of a dentist
“That depends,” was the reply.
“If the affected tooth happens to be
a molar, with the roots at right an
gles with each other or if it is de
cayed so as to leave the nerve un
covered or if it is worn down jven
with the gums, so that it is neces
sary to dig the flesh away in order to
get a good hold with the forceps,
then the chances are that you will
kick a little."
Then the tall man trembled from
head to foot, and in a shaking voice
said: “What do you think of that
oneP” accompanying his words by
opening his mouth to its fullest ex
tent and Indicating with his finger
the seat of his trouble.
The doctor took up a small instru
ment with a little round looking
glass at one end, and, returning it
into the cavern that yawned before
him, made a careful inspection of the
interior.
“That looks like a stubborn old
fellow," remarked the doctor, as he
replaced the instrument upon the
working table.
“What would you adviseP” timidly
inquired the tall man.
“Laughing gas," replied the
•doctor.
"Will I be oblivious to the
pain ?"
jinny hu.
The tall man settled himself in the
operating chair, and the doctor in
serted between the patient's teeth an
old champagne cork. Then he placed
a funnel-shaped piece of rubber over
the tall man’s mouth and nose, and
told him to breathe heavily. Gradual
ly consciousness gave away under
the influence of the gas, but not
until the man to be operated upon
had suffered the sensation of being
smothered under an old-fashioned
feather pillow.
The tall man was now in dream
land. He first imagined that he was
on his way to the world’s fair and
when the train was on a down grade
and going sixty miles an hour the
wheels left the track. The air
brakes broke and the cars rushed
along at a terrible speed. It was
with the greatest difficulty that the
dreamer kept in his berth. Tremen
dous jolting was caused by the
wheels running over the ties. The
suspense was something awful; the
wreck of the train was inevitable.
The car was filled with the shrieks
of the terrified passengers, mingled
witb the crash of glass and the rat
tle of the train. Suddenly there was
a deafening report and a tremendous
concussion, and the cars appoared to
crumble away.
The tall man found himself in
total darkness, but suddenly, to his
horror, ho discovered a streak of
lurid flame through the wreckage,
which told him that he would be
roasted alive if immediate succor
did not roach him. He could hear
voices directly over him, but do as
he would not a sound could he utter.
The flames were making rapid pro
gress toward the place where he was
confined, and their hot breath was
beginning to singe his whiskers.
Then came the crash of an axe direct
ly over his head. The first blow
struck him squarely in the back of
the neck, and he felt that his time
had surely come. The next one cut
off his left ear, and the third opened
up a space in his cranium the'size of
a saucer. The fire had now crept up
to his feet, and the left one was
slowly roasting, when another blow
from the- axe, greater than all the
rest, knocked his head clean from his
body. He experienced a singular
buzzing in his ear; there was a gleam
of light in the distance and with a
bound he returned to consciousness.
The doctor was standing over him,
holding a double tooth in his for
ceps.
“That was an old stager, and no
mistake. How he did hang! It took
all my strength to dislodge him,”
and the doctor wiped his dripping
forehead with his handkerchief.
“Where a-a-am I?” were the first
words of the tall man.
“Why, right hero in my office,”
responded the doctor. “You would
have had a tough time if you hadn’t
takoa the gas.”
“Well, if it had been rougher than
it actually was I would now be a
corpse,” and the tall man paid the
$1.50, and went out into the street
feeling as if ho had been walking in
a treadmill for a week.
Traveiiug Incog.
First American—Have a good time
abroad?
Second American—Fine. I trav
eled incog. Went-where I pleased
and escaped the vulgar curiosity of
the gaping crowd.
‘•Eh? How did you travel?"
“Incognito. I said. I didn’t let
’em know I was a rich American.
Just pretended I wasn’t anybody
but an ordinary English lord._New
York Weekly.
Shifting th. Kaspoudblllty.
“But I don't see how you ever col
lected that 15,000 insurance on his
life when you had previously man
aged to get him on the pension list
for injuries received during' the
war,” observed the friend of the
family.
“The hand of Providence was in
it,” said the widow, with a gentle
sigh pf resignation.
Lather's Finn of Education.
In 1528 Luther and Melanchtbon
drew up a scheme of popular educa
tion which was followed in the Ger
man schools for seventy-five years.
The first class learned to read, write
and sing; the second class studied
Latin, grammar, music and scrip
tures; the third, arithmetic, Latin
and rhetoric.
i
PRBCIOU8 STONES.
Woman Conildnm n Ivory Hatting Prrf
•rabla to Gold and Silver.
The study of precious stones has
suggested to the wife of an expert
and sometime collector an idea or'
reformation in the setting of dia
monds. Whether it is practicable
is a question for jewelers. The pro
posal is that ivory should take the
place of gold or silver. All wearet'3
of diamonds are aware how trouble
some is the process of washing and
drying silver-set diamonds so as to
avoid the slightest tarnish, and a
gold setting has the disadvantage of
causing so much reflection of its own
color as to render the whiteness of a
fine diamond difficult to guage. But
even more important would be the
gain of beauty, says the Pall Mall
Gazette. The brilliance of gold and
silver mar their charm as a setting
for transparent and sparkling stones,
though it makes them a good setting
for opaque stones* and for pearls.
Ivory would give the gentle effect
that is now sought by setting dia
monds together with merely semi
precious stones—a combination de
plorable to the expert. Ivory would
have even more than the quieting
effect of cat’s-eye or chrysoprase,
and its thick warm whiteness by the
lucid and darting diamond would
make an effect of great refinement.
Perhaps a difficulty would be found
,in its comparative fragility.
Of semi-precious stones none is
more lovely than the opal, with its
fiery rose and alteration of green and
blue that shame the peacock, while
by a change of pasture all these
starry ardors can be lost in a milky
way of whiteness, as suits one’s mood.
Opal runs, much like a vein of mar
ble, through a mixture of brown
ironstone. When the vein is seen to
be thick enough to yield good pieces
the ironstone is split and tho opal
cut out. But a singularly beautiful
art is practiced by a German carver,
who leaves the matrix as a back
ground and cuts the opal lying at
tached to it,following the suggestions
of color and form after the well
known manner of a cameo. A cameo,
however, is opaque and mere brown
and white, whereas the opal is
translucent and ' full of color. A
dying aurora with a burning sun
rising over the sea, a mermaid with
the rosy fire in her cheek and the
peacock tints in her tail, birds stand
ing by a pool in violet twilight, are
among the artist’s happiest carvings
to be seen at a mineralogist’s in
liegent street.
It is pleasant thus to follow an
opal to its home in nature. To do
this with some of the things of com
mon use is sometimes to get a new
idea of them. 1 oathe patchouli as
you may—and it can hardly be
loathed too heartily—it must loose
half its vulgarity after you find that
it is not only a bad smell in the
Burlington arcade, but the simple,
unmixed and innocent breath of a
shrub whose leaf you may pinch- in
an Italian garden. . Patchouli green
and alive, out of doors, must nec
essarily make you more tolerant of
patchouli, betraying itself in “white
rose” inside a shop.
A Mate Actor.
Upon one occasion, an actor, who
rarely knew his part, delibeiately
posed through an entireactof “Julius
Caesar,” says the Amusement Globe,
and left tho responsibility of the
scene upon the shoulders of his col
leagues. They managed to pull
through without him by incorporat
ing his lines into their own parts,
and when the curtain dropped, they
went in a body to the culprit’s dress
ing room. He was calmly reading a
newspaper when the door was burst
opea “Well sir,” said the irate
star, “what do you mean by placing
us in such a predicament!'” “What
are you talking about?” said the
actor. “What am 1 talking about?
That scend sir.” “What was the
matter with itP" “Why, you never
once openod your mouth; didn’t speak
a single line, sir." “Didn’t, eh!
Well, by .'Jove! do you know it struck
me the scene hung fire.”
• A Dlleinm».
“I’m in a terrible dilemm&,” said
Mickles to a friend at the office.
“What’s the matter?”
“My wife and I had been talking
economy this morning and she asked
me kow much I paid for the cigars I
smoke. I had to pretend to be in a
frightful hurry to keep from talking
about it”
“Why didn't you answer her?"
“I was afraid ta If I told her
the truth she’d scold about the ex
travagance, and if I named a fictitious
price she might buy me soma ”
Tht Typical American Face.
Here is an analysis of what is al
leged to be the typical American
face: The prominent nose, the slop
ing forehead, the fairly large mouth,
the full eyes and predominance of
the oval type are the natural char
acteristics of an aggressive, talented
and shrewd people, agreeable in
manners, but keenly alive to the
main chanca It Is a composite face,
made up of the qualities taken from
Puritan, English. Scotch and Ger
man sources.
A Loss to Literature.
“Barfclay has a wonderful imagin
ation'; he ought to employ it in
story-telling. ”
“He does."
“Are they published?”
“No; he just tells them to his wife
when he has been out late.”—Chicago
Inter Ocean.
lledgea end lutthra.
A mile of hedge and ditch equals
an acre of land. The amount of ex
tra land that would bh rendered
available for orops, were all the
hedges in the united kingdom
trimmed properly, would be equiva
lent to 600,000 acres.
A DISCONTENTED GRANQER,
Neither Crops Nor Children Turned Out
Well—What He Envied.
A gentleman who was rusticating
in the northern part of New Hamp
shire took a tramp among the hills
one day. In passing a hillside
farm he saw an aged granger
hoeing a very stony potato field
near his house, and the gentleman
stopped to converse with him, says
the Boston Journal.
“Your potatoes seem to be doing
well,” he started in.
“Oh, I reckon I’ll hev a few perta
ters,” rejoined the farmer, dryly, as
he stopped hoeing the rocks off the
vines and glanced at the stranger
curiously from under the wide rim of
his weather-beaten straw hat.
"Other crops goodP” •
"Oh. the crops is toler’ble, as
usual, I s’pose,” replied the farmer,
indifferently, as he came up to the
rail fence, dragging his hoe after
him. ‘But I’ll tell yer jest how it
is, squire,” he continued confidential
ly. "I’m the most unfortunate ole
critter in Coos county.”.
“Farming don't pay very well up
here, I suppose?”
“Pay! Nothin’ pays me, squire,
but I did expect a leetle or suthen
fpnm mw f»rnn nf irnnnrv line ^
“Children turned out bad, eh?”
Jes. so stranger. The hull on ’em
has been a dead loss to me. Dan’l
I named him for Dan’l Webster an’
give bim a good eddication—he’s a
hoss doctor; practiced on my old
mare and she died. Zeke went into
what they call the green-goods busi
ness—keepin’ a grocery 1 s’pose—but
he busted up, and he writes me that
he’s now workin’ in a place called
Sing Sing; says he’s got a good stiddy
job, but the pay ain't good, and he’s
allers wantin’ to borrer a dollar from
me. Sam an’ Hi went ter brakin’ on
the railroad, an’ I had ter pay the
funeral expenses of both of ’em.
Maria Ann got married to a drummer
at the county fair last fall, and went
up in a balloon but they came down
safe an' hev been honeymoonin’ with
me and the old woman ever since.
Lizy, my youngest, ain’t wuth her
keep, an' she’s a-teasing 'me to buy
her a bysuckle—me, who ain’t laid
eyes on a $5 bill since the war. I
tell ye, stranger, I’m the most un
fortunate critter with my young uns
that ever lived.” he groaned.
“You certainly have had bad luck
with your children.”
“I should say I had. Now, there’s
Bill Durkee up ter Colebrook; he’s
had the greatest luck with his. They
supports him in good style, an’ Bill
ain’t done a stroke o’ work for five
years. ”
“All smart and steady, eh?”
“That’s where you miss it, squire.
They ain’t any on ’em taken that
way.”
“How is it they get along so well,
then?” t
“They are all freaks, and have all
got good stiddy jobs the year around.
Sal weighs ’bout a ton and Mirandy’s
got tremendous long hair. An’ here
I be without even a mammoth hog or
a two-headed calf,” sighed the aged
farmer as he went back to his boeing.
A Groom's Predicament.
A bride tells of a difficult moment
of her recent wedding trip. A few
days of it were spent with an uncle
of hers, very deaf and very piouB.
When they sat down to dinner on the
night of their arrival, with a consid
erable company ot relatives assem
bled to do them honor, the uncle ex
ploded a bombshell by asking the
groom to ■ say grace. Much embar
rassed, as he was unaccustomed to
officiating in this way, he leaned for
ward, murmuring a request to be ex
cused. Whereupon the uncle, watch
ing him, only waited until his lips
stopped moving to utter a sonorous
“Amen!” in response. It is hardly
necessary to add that not only did
the blessing for that meal go unsaid,
but also that the effort of everybody,
except the uncle, to keep from
laughing quite took away the appe
tites for the first course.
' Einernuii,i* Luve for llontou.
In driving with Whittier one day
Emerson pointed out a small un
painted house by the roadside and
said: “There lives an old Calvinist
in that house and she says she prays
for me every day. I am glad she
does. I pray for myself.” “Does
theeP” said Whittier; “what does
thee pray for, friend Emerson?”
“Well,” replied Emerson, “when I
first open my eyes upon the morning
meadows and look out upon the
beautiful world, I thank God that I
am alive and that I live so near Bos
ton. ”—Argonaut
Kep-WlMdlnir Wutclie* Go D^g(Ing;>
Key-winding watches have been so
thoroughly out of date for nearly ten
years past that it is now difficult to
sell them for a tenth of their original
cost, no matter how well made they
may be. Watch dealers will allow
for them in exchange a little more
than the value of the gold or silver
in the case, not with the idea of
selling the works, but rather to keep
them on hand for lending to custom
ers while their own watches are
mending.
To Settle a Bet.
Dusty Rhodes—I stopped to see if
you would give me the recipe you
use for mince plesP Mrs. Dogood—
The idea,' What do you want of itP
Dusty Rhodes—Fitz William tried to
make me believe you used three cups
of Portland cement to one of mo
lasses, and I said you didn’t.—-Puck.
Making an Iinpreatlon.
First Commercial Traveler—Well,
did you make any impression on that
old farmer? Did he buy anything
from you?
Second C T.—No. he didn’t buy
anything, but he came very near
making an impression on me, for he
flung the manure fork after me.
cu
Kaseanr,
The composer Maac.,*.
lottery which is |*Z. '
tor the relief of th?W|
ferers a white silk f*1
which he has written a ?’
one of his own oper^
new ones, "Radclir ^1*
vano. ’ 1
W ™!# iB “‘u'i«0B l
»go, Thos. F. Lli_ ’
thl“ ■fte.wuJSL
cramps and diarrhoeas
meet Mr. C. M. Carter
I«rly afflicted. He 'V
of Chamberlain s Colk
Diarrhoea Remedy, »n;h
Hdeen drug store and m,
of **• 11 gave Mr.
and I can vouch fot »,
«*•’’ For sale by p
Whooping Con
There is no danger tn
when Chamberlain'ii Coi
freely given. I,
mucus and aids its
also lessens the severity,
bf paroxysms of coughin
a speedy recovery. Thi
least danger in giving |
children or babies, aa it ci
jurious substance. Por
Corrigan, drnggjst.
largest Circulation in li^
It isn’t much wonder tint]
Journal now has the largest i
in Nebraska. It has redncedlj
66 cents a month with 8a*
cents without Sunday, ft (
spending more money [«j
news than any other paper; h|
staff such men as Bixby, T|
and Annin. The Journal isti
ed at every point and is disk
ily and surely away ahead o||
etate dailies. People likeaU
per. Especially when it is s
The Journal.
Auyuue who uas ever mil
of inflammatory rhenmatiin
with Mr. J. A. Slumm, ■
Heights, Los Angeles, oral
nate escape from a siege oil
couraging ailment. Mr. Stan
man of Merriman’s confi
tablishment. Some month
leaving the heated work na
across the street on an emsi
caught out in the rain. Thei
that when ready to go borne I
he was unable to walk, owh|
flammatory rheumatism, He
home, and on arrival vs
front of a good fire and Huron
bed with Chamberlain’s Fin
During the evening and nigbl
repeatedly bathed with tbit
and by morning was relink
rheumatic pains. Henowti
ial pains in praising Cht
Pain Balm, and always keeft
of it in the house. For isle tfi
Corrigan, druggist. !
LEGAL ADVERTISERS
NOTICE FOB PU BLICATI#
LAMOrnciiffWj
Notice la hereby given that S»*
named settler has filed notice of wh
to make final proof in support oi«
and that said proof will be made ,
Register and Receiver at 0 MU
May 31, 1895, viz: t
PHILLIP MOKBISON.fl.K W
For the southeast quarter setfl*
ship 29 north range 12 we»t.
He names the following *J*“*JJ|
his continuous residence ui»»
tlon of, said land, viz: B a
John Fallon, William Cronin •* "
right, all of O’Neill, Neb. u
42-6 JOHN A. HABMMJ
In The District court ui
Samuel O. Bally, Plaintiff,
Owen Ifor and wife, Mr*. 0»e»
fondants. notics
The above named defendant*
tlce that on the ill
plaintiff herein filed hlsP®J Lhnih
triot court of Holt county, >e
lng that he is the owner of tie;
scribed real estate, situated in n
Nebraska, to-wit: ms
The east half of the nortbea"^
the southwest quarterofibeno
•wsiiKssSa*
Plaintiff alleires tnni uu .
July. 1800, one F. E. Allen ^^
certain mortgage iMdw
Ormsby Bros, it bo. opssiid ‘day h
an action in tlio districttou"or Mj,
Nebraska, against said Bonn ^ „
to foreclose said mortgage nterei •
so lureuiuse 1, ,...
decree of .foreclosure^**® ^,1*1
liovlvv Dl iw.vv.v
:ause on the 6tli dayJJJtaTiifr0' *S
the sum of $47 and coats.shenfl
said premises were sola
said premises were sow Bllv.en.i
Issued to the purchaser, o.r oWllei
Plaintiff alleges that he ,lie frf
real estate, having pureV,D error**J
Plaintiff alleges that Dy D,od
light that the defendants sMjjd
lot made defendants in tteidj
not made defenoaius ^ tier]
lult, although Pr°PfnVre*t in s‘‘d,?5
having an apparent mt *tltion that
Plaintiff prays in said pet ,W
fendants be required to pa» ,M «*
tor the use of the pWnti^ ws
with interest at JO pelrcosts of W
lecree. together with^ ^ thattW»
lecree. logevu©* »* 7v v or tnai nfij
swsLwfStq?
;sr sr »“;«“»■ “;
quitable relief. answer sa>
xou are required to ^ June.
Va^^NentNehW-^^
Dated at
>f April, 1896
4M
Attorney
PeJhyIM
>—rc
•oia DjuiLix
»*«. i. ketter •
^jasssswSI
a Druttl***'