The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, May 27, 1897, Image 5

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    i.LN'L OFFICIAL DIRECTORY
%
STATE.
Governor....Sllu Holoomb
(lieutenant Uovernor..J. E .Hurl*
aucri-tary of State.W ui. F. Porter
Treasurer...John it Me.erve
■*»»«• Auditor .JohnF. Cornell
Aii .rin*y General.C. J* Jbitythe
Com. UudttiHl Buildings...J. V. Wolfe
s. oi. Public Instruction.W. M. J tckaon
MKU ENTs STATE UNIVEBSITY.
fi.twU. Lure. Lincoln; Leavitt Burnham,
buml.a; .1 M. II utl. Alma; E. P. Holme*,
I lurce; J. I. Mmlaleu. Kearney; M. J. Hull,
i nt
" .t|i .
II- o-ex iiih'Ivu*First Oleirlot.J. R. Strode
*««-• .mi. ■* l> vi«r,» r. Third. 8. Maxwell,
I- orita. 'A. b. 'Inrx. Filth. It. I>. Sultur.auU,
alxili. W. L. Qreeu.
' OSQRSS8I0NAL.
-funtor*—<t. V. Allen, of Madlaon; John
ji. i uur*tou. of Omaha.
, JUDICIARY.
VI. .-I Justice.vi..A. M. Post
\ ....i.uw.-.T.U. Uarrlsou slid T. L-Horvall
i ll iKhNTH JUDICIAL DlbTKlCT.
euugv . ...M. P. tUukakl, of O’NeUl
.J. J. Kluitol vx'AeiU
4 >n jxe.W. U. Westover, of Ituahvtlle
: ....if.rtcr . «ho Maher, or Kush villa.
LA.su OFFJCSa.
u'mu,
■»ter
s'*-, or..
John A. Harmon.
...Elmer Williams.
UUVNTY.
• k»v
■ xv. *}■*’.
e./ee •••
iirn .
......
.tcrin...
.K'puty •... •
i. of e^ulkoolr
t..hlllLHIl|.ii.. ...
Joi'uiur.
.Oeo McCutcheon
.... inairimCourt .JohnSklrvlng
* ..O. M. Collin*
.J. P. Mullen
. Saui Howard
. ..U.il liuihea
.Mike HoCartby
..Ohaa llaiuilton
....Chaa U’.helU
.W. U. Jackaon
......Mra. VV. It. Jackson
Dr. frueblood
<»: ' >’>or.
•uru >.
.. M. F. Norton
... ..W .H. Butler
HUPB&VI80R8.
ritier district.
Cleveland, Sand Creek, Dustin, Saratoga,
U-ick rail, awl Pleasant view :J. A. Uobertaon
anCOUD D1*THI0T.
Shield*, Paddock. Scott, Steel Creek, WU
. wdaleaud Iowa—J. U. Hopkins.
y.
THIRD DISTRICT.
U rattan and O’Neill—Home* Campbell.
rODBTB DISTRICT.
twins, Verdigris and Delolt—L. C. Comb.
rirTH DISTRICT.
Chuuiliers, Conlev, Lake, laoClure and
. iiumii-5 b. Conger.
SIXTH DISTRICT.
Swan. Wyoming, Fairvlew, Francis. Green
Valley* Sheridan nod Emmet—0. W. Hoes*
SKVKHTH DISTRICT.
Atkinson and Stuart—W. N. Coats.
our or & ns ill.
Supervisor. E. J. Mnok; Juetlom, E. H.
Beuedlot aua 8. M. Wiisn; Constables, Ed.
Ma Bride end Perkins Brooke.
OOtmOILMM-IIMT WAMD.
For two year*.—D. H. Cronin. “or oM
year—C. W. Hagenslck.
SSOOSD WAMD. , '
Fur two year*—Alexander Marlow, for
unnyear—W. T. Evans.
THIHD WABD.
For two yean—Charles Davis, for one
year—E. J. Mack.
't
ctsv orricsas.
Mayor. H. K. Murphy; Clerk. N. Martin;
treasurer, John Slr.lugb; City Engineer
John Uorrlsky; Polloe Judge, U. Kautsmau;
tiller of Polloe, P. J.Blglin; Attorney,
Thus. Carlon; Welghmaster, D. tannard.
QRATTAN TOWNSHIP.
Supervisor, B. J. Bayes: Trearurer. Barney
McOreevv: Clerk, J. Sullivan; Assessor Ben
Jobring: Justices, M. Castello and Ohaa.
Wlloox; Constables, John Uorrlsky and Ed.
McBride; Boad overseer diet. Ml, Allen Brown
•list. No. t John Enright.
.'ULMERS’ RELIEF C0MNI88I0N.
Begular meeting Erst Monday In Febru
ary ot each year, and at such other times as
is deemed neoessary. Bobt. Gallagher, Page,
chairman; Wm. Bowen, O'Neill, aeoratary;
U. H. Clark Atkinson.
WT.PATBICK’B CATHOLIC CHUBCH.
O Services every Babbath at 10:30 o'clock.
Very Bev. Cassidy. Poster. Sabbath school
Immediately following services.
VIKTHODIET CHUBCH. Sunday
ill services—Preaching 10:*) a. m. and »:Wl
r. m. Class No. 1OUW a. m. Class No. 3 (En
worth League) T:00 P. M. Class No. 3 (Child
rens) 3:00 p. rr. Mind-week servloes—General
prayer meeting Thursday T:*> p. m. All will
Ke mad. welcome, ^•“^tran^era.^
i i A. 11. POET. NO.»«. The Gen. John
Ur. O'Neill Post, No. HS, Department of Be
braaka G. A. B„ will meet the ttrst and third
Saturday evening of each month In Masonic
hall O'Nell) S. J. Smuh. Com.
Elkhohn valley LODGE, 1. 0. o.
f. Meets < '
s’na
odd Vellows’
cvei
mil.
invited to attend.
W. U.Masom, N. G.
VWAJMi A «vWSH »e w. ys
nr Wednesday evenlng ln
Visiting brothers cordially
O. L. Baianv, Sec.
/ 1ABF1KLD CHAPTEB, B. A. M
YXMeeu on Brat and third Thursday of eaoh
month In Masonic hall. _ _
W. J. Doans Sec. J.0. Bamism, H. P
H, Coovontfam every Monday atio'olodk pi
a. in Odd Fellows' halL Visiting brethern
OP P.—HELMUT LODGE. U. D.
cordially Invited. „ _ _
ARTHUR OOTUMDALt.. C. C.
E. J. Mack. K. of B. and S.
r
O'MKILL KNCAMPMMNT N0.80.1.
O. O. F. mm every second and fourth
Fridays of eeoh month In Odd Fellow*’ Hell.
Ones. ItiuoHT. H. P. H. M. Tmii, Scribe
PUCK LODAI NO. 41, 1)A COBTIU
Cl OF BHBBKAH, meet* every let end M
Friday of eaob month In Odd Fellow*' HaU.
Aunbs T. Bun.IT, N. O.
Done IUtidn>, Bee.
ncitniiii) hooec.no.HJAAJC.
VT Regular oommunloetloo* Thursday nlerhta
on or before the full of themoon.
J. J. Kin, W. K.
6.0. Smtokb, Bee.
_’NO. lTlO.M.W.OFA.
_ieeta on the Bret end third Tuesday in
each month In the Itesonlc hell.
Neil. Bhemkah, V. 0. D. H. Oeoru, Clerk
AO, U. W. NO. IBS. Meets aeoond
• end fourth Tudsday of each month in
Masonic hell.
0. Bbioht, Bee. 8. B. Howard, M. W.
1NDKFKNDKNT WOBKMIN OF
AMKUIOA. meet every Brat and third
Friday of each month.
, „ „ „ Gao. MoOutohaw, N. M.
J. H. Weltoh, See.
POBTOFFH5B OUtCBTOKT
Arrival emails
F. 1. Is. J. B.R.-mqii m bast.
day,Sunday included ~~
raoMTBa west
vary day,Sunday Included at..
ot.B :40 pm
10:04 am
PACino SHORT LUI.
I’aaaenger-leaves 10:01a. m. Arrives 11 :S5 p.m.
Freight—leaves 0:07 r. s. Arrives 7:00 p. m.
Dally except Sunday.
O'niLL AMD CHELSEA.
Departs Monday, Wed. and Friday at 7.-00 am
Arrives Tuesday, Thurs. and Bat. at..1:00 pm
O'HXILL AMD PADDOCK.
Departs Monday..Wed.and Friday at..7:00am
Arrives Tuesday, Thurs. and Sat. at. .4:00 pm
_ O'MEXXJ. AMD MIOEEARA.
Departs Monday. Wed.andFri.at....THM am
Arrives Tuesday, Thurs. and Sat. at...4:00 pm
O’Slhli AMD CC1CMIMSVILLB.
4SSKISS:WL7«aSS’.r.::!lSU
8AYINOS OF COL. NORTH.
i WaateS Soma Maw Words for Hta
f Vocabulary.
• ■ The late CoL North, the- nitrato
king, had a ready, If somewhat rough
style of wit peculiar to himself, says
the London World. The trap in which
i he was seated being on one occasion
| blocked In a crowded thoroughfare in
Immediate Juxtapostlion to a coster
monger’s cart laden with vegetables,
' the coachman, finding that the horse
was about to help himself to the cab
bages would have backed the animal
out of harm’s way. “Let him graze,"
said the colonel “I want to hear the
man swear!” The costermonger turn
ing his head around at this moment,
the colonel’s wish was promptly grat
ified by an exceptionally choice and ex
tensive selection of expletives. “Bravo,’’
said North, as he threw the man a
coin that would more than have bought
the whole cargo of vegetables. “I
thought I was pretty well educated In
your line myself, but hang me it you
haven’t taught me four new adjec
tives.” North, although fond of pic
tures, hated what one calls “doing gal
leries.” Once, being pressed to go and
see a picture after Rubens, he.quickly
replied: “After Rubens! Why, surely,
Rubens was the brute they were after
last year when you dragged me in
here. Haven’t they caught the old cuss
yet?” The colonel loved children, but
was not wildly keen on kissing babies
miscellaneously. Once, being implor
ed by a handsome lady to kiss an ex
ceptionally unwholesome-looking in
fant, of which the mother stated her
self to be the living image. “Well, herb
goes for the image,” said North, and
he forthwith imprinted a sounding kiss
on the fair mother’s cheek.
NEW YORK FOOD SUPPLY.
Kaoigfe n Base la WltlutaaU a roar
Moatha’ Blega.
It the city of New Tork and the
neighboring district were to be be
sieged or in some other way entirely
cut off from the outside world, and
therefore deprived of the food supplies
which in normal times come in daily
In large quantities, how long would it
be before the pinch of hunger would be
felt? That Is a very hard queetion to
■uch Inequalities of purchasing capac
ity in New York society that some go
hungry In times of greatest prosperity
for lack of means, while the great ma
jority eat more than is good for them.
Undoubtedly the number of those who
always go hungry would be Increased
after two or three days of a siege, and
then day by day this number would In
crease until the public authorities
would feel compelled to take possession
of the food supplies and distribute them
among the people. With the exception
of milk and some other things the sup
ply of meat, poultry, hardy vegetables
and fruits would laut for two mqnths
at the present rate of consumption. If
all the supplies were taken charge of at
the beginning of a siege—and this
could easily be done—the food within
New York could be made to last for
four months at least. The siege of Paris
lasted only four months. Before two
months had passed high and low, rich
and poor, had learned what hunger was.
And, as is well known, the French are
the most thrifty and economical people
in the world. In the arrangement and
disposition of food the Parisians are
especially distinguished. But the food
supply in New York cpuld be made to
last as long as the Paris siege lasted,
and the people would still be comfort
able.—Ladles* Home Journal.
Kuilui aid AraMalaas.
The Russian people cared a great
deal about the Bulgarians; they do not
care at all about the Armenians.
Englishmen are apt to be puszled by
this difference of attitude; they would
find it more intelligible if they bore in
mind the place that religion holds in
the Russian mind. The Bulgarians be
longed to the same church—the Rus
sian peasant does not trouble himself
about “autocephalous” distinctions—
the Armenians do not belong to the
church at all. They are monophysite
heretics, and though the peasant prob
ably thinks that it might be better that
they should get their punishment from
the orthodox csar than from the Mus
sulman Turk, he is not greatly concern
Ail that fhnv eViAiiM ml It rrvi. i- - —
example of Indifference originating in
religious diversity, Just as the last war
with Turkey was an example of sym
pathy originating' in religious agree
ment; but it serves equally well to en
force the paramount part that religion
plays In the formation of Russian
popular opinion.
Saved by Saashla*.
A writer in the New York Ledger
says:
"I think the superb health of my fam
ily is to a great extent due to the hab
it we have of almost living in sunshine.
Every bright day all the shutters are
open, and the entire house gets the
benefit of sunlight. It drives away
dampness, mold, microbes, and blue
devils, and puts us all in 'good humor
and health. I cannot imagine good
sanitary conditions and darkness. Even
my cellar is as light as I can make It;
and whatever fruit and delicacies need
to be shut away from light, I put in
close cupboards or covered boxes.”
Me Basinas* Baa.
“You have a safe in your house for
money, haven’t youT”
“Yes, and no burglar who knows any
thing about It would take the trouble to
open It.”
"Why notr*
“My wife knows the combination.”—
Detroit Free Press.
Oaasasad.
Baldup—“I was amused today to seo
Gadboy’s mustache catch fire while he
was trying to light a cigar.” Teldoo—
| “Damage it much?” Baldup—"Yes; it
was burned down."—Roxbury Gazette.
I NOVELIST’S FIRST EFFORTS.
Mn Barri*'* >>R«eoll«otloni of a School
in tutor Written at an Karljr A|a
Having regard to Mr. J. M. Bar
rie's visit to Dumfries academy, the
Courier and Herald of that place
prints some extracts from the novel
ist’s early contributions to a school
magazine called the Clown, which he
and some friends started. Youpg
Barrie writes some ■•Reckoloctlohs”
in the asumod role of a “skoolmas
ter” whose spelling is Artemus
Wardian. In his second instauiuont
he complains that the e».ito.’ >‘ , elt
sura of the wurds in m. last veo<
kollections rong,” and he adds:
“Altho, of coars. 1 maik jew allow
ance for yoor eddukatlon not being
equal to mine. I hop you will be more
cairful.” Resuming the ‘‘Keckollsc
tions," he writes:
“I alwais open the school with
prair, as I think it a verry good
thing to do. and I got two skollars
by it Now, my skollars have gen
erally verry durty faces. Well, one
day in the middle of my prair won of
the boys crept in belo the tabel, and
when ho was there anuther boy cam
in at the door with a cleen face.
This was too mutch for the boy in
belo the tabel, and. ju3t as 1 had fin
ished saying ‘And may they crie
from the botom of their harts—,’ he
shouted out • l.ord Almichti. there’s
Jock Smith’wi’ his face washed!”
Here is an instanoe of how ef
fectively the lad could reproduce a
. conversation. Relating a railway
journey the sohoolmaster Bays:
l “On my rode we passed the river
. ‘Aye.* A gentleman asked me,
j ‘What river is that?’
“I was meditatin’, so I answered
abruptly, ‘Aye.’
“’iiie gentleman repeated his ques
! tion, and I. thinkin’ hs had not
heard me, again replied -Aye. ’
| • • ‘Could- -you—tell — me—w hat ~
I river—that—is?’ he roared into my
eer.
“1 again answered ‘Aya’
“ ‘Sir, said he, ‘I sea you want to
insult me!’
| “I couldn't comprehend what he
: said till another person in the trane
I informed me that he thoat that I
meant *eh’ when I said *aye.’”
Here is another example well
worth giving:
| “The minister of the .town was sed
to be a good preacher, and so I went
to heer him on the furst Sabboth of
; the munth. I went early, and their
' wer only one person there who I saw
was a nelder. I sed to him, ‘When
does servioe begin?’
“The man stalred.
“ ‘When does servioe begin?’ I
agen asked.
I “To my surprise the elder ex
claimed: ‘What abomnabul impurt
nense. Pray, sur, do you know oor
respecktlt mlnistir?’
• “ ‘Me no him? No,1 sed L
“ ‘Then, get 00V o’ this;’ here
| plied. ‘You impurnant skoundrql
\ git oot o’ this; an’ if I sea you here
; agen I’ll kick you oot mysel!’
“Of oourse I was gratoly aston
! lshed at the man, not nolng anythink
, I had sed about the minister; but it
struck me at wonce that the minis
ter’s name was Servioe!”
Admiral da Horsej aud the Sentry.
When Admiral de Horsey, who
some years ago had command of the
British fleet in the Pacific, was the
admiral of the North Atlantie
squadron, he was one evening dining
on shore at Port Royal. Jamaica. On
returning to his flag-ship alone after
dinner, his way to the boat led
across the barrack square. A black
sentry, of one of the West India
regiments, halted him at the gate
with, “Who goes dar?” Great was
the admiral's annoyance to find he
had neglected to get the pass-word
before leaving the ship. “That’s
all right,” he said carelessly, hoping
to overcome the man’s scruples by
Indifference; “you know who I am.”
“Dunno nobody, ear,” replied the
nigger, pompously; “you can't go in
dar.” “Why, I’m Admiral de
Horsey.” “Well, you can’t go in, I
don’t care if you’s Admiral de
Donkey. ”—Argonaut
Leurnad by Experlenop,
A certain judge in Chicago, who
rather prides himself on his vast and
I voncu nuuwmugu ui mw. was com
pelled not long ago to listen to a case
- that had been appealed from a justice
J of the peace. The young practl
, tioner who appeared for the appel
lant was long and tedious; ho brought
In all the elementary text books and
quoted the fundamental pro; ositlous
of law. At last, the judge thought
It was time to make an effort to hurry
him up. "Can’t we assume.” he said,
blandly, "that the court know i a
little law itself?” "That’s the very
mistake I made in the lower court.”
answered the young man, "1 don’t
want to let it defeat me twice.”—
Argonaut
A Bolotin 4n NenO.
Half a century ago, when "sub
jects” were bought by the surgeons,
a poor man, writes James Payn, felt
dead in Fleet street Without a mo
ment’s hesitation, a young fellow
who was passing threw himself on
his knees beside the corpse, exclaim
ing: "My father, my dear father'” A
crowd gathered round, their sym
pathy was excited, and money was
subscribed to enable the pious youth
to take away his father’s body in a
hackney coach. He did so, and took
it to a surgeon, who gave him a hun
dred dollars for it
Poor Uttlo Thing.
"What’s the matter. Molly?” asked
Colonel Yerger of his little 6-year-old
daughter.
"Pa, my mocking bird is dead.”
"Well, never mind. Molly, l’U buy
you another one.”
"I am oalm enough now, but when
I saw that poor little dead bird I
could have cried like a child,” said
Molly.-wTexas Siftings.
-V'*fr i:
?-■' ^' • v. 4 y«>» ^
I OUTENHBRO’S INVENTION.
****** 111* Printing Pr*a« Has Don* for
1 Mankind. •
Five hundred years ago the literary
EcfiP'ist, >bky-tingered sad forloih,
cried out t *r ■'dp, and his cry was
heard in Germany and answered by the
birth of Gutenberg in 1397, who gave
to the world, in 1450, its first com
r’o‘i,y printing press, says the New
Tf rk V. crld. “Four men," writes the
Gersier. historian Kopp, “Gutenberg,
Coiiir,!, ny. I.itUuv and Copernicus,
e 1 U it the dmti’t g lino o£ the middle
t v ' -I 'o-rje as boundary i.ones
5 tie ortviat.ee ot mankind Into
r. id. hoi- and .finer epculi ot its develop
hktiit." From centers ot discovery and
invention in over-widening circles that
development has' gone on. But ot all
the means by. which the divine flat
“Let there be light” has been fulfilled
—In its inner sense—through the long'
ages, there hp* been none In the mate
rial realm that has exerted an Influence
as powerful and tar-reaching as the
, printing press. Compared with this
'discovery, which has evolved from the
^‘.nebular chaos ot man's thoughts and
.emotions the vast solar system ot
-books, even the finding of a new con
: tinent, pales In significance. The pri
ority ot Gutenberg’s discovery over that
ot Columbus is in itself evidence of lta
vaster and more urgent import. How
ever it may be now, there was a time
when we needed a printing press more
than we needed another hemisphere.
For there has never been any miscal
culation in the order of the discoveries
and Inventions of the universe. The
Edisons and Maxims never could have
been born before the Newtona and
i Watts any more than man could have
. made his appearance in the early pro
, tozoan eras. The wonders of electricity
and Roentgen rays are the culminating
luxuries of invention, so to speak, and
not Its first necessities. Added to all
| the bare utilitarian services It has ren
dered mankind, the printing press has
enabled man to repeat in a spiritual
sense the divine drama of creation.
| And many an Ink-begotten hero ia as
; living and effectual an inspiration to
noble deeds as though he had lived
| and breathed In human form. It is,
moreover, by means of their typograph
ical cerements that the real heroes of
every land and clime have escaped ob
lfvlon Rottnv than oil 4K« «#
immortality offered to Ulysses byCalyp
so has been the immortality conferred
upon him and his comrades by the no
less magical wand of the printer. "Were
our mother Island sunk beneath the
***•” wrote Lowell, "Shakespeare would
still be an immortal England." On
the other hand, candor compels the
admission that sinful man has made
use of type—as of every other inven
tion—for base and Ignoble ends. But
the most pig-headed pessimist would
hardly maintain that the evil results
thus obtained could be more than an
infinitesimal part of the good ones,
f °r the printing press has demonstrat
ed in a most convincing manner that
only what is good and beautiful is per
manent. Beery vile and morbid book
mufcdled,- or eventually will die, of its
own diseases, till at length authors and
publishers will have learned the folly
of printing such things. It is not mere
fancy that sees in the steady external
improvement that has been made on
the first book models a symbol of an
internal progress in the matter between
the covers of bookdom. However much
antiquarian rapture we may feel when
we buy a worm-eaten old book In fif
teenth century print, we cannot deny
t ha bin their superb typographical ward
robes the books of to-day as far sur
pass the first Gutenbergen attempts as
the dainty tinted gowns of a modern
belle, outvie the Impromptu makeshift
of our fig-leaved mother Eve. Con
cerning the respective claims of Guten
berg and Koster to the discovery of
movable types, we have no desire to
quibble. If they had not'Invented
something of the kind somebody else
would have done so about the same
time dr a little later. Be that as it
may, in recognition of his service to
mankind we are willing to pledge Mr.
Gutenberg’s health—he surely would
excuse us from drinking it unless we
followed it up by swallowing a blotter
—in a brimming bumper of ink.
▲11 Thing* to Her Who Walt*.
The irony of fate forms a strong leav
• In ll» __.__
■as about the luck of Mrs. H. H. Leon
ard. While engaged In tbe taak of
searching among a lot of old letters she
discovered that her brother had de
posited in a Trenton (Tens.) bank, In
1863, $10,000. Not long afterward he
was killed In the civil war. Inquiries
elicited the fact that the'bank was still
In existence and had sought the de
positor’s heirs in vain. In this story
we have first the tragic fate of the
man who owned the money, and then
the ill-starred career of Mrs. Leonard's
husband, who, having only last fall se
cured a divorce from her to enable him
to marry another woman, was mur
dered within two months of his second
marriage. Mrs. Leonard, since the loss
pf her husband by divorce, has been
Obliged to adopt the arduous profession
Of a washerwoman. Now she alone, of
all the parties concerned, cornea out
ahead!
A Scarecrow for Mosqaltoat.
John Habberton states with the sol
emnity of firm conviction that mos
quitoes are extremely frightened by
dragon flies and will not come within
yards of them. He says that one or two
dried dragon flies suspended from line
silk under the roof of an open porch
Infested with mosquitoes will scare all
of the little pests away, and they will
not come back while the dragon flies
are there. This, he says, he has tried
with surprising results. It is a well
known fact that dragon flies are pre
datory and voracious insects, and that
they subsist largely upon gnats,
gea and mosquitoes, and It is Nut
ural that the mosquito, who is a
Insect, should regard the "spindle,"
"darning needle” or drugs fljf as tap
small bird regards ths IQB . u
me Man wlio is Raising a Big Crop
—realize* that the harreat time is
Mul farming comprehends not only the growing of the tallest
to*the*acre of hay) the best (arming—the (arming that pa
something mare than thlsi for there u a harreat time) end just In
crop fa saved, successfully, speedily and economically) In just
measured the season's profit or loss.
Harvesting Machines are the profit^hringing kind; they are the hind that
expense*; there are other kinds that don't, and are in fact a
they, .are,.so eonsUoUT oui el iis. Let'a edmilU .that we.are ^
let's admit also—because experience has proven it true—that th
than the best. In harvesting machinery here it is.
The McCormick Right-hand Open
The McCormick New 4 Steel
The McCormick Folding Daisy Reaper*
The McCormick Vertical Corn Binder*
Game in and let us show you these machines ! they anfheaBff
they are the only kind to own.
Write me for prices on Twine.
O- IF1. 33iglizx.
Pacific Short Line
-HAS THE
BEST TRAIN SERVICE
-IN
NORTHERN NEBRASKA.
Through Freight and Passenger Rate*
TO ALL POINTS.
If you are going on a trip or Intend chang
ing your location, apply to our nearest
agent, or write to
W. B. MsNiDBR.
Gen'l Pan. Agent, Sioux city.
OZMANLIS
ORIENTAL
SEXUAL
PILLS
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Pennyroyal pills
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Pru«Ul tor Ckickotor o MnfiUh XH*-,
.mondBrand iu Ue4 **4 Gold metallic'
jboxea. sealed with blue rihhoa. Take
[■• ether. Jitfit»tdan§*rouM eeUriin *
lions and imitation*. At DrcggtaM, ec —A<
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