The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, March 05, 1896, Image 5

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    OFFICIAL DIRECTORY
STATE.
Governor.Silas Holcomb
Lieutenant Governor.K. E. Moore
Secretary of State..-J. A. Piper
State Treasurer.J. 8- Bartley
State Auditor. Eugene Moore
Attorney General.A. S. Churchill
Com. bands and Buildings.C. H. Russell
Sunt. Publio Instruction. H. U.Corbett
REGENTS STATE UNIVERSITY.
Ohas. U. Gere, Lincoln; Leavitt Burnham,
Omaha; .1 M. Hiatt, Alma; E. P. Holmes,
Pierce; J. T. Mallaieu, Kearney; M. J.Hull.
Edgar.
_CONGRESSIONAL. •
Senators— W~. V. Allen, of Madison; John
M. Thurston, of Omaha.
Representatives—First District, J. B Strode
Second, D H. Mercer; Third, 3oo. X>. Mikel
john: Fourth — Ilalner; Fifth, W. E. And
rews; Sixth; O. M. Kern.
JUDICIARY.
Chief Justice. .A. M. Post
Associates...T.O. Harrison and T. L.Norvan
FIFTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT.
. Judge.M. P- Klnkaid, of O’Neill
Reporter.J. J. King of O’Neill
Jadge.W. II. Westover, of Itushvlllo
Reporter.Johu Maher, of Rushvllle.
LAND OFFICES.
o*traiLii.
Register.John f1T.mon‘
Receiver.-....Elmer Williams.
COUNTY.
ju(jKe .Geo McCutcheon
Clerk of the District Court.John Sklrying
Deputy.O. M. Collins
Treasurer........I. P. Mullen
..Sam Howard
Oierlk .Bill Bethea
Deputy'.Mike McCarthy
Sheriff..Chas Hamilton
Deputy............................. Chas O Weill
Supt. of Schools....••■W. H. Jackson
Assistant.Mrs. W. K. Jackson
Coroner.Dr- i'ru'-bl"od
Surveyor.GMi,F‘»Jiortnn
Attorney... H. E. Murphy
SUPERVISORS.
FlllST DISTRICT.
Cleveland, Sand Creek, Dustin, Saratoga,
ock Falls and Pleasantvlew—J. C. Rlondni.
SECOND DISTRICT.
Shields, Paddock, Scott, Steel Creek, Wil
lowdale and Iowa—J. H. Hopkins.
THIRD DISTRICT.
Grattan and O’Neill—E. J. Mack.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
Ewing, Verdigris and Delolt—L. C. Combs.
FIFTH DISTRICT,
Chambers. Conley, Lnke, I«cCluro and
Inman—E. Stillwell.
SIXTH DISTRICT.
Swan. Wyoming, Fairview, Francis. Green
Valley, Sheridan and Emmet—C. W. Moss.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.
Atkinson and Stuart— Frank Moore.
mnxr on fvXTTrTT T
Supervisor, E. J. Mack; Justices, B. H.
Benedict and 8. M. Wafers; Constables, Ed.
McBride and Perkins Brooks.
, OonNCUMEN—IIRST WARD.
For two years.—D. H. Cronin. For one
year—II. C. McEvony.
SECOND WARD.
For two years—Alexander Marlow. For
one year—Jake l’fund.
THIRD WARD.
For two years—Charles Davis. For one
year—Elmer Merrlman. <
city o prion RS.
Muyor, 0. F. Biglin; Clerk, N. Martin;
Treasurer, John McHugh; City Engineer
John llorrisky; Police Judge. H. Kautzman;
Chief of Police, Charlie Hall; Attorney,
Tbos. Cation; Weighmaster, J oe Miller.
QRATTAN TOWNSHIP.
Supervisor, U. J. Hayes; Trearurer. Barney
MeGreevy; Clerk. J. sullivan; Assessor Ben
Johrlng: Justices, M. Castello and Chas.
Wilcox; Constables, John Horrisky and Ed.
McBride; ltoad overseer dist. 28, Allen Brown
hist. Mo. 4, John Enright.
SOLDIERS' RELIEF U0MNI8SI0N.
ltegular meeting first Monday in Febru
ary of eaoh yoar, and at such other times us
is deemed necessary, ltobt. Gallagher, Page,
chairman; Wm. Bowen, O’Neill, secretary;
U. H. Clark Atkinson.
j
kJT.PATRICK’S CATHOLIC CHURCH.
© Services every Sabbath at 10:30 o’clock.
Very Rev. Cassidy, Postor. Sabbath school
Immediately following services.
Methodist church. Sunday
services—Preaching 10:30 A. M.and 7:110
p. M. Class No. 1 U:30 A. M. Class No. 2 (Ep
worth League! 6:30 P. M. Class No. 3 (Child
rens) 3:00 P. M. Mind-week services—General
prayer meeting Thursday 7:30 p. M. All will
be made welcome, especially strangers.
E. T. GEORGE, Pastor.
UA. It. POST, NO. 86. The Gen. John
• O’Neill Post, No. 86, Department of Ne
braska G. A. K., will meet the first and third
Saturday evening of each month in Masonic
hall O'Neil) 8. J. Smiih, Com.
Elkhokn valley LODGE, I. o. o.
E. Meets every Wednesday evening in
Odd Fellows’ hall. Visiting brothers cordially
Invited to attend.
W. H. Mason, N. G. 0. L. Bright, Sec.
i
1
T
Garfield chapter, r. a. ’m
Meets od first and third Thursday of each
month in Masonic hall.
W. J. Docks Sec. J. C. Harnish, H. P
KOPP.—HELMET LODGE, U. D.
. Convention every Monday at 8 o clock p.
m. In Odd Fellows’ hall. Visiting brethern
cordially invited.
J. P. Gilligan. C. C.
E. J. Mack. K. of It. ana S.
O’NEILL ENCAMPMENT NO. 80. I.
O. O. F. meets every second and fourth
Fridays of each mouth In Odd Fellows’ Hall.
Cuas. Bright, H. P. H. M. Tttley, Scribe
I?DEN LODGE NO. 41, DAUGHTERS
Hi OF ItEBEKAH, meets every 1st and 3d
Friday of each month in Odd Fellows’ Hall,
Flo Bentley, N. G. Kittie Bright. Sec.
Garfield lodge, no.95,f.& a.m.
Regular communications Thursday nights
on or before the full of the moon.
W. J. Dobbs, Sec. E H. Benedict, W. M.
Holt camp no. 1710. m.w. of a.
Meets on Uie first and third Tuesday in
each month in the Masonic hall.
C. W. Haoenbick, V. O. D. U. Cronin, ClcrU
AO, U. W. NO. 153, Meets second
• and fourth Tudsday of each mouth in
Masonic hall.
0. Bright, Kec. S. B. Howard, M, W.
INDEPENDENT WORKMEN OF
AMEiUCA. meet every first and third
Friday of each month.
Geo. McCctchan, G. M.
6. M. Wagers, See.
POSTOFFICE D1RCETORY
Arrival ofMails
r. E. A M. V. R. R.—FROM THE EAST.
Every day, Sunday Included at.5:15 p u,
FROM THE WEST.
Every day, Sunday included at.9:58 am I
PACIFIC SHORT LINE. I
Passenger—leaves 9:C8 a. m. Arrives 11:55 p.11.
Freight—leaves 0:07 P. M. Arrives 7:00 p. m.
Daily except Sunday.
O'NEILL AND CHF.I.SEA.
Departs Monday, Wed. und Friday at 7:90 am
Arrives Tuesday,Thurs.and Sat. at.. 1:09pm
O’NEILL AND PADDOCK.
Departs Monday. Wed.and Friday at. .7:00 a m
Arrives Tuesday, Thurs. and Sat. at. .4:30 p m 1
O'NEILL AND NIOBRARA. •
Departs Monday. Wed. and Frl. at_7:00 a it
Arrives Tuesday, Thurs. and Sat. at...4:00 p ir
O'NEILL AND CUMMINSVILLE.
Arrives Mon.,Wed. and Fridays at ..JUDOp m
Departs Mon.. Wed. and Friday at.1:00 p m
P. D- * J. F. MllLLEN,
PROPRIETORS or Til*
GOOD TEAMS, NEW RIGS
Prices Reasonable.
East of MoCiifl'erto’s. O NEILL, NEB.
NEW YORK. . .
ILLUSTRATED
NEWS
The Organ of Honest Sport In America
ALL THE SENSATIONS OF THE DAY
PICTUHCD BY THE
FOREMOST ARTISTS OF THE COUNTRY
Life in New York Graphically Illustrated.
Breezy but Respectable.
$4 FOR A YEAR, S2 FOR SIX MONTHS
Do you want to b« posted? Then send
your subscription to tbe
XIV 70IS MM4T3 SEWS,
3 PARK PLACE) NEW YORK CITY,
PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY.
RI.PANS |
ABULES!
REGULATE THE
STOMACH, LIVER AND BOWELS
AND PURIFY THE BLOOD.
KIP ANft T ABULES arc the best Medi
cine known for IndifeRtloni Biliousness,
He*dnche,Const!patlon, Dyspepsia, Chron to J
Liver Troubles* Dlzilneu* Bad Complexion* o
Dysentery, Offensive Breath, and all dls- J
orders of the Stomach, Liver and Bowels. J
Rlpons Tabules contain nothing injurious to •
the most delicate constitution. Are pleasant to •
take, safe, effectual, and give immediate relief. •
Price—60 cents per box. May bo ordered •
through nearest druggist, or by mall. Sample •
Vial, 10 cents. Address 1
THE RIPANS CHEMICAL CO., •
10 SPRUCE STREET, NEW YORK CITY.
Sioux City, O'Neill and
Western Railway
(PACIFIC SHORT LINE)
THE SHORT ROUTE
BETWEEN
SloUX CITY ,
AND
Jackson, Laurel\ Randolph, Os
mond, Plainvieiv, O'Neill.
Connects at Sioux City with all diverging
lines, landing passengers In
NEW UNION PASSENGER STATION
Hotnescekers will find golden opportun
ities along this line. Investigate
before going elsewhere.
THE CORN BELT OP AMERICA
For rates, tlnr tables, or other Information
call upon agent, or address
F. C. HILLS, W. B. McNIDER,
Receiver, Gen'l Pass. Agent.
THE NEW
DONAHOE’S
is combating Religious Prejudice
and economic injustice, and helping
Catholics and Protestants to under
stand each other better.
THE NEW
DONAHOE’S
rs brilliant without being super
ficial, instructive without being
heavy, popular without being trival.
THE NEW
DONAHOE’S
Will delight every American Catho
lic and interest every thoughtful
Protestant.
Only $2.00 a year.
Write Jor sample copy
DONAHOE’S MAGAZINE CO.
611 WASHiNGTON ST.,
BOSTON MASS.
GEO. L. CARTER.
Commission Merchant.
■ .
Hay, Grain, Mill Stuffs* Cotton Seed Meal,
Apples, Potatoes, Etc.
--- \
SPECIAL Attention to Consignments of HAY.
REFEHRNCSS:
American Exchange Hunk.
Lincoln Savings Hank. .
Merchants Hank,
Any It. U. Agent in Lincoln.
< Telephone !i82)
LINCOLN, • NEB.
HOTEL
—EVA*S
. ' , 1 ;
Enlarged
Refurnished
Refitted
Only Hirst-class Hotel
In the City.
VV. T. EVANS, Prop.
Purchase Tickets end Consign your
Freight via the
F. E.&M.V. andS. C.&P
RAILROADS.
TRAINS DEPARTj
OOINQ EAST.
Passenger east, • 9:20 a. m
Freight east. - 10:30 A. u
Freight east, - - - 2:10 p. m.
OOINQ WEST.
Freight west, • 2:10 p. m
Passenger west, • 9:27 p. m
Freight, - 2:10 p. m.
The ELkhorn Line ie now running Reclining
Chair Cars dally, between Omaha and Dead
wood, jree to holders of first-class transpor
ration.
Fer any information call on
W. J. DOBBS, Act.
O’NEILL. NEB.
READ.
THE TRIBUNE
For Telegraph, Local,
General, State and
Foreign News.
Market complete
THE
SIOUX CITY DAILY TRIBUNE
$6 Per Year.
50 Cents Per Month.
QUICKEST AND BEST MAIL SERVICE
Address:
THE TRIBUNE.
Sub. Dept.
Sioux City, Iowa.
fashions latest.
JEWELLED CENSERS WHICH
BURN PERFUME.
The New Substitute for Smelling Salts—
Swings from the Chatelaine and Gives
Forth a Tinjr Cloud of Iucense—Worn
at the Matinee^
HE modern woman
has taken to burn
ing Incense at her
own shrine. The
latest thing in Jew
elled smelling-bot
tles Is a veritable
censer that swings
from milady's chat
elaine and when
lighted diffuses a
delicate perfume
and a tiny cloud of incense, says the
New York World.
At an operatic matinee the other day
a very elegant young woman in a tailor
made gown and a fetching millinery
get-up produced her whilom smelling
salts at the most affecting moment of
the performance. As she snapped open
the cover, and a fine streak of circum
ambient vapor curled softly up and
stole athwart the footlights, there was
a craning of necks in her neighbor
hood for two whole minutes, while the
women tried to investigate this latest
idea in elegance.
This new perfume burner, as it is
called, has displaced the-vinaigrette and
tiny bottle of aromatic salts, so dear to
the heart of the swooning maidens of
half a century ago. The English matron
now swings her censer through the
London drawing rooms as sedulously
as she carries her lorgnette rampant.
The perfume burners are also appear
ing in New York, and are to be found
in the shops which make a specialty
of imported novelties of the toilet, both
in sizes for the chatelaine and for the
dressing table.
The little chatelaine censer comes in
cut glass and sliver in very dainty de
signs. Its inner mechanism has a nice
little device for automatic lighting; ex
tinguishing is accomplished by merely
excluding the air by putting on the sil
ver top.
me perfume burner is In reality a
tiny lamp, burning, In lieu of a wick, a
prepared stick of incense as fragrant
as the frankincense and myrrh of bib
lical days. Eastern perfumes, such as
the pungent, aromatic sweet grasses of
India and Ceylon, are favorites for this
use.
In a short time the woman who for
merly affected musk and attar of roses
will float Into drawing rooms, theate*
boxes and church pews in a cloud of
Oriental incense; and she of the violet
sachets in silken lnterllnings of every
frock will burn violet-essence in clouds
of spring odorousness.
And who shall not say that the bou
doir Incense chats may not rival the
club smoke-talks of the masculines as
social occasions among women fair
when the season of Lenten solemnity
settles down upon the world of fashion?
ADAPTABILITY OF ANIMALS.
How They Vary Their Food to Salt
Changed Condition*.
An impression prevails that Insects
and other creatures are so co-related
with their food that they can scarcely
exist unless the special food seeming
ly essential to them is ready to hand,
says Meehan’s Monthly. This is be
lieved true not only of food, but of their
habits in general. The yucca and the
yucoa moth are so closely connected
that it does seem as if each is absolute
ly dependent on. the other—and one
might well ask what would the chimney
swallow do without chimneys in which
to build its nests—or cherry or peach
tree gum with which to build them.
But Just as the vegetarian would have
to abandon his principles where there
was nothing in the icy region but musk
oxen and walrus to feed on—so animal
nature generally has the Instinct of
preservation to take to that which first
comes to hand when favorite resources
fail. The chimney swallow built its
nest somewhere before the white man
constructed chimneys. The potato
beetle had Its home oa the plains long
before It ever knew a potato and the
writer has seen the common elm-leaf
beetle feeding varoclously in the moun
tains of North Carolina on a species of
skull-cap—Scutellaria—touching appa
rently no other plant, In localities where
elms were absent.
In Germantown gardens half-starved
bees take to grapes and raspberries.
In the same locality the common robin
has had hard times. There had been
no rain from the 4th of July to Oct. 11,
and, everything having become parched
long since, insects that live on green
food had not increased. The robins
took to green seeds and fruits. The
apples on the orchard trees were dug
out as If by mice. An American golden
pippin, with a heavy crop, presented a
remarkable appearance with what
should be apples hanging on the trees
like empty walnut shells.' In brief, no
creature would ignore the promptings
Of nature. It will change Its habits
when necessity demands.
Cognac.
Cognac, the distilled liquor, takes the
name from the small city of Cognac,
In France. The spirit has made Cognac
very rich; the population of no other
city on earth can show as large a pro
portion of millionaires. The rich liquor
is distilled from wine only, and expe
rience teaches that excellence of quality
Is obtained only when the crude, old
fashioned distilling apparatus is used.
Au AuachronUnu
In Raphael's picture of the nativity
the curious anachronism Is presented
of an Italian shepherd playing on the
bagpipes to entertain the holy family.
Diamonds have been discovered at
Nullagine, in Northwest Australia.
a FARM
GIVEN AWAY
Consisting of one sheet of FARM BUILDINGS end one sheet
of 78 Subjects DOMESTIC ANIMALS, etc. These ere to
please the children. The Farm House and Animals can
do cut out and made to stands thus a comnlata
Miniature Farm Yard. * w * ewnjMOie
3 Ways to Get This Farm:
6 Coupons) or
Ob/iu 1 Coupon and 6 Cents t or
10 Gents without any Coupon, to
^WJ.LL'*" H * M TOBACCO CO., DURHAM, N. C.7r
ena the Verm will he sent you POSTPAID. You will find
one Coupon Inside eseh 2 ounce beg, end two Cannons
Inside each 4 ounce Dec of ’ woupone „
BlacH’s Genoln Dntam Tifiaceo.
Buy a bag of this Celebrated Smoking Tobacco, and read tho
coupon, which gives a list of other premiums and how to get them.
2 CENT STAMM ACCEPTED.
*
s.
!?V*
*
This $85 Music Box and oneXadies’
Gold Watch actually to give away- Do
you want th^m? Buy a Dollar’s worth
of goods at Bentley’s and learn how
to get them.
NERVE SEEDS WEAKWEH
Thin Famous Remedy curoa quickly. permanentlr
nervous discuses, Weak Memory, Lou o( UnloTutei,
Headache. Wukefuinens. Lait VltalKv. Nivhtiv Hmi*.
muns, ovu urcamfl, irapotency and wasting diseases caused by
youthful errors or excesses. Contains no opiates, lasncrvetonle
an<l blood builder. Makes the pale and puny strong and plump.
.eJ^cl,rr,e(1 In vest pocket. HI per box; 6 forSft. Bymnll.pre*
paid^with a written ynarantea or money refunded. Write us.free
medlcnl boob, senior! nlntn wmnnflr. with -
aitlmnvilnla ■ nil
J0U.1MK. IUkh La
»rmnn(Mn !HT.amnmr. AO charge jnr eon imitation*, Bewan of imit*>
f (07's. Sold kj oar AftaU, or addma aKltVS HUUICO.. ■imllTwhUlliii
Forsalo in O’Neill, Neb., by MOltKIS A CO., Druggists.
'A ££ dC C-iC IT *'*•£'*.'*'*'S'if'*'S'
"ALL THE MA0AZ1NES IN ONE ’•
t«^eview«Reviews
___ Edited I
S October, 1179 • ^
Edited by ALBERT SHAW.
'HE REVIEW OF
October, U?5 » ^ REVIEWS, 3S its
n:m*e implies, gives in
readable form the best
SWJM arepublished. With the recent extraordinary
iftri-^ygSS increase of worthy periodicals, these careful <$3
S2S v. , ,;j , ij __ . . __ 'Ml
40 V:.
M~S: vV -. l3 reviews, summaries, and
jssSCTTCTT; wT?r- ~rr- - r ‘‘1
m-.
-2
quotations, giving
the
15 »t*u* g.eggMLHhit.y» >—»•»■»»
__ gist of periodical iitera
ture, are alone worth
the subscription price.
Aside from these departments, the editorial
and contributed features of the Review of Reviews are themselves
equal in extent to a magazine. The Editor’s "Progress of the World” is !***>
3.11 iliVa.;UUwiw
.hronicle of the happenings of the thirty days just past, jSS
wilh pictures on every page of the men and — 1 >***
women who have made the history of the month.
Tbt Liter My U-'or'd says: “We are deeply
’ impressed from month to month with the value
of the ‘Review of Reviews,’ which is a sort
of Eiffel Tower for the survey of the whole
field of periodical literature.
THREE
RECENT
SAMPLES
'4k9>
ik9>
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And yet it has a mind and voice of its
255 cents.
• .•'.—* - *wlc
own, and speaks out with decision and sense on ail public topics of
the hour. It is a singular combination of the monthly magazine and
the daily newspaper. It is daily in its freshness;
it is monthly in its method. It is the world
under a field glass.”
£oid on all New* Stands. Single Copy, 35 cents.
^REV1EW«REVIEWS
13 Astor Place, New York
Agents find it
the flost
Profitable
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Pennyroyal pills
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Druggist for Chichester s Kngliah Din-A
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remote from Washington. J
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charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. \
A Pamphlet, “How to Obtain Patents,'1 with#
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C.A.SNOW&CO.
Off. patent Office, Washington. D. C.
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