BEAUTY IN OI8TRB68. Why • Girl Iwlranw Sat oa • Cold Ball Till After Sundown. The whispering waves rose and (ell alter the mannor of whispering waves nt Santa Cruz and elsewhere, says the San Francisco Examiner. There wore not many bathers in the surf, for thb best of the day was past and the smile had all gone out of the weather. Away out beyond the float a black speck showed now and then. It was the head of a girl that swims hotter than unybody else at Santa Cruz. The float 1b the limit of the ordinary swim down there, but to her the swim to the raft is but the first step of a journey. She swims away out beyond the line of boats that do what they oan to make the sunset picturesque. > She tarried at the deserted float on the way out to sea, and when she had gono there remained on the float ft hnt.li Imr alrlrl Slrirt.a urn pnfhaii cumbersome in long distance swim ming. The wind rose a bit, and lit tle by little wanton waves went over the raft and oarried the garment to the edge and other waves reached for It, and finally it left the raft and went danoing merrily shoreward. The bay is very breesy at Santa Cruz and the slclrt was hurried along. No body noticed the garment until It had floated dose in and nobody paid much attention to it then. After a while the girl who swims better than anyone else turned her strokes shoreward. She reached the raft and looked for her skirt, which by this time was being used as a mop by the washing waves on the sandy shores. While a skirt is inconvenient in a long swim, it is practically in dlspenslble in a walk up the beach when a lot of people are looking on. So the best swimmer at Santa Cruz huddled up on the float, where a lad der prevented the people on the beach from seeing whether she had on a bathing suit or ball dress. Pretty soon people noticed her and wondered'why she did not come in. The interested sun, tarrying as long as it could, for there was no ladder on his side, had at last set, and it got colder and colder. More people came to the beach to wonder. They did not think she was hurt or in danger, for she made no outcry, but it did not seem possible that any body would voluntarily sit on a wet raft after sunset At last somebody saw the skirt swashing around in the sand. The girls and matrons comprehended and giggled. Maybe some of them thought it served her right for being aMo to swim so well The oause of the trouble was apparent, but the remedy was not clear. It was very cold by this time and nobody wanted to swim out to the raft, even to res cue the distressed one. There was no boat handy, and it looked for a time as though the best swimmer at Santa Cruz would have to roost on the cold, wet raft until after dark. But the oooaslon, as is customary with crises, produced its hero. Ad dison Mizner, in a new bathing suit, burst through the wondering throng, seized the garment, and plunged into the yeasty sea. As he neared the raft the girl dived and swam to meet him. She got her skirt and the rest was easy. A Quutloa of probability. “How are you getting along with your new novel?" he asked of a fem inine genius. “Not so well,” she answered, “as I have been. I came to a very troublesome point last week and I haven't done anything on It slnoe." “What was the matterP" “I find my heroine all alone. She takes her hat and goes out Into the darkness and loneliness in searoh of the village lawyer." “That Bounds very good." “Yes, but It is Improba ble.” “Why?" “She Is all alone." “Of course." “And puts on her hat to go out" “Yes.” “Whom is she going to ask whether it it on straight or not?" Would Have A Snap. Mazzam—Do you think that peo ple will have some occupation in the next world similar to the one they have here? Gaddox—I hope sa Mazzam—Why? What do you? Gaddox—N othing. —Vogue. Aa Absurd Bequest, Footpad—Gimme your money! Mr. Lushforth, disgustedly—Do you suppose I would be going home at 9 o’clock if I had any money ? You are the biggest chump I have met in a month of Sunday a—Indian apolis Journal. Mo Dog* Allowed, Policeman — Sorry, miss, but no dogs are allowed in the park. Miss Dogpetter—Why not? ... Policeman—That’s our ordera I suppose the park commissioners are afraid dogs might bark the treea— Texas Siftings. • A Beeoud-Huad Burglar. Mra Nicker, whispering to her husband—Oh, John, I believe there's a burglar in the room routing about jrour clothes! ? Mr. N.—Well, it doesn't matter. You've been through .my pockets already, haven’t you? Export With tbs Poo. Dr. Culpepper, cashier of the Citizen’s bank, of Thomasville, Ga., claims to be able to reproduce a sig nature at a single glance. He says the “knack” depends - largely upon the handling of the pen like the original writer. Whoa Ho Dr«wa His Salary. “Well, I see Jones got there?" “Yes.” “Does he fill the office?” * “Ho; hut be fills the MIL* , - # COMB ALL YE JOLLY SAILORS. And I.Utan to tha Yarn of tke Oaod (‘hip Abana nnd *h« WbHlr. 'Twas a pood ship Abana; she mailed from far Dundee, and Righted off tho (Jeorpe's Shoal a whale upon lior loo. The whale was heading to the north and spouting fast and free. The skipper said: “"Pis July Fourth, and I can plainly see that ho must be a Yankee whale a-spouttrig now to be, for all the Yankee orators are spouting same as he." Tho whale moved further northward in an easy, Yankee style, and there gleamed upon his countenance a broad, offensive smile, and the skipper swore, “I’ll run him down before I run a mile." The whale lie didn’t seem to care a continental sneeze, but kopt right on his north ward course as easy as you please, until the British steamship’s prow cut through his starboard side, and thon there was immediately a lower ing of his pride, and likewise of tho whale himself, for down he plunged so deep that he must have waked tho mermaids that on the bottom sleep. All bloodless to the surface he shot up in a while, and there was much derision in his fifteen-fathom smile, but there was more derision in his flukes, that waved about, and fathom less derision in his patriotic spout. On sailed the ship Abana, and got here yesterday, and the British skipper says that this is all he has to say.—New York Sun. Old Coin Hoattered by a Cyclone. A good many people have vivid recollection of a cyclone which about seven years ago tore through this country, entering this state from above Pendleton, passing Willlamston and jumping over Greenville city. Soon after the passage of this un welcome visitor somebody found in its track on the place of W. H. Morritt, Bushy creek township, An derson county, a Spanish silver “Hex” dollar of the reign of Charles IV. The coin had evidently been dropped along with other miscel laneous fragments and wreckage by tho cyclone. A few days ago another coin of the same kind was found on the same place. Dr. T. E. James brought it to the city. It is in good condition, bright, sound, and olear of rust, and is dated 1725, with “Carolus IIII. Bex'1 on the margin.—Green ville (S. C) News. Met fur Street Gut. There has been tested in Boston a new safety devioe to prevent people from being run down by electric or cable oars. The fender, as it is called, consists of a folding steel frame, covered with stout cord net ting. whloh ti attached to the front of the car. When an obstruction is seen on the traok the gripman spreads the net, with the bottom of the frame about nine Inches above the track and so arranged as to throw any person on the track into the net, no matter what the speed of the car may bo. In case of a child or person lying on the track that the fender might pass over, a steel scoop is thrown in front of the wheels, which prevents the wheels, from injuring the body. In the tests made a dummy of straw and sand was used, and the results are stated to have been sat isfactory to the street railway men present Ingenious. One of the talents of the restau rant-waiter, according to the humor ous paragraphers, is fertility of re source. The story of the waiter who told the smart young man who ordered elephant on toast that he must pay in advance is time-honored. From France comes another story of a waiter's ingenuity. A patron ordered a filet saute. He was told that the cook was out of filet saute. Then he ordered chick en. That, too, was out “Why," he asked the waiter, “does the bill of fare offer the choice of three dishesP” After a moment’s reflection the waiter earnestly replied: “You see, sir, it is the proprietor who takes his choice. ”—Cincinnati Enquirer. Professional Dignity. He was ragged and was evidently no friend of the barbers; but in spite of it all there was a certain pride in his deportment as he stepped into the police court-room. “Have you ever been arrested be fore P" asked the judge without look ing at him. “Have I? Aw come off, judge; don't rub it in. Do 1 look like an amateur P"—Washington Star. Tha rerauaalT# Web. Impatient Mamma—Hasn’t that fellow proposed yetP Equally Impatient Daughter—No, he hasn’t come anywhere near it Impatient Mother—Try the ham mock on him this evening, dear, and if that doesn’t fetch him he’d better be dismissed at once.—Detroit Trib une. Convsnleat Husbands. Heiress: “What kind of a man should a society woman marry?" Philosopher—A newspaper man, by all means. “Dear me! Why?” “Because he'll never be at home anough to know that you are always sway from home.”—New York Weekly. _ /, , ‘ Tha Wall of Several. r The wall of Severus, separating England from Scotland, was thirty lix miles long and guarded by twenty one forts. It was twenty feet high snd twenty-four feet thick, and to the north was protected by a moat •orty feet wide and twenty feet deep. To* Quiet for Him. Satan—I can always tell a Net Jforker, when he arrives and take n our pandemonium. Imp—How? Satan—He. always wants.to knot if it is Sunday ^ .yiif' CURED OP SUICIDAL MANIA. Th« Draiflsk Offered to Give Him All the Arsenic llo Witutrd. A dishevelled man with a green, ghastly glare In his hollow, spectral eyes, dashed into a corner drug store last night, apparently laboring under intense excitement, says the Com mercial-Gazette. His bloodless fin gers were tightly clinched into his thin palms, and on his forehead the great drops stood out chilly and damp. Staggering up to the prescrip tion desk he hissed in a sepulchral voice: “Gimme some arsenic, quick!” Druggists are not in the habit of dispensing arsenic on demand like sugar candy, so the clerk laid down his postle and faced about. “What do you want with arsenic?” said he. “I want to kill myself!” gurgled tho frenzied one, hanging desperate ly ovor the railing, with limp legs dragging on the floor. “Life hadn't no charms for me and I want to die! Gimme some arsenic quick!” ‘ “All right, mister,” cheerfully re sponded the clerk. “You shall have your arsenic,’ and he turned to the shelf. The strangers knees caved in against the counter with a thump. The druggest turned nonchalantly, with a package in his hand; and without the slightest feeling in his careless voice, went on: “Any man that’s big enough fool to want to die hasn’t any business living, and the sooner you shuffle off the better it will be. Now, take this Bluff, and take it quick, so we can get your carcass out of the shop in t me to shut up for the night. And for goodness sake don’t muss up the floor!” said he, slapping the package down on the counter and turning back unconcernedly to his work. The fellow feebly shrunk away from the little paper packet and his eyes bulged out with horror. “Wh-wh-wh-what!” he stammered hoarsely. “You wouldn’t give a fel ler being arsenic to kill himself with?” “I wouldn’t?” ojaculated the drug gist “I’d like to know why not? That’s what 1 gave that to you for, ain’t it? Hurry up and take it and go off and die!” With a disgusted expression blaz ing on his face the wild-eyed custo mer remarked: “Well, I’ll be blanketty blanked! Give a man poison to kill himself with—what’s this world coming to— well, I’ll be blanketty blanked! Tou hain't got no more feelings than a tin tobacco tag!” And with a look of reproach that soured the puhr. seech, the suicidal citizen stalked haughtily from the shop, leaving the poison uncon sumed. The Electric Car Flea. With ihe introduction of the arc light a new insect was found—a huge bug with mandibles whose bite was to be dreaded. I can say that with the coming of the electric cars a small insect of the shape, size and color of the flea has made its appear ance. No one as yet can explain its presence. It possesses wings, and its principle habit is to fly into the mouth, nose or eyes of the person when the car is going at a very live ly rate of speed. Motormen tell me they are at times bothered with them, more especially in tho after noon and early in the evening. A Natural Desire. Miss Pinkerly—I didn’t suppose you ever went to the races, but I hear you were there on Saturday. Young Tutter—Yea I haven’t been before since a month ago, when I lost all my money on a horse. Miss Pinkerly—Then I should think you would keep away. What did you go down again on Saturday for? Tutter—I wanted to see if he had eome in. An Aw/ul Offense. Cholly—Ah! I heah that pooah Widgely was sent to the aw insane asylum. Algy—Yaas, always did think the deah chap wasn't quite wight in his head, don’tcheknow. Cholly—Yaas, they say he got so blawsted bad he wanted to work. — Detroit Tribune. A Narrow l£soupo. “You have just returned from Eng land, I understand?” ••Yea” “Have a good time?" “Pine.” “Were you at court?" “No, but I came mighty near it A policeman grabbed me, but I broke away. ” _ < harch Lv..*Uingera. The number of church bell-ringers in the diocese of Exeter is larger than is to be found in any of the other dioceses of England and Wales, with the exception of Oxford. The bell-ringers in Devon are said to number 2,124; those in the diocese of Oxford 2,200. Give It Time. Eastern Man— Considering the price you ask, it seems to me this lot is very small. Western Hustler—But you must re member that this is a new town and growing like all possessed. This lot is young yet. Grunge Things. Dinkle—It’s a strange thing to me how a short man always wants a tall girl.' Duukle—Humph! It’s a strange thing to me how a short man wants any girl. I’m blamed if I do when I'm short.—Buffalo Courier. Alwnjri Clean. Good Minister—I observe with pleasure that your family bible is not covered with dust Little Girl—It’s always nice and dean now, ever since the piano stool broke. NOT ABOVE CRITICISM. Mr. ul Mr*. Ftulrjr’a Obrerratlnna of Old and Mew Proverb*. “I don’t take any great account o’ the proverbB an' axioms an’ so on that’s printed in the magazines now a-days,” remarked Mrs. Philander Peasley to her husband, as she laid down the last number of a monthly publication. “I’ve been a-studyin' over a volume of ’em that some man has writ here an’ I wonder that folks publish such stuff! You can make ’em mean one thing or nothin’, jest accordin’ as you see fit Now here’s one on ’em: ‘It is as unfort’nit to seize the wrong chance to do or say a thing as ’tis to let the right one pass by. ’ “Now, I’d like to be told how folks would come out ef they was to be sca’t at both sides like that? What I like is the old-fashioned proverbs; there ain’t any two ways o’ takln’ them an' gettin’ misled. “ ‘Make hay while the sun shines.’ Now, ain’t that clear? ‘Haste makes waste.’ What's truer’n that, I’d like to know? There ain't one of them old sayin’s but what’s true as preachin’, howsomever you take ’em. They can’t be turned an’ twisted round to mean anythin’ a body picasea. "Do you recall one about ‘A thing ain’t lost when you know where ’tis?" inquired Captain Peasley, in his usual shrill quaver. “I should say I did,” replied his wife, promptly, “an' many’s the time I’ve heard it.-” "Well,” said the captain with a suggestion of a laugh in his trem bling old voice. “I had a cook once thet quoted thet to me when the teakettle was washed overboard an’ all the cups an’ saucers, but we didn’t seem to be able to find ’em Sary.” “I reckon you’ve setup about long enougn this evenin’, ” said Mrs. Peas ley, dryly, and she bundled the cap tain off to bed with considerable haste. Tears and Nerve*. As the muscular power that extends or flexes a finger is at a distance from the part moved, so the excite ment of tears is from an irritation from a distant nervous center, and is removed when the nervous' center is either soothed or exhausted. The relief comes not from the escape of tears, which is only a symptom, but from the cessation of the storm in the nervous chain. If the storm be calmed by soothing measures — as when we sooth a child that is weep ing from fear, annoyance or injury— we quiet the nervous centers, upon which the effect ceases. In children the soothing method succeeds, and sometimes it succeeds in adults, although in adults the cessation of tears is more commonly due to actu al exhaustion following a period of nervous activity.—Boston Globe. Correct It Now. Men and women who went to school thirty years ago find it difficult to rid themselves of a false impression gained through the eye from the maps in the school geographies those days. The South and West being then of less importance relatively to the New England states than now were represented upon maps of smaller scale, so that despite the story of the statistics Southern and Western states seemed small in area and the states of the Northeast rela tively large. It is hard for persons brought up on these geographies to realize, for example, that Richmond, Va., is further from Charleston than from Norfolk, further from Savannah, Chattanooga and Cincinnati than from Boston, and considerably nearer to Pittsburg than to any of the Southern cities named. Prayer Raff*. The prayer carpets or rugs sold in our stores are the product of the leis ure moments of Syrian and Indian women. In every house there is a loom, and when the woman is not otherwise busy she sits down at it and does a few moment’s work. Of course, she works by snatches, which explains the story that some of these rugs were on the loom for twelve or eighteen months, but they would not have been had she been able to work continuously. When a rug is done she sells it at once to the traveling merchant, who hands it over to the city merchant, and in time it finds its way, at a constantly increasing price, to Europe or America. An Important Point. ‘•Been buying a saddle horse for my daughter,” said the fat man to the man with the spectacles. “So?” said the spectacled man. “Yes. I picked out a nice bay, well broke—tried him myself—and brought him around tor her appro val. She looked him over with as fine a critical air as I ever saw, but I’ll bet the cigars for the two 'of us you can never guess what she asked me after she got through.” “No, I can’t guess. What was it f” 1 “She wanted to know if I was sure the beast would never fade.” . A Careless Youth, “Cholly’s in disgwace at the club again!” said Willie Wibbles. “Deah! Deah! You don’t say sa He’s always in twouble, isn’t he? It waB only lawst week that he cam* out without his twousahs wolled up.” “It’s worse this time. ” “How?” “This mohning he forgot to bwush and comb his chwysanthemum!” Mere Force of Habit. Judge Cowing—You are charged with having knocked your wife down with a club and then kicked her. Do you know of any mitigating circumstances ?” “Well, yes, your honor. You see that’s the way I always do when any body annoys me. ”—Texas Siftinga JAPANESE POLICEMEN. Ikt Moat Aristocratic and Politest Con stabulary Known. There is no human being quite so polite as the Japanese policeman. Not to his fellow countrymen, be it understood; by no means. He re* gards the bulk of them, probably, with a good-natured contempt, for, in the language of Mr. Chevalier, he is “a gentleman of birth and educa tion." When, in the pursuit of Western civilization Japan cast off feudalism and put on a frock coat and a silk hat, thousands of samurai or two-sworded retainers of the old nobles, found their occupation gone. No more exhilarating little expedi tions into the territories of neighbor ing princes were possible, and chopping foreigners into little bits Boon became a game hardly worth the candle. Tho swords rusted in their scabbards, and finally were, by imperial decree, discarded altogether, and helped a few years later to dec orate the drawing rooms of Murray. What was to be done with these Hill a wash-bucklers, trained to a militar ism quite impossible in the modern army, modelled on the French pat tern? The government wanted po lice. The samurai knew nothing about the status of the British “Bobby” or of the French gens d’armes; so they enrolled in large numbers, happy in being able to wear, at any rate, one sword, and that a two-handled one. Thus it happens that the Japanese police are the most aristocratic force of constabulary in the world. They are a finely disciplined body, small in stature, but well drilled, and ex pert in the use of the steel-scabbard ad weapon which dangles at their It is to the foreigner-—whether ho be the veriest outcast of a no-nation ality sailor from a kerosene ship, or a slick moneyed globe-trotter—that the essential politeness of the Japan sse policeman is shown in all it] na tive richness. With the former class the police of the foreign ports in Japan—Yokahoma, Kobe and Naga saki—have much intercourse, not of the gentle kind. Yet the scrimmage invaluably has but one termination. Ihe truculent son of Neptuneis sooner or later handed over to the consular authorities of his country—if he owns one— and lodged in the foreign jail. Perhaps two policemen will be engaged in the operation—perhaps twenty, that is a mere detail What is important is the fact that once a Japanese policeman makes up his mind to arrest anyone who is in his hands, he sticks to him with bull dog tenacity—never loses his temper iff Ms hold" and conducts his victim to the lookup, if he be a foreigner, with the greatest urbanity and much polite ceremony. VANISHED TOWNS. Tecomseh and Sumner, Kan., no Longer to Be Found on the Map. It is a coincidence in Kansas his tory pointed to by the Kansas City Star that two of her citizens, who afterward became United States sen ators—John Martin and John J. Ingalls — originally settled when they entered the territory in towns which afterward fell into decay, and have since been obliterated from the map; John Martin cast his lot with Te cumseh in Shawnee county, a settle ment of much promise, the child of the pro-slavery party. It enjoyed the Beat of the county government, the federal court and the government land office, and was crowded with people, mostly Democrats.. When the pro-slavery cause failed and the free state people got in control of affairs the town began to go down; the men went into the Confederate army, the women and children were sent South and the houses were moved to Topeka, as were also the county seat, the federal court and the land office. The Santa Fe railroad stops its local trains there, but does not maintain a station agent, and the only habitation on the old town site is a house labeled “Cash Grocery.” The fate of Sumner, in Atchison county, where John J. Ingalls began his career in Kansas, was even more striking than that of Tecumseh. Tecumseh was a town of wood, while Sumner was a city of brick and mor tar, graded streets, business blooks, schools, churches and other evi dences of New England thrift and culture. It once had a population of 3,000 inhabitants, and was a fair rival of all the other river towns until its hopes were destroyed by a county seat election, which gave the prize to Atchison, its pro-slavery rival Legend says that Atchison won by fraud, but be that as it may, the people accepted the situation and promptly began to pull up stakes and move to the victorious town, and to-day not a house marks the 8pot. The town site embraced sev eral hundred acres, but it is now wholly covered by a heavy growth of young timber. Blue grass has cov ered the scars made by the city en gineer and street commissioner, and railroad trains rush by without whistling. Fuel of the Future* Fritter—What are your ideas about the fuel of the future? Twitter—That is a question that does not concern me. I hare con scientiously tried to make my life such an exemplary one as to relieve me of all fears of going where fuel will be needed in the future. Fritter—You quite misunderstood me. I am thinking of the rise in coal and the necessity, sooner or later, of devising something to take its place. In the event, then, of a continued rise m coal, what do you think it would be best to burnP Twitter—In Buch an event I should unhesitatingly advocate burning the coal dealer*. ' r ■%'iff':. Mr. Brobaon, so It ^ continue to call ^ Brobson—Ah— ^. butldo itins^j # A UO U ln sense, you know MiasSmitheral-Wv Brobson-U^J grapher and my 8DL,*® tog negatives ? PW ,lt Dr. Price’s Cream o.r . • ..v: -W.Ti An oroinance to ance No. TO. reUtflt?4 ** the City ot U'Neiii. aV* Be It ordained hv n,„ „' the City of O'Nei&W Section 1. That seen., ta hereby amended* W soil'i0 fo.lowlng words.to^u11' liquor as a bever^e i„S sums as now are or*h.~! quired under the laws hraska StOO," and by Xil' lowing words, to-wlt-%*, quors as a beverage In as now are or herein*. . .^er the iaw8 of"*gw* van'ce/''1 8Ums 10 * («? -Wl^rcfe} and approval according N. Martin, Clerk. NOTICE FOR PCB1.1, liANDOmciiTO’X N *tlce is hereby given the named settler has iled notto to make tinal proofK and that said proof will fc ^ register and receiver at III on June 28,1895, viz: . BDWARD M. GRADY R IS westNE -a section 13, town He names the following in his continuous residence i ration of, said land, vlr a William H. Mason. Charles Charles C. Millard, all olTO 4I>~6 John A. Hag «U JL LUIS t'UK PUHLII LAND Ol'FICt IT O’ Notice is hereby given th»t a named settler bas filed notictotl to make final proof In sup; and that said proof will he ™ Keglster and Receiver tt O'M on Monday, July 8,1885, vii: ALFRED HILEMAN. H.l| For the ne!4 section 15, toiM range 13 west. He names the following witnM his continuous residence upa vation of, said lnnd, vti: p Wiloox, and Wallace Jolmeose county, Nebraska, Stephen h kinson, Holt oouniy, Neb taka Gordon, of Ray, Holt county, M 47-flnp John A. Him* NOTICE PORPilBUI Land OniciATffla April Notice is hereby given that It named settler has filed notic*of] to make final proof in support d and that said proof will hi usds Register and Recelysr at O'SeT May 31, 1895, viz: PHILLIP MORRISON, H.1 For the southeast quarter ad ship 29 north range 12 wen. He names the following witna his continuous residence upon tion of, said land, viz: Iticba John Fallon, William Cronin a right, all of O’Neill, Neb. 42-6 JOHN A, HAW NOTICE TO NON-SKIM Goorgo H. Conover, Sirs. Conoi first real name unknown, Juices Selmser, first real name unkwn Selmaer, his wife, first real ni* defendants, take notice that ttl vestment Company, a corpora* laws of the state of Massachu filed a petition in the district county. Nebraska, against row you impleaded with Harry J.v object and prayer of which are a certain mortgage executed Whitesell, to the Globe Invest®* upon tho north half of the aorta and the southwest quarter of ta quarter and the northwest qw southeast quarter of section at 26 north, of range 15 westoltw Holt county, Nebraska, g™ " payment of a prommlssory n™ mat. 24 1888. for the sum ot «r. gust 24, 1888, for the sum c P_-.’j-said note and® is now duo upon sum of 1362.25 with interest September 1,1888, at ten pet» num, together with the further" for taxes paid on said real «* plaintiff, for which sums costs the plaintiff prays for»f" fendants oe required to pay that said premises mav sefs the amount found dueth® Pj* ^ You and each of you ate re<] , said petition on or before the 18Dated May 20th, 1895. yl Globe Investment CoarAJJ By S. D. Thornton, its Attorney In The District Court ol Holt Samuel G. Bally, Plaintiff, Owen Ifor and wife, Mr*, fendants. NOTICE The_ tico that 0s«' KOTIC’l. . above named defendaol ^ hat on tbe JOtli dWOi ^ plaintiff herein filed£ * fJNew1 trict court of Holt count},^ ing that he Is tlie®"”^,ra0ted in B' nn.iVt/,/1 1,001 Pgfjltf, SltU“ Nebraska, to-wit: theastii» The east half of the norm X ne DttBl nf rneiiu* the southwest du“hri?£t Uartwo! ter, and the southeast Q ^ ( west quarter, of seotion e July. 1800. one 1. E^Allen certain mortgage made^ Ormsby Bros. & Co. on .... in the district cy“ , note or *os.w. t, an action in the district n or Nebraska, against said\v» A„, to foreclose saidentew decree of foreclosure wj(0yenibO ■ foreclosure ■■■.ovenli, cause on the ^i day the sum of *47 and * said premises wtre s qji.BljJJ issued to the Pury!f?f|!i is the o*®* Plaintiff alleges thatjie^ gggj 'plaintiffan«»wv sight that the delenoan saiura not made defendants > ,M tjjj suit, although PjnPf^teiest in puit, aiinouK*» having an apparaut ijidpetitl™ "£ Plaintiff pwf pay in“3 fendants be require1d W PiJ ' for the use of the pi» mid premises be <1u . deer#® m [hat Pthe defendants he^ ^ 1* Interest In,*'10 v ,;4 jo u I table relief. »ns*e': p You are day of Juohi51 jn or hetore the l°lh y^tadig Dated at O Neiii. ]t April, 189o. K. B- VlCxM 43-4 Attornf?fl