The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, March 22, 1894, Image 5

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    Kury
01 OFFICIAL DIRECTORY
STATS.
.Lorenzo Crounse
.T. J. Majors
........ .3. C. Alien
‘rlvasurcr...J-8. Bartley
General.George H. Bastings
i. uj.litor.Eugene Moore
ir"l'i mils and Bulling*..George Humphrey
i’";- V'pblie Instruction.A. K. Uoudy
_ Goudy
KKC.ENTS STATE UNIVERSITY.
il Gere. Lincoln: Leavitt Burnham,
1 :,i': I M. Hiatt, Alma; E. P. Holme*,
".'i.;.! : .!. T. Mallaieu, Kearney; M. J. Hull,
;gar.
COXORSS8IONAL.
, ,. ,.s_cuas. F. Manderson, of Omaha;
\ iien. of Madison.
motives—■Wm. Bryan. Llnooin; O.
. itroken Bow; Wm. Mchelchan. Bed
JUDI (JIAK i.
■ , i„«tice....SamuelMaxwell
^ .ilites .Judge Post and T. L. Norval
H FTEENTH judicial district.
' .M. P. Kinkaid. of O'Neill
J^ter .J. J. King of O'Neill
f1', .A. L. Bartow of Chadron
"“porter ! .A. L. Warrick, of O’NelU
■gister..
jroeiver..
v .. M. Collins
KLV rer V..J- P- Mullen
"5...BUI Bethea
i ,;tv .Mike McCarthy
W!/. ....Chas Hamilton
^ ’ Schools.. W K. Jackson
.Mrs. W. K. Jackson
^mner ' .Dr. Trueblood
.M. F. Norton
gSugi^V:..H. B. Murphy
SUPERVISORS.
itbin«nn . Frank Meore
’llvehiud..Wilson Brodie
Kv ..Willie Calkins
Wmbers.georeg) Bckley
ttek.it.Fred |°h}nQler
.J. 8. Dennis
.W. B. Halgh
.D. G. KoU
.S. GUllson
... .H. B. Kelly
Grattan .....H. J. Hayes
rVaUey”""”"
ledure .....J. H. Wilson
t’Neill ...John Murphy
hddock.•.George Kennedy
Hisantview..John Airs
',vk Fulls.James Gregg
.led Creek. . . . •. .F. W Phillips
Iron..Peter Kelly
JiidC reek.V.'.'.'.'.V.V.V 7.7.7.'." John Crawford
..L-A. JilUson
;ffun .H. C. Wine
?heridan...T* E- Doolittle
fheilds..J. B. Do no hoe
i'trtligris...
Wyoming.•••«£; E. While
Willowdale...D. Trullinger
Dustin...
jmnelt.
twing....
'rands
’airview
land offices.
o’nnx.
,.W. D. Mathews.
.A. L. Towle.
Wider,
itveiver .
.C. W. Robinson
. .W. B. Lambert
COUNTY.
.Geo McCutcheon
l ‘.if the District Court—John Skirving
k 1 .O HI (Vklltna
CUT OF a NEILL.
Supervisor, John Murphy; Justices, E. H.
Benedict and B. Welton; Constables, John
Appau and Perkins Brooks.
COUNCILMAN—TIR8T WARD.
For two years.—Ben DeYarman. For one
re&r-Davia Stannard.
SECOND WARD.
For two years—Fred Gatz. For one year—
I. Mullen.
THIRD WARD.
For two years—J. C Smoot. For one year—
. M. Wagers.
CITT OITICER8.
Mayor, R. R. Dickson; Clerk, N. Martin;
Treasurer, David Adams; City Engineer,
him Horrisky; Police Judge, N. Martin;
Chief of Police, Charlie Hall; Attorney,
E. 11. Benedict; Weighmaster, Joe Miller.
GRATTAN TOWNSHIP.
Supervisor, John Winn; Trearurer, John
I'wver; Clerk, D. H. Cronin; Assessor, Mose
Campbell; Justices, M. Castello and Chas.
Iniiorsoll; Justices, Perkins Brooks and Will
Sianskie: Road overseer dtst. 38, Allen Brown
dist. No. 4, John Enright.
SOLDIERS’ RELIEF COMNISSION.
Kegular meeting first Monday in Febru
iry ol each year, and at such other times as
Is deemed necessary. Robt. Gallagher, Page,
ebairman; W’m, Bowen, O’Neill, secretary;
H. H. Clark, Atkinson.
IT.PATRICK’S CATHOLIC CHURCH.
J Services every Sabbath at 10:30 o’clock.
Very Rev. Cassidy, Postor. Sabbath school
Immediately following services.
IfETHODIST CHURCH. Services
Jlevery Sunday morning at 11 o’clock, im
mediaiel followed by Sunday school. Preach
iMiu the evening at&o’clock. Prayer meeting
weduesday evening at 8 o’clock. Epworth
Eeague devotional meeting Sunday evening
o'clock. F. Ellis, Pastor.
YM. c. A. Bible study and consecration
• meeting every Monday evening in
lecture room, M.E. church.
Will Lowrix, Secretary.
A. R. POST, NO. 86. The Gen. John I
• O’Neill Post, No. 86, Department of Ne- j
Jraska G. A. R., will meet the first and third 1
Saturday evening of each month in Masonic
W1 O’Neil] S. J. Smith, Com.
pLKHORN VALLEY LODGE, I. O. C
rf *• Meets every Wednesday evening i
wd Fellows’ hall. Visiting brothers cordial!
inntivi --
Invited to attend.
1 L. Buight, N. G. E. W. Adams, Sec.
(Iarfield chapter, r. a. ]
Meets oq am and third Thursday of eat
® mth in Masonic hall.
J. Dobbs See. J. C. Hashish, H, P
0
K <?FP-HELMET LODGE, U. I>
r*;* Convention every Monday at 8 o clock p.
*• f Fellows* nalL Viaitinj? brethern
Wally invited*
V
_ _ , E. M. Gradt, C. C.
E Evans, K.of B. and 8.
SKILL ENCAMPMENT NO. 80. I.
y u. O. F. meets every second and fourth
"mays or each month in Odd Fellows' Hall.
Scribe, O. L. Bbiqht,
Ai I-OIXJK NO. 41, DAUGHTERS
HEBEKAH, meets every 1st and Jd
"Way ol each month in Odd Fellows’ Hall,
„ Lizzie Smith, N. Q.
audie Hkrsbiskb, Secretary.
Qarfield lodge, no m,f.*a.m.
,r ..rfEular communications Thursday nights
“I't More the full of the moon.
" ■ T.Ev.
ans. Sec. A. L. Town*, W. II.
Hu,/l' OAMP NO. 1T10.M. W.OFA.
u, h °° the first and third Tuesday in
]i in the Masonic hall.
11 ■ Crouin, clerk. K. J. Hayes, V. C.
?> L. W. NO. 153. Meeta-second
the ‘ourth Tudsday of each month in
, ‘Iconic haU.
1 McHuith, Hec. G. W. Meals, M. A
POSTOFFICE DIRCBTORY
Arrival of Malls
E- 4 R. v. B. R.—FROM THB BAST,
rj day, Sunday included at.5:15 pm
. _ FBOM THB WSRT.
rf day, Sunday included at...
... 9:45 am
PACIFIC SHOBT LIN*.
every day except Sunday at 11:35 p m
Mr‘9 e‘ •• “ 9:55 a an
,, O’SKILI, AND CBSLSBA.
4rilttv^t,.-d°:iday,Wed.and Friday atfiOOam
Vs» 1 uesdav.Thnr*.and Rat. at..l:UUom
uesday,Thurs.and Sat. at..1:00pm
O’NXIAI, AND PADDOCK.
^ A* A. A A A it 11 rAItUOvA,
Arrival9~,ODd*y. Wed.and Friday at. .7:00 am
vca Tuesday, Thurs. and Sat. at..4:50 p m
d’NKILL, AND NIOBRARA.
Irf.J^ Monday. Wed. and Frl. at... .7:00 a m
Tuesday, Thurs. and Sat. at.. .4:00 p m
lrrj...a o’sriij. and ctnoriNsvmLX.
Desn'r. = uon-.Wed.and Fridays at... 11-10p m |
’ "■8 Mun., Wed. and Friday at.1:00 pm
CIPHER CODES WELL GUARDED.
Nevertheless an Oeeuloul I«ak De
velopa in Diplomatic Correspoadear*.
There visited New York recently la
emissary from the state department
whose mission was the investigation
of what is diplomatically termed a
leak. The dispatches received by the
government are, as is well known,
sent in cipher. This cipher is guarded
with a secrecy meant to be awful, but
it was suspected that some unauthor
ized person had obtained a clew to it.
This suspicion was sufficient to start a
rigid investigation, and the trail led
to New York. All facts bearing on
these matters are carefully hidden,
and the upshot of the New York visit
or's trip was that there did exist a
suspicion, but no certainty. When he
got back to Washington there was a
change in one of the codes. So
quietly was the business managed that
not a soul in the state department,
with three exceptions, knew what
was afoot. This incident illustrates
how wary the department is with the
codes. One of them is styled the
“sphynx” — it is so guarded. The
slightest reason to believe that a code
clerk may be responsible for a leak
results in his suspension. However,
our government has been far more
successful than some foreign ones in
protecting its ciphers. The “sphinx"
was devised by a New Yorker now in
the state department, and is as sus
ceptible to changes as the combina
tion lock of a safe. Hundreds of mes
sages have been sent in it, and it has
never leaked. Those intrusted with
the mysteries of it must be absolutely
above suspicion; yet even should there
be a leak, the alteration of a key let
ter would destroy every clew to an
outsider.
LONDON SNOW.
How the Streets Are Cleared at the
Traffic-Impeding Downfall.
After a heavy snow-storm during
the night the London man comes to
his place of business and finds that in
the principal thoroughfares nearly
all traces of the snow have disap
peared. The preparations for the
coming winter are begun early in the
antnmn. For the extra labor required
reliance has to be placed on the “un
employed.” Work is found each win
ter for some 3,000 or 3,000 men out of
employment.
Snow first made its appearance last
winter in London late on Tues
day night and it continued to
fall until 6 o'clock on Wednes
day morning. Some 200 ' extra
men were taken on and by 10 or 11
o’clock the city streets were cleared,
the snow being carted away, and, for
the most part, shot over the bridges
into the Thames. There was a heavier
fall on Wednesday night, beginning
about 6 o’clock and continuing with
more or less severity throughout the
night. Hen were at work all night
salting and clearing the streets for
traffic, while early on Thursday morn
ing some 300 “unemployed” men were
engaged to help in the work of clear
ance. On Thursday night and on Fri
day between 500 and 600 more men
were engaged. The extra men are
paid at the rate of 6d an hour, and
although several consecutive hours’
work could aften be found for large
numbers of them, it is found that in
many instances they desire to “knock
off” ofter an hour or two’s labor.
This they are allowed to do, and they
are paid according to the time which
they have worked.
THE VINEGAR HABIT.
Bow a ‘Woman Slowly Poisoned Herself
to Death.
‘I once had a patient,” said Law
rence Newcomb of Bochester, N. Y., j
who formerly practiced as a physi
cian, but who is now an angel of com
merce, “who poisoned herself with
vinegar. I was never a burning or
shining light in the medical profes
sion, and hence it is not surprising
that the case baffled my investigation
for a yeqr, though I have the consola
tion of knowing that four eminent
physicians who were called in for con
sultation attributed the lady’s evident
breaking-up to four different causes,
none of them remotely connected with
the real one. The chief symptom was
lassitude and deathly whiteness, and
the lady, who had no other companion
but an ignorant, though faithful,
colored attendant, finally died before
reaching her thirtieth year. Subse
quent investigation proved that she
was a vinegar fiend, and that, while
refusing food of all description, she
was drinking large quantities of vine
gar. As the habit grew upon her, she
secured stronger grades, until finally
she was drinking acetic acid but very
slightly diluted. There are cases on
record of persons who have been
poisoned by overdoses of vinegar,
taken to improve the complexion, but
this is the only case I ever heard of any
one acquiring the vinegar habit and
pursuing it steadily until it caused
death.
Legal Coming of Age.
A man is legally of age the day
before he completes his 21st year,
and even if he were born on the last
moment of the first day of January
and executed a deed on the first
moment of the last day of Dece mber,
the day before his 21st birthday, it
would be legal. The reason is that
the law does not recognize parts of a
day, and on the last day of his 21st
year the legal age is supposed to be
attained, though in fact he may not
really be 21 until forty-eight hours
later. _
Jap. Going In for Watchmaking,
The enterprising Japs, ever on the
lookout for the chance of turning a
few honest pennies, have just gone in
for watchmaking. A large company,
with headquarters at Yokohama, has
been started, and as labor in Japan is
cheap, and the Japanese possess in a
remarkable degree the mechanical
skill which is so essential in the busi
ness, its prospects ought to be good.
MILK WORTH 7B CENTS A PINT.
■TtinAN for Con.aptln Adalta Hi
Delicate CkUina
Id an Important thoroughfare la
the West End, London, is the only
dairy in and about the city where
asses’ milk can be procured. This
| fluid, as is well known, is a valuable
remedy in certain complaints, but
only the rich can indulge in it freely,
| for it costs seventy-five cents a pint,
| The reason for this, as a I.ondon re
| porter found on visiting the milking
: stables, is its slow production. In
I the stud of milch asses nine animals
were counted and though they are
milked four times a day, each animal
yields barely two pints through the
twenty-four houra The milk is very
thin and slightly sweet, with quite
the flavor of cocoanut milk. Con
sumptive persons and delicate infanta
are its chief consumers; it is both
nourishing and very easily digested.
A feature of its therapeutic use is
that when prescribed for adults it
has to be done in an underhand way.
as a natural repugnance exists with
most persons against its use. It is
told that one fashionable London
woman suffered an actual relapse
when told what -medicine” she had
| been drinking in ignorance.
-The winter is our busy season,”
the manager of the stables is quoted
as saying, “especially during the
foggy weather, but unfortunately it
is extremely difficult to obtain the
milk just then. Sold outright to a
customer, any of the animals you see
here would realize over $50, and
would probably be milked by the pa
tient’s own servants, who do not like
the job in nine cases out of ten.
many customers. However, prefer to
hire an ass at a guinea a week and
get all the milk they can; and I have
sent several as far as Colchester,
Brighton, Exeter and even Scotland,
the customer paying all the ex
penses. Persons put this costly
fluid to curious uses. One lady had
two quarts a day regularly for nearly
six years, and we could never find
out what she wanted it for until af
ter she went to America, when it
transpired that the milk was used as
a face wash. _ We also have a mili
tary gentleman on our books who or
ders a pint every morning, and this
appears on his breakfast table for
ordinary use; while aoertain famous
dandy has been known to instruct
his valet to mix the milk with black
ing, so as to impart a more than us
ually brilliant gloss to his shoes.
••About 6 o’clock one evening last
winter an elegant carriage and pair
drove up to the door and presently
two stylishly dressed young men en
tered the shop and called for a
couple of glasses of asses’ milk, for
which they paid seventy-five cents.
“Both were obviously under the
influence of other and more potent
liquor, and when about to depart one
of them turned to me, saying: ‘Can
we see the asses?’
“ ‘Certainly, gentlemen,’ I replied,
‘go through that doorway and turn
to the left and you will meet the
stableman, who will be pleased to
show you round.’
“Now, it so happened that the mo- |
ment the first door was opened the '
swells were confronted with tne spec
tacle of their own unsteady figures
reflected in a full-length mirror on
the wall, and thinking that this was
a premeditated insult both rushed
back in a furious rage and smashed
every article of china and glass they
could lay their hands upon. With
the aid of the police, however, I was
at length enabled to pacify the hilar
ious and wrathful couple and agreed
to accept $50 for the damage done.”
Doing His Whole Doty.
Just after the suppression of the
“missing word” competitions in Eng
land some months ago, a “Salvation
Army man" gathered in a London
street an audience of two or three
girls and boys. To them he addressed
the message of salvation, inviting
the juveniles to “come and be
washed,” etc., and at the end of his
exordium, he blossomed forth em
phatically, emphasizing each para
graph with one fist in the other palm.
“He spake the word, and Peter spoke
it” (pause). “And Paul spoke it”
(pausel. “Have you read the word?”
(pause). “Do you know the word?"
(long pause). And then came the
inevitable policeman, who, ungently
pushing the preacher on the shoulder,
said gruffly: “You get away, young
man; you know it ain’t right. We
can’t have no ‘Missin’ Word Compe
titions’ ’ere. You know they’re il
legal, so just stow it ”—Argonaut.
Tm In Germany.
Tea, the beverage of the higher
classes in Germany, though more
consumed in the North, is rapidly
winning favor with the middle
classes in the South. Everywhere
the tea table is growing popular, and
Germany will probably at no distant
period become a large consumer of
tea.
Not Below Bangor.
At a prayer meeting in Northern
Maine a simple-looking fellow arose
and said: “I would like you to pray
for my brother. He went away two
weeks ago dnd we haven’t heard
from him since. 1 don’t know just
where he is, but you needn’t pray
down below Bangor.”
A New Accessory.
Western Theater Manager—What
play are you going to give me?
Advance Agent—Ten Nights in a
Barroom.
•‘Any good?”
“Any good! Why, sir, our com
pany carries a $10,000 bar.”—Judge.
A Truthful Witness.
Judge Duffy, to witness—What is
your father?
Witness—He is dead.
“Nonsense! I mean what was he
before he died?”
“Alive.”—Texas Siftings.
Omrrtm OniwXhf
Save the Children
By Purifying Their Blood
Hood’s Sarsaparilla Mates Purs
J Blood, Cures Scrofula, Etc.
'Hr experience with Hood’s Sarsaparilla hat
vtry effective. Hr little girl, fire roan
old, had for lour rears a bad skin disease. Hei
anas and Umb* would break out in a mass ol
soras. discharging yellow matter. She would
Two Bottles of Hood’s
Sanaparilla canned the eruption* to heal and
and the scabs pealed off, after which the skin
became soft and smooth. As a fsmllr medicine
HOOD’S
Sarsaparilla
CURES
•• beBere Hood's Sarsaparilla has no equal and
I recommend It.” W. L. Kino, B1u> Dale, Tax.
Hood's PMIs are the best family cathartic,
gentle and effective. Trr a box. ti cents.
The Sioux Citr Weekly Journal
Is a metropolitan newspaper issued in
two parts—four pages on Tuesday and
eight pages Friday. It is bright, dean
and entertaining, and not excelled in
point of news service and other spedai
features essential to a first class paper
by any other publication in the west.
The Journal has a laige circulation
throughout the United Statee, and is
popular wherever it goes. One trial we
are confident will please you. Once a
subscriber always a reader. Subscribe
now. Do it to-day. Subscription terms
SI per year; 50 cents for 6 months and 35
cents for 3 months, cash to accompany
the order. Sample copies free. Address
Perkiks Bros. Co.. Publishers,
Sioux City, Iowa.
Care far Headache.
As a remedy for all forms of headache
Electric Bitters has proved to be the
very best. It effects a permanent cure
and the most dreaded habitual sick head
aches yield to its influence. We urge
all who are afflicted to procure a bottle
and give this remedy a fair trial. In
cases of habitual constipation Electric
Bittere cures by giving the needed tone
to the bowels, and few cases long resist
the use of this medicine. Try it once.
Large bottles only 50c at Corrigan’s drug
store.
Sioux City, O’Neill and
Western Railway
(PACIFIC SHOBT LISE)
THE SHORT ROUTE
BETWEEN
Sioux ClTY
AND
Jackson, Laurel, Randolph, Os
' mond, Plainview, O'Neill.
Connects at Sioux City with all diverging
lines, landing passengers In
NEW UNION PASSENGER STATION
Homeseekers will find golden opportun
ities along this line. Investigate
before going elsewhere.
THE CORN BELT OF AMERICA
For rates, time tables, or other Information
call upon agents or address
F. C. HILLS, W. B. McNIDER,
Receiver. Gen'l Pass. A gen*.
NEW YORK ...
ILLUSTRATED
NEWS
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MCTUSEO »T THE
FOREMOST ARTISTS OF THE COUNTRY
Life in New York Graphically Illustrated.
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Do you want to be posted? Then send
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LUMBER,
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The Stock is dry, being cured
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f O'Neill,
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