The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, January 21, 1892, Image 1

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    JAME3 H. RIQ08, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
VOLUME XII.
O’NEILL, HOLT COUNTY, NEBRASKA, JANUARY 21. 1892. NUMBER 28. - r 1
mu NEWS-ON'TAP
* collection of Items 'Worth Examin
ing Carefully.
THE EEBEKAH DANCING PARTY
formal Opening of the Koeley Institne at
Blair-Tte Eepubliean Club Meeting.
-Other Interesting Matter of a
local Nature.
Tiic leap year ball given at the rink
,si evening by the Daughters of Rcbek"
wus a most decided success. It was
participated in by tbc largest and most
fashionable company of dancers that has
mi gathered together in a hall in
O'Neill. The Fuonteiu feels called
to congratulate the ladies of O’Neill
the excellent manner in which they
citertuined the sterner sex upon this oc
r;i.;ji,n, and also to congratulate the Re*
lukiili lodge aud the members who had
i!ii: idTait' in churge. The number of
tuples who look part in the dance and
who appeareil in the grand march must
have nearly reached the 100 mark. The
imisi entertaining feature of the evening’s
(iiiciti.imnent was ti e excellent supper
furnished by the lodge members at their
looms over the postoffice. The music
hy Prof. Hovey’s band of Norfolk was
l,utter than ever, and that is praising it
quite a good deal. The band was com
posed of eight pieces, as follows: First
uni second violin, bass viol, harp, clari
onet. first and second cornet, and
trombone. The Daughters of Iicbekah
hnve every reason to feel proud of their
entertainment.
The Fbontieh has received an in
vitniion to attend the formal opening
and banquet to be given by the officials
of the Keelev institute at Blair, on the
evening of January 21. The institute at
Blair has only just recently been opened
a::tl is already crowded with patients.
The institute building is a two-story
frame structer built by the Keeley coin
i any,the officers of which are: President,
T. W. Kenny; secretary and manager,
■ tV. J. Coals; physician, Dr. B. P. Mon
roe. The committee that will have in
charge the banquet and the reception of
the guests is composed of the following
gentlemen: J. S. Stewart, G. W. Wain
wright, T. E. Stevens, W. J. Cook and
E. A. Stewart. Messrs. W. D. Mathews
ami M. D. Long will go down from
here to attend the banquet, and they
left this morning. T. V. Golden, who
is. in Fremont, will also attend.
The meeting of the O'Neill Republican
ciub, held last Saturday evening, was an
interesting and instructive one, and was
called to order by President Towle. Mr.
H.11. Uttley read a short paper upon
'he question of issuance of bonds by the
lulled States government. A spirited
il.scussion was evoked, which was
entered into by Messrs. G. W. Meals,
**• 8. Gillespie, A. L. Towle, Clarence
Selnli, J. S. Weeks and G. C. Hazelet.
Mr. Selah was invited by the club to
prepare another paper upon the silver
question, tj be r^rad before the club at
the next regular meeting, which will be
Saturday evening, February 6.
Miss Lerao Laruoureoux "entertained
3 part,-of frieDds very pleasantly Mon
l‘3V evening at the home of her sister,
Mrs. Sanford Parker. High Five
formed the principal part of the eveu
lnf!s entertainment, and the prizes were
nistrihuted as follows: Gentlemen's
first prize, Mr. J. A. Hazelet; lady’s first
Prize, Miss Maggie Harrington; gentle
mens consolation prize, Mr. Joe Mann;
lativ s consolation, Miss Mazie Darr. An
elaborate lunch was served, and the
quests in departing extended their con
gratulations to Miss Lemo for the excel
lent entertainment furnished.
Miss Lizzie Boyd, who has been in
Minneapolis for several weeks past re
ceiving treatment for a injured eye, will
return to O'Neill tonight. Tiie Fron
T't it is gratified to learn from Mr. Boyd
Uial ')'s daughter has received great ben
Mby the treatment she has undergone,
I1"1 the sight of the injured eye has
"een almost completely restored. The
•'’-Dg lady will continue the treatment
"home until her sight has been fully
recovered.
. ‘ novel thing at the Chicago exposi
ti°n w’" he a traveling side walk around
grounds. Yon jump on and take
SL'at and ride around the grounds in
of walking. Vhat O’Neill needs,
jwever, is not traveling side walks,
,S0llle walks that would bo safe to
mvdon. We will jio the walking
1 '"(fly if the side walks are kept in
c ’“dition.
/r,uf' k- Vitale and two daughters of
rink CS’ w‘ll give a concert at the
nij ,e’’era house Friday evening. Ad
]- ScSmn "'■* cents; children under l'J years,
cents. These people are reported to
give a highly entertaining recital, and
are said to be very expert on the violin
and guitar. They also give recitations,
songs and dancing.
The Daughters of Rcbekah lodge held
a public installation of officers in their
lodge rooms over the postofflce last Fri
day evening, to which a number of out
side friends were invited. The evening
was very pleasantly passed, and the fol
lowing list of officers were installed by
the deputy district grand master, Mrs.
H. M. Uttley: Mrs. Cora Meredith, V.
G.; Mrs. Alice Scott, secretary; Mrs.
G. W. Meals, financial secretary; Miss
Ilarnish, treasurer; Miss Annie David
son, chaplain; Miss Flora Bentley, con
ductor; Miss Aggie Bentley, warden;
Mrs. C. L. Bright, I. G ; Mrs. J. Pfund,
right supporter N. G.; Mrs. C. H.
Bentley, left supper N. G.; Mrs. E.
llershiser. right supporter V. G.; Mrs.
Lizzie Smith, left supporter V. G. Mrs.
0. E. Butler, N. G.-elect for the ensuing
term being absent from home at that
time, Mrs. E. W. Adams was installed
and will act in that capacity until Mrs.
Butler returns.
The Commercial Drummer.”
Tbe O’Neill Dramatic company will
present, at a date yet to be decided upon,
the tliree-act comedy bearing tbe above
title. The author of this comedy is
Thorne Melrose, who has gained quite a
reputation in other works, among which
are to be found, “Hazel,” “Duke Mar
low,” “Two Actors,” “Only a Drum
mer,” etc.
The cast of characters, as arranged by
the company, is as follows:
Frank Koss (the outcast) (. M_ H P
IrvingBootlKtho drummer) fMr' U,1' MU1 phy
John Duilloy (a lawyer).Mr. I). II. Crouiu
Deacon Foote (a saint).Mr. T. V. Golden
J. Aslitor (a tramp).Mr. Harry Uttloy
Olie la Hwede) f .Kl,t-l'r
Biclmn^ Marlow.Mr. Frank Mann
Zadie Delores.Miss Joslo Howard
Verda Miller.Miss Tessle Dykeman
Following the presentation of “The
Commercial Drummer, "the evening’s en
tertainment will conclude with aoce-act
farce entitled, “The Rough Diamond,”
written .by John Baldwin Buckstone,
author of several very popular one-act
comedies.
Ewing Democrat:- Judge Slattery of
O’Neill, who so long held the scales of
justice in equipoise in that thriving city,
and who at all times was a terror to evil
doers, made the Democrat a very pleas
ant call one day last week. The judge
has laid aside his “ermine” and is now
engaged in the more peaceful pursuits
of inspecting the different G. A. R.
posts of the Twenty-Fifth district of
Nebraska. The judge was tne guest of
Leroy Butler while in town.
Dr. Trueblood has been called to
Grand Island on professional business,
and started this morning. While away
the doctor will attend the dedicatory
service of the new Keeley institute at
Blair, which occurs tonight and to
morrow. _
The Rev. J. W. Bates, who has
preached very entertainingly to O’Neill
audiences upon several occasions, will
hold Episcopal services nt the Presbyter
ian church next Sunday evening, to
which the public is cordially invited.
T. V. Golden, chief of the O’Neill
fire department, went down to Fremont
Tuesday morning to attend tbe annual
meeting of the State Firemen’s associa
tion in that city. He will remain there
several days.
The post office at Emporia, which was
discontinued some time since, has been
re-established. This news will no doubt
be hailed with pleasure by a large num
ber of people living in the vicinity
therof. __
It is time to offer up another hurrah
for O’Neill. A Keeley institute has
been dropped into O’Neill’s yawning
Christmas stocking, which is hung up
at all times of the year.
The Roseland Gazette, by D. L. Ma
chamer. has rnat.e its way to our ex
change table. It is a brUbt little pub
lication and we are pleased to extend
the usual courtesy.
Arthur Coykcndall, an employe in
Tiib Frontier office, has recovered
from an attack of la grippe which con
fined him to his room for several days
last week. __
C.E.Uall has jumped the counter at the
Chicago clothing house and will stay
there and assist Manager Smith from
noW on. _
•I. R. Smith, from near Paire, was in
O’Neill yesterday looking for a house.
He expects to move his family to O’Neill
soon. ____
Mr. James Doughty, a Sioux City at
torney, was in O'Neill on legal business
a few days last week.
Geo. A. McArthur of the Graphic
was down from Atkinson Monday.
Mr. Frank Kimberly of Sioux City
was in O’Neill last Friday.
1
Burdette as a Reformer.
Bub Burdette has gone iuto the busi
ness of preaching the doctrine advocated
by the new party. In the following nu
vico to his son he grows enthusiastic and
the son is doubtless able see the point;
"So you have joined the anti-poverty
party, have you. luy sou? Well your
old father is ahead of you there, he
didn’t havo to join; he was born into it.
Am:you are to nominate a candidate for
president and run nlfull ticket, are you?
Well, I understand, from some much
older and wiser than myself, that to
nouiinato a candidate for president and
run u full ticket is the aim, object, end
and triumph of all reform. If you do
that you need do nothing more; nothing
more at all. That settles evervthing.
bet me look at your platform a minute.
H’m! ah! why! this is the perfection
of political wisdom; I would have
thought I had written it myself; it’s just
wliat I have always said the auti-poverty
and labor reform party would do. ll’m;
pledged an era of high wages,steady cm:
ploy men t for everybody at his own
terms, high prices for wheat and next to
nothing for flour, porterhouse prices for
scalawag cattle for the stockman, and
choice cuts at liver rates for the honest
workingman, plonty of money, low in
terest and the best kind of times for
everybody except hankers, railroadmen,
and manufacturers, who are to have
everything taken from them'and are to
be kept so poor that they will havo no
credit and no money to pay their hands
and nothing to do business with. That's
grand. If you will excuse mo while you
go on and nominate your ticket I will go
on down to Eichelsteiner’s and buy me
a snow-white ascension robe; I don’t
want to have the millennium strike me
in a business suit.”
Expect A New Road.
A telegram from Wallace, Neb., says:
Great excitement firevails at present over
the prospect of securing another railroad
known as the ‘‘Sioux City Short line,’’
which is to start ut Sioux City la., run
ning westward on the old survey of two
years ago (made by a company known
as the Missouri Itiver, North Platte &
Denver railway system) touching North
Platte, then branching off, making this
place the division station, thence run
ning westward nearly parallel with the
Burlington & Missouri as far as Madrid,
thence southwestward through Chase
county, touching Imperial and terminat
in gat Denver,Col. By running this way
it will not be a detrimental to the town,
as most cross roads are, but on the other
hnnd'will give us competing lines, also
a direct railway route to North Platte
which will be a great benefit to this sec-,
tion of the country. ,
Willard Wheeler’s Ceal Find.
From the Atkinson Graphic.
Specimens of coal from the vein re
cently discovered and opened by our
I former fellow townsman, W. A. Whee
ler, in the vicinity of Hot Springs.S. D.,
have been sent to his father in this village
and the Graphic has had an opportunity
to test its caloric properties, and is glad
to note that the test proved to be of
superior quality. As a generator of
heat it equals the best quality of soft
coal brought to this market, being free
from clinkers, while the residuum of
ashes is a very small per cent of the
original bulk. Mr, Wheeler has evi
dently struck a vein of wealth in the
Black Hills that will prove to be a bon
anza. both to himself und to ull whose
interests are identified with the region
of country in which the discovery was
made.
O’Neill Should Hoys Quickly.
From the Chambers Eagle.
Wliy is it that the enterprising citizens
of O'Neill do not secure the erectfon of
a flour mill? The town is losing much
trade for want of it. Our farmers are
hauling their wheat toNeligh, Atkinson
and other points and as a natural con
sequence do their trading where they
get their milliug done. There is a large
amount of wheat in the graiuarics here
now aud in order to get it exchanged
for flour, it will be necessary to haul it
a great distance. We would suggest to
the O’Neill friends that they get to work
when the spring opens and secure one
with the least possible delay. As an in
vestment it can scarcely fail to be prof
itable, in fact it would be a great boom
not only to O’Neill but to the surround
ing country.
Satisfied With Nebraska.
From the Ewing Democrat.
The many friends ot Dr. Heston gave
him a glad welcome upon his return
from the Pacific coast on last Saturday
evening. The doctor has been in Idaho
and on the cq/ist fu# tiie past several
months and not only says that he is sat
isfied to remain in Nebraska, but thinks
it superior in many regards to the far
famed Pacific coast. His teturn brings
joy to the household of his many pa
tients who feared that the allurements
of the west would be sufficiently strung
to induce him to remain.
ODE KBELEY INSTITUTE.
O’Neill Citizens Tube $10,000 in Stock
and Secure One.
MEDICAL AND SURGICAL ALSO.
Dra. Connolly and Truoblood Will Establih an
Institute For the Treatment of Chronlo
Diseoaes, Including Eye and
Ear Troubiee.
Last Saturday night W. D. Mathcwg
was in 131air>nnd visited the Kocley in
stitute at that place. Hu had tpiltu a
long conversation with Dr. Monroe,who
is in charge of tho institute, and from
him learned that the company proposed
to establish two other institutes iu tho
slate. Mr. Mathews at once asked why
they could not come to O’Neill and what
it would take to secure one. Tho doctor
finally made him the proposition that if
they and O'Neill citizens could organize
a stock company, capitalized at 020,000,
and our'citizens would take half of tho
stock, paying up $5,000, they would es
tablish an institute here.
Mr. Mathews returned Sunday, and
Monday afternoon a meeting was called
to consider the proposition. After con
siderable discussion a paper was drawn
and subscriptions for stock taken. Be
fore night over $9,000 of the necessary
amount was raised and tho next day the
remainder was secured. Tboro is now
little if any question but that we will get
the institute and that soon. The town
has done its part and all that is neces
sary is to have the sanction of the Biair
people and Dr. Kceley, who is at the
Blair "housewarming” today, and will
be seen by the O'Neill parties going
down. This enterprise will be of great
value to O’Neill and the surrounding
country, morally and financially, and
The Frontier thiows its banners to '.he
breeze and shouts hurrah. Let the good
work proceed.
At the meeting Monday the fact devel
oped that Dis. Jouuolly and Trueblood
had been contemplating the establish
ment of a medical aud surgical institute
in O'Neill for some time past, and in
form us that they will formulate their
plans soon and get their institute in run
ning order before long, 'I’hoy will treat
all chronic diseases and eye und ear
troubles. We are glad to see this move
on the part of our home physicians and
wish them unbounded success.
It is The Frontier's painful duty
this week to record the death of Katie
O’Neill, sister of Mrs. Andy Gallagher
and Dan aud Michael O’Neill, which oc
cured at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Gal
lagher, where the deceased has been liv
ing for several years pust, at C o’clock
Saturday evening. The cause of death
was consumption, from which dcsease
she has been suffering for the past two
years. Katie O'Neill was a bright, win
some young lady, scarcely 17 years old,
and leaves a host of loving friends and
relatives to mourn her death. The fun
eral services were held at the Catholic
church on Monday and were conducted
by the Kev. Father Cassidy.
Died, on last Punduy at her home
nsrth-west of town, Mrs. Jolin Keeley,
wife of John Keeley, nr., an old resi
dent of this county. Mrs. Keeley was
the mother of W. F. Keeley, county
jailor, and John Keeley of Valentine.
She was a very estimable old lady and
her death causes -great sorrow among
friends and relatives. The funeral took
place Tuesday from tho Catholic church
and her remains laid to rest in the cem
etary at this place.
Tiik Frontier is very sorry to learn
of the serious illness of Dr. Walter
Lowrie of Chicago, son of Rev. Lowric
of this place. Ilis left lung is affected
quite seriously and he was obliged to
give up his practice over a month ago and
seek a milder climate. Me has gone to
Xew Mexico and will headquarter at
Albuquerque for some time. .Wo hope
to soon hear of his complete restoration
to health._
Mr. F. <V. Naregan of Aberdeen, S. D.,
manager of the artesian well company
that has the contract for putting down
the well at this place, has been in town
this week, and in all probability there
will be something done toward pushing
the work on the well to completion. At
least, The Fuontiku has hopes that
something will be done.
The Fremont Flail: The opponents oi
the Keeley cure are gloating over the
fact that u possible one out of a thous
and of the patients die of the treatment.
Pshaw! That’s simply nothing If one
out of every ten were to die the cure i;
a godsend, for nine sober men are worth
more than ten drunkards any day.
Grant IlatfleU has bought R. II. Mills
interest in the feed mill auk will conduct
the business alone hereafter.
Edgar Thompson started this morning
for Athens, Ohio, whero he goes to close
a deal that will place him In possession
of another car load of tine horses.
O'Neill is getting to the front as a horse
market.
Tun Fhontiten trusts that our fellow
townsman, Harry Wilson,will be able to
adjust his business affairs In such a man
ner that will enablo hint to continue In
business In O'Neilk
Jus. Smith of Lambert has removed to
O'Neill and expects to make this his
permanent home. Tim Fhontibh Is
pleased to welcome Mr. Smith and fam
ily to O’Neill.
Den DcYarman has built a largo barn
on his residence lot, nnd will keep two
or more of his tine horses there during
the summer months.
Thu llcv. J. M. Bates will bo In
O’Neill Sunduy and will conduct Episco
pal services at the Presbyterian church
in the evening.
A stereotyped remark—"Rather asud
den change in the weather." A stereo
typed answer - “Yes; a change for the
better."
Prof. L. VitRle and two daughters of
Naples, Italy, will give a concert at the
rink Friday evening.
Mrs. Sanford Parker gave a toa party
to n number of her friends last Friday
afternoon. _
II. W. Mathews, of the Farmers and
Merchants bank of Butte was In O'Neill
yesterday. _
The thomometer registered 20 degrees
below zero Monday and Tuesday of this
weok._
The Fkontiek hastens to announce
that the backbone of winter is broken.
Mr. Whitnuy of Carroll, Iowa, Is in
O'Neill this week on land business.
Attorney Dickson wus in Omaha Sun
day and Monday.
Bennett Martin Is over from Spencer
this week.
W. C. Evered was up from Page over
Sunday. _
Mrs. Bartley Blain Dead.
Nows reached O'Neill last Friday
night of the death that afternoon of
Mary, wife of Bev, Bartley Blain, for
merly county superintendent. Mrs.
Blain had been ailing for several years
past and her recent Illness was of three
weeks’ duration. She wts only lifty
eigbt years old, und a few years ago bid
fair to live to a ripe old age. The Fuon
tieh is very much painsd to learn of
her early demise and extends to the sor
rowing relatives and friends its sincerest
sympathy. The funeral occurred Sun
day from the Lambert Methodist church,
llev. Burt officiating. It is our inten
tion to have an extended obituary no
tice next week.
Not So Bod After All.
The cold wavs is evidently broken
and we confidently look for better
weather from now on. But thsn it is
not so bad in this country after all. Die
patches from Dallas, Tex., aud New
Orleans, m the Dee of yesterday, say that
at the former place the thermometer reg
istered 10 degrees below zeio Tuesday
morning, aud that from various points
in Louisiana and Mississippi news
reached New Orleans that snow and
sleet prevailed and it was very cold.
m IS TBS TIHS TO BUT.
If you want to buy cheap Boots and
ttlioes, you have an opportunity staring
you in the face that you should hasten to
grasp. The excellent stock of Boots
and Shoes displayed at the store of H.
Wilson will be sold under foreclosure,
and the low prices will astonish yog.
Sale going on now and will continue for
three weeks. ■ 2S-8
The Population of O’Neill
Is about 1,500, and we would say at least
one half are troubled with some affec
tion of the Throat and Lungs, as those
complaints are, according to statistics,
more numerous than others. We would
advise all our readers not to neglect the
opportunity to call on their druggist and
get a bottle of ijetnp’s Balsam for the
Throat and Lungs. Trial Mie free. Large
Bottles 50c and $1. Sold by all druggists.
Mr. W. C. Reed, proprietor of the
Hotel Dellone. Omaha, one of the finest
new and modern hotels in the west,
says of Chamberlain's cough remedy:
“We have used it in our family for years
with the most satisfactory results espec
ially for our children, for colds, ap 1
croup. It can be depended upop; be
sides it is pleasant to take and seems to
be free from cloroform and the oily
substances put inio many cough mix
tures.” 25 cent, 50 cent and SI bottles
for sale by P. C. Corrigan, Druggist.
Traveling by Tubes.
A company has recently been formed
In Hamburg for tho purpose of putting ■>
Into practical working shape a novel
plan for the transportation of passen*
gors and frolght In pneumatic tubes, ’
says an oxchange. The lino consists of
a pneumatic tube largo enough to take a ; C:
car 40 Inches In diameter and about 04
foot long. This car is divided Into three
compartments, each of which will ao* . ^
commodate a passenger. Each compart* .«££
moot Is to contain an apparatus filled
with compressed air, so that passengers
can huve an ample supply of pure air as
long ns they remain boxed up. Tho car
is to bo shot through the tube at a high
rate of speed, but with a gentle sliding '
motion. One of tho foreign papers, In
referlng to.thls railroad, remarks: Trav
elers will be allowed a limited amountof
boggngo, but smoking will be strictly *" ’ /
prohibited. An experimental Hue Is to
be built on this principal between Ham
burg and Buchon, a distance of about
fifteen miles, which the cars are expect* 1
ed to traverse in eleven minutes.
“Bill Nye was odd of my vestry men
in my former parish In Laramie, Wyo.,”
said Dean Cornell to a Sioux City Joutn it
reporter recently, "lie was a regular at-'
tendant at church and aided in taking '
up the collection with a gravity that
little suggested a humor which was dea- :,;i
lined to make thousands shake their
sides with laughter. But Nyo was fuuny J' j
then. The Boomerang, named after a
mule which formed part of Bill's equip- * ;
ment in an unprofitable mining venture,
was being published, and tho many
bright and amusing things appearing In
Its columns had begun to attraot quite
wide attention. I don’t think that Nye'
has ever written since anything better
than he often bad then In the Dally
Boomerang. He woe postmaster at that
time, by the way, and it was then that
he wrote his famous letter of reslgna- *“i
tlon to tho president. Nye owed a good
deal in those days to Eugene Feild, who .
was then on the Rocky Mountain Newt jfih
at Denver. Feild, through his many
favorable notices of Nye's work, did
much to bring him into public notice.
‘ Now he has such a grip on the publio - ^
ear that it will listen to about 925,000
worth of his humor annually. Nyo
always had lots of pluck. It is said of
him in Laramio that he got married . |
when he was working on the Weekly ^
Sentinel at a salary of $10 a week.”
Our readers will notice the advertise-. .
ments in these columns of Chamberlain
& Co., Des Moines, la. From personal J
experience we can say -that Chamber
inin’scough remedy has broken up bad ^
colds for our children and we are
acquainted with many mother* in Cent- v
erville who would not be without it In f
the house for a good many times its '
cost and are recommending it every day
—Centerville, S. D., Chronicle and Index.
23 cent, 50 cent and 91 bottles tor sale
>y P. C Corrigan, druggist.
Many persons who have recovered : i
from la grippe are now troubled with a
persistent cough. Chamberlain’s cough
remedy will promptly loosen this coogh
and relieve the lungs, effecting a per
mant cure in a very short time. 35 and
50 cent bottles for sale by P. C. Corri
gan, Druggist.
notice.
Taxes of the year 1891 will be received
by Philip Sullivan, for the township of
Orattan. at the recorder's room in the
court house, O’Neill.
Jambs Sullivan,
Treasurer Grattan Twp„ Holt County.
Oct the best weekly in the state and
county and Bet a premium along with ’>'•£
them by subscribing for the Bee and Thb
Frontier, both of which we are furnish
ing for $3, in advance. Call and see us
before ordering your reading for the , v
year. _
FOR SALE, 25,000 acres of land in
Holt county, at from 82 per acre up. •
Write me for list. Long time given. iy):
Geo. W. E. Dorset,
Fremont, Neb. '■
Get something useful as well as orna
mental for your wife a Christmas pres
ent. lleinericluon has a fine line of
chinaware, glassware, etc., from which
to make a selection.
Itch, mange and scratches of every
kind, on human or animals, cured in 80
minutes by Woolford’s Sanitary Lotion.
This never fails. Sold by Morris & Co.,
druggist. _ .yS
Cash paid for small equities in wild >>
lands or improved farms. Abstract
must be furnished. Address >
Asm us Boyskn, Manning, la.
We will again buy all the buckwheat
that may be brought in and will pay the
market price Pfund & Wagers.
Roy & McGowan. Scottvillo, haye the
larger t store and best stock of goods of
ny country store in Holt county.
Clothing at 25 per cent discount at
Roy & McGowan’s, Scottville.