The Frontier. VOLUME XXV. O’NEILL. NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, MARCH 9, 1905. NUMBER 37. I NEW SPRING GOODS | Never before in the history of Spring Goods has the season opened np with so many pretty and dainty fabric as our stock of goods this year presents. It is the custom of the times to anticipate coming events, and so as soon as the weather permits we prepare for spring and summer. Our collection of goods this year is very large; you will find large assortments of attractive materials for dressy wear, street wear and shirt waist suits. Among the many new novelties in Dress Goods you will find the following: - i | I Plain and fancy voilles, plain and fancy mohairs, fancy novelty vogue, voille de soie, voille seinette, Crec cian voilles, fancv batistes, fancy pino crepe cloth* Scotch and English suitings, checked taffetas, mousse line de soie, etamines, plain* fancy and embroidered ginghams* and pure white Irish linen for shirt waists. ■ ( ” . Our line of new belts, bags, shirt waist sets, fancy collars and buttons is complete; new shirt waists, skirts and muslin underwear, flue table linens and towels, new calicos and ginghams, fancy ribbons and veilings. We have new goods in every line. Come in and examine the stock. You will find it the very newest. J. IF*. <3- -A. Xj LAGHER LOCAL MATTERS. Peter Duffy had business at Norfolk Tuesday. Mrs. D. C. Deaver went to Omaha Tuesday. John Walmer was up from the south country Sunday. Denny Hunt was down from At kinson yesterday. Editor Miles was at Ainsworth several days this week. Frank Phillips is in from Star today on real estate business. Wanted—A girl to assist with house work; inquire of Mi's. T. Y Golden, lw Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Murnan have moved to their ranch near Scottville. Dr. Corbett will be in his dental office and gallery from the 23d to 30th of each month. 17-tf The Eebekahs initiated several new members last Friday evening. A ban quet was also spread. A new folding bed and a new sew ing machine for sale; inquire of M. M. Sullivan, O’Neill, Neb. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. William F. Grothe of Emmet, March 7, a daugh ter of the usual weight. For Sale—Good work horse. En quire of Mrs. Daniel Cronin, one-half mile northeast of O’Neill. Next Sunday evening the pastor of the Presbyterian church will preach on I — T5he Wall Pamper Season l is fast approaching. Our stock is now complete and j \ up-to date. We have giv en special attention this i year to tne selecting of j our wall paper and are | prepared to offer for your • selections some very at- t l tractive patterns. Come 1 in and look them over. GILLIGAN C& STOUT “The Alternative: If Not the Chris tian’s God, What God?” Mike Sullivan came down from At kinson Saturday to take in the Emmet entertainment that evening. George Triggs, the lightning carpen ter, is putting a new roof on the Reka building just south of the postoffice. For Sale—Good,large, full-blood Ply mouth Rock roosters; choice $1, good roosters 50c. each. Mrs. J. A. Mc Allister, Agee, Neb. 35-4. I have opened a shop across from Mullen’s barn and am prepared to do blacksmithing, wagon work and plow a specialty. All work guaranted. 37-1 G. E. Bowen. The local markets yesterday were: Hogs, $4(a;$4.20; corn—shelled, 32c, ear, 31c; oats, 22ic; wheat, 89c; rye, 63c; potatoes, 25c@30c; eggs, 15c; but ter, 18c. If troubled with weak digestion, belching or sour stomach, use Cham berlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets and yon will get quick relief. For sale by P. C. Corriga i. For Sale. Forty Short-Horn bulls ranging in age from one to three years. Will also sell a few choice cows and heifers. Special prices for next thirty days, I). J. Cronin O’Neill, Neb. Miss Magee, who is in the govern ment statistical service, visited with relatives and friends here this week and last, departing on Tuesday for the state of Washington, whither she has been directed by the department. Claud Hancock and Floyd Keyes, two Inman young men, were taken into the Odd Fellows lodge here last evening. J. P. Hancock and J. J. Hal loran were up to help initiate the boys. Mrs. Fitzsimmons wants the ladies to come to tier store on Saturday, March 11, and see the new tilings in millinery goods. Saturday will be her spring opening day with many beatiful things on display. Henry Martfeld was flown from near Emmet Monday and informed us he was going to have a sale and sell off most of his stock and machinery and take life less strenuously. Hence he left an ad with us which can be seen without glasses. C. J. Milligan and Col. John G. Maher, who attended the inaugural at Washington, were each introduced to the president by Congressman Kin kaid. Congress having expired, we note the judge is making preparations to return home. Con Keys is very glad to recover a valuable mare stolen from him last fall. The animal was taken from O’Neill by a horse thief into the southwest part of the county and sold to an innocent purchaser. The sheriff went out last week and brought it in. Judge Westover and reporter came down from Rushville yesterday, the judge presiding in some equity suits in district court. The Tomsik case from Atkinson has not yet been clear ed from the calander, a continuance being taken and the arguments not yet made. Sheriff Hall went to Lincoln Tues day with Jerry Sullivan, whom he took to the penitentiary. A little son of Conrad Whetlaugher’s accompanied the sheriff to Lincoln, where the boy’s father is working, and will be taken to a hospital for an operation on one of his lower limbs. Street Commissioner Martin is having much trouble with broken water pipes, the result of the hard freezing this winter. It is not un common to iind a stream of water gurgling through the surface above the water mains, in which case the water lias to be shut off until new pipes can be put in. Mrs. Swagart, the woman who concealed her identity here for a time by masquerading in male attire and swung the girls at dances, came in from the west yestprday accompanied by her litttle daughter. . She now wears the attire befitting women, and came to town to begin contest pro ceedings to secure a homestead in the western part of the county. New timecard went into effect on the Great Northern last Sunday. No change in passenger train time. Tiie freight leaves O’Neill daily except Friday and Saturday at 6:30 p. m. New train is put on the card, leaves O’Neill at 6:30 a. m., Saturday only, making close connection at Sioux City, with Chicago stock trains, for accomo dation of stock shippers for Chicago market. Any one in O’Neill wanting house plants or bedding plants, terns, palms, petunias, oleanders, orange trees and kinds of out door plants and flowers for a color effect, novelties in outdoor culture, etc., ornamental gardening, landscape engineering, and for beauti ful lawn designs address John William Peterson, O’Neill, box 148, agent JeweLNursery Co., Lake City, Minn., the largest growers of strictly hardy fruit and ornamental nursery stock in j the world; established 1808, twelve hundred acres, and a capital stock of $100,000. 36-2pd Mr. and Mrs. Tim Harrington enter tained a small party of young friends last Monday evening, dancing being the principal amusement of the even ing. At 12 o’clock an elegant supper was served, after which dancing was again resumed until an early hour, when the guests departed for their homes highly pleased with the manner in which they were entertained by Mr. and Mrs. Harrington. Guy Hamilton departed Thursday last for Seattle, Wash., and other western points with the view of re maining. Guy had been connected with the real estate firm of Dickson & Co. for some two years or more and has been a good and reliable hustler in that line as well as being an expert office man and having filled important positions in county and federal offices at various times. His friends here wish him the best of success where ever he may locate. J.Il.Drinnin of Columbus was in the city Tuesday, stopping oil here on his way home from Atkinson, where he had been to make arrangements for the erections of buildings on a farm he owns four miles south of Atkinson, and upon which his daughter and son in-law will reside as soon as the build dings are completed. Mr. Drinnin said it appeared that Holt county carpenters had plenty to do as no bids were received for the erection of his buildings. He made a contract with a, carpenter at Newport for the work. The best of everything is none too good for the people of thiscouniyin matters of good garden seeds. “Bren nan” makes a speciality of keeping the best. We have Sioux City and Nebraska seeds in bulk and package, don’t get deceived by having people say that tlieir’s are “jnst as good.” A counterfiter will tell you that you can pass his dollar just as good as a good dollar, but it will get caught. You should not be deceived for the best is always the cheapest. Neil Brennan. 30-2 Someone bemeaned themselves about as mean and little as they could the other night by commiting the most outrageous depredations at F. C. Gatz’s slaughter yards. They very narly pulled down a building in which Mr. Gatz had ice stored, scat tered bales of hay far and wide, stole a six dollar implement for cutting ice and laid themselves liable for a term * -ii- -i —™nffimmii—— in the pen in general. Mr. Gatzis justly indignant and says he will yet give the perpetrators of the deed all the fun they want. Matrimonial Berber Asher and Rhoba Vanavery, both of Inman. Rev. Bartley Blain of Page officiating. - Robert A. Baker of Stafford and Laura Wolfe of O’Neill, Rev. D. A. Keane of Inman officiating. Clifford Thompson and Blanch Hod gett of Blackbird, Raymond H. Eaton and Ella Rogers, both of Newport, and David Boag and Irma B. Omel of Blake, Neb., County Judge Morgan officiating. Mr. John A. Carson and Miss Anna C. Ladely, both of Dorsey, were united in marriage on March 1, Rev. Albert S. Stewart officiating. The wedding occurred at Dorsey. $25 Reward. 1 will pay the above reward for in formation that will convict the person or persons who committed the depredations at my slaughter yards. Such outrages I will not stand for and they can not go unpunished. I will pay $25 casli for information that will convict. F. C. Gatz. Do You Want a Well? If so I want to make it, I have just completed a new horse power combin ed well boring and rock drilling ma chine, the best and most practical well machine that is made. 1 will sell this machine, cheap for cash, if HHHHKflMflNMIlHSHI1MHHHHKHm* you want a well or want to buy, «uU on or address me at O’NellL J. Rogers. 37-8 Horses for Sale I have six pair of well broke draft horses for sale on easy terms. D. A. Doyle. 36-2 j St. Patrick Concert. The following is the program for a St. Patrick’s day concert to be given under the auspices of St. Mary’s academy on the evening of the 17th at the opera-house: Instrumental—All Hall to St. Patrick .Helena Vlertel Oration—St. Patrick’s Service to Humanity •.Prof. J. V. Dwyer "Your Mother, Jack. Died Here Today" .. ■■■.-.. • • • • Boy’s chorus Violin and Plano—Harp of Tora ... .. .....Gerald and George Harrington Vocal—If the Waters Could Speak as They T *'>ow.. ...John L. Sullivan Instrumental—Come Back to Erin „.Kathleen Doyle Quartette.Glse Club Hesitation—Mary Queen of Scott’s • ... -...Nolle O’Donnell Vocal—Because of You.Mrs, P. J. Flynn Instrumental—Believe Me If All Those, En dearing Young Charms ..Genevieve MeNlohols »uet.......O’Fallon Sisters The Minstrel Boy.Mixed Chorus A Favorite Remedy for Babies Its pleasant taste and prompt cures have made Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy a favorite with the mothers of small children. It quickly cure their coughs and colds and prevents any danger of pneumonia or other serious consequences. It not only cures croup, but when given as soon as the croupy cough appears will pre vent the attack. For sale by P. C. Corrigan. — . M. DOWLING. President JAS. F. O’DONNELL. Cashier SURPLUS $55,000.00 I O’NEILL NAT’L BANfrT 5 Per Cent Paid on Time Certificates of Deposit This Bank carries no indebtedness of Officers or Stockholders