The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, September 02, 1897, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    OTL OFFICIAL DIRECTORY
STATS.
Governor.......Silas Holcomb
Lieutenant Governor.. •.J• E .Harris
Secretary of State... ...... Win. F. Porter
State Treasurer.John B. Moserve
State Auditor.....John l«. Cornell
Attorney General.C. J* anisine
Com. Lands and Buildings.• •♦*{• V- VN olfe
Supt. Public Instruction.W. K. Jackson
REGENTS STATE UNIVERSITY.
, Ohas. H. Gere. Lincoln: LeavtttBurahtim>
Omaha; J M. Hiatt, Alma; E. P. Holmes,
Pierce: J.T. Mallaleu, Kearney: M. J. Hull,
Edgar.
Representatives First District, J. B. Strode
Second. H. D. Meroer, Third. S. Maxwell,
Fourth. W, L. Stark, Fitth, R. O. Sutherland,
Sixth, W. L. Green.
CONGRESSIONAL.
Senators—W. V. Allen, of Madison: John
M. Thurston, of Omaha.
JUDICIARY.
fiiitnf Justloe...A. M. Post
AssociatesT.VT.O. Harrison and T. L. Norvall
FIFTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT.
judge .M.P. Ktnkald, of O’Neill
KeDorter .J. J. King of O’Neill
f«?Se^?... W. H. Westover, of Rushvljle
importer.• 'hn Maher, of Rush vllle.
LAND OFFICES.
o'miu.
Sver,'.... ...Rimer Williams.
COUNTY.
..Geo McCutcheon
Work of the District Court . • •J^^Sklrving
Deputy .j. p. Mullen
f™"ft“rer..Sam Howard
Deputy. .Bill Uethea
Iienutv..W".Mike McCarthy
.. .Ohas O’Neill
Schools " ” . . W. R. Jackson
Assistant ...f ....Mrs. W. R. Jackson
.. 'Oucxhlnnri
Dr. True blood
SUPERVISORS.
FIRST DISTRICT.
Cleveland. Sand Creek, Dnstln, Saratoga,
llock Falls and Pleasantvlew:J. A. Robertson
SECOND DISTRICT.
Shields, Paddock, Scott, Steel Creek, Wll
owdaleand Iowa—J. H. Hopkins.
THIRD DISTRICT.
Grattan and O’Neill—Mosses Campbell.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
Ewing, Verdigris andDelolt—L. 0. Combs
fifth district.
Chambers, Conlev, Lake, ItcClure and
1 nman—S. L. Conger.
SIXTH DISTRICT.
Swan. Wyoming, Pairview, F.r.a"cl®t,®reeD
Valley, Sheridan and Emmet—O. w. moss.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.
Atkinson and Stuart— W. N. Coats.
CUT of or NEILL.
Supervisor, E. J. Mack; Justloes, E. H.
Benedict and S. M. Wagers; Constables, Ed.
McBride and Perkins Brooks.
COUNCILMAN -11R8T WARD,_
For two years.—D. H. Cronin. Tot one
year—C. W. Hagensiek.
SECOND WARD.
For two years—Alexander Marlow. For
tine year—W. T. Evans.
TUIRD WARD.
For two years—Charles Davis. For one
j ear—E. J. Mack.
CITY OfKtiVKS. t ..
Mayor, H. E. Murphy; Clerk, N. Martin;
rreusurer, John McHugh; City Engineer
Jolm Uorrlsky; Police Judge, H. Kautzman.
i blef of Police, P. .1. Bigllu; Attorney,
Thus. Carlou; Welghmaster, D. Stannard.
GRATTAN TOWNSHIP.
' Supervisor. R. J. Hayes; Treasurer. Barnoy
McGreevy; Clerk, J. Sullivan; Assessor Ben
.lobring: Justices, M. Castello and Ohas.
Wilcox; Constables, John
McBride; Road overseer dlst. 2«, Allen Brown
(list. No. 4 John Enright.
-OLLIERS' RELIEF COMNISSION.
Regular meeting first Monday In Febru
ary of each yeur, and at such other times at
IB deemed neeessary. Kobt. Gallagher, Page,
chairman; Wm. Bowen, O Neill, secretary,
II. H. Clark Atkinson.
uT,PATRICK’S CATHOLIC CHURCH.
Services every Sabbath at 10:30o clock.
Very Kov. Cassidy, Postor. Sabbath sohoo)
immediately following services.___
>1
BTHODIST CHURCH. Sunday
evjL services—Preaching 10:30 A.M.atid H.Uu
v. M. Class No. 1 0:30 A. M. Class No. (fc
worth League)7:00 P. M. Class No. J (Child
rens) 3:00 pTm. Mind-week services—General
prayer meeting Thursday 7:30 i*. m. All will
Ke made welcome, ^^i^g^tor.
/ T A. R. POST, NO. 88. The Gem John
VT. O'Neill Post, No. H6, Bepartment of Ne
braska G. A. K., will meet the first and third
Saturday evening of each
hall O’Neill S. J. Smith. Com.
ULKHOBN VALLEY LODGE, I. O. O.
Hie, Meets oveiy Wednesday evening In
Odd Fellows’ hall. Visiting brothers oordlally
Invited to attend. _ _
W. H. Mason. N. G. O. L. Bright, 8ec.
nARFIELl) CHAPTER, R- A. M
vJTMeeta on first and third Thursday of each
month in Masonic hall. u
W. J. Dobbs &ec. J. C. Harnibh, H, P
KOF P.-HELMKT LOUGE. XT. D.
_ Convention every Monday at 8 o clock p.
m. In Odd Fellows’ hall. Visiting brethern
cordially invited. _~ ~
Arthur Coykendald, C. C,
E. J. Mack, K. of U. and 8.
O’NEILL ENCAMPMENT NO. 30.1.
O. O. F. meets every second and fourth
Fridays of each month in Odd Fellows Hall.
Okas' Bright, H. P. H. M. Tttlby, Scribe
TCDEN LODGE NO. 41, DAUGHTERS
Hi OF REBEKAH, meets every 1st and 3d
Friday of each month in Odd Fellows Hall,
Agnes T. Bentley, N. G.
Dora Davidson, Seo.
Garfield lodge, so.»5,r.*A.M.
Regular communications Thursday nights
on or before the full of the moon.
J. J. Kino, W. M.
Harry Dowling, Sec.
HOLT«CAMP NO. 1710. M. W. OF A.
Meets on the first and third Tuesday in
each month in the Masonic hall.
Neil Brennan, V. 0. D. H. Oronin, Clerk
AO, XT. W. NO. 153, Meets second
• and fourth Tudsday of each month in
Masonic hall.
O. Bright, Kec. 8. B. Howard, M. W.
INDEPENDENT WORKMEN OF
AMERICA, meet every first and third
Friday of each month.
Geo. McOutchan, N. M.
J. H. Welton, Sec.
POSTOFFICB D1RCBTORY
Arrival of Malls
r. E. k M. V. R. R.—FROM THE EAST,
day, Sunday included at.9:40 pm
FROM THE WEST
very day, Sunday included at.10:04 am
PACIITO SHORT LINE.
Passenger-leaves 10:0 >A. m. Arrives 11 :55 p.m.
Freight—leaves 0:07 P.lt. Arrives 7:00 p. m.
Dally except Sunday.
O’NEILL AND CHELSEA.
Departs Monday, Wed. and Friday at7:00am
Arrives Tuesday, Thurs. and Sat. at.,1:00pm
O'NEILL AND PADDOCK.
Departs Monday. Wed. and Friday at. ,7:00am
Arrives Tuesday, Thurs. and Sat. at. .4:30 p m
O’NEILL AND NIOBRARA.
Departs Monday. Wed. and Fri. at—7:00 a m
Arrives Tuesday, Thurs. and Sat. at.. .4:00 p m
O’NEILL AND CUHHINBVILLE.
Arrives Mon.,Wed. and Fridays a .. .11:30tp.m
Departs Mon., Wed. andFrlday at.1:00 p.m
PAINTERS OP ROMANT1QI8M*
Corot* Chauoroati, Camilla, Roglar gad
Marllhat la Tholr Youth*
No anchorite ever disdained the lux*
uries of life in better faith than the
enthusiasts of romanticism, says Tem
ple Bar. In the year 1832 a little band
of artists—true bohemians, long-haired,
cadaverous—extravagantly dressed in
all colors of the rainbow, encamped
themselves in a desolate quarter of
Paris. One comes suddenly from the
roar and turmoil of the streets Into an
oasis of solitude and silence; the ruins
of an old church make the place a sort
of sanctuary; the houses on each side,
once imposing, are dilapidated and
abandoned. In one of these an ample
lodging was found for those immoder
ate lovers of art to whom the consider
ation of personal well-being was quite
unimportant—who were more than con
tent to breakfast on an ode and to dine
on a ballad. One empty room of im
mense size, going rapidly to rack and
ruin, seemed especially fitted for their
needs and was soon turned into a tem
ple of the arts. Could the already
tumble-down place have possibly been
preserved to the present day, what a
mine of wealth, what priceless treas
ures it would have been found to con
tain, for the impromptu decorations
were undertaken by hands then quite
unknown but bound to emerge into the
full light of celebrity. Perched upon
ladders, a rose behind the ear, cigarette
in mouth, the peintres romantiques
produced masterpieces of genius. On
narrow panels high above his head,
Corot produced two exquisite views of
Italy; below him Chassereau designed
a Diana bathing, where was already in
dicated the almost savage grace and
freedom of his later works; Camille
Rogler covered the celling with oriental
fancies; Marllhat, Celestln Nanteull,
Adolphe Leleux added their daring and
picturesque contributions, and, brush in
hand, these artists—themselves aspir
ing poets—recited verses from Hugo
and Alfred de Musset as a fitting ac
companiment to pictorial inspiration.
It was one of those scenes which mer
ited Carlyle’s fanciful description of the
Stirling club, “A little flowery island
of poetic Intellect.”
WOMEN OP THE WORLD,
Four Honored and Three Gifted With
Lone Life.
Miss Margaret Creaswell receives
$3,500 a year for acting as postmistress
In Gibraltar. The Gibraltar mail can
not be very heavy, for Miss Cresswell
at the same time acts as superintend
ent of all the postofllces on the North
African coast. The first woman who
has received the permission of the min
ister of public instruction to attend
lectures in the University of Munich
is Miss Ethel Gertrude Skeat, daughter
of Professor Skeat, the eminent philolo
gist. Mrs. Alice Freeman Palmer, for
mer president of Wellesley college, is
now in Venice. She has accepted the
invitation of the American Missionary
association to be one of the speakers at
the jubilee of the association in Boston
next October. Her subject will*be
"Educational Equipment for Mission
ary Service.” Three active spiritualists
in San Franciseo recently held an in
teresting celebration on their common
birthday. Each one has a great-great
grandmother, one being 82 years old,
another 85, and another 89. None has
lost a whit of her intellectual ability
and all three drank gayly out of tea
cups 250 years old as they discussed
free thought and spiritualism with all
their old-time keenness. Major Ara
bella Macomber Reynolds is the only
woman who was ever commissioned
regularly in the United States army.
She distinguished herself conspicuous
ly in the late war, but now lives in a
quiet little town on the Pacific coast,
where she is known as Major Belle
Reynolds.
Thins* Ware Going lo Tarn.
In front of a Dakota sod cabin sat a
man about 50 years old who was
ragged and forlorn and hungry-look
ing. A few rods away lay the dead
body of a mule and beyond that was a
wagon with a broken wheel. There was
no smoke coming out of the cabin
chimney, no fowls or livestock about
and no other human beings to be seen.
"Well,” queried the man as I looked
about, “things look sorter lonesome,
eh?”
“Indeed, they do, sir. What's been
the matter with you?”
“Billyus fever.”
“Where is the wife?”
“Inside the house with the same
thing.
"And the children?”
“Out thar behind the haystack ahak
in’ with the ager.
“I see you’ve lost your mule.”
“Died two days ago, sir. Can’t
rightly say what ailed him, but he’s
gone.”
x suppose you are aeaa broke on top
of all?” I queried.
“Haven’t got a red cent, sir, and
nuthin’ but cornmeal In the house," he
replied.
"Well, I don’t blame you for feeling
b’iie over the situation.”
“Who’s a feelin’ blue?”
"Why, I expect you are."
“Then you make a big mistake,
stranger. Things did look a little blue
last week, but three days ago I had
this ’ere farm cut up into 2,000 town
lots and arranged with a critter to
boom it, and I’m feelin’ like a steer in
a cornfield. Two thousand lots at $100
apiece, six railroads to cross yeare,
three big car-works a-comin’, schools!
churches, factories, parks, hotels—why,
durn my hide, but I Jist sot yere cal
kerlatln’ on startin’ five banks and
foundin’ two or three orphan asylums
with my money!" s
“Then I can’t aid you?”
“Jist a pipe o’ terbacker and a nip of
whisky, stranger, and you tell every
body down the road that ole Bill John
son has founded the town o’ Golden
City and is goin’ to plant gold watches
for mile posts all over the stalt. Feel
in’ blue? Waal, I should rayther gur
gle to obsarve that he has to keep hold
of the grass to prevent his flyin’ away
fur Jay and •xultasbun!”
SAVINGS OP COt. NORTH.
Bo Wanted Bout Haw Words for Hta
Vocabulary.
The late Col. North, the nitrate
king, had a ready, if somewhat rough
style of wit peculiar to himself, says
the London World. The trap in which
he was seated being on one occasion
blocked In a crowded thoroughfare in
immediate Juxtapostilon 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 if 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, here
goes for the Image,” said North, and
he forthwith imprinted a sounding kiss
on the fair mother's cheek.
NEW YORK FOOD SUPPLY.
Eioi|h on Band to Wltkitoad s Four
Months’ Slogs.
If the city of New York and the
neighboring district were to be be
sieged or in some other way entirely
cut off from the outside world, and
tnereiore deprived of the rood supplies
which in normal times come in dally
In large quantities, how long would it
be before the pinch of hunger would be
felt? That is a very hard question to
answer, for the reason that there are
such Inequalities of purchasing capac
ity in New York society that some go
hungry In timea 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 lant for two months
at the present rate at 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 Freneh 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 could be made to
last as long as the Paris siege lasted,
and the people would still be comfort
able.—Ladies' Home Journal.
Kaaalaiu ind Arraonlani.
The Russian people cared a great
deal about the Bulgarians; they do not
care at all about the Armenians.
Englishmen are apt to be puzzled by
this difference of attitude; they would
And 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 czar, than from the Mus
sulman Turk, he is not greatly concern
ed that they should get It. This Is an
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 Saaohlne.
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.”
Bo Bulnaia Man.
“You have a safe in your house for
money, haven't you?"
“Yes, and no burglar who knows any
thing about it would take the trouble to
open it.”
“Why not?”
“My wife knows the combination.”—
Detroit Free Press.
Damaged.
Baldup—"I was amused today to see
Gadboy’s mustache catch fire while he
was trying to light a cigar.” Teldoo—
“Damage it much?" Baldup—"Yes; it
iwaa burned down."—Boxbury Gazette.
HOW TO FIND OUT.
Fill a bottle or common glass with
urine and let it stand twenty-four hours;
a sediment or settling indicates an un
healthy Condition of the kidneys.
When urine stains linen it is positive
evidence of kidney trouble. Too fre
quent desire to urinate, or pain iu the
back, is also convincing proof that the
kidneys and bladder are out of order.
WtfAT TO DO.
There is comfort in the knowledge so
often expressed, that Dr. Kilmer’s
Swamp Root, the great kidney remedy,
fulfills every wish in relieving pain in
the back, kidneys, liver, bladder, and
every part of the urinary passages. It
corrects inability to hold urine aqd
scalding pains in passing it, or bad
effects following the use of liquor, yrine
or beer, and overcomes that unpleasant
necessity of being compelled to get up
many times during the night to urinate.
The mild and the extraordinary effect
of Swamp Root is soon realized. It
stands the highest for its wonderful
cures of the most destressing cases. If
you need a medicine you should have
the best. Sold by druggists, price fifty
cents and one dollar. You may bave a
sample bottle and pamphlet both sent
free by mail Mention Thh Frontier
and Bend your address to Dr. Kilmer &
Co.. Binghamton, N. Y. The proprie
tors of this paper guarantee the genu,
ineness of this offer.
What a Prominent Insurance Man lays.
H. M. Blossom, senior member of H,
M. Blossom & Co., 317 N. 8rd St. Louis
writes: I had been left with a very dis
tressing cough, the result of influenza,
which nothing seemed to relieve, until I
took Ballard’s Horebound Syrup. One
bottle completely cured me. I sent one
bottle to my sister who had a severe
cough, and she experienced immediate
relief. I always recommended this!
syrup to my frlands.
John Cranston 908 Hampshire Street,
Quincy, III., writes: I have found
Ballard’s Horehound Syrup superior to
any other cough medicine I have ever
known. It never disappoints. Price 85
and SO cents. Free sample bottles at P.
C. Corrigan’s.
TBS* BICYCLES.
The State Journal i* offering a first
class bicycle free to any person who will
get up a club of 100 yearly subscribers
for the Semi-Weekly Journal at tl each.
The bicycles are covered by as strong
a guarantee as any C100 wheel and are
first-class in every respect. Any young
man or woman can now earn a bicycle
If you find you cannot get the required
number, a liberal cash commission will
be allowed yon for each subscription
you do get. You are sure to be paid
well for what you do. You can get all
your friends and neighbors to take the
Semi-Weekly State Journal at $1 a year
Address State Journal, Lincoln, Neb.
Mr. Isaac Horner, proprietor of the
Burton House, Burton, W. Va., and one
of the most widely known men in the
state, was cured of rheumatism after
three years of suffering. He says: “I
have not sufficient command of lan
guage to convey any idea of what 1
suffered. My physicians told me that
nothing could be done for me, and my
friends were fully convinced that noth
ing but death would relieve me of my
suffering. In June, 1804, Mr. Evans,
then salesman for the Wheeling Drug
Co., recommended Chamberlain’s Pain
Balm. At this time my foot and limb
were swolen to more than double their
normal size and it seemed to me my leg
would burst, but soon after I began
UBing the Pain Balm the swelling began
to decrease, the pain to leale, and now I
consider that I am entirely cured. For
sale by P. C. Corrigan.
Marvelous Bssalts.
From a letter written by Bev. J.
Gunderman, of Dimondale, Mich., we
are permitted to make this abstract: “I
have no hesitation in recommending Dr.
King’s New Discovery, as the results
were almost marvelous in the case of
my wife. While 1 was pastor of the
Baptist church at Rives Junction she
was brought kown with pneumonia suc
ceeding la grippe. Terrible paroxysms
of coughing would last hours with little
interruption and it seemed as if she
could not survive them. A friend
recommended Dr. King’s New Discovery;
t was quick in its work and highly sat
isfactory in results." Trial bottles free
at P. C. Corrigan's drug store. Regular
size 50 cents and fil .00.
Pacific Short Line
-HAS THE
BEST TRAIN SERVICE
V . -IN
NORTHERN NEBRASKA.
Through Freight and Paaicagor Rates
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. McNIDER.
Gen’l Pass. Agent. Sioux City.
KINSSFORD’S
OSWEGO CORN STARCH
MOST DELICIOUS OF AT.T. PREPARATIONS
FOR
Pudding*, Custards, Cakas & Blanc Range.
FOR SALK BY ALL FIRST CLASS OROCKR8.
r *
The Man who is Raising a Big Crop
ealizcs that the harvest tin?*
IJcal farming comprehends not only the growing of the tallest grain—the
."•jhH.
‘ r:
,
to'theoacre of hayi the best hrmint—the farming that nays nnj«' contemplate
something more ttum thiai for there T» a barveet time, and just in preportion aa a
crop ia saved, successfully, speedily and economically, in just that proportion may la
measured the season's profit or lorn
, • f\ J.
; ** ■
r
Harvesting Machines are the proBvhringing kindi they are the kind that
expenses; there are other kinds that don't, and are in fact a constant
they are so constantly out of fix. Let's admit, that we arc all trying to
let's admit also—because experience has proven it true—(hat there's a
than the best. In harvesting machinery here it is.
The McCormick Right-hand Open Elevator_
The McCormick Now 4 Steel Mower.
The McCormick Folding Daisy Reaper.
Tho McCormick Vortical Corn Binder.
: A:1
■ ■:
Gome in and lit i:i chon you these machines 1 they are the only Wad **e
they are the only fc’.r.d to cav:_
ii
A A
M'CorMT.kJl
Write me for prices on Twine.
O- IF\ Biglizi. I
wheels*
Bless me!
^THE FRONTIERS
For Up-to-Date Job Work.