The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, October 31, 1901, Image 3

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    Electrical apparatus used in minKg
in this country is estimated to he
worth about 1100,000,000.
3Iw. Winuiowfl Soothing Syrup.
iToro.htldrou teett'.ng, softens the Rums, reduces to*
Vacuuatlon, allays pain,cures wladcollc. Ific a bottle.
Great souls are always loyally sub
missive; reverent to what is over
them; only small mean souls are oth
erwise.—Carlyle.
Antique Statutory His Fail.
Stanford White is one of the largest
collectors of antique statuary in Amer
ica. Not only is his house in Grarn
marey park. New York, a veritable
museum of Greek and Roman art, but
the lawn is filled to overflowing with
other examples.
IRONING A SHIRT WAIST.
Not infrequently a young woman
finds it necessary to launder a shirt
waist at home for some emergency
when the laundryman or the home ser
vant cannot do it. Hence these direc
tions for ironing the waist: To iron
summer shirt waists so that they will
look like new it is needful to have
them starched evenly with Defiance
starch, then made perfectly smooth
and roiled tight in a damp cloth, to be
laid away two or three hours. When
ironing have a bowl of water and a
clean piece of muslin beside the iron
ing board. Have your iron hot, but
not sufficiently so to scorch, and abso
lutely clean. Begin by ironing the
back, then the front, sides and the
sleeves, followed by the neckband and
the cuffs. When wrinkles appear ap
ply the damp cloth and remove them.
Always iron from the top of the waist
to the bottom. If there are plaits in
the front iron them downward, after
first raising each cne with a blunt
knife, and with the edge of the iron
follow every line of stitching to give it
distinctness. After the shirt waist is
ironed it should be well aired by the
fire or in the sun before it is folded
and put away, says the Philadelphia
Inquirer.
Same Old Voice.
“No man can disguise his voice in
talking through a telephone,” said an
exchange operator to an interviewer
recently. “Every person has some lit
tle peculiarity of speech that, no mat
ter how infinitesimal it may be, is
sure to be actuated and made more
recognizable over the wire. The man
who nas a sharp ring in his voice
will seem to speak more sharply; a
gruff voice will be made more gruff
and by the same rule an insincere
voice is given a greater tone of insin
cerity. The speaker who chews his
words has no chance at all with a
good, lively ’phone. He may only con
tort his speech very slightly, but the
'phone will do the rest, and at the
other end of the wire his remarks will
be about as intelligible as pied type.”
Farce and Tragedy.
In the course of his address to the
students at the opening exercises of
the Baltimore Woman's college last
week, President Goucher said; “A
womanish man is a farce; a mannish
woman is a tragedy. The enlargement
of opportunity obtained through edu
cation secured in such institutions as
this is attended by enlargement of re
sponsibility from which you cannot
escape. Your highest ideal should be
a womanly woman.”
Oxygen in Commerce.
Raoul Pictet, the Swiss inventor and
chemist, has effected a remarkable dis
covery concerning the manufacture of
oxygen upon an extensive scale for
commercial purposes. The inventor
has been engaged for three years upon
this invention at his laboratory in Ge
neva, where he is professor of chem
istry and physics.
In Memory of Tien Tsin Hero.
A memorial portrait of Captain Aus
tin R. Davis, who was killed in the
attack on Tien Tsin, is to be placed
in the Carnegie library, in Atlanta.
The library building occupies the site
of the house in which Captain Davis
was born.
The Life Guards' Giant to Marry.
The tallest officer in the English
army is said to be Captain Oswald
Ames, of the Second life guards. The
captain stands six feet eight, and is as
finely proportioned as he is tall. He
is to many Miss Violet Cecil, daugh
ter of Lady Francis Cecil. Miss Cecil
is petite and fairylike.
It seems awful selfish to hear peo
ple talk of wanting to get closer to
God than God is to their neighbor.
Shirt Waist Women.
The shirt waist proved a great in
vention. Nearly every woman wears
one. The only inconvenience about the
shirt waist is the trouble in ironing
caused by starches that produce that
hard, nerve racking effect. Defiance
starch contains a chemical ingredient
that does away with the trouble. Ask
your grocer for it. Sixteen-oz package
for 10 cents. Made by Magnetic Starch
Co., Omaha, Neb.
The real object of education is to
give children resources that will en
dure as long as life endures.—Sydney
Smith.
Deafness Cannot Be Cured
by local applications, as they cannot reach the
diseased portion of the ear. There is onl ♦one
way to cure deafness, and that is by consti
tutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an
inflamed condition of the mucus lining of the
Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed
you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hear
ing, and when it is ent irely closed deafness U
the result, and unless the inflammation can be
taken out and this tube restored to its normal
condition, hearing will be destroyed forever;
nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh,
which is nothing but.au inflamed condition of
the mucus surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case
of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot
be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for
sirculars, free.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, (X
Sold oy Druggists, 75c.
Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
“Bobs” is a Great Swordsman.
Lord Roberts has had few equals in
the handling of sword and lance. He
was always especially fond of tent
pegging, and so excelled in the diffi
cult diversion that he carried off the
first prize in the Indian tournament
from the whole Indian army when he
was already past his 50th year.
Tile LIVE STOCK MARKET.
Latest Quotations From South Omaha
and Kansas City.
SOUTH OMAHA.
Cattle—There was a fairly liberal supply
for this time of the week, but all kinds
were in good demand and the market
ruled active and steady to strong on all
desirable grades. There were only about
fifteen cars of corn-fed steers on sale and
none of those was what, could be called
finished. Anything at all desirable, how
over, sold readily at steady to strong
prices. Receipts Included only about
thirty-five cars of cows and heifers, and
buyers took hold in good shape and the
market was active and fully steady with
yesterday. A few of the choicest bunches
possibly sold a little stronger, but still
the situntion is best described by calling
it a good, steady market. There was no
particular change noticeable in the prices
paid for bulls, calves and stags, as they
have been selling in just about the same
notches all the week. The strong demand
for feeders was the most noticeable fea
ture of the market. Buyers were all out
early and paid good, strong prices for
weighty cattle showing quality. The
choice stockers also brought strong prices.
So far as the commoner grades and the
medium weights are concerned, there was
not much of any change, as they were
neglected more or less, the same as they
have been all along.
Hogs—The supply of hogs was light as
compared with the arrivals of the pre
vious days of this week, and ns the de
mand was in good shape the market
opened about steady with yesterday's
average. The bulk of the sales went at
$5.97%626.00. Some of the choicer loads
sold from $6,006x6.05 and a few went above
that figure. Commoner grades sold from
$3.97% down. It was not a particularly act
ive market at those prices, but still the
bulk of the offer!nsgs was out of first
hands at a reasonably early hour,
j Sheep—The receipts of sheep and lambs
continued liberal and packers were even
more bearish than they were yesterday.
They all tried to buy their supplies lower,
but as feeder buyers were numerous and
anxious for supplies they outbid the
packers in many cases, so that the bulk
of the receipts today went to feeders at
about steady prices. A big string of
lambs, the big proportion of which wTere
good enough for killers, sold to a feeder
for $4.25. which was considered a steady
price. Mexican wethers, in the same way,
were bought by a feeder at $3.60.
KANSAS CITY.
Cattle—Corn-fed cattle opened 10c high
er and closed steady; other cattle, were
steady; choice export and dressed beef
steers, $5,906^6.50; fair to good, $4.90625.85;
stockers and-feeders. $2.85624.25; western
fed steers, $4.90626.29; western range
steers, $3.25624.SO; Texas and Indian steers,
$2.75623.75; Texas cows. $1.75622.75; native
cows, $2.65624 25; heifers. $3.00625.25; ean
ners. $1.50612.60; bulls, $2,256/3.75; calves,
$3,006x5.23. .....
ANTI-IMPERIALISTS’ VIEWS.
Hope Roosevelt Will See Colonial Policy
is Impossible.
BOSTON, Mass., Oct. 20.—The Anti
Imperialist league today issued a state
ment representative ot its hope that
President Roosevelt will take the view
that a colonial policy for this govern
ment is an impossible one. The state
ment says:
“The league members deplore the
crime of crimes perpetrated at Buf
falo.
“Our grief for the dead, however,
must not make us forget our duty to
the living. The great questions which
confront us must be dealt with. Pres
ident McKinley has become an histor
ical personage. His public policy can
now be discussed, without prejudice.
We hopo the country will accept the
opinion that colonialism is an impos
sible one and that the Filipinos are
capable of’ independent self-govern
ment. We trust that President Roose
velt may speedily arrive at this con
clusion. To this judgment we shall
continue to appeal by every means in
our power.”
BOVS DUEL WITH A NEEDLE.
Thirteen-Year-OlU I>uviU Bernstein Stabs
flurry ninimetfarb.
CHICAGO, Oct. 2G.—A large bast
ing needle, such as is used by tail
ors, was the weapon with which Dav
id Bernstein, aged 13, stabbed 17-year
old Harry Himmelfarb to death to
night. Today young brothers of the
boys had a quarrel. When the older
boys met tonight on the street near
their homes they took up the quar
rel of the little fellows. Himmelfarb,
who is a coatmaker's helper, pulled
from a half finished coat he was car
rying home a big basting needle. He
plunged it into young Bernstein's
thigh and ran. Bernstein, mad with
pain, pursued him, and drawing the
needle from his leg, he held Himmel
farb with one hand while with the
other he drove the long needle into
his heart. Bernstein fled to his home,
where he v’as shortly afterward ar
rested.
Negotiations Itrokcn Off.
LONDON, Oct. 26.—According to ad
vices to the Morning Leader from
Sofia, dated October 22, any negotia
tions that were pending between the
Bulgarian authorities and the abduc
tors of Miss Stone have been broken
off.
Throw Open Dakotu Liinth
DEVILS LAKE, N. D., Oct. 26—Ma
jor McLaughlin, inspector for the in
terior department, arrived and will
proceed at once to Fort Totten to
negotiate with the Indians for the
cession of their unallotted lands. It is
believed the Indians will agree to
cede their surplus at a reasonable
price. There are 92,000 acres on this
reservation and if congress ratifies
the agreement the land will doubtless
be open next spring,
i l
The demand for electrical ventilators
in India is ahead of the supply.
THOSE WHO HAVE TRIED IT
will use no other. Defiance ('old Water
Starch has no equal in Quantity or Qual
ity—16 oz. for 10 cents. Other brands
contain only 111 oz.
' Saying mean things is the one bud
habit cultivated most assiduously by
the average woman.
I am sure Piso's Cure for Consumption saved
my life throe years aga—Mrs. Tros. Robbins.
Maple Street, Norwich, N. V., Fob. 17.1900.
Chronic kickers give the world many
an upward boost.
Foolish and -obstinate people alone
suiter from neuralgia or rheumatism.
For they can always secure Wizard Oil
and cure themselves.
When a woman marries a man to
reform him the poor fellow is up
against heroic treatment.
DO YOUR CL.OTHES LOOK YKLUOWT
If so, use Red Cross Ball Blue. It will make
them white as snow. II oz. package 5 cents.
Some men have reasons for doing
things—and some have excuses.
The young man on a salary of $t' a
week in apt to think his best girl dear
er than he can afford.
Dropsy treated free by Dr. H. H. Green’*
Sons, of Atlanta. Ga. The greatest dropsy
specialists in the world. Read their adver
tisement in another column of this paper.
Some men are so liberal they are
continually giving themselves away.
Clear white clothes are a sign that the
housekeeper uses Rod Cross Hull Hlue
Large ok. package, 5 cents.
All the world loves to laugh at the
love letters that are read in court.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES color
silk, wool or cotton perfectly at one boil
ing. Sold by druggists, 10c. per package.
They who have no desire for holi
ness will (ind no delight In heaven.
piTC Permanently cured. No fits or nervousness after
rl 0 a first day’s use or l>r. Kline’s Great Nerve Restor
er. Send for Fit Rtf $•<<)<) trtal bottle and treatise.
DR. K. 11. Ki.ink, Ltd., 981 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
The wise girl always rearranges the
Parlor furniture immediately after a
yoang man has called.
IWL UGLAS {
jEiSaa sho&W-®61
fcMAJOffvi Cannot beE^dsc^^M^c^'^"
I / IT "" 3 H ." A BJ1 y \" y O Far More than a Quarter of a Century
I A fa ‘ ^<9lllr \ the reputation of W. L. Douglas $3.u0 and £3.so
fl JU ,n A 1m| shoes for style, comfort and wear has excelled
Bffls'i •Hr! & «> Ink y all other makes sold at these prices. This ex
BMa: -n T fix VXk/ . cellent reputation has been won b3’ merit alone
IHLa rtl W L At ^ W.L. Douglas shoes have to give bet
DK« L-« 1 £ e*4L£l -JAL, 1, „V- ter satisfaction than other $3.(0 and
BB» r 4 »* — $3.50 shoes because his reputation for
H?.d rj‘ jJpjJ -r the tx»*t £3.0'and $8.60 shoes must be main
\ ’ 1 3 1 >tped. Hie standard has always been placed
■StD \ io'TaS&P t&KPjr so high that the wearer receives more value
13 iff \ io; ,/,wCL, for his money In the W. 1- Douglas $.3.00 and
fS'ZAv\ otU* • $3.60shoes than he can get. elsewhere. W. I,.
Bfc Va Douglas makes and sells more $3.00 and $8.60 shoes tha
fjf’ «*t\v\ / :' 5 any other two manufacturers in the world. Fnatt'olnr
Ijl esM^’ E velefu uu«*«|. W. L. Uouitlau £3 »nd £3.50 ■hor* urr mud©
1% ’fry ' . ’ . of.hr .am* hl«H *r*d* leather, u-rd lu £5 and £6 ahori, and
ill XTv£ f *r* JaBl M *°*d “ *"r)r "**• c AT A 1.00 FRFR. ■
la _ / Sold by /hn/fllas s'ores in American cities selling di reef fronfactorvW
lgL. C»> - B l to wearer at on* profit: and the best shoe dealers everywhere, J
BER- 1 _ Ak InnUf upon tinting IV. I,. Pougln* short with aura© 1
ISl JAH SMa&ii^* sod prior mumped on bottom. Shoes sent any.
BBg&tftv^ where on receipt of prlee anti 25c. addi
A %Ai " ■! UL mV’7 tional for carriage. Take measure
M,iSt it - i) f J inenta of foot as shown; state style
u' desired; size and width
A — usually worn; plain or cap
, / toe; heavy, medlnm, or light sole*.
iHHBBHBH^^^^HSHHBBBBRIIBBBBBIBBBBBBIlIBBHBBBinBBHHBHBBBBBnflHHBlBP^
Honesty always thinks itself in debt, j He who refuses to trust rejects truth.
iffPfsaj^11 tV eo°rACS
FROM
STA R”
HORSESHOE*
“SPEARHEAD
“STANDARD NAVY’
PIPER HEIDSIECK"
BOOTJACK
“DRUMMOND"NATURAL LEAF
“OLDPEACH&HONEY"
“NOBBY SPUN ROLL’
JOLLYTAR
"E.RICE.GREENVILLE”
GRANGERTWIST
2 Granger Twist Tags being equal to one of others mentioned.
“Good Luck,” “Cross Bow,” “Old Honesty,”
“Master Workman,” “Sickle,” “Brandywine,”
“ Planet,” “ Neptune,” “ Razor,” “ Tennessee
Cross Tie,” “ Ole Varginy.” 3
TAOS MAY BE ASSORTED IN SECURINO PRESENTS.
Our new illustrated
CATALOGUE OF PRESENTS
FOR 1902
'will include many articles not shown here. It will contain the
most attractive List of Presents ever offered for Tags, and will
be sent by mail on receipt of postage—two cents.
(Catalogue will be ready for mailing about January 1st, 1902.)
Our offer of Presents for Tags will expire Nov. 30th, 1902.
CONTINENTAL TOBACCO COMPANY.
Write your name and address plainly on outside of packages
containing Tags, and send them and requests for Presents to
C. Hy. BROWN,
4241 Folsom Ave.,
St. Louis, Mo.
I 190 2. R
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