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About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 14, 1901)
|Svaup^F«5s| I g «T IS PeFRES^1^ And Acts ^ jfi § Pleasantly AND Gently, m I n™>* I \\ ith many millions of families Syrup of Figs has become the ideal home laxative. The combination is a simple and wholesome jA one, and the method of manufacture by the California Fig Syrup ^ Company ensures that perfect purity and uniformity of product, ^ which have commended it to the favorable consideration of the tjjw most eminent physicians and to the intelligent appreciation of all who are well informed in reference to medicinal agents. K ©■ Syrup of Figs has truly a laxative effect and acts gentty with |P out in any way disturbing the natural functions and with perfect M* PX freedom from any unpleasant after effects. R® In the process of manufacturing, figs are used, as they are fg pleasant to the taste, but the medicinally laxative principles of the ® [ Kf combination are obtained from plants known to act most bene ficially on the system. C/i P To Jet its bervefieiaJ effects— ^ buy ■the ^er\uir\erMavn\jf&ctured by 1 C^Yiforraik T\t)S\jmp C© I g* bouisville.Ky. S*n FrAne.isco.CeJ. Mew YorhNM BO FOR SALE BV ALL DRUOOISTS PRICE SO* PER BOTTLE I INFORMATION CONCERNING the INDIAN TERRITORY HOMES, BUSINESS, INVESTMENT. MAP, LAWS AND TREATIES. Lv Compiled by U. S. Indian Land Appraisers. T\ Price 50 cents. IND.TER. PUB. CO. Postage prepaid. Muskogee, led. Tet ^ "A1J. WRIGHT-POR MORE THAN HALF A CENTURY” Car. llradMhr, IWtlpatlan, Chill. >nd Kerr, Bad all HQ. lou. Complaint*. All Druyyl.t.. Krife S5 cel. . Box. WRIGHT’S INDIAN VEGETABLE PILL CO.. New York. An average man is one who thinks he is just a little better than the av erage. IF YOU USE BALL BLOK, (Jet Red Cross BaH'Blue, the best Ball Blue. Large 3 oz. package only 5 cents. Age ever looks backward; youth forward; so the two never see the same scenery of life. DEFIANCE STARCH should be in everv household, none so good, besides 4 oz. more for 10 cents than any other brand of cold water starch. The man with the most means is very often the meanest man in the neighborhood. "HT *UNION°MADE* 'HT ... . ^ mMmsmcimkjB .HOES -fj| ils&gS/ i»V\^^Sp W. L. Douglas §4.00 ‘;M *1 ■ been placed 60 hlrh that tS Gilt Edge Line Cannot Be H -.&:*# I m weaver rcceivcR more value for Equaled At Any Price. 1 f i'^mone^ln the-W.I^ Douglas m ^■^^5.:. /ragkv # $3.00and #3.50shoes than ho can | For More Than a Quarter of a % /JIraafly. W g<‘t elsewhere. W. L. Douglas Century the reputation of W. L. makes and sells more $.3.00 and Douglas $3.oo and $3.50 shoos for 'mw^XW $3.50 hhoes than any oilier two style, comfort and wear has ex- manufacturer* in the world. ju celled allOther makes sold at these ffi/Tw FAST COLOR EYELETS USED, prices. This excellent reputation WL; mat-w 4^/ m insist upon having W. L. Lough* shoes has been won by merit alone. W. L. with name and pri^e stamped , ffi! Douglas shoes have to give better sat- on bottom. Shoes sent auy Isfaction than other $8.00 and $3.50 whereon receipt of price % shoes becanse his repntutlon for the best $3.00 and 25 cents additional for car and $&50 shoes must be maintained. riage. Take measurements of W. r. Dongrlas *3.00 and 83.SO shoe* iSSff«fc2d 5ridt°ht,led8" are made of the same high-grade leath- usually worn; plain c ers .used in 95.00 and $6.00 shoes and or cap too; heavy, i are just as good in every way* medium or light soles. I^^Sol^j^^^ougla^itoreni^nierlcan eltlo^euln^Iirec^Vora factory to wearer at one profit; anrt the bout show dealers M THE POPULAR LINE TO j COLORADO SPRINGS, PUEBLO, CRIPPLE CREEK. LEADVILLE, GLENWOOD SPRINGS, ASPEN, 1 GRAND JUNCTION, SALT LAKE CITY, OGDEN. BUTTE, HELENA, SAN FRANCISCO, LOS ANGELES, PORTLAND, TACOMA, SEATTLE. Ne REACHES ALL THE PRINCIPAL TOWNS AND MINING CAMPS IN COLORADO. UTAH AND NEW NEXICO, THE TOURIST’S FAVORITE ROUTE TO ALL MOUNTAIN RESORTS The Only Line Passing Through Salt Lake City Enroute to the Pacific Coast. THROUGH BETWEEN DENVER and ■ I riY., J CRIPPLE CREEK SALT LAKE CITY 01 LLDMUP LEADVILLE OGDEN uLLLTHvU GLENWOOD SPRINGS PORTLAND ■ GRAND JUNCTION SAN FRANCISCO P fl D O LOS ANGELES UHriU CHICAGO. ST. LOUIS AND SAN FRANCISCO DINING RIRQ SERVICE A LA CARTE U*tl11?« UftilO ON ALL THROUGH TRAINS E. T. JEFFERY, Pre.ldent, J. O. METCALF, Oen'l Manazer DENVER, COLO. DENVER, COLO. A* Sm HUGHES, Gen*I Traffic Manager, 5, H. BABCOCK, Asst. Gen’l Traffic Manager DENVER. COLO. 5ALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. f S. K. HOOPER, Gen’l Passenger and Ticket Agent, DENVER, COLO. War is a terrible trade; but in the cause that is righteous sweet is the smell of powder.—Longfellow. -- We promise that should you use PUT NAM FADELESS DYES and be dissat isfied from any cause whatever, to re fund lOo. for every package. Monroe Drug Co.. Unionville, Mo. When a small boy finds out what worries his mother he always does it The well posted druggist advises you to use Wizard Oil for pain, for he knows what it has done. The ruler of a nation should b« straight. DO Yorrt CLOTHES LOOK YELLOW? Then use Defiance Starch, it will keep them white—16 cz. lor ID cents. It takes a coward to stay wrong when he knows he is wrong. When a girl's education is complete her diploma is a marriage license. Smooth Old Biftliop. Had Bishop Potter of New York not become eminent as a churchman, he might have won high honors as a diplomat. Asked by a lady the other day what he thought of female suff rage he answered; “I have got far be yond that point; I am trying to make the best terms with the sex that I can obtain.” I.ook at the LabelHl Every package of cocoa or chocolate put out by Walter Baker & Co., bears the well-known trade-mark of tlis chocolate girl, and the place of manu facture, “Dorchester, Maes.” House keepers are advised to examine their purchases, and make sure that other goods have not been substituted. They received three gold medals from the . Pan-American exposition. Noted Writer Changes His Name. Ernest Seton-Thompson, the well known author and writer, has been granted permission by Justice Gisch off of the New York supreme court to change his name to that of Ernest Thompson-Seton. Mr. Seton-Thomp son in his petition said that the sur name of Thompson was a pseudonym adopted by his family, which hid from the English government after having taken part in the Jacobite re hellion of 1745. THE GENUINE) POMMEL i SLICKER .>-4 St_ TT1I I 6LACH0* YELLOW WILL KEEP YOU DRY, / ' 1 ' NOTHING EL5E WILL! LOOK FOR ABOVE TRADE MARA.TAKE NO SUBSTITUTED! CATALOGUED FREE 5H0WING FULL LINE OF GARMENTD AND HATD1 A J TOWER CO, &05T0N, MA35. • When Answering Advertisements Kindly Mention This Paper. W. N. U.—OMAHA. No. 46-1901 UUIItS WHtRE Ail ELSE TAILS. | F Best Cough Syrup. Tauten Guod. Dae State Results Quite Generally Favorali e to the Republicans. THE LOCAL CONTESTS ARE MIXED File Landslide in (ireater New York As tounds Democrats—Additional Ketuins From Nebraska, Iowa, Massachusetts »nd Other States. OMAHA, Nov. 7.—In this city these were successful candidates in the laie election: Sheriff, Power, deni.; judge, Vinsonhaler, rep.; clerk. Unitt. rep.; treasurer, Elsasser, dem.; register. Deuel, dem.; coroner, Brailey, rep.; superintendent. Bod well, rep.; sur veyor, Edrjuist, rep.; representative. Battin, rep.; county commissioner, Connolly, dem.; Waterman, rep.; O’Keefe, dem.; police judge, Berka, rep.; school hoard, Andresen, Cermak, Homan, Eunkhouser, McIntosh. Judge Sedgwick and the republican candidates for university regents on the state ticket have carried Douglas county by some 1,700 majority. The regents run close to the supreim court and close to one another. LINCOLN, Nov. 7.—From all re turns received up to noon Chairman Lindsay of the republican state cen tral committee estimates that Judge Sedgwick's plurality will exceed 7,000 The entire republican ticket is elect ed in Ijancaster county. Complete re turns give Jesse Moore, candidate for register of deeds a majority of 31, and B. F. Knight, candidate for treasurer, over 800. All other nominees are elected by between 1,000 and 2,100. A table of forty-two counties, com plete, shows a plurality for Sedgwick of 6,001. These same counties last year gave Dietrich, republican candi date for governor, a plurality of 41, a net gain over last year of 5,960, when Dietrich had a plurality in Hie state of 861. This would indicate that th republican plurality on the head oi the state ticket will be in the neigh borhood of 10,000, as the counties in cluded in the table represent more than half the vote of t‘*o state for governor last year. Partial returns from other counties show that the same ratio of republican gain obtains throughout the state. OMAHA, Nov. 7.—The Herald says. Figures secured by the World-Herald covering about 70 per cent of the state vote on judge of the supreme court of Nebraska indicate that in 1,121 voting precincts of the state out of the total number of 1,611, that Sedgwick has received 74,527 votes, and that Hollenbeck has received 63, 118 votes, thus giving Sedgwick a ma jority up-to-date in the first heard from portions of the state, customarily republican, of 11,409. But comparisons with the Holcomb Reese vote of two years ago for the same position indicate that this ma jority , will receive a big trimming down on the late precincts. The Result in Iowa. DES MONIES, Nov. 7.—Returns are coming in slowly, only one-half of the 2,100 precincts have been heard from. If the same percentage of gain in majority continues, Cummins, repub lican candidate for governor, will have 92,000 over that of Phillips, dem ocrat. The prohibition vote has been largely increased, advancing from 9,000 last year to 25,000 this year. Practically every precinct heard from shows a failing off in the demo cratic vote. Republicans Own Colorado DENVER, Colo., Nov. 7.—In tho election of county officers in Colorado, the republicans won in most of the large counties except Arapahoe. Com plete returns from all the precincts in this city and all country precincts except one show that all the demo cratic candidates were elected in Ara pahoe by majorities ranging fromi 2,000 to 4,000. In many counties the result is mixed, the offices being di vided between democrats and repaid* cans. Will of Edward Stoke*. NEW YORK, Nov. 7.—The will of Edward S. Stokes, who died on Sat urday last at the residence of his sis ter, Mrs. McNutt, was filed in the sur rogate’s office yesterday. The will was executed on February 13, 1891, before Mr. Stokes had the disagreement with his cousin, W. E. D. Stokes, and the latter is the chief beneficiary under the will. No petition setting forth the value of the property left by Mr. Stokes was filed with the will. Virginia Democratic 25,000. RICHMOND, Va., Nov. 7— Latest returns in the election figures do not alter the figures first sent out. Thoso figures place the democratic majority on the state ticket about 25,000. The indications are that the republicans have elected one senator and four teen members of the house. This is a gain of eleven on the present genial assmbly, but that body will still bf overwhelmingly democratic in botk branches. lie ulRcar uf Columbia V* Men. Many pictures of Columbia’s crew in white, with toboggan caps on their heads, have been published front time to time, observes Victor Smith, but they have not lessened interest in the peculiar headgear of Harr’s pels. Boys wear such caps in the streets in cold weather, plainly knitted articles et every conceivable color, with tasseled peaks hanging down the back. Some times a pompon takes the place of the tassel. Columbia's crew wears toboggan caps of horizontal stripes of yellowish green and bluish black, and the general effect reminds you of Pal mer Cox’ Brownies or of watchful sprites materialized. Vie null's Appetite for Meat. Consul General Hurst, at Vienna, sends to the American department of state an account of the horse meat industria of the Austrian capital, which now calls for the slaughter of some 25,000 horses and half a hun dred donkeys annually—horse meat being sold under close public regula tion, and ns such and not something else, and finding a market among the poor on account of its 50 per cent low er price as compared with ordinary meat. AN HONEST NAME. An Itlinoli* Statesman T<*1Ih h Cioori Story—Knew IIIn Father’s Son Would Not Mr. The Honorable Alva Merrill of Chlt licothe, member for the Twenty-fourth District, State of Illinois House of Representatives tells an interesting story: Some two years ago Mr. Merrill gave a testimonial stating that Dodd's Kidney Pills cured his rheumatism. This with Mr. Merrill’s portrait were published in thousands of papers all over the United States. On the train returning home from Springfield one day last winter were the Honorable Mr. Merrill and sev eral other members. After a time one of them said: “Merrill, what, time do you get to Chillicothe?” This attracted the attention of an old man who had been apparently awaiting some identification of Mr. Merrill and as soon as ho hoard the name be rushed up to his seat and extending his hand said: “You are Alva Merrill and you saved my life. 1 was most dead with Lumbago and in an advertisement 1 saw your picture and your recommen dation of Dodd's Kidney Pills. I knew your father, and 1 knew his son would not lie. and therefore I decided to try the Pills. “I am satisfied that Dodd's Kidney Pills and nothing else have saved my life and 1 have been waiting this op portunity to thank you personally, for had I not seen your recommendation I might never have been led lo use this remedy, but, thanks to God. through your honest name and the honest medicine which you so heart ily recommended I am still alive. “I have been watching you since you got on the train at Springfield and thought I recognized your face as the one I had seen in the advertisement, and as soon as this gentleman called you by name, I knew you were the man I had to thank.” Saying mean things is the oue bad habit cultivated most assiduously by the average woman. We get old trying to stay young, but we do not stay young trying to be old. I I I II 11 I A Boon To Humanity is what everybody says who has used St. Jacobs Oil i For it cures the most difff , cult cases of Rheumatism after every other form of treatment has failed. St. Jacobs Oil never fails. It Conquers Pain Price, 25c and 50c. | BOLD BY ALL DEALERS IN MEDICINE AN OPEN LETTER Address to Women by the Treas urer of the W. C. T. U. of Kansas City, Mrs. E. C. Smith._ “My Dear Sisters: — I believe in advocating and upholding everything that will lift up and help women, and but little use appears all knowledge and learning if you have not the health to enjoy it. MRS. E. C. SMITH. “ ITaving found by personal experi ence that Lydia R. Pinkliani’s Vegetable Compound is a medi cine of rare virtue, and having seen dozens of cures where my suffering sisters have lwen dragged back to life and useful ness from an untimely grave simply by the use of a few bottles of that Compound, I must proclaim its virtues, or I should not be doing my duty to suffering mothers anddragged out housekeepers. “ Dear Sister, is your health poor, do you feel worn out and used up, especially do you have any of the troubles which beset our sex, take my advice ; let the doctors alone, try Lydia K. Pink hum's Vegetable Compound; it is better than any and all doctors, for it cures and they do not.”—Mrs. E. C. Smith, 1212 Oak St., Treasurer VV. C. T. U., Kansas City, Mo.—f 5C00 forfeit If about testimonial Is not genuine. Mrs. Plnkliam advises sick wo men free. Address, Lynn, Muss. ^—-—_ - SEND POST OR AA ! ^RESS $O.UU : foi * Our Kingle Breech Loader; Decarbonized i Steel; Choke Bored; Top Knap; Pistol Grip; i Knnp fore end. TVnrranted in every respect. I Send (5.00 with order, or write for new cat alogue of Guns and Sporting Goods. THE H. &. D. FOLSOM ARMS CO. Deportment G., NEW YORK CITY. $8.00 one of the buys best made ftOQ Lb. Platform Scales ever Sold. Well made. WILL LAST A LIFE TIME. FULL Size Platform. Catalogue free. JONES (HE PAYS THE FREIGHT). BINGHAMTON, N. Y. We xn 6RANULATED$|00 SellH-U lbs. SUGAR 1“ with other groceries and mdie.ateot priced. Valuable formula* frcetouew customers. Send eight 2 ct. slumps for our catalogue detailing our big bargains and how to order. We rebate _ 16-cts. on first grocery order no cata logue costs you nothing. Big Money.tor Agent*, h.j. WAUKE.N HKRCMmucco., Importers & Jobbers,Chicago HDflDQV NEW DISCOVERY; .fives 1 quick rel ief and cures worst cases. Book of test ImontldB and lo days* treatment PtHtli. Dll. II. H. 0HKK.V9 SONS. Bo* V, AtUcU, «». u«iaii«iMiiatisiwiwHauaiiaiMi»ii*iM»ia(ti»(»i«iMiNiiaHaiiaiiaH | The Lincoln Eye and Ear Infirmary 1 »a«t | Successfully| treats all curable * • diseases and in- f juries oi the . | | EYE, EAR, NOSE and THROAT, • Including 4 | BLINDNESS, DEAFNESS and CATARRH. | • Contagious and incurable cases not admit = i ted. Patients boarded, nursed and treated, j • Letters of inquiry promptly answered. i Write for announcement. ■ DRS. OARTEN & COOK, | | Oculists and Aurists in attendance. Lincoln.Neb. § The BEST starch is De fiance. The BIGGEST package is Defiance. Qual ity and quantity mean De fiance Starch. 16 ounces for 10 cents. Don't forget It—a better quality and one-third more of it. AT HHOttSAlE BT McCord-Brady Co., Paxton & Gal lagher. Allen Bros. Co., Meyer & Itaapke, Omaha, Nebraska; Brad ley. DeGroff & Co., Nebraska City.