The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, August 29, 1901, Image 4

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    The Frontier.
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY BY
THE FRONTIER PRINTING COMPANY
D. H. CRONIN, Editor.
ROMA1NE SAUNDERS, Associate.
The appointment of Deaver to the
O’Neill land office causes popocratic
boosters a deal of worry.
-- - --
Possibly enough whole timber
can be resurrected from the Chicago
and Kansas City platforms to make
a good stout coffin for the democratic
jackass.
-. -
Politics and religion aretho father
and mother of prejudice. The man
or woman who is not prejudiced
from one or the other cbuso is a
curiosity.
The American peach crop is said
to be the largost in many years, 25, -
000,000 bushels being grown this
year. This does not prevent the
dealer from holding up his customer
at 30 cents a dozen.
Polk county republicans, so far as
we observed, were the only ones to
denounce the Bartley parole in their
convention. Perhaps Polk county
republicans only gave expression to
what Nebraska republicans in gen
eral feel.
-«»►-.
A committee of twelve workmen
from England are visiting tho east
ern states studying the methods of
American workmen. Natural re
sources combined with American
skill is fast bringing tho old world
to the feet of tho young republic it
one* disdaiued.
The United States has 184,532
miles of railroad; Germany, 29,987
miles; Russia, 28,357; Franco, 25,
802; Great Britain, 23,534. The
United States carries 912,973,853
tons of freight annually; Great
Britain, 437,043,205, Germany,
275,020,000; France, 120,487,000;
Russia, 97,140,000. This is a fair
barometer of the commercial activity
of the five leading nations, and
Americans can^look with a degree of
commendable pride upon the figures
that place their country in the lend
with a greater commerce than all
Europe.
There is no demand for a ono-cent,
letter postage. Postage is cheap
enough, but tkoro is a demand for
the reforms in the postal laws that
will more equally distribute salaries
tothenow underpaid and overworked
employed of the vast system, which
is the greatest business concern on
earth. There is need of requiring a
great deal of printed matter, which
now passes throug the mails as
second class, to pay third class rates,
or even more. There are scores of
publications now using the mails
that have no regular legitimate sub
scription circulation, but subsist up
on fakes that advertise in them;
and literature is peddled through
sub-agencies and newspapers loan
ing lists to quack and fukes who
pay a small sum for their use. It
is time the mails were purged of the
tons of stuff that pay about one
fourth what they should pay.
—-»■«#» ---
World-Herald: As autumn ap
proaches trade in Omaha’s wholesale
distriot increases, and if the busi
ness of the week that has just closed
oan be taken as an index of what is
to follow there is no doubt but
what this season will be a record
breaker and that more goods will
have been sold by the first of the
new year than during any previous
year in the history of Omaha’s
wholesale interests.
That’s good. Headers of the
World-Herald will be pleased to
learn that Omaha wholesalers are
outstrippings themselves, the predic
tions of distress and calamity made
by the World Herald in times of
political excitement to the contrary
notwithstanding. The activity in
Omaha wholesale circles indicates,
too, that the country merchants are
doing a business corresponding in
proportions, and that, too, the peo
ple in general have money with
which to buy.
Ibflionrl Governor* Arc Contented.
It la a curious fact that although
Missouri elected its first governor
more than eighty years ago, is one of
the largest and most prosperous states
of the country, and that from its geo
graphical positon cn the border line
between North and South, has occu
pied an important position in national
affairs, not one of its governors has
ever been conspicuous in national poli
tics, with the single exception of H.
Gratz Brown, who ran for vice-presi
dent in 1872 and was overwhelmingly
defeated for that office.—New York
Sun.
Habitat of Canaria*.
Canaries, which were originally
green and gray in color, were native to
the islands from which they tak ■
their name, and were first taken ti
England on ships plying bat w en Eng
lish ports and the south of Fran
From thi3 stock have been derived a
number of distinct varieties, such as
the crested, the green, the lizard,
which imitates the reptile in it. varie
gated markings, and the Belgian,
which has a strange, hump-hacked ap
pearance.
I
Greatest In the World*
The United States 13 the greatest
food producing country of the world.
Although this country represents but
ono-llfth of the total civilized popula
tion of the world It produces more than
one-fourth of all the food stuffs. The
United States produces 74,000,000 tons
of grain of a total of 229,000,000, and
4.500.000 tons of meat of a total of 15,
200.000 tons. The Americans also pro
duce a large percentage of the dairy
and fishery production of the world.
Alcohol for French Motors.
Builders & motor cars In France aro
strongly convinced that the future of
the industry lies in the utilization of
alcohol. Owners have little hope of
petroleum being cheapened to any
considerable extent. They are looking
for further economy to alcohol, the
utilization of which, It Is supposed,
will not only save them money, but
will revive a languishing national In
dustry at the expense of imported pe
troleum.
Woman'* College of Mtttr many.
A woman’s college of matrimony is
a new century idea, which, it is re
ported, will ho put into practical ex
ecution In Chelsea, England. The du
ties of a wifo will become the subject
of a two years’ course of study. The
curriculum will embrace not only the
usual branches of house-wifery, such
as cooking, sewing and laundry work,
but Is intended to deal with physiology
and medicine as well.
Answered « Hypothetical ynoulon.
A school girl of Passaic, N. J., was
asked this question by her teacher: "if
you had $20, how long would It take
you to go to Washington, and by what
route would you travel?” The next day
she disappeared with $20 of her moth
er’s money and later was found in the
national capital, seeking a practical
answer to the query.
Mnjr Spoil l*nrl« Boulevard*.
Paris Is threatened with an elevated
structure In Its finest streets. It Is
proposed to build a moving sidewalk,
like that used in the late exposition,
to run along the Avenue l’Opera, the
grand Boulevards, the Boulevard Se
bastopol, the Ituc Turblgo and the
Rue de Rlvoll, a circuit of about six
miles.
Curious Hello of 014 Rome.
During some excavations in the Fo
rum at Rome, the laborers unearthed
the head and part of the body of a
marble horse. It is a magnificent pieco
of sculpture, and great value ha3
been placed upon it. According to ex
perts, the relic dates from about the
second century before Christ.
Count “BUI", th« Favored Son.
Count William Bismarck, who died
recently at the early ago of 4S, was the
favorite son of the iron chancellor.
Count "HU." as his father always
called him. was the godson of the first
kaiser. He and his elder brother
served with distinction in the war of
1870.
liln? Ha* Job to Clive.
By the death of Colonel that Hon.
Charles G. C. Eliot the office of gen
tleman usher in daily waiting on the
king has become vacant. The salary
is £2oO a year, with allowances for
board and lodging during the four
months of annual duty.
Portrait of Justice Miller.
Thomas Wilson, formerly a member
of the Iowa bar. has presented to the
United States supreme court a large
portrait of the late Justieo Samuel F.
Miller, painted by Mr. Witt, a New
York artist, during the life of Judge
Miller.
Helpin? Tulane Library.
Mrs. Caroline Stannard Tilton of
New Orleans, has given $70,000 for a
Tilton Memorial Library at Tulane
University in that city, and Miss Bat
tle Beirne Miles has added $1,000 for
the purchase of books.
Fog Lifts, Uu.t Once.
The air In the English channel was
so clear one day recently that the dome
of Boulonge cathedral, twenty-eight
miles away, could he clearly seen from
Dover with the naked eye.
Approaching the Poles.
Explorers have approached within
258 miles of the North Pole, but the
nearest approach to the South Pole has
been 772 miles.
CUnlnir In Australia.
One i !• :11s before the Aut*
tral!e-. t ' . try is that of the
j.i , ; ration of a white Australia. M.
I. a n has recently paid a visit to
northern yum nsland with a view to
better understanding the problem of
gradually prohibiting black labor on
the sugar plantations. One of the
plantations he visited has 2,500 acres
tinder the cano and is irrigated by
the waters from the Burnes river. The
proprietors are about to spend £30,000
($150,000) on a new pumping plant to
lift water at the rate of 10,000,000 gaU
lor.s a day.
In'IIaiM Have rJano«j.
As. an llustration of wealth among
In’.'sns it Is officially stated that the
' s of the most progressive Osages
compare favorably with the dwellings
of white people of equal wealth. Their
In - uses are richly furnished with car
]>:ts and modern furniture, and in many
homes there are pianos, upon which
the daughters are taught to perform.
Hornes and carriages are not infre
q- i and, though the automobile has
not yet made its appearance, It is not
an impossibility of the future.
Larycut City Mouth of the Line.
Ten census returns for tho metro
politan district of Sydney, N. S. W.,
have Just been published and show
that during the past ten years its pop
ulation has increased by a little over
100,000 persons. The total is now 386,
359, of whom 197,227'are males, 189,
632 females. Sydney now rank3 as
one of the large cities of the world. It
is the largest city south of the lino.
The United States only contains six
larger cities. —New York Commercial
Advertiser.
Law Library Refuses Legacy.
The stockholders of tho Milwaukee
Law Library association have decided
not to accept tho $10,000 legacy left
the association in the will of Ammi R.
R. Butler of that city on the condition
that the name bo changed to the Butler
Law Library association. It was
thought that the suggested change
would be unfair to the late B. K. Mil
ler, who made a handsome gift to the
association a few years ago.
The Naming of Dotson*
Dotson, a hamlet ten miles east of
Middlesboro, Ky., was founded many
fc’ears ago by a pioneer named Lewis
Dotson A few days ago there was a
double wedding there, tho grooms be
ing William and John Dotson, broth
ers, and the brides Anna and Daisy
Dotson, sisters. The officiating clergy
man was Rev. John Dotson and all
parties were descendants of the origi
nal Lewis.
Kmlowment of 8100,000.
J. V. Thompson of Uniontown, Pa.,
has given $100,000 for the endowment
taf the president’s chair at Washington
hnd Jefferson College, Washington,
Pa. This is to bo a memorial to his
father and mother, the sum being just
what he received from their estate.
His father, the late Jasper M. Thomp
son, was trustee of the college.
Monument to Martyred Governor.
A monument has been erected in
Santa Fo, N. M., to Governor Albino
Perez, who was assassinated with
other officials during the revolution of
1837. The monument was placed on
the spot of the assassination by Sun
set Chapter, D. A. R., which has un
dertaken to mark all historic spots in
the territory.
Gift of Redemption Rock.
Senator Hoar of Massachusetts, who
some years ago bought Redemption
rock, in Princeton, Mass., where Mrs.
Rawlinson was ransomed from the In
dians by John Hoar, the first of the
name in this country, in 1676, has pre
sented the property to John Hoar, son
of the late Sherman Hoar of Concord.
ltrl.tle Fortr.it of Washington.
Gustav Korn, a New York brush
maker, has made a life-size portrait of
George Washington in bristles of vari
ous colors, taking Stuart’s celebrated
painting for a model. The bristle pic
ture is said to be quite a work of art.
It is on exhibition in the window of a
Pearl street store.
The Biggest Living Man.
The biggest living man is said to be
Lewis Wilkins, who was born near St.
Paul, Minn., in 1S74. When but 10 years
old he measured 6 feet in height, and
now has grown to 107% inches—just
three-quarters of an inch less than 0
feet—and weighs 364 pounds.
Aristocracy'. Donation to Charity*
At a charity benefit recently given
and attended by New York society peo
ple the proceeds, which came from a
basket collection, amounted to exactly
$30, an average contribution of five
cents for each of the 600 persons pres
ent.
Brow-Furrows, Trouse-Creaso*.
Judge Jenlcs of the New York Su
premo Coourt told the New York law
school the other day that "the man
with the furrows on his brow wins
against the man with the creases in
his trousers every time.”
Jersey Euchre Frizes.
A woman who entertained the West
Hoboken (N. J.) Euchre club lust week
furnished kittens for the booby prizes
and fox terrier pups for the man and
woman with the highest ecore.
Forty Counties Without Lawyers.
There are forty counties In Texas
which have to seek legal advice out
side their limits, as they have not a
•ingle attorney of^he 1 r owrc^
0NEILL BUSINESS LACES n*» 1
THAT ARE R ELI A REE ^-""1
MRS. S. G. NICHOLS
Has a complete assort
ment of fashionable
IVX i I 1 i n o r ij
If you wish the latest styles and
best values get my prices.
First door north of Cole’s jewelry store, 4th s
MRS. C. E. HALL
Drsss Making
Modern methods, latest patterns
and perfect fits. A large force
of helpers enables me to turn
work out rapidly.
Front rooms over O’Neill National bank.
JOHN MANN
The Pioneer Harness Maker
Is still at the old stand selling the best goods
at the lowest prices and paying all the mar
ket allows for hides and furs. Bring me them
or come in if you need a harness or saddle or
anything to be found in a harness store.
R. H. MILLS
Wells, Wind Mills,
TANKS AND PUMPS.
Write or call on me for estimates. Residence
1*4 block west Porter lively.
PORTER & SON
Dewey Hotel “„:cSts
AAUlv"A public to “come in”
Checker Livery
General feed and livery business. North
Short Line depot.
M. I)» LONG
U. S. Land Attorney
Practice before U. S. Land Ollioe.
Buys and Sells Peal Estate. Agent for
MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Has resided in O’Neill since may, 1877. Ollice
lirst door east O’Neill Grocery.
JOHN J. HARRINGTON
Keeps the best 014 0170 for the money
lino of. uilULu In the west.
And at prices to satisfy all.
He carries also a complete line of
Fancy and Staple Groceries,
hats. Caps, Gloves, Shirts, Overalls,
Suspenders, Underwear, etc.
f Mead carries
WOODRUFF & PLANK
Restaurant and Bakery
Mot Meals
Lurches
FrUit ai)d Candy
FRESH
Home Made Bread
EVERY DAY.
J. BENTLEY
Groceries, Fruits &
..Candies..
BREAD, CAKES, ETC.
-- .
RYAN & LACY
Dealers in
Frcgh and Salt Meat
GAME AND POULTRY.
LIVE STOCK BOsT & SOLD
Berger’s Gash Store
Headquarters for
CLOTHI NG
AND SHOES
Wholesale and Retail
Groceries, Fruits and
..Provisions..
FINE TEAS AND COFFEES
OUR SPECIALTY.
J. P. GALLAGHER, Prop.
A. MERRELL
Wholesale and Retail
FLOUR, FEED &
OIL MEAL**
Walmer’s old stand.
BAZELMAN LUMBER CO.
LUMBER
& COAL
Let us figure your bill.
MRS. ROBERTS
MILLINERY
Store always stocked with the
latest and newest goods.
We meet all competion in prices.
New Fall Styles will soon be on displaj'
JOHN BENNETT
Two doors east of Hotel Evans.
HOWARD BROS.
MEAT MARKET
(Gatz’ old stand.)
Choice Meat, Game and Poultry.
V. ALBERTS
Dealer in and Manufacturer of
Harness, Saddles
WHIPS, ROBES, ETC.
Our Native Herbs
P. J. BIGLIN
Can give you the best bargains
S~\ A A I ( GASOLINE AND
I I 1 A I 3 KEKOSKNE
Vv W f~\ i_ ) BLACKSMITH
(coal.
Yards east O’Neill Grocery.
Astounded The Editor.
Editors. A. Brown, of Bennettsville,
S. C., was once immensely surprised.
“Though long suffering from Dys
pepsia,” he writes, “my wife was greatly
run down. She had no strength or
vigor and suffered great distress from
her stomach, but she tried Electric Bit
ters which helped her at once, and. after
using four bottles, she is eutireiy well,
can eat anything. It’s a grand tonic,
and its gentle laxative qualities are
splendid for torpid liver.” For Indiges
tion, Loss of Appetite, Stomach and
Liver troublo it,s a positive, guaranteed
cure. Only 50c at P. C. Corrigan.
Canadian Minister of Justice.
Daniel Mills, the Canadian minister
of justice, has been appointed the
dominion’s representative at the con
ference on an imperial court of appeal.
He is 70 years old and has occupied
his present position since- 1S97.
Their Secret Is On1.
All Sadieville, Ivy., was curious to
learn the cause of the vast improvement
in the health of Mrs. S. 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
chilis, all Throat uud Lung troubles.
Guaranteed bottles 50c and $1.00. Trial
bottles free at P. C. Corrigan drug store.
Lite l* p Stairs and lie II ml I Ivy.
Scientists have declared that the
purest air In cities is found about 25
feet above the street, and lienee it is
concluded that the healthiest apart
ments are those on the third floor.
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
its quick cure exceeded all her hopes.
It works wonders in Sores, Utilises, skin
Eruptions, cuts. Burns Scales and Piles.
25c. Cure guaranteed by P. C. Corri
gan, druggist.
What A Tale It Tells.
If that mirror of jours shows a
wretched, sallow complexion, a jaun
diced look, moth patches and blotches
on the skiu, it’s liver trouble; but Dr.
King’s New Life Pills regulate the liver,
purify the blood, give clear skin, rosy
cheeks, rich complexion. Otilv 25c at
P. C. Corrigan drug store.
i hardware j
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A long standing reputation gives us pre-eminence in the
hardware business of this section. The Majestic Steel Range
has won fame all over the country; we have them. Exclus
ive agent for the Lick and Elliott anti-rust tinware and Stan
skey steel ware—every piece guaranteed.
Stockmens’ attention is called to the Prussian food—the
best thing yet put out to feed stocd and keep them fat and
healthy.
A full line of guaranteed grades of cutlery, guns, amunition
and all kinds of sporting goods.
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THE PEOPLES NATIONAL FAMILY NEWSPAPER
NEW YORK TRI-WEEKLY
TRIBUNE.
Published Monday, Wednesday and
Friday, is in reality a fine, fresh, every
olher-day daily, giving the latest news
on days of issue, and covering news of
the other three. It contains all import
ant foreign cable news which appears in
the Daily Tribune of same date; also
domestic and foreign correspondence,
shot stories, half tone illustrations, hum
orous items, industrial information,
fashion notes, agricultural matters and
comprehensive, reliable financial 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
ers and 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 $1; with The Frontier,
both papers, $1.75.
Send all orders to The Frontier, O’Neill.