7W.-V;, •;, ■ ■,■■" V ' Hfe* VK. ■-' :w V V4^. V¥‘ .• ' « ’ 3> 's' -V •, < • *• * > ->,?■? ‘-V *t* t^v ? , ,' •■ ■ ‘.-.!V ',v-i''•■■ '!'■ '-■ : •' V ' . '■ ■ •.-.. ■■■-.-• ,s- ■ h .*\**r' LT>a ’ VjV w‘ ' # JOT •> - ! . .». **. X. ‘ ’ * '“'l -'-V; *•>** - ,,' , FRONTIER. v • _ v;,'k • ; ■; '. ■'. #...';•. ;-Uft ill.- sb'£.! , - vM'O 'iv >. - ‘-r.. I T,, '•'•8 v ' ■ s-'::; . :-v i'*v -:i'; v . : ,. : '■ : s ' - ~ ;< ?r>* >' ■ n, ■ ' .' i . ■ .v s■«" - ■* ;i,-. ■■■ : ■■. , :. L. Darr. Mrs. S. C. Sample, who had been vis ting friends iu O'Neill for a week, re" irneil to her home in Butte Monday. Wiieu in need of coal go to Biglin's ml yard, tie keeps the best coal in »wn and his prices are reasonable. 26 tf Billv Pollock is making a very read me paper out of the Peoples’ Advocate, Wblished at Ewing, and of independent politics. , A radiator exploded in the school muse yesterday. No damage was done m the hoys and girls in the room were •illy frightened. On January 29 County Judge Mc »iian issued a marriage license to Ailliam Shannon and Miss Sarah Pink both of Scottville. FOR SALE—10 head of farm horses. ^*nt to close them otjt at once; will *11 them for $30 to $7() per head. *”3 Edgar Thompson. Judge Bowen went down to Lincoln uesilay on business. The Judge ex *cls to trade some Holt county land °r Lincoln property, to which place he * thinking of removing. It the master commissioner U"gh and Kautzman—what fctrious Wit' •evil affair an il pair!—have demonstrated their cry “good Lord!” “good to suit any emergency. It ia very to . painful to read the Sun ' ®t McHugh attemps to be funny. He *h°m as much humor in his system •rattlesnake and lacks the brains to t“»t intelligently before his readers. Atkinson Graphic greeted its trs last week in a bran new dress of "West style and ,11" trimmings •Pend. it ; Her. most modern cut, and furbelows to cor ueater and better than p,,.8 'ai*‘es of the Episcopal church ,11,aa "vster supper at the residence T- Dobbs Monday evening. A at|d profitable time was had: for the guests and profitable for church. ! Sanfi °fd Parker, Spencer’s backbone, Je,lin ll|>°n us Tuesday. Mr. Parker &t tile IlDtllrimr kxntnnnn tn flnnn. hri « -- hanking business in Spen L 8 nourishing, and that he hopes ltd ° ^ U,'*° t0 ma^0 farm loans. c°unty real estate security would 00 money for investors. ! The hum1 a<*e,’endePt may find amusement ^ mipating uie action 0f Thk Fkon (tictJeara hence in regard to tlie dis ^--hip, but it will not have the V en Ike time nfluencing us in the least. ,#rriffl0>iriEK W‘" ^e f°un U I will dig Its gravo. Who will throw It luf "I," said llonest Jehu Mileage, "I'll do it tho first trlulagei I'll throw It in." Who will oover It up? "We," said the supervisors, "Wo'U oover It up toe-nails and inoisOMi . We'll covor It up." And Tnu Fboxtub still * ilteg. . •w'< ‘ mw rfsA ■ - isili m i*.;' rmu Boyd County Press: A few evening* * young couple not n thouiend mile* ' » •way wore compelled to burn a rolling :>i% pin In their endeavor* to keey warm. V’ No Man venture* the assertion that M this is not the first case of a rolling 'pin , ^ being burnt. The blundering Jew, who edits the sausage mill that turns out bologna man ufactured from bleeding parts of the * English language, by which he labors to express the suspicion of an Idea, says that the ‘‘county alliances should throw \ nS their Inaotlve lethargy.” Just what '} kind of lethargy he would have them adopt he leaves his readers to guess, but | It Is fair to presume that he would favor an active lethargy. Now Webster says' lethargy Is preternatural sleepiness; , ; morbid drowsiness; continued or pro found sleep fipm which a person can scarcely be awakened; dullness; Inaction. 41? It would be an Inspiring sight and well worth the price of admission to .see the county alliance possessed of active ‘‘pre- - ternatural sleepiness” and laboring with a severe case of active '‘morbid drowsi- V;l|| ness," or wrapped in Morpheus’ arms in Mf a masterly active “profound sleep." Men ;i| with the frame of a mastodon and about as much brains, occasionally attempt to v £ edit newspapers and express premature, ill-begotten ideas with the cats and dogs || of the English language and nomadlo ff hieroglyphics, and still people wonder ’’;V at crime. , >, . Practicability of Irrigation. '-JM Editors Frontier-At the last meet* mg of the irrigation convention held on January 17, there was an article read on the underflow of the Elkhorn Valley - and in discussing the practicability of ' the plan to develop the underflow. The chairman of the convention mode the statement that the development of the '7 ’ underflow has been tried and found impracticable. . u Mow 1 want to show your readers, and Slyr also the members of that convention, by r this article, that it is a success and it Is , now in use in a large number of places .'V in this and other states and hoe been found reliable in every respect, and there Is no doubt in my mind but that . it is practicable in the Elkhorn Valley , and will be one of the main links in the ' chain that will make the canal through the Elkhorn Valley a success. Three of these sub-canals are now flowing in the Arkansas valley. One of these, the first constructed, has been flowing four years discharging DO cubic feet per second, or 224.41 gallons or over 18,440 per minute, or over 806,400 gallons per hour and all the proprietors of most all the canals in that valley, large and small, are figuring on providing for the work a supply of water from the underflow. On the South Platte, near Ogalalla, Neb., the same method met with signal success. The water having been flowing in the sub-caual for more than three years. A new canal, or a system of sub-canal, tapping the underflow of the South Fork of the Republican river in northwest Kansas is well under way. Near Limou, Colorado, a Denver company has invested a half million dollars in irrigation works which em braces large storage reservoirs fed in part by the underflow from the Big Sandy. For 28 years the valley lands of Creek, a branch af Salmon Creek, abundant crops by the underflow. 1889 the water of Pine Creek diverted from its bed for mining ations. The result was entire fnilure crops. Ou Clover Creek, a branch the same Pine Creek, the water in this creek was several feet below the surface of the ground of the adjoining land and by a set of dams, so os to bring the stream almost even with the surface, the stream was so raised as to afford sufficient water to irrigate crops. These are illustrations ot the fact that throughout the plains of Kansas. Colo rado and Nebraska this method of securing water is a success and that it will be the reclamation of large areas of land which would be without water supply for irrigation but for the employ ment of this method can scarcely be doubted by any one who will carefully study the facts of surface characteristics of the Elkhorn Valley and divides its draws, and their outcrops, its springs, sand beds and dooIs together with an intelligent consideration of the facts to be drawn from a knowledge of wells made by private enterprise throughout the Elkhorn Valley show forth its sub terranean resources as clearly and with as much certainty as a man’s character may he judged from his face. . . R. E. Bowdut.. . ■ ■ :V’. 4 f‘. Pine yield In was oper of of y;- :f: O'; Kt 4$. ■ V- -■ Vlfp CSS V---ir v*-'** \ A*. ’ -,V. !*; • -- ’’ i