The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, January 26, 1905, Image 8

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    De« B*T.TsteW'Ssfi
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON
speciatlics:
EVE, EAR. NOSE AND THROAT
Bpeetkeles correctly fitted end Supplied.
O'NEILL, NEB.
dr. j. P. gilligan
Physician and Surgeon
Calls may be left at Gilligan & Stout drug
•tore or at residence 1 block north and %
east of stand pipe Phones: Office 41, res. 10
DR. P. J. FLYNN
Physician and Surgeon
Night Call* will he Promptly Attended
Office: First door to right over Corrigan's
Telephone Nos.: Office, MS; Residence, #»
rTr. DICKSON
Lawyer &
RCIHCNCC: FIRST NATIONAL BANK, O'NCILLF
E. H. BENEDICT
LAW A REAL ESTATE
Office first door south of U.B. Land Office
D. W. CAMERON
Practical Cement Worker
Manufactures Cement Walks, builds
Foundations, Caves, etc. In fact all
cement work neatly and promptly
done. Address, Atkinson or O’Neill
The O'NEILL BOTTLING WORKS
R. J.'MARBH, Proprietor
Bottlers of Carbonated Beverages
CIDER MANUFACTURERS
8. F. McNichols
FLOUR and FEED
All Kinds of Grain Bought
and Sold
JOHN HORISKEY
Drayman
Your property handled without amashlngIt
and delivered when and where you want It,
_
J. C. HORISKEY
Staple and Fancy Groceries
Flour, Salt, Country Frodnce
coifcT k:b"Z"s
Flour and Feed
Handle product of Stanton Millls, than
which there is no better flour made
GRANT HATFIELD
Re staurant
MEALS OR LUNCHES
Served as desired at all hours. Nloe assort*
moat of Fruits. Nuts, Caudles, Cigars, etc.
V. ALBERTS
Mro> A DEALER IN
Harness & Saddlery Goods
Also Agent for
BUse Native Herbs, *00 days treatment for $1
and money refunded If not benefltted. Also
Wheeler & Wilson Ball Bearing Sewing Maoh.
leekTgatz
[MEAT
-Market
Telephone
WE SELL
Fresh and Cured
Meat of all kinds
Chicago & Northwestern Railway
tPassenger^o! 4,S EAST 3:ooa. m.
•Passenger, No. 6, 9:40 a. m.
•Freight, No. 116, 3:35 p. m.
tFreight, No. 64, 12:01 p. m
TRAINS WEST
tPassenger, No. 5, 3:35 p. m.
•Passenger, No.ll, 10:25 p. m
•Freight, No 119, 5:32 p. m.
fFreight, No. 63, 3:35 p. m.
The service is greatly improved by
the addition of the new passenger
trains Nos. 4 and 5; No. 4 arrives in
Omaha at 10:35 a. m., arrives at Sioux
City at 9:15 a. m. No. 5 leaves Omaha
at 7:15 a. m., leaves Sioux City at 7:50
a. m.
•Dally; tDaily, except Sunday.
E. R. Adams, Agent
Or. Price’s Cream Baking Powder
Awarded Gold Medal Midwinter Fair, San Francisco,
Special S^Vol Meeting.
(Continued limn First p.^c.)
McGreevy and for the purpose ol
doing all things necessary for the
protection of said school district and
for the purpose of giving instruction
to said school board iu the matter ol
the indebtedness of its late treasurer
McGreevy to said district and for the
purpose of giving to said board full
authority and instructions as to mak
ing settlement with said McGreevy,
and to do all things necessary for the
full protection of the rights of said
school district by reason of the defal
cation of said treasurer McGreevy.
The petition is incorporated in the
call for the meeting, which is signed
by Neil Brennan, president, and G. W.
Smith, secretary of the board.
Notice.
Matter of the application of C. O.
Tenborg.
To the chairman and board of super
visors of Holt county, Nebraska, and
to all persons interested.
Notice is hereby given that C. O.
Tenborg lias tiled his application with
the board of supervisors of Holt
county, Nebraska, for a license to sell
malt, spirituous and vinous liquors on
lot 8 block 3 in Emmet township, in
Emmet, Holt county, Nebraska, from
the 28th day January, 1905, to the 28th
day January, 1906.
if there be no objection, remon
strance or protest filed witin two
weeks prior to the28th day of January,
1905, said license will be granted
29-3 C. O. TENBORG, Applicant.
COMPENSATION.
All Thlnara Are to Be Had If One Will
bat Pay the Equivalent.
IJfe consists almost wholly of buy
ing, selling, paying. There are no
gifts, nothing that does not call for an
equivalent. If we cannot pay for gifts
in kind we must pay in gratitude or
service or we shall rank as moral bank
rupts.
If I would Lave a good situation I
must pay for It not only in labor, but
In promptness. Intelligence, faithful
ness and pood manners. If I would
have good service I must pay not only
In money, but in consideration, recog
nition, appreciation, fairness. I can
hold no one to me If I misuse him.
All things are to be had for the buy
ing. Would you have friends? Then
pny the price. The price of friendship
is to he worthy of friendship. The
price of glory is to do something glori
ous. The price of shame Is to do some
thing shameful.
Friendship, glory, honor, admiration,
courage, infamy, contempt, hatred, are
all in the market place for sale at a
price. We are buying and selling these
things constantly as we will. Even
beauty is for sale. Plain women can
gain beauty by cultivating grace, ani
mation, pleasant speech, intelligence,
helpfulness, courage or good will.
Beauty is not in the features alone; it
is in the soul also.
Good will buys good will, friendli
ness buys friendship, confidence be
gets confidence, service rewards serv
ice, and hate pays for bate, suspicion
for suspicion, treachery for treachery,
contempt for Ingratitude, slovenliness,
laziness and lying.
We plant a shrub, a rosebush, an or
chard, with the expectation that they
will pay us back. We build roads,
mend harness and patch the roof with
the same expectation. We will trust
even these unconscious things to pay
their debts.
Some of our Investments are good
and some are bad. The good qualities
we acquire—moderation, Industry, cour
tesy, order, patience, candor—are sound
investments. Our evil institutions and
habits are bad Investments, Involving
us in losses. We become debtors to
them, and they are exacting creditors,
forcing payment in full in money and
labor and sometimes in blood, agony,
tears, humiliation or shame. — From
“Balance: The Fundamental Verity,"
by Orlando J. Smith.
POINTED PARAGRAPHS.
The most Inexcusable tiling in the
■world Is to unjustly abuse a decent cit
izen.
It doesn't do people any good to be
old enough to know better unless they
are also too old to enjoy meanness.
Every man needs a chart to tell him
the degrees of kinship In his family,
but his wife knows them so well she
can say them backward.
The truth about some people who
seem to be doing so much is that they
always put things off until the last
minute and then have to rush.
The early bird may get the worm,
but the late bird has as good an argu
ment: He gets his rest which the early
bird misses and has never yet starved.
Be patient with the girl who takes
■o long to dress. By and by she will
be able to do up the work and dress
herself and three or four children In
half the time she takes for herself now.
—Atchison Globe.
D*icen of Melancholy.
The weak, broken spirited person
grows morbid and melancholy, and the
brain degenerates rapidly under th<
Influence of these mental states. Mel
ancholia Is something that comes mon
within the province of the will powei
than anything else. It can be cast ofl
and avoided only in this way. Some
times for the lack of stimulating th<
will physicians will recommend i
change of occupation, scenery and as
soclatlon. This la merely an attempi
to rescue the mind from lntrospectloi
and give the will an opportunity to as
sert itself. Sometimes this Is accom
plished, and then, If followed op bj
cultivating the will, a permanent curt
may he effected.—EH change.
THE e“:‘- OF INDIA
TKuY AftE THu > -ICH VILLAINS OF
THE BIRD WORLD.
Two Species of the Feathered Vngra
bondn Exist Side by Side and Ply
Tlieir Tricks of Iniquity la Com
| mon—Larceny For the Love of It.
It Is quite Impossible for any one
who has not sojourned in the “Land
■ of Regrets” to appreciate the impor
‘ tant part played by crows in the daily
life of the Anglo-Indian. India with
out its crows is unthinkable; It could
only be likened to London without ita
fogs. Wherever human beings have
their abodes there are multitudes of
corvidae to be found, for the Indian
crow is an inseparable appendage of
town and village. Two species exist
side by side in India, the great black
bird known to Anglo-Indians as the
corby and the smaller gray necked spe
cies. Both birds lead lives of aimless
vagabondage; both are scoundrels of
the most pronounced type; both are
sinners beyond redemption. Did the
black crow exist alone it would be
held up as the emblem of all that is
evil and mischievous. As things are, its
iniquities pale Into insignificance be
side those of its gray necked cousin.
The very name of the latter bird is
sufficient to raise the ire of the right
eous man. To' call the arch villain of
the bird world "the splendid” is mere
mockery of words. Jerdon, the famous
Indian naturalist, “often regrets that
such an inappropriate specific name
should have been applied to this spe
cies, for it tends to bring into ridicule
among the unscientific the system of
nomenclature.”
j nc iiiumu WTWw xa auio i.v/ uuiuc
most things. A Calcutta bird has
made Itself famous for all time by
constructing a nest of the wires used
to secure the corks of soda water bot
tles. Bombay Is very jealous of Cal
cutta, and the crows, of course, ape
their betters. The Bombay birds de
termined not to be outdone by the
Calcutta corvidae. Accordingly one of
the former promptly built her nest of
gold and silven spectacle frames stol
en from Messrs. Lawrence & Mayo's
factory. The value of the materials
used in the construction of this nest
was estimated at £20. But crows will
appropriate things for which they can
have no possible use. They commit
larceny for the love of the thing. The
Indian crow Is the Incarnate spirit of
mischief. The bird will wantonly tear
a leaf ont of a book lying open on
the table. My gardener, adds Mr. De
war, puts every morning fresh flowers
In the vases. This operation Is per
formed on the veranda. One day the
man was called away from his work
for a couple of minutes. During his
absence a crow swooped down and suc
ceeded in taking a beakful of flowers
and breaking the vase in which they
were placed. A retired colonel of my
acquaintance who lives In the Hima
layas Is a very enthusiastic gardener,
and the crows are the bane of his life.
They root up his choicest seedlings,
sever the heads of his most superb
flowers from the stalk and fly away
with the little pieces of paper which
he places In cleft sticks to mark where
seed have been sown.
But It Is in towns that the Iniquity
of the crows reaches Its maximum.
The Madras corvidae are a byword
throughout the length and breadth of
India. The hospital Is their favorite
playground. They are never so happy
as when annoying the inmates. They
know at once when a person Is too ill
to move. The consequence Is that It
has been found necessary to have made
for all the tables wire covers which
protect articles placed at the bedside
from the ravages of the “treble dated
birds.” • I have seen a Madras crow
quietly helping itself to the contents of
a basket which an old woman was
carrying on her head. The bird was
possessed of sufficient Intelligence to
refrain from alighting on the basket.
Had it done so Its presence would prob
ably have been detected. It flapped
.along Just above the top of the basket,
keeping pace with the woman, and so,
unperceived by her, made a meal off
the contents. The knavish tricks of
crows are by no means confined to hu
man beings. As Colonel Cunningham
truly says, “Any animal pets are, of
course, even more than inanimate ob
jects, subject to their attentions, and
qnless In wholly inaccessible places are
constantly liable to have their food
purloined and their lives rendered a
burden by persistent and Ingenious per
secution.” I once possessed a grey
hound which used to be fed in the gar
den. A man had to stand over the dog
while it was feeding; otherwise the
•rows would devour the greater portion
of the meal. Their plan of campaign
was simple and effective. They soon
learned the dog’s feeding hour and as
It drew near would take up a position
on any convenient tree. The moment
the greyhound began to eat a crow
would swoop down and peck viciously
at its tail. The dog would, of course,
turn on the bird, and the others would
seize this opportunity to snatch away
some of the food. The process would
be repeated until the meal was over.
Crows tease and annoy wild creatures
with the same readiness that they wor
ry domestic animals. They mob every
strange bird In much the same way as
the London street arab makes fun of
any person In unusual attire.—Long
man’s Magazine.
Sadden Want of Information.
Tommy—Ma, lend me a lead pencil.
Mother—I Just left pen and ink on the
table for you. What do you want with
a pencil? Tommy—I want to write to
the editor of the paper to ask him
what’ll take Ink stains out of the par
lor- carpet.—Philadelphia Ledger.
Think much and often, speak little
tnd write less*—Woman's Life. . ,
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS.
NOTICE OF FIRST MEETING* OF CRED
ITORS.
In the District Court of the United States for
the District of Nebraska.
In the matter of David M. Stuart, Bankrupt
Case No. 1045. In Bankruptcy.
To the creditors of David M. Stuart, of
Stuart, in the County of Holt, and district
aforesaid, a bankrupt.
Notice is hereby given that on the 3d day
of January, A. D 1906, the said David M.
Stuart was duly adjudicated bankrupt; and
that the first meeting of his creditors will be
held at law office of J A. Rice in Stuart,
Nebraska, on the 2d day of February. A, D.
1906, at 10 o’clock in the forenoon, at which
time the said creditors may attend, prove
their claims, appoint a trustee, examine the
bankrupt, and transact such other business
as may properly come before said meeting.
A. W. SOATTE KGOOD,
Jan. 23, 1905, Referee in Bankruptey.
(First Publication Jan. 26.)
NOTICE.
To John A. Fisher and wife Mertle L. Fisher,
and F. E. Gales, real name unknown, non
resident defendants.
You and each of you will take notice that
the plaintiff John Skirving has commenced
an action in the district court of Holt county,
Nebraska,against you and each of you,the ob
ject and prayer of said action being to obtain
decree finding that he is the owner in fee
simple of the Southeast quarter of Section 3,
Township 30 North of Range 9, we-:t of the
6th P. M. in Holt county, Nebraska, and to
obtain a decree finding that you and ea#h
of you have no interest in said land and to
remove the cloud cast on said land by reason
of certain deeds of conveyance made and re
corded by George W. Parham, to J. M.
Trumbull Jr., and by J. M. Trumbull Jr., to
John A. Fisher and also to remove the cloud
cast on the title to said land by reason of the
giving of a mortgage thereon by John A.
Usher to J, M. Trumbull Jr. and assigned by
him to the defendant F. E. Gates. Plaintiff
alleges that said mortgage is uot a lien on
said real estate and that the defendant
Gates acquired no interest in said land by
tho reason of the giving of the same and the
assignment to him and that the defendant
John A. Fisher has no interest in said land
by reasou of said deeds of conveyance and
prays that said mortgage may be cancelled
and that the cloud cast on the title to said
land by reason of said mortgage and the
assignment thereof as well as said deeds be
removed and that the title to said land be
quieted and confirmed in the plaintiff and
for other equitable relief.
You are required to answer said petition
on or before the 6th dav of March, 1905.
31*4 R. R. DICKSON,
A ttorr.ey for Plaintiff.
(First publication Jan. 19.)
NOTICE.
To the unknowD heirs of Hope Chilson,;
deceased.
Non Resident Defendants.
You will take notice that on the 30th day
of November 1904, G. A. Hamilton commenc
ed an action in the district court of Holt
county, Nebraska, the object and prayer of
said action being to obtain a decree that be
is the owner of in fee simple of the South
half of the Southwest quarter and the South
west oquarter of the Southeast quarter of
section six, and the northeast quarter of t'ie
Northwest quarter of Section 7 all in Town
ship 32 North of range 13 west of the 6th P.
M, in Holt county, Nebraska and to obtain a
decree that the above named defendants
and each of them have no interest in said
property and that the title thereto be quieted
and confirmed in the plaintiff, and that the
defendants and each of them be forever en
joined from having or claiming to have
any interest in said property and
that the deed mentioned in plaintiff’s
petition given to|bim by D. D. Chilson be
decreed to convey to him good and perfect
title to said above described land and that
the said D. I). Chilson be decreed to be the
heir and only heir at law of Hope Chilson
deceased and that the title to said land be
quieted and confirmed in the plaintiff and ;
that the heir or heirs of Hope Chilson j
deceased be decreed to have no interest in
said real estate and for other equitable relief.
You are required to answer said petition ;
on or before tne 27th day of February 1905.
R. R. DICKSON,
30-4 Attorney for Plaintiff,
NOTICE.
To John O’Kalla, alias John O’Hala, non
resident defendant.
The above named defendant will take
notice that on the 12th day;of December, 1904,
the plaintiff, J. T. Wachowski, commenced an
action in the district court of Holt county,
Nebraska, against you,the object and prayer
ot' which is to recover of and from you a
judgment, for the sum of 8200.15 with Interest
thereon, which amount is now due and pay
able to the plaintiff from the defendant on a
certain Jujgraent rendered in Justic Court,
in Cook county, Illinois, on the 27th day of
November, 1908, for the sum of 8200 and costs,
86.15. A transcript of said judgment having
been filed in the office of the Clerk of the
Circuit Court, of Cook county, Illinois, on
the 29th day of November, 1904.
Plaintiff alleges in said petition that no
part of said judgment has been paid or in any
manner satitied and that theie is due him
the above sum.
Defendant will further take notice that the
plaintiff filed in said cause, on the same day,
an affidavit for writ of attachment against
the defendant and that on said day a writ
of attachment was issued in afeid cause for
said sum of 8206.15 and that the sheriff by
virtue thereof levied upon the following
described real estate of the defendant to-wlt:
The east half of section 82,township 30, range
13, west of 6th P. M., in Holt county, Nebra
ska, to satisfy the above amount and costs,
plaintiff alleging in said petition that, the
defendant, John O’Kalla and John O’Hala
are the one a d the same person against
whom said judgrneut was entered in said
Cook county, Illinois, in Justice Court.
Defendant will take notice that the plain
tiff will ask judgment and an order that the
above described real estate will be sold to
satisfy the same.
You are required to answer said petition on
or before the 30th day of January, 1905.
26-4 H. K. DICKSON,
Attorney for plaintiff. ,
(First publication Jan. 19.)
NOTICE
To the unknown heirs of Horace G. Oakes,
deceased, audths unknown heirs of Hat
held Oakes, deceased, and Caroline Oakes,
widow of Hatheld Oakes, deceased.
Non-Resident Defendants.
The above named defendants and each of
them will take notice that Minnie Asberg
has commenced an actiou in the district
court of Holt county, Nebrasxa, against you
and each of you, the object and prayer of
said action being to quiet and confirm the
title in her, to the southeast quarter of sec
tion 11. township 30. north of range 10, west
of the 6th P. M. alleging in her said petition
that she and her pri r grantors since the
26th day of July. 1892, have been in the
actual, continuous, notorious and adverse
possession of the before described real estate
under a claim of ownership, and that she is
now in possession of said real estate and that
by reeson of said facts that she is the legal
owner. Plaintiff further alleges in said
petition that her prior grantors obtained
title to said laud from Caroline Oakes, and
that she was the sole and only heir at law of
Horace G. Oakes and Hatfield Oakes,
deceased, and prays that the deed mentioned
In her petition from the defendant, Caroline
Oakes to 11. F. Roberts, be decreed to convey
to said Roberts the legal title to said laud
and ttiat the said Caroline Oakes be decreed
to be the absolute owner in free simple of
said real estate at the time of the making of
said deed to said 11. F. Roberts, mentioned in
said petition, and further prays in said
petition that the defendants and each of
them bo decreed to have no interest in said
real estate and that they and each of them
be forever enjoined from having or claiming
to have any Interest in said premises. That
the heirs of Hatfield Oakes and Horace G.
Oakes be decreed to have no interest in said
real estate and that they be forever enjoined
from claiming any interest In said real estate
and that tho title tolsaid real estate be for
ever quieted and confirmed in the plaintiff,
and for other equitable relief.
You are required to answer said petition on
or before the 27th day of February, 1905.
It R 1)1 KSON.
30-4 Attorney for Pluintiff.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature of
ur. Price’s Cream Baking Powder
Awarded Gold Medal Midwinter Fair. San Francisco.
j**...t...!..............,.................|
. whAMi^ 50 YEARS'
iiBlIBHk, FXPFaih Nnr
3 -«|k3 >Jra m ■_ _I — ■ V 1
4 jH ■ f k ■ ■ " k am
j /i 1 I J . ■ 1^1
: *1 11 411 rv J
I
I’ T1s&BmL£H«k. Trade Marks :
Designs
rrYYYY^ Copyrights Ac.
Anyone sending a sketch and description may
qnlckly ascertain oar opinion free whether an :
invention is probably patentable. Commnnica- :
3 tions strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents
1 sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents.
13 Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive :
special notice, without charge, in the
Scientific American. I
A handsomely Illustrated weekly. Largest dr*
culation of any scientific journal. Terms. 93 a
year; four months. 9L Sold by all newsdealers.
j MUNN & Co.setBroadw*. New fwk
i Branch Office. 626 F 8t- Waahlngton. D.C,
t tttttttt iii j
ty&Sfle^ilcf
.Wash BLUE
For Sale By
TTTT- all
v WISE
GROCERS
DIRECTIONS FOR USE:
Wiggle-Stick around in the water.
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.
IF YOU WANT
Commercial News
Grain Market News
Wall Street Gossip
Minining and Building News
SUBSCRIBE FOR THE
| Omaha Commercial \
$1.00 PER YEAR
211 Board of Trade, OMAHA, Neb.
Scottish
Sharoi)--..
OF GREYTOWER 153330,
Asslstod 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.
A. <S. Slna^oad
Abttat't fSMtftitt
Title Abstractors
Office in First National Bank Bldg.
(Wiimar & Sioux Falls By.)
Passenger, Daily Except Sunday.
9:50 P. M. Ar_Central Time.Lv7:00 A. M
Mixed Train, Dally, Except Sunday.
3:50 p. M. Ar.Central Time,_L/ 9:50 p. M.
Close connections at bioux City for all
points. For rates and further information
call on or address—
W. E. West, Agent
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
tine 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.,
I. K. Thomas, roreman.O'Netll. Holt Co. .Neb
Dhc » Klct la Otullij.
Tm W IQt la dun KM s. CM
Lewis
SINGLE
BINDER
STRAI6HT^5«gSTHAI6HT
CIGAR
A a LTWW. M**rrw. nx.
I ; 1
^ ONLY
J Double Track
^ RAILROAD ^
^ Between Miiaonri Biver and G
A Chicago
^ Direct line to St. Paul ^
^ and Minneapolis. v
^ Direct line to the Black ^
^ Hills, South Dakota. ^ -
Q Only line to Bonesteel, 6 m
•• S. D., the Rosebud Indian •• JP
i Reservation. . ^
Through sleeping car ^
service to Omaha, making ^
direct connections at Om- ^
aha Union Station for
Chicago and all points east. ^
No delays, no change of ^
cars, Northwestern all the ^
Apply to nearest agent for ^
rates, maps and time cards, or ▼
write to— ^p
JOHN A. KUHN. J
A. G. F. and P. A.. Omaha
Intuit^
with your name
and address
printed on them
ONLY 50C
^AAA*
The cheapest way to buy for
those wanting small quantities j
(E1?e Frontier. I
BUY THE
SEWING MACHINE
Do not be deceived by those who ad
vertise a $60.00 Sewing 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 points makes the New Home
the best Sewing Machine to buy.
showing the dif
ferent styles of
Sewing Machines
we manufacture and prices before purchasing
THE NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE GO.
ORANGE, MASS.
28 Union Sq. N. Y., Chicago, 111., Atlanta, Ga.,
St. Louis,Mo., Dallas,Tex., San Francisco, Cal
FOR SALE BY
O. F. BIGLIN
O’NEILL. NEB.
HOTEL
EVANS
ONLY FIRST-CLASS
HOTEL IN THE CITY
FREE 80S SERVICE
*
W. T. EVANS, Prop.
O’NEILL ?
ABSTRACT
COM PAN Y
Compiles
Abstracts of Title
THE ONLY COMPLETE SET OF AB
STRACT BOOKS IN HOLT COUNTY