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

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    pr.
yL OFFICIAL DIRECTORY
STATS.
mto'
'cll*"t..o. Alien
.A-• • ”-'ll
Governor..
.Lorenzo Crounse*
.T. J. Majors
—J. C. Allen
, ifroiisuro
,riioy
r,.ne’rui'.GeorgeH. Hastings
t,lia' ...Eugene Moore
litnl* ..... inwre
I iinii BuUtngs.. George Humphrey
public instruction.A. K. Goudy
f0FNT3 STATE UNIVERSITY.
' . Lincoln: Leavitt Burnham,
— ■ . . . 1 l«wn ■ I? Lg IIaImas
n (Jere, bincum, outuusuif
i:Ui' iM Hiatt, Alma; E. P. Holmes,
i*,,a: it MiUlaieu, Kearney; M. J. Hull,
•Nl': *
congressional.
—(Tlnis. F. Manderaon, of Omaha;
’ A!!nt,'itives—Wm!1 Bryan. Lincoln: O.
Bow; Wm. McKelffhan, Bed
“J JUDICIARY.
, .Samuel Maxwell
^/iS .'.'.'.Judge Post andT. L.Norral
l°!'TKKNTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT.
,[,lt ...M.P. Klnkald,of O'Neffl
Iff..J. J. King of O’Neill
.. .A.L. Bartow of Chadron
I!C er .A. L. Warriok. of O’Neill
^ ,e LAND OFFICES. *
O’NBILIn
.W. D. Mathews.
rw,cr. .A. L. Towle.
«lver.
V KBLIOB.
.C. W. Robinson
.. .W.B. Lambert
Jf,Y,e District Court..• ..Joh^klryt^
pal.* ■
tourer..
O. M. Colling
,.J. P. Mullen
.Sum Howard
flf'J. Bill Bethea
t'k... ..Mike McCarthy
p»Vr. ......Chas Hamilton
f'l!;.; .Chus O’Neill
:p“ y*'iYh(Yola .W. K. Jackson
lfl of schools.. " ".Hra. W. B. Jackson
.*.Dr. Trueblood
r,MU‘r't.'. •........M. F. Norton
.* ..;fl. E. Murphy
supervisors.
... Frank Meore
. .....Wilson Brodle
f !1 ..Willie Calkins
....George Eckley
f®, crs. .Fred Schindler
'l“!1. .J. S. Dennis
. .8. Gllltson
., . .H. B. Kelly
r'i .W. . ........ .H. J. Hayes
Hfviilev .B. Slay maker
. ..E.M. Waring
. .8. L. Conger
»*“. .John Hodge
..j. H.wnson
.°eor8ejobnAit£
MSfjr...'.James Gregg
ft Ij’reek '''............... F. W. Phillips
51 _ :.peter Kouy
ratoga..
nd Creek.•••• ••
..* •
COUNTY.
.Geo McCutcheon
'ridan—
■ilds.
jrdtgris ..
joining...
illowdale..
....John Crawford
.L. A. Jllllson
" ...H. O. Wine
.. .T. E. Doolittle
.J. B. Donohoe
""''.V............ G. H.Phelps
.j. E. While
.D. Trullinger
C11Y OF Of NEILL.
ipervisor, John Murphy; Justices, E. H.
ledkt and B. Welton; Constables, John
ipau and Perkins Brooks.
COUSCILMEN—FIRST WARD. .
or two years.—Ben DeYarman. For one
r-I)aviu Stannard.
SECOND WARD.
or two years—Fred Gats. For one year—
lullen.
THIRD WARD.
irtwoyears—J.CSmoot.' For one year—
l. Wagers.
CITY OFFICERS.
ayor, It. K. Dickson; Clerk, N. Martin;
wurer, David Adams; City Engineer,
n Horrisky; Police Judge, N. Martin;
;f of Police, Charlie Hall; Attorney,
1. Benedict; WeighmaBter, Joe Miller.
ORA TTAN TO WNSHIP.
ipervisor, John Winn: Trearurer, John
per; Clerk, D. H. Cronin: Assessor, Mose
ipbell; Justices, M. Castello and Chas.
waoll; Justices, Perkins Brooks and Will
iskie; Road overseer dist. 2ft, Allen Brown
. No. 4, John EnrJght.
OLDIEIW RELIEF C0MNI8SI0N\
Regular meeting first Monday in Febru
7 of each year, and at such other times as
deemed necessary, ltobt. Gallagher, Page,
airman; Wm. Bowen, O'Neill, secretary;
H. Clark, Atkinson.
T.PATRICK’S CATHOLIC CHURCH.
Services every Sabbath at 10:80 o’clock.
try ttev. Cassidy. Postor.
imediately following servloes.
Sabbatn school
ETHODIST CHURCH. Services
•very Sunday morning at 11 o’clock, 1m
iatel followed by Sunday school. Preach
ntheevenlug atSo’clock. Prayer meeting
nesday evening at 8 o’clock. Epworth
;ue devotional meeting Sunday evening
U o'clock. F. Ellis, Pastor.
r M. C. A. Bible study and consecration
1 meeting every Monday evening in
tture room, M.K; church.
Will Lowrie, Secretary.
} A. R. POST, NO. 86. The Gen. John
J»0 Neill Post, No. 86, Department of Ne
G. A. R., will meet the first and third
S*S?y evening of each month In Masonic
O'Neill S. J. SMilH, Com.
RN VALLEY LODGE, I. O. O.
its every Wednesday evening in
s’ hall. Visiting brothers cordially
ttend.
Ilona.
hit, N, G. E. W. Adams, Sec.
JiRFlELD CHAPTER, R. A. M
"tats oil first and third Thursday of eaoh
m Masonic hall.
" J. bonus Seo. J. C. Harhibh, H, P
K W p—helmet lodge, u. d.
Wnvuntion fivnnr Wnnrtav at. H n'nlnok D.
«% invited.
t r P„. „ E. M. Gbady, C. C.
Evans, K. of R. and 8.
rgOLI. ENCAMPMENT NO. 80. I.
u,„ 0.1. meets every aeoond and fourth
™“f» ot each month In Odd Fellows’ Hall.
Scribe, 0. L. Bright,
y>l>OE NO. 41, DAUGHTERS
id*, J^BHEKAH, meets every 1st and 3d
i ot each month In Odd Fellows’ Hall.
„ Lizzie Smith, N. O.
E Hehsiiiseb, Secretary.
H&ELD LODGE, N0.95.F.&A.M.
iorffiar communications Thursday nights
the fuU of the moon.
fcVAtNs, Sec. A. L. Towle, W. M.
D, \n the Masonic hall.
u- Cronin, clerk " "
® Odd
ntion every Monday at 8 o'clock p.
Fellows' hall. Visiting brethem
fcEAMPNo. 1710. M. W.OFA.
, on the first and third Tuesday In
R. J. Hayes, V. 0.
i,?n’AT' 'Y- NO. 153. Meets second
;Tudsday of each mouth In
, ;»oniC hall.
' ”lcHu«h, Hec. G. W. Meals. M. A,
POSTOFFICB DIRCBTORY
Arrival of Malls
htTiW i M- Y- H- FBOM THE BAST.
1Q8J,Sunday Included at.6:16pm
dap «, p,“OM THB west.
h Sunday Included at.9:45 am
pacific short line.
^e«PT.nJ“V"W bhurt link.
Wu ,y day ozoept Sunday at 11:35 p m
* “ 9:65 am
ELSEA.
Friday at 7:00 am
!P»rt«M.,ll .NEII‘I‘ AND CHELSEA.
Wed. and Friday
1 Jtsday,Thurs.and Sat. at.. 1:00pm
t»rts ,SKILL AND PADDOCK.
fltteTiWed aud Friday at..7:00
Tuesday, Thurs. and Sat. at..4:80
‘i skill and niobbaba
:00 am
p m
harts u, .'•■ll and niobbaka.
'r'vesT,Y""ly-wed.andFrl.at....7:00 a B
hesday, Thurs. and Sat. at...4:00p H
ves £"««. and cdmminsville.
end Fridays at. ..11:30 p m
Mhn„ Wed. and Friday at.1:00 p m
METHODS OF FARMINQ.
How the Characteristics of Nationality
Crop Ont In Tillage.
For half a hundred miles about New
York the country is a region of small
farms. Nearly all are carefully tilled,
but the manner in which each is ton
ducted comes close to indicating the
nationality of the owner. The native
American likes a lawn in front of his
house and leaves uncultivated strips
near the fence of his fields. Also his
preference in the way of crops is for
grain.
The Englishman and the German
devote much space to berries and veg
etables, and both delight in displays
of flowers before their houses. The
Frenchman is sure to be a grape
grower. He, too, revels in flowers,
but he fosters those that, cut or as
potted plants, will find a city market.
The Irishman is a raiser of potatoes,
cabbages and corn. His home dis
plays little outside adornment, but
almost always there is about it
an air of solid comfort, and one may
be sure to see a pig-pen not far from
th@ cottage.
Abroad “land is land,” and those
who have been tenants of holdings that
cost them an annual rental of $20 per
acre retain their habit of close culti
vation when farming in the United
States.
Here, again, the difference between
the American and the foreigner crops
out. The former is prodigal of soil
and lets the difficult spots alone; the
latter utilizes every inch of dirt clear
to the roadway and uses fertilizers
with skill and advantage to himself.
WANTED TO CONTINUE.
A Grave-Digger Not Anxloni to Go Oat at
Bniilness by Dying.
A man whose occupation is that of
grave-digger and a woman whose
trade is cleaning soiled linen sat side
by side in an electric car. They were
on very intimate terms. His name
was John,and hers was Bridget. Said
Bridget:
“How be you now-a-da’ss, John? It’s
a long time since I seen you last.”
“Not over and above, Bridget. Me
and the old woman ’ave got the grip
had.”
“Why for land’s sake don’t you go
to bed and sweat it out? You never’ll
be any better as long as you be out in
this grippy air.”
“Bridget,” dolefully, “my business
won’t let me loaf. Ah! you’ve no idea
what a trying trade mine is.”
, “Sure, sure, to be sure it is; but
John—”
“What, Bridget?”
“Suppose you should die. Then you
couldn’t dig any more graves, and
then what ’ud the corporation do?”
“I never thought of it that way. If
I should die the committee would be
put to no end of bother finding another
man. The tricks of the trade be
something awful. Why, there ain’t
one man in ten who can dig a grave
proper. Bridget, I guess I’ll take
your advice. We haven’t got any
jobs on hand just now and ain’t likely
to have for several days. In the
.meantime I guess I’ll go to bed and
sweat out the grip. Then when
somebody dies I will feel in better
humor to dig his last restin’ place.”
Why Red Angers a Dull.
The reason why anything of a red
color excites and infuriates animals of
the ox family is because red is "the
complimentary color of green, and the
eyes of cattle being long fixed on the
green herbage while feeding, when
they espy anything red it impresses
their sight with a greatly increased
intensity. No doubt the same effect
is produced upon all grazing animals
by being suddenly confronted with the
color-red, but oxen and bulls, being
more pugnacious, show greater ex
citement, and will even attack that
which surprises them.
The Baker Abroad.
The French baker is not only re
quired to conform to laws regarding
weight, but he is also told at what
price he must sell his bread. He is
further required to deposit a certain
sum of money in the hands of the
municipal authorities as a surety of
good behavior. In the large fortified
cities he has to keep a specified quan
tity of flour on hand to provide for
warlike emergencies. In Germany
laws of similar import are in exist
ence, and are enforced with such
severity that no baker ever dreams of
defying them.
Springs -‘Break” In February.
“February fill-dike,” is so called,
because, irrespective of rainfall, the
spring's “break” in that month. It is
a curious provision of nature that the
water supply should remain pent up
in the hills until wanted. In Dorset
shire the country folk say the springs
burst after high winds. Last year
there was little wind before they
broke, but m due time they irrigated
the meadows, as they do yearly, gen
erally about the middle of February,
thus justifying the old title.
A Wonderful Cherry Tree.
What is believed to be the largest
and most fruitful cherry tree in the
world stands on land owned by Mr.
John Capura of Oroville, Cal. It is of
the ox-heart variety, and is a wonder
in several ways. It is eighteen years
old and is six feet in circumference at
the ground, and over sixty feet high.
During the season of 1887 (which you
can put down as one exceptionally
favorable to the cherry) it bore 2,800
pounds of fruit.
The Difference.
Judge Jeremiah Black for a long
time wore a black wig. On one oc
casion, haying donned a new one, he
met Senator Bayard, who thus ac
costed him: "Why, Black, how young
you look! You are not so gray as I
am, and you must be twenty years
older.” “Humph!” replied the judge;
“good reason; your hair comes by
descent and I get mine by purchase.”
GREEN GOODS.
Th« Deal Vu Almost Made Whea Con
federate Money Spoiled It.
“Well, jedge,” said the man wlfti
the bristly moustache who was up for
sentence, "It wuz dis here way. I
played’d jay fer a sucker an’ I ketched
him. See? I jist t’rowed him a few
lines ’bout green goods an’ .he < an
swered d’ letter like it brung him
news uv a forchun. I goddim t’ cum
here an’ jollied him along a4' we wuz
’bout* t’ do bizness. Wo went out t’d’
meetin’ place set fer us an’ I showed
how d’ ol’ t'ing worked. He wus to
gimme his dough an’ I wuz t’ ship him
d’ green stuff by express. See? I
flashed d’ roll on ’im an’ it made his
eyes stick out like dey was hen eggs.
Den dey wuz more talk an’ I tol’ ’im I
c’uld give ’im a thousan’ uv d’ green
stuff fer two-fifty uv d’ dough dat wus
straight goods, an’ he bit I counted
out d’ stuff, an’ jist as I had d’ deal all
made in me min’ de jay sez t' me—”
Here the man with the bristly mus
tache began to laugh.
"Well,” said the judge, “what did
he say to you?”
"lie sez t’ me,” continued the man
with the bristly mustache, VI w’d’-*-”
but he began to laugh again.
“Stop that laughing and go on with
your story,” Baid the judge, sternly.
The man with the bristly mustache
threw back his shoulders and took a
long breath.
“He sez t’ me,” he began again,
“w’ud I take Confed’rlt money, an I
soaked him.”
NOT SUPERSTITIOUS.
She Had Entirely Recovered From That
Weaknei*.
“I used to be superstitious, but I
have overcome the feeling entirely.”
“Entirely?” I asked.
“Oh, yes,” was her reply. “Begin
ning anything on Friday, or on the
thirteenth of the month, going under
ladders, refusing to turn back after I
have started out, picking up black
pins, meeting cross-eyed people on
Monday, singing before breakfast—in
fact, all those ridiculous ideas! I have
gotten bravely over.”
“Good,” I replied as I put on my
bonnet—we were going out together
—“I am glad to know that you are so
sensible.”
“Have you got a hatpin you can
loan me, Polly, dear?” she asked.
An idea struck me.
I went to my jewel-case and took
out a long scarfpin with an opal head,
and handed it to her.
She took it, and then dropped it, as
if it was hot!
“Mercy me!” she cried; “I wouldn’t
wear an opal for $100 a minute!”
“But I thought you weren’t super
stitious?”
“Oh, well; opals everybody knows
about. That’s a fact and not a super
stition,” was her unconvincing and un
grammatical reply.
So there you are.
HOW HE DID IT.
A Han Who Hade SffOO by Knowing How
to Look Interested.
• !‘I made $500 once,” said the man in
the mackintosh, “by merely keeping
my mouth shut.”
“Was it at an auction?” asked the
man in the slouch hat.
“No.”
“High-priced doctor asked you to
fehow him your tongue, and you didn’t
do it?” ventured the man who had his
feet on the table.
“No. It was—”
“Found it*on the street and didn’t
say a word about it to anybody?” sug
gested the man behind green goggles.
“Do it on a bet?” inquired the man
in the shaggy ulster.
“Burglar asked where* your money
was hid and you were struck speech
less and couldn’t tell him?” hazarded
the man with a big spot of gray in
his moustache.
“You think .you’re pretty smart,”
said the man in the mackintosh,
speaking to the crowd generally, “but
you’re not. None of you would ever
guess it. I made that $500 in the sim
plest way in the world. A rich old
uncle who was visiting us told a long
story we’d heard him tell a hundred
times before. I was the only one in
the family that didn’t yawn, and he
remembered me in his will.”
' An imp.
If at present we were to call a boj
an imp, he would possibly be offended.
But in Spenser’s time “imp” had still
a very good sound, and he allows a
noble lady a lady gent, as he calls her,
to address Arthur as “Thou worthy
imp.” Nor is there any harm in the
word, for “imp” meant originally
graft, then offspring. To graft in
German is impfen.
No College Complete Without It.
. At a large reception given not long
ago Mrs. Julia Ward Howe wore the
badge of the Phi Kappa Beta society.
“Mrs. Howe,” whispered a young
girl as she accepted that venerable
lady’s cordial hand-shake, “can you
give the Phi Kappa Beta grip?” “No,
my dear,” replied the older woman,
“but I could give the Phi Kappa Beta
yell if I dared.”
Has Many Pleasures In Reserve.
Timothy Dyer,of Vinalhaven, Maine,
is now in his 91st year. He recently
captured a 332 pound halibut. He says
he never wore a shoe of any kind
until he was 18 years old. He never
lias ridden on the cars, and but once
on a steamboat. He has never visited
a tavern, nor quarreled with any one,
he says, and has never been shaved by
a barber. _
Quebec Protects the Boys.
The legislative assembly of Quebec
has just adopted a piece of rather un
usual legislation for the restriction of
the use of tobacco among minors. The
sale of tobacco is absolutely forbidden
to persons under eighteen years of
age, while boys -under fifteen years
found using it are to be punished by
fine or imprisonment.
Clifford Blackman
A Boston Boy's Kysslght
Saved-Perhaps His Lira
By Hood’s Sarsaparilla—Blood Pot*
sonsd by Canker.
Bead ths following from a grateful nothori
" My little boy had Scarlet Fever when 4 years
old, and It loft him very weak and with blood
welcomed with caahor. Bis eyes became
so inflamed that his sufferings were Intense, ant
for seven weeks he
Could Not Open His Eyes.
1 took him twice during that time to the Eye
and Ear Infirmary on Charles street, but their
remedies failed to do him the faintest shadow
of good. 1 commenced giving him Hood’a
Sarsaparilla and It soon cured him. I have
never doubted that It amvod his sight, even
** very life. You may use this tes
timonial In any way yon choose. I am always
ready to sound the praise of
Hood's 8arsaparilla
because of the wonderful good it did my son."
Annin F. Bucuuy, 2888 'Washington St,
Boston, Mass. Qet HOOD’S.
HOOD’S PlLLS are hand made, and are pen.
feet to composition, proportion and appearanoe,
BEST SHARP-SHOOTERS.
May Not Make the Biggest Scores, Bat
Beat for Other Beesons.
“It will be a surprise to the publlo
to know that the best marksmen are
not all in the sharp-shooters’ teams of
the militia organizations,” said Lieu
tenant H. C. Du Val, of the New York
Seventh. “The men who go upon the
teams are better than the best marks
men because they are the ones who
can do their utmost under the strain
of shooting in matches,
j "There are fellows in nearly every
regiment who can give large odds to
the men in their teams, but they break
up and go to pieces when they know
that they are shooting in a match for
the credit and standing of their reg
iments. The men who get on the teams
are the stolid, imperturbable, steady
chaps who can be relied upon to not get
rattled when everything depends upon
their doing their best.
“They have either got no nerves, at
all or else their nerves are of steel,
and though they may not make such
scores as some nervous, slightly-built
fellows, they are excellent shots, and
what they are able to do they never
fail to da They are often fellows of
big build aad good, round girth.
“The best team in this country last
year looked like a rather dull lot of
workmen out of a factory, but dyna
mite could not disturb their self
possession. ”
HAD TO CLIMB ,A TREE.
The Pastor Made the Woodchnek Do
an Unusual Thing.
Men who have hunted woodchucks
know that they never climb trees.
That is, it is not [their nature to do
so, and no one familiar with their
habits would believe that one
ever did unless he saw it himself. The
pastor of a little Baptist church in
Kentucky knew this characteristic of
the animal, and on it based a story.
The congregation was in debt 8400 for
its new church, and one Sunday was
set for making an appeal for subscrip
tions. In the course of his exhorta
tion that the members of his flock be
liberal, the minister said:
“This congregation is like a wood
chuck a man once told me about He
was hunting the woodchuck with
dogs, he said, and they pressed it so
closely that it finally climbed a tree.
“ ‘But’ I said to my friend, 'wood
chucks can’t climb trees, and yon
know it.’
‘‘ 'This woodchuck had to climb a
tree,’ replied my friend, and that’s
the way it is with this congregation.
You say you can’t raise 8400, but
you’ve got to do it”
Tho congregationsawthe point, and
8350 was raised on the spot and the
rest was secured that week.
The Microbe That Ceases Baldness*
Dr. Saymonne baa made for himself
an undying fame by discorering and
naming the parasite that causes bald
ness in the human species and loss of
fur and hair in the lower animals.
He calls the creature “bacillus carnlv
orax,” a name which suggests that it
is in some way related to the St.
Louis Republic’s “cannibal microbe.”
The man who discovers an exterrain
•ator for “carnivorax” will deserve
more fame than the learned M. D.
who has discovered and named the
creature.
Walls on the Moon*
Late photographs of the moon de
veloped by the astronomer-photog
rapher of the Pcsth academy exhibit
some unaccountable pecularities. The
plate shows hundreds of walls or em
bankments seemingly about 200 feet
high and from 125 to 200 yards in
width on top. They run parallel to
each other and appear to be from 1,000
to 1,300 yards apart.
Watches. v
A watch is usually composed of M
pieces, and its manufacture embraees
over 2,000 distinct operations. Some
of its screws are so small as to be im
perceptible to the unaided eye, and
the slit in the heads of the screws is
2-1000tbs of an inch in width.
UNTIL JAN. 1,1895,
26 CENTS.
If you are not already a Journal subscriber that is all you will
. . . have to pay us for the . . .
wm s vvvinarvwwrwwrRMssv*
SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL
from now untiLJanuary i, 1895, if you will at the same time pay a
year’s subscription in advance to Tub Frontier.
The Semi-Weekly Journal is the greatest paper in the west, 't
published Tuesday and Friday, giving two complete papers each
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Remember $1.75 will pay for The Frontier a whole year and
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Send us your orders at once. &
The Frontier, O’Neill.
Ill IN III III III III III III III III III mi
£
£
Chicago Lumber Yard
Headquarters for , . .
£
E
LUMBER,
COAL and
1 BUILDING MATERIAL I
e
^ Yard!
The Stock is dry, being cured
dr\
By the largest dry*sheds in the world.
Sr 0. 0. SNYDER & GO. I
i44^4MiUi444UiUiUiUi441UlUiUi44iiWliim44i44144144i44iUK
r
i
How many E’» in the first five chapters of the Ooapel of St. Mark?
COUNT THEM AND SEE. YOU MAY 0ET $3,000.
«S,ooo ror nrsr correct answer.
$3,000 lor nearest correct answer.
$3,000 for next nearest correct answer.
$20 each to too next nearest correct.
$io each to aoo next nearest correct.
$5 each to aoo next nearest correct.
FOR TELLING.
$14,000
Will be paid to aubicribeta to the
HOUSEHOLD CIRCLE . . .
use oruinary mine, verses only, una ecna your count, together with ON K DDL
LAU. und two U-cont stamps tor your subscription to the HOUSEHOLD CIUCLE, the
bent family monthly In America. Bond money In envelope or by postal note, money
order or registered letter Premiums will lie uwared October 111.
Ties will divide. Complete list of thoso receiving premiums will be published In
November number. All premiums payable In gold und sent by American Express.
Reference, any bank or business bouse In Rochester
IF YOU CAN COUNT, YOU MAY WIN A FORTUNE. IS IT WORTH TRYING?
Mention this pupor. Address TIIB HOUSEHOLD CIRCLE, Dox B, Rochester, N. Y.
Do You
FEEL SICK?
Disease commonly comes on with slight
symptoms, which when neglected increase
in extent and gradually grow dangerous.
RIPANS TABULES
take RIPANS TABULES
take RIPANS TABULES
roro\frfIofdieSaIh,D,S0R: take RIPANS TABULES
Rigans Tabgles Regulate the System and Preserve the Health.
EASY TO TAKE, QUICK TO ACT.
II you are 3ILI0US, CONSTIPATED, or hare
LIVER COMPLAINT, . . .
II your COMPLEXION 13 SALLOW, or you
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Sioux City, O’Neill and
Western Railway
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THE SHORT ROUTE
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SlOlJX ClTY
AND
Jackson, Laurel, Randolph, Os
mond, Platnview, O'Neill.
Connects at Sioux City with all diverging
lines, landing passengers In
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Homeseekers trill find golden opportun
ities along this line. Investigate
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