STATEMENT Showing Receipts, Disbursements and Bal ances for the Six Months Beginning Jan. 6th and Ending June 30, 1910 RECEIPTS. To amount on hand January 6,1910.$ 84,052 47 Total tax collections. 98,902 29 Stale university land collections. 1,741 36 State common school land collections. 4,838 78 State aid for schools. 3,000 00 Slate apportionment. 4,370 98 Fines and licenses. 606 00 Redemptions. 3,608 83 M iscellaneous collections county general fund. 1,147 5o Miscellaneous collections county road fund. 33 40 Interest on deposits. 813 09 Fees. 601 50 Total... .#203,710 20 DISBURSEMENTS. By State treasurers receipt.# 8,124 74 General fund warrants paid. 17,943 86 Bridge fund warrants paid. 5,969 64 Soldiers’ relief warrants pa d. 125 00 County judgment paid. 4,850 00 County road warrants paid. 13 90 Water bond warrants paid. 2,583 40 District school orders paid.; . 48,972 04 District school bonds and coupons paid. 1,473 00 School judgments paid . 482 70 Township warrants paid. 16,311 65 Village warrants paid. 3,045 70 Center preQinct orders paid. 84 55 Gratton railroad bonds and coupons paid. 5,512 34 Grattan judgment paid. I43 2° Sidewalk warrants paid. 269 75 High school warrants paid. 280 22 Special road warrants paid. „ 507 37 Redemptions. 5,571 30 Salaries paid. 2,063 70 Orders of the county board paid. 10' 00 Expense and janitors salary."". **>9 23 Cash on hand. 8°U51 21 Total.#203.716 20 BALANCES. State university land.* C88 64 State school land. 1.796 57 Consolidated state. 6,14161 Soldiers’ relief. 534 16 County judgment. 378 75 County school . 20 37 County funding. 26 97 Water bond. „ 374 28 School bond. 8,029 32 Special school. 1*1*3 96 Township . 11.677 47 O’Neill Judgment . ]17 38 Village... - *“ ” O’Neill Railroad . 1.131 80 Grattan Railroad. *?2 28 Irrigation. 1 “ Grattan Judgment. 2”:’'; Sidewalk. 29 34 Advertising. . County Road.•••• . 1>"I“ 5s Redemption. of • Railroad Sinking. 5*3 County General. i’rfi r. County Bridge. 3,542 34 High School. 2’of?of District School... 32, si o no Interest on County Deposia’s. 813 09 Permanent Road. _ ’ Special emergency bridge. 3jm ot Labor Cash. 2-4^ ®9 Miscellaneous. _____ Total.84,471 79 Orders of the County Board, Overdraft,.. * 83 43 TTpm . M62 20 Expense & janitors Salary. 469 23 2,015 86 Actual Balance. *82,455 93 AMOUNT ON HAND. Fiist National Bank O’Neill. #1o’?22 ™ O’Neill National Bank. ™ First National Bank Stuart.. 5,500 00 First National Bank Atkinson. 5,500 00 Atkinson National Bank. 5,500 00 Fidelity Bank O’Neill. '500 00 chambers State Bank. ’U5u uo Ewing State Bank. S’”™ Z Inman State Bank. S’™ Page State Bank. f’iiXX XX Emmet State Bank. Vx Error In January report. (Sidewalk Fund)..... . 26 Total Cash.■••••,.A«Vro Vi 80,151 47 Trust Warrants not receipted for. 40 85 2’304 46 Total.,. 82,455 93 Registered General Fund Warrants, called for payment May 26,1910 but not presented, *609 12 THE STATE OF NEBRASKA, County of Holt, fs. I TO Harnlsh, treasurer of Holt county, Nebraska, do solemnly swear that the foregoing statement of receipts, disbursements and balance. Is true and correct to the best of my knowled^an^bellej.^ Subscribed in my presence and sworn ^VcTOLS.^ounty Cle;kA D- 19l°- (beau By P. C. Kelley, Deputy. Inman Items. (Continued from page four) beautiful chocolate and cream: it looks fine. Miss June Hancock has contracted withdlstrictNo.il to teach the in suing year. Miss Lula Wilcox has been engaged to teach the |Rolla Snell school the coming year. Mr. and Mrs. Clover went over to Crofton in their car Thursday, re turning Saturday. There will be a county option meet ing at the M. E Church here Thurs day evening the 14th. Mrs. John Kurck went to Basin, Wyoming, Friday, for an extended visit with her parents. Mrs. Benj. Dikeman of Southerland, Mo., is here caring for her danghter, Mrs. Emery Dikeman. Mr. and Mrs. Byron Mossman went to Texas Wednesday, for a few weeks visit and travel in that state. The Epworlh League and Ladies * Aid will serve ice cream and cake at the home of Geo. Klllenger Wednes day evening. Mr. Frank Conard has purchased a tine span of bay horses, he paid a good price for them, but is satisfied, and they are dandies. TSrs Murphy drove over from Page Friday to meet her daughter, Mary, who came down from O’Neill, and who has been attending Th e Junior State Normal there. The Republicans of Inm in town ship are called to attend a caucus on the lfith of July to nominate a town ship ticket, elect eight delegates to attend the county convention at O’Neill and transact any othtr busi ness that may come before the meet ing. Mr. Ed Miller and Mrs. Dikeman, who were the most seriously injured in the Fourth of July accident are slowly recovering from their injuries Mrs Dikeman is still at the home of Will Goree, where she was first taken the night of the accident, and it will be some time before she can go to her home. Young Man Hangs Himself. Lewis Jonas, son of Mr. and Mrs. F. Jonas, who live three miles southwest of Atkinson, was found hanging in the coal shed of the Tesch school house about twelve miles northeast of Atkinson, last Monday evening. Young Jonas was working on the Hale ranch, about live miles from where the body was founo, and the last seen of the young man was on Wednesday evening, when in com pany with some other young men em ployed upon the ranch, he was In swimming near the ranch. After the others had returned to the house the foreman, Myron Thornton, noticed that young Jonas had not ret urned and a search was made for him. When he did not return the next day the lake was dragged, some believing that he might have been drowned. Search was continued for him and Mr. Hale and his men were going to drain the lake Tuesday, thinking that his body was there sunk in the mud. About 6:30 Monday evening Mrs. Alfs, who had been visiting at the home of her father, went by the school house on her return home. When she approached the building she noticed the horrible stench emanating there from and going closer to the building looked into the school house through the windows, but seen nothing. She went to the rear of the building to the coal shed and looked through the win dow and seen a mans hand. She went home and informed her husband of what she discovered and he went to the building and fonnd young Jonas hanging from a rafter in the coal shed. Corner Wilson, Sheriff Grady and County Attorney Whelan were notified and they left for the school house about 6:30 Tuesday morning. Shortly after the arrival of the of ficers upon the scene the body was cut down and Dr. Wilson said it was one of the most grewsome sights he had ever seen. The young man was sup posed to have hung himself Thursday morning and the body was in an ad vanced state of decomposition. He had taken a piece of baling wire from the stove pipe and fastened It around a rafter and then made a noose and placed it around his neck. Being then unable to reach the rafter he brought pieces of stone that were used for steps at the front door around to the coal shed and got on them and fasten ed the wire to the rafter and then stepped off. nis feet were hanging down the side of the steps and he could have stepped upon them at any time before strangulation. Coroner Wilson empaneled a jury who viewed the remains and found that the young man committed suicide by hanging and that the crime was committed probably on Thursday morning. The coroners jury was composed of: John Alfs, Jr., F. S. Wright, Fred Seibert, ft. L. Arbutnot, Henry Alfs and Henry Hennings. There is no question in the minds of the friends of the young man or his employers but that he was insane as he had been acting queerly since the Fourth, and there i3 insanity in the family, two of his brothers having bsen inmates of the insane asylum, one dying theie a little over a year ago. No other reason can be assign ed for tlie act except an unbalanced mind. A Good Showing. Following is a statemhht of the bus iness transacted at the Unitee States land office for the quarter year ending June 30, 1910: No- Kind of Entry. Area Amount 1 Pulbio sale, general laws 79.72 $ 398.60 16 Public ” Kinkaid laws 2080.86 4081.38 2 Commuted homestead Ent, 200.00 250.00 7 Commissions on suspended “PoncaSioux” Corn’d, entries 27.38 3 Excess homestead entries 23.25 l “Omaha Indian” final Pay’t 147.88 1922.44 “Omaha Indian” final Pav’t Int. 181 55 5 Homestead entries general laws 440 00 41.00 57 Homestead entries Kinkaid law” 23982.19 938 00 24 Final homestead proofs general laws 3419.21 85.45 82 Final homestead proofs, “Kinkaid law” 36657.33 328.00 TestimonK fees in all cases other than contests 240.65 Testimony fees in contests 188.27 Total.$8705.98 MISCELLANEOUS. Amount of unofficial money Received $776.75 Amount of unofficial money applied or returned 653.23 109 Notices to make final proof filed. 23 Relinquishments filed. 9 Protests against final proofs. 160 Five year notice of expiration. 20 Entries reported for cancellation. 831 Miscellaneous letters answered. 95 Official letters received and attended to. 126 Contest Cases, initiated. 19 Contest cases tried. IHSBURSMKNTS. Register and Receiver.$1500.00 Clerk. 225.00 Office rental. 90.00 P.O.Box rental.75 Repairing Typewriter. 10.00 Total.$1825.75 (, A few years ago flying machines were hardly thought of, nor was in summer. ~ Now Scott's Emulsion is as much a sum* mer as a winter remedy. Science did it. ah PraCTi.i, RAILROAD TRACKS. If You Must Follow Tham, Walk Out side, Not Between Them. Two men, one young and the other grizzled with middle age, were walk ing beside the railroad track In a Bos ton suburb on their way to the nearest station. The younger stepped between the rails. "Better walk here,” he ad vised. “It’s better walking." "No,” replied the older man. "I never walk on the railroad track." “But we’re facing the direction from which trains come.” persisted the other. "It's safe." “My son,” said the middle aged man, "I was a railroad engineer for more than twenty years, and If I learned one thing from the poor chaps I’ve seen picked up it was not to walk on a railroad track when there is a possibility of walking anywhere else, if the law stopped all trains running on Sunday and this was Sunday I wouldn't do It. It’s the fellow tbnt’s sure he’s taking nil the precautions that gets killed." Hero was a man who knew about railroads from intimate conection with them. Ills advice was the advice of a man who knew. Every railroad man of experience will say the same ns he. In England the tracks are private prop erty, and nobody is allowed to walk upon them, so accidents are rare. Here hardly a day passes that wo do not read of men killed while making a thoroughfare of the railroad right of way. And usually it is noted that they were on the "safe” side of the track, became confused by the ap proach of two trains and stepped in V* VUV VI VUV VlllUla Occasionally something Is to be gain ed In distance by taking to the rail road instead of the public highway. The man who feels that he must do this will be wise always to walk be side the track and never on it. It may not be quite as good walking, but he Is not likely to suffer regrets In a hospital.—Boston Traveler. The Coffee Shrub. As a rule, the coffee shrub first flow ers in its third year and then bears only a small crop of fruit. The fifth year Is usually the time of the first considerable yield. In Java three gath erings are made annually, called the "early," the "chief" and the "after crop.” but ouly the second Is of great importance. The flower enjoys but a very ephemeral existence, as the set tling of the fruit generally takes place within twenty-four hours, and the pet als wither and fall off utmost imme diately. A coffee estate In full flower is a very beautiful sight, but Its glory is very soon past.—Westminster Ga zette. I 29 CENTS A DAY l Will Run This Maxwell Runabout | 100 Miles Per Week. THE GREAT ECONOMY CAR 2 CYLINDER 12 H. P. $600.00 Cheaper to Keep Than a Horse and Buggy. Twenty Cars Delivered to Date. ASK THE USERS Write us for Catalogs. Demonstatlon if Requested. Wm. Krotter Co., Stua.rt, Neb. Territory Agents. ! Lragmore i ■ A Practical Lesion In the Art * of Husband Winning • By GWCNDOLIN ADAMS > _ * Copyright, 1910, by American Press Association. < • * •• The central figure In these complica tions Is Itoscoe Curtiss. If this were n play ibe heroine would be—well. I would be the heroine. There wouldn’t be any hero; that Is, unless Itoscoe would be considered such, but he Isn’t. He’s simply an objective point like the king In chess. A character the theater people would call the heavy worann the woman who makes all the trouble —Is Kate Carpenter. The reason she has made all the trouble is that she wants the same man I want. We both want Itoscoe. There! I think I have stated the case just as it is. Itoscoe is Intellectual. He stood high Id his class In college and took a lot of honors—whatever that may be—but I don't love him for his learning. I love him for himself. That Is. I don’t exactly know what I love him for. I only know that I love him. Kate Carpenter is a college graduate too. She's the only girl I am afraid of. When we three are together, Ros eoe and Kate and I. she always intro duces subjects I don't know anything about. That’s a way she has of mak doesn't like to talk “booky,” as he calls it. and tries to stop her, but she won’t be stopped. Not that she pre fers to talk booky; she only wants to show her superiority over me. I'm uot such a fool but that I can see that Kate always turns the con versation on to subjects she knows something about, and when Roseoe gets on to a subject of which she is ignorant she keeps mum. It occurred to me to listen when they were talk lng, notice the subjects she avoids, make a list of them and study them. And so I did. I found out that history doesn’t Interest her. Nor does science. She smatters over social questions, professes herself theoretically a Social ist and all that. During the spring months I devoted myself to study. All the members of this play, as I call it, are friends—at least the families are—and we meet every season at the summer cottage of one or the other for a house party. This year we are at our country home. In March, April, May and June 1 stuff ed myself like a Christmas turkey with history. 1 studied up to the last min ute before leaving town, and when 1 reached Marston. our place, 1 tell you 1 knew a lot. I’d rend a whole volume of the history of England. I didn’t let on wbat I knew. 1 just laid low for Kate when she got on her high horse before Roseoe. I didn’t have to wait long. The day after we alt arrived we three were sitting on the porch, Roseoe smoking, Kate do ing fancy work, I lolling in the ham mock. Kate got on to votes for wom en and cited certain conditions away back in Greece or Egypt or some other benighted country in support of the position she took. “I’ve always considered." I butted in. “Lady Jane Grey to be the legiti mate sovereign of England.” Both Roseoe and Kate looked at me. astonished, then glanced at each other. Then Kate went on about the women of othpr times. Notwithstanding her contemptuous glance 1 was not to be put down. “Why don’t they Include Oliver Cromwell in the list of British sov ereigns?” 1 remarked casually. “lie was a king really, If not in name. At any rate, he was a ruler.” You should have seen the amazed sneer Kate gave me. But this time she deigned to notice wbat I said. "Cromwell was a regicide.” That scooped me. I didn’t know what n was nnv mnrp than what a camel or leopard feeds on. But I didn't let on how ignorant 1 was. I just looked as if I knew all about it Kate took up her old subject again, and I did some thinking. She seemed to know more than I did about Crom well and regicides and all that. How would it do for me to invent a char acter? I concluded to try it. “Do you think.” I asked, “that the hanging of Cragmore at Tyburn was t just and proper thing to do?” That caused both Roscoe and Kate to sit up and take notice. They looked at each other for a moment sort of quizzically; then Kate said to Roscoe: “One of Jeffries’ victims, wasn’t he?” “Never heard of him,” Roscoe re plied. “1 think he was a Monmouth con spirator,” Kate protested. She would not deign to ask me about him. She had too great a contempt for my ig norance and too high an opinion of her own knowledge. "Who was he. Lulu?” asked Roscoe. “I’m surprised,” I said, “that Kate doesn’t know who he was.” She was the maddest girl you ever saw. Her face was red as a beet, and she made her fingers fly at her work. "I’m not here cramming for an ex amination.” she snapped. I was so encouraged by the success of my scheme that I thought I’d go on a little further. "Well. 1 don’t mind telling you who Cragmore was. since you don’t know,” 1 said good naturedly. “One can’t re member all the minor characters. I was interested in him because he was one of the men who helped Lord Darn ley, husband of Mary, queen of Scots, to murder her lover Rlzzlo at Holy rood palace." If Cragmore was a surprise, this con necting him with that assassination was the bursting of a bomb. I hadn’t read about this Darnley-Rlzzlo busi ness at all. When we were In Scot land last year I went through Holy rood palace and heard the story from a guide. I think that by this time Roscoe had got on to what I was about. At any rate, I saw the corner of his mouth quirk up, and he was looklug far out on the landscape with his bat pulled down over his forehead. He did not say a word. I was sure he was wall ing for Kate to get tangled np some more. At any rate, he let her do the talking. “I thought,” she said, "the murder of Rlzzlo was a mystery—that there was no certainty about the identity of the assassin.” “It may be,” remarked Roscoe. "that Lula has got hold of some recent de velopments which I have not been made aware of.” “H’m!” sneered Kate. “More likely she got this Cragmore mixed up with the wrong event Seems to me I've beard the name mentioned somewhere In English or Scotch history.” 1 Just smothered her with kindness. “Why, so you have,” I said In a sweet, soft voice. “How ridiculous of me: He was one of the Scottish chiefs who went with King James when be pro ceeded to London to assume the sov ereignty of England. Now you re member. don’t you?" “I think 1 do.” said Kate its If she were trying to recall something. There was a perceptible broadening of the smile on Roscoe's lips. “We've had enough of history,” he said. “I-et's talk tennis awhile. I bought me a new racket before leaving the city. It’s a dandv." Kate rose and, taking ber work with ber, went Into tbe bouse. Maybe I didn’t feel pretty good. I knew what she’d do. She'd ransack every book la the house trying to And out who Crag more was. All I feared was that sbe would And somebody of that name. But 1 didn’t care. I'd say that wasn’t tbe Craginore 1 meant. However, I’d only hnlf won the bat tle. But It was tbe biggest half. If 1 could put my rival out of the light on her favorite ground, learning. I thought 1 could snare Itoscoe. I’m not one of those girls to quarrel with a rival. When a man sees two girls fighting over blm be gets disgusted with both. There’s where 1 got ahead of Kate. She showed tbat sbe was miffed be cause I knew who Cragmore was and she didn’t. I think I played that very foxy. “Lulu,’’ said Roscoe when she bad gone, “you should be ashamed of your self.” He gave me an amused and a pleasant look that showed he wasn’t ashamed of me. “Why so?" I asked. “You don’t know any more about his tory than a newly hatched chicken.” I was ready for, him. I’d been prac ticing looking hurt before a mirror, and I flatter myself I’d got it down to a flne point I made blm think 1 was going to burst Into tears. 1 pre tended to try to say something, but couldn’t, I was so heartbroken. “Why, Lulu! Don’t take a fellow seriously.” “You are very unkind,” I moaned. "Unkind? Why so?” “You who know so much to snub a poor Ignorant g-g-girl"— 1 could go no further for rising tears. “My dear little girl.” he said, rising and taking a seat by me in tbe ham mock, “I’m awfully sorry If I’ve hurt your feelings.” “Becnuse I’ve not been to college as you and Kate have you do nothing but try to put me down.” “I try to put you down?” “Yes. I simply tried to take part In some of your and Kate’s conversations tbat I’m constantly left out of and you combine to snub me.” He rested his bead on tbe hammock back of me. I didn’t propose tbat it should remain there, so 1 turned away from him, put my handkerchief to my face and was shaken by sobs. Tbat did it He put his arm around my waist. Before I let him go I had him kiss ing my tears away (I was awfully afraid he’d notice there weren’t any tears), and If It hadn’t been for Kate cuujjuK uuth. usieuuuijr xur a uuuk she'd left I would have had It all my own way and settled. Xou should have seeD her when she saw Roscoe sitting by me in the hammock. “Excuse me,” she said; "I didn't mean to intrude. I presume Lulu is whispering in your ear who this Crag, more was." Roscoe looked at her sort of angry. I wished she’d say something more that was disagreeable. I would have egged her on to do so, but that would hove given me away also. So I held my peace, and when she had gone into the house I said softly: “Tou mustn’t mind what a girl says when she is angry. Kate is lovely. I wish I was as good as she is.” “And knew as much. She’s always booky.” The bell rang for lunch, and. knowing that he wasn’t in a mood to go any further then. I put matters off for a more convenient season. I felt pretty sure that since I had Induced him to put his arm around my waist and kiss away tears that wouldn’t flow I’d be smart enough to do the rest of it. This Is the way I managed it. I didn't act at all as If there was noth ing between us. On the contrary. I assumed that there was a great deal between us. I pretended to be em barrassed whenever we met. cast down my eyes, started whenever he spoke to me and acted always as though the slightest harsh word from him would throw me into convulsive sobbing. I am engaged to Boacoe.