The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, August 08, 1901, Image 5

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IN HOLT COUNTY, NEBRASKA
For Soli by M. LYONS,. Emmet, Neb. I
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30 9
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Kisbee ranch in 22 27
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15
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7,18 & Lot 1, 7 33 15
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ne 22 33 15, except 10
acres
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Lot 1, See. 23, Lot 1.
Sec. 24, Lot 1. See. 26
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26 34 16
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Chicago Lumber Yard 1
Headquarters for ... Ko
jLUMBER ANd|
I +4 COAL 4* I
Jj O, O. SNYDER & c°.i
O’NEILL ©ALLEN Jj^
rpt* av xj'pcnr1 ^ the...
JL IIG JD JliCl JL Cheapest
If you want to buy the best Buggy, Carriage, Farm Wag
on, Spring Wagon, Iioad Wagon, Farm Truck, Cart, Wind
mill, Feedmill, hand or power Corn Sheller, Plow, Disc Cul
^ tivator, Sweeps, Stackers, Rakes, Mowers, Binders, Headers,
* Threshers, Steam or Gasoline powers, call and see
EZMIXX- SLTIO-O-S,
Prop. Elkhorn Valley Blacksmith, Wagon,
Carriage, Shoeing 8c Machine Shop.
^ P. S.—Just received another car ot Rushford wagons, complete stock
m sizes; they are the best wagons made.
Mack & Peeler
Hardware,
Stoves, Ranges
Mowers, Hay Rakes
AND HAY SWEEPS.
^ The Frontier j sKoi41 n
CHANGES IN WATCHES.
, Old-Fashioned h Eye” Silver
Watches Are Disappearing.
The almost total disappearance of
the old-fashioned “bull's-eye" silver
watches is a source of wonderment to
even some watch dealers. It Is prac
tically Impossible to pick up one
now among them. A Chicago Tribune
reporter made the rounds of the watch,
pawn, and junk shops recently In quest
of one of these old timepieces, and did
not find it. One dealer said he knew
where a single specimen was, but later
admitted that the owner either had
sold or lost it. A veteran watchmaker
who can make a watch by hand, In re
ferring to the disappearance of the
“bull’s eyes," said: "It Is only natural,
I suppose, that they should disappear.
None of them were first-class time
pieces. I mean that the best of them
would vary as much as a minute a
week. The cheaper machine-made
watches keep better time and cost less.
The first of these old ‘bull’s-eyes’ car
ried the regulation Virdge movement.
One hundred years ago the Virdge
watches were carried by all business
men. Later the English watchmakers
made ‘bull’s-eyes’ with improvements
on the Virdgo movement. I haven't
seen a Virdge for two or three years.
As a matter of fact, those old-fash
ioned, key-winding silver watches are
worth only what the silver in the cases
amounts to. The metal represents
about a dollar in value. The works
are worthless. Only one or two small
wheels aro taken out by the dealers.
Sometimes they are useful in repairing
family heirlooms. What are they
worth? Why, nothing at all as time
pieces. The best way to get one is
to keep on inquiring among the grand
fathers and great uncles until you run
across one, and then beg It or buy it.
It Is practically worthless, except as
a relic."
COBWEB PICTURES,
Unique Pictures Made by Mre. Game
well, a St. Louis Lady.
Making pictures and decorations out
of cobwebs, peanut shells and postage
stamps is an art created by Mrs. Belle
Cooper Gamewell of St. Louis, Mo.
Taken up as a fad the art has develop
ed into a business and Mrs. Gamewell
is making money, although she is
well-to-do in the world. When Mrs.
Gamewell wants t» make one of her
queer pictures she must first hunt un
til she finds a cobweb. The kind that
accumulates in the comer of the cell
ing in the homes where the house
maids can’t see anything higher than
the mantlepiece is best for the purpose.
When she finds a web she takes it
down very carefully and spreads It in
the bottom of a pasteboard box. Some
times it Is necessary to gather several
cobwebs to provide sufficient fairy can
vas for one picture.
When the web has been spread over
the bottom of the box it is ready to
be painted on. Mrs. Gamewell uses
brushes and oil paints, but she can
not wield the brush like the ordinary
painter who puts his colors on a big,
coarse canvas. She dips her brush in
the paints very carefully, so that she
gets only a tiny drop on it each time.
The ordinary artist draws a line with
a sweep of his hand. She builds the
line drop by drop without ever actually
touching the web with her brush. In
this way she makes landscapes and
flower designs that are greatly admired
by her little friends. When all the
paint has been deposited drop by drop
on the web it is permitted to dry. Then
Mrs. Gamewell covers it with a piece
of thin glass or mica and the picture
is complete.
Men Like Tan Bhoeo*
“Shoe manufacturers have been try
ing hard for four years to drive tan
and colored shoes out of the market.”
said a Chestnut street dealer, "and
they have made an ignominous failure
of it. The boom in cheap patent leath
ers, which was started purposely to
squeeze the tan shoes from the market
has almost collapsed. Many factories
did not send out samples of colored
shoes for this season’s trade, but sent
patent leather samples Instead. The
manufacturers who did not make this
mistake are the men who are getting
the summer’s business. Men like tan
shoes, and that’s all there is about It.
Women are not so fond of them be
cause they are more trouble to keep
clean.”~Phtladelphia Times.
The Land of Earthquakes.
There are certain generally accepted
conclusions which are entirely wrong.
One of these is as to the land of the
most frequent earthquakes. Ask al
most any person and he will tell you
that most earthquakes are in Japan;
but he is wrong. It seems as though
we hear more about earthquakes at or
near Japan than at any other place,
but when the facts are tabulated we
find that Greece is far ahead of Japan,
The latest complete reports cover a pe
riod of six years from 1893 to 1898,
and during that time 3,187 earthquakes
occurred in Greece and about one-half
of that number in Japan. The island
of Zanta alone had 2,018 shocks during
the six years.
Our Export* to Mexico.
Uast year the United States sent
over $31,000,000 worth of goods into
Mexico. This' was nearly $7,000,000
more than the year before. The in
crease of late has been chiefly due to
large exportations of machinery and
electrical supplies. Mexico buys a
good deal of her coal from this coun
try, but the amount is not likely to he
increased, as the factories in Mexico
are changing over from steam to eleo
tric power. The rivers are many in
number and every one is a series of
waterfalls, owing to the hilllness of
the country.
H2 nro likely to bo used for glazing H
Bpa coffee? If you know, you would be Bpi
^B tsure to demand
Lion Coffee I
SB which is never contaminated with B
^B any glazingof any sort, either eggs ^B
Bn or glue—ju^t pure, fresh, strong,
i>v The sealed package insures uni*
form quality and freshness. ;
Bronze Bust of Robert Lee.
Frederick Volek’s bronze bust of
Robert E. Lee has been presented to
Washington and Lee University by
Frank T. Howard of New Orleans.
The bronze is of life size and is said to
be the b*st impression extant of the
great g( Aejal. Mr. Volck was em
ployed by the confederate government
to make it during the civil war.
-—-.
Value of Shocked Nerve*.
According to a legal decision in the
Vienna courts, “shock to the nerves”
constitutes a serious accident. A pas
senger on a local line claimed damages,
which were awarded him, for a shock
to his nerves, caused by the conductor
shouting out to the passengers to
jump off tho car, as he feared a col
lision.
Full of Bunlnes* at 83.
Ex-Mayor Daniel D. Whitney of
Brooklyn, now in his eighty-third year,
is president of an insurance company,
director of a bank and proprietor of
a wholasole grocery store, and attends
strictly to business in each of these
capacities. He has lived in the same
house for nearly sixty years.
Hymn. In Gaelic.
The psalmody hymns committee of
the Church of Scotland having report
ed that the majority of the Highland
Presbyteries are in favor of the publi
cation of a Gaelic hymnal, the general
assembly has empowered them to ad
just and issue a collection of hymns in
Gaelic.
Far From tho Deadly Gaxea.
The churches of the borough of
Manhattan, New York city have sent
about 30,000 boys, girls and mothers
to the country this summer. Of the
various churches the Episcopal sends
by far the greatest number of children.
Trinity church alone sending 4,000.
President of a University.
Dr. Daniel Purinton, for the last ten
years president of Denison University,
Granville, O., has tendered his resig
nation, to take efTect on August 1. Dr.
Purinton has accepted the presidency
of West Virginia University, Morgan
town, W. Va.
Swedish Restaurant Signs.
In Sweden the traveler may learn at
which railway stations meals are
served hy huge signs, bearing a
crossed knife and fork, which aro
posted along the road on each side of
the stopping place.
Statues In London.
The proposed new statue of Queen
Victoria will raise the number of Lon
don's statues of personages to thirty
one. The city has fourteen statues of
statesmen and a dozen of soldiers.
Their Secret Is Out.
All Sadieville, Ky., was curious tp
learn the cause of the vast improvement
in the health of Mrs. 8. P. Whittaker,
who had for a long time^endured untold
suffering from a chronic bronchial trou
ble. “It’s all due to Dr. King’s New
Discovery,” writes her husband. “It
completely cured her and also cured our
little grand-daughter of a severe attack
of Whooping Cough." It positively
cures Coughs, Colds, La Grippe, Bron
chitis, all Throat and Lung troubles.
Guaranteed bottles 50c and $1.00. Trial
bottles free at P. C. Corrigan drug store.
To Save Her Child.
From frightful disfigurement Mrs.
Annie Galleger, of La Grange, Ga., ap
plied Bucklen’s Arnica Salve to great
sores on her head and face, and writes
ltB quick cure exceeded all her hopes.
It works wonders in Sores, Burises, skin
Eruptions, cuts, Burns Scales aud Piles.
25c. Cure guaranteed byP.C. Corri
gan, druggist.
What A Tale It Tells.
If that mirror of yours shows a
wretched, sallow complexion, a jaun
diced look, moth patches and blotches
on the skin, it’s liver trouble; but Dr.
King’s New Life Pills regulate the liver,
purify the blood, give clear skin, rosy
cheeks, rich complexion. Only 25c at
P. C. Corrigan drug store.
The Frontier is still doing good print
ing at moderate price. Let us figure
vour next order.
? Only 50 Cents
£ to make your baby strong and
f well. A fifty cent bottle of
' Scott’s Emulsion
will change a sickly baby to
1 a plump, romping child.
Only one cent a day, think
of it. Its as nice as cream.
Send for a free sample, and try it.
, SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists,
409-415 Pearl Street, New York,
j 50c. and $i.oq; all druggists.
"■ ""■^mrnmnm* if
AT O'NEILL,*,*,*,*
SATURDAY, AUG. 10.
THE GREATEST OF THEM ALL
THE
GREAT EASTERN
RAILROAD SHOWS
AND
Columbiam Exposition
CIRCUS. MUSEUM and
MENAGERIE
Hugh Monster Menagerie of Rare Wild
Animals, Seven Large Troupes of Ed
ucated Horses and Ponies, Best Arenic
Performers of Europe and America. Real
Roman Charoit Races.
Hosts of Funny Clowns, Facetious,
Fun and Frivolity. Everything New and
Original.
5aturday, August io.
FREE Morning Exhibition on Show
„ Grounds After Street Parade.
2 Grand Performance Afternoon and Q
Evening. Door Open at 1 and 7 p.m. L |
___________________________________________________________________
IO WEEKS trial subscripts lOc
THE TWENTIETH CENTURY FARMER
It contains a number of special articles each week by the most compe
tent specialists in every 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 and sug
gestions on cookery, dressmaking, fancy work, care of flewers 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 the 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 )
and Family Weekly j
CUT THIS OUT AND SENDIT WITH A DIME OR FIVE 2-CCNT STAMPS TO THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
FARMER, 2207 FARNMAN STREET, OMAHA.
SKILLEDLABOR I
_ • AND NEW TYPE |
ENABLES US TO I
PRODUCE ARTIS J
TIC RESULTS
j^: -J'HE FRONTIER PRTG. CO.