The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, February 08, 1894, Image 5

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    Cft.-er.
kS'SS
fut"' Vi,.:NTS STATE UNIVERSITY.
11 ' Lincoln; LeavlttJBurnhum,
:,vl OFFICIAL DIRECTORY
STATE.
,er»or
..Lorenzo Croimse
i1'” ■. | nveruor.. ..T. J. Majors
'•■vt:iiry .......J. S. Bartley
..George H. Hustings
:.Eugene Moore
George Humphrey
ilia’
ll.
P
, if Hiatt, Alma; E. P. Holmes,'
l'1'T, Mallaleu, Kearney; M. J. Hull,
congressional.
. chiis. P. Manderson, of Omaha;
m™ of Madison. ...
• '• A •'itivcs—Wm. Bryan, Lincoln; O.
1!]VMISlSi-<iken Bow; Wm. McKelflhan, Bed
c!0”'1' JUDICIARY.
, .Samuel Maxwell
C^.. .'.'.’.Judge Post and T. L.Norval
VT OTKENTH judicial district.
I1,w ...M.P. Klnkaid,of O'Neill
*. .J.J. King of O'Neill
Judge
wrier
.A. L. Bartow of Chadron
je’oie-■ .... A. L. Warrlok. of O’Neill
Reporter...*
LAND OFFICES.
jester* •
Ifceiver..
geari^ter.
geceiver .
O’NEILL*
..W. D. Mathews.
'/......A. L. Towle.
NELIGH.
.,.C. W. Robinson
.W. B. Lambert
COUNTY.
.Goo McCutcheon
District court... ..John SktrvInK
»u,>';ir'.. .I. P. Mullen
Trt-asuicr. .Sum Howard
l*lf>..Bill Bethea
Cl'1' ;. Mike McCarthy
Deputy. Chae Hamilton
8»'rl“:. .Chas O’Neill
w!'«r schools .W. H. Jackson
iS'tm.1 .Mrs. W. K. Jackson |
...
Surveyor.
Attorney.
. .Dr. Trueblood
.M.F. Norton
*7.7.7.H. E. Murphy
SUPERVISORS.
.Frank Meore
. Wilson Brodle
" .Willie Calkins
..George Eckley
.Fred Schindler
.J. S. Dennis
. .W. B. Iialgh
. .D. G. Koll
. ...8. Gilllson
'.H. B. Kelly
.R. J. Hayes
...R. Slaymakor
.E.M. Waring
.8. L. Conger
..John Hodge
.J. H. Wilson
_John Murphy
George Kennedy
.John Alts
ames Gregg
Atkinson..
Cleveland.
Conley.
mum hers.
Beloit .
Dustin.
Emmett.
Ewing.
Francis. .
..
Grattan ..
(mu ' alloy.
Ion.
Ionian.
take.
..
O'Neill.
Paddock.
PIMutview.
Sr£EEEEi®«s
S. ian ■ :::::: :t; 'B^iSbutSe
S . ..J- B. Donohoe
Verdigris .. .G-..H. Phelps
Wyoming.. •• •
Willowdale.
. .J. E. While
, D. Trulllnger
CUT OF & NEILL.
Supervisor, John Murphy; Justices, E. U.
Benedict and B. Welton; Constables, John
Lappan and Perkins Brooks.
COUNCILMEN—FIRST WARD.
For two rears.—Ben DeYarman. For one
jear-Davia Stannard.
SECOND WARD.
For two years—Fred Gatz. For one year—
B. Mullen.
THIRD WARD.
For two years—J. C Smoot. For one year—
S, M. Wagers.
CITY OFFICERS.
Mayor, B. R. Dickson; Clerk, N. Martin;
Treasurer, David Adams; City Engineer,
John Ilorrisky; Police Judge, N. Martin;
Chief of Police, Charlie Hall; Attorney,
E. ii. Benedict; Weighmaster, Joe Miller.
ORA TTAN TO WNSHIP.
Supervisor, John Winn; Trearurer, John
Dwyer; Clerk, D. H. Cronin; Assessor, Mose
Campbell; Justices, M. Castello and Clias.
Ingorsoll; Justices, PerkiDS Brooks and Will
Burnside; ltoad overseer dist. 2ft, Allen Brown
(list. No. 4, John Enright.
SOLDIERS’ RELIEF C0MNIS8I0N.
Kepilar meeting first Monday in Febru
irf of each year, and at suoh other times as
i deemed necessary. Robt. Gallagher, Page,
tkairman; Wm. Bowen, O’Neill, secretary;
I. H. Clark, Atkinson.
ST.l’ATEICK’S CATHODIC CHURCH.
Services every Sabbath at 10:80 o’clock.
Very Kev. Cassidy, Postor. Sabbath sohool
Immediately following services.
IfETHODIST CHURCH. Services
ulevery Sunday morning at 11 o'clock, lm
jnediaiel followed by Sunday school. Preach -
Bin the evening atgo’clock. Prayer meeting
•etmesduy evening at 8 o'clock. Epwortb
hague devotional meeting Sunday evening
o'clock. F. El.Lis, Pastor.
V M. C. A. Bible study and oonseoration
meeting every Monday evening in
Kcturo room, M,K. church.
Will Lowbik, Secretary.
It POST, NO. 86. The Gen. John
NeiU Post, No. 86, Department of Ne
hturdu^* jneot the first and third
>&li O'
«f»y evening of each month in Masonic
1 Neill S. J. Smiih, Com.
pI.KlIOKN VALLEY LODGE, I. O. O.
fSA; „M°ets even- Wednesday evening in
KH 0W8’ hal1, visiting brothers oordlally
">ted to attend.
t- t.iiuujHT, N. G. E. W. Adams, Sec.
ft. ABFI
''Meets i
-IKLl) CHAPTER, R. A. M
a»T!t8.0.n Brat and third Thursday of each
“ftn in Masonic hall.
■1Jo“RS See. J. C. Harnisii, H, P
K
OP p.—HELMET LODGE. U. D.
convention •**ro*,*» Mnn/lav o4- U A’olnnlr n
«l in every Monday at 8 o clock p.
*rtumj-‘iuvfted0W8’ “““• Vi8lting bretbern
t r E. M. Grady, C. C.
e- Evans, K. of E. and 8.
0’» ENCAMPMENT NO. 80.'I.
o. u. t'. meets every second and fourth
ot each month in Odd Fellows’ Hall.
Scribe, O. L. Bright,
E1'o^|C?I>GE no. 41, DAUGHTERS
, 'JMltllhKAH, meets every 1st and 3d
“i oi each month in Odd Fellows’ Hall,
An,„„ „ Lizzie Smith, N. G.
^ IE Hehshiser, Secretary.
^R?™?ELn LODGE, N0.85.F.& A.M.
on ot >Kar communications Thursday nights
W t t?,fe tbe full of the moon.
Evans, Sec. A. L. Towle, W. M.
NO. 1710. M. W. OF A.
each mn.f,? ! u»o Bret and third Tuesday in
D H 0,')to in the Masonic hall.
*• tr°nin, clerk. It, J. Hayes, V. C.
0, U.
•.and
W. NO. 163, Meets second
°* eacb mouth in
^■MoHugh, itec. G. W. Meals. M. A,
POSTOFFICE DIRCETORY
l
Arrival of Mali.
Sttrv J “■ y- »■ R.—FROM THE EAST.
ay’ Sunday included at.5:15 p m
■herrs.. o. K.ROM the west.
r. Sunday included at.9:45 am
^ves orowl!AV1FIC SHORT LINE.
'^PUi'ts VCr^ except Sunday at 11:35 p
9:55 am
Vts M(,n,int:iI.'.r; AND CHELSEA.
;*ttite8Tw!i5ay’)Ked-ttn<* Friday at7:00am
Jtsday,Thurs.and Sat. at..i:00pm
imparts M,.!!lNEII:!;AND paddock.
tffivts 1 °"‘iay- Wed.and Friday at..7:00 am
uesday, Thurs. and Sat. at. .4:90 p m
{''“‘ns VnneEIr'tAND NIOBRARA.
*ftive8Tn<i']1|uy’JVed-and Fri.at_7:00 a m
Tuesday, Thurs. and Sat. at.. .4:00 p m
Joivnj *J;L and cdmminsville.
NartsMnn ' ® ®“d Fridays at. ..11:30 p m
"on., w«d. and Friday at.1:00pm
FORQOTABOUT 8HOES.
Tom* Lore Fl«, ruM to Go Hotu#.
keeping, snd AI1 b Wel|.
'‘Youth is so sweetly simple, and
world*® * tha“ aU thewide- wide
What are the prosaic things of life
to two young hearts when they throb
in unison? Nothing. And nothing is
tEV-T For is nothing also
what they have to go on? And do
* w Wel1, we sh<>“id smile!
He had loved her, oh! so tenderly,
W^\TCh,a,ayear- And 8he had
loved him always, always.
He was aland she 18, and he had
0 pe,r^eek' Great heavens, how
they did love!
‘Precious darling,” he murmured,
one evening as the pale moon hung
its golden crescent in the blue, blue
8hy, “letus fly!”
The dear, silly angels thought they
had wings.
“Where to, Algie?” she whispered
eagerly, forgetful of her syntax, or
prosody or whatever it is that governs
a final proposition.'
“Where we may be made one, dar
ling, he said ecstatically.
‘But, Algie,” she hesitated, “we
have no money, have we?’’
“Darling,” he whispered, I have 810
a week.”
Oh! Algie,” she whispered, “for
give me for doubting you That will
give us theater tickets twice a week,
soda water and candy, won’t it, and
what more could heart wish?”
Precious darling!” he exclaimed,
Kissing her rapturously.
And so they were married.
SURE TO BE ACQUITTED.
All a nit Was an Election Bow and Did
Mot Amount to Mooli.
“What’s your defense?” asked the
attorney who had been sent for to de
fend a man charged with murder.
“It wa3 a mistake,” said the pris
oner.
How a mistake?” asked the lawyer.
“Well, I hit him with a brick, but I
didn’t mean to kill him.”
“Did you throw the brick at him in
tending that it should hit him?”
“No; I didn’t throw it at him at>all.
I kept it in my hands and just
pounded him on the head with it.”
“But you meant to hit him?”
“Sure I did, but I didn’t mean to
kill him.”
“Um! Well, I don’t believe I can
get you off on that plea. What was
the trouble about?”
“I was trying to convince him that
he ought to vote for Mullaney. ”
“And wouldn’t he do it?”
“Naw. He said the other man was
twice as good a man and that he
wouldn’t vote for Mullaney for seven
teen men like me, and then I hit him.
And now they swear they’ll hang me.”
“O well, don’t worry about that. I
see my way clear now. If I can have
the trial set for some day just before
election I’ll raise the cry of political
prosecution, and that will pull you
through all right. It’s a good thing
you were talking politics, though.
You’d hang if it had been anything
else.”
Another Courtship Ended.
He had been worshiping her for
months, but had never told her, and
she didn’t want him to. He had come
often and stayed late, and she could
only sigh and hope. He was going
away the next day on. his vacation
and he thought the last night was the
time to spring the momentous ques
tion. He kept it to himself, however,
until the last thing. It was 11:30 by
the clock, and it wasn’t a very rapid
clock. “Miss Mollie,” he began trem
ulously, “I am going away to-mor
row.” “Are you?” she said, with the
thoughtlessness of girlhood as she
gazed wistfully at the clock. “Yes,”
he replied. “Are you sorry?” “Yes,
very sorry,” she murmured. “I
thought you might go away this even
ing.” Then she again gazed at the
clock wistfully, and he told her good
night. _
Saved by a Baby Incubator.
Dr. C. C. Bippus of Allegheny, was
called to attend a woman who had
fallen downstairs. The shock caused
her to give birth to a 6-months’ child.
The doctor thought the child dead,
wrapped it in paper and took it to his
office, intending to have it buried. At
his office Dr. Bippus detected life in
the little body. He quickly rigged up
an incubator, which he warmed by
bottles of hot water. He put the baby
in it and nourished it by injections of
scrapings from raw beef. The young
ster gradually grew stronger during
the over four months of its captivity,
and the other day Dr. Bippus took it
out find surprised the mother, who
had thought it dead, by restoring it
to her. _
Lawyers In Trnrte.
“Do you know,” asked one of your
nose-for-news men of the writer,
“that many lawyers are engaging in
other business in addition to their
profession? There was a time when
a lawyer would think it a tarnish on
his profession if he did anything else.
But it is not so any more in this city.
I know one lawyer who has an in
terest in a meat market, and I know
a judge of the supreme court who ia
the owner of a barber shop. He
bought the place one day before ho
was on the bench as an investment,
and it pays so well that he is holding
on to it __
In the Desert.
When Mr. David Lindsay returned
from his expedition across a part of
the Australian desert some time ago.
he said the whole of that almost
waterless country was inhabited by
natives who get their water supply by
draining the roots of the mallee-tree,
which yield quantities of pure water.
This tree, absorbing moisture front
the air, retains it in considerable
quantities in its roots and thus makes
it possible to live in an arid region,
which would otherwise be uninhab
itable.
FOLLOWING PRECEDENT.
Old BUI Botts Found the C'liinoae Not
at All Accommodating.
A good, honest fellow in his way
was Bill Botts, but he had never had
an opportunity to study moral philos
ophy as taught in the colleges and
universities. He came from Bidde
ford, in Devon, and very likely some
of his ancestors had helped Drako
•‘wallop" the Spaniards. He had fol
lowed in tlielr footsteps by enlisting
in tho navy to fight for his country
whenever called upon to do so.
When he returned from a voyage to
China he brought with him a present
for a gentleman who had been yery
kind to his old mother during his ab
sence. It was a curiously fashioned
Chinese garment made of bits of a
species of straw strung together.
"Blase, snr, you must excoos un be
ing torn,” he said bashfully, when he
presented it, "the Chinaman wouldn’t
part with un alsy.”
He had run across a Chinaman
wearing it somewhere in the streets
of llong Kong, and tho unfortunate
celestial not understanding his sum
mary request to "Hand . that over
here,” ho had simply yanked it off
him.
To tho suggestion that his oonduot
had hardly been consistent with strict
honesty he replied:
“Beggin’ your pardon, sur, ho wus
only a haythen, an’ I never heard
that taking things from a haythen
counted as stalin’.”
“Well,” replied his friend, "If many
illustrious Englishmen had not acted
on that assumption I don’t know
where the British empire would now
be, so I’ll keep tho heathen’s gar*
ments.”
THE MANDOLIN OIRL.
She Wbi a Fraud, of Course, Dul Nona
the Leat Interesting.
In the corner of a New York cable
car sat a charming girl. She was
beautifully gowned, faultlessly
gloved, bore a most becoming hat on
her piquant little head, and on her lap
carried a mandolin case. Of course
she was the object of intense interest
to the other passengers, and a man
who had seen her nearly every day in
the car and always carrying the man
dolin put her down in his mind as the
most devoted student of that musical
instrument he had ever encountered.
Behind him sat two shopgirls and they
were discussing the interesting un
known.
"There is that mandolin girl
again," said one of them. "I can’t
bear to look at her.”
“Why not?” asked the other girl;
“I think she'is beautiful.”
“So she is, but she is such a fraud.
She clerks in a store downtown, and
doesn’t want people to know she is a
shopgirl. So she carries that everlast
ing mandolin back and forth to con
vey the impression that she is a
society girl out for a music lesson. I
have known of her little dodge for
more than a year, and am tired of it
I wish she would carry a tennis racket
or a poodle for a change.
“The mandolin case is very conven
ient, however, for another girl told
me that she carries her lunch, her
overshoes, a comb and brush and lots
of other things in it. It is not honest,
though, and I feel contempt for her. ”
Possible.
A popular English Nonconformist
minister was staying with a family in
Glasgow, while on a visit to that city,
whither he had gone on a deputation
from the Wesleyan missionary society.
At dessert, when invited to take some
line fruit which he declined, he men
tioned to the family a curious circum
stance concerning himself—he had
never in his life tasted an apple, pear,
grape or any other kind of green fruit.
This fact caused considerable amaze
ment to most of the family, but a
cousin who was present—a cautions
Scotchman of a most practical turn of
mind—listened to the statement with
great unconcern, and when the vari
ous exclamations which it had aroused
subsided, he remarked dryly: “It’s a
great peety ye hadna been in Para
dise, and there micht na hae been
any fa’.”
A Cool Chinaman.
Coolness is a powerful weapon, even
against wild beasts. The other day a
philosophic Chinaman, in the Straits
settlements, was walking along a
country road, and sucking a length of
sugar cane. Out of the woods leaped
a tiger. Some people in the China
man's position would have bolted;
others would have screamed; still oth
ers would have fainted; but John
merely gave the tiger a tap oa the
head with his sugar cane and then
calmly went on sucking the tooth
some juices. The tiger was so com
pletely upset with his unexpected re
ception that he fled!
Carrier Pigeons.
The carrier-pigeon, when traveling,
never feeds. If the distance be long,
it flies without stopping to take nutri
ment, and at last arrives thin, ex
hausted, almost dying. If corn be
presented to it, it refuses, contenting
itself with drinking a little water
and then sleeping. Two hours later
it begins eating with great modera
tion, and sleeps again immediately
afterwards. If its flight has been very
prolonged, the pigeon will proceed in
this manner for forty-eight hours
before recovering its normal mode of
feeding.
A Vagrant lilt of Advice.
We do not know to whom the fol
lowing vagrant bit of advice should
bo credited, but it is good sound sense.
“When a man playfully points a gun
or pistol at you knock him down.
Don’t stop to inquire whether it is
loaded or not—knock him down.
Don’t b'e particular what you knock
him down with—only see that he is
thoroughly knocked down. If a
coroner’s inquest be held let it be on
I the other fellow—he won’t be missed.”
IT WENT DEMOCRATIC.
Colonel Vlmlra'i First Sod Experience
With n Virginia Jury.
"Washington not only has among
its wonders and beauties the charming
city of Tacoma," said Colonel Will
Visscher, “but it has some remarkable
characters, sah. There is, for Instance,
Colonel Patrick Henry Winston, late
fedoral attorney in that state, who is
a descendant of the old ‘give-me
liborty-or-glve-mo-death* Henry, so
dear to the memory of the sohoolboy
dcclaimer.
"When Winston began practicing
law, after graduating at a North Car
olina college and somebody's law of
floe, he settled in Lynchburg, Va. Ills
i first case was tho defense of a negro
who was charged with grand larceny.
Winston said of that case: T con
ducted It, sir, witli such consummate
ability, and made such an eloquent
speech in behalf of my client that I
felt oertain of his acquittal. Tho
case was given to the jury about noon
and I went homo to dinner. On tho
way down to tho court house after
the noon meal I met a mulatto whom
]| had seen loafing about the court
room, and I asked him if the jury had
come in.
" • "Yas, sah,” he said, "do jury’s
done come in, sah.”
"' "Do you know what it did?"
'• ‘The man looked serious and some
what alarmed as he said: "Tell you,
Mars Winston, dat jury's done gone
Dimmercratio. ”
“ ‘My heart sank. It was shortly
after the close of the war, and I knew
what it meant for a jury to "go Dim
mercratic” in a negro case down there
in Virginia. My case was lost.”
AN INQUIRING MIND.
The Auloiu>Lookln( Men Aiked t Very
Touching Question.
“And now,” said the learned lectur
er, who had addressed a small, but
deeply attentive audience at the vil
lage hall, "I have tried to make theso
problems, abstruse as they may ap
pear, and involving In their solution
the best thoughts, the closest analysis,
and the most profound investigations
of our best scientific men for many
years—I have triod, I Bay, to make
them seem Comparatively simple and
easily understood, in the light of mod
ern knowledge. Before I close this
lecture I shall be glad to answer any
questions that may occur to you as to
points that appear to need clearing
up or that may have been overlooked. ”
There was a silence of a few mo
ments and then an anxious-looking
man in the rear of the hall rose up.
"I would take it as a favor,” he said,
"if you could tell mo whether science
has produced as yet any reliable and
certain cure for warts?"
A Race of Giant Cannibals
Unlike as it may seem to some who
read these lines, it is a fact, neverthe
less, that there is an island in the
gulf of California, not more than sixty
miles from the Mexican mainland,
which is inhabited by the remnants of
a race of giant cannibals. This
startling discovery was made by a
West coast naturalist early in 1891,
and has since been confirmed by both
United States and Mexican explorers.
Mr. McNamara, the scientist referred
to, has a photograph of one of the men
found by him on the island, that in
dividual, although not one of the
largest, being over seven feet in
height The island upon which they
were found is known as the island or
isle of Leri, and the original discoverer
says that there is every evidence of
cannibalism among them.
Writing the Scriptures.
The scriptures were first written on
skins, linen cloth or papyrus, and roll
ed up as we do engravings The Old
Testament was written in the old He
brew character—an offshoot of the
Phoenician. It was a symbol language
as written, having no vowels The
consonants were only written, and the
vowel sound supplied by the voice.
The words ran together in a continu
ous line. After the Hebrew became a
dead language vowels were supplied
to preserve usage, which was passing.
After the Babylonish captivity the
written Hebrew was modified by the
Aramaic,and schools of reading taught
the accent and emphasis Then came
the separation of words from each
other, then division into verses.
She Squelched the Lloenae Clerk
Just as the door of the city clerk's
office was due to be closed the other
night, two young ladies called and
stated that they were looking for a
marriage license. “This is not the
place," explained the sober-faced
clerk. “The clerk of the court issues
them at the court house, but you are
too late to get down there before he
goes home." “Isn’t that provoking?”
remarked one of the maidens, with a
pout equally provoking. “They told
us that this was the place to get
licenses.” “It is. Dog licenses,” the
facetious clerk answered. “The license
is for me, not you. sir,” answered the
girl, and a deep hush fell on the city
seal.
Not Much ot a Company,
A British regiment stationed in
India had listened to a sermon on
“the company of apostles,” from its
“padre,” now a colonial bishop. As
the officer sat at mess the sermon
came up in the conversation and va
rious opinions of its merits were
heard.‘ Presently the adjutant, a
silent, saturnine man who had risen
from the ranks, remarked; “To tell
the truth, I don’t think much of the
apostles as a company—only twelvo,
rank and file."
••£ Pinrlbut Cnam" ou Cains,
The legend “E Pluribus Unum,"
which appears on a number of United
States coins, was never authorized by
law. Its first use is said to have been
upon a coin struck at Newbury, N. Y.,
in 1777, before the adoption of our
constitution.
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EL SICK?
Disease commonly comes on with slight
symptoms, which when neglected increase
in extent and gradually grow dangerous.
tare ripans tabules
take ripans tabules
RIPANS TABULES
RIPANS TABULES
Ripans Tabules Regulate the System and Preserve the Health.
EASY TO TAKE, QUICK TO ACT.
RIPANS TABULES
take the place of
A COMPLETE
MEDICINE CHEST
and should hr kept for
tia tin every family...
SAVE MANY A DOCTOR’S BILL.
Sold by Druggists or sent by mall on receipt of price.
Box (0 vials), 76 cents. Package <1 boxes), 32.
For Free Sanities address
THE RIPANS CHEMICAL CO.
10 6PRUCE STREET, • • NEW YORK.
ONE BOX SENT BY MAIL ON RECEIPT OF 75 CTS.
BY II. T. CLARKE & CO. - LINCOLN, NEBRASKA
Sioux City, O’Neill and
Western Railway
THE SHORT ROUTE
SlOUX ClTY
Jackson, Laurel, Randolph, Os
mond, Plainview, O'Jvdll.
Connects at Sioux City with all diverging
lines, landing passengers In
NEW UNION PASSENGER STATION
Ilomeseekcrs will find golden opportun
ities along this line. Investigate
before going elsewhere.
THE CORN BELT OF AMERICA
For rates, time tables, or other Information
(PACIFIC SHORT LINE)
BETWEEN
AND
mts or address
Receiver.
W. B.McNIDER,
Gcn’l Pass. Agent.
NEW YORK .. .
ILLUSTRATED
NEWS
The Organ of Honeot Sport In Amorloo
ALL THE SENSATIONS OF THE DAY
PICTURED IT THE
FOREMOST ARTISTS OF THE COUNTRY
Life in New York OrmphiCAlly Illuatrated.
Breesy but Reapectable.
$4 FOR A YEAR, *2 FOR SIX MONTHS '
Do you want to be poeted? Then send
f" t
your aubacriphon to the 1
SEW MS ILLUSTRATED SEWS,
3 PARK PLACE, NEW YORK CITY.
' PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY.
- ‘>3 \.M