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About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (March 23, 1893)
(FACIAL directory ■''TA16 j,0 CrounSC . .T. J. Mujoi* ' - \llr~ livornor. -tut* .. . .J. C. Allen ...j. 8. Hartley r .. .. o% uiumvj ... II. Hustings • • .W«ne Moore 11r • •• Vii ',rJ 'ii'ontK Humphrey ....A. K. Uoudy Instruction. .. N TS Burnham, - m.’“ Malluleu. Kenrmj. °maha: Wm. McKclrh«u Bod .Samuel MaxweU JIXICIARY. ..j ini ice i’ost and Ti L. Norval s^wasss«..!» M. V Kinkald, of O, Neill .!. J. King of t> Neill .\ i. Bartow of Chadron .a! h- Warrick, of O Weill !,.\XD offices. 0’NKII‘I" B. S. Gillespie _A. L. Towle. sEi.ioii. c w j>obinson .W.B. Lambert COUNTY. WmBowe„ r iistrict Court peLnnce .Barret t Scott. _John S.Weekes . C. E. Butler . . j. C. Harnlaii .. C. McEvony . ..R. Me,rlniau .....II. W. Dudley ...Mrs. H. W. Dudley . Hr. H. A. Skelton ...W.W.Pase . E. Murphy STii’ERVISOKS. TOWNSHIP pleasant view t- Beloit Cleveland Verdigris Inman n!m Sand Creek , Rock Falls Conley ; Falrvlew j Dustin Green Valley o!ii) Shields Francis Knimet Sheridan Stuart Swan r .Scott , Lake to 'Paddock iVNeill 11 ! Chambers i Atkinson «11; Saratoga ,nk 'Steel Creek i Ewing 1» Willowdole Wyoming McClure [ Iowa Grattan Ray Ewing Brodiu Page Inman Atkinson Turner Chambers Amelia Dustin Atkinson O’Neill Atkinson Atkinson Atkinson Stuart swan Seottvlllo Bliss blackbird O’Neill Chambers Atkinson Saratoga Star Ewing ...lnneola Amelia | Little Pave O’Neill 'll T OF O'NEILL. r, H. 11. Long; Justices, B.H. ntl R. Welton; Constables, John i Perkins Brooks. 1CNC1LMEN—FIRST WARD. years.—Ben DeYarman. For one u Stannard. SECOND WARD. ears—Fred Gatz. For one year— THIRD WARD. ears-Barrett Scott. For one year ird. CITY OFFICERS. F.Biglln; Clerk, Thos. Campbell; David Adams; City Kn&neer, dams; Police Judge. N. Martin; Police, Charlie Hall; Attorney, on; Weighmaster, Ed. M .Bride: mUsioner, O. E. Davidson. ATT AN TOWNSHIP. tr, John Winn; Treattirer. John rk. D. H. Cronin; Assessor, Mose Justices, M. Castello and Ghas. Justices, Perkins Brooks and Will load overseer dist. £6, Allen Brown John Enright. W RELIEF C0MNI8SI0N. meeting first Monday in Febru year, and at such other times as icceBsary. Robt. Gallagher, Page, "ffl. Bowen, O’Neill, secretary; , Atkinson. KICK’S CATHOLIC CHURCH. < every Sabbath at 10:30 o'clook. Cassidy, Postor. Sabbath sohool y following services. ►BIST CHURCH. Services unday morning at 11 o’clock, im ■illowed by 8unday school. Preach veniu^ atso’clock. Prayer meeting •[evening at 8 o’clock. Epworth 'otional meeting Sunday evening l*k- F. Ellis, Pastor. CHURCII Services Sunday morning at 11 o’olock. ‘ool at 10 a. in. Rev. N. 8. Lowrib, Pastor. l’OST,N°. 80. The Gen. Jol P^Jp. 86, Department of N »;Vwlllmeet the and thii vening of each month in Mason 8. J. Smith, Com. valley LODGE, I. O. ( fl',8-s- D. L. Dakb, P. Thompson, Treas. vsafa&Jt ot™ “as. Sec. J. C. Harsish, H. P •HELMET LODGE, U. I ?n every Mondav »r u , Monday atS^'elook ,vitM? 8 &al1’ vdiUng brethi ^K.oflt. andlSM-GRADYlC-C ' meet» SvLv lt> A »0. 80.1. each mnSThr.y B«cond and fourth or s n rlt^ In Odd Fellows' Hall. ’ A. 11. Corbet^ C. P. EBEKtlfS-i1’ UAUGHTEB8 V* v'uu r snows' nail. Secretary™ Butuir* N- «• jl^&Wo^eJJP&SS" ^'■•Kec. 0. W. Meals, M. A, the full „??PonsThur •'« Cottle ?<»n. A. L.Towlb. W. M. 4l| Arriv»l of Malls ^toSSSW1* KABsT:,,r t'Acicir .8:351 Cry Uav ...S„H0KT Mne. ept Sunday at 9:25 r o'vb.. _ ‘ 7-nrii Friday, w^n p*M)Ock. lts%, Thws nandrf?a.5r at--’r;« '•SWU, A\n » d 8 t- at--<:30 Friday WS® Niobraka leM»ri Thun8 ands'at—7:00 SCi‘-LAKn™;8 dSat-at- <:00 ,Ci'^i<nn;ttndSat-at:;.4M '“•.Wed. unStiylSiIN8VIIJ^. Supervisor*' Proceeding*. CONTI NU*D THOM I.AST WBSK* Hayes, Jtllson, Kelley, Kennedy Mn curaber, McCarthy, Phillips, Roll, White, Waring (13), carried. Moved and seconded that we reconsider the action taken at the January meeting in regard to the help allowed the oounty treasurer. Lost. Chair appointed McCarthy as member of the bridge committee nnd Bradley as member ot the tax committee. I move yon that in the matter of the suit now pending against A. A. Meals and bondsmen for the recovery of 9 amount of nlleged defalcation in his office as ooauty treasurer for the two terms ending January, 1890, that the chair be empowered to appoint a com mittee of five members of this board with fnll powers in conjunction with the oounty attorney to affect snoh reasonable settlement of this matter as they may doom to the best interest of the county. Seconded and carried and chair appoint ed Jillsou, Miller, Bryan, Douolioe nnd White committee. Moved, seconded nnd carried that tho janitor be custodian of the court room nnd charge for use of. same except for political and educational purposes, such charges to be $5 per meeting, the janitor to receive 92 and the remainder to be applied on his salary an 1 in case of polit ical meetings the janitor to be allowed to charge the sura of $2. which he may ap propriate to himself to pay for cleaning np said loom. Moved, seconded aud carried that ex cess fees $110.(19 of sheriff be transferred to general .fund of 1891. 1 move yon ' llmt for the purpose of making n proper cxhib;t at ike world’s fair, that an appropriation of $150 be made for the purpose, and thnl thn chnir ! be empowered to appoint a committee of three to have charge of said exhibit and that said appropriation be nsed by said committee in collecting the necessary ex hibits paying for the same and such other incidentals as are necessary thereto. M. D. Long. Upon motion the above motion was tabled. Moved, seconded and carried that each supervisor bt a committee of one to re ceive b11 donations to be sent to the world’s fair as an exhibit from Holt county, the same to be forwarded to the connty clerk, O’Neill, Neb. Moved, seconded and carried that, we authorize the county clerk to purohnse type writer for county judge and treasur er on the same terms offered by Dens more agent. The ayes and nays being demanded resulted as follows: Ayes, Bradley, Cievish, Calkins, Donohoe, Hays, Jones, Long, Phillips, Trnllinger, Wilson, Wynn, (11); nays, Alfs, Bryan, Crawford, Dutton, Haigh, Jillson, Kennedy, Ma cumber, McCarthy, Roll, White Waring, Lost. Upon motion board adjourned until March 28, 1893. Mothers’ Recommendation. We are acquainted with many mothers in Centerville who would not be with out Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy in the bouse for a good many times its cost, and are recommending it every day. From personal experience we can say that it has broken up bad colds for our children.—Ccntervill, South Dakota, Citizen. 50 cent bottles for sale by P. C. Corrigan, druggist. WANTED—Local and traveling dep uties for the Eclectic Assembly. Face of certificates from $500 to $3,000; lim ited assessment; no double headers, splendid commission to organizers; Write at once. State Deputy, M. L. Adah, 6-m Lock Box 77. O’Neill, Neb. Town Topics, that brilliant, spicy, though sometimes slightly naughty society journal, published in New York, makes the following announcement: With the first issue in March Town Topics will be permanently enlarged to thirty-two pages. Although it is gener ally conceded that already this journal had become the most complete, varied and entertaining to men and women of culture of any weekly ever published, yet the publisher, grateful for the extraordinary favor with which the higher class of readers, not alone in ; America, but wherever English is read, has received Town Topics, will be con tent only with renewed and greater efforts to produce a journal unap proached in breadth of scope and excel lence of literature. Arrangements are now completed with twenty-five of the most distinguished writers of fiction to contribute short stories and serials to its columns. Among them are such world famed authors as Amelie Rives, Mary J. Hawker (‘Lance Fnlconer’), F. Marion Crawford, Fdgar Fawcett, Julian Haw thorne. Ambrose Bierce, Hamlin Gar land, Paul Llndau, Catulle Mendes, Francois Coppee, Anatole France, etc. Hereafter each number of Town Topics will contain a short story, and a serial by one or the other of these enter taining litteratures. There will be no curtailment of the varied and interest ing matter that has heretofore gained for the journal the unique and exalted position it now holds in current litera ture. There is no weekly journal publisher which covers so wide a field of matters interesting to people of intelligence and culture as does Town Topics. This new departure, giving to its readers the fur ther benefit of the very highest order of fiction, will prove another element of popularity. For the amount of reading matter that it gives weekly, it is the cheapest publication ($4 per year) in the world. Clubbed with the great quar terly magazine, “Tales from Town Topics,” each number containing an oiiginal prize novelette, the two are sent for $5 per year. Town Topics, 21 West 23 Street, New York. ROBBED WITHOUT MBRCV. A Queer Misunderstanding of • Hand tn a Turkish Bath. When the new Apprentice assumed his duties at tho Turkish bath estab lishment the manager thought he seemed rather stupid, and entered into a long explanation of what he was to do. lie particularly emphasised the command that the attendant was to “rub ’om without mercy ” Daring the day the manager heard a great many complaints from his patrons that they had lost their personal prop erty. He thought that a sneak thief must have come in to get washed, and resolved to bo on the look out He discovered nothing, however, though he peeked around most of tho day like an umateur detective, hiding in all sorts of places. Toward the time when the new at tendant was to go off duty the latter went into the manager's office and be gan behaving with much mystery. He walked around like a wet hen, waiting until the coast was clear. When there was none but himself and his chief in the office he tiptoed up to tho door and locked it. Then he produced from his pockets five gold watches, some dia mond rings, a few scarf-pins and a gold-headed cane, which ho set forih with great pride before Ills manager, who, horror-struck, recognized t.ie ef fects ss belonging to his customers. “You told me to rob ’em without', mercy,” said the delighted novice, “and I done it. Do yer think I'll suit, boss?1' PORQOT THEIR TACT. How Women Broke Bad News to ■ Friend In the Theater. Wo men are called the tactful sex. Two women came to a Buffalo theater one Saturday afternoon in search of a third woman, whose father had died suddenly. The matinee was in progress and the curtain was up. The doorkeeper bade them wait till the act was oVor, and then cautioned them against breaking the sad news to their f iend while she was in the theater. “Just tell her she is wanted at home,” he said, “and get her out os quickly as possible.” In a few minutes there was a mighty noise .within, and the two women emerged supporting their friend, who was shrieking aud throwing herself about. She was taken from the build ing in a faint’ lg condition. Doubtless the scene was renewed at frequent intervals on the road home. The awkwardness of the messengers had added difficulties to their own task as well as spoiled the pleasure of a large number of people. “There!” said the doorkeeper in dis gust, “that’s just like a woman. You ean tell a man something and he'll s.e the point of it But women go all to pieces in emergencies.” Endurance of Infantry and Cavalry. On a march infantry will endure the fatigue much better than cavalry, and in a long distance the foot soldiers will outmarch the horsemen. Those who doubt this statement should re member that a horse in army service carries 370 pounds weight while the soldier carries only his gun and from twenty to forty pounds. Notwith standing the fact that a ten minutes’ halt is made in every hour for strag glers to catch up, cavalry straggle to the rear more than infantry do. and the care of a horse on a long march is a serious matter. The horses arc picked animals, but even the best horse is liable to fall lame from the loss of a shoe or a stone in his hoof, or from some other cause which at first may be entirely unperceived by the rider. Building a Steamer on Novel Flans. A new idea in shipbuilding has been developed at Belfast, Ireland, There is an immense vessel on the stocks there which has no keel for about 120 feet from the stern-post, while six feet of the stern post is cut away, the hull of the vessel sloping from the horizontal for the 120 feet, until level with the curtailed stern post. The bottom of the stern post and the actual stern of the vessel are not connected in any way. The ves sel is a twin screw and the propellors will work through a small aperture with nothing between them and the water beneath. They will therefore always be in unbroken water. When Butler Wai Younff. When General Butler was a young lawyer in Lowell, he had a case in court and, as is the custom, said: “Let notice be given.” The aged clerk, who was an unrelenting Whig, asked him in what paper the notice should be given. Butler promptly replied in the Advertiser, which was a stanch Jack sonian paper. “I don't know such a paper,” said the clerk. Butler, of ourse. knew that it was almost a sac rileg to mention a Jackson paper in that court, but he answered the clerk thus: “Pray. Mr. Clerk, don’t interrupt the proceedings of court, for if you begin to tell us what you don't know, we will have no time for anything." He never interrupted Butler again. Iloand to Keep Up« A man went to hire a horse of a liv i ry-stable proprietor, who was very particular about his stock, and always extorted a promise from his customers not to drive fast as a condition of let ting. “You can have the horse,” he said, “if you agree not to drive him fast.” “Well,” said the man, “I want him to go to a funeral, and 1 am bound to keep up with the procession if it kills the horse.” Chickens In China. The keeping of poultry of some kind or other is almost universal in China. The poorest householder has wherever practicable, its pert cock and three or four lean hens, which stalk in and out of the mud shanty in search of any thing eatable that no one elso of the I family may happen to be able to digest. If Your Cistern Is Out of Order or Soft Water it tcaree, don't worry yourself for a moment go right ahead and use hard water with KIRK’S WHITE RU88IAN SOAP and you’ll never know the differen'e. The clothes will be just as white, clean and sweet-smelling, because the “White Russian" is specially adapted for use in hard water. JAS. S. KIRK & CO., Chicago. Dusty Diamond Tar Soap.■"* %&£”' THE FRONTIER FOR •V, > JOB WORK : ‘^ortj^guotbaA®^^ In the family are more often the resell of disorderedaigvttionihin most people know. BEECHAM’S mi I wiU!u»tttacti»a |»| ■ ■ » family, by curing ■ ■ kick Headache* Weak Stomach*Impaired DiteUltn, Disordered Liver, Constipation and all Billons and Nervous Disorders art slap from these causes. Covered with a Tasteless A Bolshie Coating. Of all drujrrlsts. Price 1ft cents a bor. New York Depot, 865 Canal lit. eooeoetmttemtemseesc^ rtr r‘ a ■ !~n 0 •P 0 (fl Purchase Tloketa and Consign your Freight via the F. E.&M.V.andS.C.&P. RAILROADS. TRAINS DEPART: GOING EABT. Passenger east, - ; 9:85 a. x. Freight east. - - ~ 10:45 a. x. GOING WX8T. Freight west, - • 1:45 p. x Passenger west, • 5:15 p. x Freight, - - - 6:44 r.x The Elkhom Line Is now running Becllnlng Chair Cars dally, between Omaha and Dead wood, jroe to holders of first-class transpor tation. Fer any Information call on Wu J. DOBBS, Agt. O’NEILL, NEB. FRED C. GATZ. # —DXALBB nr— FresI), Dried and Salt Meats. Su*rar-cured Bam, Breakfast Baoon, Btdea, Spice roll baoon, all kinds of sausaces • O’NEILL. NEB A SALOON Where the beet WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS Can Always be Had -JLHL.GLOBE, PAT GIBBONS, Prop. EMIL SNIGGS PRACTICAL HORSESHOER And general blacksmithing carried on in connection. Cor* riage work in either iron or wood executed in the most skillful style possible. First-class plow and machine work that cfm be relied upon. No new experience used in any branoh of work. All my men'are skilled workmen. ALSO DEALER IN FARM wwruraw ‘ Plano binders, mowers, rakes, Skandi plows, harrows and cultivators of all descriptions. Everything guaranteed to beat the best. o’skitt, neb. Do You FEEL SICK? _ Disease commonly comes on with slight symptoms, which when neglected increase in extent and gradually grow dangerous. take ripans tabules take ripans tabules take ripans tabules teaarBraaa“i,T; ripans tabules Ripant Tabu let Regulate the S/item and Preterve the Health, EASY TO TAKE, QUICK TO ACT. SAVE MANY A DOCTOR'S BILL. RIPANS TABULES tajee the plant qf A COMPLETE MEDICINE CHEST and tfunild be hrptfor ml in every family,.. THE RIPANS~CHEMICAL CO. 10 SPRUCE STREET. - • NEW YORE. I SIOUX CITY • • • . WEEKLY JOURNAL THE BRIGHTEST THE NEWSIEST THE BEST Full Telegraphic Associated Press Reports 12 LARGE PAGES 84 COLUMNS Contains the Cream of tbo Mswf v- vdij SERIAL STORIES SCIENTIFIC MISQELLANY _ ILLUSTRATED ' FASHIONS, ETC Reliable Market Reports from the Leading Trade Centers of the World Valuable and practical Farm Department, conducted by an experienced Iowa Farm Editor. Special Norwegain, Scandinavian and DanUh News. IT GIVES ALL THE NEWS f $1 per year 50 cents for six months Sample copies free YOU WANT IT BUY IT _TRY IT Address, PERKINS BROS. CO., Sioux City, Io. \ PUBLISHERS OP The Sioux City Weekly Journal- . . . . $i per year The Sioux City Sunday Journal . . . a ♦» The Sioux City Daily Journal .... 8 “ The Sioux City Daily Evening Times ... 5 «« JONES & ATCU7CHEOA PROPRIETORS OF I - CENTRAL - _J___ Livery Barn O’NEILL, NEB. NEW BUGGIES BP NEW TEAMS. Everything Ftrpt-Ctapp. Barn Opposite Campbell's Implement House FRED ALM, BOOT AND SHOE SHOP, Custom work and repairing—Doc. Shore’s old office. O’NEILL ^ NEB. Hotel Evans. FORMERLY EUROPEAN. Enlarged, Reiumished -AMD REMITTED. Only Firs! Class Hotel in City. W. T. EVANS, Prop,