The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, January 04, 1894, Image 5

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    t\. OFFICIAL DIRECTORY
Lorenzo Crounsc
...T. J. Majors
r"° .J.C. Allen
,ie •'111 .'".[nil iiiillings..George Humphrey
►vu'SiVinst ruction.A. K. lloudy
VU ' vTS ^i'ATE UNIVERSITY.
r.incoln; Leavitt Burnham,
-,^11 .'tt. Aimas E. P. Holmes,
/n’^Mallaieu, Kearney i M. J. Hull,
prct':
fir no $V, R KSSIONAL.
-a_ciins. !’■ Manderson, of Omaha;
K^kei. Bow; Wm
tryan. Lincoln: u.
. McKelghan, Red
»"• JUDICIARY.
, 0 .Samuel Maxwell
Itf Justice.j^jgg pOBt and T. L. Norval
JUDICIAL DISTRICT.
flKTEEN 1H J UM p Klnkald, of O'Neill
... ... J. J. King of O'Neill
.. a T D.iatnur A# PKoHsnn
... Bartow of Chadron
..... A. L- Warrick, of O’Neill
porter._ - —v« » «
"land offices.
O’NEIIX. _ „
. ..W. D. Mathews.
.A. L. Towle.
liter-■ .
td«r. nelioh. _
..,.,C. W. Robinson
liter...W.B. Lambert
**.COUNTY.
.Wm Rowen
If of tub' District Court .John Sklrvlng
...Kbodv Hayes.
.. Jas.Sulllvan.
put)’. .C.E.Butler
(It. J.C.Harnlsh
putf.. ’.... H. C. McEvony
sift. .John McBride.
C of Schools.• & W. Dudley
, ,cuom“.'.‘..'....Mrs. H.W.Dudley
Ultaut. .Dr. h. A. Skelton
roner..
rteyor..
lorncy.
_W. W. Page
.H. E. Murphy j
SUPERVISORS.
hcaW W
dieV
inG E
Jlej 11. .
Kfurd John
risj Win
tins W
»HB
IlOU !■ 1 >
iin F H
mhoe John
““s. „
j2li IV B
fesWT
80 h A
«JD
Iky Peter
Ige John
iiedy Geo
i/M D
cumber It
toll
Carthv M II
llips I rauk
IDG
illin;er D
lie J E
ton J II
I’leasantview
Delolt
Cleveland
Verdigris
Inman
Sand Creek
Rook Falls
Conley
Fiilrvlew
Dustin
Green V alley
Shields
Francis
Emmet
Sheridan
Stuart
Swan
Scott
Lake
Piiddook’
O’Neill
Chambers
Atkinson
Saratoga
Steel Creek
Ewing
Willowdale
Wyoming
McClure
Iowa
Grattan
Uay
Ewing
Brodie
Page
Inman
Atkinson
Turner
Chambers
Inez
Dustin
Atkinson
O’Neill
Atkinson
Atkinson
Atkinson
Stuart
Swan
Scottville
Delolt
olaekblrd
O’Neill
Chambers
Atkinson
Saratoga
Star
Ewing
uinneola
Amelia t
Little
Pave
O’Neill
Cll 7 OF Of NEILL.
bnerviBor, M. D, Long; Justloes, E.':H.
■diet and 11. Welton; Constables, John
ppan and Perkins Brooks.
COUNCILMEN—FIRST WARD.
For two years.—Ben DeYarman. For one
B-David Stannard.
SECOND WARD.
For two years—Fred Gatz. For one year—
Mullen.
TFIIRD WARD.
For two years—J. C Smoot. For one year—
1. Wagers.
CITY OFFICERS.
Mayor, R. R. Dickson; Clerk, N. Martin;
Kwurer, David AdamB; City Engineer,
bn Horrisky; Police Judge, N. Martin;
ief of Police, Charlie Hall; Attorney,
M. Benedict; Weigh master, Joe Miller.
ORATTAN TO WN8WP.
bpervisoy, John Winn; Trearurer. John
ijer; Clerk, D. H. Cronin; Assessor, *Mose
lapbell; Justices, M. Costello and Chas.
forsoll; Justices, Perkins Brooks and Will
aside; Hoad overseer dlst. iJtt, Allen Brown
IL No. 4, John Enright.
mERS' RELIEF G0MNI8SI0N.
tegular meeting first Monday in Febru
rof each year, and at such other times as
ieemed necessary. Iiobt. Gallagher, Page,
•innan; Wm. Bowen, O'Neill, secretary;
fH. Clark, Atkinson.
^PATRICK’S CATHOLIC CHURCH.
I Services every Sabbath at 10:30 o'clock.
Kev. Cassidy, Postor. Sabbath school
■^lately following services.
pTHODIST CHURCH. Services I
■every Sunday morning at 11 o’clock, lm
aiaiel followed by Sunday school. Preach- i
|in the evening atSo’clock. Prayer meeting
Mnesday evening at 8 o’clock. Epworth i
Jeue devotional meeting Sunday evening
p)o clock. F. Ellis, Pastor.
f M. 0. A. Bible study and oonseoratlon
“ meeting every Monday evening In
pre room, M.K. church.
Will Lowbie, Secretary.
i A. B- POST, NO. 86. The Qen. John
■'0 Neill Post, No. 88, Department of Ne
A. K., will meet the first and third
evening of each month In Masonic
*0!ielU 8. J. Smiih, Com.
VALLEY DODGE, I. O. O.
H every Wednesday evening In
attend' brothers cordially
^ liWQHi, n. o. b. W. Adams, Sec.
CHAPTER, R. A. M
on drat and third Thursday of each
K1" Masonic hall.
Hours Sec. J. C. Harhish, H. P
tr E.M.Gbadt,C.C.
pt- a\ass, K. of R. and S.
’oEiI)LJ‘ EJiCAMPMENT NO. SO.I.
.- (■ meets every second and fourth
‘ ,a ot eacl' month fn Odd“FellowavHaIF.
Scribe, O. L. Bright,
feuffii&F3?°- 41, DAUGHTERS
■Hot »nBFKAH* nieets every 1st and 3d
month In Odd Fellows’ Hall,
taut no-.. Lizzie Smith, N. G.
[^Hershiser, Secretary.
}&}EEp LODGE, N0.95.F.& A.M.
'w before “fmHnl°tttion» Thursday nights
*T.SvA«eafu110*th0 moon.
See. A. L. Towns, W. M.
'*eetaonV.HI1oNO* UIO.M.W.OFA.
fSoritMn ih and third Tuesday In
D-H Crn, inlh;' Masonic hall.
cler';. K. J. Hayes, V. 0.
i 0,1J
Maud *'
vanil f0,reX-_NO. 153, Meets second
t^ntc h,mTudsday ot each m0“th ln
•SicHugb.Ueo,
G. W. Meals. M. A
POSTOFFICB
DIRCETORY
\ r.r Arriv«l of Mails
R-B.—FROM THE MAST.
LSunday included at.6:151
!*Jdav- s„/,ROM TH« WEST.
I, Runduy included at.9:45 i
J'tS eye™*,?IFIC SHORT LIMB.
ttrts V. ““>■ except Sunday at 11:351
“ 9:651
S?n»Moudov IV A,ND CHEI.SEA.
Ticsdilv’ 'm?d' and Friday at7:00i
■ fburs.and Sat. at.. 1:00]
- . -*aai*o. aim out. til
IfRt Mondu'J’NIOBRARA.
WTf‘T" w • SLed-and Fri. at... .7:00
“auj.Thurs. and Sat. at...4.00
0. ~ ana eat. at...tas
Eres Moif1Vv;.iND S'J“1'™SVII.L1.
"hi 'Ved. and Fridays atT.. 11 :JK
. °n- W«d. and Friday at.....1.-01
/NOT SPOKEN AS SPELLED.
8«m« English Karnes Which a Stranger
*• 1 *» Mispronounce*
A certain English magazine has
been printing a series of articles on
etiquetV*. and, after disposing of the
treacherous knife, fork and spoon,
elevating and lowering the hats of
mankind for all possible occasions,
and providing rules for every possible
emergency, from tipping over your
neighbor s coffee to coming to life at
your own funeral, this accommodating
journal gives one really interesting
paragraph on the proper pronunciation
of English names. Of course every
one knows the old catch names of
Cholmondely (Chumley), Beauchamp
(Beecham), Derby (Darby) and
Majonbanks (Marchbanks). But
lu, ”?ay not have occurred to
tjjls benighted people to call Lord
Buthven “Lord Riven," or to speak of
the St Maurs as the “Semurs.”
Berkeley must also be called Barklay;
Drogheda drops the hard »g” sound;
the Seymours are like the St Maurs,
Semurs;” De Moleyns is DemOlins:
Reauolerc is Anglicized; the letter “t"
in Johnstone might better have never
been born for all the attention it
receives; ,Cowpor might be written
“Cooper” and be less delusive; Mont
gomery is called Mungumry; Blount,
of course, is Blunt; equally, of course,
Brougham is Broome; Trafalgar has
the accent on the last syllable; Villiers
is called Villers by all but the un
initiated; St. John and St Clair are
pronounced Singin and Sinclair; the
two surnames Knollys and Knowles
are alike; Dalziel is Deel; Glamls is
Glarms, and Leveson Gower (the
Sutherland name), is called Lewson
Gor.
THE WORLD OF CHANCE.
What It Did for Young Hlgger, Who
Read a Charming Novel.
If young1 Higger had not been Tread
ing “Lady Fitz-Maudlin’a Dark Se
cret” until 2 o’clock in the morning,
he would not have arrived at the dry
goods store with his head full of
Chesterfieldian and elegant phrases
with which to regale the girls at the
glove counter.
If he had not had those phrases in
his head he would not have made an
impression of elegance and education
upon the wife of the proprietor who
happened to call in and pause near
the bargain counter to ask a question.
If he had not made such an im
pression the wife of the proprietor
would not have expatiated about him
to her husband for about ten consecu
tive breakfasts.
If she had not thus expatiated her
husband would not have been led to
place young Higgins in a position
where be could look important and do
no particular harm, from which posi
tion he was successively pushed up to
higher places, and at last to a partner -
ship in the firm.
If young Higgins hadn’t been read
ing “Lady Fitz-Maudlin’s Dark
Secret” he would still be salesman in
the silk department But the world
sayS'that he is a man of wonderful
enterprise and a Napoleon of finance.
(Bravo, Yon Moltke.
Von Moltke once went to Lindau,
as be thought incognito. He ordered
a room on the ground floor in the
“Bayerische Hof” and went to bed
early, but forgot to draw bis blinds
down. When he was just going to
sleep he heard music drawing near.
He had been reoognized, after all, and
was going to be serenaded again. The
difficulty was how to get dressed with
out being seen. He dared not strike
a light But presently the glare of
torches lit up his room and the curi
ous crowd stood close to the windows,
their noses pressed against the panes.
In spite of that he felt that be must
rise, so he got up and dressed. But as
he put on each piece of his apparel,
the feat was greeted with loud and
prolonged applause.
‘Much Men nine In a Hall Chain
Departing1 from a friend's flat the
other day I almost fell over a chair
that stood against the banisters.
The friend explained: “That’s an
awkward place for a chair, I know,
but I find it necessary.” “How so?” I
queried. “Well, you know there are
people who will bid you an affection
ate farewell at the reception-room
door, and then when you accompany
them into the hall, they will stand
fifteen or twenty minutes on the top
stair continuing their chat. “So as I
grew tired of hanging over the banis
ters, X had the chair placed here, and
when I see the symptoms I drop into
it “You were saying—” “I was
saying nothing,” replied I, as I made
for the front door, "except good-by."
He Had Him There.
The late Sultan Burghash had a
very savage, chained lion, and as a
happy thought, offered it to Sir John'
Birk. then British consul-general to
Constantinople, reminding him that
the lion formed one of the supporters
of the royal arms above the gate
of the British consulate, and that the
presence of the real brute would,
therefore, be highly appropriate. “I
am sure that your highness would
never make an incomplete present,”
he replied, “and when you are able to
accompany the lion with a unicorn I
shall be delighted to receive your
munificent offer." _
Strange Cats.
Three «ftts of a species said' to be
unknown were discovered recently, in
the spire of a church at Brighton,
Mass. The cats are covered with a
coat of long, shaggy fur; their teeth
are long and almost like tusks. On
the nose of each is a long tuft of hair
resembling a tusk. The/ are very
agile and spring from rafter to rafter
with the ease of a squirrel. It is not
known how they got into the spire or
how long they have baen there, but it
is believed that they haio been con
fined in their aerial abode for many
l years. -. ^
A *wnJ-Slded Knight. ^
Few people have had a more varied
career than Sir Henry Loch, who ia
now In supreme control of all the Brit
ish forces and British territory in
South Africa. Ho has been in turn a
midshipman, a cavalry offloer in the
. British army and in the Turkish
army, a member of Lord Elgin’s spe
cial embassy to China, the tortured
inmate of a Chinese prison, a private
secretary to an English cabinet min
ister, a governor of the Isle of Man, a
commissioner of land revenue, and a
governor of the Australian eolony of
Victoria, before becoming the queen’s
high commissioner at the cape. -
It’s Hurd to Kill a Student.
A Pennsylvania girl drank one por
tion of a Seldlitz powder; then she
drank the other. A coroner’s inquest
was deemed unnecessary. Evidently
not all people are built on the same
plan, for a college student who per
formed this feat over twenty years
ago has not only escaped the coroner
so far, but has preserved a digestive
Power'' that has enabled nim to hold
many dignified positions, including
that of United StateB district attorney
for one of the New England states
JuHim Craig
r Cleveland, Ohio,
Hood’s Prom Its Merit
Severe Case of Blood Poisoning—
A Perfect Cure
"I will tell how valuable we have found
Hood’s Sarsaparilla. My brother Julius was
Blood Poisoned
and, although we had medical attendance, ha
failed to get any better. He was stek for nine
weary months, suffering with numerous sores,
which appeared first like water blisters, and
when their burst, wherever the water spreads
new sore formed.
The Pain Was Terrible
The trouble was principally upon his legs, and
we were afraid they would have to be ampo
tated. My grandmother urged us to try Hood’s
Sarsaparilla, but we thought It was of no use, as
we had spent hundreds et dollars which had
proven useless: but father said, ‘ We will try a
bottle.’ Soon after Julius began taking Hood’s
Hood’s x Cures
Sarsaparilla the sores all disappeared: and In a
short time he was perfectly cured/’ Emma
Cbaio, 01 Park St, 27th Ward, Cleveland, O.
Hood’s Pills are prompt and efficient yet
easy In action. Sold by all druggists. 20a,
O’NEILL ABSTRACT
COMPANY
OLDEST
FIRM
And have the only complete
set of Abstract Books in the
county. Always up to date.
Have Experienced Men in Business
BUY AND SELL
REAL ESTATE
O'NEILL, NEB.
T
FRED C. GATZ
■ww-^wwr we
f Fresh, Dried and Salt Meats
Sugar-cured Ham, Breakfast
Bacon, Spice Roll Bacon, all
Kinds of Sausages.
GEORGE A. McCUTCHEON.
PROPRUTOE OW
| - CENTRAL- ~
Livery Barn
O'NEILL, NEB.
- ;J NEW BUGGIES JR
tyaNEW TEAMS.
Everything Firpt-Cla??.
Barn Opposite OsmpbeU'slImplemeat House
P. J>. A J. Fi MllLLBN, '
' paonuMOM or Tin
RED-FROM
GOOD TEAMS, NEW RIGS
Prices Reasonable.
Boat of MoCufferto’a. O'NEILL, NEB.
y-:
Vft*
v v , '
’ - ■:
:SV- ::y<
VA
a. “ V
■ . .‘■-'ivy iv,1.
*
1
O’CON NOR & GALLAGHER
FINE CIGARS.,
It you want a drink of Rood liquor i
do not fall to call on u».
I
p
Purchdae Tickets and Consign your
Freight via the
F. E & M.V.andS.C.&P.
, RAILROADS.
TRAINS DEPART!
GOING BAST.
Passenger east, - 7 0:35 A. m.
Freight east, • - 10:45 A. K.
oona was*.
Freight west, * 1:45 P. x
Passenger west, • 5:15 p. u
Freight, • • 6:44 r. m.
The Elkhorn Line is now running Reclining
Chair Cara dally, between Omaha and Dead
wood, jree to holders of first-class transpor
tation.
Fer any information call on
W„ J. DOBBS, Agt.
O’NEILL, NEB.
NEW YORK . . .
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r<-s\mp >•?;
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western Journals. It consists of olght paxes with a supplement, Il
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aud two full page Illustrations, Is alone worth the price of paper.
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of the Allegheny mountain* aud la oetter adapted to tho needs of
the people of that section than any paper farther east. It la In ac
cord with the people of the west both In politic* and Literatures*
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Headquarters for
LUMBER,
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BUILDING MATERIAL!
The Stock is dry, being cured
By the largest dry-sheds in the world.
6=
(O'Neill,
Yards < Page,
g- (Allen,
0.0. SNYDER & 0.|
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Disease commonly comes on with slight
symptoms, which when rieglected increase
in extent and gradually grow dangerous.
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