The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, August 10, 1893, Image 5

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    JFVICIAL directory
eT 4 TE.
Lorenzo Crounse
. . .T. J. Majors
.."Governor..J, 0. Allen
‘ ,,f State---. ...J. 8. Bartley
. ..George H. Hastings
,, rural..Eugeue Moore
:>i <"r v i»;,Vlins»’.V5oor*e Humphrey
<?uetM.A. K. uoudy
v « sT ATE UNIVERSITY.
ly^feyiM.J.Hull.
'^S^oIOmah.;
..'f ,LHwm"'Bryan. Linoolns O.
'imiu'nBow: Wm' McKeiilhaa. Bed
JUDICIARY.*
«lce-"'"jiiiigePoit and T. L.Norval
TCENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT^
. .. J.J. King of O’Neill
..a Bartow of Cnadron
u. Warrick, of O’Neill
LAND offices.
o’nkiu»
W. D. Mathews.
.A. L. Towle.
kklioh. c w Robinson
.W.B. Lambert
..cotjnt't. m „
.Win Bowen
District Court.John Skirvlng
-Barrett Scott
lIiooIs..
.It. L. Clapp.
.C. E. Butler
. ..J. C. Harnlsu
**....H. C. McEvony
...John McBride.
....ll.W. Dudley
'.Mrs. H. W. Dudley
Dr. H. A. Skelton
.W. W. Page
H. E. Murphy
SUPERVISORS^
township
rt'W
w
F.
II
,1 John
Wm
W
llll
Sll
John
II
W T
A
II
Peter
Join.
!v Geo
I)
ilier 11
liv M U
Prank
scr I)
V.
JII
K M
Pleasantvlew
Delolt
Cleveland
Verdigris
Inman
Sand Creek
Rock Falls
Conley
Fairviotf
Dustin V
Green Valley
Shields
Francis
Emmet
Sheridan
Stuart
Swan
Scott
Lake
Paddock
O'Neill
Chambers 1
Atkinson
Saratoga
Steel Creek
Ewing
tvillowdale
Wyoming
McClure
Iowa
Grattan_
ADDRESS
Ray
Ewing
Brodie
Page
Inman
Atkinson
Turner
Chambers
Inez
Dustin
Atkinson
O’Neill
Atkinson
Atkinson
AtkinBon
Stuart
Swan
Scottvllle
Delolt
olackblrd
O'Neill
Chambers
Atkinson
Saratoga
Star
Ewing
minneola
Amelia
Little
Page
O’Neill
C11T OF O'NEILL.
•visor, M. D. Lonff; Justices, B.'-H.
...[ id b. Weltons Constables, John
i and Perkins Brooks.
COUNCILMEN—FIRST WARD.
wo years.—Ben DeYarman. For one
Javld Stannard.
SECOND WARD.
wn years—Fred Gatz. For one year—
leu.
THIRD WARD.
wo years—J. C Smoot. For one *sr—
CITY OFFICERS,
ir, U. II. Dickson; Clerk, N. Martin;
nr, David Adams; City Engineer,
Jorrisky; Police Judge, N. Martin;
of Police, Charlie Hall; Attorney,
k'lieilict; Welghmaster, Joe Miller.
fill AT TAN TOWNSHIP.
rvisor, John Winn; Trearurer. John
; Clerk. D. II. Cronin; Assessor, Mose
icll; Justices, M. Gastello and Clias.
41: Justices, Perkins Brooks and Will
ie: lload overseer dist. 36, Allen Brown
o.4, John Enright.
HERS’ RELIEF COMNISSION.
iar meeting first Monday in Febru
each year, und at such other times as
red necessary. Kobt. Gallagher, Page,
an; Wm. Bowen, O’Neill, secretary;
Jlark, Atkinson.
ATRICK’S CATHOLIC CHUHCH.
rvices every Sabbath at 10:80 o’clock,
lev. Cassidy, Postor. Sabbath school
lately following servioea.
niODIST CHURCH. 8ervioes
ery Sunday morning at 11 o'olock, im
" followed by Sunday school. Preach
toe evening atSo’clock. Prayer meeting
s'ay evening at 8 o'clock. Epworth
' devotional meeting Sunday evening
" ™ek. F. Ennis, Pastor.
1. 0. A. Bible study and eonseoratlon
meeting every Monday evening In
; room, M.E. church.
Winn Lowhie, Secretary.
■It.POST,xo. 86. The Gen. John
,,e1,1 Post, No. 86, Department of No
'■ a. It., will meet the first and third
ay evening of each month in Masonic
•Neill
S. J, Smith, Com.
‘ m?1,™ VALLEY LODGE, I. o. o.
,11, f,c!* ®yery Wednesday evening In
i ioattend' Visiting brothers cordially
Bkiui1 N- G. E. W. Adams, Sec.
Se®. C?APTER, R. A. M
* nConiVhtdl?dlrd Thursday of each
Doans, Sec, ’ j. c. Harnibh, H. P
omlm,;HELMKT LODGE. U. D.
Odd ^in11 ev,ei7 Monday at 8 o?clook p,
;'ymvited?W &aU’ Visiting bretheni
K'^.K.otK.nnd8M'°RADY’C'C'
“'■''RCAMPMENT HO. 80.1.
"s of eY?ry 8eoontl and fourth
each month fn Odd Fellows’ Hall.
Scribe, C, L. Bright,
lniEBEK?Jf°- *1. DAUGHT
Hi! eihm H-fheoU every 1st ai
each month In Odd Fellows’ Ii
\ Eva\« c, of the moon.
- s, Sec. a. L. Towle, W
1 llO-M. W. OF 1
|l0^nlhfTUe8<Jay 1
J^ln, Clerk. B. J. Hayes, V. C.
J:'l fourthTmte/in Meets secoi
“;onie hail udsday of ea<;h mouth :
"eHugh, Kec.
G. W. Meals, M. A,
ruSTQFFICE DIRCETORY
E Arrival ofMaUa
''Z$£ss&:
!HWuavnrSH0»2 '■”»<=.
19 •■ J LI«ept Sunday at 11:35 p
- o’ntt,t “ 8:36a
andchelsba. 9-36
^^Jtsday,Thu'“"^ Friday at7:00
™rB.and Sat. at..1:00
J Monday Lw£?D PAI)i>ook.
' TJt'8da>; Tburs nan^risday at -1':00
— a
:00 p
a* o'xcn. 14110 oat. at..4:3C
£ Mond£y^ wtdD«Ni°“RARA.
Tuesday,,Thu;«a"df5-at....7:00 a
O’KBUl and8“t-Bt...4:00p
\l... ... AKD Rituutwn»_ **
a
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'•'EHand 8«t- at.. AM)
^n°"-.Wed. “nd,ffi,d’,8VnjJt
r Mon- *•* wt^assyP
:00p
BB BB BB BB SB
> SapwriNn' Proceedings. -W
[oOBXINUBD MOM LAST WBBZ.]
SUFBBVISOBS’ Ovi'tCB, O’NkILL, NbB )
July 14, 1893. $
Upon notion the chnir appointed a
committee consisting of Phillips and
McCarthy to figure the - levies of the
bonded school districts of Holt county.
The comihittee then made the following
Land* For Bale.
By the Illinois Central R. R. Co., at
low prices and on easy terms, in south
ern Illinois, the best farm country in
the world for either large or small fruits,
orchards, dairying, raising stock or
sheep. A greater variety of crops, with
a greater profit, can be grown on a less
amount of lands in this country than
can be raised in any other portion of
this state. Don't go elsewhere to buy
lands for farms until you see Southern
Illinois, All sales made exclusively by
the land commissioner, I. C. R. R. Co.
Special inducements and facilities
offered by the Illinois Central railroad
company to go and examine these lands.
For full description and map, and any
information, address or call upon E. P.
Skene, Land Commissioner I. C. R. R.
Co., 78 Michigan aye., Chicago, 111.
We Mean Bnsineas.
The public is quick to apreciate an
article of merit, and when the publishers
of the State Journal began offering
their semi-weekly at only $1 per year,
the same price that others ask for their
weeklies which only give half as many
papers,.the subscription list doubled in
a few months, and has since been grow
ing with wonderful rapidity, leaving the
oldtasbion weeklies away behind.
People don’t see any use in waiting a
whole week for the news when they can
get it fresh twice a week for the same
money. Readers of the Semi-Weekly
Journal get 104 papers a year for their
$1,'which is less than one cent per copy,
and they find the paper almost as good
as a daily. If you have not yet tried
this gieat paper, do so at once. It gives
you the markets twice each week, which
alone is worth the price. Some of our
special offers are: The Journal and
either the Standard History of the
United StateB, Stanley’s Adventures in
AfHca, Life of Spurgeon, or Life of
Harrison, handsomely bound books,
postage all paid, for $1.40. The Journal
and Weekly New York Tribune, both
one year, $1.35. For $3 we will send
the Journal two /ears and one of the
above books free; for two new subscrib
ers (your own name can be one of them)
we will send you any one of the aboye
books free; for $1.05 we will send you
the Journal and Tribune, and any one
of the books. We mean business and
our offers are right down to bard-time
prices. Send for a free sample at once.
Address, Nebraska State Journal,
i Lincoln, Neb.
I
$16.90 round trip rate to Chicago via
the F. E. aud M. V. Ry. Tickets on sale
July 24, good to return July 28 or Aug.
4. Tickets on sale July 31, good to
return Aug. 4 or 11. Tickets on sale
Aug. 7, good to return Aug. 11 or 18.
These tickets will not be honored on
any other days.
W. J. Dobbs, Agent.
«-*iN CARS HAVE BARS.
matt* Could Not Boor to Bom Hot Me
tros* Altai Ml lld^lpgko Up.
The other evening when the New
York L cars were crowded with par*
ties returning from the theatres, a
young and very short Irish girl
boarded the train at Twenty-third
street It was impossible for her to
reach a strap, and a gentleman roae
aid gave her a seat
Presently the you ng woman became a
forced and not uninterosted.listener to
the conversation which he was carry
ing ouwlih the friend who stood beside
him. They were discussing the merits
and weaknesses of certain friends of
theirs, whom we will eall Mr. and
Mrs. D » •
Mr. D-was benevolent and ridic
ulously fond of his , wife. Mrs. D——
was good-hearted, but a very pushing
sort of a woman, while the grown-up
son was described as a most selfish
young man, with more criticism of the
sort that some of us bestffw so liberal
ly upon absent friends
"Sure mem," Bald Katie the next
day, when she was relating the inci
dent to her mistress, "I niver knew
before how bad yez are."
Her mistress laughed heartily, when
the faithful girl resumed:
"Well, I gave thim a pace av me
moind. When I cudn’t kape still any
longer I jist sed: 'Here’s yer seat, sor.
I’ve lived with them paple ye’re
a-talkln’ av iver since I came from the
ould counthree, and I’ll not sit and
hear ’em abused."
Moral: L seats have ears.
A CHINESE LEGEND.
A Combination or Figaros Which Mods
n Young Lad y Sad.
«4he was visiting her brother’s house
and, happening to stroll into the
library, she noticed the combination
‘‘3—8—8” marked with pencil on a
card that hung on the wall. Instantly
she grew indignant, for she was a
most religious maiden and was very
fond of her brother, whom she con
sidered, indeed, a model young man.
Quick to arrive at conclusions, she
immediately sought him out and gave
him a lecture on the wickedness of
policy playing.
All the while that she was imploring
him to give up the pernicious habit,
he maintained a stolid indifference
which sorely aggravated her. When
she had spent her fury he burst into
a loud laugh and explained the mean
ing of the mysterious figures. Every
time he had sent his laundry to the
Chinaman he had lost pieces of linen,
and, as he had never counted the num
ber he had sent, he had no redress.
He had determined, therefore, to keep
a record of t le different articles he
sent to be “done up.” The “3—6—8,”
he explained, represented three shirts,
six pairs of cuffs and eight collars.
Now his sister likes him better than
ever, and since that day she has never
been induced to listen to anything de
rogatory to him.
HB QOT THERE.
Wouldn't Ml» Prayer Became He Wee
Not in Poll Dren.
A good story about Professor Tuck
er, formerly of Bowdoln college, is
told:
About the year *61, when he was
“Tutor” Tucker at the institution, the
bell rang for prayers at the chapel, as
now, very early in the morning, and it
was imperative upon tutors and pupils
to respond.
As a tutor Mr. Tucker was very
popular, although very strict, and he
was always prompt to take his place
at the head of his class at the early
morning devotions.
One morning, however, he found his
clothing gone and his door nailed
while the bell was ringing.
Finding a hatchet he soon split the
door down and at the last stroke of
the bell appeared, .clothed in his shirt
and a pair of overalls, barefooted, but
with a smile of serenity on his ex
pressive countenance. He took his
customary place and neither then nor
afterwards were words of complaint
heard from him.
A Student of Mankind.
Mrs. Minks—There! There is another
torn silk handkerchief that my hus
band has stuffed into the rag-bag.
That is the last of the half a dozen he
bought last year or year before, and ho
put them all in the rag-bag himself.
Now wait.
Sister-*-What for?
Mrs. Minks — In about a week
you will hear him raving
around wanting to know what
has become of that half a dozen new
silk handkerchiefs he bought only a
few months ago.
Astrology Not Needed Hero.
• When a young man who has had the
good fortune to secure a salary of a
hunlred dollars a month enters a cir
cle of gay livers who have incomes of
$5,000 or $10,000 a year, there is no
need of an astrologer to predict the
end. But should not some of the
guilt of the falling one be charged to
those who entice him into an associa
tion which he cannot enter without
wrong-doing?
Extremely Courteous.
A good example of the extremely
courteous in public correspondence was
the notice sent to Charles James Fox
that he was no longer a member of the
government of George the Third. It
read thus: “His gracious majesty has
been pleased to issue a new commis
sion in which your name does not ap»
near.”
Not One of HU Accomplishment*#
▲ distinguished bishop of the Epis
copal church, arriving late at a small
town one night,found the hotel closed,
and hammering at the door for admis
sion, a neighbor stuck his head out of
an adjoining window with, "Say,
[ stranger, knock like h—II” to whleh
the bishop replied: "I don’t know
how.”
DU. '
McGRIW
la the only
SPECIALIST
WUOTUBATt ALL
PRIVATE DISEASES
and DEBILITIES of
MEN ONLY.
Warn** Excluded.
18 years experieore
| ttleot. stricture, syph
111s, varicocele, spec
v mrui
h<H«t, niuht loam*,
nertrat. wpok, forgetful, low aptrita, all evil
etfoclx of early vtco nod all dlefUK<« of the blood,
akin, liver, kiduoyo and bladder, Inatani relief,
periuanaut core. Circular* free.
14th and Fnrnara ate., Omaha, Mb.
• FRED ftLM, •
BOOt AND
SHOE SHOP
Custom Work and Reprairing.
Dr. Shore's Old Stand, O’Neill, Neb.
P. D. A J, F. MULLEN,
PROPRIETORS OP TH1
RED - FRON
m
GOOD TEAMS, NEW RIGS
Prices Reasonable.
Bast of MoCiifferto'a. O'NEILL, NKB.
A. J HAMMOND ABSRACT CO
Successors to
R. R. DICKSON & CO.
Abstracters of Titles.
Complete set of Abstrect Books,
Terms reasonable, and absolute ac
curcy guaranteed, for which we have
given a 810,000 bond as required
under the law. *
Correspondence Soliced.
O’NEILL, HOLT COUNTY, NEB.
O’CONNOR & GALLAGHER
WINES^
LIQUORS
Of all kinds. A specialty made of
FINE CIGARS.
If you want a drink of Rood liquor
do not fall to call on us.
GEORGE A. McCUTCHEON*
PROPRIETORS OP
| - CENTRAL- ~
Livery Barn
O’NEILL, NEB.
NEW BUGGIES ^I
tr NEW TEAMS.
Everything Firgt-Claps.
Barn Opposite Campbell’s Implement House
NEW YORK . . .
ILLUSTRATED
NEWS
Th.Orc.nof Honest Sport In Amerloa
ALL THE SENSATIONS OF THe DAY
PICTURED BY THE
FOREMOST ARTISTS OF THE COUNTRY
Life in New York Graphically Illustrated.
Breezy but Respectable.
$4 FOR A YEAR, *2 FOR SIX MONTHS
Do you want to be posted? Then send
your subscription to the
lev mi tuisnuiTSD levs,
3 PARK PLACE, NEW YORK CITY.
I PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY.
THE.
O’NEILL
* ■>
MILLS.
AVE BEGUN operation
. and request your patron
age. All the machinery is new
and the latest and best improv
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il MI Ml in Ml Ml Ml III III Mi Ml Ml III Ml III III Ml Ml*
in in in in mi in in hi ill III III ill III III Ml Ml III Ml Ml 111 111 III Mill
Chicago Lumber Yard
i
- i-.\ i
Headquarters for
v f. ‘- ■! i
LUMBER,
COAL and
BUILDING MATERIAL
The Stock is dry, being cured
dry-s‘
Yard*
By the largest dry-sheds in the world.
1ST 0.0. SNYDER & CO.
In
S^Robbedf
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World
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Do You
FEEL SICK?
Disease commonly comes on with slight
symptoms, which when neglected increase
in extent and gradually grow dangerous.
II yon SUFFER FROM HEADACHE, BY*- -rn,
PEPSIA or INDIGESTION, . .
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