The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, February 03, 1898, Image 1

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    / PUBLISHED BY THE FRONTIER PRINTING CO.
VOLUME XVIII.
O’NEILL, HOLT COUNTY, NEBRASKA, FEBUARY 3. 1898.
NUMBER 31.
SUBSCRIPTION. • l.ao PER ANNUM.
D. H. CRONIN. EDI
NEWS SANS WHISKERS
Items of Interest Told As They Are
Told to Us.
WHEN AND HOW IT HAPPENED
too* Happening! Portrayed Per General
Education and Amasemont.
For choice candies go to Cress'. Sl-tf
Fine tin and granite ware at Mre.
Cress’. ______ 81-tf
E. Opp was down from Stuart last
Friday. __
C. W. Moss was up from Amelia
Friday. _
H. A. Allen was down from Atkinson
Tuesday. _
Will Watson was up from Inman
Monday. _
Fred Felts was up from Ewing
Monday.
Ernest Spinier was up from Ewing
Monday. _
The best five-cent tablets in town at
Mrs. Oreas*. __ 8X-tf
F. A. Huston, of Ewing, was in the
city Monday.
F. M. Housch, of Neligh, was in the
city Tuesday.
J. F. Brady was down from Atkinson
last Saturday.
Bail ties and wire always on hand at
Meil Brennan’s. 16-tf
Rev. M. F. Cassidy was in Omaha the
first of the week.
R. O. Adams, of Trenton, Neb., was
in O’Neill Saturday.
E E. Wright, of Deadwood, was at
the Evans Tuesday.
Geo. Brooks, of Bazille Mills, was in
O’Neill last Friday:
For first-class horseshoeing on short
notice, call on Emil Sniggs. - 26tf
Tou can buy bread cheaper than you
can make it, at Hatfield’s. 31-8
t A. E. Pike, of Sioux City, was regis
tered at the Evans Tuesday.
E. E. Post, of Scotia, Neb., was regis
tered at the Evans Saturday.
FOR SALE—A good second hand
corn planter. Call on Robert Marsh.
Mrs. Tim Dwyer is dangerously ill and
fears are entertained for her recovery.
Prof. 8chubert informs, us that the
conservatory now has 73 pupils enrolled,
Mrs. John Beck returned to her home
at Green River, Wis., last Saturday
morning. _•
Come and try the bread baked in the
new oven. Oh I gosh, but it is good.
At Hatfield’s. 31-3
J. Tucker, of St. Joe, Mo., son of J.
Wesley Tucker, of Valentine, was in
O’Neill Tuesday.
We understand that a change will be
made in one our leading business firms
the-eoming week.
Miss Ethel Morse, of Atkinson, was
in O’Neill Monday transacting business
and visiting friends.
Jake Hersbiser was up from Norfolk
the first of the week looking after his
business interests here.
Mrs. J. E. Allison, of Atkinson,
visited friends in O’Neill on Thursday
and Friday of last week.
For teeth or photos, go to Dr. Cor
bett's parlors, 33rd to 80th of each
month. Photographs 81 per dozen.
me Academy Dramatic company are
at work on a new play which they
expect to put on the boards March 17.
Don’t forget that Hatfield keeps the
largest stock of candies, nuts, fruits,
tobaccoes and cigars in the city. 31-3
Mrs. Laura Cress returned last Thurs
day night from Council Bluffs, where
she has been visiting friends for a week.
WANTED—A girl for general house
work. Permanent place and good
wages for good girl. Inquire of Mrs.
Dr. Gilligan. 30-tf
Tom Smith, who established the first
paper in Holt county, the Holt Record,
in September, 1879, is now running a
Job office in Lincoln.
Mrs. K. J. Mack returned Sunday
evening from Omaha where she went
the first of the week to attend the
funeral of her sister.
The ice harvest is over. The dealers
in that popular summer article have
their houses full and utre not now how
soon spring time arrives.
A list of the speakers for the Farmers’
Institute has not been received by the
local management and tor that reason
the program will not be published until
next week.
Don’t forget when in the city that yon
can get warm or cold meals at all hours,
day or night, two doors south of the
Post Office. Hatfield’s Restaurant.
Don’t annoy others by your coughing,
and risk your life by neglecting a cold.
One Minute Cough Cure cures coughs,
colds, croup, grippe and lung troubles.
—Hershiser & Gilligan.
Children end adults tortured by burns,
scalds, injuries, eczema or skin diseases
may secure instant relief by using
DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve. It is the
great pile remedy.—Hershiser & Gilli
gan. _
Scott Hough returned from Sioux
City Tuesday evening. He is recovering
nicely from the operation which was
performed upon him a couple of weeks
I ago, and expects to be out and around
in about ten days.
Died, Wednesday, January 27, 1898,
Mary Elnora, daughter of i. W. and
Nina Hinton, aged nine months and six
days. "Suffer little children to come
unto me and forbid them not for of
such is the kingdom of heaven.”
Burwell Mascott: Sam H. Eves, late
editor Of the Atkinson Plain Dealer, was
m town the fore part of the week and
made this office a visit. On account of
failing health he has leased his paper
and is now acting as advance agent for
Dr. Wilson, the optician.
P. Sullivan, of Denton, Lancaster
county, is in the city visiting friends.
The writer and Mr. Sullivan were
schoolmates in Houghton county, Mich
igan, and had not met'for over twenty
years until Monday, when old times and
incidents were reviewed.
Frank Mann returned Thursday night
from Colorado, where he has been the
past year and a half. During bis
absence he saw a good deal of the west,
and he says he is now satisfied to remain
in Nebraska. He went over to Spencer
Saturday morning where has a position
in the store of Joe Mann & Co.
Rev. S. F. Sharpless will preach in
the Presbyterian church next Sabbath
morning and evening. In the morning
at 10:30 and in the evening at 7:30. Sub
jects of discourse: Morning service,
“What is man?" Evening service, "Our
duty to be happy." Everybody cordi
ally invited to attend these services.
Norfolk News: A. B. Charde, form
erly a prominent democratic politician
of Wayne county, has gone insane and
was brought to the asylum at this place
by Wayne officers this week. He has
been in St. Bernard hospitll at Council
Bluffs for some time past, but they
were unable to do anything for him.
A Michigan paper tells a story of a
little girl named Hattie, whose mother
was putting her to sleep one night. She
showed no signs of being sleepy, how
ever, and at last her mother said,
“Hattie, dear, I am anxious that you
get quiet and go to sleep, because I
want to go down stairs and join in the
evening prayers." "Who’s doin’ to
pway?” asked Hattie. “Why, Uncle
William, of course, • dear.” “Uncle
William pway!” said the baby, with
wide-eyed astonishment, and springing
up in bed in the vigor of her emprise,
“W’y, I fawt he was a demokwat!”
It is not often that a physician recom
mends h patent medicine; when he does,
you may know that it is a good one.
Dr. J. P. Cleleland, Glasgow, Va.,
writes: “I have used Chamberlain’s
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy
in my practice and it has proven to be
an excellent remedy, where a thorough
course of medicine had failed with me.
I recommend it to my patients every
time for colic and diarrhoea.” Many
outer progressive physicians recommend
and use this remedy, because it always
cures and cures quickly. Get a bottle
and you will have an excellent doctor
in the house for all bowel complaints,
both for children and adults. For sale
by P. C. Corrigan, druggist.
Sioux City Times, Jan. 81: Donald
McLean, the untiring promoter of an
independent line of railway from the
Missouri river to the Pacific coast, over
a survey which be has all but completed,
expects to return to Sioux City within
thirty days and resume the preliminary
work. All the letters he has written
from New York within the last three
weeks have been hopeful, and in a com
munication to bis chief engineer, L. F.
'Wakefield, he asserted that his negotia
tion's with a bond firm were satisfactory
and that the Pacific Short Line would
be completed as sure as fate. He re
viewed bis well-known belief regarding
the advantages of s line nearly 300 miles
shorter than any now constructed, and
intimated that his views were shared by
capitalists who stand in a position to
command the funds necessary for con
struction. “The end of the J. Kennedy
Tod cases,” said Mr. McLean, “will see
the beginning, in a very short time, of
work on the Pacific Short Line."
OUK UR1TSB8ITT.
Lincoln, Nkb., Jan. 2ft, 1808.—Special
Correspondence: Walk two blocks east
and two blocks north from the Burling
ton depot and you reach the plant of the
state university. The fine substantial
brick buildings and the 13 acres of
ground on which they stand are Worth
8500,000. ^
Two hundred thousand dollars art
spent annually in maintaining this insti
tution which has ou its'pay roll 150
people, 180 of whom are professors and
teachers. If you think of the state
university from the standpoint merely
of what the plant is worth and what it'
costs annually to maintain it, merely as
a business proposition, you realize that
tbo half million investment, the annual
expenditure of 8200,000 and the employ-,
ment of 150 people makes it a business
item of some consequence in the busi
ness affairs of the state.
But when you consider its effect upon
this Nebraska community you compre
hend at once that it ts over and'above
all others the most important institution
in the state. Every year life and that
which makes it worth the living is more
and more a matter of mind and less and
less a matter of physical environment.
Centuries ago a few understood that
mind makes the man, but now- the
masses have come to comprehend this
great truth, and the ‘masses consenting
and uniting, we are each year making
the road to education broader and
smoother. Each taxpayer, be he learned
or unlearned, rich or poor, understands
the value of higher education, and as he
drops his proportion of tax into the
school fund he says to himself. “God
speed the public school and the univer
sity. *
As Nebraskans we are proud of our
common schools and our university, for
in whatever we have disagreed, in these
we have been united; in whatever we
have failed, in these we have succeeded,
and it warms our hearts toward the
state and toward each other to know
that wherever the name Nebraska is
spoken among intelligent people, these
are the measures by which they compute
our mental and moral status as a com
munity. By these they know and wa
know that whatever unsettled problems
confront us, whatever political confu
sion vexes us, the mind force that is at
work in these mind making industries
will solve all our problems and make us
one of the most happy and prosperous
communities in the world.
In Missouri, with her two and a half
millions of people, there are 800 students
in her state university, while Nebraska,
with only one million of people, has
today in her state university over 1000
young men and women who are pursu
ing higher education with that eager
ness and quickness of mind peculiar to
those who have been born and reared in
this quickening and healthful climate,
in the high altitude of this prairie state.
I love to dream, and whether it is
practical or not it is alwavs sweet to me,
that in the coming years, from the gen
erations of people who come into life
within these healthful and quickening
environments will spring the brightest
minded men and women in the world.
I met a Clay Center boy the other day
who told me that he was only one of
the many who are washing dishes, wait
ing on table, carrying newspapers,
doing anything there is to do, to make
their expenses through the university.
It is this eagerness of the young mind in
Nebraska which makes us promise so
much for the future manhood and
womanhood of this state.
In a contest between several western
universities last year a Nebraska boy
carried off the hundred dollar gold
medal. This was young Baker who was
raised on a farm out in Frontier county,
near Curtis. I am told that for five
yeari mis young man pursued bis uni
versity course on an allowance of only
$100 a year for bis expenses. During
vacations he went home and worked on
the farm as eagerly as he worked in
school. A banker in Curtis said to me,
“Young Baker, when he is at home,
works harder than any man in Frontier
county." The people there who know
him will bear witness that I am not
exaggerating.
Now the difference in the. energy,
earnestness and aptness of this farmer
boy from Curtis and the young man
over in Missouri is understood when
you remember that the altitude at Curtis
is 3,000 feet higher than it is over in
Missouri. I asked the Clay Center boy
if the dish washing, the waiting on
tables, and the newspaper carrying did
not hinder those who were compelled to
resort to these means for expense money,
and you ought to see how that young
man’s face brightened as he answered
proudly, "1 am carrying nineteen hours
and I am bolding my place in every
study."
And then 1 learned on further en
quiry that it is such as this young man
from Clay Center and the other from
Curtis who seem to grow stronger by
‘"T*'1 "'1 .....
tie extra energies which they exert and
who carry off the honors of the school.
If you were in Lincoln you could see
these 1900 students, every morning at
7:30, hurrying toward the university.
It would interest you to look into their
earnest faces and it would please you to
know that the girls are keeping right up
with the procession, for the bigotry, the
stupidity, and the selfish brutality
which once excluded women because
they were women have never obtained a
foot-hold in this state.
lion can see Chancellor MacLaan and
the proffessors hurrying home to a late
supper at 7 o’clock in the evening, for
tjtey not only commenced early, but
they work late.
The chancellor tells me that eighty of
the high schools In the state graduate
students into the freshman year of the
university, which shows how this
mother of all the schools reaches out
her friendly arms in all directions to
gather the children in. There’s a de
partment of mechanical arts where a
boy can learn a trade which will make
him a 94 or a 9S a day. instead of a dol
lar a day hand.
There’s a sugar school where young
men are learning the beet sugar indus
try. There’s a dairy-school where they
are teaching the science of butter and
cheese making. There are over 100
farmer boys in these departments.
Everyone who applies can get the
printed bullitins which are Issued from
the various departments. A letter from
England, this week congratulates the
Nebraska university on its scientific
investigations, declaring that our Ne
braska professors are becoming known
in Europe and are accredited as leaders
of thought and scientific research.
If we disagree in politics, if we have
failed in some things, let us congratu
late each other that we are united as to
the university, and that in its achieve
ments we have succeeded. In the mean
time, if you doubt my high altitude
theory, keep an eye on the young men
from the western counties.
J. W. Johnson.
The advanced chorus class of the
^O’Neill conservatory of music for ladies
arid gentleman will meet Friday even
ing, February 4, at 8 o’clock p, m. over
Campbell’s store, corner Third and
Douglas streets.
C. J. Schubert, Director.
CABD OF THANKS.
We tbank our neighbors very much
for their kindness to us at the time of
the death and funeral of our little babe.
J. W. Hinton.
Nina Hinton.
NOTICE.
Notice is hereby given that order
Number 27, of School District Number
7, dated January 7, 1808, for 840.00, has
been lost or stolen. Said order Is pay
able to Tillie Mullen or order and has
not been endorsed and all persons are
hereby warned not to purchase same as
it will not be honored for dupli
cate will be issued.
81-tf Tillie Mullen.
Following is the list of jurors selected
for the March term of district court, and
the townships they were selected from:
W. B. Hovey, Stuart; Tim Harrington,
Grattan; Ed Graham, sr., Shields; J. H.
Addison, Wil'lowdale; Tom Jennings,
Sheridan; Philip Kramer, Stuart; C. W.
Morgan, Scott; R. K. Stevens, Iowa; H.
W. Rouse, Wyoming; B. Jones, Fair
view; Byron Parker, Grattan; Henry
Harris. Steel Creek; Otto Nilson, Sara
toga; John Inglis, Sand Creek; Andrew
Robertson, Cleveland; John Andrews,
Sheridan; Pat Cuddy, jr., Deloit; Fred
Cronk, Verdigris; John Tulk, Green
Valley; Ed Workman, Lake; William
Riley, Inman; E. S. Einch, Second
ward, O’Neill; William Gilmore, Ewing;
M. Beebe, Chambers. Jury meets
March 7.
Patrick Barrett, ar., who was buried
from the Catholic church on Wednesday,
January 26, was in his 60th year, since
May. He was born in the county Meath,
Ireland, but left his childhood’s home,
for Canada, at ten years of age. He
lived at Kingston. Canada, till ’61 and
then went to Fenville, Mich., where he
lived 7 years, and then moved to Peoria,
III. He was one of the early settlers
and pioneers of Holt county, having
located here and entered a homestead,
where he died, three and one-half miles
north of O’Neill, 22 years ago. He was
married to Mary McConville, who was
born in England, and who died here 9
years ago, in Kingston, Canada, nearly
fifty years ago. He is survived by six
sons and one daughter, Richard, Arthur,
Patrick, Lawerance, Thomas and John,
and Alice (Mrs. John Minton) who were
all present at his death bed except John,
who is in Minnesota. He is also
mourned by 36 grandchildren, nearly all
of whom attended the funeral. He was
one of our most respected citizens.
May his spirit rest in the enjoyment of
perpetual glory and peaceful repose.
SCHOOL NOTES.
Mlaa Mullen lost her pocket book the
night of the social.
Mr. and Mrs. Woodruff and Mr. Gil
lespie were visitors Monday.
Miss Burke is teaching in the second
primary during the absence of Miss
Quilty.
John Stewart entered the ninth grade
last Friday, and his sister, Leonora, the
sixth grade.
The class in English literature has
begun the study of Burkes' "Concilia.''
tion with the Colonies.” >
Miss Morrow was unexpectedly called
home Friday evening and was not pres
ent at the book social.
Mr. Long visited “teacheh’ meeting”
Tuesday evening. He was soliciting
orders for Warner’s Bncydopedia of
Literature.
The following pupila of the fifth
| grade were promoted to the sixth: Lind
Trueblood, Constance Harrington, Grace
Ryan, Mary Mullen, Anna Dwyer, Roy
Little, Gertie and Jessie Woodruff,
Ruth Brans and Lillie Golden.
One of the members of the beginners
class in geometry was studying her
lesson at home one evening, and re
marked to an older sister; *‘A right
angle is an angle that turns toward the
right, and a left angle is an angle that
turns towfird the left."
Following is a list of the books
donated to the school library at the book
social last Saturday evening, and a list
of thedoners:
Arabian Nights, Fred Millard: Ben
Hur, Walter Laviollette; Sunny France,
Rev. Crews; Lucille, Robert Hunt;
Bricks Without Straw, Nina Ryan;
Home in the West, Norah Kelly; Ander
son's Fairy Tales, Frank Hunt; Night
Scenes of City Life, Dr. Trueblood;
Select Readings and Recitations,-;
Schiller’s Poems, CoilaUttley; Cowper,
Frank Smith; Sad Fortunes. Mr. and
Mrs. Selah; Felix Holt, M!bs Lowric;
The Princess, -; Horne on the
Psalms, Thomas Golden; Artistic Guide
to Chicago, Martina Golden; Emnett
Bonlore, Thomas Golden; Milton, John
Morrow; A Sentimental Journey, Will
Morrow; Tne Vicar of Wakefield,
George Henry; The Deerslayer, Michael
Horriskey; Goethe’s poems, Rose Her
sbiser; Stories for Village Lads, Maud
Plunder; Summer Memories, Maud
Plunder; The Alhambra, Mrs. Clark;
The Great War Syndicate, Mamie Mo
Man us; Slain by the Doones and Open
ing a Chestnut Burr, Mr. Frank Camp
bell; Playmate’s Picture Book, Lottie
Grady; Histoiy of the World, Vincent
Golden; Famous Frontiersmen, Ida
Mohr; Love, the Supreme Gift, Loyd
Gillespie; Micah Clarke, H. M. Davis;
Life of Columbus, Willie Hammond;
Willie and Lucy, Leo Kline; Last Days
of Pompeii, Lyons Mullen; History of
the United States, Harry Bane; Jack in
the Forecastle, Tommy Campbell;
Arnold’s Poetic Works, Owen Meredith;
Jolly Good Times, Willie McNichols;
Life of Gen. Sheridan, Fannie Milliard;
Poems of Gothe, Frank Biglin; She’s All
the World to Me, Dan Harrington;
Lorna Doone, Burl Martin; The Marvel
of Nations, Paul Butler; The People’s
Encyclopedia, I. N. Martin; Life of Ben
Harrison, Mrs. Cress; Complete Letter
Writer, Mabel Snyder; Mother’s Darl
ings, Lorella Sullivan; The Cosmopoli
tan, August, 1897, Tommy Barrett;
Lucille, Mr. Collins; The Swiss Family
Robinson, Ralph Evans; Henry Ward
Beecher, E. H. Benedict; Pictorial
Library, Mrs. A. U Morris; The Swiss
Family Robinson and In One Syllable,
Eva Tierney; All Aboard For Lakes and
Mountains, Mrs. Evans; Saddle and
Sabre, Kathleen Stannard; Humphrey
Clinker, Martha Hanley.
CASH DONATIONS.
Louise Pfund, 95 cents; Bessie De
Yarman, 95 cents; Myrtle DeYarman,
95 cents; Tommy Jenness, 10 cents; M.
F. Harrington, II; Johnnie Connell, 10
cents; Mrs. Jenness, 10 cents.
THAT BOOK.
Editor Frontier: “From the Bell
Room to Hell," ia the attractive title of a
sensational book going the rounds, and
within its folds are fiendish thoughts,
born in lust and inscribed in ignorance.
We are surprised and astonished that
any well meaning man would accept the
statements made therein by this so-called
dancing master as facts, applicable to
honorable persons of both sexes who
trip the light fantastic, and we are
indeed extremely sorry that any church
organization would lend its assistance
to promulgate such damnable rubbish.
Several of the statements made there
in are a direct insult to every lady and
gentleman who, in their young and
happy days, participated in round
dancing. ^
There may be a shadow of truth in
the statement made by this narrow
minded author, that the ball room is
frequented by the libertine and scound
rels generally, but 1s is also a fact that
; . \ . .
they are few compered to the large
number of our beet people whoae honor* ■ '
able and virtuous lire* are positive ‘
proofa against the filthy chargee :
preferred.
The author also claim* to be a meek
and humble follower of the Lord, bar
ing been converted and eleanaed of hii
past wicked and namelese crimes and 6
endeavoring to atone in a measure fojr
the destruction of hundreds of innocent
lives. -
Well, we are satisfied thar he was
sadly in need of purification, but have
our doubts that he will be benefited
thereby. *
His very soul must be thoroughly and
completely saturated with the slime and
ofal of a thousand putrid bodies, which '
his crazed and diseased imagination hah
painted upon that part of his anatom#
where a sound and healthy brain should
be. Characters such as he can but fan
to distinguish between an honorable a
and virtuous young lady or gentlema*
and the degenerate associates of his f’;
erstwhile youth. The innocence and
purity of the happy and sinleas maided ,
is but to his corrupt and narrow soul the
living evidence of her corruption. T6
him there is no innocence, no honor, no
love but that born of lust, nurtured by
the libertine, a curse to mankind, and
positive destruction for the noblest of. :*
God’s handiwork—woman.
Own who Dahcbd. .
i
on oKKAmi.
The leteat addition to official literature
la a letter received the other day by
Oommiaaloner of the General Land Office
Herman. The writer ia a reeldentof
Johnson City, Tenn., who waa formerly
a homeateader in Kansas. He had heed
notified hr the department to show
cavae within thirty days why hia entry
to the Kanaaa land ahould not be ' for
feited. The letter, which la liable to
become hiatoric, ia aa followa:
“Answering your favor of the 8rd
inat., referring to my entry 17,005, '
under the homeatead law, will aay that } ; ;
I have no cauae to ahow within the pre« ia
nor montha even) why my claim ehonWf
not be forfeited to aaid piece of land
in that arid region, where raina are V
scarce aa the proverbial hen’a teeth, and
aa far between aa angela’ vialta; where
water ia not more precious than dla-'
monda; where the lean and hungry
coyote barka to the majaatlc alienee oj
the lonely and unpeopled prairlea; where
the feative jack ranit wanders unmoleat
ed, lordly 'monarch of all he snrveya,’
and mourns for hia lost companions, the
Indian, buffalo, and 'settler' who are nek
“I voluntarily surrender all my right,
title and interest m aaid land forever
and irrevocably to the eminent domain
of our own‘Unde Sam/ Bleat be hia 3I
magnanimous, great heart for that bene
ficent homeatead law that plants the
settler on hia lonely claim, forty miles
from nowhere, and out of God’s knowl
edge, to delve a fortune from the bosom,
of mother earth to the tune of blizzards,
cyclones, grasshoppera and chinch bugs,'
and after a few short and fitful years, >
full of sorrow and hard work, to aeek
hia laat and only rest in the bosom of
mother earth, hia only companion in hia
iasolation.
“1 congratulate his excellency the
president, on thia magnificent addition
to the public domain. I thought it waa
forfeited yeara ago."
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy ia the
beat cough syrup we have ever used our
selves or in our families. W. H. King.
Isaac P. King, and many others In thia
vicinity, have also pronounced it the
best. All we want ia for people to try
it and they will be convinced. Upon
honor, there ia no better that we have
ever tried, and we have naed many ^
kinds.—R. A. Blass A Sox, general
merchants. Big Tunnel, Va. Sold by
P. C. Corrigan, druggist
scribed thirty days (nor thirty waeks^
To Our Ouatomara.
HOTICX.
United States Land Offlee,
O’Neill, Neb., Jan. SI, 1898.
To whom it may concern: Notice ia
hereby given that in accordance with
commissioner's letter “O" of January 88,
1808, this offlee will, on and after this
date (January 81, 1808) allow homestead
entries to go of record on any and all
odd numbered sections that have not
been selected by the State of Nebraska
as school idemnity lands, in that por
tion of the Fort Randall abandoned
military reservation lying within the
state of Nebraska. ,
R. H. JENNBSS, S. J. WXBKB8,
Receiver. Register.
HOTICX 07 DISSOLUTION.
The partnership heretofore existing
between Grant Hatfield and C. E. Hall,
under the firm name of Hatffeld & Hall,
is this day desolved by mutual consept,
G. E. Hall retiring and Grant Hatfield
continuing the business. All parties
owing the firm will make settlement
with Hr. Hatfield and all claims owing
by the firm will be settled by him.
Dated at O’Neill. Neb., Jan. 10, 1888.
Grant Hattold.
0. E. Hall.
-,/i
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88-4