The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, July 16, 1903, Image 4

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    The Frontier.
Publluhed by D. H. CRONIN
KOMAINE SAl'NIiKKS. Assistant Editor
and Manager.
tl 50 the Year. 75 Cents Six Months
Official paper of O’Neill and Holt county.
ADVERTISING RATES:
Display advertisments on pages 4, 5 and 8
are cnarged for on a basis of 50 cents an Inch
tone column width) per month; on page 1 the
charge is fl an Inch per month. Local ad
vertisements. Scents per line each Insertion.
Address the office or the publisher.
Mr. Bryan says Cleveland’s candid
acy is a comedy. Mr. Bryan’s was a
double tragedy.
A-^ •>
The theory of the scienitfic relation
of alfalfa,|“certaln” fungus and prairie
dogs is a little mysterious to say the
least.
- -
There may have been something in
the name that a Missouri Pacific train
from St. Louis to Kansas City should
be wrecked at “Deadman’s Curve”
and a mumber of imssengers killed
and wounded.
A recent census of Chicago gives
tire city a population exceeding 2,200,
000, and it takes over 7,000 licensed
saloons to feed the liquor appetite,
which keeps a pretty even pace with
ihe population.
The United States entering horri
fied protests against sinister racial
wrongs ten thousand miles away
with the blue smoke of burning
negroes curling skyward every few
days at home , is about as consistent
as some other things in this vain and
sinful world.
Justice Brewer of the United States
supreme court, is quoted assaying:
“Every man who participates in the
lynching or burning of a negro is a
murderer pure and simple.” The
courts looking at it In that light, the
next step in ridding the country of tills
specie of anarchy is to apprehend the
participants.
Crab Ochard News: The law mak
ing it a misdemeanor punishable by a
line and imprisonment for a minor to
use tobacco in any form, went into
effect July 1. It is also contrary to
the law to sell or furnish a minor
witli tobacco in any form. This is
pretty tough on the kids, who have
already formed the habit, but it’s dol
lars to cigarette stubs that the law
will not lie enforced in ninety-nine
cases out of a hundred.
Your liberal estimate is yet too
small. 'Tis a fool law that no minion
thereof has any intention of ever en
forcing. Ninety-nine out of a hundred
tobacco devotees began before tiie
Nebraska voting and smoking age
and another precept added to the
statutes will hardly eradicate an
evil that continues to be. inculcated
by example.
—
Omaha Bee: Nebraska’s state trea
surer is again facing the prospective
dilemma of having more money in the
permanent school funds on hand than
he can tind places of investment war
ranted by law. The constitutional
provision relating to the investment
of school money should be extended
to include approved bonds legally
issued by cities and school districts in
the state that have not defaulted on
interest. With such a provision the
state treasurer would have no repeti
tion of his present embarrassment
and both the state and the municipal
subdivisions would be the gainers in
the interest saving, which they would
divide, instead of donating as now to
eastern bond brokers.
The esteemed Independent is touch
ed in a very tender spot whenever tax
lien foreclosures are mentioned. The
Independent editor’s name lias been
attached to a great many of these tax
cases, but The Frontier wouldn’t sug
gest that this is why the Independent
jumps to*its feet to call the supreme
court down for expressing an opinion
wldch militates against the forclosures
as tlicy have been in Holt county.
The tax payers are familiar with the
scandalous land grabbing carried or
by thesyndicatclof populists at O’Neill
under the pretext of collecting taxes
when hundreds of acres were wrong
fully acquired at a very nomina
figure, and the syndicate, after getting
much of the vacant land under its
control, demanding trust prices from
farmers and stock men; they are
familiar with the excessive and uncall
ed for costs in these cases, and now
that the supreme court points out
clearly that “the remedy for the en
forcement of taxes upon real estate
by foreclosure of the tax deed or tax
sale certificate is adequate and suffic
ient, and must therefore be regarded
as exclusive” the Independent's de
fense sounds all the more absurd.
A North Dakota editor writes:
“Drink water and you get typhoid,
drink milk and you get tuberculosis,
drink whisky and you get jimjams,
eat width flour and get appendicitis,
eat soup and get Bright’s disease, eat
beef and encourage apoplexy, eat
oysters and acquire toxemia, eat meat
of any kind and get indigestion or
some kind of germ disease, eat vegeta
bles and weaken the system, eat des
serts and take on paresis, smoke
cigars and secure catarrh, drink coffee
or tea and obtain nervous prostration,
dring wine and get the gout. In order
to be entirely healthy one must eat
nothing, drink nothing, smoke noth
ing, and before breathing one should
see that the air is properly sterilized.”
--—
NEBRASKA NEWS NOTES.
An Hastings tailor died the other
day from cigarette smoking.
William Rhea, the young man who
murdered the Snyder saloon keeper
and who has been in the state pen
itentiary since 1901, was executed
July 10.
Alice Freeman, an eight year old
girl, fell from the window on the third
floor of a bank building in Beatrice.
Monday and was caught by two pass
ersby before striking the pavement.
A distance of fifty feet and neither
the rescuers nor the little girl were
injured.
The Howells Journal says that some
may doubt the statement that there
is money in poultry, but J. W. Kucera
of Stonton county is not of the num
ber. Wednesday he marketed a dozen
spring chickens that weighed an even
thirty-four pounds and brought him
fifteen cents per pounds—$5.10 isn’t
bad for a dozen spring chickens.
»
Another Nebraska coal find has
been made, this time in the hills of
Cass county near Plattsmouth, and
the owner of the farm whereon the
find was made is J. W. Thomas. The
vein is three feet thick where visible.
Levi Eddy, a notoriaus character,
72 years old, who lived in Norfolk
nineteen years, a man of one-time
wealth, but penniless because of con
tinued drunkenness tor many years,
Friday morning fell trough a hole
from a hay loft, where he had gone to
sleep off his last spree, and broke his
neck.
A. G. Clark, a farmer living near
Craig, almost clipped off one of his
little two-year-old son’s feet with a
mowing machine. The little fellow
jumped out of the tall grass imme
diately in front of the machine. Be
fore the machine could be stopped an
artery had been severed and the bone
of the ankle cut through.
Adolf Kaplan, a young Bohemian
aged 18, who came from his native
land but.a short time since and was
employedon the farm of Prokop Castek
near Schuyler, died from sunstroke
last Thursday. He was in the field
alone with a team cultivating corn.
A young girl went out with lunch for
him and found him lying dead behind
the cultivator, where he had fallen.
Three members to represent Nebras
ka in the joint boundary commission
authorized by the state of Nebarska
and South Dakota in the location of a
dividing line between the two com
monwealths were appointed today by
Governor Mickey. The choice of the
executive fell upon C. .T. Swanson of
Oakland, Dr. F. O. Robinson of Hart
ington and E. A. Lungberg of Wayne.
The appointments were made by vir
tue of an act passed by the last legis
lature, similar action having been
taken by the lawmakers of South
Dakota. The commissioners are to
receive $10 per day for not more than
thirty days as compensation.
Hastings Tribune: Theodore Burr
of Juniata is lying in the county
bastile in this city awaiting trial at
the next term of the district court on
the Charge of stealing goods and cash
from his father’s store in Juniata.
Young Burr is a graduate of tire
Juniata high school and in that town
is regarded as being a very bright
young man, and his downfall is there
universally regretted. The elder Burr
purchased the business at Juniata a
short time ago supposedly to give to
his son, however, he continued it on
his own name and employed the young
man as clerk. Valuables disappeared
from time to time until at last un
doubted evidence pointed to the
young man as culprit. His father
then gave him a stated numoer of
days to leave the country, and on his
failure to do so he was apprehended.
He was testified against by his father,
mother, and sister.
Supervisors’ Session
On motion levies were made to ap
ply on the payment of bonds and in
terest for the amounts on the various
school districts as follows:
No. Amt. When Time Rate Sink. Mills
Dlst. Bond Due Yrs. Inst. Fund Inst. Lev.
21 $:$500 1907 10 7 $350 $240 9
22 220 1907 20 7 11 16 2
27 400 1909 20 7 20 28 7
30 1680 1905 11 7 168 118 10
44 3000 1909 20 7 150 210 8
49 500 1908 10 7 50 35 5
117 200 1908 20 7 10 14 5
134 400 1909 15 7 27 28 4
156 375 1903 5 7 75 27 15
218 786 1904 10 7 78 56 22
223 200 1904 15 7 14 14 2
225 213 1909 20 7 11 15 6
135 400 1913 10 6 40 24 7
222 490 1912 10 6 49 30 8
On motion the following levies were
made on the various townships as cer
tified to by the township clerks the
levy being on the one hundred dollars
valuation.
Precinct Gen. Fund Road Bridge Total
Mills Mills Mills Mills
Atkinson.3 2 2 7
Chambers.3 2 5
Cleveland.4 14 2
Conley no levy
Deloit.1 1 1 3
Dustin. 2 2
Emmet.3 2 5
Ewing.3 3 2 8
Eairview.3 3
Frances.3 2 2 7
Grattan.3 2 2 7
Green Valley no levey
Inman.3 2 2 7
Iowa.2 2
Lake.3 2 2 7
McClure.2 2 1 5
Paddock.2 2
Pleasant View. .1 1 2
Itock Falls.3 2 5
Sand Creek.2 2
Saratoga.2 2
Scott.2 2
Shamrock.3 3
Sheridan. 2 2 2 7
Sheilds.5 ,, 5
Steel Creek.2 I 2
Stuart .3 2 2 7
S .van.2 2
Verdrgris.3 1 4
Wiliowdale no levy
Wyoming no levy
On motion the cattle assessed to
W. P. O’Brien in Sheridan
precinct be stricken from the assessor
book in said precinct for the reason
that the same cattle were assessed in
Rock Falls precinct.
On motion the cattle assessed to
Jacob Beaver in Shields precinct be
stricken from the assessor book in
said precinct for the reason that the
same cattle were assessed in Paddock
precinct.
On motion the matter of the peti
tion of the Rochester Loan and Bank
ing Coumpanv concerning the chang
ing of lands in SEI of SEJ 25, 29, 12
from the city of O’Neill to Grattan
township be laid over until July 18,
1903.
On motion the following county
levies were made on the basis of the
one hundred dollars valuation:
County general fund.9 Mills
County bridge funds.4 Mills
Soldiers’ relief.3-10 Mills
County road.1 7-10Mills
Total.15 Mills
On motion the board adjourned.
F. W. Phillsps, Chairman.
E. S. Gilmour, Clerk.
Annual Popnlar Excursion to Dnluth
The Great Northern (Short Line)
will run their annual popular excur
sion, starting from O’Neill at 10:10 a.
m., Thursday, August 6. Returning,
will leave Duluth Sunday August 9,
at 4 p. m. Rates for round trip $<>.
Double berth in tourish sleeping car
$1 each way. Reservations in sleep
ing cars should be made as early as
possible.
For further information call on or
address W. E. West, agent, or Fred
Rogers, G. P. A., Sioux City.
Danger of Colds and Grin.
The greatest danger from colds and
grip is their resulting in pneumonia.
If reasonable care is used, however,
and Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy
I taken, all danger will avoided.
Among the tens of thousands who
have used this remedy for these dis
eases we have yet to learn of a single
case having resulted in pneumonia,
which shows conclusively that it is a
certain preventive of that dangerous
disease. It will cure a cold or an at
tack of the grip in less time than any
other treatment. It is pleasant and
Fafes to toke. or sale by P. C Corri
gan.
Jiseasc takes no summer
i vacation.
If you need flesh and
strength use
Scott’s Emulsion
summer as in winter.
Send for free sample. |
SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists,
409-415 Pearl Street, New York.
50c. and $ 1.00; all druggists.
*■
NEVER ill the history of the
trade in this locality have we
been more successful or letter
satisfied with the inum rise tra !e we an*
receivin'’- in ali lines.
~ G
I
A Comparison
of Goods and Prices
ALWAYS DOES THE
.. WORK ..
FARM MACHINERY, WAGONS & BUGGIES
In the Machinery line we have the King of all
in larest, up-to-date McCormick Harvesters and
Mowers, and it is needless to assure you that they
also DO THE WORK.
We have also a full and complete line of Mc
jj Cormick Hay Rakes and Jenkins Sweeps, Stackers,
etc ; they will DO THE WORK.
In Farm Wagons and Buggies we will from
now till after the 4th of July make
SPECIAL PRICES
and give you goods that are without a peer in the
market. Young man, let us sell you one—they
WILL DO THE WORK.
• I j
FI I F? M IT"l I FI F In t^16 ■^urn^ure ^ne we are wearing a broad smile of the kind that don’t
f ^ " * m ■ wear off, and all we ask of our patrons is an opportunity to make a compar- ^
j ison. We assure you this will DO THE WORK.
We Have a Complete Line of Undertaking Goods, and Have had Twenty Years Experience
O. F. BIGLIN rn rn rn rn O’Neill, Nebraska