The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, January 30, 1902, Image 5

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See. 2-4. Lot l. Sec. 20
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| "bicap Lumber iard |
IloWBER and!
B&J
♦4 COAL 4°* 1
I O O. SNYDER & CO. !
||^ ^ O’N EILL ^ (§) ^ ^ ALLEN ^ ^ , |t
sttua* titpq isthe
X IJLU JDJIlO Cheapest
If you want to buy the best Buggy, Carriage, Farm Wag
on, Spring Wagon, Road Wagon, Farm Truck, Carl, Wind
mill, F mdmill, hand or power Corn Shel er, Plow, Disc Cul
y tivator, Sweeps, Stackers, Rakes, Mowers, Binders, Headers,
Threshers, Steam or Gtsoliue powers, call and see
IEIMIXXj S^Tia-O-3,
^ Prop. Elkhorn Va'ley Blacksmith, Wagon,
Carriage, Shoeing & Machirp Sh^p.
P. -Just received another car »>t Ruslyf-tnol wagons, complete stock
aijes- they are the h«wt waariios matle.
fE KILLED LABOR
& AND NEW TYPE
ENABLES US TO
PRODUCE ARTIS ,
TIG RESULTS |
TIT __ 11 'J'HE FRONTIER PRTG. CO. | |
4 QAII? Rtt t Q 1 THE best at
UIlLCi UiLLO 1 THE FRONTIER
Ftn and sweat . \ v \ fef]
. have j.oiiiVvt on t J5 S^|
*'4 ‘harnnss treated 0 M Mr ^
v < wlih Eureka Ilsur- BL*£k fc--*£k
f~\ ness Oil. U re- '
• V . Isis the da u p, y
keep?thele.oh
, ; or soft and pli
/ i able. Stitch' 3 ,,
] cM not hr- ;:k.
{No rou. h • ur
' lace to chafe
• *» and cm. T he {j.
..I| harness rot /j
In wears twice
m2 as lorn;by the
BS u-r of Eureka
EM Harness Oil.
Isv
Sold
everywhere
in < :m —
all si/cs.
Made by
Standard Oil
Company
Ths Wall Street Journal
The Wall Street Journal gives ad
vice and answers, without charge, in
quiries about investments. Studies,
underlying causes of market move
ments. Determines facts govern
ing value of securities. Criticises,
analyses and reviews Railroad and In
dustrial reports. Has complete tables
of earnings of properties. Quotes
active and inactive stocks and bonds.
Records the last sale of bonds and the
yield on investment at the price.
One who daily consults The Wall
Street Journal is better qualified to
invest money safely and profitable and
to advise about investments than one
who dose not do so.
Published daily by Dow, Jones & Co
44 Broad St., N. Y. The oldest news
agency of Wall St. $8 a year, $1 a
month
Blown To Atoms.
The old idea that the body some
times needs a powerful, drastic, purga
tive pill has been exploded; for Dr.
King’s New Life Pills, which are per
fectly harmless, gently stimulate liver
and bowels to expel posionous matter,
cleanse the system and absolutely
cure Constipation and Sick Headache.
Only 25c at P. C. Corrigan, drug store.
A Big Cut in The Price.
The Nebraska State Journal has re
duced its prices to sudscribers outside
of Lincoln and sudurbs from $7.50 to
$5.00 per year, including the big Sun
day paper, or $4.00 per year without
Sunday. The price of the Sunday
issue will be $1.50 per year.
By this action it is presenting its
state readers with thousands of
dollars, but the result will be thou
sands of new subscribers, thus enlarg
ing its usefulness and abbing to its
value as an advertising medium. In
stead of any lessening in the effort to
make it a first-class State Paper, the
Journal will be improved in every de
partment, making it the best newspa
per in the state for Nebraskans. It
is published at the State Capital,
which has always been the center of
things political and social of a state
nature. The Journal’s state tele
graphic service excels that of all com
petizors which, with its compelet
associated press reports and . special
telegraph service from Washington,
makes it the paper for Nebraska
people.
A. L. Bixby’s department is one of
the most widely read in the west,
and the fair and unprejudiced editorial
treatment of all state matters has
made the Journal thousands of warm
ffiends,,
This big reduction in price which |
now makes t he six week day papers
eight cents a week, and the seven
day paper ten cents a week, will make
the Journal the most widely read
paper throughout Nebraska.
Why not enroll your name on the
listV Send your order to t he Nebraska
State Journal, Lincoln, Neb.,
Elkhorn Valley Farm.
We owu aim uiit-r for sale 160
acres of beautiful lam! in tbe Elk
born valley, 44 miles from O’Neill.
It is tbe NW | of sec 10, t.wp 28,
range 1 1, Holt county, Nebraska.
Not over ten acres unfit for cultiva
tion. Price $8 per acre. 4ddiess,
Mortgagees, Investment 0o.,
665 Commerce Ba lding,
26*4 Kansas City, Mo
Thousands Sent Into Exile.
Every year a large number of poor
sufferers whose lungs are sore and
racked with eftughs are urged to go to
another climate. But this is costly
and not always sure. Dont be an exile
when I)r. King’s New Discovery for
Consumption will cure you at home.
It’s the most infallible medicine for
Coughs, Colds, and, Throat and
Lung disease^ uu earth. The first
dusp Vriiigs relief. Astounding cures
results from persistent use. Trial
bottle free at 1’, C. Corrigan, Price
ooc and *1. Every bottle guaranteed.
Two P&purs f >r Price of One .
Eveay person who cuts out and
sends this advertisement and one
dollar to the Omaha Semi-Weekly
World-Herald for one years subscrip
tion before January 31, will also re
ceive free of charge the illustrated
Orange Judd Farmer, weekly, for one |
year. No commission allowed. Kegu-!
lar price of both $2.—Address, Weekly I
World-Herald, Omaha, Nebr. I
Aleutian* Died by the YTandred*.
The rapid declino of the native popu
lation of the Aleutian chain of islands
Is told in a report Just received by
the marine hospital aervico from Mr.
F. J. Thornbury, its assistant surgeon |
at Dutch harbor, Alaska. The report
says that formerly there were 120 vil
lages on the islands with a native
population variously estimated at from
t,500 to 2,500. Now, in the same dis
trict there are only 10 villages and
1,000 inhabitants, exclusive of whites,
Df whom 300 are creoles (mixed breed
with Russians and other nationalities)
and 700 natives.
“Mt. McKinley.”
A bill will be Introduced into the
next New Hampshire legislature
changing the name of Mount Pleas
int, in the Presidential range, to
‘Mount McKinley.” There Is prece
lent for the change, Inasmuch as, be
sides the five early Presidents, only
those who have been shot by assas
ins have had their names given to
mountains. The name Lincoln was be
stowed on the second highest peak of
die Franconia group, and “Mount Gar
old” displaced Haystack mountain in
1881.
Four Territories Seeking Admission.
There are now four territories seek
ing admission into the Union as states
tnd according to all precedents they
have a better chance of succeeding in
the matter in Congress, especially in
advance of a presidential election, If
they are of the same politics as the
dominant party in Washington. Of
the four, three, Oklahoma, New Mex
ico and the Indian Territory are gen
erally regarded as Republican, and
anly one, Arizona, as Democratic.—
New York Sun.
Epitaph for Equine.
A recent number of the Westminster
Gazette contains the following obitu
ary notice: “Mercifully sent to sleep
at Landguard, full of years and honor,
Freedom, a chestnut mare belonging
to Dr. Cowper. She was bred by me
and was named ‘Freedom’ by Mr. Bart
lett on account of her absolute free
dom of movement when quite a tiny
filly. In her best days she would be
hard to pass on any road.”
Tricking a Chrono’.oRpr.
President Pritchett of the Massa
chusetts Institute of Technology, in
relating his experience in college re
cently, said that the way boys had of
finding a certain professor was to step
Into the middle of the college yard
*nd call out a date in American his
tory. Instantly the professor would
come out from some window or door
In the college and say that the date
was incorrect.
Local Option In Mississippi.
Few as the saloons are in Missis
sippi, they pay nearly one-third of the
state’s total Income from privilege tax
es. Mississippi is regarded as one of
the most ultra of prohibition states,
made so by the anti-saloon sentiment
In a majority of the counties under
the local option system. Fourteen of
the counties pay the bulk of the $150,
000 received annually from this tax.
American Enterprise'in Mexico.
An American syndicate has just
bought the old McKenzie concession to
supply the City of Mexico with water.
The water will be brought from the
Almoloya springs, forty miles south
west of this capital. The work will in
clude sixteen miles of canal, six miles
of steel piping and the installation of
motive power.
American Coal in Europe.
So great has become the demand
for American coal In Europe that it
has been decided to build an immense
receiving station for unloading, screen
ing and grading coal in northern
France. Rates have been made on
French roads which will drive Ger
man coal out of central Europe.
Sue* Neighbor for Raising Mosquitoes.
A man in Chappaqua, N. Y., has sued
bis neighbor for damages because the
neighbor built a dam on his premises,
creating a pond which has since been
a breeding place for mosquitoes. The
man who sues says that there never
were any mosquitoes around bis place
Until fVlia (lam nrnn R<<(D
- --— —r * Y*
firars«np.a,l<V> Behind British Recruits.
General Buller once explained why
lit was necessary to put such showy
elothing on most of the troops: "Be
cause a showy uniform attracts Mary
Ann, the nursemaid, who makes Tom
my Atkins join the army. In plain
uniforms, you would find recruiting a
harder job than ever.”
An Independent American CItiaen.
While riding in a Maine country road
a traveler observed a field o{ corn
which was overrun with rank weeds,
and mldyray oi the place was a large,
conspicuously displayed sign with the
following: “Notiss! None of Your
business if This Corn Ain’t Hoed.”
Clean Versons Among Lepers.
In the leper settlement on the Island
of Molakai, there were 909 lepers and
164 “clean” persons. The genera]
opinion was that the "clean” would in
time become leprous. Nearly 1,100
people are housed, fed and clothed for
about $80,000 a year.
Tolstoy Independent of Doctors.
Count Tolstoy is not an obedient pa
tient. Some time ago his physicians
told him not to walk or ride on horse
back, but he did what he pleased, re
marking, “I know better than all
physicians what is good for me.”
WOMEN AS PHILANTHROPISTS.
Millions ll;tve Hoou Given by Them for
Education and Charity.
Few realize how much the cause of
education and the various philan
thropic enterprises owe to the women
of the United States. Some of the
gifts recently made to women's causes
are noted below: Mrs. Joseph L. New
combe of New York to Tulane univer
sity, $3,000,000; Mrs. P. D. Armour of
Chicago to Armour institute, $1,250,
000; Mrs. Edna J. McPherson of New
ark, N. J., to Yale college, $750,000;
Mrs. H. R. Schley and Mrs. R. P. Flow
er of New York, jointly, to the town
of Watertown, N. Y., $500,000; Miss
Helen Gould of New York, to various
charities, $100,000; Mrs. Vaughan Mar
quis of Ashland, Wis., to religion,
$300,000; Mrs. J. F. Ryan of New York,
to religion, $250,000; Mrs. Eugene Kel
ly of Buffalo, to religion, $250,000; Mrs.
Emmons Blaine and Mrs. Cyrus Mc
Cormick to the University of Chicago,
$250,000; Mrs. A. S. Greenspau of To
peka, Kan., to various charities, $200,
000; Mrs. Louise Sebor of Middleton,
Conn., to religion, $175,000; Mrs. Mar
garet J. Bennett of Baltimore to vari
ous charities, $150,000; Mrs. Mary
Shannon of Newton, Mass., to various
colleges, $123,500; Mrs. G. S. Burbank
of Fitchburg, Mass., to various chari
ties, $120,000, and Mrs. F. H. Alms of
Cincinnati to the University of Cin
cinnati, $100,000. Besides these several
sums to the university here, the total
aggregating nearly $500,000.
SERVANT GIRLS’ ROOMS.
Domestics Are Ratified to More Com
fortable Sleeping Apartments.
Tho servant girls throughout the
country are asking that comfortable
sleeping apartments be assigned them.
As a rule the bedroom of the “hired
girl" is the most cheerless and con
tracted in the house and it is no won
der that she seeks to fly from it on
every occasion that she receives an
invitation to spend an evening else
where. Every charitable institution
In the country built for paupers and
orphans is fitted up with steam heat,
hot and cold water, and the matrons
take great pride in showing visitors
the bathrooms with all the modern im
provements. And it is not strange
that girls who work for their living
WQuld like a few of these privileges
that are given to those who are living
on charity. It is not too much to as
sume that the girls who live in our
homes and who cook our meat and
bread for us to eat may possibly have
the same ambitions to keep clean and
comfortable as those who are living in
charitable Institutions. It is not going
beyond the bounds of all reason to sup
pose that if a girl is earning her liv
ing she has a natural desire to be self
respecting and might like a closet to
keep her clothes where the moth and
dust doth not corrupt; that she may
like an opportunity to take a bath once
in a while and that she may enjoy a
decent room.
Great Reach or Roots.
It has been remarked as a serious
fact of science that a person cannot
feel pain in two different places at the
same time. To be sure, there are peo
ple who maintain that the place some
times covers the entire body, but that
does not interfere with the general
theory. A certain dentist, whose
name and address are not given, is a
stanch adherent of this theory, and
has once or twice sought to demon
strate the truth of it by Jabbing his
patients in idle arm or leg with a
heavy needle Just as he extracts the
offending tooth. One day he got hold
of a particularly stubborn tooth, which
gave him no end of trouble. “Here it
comes out at last!" he exclaimed as he
felt it yielding, and at the same time
he plunged his needle into the pa
tient’s leg. “There," he said, tri
umphantly as he held up the forceps,
with the tooth securely wedged, “we’ve
got it, you see!” “Yes, I see,," replied
the victim, ruefully. "I knew it was a
big one, and I was afraid it would
come hard, but I never supposed the
roots went so far down a3 this," and
he rubbed the spot on his leg where
the doctor had Jabbed him with a look
that was partly awe and partly pride.
ittalury Blazed on Treez
For six miles through the forest of
Hancock and Wood counties, Ohio,
may be seen a wide swath through the
treetops, the once open space being
grown thick with smaller timber. It
tells the story of Gen. Hull and the
army that blazed its way north to Fort
Meigs in the war of 1812. On several
farms near Findlay are still found
sections of the old corduroy roadway
built of the tree trunks that were
felled to gain a passage for the army.
The logs are well preserved and are
found from two to five feet under the
soil. It was at the close of that mem
orable campaign that Col. Findlay
camped on the south side of Blanch
ard’s fork of the Auglaize and estab
lished the old stockade fort named
after him, Fort Findlay.
Burial Reform Begin-,
A burial reform society has started
In a little town in California. One oi
the members has been engaged as the
undertaker, and another as grave-dig
ger. The coffins are to be made by the
undertaker, and a neat wagon is to
take the place of the conventional
hearse. The mourners will walk to
the cemetery, and the total cost of the
funeral will be about $20. On the oc
casion of death, each member of the
organization is expected to render the
assistance that ho can to the family,
and to attend the funeral. These peo
ple feel that fashion and pride gener
ally stand in the way of funeral reform
and that it is only by organization of
this kind that reform can con'!-.
Odd Martoo Kalla
An ancient ship was recently dis
covered In the bed of the old River
Lea, In England. The vessel, fonnd
at a depth of seven feet below the
surface. Is about fifty feet long and Is
constructed of oak throughout, with
the exception of the keel, which Is of
elm. The ribs of the boat are secured
to the sides by tree-nails, while the
timbers are secured with crude Iron
nails. The floor boards are fastened
together with nails and the calking
is done with felt Antiquarians think
it belonged to the fleet with which
King Alfred the Great fought theDanea
C»e Rhone River Power.
Switzerland presents an object les
son in the practical applications ol
scientific principles. Geneva now de
rives all the electricity It requires foi
public and private lighting and thd
traction of its cars from the Impetus
of the Rhone as It rushes out of Lake
Leman, and there Is still left an enor
mous amount of power unused. Elec
tric railways and lighting everywhere
are supplied by the Innumerable water
falls, while heat and power to an In
calculable extent can be derived from
the same source.
Wan px Storm a Beehive.
A story of a curious battle between
bees and wasps comes from Sempering
ham, England. A band of wasps en
tered a beehive In search of honey.
The bees not unnaturally defended
their property and tried to turn thi
enemy out. They were, however, bad
ly beaten, and the wasps gained pos
session. When the beekeeper exam
ined the hive later on he found that
nearly all his bees had been killed and
that the wasps were enjoying the
fruits of their victory.
Proa* Bringing Univaraal Ponca.
Max O’Rell, who recently joined the
staff of the Paris Figaro, thinks that
the press now fulfills the duties for
merly monopolized by diplomacy and
urges his companions of the pen to re
frain from writing on any subject with
which they have not at least an ele
mentary acquaintance. If this plan
were followed everywhere he say's that
twenty years hence the peace of th«
world would be assured.
Crusade Against Pat Pollcsman.
A crusade Is on In Jersey City
against fat policemen. They must get
down to fighting and running weight
The other day a thoroughly equipped
gymnasium was opened and orders
were Issued by the president of the
police board and chief of police to
every policeman to report at the gym
nasium at certain hours for exercist
necessary to reduce them to athletU
proportions.
Asymptote.
Asymptote from the Greek, meaning
"not coinciding," Is a line that con
tinually approaches nearer and nearei
to some curve, but only meets it at
an infinite distance. It is only with
regard to mathematical lines that th*
proposition is true; and the truth ot
It has to be conceived by an effort ot
pure reason, for It cannot be repre
sented.—Montreal Herald and Star.
Food for I.lterary People.
An English writer thinks he has
discovered a food particularly adapt
ed to the literary man. He asserts
that apples, raw apples at that, ar«
the best diet on which to feed genius,
but that they should be eaten as the
children eat them, skins and all, and
In sufficient quantities to be satisfy
ing.—The Commoner.
Total Population and tha Votars.
The total popular vote of the United
States in 1900 was within a small frac
tion of 14,000,000, and the total popu
lation of the country. Including ter
ritories which have no vote on the
presidency, was 75,000,000. Practi
cally, therefore, there was one vote
cast for each five and a half inhabt
The Kaiser’s Palace*.
In the twenty-odd palaces of the
German Emperor some 3,500 servants
are employed, about 2,000 of these be
ing women. A huge Income is, ot
course, required for keeping up estab
lishments on this scale, and the Em
peror’s total expenditure is estimated
at some $26,000 a day.
Waterworks of Two Cities.
New Orleans, a city of nearly 300,000
population, consumes less than 15,000,
000 gallons of water dally. The total
cost of the New Orleans water works
was $4,000,000. St Louis has spent
$20,000,000 for the game purpose and
has a dally consumption of 60,000,000
gallons.
Water Power Is Mighty.
Gigantic water power developments
are projected In the Alps. There are
now in the French Alps 48 factories
supplied by 250,000 horse power, elec
trically generated. Engineers esti
mate that 3,000,000 horse power Is now
running to waste in the Alps.
Robes of Mask-Ox Skies.
The skin of the musk-ox, which Is a
denizen of the "Barren Grounds" and
the Arctic region of Canada, has taken
the place of that of the extinct buf
falo for sleigh robes. It varies In
price from $50 to as low as $5 for a
poor article.
Wire Ganse for Hay Fever.
The newest Ideas for mitigating hay
fever—a disease which seems to claim
more victims every year, in propor
tion to the population is embodied in a
r.mail disc covered with wire gauze,
which is inserted in the nostril.