The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, June 27, 1895, Image 8

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A flutprlalDf Mei|iit>n<!« In lha Llv« of
Our Firm M* I'raalUanls.
Coincidence, which is niinply mys
terious law of series which works in
un undiscovered groove, is most
wonderfully interwoven with the
lives, administrations and deaths of
our first hulf-dozon presidents.
Washington, we are told, "died on tho
las t day of tho week, tho lust hour
of tho day, the lust month of tho
year, am! in tho last year of tho cen
tury. " All this series of coincident
tacts needs to make it truly mart cl
ous is for tho day of his death to
have occurred on tho thirty-first day
of December instead of tho four
teenth.
Tho ••coincldonoo of eight” which
follows in tho livos of tho noxt five
presidents is oven more romarkable:
Horn. Retireil
Jolm ,A<lnn>*.1*115 1801
Thomns JefferHon.1713 1H09
.lumen Mudlson. .1751 lBif
.lumen Monroo.1759 1825
J. <} AiIuiiih.1767 1H-JT
From this table it will lie seon that
each of thoso distinguished Ameri
cans was born eight years after his
predecessor, and that each (with the
exception of J. y. Adams) wont out
of office eight years after his prede
cessor. John Adams, Thomas Jeffer
son, James Madison and James Mon
roo ouch retired in the sixty-sixth
yoar of thoir ages, and three out of the
four died on the fourth of July, our
anniversary of independence.
a«org« Vanderbilt's Neighbor,
(ieorge Vanderbilt has a country
villa and a tract of 9,000 acres near
Ashevillo, N. C. There are fourteen
acres in the southwestern portion of
this estuto tho young millionaire
doeB not and cannot own, though he
has made effort aftor effort to do so.
The fourteen acres belong to a negro
man named Collins, who, wlion Mr.
Vanderbilt bought the large tract,
asked him $600 more for this small
tract than he was willing to give. A
few wooks later Mr. Vanderbilt went
to Collins and agreed to his terms,
but Collins now added a couple of
thousand to the first prloe, and as
often as Mr. Vanderbilt got in the
notion to pay Collins his price Col
lins went up a safe distance, and has
just announced that he will not sell
the land at any prloe so long as he
can have Mr. Vanderbilt for his
neighbor. He tellB Mr. Vanderbilt
that the value of a good neighbor in
this world cannot be estimated by all
the money of the Vanderbilt family.
—New York Press.
. Gattlaff AulnUti I»**f Into German;.
John Gedda* of Sidney, N. S.W.,
if has been visiting Berlin, at the ex
pense of the government of the col
ony, trying to introduce frozen beet
and mutton from Australia. One of
his objects was to induce the com
missariat department of the German
army to order supplies for provision
,ing the army. The French authori
al' ties have already given orders with
the viow of trying the feasibility of
the plan upon a considerable scale.
The importation of frozen moat from
Australia for the army would, it is
argued, groatly relievo German tax
,1 payers. It is claimed that if Paris
and Metz had boon provided with re
frigerators in 1870-71 tho latter town
could have held out for at least a
year and tho former for no less than
five years. Refrigerators and every
device for koeping ■ meat are now
found in all tho chief French fort,
reeses and cities. It is understood
that tho German war department is
williug to entertain any practical
proposal laid before it—New York
Evening Post.
£v. ■ A Delay.
Feathorstone—Willie, is your sister
In?
Willie—Yes. She's trying on a
new gown, and I guess you can’t see
; her before to-morrow,
Featherstone—Why It ought not to
take her very long to try on a new
gown.
. Willie—Noj but the dressmaker is
trying to collect the money for it._
Church Review.
1
Worn by Good ^aeen Host.
At Hatfield house, the re side 40 e of
Lord Salisbury, iu the James II. pic
ture gallery there is preserved the
garden hat worn by Queen Elizabeth
and a pair of her majesty’s silken
hose. The room is also remarkable
for beautiful alabaster sculptures,
and it is the rule for every royal vis
itor to leave behind a photograph,
to which is added an autograph of
the donor.
$rJ
'
f1'
The Slowest Yot.
It was a vory slow train indeed,
and the traveling man remarked to
the conductor:
••Would there be any objection to
my getting off this ar right now?”
• Why, my dear sir. it’sin motion."
••I don’t doubt it, but I thought
I’d like to look at it from the outside
and see if I can’t tell whicji way it
is going—Washington Star.
The Greatest of Plea.
The largest pie ever made was
baked at Deuloy Dale, England, for
the queen’s jubilee. It spoiled, how
ever, so that when it was opened the
a tench was awful. The next week
another was spade, of 672 pounds of
flour, 1,800 pounds of potatoes, one
heifer, two calves and two sheep.
Couldn't Buy It.
Guest—What a magnificent resi
dence that is opposite.
Mr. Pompous—Grand! A veritable
palace! I have been trying to buy
that place for years.
Guest—They won’t sell, eh?
Infant Terrible—Yes, but they
want cash.
Near Enough.
She—You say that you have never
been in love How near have you
come to it?
He—I was married once.—Life’s
Calendar.
Til* BmwIuliU Acquirement* of a
Ornan Uerolntlonlat of 1849.
An old man with long white hair
and beard and an anxious look was
seen by a Pittsburg Dispatch reporter
poring ovor a directory. When lie
warf asked what ho was hunting for
ho mid: “I’m trying to find the only
man who 1 can count on as a friend.
He was living Loro forty years ago,
but Ills name is not in the directory
now. ’’
As he was talking a lady approached
to ask a question. Tho old man
stopped suddenly and with a “beg
your pardon” doffed his hut and stood
aside at a rospectful distuneo in a
Chesterfield manner. Continuing,
after the lady had loft, ho said: “You
are correct in thinking that 1 have
seen bettor days. My namo is Carl
Maier, and I was one of the revolu
tionists in Germany in 1849, being
secretary of tho Domooratio party
and civil commissary at Buohon in
the grand duchy of Baden. I am an
cxamplo of a shattered ambition, it
being my one aim in life to do some
thing for tho good of the public.
After the failure of our cause I was
forced to flee to America, and went
to tho houso of Frederic Heckor,
chief of tho German revolution, who
had aUo come to America and located
in Illinois. Here I resumed my old
calling as a professor and.taught his
children. When I look back upon
my seventy years of life I can say
that the only friend I have in the
world is myself.”
Did you ever see a person begin
writing a letter at the last period
and then write baokwards and finish
up at the beginning? That’s what
Carl Maier can do without tho least
exertion. It seems just as easy for
him to romember the words and let
ters of n sentence in reversed order
us it is for the ordinary person to re
member them in their regular order.
It is an oasy matter for him to think
backward, and, what is more aston
ishing, he writes upside down. The
lettors are all Inverted aa he looks
at them when writing. And, again,
performing this feat, whioh one
thinks would require all the power
and attention of his brain, he is not
disturbed by carrying on a conversa
tion with you, no matter how foreign
the subject may be. Maier’u per
formance would almost make one
believe the theory promulgated by a
scientist that wc have “double-bar
reled brains.” If you repeat a sen
tence to Maier, no matter how long
it may he, aftmr heaving it once he
will ctiranenoe and write the sentence
verbatim, starting at the last letter
of the last word and finishing it
through the first letter of the first
word.
it seems to be natural to him U
Invert his mind in his work, for h«
never falters or stops to think, but
writes as rapidly as a person writing
in an ordinary way. “I acquired
this in a peculiar manner," said
Maier. “While I was clerk in a
grocery store in Saxony I was an
ambitious sort of a boy and always
wanted to do everything differently
from every person else. When the
customers came to me for their bill
I would place the bill head in an
inverted position in front of me
and make the bill out backward, as I
have written for you.
\“1 came very nearly being prose*
outed for practicing witchcraft.
Many people assigned this power to
the witches. Then the Spiritualists
came to me and told me I was con
trolled by a wonderful mind.
Although I couldn’t explain it by
any other theory than that it wan a
concentration of my mind, I at last
persuaded them that there was
nothing supernatural in it I am
not able to perform the feats I used
to whon I was younger. I am get
ting old and my memory is not ar
it used to be. My eyesight is pretty
near gone. I can’t see very much.
In looking at you I see that it is a
form and know that you are a human
being, because you speak to me, but
I could not see my writing if I did
not use a blue pencil. It seems to be
the only color I can see.
True to the Letter.
fits Officer—You say you are used
to taking meters. But we want a
man who oan do the work expedi
tiously.
Applicant—Oh, I understand that
I just take‘the meter for a few quar
ters, and after that I strike an av
erage without taking the trouble to
consult the meter.
Gas Officer—That's all right as far
as it goes, but it doesn’t go far
enough. Instead of striking an av
erage, we find it more business-like
to strike the consumer for all he
will stand.
He’d Boob Backed.
Horseman—That is a remarkably
fine animal you are driving, madame.
Lady—Oh, I wouldn’t part with
this horse for the world. He’s just
as gentle as can he, and real fast, too.
“So I should judge. Has he ever
been backed against any noted trot
ters?"
"Well. I dan't know, but it seems
to me we back against pretty much
everything in the street every tljpe I
attempt te tilrfc ’round. ”—New York
Weekly.__
Material for Sleeve*.
“See how the sun gilds the west
ern sky!” he said as they emerged
from a leaf-ombowered avenue. "See
what a soft, rich color the blending
tints produce. How delicate it is,
and yet how glorious.”
And she, raising her soulful eyes
to the sky, replied:
“Uh-huh; it ’ud make an awful
pretty dress, wouldn’t it?”
Good or Bad, Not Explained*
I Jones—I say. Miss Brown, how is
it that you are always out when I
call?
i She—Oh, just luck.—Life.
SUPERSTITIOUS RAILROADERS.
Ths Kffuot Which Accidents H ivo Upon
En^inMn and Flrameu.
Of the superstition ot sailors, fish
erfoik and others we have all heard,
but that such a distinguishing char
acteristic should have attached itself
to railway men does not appear to be
generally known. It savors some
what of the anomalous that such a
pre-eminently practical class of men
should be the victims of credulity re
garding the supo'antural; such, how
j ever is the case.
I. recently had occasion to inter
view aprominen'. railway official, and
in the course cf the conversation
that onsuod that gontleman incident
ally alluded to two collisions which
had lately occurred in the neighbor
hood, following up his remarks with
the announcement that the local men
would be in a stato of subdued ex
cltomont and “flurry” till a third
mishap took place. Such is the
suporstition of the railway man.
Upon expressing considerable aston
ishment 1 was assured that this kind
of thing was notorious among rail
road men in general, and in this par
ticular instance it was known that
tho circumstances of the two pre
vious accidents were the chief topics
among the workingmen in all depart
ments, who were also counting on
the possioilitles of a third disaster.
Curiously enough, a touch of
realism was lent to the information
just imparted by the explanation
that the second of the two collisions
referred to was due to the driver of
one of the engines, a reliable servant,
noted for his alertness and precision,
with an honorable record of somo
forty years’ service, who being, it
was believed, so disturbed over the
“omens" of the first occurrence and
so engrossed with what he felt would
be two other catastrophes, that he
committed the slight error of judg
ment which caused his locomotive to
crash into another coming in an op
posite direction. The statement is
given as the conviction of one who
has spent upward of a quarter
of a century among railway
men of all classes, and who bus
known the driver alluded to for a
long period of years. So came about
a Becond collision. Surely supersti
tion could go no further than this.
But here is a tragic sequel—a se
quel which, unfortunately, will in all
probability do much to strengthen
the reprehensible beliefs of these
men. Two days after the interview
above mentioned, within fifteen min
utes’ drive from the scene of the
second collision, an express mail
fulled to take the points, a portion
of the train with the tender of the
engine was violently thrown across
the rails and one poor stoker killed.
This is what the railway men will
term the “third mishap.” “There’s
the third,” they say; and now per
haps they will breathe freely for a
season.
A Queor Eloutrlo CI<m^
T. F. Hudson, a convict in the
Maryland penitentiary,has construct
ed a real horological oddity in the
thape of an electric clock. The dial
is a semicircle of white marble with
twolve marked at each corner, tha
other numerals for the hours being
figured along the arc. It has one
hour haud and two minute hands,
the last two set opposite to each
other, and in such a manner that
one is seen at noon and the other at
midnight, and at no other time. The
seconds are marked on a dial that
turns from right to left, while the
pointer or second hand is stationary.
Hudson is a born genius, and nearly
•very room in tho prison is adorned
with a specimen of his ingenuity.
What Will the Cook Do?
Specialists on throat diseases are
beginning: to take unusual interest
in culinary methods. They advise a
kitchen quarantine on wash days
and boiled dinner days, giving as a
reason that the stoam from boiling
clothes and pickled meats that re
quire much heat produces many
illnesses of the respiratory organs
aggravates slight or chronic diseases
of tne nose, throat and lungs.
Patients are advised to vacate apart
ments having dark or ill ventilated
kitchens and to keep all babies and
ailing children out of the kitchen
when cooking is going on.
It liemlmlei Him.
Before the night session bogan,
the senate had adjourned, soys Kate
Foote, and soveral senators were
getting their hats in the cloak-room,
Mr. Stewart among them, when one
of his fellow senators said: “Stewart,
you remind me of a clergyman." Mr.
Stewart naturally stared, then
laughed and said: “How,pray?” -Yes,
you are like a certain minister who
v'T.s telling a friend that he had
preached two hours and a half. ‘Were
you not tired.' said the fria.ud, sym
pathetically. ‘No, no, I was as fresh
as a rose; bat you should have seen
the congregation. ’ ”
Expected Bim.
Young Yard in.—I understand that
there is a vacancy in your establish
ment, sir, and 1 have come to apply
for the position.
Senior Partnor, dryly—I have been
expecting you. ”
“Expecting me?”
“Yes. I heard you ask o»a of the
ftlerks if it was ‘rue that our Satur
day half-holidays wore to be continued
a month longer. ”
This Hoy a Philosopher.
Tommy—Are you going to whip
me, mamma?
Mamma—Yes, I am, Tommy.
Tommy—You said the ether day
that whipping never did me any
good, didn’t you?
Mamma—I believe I did.
Tommy—Then what’s tb* use of
whipping me again?—Naw Orleans
Picayune.
PAINLS9S DENTISTRY.
If« Had »n Exp«rlencu With Ua|hlB|
flan and Will Never Forget It.
“Does it hurt very much to have
a tooth pulled?” Inquired a. Boston
Herald man of a dentist.
“That depends,” was the reply.
“If tho affected tooth happens to be
a molar, with the roots at right an
gles with ouch other or if it is de
cayed so as to loave the nerve un
coverod or if it is worn down even
with the gums, so that it is lieces
sury to dig the flesh away in order to
got a good hold with tho forceps,
then tho 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 advise?” timidly
inquired the tall man.
“Laughing gas," replied the
doctor.
“Will I be oblivious to the
pain?”
“Entirely so.”
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.
I he tall man was now in dream
land. He first imagined that he was
on his way to the world’s lair 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 orer 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
with the crash of glass and the rat
tle of the train. Suddenly there was
a deafening report and a tremendous
concussion, and the cars appeared 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 diroctly 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 Bquarely in the back of
the nock, 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.
“Ihat was an old 9tager, 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 i
have bad a tough time if you hadn't
takea 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.
Traveling; 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.
Shift!■! k til. Keapoonibllity.
“But I don’t see how you ever col
lected that $5,000 insurance on his
life when you had previously man
aged to get him on the pension list
for injuries received during tho
war,” observed the friend of the
family.
••The hand of Providence was in
it,” said the widow, with a gentle
sigh of resignation.
Luther** l*I*n of Education.
In 1528 Luthor and Melanchthon
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, writo
and sing; the second class studied
Latin, grammar, music and sarip
tures; tho third, arithmetic, Latin
and rhetoric.
THE GREATNESS OP INDIA.
Eomethlag of Its Population, Religion,
Crops and Hearts.
There are some big figures In a recent
blue book upon Indian affairs that has
Just been published in England, says
the New York Evening Post. The grand
total of the population, including Brit
ish India and native states, according
to the census of 1891, was 287,223.431, as
compared with 263,703,514 at the census
of 1881, the males numbering 146,727,296
and the females numbering 146,496,186.
Taking the distribution of population
according to religion there was in 1891
207,731,727 Hindoos, 67,321,164 Moham
medans, 9.820,467 aboriginals, 7,131,361
Huddhists, 2,284,380 Christians, 1,907,833
Sikhs, 1,416,638 Jains, 89,904 Parsees, 17,
194 Jews and 42,763 of other religions.
Of the Christian population, 1,315,263
were certified to be Roman Catholics
and 295,016 Church of England. The to
tal number of police offenses reported
during 1892 was 136,639, as against 124,58#
in 1891 and 115,723 in 1890, the police be
ing composed of 150,516 officers and men.
The opium revenue in 1892-3 was Rx.
7,993,180 and the expenditure Rx. 1,602,
496, giving as the net receipts on opium
Rx. 6,390,384. In the last ten years the
net receipts on opium have been Rx.
62,922,987, while the average annual
number of chests of Bengal opium sold
for export during the last ten years has
been 53,994. The actual area on whlcfc
crops of various kinds were grown in
India in 1892-3 was 195,897,389 acres, of
which 65,743,812 were devoted to rice,
21,484,889 to wheat and 92,927,655 to other
food grains, including pulse. The area
devoted to cotton was 8,940,248 acres, to
Jute 2,181,334, to oil seeds 13,646,025, to
tobacco 1,149,548, to sugar cane 2,798,637,
to tea 360,463 and to coffee 122,788.. The
length of railway lines open to traffic
in 1893 was 18,459 miles, the number of
passengers conveyed was 134,700,469, the
goods and minerals carried represented
28,727,386 tons, the gross receipts were
Rx. 23,955,753 and the net earnings Rx.
12,679,200. In 1892 21,988 human beings
and 81,668 head of cattle were killed by
snakes and wild beasts, the chief hu
man mortality (19,025) having been due
to snake bite. Tigers claimed 947 hu
man victims, leopards 260, wolves 182.
bears 145 and elephants 72. On the other
hand, whereas only 4,498 cattle were
killed by snake bite, no fewer than 29,
969 were devoured by tigers, 30,013 by
leopards and 6,758 by wolves.
TEMPERING ALUMINUM.
& Recent Discovery That May Greatly
Increase Its Usefulness.
The successful tempering of aluminum
so as to give It the consistency of Iron
is the latest triumph of F. Allard, the
Levis blacksmith, whose rediscovery of
the lost Egyptian art of hardening cop
per startled the mechanical world some
three or four years ago and only failed
to make the fortune of Its author be
cause of the expensiveness of the proc
ess. A recent trial of Allard’s tempered
alibntfNlm has proved the success of
hi* new method -in Quebec and the prac
tical purposes to which it can be ap
plied. He has made and hardened a can
non, which has just been tested in pres
ence of Col. Svsence, the American con
sul, with the greatest success. This
cannon is twenty-six Inches long and
| five inches in diameter, the metal of the
gun outside the bore being only a quar
ter of an Inch thick. A charge consist
ing of a pound of powder, has been suc
cessfully fired out of this little piece of
ordnance without having any appreci
able effect upon it. A new and more
scientific trial of the cannon has been
ordered by the Canadian military au
thorities, to be held immediately at the
Quebec citadel by the artillery experts
there, and the United States consul, in
view of this move, is understood to
have encouraged Mr. Allard to manu
facture, as speedily as possible, a can
non twelve feet in length for shipment
to Washington, but whether this is to
be a( Allard’s risk or by instructions
from the United States government is
not known and can not be learned here.
The great advantage of cannons made
of aluminum, everything else being
equal, lies of course in th'e lightness of
the metal. The cannon just tested here
weighs fourteen pounds. If it were of
Iron and the same dimensions it would
weigh 180 pounds. Allard's friends here,
and military enthusiasts over the pro
ject, assert that if the tempered alumi
num supersedes iron for the making of
big guns field artillerymen. Instead of
Jjelng dependent upon horses and gun
carriages for dragging their weapons
over rough country, will be able to
shoulder them like muskets. In ap
pearance the finished specimen looks
#Uver°UKh U W6re made of burnished
JURY PLAYED CARDS.
R markable Discovery Made by a Chi
cago Judge.
a “>lnd to send you all tc
Jail, said Judge Goggtn to the dozen
Jurors who recently sat during the trial
“ da™af?e ®ult brought by Mrs. Mat
McLeroth against the De La Verne R*
frigeiator company for *25,000. She wut
injured in an accident' on the ice rail
^aLa\tlie World's Falr- The remark
of the Judge was due to the fact that
when a bailiff went to the Jury room
to inquire whether a verdict was possi
ble before adjournment of the court he
found the twelve men playing "pedro,’
and so reported to the court. Judge
Goggtn sent for the Jury, and asked if
it was true that the members were
playing cards instead of endeavoring
to arrive at a verdict. Upon being in
formed by a Juror that it was so, he
gave vent to his anger with the above
threat. He ordered the men to go back
and attend to their duties as Jurors,
and cease their "high five” deliberations’
The twelve left the court room in a de
jected way, with instructions to seal
their verdict.
Aboat Elephants' Tongues.
"Only few of the many people whe
halve thrown peanuts into the ele
phant’s mouths,” said Head Keeper
Manley of the Zoological gardens to a
Philadelphia Record man. “have no
ticed that the tongue is hung at both
ends. A tongue hung in the middle Is
a human complaint, but elephants
have a monopoly on those hung at both
ends. The trunk suffices to put the
food Just where it ought to be, and the
tongue simply keeps it moving from
side to side over the grinders. -When a
peanut gets stuek on the elephant’!
tongue he raises it in the middle, like a
moving caterpillar, and the ehell cracks
against the roof of the mouth, to then
disappear down a capacious throat,'
FOURTi
OF jm
HeJu-cd ,lt,s
nelwee“ Ml StaU^J
♦♦♦♦mm
APPLY TO ANY
Largest Circulation in ]
It isn’t much wonder th
Journal now has the largesi a
in Nebraska. It has reducedti
65 cents a month with gUnda
cents without Sunday. [, j
spending more money hr j
news than any other paper; j
staff such ,mtfn as Birb, a
and Annin. The Journaliib.
ed at every point and is climb,
lly and surely away ahead (
state dailies. People like a L
per. Especially when it ig,
The Journal.
Dr. Price’s Cream L,™
Awarded Gold Medal Midwinter"^
A B'markabls Cura of ]
Westminster, Cal.,
Sometime ago, on awakening)
injc, I found that I had rheui
my knee so badly that, as Irn
my wife, it would be impos>ibli|
to attend to business that day.
ing that I had some Chamber!*
Balm in my store 1 sentforsb
rubbed tbe afflicted parti i
with it, according to directia
within an hour I was completeiyid
One application had done the k
It is the best liniment on thei
and I sell it under a positive j
R. T. Harris. For sale
gan Druggist.
Some time ago I was takes lidl
a cramp in the stomach, lillJ
diarrhoea. I took a couple of ha
Chamberlain’s Colie, CbolersulB
rboea Remedy and was imafia
relieved. I consider it the bee a
cine in the market for all nekfl
plaints. I have sold the raafil
others and every one tvho usnila
highly of it. J. W. Strickle,*
Center, Cal. For sale bjPGl
gan, Druggist. I
Having used Ckamberliis'i la
Remedy in my family and fossil
be a first class article, I takepta*
recomending it to inv friends. 11
Foster, Westport, Cal. FornliW
C. Corrigan Druggist. J
LEGAL ADVERTISED
- TIMBER CULTURE FINALP&*
NOTICE FOR PDBLICATIOS.
NOTICK FOR FLBVipf,, Sllj
LAN DOFFICIilO«^'
Notice Is hereby given that
named settler has filed noticed
to make final proof in bnPP?5e befodl
and that said proof will be \«mI
-proot wn ^ -jj hi
register and receiver at on«"'
on June 88, 1895, viz: „ E y0 K*
BDWAKD M. GBADIl.
the NK !i section IJ, townsmy
for
^Henames the following !
his continuous residence upon^
ration of, said land, 0 f
William H. Masom diaries o .
Charles C. Millard. anotOXM
46-« John A.Habmw,
NOTICE FOR Pb'BLlCAT'®
Land Orncs at 0 ■’'tW-&
Notice Is hereby give”‘ hi/i?
named settler bas_b*t?n“°upCp0rt of M
will heM?
Register and Reeel ver at O el
named settler nas m™ ■‘■"r--DOrtof M“
to make final proof in suPl»r deW(j
ind that said proof w'd Iw w*. —
register ana aww
m Monday, July 8,1Mb. J1 .. j
ALFRED HILE51AN. H-EJ „.*
For the ne!i section 15, tow
•ange 13 west. witnesses» ;
Be names the foll5! upon aIld,l
its continuous residence e Ablalo»J
ration of. said. land.™' of li»? fl
_ saia
Vlloox, and Wallace■ Joh ®°1j0wles.
ounty. Nebraska, Stejhe-^.
lnson, Holt county. Neb„*»
hordon. of Kay..11'?- a HaR*0*' Ke'
47-lnp John a- _
The city council upon ^ul)ie aj-,
allowing estimate of ' Eposes, “
loney necessary, for al pri„g the
□oiiey necessary* Tor o ^ the b°v jj
tended in the city. Tuesday *
ommencing on the n
ifiirles of city officers and empW
uel, lights and rents. .
rater works bond inters .
rintlng and sundries. •
'ater works.
,uie of the
eviousfiscalX0"*'’".'Slandloulid“
nsldcred by the council J
llows:
tcupation tax. • • - • ..
;count of tax levy. .•• jil
ater works.
The entire reven
revious fiscal year
'EPVROYfJiS
,*ouSBr.”i.i o'.KJ* HbS”"
in tumj'* JvX *5
i .wy*
a B all Lvesl OmnOo.
Co to SuLLIVAN MERCANTILE COMPANY and Get Their Prices on Shoos if You Want to Save ^'oney'
---- —-- ■ - — - .... - - ■ ■ ■■ ...... ..__..___1