The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, September 06, 1894, Image 1

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    O’NEILL, HOLT COUNTY, NEBRASKA, SEPTEMBER 6, 1894.
NUMBER 9.
SANS WHISKERS
Interest Told As They Are
Told to Us.
IND HOW IT HAPPENED
Ippenings Portrayed Por General
Edification and Amusement.
i Kinkaid had business in Nor
esday.
dice’s cream baking powder the
ferfect' made.
lay was Labor Day but it
kerally observed in O’Neill.
was
[Price’s cream baking powder a
spe cream of tarter powder.
[ Hough is now in the employ of
leill Flour & Feed company.
and Mrs. O. O. Snyders’ little
ir Mabel is very low with typhoid
(flour, corn, bran and all kinds of
to the O'Neill Flour & Feed Co.,
lack Manager; 38-tf
in a limited quantity has been
fered on the farm of John Otter,
<ittle pos [office.
fonder what Scottie paid. Harring
1 is a query that is frequently heard |
streets since the bond trial.
| Bigiin will deliver kerosene and I
pne at your residence or place of
ess. Bis wagon makes the rounds
|day.
47-tf
ail Oats,” what are they? The
|hing in the way of Oat Meal on
ket. Try a package.
0’Neh.l Grocery Co.
at Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Hershisers
Bnths old twin boys died last
ly and was buried Sunday in the
|ant cemetery.
Du want a good Leghorn mslebird
^reeding purposes at reasonable
; see me this month.
J. H. Riggs.
Ilbourne, the rain-maker,who once
Id O’Neill and missed ' V couple of
band dollars by but a few hours, is
lo have committed suicide in Colo
■ Little and O’Neill ball teams gave
thibition on the O’Neill grounds
laturday, It is rumored that Ex
|Stitt has been employed to foot up
ore.
mornings are now getting cool
| cup of that famous old Govern
lavaand Mocha coflee will invigor
du and make you feel rich. Try a
9-8 O’ Neill Grocery Co.
Iter Martin and Sister Walburga, of
pder of Dominican Sisters, of Jack
Neb., arrived ip the city Monday
ling and will visit Mr. and Mrs. D.
foyle until Thursday. Sister Martin
Bister of Mr. Doyle.
le Sioux City O’Neill & Western
|way will run an excursion to Sioux
Sunday, September 9, account the
league game baseball between the
lx Gity and Toledo, Ohio, teams.
for round trip $8 00. Train leaves
! m. G. W. Smith, Agt.
fe have just received our first impor
on of our celebrated “Crown Chop”
au tea, new May pickings fre3h and
frant. It is a garden grown tea and |
none of that harsh strong flavor of
mountain grown teas. Try a pound.
■2 O’Neill Grocery Co.
In irrigation meeting was held out in
:lds township last Friday night.
farmers requested speakers to ex
n the proposition and T. V. Golden
J. P. Mann went out for that pur
pose. The attendance was large and
’ resolved for irrigation without a
anting voice. •
Peter Greeley has returned from his
grimage to New York where he
lured a new artificial leg. Mr. Greeley
smong the number that left a souvenir
southern soil during the war and now
icle Sam kindly looks after him by
iding him to New York once every
:ee years for a bran new leg. 1
card received at this office last Tues
y morning announces the marriage of
lomas P. Mullen to Miss Edith Hay,
Custer, S. D., Monday, September 3,
14 The inaqy friends of Mr. Mullen
this city join us in wishing him and
i better half a long aud happy life,
II of sunshine and happiness.
^Ve have now on hand a nice line of
loked salt meats, such as:
Imoked sides @ 12* cents V lb
treakfast bacon “ 14 •< •• ••
California hams “ H •• •< <<
>•7 salt sides “ n •« •< <• .
r hen in need of any call and see us.
. O’Neill Grocery Co.
There will be an irrigation meeting at
the town hall in Paddock township
on next Saturday night at 7 o’clock. T.
; V. Golden, J. P. Mann and others will
address the meeting.
Mathews’ excursion - to Arkansas
leaves O’Neill on Tuesday, September
11. We understand that quite a num
ber will take advantage of the reduced
rates to see the southern country.
The Atkinson Graphic comes out
boldlv at last and bolts the legislative
ticket. It says the campaign cry will be
“Tom and Trom.” After election its
ory will probably resemble that used by
the kid that stuck a pin into his dad.
The O'Neill base ball club will give a
dance in the rink next Monday night
for the purpose of raising a little cash
for the benefit of the club. The players
will attend uniformed in their ball suits.
The club has made several lively days
for O’Neill this summer and should re
ceive liberal patronage in return.
The T. A. Thompson tax certificate
case was heard last Thursday night by
Judge Chapman and decided in favor of
the county. This is the case wherein
Barrett.Scott went over to Sioux City
and collected taxes to the amount of
several thousand dollars, while be was
on his way to Mexico. The board after
wards cancelled the receipts, leaving Mr.
Thompson in the hole.
A. M. Baily, a well known citizen of
Eugene, Cregon, says liis wife has for
years been troubled with chronic diar
rhoea and used many remedies with lit
tle relief until she tried Chamberlain’s
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy,
which has cured her sound and well.
Give it a trial and you will be 'surprised
at the prompt relief it affords. 25 and
50 cent bottles for sale by P. C. Corri
gan, druggist. , ^
Irving W. Larimore, physical director
of Y. M. C. A., Des Moines, Iowa, says
he can conscientiously recommend
Chamberlain’s Pain Balm to athletes,
gymnasts, bicyclists, foot ball players
and the prosession in generalfor bruises,
sprains and dislocations; also for sore
ness and stiffness of the muscles. When
applied before the parts become swolen
it will effact a care in one-half the time
usually required. For sale by P. C.
Corrigan, druggist.
While in Chicago, Mr. Charles L
K abler, a prominent shoe merchant of
Des Moines, Iowa, had quite a serious
time of it. He took such a severe cold
that he could hardly talk or navigate,
but the prompt use ot Chamberlain’s
Cough Remedy cured him of his cold so
quickly that others at the hotel who had
bad colds followed his example and half
a dozen persons ordered it from the
nearest drug store. They were Drofuse
•in their thanks to Mr. Eakler for telling
them how to cure a bad cold so quickly.
For sale by P. C. Corrigan, druggist.
The democratic central committee
held a meeting yesterday in 8. M. Wa
gers’ office and called the county con
vention for September 19, recommend
ing that the primaries be held on Sep
tember 15. Levi Van Valkenburg, of
Inman, was elected chairman to fill
vacancy caused by the removal of Mr.
Dudley from the county. The election
of Mr. Van Valkenburg as chairman
was a slight victory for the free silver
ites. Although they were vastly in the
minority they carried the day by leader
ship of T. V. Golden and the lack of a
proper understanding on the part of
administration bourbons. When the
county convention meets the fur will fly.
Senatorial Convention.
The senatorial convention for the
Thirteenth district was held in O’Neill
last Saturday as per call.
In the absence of the chairman o,f the
central committee, the convention was
called to order by Clyde King, secretary,
who read the call.
D. J. J. Hornback, of Boyd was
elected temporary chairman and Frank
Phillips, of Holt, temporary secretary.
W. F. Clevish and D. C. Harrison, of
Holt, and James Lake,*of Boyd, were
upon motion appointed committee on
credentials.
The chair upon motion appointed C.
E. Farrier, of Holt, Judge Skuse, of
Boyd, and J, A. Rice, of Holt, as com
mittee on permanent organization.
Committee on permanent organiza
tion was then appointed by the chair,
and consisted of J. L. Roll, of Holt, C.
E. Squires, of Wheeler, and I. L. Dud
ley, of Boyd.
The chair here announced a recess of
10 minutes in older to give the commit
tees an opportunity to transact their
business. When the convention was
again called to order the various com
mitties were called for and reported in
the following order:
CREDENTIALS.
To the senatorial convention held at
O’Neill Sept. 1, 1884—Pursuant to the
call of the central committee, your com
mittee on credentials find that the fol
lowing delegates are entitle^ to seats in
this convention: Boyd county—D. J. J.
Horn buck, C. B. Cornell, I. L. Dudley,
J. 11. Lake, Cbas. South and C. J. Skuas,
Holt county—D. C. Harrison, Jake
Itoll, Frank Phillips, J. A. Itice, John
Inglis, C. E. Farrier. Jake Herahiser,
Frank Moore, A. J. Clark, C. W. Moss
and YVm. Clevisb. Wheeler county—O.
E Squires and U. H. Hoppe. Garfield
not represented.
PERMANENT ORGANIZATION.
Your committee on permanent organ
ization would recommend that the
temporary organization be made per
manent.
RESOLUTIONS.
We, the delegates for the senatorial
convention held In O’Neill on Sept. 1,
1804, endorse the republican platform
adopted at the state convention held in
Omaha on August S3, 1894.
The following was handed in and
adopted by the convention as a supple
mentary resolution:
Whereas: We live in an agricultural
portion of Nebraska that has a soil as
fertile as any in the land, and
Whereas: We are in the semi-arid
region where the rain fall is' insufficient
for the raising of a sure crop every
year, therefore, be it
Resolved, That we favor an extended
system of irrigation that will make our
people prosperous and oomfortable.
Resolved, That we favor a state irri
gation law that will embody the good
features of the irrigation laws of Cali
fornia, Colorado and other states older
in irrigation experience, and that will
protect and guard every right of the
homesteaders who own the land to be
irrigated.
After this report had been read and
adopted a motion prevailed to proceed
to an informal ballot for senator. The
result was: Sample, of Boyd, 11 votes,
and Glassburn, of Wheeler,7 votss.
A formal ballot, upon motion was
then taken which resulted in the nom
ination of Mr. Sample by a vote of 13 to
7.
Mr. Sample, being declared the nom
inatee, was called for and responded
with a short, spicy and patriotic speech.
The appointment of central committee*
was next in order. D. C. Harrison, of
Holt, was made chairman, and D. J. J.
Hornback, of Boyd, D. B. Richardson,
of Wheeler, C. E. Farrier, of Holt and
G. J. Harris, of Garfield, the other
members. .
Upon motion Mr' Sample was allowed
to select the secretary and his choice
was Frand Phillips, of Holt.
The convention then upon motion
adjourned.
A Beply.
Lbonia, Aug. 20, 1894.
To David Moler—Dear Sir: In an
swer to your resolutions taken by the
Colburn Post, No. 257, and spread for
publication all over this county for no
good purpose. I did not intend to give
any answer or explanation, if it was not
for the many questions that are put
before me in regard to it. And as I find
that people are interested in knowing
bow it is, I feel it as a duty to give seme
explanation. I would just as leave the
people know the stand I take, if it be
presented in the true light. But false
accusations should be avoided, remem
bering that we are not at enmity and do
not want to be; but let all be done with
a good purpose. The accusations need
to be corrected.
1. I mentioned the U. S. flag. To be
sure. But not with any disgrace to the
flag, but to the way it was used. I have
chosen this country and flag in prefer
ence to my own native country, and
claim to be a law abiding citizen, and
ain entitled to protection by the Ameri
can law if attacked unlawfully.
2. About the memorial services held
by the soldiers and relief corps: I have
no objections. Let the dead bury their
dead, says the Savior, and further he
pronounces a woe unto them that are
Using up the graves of the prophets or
old heros, and do not realize the proph
ets in their time. This woe belongs to
the professors of religion, “all that con
tinue in so doing,” and 1 declare it to be
idolatry. That part is right. Now
judge for yourself if this is ridiculing or
making sport of the doing or not. It
will be hard for you te kick against the
pricks. I use the word of God and say
to his people, “come out from among
them.” Remember that I do not be
grudge those that have not got any
thing better to go to, but God’s people
should have no fellowship with the un
believers in that respect. To be sure
they have prayer. Yes. Something to
boast of, when we know they are read
out of a book, sometimes by an infidel.
Such mockery! May the Lord deliver
us! That is the kind of good and holy
things that I have been opposed to these
many years, that are meulioned. And I
have no objection to its being published,
maybe it will. encourage some poor
struggling seaman. I also take my
stand against church festivals, all secret
societies, insurance or gambling, and all
these unfruitful things of darkness,
especially fur a Christian to participate
in. And 1 claim to have a right to my
belief, and advocate it in our own meet
ings. About the names that has been
hurled at me, I just say, "never mind,
the devil always gets mad when his
kingdom is disturbed, and uses his
branding iron as a favorite instrument.”
That is nothing new, they called the
prophets and Savior names in the days
that they lived. Not now. O my no!
The same kind of people would decorate
their graves if they could find’them. If
not, they will choose a green spot, just
like the people at Athens had, an un
known god, idolatry. Friends, let us
I worship the living God and not the dead,
is ‘ Geo. £. Hansen. ,
The Bond Out.
The Scott bond case, tried Uat week,
was undoubtedly the most Important
civil suit ever brought iu the county, or
pcrhups this judicial district. It wm
hotly contested on both sides and
watched with interest by a court-room
full of people. The legal committee of
the board was there drawing per diem,
we suppose. They had refused a settle
ment, upon Harrington's advice, where
by they might have secured $10,000 in
cash and forty or fifty thousand in secu
rities, and . were present at the trial to
see a Judgment rendered against the
bondsmen for $70,000. But they were
disappointed. They had been misled by
false council. The law had not been
correctly Interpreted for them.
Our readers, we presume, kre familiar
with the point upon which this case was
lost to the county. It was, we think,
along sometime in 1803 that the board
spent so much time making life a bur
den to Scott, and, among other things;
adopted a resolution whereaslng that
bis bond was insufficient and ordering
him to give additional security. After
this resolution had been adopted the
question was raised as to whether or not
he must get additional signers to his old
bond or give a new bond. It was at
this time that Honest John, the watch
dog of the treasury, Crawford, was the
high mogul of the pops, and he arose as
best he could with bo much dignity and
responsibility resting upon his shoulders
and said that it was his understanding
that the resolution meant that Scott was
to get new signers to the old bond, and
that settled it, although County Clerk
Buttler, who was clerk of the board,
cautioned them that any such proceed
ings would invalidate the bond. This
little history was not brought out at the
trial, but is simply editorial reminis
cence that bore no relevancy to the suit,
as the altered bond was there to speak
for itself, and that whs what lost the
case.
The judge held it as law that no man,
or body of men oould change an official'
bond after it had been approved without
vitiating it, and accordingly ordered the
jury to return a verdict against Scott for
$76,000, and a verdict releasing the
bondsmen from liability.
It was almost worth the 976,000 to
hear Attorney Bartlett roast Harrington
for getting too gay, and to see Harring
ton writhe and squirm like a snake in a
bed of coals.
It was amusing, too, to see the smile
of confidence Harrington wore while the
jury was being impaneled. The special
venire had been drawn with a view
to winning the case and he challenged
none of them for cause. They were all
satisfactory to him. Another peculiar
feature of the case was that they were
nearly all populists and but one of them
would swear that ho ever read the Bea
con Light, and be said that he never
paid any attention to anything it said.
The way the case now stands the pops
are the ones to blame for the loss of this
great sum of money. It was lost
through their negligence, incompetency
and almost criminal carelesness, and
they should be made to make good the
deficiency.
In the commencement of the trial
Judge Chapman seemed to favor the
prosecution m bis rulings and it caused
great joy among the blood-thirsty.
During n recess ' Harrington was heard
to say: “we are perfectly satisfied with
the judge; he is one of the most honor
able and upright jurists on the bench in
this state.” Crawford ejaculated, “O
upright judge!” Cord Smith exclaimed,
“most upright judge." Jiilson was
beard to murmur through his smiles,
“most learned judge!” But after the
decision those fellows saw where they
were at. They were looking for the
pound of flesh, Sbylock-like, and as
Sbylock was to cut his tenderloin at his
own peril should blood flow, even so
did this judge tell the persecutors that
they were responsible for the damage
they bad done. Read the court scene in
the “Merchant of Venice” and you can
then imagine bow those fellows looked
last week when the decision broke
upon them.
Had the board heeded the advice of
The Frontier two years ago, the
county would have been vastly better
oft to-day. We told them to let Scott
alone, that his bond was good; that at
the end of his term while he might per
haps be a little short, it could be collect
ed from his bond. But they would not
do it. For politics they would rush him
to the wall; they would force him to
give additional security, and invalidate
the bond; they would declare that the
additional security was insufficient, oust
him from office and force him to leave
the country; they would appropriate
thousands of dollars to get him back
again; after getting him back they
would refuse settlement, and cow they
have lost the whole amount, together
with the almost endless expense that
they have gone to in the case.
Let the sups pay for their folly.
■rt-vfc
Tor Bettor Or Tor Wone.
Tbe memory of the oldeot inhabitant
runneth not to the time when a prettier
little marriage program wai carried out
than the one that took place laat
Wednesday morning in which the
parties most highly concerned were Mias
Eulalia Clear and Homer Garretaon,
both of O’Neill.
Tbe w.eddlng took place at 8 a. m.,
Eight (Rev. Father Cassidy officiating.
Tbo church was filled with friends of
the bride and groom, among them being
Mr. and Mrs. Garretaon, of Oskaloosa,
Io., father and mother of tbe groom,
Mrs. J. D. Fitzsimmons, of Creston, Io.,
Miss Fannie Fitzsimmons, of Omaha,
and Mr. Stitt, of St. Paul.
After the ceremony the guests and
bridal party repaired to tbe home of the
bride, where an ideal wedding breakfast
was spread.
The happy twain were the reolplnts
of numerous presents of intrinsic value
and memorials of their start in life.
Few young couples have started out
under more auspicious circumstances
and Tub Frontier trusts that tbe sun
of their present happy sky may never
be dimmed by a mist.
Miss Clear is the daughter of our
worthy and popular fellow townsman,
Pat Clear, and numbers none but friends
among her numerous acquaintances.
Mr. Garretson, formerly of Oskaloosa,
Io., but tor the past three years electric
ian for the electric light company of
this place, is a young man of sterling
worth and popular everywhere.
Mr. Pat Mullen and Miss Mary
McGinnis officiated very nicely as
groomsman and bridesmaid.
Mr. and Mrs. Garretson will go at
once to housekeeping in what is known
as tne Russell property in the northern
part of tbe city.
LIST OF PRESENTS.
White Sewing machine—Mr. and Mrs.
T. B. Garretson, Oskaloosa, Io., parents
of the groom.
Set towels and cut glasses—Mr. and
Mrs. P. Clear, parents of the bride.
Set silver tea spoons in satin case—
Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Enright, Des Moines,
Io..‘sister of the bri le. •
Bon bon dish and fruit—Misses Hattie,
Zetta and Sell Garretson, Oskalooso, Io.,
sisters of the groom.
Table scarf and napkins—Mr. P. D.
Mullen
Fancy linen—Miss Mary McGinnis.
Fur rug and throw draperies—Mrs. J.
B. Fitzsimmons, Creston, Io.
Set fruit plates—Miss Susie Quilty.
Bed spread, sofa pillow ane shams—
Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Hammond.
Set sliver fruit knives, basket fruit
and card basket—Mr. and Mrs. J. F.
Richardson, Omaha, Neb.
Dresser cover—Etta Garretson, Oska
loosa, Io.
Brownie scarf pins—Hattie Garretson.
Gentleman’s rattan rocker—Mr.' and
Mrs. J. A Golden.
Lady’s rattan rocker—Mrs. T. V.
Golden.
Center table—T. V. Golden.
Set silver knives and forks—Mr. and
Mrs. John McHugh.
Rose jar—Mr. and Mrs. S. P. Hawk
ins, Oskaloosa, Io.
Set towels—Mrs W. J. Dobbs.
Toothpick holder—Nye Dobbs.
Easy rocker —Vincent Golden.
Moquette rug—P. J. McManus.
Lace throw—T. D. Hanley.
Set gilt china dishes—M. P. Brennan
and thirty-eight others.
Set silver table spoons—J. B. Fitz
simmons, Creston Io.
Irrigation Far Away.
Editors Frontier: I have recently
procurred a work in eight volumes, en
titled "Paradise of the Pacific," “The
Land of Sunshine," "Picturesque Ha
waii,” by Hon. John L. Stevens, ex U.
S. minister to Hawaii, and Prof. W. B.
Oleson of Honolulu, fifteen years presi
dent of Kamehameha college. From
volume three of said work I take the
following, which may be of interest to
your readers:
"A very considerable portion of the
land now under cultivation was compar
atively valuless until foreign 'enterprise
and capital reclaimed it. Much of it
was arid and so forbidding that in some
cases it had never come under cultiva
tion until within a very few years.
These lands were worthless for Hawa
iian farming,* and would have remained
an unproductive area had it not been for
foreign capital and energy and grit.
Thus the largest plantation at Sprockets
vilie, the two remarkable plantations at
Ewa and Makaweli, to say* nothing of
others, show what American enterprise
can accomplish in the face of grave
difficulties.
At Sprecklesville, an immense area of
sandy plain was biought under cultiva
tion by the digging of an irrigation ditch
conveying water from mountain streams
seventeen miles away. The original
ditch of this kind was constructed for
the Haiku lands in 1878 at a cost of 880,
000. It was over thirteen miles long,
the larger part being dug through dense
woods, provisions for the small army of
workers being transported to the camps,
as they moved onward, by means of
roads cut through the virgin forests.
Two hundred men were employed on
this ditch and it required a year to build
it, but when finished, it brought water
on to land* that now constitute one of
the best sugar estates on tbe Islands.
An enterprise requiring a larger ex*
penditure and encountering greater dif
ficulties *ii the Makawell ditch on the
Island of. Kauai. Tbe water for this
dltob Is taken trom a large stream lust
below the beautiful Hanapepe falls.
Tho dltoh la thirteen and a halt miles <
long. In the first seven miles from the
point where the water is taken from the
stream, there were 10,000 feet of ditch*
| log, two miles of which was through the '
solid rock; 12,000 feet of wooden Hum*
ing, requiring 000,000 feet of redwood
6,000 feet of steel piping, forty Inches
In diameter, and from one-eighth to firs
sixteenths of an Inch In thickness; and
over one thousand feet of tunneling
through solid rock. Four substantial ’ ;'1
iron bridges carry the pipe across the
canyon, three with e span of 100 feet
each, and one with a span of 140 feet.
Several inverted siphons were used, one
being 400 feet deep and 1B00 feet long.
The entire coat was 1109,018. The
capacity of the ditch is 00 cubic feet per
second, or 0,184,000 gallons per day.
An ancient crater was utilized as a stor
age reservoir, having a capaolty of 48,
000,000 gallons, being 900 feet across at
the top and 80 feet deep. The land
made available for cultivation by tho
construction of this ditch la about 7000
acres In extent, making tbe cost for tbe *
original outlay about 899 per acre. N
Nothing but dauntless energy could
have undertaken and consummated such
an enterprise. The man who did it is
the originator of the Aalku ditch, a man
who has individually done more for the
industrial development of Hawaii than
any other person, albeit the son of n
missionary. Beginning as a poor man,
ana more man once jeopardising all bis
gains by daring schemes, demanding
large capital and indomitable energy, It
Is doubtful whether he bould have con
tributed, in any other wav, a laiger per- Im
manent blessing to the land of his birth
than he has by bis phenomenal sucoeas
In converting large waste areas into
waving Helds of cane.
The Ewa plantation Is on land that
wag unsuitable even for pasturage until
American capital and enterprise con
ceived the project of Irrigating those 'j
barren plains- by means of artesian ,
water, pumped into flumes, and borne ^
to the fields as wanted. Accordingly
twenty-four artesian wells were sunk,
In close proximity, and enormous pumps
erected, and there in now a supply from
this source, without any indications of a
decrease in the flow, of 90,000,000 gal
lons per day.” #%
- A Million Trtlnds.
A friend in need Is a friend indeed,
and not less than one million people
have found Just such a friend In Dr.
King’s New Discovery for Consumption
Coughs, and Colds.—If you have never
used this Great Cough Medicine, one
trial will convince you that it has
wonderful curative powers in all diseases
of Throat, Chest and Lungs. Each I
bottle is guaranteed to do rll that is
claimed or money will be refunded.
Trial bottles free at P. C. Corrigan’s
Drugstore. Large bottles 80c. and $1.00.
Tear Big Saoeesses.
Having the needed merit to more than '
make good all the advertising claimed
for them, the following four remedies
have reached a phenomenal sale. Dr.
King’s New Discovery, for Consumption
Coughs and Colds, each bottle guaran
teed. Electric Bitters, the great remedy
for Liver, Stomach and Kidneys. Buck
len’s Arnica Salve the best in the world,
and Dr. King’s New Life Pills, which
are a perfect pill. All these remedies are
guaranteed to do Just what is claimed
them and the dealer whose name is ,,
attached herewith will be glad to tell you
more of them. Sold at P. G. Corrigan’s
Drug Store.
Until After XlMtion.
The present campaign is of unusual
interest to Nebraskans. Not only will a .
full set of state officers be elected, but a
legislature will be elected that will
choose a United States senator. The
State Journal, located at the capital, can
give you ail this news more fully and
more reliably than any other paper. It
comes twice a week and will be sent
until after election for only 85 cents.
Address, State Journal,
4 Lincoln, Neb.
Xaeklsn’s Arnica lairs.
The best salve in the world for cuts,
bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever
sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains,
corns, and all skin eruptions and pos
itive^ cures piles, or no pay required.
It is guaranteed to give perfect satis
faction or money refunded. Price 95c.
per box. For sale by P. C. Cor
rigan. _ _ 98-38
Will Pay Cash.
Poultry, game, furs, skins, wool, but
ter, eggs. Hiram P. Ballard & Co.
At.
89 £ 38th St, Chicago.