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About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 17, 1901)
1 mile north nest of Inmam, Neb., on Sa-tu.rca.3-3r, J"a.n_ 20, ’Ol IO O’CLOCK A. M. 25 HEAD of CATTLE consisting: of cows, heifers, yearlings and calves. Team of mares | 1 heavy baggy 1 span yearling colts I 1 good McCormick mower 15. slioats, 6 doz chickens 1 Set of drags, hay rack 1 good wide tire wagon | 1 plow, set of harness 500 BU. CORN 10 TONS HAY TERMS—-One year’s time at 10 per cent., good secured notes, on sums over $5; S5 and under cash; 5 per cent dis count for cash on sums exceeding $5. Barney Stewart, At. I. BALDWIN MISSIONARIES. Japan Wants Those Who Know and Lore the Japs. However China may feel toward the missionaries, it seems that they are welcome in Japan. S. Yamaguchi, in Gunton’s Magazine, makis this plea for more missionaries to be s.nt to his country. He says: “American friends, send us more missionaries. We wel come them and we need them. But beware not to send those who exagger ate all weaknesses and shortcomings of our people so that they can overmag nify their own importance and dare to attribute to their own merit all en lightenment and advancement in every line of our civilization, being mean enough to ignore all merits on the pari of other foreigners as well as of .the government and the people at largr Beware not to send those who are fan atical enough to denounce everything Japanese as ‘heathenish,’ denouncing even their old ceremonies of marriages and funerals as against the Christian teachings. Beware not to send those who make themselves no evangelists of grace, but pioneers of internati na'. greediness and insatiable Machiav 1 lianism. Beware not to send those wli i cannot make a living in their own country, but who go there simply b - cause they can live as lords with a thousand dollars a year, without any thing to do but occasionally teaching the English Bible to some half a-dozon young men who come to them s mply for learning English. Send us those— only those—who know us, sympathize with us, love us as Paul did the Ro mans, wish to become even our own citizens and part of our own nation, thus exterminating all the sourc s cf international disturbance, devoting their lives really to the wtlfaie cf thei:' heathen brothers as they mal ceil us. If not your humanitarian, noble and God-like intention and effort will not bring a particle of go: d but a great b’rm and misery not only to us but t *' e cause of universal peace and the k r,. 1. m of the Lord.” I On I'll I ' 1» III (t ul> ^ The (nine f Burkleu’s Arnica Sa Vi-, as Ihe best in the world. extend* ammo) the earth Ii’s the one perfi ct henlor of Pots, Poms, Burns. Sores, Scalds, Bruises, Boils, Ulcers. Felons Aches. Pains and all Skin Eruptions Only infallible Pile cure. 25c a box at P C. Corrigans drug si re. t.iiant Equal to Occas'on. A landlord recently walk d into a Salem (Mass.) store and ordered his tenant to vacate. The tenant m ’> kly listened to the command, and then, exhibiting a constable’s badge, ordered the landlord to vacate the premises under the threat of arrest for tres pass upon the tenant’s store. The as tonished landlord got out.—Pittsburg Dispatch. Are you nervous, run down, weak mid dispirited? Take a few doses of Herbine. It will infuse new energy, new life into the exhausted nerves, ahd oyer worked brain or muscular system, and put a new fare on life and buisnesa. Price 5'Joea|s. P. C.Corrigan I A Deep Mystery. | It is a mystery wtiy women endure Backache, Ileadache, Nervousness I Sleeplessness, Melancholy , Fainting and i Dizzy Spells when thousands have prov | ed that Electric Bitters will quickly cure I such troubles. "I suffered for years | with kidney trouble,” writes Mrs Phebc [ Cherely, of Peterson, la., “and a lame back pained me so I could not dress my self, but Electric Bitters whoolly cured me, and, although 73 years old, I now am able to do my house work.” It over comes Constipation, improves Appetite, gives perfect health. Only 50c at P. C. Corrigans drug store. ISiff Harvest*. The farmers of the San Juaquin val ley, in California, utilize the larg st machines in the world for harvesting and threshing their wheat crops. These machines are combined harvest ers, that cut, thrash, clean, sack ani dump the grain on the ground ready to be stored. The traction engin s which operate them are of fifty-horse power. Last season some great rec ords for harvesting were made. A twenty-foot sickle harvester, with what is termed a four-foot extension, cut, thrashed, cleaned and sacked 1.772 hag of wheat, or over 3,000 bushels a da/. Wheat fields containing as mary as 25,000 acres are common sights all over the west. 151 • >w11 T" Atoms The old idc-i that the hod' pome limes need H pilWerfll1. (ll’is'ie, nlll' H'iv lull ha* lieen ( X'd > le *; f >r Dr K New Life 1’| !-, 1 lei'll .r o r 1 ll mile ■ « i_r ■ t ■ V ' '11 1 t i V '• 111! we s i. • i x e! ■ e ii-j " ' • ll» * *• ' IP C ll I ■' - i U < I -i 1 'I P. ( ' i’ii!, ii - r ' ,o .cl ;^.l l.j, reside.. . 1 i.:.. . A s>< stations an.act vs basin ss will bo added. The company this way to get back some . i th money invested for station sites, Th station buildings are n w only one story in height, although occupying some of the most valuable ground in I London. 1 ___ London » Eteetrlc Railway*. There are now three distinct elec trical railways in active operation in London, and there are nearly a dozen others authorized or under construc tion. _ There is probably no disease or condi tion of human system that causes more suffering and distress than piles. Tabler's buckeye pile ointment cures them [Quickly, without pain or detention from ; business. Price, 50 cents in bottles. ; Tubes, 75 cents. P. C. Corrigan. i . : : . When pain or erritation exists on any part of the bodv the application o' Pal lards snow liniment will give prompt relief. Price ~5 and 50 ceuts. P. C. I Corrigan. ICE PLANTS. They Are Needed In the Philippines, Says a Writer. In all tropical and subtropical coun tries there has been an active appre ciation of late years of the luxury of ice in hot weather, and the result has been the building of many ice plant? and cold storage houses in those lands In Ceylon the natives will deprive themselves of other things in order to have money to buy ice, and in Japan the ice plants cannot supply the de mand. “Cold Storage,” in an excel lently illustrated export edition, ca'l? attention to the great opportunity for the building of many ice plants in thv Philippines. It says: “There are sev eral reasons in favor of this wholcsal building of ice plants. These island are well populated, with a score o more large cities. The land is so ric that the business done in the cities profitable. This condition will att-rv more persons,- white capitalists. Thl will add to the population. The na tives are so eager after ice that the - will go without food to get it. There are two public ice factories in Manila and none anywhere else. These fac tories were so overworked that the military authorities were forced to recommend a large government h i plant and cold store. The govern^ov a’so has a small plant in Iloilo. island of Luzon needs fifteen ice p'~ of from ten to twenty-live tons’ c~ ity. It needs as m-'ny cold store-: from 20.000 to -,0 n00 cubic feet c ity. It needs refrigerator cars and up-tn-date refrigerate-r apparatus anr”nnces It is a m'st°ke to th: - - 'Vpcf, will not be nee ’ed ti-d’’ - 'a ->re peeifi-'d: they t r The citi s -’■e , rn<1 ... -o t — '- - - - :— ■ 1 ■. - . ''Mr- V l i f if. i ■ h. I>- 1111 v n ive of neivim. ness, 1 -1reiii!Uens 'tie (i slbm h11* 1 hh s tN to ihat sort of flesh. which crcaow strength Hint power of endurance Piic 25 ci n'R. P ('. C' rruran. Maxoot ThJinknffivlis: Bird. Mrs. Jla;y Lemon of 5iS Java street, Grcenpoint, is the envy of her n:igh hors. While she was dressing a tu key on Thanksgiving day there dropped from it3 crop a glittering di inond. Mrs. Lemon suspended the preparation . for dinner long enough to run to the | home of a neighbor and exhibit her i prize, the news of which soon spread 1 through the neighborhood, and for the remainder of the day Mrs. Lemon was kept busy exhibiting the diamond to I many admiring friends. The diamond ! was taken yesterday to a jeweler in | Manhattan avenue, who said it weigh > ('d nearly a carat, was finely cut. of | excellent color, and worth about $100. 1 Mrs. Lemon bought the turkey at a store in Franklin avenue, but the d al i er does not know where it was raised, j —New York Herald. DOING GOOD. Owner of "Golden rule'1 I’ark Loeni lluukt to l’oor. Now that the flowers that he loved so well have died and withered away under the first chilling blasts of win ter, Charles A. Josiyn, Jr., the founder of Golden Rule park, has opened tho doors of his little cottage on Troy street to his less fortunate neighbors and will give them full benefit of his library, consisting of 700 volumes, says the Chicago American. All through the long winter evenings and after noons, too, any resident of the West Side can ring the bell at Mr. Joslyn's home and gain entrance to the library, if he or she will but use care In hand ling tho books. While tho summer months held full sway, Mr. Josiyn, af ter business hours, tolled In his yard arranging his flowers In attractive groups. Under the spreading trees that filled the yard he placed benches and here the children and men and women gathered during the hot nights, the guests of the man who finds pleas ure in doing for others. Each even ing a flower was given to those who visited Golden Rule park, as Mr. Jos iyn named his retreat. "Summer has gone,” he said to his daughter a month ago, "and now we must find some thing attractive for our neighbors.” During the past year Mr. Josiyn has bent his efforts in collecting a library. Any one of his friends was always a welcome guest In Mr. Joslyn’s library, but he believed he should extend tho privilege. With this idea In view he added day by day to his collection of books until now they number some 700 volumes. For a man who is a book keeper to collect such a large supply of interesting books was a hard task. Every week he has seen his collection grow, but not with the speed that he desired. His daily paper he saved, and securing the best of magazines, he clipped from their numbers each even ing interesting discussions on current topics and arranged scores of books with statistical data. With much care he bound his clippings into book form until he has collected a valuable and Interesting amount of reading. At the present time Dr. Josiyn has more thae 250 of his books in circulation. Dur ing the afternoon hours his daughter answers the ring of the doorbell and furnishes callers with a book. In the evening Mr. Josiyn ts in charge of his free library, with a pleasant word and a few moments’ conversation for all. Mr. Josiyn but asks his friends and neighbors to use care in handling the books, "so others can secure some ben efit from them.” BISMARCK’S LETTERS, Iron Chancellor Had Poet's Soul Beneath Harsh Exterior. The recently puolished letters of Bis marck to his wife show that the Iron' Chancellor had the soul of a poet be neath the harsh exterior of the soldier and statesman. The letters are idyllic in their outpourings of tenderness and in their description of nature, while the light, graceful touches of philoso phy regarding human affairs show that a nature of velvet was incased in steel. These short but expressive letters written by Bismarck undoubtedly show the man, while his public record shows ”;he machine. Yet the public will doubtless continue to judgo the real Bismarck by the standard of the ar tificial. The brief glimpse of the poet philbsopher, disclosed by the posthum ous publication, will soon be replaced by tl? - familiar picture of the iron handed helmsman, with no thought beyond ..he course of the ship of state. Bismarck’s life Is not the only exam ple of an inner suicide for the sake of state. Pew public men cast off the restraint that comes with prominence in the sight of the people. They find that it is easier to impress with the owl-like mask of sternness or imper turbability, rather than to give free rein to fancy and expression. Lincoln was one of those rare beings whose simplicity of soul and whose tenderly humorous view of life could not be kept back by the dignity of statesman ship. His inner life was not a sealed book, to be opened after his death.and in consequence there is evidenced more of love than of awe when his name is recalled. Lincoln’s life suggests that man can be himself at all times, b” Beeming’y the lesson has tmen 1"'' upon rprri It is the commonlv e-c r*r! V>r,r t1'-**- r r> '> a T’V^ ^ ' bf» ftro-4 T>v -"1*3 , n " Cutiinot Kii In >1. i at; salaries attached to th m r tiers of the cabinet holding office in Ireland are very respectable, to say th least of them. For instance, the Iks. paid of all the ministers is the Lj d Lieutenant of Ireland, who rec ive; £20,000 per annum, but in the case of the "vice-king,” it is not nearly enough to cover the expenses of the post. The Irish Lord Chancellor is better off with £8,000 a year, and the Chief Sec retary for Ireland cannot complain with £4,425 and a lovely residence In the Phoenix Park. Llfe-SavlnB Service Statistics. The cost of maintaining the life sav ing service during the last year was $1,535,936. The amount of property it saved was in round figures $7,500, 000, in addition to 2,607 lives. A t’ontraUo’n Nine Dependent*. lime. Schumann-Heink, the famous grand opera dramatic contralto, sup ports by her singing an invalid hus band and pays for the education of her eight children. IO WEEKS trial subscripts |0c THE TWENTIETH CENTURY FARMER It contains a number of special articles each weekby t mpe tent specialists in over}’ branch of agriculture; departments devoted to live stock, crops, the dairy, poulty yard, the orchard and garpen, farm machinery, veterinary topics, irrigation and the markets. The farmer’s wife, too, has her share of space, with recipes aid sag* gost ions on cookery, dressmaking, fancy work, care of flowers and matters particularly pleasing to her, while the children have a department edited for them exclusively. Four or live pages are devoted to a complete review of tile news of the week, covering happenings at home and abroad, and news in particular interesting to the great farming west. Then, too, are the stories, choice poetry and humor and all the good things that one likes to read after the lamps are lighted and the day’s work is done. An ideal Agricultural ) (|> / per and Family Weekly j ($) _L year. CUT THIS OUT AND SENDIT WITH A OIME ON FIVE 2-CCNT STAMPS TO THE TWENTIETH CENTURY - FARMER, 2J9T PANNMAN STREET. OMAHA. ntauti THE PEOPLES NATIONAL FAMILY NEWSPAPER NEW YORK TRI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE. Published Monday, Wednesday and Friday, is in reality a fine, fresh, everv other-day daily, Riving the latest news on days of issue, mid coveting news of the other three. It contains all import ant foreign calde news which appears in 'lie Daily Tribune of same date; also domestic and foreign correspondence, shot stories, half tone illustrations, hum orous items, industrial information, fashion notes, agri< ultural matters and comprehensive, reliable tlnancial and market reports. Regular subscription price $1 50 With The Frontier, both papers, $3.25. NEW YORK WEEKLY TRIBUNE. Published on Thursday and known for nearly sixty years in every part of the United States as a national family newspaper of the highest class for farm* era amt villagers. It contains all the most important general news of the Daily Tribune up to the hour of going to press, an agricultural department of the highest order, has entertaining read ing for every member of the family. Market reports which are accepted as authority by farmers and country mer chants, and is clean, up to date, inter esting and instructive. Regular sub scription price 91; with The Frontier, both papers, $1.75. Send all orders to The Frontier, O’Neill. If its a BKcken«derfer No. 5. The universal t'a\ orile with all classes zf jperators who desire a simple and speedy machine. More “BlicKs” in use among Iowa and Ne braska newspapers than all the rest of tiro £100 na. lii.ies together. The only Typewrit r on the laarkot doing hundred dollar work that is sold .. » ; i;i -r price. Has -vs Kevs. of ^4 Characters no I.tttor»; 1’orta'Mc, *<veiilvnfr Inst Siv P.>u.ts with Copies raid Wriii-V.-lds ps'ipct v.a c.ubon :opio:< neiis . < a- i!v fa ken or car vrlt<Ti«r Only on* 1'* e co rv\ n > * 1 err.* »• t • any res vn-ribl- man is rv Address, HAlctirR 6 Bj.fSH f'cT.,r.,;l A2rr»-ls, ;o,«~r-3 Jfrcet, DUBIJOUB. K'WA .TFjpr jpKrrejBsr■aRjr** ” * * *7 1 KILLED LABOR AND NEW TYPE ENABLES US TO PRODUCE ARTIS TIC RESULTS HE FRONTIER PRTG. CO. <Mft GRAP50PE0NES. <M(\ tPlV TALKINQ MACHINES! V-IVJ Greatest money maker ever offered. Anybody can start In the show business. Make $10 to $ao a day giving ex hibitions. LOUD AND CLEAR ENOUQH to be heard in any Hall or Church anywhere. They're wonderful. Imagine a musical in strument that will actually TALK TALK. That by simply winding it up like a clock _you can play band music exactly as it was played by Sousa—cornet, trombones, drums and all. Sings songs, tells funny stories. Does'nt seem possible, doesitf But it does even more than that. You can sing or tauc into it yourself and it will repeat, a moment alter, just what you said. sFOR HOnE AnUSEnENT fi GRAPHOPHONE out. Very loud. I’rico EAQLE with two hearing tubes ana concert nom, 91U. oauic uuuu, wim iuhhuu...* —o case, $13. Price of our BEST EXHIBITION flUSICAL OR TALKING RECORDS, goe each $g a' ‘ c-n Dj~ Chr»vLT Outfit Include* our Eagle Graphophone, with carrying case, two hearing Our 3>20 Dig snow OUlIll tubes, concert horn, record brush,18 assorted record*,music,tang*and speeches (lasts two hours steady running), 200 big poster* advertising exh^ition, 200 admission tickets, $ao. Sent C. O. D., with privilege of examination, if desired. Complete-Record Catalogue free. Write tor it. HARGER & BLISH, Western Agts., 904-910 flaln St., Dubuque* Iowa. ROiiRBOUGH BROS., Proprietors, Omaha, Neb. FALL TF.IKI-Opens September 3. NewClasaealn Regular Business, Shorthand, Typewrit ina uml Telegraph Departments. .iia. 1 (ililKili is no It'I'll AIN l>—New system, easy to learn, easy to write, easy to read. Mas but one position, one slant, few word-signs, and is the most rapid system In use. Cata logue gives sample lessons and full particulars. It will be sent free \VOHK FotC oOAHD-We give board for three hours work each day. Ask about It mVk »Vk '•« o’'anV ONE—Large new catalogue, copy of College Head Light and a *petiF>n|-;'«P\ l” IN f'oKHATION—Students enter any time; over 1,200 students last year; over 400 placed in good positions, and the best commercial school we-t. r • ^ e go. % write ROHRBOUGH BROS* Omaha. Neb Baking Powder Makes the food more delicious and wholesome ROYAL BAKINO POWDER SO., SEW YORK._