The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, May 14, 1896, Image 5
GKN’L OFFICIAL DIRECTORY t STATE. Governor.:......Silas Holcomb Lieutenant Governor.U. E. Moore Secretary of State... .J. A. Piper State Treasurer.J. S. Bartley State Auditor.Eugene Moore Attorney General.A. S. Clnircliill Cora. Lands and Buildings.C. 11. Russell Sunt. Publio Instruction. II. R. Corbett. HEGENTS STATE UNIVERSITY. Chas. H. Gere, Lincoln: Leavitt Burnham, Omaha; .1 M. Hiatt, Alma; E. P. Holmes, Pierce; J. T. Mallaieu, Kearney; M. J.Hull. Edgar. CONOR ES8I0NAL. Senators—W. V. Allen, of Madison; John M. Thurston, of Omaha. Representatives—First Distrlot, J. B Strode Second, D H. Mercer; Third, Geo. D. Mikel Jolin; Fourth — Plainer; Fifth, W. E. And rews; Sixth; O. M. Kern. JUDICIARY. Chief Justice.A. M. Post Associates...T.O. Harrison and T. L.Norvail FIFTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT. Judge .M. P. Kinkaid, of O’Neill Reporter.J. J. King of O'Neill Judge.W. H. Westover, of ltushvllle Reporter.John Maher, of Rushville. LAND OFFICES. Register. Receiver. o’lntnx. .John A. Harmon. .Elmer Williams. COUNTY. judge.Geo McCutcheon Clerk of the District Court-Johu Skirving Deputy.O- }}• Collins Deputy......Sam Howard Clerk .Bill Bethea Deputy.Mike McCarthy Sheriff....Chas Hamilton Deputy...Chas O'Neill Supt. of Schools.W. K. Jackson Assistant.Mrs. W. R. Jackson Coroner..Dr. Trueblood Surveyor. Attorney.H. Murphy SUPERVISORS. FIRST DISTRICT. Cleveland, Band Creek, Dustin, Saratoga, ock Falls and Pleasantvlew—J. U. Blondlu. SECOND DISTRICT, Shields, Paddock, Scott, Steel Creek, Wll lowdalo and Iowa—J. H. Hopkins. THIRD DISTRICT. Grattan and O’Neill—E. J. Mack. FOURTH DISTRICT, Ewing, Verdigris andDololt—L. C. Combs. FIFTH DISTRICT, Chambers, Conler, Lake, lacClure and Inman—E.'Stillwell. SIXTH DISTRICT. Swan, Wyoming, Fairvlew, Francis. Green Valley, Sheridan and Emmet—C. W. Moss. SEVENTH DISTRICT. Atkinson and Stuart—Frank Moore. I \ C11T OF (y NEILL. Supervisor, E. J. Mack; Justices, E. H. Benedict and S. M. Wagers; Constables, Ed. McBride and Perkins Brooks. COUNOII.MER—FIRST WARD. For two years.—D. H. Cronin. For one year—H. C. McEvony. SECOND WARD. For two years—Alexander Marlow. For one year—Jake Pfund. THIRD WARD. For two years—Charles Davis. For one year—Elmer Merrlman. CITY OFFICERS. Mayor, O. F. Biglin; Clerk, N. Martin; Treasurer, John McHugh; City Engineer John llorrlsky; Police Judge, H. Kautzman; Chiof ot Polioe, Charlie Hall; Attorney, Thos. Carlon; Welghmaster, Joe Miller. OR AT TAN TOWNSHIP. Supervisor, It. J. Hayes; Trearurer. Barney MeUreevy: Clerk, J. Sullivan; Assessor Ben Johring: Justices, M. Custello and Clias. Wilcox; Constables, John Horrlsky and Ed. McBride; Itoad overseer dist. ski, Allen Brown dist. No. 4, John Enright. SOLDIERS' RELIEF COMNISSION. Regular meeting first Monday In Febru ary of each year, and at suoh otlior times as is deemed necessary, liobt. Gallagher, Page, chairman; Wm. lloweu, U’Neill, secretary; tl. U. Clark Atkinson. VJT.PATRICK’S catholic church. O Services every Sabbath at 10:30 o'clock. Very Kev. Cassidy, Poster. Sabbath school Immediately following services. METHODIST CHURCH. Sunday services—Preaching 10:30 A. M. and 8:00 !•. M. Class No. 1 0:30 a. M. Class No. 2 (Eu worth League! 7:00 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. U. T. GEORGE, Pastor. m di A. U. POST, NO. 86. The Gen. John f vX, O’Neill Post, No. 86, Department of Ne I braska G. A. It., will meet the llrst and third V Saturday evening of each month in Masonic hall O'Neill S. J. Smi ; H, Com. IJILKHORN VALLEY LODGE,I. O. O. J e: Meets every Wednesday evening in Odd Fellows’ hall. Visiting brothers cordially Invited to attend. W. H. Mason. N. G. O. L. Bright. See. Garfield chapter, r. a. m Meets on first and third Thursday of each > month In Masonic hall. ’j W. J. Dobrs Seo. J. C. Harnish, H. P KOFP.—HELMET LODGE. IT. D. . Convention every Monday at 8 o clock p. m. in Odd Fellows’ nail. Visiting bretbern oordially invited. J. P. Gilligak, C. C. E. J. Mack. K. of K. and S. O’NEILL ENCAMPMENT NO. 30.1. O. O. F. meets every Becond and fourth Fridays of each mouth in Odd Fellows’ Hall. Ohas. Bright, H. P. H. M. Tttlky, Scribe iJDEN LODGE NO. 41, DAUGHTERS J OF RKBKKAH, meets every 1st and 3d Friday of each month In Odd Fellows' Hall. Flo Bentley, N. G. ■ Kittie Bright. Sec. Garfield lodge, no.05,p.<& a.m. Regular communications Thursday ulgbts on or before the full of the moon. W. J. Do bus, Sec. B. H. Benedict, W. M. Holt camp no. 1710. m. w. of a. Meets ou tne first and third Tuesday in each mouth In the Masonic hall. C. W. Hagensick, V. C. D. H. Cronin, Clerk AO, U. VV. NO. 153, Meets seoond • and fourth Tudsday of each mouth In Masonic hall, C. Bright, Rec. S. B. Howard, M. W. Independent workmen of AMERICA, meet every first and third Friday of each month. Geo. McCutchan, N. M. J. U. Welton, Seo. POSTOFFICE DIRCETORY / f I / , Arrival of Malls r. E. a M. V. R. R.—FROM the EAST. Every day, Sunday Included at.6:15 p n FROM TnE WEST. Every day, Sunday included at.8:58 am PACIFIC SHORT LINE. Passenger—leaves 9:68 a. m. Arrives 11:55 p.m. Freight—leaves U:07 P. M. Arrives 7:00 p. m. Dally except Sunday. O’NEILL AND CHELSEA. Departs Monday, Wed. and Friday at 7:00 am Arrives Tuesday, Thurs. and 8at. at.,1:00pm O'NEILL AND PADDOCK. Departs Monday. Wed.and Friday at..7:00 am Arrives Tuesday, Thurs. and Sat. at. .4:30 p m O’NEILL AND NIORRARA. Departs Monday. Wed. and Fri. at_7:00 a m Arrives Tuesday, Thurs. and Sat. at...4:00 p it O’NEILL AND CUM MINS VILLI. Arrives Mon.,Wed. and Fridays at .. II :30p m Departs Mon., Wad. and Friday at.1:00 p m P. D. & J. F. MULLEN, PROPRIETORS OP THE GOOD TEAMS, NEW RIGS Prices Reasonable. East of MoCufferto’s. O'NEILL, NKB, NEW YORK . . . 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Address THE RIPANS CHEMICAL CO., 10 SPRUCE STREET, NEW YORK CITY. Sioux City, O’Neill and Western Railway (PACIFIC SHORT LINE) THE SHORT ROUTE BETWEEN SlOlJX ClTY AND Jackson, Laurel, Randolph, Os mond, Plainvicw, 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, tiroo tables, or otdor information call upon agent j 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 is 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 for sample copy DONAHOE’S MAGAZINE CO. fell WASH.NGTON ST., BOSTON MASS AN ENGLISH OPINION. AaMrtean Women Snarled at by a Lon don Newspaper. From a London paper:. The Ameri can woman must surely be the vainest creature that struts about the earth. Compared to her Yum-Yum, In the “Mikado," admiring herself in her mir ror and congratulating herself on being the most beautiful woman in ail the world, is modest. She, at least, utters her conviction only to herself, whereas the lady from Chicago, 11L, or Cicero ville, Me., goes up on the housetops and publishes hers abroad to all who care to listen. Nay, she screams so loud that we are compelled to listen whether we will or no. But, having given ear to her appreciation of her own charms, we go away and think over what we have heard. Then, after due considera tion, we go forth in spirit and, finding an imaginary American woman of the sort which writes to the newspapers, we take her gently by the unsubstan tial hand of hers and address her—po litely, we hope, but above all firmly. “Dearest madam," we say, “you are not bad-looking, and it must tie confessed you have gone to one of the best mod istes In Paris for your clothes. But you are not a lady—the word is out ot tasJUon, but the thing never is—and it is to be feared that nothing could make you one. You are absolutely self-satis fied and you Bhow it every minute of your life, or, as you would say, ‘all the time.’ You ure quite without charm of manner, yet you think that all men worship you. Your education has been of the sort that our board schools give our coachmen’s children at our expense. Yonr own comfort Is the one thing you think of—and here is a piece of comfort for you. So long as you cover yourself with diamonds in the morning; so long as your voice, can be heard from on' end of the Rue de la Paix to the other, so long as your one topic of conversa tion is your frock and what you gave for it; so long as you sit about in the public rooms of a hotel in a gown in which you might go to court; so lets as you are not afraid to state en pleta table d'hote that the room was not stuffy and the Vomen smelt that strong you’d have been sick right there; so long as you do all or any of these things, be lieve me, yos need have no fear of being taken for the only kind of English wo man worth considering." ROQfr>vBPORT*i8 INFLUENCE. Wtaw He Said A boat Starting- a Saws paper In BroiMia. M. Rochefort Is known in England as a Boulanglst, as the edltot and ^rogsdo tor of the Intranslgeant newspapet, as the wild political agitator who opposed the government of Louis Napoleon in the ’60s as bitterly as he attacked th* actual republic at the close of the ’80s, says the Saturday Review. English men can scarcely understand M. Roche fort’s position as a newspaper editor and agitator, and his power is to them almost incredible. Yet the signs of his influence are not Impalpable. The In transigeant has a larger circulation than any French newspaper except the Petit Journal. The truth is that there are only three or four men in France who have made their pen a whip, and so become objects of fear and respect, and of these M. Rochefort is the chief, for neither M. Cassagnac nor M. Dru mqnt can be compared with him in wit or power of vituperation. His reputa tion in this sort of journalism dates back to his youth (he is now a gray haired man), but was first established by the success of La Lanterne, the paper he published in Brussels when he was exiled from France by Napoleoa TIL Chicago Girls and Matrimony. I have no doubt that the remaining cause of the low marriage rate is that many men dislike intellectual women— whether because such women are really disagreeable or because man’s taste la at fault, I shall not try to determine. And even among those who like them as friends many feel as the young man did who made thiB confession: “I never expected to marry the sort of a girl I did. You know I always be lieved in Intellectual equality and all that, and had good friendships with the college girls. But you see, you girls hadn’t any illusions about us. After you had seen us hanging at the board on problems you could work, and had taken the same degree yourselves, you couldn’t imagine us wonders just be cause we had gone through college, and when I met a dear little girl that thought I knew everything—why, it Just keeled me right over; it was a feel tfag I had no idea of.”—Century. Costly Entertainment for a Prince. The Prince of Wale® recently paid fc visit to Lily, Duchess of Marlborough, It was ibr a few days only and “very quiet,” yet this little informal stay, it it rumored, cost the duchess $50,000. Th« suite of apartments which his roya) highness occupied was newly uphol stered in pale blue satin,and the prince’s bath was of plated silver. The main hall of Deepdene was entirely trans formed. The statuary was removed and the walls were hung with trophies of the chase. War Agalait th. Wicked. Police Commissioner Lee ef St Lout recently sent a letter to the paston of the different churches of that city asking them if they would uphold hiu> in an heroic effort to enforce the Sun day law in St. Louis on the lines pur sued in New York. Most of the pastor* have promised a zealous support A Remarkable Han. “At that moment the worthy pastor appeared on the threshold of the mansa His hands were thrust into the pocketr •f his large, loose coat, while he turned over the leaves of the prayer book and wiped his spectacles.”—Paul Lindau. ADAPTABILITY OP ANIMAL& How They Tory Their Food to Soil Chanced Condition*. An impression prevails that insects and other creatures are so eo-related with their food that they can scarcely exist unless the special food seeming ly essential to them is ready to hand, Bays Meehan’s Monthly. This is be lieved true not only of food, but of their habits in general. The yucca and the yucca moth are so closely connected that it does seem as it 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 on the plains long before it ever knew a potato and the writer has seen the common elm-leaf beetle feeding varociously in the moun tains of North Carolina on a species of skull-cap—scutellarla—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 ihas 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 Bplrlt 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. An Anachronism. 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. Mrs. Anna Gage, wlfn of Ei Onputy II. S. Marshal, Columbus, Kan., says i "l was delivered of TWINS in less than 20 min utes and with scarcely any pain after using only two bottles of “MOTHERS’ FRIEND” SIS NOT STOVES ASTEBWABS. t^Sent by Expran or Hall, on receipt of price, •1.00 per bottle. Book “TO MOTUEH8" mailed free. BRADflELD BEQVLATOB CO., ATLAKTA, SOLO BY ALL DRUGGISTS. GA. HOTEL --Jh VANS Enlarged Refurnished Refitted Only First-class Hotel In the City. W. T. EVANS, Prop. READ^^^ THE TRIBUNE For Telegraph, Local, General, State and Foreign News. Market complete -THE SIOUX CITY DAILY TRIBUNE SO Per Year. ~ 50 Cents Per Month. QUICKEST AND BEST MAIL SERVICE Address: THE TUIBUNK. Sub. Dept. , Sioux City, Iowa. OFFICE or Blackwell's Durham Tobacco company. DURHAM, N. C. Dear Sir: You are entitled to receive FREE from your wholesale dealer, JJ/HITE STAR SOAP with all Blackwell’s Genuine Durham Smoking Tobacco you buy. One bar of soap Freo with each pound, whether 16 ot, 8 ox., 4 oz., or a oz., packages. We have notified every whole sale dealer in the United States that we will supply them with soap to give you FREE. Order a good supply ot aENUlNlB DURHAM at once, and insist on getting your soap. One bar of Soap each - ot____ to-day. Yours very truly. ’ : WMV%» vii jjciuug your soap. One bar of Soap FREE with each pound you buy. soap Is offered for a limited time, so order BLACKWELL’S DURHAM TOBACCO COMPANY. If you have .ay dtHlcalty In procuring your Map, cut out till, notice and «ond It with year order to yoar wholesale dealer. 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The Editor’s ‘1 Progress of the World” is an invaluable chronicle of the happenings of the thirty days just past, with pictures on every page of the men and women who have made the history of the month. Tie Literary World 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 Geld of periodical literature. And yet it has a mind and voice of its own, and speaks out with decision and sense on all 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.” Sold on all New. Stand.. Single Copy, 35 cent.. ®REV1EW*REYIEW5 13 Astor Place, New York. THREE RECENT ■AMPLER 25 cents. Agents find it the /lost Profitable ilagazine. Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder Awarded Gold Medal Midwinter Fair, San Francisco. 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