The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, August 18, 1904, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    R. R. DICKSON
Lawyer
REE R ENCE: FIRST NATIONAL BANK. ONEILLF
DR. P. J. FLYNN
Physician and Surgeon
Night Call* will he Promptly Attended
Office: First door to right over Corrigan's
Telephone Nos.: Office, 68; Kesldeuce, !w
DR- J- P« GILLICBAN
Physician and Surgeon
Calls may be left at C.llllgan tx Stout drug
store or at residence 1 block north and y%
east of stand pipe Phones: Office 41, res. 10 :
v ______!
He< 8JM?s?ta«M©©i
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON
SPEC IATLI €S:
eve, Ear, Nose and throat
Spectacles correctly fitted and Supplied.
O'NEILL, NEB.
SHORTHORN BULLS
AND HEIFERS
SCOTCH tops on best BATES fami
lies, 35 BULLS 14 to 26 mo. old. 20
HEIFERS and 10 COWS bred to our
line Scotch bull MISSIES PRINCE
75402. Over 200 head in heard to select
from. These are the cattle for western
men,as they are acclimated. Come and
see them or write for prices.
THE BROOK FARM CO.,
J. R. Thomas, foreman.O’Nolll. Holt Co. .Neb
Scottish
Sharoi).
OF GREYTOWER 153330,
Assisted by Imported KING TOM 171879.
Both prize-winning bulls of
the Pan-American, heads the Ak-Sar
Ben home herd of Shorthorns. Young
bulls for sale.
J. M. ALDERSON & SONS,
Chambers, - - - Nebraska.
This hotel has been newly fitted
up, freshly papered throughout and
painted outside and in, every thing
neat and tidy.
Rates $1 and $2 a Day
You patronage solicted. First door
west of Brennan’s hardware.
^O’NEILL
ABSTRACT
COMPANY
Compiles
Abstracts of Title
THE ONLY COMPLETE SET OF AB
STRACT BOOKS IN HOLT COUNTY
!jf 7j MEAT
L-'--— Market
Telephone
No. 80
Fresh and Cured
Meat of all kinds
Careful attention to
Deliveries in the city
Leek & Blackmer
HOTEL
EVANS
I - -
ONLY FIRST-CLASS
HOTEL IN THE CITY
FREE BUS SERVICE
W. T. EVANS, Prop.
Howto |
Make Bread
Good bread bakers, as
i well as beginners, can
! always learn something
new about making bread.
Send for our bread book,
which explains “How to
. Make Bread” with Yeast
l Foam—the best yeast in the
1 world.
f Good home-made bread
* is delicious, nutritious, and
*■"»"tiful, and is just as easy
lake as pie or cal
use Yeast Foam
allow the direction
Sh is the first essential
>od bread, imparts a
: and aroma of its own.
made of wholesome __
able ingredients, and H
ins the secret of that
;, nutty, wheaty taste
i is the delight of all i
home-keepers.
scret is in the yeast. \
ist Foam is sold by ill
:ers. Each package
lins 7 cakes—enough to
; 40 loaves—and sells
cents. It’s the most
imical and the best, re
ess of cost. Write for ; f
00k to-day. We mail
re.
'(WESTERN YEAST C0„
cursion Rates
Will be in effect from all points
on the Chicago & Northwestern
Railway for the occasions named
below:
Los Angeles, beginning May 3, Gen
eral Conference M. E, Church.
San Francisco, May 3 to 8, Retail
Grocers’National associotion.
Atlantic City, N. J., July 13-15. No- B
blcs of the Mystic Shrine. :
Cincinnatti, O., July 18 to 23, Grand B
Lodge B. & l’. Orderof Elks.
San Francisco, Sept. 5 to 9, Triennial B
Conclave Knights Tenjplar.
San Francisco, Sopt. 19 to 22, Sover- B
oign Brand Lodge I. O. O. F.
For information as to rates, dates of B
sale, etc., of these or other occasions, B
call upon the Ticket Agents of the B
:| Northwestern Line. 4
BUY THE
SEWING MACHINE
Do not be deceived by those who ad
vertise a $60.00 Hewing Machine for
$20.00. This kind of a machine can
be bought from us or any of our
dealers from $15.00 to $18.00.
WE MAKE A VARIETY.
THE NEW HOME IS THE BEST.
The Feed determines the strength or
weakness of Sewing Machines. The
Double Feed combined with other
strong ]mints makes the New Home
the best Sewing Machine to buy.
Write (or CIRCULARS SSSsJj
we manufacture and prices before purchasing
THE NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE GO.
ORANGE, MASS.
28 Union Hq. N. Y., Chicago, 111., Atlanta, Ga.,
Ht. Louis,Mo., Dallas,Tex., Han Francisco, Cal
FOR SALE BY
O. F\ BIGLIN
O’NEILL. NEB
Ilte Frontier Six Months for 75c
SUPERVISOR SESSIONS
Official : 1‘ublication ; of : Proceeding
O’Neill, Neb., July 22, 1904.—Board
of supervisors met pursuant to ad
journment at 10 o’clock a. m.
Present: Biglin, Grimes, Moler,
Rueting, Skidmore, Simar and
Chairman Philips.
Minutes of session of July 16 read
and approved.
On motion all money in the bond
fund of school district No. 38 be trans
ferred to the general fund of said
district, the bond having been paid.
On motion a refund of $9.83 was
granted to P. C. Corrigan, error in
taxes for 1902 on lots 12-13-14-15, block
4, Fahys park addition to O’Neill.
Committees to appraise the value of
school lands reported as follows:
Value per acre
Part of sei of sei 16, 30, 16.$10 00
swi of swi 24, 26, 9. 8 00
nl swi, nwi sei 30, 25, 7. 7 50
nwi 36, 25, 9 . .•. 8 00
nel 36, 25, 9 . 7 50
ei swi 36, 25, 9 . 7 00
sj swi, swi sei 36, 25, 9 . 7 50
E. McConnell applied for a refund
on assessment of certain cattle that
were assessed in both Antelope and
Holt counties. On motion the matter
was referred to the tax committee.
On motion the following claims
were allowed on the road fund:
George Geary.$30 00
J. A. Trommershausser. 2 70
Th I). Sei vers. 2 70
J. S. Mitchell. 2 70
Hugo Lotyell. 25 00
On motion a refund of $14.59 was
granted John Lorge, error in taxes
on SWi 6-29-15.
On motion the board adjourned till
1 o’clock p. m.
F. W. Phillips, Chairman.
E. S. Gilmour, Clerk.
One o’clock p. m.—Board met pur
suant to adjournment. There not
being a quorum present, adjourned
till 9 o’clock tomorrow morning.
O’Neill, July 23, 1904.—Board call
ed to order at 9 o’clock a. m., all
members present. Minutes of yester
day’s session read and approved.
On motion the following claims
were rejected, they not being legal
claims against the county:
Thos Tom jach, sr.$4 60
Thos Tomjach, jr. 4 00
John M. Stewart. 1 45
Jas Nekolicjak . 2 80
E. Hull'. 4 00
The report of the South Fork Fair
association was read, showing receipts
and expenditures as follows:
Balance on hand last report_$ 17 63
Received from all sources. 381 10
local.swys 16
Amount paid out per vouchers $427 36
Deficit.$ 26 63
On motion the sum of $200 was
appropriated to the South Fork Fair
association and the clerk ordered to
draw a warrant for the amount in
favor of J. W. Holden, treasurer.
On motion the clerk was instructed
to procure a suitable book for the
County Treasuer to prepare a delin
tax list under the scavenger act.
On motion the resolution introduced
July 13 by Supervisors Simar and
Grimes was taken up and adopted.
On motion the county surveyor was
instructed to set the stakes showing
the lines of road No. 139.
On motion the board adjourned un.
til one o’clock p. m.
One o’clock p. m.—Board called to
order,all members present.
On motion the county surveyor was
instructed to survey and plat the fol
lowing road: Commencing at the SE.
corner of section 13-29-12, thence west
one mile, thence north as far as the
same has been established by use.
On motion the sum of $6,000 of the
sum on hand in the county general
fund being surplus for the various past
years be transferred to the general
fund, of 1904.
On motion the county attorney was
instructed to commenc e foreclosure
proceedings against lot 4, block 27,
original town of O’Neill.
On motion the county clerk was in
structed to notify each road overseer
in this county to report on or before
the 15 day of September, 1904, regard
ing the condition of the highway in
his district.
On motion the following claims
were allowed upon the general fund:
W II Shannon. $ 6 80
P J Lan worth. 13 40
Will Carson. 7 00
Dan Sullivan. 2 40
Fred Torbert. 7 00
LG Lambert. 2 10
M Libe. 5 50
Walter Fuller. 14 00
Ernest Stein. 13 60
Geo Ridgway. 13 60
Will Pickering. 15 io
T France. 15 10
Frank Eppenback. 14 00
W J Darr. 14 00
W P Bradstreet. 14 40
S S Sidner. 19 70
M Sweet. 19 70
Wm Storts. 8 60
Ida Storts.. 8 60
J M Morgan.$ 4 10.. 8 10
Harry Maynard. 19 70
Lee Massey, apply on tax. 14 00
J M Kreader. 19 70
C A null. 14 10
Eli Ilershiser. 6 20
C M Fowler. 2 10
J B Berry. 6 50
John Addison. 14 00
J P Gilligan. G 10
P J Flynn. 6 10
Laurence Barrett.. 4 50
Richard Jennings. 10 00
W 11 Bedford. 5 GO
Ed Coppoc. 2 10
Geo Hasland. 19 70
\V S Grimes. 28 00
ESEves.$282 10 allowed 242 30
John Ilorriukey. 5 00
E S Eves. 298 50
W P Si mar. 23 00
A F Mullen. 27 59
Eli Whelan. 100 00
G II Hess. 40 00
J A Golden.$24 55 allowed 15 85
ES Eves.261 10 182 40 allowed 107 37
A F Mullen.200 00 200 00
John Molar. 22 80
J M Morgan.40 00 5 05
E Huff. G 10
F W Phillips. 92 00
C B Scott. 7 50
P J Flynn. 8 00
L E Skidmore. 41 90
Eli Whelan. 3 00
Neil Brennan.119 38 20 70
OFBiglin. 47 20
J P Gilligan. 35 00
A F Mullen.51 34 23 80
A F Mullen. 76 66
South Fork Fair. 200 00
J M Morgan. 12 00
Laura Cress. 14 15
Galena Lumber Co Atkinson. 331 81
E Roy Townsend....$364 00. 137 16
E Roy Townsend.G9 57. 297 00
E Roy Townsend.337 50. 377 00
E Roy Townsend.185 00. 403 00
Wm Krotter & Co.126 00. 14 97
O O Snyder & Co. 75 88. 43 82
O O Snyder &Co. 66 25 . 80 95
OO Snyder & Co.142 49. 54 28
O O Snyder & Co. 63 45. 74 94
Canton Bridge Co. 633 28
Galena Lumber Co.204 10 206 95
Galena Lumber Co.269 95. 277 75
Walrath & Sherwood... 74 59 27 72
Geo Ilaslin. 10 00
S L Thompson. 30 50
Wm Blotter & Co. 55 51
A B Vanjandt. 57 02
1’ J Flynn. 35 00
S L Thompson. 37 00
II Reuting. 37 50
On motion the board adjourned un
til September 19,1904,at lOo’clock a. m.
F. W. Phillips, Chairman
E. S. Gilmour, Clerk.
Taken with Crams.
Wm Kirms, a member of the bridge
gang working near Littleport was
taken suddenly ill Thursday night
with cramps and a kind of cholera.
His case was so severe that lie had to
have the members of the crew wait
upon him and Mr. Fifford was called
and consulted. He told them he had
medicine in the form of Chamberlain’s
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy
that he thought would help him lout
and accordingly several doses were
administered with the result that the
fellow was able to be around next day.
The incident speaks quite highly of
Mr. Gifford’s medicine.—Elkader,
Iowa, Argus.
This remedy never fails. Keep it
in your home, it may save life. For
sale by P. C. Corrigan.
The New York Herald has printed
a facsimile of Judge Parker’s gold
telegram. It should furnish a com
panion piece by printing a facsimile of
his silver ballot in 1896 or 1900.
Physician and Druggists
Ford & Sturgeon, a prominent drug
Arm at Rocky Hill Station, Ky.,
write: “We were requested by Dr.
G. B. Snigley to send for Ilerbine for
the beneAt of our customers. We
ordered three dozen in December, and
we are glad to say, Ilerbine has given
such great satisfaction that we have
dupilicated this order three times,
and today we give your salesman
another order. We beg to say Dr. G.
Snigley takes pleasure in recommend
ing Ilerbine.” 50c at P. C. Corrigan.
The Dingley la# brought prosperity
and has maintained it tor seven years.
The person wtio is tired of prosperity
can close it by patronizing the demo
cratic ballot box.
Cured Paralysis.
W. S. Baily, P. O. True, Texas,
writes: My wife had been suffering
live years with paralysis in her arm,
when I was persuade to use Ballard’s
Snow Linment, which cured her
all right. I have also used it for old
sores, frost bites, and skin eruptions.
It does the work.” 25c, 50c and $1.00
at P. C. Corrigan.
The American workman has no de
sire to return to the democratic break
fast food which he had on his table
for some years.
/~- -*■ a A a a a ^
“Do It To-Day"
The time-worn injunction, “Never
put off ’til tomorrow what you can do
to-day,,’ is now generally presented in
this form: “Doit to-day!" That is
the terse advice we want to give you
about that hacking cough or de moral iz
ing cold with which you have been
struggling for severl days, perhaps
weeks. Take somo reliable remedy
for it to-day—and let that remedy be
Dr. Iloschec’s German Syrup, which
has been In use for over thirty-five
years. A few doses of it v^ill un
doubtedly relieve your cough or cold,
and its continued use for a few days
will cure you completely. No matter
how deep-seated your cough, even if
dread consumption has attacked your
lungs, German Syrup will surely effect
a cure—as it has done before in thou
sands of apparently hopeless cases of
lung trouble. New trial bottles, 25c;
regular size, 15c. At all druggists.
Norfolk News: More than $1,000
saved up in the bank for two years of
work in the business of bootblacking!
To the school teacher who draws $000
per year, that statement sounds, no
doubt, quite imppossible. And yet
that is | what has been accom
plished during the past two years by
Ltoy Wiley, colored, of this city. Yes
terday, Wiley, who has been shining
shoes first at one barber shop and
then at another, quit work {and left
with his wife for Deadwood. Before
leaving Norfolk he went to the bank
and drew out more than 8000 in cash,
which he had deposited from time to
time. _
Violent attack of Dirrhoea Cured by
Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and
Dirrhoea Remedy and perhaps a
Life Saved.
“ A short time ago I was taken with
a violent attack of diarrhoea and be
lieve I would have died if I had not
gotten relief,” says John J. Patton, a
leading citizen of Patton, Ala. “A
friend recommended Chamberlain’s
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy.
I bought a twenty-fiveccnts bottle and
after takin thrceg doses of it was en
tirely cured. I consider it the best
remedy in the world for bowel com
plaints. For sale by P. C. Corrigan
The press reports of the fusion con
ventions last weekat Lincoln contain
ed this item: Attorney general was
another position which went begging
and it was tendered to about every
lawyer in the convention and rejected
by them. Fleharty of Omaha was the
first to refuse, I. J. Dunn of Omaha
was next and then a delegate suggest
ed that some one not present be nom
inated, so that he could not decline.
The agreement was acted on and the
nomination worked oil on Edward
Whalen of O’Neill, who was nominat
ed by J. S. Harrington.
A Worm Killer.
J. A. J. Montgomery, Puxico Wayne
Co., Mo., writes: “I have little twin
girls, who have been bothered with
worms all their lives. I tried every
thing to relieve them which failed un
til I used White’s Cream Vermifuge;
the first two doses brought four worms
from one of them, the next two doses,
twelve, one of them measuring twelve
inches; the other child was only re
lieved of four worms, it is a most
excelent medicine.” White’s Cream
Vermifuge is good for children. It
not only destroys worms, it»helps the
child to perfect growth, wards olf
sickness, 25c at P. C. Corrigan.
a We like best to call J1
J SCOn’S EMULSION j
Ja food because it stands so em- ;,
phatically for perfect nutrition. £
i> And yet in the matter of restor- d
0 ing appetite, of giving new #
<r strength to the tissues, especially ^ ►
t0 die nerves, its action is that J
J of a medicine.
5 Send for free sample.
0 SCOTT & BOW N E, Chemists, i »
409-415 Pearl Street, New York,
50c. and $1.00; all druggists.
AYcgdable Preparationfor As- [If
similaling the Food andRegula- I §
ling the Stomachs and Bowels of
Promotes Digestion,Cheerful- til
ness and Rest .Contains neither |
SMum.Morphine nor Mineral. {§|
ot Narcotic.
of Old I)rSAMUELHIXj/{Ktt
ISm/Jcln Seal- »
Alx.Smn* * 1
§
Jtnixf Seed, e 1
hfnpStvtf' I
Ctmtitd Sum*
htninyrrm r/mvn /
A perfec I Remedy fo r Const!pa- 8
lion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea j
Worms .Convulsions .Fcverish
' ness and Loss of Sleep. i|i
Fac Sunite Signature of
•i NEW YORK.
CUSTOM
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Thirty Years
GASTORIA
TNI OlffTMR COMPANY. MKW YONtt CITY.
BMBBM'EW—
I
I ONLY
Double Track
RAILROAD
Between Missouri River end
Chicago
Direct line to St. Paul
and Minneapolis.
Direct line to the Black
Hills, South Dakota.
Only line to Bonesteel,
•• S. D., the Rosebud Indian a*
Ja Reservation. ±
\ Through sleeping car ^
0 service to Omaha, making f
\ direct connections at Om- ^
(# aha Union Station for ^
^ Chicago and all points east. ^
^ No delays, no change of ^
^ cars, Northwestern all the \
^P Apply to nonroat agent (or ^P
rata*, maps and tlmo oards, or
^ JOHN A. KUHN. J
^ A. O. F. and P. A., Omaha
with yoar name
and address
printed on them
ONLY 50C
The cheapest way to bay for
those wanting small quantities
(Ll/e Frontier.
V ri'VII A Vi To PATENT Good Ideas
ill il ^ '■ may be secured by
ill l' J I our aid. Address,
W If I ■ I the patent record,
Baltimore, MU
Subscriptions to The Patent Record *1.00 per annun»
Cholera Infantum.
This disease has lost its terrors
since Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera
and Diarrhoea Remedy came into
general use. The uniform success
which attends the use of this remedy
in all bowel complaints in children
has made it a favorite wherever its
value has become known. For sale
by P. C. Corrigan.