The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, May 23, 1895, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    TOO MUCH EDUCATION.
Tim Supply of Scholars Bald to Bo Groat*
or Than tho Demand.
Kvor since the enormous enlarge
ment, numerically, of the English
universities, there can be llttlo
doubt that the value of a degree has
gone down commercially. The num
ber of first-class men seeking work
, and finding none is a sorry comment
on tho development of the English
unlvorsity system. If this Is true of
tho flrst-claBs, what must be the lot
of tho second, tho third and the pass
man? The learned professions, in
fact, are overcrowded. The cause of
this unhappy crowding of the market
for brain laborers is not far to seek,
says tho Saturday Roviow. An im
mense number of persons who in
formor times would havo worked
with their hands as tholr fathers did
before them are being educated to
work with their heads. There is a
general levoling up of the social
grades, if you look at it optimisti
cally. The son of the artisan be
comes a clerk, the son of the clerk as
pires to teach in a school, the son of
tho school teacher aspires to go to
Ox ford or Cambridge. But this lev
eling up is not an unmixed bless
ing. • The result Is that we have
fifty times too many clerks—200 ap
plied for an Insignificant post adver
tised in the Times the other day—
ten times too many half-educated
teachers, and, alas! ten times too
many university graduates turned
uui every year 10 orowa me ran kb oi
the bar, the sohoolg and journalism
and recruit the year's crop of miser
able and hopeless failurea None of
these people oan dig as their fathers
did; they oannot make shop boys, or
busmen, or crossing sweepers. Too
many of them can only teach or
starve. It is really impossible to
deny that a certain degree of intel
lectual education untits a man to
work with his hands and earn his
bread as a laborer. It may be that
it ought not to do so, but in the
prosent imperfeot state of the world
so it ia Therefore, somehow or
other, places must be found for this
onorraous harvest of tolerable
scholars as schoolmasters or
something analogous in the so
cial soale. Every year the
problem is how to do it That
1 problem formerly the university
solved by the fellowship system.
The number of soholars was small
and they had a fellowship apiece.
That solution is no longer possible,
even if it were desirable. Then the
universities tried ignoring the prob
lem altogether. They, as it were,
denied liability. . Their position was:
“Our business is to provide facilities
for learning for those who wlBh to
learn, and opportunities to study for
those who care to study. We have
no duties beyond that. When our
- men have attained, by the help of
our endowments, to a degree the
'connection between us terminates.
They must shift for themselves.”
Theoretically, of course, this was
undeniably a logical position which
they could very fairly take up, but
in praotice they must be held re
sponsible, in some degree at least,
for the men whom they have raised
out of their own position in life by
scholarships and exhibitions spe
cially offered for necessitous persona
NOT IN A LAWYER'S LINE.
A KttMklBB'i IdiB M to tho Rmiob for
th« OtUbrttloB of ChrUtmao.
Curtis F. Burnham of Richmond,
Ky., is one of the most suooessful
lawyers in the blue grass section,
but like many other brilliant men is
liable to make mistakes. Some little
time since, says the Louisville Times,
Colonel Burnham was employed in a
suit brought by the relatives of a
rich Madison county farmer, who
alleged that he was Sritzy and should
he deprived of the control of his
property. Some of the best lawyers
In Richmond were engaged on both
aides, and the trial attracted a large
orowd. When it was Colonel Burn*
ham’s turn to cross-examine the de
% tendant he very naturally tried to
make the poor fellow out as feeble
minded as possible and asked him
questions calculated to show that he
was mentally irresponsible.
“My good fellow,” said the colonel,
“tell me, do you know what Christ
' mas is?”
“Of ooursel do,” retorted the man.
“It’s a day when you give presents.”
“Very good,” responded the law
yer blandly, nodding his head at the
spectators, “but why do we give
presents? What do we commemor
ate upon that day?”
This proved a puzzler for the de
fendant, who very oandidly replied
that he didn’t know anything about
“Of oourse not, of course not,” ex
claimed Colonel Burnham triumph
antly with a knowing glance around
the courtroom. “Here you are liv
ing in this enlightened age, within
sight and sound of dozens of
churches, you have seen this sacred
festival celebrated year after year,
and yet you do not know that we ob
serve it in commemoration of the
crucifixion of our Redeemer.” -
The outburst of laughter provoked
by this remark was so terrific that it
was a long time before silence could
be enforced, or before Colonel Burn
ham realized his break. The jury
decided immediately afterward that
the defendant was sane and could
not legally be deprived of his prop
erty when a man whose brilliancy
has never been questioned was
equally at sea when it came to tell
ing why Christmas was celebrated.
▲ Hough £atlmit«.
“Sawyer seems very proud of his
violin,” said the man who likes to be
disagreeable
“Yes. How old is it?”
“I don’t know. I should say a
couple of thousand years at least,
iadj^g jyggtap tuijjp he plqysaa It"
NOT ALL JOYOUSNESS.
Taehtlng Um Lot* of Discomfort* for
THom Who Book Thom
One commonly thinks of yachting
as the most delightful of summer
pastimes, and the very word calls up
visions of "a wet sheet and a flowing
sea, and a wind that follows fast,”
smells of salt things and whistlings
through the rigging, blue sky, white
caps, driving clouds and all that sort
of thing, to say nothing of the possi
bilities of delightful companionship
and the delicious unconventionality
of meeting one’s fellow men and
women with all the formality and
restraints of on-shore life thrown off;
no making talk or anything of that
kind, but knocking about carelessly
and easily in flannel suits and having
“areal good time." Or, again, rac
ing, with its excitements, and cruis
ing, with all its possibilities of ad
venture—as, for oxample, cruising
to Bar Harbor, where, it is well
known, America’s fairest daughters
gather yearly, decked in their best,
for the solo purpose of making Bar
Harbor a Utopia and haven of rest
for those who have plenty of money
and go down to the sea in expensive
yachts.
ouou is toe popular ana accepiea
view of yachting, but there is
another and gloomy side of the
picture which the writer, who ia
sometimes inclined to growl, can set
forth clearly in three distinct state
ments, with an open challenge to
contradiction; First, that to "go and
take a sail” in a small boat belong
ing to some one oIbo and to sail aim
lessly about on the open sea is "an
awful bore;” secondly, that to go
as an "amateur crew,” on a rowing
yacht under sixty feat long is not
only a bore, but a hardship, and on
yachts over sixty feet in length it is
not customary to have an "amateur
crew,” unless an occasional and
almost useless passenger can be con
sidered such; and, lastly, that cruis
ing is a lottery absolutely dependent
on the weather. Fogs, calms, storms
and head winds are quite as usual as
free winds and sunshine.
Observe that nothing has been
said about seasickness, which maker
yachting impossible to so many.
There is no place on earth where
the sun can strike down out of the
sky and bleach and blister and sizzle
as it can upon a yacht’s deck. There
is no place that can be hotter or
more stuffy or more uncomfortable
than a yaoht’s cabin on a hot day,
when there is no wind or when the
wind is dead aft, and when it is
rough and the water is driving across
the yacht’s deck in a sheet of white
foam and the crew are all huddled
behind the shrouds, into which old
oilskins have been stuffed to make a
screen, and the man at the wheel has
lifelines, running from the main
sheet to the main shrouds on either
side of him, to keep him from being
washed overboard, and the oil bags
are hung to windward, to keep the
water from breaking, and the fire is
out in the galley and the cook has
been scalded by the sour soup stock
jumping out of the boiler, and the
barometer is dropping like mad, and
the skylight leaks so that every
wave which comes aboard Bends
bucketfuls of swash down into the
cabin, and when every now and then
a wave comes aboard and pounds
down on her deck like a load of pig
iron, and those below are shaken
about like oorn in a popper and those
'on deck simply hold on and duck
their heads—when such is the con
dition of affairs, yachting would not
be considered a pastime.
The delights of being “amateur
orew” can be briefly summed up.
They consist in lying flat on your
face either in a hot sun or a pouring
rain, and if you turn over having the
owner shout at you: "Keep still! Do
you think that you’re a wild elephant f
You jarred her all over that time.”
Furthermore, all yachts are not
rigged alike, and if the amateur
crow is told at a critical point in the
race—say just before rounding the
leeward mark—to let go the spinna
ker halyards, and let the balloon jib
halyards go instead, so that the whole
sail goes over to leeward, the'remarks
which will be made to him will be
"unfit for publication.”
Crying Down Credit.
One of the rules of the Canadian
military service is that of “crying*
down credit” In Toronto last week
this rule was carried out in front of
the postoffloe. It consisted in a lit
tie ceremony performed by a sergeant
major, a trooper and a trumpeter of
the Canadian dragoons. The trum
peter blew his trumpet and then the
sergeant major in a stentorian voice
declared that the officer commanding
the Canadian dragoons would not be
responsible for any debts contracted
by the members of the regiment
beyond a day’s pay, and that even a
day’s pay would not be guaranteed
it the debt was contracted for liquor
Thalr Presence still Felt.
Landlord, of seaside hotel—How
did you sleep last night, sir?
Guest—Not very welL The fact
is—
“You didn't? Let me tell you, sir,
some of the biggest men in the coun
try have occupied that bed. Chaun
cey Depew, Senator Evarts, Secre
tary Carlisle, General Alger, White
law Reid, Charles A. Dana, George
W. Childs and Bill Nye have all
slept in it."
“That’s the trouble. There’s been
too many big-bugs in it. ”
It Make* No JDUtoroneo.
“I suppose you don’t believe In
courtship,” said the paragraphiat
laughingly to the president a' an up
town gas company.
“Why notP” asked the president
“Because lovers always turn the
gas down, you know. Ha! hit ha!”
“Oh, that makes no difference,”
I said Mr. Beal “The meter gets In
lte.work all the same.” j
THE SENSIBLE WOMAN.
She la a Gam anti Ne»»r mindly Follow#
tho Land of Other#.
A crusty old bachelor once said
that a sensible woman was the
noblest and the rarest work ot God.
His audience was composed of con
genial friends, and he was not dis
puted, so he continued:
••The sensible women who are born
into this world outnumber those who
leave it six to one.”
••Got the figures to prove that?”
asked a reporter.
‘ -No; but you can't prove that I’m
wrong. My statement is an axiom
and will be acknowledged as "Such
before long.”
“What becomes of the sensible
women who don’t die?” was the next
question.
“They die fools; spoiled in the
bringing up. ”
A sensible woman begins early in
life to show her prevailing charac
teristic. As a child she can be reas
oned into obedience when she cannot
be coaxed or driven, and, though it
would be idle to attach undue im
portance to the bachelor's opinions
as given above, it is wise to remem
ber that wise impulses may be
changed to bad ones by improper
training.
me sensioio woman aoes not allow
Belt-gratification to pereuado her to
do that which is contrary to reason
or sound judgment. She never loves
a man bo dearly, notwithstanding his
bad habits, which she despises, that
“she cannot give him up.” Her good
sense tells her that love is short
lived unless fed on respect, and also
an affection that is weaker than a
bad habit is scarcely worth having.
The sensible woman never does a
thing simply because every one else
is doing it, but because she has de
cided that she may safely do it. She
cares just enough about the opinion
of her neighbors and none too much.
She who does not care what others
think of her is lacking either in good
sense or morality. She whose first
thought is “What will folks sayP”
lacks good sense and firmness to do
what she believes to be right regard
less of consequences. The sensible
woman is the medium between these
two extremes.
In time of trouble one turns invol
untarily to the sensible woman.
Others may be favored companions
when the skies are clear, but under
the clouds are useless as a lace shawl
in a snow-storm. But the sensible
woman knows you are human, and al
though they may have seemed pro
saic, when your fair weather friends
are comparing you with the angels
you are not grateful. She does not
gush, or look scandalized or say “I
told you so,” or become sentimental,
or try to convince you that she has
suffered worse; you know at once
that she understands that Bhe is not
wanting in appreciation or sympa
thy, and that she will help you if
you will let her.
Very Mach Astonished.
After a decision of the house of
parliament on a motion of Mr. Fox,
Sir George Young, who had been
drinking all day instead of attending
to his parliamentary duties, insisted
on addressing the house; but, begin
ning with “I am astonished,” could
proceed no further. When he had
repeated these words seven times,
the 'house was convulsed with laugh
ter. The baronet appealed to the
speaker, who pleasantly inquired
what he would have him da Sir
George grew very warm at this, and
declared that he would not give up
his favorite word, “for,” said he. “I
really am astonished, Mr. Speaker.”
By the advice ot friends, however,
he was presently prevailed upon,
after repeating the word about a
dozen times more, to change it to
“surprised,” after which, “having
entirely forgotten what he intended
to say,” he sat down.—Argonaut.
What Did It.
The Coroner—You say in your
opinion the man was killed by a
funny story. Explain yourself.
The Drummer, witness at the in
quest—It’s this way. We were all
standing at the head of the stairs on
the second floor of the hotel.
The Coroner—Yes; go on.
The Drummer—tiaggs, the shoe
man, said he had two or three good
ones to tell us.
The Coroner—I understand.
The Drummer—He started right
in with one of them. None of us
caught on except the poor fellow ly
ing there dead. He—
The Coroner—He what?
The Drummer—He tumbled to the
first story. The fall killed him.—
Hotel World.
A PIneh of fluff for Hyatorla.
The idea has been suggested that
in certain well-known conditions of
hysteria a judiciously administered
pinoh of snuff might have a bene
ficial effect Familiar to everyone is
the perverseness with which such
hysterical attacks resist ordinary
remedies, and it seems not Improbable
that some of them might be curtailed
by a period of vigorous sneezing.
Strength I rora Alcohol.
There is a common belief that alco
hol gives new strength and energy
after fatigue sets in. The sensation
of fatigue is one of the safety valves
of the human machine; to stifle the
feeling of fatigue in order to do mere
work is like closing the safety valve
so that the boiler may be overheated
and explosion result.
An Old Custom.
Probably very few persons know
that the lord mayor is the only per
son-other than the queen and the
constable—who knows the password
to the tower of London. The pass
word is sent to the mansion house
quarterly, signed by her majesty. It
Is a survival of an old eastern.
GROWING TALLER.
The Kflfccta of AtUletlea on the Physique
of Englishmen.
Francis Galton has collected some
Interesting facts in regard to the ef
fect of athletics and the improved
physical conditions during . the last
forty years on the physique of the
middle classes, that great and im
portant part of the English poDula
tion which in the arbitrary social
scale of the country lies between the
artisan class on the one side and the
‘•upper ten thousand" on the other,
says the St Louis Globe-Democrat.
Mr. Galton gives instructive evi
dence of the amelioration of the up
per middle class. When he was an
undergraduate at Cambridge from
1840 to 1844, although but 5 feet 9j
inches in height, he was taller than
the majority of his fellows. In ad
dressing them he habitually lowered
his eyes, and if in a crowd he would
readily see over the heads of the peo
ple. Writing in 1898 he states that
he no longer possesses these advan
, tagos. Altered social conditions in his
opinion, have helped to improve the
bodily powers and address of this
class; such conditions, for instance,
as more wholesome and abundan t
food, better cooking, warmer cloth
ing, moderation in the use of alco
hol, better-ventilated sleeping-rooms,
more change through vacations, and,
lastly, the healthy lives led by
women in their girlhood. One of the
most striking sights in the city of
London is the number of tall women
that are to be found in the fashiona
ble parks during the season. It is
more particularly among the women
in the upper classes that the im
proved conditions of the last two
generations have left their mark.
Women of five feet six inches and
fine feet eight inches are common,
and it is not a very unusual occur
rence to meet a women of five feet
ten inches and even six feet. A
gentleman well known in London so
ciety states that when he became of
age, twenty-two years ago, his
sister, a tall and handsome girl, was
the tallest girl among the visiting
acquaintances of the family, and now
she is overtopped by nearly every
one of her younger lady acquaint
ances. With this physical progress
there has been a corresponding
moral one. The youth of what is
called in England "the leisure class”
is not now so addicted to the idle
habits, the bad language, the gam
bling and the unmanly amusements
of his forefathers. Exercise has
taught him to be choicer in his dresB
and more lavish in his use of water.
The purer mental tone has insensibly
permeated more or less other grades
of society, and the streets of large
English towns are not so thronged
as they were with drunken and dirty
toughs. The prominence given to
all bodily exploits by the sporting
and general press has likewise di
rected public attention to the ques
tion of physical education, and has
had an eminently salutary influence.
American Money and Its Equivalents.
A contemporary has figured out
that the American double eagle of
$20 is equal to 20 patakas of Abys
sinia, 80 kwans of Anam, 24 piasters
of Arabia, 20 pesos of Argentine,
about 44 florins of Austria, about 103
francs of France, 86 milreis of
Brazil, 2 condors of Chili, 86 rigs
dalers of Denmark, 400 platers of
Egypt, £4 of Great Britain, 103
drachmas of Greece, 84 marks of
Germany, 45 rupees of India, 103 lire
of Italy, 20 yens of Japan, 50 scudi
of Malta, 103 lei of Koumania, 50
guilders of the Netherlands, 27
rubles of Russia, 8 tomuns of Persia,
251 piasters of Servia, 82 tiools of
Siam, 103 pesetas of Spain, .200
gwush of Tripoli, 7 tillas of Turkes
tan, 21 patacons of Uruguay and 25
pesos of Venezuela.
A Diagnosis. :•* ^
“Doctor,” said the senator's wile,
“you must do something lor my hus
band. He is simply wearing himsell
out. ”
“What is the matter P”
“His mind is never at rest. He
talks in his sleep as much as he does
in the daytime.”
“H’m’m! Don’t be alarmed. That
isn’t his mind. It’s involuntary ac
tion ol the vocal chords, the dia
phram, the maxillary and other mus
cles. He’ll get over it as soon as the
effects ol the recent financial discuss
ion get out ol his system.”
The Title “Excellency.**
Excellency is now applied to am
bassadors. It was lormerly a royal
title, and during the middle ages
princes were sometimes put to
death lor treason because they as
sumed this title. It was first be
stowed only on the ambassadors ol
monarchs and denied to those ol a
republic, but in the seventeenth cen
tury, Venice, alter an immense
amount ol correspondence, succeeded
in obtaining it lor her ambassadors,
and since then it is applied to all
envoys.
Some Consolation.
A physician points out that lat
people endure most kinds ol illness
much better than thin people, be
cause they have an extra amount ol
nutriment stored away in their tis
sues to support them during the or
deal. Moreover, there are many
other consolations lor persons ol
abundant girth. They are generally
optimists by nature, genial and jolly
companions, whose society is uni
versally prelerred to that ol people
with angular irames and dispositions.
The Voice of Experience.
“One would think that it would
not be unsafe to attend such a thing
as a church fair. ”
“I cannot see how it can be un
safe?”
“Well, I’ve noticed that when you
go to one you’ve got to take a good
many chances.”
THAT BAD BOY.
ttlm Him Tired to Bee the Billing and
Cooing of a Mew Fair.
A carriage rolled down Easton
avenue from a wedding a few even
ings since. It was a bridal equipage.
By the electric lights the happy pair
inside could be seen by passers. The
bride had on her long veil, and the
groom, with his newly cropped hair
and supremely happy look, could
not be mistaken. There was, more
over, an old shoe lying on top ot the
carriage.
The young folks thought they
were alone, according to the St Louis
Republic.
Hanging to the springs in the rear
was a small boy. The youth had a
clear idea of the situation. About
once a minute he raised himself so
that he could peep through the little
glass at the back.
As the carriage approached the
business part of the city and the
lights became more numerous the
boy thought it well to jump off. Then
he unbosomed himself.
“Oh, but it woz funny,” he said.
“Dere dey was, dem two, sittin’ dere
holdin’ hands an’ sayin’ nothin’. I
gits on de back of de buggy away
out, not knowln’ dev woz a bride an’
groom inside. When I peeks in I
laughs an' says, ‘well dey’s goin’ to
De some Kissin in aere.' An Bhore
enough, wen I looked agin we woz in
a dark place in de street an’ he
smacked her a good un. Den—”
Here the youth laughed an inter
ruption to his story.
“Den,” he continued, “I kinder
slapped the back of the buggy—say,
you orter seed ’em jump. Den he
smiled an’ said somethin’ I couldn’t
hear. I reckon he said that it woz
all right, coz they woz married, fer
they got up close agin an’ she ack
shully put her purty head on his
shoulder. Dat made me laugh out
loud, which made her jump agin, an’
it left the whitest spot on his coat
where her 'head woz, an’ den in a
minute, when we woz in a dark place
in de street, dey kissed one anoder
several times. I could hear de
smacks clear outside. Den dey took
holder hands agin an’ jest looked at.
each other like blame fools. I got
clear disgusted wid de whole thing,
an’ dat’s why I got off. If dat’s mar
ryin’, I’m out. I don’t want none o’
dat truck, see?”
TURNED OUT BAD.
The Office Boy Was Sorry He Met the
Messenger.
He was a very down-hearted and
disgusted-looking boy, with torn
clothes and rumpled hair, and a few
suspicious bumps on his face; so I
stopped and asked him what the
matter was and whether I could be
of any assistance to him.
“Naw, yer can’t do nothing for
me; it’s a business trouble,” he ex
plained.
“Ah! Have you lost your posi
tion?” I asked.
“Naw; and I wouldn’t care if f
had. The president of our company
is the worst old duller in New York.
“Does he ill-treat you?” I asked
kindly.
“Naw, he doesn’t even know me by
sight, but he came into the office
cross as a hornet’s nest this mornin’
and climbed up the secretary’s back
the worst you ever seen. ”
“But how did that effect you?"
“Why, don’t yer see?” the boy
asked impatiently; “the secretary
had to get square somehow, so ho
jumped on the cashier with both feet;
and after the cashier’d thought it all
over and got good and mad he
jumped on the book-keeper, and the
book-keeper jumped on the bill-clerk,
and he just salted in and gimme
particular rats. An’ there was no
one fer me tor jump on, so I thought
I’d go out and lick a district mes
senger.” .
“Well, Oouldn’t you find one to
lickP” I asked.
“Oh, I found him quick enough:
but I didn’t lick ’im.y
“Why not?”
“’Cause he licked me!”—Fuck.
The Roman Goninli*
The most honorable office in the
Roman republic was that- of consuL
There were always two elected every
year, one each from the patricians
and plebians. The consul must be at
least 43 years old and must have held
the office of quaestor, aedile and
praetor. The consuls were the heads
of the republic, discharging all pub
lic functions, such as receiving am
bassadors or assembling the senate.
Their insignia were those of a king
except a crown. They were always
attended each by twelve lictors or
servants, bearing the boxes or
bundles of rods with an ax in the
center. The lictors, however, pre
ceded only one at a time, the lictors
of the other following him. The
year was named after them, and any
laws passed at their recommendation
also went by their names. They
commanded the armies of the repub
lic, and when both were with the
same army they commanded on alter
nate days. Under the emperors the
office became an empty honor, though
surrounded with much greater state.
Hard to Keep Track of Hlm
“Did Jones get an office ?"
“You bet!”
“What was it?"
“Minister.”
“Where to?”
• Hanged ef I know—they keep a
snoovin’ him so fast."
“Moving him?”
“Yes; he’s one o’ these here Meth
odist ministers.”
Tho Discharge or a River.
The discharge of a river is the vol
ume of water it pours into the sea
within a given time, usually ex
pressed as so many feet per second.
It is estimated by finding the breadth,
the average depth and the average
rate of a river at its mouth.
ABOUT
Fr®« ho*"
A very novel cornu
ta now being con^1
the western cities i
built for the7rl! ,h‘
Plants for the ^
same companies t? '
the two plants ^
This idea has also
home, and the puL^H
Plant In a near-by l*1’
advanced state of o '"
new development of
business has been hi,
* «>y the lmpmBve^
process of its manSS
not only materially il!*1
ty of the product, bm^Ja
to a point which seemsL
large profit even at an?
that possible to those S
Ply from nature's sJv
thatthe-plau-pj^
uct to be made entire!?
purity of any sort, free?,
outward, tending'^
purities which by the >
freezing from the four »u
are lodged in the center
The “plate” process obvi
the necessity for'raisins
ture of the water before*
the best results so far
“plate” process Indicate
ten and five-eights tons
Single ton of coal where
Is demanded in supply^,
manufacture. In the "c!
results are said to have i
seven tons of ice to a ton
average product has he
than this proportion. Tb
ess necessitates a heavj
In the original plant, but
percentage of return upoi
once In operation.
LEGAL ADVERTS
NOTICE FOR PUBLIC!]
Land Ofiuci atO’Ndu
Notice is hereby given
named settler has filed noticeoli
to make final proof in sm
and that said proof will be amu
register and receiver at OMfl
on June 28,1895, viz: ■ r
EDWARD M. GRADY.H. 11
for the NK H section l3,tov
18 west.
He names the following wits
his continuous residence unJ
vation of, said land, viz: M
William H. Mason. Charles 0|
Charles C. Millard, all of O'Neflj
46-6 John A. Hi
NOTICE FOR PUBLIC!
LandOftici atO’Nb
April iL
Notice is hereby given tbit tal
named settler has filed noth* of tig
to make final proof In support all
and that said proof will be mtkdslL
Register and Receiver at O'MUl
May 31,1885, viz:
PHILLIP MORRISON, H.ll
For the southeast quarterae
12we»t.
ship 29 north range 12 west.
lie names the following wltn
his continuous residence upon a
tion of, said land, viz: Richirtl
John Fallon, William Cronin utfl
right, all of O’Ntill, Neb.
42-6 JOHN A. HARM0S,H
NOTICE TO NON-RE9IDO
George H. Conover, Mrs. Cooon
first real name unknown, JamesII
Selmser, first real name unknoni
Selmser, his wife, first real nanitf
defendants, take notice that ttal
vestment Company, a corporatioia
laws of the state of Massachusr
filed a petition in the district c
county, Nebraska, against mj
you impleaded with Harry
object and prayer of which are ttl
a certain mortgage executed tj 1
Whitesell, to the GlobeIuvestm®!
upon the north half of thenortialf
and the southwest quarter of «* g
quarter and the northwest quw
southeast quarter of section uni
25 north, of range 15 west of the*
Holt county, Nebraska, given
payment of a prommlssory
gust 24,1888, for the sum of 5
Is now due upon said note ana n
sum of 1362.25 with interest tfi
September 1,18tW. at ten per ctttl
num, together with the furtherw»|
for taxes "bald on said real
plaintiff, for which sums
costs the plaintiff prays forad*"
lendants be required to Pard "
that said premises ma? -. -
the amount found due the ^
You and each of you arerequjjj
said petition on or before the ww
18Dated May 20th, 1895. ^
Globe Investment Compant
By S. D. Thornton, its Attorney^
be sold si
In The District Court of Holt
Samuel G. Baily, Plaintiff,
, iirt. ow
Owen Ifor and wife
fendants. notic*
The above named defendant®
tlce that on the 30th day of Apr*,
plaintiff herein filed his pod,.^
trict court of Holt county.*®^,
lng that he Is the owner
scribed real estate, situated io
Nebraska, to-wit:
The east half of the nort„ „ortb«
the southwest quarterof then 4
Ormsbv Bros. &to.ons d g|
note of 362.45. andthat
an action in the districte^,
an action in the district court" m1,
Nebraska, against said “ Allei»
to foreclose said II10^t^,r6 entered
decree of foreclosure
cause on the 8th day otn fi; s!, uj
the sum of *4, and sherif]
laid premises were sola a gllrel)rj
««.inA tn Mio niircllHSPfi V* , .
said premises were soiu gllt(,,ri
Issued to the purchaser, c- 0*t«
Plaintiff ulleges that he is i ^
real estate, having PurcJla„„prn)r‘»
real estate, having purct®^,,^
Plaintiff alleges that, by “^vc-o*®?
sight that the detendantsa s#j|J foB4|
□ot made defendants ® w t
suit, although proper P t ja si-._ ,
having an apparaut int r tb»;
. Plaintiff PWS n said P» , t0 W
thet**1
Plaintiff prays In into 4*
•endants bo required to P ^ tM su»
or the use of the W®'
vlth interest at 1® Krc08ts of ***,
lecree. together with ‘be c tt,„ th -j
37.83 Within thirtydays )n,bejl»"p
aid premises be quiete crged
hat the defendants bode d w
aterest in said premise*
nuitable relief. answer*)#
You are required to an, June 1%
i or before the jMUjSL.ki. thl> *
or before the u, u„ ^a ,
Bated at O'Neill. >eur»
April, 18115.
Attorney f°rr
43-4
PehnyroM
Druggist for. f* »dJ 1
ttlfl By All ilOCAl
PILES»;ii
wki«fc epSV®* ®1J'I3‘S w*^:r
Ss^SSKBS®-^