THAT PLUCKY GIRL. i LIGHT, stranger! Alight and rest yourself! Here, Mow! Pete! Some of you lazy fellows take the stranger's beast and be quirk nbout It! No Chi nee? No. stranger, not while there’s a nigger or a white fnee to be hurt In Sllvcrvllle. No yel low-faced scoundrels for old Jeb Sloan. Have a chair, stranger, or perhaps you will go In and register the first thing?" I went. Presently the landlord came out and n" lotned me. "Tuke a seat, stranger—Mr. Kendall, v v I suppose 1 ought to say, seeing that you wrote your name as such, though here we don't know that a man always puts down the name his mother gave him.” "I haven’t had oocaslon to abandon my nnme yet,” said I, laughing. “I hope It won't be very long before sup per Is ready, Mr. Sloan. My mountain ride has given me an excellent appe tite." "It will be on the table In about halt an hour’s time. There'B a tine perch for supper; one of the men caught It this morning. It you’re hungry, the cook can give you some coffee and something to eat now.” "No, thanks, Mr. Sloan; I’ll wait and enjoy a good cigar and this mountain scenery a while. Have a cigar? They’re prime, I assure you." “Thank you. That’s an offer I sel dom go back on—thank you. stranger; ■ but you needn't mind that there ‘mis ter’ any more." "Been here long?” I asked, as I lit my weed. 2%; "A matter of fifteen years slnoe I came down here, and began keeping this hotel.” -■xou ve seen a good many cnangee In that time, X suppose?" "I have. There were Indiana thicker than hops, right up to the very doors, when I first came. Now they’re very scarce. Plenty of Chinese, though. I'd just as soon have the Indians. Ugh! I hate the yellow varmints!" "Then you agree with the sentiment 'the Chinese must go,’ landlord?” "Stranger, they're gone, so far as old Jeb Sloan is concerned. I won't have one about while there's a nigger this side of the Rockies, as I’ve said before now." "Well, I don't muoh blame you, Sloan. I don't like them myself. I suppose you've had adventures with wild beasts and Indians, too? Regular hair-raising times?" “Well, Mr. Kendall, I-" At that moment a slight, graceful girl, with short, black curls, black eyes, lovely hands and feet (as I saw at a glance), a sweet, gentle face, and an altogether ladylike and refined air, cast* e%t osi the vaningh, Aewaed la a trlai blue calleo dress, with a ertmson ribbon at the collar circling her white throat, and addressed old Sloan: "Father," said she, “my pony is lame, and I want Black BUI to ride over to the postofllce." “Well, tell Pete to get him up for you," said the old man, looking at her with an air of pride. “Yes, sir.” With a half-glance at me, the little beauty disappeared, leaving me Quite astonished at such a ladylike appari tion In such an out-of-the-world spot. The old landlord saw my look of sur prise, and. as the light figure disap peared In the house, he said: “My daughter, sir, Don’t look much like her dad, does she? We can take care of daisies when we've got them, if we do live in the mountains,” said the old man. “You were asking me about adventures. You wouldn’t think as that little girl was one of the coolest hands hereabouts, would you, now? She can break the wildest horse on the plains, ride the fastest horse, and shoot FIRED THROUGH THE KEYHOLE, stralghter than any man. woman, or child in the diggings. Yes, stranger, I’ve had adventures, but I don’t know as I ever did anything more jhan that little girl did, the time she saved all the boys’ dust for them. It was about two years ago.” began Sloan. “We never thought of leaving the place all alone, or the girl, either, for though Belle is not a coward, it isn’t safe in these parts. "But there had been a mishap over at the Lone Tree Mine, and some of the men needed help, so It Just happened that every mother’s son on the place went over to the mine. There was two girls working in the house, but they had gone out to buy something, and there was not a soul but Belle left at home. I knew the men had a lot of 'nuggets in my big blue chest for safe keeping, and the key was in my drawer, but none of us ever thought of danger, i There was no Indians about, and we ’ did act think of anything else. But j there was something worse than Indians —a mean white man. He was a ruffian that the men had driven out of the tamp on account of his meanness, and none of us knew that Red BUI was in the neighborhood. We called him Red Bill because of his fiery red hair; and for general wickedness he couldn’t be beaten. If I had known he was prowl ing about, I’d never have left my girl alone, you may be sure of that. But I didn’t even give him a thought, nor did Belle. I had given her a very pretty sewing machine for a present, and she I was sitting there, on account of the 1 '.I-. !■ ' .. heat, with all the doom open, singing and sewing away a» contented aa could be, when all of a sudden somebody said: “ 'How do you do, Miss Belle?' right at her elbow. "Belle looked up, and there stood Red Bill laughing at her, and she was alone, und no one In sight. She was awfully frightened, but did not make any fuss. She just said, smiling as pleasant as a May morning: *' ‘How do you do, Bill? When did you get back?’ " 'Well, I haven’t been here long,’ said BUI. ‘And I ain't going to stay much longer. Can you guess what I have come for, Miss Belle?’ “Belle turned faint, but quickly said: " 'I suppose you have come to Bee father.’ "Then Bill laughed heartily, and said: " ‘No, I did not. I knew they had all gone before I came. I want those nug gets out of the chest, and then I want you. Belle Sloan. Who's here to hinder me from taking both, I wonder?’ “Then Belle said, as calmly as she could: “ ’I suppose there's nobody to hinder you, BUI; but I hope you’re going to act the gentleman.’ “ ‘I hope so,’ said BUI; 'but I'll have to request you to get the key of the blue chest for me. I don't know where they keep It.' " ‘What If I don't do lt?‘ said Belle, looking up at him. "He smiled and laid his hand on the revolver In his belt, and said: " ‘I think you had better, Belle. I came for it, and I am not likely to go without It.' "Belle saw there was nothing for It, she being alone, but to pretend she was going to surrender till she could hit on a plan. She wasn't going to give up the men’s hard-earned gold, not she. But she had to appear as if she were afraid, so she said: " ‘BUI, I wouldn’t give you that key, If I could help It. 1 want you to tel) the men I didn't do It willingly.’ "BUI laughed, and said: ■When I see them, I will. Hurry up. Belle. It would be unpleasant for you If they came Just now.' “By that time Belle had hit on her plan. If she could only make It work. “There's a cupboard in that room, with a high shelf to It, and on the ahelf a box, where I keep my papers. She knew the key wasn’t there, and she knew that she was dealing with the worst ruffian on the plains, and If Bhe tried to do anything and failed, her life wasn't worth a red cent. If she didn’t try, she knew he'd keep his word about carrying her off. So, to save her self, and the boys' gold, she made up her mind to risk It. “ 'BUI,' she said, ‘I’ll get the key, but you must lay down that revolver. I can’t trust you.’ “ 'You want to trick me,' said BUI. " 'How could IT' asked Belle, as In nocent as a lamb. ‘You know I'm In your power, and you might be gentle man enough to lay down that revolver while I'm busy getting that key.' " 'Well, there, then!* said BUI potting his revolver on the table close to the cupboard door, not thinking of any danger from the girl. “She stepped and unlocked the door and reached up to the Bhelf. " ‘Father keeps the key In a blue tin box on that shelf.’ she said; ‘but I don’t believe I can reach the shelf.’ “ ‘Perhaps I can,’ Bill said, grinning (he was a mighty tall fellow), so he stepped up, Just as Belle wanted him to, for the Instant he was Inside the closet, she closed the door to, locked it, shot the bolt Into the socket, and, stranger, she had him. “He began to curse and swear and fling himself against the door, but It was stout, and he hadn’t much room to work, so it held tight. “And Belle picked up hla revolver and shot straight through the keyhole, not missing him an inch. “ 'I’ll shoot every time you stir!’ she said. ‘You know me, BUI Wilder, and you have got sense enough to keep still when you are beaten. If you break that door I’ll shoot you down! The men will settle you when they come.' “And, stranger, that plucky little girl stood guard over that wild rascal till we did come. * "Then there was a rare hubbub! "The girl and the gold all safe, and Red Bill a prisoner in the closet. "We gave him a coat of tar and feath ers, and ordered him out of camp. “Some of the men wanted to hang him, but Belle wouldn't let them. j "They all put some money together and bought Belle the prettiest pair of sliver-mounted revolvers you ever saw,1 to show their gratitude. "But Bed BUI has not been here since, and I don’t think he is Ukely to come again. “Stranger, here comes the men, and there goes the supper bell." PUT SCIENCE TO NEW U8E. Erudite Commliiloa Mow Selecting a Site for Rio Janeiro. Rio de Janeiro, the capital of Brazil, has a notoriously bad climate. It Is a fastness of yellow fever and subtle trop ical ailments, and the death rate Is so alarmingly high as to seriously affect the commercial prosperity of the city. Some time ago the Brasilian govern ment took in hand the question of re moving their capital and appointed a scientific commission to fix a site, says the Pittsburg Dispatch. The commis sion have selected a plateau which should be a real land of promise to the transmigrants from the coast. The spot Is between the parallels of 15 de grees 40 minutes and 16 degrees 8 sec onds south, and the meridians of 49 de grees SO minutes and 51 degrees west. It Is over 4,000 feet above the level of the sea and its temperature resembles that of middle France. There Is plenty of water for agriculture and no yellow fever. The journey by railway from the coast is a matter of some eighteen hours. This is believed to be the first occasion on record in which science has keen calls* In to akeasee the site ut s capital. , Duty, Let him who gropes painfully In dark ness or uncertain light, and prays vehemently that the dawn may rlped into day. lay this precept well to heart - Do the duty which lies nearest thee, which thou knowest to be duty; the second duty will already have become clearer. It costs something to do right, but a great deal more not to do It ROCKY MOUNTAIN BIO-HORN, It Yon Kill Oh of Thm Yon May Call Yourself a Sportsman. At last we have reached that gallant fellow, the mountain sheep or big-horn. A true cliff-dweller Is he. Born under the shelving rocks of a beetling cliff, sometimes actually cradled In the snow, and reared In the stormy atmosphere of high altitudes, he Is a typical moun taineer. Wherever you find him at home, depend upon it that you will also find the finest scenery of the district. This animal loves a blrds-eye view of a mountain landscape as well as does any member of the geological survey. A steep descent, with a narrow, level val ley and a thread-like river spread like a relief map three thousand feet before him, is his delight. In td£mer times he was venturesome, and often wandered miles away from his mountain home to explore tempting tracts of bad lands; and, being unmolested, he sometimes took up a permanent residence In such places. But the venturesome inhab itants of low, isolated mountains and shelterless bad lands have paid with their lives for their pioneering, and now a mountain sheep Is rarely found else where than amid mountains worthy of the name. Kill one fine old mountain ram by your own efforts In climbing and stalking, and We will call you a sports man, with a capital 8—provided you save his head for mounting, and his flesh for the platter. But no ewes, mind you! Ewes and lambs count against you, rather than to your credit. Can I ever forget how I once traveled all the way from Washington to Wyoming, killed Just one superb mountain ram amidst grand scenery preserved him, carried his "saddle” to Washington, and called my pleasure trip a complete success? Hardly. Even the recollec tion of It is worth four times the money it cost. That particular mountain sheep stood four feet three Inches In height at the shoulders. He was four feet ten Inches In length of head and body, and his girth was three feet eight Inches. He leaped off a low ridge of bare rock, fell dead on a foot of snow In the head of a rock-walled gulch, and oh! boys, how line he was! Up in the mountain park he had been pawing through the snow to get at the spears of dry grass that were there obtainable; and In spite of the difficulty of the process, and the pitiful scantiness of the grazing, I was astonished beyond measure at finding that his stomach contained fully half a bushel of that same grass. He was not only In good flesh, but positively fat; and from the fact that to save our lives Fleming, the packer, and I, both muscu lar men, could not lift him upoh a mule to carry him to our camp, and for other reasons I am certain that he weighed at least three hundred pounds. QOOD STORY TOLD ON CHOATE. Noted Lawyer Wins the Respect of Hla Jewlah Coadjutor. IM(U IdwraMfc Uhrarlaa t( Ue Maate, tm town mn Aibur RMw day, eaye the New York Sun, and this is his latest anecdote: Joseph H. Choate and Edward Lau terbach were associated In a suit a short time ago and won. As the Jury left their seats Mr. Lauterbach turned to Mr. Choate and said: "Choate, we won this verdict because we happened to know more law on this subject than our adversaries." "Yes?” queried Choate. "Our clients are rich, you know, a corporation and all that,” rejoined Lau terbach. "Yes?" again queried Choate. "What do you think we ought to charge, Lau terbach?" “Oh, $750 apiece.” "Tut, tut,” broke out Choate, impa tiently, and he repeated: “Tut, tut! You let me handle this bill, Lauterbach. I’ll collect for us both.” A short time afterward Mr. Lauter bach was in Mr. Choate’s office in Wall street, and Mr. Choate handed out a check for $1,500 as Mr. Lauterbach’s fee in the case, and said: "Lauterbach, what do you think of that?” Mr. Lauterbach looked at the check, Btroked his beard for an instant, and looking intently at Choate, replied: “Almost thou persuadest roe to be a .Christian.” THE MICROPHONE. They Have a Natural One In Texas Which Beats the Eastern One. A man from Texas aat in the Hotel Brunswick yesterday and told three lies—told them deliberately, says New York Press. He was not an Ochiltree, either. One of them may be worth read ing:. Said he: ' "You've got your new-fangled micro phone at work, I see, but I Just want to tell you folk up here that we have a natural one down In Texas that beats It all hollow. I reckon he’s about 12 years old now. He’s got two ears— one big and one little. With the big ear he can hear the rumbling of a storm 100 miles away. He beats the weather bureau predicting rain. He hears every year the song of Miriam after Moses and his friends crossed the Dead sea. He has heard the booming of the guns at the battle of Waterloo, and even re ports word for word the orders at Uor poleon on that occasion. No sound that ever started the air to vibrating is lost on him. If he happens to get in the line of excitation. With his little ear -He can hear the fainteBt sounds on earth. He can hear a fly walking on a window pane, or flying through the air. He can hear a flea hop, or a spider weaving her web. On a dark night he can hear a flsh swimming. I have known him to hear night coming on and settle down. He never heard the moon rise, but there are good reasons, I am told, for that. I am here to get Barnum to give him a place In his freak show.” The Mountain Goat a Stupid AnlmaL AIM nugh Dm mountain goat Is a very sure-footed and level-headed animal, he Is said by those who have hunted him (of whom I confess I am not one) to be a very stupid animal and easily killed when once the hunter reaches his haunts, says a recent writer. In actual weight he Is about the size of the Vir ginia deer, but In bulk he seems to be larger because of his shaggy fleece of wool and hair. The horns are small, smooth and jet black, and the hoof Is a strange combination of rubber pad on the Inside and knife-edge on the out side, to hold the owner on snow, ice, or bare rook without slipping. ASLEEP AS SHE WALKS, An Vauuillr Pronounced Cnee of ton* iiambnllam In Denver. Anna Rossman, a .beautiful woman about 22 years old, was found walking the streets of Denver In a somnambu listic condition on a recent afternoon, says the Rocky Mountain News. An Italian fruit vender noticed the strange conduct of the young lady near the corner of 15th and Arapahoe streets. She walked into the drug store at the mining exchange, the police were noti fied and the patient was taken to her home. The case Is a very peculiar one, and has before been brought to the at tention of the police department during the past two months. On account of the family, all mention of the matter has, until this time, been suppressed. It Is evident, however, that the somnambu listic tendencies of the unfortunate woman have become chronic and the peculiar features of the attack are at tracting the attention of physicians. Miss Rossman formerly lived In Pueb lo. There she attracted attention by her strange performances, walking about the streets apparently awake, but really asleep and totally unconscious of where she was going. Removing to Denver, the same conduct was contin ued, and the family then went to Chey enne. They again came to this city and settled at the place where they now re side. It is claimed by the friends of the afflicted woman that she 1b possessed of supernatural powers. Is gifted with second sight, and that other strange phenomena are within her control. In these spells she would attract but little attention were it not for the fact that she is utterly obllvlous of passing ob jects and walks before carriages, street cars and other vehicles with reckless ness. Otherwise her appearance is that of a person In possession of her normal senses. A little over a month ago she was found at the union depot, and Yard master Pierce discovered that she was not aware of where she was. A carriage was called, she was taken to the police station, and afterward to her home. Again on the 7th of March she was found In a similar condition at the Glenarm hotel. One day when Dr. John son, the police surgeon, was In a res taurant, Miss Rossman walked In and the waiter thought that she was Intox icated. ' Grasping the situation. Dr. Johnson left his meal, took the patient's arm, and quietly walked with her to her home. Miss Rossman being all the while utterly oblivious of the notice she was occasioning from bystanders. The young lady had come from Cheyenne Just before her latest sleep-walking ex perience, and walked from the depot to the place where it was found that she was still asleep. No Information could be gained as to what she had been do ing at Cheyenne or whether she had made that trip In a somnambulistic state. When the ambulance came to the mining exchange Miss Rossman was taken quietly to the conveyance and realized nothing of the situation until her home was reached. She then awakened out of the deep sleep, but •Mu paKlealat* as to her sudMfc visit north. She Is a beautiful blond, has the sympathy of all who know her In the unusual affliction which has be fallen a woman who Is said to be pos sessed of a bright mind. When these fits have passed away she knows noth ing of what has transpired. NOBILITY OF THE DONKEY. He Used to Be Classed Among the Great Ones. The donkey, who rather undeserved ly has come to be considered one of the “naturals” of the animal world, was dedicated by the ancients to Bacchus, while the ass of Silenus was raised to a place among the stars. Apparently he was a more Intellectual personage in early days than he Is supposed to be at present. Ammonlanus, the grammar ian, possessed one who Invariably at tended his master’s lectures on poetry, and would even leave the choicest luncheon of thistles to do so. “Wicked as a red ass” ran an old proverb, which the Copts believed In so firmly that every year they sacrificed an unhappy animal of the detested color by hurling it headlong f/om a wall. In an old DiacK tetter translation or AlDertus Magnus the donkey figures In the fol lowing extraordinary recipe: "Take an adder’s skyn, and aurl plgmentum, and greeke pitch of reupirltlcum, and the wage of pewe bees, and the fat or grease of an ass, and breake them all, and put them all In a du)| seething pot full of water, and make It to seethe at a glowe fire, and after let It waxe cold', and make a taper, and every man that shall see light of It shall seeme head lesse.” Burton, In his "Anatomy of Melancholy,” mentions as a valuable amulet, "a ring made of the hoofe of an asse’s right foot carried about.” A tract written by a certain "A, B,” in 1695, entitled “The Noblenesse of the Asse,” is exceedingly laudatory of that excellent animal. “He refuseth no bur. den; he goes whither he is sent without any contradiction. He lifts not his foote against anyone; he bytes not; he is no fugitive, nor malicious affected. He doth all things In good sort, and to his liking that hath cause to employ him." But what chiefly fills the worthy author with admiration Is the donkey's voice—his "goodly, sweet, and contlnu all brayings,” which form “a melodious and proportionate kind of musicke.” Leap* of a Mountain Sheep, No; the mountain pheep does not leap from great heights, and lai)4 either up on his horns or his feet. He knows th<; strength of his material too well to try It. His horns and skull might success fully withstand the shock, but the weight of his body would break his spinal column in two or three places, to say the least of it. It Is true that when hard pressed a Jierd will some times plunge down a terribly steep In cline, sliding and bounding from point to point, until they plough Into the “slide-rock” below; but as to leaping over a sheer precipice, I never saw any one who even claimed to have ever wit nessed such a thing, says an authority. The old rams often fight by butting each other terrifically, and often splinter, or sometimes break off the ends of their horns In that way. Shortness of Time. We all of us complain of the shortness of time, and yet have much more than we know what to do with. Our lives are spent either in doing nothing at all, or In doing nothing to the purpose, or in doing nothing that we ought to do. We are always complaining that our days are few, and acting as though there would be no end of them. FOURTH OF JULY . Reduced rates on the Sioux City O’Neill and Western R’y Between all Stations. APPLY TO ANY AGENT. Largest Circulation in Hibruka. It isn’t much wonder that The State Journal now has the largest circulation in Nebraska. It has reduced its price to 65 cents a month with Sunday, or 50 cents without Sunday. It has been spending more money for Nebraska news than any other paper; it has on its staff such men as Bixby, Walt Mason and Annin. The Journal is bemgpugh ed at every point and is climbing stead ily and surely away ahead of the other state dailies. People like a Lincoln pa per. Especially when it is as good as The Journal. A Bsmarkabl* Car* of Rheumatism. Westminster, Cal., March 21, 1894.— Sometime ago, on awakening one morn ing, I found that I had rheumatism in my knee so badly that, as 1 remarked to my wife, it would be impossible for me to attend to business that day. Rernbsr ing that I had some Chamberlain’s Pain Balm in my store 1 sent for a bottle, and rubbed the afflicted parts thoroughly with it, according to directions, and within an hour I was completely relieved. One application had don* the business. It is the best liniment on the market, and I sell it under a positive guarantee. R. T. Harris. For sal* by P. C. Corri gan Druggist. Some time ago I was taken sick with a cramp in the stomach, followed by diarrhoea. I took a couple of Doses of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diar rhoea Remedy and was immediately relieved. I consider it the best medi cine in the market for all such com plaints. I have sold the remedy to others and every one who uses it Speaks highly of it. J. W. Strickler, Valley Center, Cal. For sal* by P. C. Corri gan, Druggist. Having used Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy in my family and found it to be a first class article, I take pleasure in recomending it to my friends. J. V. Foster, Westport, Cal. For sal* by P. C. Corrigan Druggist. A Canadian National Park. There is a movement in Canada for having a national park created in the* Nepigon country in order that the trout fishing may be eternally per petuated. The movers hope to gee five miles of the Nepigon river north of Lake Superior set apart and guarded and the river Kept stocked with fish. Constituted u Alibi. Among the Saxone a person accused of crime would clear himself by means of compurgators—that is to say, he induced twelve persons to come in and swear to his good repu tation and that they did not believe him guilty. She W» Not Musical. Teacher—Tommy, what was Nero’s greatest act of cruelty. Tpnjmv—Playin’ the fiddle, mum. Teacher—'Take your place at the head, Thomas. —Texas Siftings. A Doctor's Unique Collection, Dr. Luys, a leading Paris physician, has made what he considers to be a Ublque present to the medical faculty. It consists of a collection of 22® mum mified cerebral lobes, which show nu merous specimens of the various forms of brain disease, from the commonest to the most complicated. Dr. Luys organized this collection in the interest of science during his long connection with the Saltpetriere and the Charlte hospitals. The brains are mostly those of madmen, idiots, paralytics and deaf and dumb persons, a few lobes from the skulls of normally intelligent subjects being added for the purposes of scien tific comparison.—Paris Letter to Lon don Telegraph. Lizzie Smokes Strong Tobacco. Officer P. D. McWeeny, of the Visi tation and Aid society, Chicago, recent ly took to the detention hospital Lizzie Barnet, a child of 12 years, whose sis ter, together with a number of other young girls, had previously been com mitted by Justice Doyle to the House of the Oood Shepherd. Lizzie has smoked a pipe and chewed tobacco for seven years. The child told Officer McWeeny that a man near South Bend, Ind., near whom she lived when she was 5 years old, had taught her to use to bacco, and that he used to laugh at her and praise her when she would smoke before his friends. Preparation. “I did think of trying for a diplomatic place,” said the office seeker. “Do you think you are qualified to fill one?’’ asked the congressman. “I don’t know yet; but I’m doing my best” ••HowP" “I’ve bought me a monocle and I practice at least three hours a day. “Did you kea».i.^i the china painted * ‘‘"o; what i8 “How is that?” “His wif0’s father g^J Little Dot—Wt ' i Little Dick-Y LittieDot-Crf he wants me to w5 my own lviing when‘s Little Dick—So 8,^*1 marry you, I gum ^« An Uni.xpMtrt Jf1®8 Winslow-rn called, Mr. Walker. Mi*. Walker—Oh tw Miss Winslow,’nZ tically Yes, I have seen that beautiful —Truth. UllMful Its on,,] “I don t believe thst I * knows she has a mount** quized young SpoonanZ been right under her last twenty-five years," LEGAL ADVERTIS v«ll NO. 72. - An ordinance to amend sectlal anoe No. 70, relative to occ» the City of O’Neill, Neb. 1 B?Jt^!dalned by the mayor, the City of O’Neill, Neb.: 1 i Seotionl. That section I, orJin Is hereby amended by strlklni" following words, to-wit: "SX, liquor &b a beverage In iddw sums as now are or hereatia! qulred under the laws of tin . braska 1300," and by adding thw lowing words, to-wlt: "Salooad quors as a beverage In addition* as now are or hereafter stall bi under the laws of the stur il •ISO, said sums to be paid c vanoe.” Seo. 2. This ordinance shill w and be In force from andattel and approval according to lav. O.F.Bm N. Martin, Clerk. TIMBEK OULTDRE FlMIlj NOTICE FOR PDBUCil Ukit»d States Lank Omci, l Jail Notice is hereby given tiaf Delinger has filed notice of u make oommutatlon proof Monti and receiver at their offlce Id n braska. on Saturday, thettilL 1693, on timber culture appllcitkil for the Northwest quarter oinah In township No, 30; north, rannk He names as witnesses: Gtnpfl Knoxville, Nebraska; LewisWintl vllle, Nebraska; Joseph Spot Bolter, both of Walnut Grove,* 49-6 John A. HabmiJ NOTICE FOR PCBLICM Land Orrici at O'Kzuil Mar ail Notice is hereby given that thr named settler has filed notice of hi to make final proof in snppottili and that said proof will he iuadett register and receiver at O H 1 on June 88,1895, viz: ■ EDWARD M. GRADY H.Efcl for the NE H section 13, tovmhiffir wosfc He names the following vitnnejl his continuous residence up«jw vatlon of, said land, viz: Mlchdl William H. Mason, Charles 0.1 Charles C. Millard, all of O'NeiO 46-6 John A. Uimor.l NOTICE FOR PUBLlCjn*! Land Oitici atO'SehC Mil* Notice Is hereby given that d» i named settler has filed nottceofUg to make final proof in supportotiw and that said proof will he ma»« Register and Receiver at 0 Seal. ■ on Monday, July 8,1805, viz: ALFRED HILEMAN. H.E.No.1 For the neM section 15, townshi) I range 13 west. , j He names the following witnewi his continuous residence upoew vatlon of, said land, viz: Wilcox, and Wallace Jolinsmo'i, oounty, Nebraska, Stephen BoHM klnson, Holt county, ^ Gordon, of Ray, Holt county, M* 47-flup John A. H4MM, > NOTICE TO NON.RE9IDE»| George H. Conover, Mrs. Conova first real name unknown, Jamer Selmser, first real name unknom Selmser, his wife, first real na defendants, take notice that “ restment Company, a corporate, laws of the state of MassachusJJj^ died a petition in the considered by the coun follows Occupation tax.. • ••• Account of tax levy Water works... • •• From other sources Goto SukLIVAN MERCANTILE COMPANY and Get Their Prices on Shoes K You Want to Save Money- ^ | m &iitw«i _u>L< -l-*' ■